Page 4-B The Chapel Hill Weekly j "If the matter it important and you are sure of your ground, never fear to be in the minority." ORVILLE CAMPBELL. P*U*er JAMES SHUMAKER, Getteral Manager IPubtMwd every Sunday and Wednesday by the Chapel Hill Publishing Company, Inc. 128 East Rosemary Street, Chapel Hill, N. C. P. 0. Box 271 Telephone 967-7045 Subscription rates (payable in advance and including N. C. sales tax)—ln North Carolina: One year, 18.15; six months, $5.09; three months, $2.06. Elsewhere in the United States: One year, $6.00; six months, $4.00; three months, $3.00. Outside United States: One year, SIO.OO. Sale Os The Franklin Street School Property Step In The Right Direction Unassailable logic in the public af fairs of Chapel Hill is a commonly rare commodity. To assume a position here is to observe the line of would-be antago nists forming to the rear. Newly elected school board member Ed Tenney, however, may have hit a large lode of unanimity with his pro posal that the Board dispose of the pres ent site of the Town’s junior and senior high schools and use the proceeds to build new schools in better locations. Mr. Tenney’s thinking on the matter is not simply personal opinion. The pres ent West Franklin Street site is located strategically in what will become the commercial heart of Town, a location not notably conducive to the most ef ficient teaching and learning. It is also one of the most valuable pieces of real estate in Chapel Hill. Its sale might well float the construction of two additional schools. If it is purchased and developed by commercial interests, the added reve nue from property taxes would sweeten the coffers of Town and County. Both are now stuck with relatively little in the way of a tax base because of exten sive public holdings by the University and other State agencies in Orange Coun ty. Also, the West Franklin plant is be ginning to show its age. In terms of con temporary school design it is already obsolescent. In a few years it will be out moded as a design and woefully inade quate to handle the school system’s an ticipated enrollment. It stands athwart a proposed link of Pittsboro and Frank lin Streets, a major item on the new’ Thoroughfare Plan, and a thorn Jn the side of the University’s complex. The link would enable the Uni versity to close off the present Pitts boro Road, which splits the Health Af* The Dog Days Os August Get Lost This must be the way the world ends not with a bang, but with Dog Days. The air is fevered, the sun vicious, the trees exhausted, and the tap water permanently tepid. In the distance at night the lightning flashes in wild spasms, but never a drop of rain falls. Dogs lie in the shade, tongues dangling and sides heaving like little bellows. The effect of a bath is bliss, for five minutes; then the skin be gins to grow sticky again. Even scientifically conditioned air hov ers close, threatening to press you to death if you drop your guard. The tongue grows weary and the throat muscles tir How About Some Freedom For The Dogs THE VINEYARD GAZETTE Maybe, with all the talk of freedom, something should be said for the free dom of dogs to bark, at least in the coun try. We have here not only what seems legitimately to be an inalienable right, considering a dog’s obligation to look after things and make appropriate com ments, but one of the last of the familiar country sounds