;,) di ?SDAY, AUGUST 12, 19S4 CHAPEL HILL NEWS LEADER noponed Bid Controversy [At Request Of Orange County iettled ird Moved irrectly, Says H. Graham Commissioners Carrboro, White Cross School District Divided Into Two Units By State Board Of Education f rhubarb over what to do j, g ! - g - they would be open to suit if j _ this were broken. The attorney’s ruling completely vindicated the action of Architect Archie Royal Davis and Chairman S Howerton’s irregularly j ^ to open i_i_ . the Howerton bid when it did not copfain a contractor’s license as re quired by the specifications. Davis told the commissioners he would have been subject to a fine of $500 and Howerton another $500 under state statutes if he had opened Howerton’s bid and it had exceeded $20,000. All previous estimates and all bids opened prior to Howerton’s were above the $20, mitted on July 29, Graham told, commissioners were told incumbent =nri tietween Orange County upon Howerton, knowing that his ese successful bidders.” He bid was under $20,000 and know ing that a contractor’s license was required above that, to have been present at the letting and advised the commissioners, who could then Carrboro and White Cross will i be separated into two school dis tricts, the State Board of Educa tion ruled last week. The state board acted at the re- 1,7 quest of the Orange County Board cept the forfeit check of Paschal Education. Brothers and allow that firm to withdraw from the heating con- bids were published. In another action at Tuesday’s meeting, the board agreed to ac- tract awarded it in the July 29 letting. Paschal failed to take into ;ed low bid to complete the ent section of the new ige County courthouse dropped .^resounding thud on the ad- of the county attorney at a TraeeliSg uf commissioners on *fe«sday night. t “Sandy” Graham, who ducfj^^es. millions in bids every year e etfup^tairman of the State Highway Lnd Public Works Commission, had! 000 mark. Said Davis: “Legally we the »ready answer for the dilemma in [ couldn’t open it, legally he couldn’t losiui^hich^ the commissioners found even bid.” oji’iihemsilves after the local carpeii- Iter sent in a sealed bid some have opened the bid in safety, account heating of the storage rcom Howerton first bid slightly over' $17,000 and then raised it about $2,000 to $18,915 between the time it was returned to him and his re- submision on August 2, after other in the nothern end of the base ment and subsequently raised his price $1,000. The architect was in structed to call for new bids on August 19 for the heating contract Howerton had neither a con tractor’s license from the licensing : nii|, MW ukiwl ay, tel ^d not comply with specific which the State of North Carolina t. Hi:.!,. . ii, „ -f j,- requires of all bidders on jobs as ^sR^tions m the specifications $io,ooo. This later difi- l^bidders. jciency was soon rectified by the The formal resolution of the i State Department of Revenue foi- Pi accepting the low bids sub- lowing publication of the bid, the ^yy NOW-WE GUAMNTEE $ATISFAeT|ON,-GR YOUR MONEY BACK autiful! Tough! One coat covers! lous Lowe Brothers Plax is sy to use as it is to . say I [u^t brush it on and watch it |?0g»ke up” dull furniture, cabi- y^_nets, walls, toys—dozens of things inside the house or out! pne coat of this imiversal beauty sh is usually sufficient £^ finest results on repainting work. Plax dries in a liffy to a tough, elastic finish that withstands all kinds of wear, weather and abuse—even many stains and acids! Choose from a fine variety erf cheerfirf 23 A^hapel^^nilStory Dealers Combine Against ^Doc^ And The Juke Box (Editor’s Note: Well-remembered to many Chapel Hil- lians through the past 25 years is one of the communitiy’s most genial and casual philosophers, “Doc” Blodgett, a stu dent at the University during various periods from the early, go s through 1952. During this period he also worked on the Greensboro Daily News and the Durham Morning Herald while living in Chapel Hill. The story reprinted below gives an insight into an incident that seems typically “Doc.”) with one exception. He had a passionate hate for juke boxes and his greatest am bition in life was to “make hash Styk-Tested Orfots. MINS pint By J. P. BRADY IN THE FRANKLIN PRESS A recent column by this news paper’s editor—Mr. Jones — on his unsuccessful encounter with those banshees of dining estab lishments, juke boxes, reminded me of a man whom, Mr. Jones