Art Holds Auditions /mi gstone s :feats. ® Southern Appalachian Repertory Theatre (SART) will hold auditions for the , ^'iinmer season on Saturday, March 20, from 1 to 5 p.m. in Owen Theatre. ;, T is a professional repertory theatre founded in 1976 as a Bicentennial pro- I has premiered a new play each summer since opening with “Ark of Safety,” “"'ard Richardson, who was commissioned to write the first new play for the en Le"'** JtliS! 1^82 season will include two musicals, the ever-popular “Camelot,” and ,ewis Q most popular premiere “Mandy Lou,” written by Mars Hill playwright C. ly fhe Lion^ VS, Jones. The two non-musicals will be “To Kill a Mockingbird,” and the r Premiere of “Magnets,” written by Charlotte playwright Phil Hines, v'^hioners should prepare at least one short audition piece approximately one til'' one musical selection. An accomplished accompanist will be pro- Dooley.'^’.-nirfo ior' nade thre«. ,4 om the fiei‘ oflS to the ftce missed ne int^’ /lurphy regain®' dth«‘ imestoj^t" cannedr while Kay j4, oley nett®' Ijj ttr the songs. i^®‘tional information is available from James W. Thomas, Managing Director, ji|^“Pthern Appalachian Repertory Theatre, P.O. Box 53, Mars Hill, N.C. 28754, V 704/689-1203. Dance Performance Set For March 31 ii n § Vjii^^rs Hill College Dance Compa- an evening dance per- Moore Auditorium on The V'h day, March 31 at 7:30 p.m ij Will include a variety of dances ^feas of ballet, modern and jazz. Will be performed by Donna liv’ Laurie Lennon, and Joan ‘ Other featured dancers are Kim k ody Brooks, Melanie Mitchell, and Cheryl Radcliff. !« ‘dding the program will be a i^^t jazz composition performed J«,^|^doupies. to the performance is free y^ne is encouraged to attend. Take Over A Media Head Applications are now being accepted for the editorships of Cadenza, Hilltop, and Laurel and for managership of Radio Station WVMH-fm for the 1982-83 school year. Forms on which to apply are available in the student publications area of Wren College Union and from each of the media ad visors: Mrs. Betty Hughes in Cornewll, John Campbell and Walter Smith in Blackwell, and Brad Zabel in Wren. Deadline for applying is 5 p.m. Friday, April 2. WVMH Back on the Air By Mitchell Beal After diligent work by the manage ment of WVMH-FM, the student-oper ated campus radio station, is back on the air with full power and varied program ming. From 6 a.m. ’til 1 a.m. at 90.5 on the FM dial the station broadcasts news and information and good music, rang ing from Top 40 to contemporary Chris tian, from hard rock to classical. More than 60 students help to keep “your col lege radio station” on the air with 127 hours of commercial-free programming. According to Rusty Enscore, the sta tion manager, WVMH is constantly be ing improved. Thus far this semester Rusty and his staff have purchased 60 new albums to update and improve the station’s current stock of more than 2,000 albums and singles. The station will continue to receive the top 10 new singles each week to help insure a cons tant supply of current hits. The staff of the news department roams the campus gathering news and information of special interest to stu dents. Supplemented by world and na tional news items, this helps the station keep its listeners up-to-date on what’s happening. By fall the power of the station will be increased from 10 to 100 watts, says Enscore. This move, which will assure coverage of the entire campus by the sta tion’s signal, was forced by the Federal Communications Commission, which li- Mike Kelly censes and regulates all radio and televi sion broadcasting in the United States. The 10-fold increase in power will re quire the installation of a new transmit ter at the station’s studios in Moore Auditorium and Fine Arts Building and must be preceeded by a mountain of highly technical paperwork. To help the station secure professional help in com pleting the paperwork, the Student Gov ernment Association has appropriated $1,500 out of its funds. President Bentley has agreed to raise from outside sources or appropriate from college funds approximately $5,000 which will be needed for the new transmitter and other equipment. The new equipment should solve the problem of breakdowns, which have plagued the station’s old equipment in recent months and kept the station off the air for days at a time. “Hopefully,” says Rusty, “all this work can be completed by late summer and the station will come on the air this fall at 100 watts.” Rusty and his staff, including Andy Hill, assistant manager, and Mitchell Beal, creative consultant and production manager; and the other students, are responsible for all programs aired and other facets of operating a full-time radio station. Hand picked by Rusty, Andy and Mitch from over 100 appli cants, the staff has been trained and Continued on page 3 - A Survivor Reprinted from The Asheville Citizen-Times. by Bobby Hayes When senior guard Mike Kelly graduates from Mars Hill in May, he \yill have earned two diplomas, so to speak. Along with a degree in Business Administration, Kelly should also receive a Phi Beta Kappa key for his performance in the School of Hard Knocks. As a freshman, Kelly and the Lions finished 15-15. That was as close as Mars Hill would come to a winning season during his four years at the school. In his sophomore year, Kelly left school before the season started because several of his teammates from the year before didn’t return. Kelly decided to return. Quit ting was not the answer. As a junior, he got a crash course in losing. The defeats never ended. The Lions finished 3-28 and set a school record by losing 14 games in a row. He thought about leaving again. More than once. But he stayed. This year as a senior, his world was jostled again. Before the season. Lion coach Jack Lytton resigned and was re placed by Bob Ronai. In his senior season, Kelly was forced to adjust to a new coach and a new sys tem. Even the starting position that had been his for three years had to be earned once again. Kelly accepted the challenge, earned the starting position and was named captain. Challenges have never bothered Kelly. As his final season comes to a close and the grades are passed out, only one of the nine freshmen that were on the Lions’ 1978 rollbook remains. Mike Kelly. A survivor. Actually Kelly feels rather fortunate. He is the Lions’ fifth all-time leading scorer with 1,378 points. He is playing Continued on page 4 ^ cHdtiofi ^ou[d Jliks: 2^^. cdioffman c/f Sizi^dayH