Comn BY KAHN ADAMS At the request of about 30 local fishermen and State Rep. David Redwine, Brunswick County Commissioners Monday adopted a resolution to "strongly oppose" a Wildlife Resources Commission proposal that would ban gill-netting in inland waters. The action came at the outset of the commissioners' 4V4-hour meeting Monday night which included the Twenty-sixth Year, Number s F/i* Kf \ i*t o I-, THE DEMOLISHED CAB of one vehl mud while wrecking crews work to rt tractor trailer from a ditch (far right Fertilizer Spii M A Myrtle Beach, S.C., man was listed in fair condition at Grand Strand General Hospital Tuesday following a traffic accident last week which left another man dead. The early morning wreck along U.S. 17 at Bolivia involved two tractor trailer rigs and was apparently caused by a spill of organic matter being transported by truck from Pfizer Inc. at Southport. Daniel Lee Holder, 49, of Myrtle Beach, survived the accident and was admitted to Grand Strand in critical condition last Wednesday. 1 ne extent ui his injuries was net available. Earl Preston Black, 51, of North Myrtle Beach, S.C., was killed in the accident. It took more then three hours to pull his body from the vehicle. Holder was trapped in the cab for about two hours before rescue crews were able to get him out using the "Jaws of Life." A Volkswagen driven by James Washington Hargrove, 35, of Supply, also slid off the road after the trucks had wrecked. He was uninjured and Two Sentei Guilty In D BY RAHN ADAMS A Holden Beach building contractor and a Tabor City man were given active prison terms last week for cocaine trafficking, while a Calabash man pleaded guilty to cocaine charges but was not sentenced. The three were among 37 defendants indicted on cocaine trafficking charges in Brunswick County last June and July by the state's first special investigative grand jury. All three cases were heard last Thursday in Brunswick County Superior Court in Bolivia by Resident Superior Court Judge Giles R. Clark. Elliott Wade Coleman, 39, of Holden Beach, received a seven-year prison sentence after pleading guilty last September to one count of conspiracy to traffic in more than 28 grams of cocaine. He earned credit for two days served while awaiting iriai. In addition, Coleman's probation from a previous drug conviction was revoked, and he was ordered to serve a 10-year prison term to run concurrently with I hi' seven-year sentence. I lissioners 'Str board's first executive session of the year. Red wine, who addressed commissioners on behalf of the fishermen, said he opposed any changes in state laws involving gill-netting. "I've gone on record being opposed to any ban on gill-netting," Redwine said, adding that local fishermen have experienced enough problems lately from the recent closing of shelifishing beds due to the "red SPRINGPORT S 1 5 |9R8 THE BRUNSWICK BEACON i?& I ? f 715 1 ?. .. f.*r ?ffP j Iclc sits coated in was the one in whi( rraove the second tie Beach, S.C., we ;). The cab at left I! Causes Higi there was no damage to the vehicle. Robert Nubel, plant manager at Pfizer, said the fertilizer spill appeared to have resulted from the failure of a double-locking mechanism on the truck's tailgate. He said the system probably failed when the truck hit a bump on a Midway Road bridge about a mile south of the U.S. 17 intersection. Nubel said it appeared that when the truck hit the bump, the primary tailgate system failed, the load shifted to one side of the truck bed and a chain holding the tailgate snappcu. He said the tailgate was probably secure up until that time because there were no traces of fertilizer on tlie ruuu before the bridge. The load of fertilizer was being delivered to a farm near Bolivia, said Nubel. He added that the spill consisted of several thousand pounds of a 35,000-pound load. According to State Highway Patrol spokesman Ruby Oakley, the accident occurred around 4:50 a.m. No charges were filed by the state. i iv.uu( r~\i iu11 ic rug Traffickin Charles Ronald Strickland, 34, of Tabor City?who had pleaded guilty last August to six cocaine trafficking counts involving more than 400 grams of the controlled substance?also was sentenced to 10 years in prison, but was recommended for immediate work release. In both cases, Clark found that the defendants had provided "substantial assistance" to the state in its drug investigations?findings which enabled the judge to hand down lighter sentences than state drug trafficking laws prescribe. Also last Thursday, Willard R. "Richard" Woods, 38, of Calabash, pleaded guilty to drug charges stemming from the special grand jury investigation and other undercover operations. Coleman Case According to court records, Coleman was inrlictofl .limn 11 10B7 ?n charges of conspiracy to traffic in more than 2ft grains of cocaine and trafficking by possession of more than 2ft grains of cocaine. He faced a maximum of 20 years in prison ?:n ) ongly Oppose tide." U On a motion by Chris Chappell, fi commissioners unanimously voted to instruct County Attorney David fi Clegg to draft a resolution opposing tl any proposed bans on gill-netting and C haul-seining in Brunswick County. d Jimmy Davis, coastal area super- f< visor of fisheries for the N.C. Wildlife y Resources Commission, said Tuesday that the gill-netting ban was pro- s posed to protect game fishing in in- p A I4fe? | f| bindery if! ?2a2/3i/" y| Shallotte, North Carolina. Thi ' ' '''' SIAFF PHOTO BT OOUGHUIlEn U ;h Earl Preston Black of North Myr- a is killed. hway Death ii Brunswick County Emergency u Management Director Cecil Logan s said the two trucks were traveling a north on U.S. 17 when they came across the spill and ran off the highway. 