would probably immortalize for his relentless war on the‘bright ly colored music boxes. This man was a big, hulking, 250-pound newspaperman nam ed “Doc” Blodgett, whose heart was as big as his frame. “Doc” (don’t know how he got that name) was one of those legen dary “old school” newspaper characters, who bounced from one job to another with the reg ularity of an elevator, and who was always flat broke but smil ing. His financial condition had direct bearing on his folksy phi losophy —i “help everyone you can; there are plenty of poor souls in sadder shape than you are.” And “Doc” would help anyone that needed help; his contribu-- tions were monetary or spirit ual, it mattered little to him. “Doc”, in his wrinkled tweed suit (the only one he owned), and this column used to stump the state on some of the wild est adventures possible—always on a mission to help someone, at his suggestion. There was the time we took a load of books and school supplies to an 80- yearmld teacher of an isolated one-room school near Boone; a trip that encompassed a seven- mile hike (supplies on a horse sled) to the school, and a night in jail for me and “Doc”. The latter accommodation was at the invitation, not the insis- tance of the sheriff, who put us up for the night when “Doc” gave our (I should say my) last $5 to the spunky school teacher, who was sick in bed when we found her. One Exception Well, that’s the kind of a guy “Doc” was. He loved everything In a letter to Carrboro and White Cross District and Advisory Committeemen, Supt. G. P. Carr said, “As you probably know, the new district division will cause the County Board of Education to terminate your appointments as committeemen because the district for which you were appointed committeemen no longer exists. Thvo new district committees, one for each of the two new distriers, will have to be appointed. We will not use advisory committees for these districts.” Supt. Carr also called on the for mer committeemen to suggest “de sirable persons” for the two com mittees. The reason given for desiring a division of the school districts was “the difference In background and occupation in the two sec tions.” However, it is understood that White Cross was suffering left side of the county highway banks; thence with the tracks of the Southern Railway (State Uni versity Railway) in a southerly direction to Main Street in the town of Carrboro; thence south 4° 21’ east along the eastern boun dary of the property of the Carr- boro Woolen Mills to the town limits; thence with town limits in a westernly direction to the inter section of the town limits and county highway 558; thence in a southerly direction following the back of the property lines on the Glen Lennox X-Ray Clinic Set Saturday The Orange-Person-Chatham-Lec District Health Department will conduct a free chest X-ray clinic for residents of Glen Lennox Sat urday from 9a.m. to 6 p.m. on the parking lot of the Glen Lennox Shopping Center. All persons 16 or older and any body who has been in contact with a known case of tuberculosis or have been tested and found to be I tuberculin positive, regardless of of one of those multi-colored j age ,is urged to get a chest X-ray monstrosities.” | during these hours. Time and again, as we ate in i Dr. 0. David Garvin, District joints over the state, I would lis-1 Health Officer, announced that ten to “Doc” spout vehemently | with a little less than a half-year against the infernal machines | remaining, approximately 12,000 and the “classical idiots” feed-1 chest X-rays have been taken in ing money into them. As he hulk- the Orange-Person-Chatham-Lee ed over a cup of coffee, a wild her 196 suspected cases of tuber- gleam in his eyes, “Doc” would Health District. Out of this num- solemnly vow to make hash of culosis were found and 34 of these one some day. j have already been confirmed as And “his day” came. active cases during followups by because it was in the district with Carrboro. White Cross has four teachers and 102 pupils, while Carrboro has 12 teachers and 374 pupils. White Cros has been los ing pupils to the Carrboro School and a division of the district will channel students back to White Cross. Here are descriptions of the new districts: District 4-A, Carrboro; Begin ning at Glenn Neville’s house at the northeast comer of the White Cross School District and running in an easterly direction to Eu- Navy To Open Area School A new Naval