We A Uterrtf OUiriattnaa I )ecembei . ! ( i os* Patriots Win Five Straight ? Story On Page 5 The NCWS RECORD SERVING THE PEOPLE t -'^^TpuNTY SINCE 7901 Community Calendar MAO I SON COUNT Y L 1 B KA H Y fcjfcNbRAL OtLIVtRY MARSHALL Vol. 84 No. 51 Vt*~. NC 2UYSJ ? 25c Laurel VFD Turkey Shoot The Laurel Volunteer Fire Dept. will hold a Christmas Day turkey shoot from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the fire station field. Optimists Seek Donations The Madison County Optimist Club is now receiving dona tions and selling pecans for their Optimist Christmas Cheer Fund to benefit needy Madison County children. Donations can be made at First Union Bank to Bryce Hall, secretary treasurer. Pecans are available at First Union, Mary's Restaurant and The News Record Office. Kingston R.R. On Display ^ The Marshall Public Library currently has a display featur ing electric trains owned by Richard Kingston of Marshall. Kingston will operate the trains from 3 until 4 p.m. daily, Mon day through Friday and again from 6 until 7 p.m. News Record Closed On Christmas The News Record office will be closed on Christmas Day, Dec. 25. We will reopen at 8:30 a.m. on Dec. 26 Scene from Marshall Christmas pageant. Hundreds flocked to Marshall to witness the revival Of Marshall Christmas tradi tion. District Court Hears 0^1 Cases .tMmM Judge Philip Ginn presided over two sessions of District Court last week in Marshall. Judge Ginn dispos ed of a number o t cases during the Dee. 12 session of the court. Charges of trespassing and larceny against both Dale Phillips and Clarence Phillips were dismissed, as were charges of larceny against Bruce Massey, Jr. and assault charges against Clarence Massey. At the request of the prosecution, the court also accepted voluntary dismissal of charges of com municating threats against Diliard Shetton. assault charges against Daniel V, Rusher, Robert Jarvis and John DeWeese. The court also ac cepted a voluntary dismissal of chiu*ges of assault with a deadly weapon against Harry Arnold Can trtU. In the case of assault charges against Jarvis, Judge Ginn issued a court outer for the complainant, Billy Ridenour Ridenour is to appear in court on Jan. 23 to ffcce contempt of court charges / The court also found probable to serve ten days in jail for the of fenses. John R. Ray, Jr. pleaded guilty to charges of impaired driving and possession of a controlled substance and was fined $150. Ray was also ordered to perform 48 hours of com munity service and received a four month prison sentence, s us pew for two years. He was also ordered to surrender his operator's license. Terry Lee Roberts entered a guilty plea to a charge of impaired driving and was fined $100 and ordered to serve >4 hours of community service. Timothy Lealian English entered guilty ideas to charges of littering and possession of a malt beverage by a minor and was fined 165 plus court coats. John Scott Landon pleaded guilty to charges of driving while impaired and speeding. Landon was fined $150 and was ordered to attend ADETS and serve 4$ hours of community ser vice. He also received a 130-day Jail sentence which the court suspended Mars Hill Police Scuffle Patrolman Suspended, I Charges Police Chief A Thursday night dispute between two Mars Hill police of ficers has resulted in the suspension of a patrolman and charges of assault against the town's police chief. Patrolman William Lisenbee and his chief, R.J. Cutshall ap parently engaged in a scuffle sometime aroung midnight Thursday. On Friday, Cutshall suspended Lisenbee from the , town police force without pay. lisenbee charged Cutshall with assault inflicting serious injury following the dispute. Lisenbee is a former Marshall policeman and ran unsuc cessfully against Madison County Sheriff E.Y. Ponder in 1982. Mars Hill Mayor Bill Powell announced that he would ap point a panel to investigate the incident. RJ. CUT8HALL Students Escape Injury Thirteen~Buncombe County students, most from North Buncombe H.S., escaped serious injury Thurs r JJ-., r? ft ^ ^ _ ? n-L.t-, tU 1 f-i iL rt j . uHj Biwuioon wntjft trie uu3 uicywiw ' riding slipped off Mundy Cove Rd. in WeavervUle. On* student passenger, Michael Cabe, suffered a broken finger as a result of the 4 p.m. mishap. According to Highway Patrol Trooper M.T. Murphy, the bus, driven by Brian Scott Dodd of Weaverville, slipped off the side of the road in a sharp curve when it en countered freshly spread gravel. The bus waa going about 10 m.h.p. at the time of the accident. Dodd, 16, was not charged in connection with the ac cident. Three