Program Cets Chief Brunswick community College has hired Owen Weddle of N.C. State to head Its College Transfer Program for college transfer students, filling a long-standing vacancy. This and other news from BCC can be found on Page 9-A. Five Are Rescued Five people escaped Injury when a 25-foot fishing boat capsized about 18 miles offshore Saturday. Two nearby boats came to the rescue, and the U.S. Coast Guard later retrieved the overturned boat. The story Is on Page 3-A. Hook. Line And Sinker From kings to sheepshead, the fish were biting along the Brunswick Coast last week?Inshore and offshore. Check out the Fishing Report and news of upcoming tournaments on Pages 10-B and 11-B. THE 'NS G-'.'O^ BINDERY 12 / 31 t<KT UI1VII IV Twenty-eighth Year, Number 36 thebrunswickbeacon Shallotte, North Carolina, Thursday, July 26,1990 25c Per Copy 34 Pages, 3 Sections KD?*a ipr%i#ir ir r I nivim^rc PLn Trv AA^Unniral "L^rtnc Ul UI low iv-ix v^ivji I II I IVI o i icii i i u w i t iv/v^i aw?i nwJ! .J! IIY DOUG RUTTER Brunswick County clammcrs aren't likely to clam up when a proposal that could open the doors to me chanical tongs in local waters comes up for public com ment next month. "Everyone in the county is totally against it," Shal lotte Point seafood dealer Larry Holdcn said of the pro posal to allow the state fisheries director to designate areas where patent tongs can be used. The N.C. Marine Fisheries Commission has sched uled a public hearing on the proposal Wednesday. Aug. 8, at 7 p.m. in the Public Assembly Building at the Brunswick County Government Center in Bolivia. The patent tong proposal is one of four that wili be discussed at the public hearing, one of four hearings planned along the coast in early August. It's the only proposal that will have an impact on local shellfisher mcn. Patent tongs and other types of mechanical clam harvesting equipment arc already permitted in the cen tral n:?ri of North Carolina. Clammcrs in Brunswick County can only harvest by hand methods. If the proposal is approved, N.C. Fisheries Director William Hogarth would have the authority to open oth er areas for patent tongs, including Brunswick County. Patent tongs work like scissors, said Rich Carpenter, district manager with the N.C. Division of Marine Fish eries in Wilmington. "As long as we have hand tongs, there will always be clams. A few of these patent tongs will ruin the whole county." ?Larry Holdcn, seafood dealer The tongs arc about four feet wide. They are raised and lowered out of the water by a rope that's attached to a winch. Tongs go down into the water in an open posi tion, close when they hit the bottom and pull up clams. "It's more cfficicnt than a hand tong," Carpenter said. The patent tongs cover more area than hand tongs. They also arc easier to use, since they work mechani cally. Carpenter said the proposal to open up more areas to patent tongs originated in the Morchcad City area. Some fishermen there want to use the longs to harvest clams in Pamlico Sound, he said. Patent tongs are allowed in Carteret and Onslow counties. But Carpenter said most clamming operations there use other types of mcchanical equipment. He said patent tongs are a "traditional piece of gear" in Virginia. However, there is some question over whether patent tongs and other types of mechanical gear are harmful to the environment. Fishermen have been using patent tongs more than 50 years in Virginia, said Roy Inslcy, chief of fisheries planning with the Virginia Marine Resources Commis sion. "They've been using them here ever since they had power engines to puii them with," insiey saiu. "We haven't really found them to be destructive to the bot tom." Holes created by the four-inch teeth on the tongs fill in quickly, he said, and clams grow back consistently in areas where tongs have been used. Insiey said patent tongs aren't permitted to be used on oyster rocks, where they can cause damage. The North Carolina proposal would not allow the tongs in grass or oyster bixJs. Holden, who has seen patent tongs used i.i Virginia, said they destroy the bottom of waters where clam grow. Patent tongs are almost as bad for clams as me chanical dredges, he said, which pump clams up onto escalators or use propellers to kick them into nets. "As long as we have hand tongs, there will always be clams," Holden said. "A few of these patent tongs will ruin the whole county." Holden said local fishermen arc tired of fighting mechanical shellfish harvesting methods that have been proposed repeatedly by (he slate. Hundreds of area clammen; turned out for hearings in 19X6 and 1987 to oppose mechanical clam dredging in county waters. Die Marine Fisheries Commission rejected the proposal both times. "We're getting tired of going to these state meetings when we don't want it in the first