NEWS RECORD ? ? > SERVING THE PEOPLE OF MADISON COUNTY -On thm Insldm . ? . ? Red Oak Students Get A Free Book ...Turn To Page 6 7W? Year No. 13 ? ? PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN THE COUNTY SEAT AT MARSHALL, N.C. THURSDAY, March 27, 1980 15* Per Copy YOUl'S SUBMARINE SHOP in Mars Hill is the site of another county controversy over alcohol. The restaurant has been issued a 90-day "brown-bagging" permit that allows customers to "bring their own" ? beer, wine, or lfquor ? as long as tney seep it unaer wraps. Last year Peabody's Dis count Center, a beer store owned by the same men who own Yogi's , was the focus of a dispute in Forks of Ivy. 1 . ? , ? ______ Brown -Bagging Permit Resisted By Mars Hill The owner of Yogi's Sub marine Shop, a sandwich restaurant on Main Street in Mars Hill, have obtained a pair of temporary "brown-bagging" permits which could make Yogi's only the second establishment in Madison County where customers can drink alcoholic beverages. Both permits, one for "Special Occasions" and one for "Restaurant and Related Places," make it legal for patrons to bring their own beer, wine or liquor into the restaurant if concealed by a bag or other covering. Presently, the only place in the county where alcohol can be purchased is the ABC store in Hot Springs. One brown bagging permit also exists at Uie Wolf Laurel Resort. According to Special Agent Stewart Cook of the North Carolina Board of Alcoholic Control, 90-day permits were issued on March 17 to Robert Thomas Sofield and Edward Kirkpatrick, the owners of Yogi's. Officials of the Town of Mars Hill, who learned of the permits on the day they were issued, brought up the matter at a meeting that same night and voted to adopt a resolution opposing the permits. The resolution is being taken, along with letters and a peti tion being circulated among Mars Hill residents, to the Board of Alcoholic Control in Raleigh. The board will decide whether to issue permanent permits. Sofield and Kirk pa trick are also the owners of Peabody's Discount Store in Forks of Ivy, the focus of a prolonged border dispute last year. Madison County argued that Peabody's which sells beer, is in Madison County and therefore illegal. A three judge panel, however, ruled after nearly a year of debate that the portion of Peabody's actually selling beer is in Bun combe County. In the face of strong resistance from the mayor, aldermen, merchants and of ficials of Mars Hill College, the owners of Yogi's have paused to reconsider their plans to moisten a historically dry town. "I'll tell you the truth," said Tom Sofield a week after ob taining the permits. "We cer tainly didn't realize there would be this much of a con troversy. We don't want to disrupt the community. We mostly wanted to provide a place for young people to go where they can have beer or wine with a meal. We're not interested in another-year long struggle." Sofield estimated that some 80 percent of the customers at Peabody's, just three miles from Mars Hill College, are college students. "We've had such a demand from not only college students but other young people to have a place to go instead of just rodding around in their cars. They are going to drive to buy stuff wherever they have to. I think it's better to give them a place to go so they don't drive back from Asheville after drinking.'' The college administration, however, has little sympathy with the plan. "We are definitely opposed to it," said President Fred Bentley. "We will exercise whatever in fluence we can to see that the permit is not made perma nent. We have no legal authority beyond the campus, but our students will be en couraged not to go there." No drinking is allowed in college dormitories or at col ( Continued on Page 3) County Will Get $533,948 Tp Repair Secondary Roads In their artpua) public meeting with the Board of Commissioners, state highway officials announced last Wednesday that just over half a million dollars would be available to upgrade secon dary roads in the county dur ing the next fiscal year. Division Engineer Earl RfcEntyre said that a total of |B33,948 has been estimated (or Madison County for Fiscal 1M0-81. Of this amount, 9373,803 is projected to come from the Secondary Construc tion Program, which is funded by revenues from the state gasoline tax. Also, $160,345 will come from the secondary bond allocation, This is the county's share of the $300 million bond issue passed statewide in 1977 for primary, secondary and urban roads. McEntyre emphasized that Us figures are still estimates, and that the final amount will depend on tax revenues col lected between now and the end of the current fiscal year. Commissioner Jim Ledford pointed out that the highway fund has suffered lately because of falling gasoline sales statewide. "Tax revenues dropped $25 million last year," he said, "while we had a 22 percent inflation rate for the cost of highway con struction. We are really hur ting. People have quit buying McEntyre said that it costs about $100,000 a mile to upgrade and pave a road in the mountains. ? compared to perhaps >30,000 on flat land. He said that a one-mile road being done in Mitchell County was costing 1173,000. In addi tion, a bridge costs about 11,000 per foot. Thus the total allotment for next year might be enough to upgrade and pave less than five miles of Some officials fear that oaiess more money is found , (or the highway fund, many roads in the state will too rough for use by cars. we have to consider, ly," said Commis Ledford, "is that we on a small amount of r.lfwei to spend on secondary roads. Then we could pave these roads. The way it is now, we can't." The current year's alloca tion of state money is being us ed to pave Cutshalltown Road. That road was selected on the basis of a priority list, main tained by the state and up dated every two years. Every unpaved road in the county is Priority Roads: The Top 15 Priority S.R. Number Number 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 1332 1375 1136 1369 1155 1158 1346 1319 1509 1584 1576 1405 1334 1303 1359 Length Homes Traffic Count Name CQlvin Creek 2.75 38 200 Heck Creek 1.40 18 150 Dry Branch 2.35 25 150 Bee Tree Road 1.50 17 138 Anderson Branch 3.00 18 144 Big Pine 2.30 22 132 Bear Branch 1.40 19 120 Lonesome Mtn. 2.65 14 84 Holland Creek 1.40 18 114 Tillery Branch 1.05 17 100 Bend of Ivy 0.80 16 96 Thomas Branch 1.00 16 96 Sodom ? Rice 2.25 11 66 Lower Shut In 2.10 16 125 Old NC 213 0.70 9 