Photo by Chick Squire I Walls Come Tumblin' Down With children home for the Christmas New Year's holidays, workers had a chance last week to begin demolishing the old Weaverville Primary School, de clared structurally unsafe. Demolition should be complete by the time children report back for classes Monday. Con struction of a new, $500,000 building should begin within two months. Classes are currently being held in temporary trailer classrooms . Mars Hill Board Adopts Sign Rules I$\ 1511. 1. STl'DKNC Kditur After nearly a year of debate, discussion and delay, the Mars Hill Board of Aldermen finally approved a zoning ordinance, including regula tions on commercial signs and out door advertising, during a special meeting Monday night. The ordinance includes a ban on the construction of any additional off premises signs -? billboards and calls for the removal of existing billboards in most of the town and its one-mile extraterritorial zone. Approval came after Jim Edwards, planning director of Land-of-Sky Regional Council, met with board members to answer a few remaining questions about the much-discussed section of the zoning ordinance regulating signs The ordinance adopted Monday limits the heights of on-premises ground signs, or business signs, to 25 feet, regulates the total area of all signs and bans the construction of any new off-premises signs. Billboards currently in place must be removed within a maximtim of five years, depending upon the value of the sign, according to the or dinance. Already, there are exceptions. Signs along U.S. 19-23, a federal-aid primary highway, will not come under the Mars Hill ordinance. Those signs -- both business signs and billboards - are regulated by the federal Highway Beautification Act. Kdwards told the board Some board members had previously expressed concern that the ordinance, as written, might force the removal of such signs as the large Texaco sign, some 65 feet high, along U.S. 19-23. "The federal regulations have priority over local ordinances," Mars Hill Mayor Owen Tilson said The town could have called for the removal of non-conforming signs along U.S. 19-23. but would have had to pay the sign owners a cash sum for their investment in the signs, accor ding to federal law And that, town officials said, was simply too expensive. Under the Mars Hill ordinance, owners of non-conforming signs that must be removed will be compen sated through an amortization schedule which allows signs to re main in place for a certain period of lime. Thai schedule is: ? One year, for signs with a replace ment value of up to $500. ? Two years, for signs with a replacement value of $501 to $1,500. ? Three years, for signs with a replacement value of $1,501 to $3,000 ? Four years, for signs with a replacement value of $3,001 to $5,ooo. ? Five years, for signs with a replacement value of more than $5,001. The new ordinance also limits the size of on premises business signs In 0-1 commercial and industrial-zones, the maximum size is 32 square feet per side, up to 64 square feet for the entire sign. In C-2 commercial zones, that limit increases to lOO^quare feet per side, up to 200 square feet for (he entire sign The ordinance also creates a Board of Adjustments, which "has the authority to grant variances lo allow the construction of signs that don't conform to regulations. "What ever size we pick, there are going to be exceptions." said Wayne Roberts of the Mars Hill Planning Board -Continued on next page Highway Caused - End Of Booming Craft Industry By KI.IZABRTH I). SQI IRK Feature Writer (Last of two parts) Annie Shelton Gosnell says she was bom about the time that Frances L Goodrich came to Allanstand and started Allanstand Cottage In dustries. Mrs. Gosnell grew up admiring the founder of those Allanstand in dustries, which flourished from the tate 1880s to about 1930 She remembers her mother, Susie Dudley Shelton. drawing the curved lines, like vines and little leaves, that were part of the design of coverlets her mother made, by embroidering homespun cloth. The embroidery thread was dyed with natural dyes and Mrs. Gosnell went with her mother to see Teddy Tweed, who ran a "blue pot." Mrs. , Tweed's hands were always blue from dying yarn. According to Miss Goodrich's book, "Mountain Homespun," the "blue pot" was a fermented mixture of in digo, madder, bran and home dripped j lye. always prepared in a big iron pot, taking great skill to control and pro- j ducing a beautiful clear blue. I Later, after she was married, Mrs. Gosnell ran the Allanstand Industries 1 Shop, just down the hill from her house, and when a prospective buyer came she would stop her housework and go down to the store. Some customers were "kind of money-like folks," probably tourists. Some wanted to look but not buy. The log -cabin shop had shelves with a few large items like coverlets, but mostly Mrs. Gosnell sold smaller items. Her favorites were the corn Photo by Elizabeth Squire Annie Shelton Gosnell, left, shows off one of her latest craft projects to her daughter-in-law, Christine Gosnell. shuck dolls, she recalls. Nell Thomas, who lived in Allans (and as a child, remembers that the shop sold wreaths and brooms, each made out of one piece of hickory, split and shaved. Also there were brooms made from home-raised broom corn, and hats made out of braided corn shucks, and quilts. She remembers the quiltings. Ten or 12 women would get together, br -Continued on next page County OKs A-B Tech Campus For Madison By BILL STUDENC Editor A satellite campus of Asheville Buncombe Technical College to serve Madison County has been formally approved by the Madison County Board of Commissioners. The commissioners agreed Dec. 18 to build a satellite campus on an undetermined site in Madison Coun ty, using $800,000 appropriated by the General Assembly last year According to a resolution adopted by the commissioners, the county will contract with the A-B Tech Board of Trustees to build the satellite campus on county property. The facility will then be leased to A-B