1 Both vehicles ended up in roadside ditches along a curve between Midway and Galloway roads, just north a of the Brunswick County Govern- 111 ment Complex. The trucks were the property of ^ Big Concrete Inc. of Myrtle Beach. w Bobby Steele, company manager, ^.( said the trucks were traveling to sl Wilmington to pick up a load of dry B cement wher; the accident occurred. He said the company's insurance agent would decide if any legal action would be taken. ilWIr\ inet U ? C 4 a ? < itv jnou view it eta an uiuununaie 1 accident," said Steele. "Nobody did anything intentionally." Ixigan said rescue squads from Southport and Town Creek responded ' to the accident. The roadway was later cleared of organic matter by fire departments from Bolivia and c Supply. C r Pleads j ia Cases " cl Ui those original charges. i? On Sept. 9, 1987, he pleaded guilty gj to the conspiracy count, and the e< possession charge was dismissed as r part of a plea agreement, cutting his in possible maximum sentence in half. During Coleman's sentencing hear- M ing last Thursday, an SB1 agent said the charge stemmed from an incident on Dec. 15,1984, when the defen- h( dant obtained an ounce (28 grams) of m cocaine for $2,000. Coleman later fii testified that he bought the cocaine a.' for his own use. y< The agent outlined the defendant's pi assistance to local, state and federal st investigators?help which Coleman b< said he provided for about three fo years after he was convicted of marijuana trafficking in 1963. vt In June 1983, Coleman was fined m $10,000 and was placed on five years Ui of supervised probation after he f>r pleaded guilty to conspiracy to traf- in fic by possession of more than 10,000 pr pounds of marijuana, according to pj testimony. He was placed on unsupervised probation less than a year 11 (See TWO SENTENCED, Page 2-A) iu Proposed E ind waters and would not affect ishing in the Intracoastal Waterway. He emphasized that commercial shermen would not be affected by le proposed ban. In Brunswick ounty's inland waters, gill-netting is one mainly in the Waccamaw River >r catfish, suckers, blackfish and ellow perch, he said. The Wildlife Resources Commision is currently holding a series of ublic hearings across the state on mmr m jrsday, February 18, 1988 r ~a?i CuUbiUi Of Toxic BY Dour, RUTTE1 Coastal waters tested free of all red tide" algae last week, as North o monitor shellfish meats with the h og oyster and clam beds. Bob Benton, supervisor of the ! irogram of the N.C. Division of He londay, "Everything is clearing u nain problem now is just waiting ur lams are clear of all toxins." He said shellfish meats taken fro !ape Fear River, Lockwood Folly Inl :t will be tested for toxicity later thi The state has continued to condu ysters and clams in the northern seel tretch closed to shellfishing. Although waters near Cape Hattei f the algae for more than three weel reek's tests continued to show toxicity dded that clams have been purging lan oysters. Jim Tyler, spokesman for the larine Fisheries, wliich will be resp hellfish beds, said, "We won't know est results are available this Friday. He said most state environmenta nnrri;*! fin n-hn oHon/l^wi IIHU UUVilUCU * V-V.I pstatc agreed that areas should n hellfishing until oysters and clams ir ble to cleanse all toxins from their b Opening a small area to harvest, 1 e detrimental to long-term shellfish rea. Meanwhile, water samples taken I ined no toxic levels of the "red tid< larked the first time since October th ere clear of toxic amounts of algae. Algae contents as high as 2,000 ci ttected at Topsail Inlet off Pender ere no traces of ptychodiscus brevis I rint. Algae counts greater than 5,0 dered toxic. Loekwood Folly Inlet was the runswick County where traces ol Gift Establisi Professorshi| A new endowed professorship in hemistry at the University of North arolina at Greensboro will honor le memory of "a servant of good auses and of her community," the ite Marie Foscue Rnnrk r>f shaiinttn Dr. Malcolm Henderson Kourk of hallottc gave the university $333,000 ) establish the professorship in onor of his late wife. When joined with $167,000 in mathing funds provided by the state nder a program approved by the 185 General Assembly, the $333,000 ift makes possible a $500,000 endowJ professorship, the Marie Foscue ourk Distinguished Professorship i Chemistry. UNC-G Chancellor William E. loran commented that the gift is generous and meaningful." "In honoring his wife, Marie, he mors and strengthens her alma later as well," said Moran. "The eld chosen is one that Marie chose : her major area of study many ears ago. The satisfaction and easure in learning that marked her ay here, by means of this gift, will : oiiercd to others in a renewed rm. "Marie Fescue Rourk was a serint of good causes and of her comunity. The goal of service which the Diversity ever seeks to impart to its actuates was a familiar one for her. memorializing her life, the new ofessorship reminds as of the imirtanee of service." Marie Foscue ltourk died on Oct. , 1087, at age 82. The Maysville Hive was graduated from North ian On Gill-I" the proposed ban. A hearing fo Brunswick County's wildlife distric was held last Thursday night L Elizabeth town. Davis said