\u Bpr \ \ A ■/ . nP(\i /r a ' >■[l vj JF^W^§sjy/ » .'. 1 C ■AI -1 j H / m J9H|ot| Bl I Yuletide Spirit The Christmas spirit is running high, despite rainy weather, icey roads, and worry over postal deadlines. With only 14 shopping days left until ol’ Saint Nick arrives, the town has added to the season’s cheer by putting up their annual decorations on the town square. Marshall’s Annual Christmas Pageant BY JIM STORY < On Friday and Saturday 1 nights, December 10 and 11, 1 at 7:30 o’clock, the courthouse 1 lawn in Marshall will revert almost 2000 years in time to resemble the famous streets and manger scene of Bethle hem. The annual Christmas Pageant will be presented for the 13th time. As in the past, live animals will be used in addition to a selected choir, and a cast composed of persons from Marshall, Mars Hill, and other areas. There is no admission charged and everyone is invited to share in and enjoy Art Council Film Set The Toe River Arts Coun cil will sponsor a film at the Yancey County Public Library on Monday, December 13, at 7:00 p.m. The film is “The Magnificent Ambersons,” from the novel by Booth Parkington. Admission is free. 100-Voice Choir Here The Mars Hill College 100- voice choir will present a program on Saturday, De cember 11, at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium at Mountain Heri tage High School. Admission will be $1.50. The program is sponsored by the East Yancey PTA. Proceeds will go to wards the purchase of school dictionaries and equipment. Fire Calls November 30, Tuesday, at 9:00 a.m. the Avery Higgins Residence on Hardscrabble Road caught fire; 1 truck and 10 firemen responded. The house was completely de stroyed, with all contents, when the blaze was dis covered. Novembei 4, Saturday, iMichael Bryant's house at Horseshoe Highlands near Clearmont School. The house was completely destroyed. 12 persons answered the call.. tfijft omtgmade ecuuf the nativity drama. Refres ments will be served in the courthouse lobby following the pageant on both nights. A beam of light from the mountain overlooking the manger scene will spotlight Joseph's and Mary’s search for overnight lodging and their finding the stable. As the reenactment of the mira culous Bible story proceeds, the beam progressively spots the visit of the shepherds and the arrival of the Wisemen from the East. The inception of this annual community-sponsored drama began as a vision of Don Luckadoo, who noticed the similarity between the mountains around Marshall and the hills of Bethlehem. The pageant has been presented yearly since 1963 except for cancellation in 1973 due to the energy shortage. v fT * JB* "fb *•' •4* -i,” *» *. v i. ■■■ W* * , Students Make Courthouse Sien The Vocational Education [Shop] class at Mountain Heritage High School has been busy so far this school year making signs for the grounds and buildings of their school, including an Impressive entrance sign just off Highway 19E. The sign voted “most likely to be seen by everyone,” however, THE YANCEY JOURNAL VOL. 4, NO. 49 One Man Killed In Collision A two-car collision at 5:55 p.m. last Monday, December 6, took the life of 23-year-old William Jerry Wilson of Burnsville, husband of Kathy Hughes Wilson and father of Jeremiah Wilsop. He was pronounced dead on arrival at Yancey Hospital. Wilson was a passenger in a 1965 Pontiac driven by 18-year-old Randall Dale Hon eycutt of the Windy Gap Section of Yancey County. Other passengers in the car were Melvin Fox, 17, and Jerry Fox, 15, of Micaville. The '65 Pontiac was traveling East on Highway 19E at Riverside and was passing a vehicle at an apparently high rate of speed. When he pulled back into the correct lane after passing the vehicle he struck a 1970 Ford driven by 22-year-old James Victor Gardner of Burnsville. Gardner was attempting to make a left hand turn off 19E into a private drive. A passenger in the 1970 Ford, Michael Higgins of the Coxes Creek section of Yan cey County was taken to Yancey Hospital and then to Memorial Mission Hospital in Asheville. All others involved in the accident were treated at Yancey Hospital and then released. Troopers B.R. Owens and A.T. Morrison investigated the accident. Charges were made on Randall Bill Honey cutt: Driving without an operator’s license. Driving under the Influence, and Causing death by vehicle. Notice By North Carolina Law all County Ad-Valcrem Taxes for 1976 which a'e not paid before January 1.1977 will be subject to a 2% interest charge as of January 1, 1977, with an additional interest charge of V* of one per cent for February 1977 and each month thereafter until paid. w~\ f ” '' n Iw H / *• » ? jui %L fit Hr BHPfc 4 'Un ■ m SB "■?' ' S-/ «•* y JL IgjjHOT mBMj .A^BPg ? • Z |g I I i* i i .-jM? i 1 j 188 BBHBMFBnBnBBf \W rv * BBBPB Newly elected officers and board members for Yancey County were sworn in last Monday morning in the Yancey County Courthouse, with Superior Court Judge Ronald Howell officiating. Elected to office on November 2, these people have all assumed their official duties as of Monday. Pictured left to right: Edward Yuziuk, Soil and Water Conservation Supervisor; Garrett Nationwide Brake Check Has Begun: Cause Os Brake Failure Found BY CAROLYN YUZIUK Four weeks after the school bus accident in Yancey County which involved 26 school children, school auth orities all over the country are taking a closer look at the school bus maintenance re quirements in their own school system. What sparked off this nationwide school bus maintenance reform was the conclusion reached by state transportation authorities re garding the accident here, caused by brake failure on a 13-year-old school bus. Unknown and unseen by bus mechanics in their normal is this new one they have Just created for the Yancey County Courthouse. Pictured