Come Home Fresh off a big win, the Trojans face West Columbus for homecoming. Page 9-B. ACOM Thirtieth Year, Number 50 Shollotte, North Carolina, Thursdoy, October 15, 50? Per Copy 54 Pages, 4 Sections, 2 Inserts They're Back! Big spots are back in full force, making local anglers and eaters happy. Page 10-C. Welcome... ...to the 12th Annual North Carolina Oyster Festival. Read all about the food, fun and competition in store for you. Section D. SWF mOTO BY DOUG (UTTER ELECTION OFFICIALS Elwood Benton (seated) and Chester Stevens count ballots at the Brunswick Electric Membership Corp. annual meeting Saturday. School System Critic Unhappy After Plan To Visit WBHS Nixed BY SUSAN USHER A Calabash retiree and "con cerned taxpayer" is displeased with a local principal's refusal to let him make an investigative tour of a school, while the principal says he is working on a system to allow all in terested persons to tour the school in groups. Warren "Bud" Knapp Sr. said his request to look around West Brunswick High School was con veyed through Brunswick County Board of Education member Robert SlocketL He said Slockett called him Friday to notify him that the request had been turned down. West Brunswick High School Principal Ed Lemon said Monday that the school is working on a plan to provide giuup tours to create as little disruption of classes as possi ble. "Our school and community com mittee is working on that," he said, modeling the school's program on one instituted in Currituck County last school year. Schools in that county, he said, provide guided lours for community leaders, resi dents who do not have children in the schools and officials from other county agencies. The school "is not in the business of tours, especially of people wan dering about on campus wherever they want," said Lemon. "Here we are pressing our own people not to disrupt classes or come in late. 1 jgn't see how we can open it to the general public to do thaL We need to have control of that somehow." However, he said it is important for the school to find a way to honor such requests from taxpayers, coun ty officials and others who want to visit (he school to see how students are being taught and how their tax dollars are being spent, but don't have children enrolled there. "We think it is valid enough we're working on it," he said. "We don't want to put on a show. We un derstand they want to look at normal operations. "If a taxpayer is interested in see ing how we spend tax dollars, then we want him to see that and he might miss it on his own." Lemon acknowledged that the school has had very lew requests similar to Knapp's in past years. A more typical request is for a parent to sit in on one or more of his or her child's classes. The principal said it wasn't made clear to him why Knapp wanted to visit West Brunswick. "I don't know what Bud Knapp wants since he hasn't talked to me," he said. Slockett could not be reached for comment However, Lemon said Slockett had advised him that Knapp, a retired engineer, is "an ex pert on atmosphere" and wanted to observe the school's atmosphere. Knapp, who has been urging the county school board to hire an out side firm to conduct a management audit of the entire system, said he is "acting as an investigative reporter" and wants to collect information to use in a report he intends to make at the Thanksgiving weekend meeting of the Sunset Beach Taxpayers' Association. "If I make a report and recom mendations to them 1 ought to be able to do it intelligenUy. At this point I'm not making recommenda tions. I just want to find out if what people arc saying is true." He said he wants to check out ru mors he has heard about how the school handles student discipline, among other things, but that he had no plans to approach Lemon directly to request a visit Knapp asserts that student perfor mance is proof that the school sys tem is "a large, expensive, ineffi (S et SCHOOL, Page 2-A) i MORE THAN 7 ,200 ATTEND MEETING Members Oust 5 Incumbents In BEMC Directors' Election BY DOUG RUTTER Apparent concerns over dispro portionate representation on the Brunswick Electric Membership Corp. Board of Directors spurred members to elect five directors Saturday who had been nominated by petition. In doing so, a majority of BE MC's members ignored nominating committee recommendations and voted for change at an annual meet ing characterized by election-year politics. In the two Brunswick County dis tricts up for election this year, both candidates who had been nominated by petition handily defeated incum bent directors. JoAnn Bellamy Simmons of Ash unseated W.T. Bowen 690-445 in District 2, while D.V. Jones Jr. of Long Beach defeated incumbent Kenneth Bellamy 632-494 in the District 8 race. Another candidate nominated by petition, incumbent Robert G. Ward of Winnabow, was re-elected to Brunswick's at-large seal. Ward was the top vote-getter Saturday as he defeated Boyd Evans of Ash 704 404. Members voted the same way in the race for two Columbus County district seats, opposing the candi dates recommended by the Bruns wick Electric nominating commit tee. Jack Miller of Guidcway edged Ray Canady 598-504 for the District 1 seat, and incumbent Frederick Tedder of Hallsboro defeated Jim Sessions 621-459. Supporters of the five winners were encouraging voters to elect them as a group Saturday, distribut ing printed cards to the large, annual meeting crowd at Shallotte Middle School. Jones, one of the local winners, said ihe five candidates decided to run as a group because they hoped they would get more support than they could as individuals. "I wanted to do more for my church and more for my community, and that's why I ran" Jones said in a phone interview following the meet ing. As a candidate, however, Jones said he learned prior to the election that some members are disturbed by the apparent disproportionate repre sentation on the board. Although Brunswick County has about 29,500 BEMC members and Columbus County has around 7,500, the board of directors is pretty even ly balanced with members from both counties. Seven of 13 scats on the board of directors arc designated for Bruns wick County residents, while Co lumbus has the remaining six. Each county had six scats