Reserve Officers School will be opened in this area next month, the Navy has an nounced. Headquarters for the school will be located at the Naval Reserve Training Center in Durham, but classes will also be taught at the Naval Reserve Training Center in Raleigh to facilitate attendance. All Naval Reserve offeers, re gardless of status, will be eligible to attend the school. (The Durhain- Raleigh school will be one of three I think it was back in 1948. | family physicians. In addition, 15(} | to be established over the seven- “Doc” was holding down a desk non-tuberculosis lesions including state area of the Sixth Naval Dis trict. The other two will be located in Miami and Atlanta. Part of a nationwide Navy pro gram, the schools will provide re serve officers with the opportunity job with the Greensboro Daily pleural and bronchia involvement; News, a job he referred to as “a 404 cardio-vascular conditions (en- perch-like thing to keep body largement of heart and large blood and soul on speaking terms with vessels); and two cases of cancer stomach.” j of the lung have also been found. I bumped into him in down-' The Glen Lennox clinic will be to develop their professional skiLs town Chapel Hill and seeing conducted by Dr. James L. Goddard while earning credit towards pro that, although he was working of the U. S. Public Health Ser motion and retirement, again, he could use a good meal, vice, who has been acting in the Student officers will attend one I invited him out to our trailer capacity of Assistant District night class each week at either Health Officer for the past year.' Durham or Raleigh. Classes are to Dr. Goddard’s tour of duty with begin the third week in Septeni the District Health Department ber and continue through June will end the latter part of August, with a total of 40 sessions to be at which time he will leave for a taught. year’s graduate study at Harvard | The Durham-Raleigh site has University, School of Public been chosen because of the large Health. SAVE MONEY NOW By Filling Up Your Oil Tank or Coal Bin For Quick Service Call 6161 Bennett & Blocksidge for a three-course dinner (wat er, coffee, and doughnuts) and, for the first time in our asso ciation, he refused me. “The time has come for me to repay some of those hand outs you and the lovely wife have been tamping into me,” he declared, pulling out a large roll of bills. “Gas up the buggy and I’ll buy the chow.” The wife, being a working gal, had to decline this noonday ban quet, so “Doc” and I piled in my car and headed for the vicin ity of Durham in search of a square meal. We ended up in a little road house somewhere on the outskirts of the city. “Doc” draped his gangly frame over a bar stool and started sip ping tap beer, one of his favor ite pastimes. A pimply-faced kid, whose wit ticisms were wrenching spasms of giggies from a young girl in a nearby booth, got up and ap proached the juke box. “Doc’s concentration of Naval Reserve of ficers in the area plus the avail ability of teaching personnel at the neighboring colleges and universi ties. WCHL Programs 1360 on the Dial Hours: 6 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday 6:30 Easy Does It. 8:05 What’s Going On. 9:05 Personals: Home Stretch. 10:05 Mid-Morning Music. 11:15 This is the Hour. 12:15 News Summary. 12:25 What’s Going On. 12:30 Scott Jarrett. 12:45 Patriotic Platter. 1:05 Dig These, jaw tightened as he 3:05 Personals. 105 E. Franklin St. watched the kid put a quarter in the machine and the lights flashed on. Then “Doc” really loudly howled when the kid punched the same record FIVE times. As the music started, the girl over in the booth gushed, “Gee, our song.” Breaking Point Red flooded up around “Doc’s” collar and I knew that the breaking point I had been a- ware of for some time had been reached. “Doc” bellowed for the man ager, who eyed the big man’s left and meekly asked what the trouble was. “Tell me how much those con founded juke boxes cost? “Doc” demanded. “I can let you have that one for $175”, the manager ventur ed, sensing, no doubt, a chance to make a little money from his obvious rage. “Sold,” “Doc” roared, jerking his roll of bills from his pocket. Whereupon, he unwrapped his frame from the stool, stalked across the room, removed a fire axe from the wall, rolled up his sleeves, and proceeded to “make hash” of the juke box under the horrified eyes of the young couple and the manager. “My soul has found peace,” “Doc” reflected as we rolled down the highway, “I’m broke, but I’m happy.” I never questioried hiin . . . 