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How Times Have Changed

Glencoe Elementary School
Glencoe Elementary School

Every so often I see in the newspaper where kids who go to some school in Wake County, North Carolina, my county, were sent home early because the school’s air conditioner went on the blink.  It was so hot the little darlings couldn’t concentrate.

It used to not be that way.

I started to school in the late 1940s, in Glencoe, Alabama, in a two-story, use-to-be white frame building in bad need of paint.  Air conditioning had been invented but my school didn’t have it. It didn’t have indoor plumbing, either. There were privies outside, one for the boys, one for the girls.

Potbelly stove, courtesy of Museum of Appalachia
Potbelly stove, courtesy of Museum of Appalachia

In the winter, each class room was heated with a potbelly stove, and the stove in my room glowed red hot.

Some of the windows in my third grade classroom had been knocked out and, apparently, there was no money to fix them. So when it got cold the teacher wadded up newspapers and stuffed them in the holes.

The second floor room next to my classroom had burned. How they got the fire out before the whole building went up I’ll never know, but they did. No money to repair it either, apparently, but they didn’t board it up. They just warned us.

“You children stay out of that room,” the teacher said, “or you’ll fall through the floor.”

Coming Monday: Those Mean Old Newspapermen

Bear Bryant Called

Vito Ragazzo, an assistant football coach at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, dropped by the Sports Information Office one afternoon to see Bob Quincy, the director. I worked there after class and I heard this exchange.

Paul William "Bear" Bryant
Paul William “Bear” Bryant

Ragazzo, who coached ends, told Quincy that he had just gotten a phone call from “Bear” Bryant, the legendary University of Alabama coach whose team had just won the national championship.

“What did he want,” Quincy asked.

“He wanted ends,” Ragazzo replied.

“I hope you didn’t give him any of ours,” Quincy said.

“He doesn’t want our ends,” Ragazzo said. “Coach Bryant wanted to know if I knew of any good ends we couldn’t get in school.”

Ragazzo said he told the Alabama coach that he knew of a couple of good ones but he said he told Bryant they were dumb as a post.

He said Bryant told him, “I’m not looking for students. I’m looking for ends.”

Coming Friday: How Times Have Changed