Sports, page 18 South Cougars host West this Friday Classifieds, p. IB most complete Ifett&Droperties ——i-swgaiisn INSIDE Volume 61/ Number 28 Southport, N.C. f r*f* February 26, 1992 / 50 cents ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ELECTION '92 Easley, Redwine join race Where does it stand? For whom will we vote? Bruns wick County’s registered vot ers are asking themselves these ques tions with increasing regularity as the March 2 deadline for filing notices of candidacy draws near. The easy way to answer those ques tionsis: Most Republicans and Demo crats are going to have to make initial decisions in primary races. Virtually all offices to be decided are subject to primary contention with a little more than a week remaining in the declara tion period. Final decisions will be made Election Day. November 3. Among the important election year decisions made this week were those by Southport’s Mike Easley,41, who announced he would run for the office of North Carolina Attorney General. Easley, a Democrat who took Harvey Gantt of Charlotte to a close primary election contest for the right to run against Republican Sen. Jesse Helms in 1990, told the Pj'/ctf Tuesday he was confident of a primary election win over challenger Henson Barnes, the president pro-tem of the state Senate. ■Easley and Barnes have debated ^ before the N. C. League of Women Voters already, but fund-raising con tinues to be a factor in this high-pro file race. In announcing his candidacy Fri day, Easley said he would, as attorney general, continue his on-going effort to expose the N. C. Fair Sentencing Law for the “fraud” he believes it to be. Easley spent eight years as an elected district attorney in Bruns wick, Columbus and Bladen counties and was an assistant prosecutor for three See Election, page 6 Nobody knows better than Charles Keller that whittling can be an end in itself. Though he has carved several of these conversation pieces for sale, Photo by Jim Harper he intends to keep this one, fashioned from a centuries-old cypress log "probably cut down by Cornwallis’ troops," for himself. Same school goal, but process different By Marybeth Bianchi Feature Editor The goals of Parents in Action and Brunswick County schools are the same: Creating effective schools for learning. But the two may soon bd clashing on how quickly that common goal can be accomplished. Parents in Action, headed by Dorothy Essey of Yaupon Beach, would like to see the first 12 steps of the Comprehensive Concept Management System in place at South Brunswick High School by August. However, local school system and state department of public instruction officials, as well as those who already have instituted the plan, say time is needed for planning. “You can’t go back and put this in place,” Thomas Salter, principal of South Lenoir High School in Kinston warned a group of Brunswick County visitors on Thursday. “You have to go back and do some homework.... If you plan and do your homework it can be successful.” Salter and his assistant principal, Sheila Walker, told their visitors that the comprehensive management system was the means they chose to carry out the effective school concept. That concept consists of seven correlates: A clear and focused mission shared by the staff, instructional leadership, a climate of high expectations of success, a safe and orderly environment, frequent monitoring of student progress, an opportunity to learn and time on task, and home/school relations. Salter said the effective schools training must come first, before a plan of action is developed. “How are you going to choose a plan if you don’t know what you want to do?” he asked, but added, “If you’re dealing with effective schools this (comprehensive management program) ties right in." Brunswick County schools recently embarked on a three-year school improvement plan, which incorporates the seven correlates of effective schools. Central office staff, school administrators, teachers, counselors and board members participated in a weekend retreat to assess where the school system is, where it wants to be. the obstacles it faces getting there and how they can be overcome, said Gloria Yount, staff development director. She said Tuesday that the goal of an effective school system may be achieved by the comprehensive management program. “It’s exactly what we’re trying to do with the effective school," Y ount said. Each school is setting up committees to review the seven correlates and See Same school, page 9 County learns its ABCs again Towns: too many would drink from same trough By Richard Nubel News Editor Area municipalities may again this year be rallying to protect their inter ests in the ABC stores they operate, as a law barring Brunswick County’s two-year-old ABC system from es tablishing proximal liquor stores is soon to expire. Long tseacn mayor Joan Altman tms week contacted other area political leaders in an effort to promote discus sion of the relative interests of the municipal and county ABC systems. Altman said the goal of local mu nicipalities is to check competition from a proposed county ABC store. “We want at least a cooperative agreement whereby the county ABC board would not place a store in an area which would threaten another ABC store," Altman said Monday. An argument between area munici pal ABC store operators and the fledg ling county ABC system — autho rized at referendum in 1989 — arose in late February last year when the county ABC board proposed to estab lish a liquor store in the River Run Shopping Center, at the intersection of N. C. 211 and Beach Road. Southport, Long Beach; Yaupon Beach and Boiling Spring Lakes offi cials said the proposed county store would steal business from them and deplete funds on which each of the municipalities is dependent. County officials countered that ar gument, saying there should be only one ABC system — a consolidated ABC system—in Brunswick County. Led by members John Ramsey of Long Beach and Clyde Babson of Ash. county ABC board members said they would proceed with plans to build the River Run store if municipal officials did not engage in negotiations for a consolidated county ABC system. Municipalofficialscalled that threat “blackmail," but reluctantly agreed. In April. 