Opinion Page THE BRUNSWICK&BEACON Edward M. Swcatt and Carolyn H. Swcatt Publishers Edward M. Sweatt Editor Lynn S. Carlson Managing Editor Susan Usher News Editor Doug Rutter Sports Editor Eric Carlson StaJJ' Writer Mary I'otts & Peggy Earwood Office Managers Carolyn H. Swcalt Advertising Director Timber lev Adams, Cecelia Gore and Linda Cheers Advertising Representatives Dorothy Brennan and Brenda Cleminons Moore ..Graphic Artists William Manning Pressman Lonnle Sprinkle Assistant Pressman PAGE 4-A, THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 1994 When Executive Session Info Leaks, It's Time To Go Public Holdcn Beach Commissioner David Sandifer should have re ceived some support from his fellow board members when he tried to instigate public discussion of the to-date unsuccessful scheme to terminate Town Manager (lus Ulrich for reasons which at this point remain non-specific. In a meeting last Thursday Sandifer cast the lone vote against going into closed session to discuss "personnel matters" obvious ly related to an article published on that day in this newspaper, in which Commissioner Dwight Carroll characterized Ulrich as "useless" and worthy of being fired. Sandifer also expressed his displeasure that some commissioners had discussed with our re porter what transpired in an earlier closed session, and said he wanted to offer board members a chance to give their views in an open session. 1 he insuc begs that several points be made. f irst of all. our article was no revelation of any deep secret. Rumors about the push by Carroll and cohorts to have Ulrich fired were rife following the earlier executive session. In fact, the source of our tip was not an elected official hut several citizens who heard the news "on the street." That's a good indication that commissioners had been sharing executive session information pretty freely around town, which is perfectly within their rights. While the N.C. Open Meetings Law sets forth the circumstances under which a closed session can be held, ii contains no gag rule for the participants, and it shouldn't. Holdcn Beach's experience is a good example of the fact that elected officials more often use the executive session privilege to shield themselves from public scrutiny than to protect their em ployees from embarrassment. When that strategy backfires and rumors start flying, citizens demand and deserve a public expla nation from the men and women they elected to represent them. In this case, they still haven't gotten one. Meanwhile Ulrich. ser\ ing his second stint as one of a series of Holdcn Beach town managers in recent years, stands publicly accuscd of being unfit to do his job for reasons which remain en tirely nebulous. Both he and the citizens of Holden Beach de serve a thorough public airing of the charges, the investigation and the conclusions. Only the commissioners can give them that. Worth Repeating... {\mcrica was discovered accidentally by a greal seaman who w as looking for something else; w hen discovered it was not w anted; and most of the exploration for the next fifty years was done in the hope of getting through or around it. America was named after a man w ho discovered no part of the New World. History is like that, very chancy. ?Samuel Eliot Morrison I The strongest and sweetest songs yet remain to be sung. ?Wall Whitman I Everybody wants to be C'ary Grant. Even / want to be Cary ii rant. ?Cary Grant I He know the human brain is a device to keep the ears from granny on one another. ?Peter De Vries I There comes a time in a man 's life w hen to get where he has to go?if there are no doors or w indow s?he w alks through a wall. ?Bernard fviaiamud \Where I was born and where and how / have lived is unimpor tant It is what / have done with where / have been that should be of interest. ?Georgia O'Keeflc Demise Of Spelling Bee Sign Of The Times "What about the spelling bee? What's the schedule? What's hap pening?" I was only the second caller to ask. she said It was the first of March and there hadn't been a classroom or school spelling be anywhere in Brunswick County. It was time What was wrong? There isn't going to be a Brunswick County Spelling Bee this spring, anil perhaps not next year or the year after. The demise of the bee is a symptom of a larger ailment. Nearly 11 years ago. the Shallotte Junior Woman's Club, under the leadership of Debbie I x'mon and with the help ol The Sum? I'ort Pilot in Southport. revived the Brunswick County Spelling Bee. The county winner could no longer advance to a regional bee, because there wasn't a regional bee. So. for the past 10 years a student from Brunswick County had ad vanced directh to the Scripps llovvard National Bee in Wash ington. D.C.. part of a select group of students from across the country. Our contestant never won. often didn't make it past the first round of a vers difficult competition. But that student was there, a visible state ment that to someone back home. Susan Usher spelling was important. That "someone" was mainly Debbie Lemon, a Shallotte Middle School math teacher and then-Junior clubwoman. I ast year she retired as bee director, after having tried three or four years to recruit a co-dircetor. She would have continued another year as a co-director, but no one would take the other half of the job. Just as well, she's been thinking. The past several years it's been like pulling teeth to get the cooperation of teachers and schools in schedul ing the bees, and of the community in raising the money needed to send a speller and his escort to D.C. and obtaining prizes suitable for a coun ty-level competition. I ct a year pass and perhaps some other people will miss the bee, she's thinking. Maybe students will miss the bee. I'm afraid they won't. Debbie. 