Volume 62/Number 21___ Southport, N.C. January 13,1993/50 cents ‘ j iMMte minw ■ ■■ «.«~ ttk'' k. • —. *-**. f* ■:'..-V -i'tM ■ rl M r* IAR RELSON HONORED Gov. Jim Martin was on hand last Wednesday to honor his transportation secretary, South port’s Tommy Harrelson, in ceremonies at Bruns Mm.•-- a.i m a >-■>.HMaHB — Photo by Jim Harper wick Community College. The section of U. S. 17 from Winnabow to South Carolina was named for Harrelson. Despite'Report Card’ Johnston says school progress being made By Marybeth Bianchi Feature Editor Despite receiving poor marks for the third straight year on the state's Report Card, Brunswick County schools' top administrator says progress is being made. The 1992 Report Card issued last week by the N. C. State Board of Education compares school systems across the state and provides informa tion that allows a school system to see where it is headed, how it compares to state averages and if it meets stan dards established by the state board for accreditation. "When you look inside (the 1992 See 'Report Card', page 6 ‘When you look in side (the 1992 Report Card), there was steady prog ress. The dot in the box and par don't mean nearly as much to me as seeing what we’re doing internally to make progress.’ Supt. Ralph Johnston Remarks, page 6 Brunswick County 992 Report Card Dr. King inspired local blacks Gore: Situation better; segregation more 'subtle' By Marybeth Bianchi Feature Editor Inspired by the words of Martin Luther King, Jr., spoken on August 28, 1963, in Washington, D. C„ Eugene Gore returned to Southport to help break down the walls of discrimination that blacks faced in their daily lives. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., will be honored on Friday, his birthday, as well as on the official national holiday January 18. ‘It wasn’t just blacks. It was all nation alities, all races of people. It really motivated you to see all those people coming together, all come to make changes. It told us that people can make a difference, especially when they speak up for their rights.’ Eugene Gore Today, 29 years later, he is still working to break the threads of a "subtle" discrimination that exists in Brunswick County. In the early 1960s sit-ins by black college students at Wool worth’s in Greensboro and other civil rights activities across the country provided inspiration for Southport area blacks. "During that time it aroused the consciousness of all blacks that the law See Dr. King, page 6 King celebration The public is invited to participate in a Martin Luther King* lr., celebration to be held Friday, January 15, at 7 p.in. on Brunswick Community College’s main campus. Dr. Reginald A. Hawkins, president of the North Carolina Southern Christian Leadership Conference, will speak. The event is sponsored by Brunswick Community College and the Brunswick Community Coliege Foundation, and will be held in the college’s student center. The Christian Sisters, a local musical group, will provide entertainment. An instrumental jaast selection will be per* formed by Bnmswick Community Cbliege'snew visitlngartist, Jon Thornton. Art will be exhibited and refreshments will be .served. .i. I . ' 1 • It ® Southport selects new city manager By Jim Harper Staff Writer Figuring they'd found their man even before interviewing all seven finalists, Southport aldermen Mon day hired 44-year-old Thomas A. Lynn, a veteran of both municipal and county management, as Southport’s new city manager. "I'm very well-pleased," mayor Norman Holden said. "The board should be commended for the job they did to come up with Tom. I’m looking forward to working with him.” Said Lynn: "I saw a lot of coopera tion and a lot of stability in the board. I've base my decision (to take the job) on how people treated me." Lynn will be paid $43,000, and said Monday that he'd be moving to Southport "as soon as I can find a place cheap enough for me to afford." A Raleigh native, 1975 North Caro lina State University graduate, former city manager of Enfield and former Hertford County manager, Lynn spoke by telephone from Tifton, Ga., where he served as Tift County administra tor from October, 1990, until he was asked by the county board to resign last August. Lynn, who met with the Southport See Manager, page 6 OUTSIDE Forecast Hie extended forecast calls forpaitly cloudy skies Thursday and Fii« and cloudy skies on am *. - ft Saturday. Highs Thursday fP SMI jMlbeintheSQsand» ptows:in the 40s. Friday 1 Saturday, expect ighs in the 40s and lows $ t the 30s. ■■.ii.iii.ir Tide table HIGH LOW THURSDAY, JANUARY 14 12:25 am. 6:30 Am. 12:39 pjn. &52pja. FRIDAY, JANUARY 15 125 Am. 7:32 Am. 1:38 p.m. 7:51 pj*,. SATURDAY, JANUARY 16 . 2:28 in. 8:37 L39pm. 8:52pjm SUNDAY, JANUARY 17 3:30 Am. 9:40 tMii 3:42pan. - 9i52#4P ^ MONDAY, JANUARY 18 P ' 4:30 Am. 10:40 mM 4:40 pjn. 1049 pjn. TUESDAY, JANUARY M 5:26 Am. 1>34a«, 5:37 p.m. 11:40 pj" /, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20 6:17 Am. 1222 a* 6*26p.xn." ■ The following nhotsM be i„_ B«W Head hUmd, high AO, hm -7; C&*. Batch, hiah -5, low .1; Southport, high < low 4'5,5, V*u&jB Bench, high -32, ipvit ■ ijockwoorf foiy, high -22, tow -A: ——...... .-■'■‘s