8LRCK . f I I -?? I II a.H 1 f -4-.. if I i rjMu i . I tai!4- it T-"f'i f V z mmm f t 1 lmm;KM$ S .: - f a,,,, i,r:.M v lT""""' hst I nm ' "wife v I - If f -Jrg I ; - I : i I , .?-''''i'i''i'i".' -w L v '"! I I j v fcgrr si ft 7 I f f 1 " I PI M- A f ' ; 1, -r '. .A .--' V' " I 'I ,;f vffsS' -i th i; 1.1 I : J f OR PEOPLE 'WD j. h vi poir LIKE ) I N0ISE ; I TT" j .ilfilHIi ill If j f There was something for everyone at the Southern Highland Craft Guild Fair last weekend. risG08 Inc. Brisco, Inc. of Swannanoa will be featured on the radio program PROFILE over Station WWNC in Asheville, Sunday, October 19, at 6:15 p.m. Mr. Edward Nix, president of Brisco, Inc., will be interviewed by Fred Brown, WWNC staff an nouncer, on the 15-minute program. Following the broadcast, Biisco, Inc. will receive a Profile Award from WWNC and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, sponsor of the program, for its outstanding contribution to the industrial growth and development of North featured on Carolina. The citation will be signed by Thomas A. Rose, president of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, and by Wilson Wearn, president of Multimedia Broadcasting Incorporated. Lectures at V V C PoUtics, poetry and energy All lectures begin at 7 : 30 in will be the issues at large as Bannerman Lecture Hall. Warren Wilson College The public is invited. Ad begins the week of October 26 mission is free, with three lectures. broadcast The purpose of these broadcasts is to assist in the campaign to attract new industry to North Carollina and to develop greater public appreciation of business and industry already located in the State. r oaf to conduct worhsho Louise Gluck, recently invited to read her poetry at the White House, will con duct a poetry workshop on Thursday evening, November 6 from 7 : 30 to 9 : 30 p.m. in the Visual Arts Center at Warren Wilson College. The workshop, part of "The Arts Journal" Poetry Forum Series, is free and open to the public. Par ticipants are invited to submit no more than two poems for consideration in the workshop. Deadline for submission is November 1. Send poetry submissions to: Poetry Workshop, Jack Boozer, Department of English, Warren Wilson College, Swannanoa, NC 28778. Ms. Gluck is also scheduled to read her poetry California The California Boys Choir will be sponsored by the ASU Artists and Lecture Series in a performance at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 22, in Farthing Auditorium at Appalachian State. The California Boys' Choir is composed of 26 choirboys ranging in age from 10-15 years. The choir performs "The peak autumn color has already arrived at the top of Great Smoky Moun tains National Park." stated Naturalist Glenn Cardwell. The color leading down from the mountain crest is as good as it will get, but at other elevations the best is yet to come. Color at elevations from 3000 to 4000 feet has developed about 50 percent and will probably peak during the week of October 20-30. Highway No. 73 tward Cosby and Little River Road through the Park will show the best color this weekend and into next week. Fall color along the Foothills Parkway at Look Rock and Cosby is about 50 percent complete. With many oaks at these two areas, color will remain into November. Fall color at Balsam hem report: p October 23 thru 29 on Wednesday evening, November 5 at 8 p.m. in Kittredge Center at Warren Wilson College. Also free and open to the public, the reading will be followed by a reception. Louise Gluck was born in New York City and raised on Long Island. She has published two highly ac claimed volumes of poetry, "Firstborn" and "The House On Marshland." Her third collection, "Descending Figure," is scheduled for publication on October 24. Her awards include a Guggenheim Fellowship and grants from the Rockefeller Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. She has won the Academy of American Poets Prize and the Eunice Tietjens Memorial Prize from Poetry Boy'sChoirto perform regularly with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Or chestra, the Los Angeles Master Chorale, Glendale Symphony and Pasadena Symphony. Located near the heart of the recording industry in Hollywood, the choir has performed with such per sonalities as Alice Cooper, eaEi is Mountain Road will be ex cellent this weekend and worthy of driving out to Mile High Overlook. Blue Ridge Parkway offers several good exposed ridges with lots of color, but the green coves indicate the best is yet to be -probably around October 20 31. Color along Lake View Drive out of Bryson City, North Carolina is about 50 percent complete, so the week of October 20-26 should give the motorist the best opportunity for viewing autumn landscapes. Cataloochee Cove is in full color. Cades Cove is still dominantly green, with peak color expected to be the last week of October. "A visit to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park is always enhanced when one takes the op Magazine. Early in 1980 she was invited to the White House to read her poems at "A Salute to Poetry and The Poetry Forum Series, which will bring 10 poets to western North Carolina, is sponsored by THE ARTS JOURNAL and funded, in part, by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, Literature Program. Additional local sponsors include Mars Hill College, Montreat-Anderson College, UNC-Asheville, Warren Wilson College, Western Carolina University, Asheville Department of Parks Si Recreation, Quality Forward, the Community Arts Council of WNC, Penland School of Crafts, Painting in the Mountains and the Toe River Arts Council. Bruce Johnston and the rock group Angel, as well as on the 1977 album of Christmas music by the Salvation Army. The choir also appeared on the Mary Tyler Moore Special, "Mary's Incredible Dream," which was seen nationally on CBS television. 0 iiere: portunity to use some of the hiking trails," Cardwell said. Autumn in the Park usually finds the roads crowded, so be prepared to drive slowly and stop often. Quiet Walk ways are short trails for Park visitors who want to savor the sights, sounds and smells of a natural en vironment. The transformation of leaf color causes one to stop and observe more. Wind and rain bring down the scarlet of maples, sourwoods, dogwoods; yellows of poplars, hickories, birch; purples of sweetgum, ash and winged sumac all forming a beautiful carpet of variegated colors of reds, yellows, yellow-orange, purples, russets and even greens. i V J T