Buncombe County Emergen cy Medical Service ambulances transported the 13 injured students to Memorial Mission Hospital where they were treated and released. Among the students riding the bus at the time of the wreck were Shawn Bowden, Becky Rice, Becky Grooms, Missey Bradley, Beth Zita, Mollie Easter, Russell Bradley, Roger Rid dle, Robin Medford, Jeanny Ballard, Rachel Edmondstoo and Donald Can trell. Ponder Outlines County Road Projects Plans Zeno Ponder, Madison County's representative on the N.C. Dept. of Transportation board is expected to be replaced in January when Gov. -elect Jim Martin takes office. Ponder was appointed to the board by Gov. James B. Hunt, Jr. in 1900. His four-year term on the board is scheduled to expire on Jan. 15. Ponder told The News Record Mon day that he is looking forward to the end ?f his term and planning to 8e$dte more time to 'TWWt^ tttfvell ing and tending the farm." The coun ty Democratic party chairman has no intention of retiring from politics, however. "I'll be involved in politics until I die," he said. Ponder released a list of Madison County road projects which have received approval and are continu ing. The list was compiled by DOT district engineer Earl McEntire. Ponder said there are currently nine county projects approved in which federal highway funds will be used. Of these, only one, the resurfac ing of U.S. 25-70 from Marshall to Walnut, is cuurently under coins trac tion. Ponder said that the DOT board has also approved letting bids for a $400,000 project to add a third lane to U.S. 19 East from Upper California Creek to the Yancey County line. Other major projects which have received approval include: Improvements to U.S. 25-70 from Walnut to Hot Springs and construc tion of a Walnut Bypass. The Walnut to-Hot Springs projects are broken in to three segments. Rights-of-way are currently being purchased and con struction is scheduled for next spr ings. Right of way for the section from N.C. 208 to Hot Springs will be purchased next fall, with construc tion planned for the fall of 1988. The final step in upgrading U.S. 25-70 from Hot Springs to the Ten nessee state line is scheduled to begin in 1888, with right of way being pur chased in Jan., 1988 and construction contracts to be let in Nov.,- 1988. shall and the Spring Creek section is scheduled to begin next year . Right of way for the road from Little Pine to N.C. 63 is planned for April, 1985, with construction contracts to be awarded in June. Replacement of the Redmon Bridge over the French Broad River, a portion of the Marshall-Spring Creek link, is also scheduled to begin in May of next year. A final major project, to make U.S. 23 a four-lane highway from Mars Hill to the Tennessee state line , has also been approved by the present DOT board, Ponder said. The U.S. 23 North project is scheduled to begin .right of way acquisition in June, 1987, with construction planned for July, 1988. A number of county road construc tion projects have also received ap proval. Those included in current {dans include: Relocation of Sweetwater Rd. from U.S. 25-70 to Sweetwater Gap. Grading, draining and paving of Bend of Ivy Rd. (State Road 1578). Grading, draining and paving of / Ramsey Creek Rd. (SR 1115). / Grading, draining and paving Grandview Rd. (SR 1568) from coun ty line to Riverview Dr. Grading, draining and paving of Piney Grove Baptist Cburch Rd. (SR 1111). Work on the above six projects is k nearing completion. Other county > road projects and their currant status an as follows: j . O ? , A f MM II ? m ??? r - * A- n a M ,1,, SI ? A 9pOt linprOVctiiClllS it) ctflTiOy Out* torn Rd. (SR 1150) will require fun ding Lp the 1985-86 fiscal year. I. Grading, draining and paving a I .1-mile section of Laurel Branch Rd. \ (SR 1US) is scheduled for paving \ next summer. " V Surveys and right of way for a \ 1.5-mile section of Holland Creek (SR 1509) have been approved. Funding for construction on the project has not yet bean approved. Grading, draining and paving a section of Walker Branch Rd. has been approved and is scheduled to begin in July of next year. The DOT has also given approval to funds to make surveys and right of way acquisitions for portions of Long Branch Rd. (SR 1580), Tillery Branch (SR 1564) and Laurel Branch Rd. (SR 1118) Construction funding for these improvement projects will have to be made in the 1(85-66 budget Ponder also said that 616,060 has been approved to study a possible road linking Revere and Walnut When completed. Ponder said, the > Continued on Page 5 Max Patch Volunteers Celebrate , ? *