place," Holden said. "They should know that by now." Area claminers shouldn't have to wait very long af ter the public hearing to find out whether the proposal will be approved or rejected. The commission is scheduled to act on the proposal when it meets Friday, Aug. 9, at 9 a.m. in the Carolina Power & Light media center near Southport, according to a Marine Fisheries news release. Other proposals to be discussed at the public hear ing arc as follows: ?Reducing the clam harvest limit in internal waters from 6,250 clams per fishing operation per day to 5,000 clams, and allowing limits on clam harvests in the ocean by proclamation. ?Allowing mechanical clam harvesting in the ocean at all times and deleting the 100-pound weight limit for clam harvests on dredge boats working in the ocean. ?Deleting size and harvest limits for clams pro duced in hatcheries and aquaculture operations. Two Charged In Break-Ins Of County, Area Churches BY BOH HORNE Officers from New Hanover and Brunswick County sheriff's departments Monday charged two men who are suspected of banking into about 20 churches in the two countics in the past three weeks. Thomas Elinor Wright, 30, and Ira Douglas Maihis, 18, have been charged by the New Hanover County Sheriff's Department with breaking and entering and larceny at 10 churches and the Wilmington Police Department has lodged the same charges against the pair for breaking into three churches. Warrants were being prepared Tuesday and the two men were to be charged Tuesday afternoon or Wednes day on charges of breaking and entering and larceny at five Brunswick County churches, according to Bruns wick County Sheriff's Del. Gary Shay. The five Brunswick County churches that were bro ken into, according to Shay and Sheriff's Department reports, were Peace Memorial Baptist in Winnabow and Ncv Hope Freewill Baptist, in the Snowficld section of Lcland, the weekend of July ,13-14; First Baptist of Wood burn in Lcland July 18 or 19; and Lettics Grove Pentecostal in Shallotte and Ml Olive Baptist in Boli via last weekend. Thousands of dollars worth of property, most of it musical equipment such as cassette players, amplifiers, guitars, bass guitars, public-address systems and speak ers, was reported stolen from each church. Another county church that was reportedly broken into, Town Creek Baptist the weekend of July 6-7, is an entirely separate case, according to Shay. Nothing was taken in that break-in, but two drawers reportedly were left open and a door casing broken, for an estimated $250 worth Of duniagc. The New Hanover County Sheriff's Department called the Brunswick County Sheriff's Department about 4:15 to 4:30 a.m. Monday, saying that department had a possible suspcct in the recent church break-ins. Shay said. New Hanover deputies I..K. Miller and T.C. Robinson had found two men inside the Myrtle Grove Baptist Church during a sccond chcck of that church about 2 a.m. Both men ran. Deputies caught Wright but Mathis escaped, worked his way through a wooded area and got away in a taxi that he callcd from a pay phone in a Myrtle Grove area grocery store, officials said. Shay said he met New Hanover Sheriff's Del. George Landry at the Town & Country Motel in Bel villc after the call. ??1 t . nc cAjnaiiiLU iu iiic wnai v\na^pCning aim SO we went and knocked on the door of Apartment No. 8 and an individual named Donna Hcrrin answered," Shay said. When asked, she said Mathis was in the apartment, so officers went in, found Mathis hiding under a bed and placed him under arrest. Shay said. Both people signed conscnt-to-search forms. Shay said, and the officers searched die apartments of Math is, Wright and Ms. Hcrrin and found "a large quantity of music equipment, all of it property of different churches." Ms. Hcrrin was not charged, although some of the stolen property was in her apartment. Shay said. "She was an innocent party," he said. "She didn't know what was going on and she cooperated fully with us." Shay said officers did not have an estimate on the value of the property that was recovered in the apart ments, but said that officers were searching for still more property that they believe was sold through a fencing operation. The men were initially held under $65,(XX) bond each. Their first-appearance hearings were Tuesday, Qhoy roiH STAFF PHOTO BY BOB HOBNE Picturesque The scene is picturesque, as a boat slides through the Sunset Beach Bridge. The replacement of the pontoon bridge to the island with a high-rise bridge continues to be controversial, as some people say the beauty of scenes such as this one would be disturbed by replacement of the bridge. ANNEXATION FREEZE LIFTED Shallotte Hikes Development Costs BY DOUG RUTTER People developing land in and around Shallotte will reach deeper into their pockets and pay the