APRIL 26, 1974 MARS HILL COLLEGE HILLTOP PAGE SEVEN ~V xcessive ps, and d-plated carrier, le F-I4 i Labor 'arl Pef' t request Tor the ifficient.’ e of the- ere “vio- President to Title Education National Supple* portunity .rk-Study minimum are pfO' portunity gram. Kathleen and Carol Duo DEBUT Friday Night ^ARS hill - The brightly '^°lored poster read “Kathleen Carol.” A certain amount of I'^coinplishment is reflected in ® ®yes of the two young women they appraise their own pos- which announce that they will Appear in the Wren College Union ^°*^feehouse this Friday and Sat- April 26 & 27. Kathleen ? Kathleen Dunk, a freshman at Hill College, native of Ashe- 3®' and Carol is Mrs. Carol 'Va tati ^ frii ®*ker, also a native of Asheville. Jhe two, friends since high °ol, began their singing rather inauspiciously at •find’s party. Now, after three ars of singing together, the j,® Will debut their show at Mars 'a this weekend. , '^fi met in the music room at l^^heviiie High,” notes Kath- “After a while we saw that J liked the same kind of music;” Carol, “and we began to Pra, >>61, ‘fitice together in the morning aae school started.” nth the girls studied music '•'gh school, Kathleen enter- ^^^Mars Hill as a music/theatre major, but she recently ”®aged her major to elementary p.P^ation. “1 am still taking and voice lessons privately, I don’t want to concentrate i^^die classical works the depart- requires for a degree,” she Carol has continued to ^ music lessons privately in '^ke I ^fiville since Th ^timmer. being married -fiir first official appear- ^ PP together was just short of ‘faster. During their senior year in high school, they decided to enter Enka High School’s Tijuana Talent Show. “It was terrible,” remembers Carol; “the piano was ’way upstage, almost in a corner, and they wouldn’t move it. We ended up singing almost off stage.” Needless to say, the girls didn’t place too high. Since then their appearances have been considerably better. “A mutual friend arranged a date at UNC-Asheville; and we’ve sung at the Sheraton Hotel a couple of times as well as a num ber of charity benefits,” notes Kathleen. Now that they have some ex perience and a solid two-hour act together, the girls have con sidered charging for their ap pearances. “We need a really good public address system, one that we can take with us,” Carol states. “It’s really embarrassing to have your mike go dead in the middle of a song.” “And it destroys the mood we’ve worked to establish,” adds Kathleen. Both the girls want to “touch people with our music. We don’t want the feeling that we’re up here and the audience is somewhere out there. We want the music to bring us together,” both girls agree. And it should. The program reads “Folk, Rock, Jazz, and Blues.’ There’s something for everyone, and everyone is invited to attend. There’s no admission charge and the curtain call for each show is 8 p.m. MARS HILL-Mars Hill Col lege is planning four days of activities April 22-26, in obser vation of Earth Week. Established several years ago by President Nixon, Earth Week is now spon sored by the Alliance for Environ mental Education, a non-profit consortium of 27 organizations that are committed to environ mental conservation and educa tion. Among the activities will be forums, film festivals, and environmental hikes. The pri mary objective of the week is to help learners perceive environ mental problems and to assume a per sonal commitment to im proving life around them. The week’s activities will be gin with a forum Monday, April 22, at 6:30 p.m. in the Memorial Library auditorium. The forum will be led by Dr. Arthur W. Cooper, Assistant Secretary for Resource Management of the North Carolina Department of Natural and Economic Resources. Cooper is a native of Washing ton, D. C. and received his under graduate and M. A. degrees in Botany from Colgate University. From there he went to the Uni versity of Michigan where he received his Ph. D. in Botany with a major in Ecology. Cooper is on leave from North Carolina State University, where he is Professor of Botany. In 1971, he took a leave of absence to assume the duties of Deputy Director of the North Carolina Department of Conservation and Development. He came into his present position when the state government reorganized. His topic for the forum will be “Land Use Planning and Its Relation ship to the Management of Recreation and Wilderness Areas.” On Wednesday, April 24, a second forum will be held in Belk Auditorium at 1 p.m. The guest for this forum is Jane West- enberger, chief of the Educa tional Branch of the U. S. Depart- m nt of Agriculture’s Forest Ser vice. The current president of the Conservation Education As sociation, Ms. Westenberger received her B.A. in Social Sciences and an M. A. in Geo graphy from Long Beach State College. For 12 years prior to joining the U.S.D.A. Forest Ser vice, she was a teacher and school administrator, and has life cre dentials for elementary and secondary teaching as well as general school administration. Both forums will give the audience ample opportunity to question the speakers. Films will also be shown during the week which will give participants an opportunity to view what is being done in the areas of air and water pollution, forests, and the reclamation of waste products. The first series of films will be shown in Belk Auditorium Tuesday night, April 22, at 7 p.m., and again on Thursday afternoon, also in Belk, from 3 p.m. until 6 p.m. A highlight of the week will be several “environmental” hikes through the countryside. Those interested in participating in one of these hikes should get in touch with Dr. Joseph Taylor, associate professor of Biology, at area code 704-689-1188. Solzhenitsyn (CPS)—In recent weeks exiled Russian writer Alexandr Sol zhenitsyn has been praised, honored and dogged by the Western media who hnow he makes good copy. But the Small Press Review, a US publication dedicated to non establishment literary publishing, has issued a unique open letter to Solzhenitsyn that warns him against being exploited by West ern publishers and politicians. The letter reads in part: “Do not forget your own belief that all governments are jealous of artists and writers because they confirm laws higher and more com pelling than any government could legislate. “Beeause you are unpublishable in your own country you are worth millions in ours to our Madison Avenue publishers alone who are at this point furiously translating your book to recover themselves from further decline on Wall Street. “The glitter of American and European enterprise, big-name writers who thrive on and con tribute to this enterprise, poli ticians who will neither read nor understand your work—all ery out in your behalf as Tong as you represent material value to them. “But slip from this ‘grace’ and you will again be at the^mercy of a force which everywhere in this world punishes and commits to madness those who oppose it but have no monetary value to it. “Our jails and prisons are ugly and dehumanizing too, as they are everywhere; but they are filled with ‘ordinary’ people with no ‘saleability’ and so the outcry is small. “It IS sad that your book, which decries such dehumanizing forces and conditions will now have a part in strengthening them. You did not intend it this way, to be sure, my brother, and perhaps you will speak of it before it is tnn late SENIORS Do something meaningful I Please send me current information and an application I I Single Name 1 1 Married Permanent Address City State Zip Graduation Date FOLD ■ Major ACTION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20525 OFFICIAL BUSINESS POSTAGE & FEES PAID ^ ACTION VISTA/PEACE CORPS Parts of ACTION ATTN. OFFICE OF RECRUITMENT AND COMMUNICATIONS WASHINGTON, D. C. 20525