Serving i*r Black Mountain ^ Swannanoa * Montreat ^ Ridgecrest Second ctass postage paid at Btack Mountain. NC 28711 Even in biach and white, the change o/ tea/ coior can be seen a/ter iast weeh's/rost. (^Dan Ward^ Hospital care to change by Dan Ward Employees of WNC Hospital in Black Mountain were ad vised last week to begin training for a transition at the hospital from care of respiratory diseases to care of the mentally retarded by Dr. Sarah Morrow, secretary of the Department of Human Resources. Morrow told directors of the state' s specialty hospitals October 6 that WNC Hospital will be phased down to a 50 bed unit for tuberculosis (TB) in-patients, while the satellite unit of the Western Carolina Center, now occupying 40 beds, will be expanded con siderably. According to Jack Ellison, administrative director of the hospital, reaction among the 274 employees was mixed. "The immediate reaction was relief that the hospital would remain open. There is some 1 own re-applies for grant by Dan Ward The B)ack Mountain Town tard voted to take another ot at a Community :vetopment Grant to instal) w water tines in Cragmont d upped its settlement offer a family whose hoitse was stroyed by a fire truck at its iuiar meeting October 9. May - ,:Tmn iiob-jl . that : tcwn will have another portunity to apply for partment of Housing and ban Development (HUD) immunity Development nding with a second round fundtng in November and :cember. He said adapting an eariier [plication that was rejected 11 simply be a matter of tanging dates. In addition, le town will be required to )ld two more pubiic hearings before it can re-appty. Soboi said that, in view of pressure put on HUD when only 4 per cent of grant funds in North Carolina went to the western half of the state, Black Mountain and other western municipalities may have a better chance of obtng awarded grants. If the t-y?nt to install new water linos and fire hydfants is approved, the town would stand a better chance of receiving other grant money, including funds for a new storage reservoir through the Appalachian Regional Commission. The board also met in closed session with the son and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J.E. McMahan, whose house was destroyed when it was hit by a Black Mountain Fire truck August 1. In that session, the board agreed 4 to I on a new set tlement offer to the Mc Mahans that Sobol called substantially increased" over a previous offer of ap proximately (17,000. Aid. Ruth Brandon opposed the figure, saying she thought 'he couple shou'f* receive more compensation. A written copy of the offer will be drawn up and sent to the couple this week. The board also voted to ask for new bids for a new police car. Police Chief Crait Slagle suggested that the town try to get a car added to an order made by the Asheville Police from Apple Tree Chevrolet, at (6073 per car, as opposed to low bids from Black Mountain dealers of (6570 and (6695. On recommendation of Aid. Jim Norton and AM. John Kluttz that the town buy from a focal dealer, and a suggestion from Aid. A. F. Tyson that a better price may be negotiated locally, the board voted to advertise for new bids. The board also gave Town Manager Mack Kirkpatrick permission to buy a back-hoe attacnment for the water department at a cost of (3049. Most of the meeting con sisted of an appeal from Jeanette Clevenger for some town funding for the Meals-on Wheels Program in view of a cut in Community Develop ment funding for that program. The Meals-on-Wheels program is sponsored by ABCCM, and delivers hot lunches to 17 to 25 shut-ins in the Black Mountain area at a cost of $1.65 per meal. On Sobol's recommendation, the board agreed to make a decision on funding the program at the regular November meeting. Kirkpatrick told the board that, contrary to reports by Asheviiie media, Black Mountain is not buying Asheviiie watM He said the water leva! in the feservoir 4a down sis feet, and water is still being pumped from the lower collection pond. He said Black Mountain did buy water from Asheville for three days in June while a pump was repaired. The board also told Kirk patrick to have Carolina Power and Light install three sodium vapor lights near the NC 9 exit off of 1-40. The lights will cost (316.80 per year to operate. iVetc test causes concern /or some by Dan Ward When it was announced that luncombe County Schools anked above the state n erage on a that high schoo) competency test iast year, )wen Principal Charles Lytie *as hardly gleeful with the cesuits. If a new state law requiring 1th grade students to pass the ompetency test to receive a iiploma had gone into effect ast year, as many as 82 Owen entors would graduate this ear wtth only a certificate of ittendance to show for 12 ears of schooling. Buncombe County juniors cored approximately 10 percent higher than the state average on the triai com petency test, now required for graduation In