ffltWUNSWCK?^C0N Edward M. Sweatt and Carolyn H. Sweatt Publishers Edward M. Sweatt Editor Susan Usher News Editor Doug Rutter and Terry Pope Staff Writers Johnny Craig Sports Editor Peggy Earwood Office Manager Carolyn H. Sweatt Advertising Director Timber ley Adams & Cecelia Gore ^Advertising Representatives Tammle Galloway & Dorothy Brennan Typesetters William Manning Pressman Brenda Clemmons Photo Technician Lonnle Sprinkle Assistant Pressman Phoebe Clemmons and Frances Sweatt Circulation PAGE 4 -A, THURSDAY, APRIL 4. 1991 Burst Of Business Activity For Shallotte Trading Area Three new businesses ? a major discount store, a medical ser vices complex and a bowling center ? plan to locate in Shallotte. This burst of activity is a promising sign for the economy of the Town of Shallotte and the entire South Brunswick Islands. It helps re-establish Shallotte as a trading and activity center and of fers to fill many of the needs expressed by area seniors in a survey made a year ago. (Those results are elsewhere is this week's edi tion.) The decision to locate in Shallotte also affirms the town board of aldermen's decision to stick with its sewer policy of extending service only within the town limits. The board has stuck by its guns even under intense pressure from several area developers. At least one of the new businesses, Wal- Mart, had considered building outside of town, but reconsidered in light of that policy. Bravo. Sewer is a service provided by the town, intended for the ben efit of its own people. Used wisely it can also serve as a planning and resource development tool: It can be used to attract new in dustry or business to a district or site. In a refreshing change from what is often the norm in Brunswick County, it puts the town, not the developer, in the driver's seat. That's important. If Wal-Mart had located out of town it would have paid county taxes and sales taxes, certainly, and a sewer fee if the town had so allowed connection. At the same time, it would have drawn shoppers away from Shallotte 's downtown business area and placed additional finan cial strains on smaller "mom and pop" stores there. That would not have been good, especially during the transition period associ ated with completion of the U.S. 17 bypass of Shallotte. This way, at least, Shallotte gets something in return. The store's presence downtown should help bring shoppers in. There's a chance the traffic and exposure will help other businesses as well. The same concept goes for the medical complex. The same is true of the bowling center. Bowling is extremely popular with South Brunswick Islands residents, as results from lanes just south of the state line remind us every week. Having lanes here will add to the recreational options for visitors as well as meeting the needs of year-round residents. The 1991 season is starting off with a bang. State Should Rank Needs, Set Budget Accordingly Let's get our priorities straight as a state. At the same time state legislators are whacking away at bud gets for human services and education, advocates are unabashedly seeking big bucks for some projects that can only be considered frills. The state is just as bad. It continues to pour money into build ing roads and bridges and in other projects of'questionable priori ty. These are needs, but they certainly shouldn't be at the top of the list. The latest of the special requests is a bid for $4.38 million to help save Fort Fisher. There are lots of good reasons to support the rescue of the fort from erosion through construction of a revetment. It holds an irre placeable spot in state and national history. It draws more visitors than any of the state historic sites, visitors who spend money in the area. Protecting the fort helps protect and save our heritage. The erosion has been going on a long time and certainly needs attention. But the timing of this request is tenible. Before the state even thinks about spending this $4.38 million, it needs to invest first and fully in its greatest asset. That isn't the past, but the future: human potential. Programs that build people, that give young people and adults the skills and values they need to become productive workers and good citizens, should be North Carolina's top priority. All the in dicators tell us this, from our young people's low SAT scores to the complaints from mdustry that new hires simply don't have what it takes to do their jobs. We have yet to tap the full potential of our community college system in helping individuals prepare for the rapidly changing en vironment of the workplace. Yet, for the past several years the system has endured horrendous cuts. Those now proposed would send the system back to the dark ages of its beginning. Institutions like Brunswick Community College and the people they serve will lose because of this. While most observers say the public school system needs a major overhaul, no one has said it needs its budget slashed to pieces in the meantime. Until there's something better devised to take its place, the educational system we have now needs to be ad equately funded. North Carolina needs to get its priorities straight and invest in the programs that are guaranteed to show the biggest return in the long run: those involving people. If it is important that Fort Fisher be saved immediately, then supporters should convince the state to fund the project in addi tion to other, more basic requests. Second, both the federal gov ernment and private historical groups, should each chip in a large sum of money, since Fort Fisher is supposed to be the highest preservation priority in North Carolina under the American Battlefield Protection Plan. No matter how unique or how important the site of the fort may be, it is not worth sacrificing expenditures on basics such as education. 