Decision Appealed A ruling which upheld the rights of private property owners in the Holden Beach West subdivision but guaranteed limited public access to the western end of Holden Beach has been appealed. Durham attorney James Maxwell, who represents a group called Concerned Citizens of Brunswick County Taxpayers Association, said last Thursday that an appeal recently was filed with the N.C. Court of Appeals in Raleigh. I,ast November in Brunswick P..?*.. CHnaeim t~> * Ti.rlno v/uuiivj wu|n.i ivi V/UUI i, uuugv. Bruce Briggs of Madison County ruled in favor of Holden Beach Enterprises Inc., which was the defendant in the 1986 lawsuit brought by the citizens group and the state. The trial involved the citizens' contention that Ocean View Boulevard West through the subdivision was a public right-of-way to Shallotte Inlet, even though the developer had constructed a gate and guardhouse at the entrance to Holden Beach West to restrict nithlif traftir* The N.C. Department of Natural Resources and Community Development's Office of Coastal Management intervened in the case as a plaintiff, in its role as administrator of the state's coastal access program. Maxwell said he expects the appeal to be heard within six months. A decision could be made by the appellate court in about nine months, he said. STAFF PHOTOS BY RAHN AOAM! y Take Top Honors West Brunswick High School | students Dean Smith (left) and Barry Newman won first-place I awards in speech contests at a reE cent District II Future Farmers ol America rally. Smith, president ol the local FFA chapter, placed first in public speaking with his speech, "The American Farmer: A Proud Heritage." New man took top honors in extemporaneous public speaking with a speech on the role ol agriculture in international relations. Both advance to state competition in June. Reception Set For Volunteers Shallotte Middle School will honoi volunteers who have helped tht school during the past year with i reception Monday, May 23, at 6:3( p.m. Approximately 200 volunteers hav logged 746 hours of work during th 1987-88 school year, according t Assistant Principal William Detrie They have helped teachers in th classroom and shared their par ticular expertise and time in meetini the needs of the school and it students. r J Trust your he i a name I Over 1.300.000 Tarheels h? protection to a name they knc North Carolina Return this coupon today rates Individual * *Family I Medicare Suppl i I I.e. "C I Address City ? Slate Telephone | Age (check one) I At; " I a Under 65 Mail to: Nongroup and Rural 2 I Blue Cross and Blue ! I North Carolina P. O. Box 2291 Durham, N. C. 27702 K I ^rhnnlc vwa i wis/ BY SUSAN USHER There's no vaccine, no cure, no cer tainty of how many people once ex posed to the virus will develop AIDS Only one thing about AIDS seem; certain, Brunswick County Board o! Education Chairman Jame: Forstner told an audience of mostlj school personnel last Thursday nigh in Shallotte: "Once you catch it you're going to die." A family nractinner Dr 1 "'nrcfnoi joined Superintendent of School; John Kaufhold in presenting the se cond in a series of three informa tional programs on AIDS. The) presented the school system's recent ly adopted AIDS policy and preview ed "A Letter From Brian," i 29-minute video that is to be show; .....I pnhnnl ,,?o* ?? 1,, ,1,1... J v?. ~ U.UUV..W ? e>- ?. seven through 12. The schools wil also introduce an AIDS curriculun for grades K-12 now being developec by the State Department of Public In struction. In the video, four high schoo students learn, as narrator Micliae PEOPLE IN Waples C Robert William Waples of Shallottc was graduated from Campbell Ljjflg| University at H Buies Creek on H May 9, with a bachelor's f degree in business ad- M' ministration. bell, he served as president of Alpha Phi Omega ser vice fraternity and was a member ol the College Republicans and Adam Smith Free Enterprise Business -* Club. Waples is a graduate of Winstor Churchill High School in Potomac Md., and is the son of Mr. and Mrs 1 W.G. Waples of Copas Shores 1 Shallotte. I' Attends Meeting Mrs. Linda S. Varnum of Supply at i tended the May 6 spring meeting o! k the South Central District Associa tion of Agricultural Extensioi , Secretaries in Anson County Featured was a program on "Tean Building." I She is secretary to the Brunswick I County Agricultural Extension Ser vice, located in Bolivia. I Receives Credential f Carol Ann Burney of Supply, a t worker with the local Head Start S | program, has hppn award a I [ ment Associate Credential by the * Council for Early f e s s i o n a 1 Recognition recognition of her outstanding wort with young children. A team of evaluators that included childcare professionals and a parenl observed her working with young children as part of the organization'! r efforts to improve child care by ! evaluating workers and recognizing J skilled caregivers. Zuber Inducted e Freshman Teresa Raye Zuber, a e 1987 graduate of West Brunswick o High School, was recently initiated - into the N.C. State University 2 chapter of Alpha Lambda Delta, a national scnoiastic nonor society (01 ? freshmen. s Members must earn a B-plus 01 better grade point average during ' i alth coverage to you know ave trusted their health care >w. