The Pilot Covers Brunswick County! THE STATE PORT PILOT A Good Newspaper In A Good Community Most of the News All The Time VOLUME 38 No. 25 10-Pages Today SOUTHPORT, N. C. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1966 5* A COPY PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY Promoted To Captain PROMOTED — First Lieutenant John P. Boylin, Jr., Assistant to the Director, Mili tary Ocean Terminal, Sunny Point, has recently been promoted to the rank of Captain Photograph shows Mrs. Boylin and Lt. Colonel Charles B. Shiveley, terminal executive officer, each pinning bars on the shoulders of the new captain. Raise Deposit For Maternity Hospital Care The board of trustees of Dosh er Hospital approved an increase from $50 to $100 for the ad mission of all maternity patients at their regular monthly meet ing Wednesday night. The board also approved plans for the laboratory to purchase some new equipment to include a binocular microscope, steri lizer, centerifuge, incubator and smaller items. The new equip ment will increase the accuracy of all lab work done and de crease the amount of lab work that has to be sent to other laboratories for testing that it has been unable to do. Request for routine lab work by the physi cian for the patient will increase. The installation of the sterilizer and incubator will establish a department of bacteriology with in the laboratory. Donations for improvement of Dosher Hospital continue to come in. Pictures for the hall ways and rooms have been con tributed by Mrs. Holly A. Dut ton, Southport, Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Clark, Long Beach, and the Ocean View Methodist Church, Long Beach. Mrs. Dutton also has contributed curtains for the hospital rooms. Pawnee FormyDuval has donated two chairs for room number 30. Mrs. Dan Harrelson donated enough paint to repaint room number 11. More curtains for the second floor patient rooms have been contributed by the Oak Island Home Demonstration Club. Baby blankets, sheets, shirts, baby basket and baby crib have been donated by the Live Oak Garden club of Southport. LfWWWWWWVV \ Brief Bits Of [news j HOSPITAL PATIENT Edward Lindner is con valescing from an operation per formed last week at Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill. CHURCH BAZAAR The annual bazaar of the women of St. Philip’s Episcopal Church, Southport, will be held on Friday from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. in the Parish House. SCOTCH FOURSOME A Scotch Foursome will be played at Oak Island Golf Club Sunday, followed by a dinner Sunday evening. Trophies will be awarded winners in the recent club tournament. BENEFIT DINNER The WSCS of Shiloh Methodist Church, Leland, will sponsor a benefit dinner at the church on Saturday. The menu will consist of either turkey and dressing or baked ham, and a variety of vegetables. Homemade pies and cakes will also be on sale. Pro ceeds will go to the building fund. Serving will begin at 6 o’clock. The public is invited. Shallotte Plans Christmas Parade Final plans are being made for the annual parade and Christ mas opening by the merchants and businessmen of Shallotte which is schedule for Thursday afternoon at 4:30 o’clock. Twenty units have already been entered and others are expected to come according to Thomas Batson, chairman of the float committee. Commercial floats with pretty girls, Smokey The Bear, Holsum and other at tractive units are included in the parade which promises to be ‘the biggest and best yet.’ Included in the bands already secured for the parade are the Columbus County High School Band, the Brunswick County High School Band and the ROTC Drill Team and Color Guard which will carry colors. Santa will arrive in traditional style, probably aboard the big red fire truck which will parade the full length of town along U. S. 17, beginning at the Northern city limits. Decorations are being in stalled in the stores to make ready for the gala event. The shelves of the stores are being stocked with gift items and most all merchandise has taken on a Christmas glow. “Uncle Charlie’, the popular personality who has been heard many times on WVCB Radio, but never seen, will make the first appearance in public and serve as parade marshal. Christmas Ball Helps Library On the night of December 9 the Southport Junior Womens Club will hold a gala Christmas Ball at the Boiling spring Lakes Coun try Club. Music will be provided by the 16-piece Wilmington Com munity Orchestra and proceeds will be donated to the Southport Brunswick County Library Build ing Fund. Tickets will be sold by all Southport Junior Womens Club members or reservations may be made by calling Mrs. Afton Smith, Jr., Mrs. Richard Con rad, Mrs. A. R. Turner, Jr., or Mrs. Norman Hornstein. As the Country Club will accommodate only 400 people, those planning on attending are urged to make their reserva tions as soon as possible. The Boiling Spring Lakes Country Club has been made available for the Christmas Ball by Arthur Greene, who wrote that the future residents of Boil ing Spring Lakes will certainly benefit from the new library. The Wilmington Community Orchestra is being provided for the occasion by the American Federation of Musicians. The Wilmington Community Orchestra is