Editorials iV V ' School Attendance Trial In a Sept. 4 editorial concerning the | then pending trial to settle the dispute bet ' ween the Madison County Board of Educa ; tion and 51 Madison children attending Bun ? combe schools, we said, "We hope the | parents and attorneys representing the ! students, and the Madison County Board of ; Education, will work toward a speedy solu tion to this matter and spare the children I from being punted back and forth across a cota^goal line.'' te today's edition, we are happy to report that the matter was dispensed with f efficiently, and justly in our opinion, in last week's special session of Civil Superior Court. The attorneys representing all parties and Judge John Jolly are to be commended on their promptness and wisdom in reaching the compromise solution. We suspect that not all of the families involved will be perfectly satisfied with the judgment issued in the settlement, but we think the best solution has been arrived at for the majority of the children involved. At least now they know where they stand, and can continue this year's schooling in a stable atmosphere and plan accordingly for their education in the years to come. Other Editor's Say Drinking Age The Sylva-Herald This fall the legal drinking age rises from 18 to 19 in Georgia and Florida, two more states which joined the trend to raise the age limit from eighteen. Another study, now underway in Massachusetts, is likely to add impetus to the trend. Dr. Richard Douglas, of the University of Michigan, who produced two convincing studies of the increase in death from ac cidents when the drinking age was lowered, was recently quoted as saying that a new | study at Boston University, weighing the ef ! feet of te hiked legal age in Massachusetts, ! would add significant factual data in this j field. In September, data from a study con ; ducted in Michigan on the effect of the age : hike there to 21 - in effect now over a year ! now - will be released. All indications are | that it will be conclusive evidence many \ t lives have been saved. Although Wisconsin, home of many breweries, rejects a move to hike its drink ing age this year, the trend throughout the country is toward raising the legal drinking age. Such changes have already saved the lives of many young people - and innocent victims - and reduced the number of traffic accidents. Alcoholic consumption, should, of course, be subject to strict laws. Other drug use is tightly controlled; yet we have been allowing glamorous advertisements about alcoholic beverages to go into every home to every age via television, and hard liquor has been sold freely to teenagers, many of whom are unprepared to cope with its ef fects, and die or kill or ruin their lives as a result - and those of others. Mary Jane Hollyday Candidate (Continued from Page 1) is up to the individual states to "see that their laws are such that aU citizens are treated equally." During her campaign swing through Madison County, Mrs. Holijrday said she had found the people in Madison |5fe . ~ v. ? fc~:' ~4 . . . ? - extremely nice and friend ly" "Win or lose the election, I'll go right on fighting," she said. Mrs. Hollyday, a Republican, is running for one of two seats in the N.C. Senate. Her opponents are Democrats James McClure Clark and Robert Swaim. NONPARTISAN IN POLITICS a NICHOLAS HANCOCK. I JAMES L STONY. Mortal Oi?? m I Published Weekly By i County Publishing Co. Inc. BOX 369 MARSHALL, N.C 28793 I PHONE: (704)449-2741 1 1-d French Broad Has Been Dumping Ground' Fishermen, rafters and boaters along the French Broad River which runs through Western North Carolina's Transylvania, Henderson, Buncombe and Madison Counties, say pollu tion, trash and poor access are causing major recreational problems. A survey headed by Dr. D.D. Tarbet, a North Carolina State University assistant pro fessor of recreation resources administration, polled the river's users to get insights in to the problems. The survey which was fund ed by federal agencies through the Southern Ap palachian Research Manage ment Cooperative, was designed to identify stream related problems in the region where states are heavily dependent on recreational resources and tourism. Rivers are major sources of recreational opportunity in North Carolina, Tarbet ex plained. "It's important to get the users' insights. The pro blems have to be identified before they can be solved." The consensus among stream users is that natural hazards such as falls, rough rapids and wild terrain should be left alone. Moat people who use the river want to see it cleaner and free of man-made hazards like dams and cables, Tarbet noted. Unfortunately, the French Broad has been a dumping ground for refuse for years, he said. The guilt can't be assigned to a single group," he said. "Both recreation and lan downers along the river have been negligent in this regard. " Old abandoned autos, animal carcasses, trash and garbage can be seen along the banks and floating down stream, he said. The high in cidence of flooding along the French Broad facilitates the movement of trash and in creases the chance of some forms of pollution. Another major problem that the survey identified is the conflict between landowners and those who use the river. "Owners complain about trespassing which results in their crops bing trampled, fences being broken and animals escaping," he said, "the user maintains that he has a right to reach and use the river." There is no right and wrong in the argument, Tarbet says. "Both sides have a good point, and the only realistic answer is compromise." He cited a multi-county organization in the western part of North Carolina called the Land of the Sky Regional Council as an appropriate group to handle the problem. As a result of the successful survey on the French Broad River, further NCSU manage ment studies in the Southern Appalachians have been fund ed by the U.S.D.A. Forest Ser vice and the Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. According to Tarbet, the re cent survey has found that -moat recreational users and landowners concur on one point. "They both want the oppor tunity to govern their own streams and rivers with as lit tle federal regulation as possi ble," he said. "If we don't solve the pro blems ourselves," he said "the federal government is giv ing to solve them for us." LETTERS WELCOMED We welcome totters to the editor. All we ,f. Mk ki (hat they be ret? My brief, la good taste uMI coataia no HMm published if they are aat signed by one er aiere ladividaals. "Pareats" or wwfww powmv^jwgmw^wwwwvw Heard And Seen By POP 8T0RY This is the week for the American and National League playoffs to see who will play in the World Series. It's an exciting time for baseball fans. As a rule, I pull for the National League. Why? Because the Na tional League has terms in Atlanta and Cin cinnati, close enough