1 Few people, it seems, think spelling matters. Why should they think any differ ently? That's what they're taught in school. Standardized tests give mini mal weight to any of the "mechan ics" of writing, though colleges complain regularly that the high school graduates entering their halls don't know how to write?in terms of both mechanics and the concise expression of thoughts and ideas. "It's not important" or "I never use it" are typical excuses given by many an adult who never learned how to spell or use a dictionary, or can pass the chore on to clerical help. Just the other day, a news release was presented on the letterhead of a county educators' group on a topic of current concern?allowing the faculties, principals and parents/ communities to have a greater say in how their schools are run. Educators usually call it "site-based" manage ment, but in this instance, the news release called it "sight-based" man agement almost all the way through to the bottom of the second page. leased about it. the submitter said. "We ran it through the spell checker four or five times." "Sight" and "site" are homonyms, words that sound alike but have dif ferent meanings. Both are legitimate words thai a spell-checking program on a computer would scoot past without a pause. Computerized spell-checking is no substitute for proofreading. I was reminded of that myself the hard way. The release reminded me of one of our all-time goofs here at The Brunswick Beacon, where we do make a conscious effort to use and spell words correctly even if we don't always succeed. (I'd like to think the same could he said for our schools.) One of our staff writers referred to the "wench" on the old lloldcn Beach Bridge, when he meant to write "winch." That little print imp sneaked past a spell-checker, of course, plus two editors and a type setter. It showed up on Page I, to our dismay and the delight of sharp eyed readers. One even wrote a po em in its honor which we ran on the opinion page the following week. Spelling may not often be the stuff of life-or-death scenarios, but it is important. If clarity anil under standing are the goals of a writer, spelling must be a part of the process. There's no substitute for it, not even computer literacy. An annual spelling bee was one way of getting that idea across to Brunswick County students. I. for one, will miss it. is ^emo: Use exfre^^'^^n^n&^ng Wnew sxSc'm p especially fhae wHf? ? " ^ 'SffiBCUR. & (WY cfiMuuA r/tmm t /VVDCC LETTERSTOTHE EDITOR Rates Are Sewer Opponents' Only Concern i o me euiior: What nerve! II there is a hidden agenda any where on the Calabash Hoard of Commissioners, it's with the opposition to the sewer authority. Their agenda is to secure their own sewer rates, regardless of good or bad. There is no concern for what's best for the town: its extraterritorial juris diction or the region as a whole in the long run. The line of thinking seems to be, "What can we do for ourselves?" The whole area needs this system. The over whelming majority of the elected officials agree this is the best way to go. The only people who don't are those with a special interest in Carolina Hiythc. Using the term "hidden agenda" seems a bit hypocritical to me. Hut if we do have one, it's this: if we don't go ahead with this system, we'll all soon be floating in "it." Forrest King ( alahash (Commissioner Like A Friend's Visit To the editor: Once upon u time, I was told that a good way to get to know an area was to subscribe to the lo cal newspaper. So when my husband and I pur chased a condo at Sea Trail, we took our our sub scription to the Beacon. What I was not told was what an enriching, entertaining experience it would be! Each week we look forward lo visits from our friends as we catch up on what's going on in a very special corner of the world. We think of it as a mini-vacation! Believe me. we've needed all the vacation we could get from the terrible weather we're having. (There's another 6 to 12 inches on the way today, exactly what we don't want!) We've learned thai Brunswick County is not an idyllic, never-never land, but that the citizens of the area are trying to come to grips with the prob lems that face all communities before they be come insurmountable. Progress is, indeed, a two-edged sword and must be handled carefully. Your reporting of these issues has been accurate, fair and most enlighten ing. Thank you. and keep up the good work! Lach time we visit, it leels more like home, thanks to you. We look forward to the time when we can get the Beacon hot off the press and not from an ice-encrusted mailbox! Rebecca Winfield Eastlake, Ohio {\Siii~c !