University of North Carolina Asheville - Archive Yearbook (Asheville, NC)

 - Class of 1972

Page 1 of 190

 

University of North Carolina Asheville - Archive Yearbook (Asheville, NC) online collection, 1972 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1972 Edition, University of North Carolina Asheville - Archive Yearbook (Asheville, NC) online collectionPage 7, 1972 Edition, University of North Carolina Asheville - Archive Yearbook (Asheville, NC) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 190 of the 1972 volume:

 r- INTRODUCTION I •«-.- ,■ S jp2LJi- ' r- ., t ■ • v •7 :: !5 -;6j • ' 4 ' i5 ' m Sir ' fX ' - -: 9 , , , }.ir, - 15 .SKi .-..4Kk_ «W o i«l « H t m U ' (imi ■ .- i V. - t TV i X Hgur t- I ' ' i 11 % % r v n s ip t ■ mm- ' - ■ m .:- .t ' :sr ' ■ - ' ' %■ - ' C! S ' -.« ' ■.• i -! ■r- jL - V ' « , J ■ . a ■Jr. . v«:. j, :1 ■:;„ k. -.. .v r. V ' Cream of STUDENT F. « r .A 3k V-. ' .- ' ■• =. ' ■ - ' ■ ' ■MP ' m J w 32 33 ' U ?••- d - vw: 40 ' 4 i f 41 % 1 1 I TT e. ■ i y-r ;: if -4 : l p I H ' :u ?i mm ■ H l •Tjlf mJMjJm -.1 3 ... L H o J 1 ui- T- ' •A Ka « X B LT 47 48 49 55 RjH 56 } I 57 Efe. ' -« : Organization with Bean 02.  !- 4t ■• ■ ' p ' i rm THE UNEXPECTED JOYS OF A SIMPLE GARDEN 66 5f fh l iLa _ M ■■ Lid DdtaChiOmega Wa ..- « . ' t 1 ■ CHEMISTRY ■ ' ' H M ' 5 ' Jfc i , 1%- rjt - T „,i.,i i ' .n EDUC. CLUB 74 75 76 • . ' ' TU niMMfif TV g- ' B: ft ' -« v ■ •I y., vy, - -..j, y IIW ES .f,:;A.i; ?v?ai3 - ' ifii ' - the ridgerunner • thursday, april 13, 1972 Editorial Commei Son Abe r i • Ending  i j experience, so many Se. | outside w( j isolation those words I modes of th I be the realit By far th (and univer fresh out of I into this ' ir I and that is j I block that; I Students cq I what they w | hers of the becomes a | school, and extended nib an outside world, it is due to the limited focus of the students to start with and the failure of the college to change that outlook which sees college as a depository for four years. The students 1 have spoken to who re- turned to college after a career, or to flnish up requirements after raising a family or after leaving the service have mush clearer goals, and if they return because they simply ■ ULU103 BUU able and also a distillate; a chance to view the dominant themes recurrent in sodeties and cultures in our world. But if higher learning becomes only a distillate, only the teaching of lefty and unapproachable ideals: Truth and Beauty and Education, without applying the meat from which the insight comes, then we have an outside world and higher education is clearly divorced SavtTWKJS I PICKED UP (=B THEV CAUU IT ACUPUN T«e( « Promises Kept and Unkept Insurance: I or Primroi Dear editor Reading your artic McEIhaney, who led ttie Buiioogs to Kansas City ' s NAIA national tournament in 1%9 and 1971. McEIhaney holds the alltime scoring record at the AsheviUe campus, 1904 points. i The past season, UNC-A snaitercu any nupcs loi a piayuu berth and a possible third trip to Kansas Cily. Academic ineligi- bility scratched focu- of the top eight men from the UNC-A roster. Gray, who had seen bmiled nrotner uary, piagucu oy an old wrist injury hurt first in the eighth grade and again halfway through his senior year, stayed with the JVs and averaged 13 points a gamr with ' his right arm in a cast. readily take whatever fruit we couldn ' t use to give away fresh or to preserve: for stilt most of the world is hungry. Thank you D. Ladinsky- tions: SURVIVING THE ' TO ' s is a survival manual for this decade by one of America ' s top social critics, Benjamin DeMott. Pub- -lished in hardcover by E.P. DtHton Co., SURVIVING THE ' Tffs-willbe published by Penguin Books Inc. March 23. DeMott has written a sane guide t the oppor- tunities that lie beyond today ' s tangle of pop ideas about hip life styles. The lifierated Woman, college students, campus revolt, the family, the ecology movement. York State, in the t the nineteenth centi i Not much is te( the author notes, hill — still called is partly gone, bulldc improvement . .. . Sti is left. The bright, p , colors are left. We their Tomantic att] each other, their q • ' oryiril i ness in n isolaledTronnecucltl valley in 1816. When this hovel first appeared, .ttiie first Affinial Day. of Women ' s Lib: ... there ' s a loony fringe here as elsewhere on the Mod ' competing models, ' sounding the depth of our still insufficiently acknowledged personal responsi- bility for the terms of our daily life. On Mod Wishbook: . ' . in addition to being the first wish- book of its kind in . history, the Whole Earth Catalogue is rich in revelation of -national character, an nhke the competition — Sears, Monkey Ward and the rest — it ' s tight at the edge of Now, The second part of the book. Meeting a Stranger, contains a il of a Campus Strike. DeMott ' s personal ac- the protests that, shook College in May, 1970, S. troops invaded Cam- DeMott says of the strike effect it had on his life- It do you do when it dawns that the life you chose, the [you prepared for, the work jve best, is sliding away, !S, more to memory or ;y than to day-to-day 4- - :i|ording te the critics, De-, s a culture-watcher who de- to be watched as he professional culture-wat- and one of the best. Life e insight of -a committed ntrospectiye man . . . part i part philosopher . . . one with it while watficing it. ay Review itain DeMott teaches at rst College and is a fre- contributor to The New Times and ne New York Times Magazine. SOKVl BjgJHE •70 ' s by Ben- flpok. the university of north Carolina at asheville SUMVlfT H bbbMi . :. g: ' k. J j - -. 3!M 1 • RKH; 1 ■ H «. 1 p ■V dB ' - -w 1 J 2jBl£ R£k i i 1 i -j fcr - ,_ jft. : J ' mS ;;.,, wn :n H Nhu;:: ' B73 H I Vb_ -J ' zl f ' PvSflbJH ■. ' ' ' ■ i««« t 9W ffU H E T ' ' ' 3Bm H ' I f B9BiLMlA R%i | j.t H DWBTX ' nBiiBki k ■ ' ' m .. voM sMKI b I H ' 1 ■tI? - ' 1 ' ; - B - ■ ' ' fe k ' S r S J ' Hft. B H Ji P! ' ■■■■ ACTIVITY with NOODLE ' 01 ti- S A i .-Vr Ml-, r) rm 12 3 4 6 7 8 9 10 11 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 5 12 OCT. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 I 31 85 georgia 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 f V x S M T W T F S JA i. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 MAR. 12 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 kathyrn % V 12 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 2a 29 30 31 JUNE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 I I I I S M T w T F s JULY • 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 :. 