1991, after the county ABC board withdrew its request for site approval for a River Run liquor store, municipal and county ABC board members met once with a former man ager of the Forsyth County ABC sys tem, a recently consolidated city county system. Since that meeting there has been no formal discussion of the consolida tion issue. Long Beach ABC board member Rosetta Short said. While discussions between munici pal ABC operators and the county ABC board were in progress, munici pal leaders also sought protective leg islation. In June. 1991, Rep. E. David Redwine of Brunswick County won approval of a bill that barred Brunswick County’s ABC board from establish ing any liquor store within seven miles of an established, municipally oper ated ABC store. That protected ABC operations in Long Beach. Southport. Yaupon Beach and Boiling Spring Lakes. But, the Redwine bill will "sunset" on July 1 of this year. A law' that “sunsets", in legislative parlance, is ‘Maybe we can structure something with the county and municipalities working together. At least that's my hope.' Rep. E. David Redwine one that has a set time to end. On J uly 1, Brunswick County will again be free to pursue establishment of a store at River Run Shopping Center, or at other places in the county which might place Brunswick County in directcom petition with a municipal ABC opera tion. "At this time, until we determine the attitude of the county ABC board, I think this is very critical." said Southport mayor Norman Holden. Holden said he had conferred with mayor Altman on the matter and plans were in the works to establish a com mittee of Southport-Oak Island and Boiling Spring Lakes elected officials and ABC board appointees. Altman said Monday that Long Beach ABC board chairman Ben Tho See ABCs, page 6 LONG BEACH RENOURISHMENT SURVEY O PPOSE 4,306 Results through February 24 OUTSIDE | | | | Forecast The extended forecast for the Southport-Oak Island area, Thursday through Saturday, calls for fair skies and dry weather, with highs in the SOs and lows in the 30s. Tide table HIGH LOW THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27 3:23 a.m. 9:31 a.m. 3:32 p.m. 9:43 pjn. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28 4:16 a.m. 10:23 a.m. 4:27 p.m. 10:37 pjn.. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 29 5:09 a.m. 11:15 a.m. 5:20 p.m. 11:25 pjn. SUNDAY, MARCH 1 5:55 a.m. 12:00 a.m. 6:06 p'.m. — p.m. MONDAY, MARCH 2 6:37 a.m. 12:11a.m. 6:45 p.m. 12:40 pjn. TUESDAY, MARCH 3 7:14a.m. 12:55 ajn. 7:24 p.m. 1:18 p.m. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4 7:49 a.m. 1:35 a.m. 7:59 p.m. 1:55 p.m. The following adjustment! should be made: Bald Head Island, high >10, low -7; Caswell Beach, high -5, low -1; South port, high +7, low +15; Yaupon Beach, high -32, low -45; Lockwood Folly, high -22, low -8. Grinders may come to a halt By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor Grinder pumps have been the great bugaboo of the Long Beach pressure wastewater management system pro posed by consulting engineers last April. But Monday night, consulting engineer Finley Boney proposed an alternative combination pressure and gravity system that relies less heavily on grinder pumps and will ring in at about the same price tag. Commissioners are to decide this afternoon (Wednesday) which sys tem — the all-pressure or the combi nation pressure and gravity system— will be put before the public at refer endum on March 31. “In the combination system, every effort is going to be made to maxi mize gravity,” Boney said Tuesday. “We are going to make every effort to eliminate grinder pumps, even on the beach.” Even proponents of a public sewer system have been skeptical of the 4300 grinder pumps — ih combina tions of single and duplex units — which were part of the full-pressure system originally proposed by Boney. llie combination pressure and grav ity system proposed Monday night will cut the number of grinder pumps in use to around 1,300, the engineer said. The $301,000 originally bud geted for annual replacement of grinder pumps proposed for use in the all-pressure system will also be re duced to about $127,000. But, the capital cost of the proposed* system is somewhat higher overall. To combat that and to keep the system affordable, Boney has proposed Long Beach increase its debt to finance the system. Initially it was believed an all-pres sure system could be built for $ 15.185 million. That cost rose to about $ 15.306 million when land costs were more fully explored. Under the origi nal plan, Long Beach was to assume about $9.35 million in debt to con struct the pressure system. To construct the proposed $ 18.279 million combination gravity and pres sure system, the town will assume an approximate $ 12.5-million debt from a combination of $9 million in four See Grinder, page 7