are the students who made the sign; Jack' Buckner, on the extreme right, who Is head of the Vocational Education Department at Mountain Heritage; and Mike Orr, third from right, who teaches the class. BURNSVILLE, N.C. 28714 Yancey Officials Sworn In At Courthouse course of inspection, a portion of the hydraulic brake line in the 1963 Yancey school bus was found to be rusted and corroded, perhaps by the salt which the highway depart ment uses to de-ice the roads, and the line had developed pin-point holes. The brake fluid, always under pressure, apparently forced a larger , hole in this weakened portion of the brake line on the morning of the accident and the brake fluid, spewing out under pressure, caused an immediate loss of braking action. “This type of accident Give A Gift Subscription To THE YANCEY JOURNAL (Fill Out Coupon Page 6) Anglin, Board of Education Member; Tommy Robinson, Board of Education Member; Kenneth Hunter, Board of Education Member; Grace Ayers, Register of Deeds; Superior Court Judge Ronald Howell; Carl Carter, Chairman County Commissioners; Alton Robinson, County Commissioner; and Clay Miller, County Commissioner. could not have happened with school buses built after 1967,” said School Bus Maintenance Supervisor Jim Simmons, who has held that position in Yancey County for four years. "Before 1968," he said, “buses had a single braking system. Buses built since 1968 have a dual braking system so that even if a brake line erodes through as was the case here, the bus will still have some braking action.” 50 school buses are authorized to the Yancey County School System. The County must initially buy the necessary number of school buses, but the state will then replace old buses with new ones on a regular schedule. At present, school authorities report that replacement is on an 11-12 year basis; that is, buses of 1964, 1965 vintage are being replaced in 1976. Yancey County received two new buses last week to replace two of the 1965 buses.. With this current replacement we are now using 41 buses built in 1968 or later (with the dual braking system), and 9 buses of 1963-66 vintage. The reason we are still using the earlier models when the state is already up to the 1965 replacement level is that the County, which bought one bus in 1974, must buy three more to complete our authorized 50-bus fleet, but until these are purchased, the school system must bring earlier models out of ‘ ‘retirement’ ’ to be used in their regular bus schedule. / It must be noted, however, • that any bus up to 1968 could have had the same brake failure which caused the accident in Yancey County. In fact, the North Carolina Department of Public Instruc tion issued an order, since the accident here, to have the brake lines of all school buses in the state inspected and the inspection is turning up the THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1976 same rust and corrosion condition in these lines which are up under the bus and difficult to reach for inspec tion. This has caused other states to enforce the same order and has uncovered more brake-line deterioration all across the country. > Simmons states thaCian cey County school bus me chanics are inspecting the brake lines on all older school buses on a daily basis and have replaced a lot of lines. Buses having a dual braking system have also been in spected and are being check ed on a less frequent, but regular basis. “We are doing everything in our power to make our school buses safe and keep them that way,” stated Simmons. “But I’ll admit I will be very glad when all our buses are 1968 or later models, which won’t be for a couple of years yet.” “I do want to say though,” he continued, “that our student bus drivers are excellent school bus drivers and very responsible indivi- Winter Warning! BY HOPE BAILEY The North Carolina Society for the Prevention of Cruehy to Animals [NCSPCA] has issued s winter warning to animal owners who break s state law when they leave animals outdoors In sub-beezhig weather without adequate shelter. Edith G. Raber, president of NCSPCA, warns that warrants will be served on those who fall to provide adequate shelter for their animals. The law applies to owners of all animals, Including farm animals. Anyone who is aware of animal owners in Yancey County who are breaking this law should send complete Information to NCSPCA, P.O. Box 8432, Asheville, N.C. 28804; or call 253-8862. A movement Is underway to organize a Yancey County chapter of the NCSPCA. Ail who are interested in helping to organize a local chapter are asked to mall a postcard with name, address, and phone number to P.O. Box 545, Burnsville, North Carolina. A spokesman for the local group stated that the main purpose of the organization is not the punishment of man, but rather the education of our people to be kind and merciful In their treatment of ail animals. duals.” Simmons went on to say that in the accident we just had, the student driver did just the right thing-possi bly preventing a worse accident. And it wasn’t only a matter of “keeping cool” .which has been mentioned, " but also of using the information learned in school bus safety classes which the bus drivers attend frequently, and in which they learn what to do in emergency situations. “I preach safety constant ly in these sessions,” says Simmons, “anjJ the kids recognize the responsibility of driving a school bus. Al though adults have usually been driving for a longer period of time, I am sure most of them haven’t had the opportunity to attend the kind of special classes these kids do that deal exclusively with safe school bus driving practices.” It is impossible to be too careful about the safety of school children. One member of the Yancey County School Board has already spoken to a [Cont’d on page 2]