Opinion Page THE BRUNSWICK&BEACON Kduard M. Sweat! and Carolyn II. Swratl t'ntdishers Kdward M. Sweatt Editor Silvan i slier \eir.\ Editor Halm \dains X Doim Hotter S/./// II riters Johnnx (iraif! Sports Editor Christine llallou Office Munum*r Carol) ii II. Sweatt Utvertisinf,: Director Cerrlia (hire ?X Susan llarefoot. . \dvcrtisitifs li eprcs en til tires Tannine Callowa) ?K Dorotlix Hrennan typesetters \\ illiam Manning I'res smart Hrenda Clemmotis I'hoto Technician Connie Sprinkle I ss is hint I'ressman Clxde and Mattie Stout. IMioehe Clemmons ( imitation Pane I-A Thursday. June 30, 1988 Who Would Do Such A Thing? The plant pilferers are at it again, literally digging up landscape plants from the grounds of the Brunswick County Government Center in Bolivia and stealing away with them. Who would do such a thing? That is low. low behavior. Unfortunately the perpetrators don't share that opinion. In fact, one woman was greatly offended when caught by a county employee while in the act of stowing some publiclyowned azaleas in her car. n seems the Harder the stall works to beautify the grounds, the bolder become the thieves. They don't seem to understand or care that the plants are intended to be enjoyed by all of us. not just a few. Earlier this year, according to Brunswick Veteran Service Officer Jess Parker, the groundskeeping staff planted 40 azaleas as a backdrop to the county's Veterans Memorial and framed them with camellias. The idea was to have a showplace next spring. But the plants keep vanishing, and not because of moles. If those stealing the plants are so desperate for foliage and flowers, Parker has a offer not to be refused. "Would the ones who are stealing the plants please check in at the Veteran Service Office," he suggests in a recent note. Seems he ha.: some nice potted azaleas, and even a few camellias to give away. But. take warning, his supply is limited. Any rush on his office could result in a "Thief of the Day" drawing, he says. ivieanwnne, as parser suggests, all ot us need to be on the lookout for those who are too bashful to "check in." Let's make sure they get what's due them. Let's Hear Some Cheers For Commission Decision The N.C. Marine Fisheries Commission should be commended for its decision not to permit mechanical clam harvesting in Brunswick County waters. Not only did the commissioners make a lot of friends locally, they also did the right thing. But the commission's decision to allow clam dredging to continue in areas to the north is also a practical one. Supporters of hand clamming point to the harmful environmental effects of mechanical harvesting, while dredge boat operators claim their methods are no more damaging than any other. In fact, research on the effects of mechanical harvesting is quite limited. And until it is known for certain what happens to the marine habitat when dredge boats dig for clams, it is a smart decision not to expand the area open to clam dredgers. By the same token, however, it is logical to allow mechanical harvesters to continue operating where they have been for the past decade. Cutting off their source of income would have been just as wrong as opening the local gates to dredges and leaving clammers standing on the shores with clean rakes and empt> baskets. Some people may believe the commissioners chickenec out and made a decision that would pacify both groups Whether or not that's the case, it turns out the commission': ruling is a sound one. Senator Sam Was h Senator Sam has been on my mind lately. I don't know why. Maybe it's because the Fourth of Bp liny?our clucf patriotic holiday?is D^kr-* HE^ & right around the corner, and the late ??? ^ j senator from Morganton is high on AdortlS & my list of great Americans. Or maybe I started thinking about him after I noticed that several area bookstores still carry one of his Jr books. Whenever I browse through during the Watergate hearings t( the "regional interest" shelves, I see make his position clear?his stance his picture on the bookcover and feel being to preserve the rights anc as though I'm visiting with an old freedoms we enjoy in America, friend. In simplest terms, I remember hiir Of course, Sam J. Ervin Jr. is best as the quiet neighbor who lived in a remembered by the American public nice brick house down the street from as the Watergate Committee's me. And while most other lawyers ir homespun chairman. He even town sported European luxury cars, described himself as "just a country he drove a Carolina blue Cadillac, lawyer." I also remember him as the slightHut when I think of Senator Sam, ly cranky, ailing old gent who I'm reminded of more than just the granted me an interview, even humorous, down-home tides he told though he was tired of talking to -J ? Defe It figures. The other day we needed a tick and couldn't find one. We wanted to run its photo in the newspaper, with a story on tickrelated diseases. All Don and I have to do?usually?to find one or more ticks is walk from our house through the woods to an adjacent golf course, or go over to the Shallotte