Sports Hook a Kid on Golf gives county youngsters a chance to explore new sport — 1C Z3 Pick to enj' Owen ors ; one way vlaynard age IB Sout lot, dc on bu< vn ien talk a t hearing A— Page 2 Fourth of July Festival events start on Sunday Festival Fever has struck Southport-Oak Island with its annual show of force. The N. C. Fourth of July Festival begins in earnest next week, but there are still a number of teaser events between now and then the locals es pecially will want to note. Tonight (Wednesday) the U. S. Marine Band will offer a 7 o’clock concert on the Garrison at Fort Johnston. Be sure to bring along a lawn chair or a blanket for this patri otic performance. There will be plenty of festival-re lated things to do Sunday, starting bright and early at 8 a.m. when the festival sponsors its one-mile Fun Run. The 1997 N. C. Freedom Run, the five-kilometer competitive run through the streets of Southport, will follow at 8:30 a.m. Both races will begin and end at Waterfront Park on Bay Street. The Firemen’s Competition will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday on Nash Street, between City Hall and the emergency services building. The games, which test many skills required in firefighting, will include volunteer organizations from throughout Brunswick County. Sunday night Southport-Oak Island neighbors are invited to gather at Southport Baptist Church on Howe Street for the Community Worship Service. Worship is to begin at 7 p.m. The festival begins in all its splen dor Tuesday morning, July 1, with the opening of festival headquarters, the See Fourth, page 6 Early edition “ Next week’s edition of The State Port Pilot will be pub lished early for distribution before noon on Wednesday. Mail will be placed in the post office that afternoon for delivery Has usual. The N.C Fourth of July Festival program will be included in newsstand and counter sales of the July 2 edition; the program was mailed to all Pilot subscribers in this issue, and festival volunteers will begin distribution to key locations this weekend. - Classified advertising deadlines will remain un changed. Display advertising for the July 2 edition must be in the newspaper office by noon next Monday. Photo by Jim Harper Yes, that Star-Spangled Banner still waves on the Southport waterfront, and will wave gloriously for the next ten days as the N. C. Fourth of July Festival presents a full program for the Independence Day obser vance. It starts Sunday with the 8 a.m. Freedom Run, followed by the Firemen’s Competition at 2 p.m. and the Community Worship Service at 7 p.m. Town elections filing period opens July 4 By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor For the politically inclined, July 4 may be a bigger day this year than in years past. July 4 marks the first day residents of towns and cities in North Carolina may file notice of candidacy for election to municipal office. Although neither town halls nor the Brunswick County Board of Elections office will be open July 4, the state has set noon that day as the opening of the filing period for municipal offices nonetheless. For a $5 fee, those who would serve their towns and cities may file notice of candidacy at any time before noon August 1. In Brunswick County that means 18 municipalities, two sanitary districts, See Elections, page 10 Water supply down Customers of the City of Southport water system are asked to help conserve water, particularly in afternoons for the next few days. As the city prepares this year to locate another well in the city to assure an adequate supply of drinking water, Southport remains dependent on the Brunswick County water system for some of its drinking water needs. This is particularly true in summer months when water consumption is highest. For the next several days, See Water, page 6 Long Beach issue Not just fine, but principle of the thing By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor No sea turtle was ever endangered when the Town of Long Beach pushed sand in May, 1996. The town will contest a $700 pen alty the state has assessed it for the sand-pushing effort, mayor Joan Altman said Tuesday. Roger Schecter. director of the Di vision of Coastal Management of the N. C. Department of Environment. Health and Natural Resources, June 12 ruled Long Beach had willfully and intentionally violated a ban against sand pushing during sea turtle nesting season and doubled a $350 base civil penalty he assessed the town. “We will appeal," mayor Joan Altman said Tuesday. “We do not agree any fine is warranted. The Town of Long Beach did not do anything to endanger ser. turtles.” The dispute between the Town of Long Beach and the Division of Coastal Management has been fester 'It is not our fault they couldn’t get information from another agency and I will not agree to pay any fine because of it.’ Joan Altman Long Beach mayor ing since June, 1996, when DCM field representative Edward Brooks proposed a $2,500 civil penalty be assessed Long Beach for pushing sand between Mth and 58th streets SF from May 15 to May 22, 1996. Although the town has a general See Principle, page 9 Brunswick County 'Lean' budget gives schools more funding By Terry Pope County Editor A revised budget presented to Brunswick County commissioners Monday is $2.3 million leaner, and increases spending to public schools by $732,225. That is still less than the extra $1 million school officials told commis sioners they need to operate the schools during the 1997-98 fiscal year. The school board requested $15.3 million while the total alloca tion under the revised plan would be approximately $14.7 million. County fiscal operations director Lithia Horne said Monday the extra funds would come from the $2.3-mil Second floor, other amenities cut Community Building is scaled down By Richard Nubel Municipal Editor As expected, Southport aldermen rejected all bids for re building the Southport Community Building, the waterfront structure lost to fire in January, 1995. Although the four-member committee charged with re building the structure on the city’s behalf had expected con struction costs to be between $87 and $95 per square foot, actual bids set cost at $157 per square foot, alderman Paul Fisher, a member of the committee, said. A $ 1.102-million apparent low bid last week for the project, designed by architect John Thompson under the committee’s direction, was more than $380,000 over the ‘I was as surprised as anyone. I was just astonished, the way the bids came in.’ Paul Fisher Ward I alderman committee’s fund-raising goal of $720,000. It was even farthvi beyond the $650,000 a local contractor had predicted bids would be -*fter re viewing the project for the committee. Alderman Meezie Childs, another member of the commu nity building reconstruction committee, said Thompson has been instructed to scale-down the project severely. He has been instructed to remove from the project a second story, decks, landscaping and all things non-essential to the basic structure. “We didn't feel we could negotiate down with the lowest bidder, because the changes will be so significant,” aider man Childs said. In essence, what Thompson has been di rected to deliver to the committee today (Wednesday) is a new project entirely. Aldermen Thursday said building costs were not what they were “led to believe,” but didn’t say how they were mislead. See Building, page 6 lion cuts in various departments and by adjusting the projected county tax base to $6.15 billion at a 95.5 percent tax collection rate instead of 94.4 per cent as previously figured. The prop erty valuation was $6.10 billion in the first draft. The revised spending plan would set aside 24 cents instead of 23 cents of the proposed 68.5 cents per $100 of property valuation tax rate for county schools. Last month, the school board asked commissioners to increase its allocation from a recom mended $14 million ($12.3 million in ad valorem dollars plus other funds) to $15.3 million, and a majority of commissioners agreed to study the issue. Faced with heavily tapping the county fund balance, commissioners last week ordered county manager Jim Varner to trim another $1 million from the $84.3-million budget. They received their first look at Varner's See Schools, page 6 INSIDE Opinion 4 Police report 7 Obituaries 10 Church 3B TV schedule 6B Business 9B Schools 10B Calendar 11B NASCAR 4C Classifieds 7D TOP STORIES ON THE INTERNET www.southport.net -