Ttiesdav Results Board of Commissioners District 1 (Democrat) ■ Don Warren 2838 □ Randy Stanley 2749 (Republican) ■ Douglas Simmons 1262 □ C. W. Hughes Jr. 840 District 2 (Democrat) □ Bruce Quaintance 2209 ■ Willie Fullwood Jr. 3308 (Republican) ■ David Sandifer (Unopposed) District 3 (Democrat) ■ Wayland Vereen (Unopposed) (Republican) ■ Leslie Collier (Unopposed) District 4 (Democrat) □ Tom B. Rabon Sr. 2764 ■ JoAnn B. Simmons 2884 Simmons wins seat. No Republicans filed. District 5 (Democrat) ■ W. M. (Bill) Sue (unopposed) (Republican) ■ David A. Bright Jr. 960 □ Roger L. Rogers 916 Board of Education District 1 (Democrat) ■ Olaf (Bud) Thorsen 2868 □ Harvey W. Gaskins 2350 (Republican) ■ Rozell Hewett (Unopposed) District 2 (Democrat) □ Clara S. Carter 1851 ■ Joyce Parker Hewett 2352 □ Polly G. Russ 1534 (Republican) ■ Charlie Scearce III (Unopposed) District 3 (Democrat) ■ William D. (Billy) Carter 3431 □ Cora M. Croff 1822 (Republican) ■ Bob Hayes (Unopposed) District 4 (Republican) ■ Pat Purvis Brown (unopposed) Brown wins seat. No Democrats filed. District 5 (Democrat) ■ Glenda Browning (unop posed) (Republican) ■ Julia (Julea) Wood 831 □ Scott Bright 777 □ Ada J. Mullins 320 Register of Deeds (Democrat) ■ Robert J. Robinson 2443 □ Raymond Carl Gilbert 1799 □ Bill Sisk 1593 (Republican) ■ Virgil F. Batten 1406 □ Yvonne Lewis Bright 752 Coroner (Democrat) ■ Greg White (unopposed) (Republican) ■ Charles A. Drew 1337 □ Franklin N. Eaddv 608 14th District State House (Democrat) ■ E. David Redwine 4251 ■ Dewey Hill 3150 □ Joseph B. Carter 1805 (Republican) ■ Robert Quinn (unopposed) ■ Shirley Babson (unopposed) Low voter turnout, but change made Incumbent school chairman, commissioner lose primary By Terry Pope County Editor County residents who voted in Tuesday’s primary ousted an incumbent county commissioner and the school board chair man. JoAnn Bellamy Simmons of Ash defeated incumbent District 4 commissioner Tom Rabon Sr. of Winnabow to win that seat outright. No Republicans filed. Also, school board chairman Clara Carter lost her reelection bid when she was upset by Joyce Parker Hewett of Supply. The surprise candidate also outdistanced former school board member Polly Russ in the Democratic District 2 primary and avoided a runoff by gaining 41 percent of the vote. As predicted by Brunswick County Board of Elections supervisor Lynda Britt, it was a low turnout at the polls Tuesday with just 8,805 of a registered 37,465 persons voting. It represents a 24-percent turnout, one of the lowest on record. In the heated register of deeds race, incumbent Robert J. Robinson captured 41.8 percent of the Democratic votes to avoid a runoff against challengers Bill Sisk and Raymond Gilbert. Commissioners In District 1, former commissioner Don Warren of Shallotte won the Democratic nomination over Randy Stanley and will face incumbent Republican Doug Simmons in the fall. Simmons, of Calabash, was an easy winner over C. W. Hughes Jr. of Shallotte Point. It will be a rematch between Simmons and Warren in the fall. In District 2, Democrat Willie Fullwood Jr. won the nomi nation over Bruce Quaintance of Ocean Isle Beach. Fullwood will face David Sandifer in November. Newcomer David A. Bright Jr. of Leland won the Republican nomination in District 5 over Roger L. Rogers. Fullwood’s victory gives minorities a shot at gaining a seat on the commission. Fullwood defeated Quaintance by captur ing 59 percent of the vote. Quaintance had listed the most expenditures of any candidate in the primary on his campaign See Election, page 9 Photo by Jim Harper The weight of government fell squarely on citizen shoulders again Tuesday as voters turned out to select tneir candidates for county, state and national offices. Bond notes sought District sewer plans proceed By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor In separate actions Monday morn ing, Southeast Brunswick Sanitary District commissioners asked the state treasurer to allow the district three more years to repay $350,000 in bond anticipation notes and autho rized the sale of an additional $350,000 worth of those notes. Bond anticipation notes are short term financial instruments sold by local government entities to raise capital for projects before permanent financing is available. In the district’s case, proceeds from the initial $350,000 anticipation note sale were used to pay engineering costs to date, including payments to an engineer ing consultant fired last year. Pro The consulting engineer says Southport needs additional flow to defray the high sewer costs city customers pay ceeds from the $350,000 sale autho rized Monday will be used to pay the district’s new engineering firm, W. K. Dickson & Co., of Charlotte, which See Sewer, page 8 wins 17 awards The State Port Pilot was presented the Metro Plus Business Award that recog nizes “best balance of en tries” in the Community Di vision, 3,500 to 10,000 cir culation, Friday at the annual North Carolina Press Asso ciation advertising contest. : This is the third consecu tive year the Pilot has won the most awards in its divi sion. The 17 awards tied for the most won in any commu nity newspaper division at the annual conference held in Chapel Hill. First-place awards in cluded: ■ Best Retail Ad — Lynne’s Hallmark Shop, See Awards, page 10 New superintendent Schools make 'Wise' choice By Holly Edwards Feature Editor Associate superintendent for Cumberland County schools Marion Wise will assume leadership of the Brunswick County school system July 1. Following a clandestine three month search for a new superinten dent, Brunswick County school board members voted unanimously to hire Wise during a special school board meeting Thesday morning at the cen tral office. Board members also approved a four-year contract with Wise in which they agreed to supplement his state salary with local funds sufficient to See Choice, page 6 WISE L100 vaccinations Rabies spread to east county By Terry Pope County Editor Rabies has spread rapidly from Ash to Leland, and the growing threat has more and more pet owners concerned. Approximately 1,100 rabies vacci nations were given at four local vet erinarian offices during a clinic spon sored by the Brunswick County Health Department on April 27. The clinic was held just days before an other rabies case was reported on Lanvale Road near Leland. That discovery shows the fatal dis ease has moved eastward to cover the entire county and places all pets not vaccinated against the disease in dan ger. It was the third case found in 1996, all within the past six weeks. This time, it cost a dog its life. “The dog was not up to date with its rabies vaccine, having had a one year vaccine back in 1990 and none since,” said Jan Reichenbach, health educator with the Brunswick County Health Department. “Since this was the case, the dog’s owner made the decision that the dog would have to be destroyed, which it was.” * On Tuesday, April 30, the dog's owner returned home from working a second shift and noticed his six year-old boxer was barking outside and wouldn’t stop. The owner went into the yard to investigate, and found a raccoon was hiding inside the dog’s house. "The man called animal control, and an officer went out at 12:40 a.m. and captured the raccoon, took it back to the shelter and put it down,” Ms. Reichenbach said. Following procedure, the raccoon’s head then was sent to a state lab in Raleigh for testing. The department was notified the raccoon tested posi See Rabies, page 8 Forecast The extended forecast calls for partly cloudy skies with temperatures in the mid 80's and a chance of show ers and thunderstorms. INSIDE Opinion. 4 Obituaries.11 Schools... SB Church.6B Business.6C District Court .. 7C Classifieds.ID Pilot TV ..8D