Serving— ' j at Black Mountain, NC 1 ★ Ridgecrest nirsday, July 20. 1978 Vol. 24. No. 39 ^n9HMpSr*WllliPi^pllJiyNlBfll . . .. . 15 cents per copy 7oll shows pro-drink 2-1 by Clint Williams A random telephone and reet survey of people who e within the Black Mountain y limits, and would be gible to vote in the Sep mber 12 mixed-beverage [erendum, revealed a [•prising trend in the at udes of potential voters, though the sample survey is not large enough to be nsidered conclusive, the most two-to-one margin voring mixed drinks may dicate a 180 degree swing in e political climate com ired to 1973. Slightly over W per cent of use questioned said that if e referendum were held day, they would vote in vor of allowing mixed drinks be served in restaurants ating more than 36 and cial establishments. •arly 40 per cent of those lestioned were opposed to mixed drinks and one per cent were undecided. Perhaps the most significant figure in the poll was that 64 per cent of those questioned did not vote in the 1973 state-wide referendum in which state-wide liquor-by the-drink was defeated by a two-to-one margin. Of the three restaurants in Black Mountain that could serve mixed beverages if the referendum passes on Sep tember 12, two of them will probably do so in the future. “As far as I know,’ ’ said Frank Gibbons, co-manager of the Red Rocker Inn, “we’d be for liquor by the drink. If we could obtain a license, we would.” Peter Kirk, manager of the Epicure, said that he “would love to have it,’’but the cost of hiring a trained bartender and setting up his restaurant to serve mixed beverages would delay his installing liquor by the drink if the referendum passes. The manager of the Coach House, M’ Della Knight, said she would have to wait before she would comment. Hunt due for 1-40 dedication Governor Jim Hunt took part in a ribbon-cutting ceremony signaling the for mal dedication of 1-40 from southeast of Swannanoa to US 70 east of Black Mountain on Wednesday. July 19. The Six rescued from apartment fire Hack Mountain firemen re called on to carry out a cue of six persons from the oke-filled upstairs apart nts at Monte Vista Apart nts early July IS morning, fire appfe-ewjr started by jaret dropped on a sofa in irtment 3, on the first floor, set the upstairs apart its to become filled with oke Firemen Jerry ins, Tim Rayburn, Pete Post and Steve King awakened sleeping tenents on the second floor and led them from the building shortly after arriving at 2:21 a.m. No in juries were reported. Two iflai responded, from fire and estimated at $1200 ccording to Chief siad that it was fortunate nobody was injured by smoke inhalation in the incident, and said that damage and danger could have been reduced if smoke detectors had been installed in Black Mountain firemen made one otter run last week. On July 10, two engines and 22 men responded to a fire in a dryer at Ridgecrest Boys Camp. Second well planned Black Mountain Town lanager Mack Kirkpatrick lid Tuesday that approval as been granted by the uncombe County Health Department for the town to drill a second well on town property behind Pizza Hut on US 70. Kirkpatrick said that a Stvann&noa Fire The Swannanoa Fire epartment made only one m last week. Two trucks and 14 men responded to a false alarm on • New Salem Road on July 17. second well is needed because the first one, recently drilled near the 17 green at Black Mountain Golf Course, produces only 25 gallons per minute. Drilling of wells to sup plement water supplied by the town'is reservoir was approved by the Black Mountain Town Board as a means of heading off a water shortage similar to the one suffered last summer. Kirkpatrick said that he is taking bids for drilling the second well. The first was drilled by Cauldwell Well Drilling. segment was opened to traffic on June 30 prior to the July 4 holiday traffic. The ceremony, scheduled for 1:30 a.m. was held 1 mile east of NC-9 and 1 % miles west of Ridgecrest. North Carolina Tran sportation Secretary Tom Bradshaw, who presided at the ceremony, said, “The early completion of this project reflects the Governor’s commitment to construct east-west corridors linking the mountains to the piedmont and the ports. We view this important link as a vital element in attracting ad ditional tourism and trade to the western part of the state. In addition,’ ’ Bradshaw con cluded, “we owe a special thanks to Asheville Paving Companyand A». Burton tad Company for their cooperation in moving ahead to get the job completed.' ’ The 4.2 mile segment of this project was constructed