482-4418 - Wednesday, September 15, 2010 .—:.= 11 ..===== J Chef to duel at Market Impossible Challenge, Page IB 50« Marine to get Purple Heart at game By REBECCA BUNCH Staff Writer Love of community is prompting Lance Cpl. Bobby Brown to share his Purple Heart awarding with family and friends in Edenton. Love of country prompt ed Brown, of the U.S. Ma rine Corps, to risk his life to save others this spring while serving in Afghani stan. He suffered burns from a grenade explosion. Brown’s actions earned him the Purple Heart. A ceremony saluting Brown will be held on Fri day evening, Sept. 24, at the football game between Edenton and Bertie. Special guests at the cer emony will be two former Marines who live in< Eden ton, Tom Griffin and Ben Rinehart. According to Aaron Davidson,^comman dant of the local Marine Corps League, .Rinehart will take part in the cer emony. Davidson said the last time a Marine from this area received a Purple Heart was during the Viet nam War. “As far as there ever be ing a ceremony like- this held in Edenton, as far as I know there hasn’t been one,” Davidson said. “We want to make it as special as we can for Bobby.” Part of making it special will involve inviting all cur rent and former service men and women from the area to come to the game that night and help honor Brown, Davidson said. Brown requested that his Purple Heart be award ed during that particular game because the yearly event has great personal meaning for his fam ily, Brown said. His father, Robert Brown, has been an assistant coach at Bertie for the past 18 years, and Bobby played for the Aces in high school. “Edenton is my home town,” Bobby said when asked why he chose to have the ceremony here rather than in Texas where he is undergoing rehabilitation for his injuries. “He could have chosen to have it anywhere but he wanted to do it here,” add ed his sister Christina. “We moved here 23 years I ago,” said his mother, Lin- | da Brown, “and we love it here. This is our home. He wanted to share this honor with his Edenton family.” Bobby suffered first and second degree burns to his See BROWN, 3A Aces to hold 50th Anniversary PHOTO FROM THE 1961 JOHN A. HOLMES HIGH SCHOOL YEARBOOK A victorious Edenton Aces carry coach Bill Billings off the field after his 1960 football team defeated Hanes (Winston Salem) 19-7 for the high school state 2A football championship, the last outright championship the school earned. Coach Billings key to ’60 perfect season By RITCHIE E. STARNES Editor If this season’s Edenton Aces require any gridiron inspira tion, the players might want to skip the halftime speech and keep their eyes peeled at ' midfield. On Sept. 24, players from John A. Holmes High School’s 1960 state high school 2A foot ball championship team will be honored at halftime. That Hol mes team went 13-0, defeating Hanes (Winston Salem) for the title, the last outright football championship that Edenton ever claimed. Other than Edenton’s first football championship in 1934, the 50s and 60s were the Aces heyday as a perennial power house. Edenton also earned championship hardware in • ’54, ’56, and ’57. They shared top honors in ’64, ’65, ’67, and ’69, during a time when no one team held the state title. “Back then everybody came to the football game; It was the only thing going,” said Jerry Tolley, Aces’ 1960 halfback. Ask any of his teammates about that 1960 season and the championship game, they recall details as if the game was played yesterday “We took a 6-0 lead into half time,” said Jack Sawyer, center and defensive end. “They soon ' scored to start the second half to take a 7-6 lead. That was the first time we were behind all year. “Coach (Bill Billings) gave us the devil at halftime,” Sawyer added. “He was always good for that.” Carroll Forehand, the team’s junior quarterback on a mostly senior-laden team, remembers game night as brutally cold - tough for a player dependent on his hands. He called the game “hard fought.” “All of the games up until then were easy, but that cham pionship game was by far the toughest,” Forehand said. Defensive end Alex Kehayes remembers he warmed the hench that night. The preced ing playoff game, however, he played. “Coach Billings played me when we played teams that S liked to sweep,” Kehayes re called. “If it was a run it up the gut team, I didn’t play “I didn’t come away with woe is me I didn’t play,” he added. “I came away happy that I was part of the championship team.” See ACES, 2A Hospital’s bid rejected for Mental Health site By RITCHIE E. STARNES Editor Efforts to sell the former Mental Health building hit a snag after the Chowan County Board of Commis sioners voted unanimous ly Monday night to reject a purchase bid from Chowan Hospital. Commissioners agreed ©2009 The Chowan Herald All Rights Reserved that the hospital’s offer of $250,000 was too low to seriously consider. Tax records show the value of the building alone is worth $831,947. The property is part of 22 acres contigu ous to the hospital. “As low as the bid was, the enterprise committee would not entertain it,” said Commissioner Keith Nixon. Interim County Manag er Paul Parker advised the board that Jeff Sackrison, hospital president, visited county officials earlier Monday indicating that the hospital would enter tain a counter offer. . Nixon said between the difference of the low bid and the building’s tax value as well as deter min-, ing the value of the land, more time would be re quired before considering a counter offer. “I can’t see us making a counter offer to the hospi tal,” Nixon added. He also pointed to the county’s recent sale of land on Virginia Road that fetched $300,000. In a July 26 letter to Chowan County Com mission Chairman Eddy Goodwin, Sackrison miti gated the building and property’s value because of its site location and the structure’s founda tion. He wrote that be cause the building is too close to nearby Filbert’s Creek, the structured had sustained “visible cracks in the exterior wall and a slope in the interior hall ways.” “The only way to pre serve the foundation is through costly slope stabi lization measures, which are not recommended for a building of this size,” Sackrison wrote. Sackrison also ex pressed concerns about the building’s. electric heat pumps and interior renovations due to mois ture damage. He stated the hospital would use the building and property for hospital office use. Another option includes the Health Department using the property, a move currently being evalu ated. Before attempting to sell' or lease the build ing and property, county leaders waited for months See SITE, 2A Chowan adopts state plan Commission wants prayer ban reversed By RITCHIE E. STARNES Editor County commissioners adopted a series of new policies Monday night, in cluding a new Water Short age Response Plan. The Chowan County Board of Commission ers unanimously adopted a resolution that imple ments a Water Shortage Response Plan as required by the state. Chowan’s new i; plan has already met the approval of the N.C. De partment of Environment and Natural Resources. It had to be formally adopted by the commissipners. In the event of a water shortage, the plan calls for specific for ms of water cus tomer notification, levels . of response, enforcement, public comment, effective ness, and opportunities for revision. See PLAN, 3A New EHA director j is hired By REBECCA BUNCH^ Staff Writer Deborah Davis of Charleston, S.C. has been named new director of the Edenton Housing Authority. Davis is replacing longtime director Mary Har rell who resigned recently due to health concerns. Davis, who holds a Mas ters degree in counseling, is a graduate of Virginia Commonwealth Univer sity and attended graduate school at The Citadel. After college, Davis worked in the public hous ing sector in a variety of roles including becoming a certified housing coun selor who helped tenants repair their credit. Davis See DAVIS, 2A