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of for information about our new low I I emental I i i .? Zip I 5S_ ffcSi Blue Cross ' Itll Blue Shield 1 KSS3H ^SU ollMACriMi I 3505 Sales Shield ol I I 2291 I Take AIDS P Warren notes, that "the AIDS virus - doesn't care what color we are, what - sex we are, or if we are straight or . gay. AIDS is everyone's concern." i The film stresses that by saying f "No" to sex and to drugs, teen-agers i can avoid exposure to AIDS, and that r if they choose sexual activity, to use t protection and help prevent the , spread of AIDS. It was standing room oniy in the r West Brunswick High School ! multipurpose room for an attentive - audience of bus drivers, teachers, ad ministrators, teacher assistants and r a smattering of parents of students. According to Kaufhold, it is only a matter of time before the Brunswick i County Schools must deal with an I AIDS victim. The spread of AIDS ; within the helerosexiisl consnynitv I could "explode" as it did in the early ? 1980s within the homosexual com1 munity, he noted, "or people could listen." He stressed, "We want to talk I AirtD u-c * - - i uuuui niuo uciurc we get a case in I school. We want to educate you as I THE NEWS Graduates t their first one or two semesters while carrying a full-time course load. Ms. Zuber is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray A. Zuber of Route 1, Shallotte. Completes Course Josie Cause Brown, a Brunswick Countv native now emnlnveri with thp Fayetteville Police Department, recently completed an 80-hour course ' in basic criminal investigation at the N.C. Justice Academy in Salemburg. , Three Graduate i Three area students graduated May 5 from Winston-Salem State i University. They were Dwight Bryant, son of Harvey and Ernestine Bryant; Henry Randolph Jr., son of Lillie J. Randolph and the late Rev. Henry Randolph; and June Lakeitha Johnson, daughter of Ida Mae Johnson and the late John Howard f Johnson. 1 Attends Conference 1 Abbie Bitney of Southport attended the 1988 conference, "A Family Affair," of the National Genealogical Society in Biloxi, Miss., in April. Bitney is a local genealogist and teaches a continuing education course on "How To Trace Your ! Family History" for Brunswick County College. She is active in the I Brunswick Town Chapter of the Na' tional Society Daughters of the American Revolution and the Southport Historical Society. She was accompanied by her husband, Dr. Raymond H. Bitney Jr. Shallotte Rescue . To Sell Barbecue Shallotte Volunteer Rescue Squad I will sell homemade barbecue dinners t with all the fixings at the squad 1 building on Saturday, May 28. s Plates will cost $3.50 and will be ' sold all day starting at 11 a.m. ! Volunteers will also deliver in the Shallotte area to any person ordering at least five plates. Orders can be called in to the squad building at 754-6666. The rescue squad building is | located on N.C. 179 just east of U.S. t 17, across from Shallotte Middle ( School. i Our South Bruns\i Pk t *7: rui DANNIE SHEFFIELD DAVID I ...always read) CALL 7! I rograrn To Pe parents, teachers and students. "AIDS is a fact of life?it won't go away; we must deal with it." And, rather than hysteria, Kaufhold and Forstner say they would rather the community respond to any reported case "in a capable and comnassinnate mannnr ** Currently there are two confirmed cases of AIDS in Uie county, accoruiiig to the Brunswick County Health Department. Statewide. Forstner noted, there are 11 children with AIDS. /vlDS, or Acquired Immune Deficienc>', is a condition which damages the immune system, the body's defense against disease. This damage leaves the body open to attack by infections and cancers that are not a threat to healthy Deople. It is these infections and cancers that kill many people with AIDS. AIDS is caused by the Human Immunodeficiency Virus, or HIV. Not everyone who is infected with HIV develops AIDS or AIDS-related complex. Some infected persons seem to ' H i -t- I U 4?il rafcEffiPKSF JSSZ& Fishermen A A crew of fishermen visiting from we ment of bottom fish last Thursday ab I" out of