to travel to, and because I think the National League is stronger and more aggressive. My good friend, Roy Reeves, disagrees with me, but I'll still stick with the National League. + + + The passing of Robert G. "Bobby" Red mon, of San Antonio, Texas, on October 1, has taken another friend of mine. A former resident of Marshall, he and I were the first to play ping pon in Marshall. We played on a small table, using a string for a "net." The table was located in front of the News Record building which was then located down the street where the new portion of the First Union Bank is now located. Others soon started taking an interest in the ping pong games and joined Bobby and me in the sport. It soon became quite popular here and we built a regulation table with a real net and moved it upstairs in the building. Bobby was close friend and ping pong opponent. Whenever he visited T.N. and his sister, Nell Henderson here he would always come in the office and we would discuss the "good old days." Yes, I'm going to miss Bobby. + + + A series of ham-turkey shoots, spon sored by the local Optimist Club, will begin this Saturday afternoon on the Marshall bypass. The Saturday shootings will con tinue for several weeks, Optimist members stated. All sportsmen are urged to par ticipate. Letters To The Editor Editor: I would like to tell you about something I witnessed near Mars Hill Sept. 25, involving a school bus wreck and a tractor trailer. Two of the first people who reached the scene of the acci dent were two Mars Hill Col lege students, Brian and Nan Ramsey. In place of panicking or wasting time, this young man turned his car and quickly headed for help. They were the first to get the word to the ambulance personnel and alert them that children were involved. In a matter of minutes, help was on the way. As a passer-by who was in the crowd and overheard the conversations, I experienced the good feeiing of knowing, that in these "modern times," our young people care and are willing to help another in any type of situation. These young people returned and helped all they could until help was there. So many of us are only curious seekers at a time like this and are only in the way. Thanks again to these young people and all others who helped those children in this emergency. Sincerely, Mrs. M.B. Doyle Asheville Editor I wish to express my ap preciation to all the people who assisted at the scene of the school bus collision on Highway US 19423 bypass on Thursday, 25 September I960. A special thanks to Trooper Johnny Robinson and other Emergency Medical Techni cians who rendered "on-the-scene" medical treat ment to my son and to the other injured children, secondly, to the Mars Hill Fire Department, the Mars Hilt and Marshall Ambulance Ser vices for their quick response and the transportation of the injured children to the hospital, and thirdly, to the Mars Hill Police Department for their assistance to the Highway Patrol in protecting the accident scene and direc ting traffic during the time Trooper A.L. Cooper was con ducting the investigation. It is gratifying to know there are still citizens who don't mind "getting involved", and I'm deeply appreciative to each one, both private and professional, who assisted. ROBERT M.WALSH Line Sergeant North Carolina State Highway Patrol Editor Next year will be the 40th anniversary of the graduation of the Class of 41 from Mar shall High School. I would like for those class members who are interested in a reunion next spring during the alumni meeting to contact me. I will be happy to help in terested members make plans for the reunion. JACK ROBINSON 293 Weiner A venue Harrington, Delaware 19952 more Uj n nancoc* Scott Lunsford Meet The Other News Record Photographer Scott Lunsford, 18, is another young man who is helping the News Record ? in the photography department. The Mars Hill native is cur rently attending Asheville Buncombe Technical College in preparation of attending photography school in January. Scott primarily covers the Mars Hill Lions football games for the News Record. However, his interests in photography goes beyond photographing athletic events. A sample of his work can be seen on the next page. The News Record is grateful to Scott for his photographic con tributions. A Review TOWER OF BABEL; The Growth Of Nuclear Power In The South TOWER OF BABEL: The Growth Of Nuclear Power In The South. The USA's Southland - tradi tionally celebrated for its benevolent climate, easygoing lifestyle, and hospitable charm - has become, over the past two decades, the focus of intense interest by both private and federal nuclear entrepreneurs who relish the non-unionized work force, cheap land, and welcoming at titude of "progressive'' local officiate. Tower Of Babel, as Southern Exposure's 100-page report is called, documents, with charts, graphs, and maps, the extensive development of the Southern states by an economically and politically beleaguered industry seeking nuclear waste products (now Portsmout, Virginia, does this hazardous job since Charleston passed a city or dinance in 1979 forbidding fur ther shipments, following the Three-Mile Island accident). Maxey Flats, Kentucky was the country's first commercial nuclear waste dump (the South handles over half of the nation's commercial waste, 30% of its high-level waste, and 40% of its military waste). Four key facilities needed for the production of nuclear warheads produce the materials for three warheads a day; there are 19 operating nuclear reactors, with 49 more in construction. Columbia, South Carolina has the world's largest nuclear fuel fabricating plant. Aiken, South Carolina, is the potential site for the nations Perhaps the most alarming phenomenon that Southern Exposure details is the heavy highway traffic in radioactive waste, currently shuffled from site to site all over the South, some of it shipped in unmark ed vehicles by undesignated routs for "national security" reasons. Tower Of Babel is also a place to begin learning about what several Southern cities have done to restrict nuclear pollution of their environment. It is a primer for learning about the nuclear industry, who runs it, and how its pieces fit together. Every citizen these days needs to be inform ed about how nuclear energy affects our lives now and in the future. You may order The Tower Of Babel for $4.00 postpaid from Southern Exposure, P.O. Box S31, Durham, N.C. 27702 BARBARA WEFING (The reviewer ta a trailed nurle living with her family in Durham, N.C.) Hot Springs CD Meeting To Be On Oct. 15 The Town of Hot Springs will conduct ? general meeting for the public at the Community Center Oct. is at 7 p.m The purpose of the meeting la to dtac?a HUD for the Community Develop meat Grant Program ESS sent at the meetings answer questions. | All citizens of Hot Springs \] are encouraged and invited to attend the meeting