(■’3rdner-Uebb Colle Librery P‘0. B Bo i 1 ox 836 ind Springs» Nc 2 The Foothills View BO 17 Second Class Postage Paid In Boiling Springs, N. C. 29017 THURS., SEPT. 24, 1981 See It Your If ay” FDH HEFEHENCE JVot to be taken from Library -GARDNER WEBB COLLEGE LIBRARY Kays Gary: An Interview The Editor. When I tell people I’ve worked for the Charlotte Observer the first question they ask is not if I know the reporters who won the Pulitzer Prize. Instead, they ask if I know Kays If the Pulitzer.were awarded for service to the human heart Kays Gary would win the goid. Thursday night this Fallston auditorium of friends at Cieveland Techs Cleveiand County in Transition” program. Introducing him, WBTV’s C.J. Underwood said: ‘‘Kays Gary IS at the top of the list of peopie Cieveiand County is proud or He IS one of America’s premier journaiists.” For over 25 years Kays Gary’s column has appeared as pages of Knight-Ridder’s Charlotte Observer - more years than Knight-Ridder has owned the newspaper. Like the weather box, Kays’ column has recorded the daily vissitudes of our lives - the stormy upheavals and God-given calms of work, love, deaths, and ‘Tm satis fied now. It's a grace, if you will, given by God.” Kays Gary: he’s that rarest of combinations, a nfnM ® program Thursday night, he further gave of himself with an interview for the readers of the Foothills View. Here’s what Kays said about living and writing. Kays, where shall we begin? Gary: Start with memories. C.J. Underwood said tonight that if he could choose to live a life other than his own, he would choose yours. Have you ever wanted to be someone else? Gary: I don’t think so. They’re too many damn distractions today to live over. When I was growing up In Fallston their mere absence made for creativity. You had more time to evaluate, and to cherish, friendships. Today I think there’s a confusion with people about what they really want in life. Were you ever confused about wanting to be a writer? Gary: No. I knew it was for me. My home is in the center of the newsroom. Back in ’42 a man gave me a job in Thomasville as editor; we both knew I was going to be called up, I was just working for him until he could get a 4-F man to fill the job. Well, the Shelby Star wrote me and asked me to work there. I was sports editor and also covered courts. Wasn’t that a combination? Back then the wire machine would set off belts when the news came over. I didn’t need a watch, I could tell time by the bells - they would go ding-ding-ding, somebody was always yelling “Copy-boy!” It would be Bedlam, a rising cresendo. It was for me. Didn’t you also teach journalism at Gardner-Webb College? Gary: Sure did. Once a week. Thursdays. Did they pay you? Gary: [Laughing] I can’t remember. My boss at the Star volunteered me. Well, actually, he volunteered his services, and then he went to South America, or someplace. I had to fill in the gap. [Lighting a cigarette and smiling] But it was all right. I like it all right. Did you come back to the Star after the war? Gary: I sure did. It represented a kind of security. You know I was married then, and 9 months, 3 weeks after our marriage we had our first baby. I was working for the Star for $50 a week, which was really a good wage, or so it seemed, because the pre-war salary was $20. I also sold features to the Observer at $3 and $5 a clip. [Lighting a second cigarette from the first] I had to hustle bucks then ... hard. We’ve both heard tonight about Cleveland in transition. Is Kays Gary in transition? Gary: Oh sure. The transition is constant in life. I’m a less emotional person now. You know, I used to be very scared about death, and I spent a lot of time worrying about the great philosophic questions. I’m satisfied now. It’s a grace, if Please turn to Kays Gary, pg. 3. Chargers Roll, 28-13, ‘Dogs Ramble, 31-8 iieiU' ROBERT McCLUNEY (above Nofc 20) rolled for two touch downs Friday night as ^est scored A imlressive 28-13 victory over East Rutherfordj/C^ip Suar^^krigjit) thwows a touchdown pass to Duane Foster |ftlJBulfiogs raiSble&oaJeasy 38-8 victory Saturday over Newberr^ Slrfl arefcelow. First Downs Yds. Rushing Yards Passing Punts Fumbles Lost Interceptions Suffered Penalties East 4-3 Sfd 13 Crest: -Robert McCluney 1 yd. run Randy Lovelace kick good Crest-Herbert Harbison 44 yd. run Lovelace kick good Crest-McCluney 3 yd run Lovelace kick good Crest-Maurice Lee 18 yd past from Smith Lovelace kick good Leading Tacklers Crest-Tony Wray Rayfield Smith Maruin Burris Jim Newman Interceptions Jeff Bell, Randy Lovelace ED PILEGARD PHOTOGRAPHING THE GAME team stats First Downs Yds. Rushing Yds. Passing Rushing Atts. Passing Atts. Pass Comp. Passes Inf. By Total Off. Plays Avg. Per Play Fumbles Lost Pen/Yards TD IPAT 2PAT FG S Rosey Kirby Jamie Pope Carlisle Kounts Chip Stuart Dvane Foster Tim Davis 12 13 Who “W/io guards the guards?” asked the Roman satirist Juvenal. The question is asked today in Boiling Springs just as in first-century Rome as newspapers set themselves up as the guard ians of truthful reporting. But who guards the guards? Who reports the reporters? Other newspapers do, as I found out this summer when I was interviewed by Woody Woodruff, managing editor of the Publisher’s Auxiliary. The Auxiliary is a trade journal BOILING SPRINGS, N.C. — Most teachers —even journalism teachers—might have mixed feelings about school starting after a summer’s respite. Not Dave Robertson. He couldn’t wait for his students to arrive on campus, because he’s worn out from trying to be a one-man band. Over the summer, Gardner-Webb College, a small liberal arts school in this rural area north of Charlotte, bought a weekly newspaper and hired Robertson to run it. The Foothills View, eight years old, was Boiling Springs’ only in-town newspaper when Dianne Holland, the founder, put it on the market because “It was getting to be a full-time job.” At the same time Gardner-Webb, which al ready operated a 5,000-watt radio station, was looking for the nucleus of a proposed jour nalism program. The college president. Dr. Craven Williams, said he wanted a cohimunity newspaper for teaching purposes rather than one that just covered the camous. There was a “coincidence of availability,” circulated nationwide among newspaper editors. I found myself on the other side of the desk as Woody reported on me and my arrival at The Foothills View. As when the View interviews local figures, I had no idea whether the published story would be favorable or critical. The Auxiliary published its story Aug. 31. We reprint it below The Editor said Williams, that “would not require our beginning entirely from ground zero.” The money for buying the Foothills View came from the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, a trust connected with the R.J. Reynolds tobacco family that has given more than $100 million to various causes within the state—including two previous grants to Gardner-Webb. “It wasn’t a spur of the moment decision,” allows Barry Hartis, the college’s vice president for business and finance. Williams said the college definitely wanted a community newspaper rather than a college campus paper. “As journalists we’ve got to sell newspapers,” says the president. The Foothills View is “not going to be a Gardner-Webb propaganda newspaper.” We re not playing at being a newspaper,” agrees Robertson. • And as of Monday, August 24, Dave Robertson had some journalism students to go with his community newspaper.