Newspapers / The Transylvania Times (Brevard, … / May 20, 1971, edition 1 / Page 22
Part of The Transylvania Times (Brevard, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
The Transylvania Times A State And National Prize-Winning Home Town Newspaper ■■com Hid wiwi mm n nn«n, i i u tool i»u k Vol. 84—No. 20 BREVARD, N. C., THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1971 * SECTION FOUR ★ By U. Governor Brevard Graduates Urged To Restore ‘Moral Ecology9 - Lt Gov. H. Pat Taylor called upon graduating stu dents of Brevard College Sunday to join with their elders to “restore our human and moral ecology” as well as protecting the physical en vironment He challenged the students to join his generation to “re store some of the balance of nature, for unless we do, we may not survive;” and “restore some of the values which are just as essential to life as our physical needs.” “Your generation,” he said, “sometimes speaks of love as though you invented it You didn’t. My generation’s greed and prejudice have at times made a mockery of the ideal of brotherly love. But I’m not sure you are doing much better.” Lt. Gov. Taylor said he had “heard young people criticise hypocrisy, but someone who sings songs about loving every body and then calls a fellow hu man being a nig because he wears a blue uniform is a hypocrite.” While it is wrong, the lieu tenant governor said to Judge young people by the length of their hair, it is equally wrong for them to show hatred or dislike for the stu dent with a crew cut and white socks.” Mr. Taylor told the students that he was going to depart from tradition and not tell them about “going out into the world . . . about the world you’re going to be living in . . . as though you have been living somewhere else” to the present. The older generations and the younger, he said, are not as far apart as might appear. “Perhaps the only major dif ference between your view of the world and mine is one of prospective. If I see things a HERE’S THE WASHER for apartments ...for mobile homes a. HOOVER U> Spin-Drying Washer • K Compact! Fits Most Anywhere.. .Yet rt Washes end Damp Ories a Full Family Size Wash In An Amazingly Short Time! You Need Never Again Do Your Wash in Public. • No Special Plumbing Required • Hook Up To Sink and Start Washing • Lightweight* Rolls Easily On Casters • Complete With Serve-A-Top Cover • Choice of Popular New Colors #169 ... And Here's The Matching DRYER FOR ONLY 139” AND HERE’S THE PLACE IN BREVARD TO GET THEM BOTH! little differently than you do, it it probably because I see them in context of a longer period of time and a larger inventory of remembered events." He referred to the Southeast Asian war having gone on al most as long as they “have been able to read,” the civil rights movement is a relatively re cent thing to him he said, and, while “we had lived most of our lives under an entirely different set of circumstances ... for you, it has been part of the world around you all your lives.” He said similar comparisons could be made on “a lot of other subjects: economics, ethics, work, sex, conserva tion, education . . .” Mr. Taylor then said he “would like to ask what we to gether, you and I, your genera tion and mine, can do to make a new ‘normality,’ which you know so well, something we can live with. Since the good old days will never come again, how can we create some good new days for ourselves and our children?” He said some values are polluted, as are the rivers; society is clouded with suspi cion, prejudice and hate as the air is chocked with smog: and “outworn concepts and Judgments litter the moral landscape and need to be re cycled. As a result of the imbalance of the physical en Set Singing At Carson's Creek Friday Evening There will be a singing at Carson’s Creek church on Fri day, May 21, at 7 p. m. The Angel Family and the Gospel Five will be present. The public is invited to at tend. vironment, the fish and the birds are dying, and in the wreckage of our social and cultural environment, we see the death of such things as hope, courage, charity, in tegrity and even love.” Finally, he said, "our future together amounts to a challenge and an opportunity as difficult and important and potentially rewarding as any generation has ever faced. If we can han dle it, we may indeed change the course of history and insure the survival and improvement of the human race . . . “If we can’t, there may be no future beyond our own.” Dr. Robert A. Davis, Bre vard College president, pre sented Mr. Taylor, and later awarded 92 associates in arts and 27 junior college di plomas. Dean Grady H. Whicker an nounced the awards winners. Chaplain C. Edward Roy pronounced both the invoca tion and benediction, and the college glee club and choir sang the anthem from Anton Bruckner’s Mass in E Minor. Several