20,000 Gallons Of Water A Day Is Deadly Too much of a good thing can kill you. It's an argument opponents use to convince regional and municipal water suppliers not to add flouride to the public's drinking water. Last month, Brunswick County Commissioners wisely renewed its effort to begin adding flouride to the county's water supply. The previous board had approved the program in concept, but no one in county gov ernment seemed to be excited en ough to really push for its imple mentation. Health experts say adding flouride to water strengthens the mineral com position of teeth, cspccialiy in young children, making teeth more resistant to acid attacks which result in cavi ties. Flouride also helps to strengthen bones ami can act as a deterrent to os teoporosis, a disease that causes bones to become brittle with age. The American Dental Associa tion estimates that for every SI spent on fluoridation at least S50 is saved in the dentist's officc. Brunswick County will apply for nearly S57.000 in state grants to fund its flouride program. Water cus tomers may pick up a tab of around 50 cents per year to pay for the chemicals, such a small price to pay. Terry Pope Flouridc is most effective when ingested during tooth growth, when the chemical becomes part of the tooth substance. In 1980, the U.S. Public Health Service issued a re port it hoped would educate the world on the importance of flouride. Its goal was to push for fluoridat ed water in 95 percent of public wa ter supplies by 1990. Last year, it was reported that only 60 percent of the nation's water systems now have flouride. The agency now hopes 95 percent can be achieved by the year 2000. If flouride is so good for you and is so relatively cheap, why is there resistance to have the invisible war riors pumped into our homes? I received a letter last week from a Sunset Beach resident who asks the same question. The writer ex plains how a daughter's dental problems developed over a five year period after moving away from a fluoridated water supply. A dentist advised that the lack of flouridc had a great impact on the child's teeth during her critical years of development It is an argu ment that Dr. David McDaniel, a dentist who screens school students in Brunswick County, also made be fore commissioners last October. McDaniel said 36 percent of Brunswick County's school children had cavities or severe dental prob lems when screened in 1989 com pared to 13 percent of schoo1 stu dents in New Hanover County, which has flouride in its drinking water. Brunswick County's water expansion project will provide more and more residents with fluoridated drinking water in the years to come. It is the fear of cancer that has some people swimming against the stream. Safety questions were raised after a study revealed that four out of 130 male rats which received very large doses of flouride in their drinking water developed a rare form of bone cancer, osteosarcoma. Interestingly enough, none of the female rats or mice involved in the experiment developed bone tumors during the two-year study conduct ed by the National Toxicology Pro gram. Even the researchers were skeptical about the findings. Why? The level of flouridc at which cancer occurred in male rats was 45 to 79 times higher than nor mal human consumption through fluoridated drinking water. A person would have to drink 20,000 gallons of water a day to consume the same amount of flouride those poor rats were given over a two-year period. However, opponents are back in full force. Another study to deter mine the validity of the rat test has been ordered. Across the country, local govern ments are once again scared into keeping flouride out of water until studies are complete. And then there will probably be another study and the debate will continue, on and on. Dr. Brad Williams, a dentist on the Brunswick County Board of Health, said flouridc appears natu rally in well water in the Ash com munity and throughout parts of Horry County, South Carolina. Those lucky Ash residents are the only county residents now who are enjoying a good thing and are living to smile about it. No doubt, they do so with a full set of teeth. YEAH, we Li LOOK AT IT. ^NlGHT r-*Qo^Missici t^QREPORT i FIGHT AFTER THE GAME/, ANYONE WANT TO REAP about television Is DOMINAT/ON OF COLLEGE <3 PORTS? WBoor ?iw C/MfcUfttcrawM You Should Read The Things They Write About Us! Mint juleps, Crinolines, fried chicken, grits. That's the way lots of people visualize the South, especial ly if they've never visited. Certainly these items are ele ment'. of our past and in some cas es, rur present. But they aren't the whole woof or fabric, any more than these quotable quotes I'm about to share with you are. The quotes come from book called The Traveller's Dictionary of Quotation, edited by Peter Yapp and published by