the public basically ha opposed the proposed ban, althoug "there wasn't really a lot of con troversy" at last Thursday's hear ing. "I really doubt that this proposa will pass," he commented. Reef Funds Given 25c Per Copy I A ? \*\i r*c I : 'Red Tici R organism were i toxic levels of the was also 2,000 o Carolina continued Benton sai< ope of soon reopen- waters Mondaj algae." shellfish sanitation "It's cleare alth Services, said cerned," he sail p pretty well. Our tents and purpc itil the oysters and In South Ca Health and Em m the mouth of the and detected nc et and Shallotte In- Ron Tata, c s week. tal Quality Con ct toxicity tests on traces of it fron ions of the 200-mile and no traces f; Tata said t ras have been clear samples and wil is, Benton said last once algae cour ' in those meats. He He added t themselves faster are optimistic tl The N.C. Di N.C. Division of its local oyster ansible for nnpnino i = ! ?I --O LiVllg WCUV.I1 M ariything until the cooperative lid; " Shellfisherr 1 officials and com- manenlly close snt public hearings because of the ot be reopened to shellfishermen i a large region are replant these oy odies. Fritz Rohde le explained, could ington branch of populations in that to be moved to days of hand rel During the last Thursday con- Lockwood Folly j" organism. This more than 15,00 at all state waters were not availat According tc ells per liter were secretary with J County, but there shellfishermen \ Found north of that gram as of last 1 00 parts are con- bushels of oystei The progran only location in and Pender co : the "red tide" Brunswick Coun ies Marie Fo p In Chemisti p Marie Foscue Rourk Carolina College for Women (now UNC-Gi in 1927, with an A B degree in chemistry. After studying laboratory technology in Charlotte for one year, she was director of the laboratory at James Walker Memorial Hospital in Wilmington from 1928 through 1930. She also taught chemistry in the hospital's school of nursing. She was married to Dr. Rourk in 19.10. After several moves they settled in Shallotte in 1947. Her survivors in addition to her husband include two children, Dr. Malcolm H. Rourk Jr. of Durham and Mrs. Marie R. Harrison of Shallotte; eight grandchildren and seven great Jetting r In another fishing-related matter :t Monday, commissioners unanimousn ly granted a request from the Brunswick County Artificial Reef s Association for $12,000 to retire its h debt on a reef project involving the i- old Holden Beach Bridge. Association Chairman Dale McDowell said his group has 1 reorganized its board and hoped to get off to a fresh start by retiring the (Sec PROPOSED, Prgc2-A) ~ 36 Pages Plus Insert ri^ '-u'W-ll le' Levels detected last week. The count in that area rganisms per liter. :i additional samples taken from local r showed "absolutely no traces of the d up real good as far as the water is con1. "I think this is basically gone for all inises." rolina last week, the state Department of ironmental Control also sampled waters i toxic levels of "red tide" algae, listrict director for the S.C. Environmentrol Division, said, "We have found only 1 the North Carolina line to Murrells Inlet irther south." he state will continue to analyze water 1 begin testing shellfish meats for toxicity its have disappeared, hat state environmental health officials hat the "red tide" will soon be gone, vision of Marine Fisheries also continued relocation program in Davis Creek near jst Wednesday after a week of utv !S. nen moved oysters from areas perd to pollution to areas currently closed icu uue iniesiauon. ine state pays SI per bushel and up to $100 per day to stei-s by hand. !, biological coordinator with the WilmMarine Fisheries, said the program was Shallotte River Wednesday, after five aying in Davis Creek, three earlier days of relocation in River, 76 shellfishermen had replanted 0 bushels of oysters. Accurate figures lie for Davis Creek. 1 Diana Heatwole, fisheries development darine Fisheries in Wilmington, the 400 ,vho had participated in the state pro'uesday had relocated more than 200,000 s. a first started Dec. 15 in New Hanover unties and was expanded to include ty Feb. 1. iscue Rourk y At UNC-G | grandchildren. Mrs. Rourk was active in community and county civic affairs for | many years. She served as chairman of the Brunswick County March of j Dimes during and succeeding the polio era. She was a charter member _r on?n ?? - - * ? ui anauouc rresDyienan unurch. She was appointed by Gov. Terry j Sanford to the original board of trustees of Southeastern Community College, where she served several terms. She served several terms as president of the Brunswick County Historical Society, worked extensively on behalf of Brunswick Town State Historic Site and was active in efforts to save from destruction the original building of Sunnyside School in Shallotte. She held membership in several national historical organizations. She served as a trustee of the Southport/Brunswick County Library from 1962 to June 1979, including three terms as vicechairman, and was instrumental in establishing the West Brunswick Branch Library, dedicated in May 1979 in Shallotte. She was instrumental in bringing the North Carolina Symphony Orchestra to Brunswick County for a concert each year, beginning in 1949. Dr. Rourk practiced internal medical for 42 years before retiring and was also a cardiologist. The UNC-Chapel Hill graduate completed two years of studies at the (See I'ltOKKSSOItSIUI', I'age 2-A?