Township Park. In fact, sometimes one has to wonder if enjoying the great outdoors is worth it. In our adventures we sometimes bring back even more than ticks, such as tiny little chiggers or Ted bugs" with nasty, itchy bites. And there are always, but always, the mosquitoes, even though they haven't been too bad at our house lately. But wait until it rains. Boy. oh. Boy! They'll be thicker than ever when all those waiting eggs hatch. - Tr il Fill ^ So V I've been asked by a lot of people recently (nearly everyone who has taken a seat in my car, for that matter) where I learned to drive. And each time the question has been posed, my reaction has been the same. "Why do you want to know that?" I ask suspiciously. "Is there something wrong with the way I drive?" Almost always, the passenger wili respond with the most insincere "No" you can imagine and follow it up with a question concerning the number and severity of automobile accidents in which I've been involved. "One accident," I tell thern. "I hit a parked car with the tank we used to call a van. Never saw it coming. There were no injuries." At tliat point, my passenger usually insinuates that I'm the biggest liar since the Big Bad Wolf who took a liking to Red Riding Hood, and promptly reaches for the seat belt i I learned to drive in Pennsylvania, for crying out loud, where only the strong and crazy survive life on the ' streets. In Philadelphia, law-abiding drivers are chastized and literally r run off the road by those who thrive ~l II.. ?U? ,.^n|| ?r f Oil V. IVI.1t V.OUO, UIC .111 IVII Ul II V .11 111 c 1 rubber and the screeching of discbrakes. \ By the way, for those who don't like J tailgaters or horn blowers, and possibly have a nervous condition to Aore Than Ju: reporters about the 10th anniversary of President Nixon's resignation. "I've given 20 interviews, and I'm not giving any more," he declared, then spent the next 15 minutes talking to me about his role in the Watergate hearings. The man definitely holds a special place in my heart, but partly because he was indirectly responsible for i scaring the living daylights out of me i once. I Several months before Senator Sam's death, a local lawyer invited i me to fly to Raleigh and cover an I awards banquet honoring the former i senator, who was unable to attend i himself due to poor health. I agreed to go, even though I had serious reservations about riding in the small, twin-engine aircraft that i the lawyer rented. A double plane crash that had occurred in Morganton exactly one week earlier was still ending The Ho Susan Usher i ' However, the real assault is taking place on the ground, not in the air, and in our semi-tamed yard, not in the wilds across the street. We've discussed the small, tunneling critters in the front yard whose breed 1 won't mention. But that's not all. It's not safe anvit'lmrn Our gardening has been sporadic this year, with a few tomatoes, peppers. onions and herbs. But the other day I decided to start some summer >0? LORD, NUfAM-SW \/here Did Yol fir/ 1 start with, I don't recommend a drive i through the City of Brotherly l.ove. Suffice it to say that any place where ( taxi drivers cut over sidewalks and i median slips just to gel to the airport 20 seconds early is no place for the weak-hearted. ! Needless to say, growing up and witnessing that style of driving had its effect on me. Not that I make a practice of hopping median strips or jumping on my horn when someone starts daydreaming in front of a green traffic light, but my driving tends to be more aggressive than defensive. Anyway, the habits of other drivers, not me. are the foetus of this column. Like any person who is forced to come up with an innovative column each week, or at least one that a jury wouldn't find to be plagiaristic, I never waste time during my daily drive to and from work. The gears are always churning inside my head, although sometimes they're stuck in reverse. st A Country L fresh in my mind. And on top of that, I had never ridden in an airplane before. My companions on the flight were Keaerai Appeais -.ourt Judge Sam J. Ervin III, the local newspaper editor and two of the best lawyers in town, one of whom was the senator's grandson, Sam J. Ervin IV. All the way to Raleigh, I kept telling myself that if our plane crashed, at least I'd die in a blaze of glory. Not everyone gets the chance to bite the big one in such good company. As it turned out, the trip to RDU that afternoon was a dream come true, with smooth sailing the whole way. But the journey home late that night was nothing but a nightmare. Without going into detail, we somehow managed to survive a runway accident; a replacement plane whose cabin was so cramped that I didn't have to worry about doing the me Front, A< r < squash i in tubs i and also to set out a few watermelon vines. Wearing cheerful red Dr. Scholls sandals left over from some healthy foot kick of the past. 1 dug up some dirt and made some "hills." then laid black gardening cloth over the works. So far. so good, 1 thought, wiping away sweat with