Buncombe County, 32 out of iOO students failed the math segment of the test and 9 out of 100 failed the reading segment. "We were just about where Buncombe County was, "Lytle said "But the bung people forget in iooking at statistics is that sooner or later it boils down to individual people, not statistics, "he said. Lytle said that out of senior classes of about 200, all but 6 to 10 out of each class have received diplomas in past years. Many times that number will be ieft behind if the triai test last year is any indication. Owen juniors will have their first of three chances to pass the test November 1 and 2. Even when they pass the test, the students will have to fulfill the school requirements of 18 hours credit and passing grades on required courses. The fact that almost a third of Buncombe students failed the math segment of the test has a number of educators trying to compute what went wrong, and Lytle is no ex ception. "1 think a lot of it is a result is one o/ tbe best t/Mn#s to ever happen ' — Lyt/e of the new math we went through — I think that was one of the primary causes. "Surprisingly enough, iower grade children now are doing well on math," he said. The competancy tests deal only with the most basic math and reading in day-to-day situations — reflecting what Lytle and other educators regard as "survival skills" in American society. The fact that many students have not mastered the most basic skills suggests they may not have been tested enough on the basics before moving on to other work, Lytle said. He said that classes in remedial reading and math are now taught after normal schooi hours four days each week at Owen. Teachers are also stressing basics needed to pass the competency test in regular math and English classes now, he said. "My personal opinion is that this is one of the best things to ever happen. 1 think it is going to make teachers, principals, superintendents, boards of education more aware of their responsibilities to students and parents. By the same token, 1 think it's going to make parents more aware that they have some responsibility to their children' s education, too,"he said. "!' m afraid our whole society, particularly mothers and fathers, need to get more involved in the educational process. You can't wait until the child is 16 years old and do something about it. "This doesn't start in high school, it starts down in the primary grades,'' he said. Recognizing this, state law also requires that stan dardized tests oe given to first, third, sixth and ninth grade students. "Those tests wili do as much good as the competency tests, because now welt know ail aiong how weil they are doing, i think weli see an end to sociai promotion," ' Lytie said. One of the greatest ad vantages of the testing wili be that parents who had formerly thought they had no part in their children's education will now have to take a more ac tive roie in seeing that school work gets done if the children are to graduate, Lytle said.. "1 think more parents are concerned now, but how they are getting involved I" m not sure," he said He said one place that parental help is needed is in discouraging absenteeism "! think one of the dangers of testing is that everybody will tend to make everyone else a scapegoat,' ' Lytle predicted. "I don't think that should be a basic concern ! think we should all just work together to make it work." wondering of where I wiii fit in', though."Eilison said he was mainly happy that Morrow chose to utilize the facilities for state health care and that she placed first priority on placing present hospital personnel in new positions that will open at the satellite unit. Morrow, in a memo to employees, said that training for the new position will be given to any employees who desire it, and that they will be given first consideration for the new jobs. Ellison said he did not know how many employees would be kept on for the reduced respiratory facility. The hospital contains 215 beds. 40 of which are now used by the satellite unit and 90 by the respiratory unit. With reduction of the respiratory unit, a total of 165 beds could be utilized for care of mentally retarded. Western Carolina Center, located in Morgan ton, is now filled to capacity and received an average of 20 requests per month for beds for Ms retarded. Last year, only 10 vacancies occurred there, leaving an enormous waiting list. "I'm just happy this facility will be serving a real need,'' Ellison said of the transition, due to take several months. Ellison said that of the 50 patients the hospital will continue to serve, 32 will be for TB and the others will be exceptional cases involving serious respiratory diseases that cannot be handled by iocai clinics. ENC Hospital, in Wilson, will continue to serve respiratory disease patients on an out-patient basis only, and will be used primarily to care for geria ric patients from the state' s mental hospitals. The