Routledge, Chapman and Hall, Inc. My guess is they would be fun while passing through, but I'm not sure they add much to a visitor's first impressions of the region. From the post-Civil War carpet bagger era to more modern times, it seems that in the hands of its own writers and others the South has not always fared gently. See how your views today compare with those of others over the past century. What do you think about the South and its fj%, Susan w Usher v * J2f* people? What writer would you quote in trying to describe the char acter of the region? Whatever you do, don't take these quotes too seriously, especial ly if you're a Southerner! "The South, the poor South!" So mourned John C. Calhoun in his dying words in 1850. An intellectu al giant of political life in his day, Calhoun was an ardent nationalist who later became an equally strong advocate of states' rights as he fought to preserve the agricultural way of life in the South. "A Southerner talks music." Mark Twain wrote this line in his 1883 work of non-fiction. Life on the Mississippi. "Alas! for the South, her books have grown fewer ? she never was much given to literature." Or so claimed J. Gordon Coogler in his 1897 edition of Purely Original Verse. (Good thing the likes Eudora Welty, William Faulkner, Thomas Wolfe, Flannery O'Connery or Car son McCullers didn't see this quote.) "In the south, the war is what A.D. is elsewhere: They date from it." Again, that's Samuel Clemens, a.k.a. Mark Twain, speaking in Life on the Mississippi. "We Southerners are, of course, a mythological people." That's Raleigh newspaper man and South ern liberal Jonathan Daniels speak ing in his reportorial book, A Southerner Discovers the South, 1943. 'The South has preaching and shouting. ..grits... country songs...and all or it, all of that old mental cholesterol, is confined to the Sunday radio." Thai's Tom Wolfe, writing in 1965 in The Kandy - Colored Tangerine - Flake Streamline Baby. "Southerners say that their speech is so measured that, before a Southern girl can explain that she won't, she already has." Trevor Fishlock, 1980, in American and Nothing Else. And yet, for all its size and all its wealth, and all the "progress" it babbles of, it is almost as sterile, artistically, intellectually, cultur ally, as the Sahara Desert" Scorching commentary from H.L. Mencken "The Sahara of the Bozart," Prejudices, Second Series, 1921. "The Old South was ploughed under. But the ashes are still warm." So said Henry Miller in 1945, The Air-conditioned Night mare. LETTER TO THE EDITOR There Is No Excuse For This Slowness To the editor I have grown up enjoying and appreciating the coastal communities of North Carolina. As a child I visited Wilmington and Carolina Beach. As an adult I have grown to appreciate Brunswick County, and especially Holden Beach. The people there have always been friendly, while the environment has been void of tall buildings, megacommercialism, and all the trap pings that come with them. I have seen this to be a good place to spend vacations and holidays with the family. My love of this area has prompted me and other members of my family to buy property in the Holden Beach area. My parents, my brother and myself are all absentee land owners. We are a few of the many people who enjoy the beach areas during the warm months of the year. On March 13 my parents received a phone call informing them that their beach house had been broken into and robbed. This is not such shocking news because when you leave a house empty for a period of time, you can expect this to happen. The shocking news is that the Brunswick County Sheriff's Department informed my par ents that they had discovered the break-in on Feb. 28. The information was received by the owner 12 days after the discovery. There is no excuse for a law enforcement department to be this slow or lax. When a family member went to check on per sonal items that may be missing, it was discov ered that no one in the sheriff's department had filed a report concerning the break-in. Once again, there is no excuse for this lack of action. The only positive thing that was done was the locking of a storm door that would keep honest people out of the house considering the front door was damage beyond use. The house is not located in a sparsely popu lated area nor in an area with very little traffic on the roads. It is located on Kirby Road which is traveled 24 house a day. 1 make this point be cause no one knows when the house was robbed. We suspect much earlier because the electric bill is double the normal amount. No one has been there since November and the winter has not been harsh. The clectric meter was read on Feb. 28. Where is the protection? As a taxpayer of Brunswick County, I am ex tremely upset with the non-professionalism of the Brunswick County Sheriff's Department. Can anyone in the department do their job correctly? I am a school teacher and If I do not perform my job to meet the high standards of my local school system, I will be terminated as my boss sees fit. I only regret that I do not live in Brunswick County so that I can work hard to remove the non-professionals of the sheriff's department The voters of Brunswick County must watch their workers of public service jobs and ques tion their effectiveness. Randall Jackson High Point