|ry INSIDE Sports, page 16 Cougs make it four of five over 4A foes Classifieds IB most complete state properties Volume 61/ Number 21 Southport, N.C. January 8, 1992 / 50 cents Crews from Utility Services Company began painting Southport’s water tank this week. The preparation and painting project was delayed before the Christmas holidays because of high winds and rain. Photo by Jim Harper The new paint job is to feature a darker blue background against which the name "Southport" amid a field of white stars will be em blazoned. Library County agrees to take system responsibility By Holly Edwards County Editor "County taxpayers arc going to support the library system, and the board of commissioners will run it," commissioner Gene Pinkerton said Monday after the Brunswick County Board of Commissioners voted un animously to^tikc over the library system that has been shared with Southport since the 1950s. The board agreed to begin im mediate work on a county library department, and turned the task of organizing the new department over to county manager David Clegg, who also serves as county attorney. "There will still have to be a num ber of joint resolutions passed be tween Brunswick County and the City of Southport," Clegg said after the meeting. "I’m not so sure there won’t be problems." Not everyone supports the idea of having a eotmty library department, Clegg said, but he suggested the main problems would be with logistics rattier than wiih conflicts of opinion. The county should be in complete control of the library system and all library employees should be put on county payroll by July 1, Clegg said. "It’s not the intention of the board of See Library, page 11 ‘Southport is look ing at their contri bution to the library and realizing that the money would be better spent on the health and safety of its citizens.’ David Clegg County manager More sewer meetings on tap in Long Beach By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor In the first of what commissioners promise to be several workshops on construction of a public wastewater management system Thursday, Long Beach property owners fired questions at consulting engineers who have prepared a preliminary engineering report for the project. Commissioners set a second work shop session with the engineers tomorrow (Thursday) at 7 p.m. at the town recreation center. Throughout discussion last Thurs day, engineers held to the assertion a public sewer system would cost about $15.2 million to build and monthly sewer bills for average customers using 6,000 gallons of water per month would be between $15 and $16 if expected favorable financing is obtained. New facts emerging from the ses sion include: •The N. C. Local Government Commission recently instructed the town to underwrite the project by seeking approval of a S15-million bond issuance. Before, town offi cials and their engineers had said it would be possible to authorize sales N. C. Fourth of July No festival pageant; cost is crowning blow By Marybeth Bianclu Feature Editor With expenses outweighing the benefits, the N. C. Fourth of July Festival board of directors has voted to abandon the 1992 queen’s pageant, the chairman said Monday. "This is the way a majority of the board felt," chairman Wayne Berry said. There was a considerable amount of discussion about the pageant, which has been held for the past 27 years, but the directors’ de cision to abandon this year’s queen’s pageant "was unanimous before we left the meeting," Berry said. "The board of directors (made up af past festival presidents) decided not to have the Fourth ot July pageant based on the costs involved with the event," he said. That does not mean, however, that there will never be another pageant. Berry said the board voted not to have the competition this year, but left it open for the future. "It’s not the final chapter because the title itself was not retired," he said. "They didn’t vote to retire the title." While directors recognize the long tradition of the title and the fact that the crown, studded with red, white and blue stones, is the oldest in the See Pageant, page 7 of as little as $1 million in general obligation bonds and then only sell bond anticipation notes while await ing anticipated low-interest state loans. •A referendum on the authoriza tion of the sale of $15 million in general obligation bonds has been tentatively set for March 31. Regis tered voters only may participate in the referendum to be conducted by the Brunswick County Board of Elections on the town’s behalf. "Therefore, there is adequate time for all your questions to be ans wered and all the engineers’ work to be done," mayor Joan Allman told a standing-room-only crowd. "... the town can not advertise for and let bids until it has money in the bank. The only way we can have money in the bank is to sell bonds.’ Finley Boney Consulting engineer Supply fuels lower gas prices By Marybeth Bianchi Feature Editor Unlike many other consumer goods, gasoline prices are falling. Nationally, prices have dropped an average of 4.3 cents since mid November, and a few places in Brunswick County are now selling gas for less than a dollar a gallon. Quentin Anderson of the AAA-Carolina Motor Club said the drop is due to the reduced price of crude oil. Also, supplies have been above normal because of the unusually mild winter experienced so far this year, allowing more crude oil to be channeled into gasoline production rather than home heating oil. It also helps that OPEC has continued to maintain a steady flow of oil to the United States, he said. With Iraq's invasion of Kuwait last year, gasoline prices rose substantial ly. But for the past few months they have been dropping, and Anderson foresees them going even lower - at least until Memorial Day. He predicted last week that the national average cost of gasoline will be as low asSl.OSagalloo. Gasoline prices in North Carolina, which has one of the nation’s highest gasoline taxes, arc slightly higher than their neighbor to the south, Ander son said, but the Southeast as a whole has the lowest average in the nation: S1.07, compared to $ 1.21 in New England. "From the way I look at it we’re coming out better than anyone else," he said. Bob Patel of E-Z Way in Southport said it’s the overall economy that is affecting gas prices. "No one’s consuming as much. People are cutting back on driving," he said. He said he’s noticed fewer people not only at his pumps, but also at his competitors’. One reason, Patel said, is a slowdown in the construction and fishing industries. In the Southport-Oak Island area, a gallon of unleaded regular gas costs between $1,019 and S1.0S9 with some locations selling it as high as $1,189 a gallon. The price of super unleaded goes ranged from a low of SI.169 to a high of SI.259. In the Lcland area, regular unleaded gas is selling for 98 cents a gallon. Sam Brothers, manager of the Scotchman store in Belville, said the price is the same at the other gas stations in that area because they are all competi ng against each other. Just across the river in Wilmington, some stations are selling regular unleaded gas for 95.9 cents. Will the prices drop further? "I’ve heard rumors," Brothers said. "Everyone’s hoping they will." Consulting engineers Finley Boncy and Robert Graham, both of Finley Boncy and Associates of Raleigh, took turns presenting in formation and fielding questions of the property owners. Graham outlined the preliminary design of the sewer system that would be advanced to state regulatory and financing agencies. The Boncy firm began working for Long Beach in September, 1990, and revised design plans and cost estimates advanced by another firm in 1984. Sewer construction in Long See Beach sewer, page 11 Registration open for Yaupon voters Voter registration for the special Yaupon Beach election on February 18 will remain open until January 20 and prospective voters may register in a number of ways, Brunswick County Board of Elections supervisor Lynda Britt said this week. It had been incorrectly reported that prospective voters may only register at the Bolivia office of the Brunswick County Board of Elections. In fact, those wishing to vote in the newly-ordered election may also register at any branch of the Brunswick County Library system, or with any registrar or judge of elections in the county on or before January 20. The elections registrar in Yaupon Beach is Claire Rees. Judges, also able to take new voter registrations, are Lyman Clark and Carlton Sligh. All three have telephone numbers listed in the local Southern Bell telephone directory. Ms. Rees’ number is the one listed under the name of her hus band, Ernest W. Rees. Yaupon Beach voters should also note that the polling place for the newly-ordered election will be Yaupon Beach Town Hall and not the county polling place in neighboring Caswell Beach. On November 5, incorrect instructions were printed on ballots for Yaupon Beach commissioners and county elections officials were not able to certify the election. Candidates for election arc incumbents May Moore, Joseph Broyles and James L. Poole; challengers Darrell D. Posey, J. M. Warren and Rhett Blackman. OUTSIDE Forecast The extended forecast for the Southport-Oak Island area calls for mostly cloudy skies Thursday with a high between 60 and 65 degrees. Skies will clear Friday, with an expected high temperature of 50 and low of 40. Saturday’s high will be about 50 degrees with a low in the 30s, then on Sunday expect a chance of rain. Tide table HIGH LOW THURSDAY, JANUARY 9 10:23 a.m. 4:11a.m. 10:39 p.m. 4:44 p.m. FRIDAY, JANUARY 10 10:57 am. 4:50 a.m. 11:20 p.m. ' 5:21 p.m. -SATURDAY, JANUARY 11 11:35 a.m. 5:35 a.m. -p.m. 6:06 p.m. SUNDAY, JANUARY 12 12:07 a.m. 6:30 a.m. 12:22 p.m.' 6:54 p.m. MONDAY, JANUARY 13 1:06 a.m. 7:30 a.m. 1:21p.m. 7:50 p.m. TUESDAY, JANUARY 14 2:09 a.m. 8:39 a.m. 2:27 p.m. 8:54 p.m. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15 3:14 a.m. 9:47 a.m. 3:35 p.m. 9:58 p.m. The following adjustments should be made: Bald Head Island, high -10, low -7; Caswell Beach, high -5, low -1; Southport, high +7, low +15;Yaupon Beach, high -32, low -45; Lockwood Folly, high -22, low -8.