Transylvanians Receive Diplomas At Local College Sunday Junior High P-TA Meets On Monday Brevard Junior High School P-TA will hold its final meet ing of the year next Monday, May 24th, at 7:30 p.m. in the cafeteria. Officers for the coming year will be elected and installed, and awards will be presented to outstanding students. Mrs. Edwards’ Seventh and Eighth grade choral group will also present a program of popular music. President James Felty will preside. The public is invited. NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the authority contained in that cer tain deed of trust from Charles W. Banther and wife, Mrs. Charles W. Banther, to Joseph B. Chambliss, Trustee, dated January 21, 1966, and recorded in Book 75, page 451, the un dersigned Substitute Trustee on Friday, June 18, 1971 at 12:00 noon, at the courthouse door in Brevard, North Caro lina, will offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash the following piece, parcel or lot of land, situate, lying and being in Little River Township, Transylvania County, North Carolina, and more particular ly bounded and described as follows: BEGINNING at a stake in a branch near a black gum tree, L. B. Scott corner, and running thence N 30 deg. E 212 feet to a stake at Will Owen’s line; thence with Will Owen’s line, S 87 deg. 45 min. E 200 feet to a stake; thence S 30 deg. W 166% feet to a stake; thence S 84 deg. 30 min. W 200 feet to the BEGINNING CORNER. This is a portion of the prop erty conveyed to Charles W. Banther and Rosa Lee Banther by deed recorded in Book 109, at page 106, in the office of the Register of Deeds for Transyl vania County, North Carolina. Said sale being made on ac count of default in the payment of the indebtedness secured by said deed of trust. This the 18th day of May, 1871. GAYLE E. RAMSEY Substitute Trustee 5-20-4tc .. .—: — i— ■ "7 — — ™—■ - . The Transylvania Several Transylvania county students were awarded di plomas at Graduation Exercises Sunday afternoon at Brevard College. According to Mrs. Brona Roy, assistant registrar, they were as fbllows: Lyndon Kerry Ashworth Freeman Douglas Canty, cum laude Thomas Spurgeon Carpenter Imogene Monteith Eaker, cum laude Lindsey Lee Burgage, cum laude Gary Ralph Fisher Jerry Lee Girard Jacky Lee Houck Carolyn Louise Hutchinson Patrick Thomas Leeder, Mag na cum laude, Faculty Scholar ship award Helen Jeanette McCall, cum laude Jo Lane McKinney, Magna cum laude Leonard Keiffer Steven Rex Nix Dan Howard Fial, Jr. General Ned Whitmire Myrtle Maxine Whitmire, cum laude Maxine Caroline Ashworth Linda Sheryl Tate Stephen Donald Burch Martha Elizabeth Williams The Times CLASSIFIED RATES An classifieds are payable la advaoce aad must be broaght by Tie Time* office by 4:M pa. on Tneaday. MINIMUM Or » WORDS M ■he type (8 point) |LM. Rack additional void 5c. MINIMUM of 20 WORDS tftia also typo (10 point) H,20. additional word <o. MINIMUM ALL KXTRD AM $1JM. Over M word*. Ce peri. Card of Thanks *1.M (S point). CLASS IFIKD DISPLAY AuVER THING |LM inch. mmmrn Spaghetti Supper On May 29th At See-Off Center The See-Off Homesteaders will have a spaghetti supper on Friday night, May 28th, at the Community Center. The menu will include spa ghetti with meat sauce, tossed salad, French bread, peach cobbler, coffee or tea. Serving time is set for 6:30 p.m. The price for the dinner will be $1.50 for adults and $1.00 for children. Everyone is cordially invited. "LINE BOOK REVIEWS" FROM THE TRANSYLVANIA COUNTY LIBRARY FOR FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY SPRINGTIME IN BRITAIN by Edwin Way Teale. A delight ful journey through Britain which combines history, folk lore and travel in springtime. LASSITER’S FOLLY by Na thaniel Benchley. This newest novel of Mr. Benchley is set in a small town on the Inland Waterway and involves a mil lionaire with well - meaning ideas of renovating the town. AMERICA AND RUSSIA IN A CHANGING WORLD by Wil liam Averell Harriman. One of the most experienced ne gotiators with the Communist world tells of his personal en counters and interpretations of our times. THE ORDEAL OF RUNNING STANDING by Thomas Fall. The story of a Kiowa Indian torn between the Indian World and the White World. It is set in Oklahoma in this cen tury. ANYONE CAN GO TO COL LEGE by Herbert B. Livesey. This book can help the high school student to find the right college for him by analyzing the fact - finding factors neces sary for entrance. When yon think of prescrip dons, think of VARNER'S. ITS TIME FOR SANDALS — And We Have Them! 2400 PAIR OF ITALIAN SANDALS 45 Styles To Choose From! SIZES 4 TO 10 *3.98 VALUES TO $10.95 *4.98 *5.98 In The College Shopping Center
The Transylvania Times (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 20, 1971, edition 1
22
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75