under the direction of Prof. William F. Adcock of the Wilmington College Music Department. Dr. Richard Con rad, Southport dentist, will be featured on the saxophone. Dress will be formal or semi formal. Adult Classes At Waccamaw ASH—Waccamaw High School, in cooperation with the Cape Fear Technical Institute, is plan ning to provide adult education opportunities for residents of the Waccamaw area. Waccamaw Principal John G. Long has said that past par-1 ticipation in these courses has been so great and interest has been expressed for more of the same is the cause of the con tinuation of the program. A meeting was held the past Tuesday night at the school and another is set for Thursday night Dec. 1, at 7 o’clock, also at the school. Any person desiring to enter classes are urged by Prin cipal Long to come on out to the school at this time. Long said courses would be offered in the following subjects, interested: Basic Education I, for adults who need to improve reading, writing and math skills, no cost; Basic Education II, for those who wish similar instruction on the upper elementary level, no cost; Secondary Education ], for adults who dropped out of high school in the 9th or 10th grade and wish to work toward high school equivalency, Cost, $4.25 for books; Secondary Education H, for those who wish to review the 11th and 12th grades work in preparation for high school equivalency, cost, $4.75 for books. Modern Math for Parents, brief introductory course for the bene fit of parents who want more in formation about the new method of teaching math in the public schools Business Education, to include typing, shorthand and bookkeeping; Arc Welding, a be ginning course for those interest ed in learning the fundamentals of welding. Financing Is Student Topic The guidance committee of Union High School has planned a series of meetings with the parents of juniors and seniors in the school district to acquaint them with procedures and re sponsibilities relative to college attendance. An introduction to these meet ings was given by Mrs. I. B. Hankins, coordinator of guid ance, at the regular Parent Teachers Association meeting on November 22. The first meeting of the series will be held Friday evening, at 6:30 p.m. at the school. Topic for discussion at this time will be “Financing A College Educa tion For Your Child”. Consul tant for the occasion will be Aubry Johnston, vice president, Waccamaw Bank and Trust Com pany, Shallotte. All parents with children in the junior or senior class as well as those with children already in college are asked to be present. It is necessary that this meeting begin promptly at 6;30 as another (Continued on Page 4) Meeting Should Help Map Plans For Agriculture Brunswick County farmers and others interested ii agriculture will meet with officials from North Carolina State University tomorrow (Thursday) to discuss current developments in agricul ture and the School of Agri culture and Life Sciences atN.C. State. The meeting in Supply will be held for people from New Han over, Pender and Columbus coun ties. Starting time is 7:30 p. m. in the County Extension Service Building. County Extension Chairman Archie F. Martin, said the meeting will be part of a series of similar meetings scheduled across North Caro lina this winter. The series is sponsored by the School of Agri culture and Life Sciences and the Agricultural Foundation. Objectives of the meetings are to let the local people share their ideas with the university of ficials and to report on the university’s agricultural activi ties. Those appearing on the pro gram from the university include Dr. Brooks James, Dean of the School of Agriculture, Dr. -George Hyatt, Director of Ex tension, and Dr. E. w. Glazener, Dean of Instruction. Similar meetings were held throughout the state in 1964 and were termed a “huge success” by both local people who attend ed and by those representing N.C. State. “It offers us a wonder ful opportunity to exchange ideas and to become better informed about problems and concerns at the grass roots level,” university officials said in announcing the meetings. Invited to attend the meeting are farm, business and legis lative leaders; members of extension advisory boards; rep resentatives of agricultural agencies; vocational agriculture teachers and their students; and other people interested in agri culture or N. C. State. Contributes To New Handbook The School of Education at East Carolina College, in co operation with various school officials, mainly from Eastern North Carolina, has prepared a new handbook of maintenance and operational procedures for school administrators. The school officials who wrote the articles in he handbook have all completed or are enrolled in the sixth-year graduate program in ECC’s School of Education. The articles cover various phases in the maintenance of public school property. Ralph King, assistant super intendent of Brunswick County Schools, contributed an article on “The School Heating Plant— The Boiler.” Dr. Ralph Brimley, professor in the School of Education, direct ed the preparation of the hand book. Ronald T. Chuchola of Goldey Beacom Junior College in Wilmington, Del., served as editor and John W. Moore of New Bern High School as assistant editor. Dr. Brimley