town more money than ever before they start building new struc tures or tap on to town water and sewer lines. Shallouc officials have increased capital reserve fees, which arc paid when tapping on to the town sewer system, and will start charging new acreage fees that must be paid before building permits arc issued or town water or sewer scrvicc is extended. Despite opposition from local developers at a July 9 public hearing, Shallouc Aldermen adopted the new fees at their meeting last Wednesday. Town officials have said the fees are needed to help generate dollars that will be required for future sewer system expansion. Capital reserve fees have been increased for the first time since the town started collecting them in 1985. (See SHALLOTTE. Page 2-A) EMPHASIS ON ENVIRONMENT. EDUCATION Gantf Brings Senate Campaign To Brunswick swf mora sy susan usmm HARVEY GANTT, (left) Democalic candidate for the U.S. Sen ate, shakes hands with county employee Linda Green at a "meet the voters" stop last Thursday at the county complex. In the background (from left) are Sheriff John Carr Davis, Hoard of Education member James Clemmons and John Marlow, chief of deputies of the Brunswick County Sheriff's Department. BY SUSAN USHKR U.S. Scnaie candidate Harvey Ganu toid a group of approximately 100 supporters in Bo livia July 19 that his campaign for incumbent Jesse Helms' seat won't be waged with dollars or fear-mongering, but with "a sensible agenda that relates to our quality of 'life". Ganu's stop at the Public Assembly Building at the county government center was hosted by the Brunswick County Democratic Party. It was part of a two-day swing through southeastern North Carolina. Between interviews with two television reporters Gantt met one-on-one with voters, addressed the group as a whole and an swered questions. It was his first visit to Brunswick County since winning the May pri mary against Michael Easley. His opponent. Helms, has held the office for 18 years. Gantt is gearing his campaign toward issues that he says relate to the concerns of working families. "I felt they were not gelling a fair shake from their government," Gantt said of the work ing people. "It's time to pay attention to the peo ple who pay their taxes and obey the laws." Ganu called for a redesigning of America's agenda, "with less spending on the military and more spending on us." Specifically, he advocat ed developing a technologically efficient and "lean" defense budget and redirecting funds toward addressing the nation's environmental, health care and educational needs. "If you look at what the people of Lithuania threw off in less than a year, I know the people of North Carolina can throw off Jesse Helms " ?Harvey Gantt Democrat Candidate for U.S. Senate With a rcduccd Cold War threat and emerg ing democracies, Gantt said his message is time ly and Helms' message is "not relevant." On the changing world scene, Gantt said America will be measured in the future by new standards: "How well we compete in the eco nomic marketplace and how well we sell this idea of democracy." Helms "is not a friend to the farmer," the former Charlotte mayor told the group. "He's more interested in foreign affairs?Jesse Helms' record is going to be an important part of this campaign." Gantt did not discuss a recent letter by Helms aide James Meridilh. The former civil rights leader charged that most members ot the NAACP's 3,0(X)-membcr leadership are guilty of "criminal" activities and are "involved in the drug culture." Further, he asserted that most blacks in major political posts owe their posi tions to a group of about 15 whites. Helms has defended Meredith's right to write the letter, but did say the aide should not have mailed it at government expense; he will be asked to reimburse the office. Gantt told The Brunswick Beacon that he didn't think Helms' much-larger "war chest" would be the deciding factor in the election. "We know enough of his campaigns to know it's not the money that wins it," he said. He elaborated on that theme later, telling the group, "He (Helms) would have you get caught up emouonally in things that make you tearful. But it is in our best interests to come together to deal with these issues." Gantt said he doesn't intend to get involved in a divisive campaign, but intends to instead develop a positive, unifying campaign. He urged those present to get involved in voter registration and to spread interest and sup port for the campaign before the fall election. "If you look at what the people of Lithuania threw off in less than a year, I know the people of North Carolina can throw off Jesse Helms," he told the group, his remarks punctuated by en thusiastic rounds of a applause and at one point, a standing ovation.

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