1 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 94 AUG. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 1 29 30 31 1 gtvdCy A 3l H Ei . ■ fl S 2 SS S  2 SP I s- f . 3 3 H3-S S 2 • 3- B- IB  ? -• (ft 3 OS 3 A •=(- St 2 ? o 3 v  s- «■ - o .3 2 — a 1 Wo = as 2 i 3- - 5 g. 3 g • a 1 •♦ c 2.XJ 5. a o cf. P V! u! sr «6 ,m mm, m.::l i I n I ID CD CD k perimenxai oresi ;steia, a modern adap- of the classic Greek by Aeschylus, will be ted Thursday through ay, October 28-30, by eater of the University rth Carolina at Ashe- :urtain is at 8:00 p.m. •insky Student Center rium. ated story on page 5 steia ' depicts the cycle •ders that begins when inestra kills her hus- gamemnon on his re- from the Trojan War. mnon ' s, Orestes, from name the title of the J derived, avenges his J death by killing his , only to be driven mad Furies. production is staged tribal concept, accord- grow, and emphasizes the sound and movement of the chorus. We are using the adapta- tion by John Lewin that was written for the Tyrone Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis in order to try modern tech- niques of staging that may convey the theatricality of Greek drama better than traditional methods, said Wengrow. The large cast features Donna Glick of Port Republic, Va., as Clytemnestra, Rob Storrs of Richmond, Va., a? Agamerpnon, Mary Ann Lam- pley of Hendersonville as Electra, and Michael Meagher of Nashua, N.H. as Orestes. Tickets for Ores tela ' are $2.00 regular, $1.25 for stu- dents and will be on sale at the sia wpens owiiuuei ?«. ji is ■Aii iiriMMSEi ' Tmn ® 102 ■ ' ti fi ' ' . im ZIMMER •  1 K 3 u 1 Sm gmi ■f HHdF y t e r tedders, (a)SS loiri- or c3 stro pd uohile D« Mg_ OvVnOt polocj ' .es AN v- St- be c PereJ to c.-H Qr people ooho w), ' !! be O.NJc Si AJ- m- ofv) I v excuse, oo s -vooip- ©wM+.Tel-) re.sfoN£. ' ble foe 3i oj 2drVooolc- vjer +f - ' l:i ° , Cc ' .+or T. SMIT r ' 4 r mmmi I 1 dMUiii .IB ' J c=5l fc: :: . a BLUEOYSTERCULT UAV OJ MONf y 6ACH utrs T«f turrttftr ffcfft Sfstem tetcl s yoi to tiftrl i«Df th€ ftnt MfS imM by tar or iiott tes $i jOa a ortf nfUrn 9f tH 1 m p ttlif music; a W , of XiHwtf fe. T0TALntMt7Jli $£110 MO mmeti Mkrmma 120 BEST DRESSED Lucille Thrash, Jr. Frank Bell, Jr. 121 MOST PERSONALITY Sue Shealy Tommy Robertson (Not Piclured) MOST SCHOLARLY Martha Jane Wix Joe Schandler (Not Pictured) BEST ALL-AROUND June-Hope Dougherty Larry Carter 122 BETTY COED JOE COLLEGE Barbara HoUey Dave Cheadle VIOST SCHOOL SPIRIT Frances Mclntyre Johnny Tipton MOST FRIENDLY Ruby Sargent Bill Dalton (Not Pictured) SPORTS GUMBO ■, •. • ..IN. ' ' ■ j H ! r 9 H HHUJi B B B ' k«iiiii£« i l H| H f H MU ' ■ H I P n ! ' ' rsi « % ■%. 133 ' iMatM V - 136 I f 139 Faculty Bisque « r- ■A ■ .  1 ■ ' SAY GCX)DBYE TO THE GIRLS 148 On the tenth of February, 1972, letters were sent from the SUMMIT Faculty Editor to all faculty members urging them to set up appointments with the SUMMIT photographer. Most of these letters were ignored. On the following pages are photos of both the departments which responded and those which did not. It should be easy to tell the difference. 149 i -wi - ' ' . ' ..Ji iMMC 1 1 sN J Owen , ' ' laweiser ' ' fnffuef j ti t.M -h i .A ■■ - : ■.. ,1., Spangiep uweisef ' -AGCR BEER ■ «« W y rf i f ' I £ jfc4:! ' Education Dept. ' Wfe Wil v-r . ?