3:15 Rhythm Rendezvous. 3:30 Music For You. 4:30 Evensong. 6:05 What’s Going On. 7:30 Listening Tip. Saturday 6:30 Easy Does It. 8:05 What’s Going On. 9:05 Saturday’s Sound- 10:30 Proudly We HaiL 11:05 Silent Sid. 12:00 Radio Auction 12:15 State and National News 12:25 What’s Going On. 12:30 Luncheon with Lenny. 1:05 Variety. 1:30 Records at 33%, 45, 78 4:30 Highway Hits 5:05 Evensong 7:30 Listening Tip Sunday 6:05 Hymns. 7:30 Meditation. 8:05 Your Community Chapel. 8:35 Howard Barlow Conducts. 9:05 Concert Hour. 9:45 Christopher’s Program 10:05 What’s Going On 10:10 Williams Conducts 11:00 Carrboro Methodist Church 12:05 Rainbow Rendezvous. 12:25 What’s Going On. 12:30 Calvalcade of Music. 1:00 State and National News. 1:15 Let’s Go To Town. 1:30 Music by Mantovani. 2:05 Frankie Carle. 2:15 UN Story. 2:30 Sunday Concert. 4:05 Snack Time. 4:30 Evensong. , 7:00 Listening Tip. Credit Bureau School Is Meeting This Week Credit bureau and merchants as sociation officials arrived at the University yesterday for an an nual week-long Management Insti- tue in which national and local leaders will participate. The Institute is sponsored by the North Carolina Merchants As sociation, the State Association of Credit Bureaus, and the Univer sity School of Business. A graduate seminar will be of fered this year for the first time for graduates of the Institute and prospective instructors from the ACB of A districts east of the Mississippi, Dr. R. S. Winslow, director, UNC Bureau of Business Services and Research and Insti- ’ tute Advisor, said. The new feature jOn “Instruc tors’ Sales” will be devoted en-, tirely to helping the participants learn the best techniques to sell their services. 558 to the Chatham County line; thence in a westerly direction with the Chatham County line to the southeast corner of the White Cross District; thence in a northei ly direction by the old Claude Ne ville place. Gates Service Station, and Bethel Church to the Glenn Neville home which is the point of origin. District 4-B, White Cross: Begin ning at the Glenn Neville house and running in a southerly direc tion by Bethel Church, Gates Ser vice Station, and the old Claude Neville place to the Chatham County line; thence in a westerly direction along the Chatham Coun ty line to the Alamance County line; thence in a northerly direc tion along the Alamance County line to the farm of George Lesley; thence in an easterly direction to Dodson’s Cross Roads, following j an unnamed county road from Dod son’s Cross Roads in an easterly direction to Glenn Neville’s, which is the point of origin. PAGE FIVE Math Group Ends Sessions The Conference in Collegiate Mathematics, which has been run- ninff for eight weeks at the Unil Iversity, closed Friday. Most of the 77 members, repre senting 47 colleges and universi ties located in 24 states and three foreign countries, have left for their homes. - • This Conference, which was sponsored and financed by the National Science Foundation, had as its primary purpose that of fostering the improvement of the training of undergraduates in mathematics. According to Prof. E. A. Cam eron, the Conference Director, the Conference achieved its purpose to a high degree. The principal lectures, deliver ed by the two eminent mathema ticians, Prof. Emil Artin of Prince ton University and Prof. Tiber Rado of Ohio State University, to gether with shorter series of lec tures by other mathematicians, constituted a program of extreme value which held the interest of visiting professors of mathematics throughout the term of the Con ference, Prof. Cameron said. Time To Start Your Back-To-School Sewing New Fall Cottons Are Arriving Daily Bates, Dan River And Many Others Come in now and see the many attractive new Fall patterns and colors in dress fabrics that are ideal for making girls' school dresses. We also carry a complete line of thread, buttons, tape, zippers and Advance Patterns for children's dresses. Make Custom Made Belts, Buttons and Buckles. Carolina Drepery Shop W. Franklin St. Phone 6986 Only Two More Days of Our Summer Clearance Sale Savings Up To 50% Andrews-Henninger Co. 133 E. Franklin St. ROSEMARY AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY (Rear Fowler's Food Store) The Laundry That Gets Your Clothes the Whitest, Brightest and Cleanest. Hand ironing