the tad of my T-shirt. I cut a few slits in the covering. planted and watered both plants and myself. There was just one thing left to do?mulch. With no pretty, fresh straw left, I turned to the pile of stuff waiung lis lurn as compost and grabbed an armful or two. No problem. Then?out of nowhere, there they were: small, red-brown ants scurrying everywhere. Over my toes, between my toes, up my legs and over my ai ms, like the first wave of tanks rolling onto Omaha Beach. They \' Wm I (the -vw WAS iTHA \ Learn To Di For some time now, I've been analyzing the way people drive and determining, at least in my own mind, the latent characteristics of each person who takes the wheel. Whether I'm behind a station ivagon full of screaming, sunburned kids and two tuckered out parents or a silver luxury sedan with a retired couple in the front seat slowing down to admire every house on the beach, I've been paying careful attention to detail because I knew I would need something to write about sooner or later. The net results of my informal study place just about every driver in the country into one of three categories. Each category has numerous subdivisions, but if you want the lowdown on those, you'll have to wait for my first book. To begin with, there is the POKESTER. While this style of driving is most common in elderly people, it can afflict young people at any time, usually right after they receive their first speeding ticket. Commonly, the Pokester will drive along at half the speed limit, which I've found is sometimes more dangerous than driving twice the speed limit. This creature will also be the one who sits motionless at an intersection even when he or she has the right-ofway. They won't wave you through or proceed until you wave them .awyer old head-between-the-knees routine in the event of a more serious mishap; and a replacement pilot who needed four tries to land the plane because he couldn't see the runway lights through the thick fog. But if I had it all to do over, I'd jump right back on those planes and take my chances again. Senator Sam was worth the trouble. When he died in April 1985,1 interviewed leaders in the community and asked them how the late senator's mc iuiu uiiL-cieu our nomeiown, suite and nation. "Senator Sam carried the torch of freedom and fought for our Constitutional rights as Americans," one person said. "Now that he's gone, the question is: Who did he pass the torch to?" That was a good question then and still is now. I gain weren't just traveling, they were biting, hard. Their mound must have been under the pine straw, about the only place in the yard that hadn't already been treated for the little monsters. Don mounted a fierce counterattack while I ran for homemade relief, a paste of household ammonia and meat tenderizer with a dose of antihistimines. Folks, it may not be entirely safe outside, but what the heck. Life is meant to be an adventure. Nothing risked, nothing gained. And while our watermelons and squash may be kind of late, they'll certainly be appreciated. And the next time a tick tries to hitch a ride. I'm going to lay out the bare facts: Brother, you have already missed your ticket to Hollywood and fame. Take a hike! 1?' rive? through. Often, the pokester won't drift into the intersection until you have frantically waved them on three times and begun to move forward yourself. For some reason, many tourists fall into this categoiy. Although they may be perfectly competent drivers under normal conditions, the tag of tourist seems to hestnw nnnn them the responsibility of holding up everyone else who isn't fortunate enough to waste the day driving to the beach. Another subhead of the Pokester is the Sloth?a person who slowly pulls out of their driveway or a side street 50 feet in front of you as you're cruising 55 m.p.h. or better down U.S. 17. On a personal note, I can stand the common tourist, but a Sloth is the most aggravating driver 1 know. The classification SPEEDSTER, so named for his or her lack of respect for the speed limit, includes a rather large group of people. Although he takes many forms, the speedster is usually young, fearless, rebellious and impatient. In many cases, the speedster is someone vour grandfather might have called a whippersnapper. Subclasses of this animal range from the Barbarian to the Bozo to the Brat, depending on the extent of their aggressive driving. I would most likely fall into the Bozo classification because I'm sort ot a conservative speedster. In between these two extremes are what I've termed the ROADSTERS. Figuratively speaking, these folks, which make up the largest classification. are middle-of-the-road drivers. They obey the laws and get from one place to another without getting anyone upset or giving anyone gray hairs. So there vou have it. Where tin vnu fall in this spectrum of driverhood? I'll just bet the answer would provide some clue about the place where you gyew up. IN SUPPLY BRING HOME THE6BEAC0N On Sola At ANN'S COUNTRY STORE BRUNSWICK COMMUNITY COLLEGE KIRBY'S THE BRUNSWICK HOSPITAL I