by Asheville Paving Company, and the 2.2 mile portion was contracted to A.B . Burton Company. Total construction cost of this project was $12.5 million. Storm clouds gather over the In-the-Oaks Golf Course. (Charlie Taylor) Blue Heaven draws hungry rock hounds by Clint Williams Millions and millions of years ago, the surrounding Blue Ridge Mountains towered higher than the present day Rorfces.' Wtod, water, glaciers, and time slowly broke the mountains down. Through the eons, pieces of the mountains migrated downward, traveling with immeasureable slowness and undeniable certainty. Many of those rolling stones stopped and gathered moss on a piece of property off of McCoy Cove Road known as “Blue Heaven’ y About three years ago, Charfotte LeVirie discovered that her property was listed as an area with concentrated deposits of kyanite and blue corundum in a geological survey published by the state of North Carolina in 1958. Until then, the only indication Mrs. LeVine had that her property contained mineral deposits was the midnight chipping of clandestine rock hounds. “People would come while we were away and chip away at the large stone the children used as a stepping stone to get on our horses,’ ’ said Mrs. LeVine. The stone she referred to is a miniature monilith that lies in her rock garden in her front yard. It is now about half it’s original size, according to Mrs. LeVine. Mrs. LeVine’s research into Two arrested after chase A high-speed automobile chase involving the Black Mountain Police Department ended in the arrest of two youths the evening of July 14. The chase ran along Flat Creek Road and Old Toll Road, with both cars traveling at 70 to 80 miles per hour, according to arresting Det. D. R. Ramsey. At one point in the chase, the two cars ran along side of each other, alternately forcing the other car onto the shoulder of the road. Walter F. Tipton, Jr., 16, was charged with reckless driving, failure to yield to a blue light and misdemeaner possession of marijuana. Riding in the car with Tipton was Jame Howard Stafford who was charged with misdemeaner possession of marijuana. On July 15, the Black Mountain Police Department served a warrant on Kenneth Allen Owenby for possession Bead craft journeys herefrom 5000BC Egypt by Dan Ward Image — An Egyptian ar tlsan. his skin bronze and glistening in the sun, squats over a flat stone rolling a faintly striped clay worm, cutting it afterwards into beds, which he strings for baking in a primitive kiln. The year, 5000 B.C. Another image — Black Mountain native Kay Cole, rolling the same dull clay on a wooden table at the Qierry Street Framery. The minerals are the same, the technique is the same, but Kay makes use of a modem electric kiln. “There is something about beads that appeals to everyone. One time, a man in his 70’s bought a string, took off his tie, and put them around his neck,'’she said. The uniqueness of the Egyptian beads, Kay said, is the fact that no paints or glazes are used to give them their shiny, bright colors. Different minerals mixed in the clay turn color and salts in the mixture melt to form a natural glaze in the firing process. "To get different blues, I add different amounts of cobalt carbon, for purples, I add manganese dioxide,’' she gave as examples. After she rolls the beads from pre-mixed batches of clay in labeled containers, she strings them on wire to dry. The salts that form the glazing rise to the surface and give the beads and pendants she makes a powdered ap pearance. At that stage, there is no way of telling which will be a red bead, or a striped bead, or a yellow bead, or whatever. The brilliant products that emerge from the kiln defy their drab origins. Kay has been making the beads for over two years, and now travels regularly to craft shows throughout Western North Carolina selling them. She didn't have to go to an Egyptian to learn the art. “I was staying on the Outer Banks, and I became friends there with a girl who made the beads. She showed me how to make them. “She came to the mountains during the summer for a visit. She told me then she wanted to sell the kiln and supplies — she was going to graduate school. “I bought them, not knowing if I’d make 10 beads or 10,000,” she said. Tens of thousands of beads later, Kay is glad she left alcoholic counseling to become a full-time bead maker. “This part is tedious, mixing the ingredients. Producing beads gets to be old. The fun part is putting them in jewelry — trying to come up with something different. “I put them in earrings, necklaces, wall