/it'ers. Following Page) Write Us We welcome your letters to the editor. Letters must include your address and tele phone number. (This information is for verifi cation purposes only; we will not publish your street/mailing address or phone number.) Letters must be typed or written legibly. Anon ymous letters will not be published. Style Slaves: Don't Change A Hair?Or Hat As a youngster, on (he tare occasions when I stum bled upon a particularly astute observation, my grand father always got a kick out of saying, "Hey, you're not as dumb as you look." "You're darn right!" I would answer indig nantly. "I mean Yes I am! Hey. Wail a minute. I'm not dumb!" Which re minds me of an embarrassingly idiotic, yet stubbornly popular dressing habit that likewise makes one question whether the wearer really is .is intellectually bankrupt as their ap pearance would indicate. I 'm talking about that ridiculous turned-around base ball cap thing Now there's a fashion statement. One that shouts, "Look at me! I'm an imbecile!" The fact is. walking around with your hat backwards is about as stylish as wearing underwear on the outside <>t your clothes or stumbling around with your shoes on the wrong feet Hopefully, I've employed a sufficient number of "big words" to lose any readers who are so tragically clue less that they actually believe a ball cap is supposed to be worn with the bill (or visor) protruding out the back. I don't want people like that calling to complain. (They aren't likely to write a letter.) "Duhhhhh.Mr. Carlson? You know that thing you wrote?...I think you're...like...wrong...or something." " Thank you. pumpkin. Don't' change a hair (or your hat) for me." Most stupid fashion statements are easily ignored. Hut so many people continue to cling to this moronic reverse hat habit that our MTV-infected young people might start to believe that the visor REAIJ-Y DOES belong in back! Imagine an entire generation "growing up" to be come like that slovenly pest in the Burger King com mercials; the one who wanders from table to table pick ing at peoples' food and yodcling I LUUUUUUVVV T1IIS PLACE!" He reminds me of the mental patients you see loiter ing around the Port Authority Hus Terminal in New York, talking to themselves, grabbing at imaginary in sects and forgetting to use the bathroom. Those guys can be excused for wearing their hats backwards. (Or their pants for that matter.) Shock treat ment and heavy doses of lithium will do that. Hut anyone with properly functioning brain synapses should understand that the purpose of a cap's bill is to shield the wearer's eyes from sunlight or rain. And un less you are extremely paranoid, your eyes are located in the front ot your head Pretty simple, eh? The visor dates hack to the "days of yore," a peril*! spanning the years between the development of early stone tools and the invention of duct tape. In those days, knights in shining armor used to poke each other with spears and hit each other on the head with cans of Mace. They also wore protective helmets equipped with lit tle swinging doors in front called "visors." Che term comes from the t rench words "vis," meaning face, and "or." meaning coverer-upper. Visors protected the knights from the stinging effects of Mace and allowed them to taunt each other in nasty ways without being recognized: "Yo! UtiKclol! You're so ugly, when you were born, the doctor slapped your mother!" "Oh yeah? Well, you wouldn't say that if you weren't wearing that visor!" A knight named Harold of llalitosi was the first to commit fashion suicide by wearing his visor in back, lie thought it "looked cool." Hut the lack of ventilation made him violently ill anil he choked to death on his own vomit. The original visor lost its usefulness as people be came more civili/cd and started killing each other with artillery and automobiles. It was retained on the base ball cap to shield a fielder's eyes from the sun. (Visors also keep the faces of managers and umpires a safe dis tance apart while they scream at each other.) liaschall catchers were the first to wear their caps backwards, because they had a legitimate reason to do so: I'heir protective mask would not fit with the visor in front, fortunately, they had enough sense to return the hat to its proper position after the game In the 1970s, some teenagers wore their caps turned sideways anil occasionally backwards as a "style thing." Hut the trend faded when new modes of sell ex pression came along that didn't look quite so dorky. The next decade saw young white kids revive the hat backwards thing after a few rock musicians were seen wearing them that way. It's hard to say whether this was done on purpose, or because they didn't know any better, or because they exceeded the recommended dosage of medication. Axl Rose, the lead screamer for the Guns and Roses rock band, was once asked if he knew how stupid he looked wearing a bandanna and a backwards hat at the same time. "Uhhh ..yes," Axl said "I mean, no. Is this a trick question?" Perhaps it isn't the visor in back that matters. Maybe these folks like to have that perforated plastic strap mashed across their eyebrows so they can have little tank-tread marks etched into their foreheads Personally, I don't get it. I can imagine only four legitimate reasons to wear a baseball cap with the visor turned around. You may do so if (and only if): 1) You are a baseball catcher actively engaged in catching baseballs while wearing a baseball catcher's mask. 2) You are looking through a camera lens, a keyhole or some other aperture in such a manner that the bill would get in the way. 3) You are outdoors during a windstorm or engaged in some form of activity that causes air to move rapidly toward your face, creating an area of low pressure above the visor, causing your cap to be blown off. 4) You really are as dumb as you look.