says the publi cation starts a series to be con tinued during the coming years. It is hoped, he adds, that the series will be “useful and prac tical to school administrators because of the lack of printed material on school operation and maintenance.” (Continued on Page 4) Brunswick In Running For Site Of Oceanography Experiments Study Development Commission VISIT — Four persons were in Southport Tuesday to make a study of the plan and operation of the Brunswick County Resources Development Commission. They were left to right — seated: Dr. R. G. Townsend, chairman of Hoke County Planning & De velopment Commission, and Jim Fout, director, with George Gold, Regional Represen tative for North Carolina Department of Conservation & Development, standing left, and W. A. Powell, chairman of Resources Development Commission for Brunswick .County, ^ ... Congressman To Visit County For Two Days Congressman Alton A. Lennon has been making the rounds of the Seventh Congressional Dis trict during the past few weeks during the adjournment period of the second session of the 89th Congress, and next week he will be in Brunswick county. On Monday and Tuesday he will be in the District office to fill appointments and to attend to his mall. Next Wednesday he will be visiting throughout Brunswick County and on next Thursday he will be at the courthouse from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. He will be back in his Wilmington office on Friday. “While I was able to fulfill numerous speaking engagements in the District during the first six months of the Session,” said Congressman Lennon, “the ex tremely heavy legislative calen dar, as well as the late Congres sional adjournment, limited my visits in recent months." “In traveling throughout each county, I shall continue my ef forts to learn, by personal dis cussion with our people, some of their problems in connection with our National Government,” he said. Time And Tide i Announcement was made in The Pilot for December 2, 1936 that the submarine Perch would visit Southport on her shakedown cruise. There was news, too, of another vessel. The menhaden boat “Captain” had run aground during a storm and had sunk with all hands aboard being saved. A “hot Sulphur spring” promised to speed development for Fort Caswell as a resort; a Shell oil tanker was stranded in the Southport harbor due to shortages in her crew; and Southport had just had its first taste of real winter weather for the season as the temperature dropped to 25-degrees on November 28. Five years later there was a front page weather report which classified the November just past as being “warm and dry”. The lowest reading for the month was 31-degrees. This and other news was recorded in our publication for December 3, 1941. There was a front page piece which declared “Bolivia Automobile Man Has Interesting Hobby.” That was J. A. Elmore, and the “hobby” referred to was a nursery for growing azaleas and camellias—some thing that later developed into a very profitable venture for him. There also was a front page story telling that tobacco graders—those with a true talent for the business of separating the good weed from the bad—were much in demand. The time was December 4, 1946, and officials at Shallotte had placed a ban on the use of fireworks in that town. Bill Wells had begun construction of a marine railway at his seafood packing house in Southport. Book covers were being distributed to school children, and the (Continued On Page Four) New Industry Will Start At Shallotte Brunswick county’s newest in dustry, Highlander, Ltd., will be in operation shortly before the end of the year, it was announced by company officials yesterday. Highlander, a leading manu facturer of ladies’ knit sports wear, will initially employ about 50 workers in Shallotte, where stretch slacks will be cut and sewn. By late spring it is ex pected to have over 300 em ployees in a new, modern build ing in the center of the county. President of Highlander, Ltd. is Herbert Rounick, who at age 35 was President of Spartans Industries and one of the youngest company presidents of a New York Stock Exchange listed cor poration. Rounick’s entire busi ness experience was with Maro Industries, a manufacturer and distributor of men’s and women’s apparel, which had a volume of approximately $50,000,000 a year. In 1965, after merging his company with Spartans, he as sumed the presidency of a com pany which has an annual volume of $250,000,000 and employs 10, 000 people in 19 plants. He re signed from Spartans to form Highlander. Highlander is a completely vertical operation. It knits its own fabrics and makes a finished garment. Other Highlander plants are located in Morganton, (Continued on Page 4) Moose Lodge In Operation Oak Island Moose Lodge 2059 was instituted in October with 102 charter members, and as of this date has increased to 155 members. The following officers were appointed by the State Supreme Lodge; Governor, L. D. Jones; Junior Governor, Carl Watkins, Jr.; Prelate, James M. John son; Secretary, Harold H. Bird; Treasurer, Dan Shan non; Sergeant-At-Arms, James F. Howard; Inner Guard, H. R. Duncan; Outer Guard, Koscoe Rogers, Jr., Trustees, E. W. Morgan, Archie A. Dixon and Gib son V. Barbee. The Lodge will