hangings, mobiles... I want to start putting them in silver, but that' s an expense I'm not ready for,’ 'she said. A member of the High Country Crafters and the Toe River Crafts group, Kay finds herself meeting with, and being inspired by, crafters and craft fans throughout the area. “I think the thing I like most about working with beads is meeting people at shrws. Not knowing who I will meet has been exciting. People have been really nice,''she said. of Phentermine. In the course of serving the warrant, police searched the vehicle of Owenby and found a misdemeaner quanity of marijuana. Black Mountain Police investigated three accidents, issued seven citations, and made two arrests for DUI last week. The department received 282 calls. the mineral deposits on her property, after die found out that they were there, revealed that more than a doeen dif ferent minerals could be found on her property. Among the minerals found on the grounds of "Blue Heaven,’ ’ Mrs. LeVine’s nickname for her mountain retreat, are the precious minerals kyanite, garnet and blue corundum — better known as sapphire. Mrs. LeVine’s neice, Judy Leffe, shared her interest in the new discovery and went into searching and resear ching full force. “You get the fever,’ ’ Judy explained,"and it’s all over. I had the fever when I first came here and it’s wild. But it gets tiring.” At the peak of their ex citement over the possibility of finding sapphires, Mrs. LeVine and Judy “covered almost every inch’ ’ of the 50 plus acres of the property. There was even the possibility of opening up a commercial mining operation, a place where tourists could come and pay by the bucket for the chance of finding a star sapphire. But the enthusiasm soon left the dreamy discussions. “The insurance man really didn’t give her (Mrs. LeVine) a good feeling about having peopSf hvre.'said Ms. The legal and financial liabilities of a commercial operation made the project impractical for the residents of “Blue Heaven’! And there were a aesthetic con siderations. “I wasn’t sure if I wanted to open a mine and com mercialize this area with all the tourists. It’s such a lovely, lovely area.”Mrs. LeVine said. There was still another reason the mining project wasn’t persued. “We don’t want to go out there and dig ditches and holes trying to find a rock. It’s hard work! Who wants to do it?”Judy Leffe exclaimed. Hard work, liability, and more importantly, the desire to preserve something more precious than any mineral — privacy and natural beauty — has kept Mrs. LeVine from exploiting the mineral deposits found on her property. The rock-hounds may grieve, but for Mrs. LeVine, the riches of “Blue Heaven” are not found in the dirt. Valley phone book set Officials from Southern Ben unveiled plans to publish a Valley-oriented telephone directory to community representatives at a dinner meeting held July 13 at the Red Rocker Inn. The new directory would place listings for Black Mountain, Montreat, Swan nanoa and Ridgecrest at the front of the book and include Yellow Page listings of Swannanoa Valley businesses seperate from those of the metropolitan Asheville area. Street dance set for Saturday A street dance sponsored Dy the Town of Black Mountain, has been planned for Saturday evening, July 22, according to Black Mountain Kecreator Keith Osteen. The dance, to begin at 7 30 p in., will be held on Richardson Boulevard bet ween State and Sutton Streets The Stoney Creek Boys will play Bluegrass square dan cing music. An exhibition will be given by the Pisgah View Ranch Dancers. Wolford Johnson will call. There is no admission charge. Another dance has been scheduled for August 19, Osteen said. Local merchants would also be included in the Yellow Pages of the Asheville directory. The books distributed throughout the Valley would have two white page sections and two Yellow Page sections. The first of each of these sections would be devoted exclusively to the residences and businesses of the Valley. The cover of the new phone book would depict a scene that pertains specifically to the area served by the directory. Because of the restricted circulation of the new book, advertising rates for area merchants in the first section of Yellow Pages would be approximately ore-third the rate currently barged, ac cording to Bell fficials. The represenlatives present seemed very receptive to the proposal and Montreat Aid. Andy Andrews and Black Mountain Aid. Michael Begley pointed out that the new uirectory could be the “vehicle to pull the Valley's communities together ”