— ■- «. Pt Bj I i f J. J Bp ' ' ■ ra Ilil H v p ' UP H ' ■ ' ' -- 1! i 1- «   J t .;- ' ' HEAVY THINGS ise I mrm GOOD FOR LIFE 168 m ' e Bank £ Asheville Radio Station WPTL Canton, N. C. Polly ' s Florist Main Street Canton. North Carolina GORDON S JEWELERS PACK SQUARE TUNNEL ROAD Swannanoa Cleaners FIVE LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU 22 CHURCH ST. 712 MERRIMON AVE. BILTMORE FOREST CENTER 916 TUNNEL ROAD 1334 PATTON AVENUE EXCLUSIVE RAW LEATHER CARE CLEANING PEPSI PEPSI-COLA BOTTLING CO. Ashevilie, N. C. ECKERD-S DRUG STORES ' CREATORS OF REASONABLE DRUG PRICES ' 31 Patton Ave. — 846 Merrimon Ave. 1001 Patton Ave. West Tunnel Road Shopping Center TOPS FOR SHOES OVER 50 TOP BRANDS TO CHOOSE FROM 27 N. Lexington Ave. USE YOUR FAVORITE BANK CHARGE ASHEVILLE CLEANERS DYERS THE HOME OF FINE DRY CLEANING 1 DAY SERVICE ' FUR STORAGE CLEANING HAT CLEANING LEATHER WORK • DRAPERIES RUGS CARPETS CLEANED Pick-Up 230 Delivery 254-2364 Merrimon THE FLOWER HOUSE NORTHLAND SHOPPING CENTER National Welders Supply Co. Inc. 736 TUNNEL ROAD, ASHEVILLE, N. C. ALL TYPES OF COMMERCIAL MEDICAL GASES, SCUBA DIVING EQUIPMENT AND WELDING SUPPLIES TTWACHOVIA BANK TRUST, N. A. YOUR BANK OF FIRST RESORT ROY M. GASPERSON TRANSFER Local and Statewide Moving 10 MIDDLE BROOK THE IXL SHOP FURNITURE, CRYSTAL, GIFTS LAMPS, LAMP SHADES AND HOME ACCESSORIES SIGMA DELTA UPSILON EXTENDS BEST WISHES TO THE GRADUATES OF 1972 .cONr,„ ' VciN FIRE ENGINEERS INCORPORATED 3864WALBASH BLVD. WINSTON-SALEM N C. 27106 Hwy. 74 and Tunnel Rd. Since 1891 371 Merrimon Ave. Asheville, North Carolina Customer Parking the fashion slop EVERYTHING FOR CAMPUS AND CAREER Phone 298-6901 -INC- 34-36 HAYWOOD STREET ASHEVILLE, N. C. 28801 Waechter ' s Silk Shop Asheviiie. North Carolina IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC .ilLkS, WOOLENS. COTTONS Compliments ot MOLNTAIN CIT CLEANERS AND LAUNDRY :07 Co e Avenue Home of Sanilone Dr Cleaning W- J It ' s the real thing. Coke. ALLISON ' S FLOWER SHOP 22 College Street - Ph. 252-8253 ASHEVILLE. N. C. 28301 [.MORGAN brother; INCORPORATED W holesale-Distributors EHK AMERICAN ENKA CO A PART OF AkzOna INC. NYLON • POLYESTER • RAYON • YARNS • FIBERS ENKA-, N. C. • LOWLAND. TENN • CLEMSON, S. C. • MURPHY, N. C. AutogT pn? M. f l X fi -yn t-wy - _, j(j: a . Yll PARTING SHOTS Why are these men smiling? 178 ■ ■ ' ' ' if, '


Suggestions in the University of North Carolina Asheville - Archive Yearbook (Asheville, NC) collection:

University of North Carolina Asheville - Archive Yearbook (Asheville, NC) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

University of North Carolina Asheville - Archive Yearbook (Asheville, NC) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

University of North Carolina Asheville - Archive Yearbook (Asheville, NC) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

University of North Carolina Asheville - Archive Yearbook (Asheville, NC) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

University of North Carolina Asheville - Archive Yearbook (Asheville, NC) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974

University of North Carolina Asheville - Archive Yearbook (Asheville, NC) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

1975


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