120 Estimated Cost $360,000 $225,000 $350,000 $200,000 $325,000 $250,000 $200,000 $350,000 $200,000 $125,000 $100,000 $125,000 $300,000 $325,000 $100,000 McDevitt Elected President Of N.C. Young Democrats Wayne McDevitt of Mar shall was elected president of Young Democrats of North Carolina at their annual state convention held in Greensboro March 15. McDevitt was elected by acclamation by more than 500 delegates representing county and col lege organizations from across the state. McDevitt also announced that he was resigning as chair man of the Jim Hunt cam paign in Madison County. "In no way is my resignation meant to discredit Gov. Hunt. I have always been a strong supporter and worker for Jim Hunt and believe he demonstrates the kind of leadership North Carolina R. WAYNE needs to continue on the road of growth and progress. My resignation is totally based on a technicality in the Democratic Party's Plan of Organization which requires any person holding a position of leadership in the party to refrain from holding a position in a Democratic Party primary." He also announced his resignation as election registrar in the North Mar shall precinct. McDevitt, 27, is currently regional manager of the Department of Natural Resources and Community Development for the western region of North Carolina . He is ? graduate of Marshall High School and political science graduate of UNC-Asheville. He served as vice president of the North Carolina Young Democrats during Iff*. Dur ing the past 10 years he has received several awards in Young Democrats Party at all : : ranked according to a point system ? 283 roads in all, totalling 315 miles in length. Roads r^*?ive poiiits for each house, church, school and place of business, and for school bus routes, traffic count, and so on. Generally, the highest priority roads are those that are short, heavily used and densley populated. Priority number one this year is Colvin Creek road, which is 2.75 miles long and has 38 houses and a traffic (Continued on Page 8) RANGER CHARLES MILLER, center, has recently moved to the French Broad Ranger District. In the photo above he is flanked by assistant rangers Richard Cook, left, and John Strojan outside the Forest Service headquarters in Hot Springs. New Ranger Moves To County Charles N. Miller has suc ceeded Joe Wallace as ranger on the French Broad Ranger District of the Pisgah National Forest. Miller, a native of central West Virginia, first arrived in Madison County in December. After a brief leave, because of illness in his family, he began work in January, at the same time the Forest Service staff was moving into its new building in downtown Hot Spr ings. Miller came to the county from a very different environ ment ? the Apalachicola Na tional Forest in Bristol, Fla. ? which is dominated by flat ter rain, dense pine forests and a wide river that must be kept silt-free because of the famed oyster beds in its mouth. Nonetheless, Miller is no stranger to the mountains. He graduated from the Universi ty of West Virginia in Morgan ton with a B.S. in forestry and wildlife. After graduating he spent the summer in timber country In Oregon, then mov ed to the Shenandoa Valley in Virginia for three years. After a short tour in the U.S. Array he was sent by the Forest Service to Ervin, Tenn. where he worked for seven years as program manager in charge of timber manage ment, sales, and reforestation in the 150,000-acre Unaka District of Cherokee National Forest. There he oversaw the planting of trees, preparation of timber sites, appraisal of timber, and actual timber harvesting. From Ervin he went to Florida, where he worked not with timber but with everything else that goes on in a national forest. "The customary arrangement," said Miller last week in his of fice, "is that a district ranger will have two assistant rangers. One of them handles the timbering operation, if there is one, and that is such a big Job that it will take all his time. The other assistant handles just about all the other operations and respon sibilities we have - wildlife management, recreation pro grams, helping visitors, and so forth. "It's also customary to get experience in both kinds of Jobs. U you do timber in one area, youll probably do the Republicans Pick Convention Delegates Stern, Roger Swann, Dedrick Brown, Curtis Roberta and rn ?? f> n I. n ?< m tiyae ttooeirs. The taOowinc alternates were also elected: Jean Flowers, Edith Lnniford, William Tisdale, Cecilia Powell, Ella Vee Willis. Larry Ferguson, Mrs. Curtis Giboon. France, Ramsey Mrs. Charles Crocco and BUI other activities in the next place you go. The Forest Ser vice does this so you don't get locked into the same program and so you see how various ways of doing things work or don't work. "They also move you Haynie Chosen Chairman Roger D. Haynie of Mar shall was elected chairman of the Young Democrats of the Uth Congressional District at the annual state convention held in Greensboro March IS. The election follows his nomination by the 17 western counties who caucased at the governor's western residence in February. Haynie, 29, is adult proba tion and parole officer in Madison County. He is cur rently chairman of the Democratic Party in the North Marshall precinct. He haa held several Young Democrat positions at the county and district levels and was named one of the 10 most ROGER HAYNIE around a fair amount, for the same reason. The broader your experience is, the more perspective you're likely to have when you have to handle new situations and problems." Miller's two assistant rangers are Richard Cook and John Strojan. Cook, who is in charge of timber management from the French Broad District, is a native of Oklahoma. He graduated from Louisiana State University in 1976 with a degree in forest management. After graduation he was assigned to the Southern Forest Experiment Station, based in New Orleans. For three years he cruised timber throughout four southern states, measuring the growth of trees in permanent plots. For every state, growth trends are compiled every ten years. This shows the Forest Service how much timber can be harvested without cutting faster than trees are growing. Cook went from New Orleans to BLue Ridge, Ga., where he worked as a prescriptionist in Chat tahoochee Nation Forest. This Job involves cruising stands of timber, measuring types and ages and deciding the best type of treatment for each stand. After his brief tour In Georgia, Cook came here in