INSIDE Sports, page 14 Cougar boys, girls both in semi-finals Classifieds, p. IB i Cj-; i>> /. -ivSV ■;».£ y'-k'&im lort-Oak ind's most complete ffl^Ktate properties ». v .V ■- v'v .*• \ ^ V\ \ VYu V- V1 ' '\ *\ • , . v .-V » " T • -V i A- J-M.l \4 Volume er March 4,1992 / 50 cents ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ELECTION ’92 Whofs running... COMMISSIONER District 1 I Don Warren, D □Raymond Erikson, R District 3 I IM. E. (Mark) Sharpe, D □William R. (Bob) Thorscn, D I IWavland Vereen, D □Steven Foster, R I Joseph Tyler Lenins, R □Nathaniel (Nat) Parker, R □William (Bill) Sisk, R □Bob Slockett, R I Torn Yeagle, R District 4 □C. Lephus Piggotte, D □Tom B. Rabon, Sr., D □JoAnn Bellamy Simmons, D □Tom Simmons, D □Gene Sellers, R □Patricia (Patty) Young, R SCHOOL BOARD District 1 □Sam Fletcher Frink, D □Joseph V. Brust, R □Janet Pope, R District 3 [□William D. (Billy) Carter, D □William F. Faught, D □Carlton L. Sligh, D □Stephanna Tewey, D □Bill Fairley, R District 4 □Donna Baxter, D □J. Bryant Pcrgerson, D □Pete Barnette, R Coroner □Greg White, D Register of Deeds □Grace Beasley, D I Edward F. Mintz, D □Robert J. Robinson, D □Arthur Knox, R 14th House District 1 [David Redwine, D-Brunswick □Leo Mercer, D-Columbus □Dewey Hill, D-Columbus □Shirley T. Green, D-Columbus □Kelly Holden, R-Brunswick 18th Senate District □R. C. Soles, D-Columbus □Ron Taylor, D-Bladen □Jim Whitworth, R-Wilmington 7th Congressional District □Charles G. Rose, III, D □Robert Anderson, R-Lumberton □Scott Dorman, R-Tabor City (Filing for this office closes March 9 at noon.) On a foggy Southport morning a pair of pelicans dock, while a clammer sets out on a food-finding tries panhandling on the American Fish Company mission of his own. Better discipline is goal South Brunswick will adopt new school plan By Marybeth Bianchi Feature Editor Although the Comprehensive Con cept Management System was not for mally adopted by the Brunswick County Board of Education Monday night, members said they will support the schools which want to implement it. And, South Brunswick High School principal Sue Sellers saidTuesday she expects to have a plan of action ready to present to the board by June. The comprehensive management system has been promoted for the past month by Parents in Action, a group of South Brunswick area parents who want to see discipline problems re duced, students given a quality educa tion, teachers provided with a support system and the community more in volved in education. Dorothy Essey of Yaupon Beach and Gilbert Powell of Southport both spoke in support of the comprehen sive management system at Monday night’s board meeting at South Brunswick Middle School. Powell reviewed the objectives of the “effective school” philosophy the school system is in the process of adopting, and illustrated how the man agement system supported that phi losophy. He urged the board to study the 12 steps in the first phase of the manage ment system for implementation in the 1992-93 school year. “This will start the process, and al though it will take several years to fully implement and maximize the effect of the comprehensive concept, based on what we have seen in other schools the results we will enjoy in our schools, even the first year, will be remarkable,” Powell said. “We’re all for this program,” board chairman Donna Baxter said. “We do understand the concept and we are working towards that goal. Anything that can reduce 80 percent of disci See School plan, page 3 OUTSIDE Forecast The extended forecast calls for a chance of rain Thurs day and Friday but clearing skies on Saturday. Highs will be in the mid-70s, lows in the mid-SOs. Tide table HIGH 8:21 a.m. 8:33 p.m THURSDAY, MARCH S LOW 8:53 a.m. 9:08 p.m. FRIDAY, MARCH 6 2:12 a.m. 2:30 p.m. SATURDAY, MARCH 7 2:50 a.m. 3:04 p.m. 3:28 a.m. 3:41 pjn. 4:07 a.m. 4:18 pjn. 9:25 a. in. 9:44 p.m. SUNDAY, MARCH 8 10:02 ajn. 11:26 pjn. MONDAY, MARCH 9 10:42 ajn. 4:53 a.m. 11:16 pjn. 5:02 pjn. TUESDAY, MARCH 10 11:35 ajn. 5:45 a.m. -p.m. 6:54 p.m. WEDNESDAY, MARCH II 12:12 ajn. 6:44 atm. 12:36 p.m. 6:56 pjn. The following adjuitmemi should be made: Bald Head Island, high *10, low *7; Caswell Beach, high -5, low -1; Southport, high +7, low +15, Yaupon Beach, high -32, low -45; Lockwood Folly, high -22, low -8. Bids are asked for revaluation By Holly Edwards County Editor Brunswick County will solicit bids from contractors to perform the county’s 1994 property revaluation, but county commissioners Monday night left open the possibility of per forming an in-house revaluation if tbe bids prove unacceptable. The board has three options in con ducting the revaluation, tax adminis trator Boyd Williamson said Monday night: Commissioners could hire a contractor to perform the complete revaluation without any county in volvement, they could hire a contrac tor to supervise the project and hire additional county employees to per form the appraisals, or they could con duct the entire project in-house using county employees only. Commissioners agreed to receive two bids from contractors: One to perform the entire revaluation and one to supervise the project. There will be a great difference in the amount of the two bids since it would be consider ably cheaper for a contractor to send in a supervisor alone rather than an entire crew, Williamson said. But, he See Revaluation, page 7 After nine workshops Sewer system plan presented to beach voters By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor A financial plan and preliminary design proposal to build a public wastewater management system to serve the Town of Long Beach won the official approval of all commissioners Monday night. The package also was embraced by five of six commissioners and Long Beach mayor Joan Altman as best for the town’s citizens. Long Beach voters will go to the polls March 31 to authorize or reject the sale of up to $15.5 million in general obligation bonds to finance the project. In short. Long Beach commissioners said Monday they would put before the voters for ratification a SI9.179-million proposal to build a combination gravity and pressure sewer collection system with a treatment facility on the mainland near Sunset Harbor. About S7.5 million of the system cost will be recovered from taps and assessments. Another S9 million will come in the form of loans from a state revolving Clean Water Fund program. The remaining See Sewer plan, page 6 New owner in a hole Sewage flows with each tide By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor A debate over a public utility sys tem dominates the time of staff at Long Beach Town Hall these days. But that's little comfort to Tom Dean and his wife, who have invested their life savings in what they hope will become their ultimate dream: A “mom-and-pop” business in Long Beach as operators of a small restau rant, convenience store, docking and motel operation at the place known as Blue Wa’er Point Marina. The combi nation facility was dubbed See Tidal flow, page 6 When county sanitarians arrived, what they found was an old septic system constructed of porous cinderblock with roots growing through it * * mwa », mm > ~ m Tom Dean prods the bottom of an old faulty septic tank constructed of cinderblock on his newly purchased property, the Blue Water Point Marina.