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Rob Neufeld posted a blog post

Seeking former teachers at Asheville-Biltmore College

Seeking former teachers at Asheville-Biltmore CollegeClark Adams, a member of the English faculty at Randolph Community College in Asheboro, is seeking information on the following list of faculty who are still living and may have taught when the college was "on the mountain" at Seely's Castle during the years 1949 - 1961.  The college operated under that name from 1936 to 1969, when it was consolidated into the state university system.  See UNCA Ramsey Library Special Collections'…See More
6 hours ago
Rob Neufeld posted a discussion

A walk down Haw Creek Road in 1936

A nostalgic walk through 1930s Haw Creekby Rob NeufeldPHOTO CAPTION: The Haw Creek School that replaced Bell’s church-funded school in the 1920s.             I took a walk down Haw Creek Road the other day—in the year 1936—and I got to hear some folks talking.            I wasn’t sure of my way around, so I…See More
yesterday
Row by Row Bookshop updated their profile
Friday
Rob Neufeld posted discussions
Friday
Rob Neufeld commented on Malaprop's Bookstore Cafe's event CHARLES PRICE READING & SIGNING
"The event is July 21 at Malaprop's.  Looking forward to it; and I'll be writing about it."
Thursday
Sharon Gruber posted an event

"Aftermath of the Civil War" A lecture in WNCHA's Civil War Series at Reuter Center at UNCA

June 15, 2013 from 2pm to 3:30pm
Dr. Gordon McKinney and Dr. Steve Nash will describe and analyze the attempt to recreate the social, political and economic world after the Civil War in western North Carolina.  Special emphasis will be placed on racial adjustment, improving transportation and the development of the Appalachian stereotype.  Sponsored by the Western North Carolina Historical Association and the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute.  Open to the public, admission to members of WNCHA and OLLI is free.  $5.00 for…See More
Jun 11
Connie Regan-Blake posted an event

"Taking A Leap: An Evening of Connie's Stories" and a Workshop at Hawk and Ivy Bed and Breakfast

June 30, 2013 from 3pm to 9pm
 Connie Regan-Blake, renowned Appalachian storyteller, will perform “Taking a Leap: An Evening of Connie’s Stories” on Sunday June 30 at 7:30 p.m. at Hawk and Ivy Bed and Breakfast in Barnardsville, NC, twenty minutes north of Asheville. Persons interested in learning or developing the craft of storytelling can also attend a workshop entitled “Opening Doors: A Storytelling Workshop Exploring Memories” at 3:00-5:30. Workshop fee is $40 before June 21 and $55 after. Fee includes both events.…See More
Jun 11
Julia Nunnally Duncan posted an event

Julia Nunnally Duncan Book Signing and Reception at St. John's Episcopal Parish House

June 23, 2013 from 11:30am to 12:30pm
St. John's Episcopal Church Women in Marion will host a book signing and reception in celebration of Julia Nunnally Duncan's new book Barefoot in the Snow. The event will be held at St. John's Parish House in the great hall during Coffee Hour (approximately 11:30 a.m.) on Sunday, June 23,and the public is cordially invited. See More
Jun 11

Chautauqua brings four world greats to Asheville

Buncombe Chautauqua features "They Came to America"

by Rob Neufeld

See Chautauqua schedule

 

            Starting tomorrow, Buncombe County Libraries brings back its perennially popular “Chautauqua”—four days of actor-scholars conversing as great historical figures.

            Gathering in Ferguson Auditorium, A-B Tech, the traveling show leads off with psychoanalyst, mythologist, writer, and experiencer of America, Carl Jung, acted by long-time Chautauqua leader, George Frein.

            “How can we become conscious of national peculiarities,” Jung once said on his travels, “if we have never had the opportunity to regard our own nation from outside?”

            And so, this year’s series, titled, “They Came to America,” highlights outsiders: Golda Meir, performed by Joan Wolfberg, Tues.; Oba King, performed by Denmark Vesey, Wed.; and Winston Churchill, performed by Larry Bounds, Thurs.

            Vesey came to America as a slave, won a lottery, purchased his freedom—yet without being allowed to free his wife and children—became a Charleston businessman, led the slave uprising of 1822, and was hanged.

            Though he spoke three languages, he leaves no written record—and historians go to old oral histories and the trial transcript.

            Golda Meir grew up in Milwaukee, her family having fled Russian pogroms.  At age 23, in 1921, she immigrated to Palestine with her husband; and, in 1948, in order to help create Israel, returned to America for a historic fundraising mission.

            Meir had a wit that could flip any westerner. 

           When Henry Kissinger, Nixon’s Secretary of State, told Golda that he was an American first, then the Secretary of State and then a Jew, she replied, “That was fine, but “in Hebrew, people read from right-to-left.”

            Winston Churchill’s mom had been American; so when Great Britain needed America’s support in World War II, he went to his mother country.

            His rallying cries and quotable quotes are classics in literature.  “A riddle wrapped in an enigma” is his phrase, describing Russia.

            “Nothing in life is so exhilarating as to be shot at without result,” he proclaimed. “I expect that history will treat me kindly, for I intend to write it,” he mused.

            Characterizing the U.S. in the 1930s, he quipped: “Toilet paper too thin. Newspapers too thick!”

            “They Came to America” also takes the stage in Greenville and Spartanburg through June 23, with an additional character, the Marquis de Lafayette, portrayed by Ben Goldman.

            Chautauqua 2012 in Asheville is sponsored by the Friends of Buncombe County Public Libraries, Inc.  A musical program begins each evening at 7 p.m., followed by the featured program at 7:30. There is a suggested donation of $4 per night or $12 for the four-night series.

           For more information, call Pack Memorial Library at 250-4700.

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