meet each Wednesday night at 8 o’clock at the Yaupon Beach bingo build ing, which will serve as a lodge hall until May at which time members hope to move into their own building. Visitors Study County Program The operation of the Resources Development Commission for Brunswick county was outlined to a representative group from Hoke county Tuesday, according to W. A. Powell, chairman of the commission. Powell stated that Dr. R. G. Townsend, chairman, and Jim Fout, director, of the newly or ganized Hoke County Planning and Development Commission met with Roy A. Stevens, director of the Resources Development Commission for Brunswick coun ty, to discuss the local operation to guide them in setting up the Hoke county organization. The Resources Development Commission is considered a model operation in Eastern North Carolina. Other county rep resentatives have visited the area to see first hand what Brunswick is doing in the promotion of economic development. George Gold, regional rep resentative of the North Caro lina Department of Conservation and Development, joined the group in the discussion. Powell stated that itisapleas ure to have other counties use Brunswick county as a model. “We meet with these delegations to advertise Brunswick county,” he said. “Each delegation has its own questions, and we attempt to give them the best information that is available.” Gospel Sing At Ash To Benefit Special Classes ASH--A Country and Gospel Jamboree will be held at Wac camaw School auditorium, Satur day night, Dec. 3 at 8 o’clock. Mrs. Myrle Evans, an instruc tor of special education at the school said that the proceeds from the Jamboree will be used to benefit the special education classes at the school. Among the personalities in lo cal and area country and gospel music that are scheduled to ap pear to entertain those attending (Continued on Page 4) W. A. Powell, Chairman of the Resources Development Commission for Brunswick coun ty said today that information has been received that Dr. Harris Stewart and representatives Of the Environmental Science Serv ices Administration's evaluation team will visit Brunswick coun ty on J anuary 6. Powell stated thatthe commis sion has worked with the North Carolina Department of Con servation and Development for several months in preparing in formation which was presented to ESSA in Rockville, Maryland, on October 31. The presentation was made by the Department of Conservation and Development on behalf of North Carolina and the two areas of the state that are being con sidered by ESSA. These are Carteret county and the Cape Fear Area of Brunswick and New Hanover counties. Carteret and New Hanover counties each have one site and Brunswick county has five sites that will be shown to the evalu ation team headed by Dr. Stewart. ESSA has a fou-teen point criteria which was provided to each area of the state by Marshall L. Sheppard of the Department of Conservation and Development staff. Roy A. Stevens, Director of the Resources Development Commission for Brunswick county, and representatives of Carteret and New Hanover coun ties worked with Sheppard and the Technical Studies Depart ment of C & D in the preparation of the material that has been presented to ESSA. Dan E. Stewart, Director of the Department of Conservation and Development, headed up the North Carolina delegation that presented the state’s pro posal to ESSA. It is reported that the Oceano graphic Center to be established by ESSA will have an annual! budget of approximately three million dollars and will employ approximately 350 people. Essa now has three research vessel and plans for additional ships in the future. Powell declared that the com mission is at present preparing additional information to be pre sented to the ESSA representa tives when they visit Brunswick county in January. “We have provided detailed Information one each of the fourteen points of the ESSA cri teria and Brunswick county caii meet the requirements,” Powell stated. "There are several states competing for this proj ect, but we feel that Brunswick county has many advantages to offer this particular project.” “ESSA has allocated only one day to look over the sites in the Cape Fear Area and we will have an extremely tight sched ule to cover the many points that are on the agenda for the day,” Powell said. Several local representatives will join the delegation while they are in Brunswick county, but the complete list cannot be determin ed until further information is received from ESSA. A copy of the North Carolina Proposal was reviewed by mem bers of the Resources Develop ment Commission for Brunswick county at their November meet ing. Tide Table Following Is the tide table for Southport during the week. These hours are ap proximately correct and were furnished The State Port Pilot through the courtesy of the Cape Fear Pilot’s Association. HIGH LOW Thursday, December i, 9:57 A M 3:46 A M 10:15 P M 4:34 P M Friday, December 2, 10:45 A M 4:34 A M 11:09 P M 5:28 P M Saturday, December S, 11:39 A M 5:28 A M 6:22 P M Sunday, December 4, 0:15 A M 6:34 A M 12:39 P M 7:16 P M Monday, December 5, 1:21 A M 7:40 A M 1:39 P M 8:16 P M Tuesday, December 6, 2:21 A M 8:46 A M 2:45 P M 9:16 P M Wednesday, December 7, 3:27 A M 9:52 A M 3^45 P M 10:16 P M