Captain Pete's Marina at V Charlie Spencer, mate; Everette S 13-ounce American red snapper; M 11-pound dolphin; Mike Masterson of Conn of Southern Pines with a 20-pc Carr. Fugitive ii A ShaHottc area man who was indieted on drag charges last June was captured last week after eluding local authorities for more than a year. Alan Dale Brooks, 24, was taken into custody Friday in Anderson, S.C., by South Carolina lawmen, said Brunswick County Sheriff John C. Davis. The fugitive was located by agents with the S.C. Law Enforcement Division as a result of being listed in a national police information network, Davis said. oi ouks was one o: il defendants indicted June 11,1987, by a Brunswick County investigative grand jury?the first of its kind in the state. He was indicted on charges of conspiracy to traffic in more than 400 grams of cocaine and trafficking by possession of more than 400 grams of cocaine. According to the Brunswick County Clerk of Court's office, Brooks?charged on other drug trafvick Islands team 4 k-' 'X / Ik Fit 1 KEATON F J IEE /to serve you! 54-4488 ns, (ri THE BRUNSWICK BEAD jrsonne! And remain in good health. Factors such as drug and alcohol abuse, stress and other illnesses may increase the likelihood that an infected person will develop AIDS. In "A letter From Brian," the American Red Cross position on adolescent sexuality education comes across clearly. The ARC advocates: That "saying NO" to sexual activity be recommended for single teenagers for a variety of reasons; That education regarding sexuality should be provided within the family, with schools and community organizations supplementing parental ,?i ? ' vui <.uuv.di.iuii wiiiic encouraging parent-child communication; and that instruction should be provided for parents and teenagers. The ARC's AIDS prevention program includes student booklets, teachers' guides and parents' brochures; and That Adolescent sexuality education should be based on "positive values that rest on religious, ethical, legal and moral foundations." PHOTO CONTBIBUllO re Successful stern North Carolina caught an assortout 70 miles offshore aboard the "Salty lolden Beach. Pictured, from left, are ipe of Mount Holly with a 10-pound, ichael Thomas of Morganton with an Valdesewitha 12-pound lobster; Ralph >und yellow fin tuna; and Capt. Gary I n custody ficking counts?was declared a fugitive on April 13, 1937. Special Assistant District Attorney Bill Wolak said last month that Brooks fled Brunswick County after pleading guilty to drug charges. Davis said Brooks was returned to Brunswick County late Monday. The defendent was being held in the Brunswick County Jail under a $300,000 bond Tuesday afternoon. Import* Virg mi i ne super-eincient It's designed and manufactured rij combination of advantages I A family of four telex 8 lines and 24 telex ' ^ cap Buil The Executcch 8 A host of additic dialing, paging, conterencing; all i The super efficient Comdial Execul the U.S. quality and is surprisingly c us today for complete details on the 1 It's far ouL..nol far East! COSVi ATLANTIC TELEPi \\ ON, Thursday, May 19, 19??Page 9-A Parents Greg Norris, a (acuity member at Shallotte Middle School, noted the video is being shown there to students participating in the "Say No" program. It has been received "very positively," he said, but added that he's not certain of its appropriateness for seventh graders. Still, he and others said educational information on AIDS does need to be shared with students in the lower grades. Forstner noted that he sees pregnant 14 year olds "all the time," and that the youngest pregnant girl he has seen in his practice was 11 years old. AIDS is not highly contagious and is not transmitted through casual contact such as sneezing. Forstner noted that the most common ways it nan ha cnraoH arc thTQi!*?h th? char. ing of body fluids such as semen, blood and vaginal secretions?most mien uuuugii sexual activity, snaring drug needles contaminated with the AIDS virus. AIDS can also be passed by an infected mother to her unborn or newborn child. As for the use of condoms to prevent the spread of AIDS, Forstner noted, "There is no 'safe' sex," he said. "There is only safer sex." Audience members had only a few questions, one regarding the effectiveness of condoms. Forstner noted that foreign-made brands do not necessarily meet the same standards as American-made. ^j@j% EARLY BIRD SPECIALS 5:00 to 6:30 Choose From: 6 oz. Ribeye Small Fried Seafood Platter Broiled Flounder Chicken Marsala All specials are served with House Salad or slaw, rice pilaf and your choice of Iced Tea, Coffee, or a Glass of House wine. /n /* /% ? 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