specialty hospital in McCain will con tinue to serve TB patients, including in-patients now cared for at ENC Hoeptal. Towns got street repair c/tec^s State Transportation Secretary Tom Bradshaw has announced that checks totaiing more than (33.5 million have been mailed to 452 municipalities in North Carolina for local street construction and main tenance. The monies make up the 1978 allocation of state street aid (Powell Bill) funds. Black Mountain, with 27.02 of eligible miles of streets, received a check for $59,557.09 for street repairs. Montreat, with 11.75 miles of eligible street miles, received (15,473.02. Each year the Powell Bill returns to qualified municipalities one cent of North CMfiiy's ^ "e% ^tate Atoty fuel tax and requires dsa: u'lese funds be disbursed by no later than October l. "The checks were prepared,' explained Secretary Brad shaw, "on the basis of the allocation formula prescribed by the "street aid legislation.' The formula reflects the population of the community and its local street mileage. "This year' s sum of $33,502,112.52 is the largest amount ever returned to North Carolina communities under the Powell Bill provisions. In fact, it is nearly $1.5 million more than last year's record disbursement," Bradshaw added. "Sharing these resources is another example of our partnership with the com munities we serve In our joint effort to meet tranvwstiaa needs tidily as wed as statewide, the transportation secretary said. From this year's Powell Bill Montreat water meeting set by John Abe me thy When the Montreat Board of Commissioners meet Monday afternoon for the regular October session, they will hear an interim report from the Water and Sewer Negotiating Commission The town council will be advised that the Montreat Management Council will delay farther discussions until after the N.C. Attorney General has made a ruling on the appeal now in his hands. That decision could seriously affect the process of negotiations regarding the transfer of the Water and Sewer system from the Mountain Retreat Association to the Town of Montreat. The board also wiU hear a report regarding the com pletion of the Texas Road Extension bridge, which already is being used by residents who live in the area There will be discussion about road repair scheduled before the onset of winter weather. The Board of Com missioners usually meets the second Thursday each month, but the meeting was rescheduled when it was found that a quorum could not be present. The meeting will begin at 4 p.m. Monday in the Board's usual meeting place in Gaither Hall. Visitors are welcome. Funds, the largest singie check went to the City of Charlotte. Charlotte' s allocation of (3,813,424.29 was based on a population figure of 306,230 and a local street mileage figure of 1,117.76 Of the total amount allocated as part of the Powell Bill Funds, 75 percent is proportioned among the municipalities on the basis of population and 25 percent on the basis of non-state system local street mileage. Each municipality furnishes its own certified lo&d street mileage and the population figures are the r t recent annua) estimates of population as certified by the North Caroiir. Department of Administration. Th< smaltest check d'sbtr under the act went t; t)A cipaiity of Caswell Beach Brunswick County, xf "t i'i receive a check for < 2 Casweil Beach wili reec've share of the Powell Bill unds based on a popji tion figure of 70 and ioca! street mileage of O il miles. 7? ] vtctor Haii, pastor o/ the Bibie Presbyterian Church in Chariotte, and Me! Perry, pastor o/ the Grace Bibie Presbyterian Church in NashviHe, Tenn., pichet the Montreat gate in protest o/ Biiiy Graham's trip to Communist Poiand iast weeh. The two said Graham is piaying to propagandists who use his visits as an exampie o//reedom o/ reiigion behind the Iron Curtain. fDan Ward) Fire drills heid The Black Mountain Fire Department made four runs last week. No damage resulted from a chimney fire at the Phelps residence on Montreat Road October 4. Two engines and 25 men responded Also that day, one engine and four men were called to wash down after an accident on Montreat Road. One engine and 16 men were called to put out a fire on a light pole on West State Street October 6. The Mountain Search and Rescue Team responded to a call October 7 to assist the Broad River Fire Department in a search and rescue mission, only to find that the missing woman had been found. One truck and 11 men responded The Buncombe County Ambulance Service made !0 routine, two emergency and one unneeded run last week A series of fire driiis were scheduled to be held in con junction with fire Prevention Week this week. The fire department was schcdtittd t< participate in driiis at the Grammar School, Carver School, the Prima y School and at Drexel Plant Id. Biach Mountain Gramma- ** * n Biach Mountain Fire Depart ment, hoidea/iredri!? .' ; c Prevention Weeit. CDcn Ward)