Tech's Board of Trustees. Approval of the plan by the com missioners on Thursday became necessary when A-B Tech President Harvey Haynes told the board that the previous commissioners had ap parently approved the plan, but never adopted a formal resolution. The only site that had been discuss ed between the previous commis sioners and A-B Tech was property on Long Branch Road. The commissioners agreed to check out the site over the weekend before meeting with the school of ficials again last Monday for final ap proval of the site But at that meeting, the site was not discussed. County attorney Larry Leake said the commissioners would bring the topic back up in January. Robert Edwards, superintendent of Madison County schools, suggested that property near Madison High School be used for the satellite facili ty -Continued on next page 1986: A Year Of Drought, Politics , Nuclear Threat By BILL STUDENC Editor The year 1986 may well be remembered by Madison County residents as a year of vast political change. It was the year that legendary Sheriff E.Y. Ponder lost his badge to Republican Dedrick Brown in an election that saw the GOP make ma jor moves into a traditional Democratic stronghold. Republicans also took control of the Board of Education. Democrats avoided a Republican sweep by main taining control of the Madison County Board of Commissioners. Voters still called for change in county govern ment, however, as the incumbent commissioners failed ib survive the May primary. The threat of Madison County becoming a dumping ground for the nation's nuclear garbage hogged the headlines from January through May. A 105-acre tract in Madison. Buncombe and Haywood counties was one of 12 sites considered by the U.S. Department of Energy for a nuclear waste repository DOE's an nouncement sparked a tremendous upwelling of public opposition, which continued until a May announcement that the search for a dump site had been called off. 1986 will also be remembered as the year of the big drought, perhaps the worst in a century. A nearly yearlong dry spell forced officials to call for cutbacks in water usage, while coun ty fanners were hard hit by the lack of rainfall. On this, the first day of 1917, here's ? look back at 1986. as reported in the pages of The News Record: JANUARY The year began with the dismissal of mail fraud charges against fice had charged Ponder?^ ltorie; a nephew, Leonard; and, a business associate, Marshall Kanner, with 17 counts of mail fraud in con nection with land purchases made in Madison County in 1982. Federal pro secutors had charged that Ponder, then a member of the N.C. Board of Transportation, used inside informa tion to purchase property along (he route of a planned Spring Creek Marshall road. But on Jan. 7, JJ.S. District Court Judge Woodrow Jones dismissed the charges, saying that federal pro secutors had failed to prove their case. Ponder later blasted the charges as "politically motivated," and accused U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms, a Republican, of ordering the prosecution. Meanwhile, Dedrick Brown threw his name into the hat as a Republican contender for sheriff of Madiaon County. Incumbent commissioner* James Ledford, Ervin Adams and Virginia Anderson filed for re election, along with incumbent school board members Robert Z. Ponder, Ed Gentry, Floyd Wallin, Gerald Young and Frederick Anderson, and Clerk of Superior Court James Cody and Tax Collector Harold Wallin. A Madison County grand jury call ed for an investigation into county board chairman Jama Ledford's business transactions with the coun ty. Audits showed that county agen cies purchased goods and services B.Y. Pander . . . loses election from service stations operated by Ledford, a potential conflict of in terest. But District Attorney Thomas Rusher later in January announced that Ledford would not be charged, and blamed accounting errors for the discrepancies Madison County learned In mid January that a l os-acre tract in Madison, Buncombe and Haywood counties was one of 11 site* under con sideration for a nuclear waste storage facility That announOMMnt by the U.S. Department of Energy sparked a massive public outcry which did not subside until May. In Mars Hill, town officials began to look at an ordinance which would regulate signs and billboards. Sheriff E.Y. Ponder filed for re election, while Democratic challengers Robert Capps. Reese Steen and John Hensley entered the race for county commissioner. FEBRUARY February began on a good note - with the startup of a new digital swit ching' system by Contel, enabling residents on one side of the county to telephone, toll-free, residents on the other side of the county. The town of Hot Springs unveiled a new Town Hall. Officials from Hot Springs. Mars Hill and Madison County government passed resolu tions in opposition to a nuclear waste dump in Western North Carolina. Some 500 residents attended a meeting in Mars Hill to hear how state officials planned to fight the proposed repository. Later that month, 1,500 WNC residents packed the Thomas Wolfe Auditorium in AsheviU* to voice to DOE officials their concerns about UM repository The public hearing. The Madison County Nuclear Waste Education Committee formed in response to the nuclear threat. More candidates for local office entered various races as the filing deadline came in early February. Republicans Bob Phillips. Clarence Cutshall, Clarence Faulkner. Joe Fowler and Howard Allen joined the county commissioners race, while Democratic challengers Rita Murray and Donald Massey and Republicans Edward Krause, Dr. Lester Stowt, Mike Jenkins. Dewey Griffey Jr., Jimmy Dean Hensley and Assistant District Attorney Jim Baker entered the school board race. William Bray and Jimmy Dean Rios, charged with first-degree murder in the September IMS slaying of N.C. Highway Patrol Trooper Bob by Lee Cogging, entered pleas of not guilty during arraignment hearings in Yancey County. Coggins was shot on N.C. 209 near Hot Springs Sept. 14, setting off a massive three-day