until April, when the board of directors voted to split the Shallottc area into two districts. Jones said Tuesday he expects the board of directors to consider more changes in representation after the new directors take office in December. "I don't know how the districts are organized," Jones said. "I'm sure it will be looked at. I'm just going to wait and see." Jones also said he ran for election because he was concerned members haven't been kept well-enough in formed. "Not that that hasn't been done in the past, but you can always do a better job, he said. BEMC General Manager David Batten said the newly-elected direc tors will take office at the regular board meeting in December. Meetings arc usually held the last Thursday of each month, but Batten said December's meeting will prob ably be changed due to Christmas. Batten said he wasn't involved in the board of directors election and didn't know reasons for the vote. "All through the campaign, we do not get involved in any of the politi cal issues at all," he said. "We just put on the meeting." Batten described the annual meet ing as "extremely good." He said 1,234 members registered and be tween 1,100 and 1,150 people voted. "Normally it's somewhere around 800 people that vote," he said. "We had somewhere in the neighborhood of 3,000 people there based on our name tags." Batten said the cooperative easily reached uie minimum number ot members it needed for a quorum, which is 2 percent. "We had a good crowd that par ticipated," Batten said. "We felt like it ran as smoothly as we had planned." BEMC Seeks Appeals Court Review Of NLRB Decision BY SUSAN USHER Brunswick Electric Membership Corp. has chosen not to comply with a ruling by the National Labor Relations Board in a three-year la bor dispute. Instead, the co-op's labor relations lawyer, W. Britton Smith Jr. of Charlotte, confirmed Tuesday that BEMC is asking the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals to review the order. By the lime both parties file briefs and responses, make oral argu ments before the court and the court deliberates on the evidence it hears, "it could be April, May or June before a decision is reached," said Britton. "That's just a wild guess." In the three-member panel's decision announced in September, the NLRB affirmed earlier findings by an administrative law judge and adopted his recommended order. That order would require BEMC to step certain types of "threatening" or "coercive" behavior by its man agers. to resume negotiations with the union, and to rehire George Douglas (Doug) Smith Jr. of Whiteville. At the time of his tiring, Smith was president of Local No. 495 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. The local represents about 60 co-op employees. "I talked it over with management and with the board (of directors) and everyone felt that the NLRB still hadn't got it right," said Smith. "We wanted a disinterested party ? the court ? to review the facts and how they applied the law." The NLRB panel had ruled on the findings of its own administrative law judge. Smith said the NLRB's order is not "self-enforcing." That means that by BEMC not choosing voluntarily to comply with the order, its en forcement would have to come through the court of appeals. FIVE CANDIDATES GO ON RECORD Election Will Decide Fate Of Zoning Law BY ERIC CARLSON When Brunswick County voters close the cur tains on election booths next month, they will de cide whether or not to close the book on recent ef forts to establish county-wide zoning. The Brunswick County Board of Commissioners is expected to enact a zoning or dinance before the Nov. 3 election. A majority of the board ? Commissioners Kelly Holden, Gene Pinkerton and Jerry Jones ? are on record as sup porting the law. Commissioner Frankie Rabon has said he will vote against zoning. Commissioner Donald Shaw has not publicly announced his position on the or dinance. But with Holden and Pinkerton not seeking re election, many have wondered if the fledgling law might be repealed by three new commissioners who could swing the voting balance against zon ing. Rabon also has declined to seek another term. In telephone interviews this week, both District 1 candidates said they were in favor of zoning and would work to implement the ordinance. One District 4 candidate said she would defi nitely vote to throw out the zoning ordinance. The other gave the zoning effort lukewarm support and would not rule out a possible vote to repeal the law. Which leaves the possible deciding vote to District 3, where one candidate said he would vote to keep the law and the other failed to re spond to numerous requests tor nis comments. The candidates were asked three questions: Do you support the concept of county-wide zoning for Brunswick County? How do you feel about the current zoning law as drafted? Would you vote in favor of a motion to repeal the zoning or dinance? DISTRICT 1? BRUST District 1 Republican candidate Joe Brust said a county zoning ordinance is "absolutely essen tial" to protect property values. "I am very much in favor of zoning," Brust said. "We have a county of 53,000 people that is projected to grow to 80,000 by the year 2010. With such enormous growth, there is a com pelling need for land-use planning and zoning. "We simply have to have zoning to make intelligent de cisions about our schools, wa ter lines, recreational facili ties, etc. Families thinking aoout moving 10 orunswicic County will want to know if their property will be protect ed by zoning." Brust said the current ordi nance was a "good base document" that he ex pects to be modified over the years. He said the law "seems to strike a reasonable balance" in cre ating land-use districts. He feels there is a "silent majority" of voters that supports zoning and said parts of the law have been misunderstood. "Some folks who live in smaller, single-wide (See ZONING, Page 2-A) BRUST . _ _ STAff PHOTO IV EMC GMISON A Dream Destroyed m uream uestroyed Iris Bellamy (left) looks down on her late husband's newly restored 1946 Piper PA-12 shortly after it crashed into the ltracoastal Waterway near her Windy Point home Wednesday afternoon. With her is her sister, Ruby Jane Balint. The story is on Page 3-A. i