inental ffbeat romafl“ your audi^”' Animal Bo^' irs as 3 laper il coi column'?' rrupti°n him "’ iphic etting Out is Next Production at Mars Hill Hill’s next major drama produc- ’ "Getting Out,” will be unusual for School. It is the gritty story of a "8 Woman on her first day out of The language is strong, explicit. Ill- in ) hot for eassigned d-edged fen>; m) living ’an ite sponW'’®®, offers plen\. .;{0 and totally typical of prison life. ’.me dvely pn ; of laughs- ’S lit scoi^' , n IS also a story of hope. Wanted to do this play,” com- , nd James Thomas, chairman of the Arts Department, “because ^ nf us have never been exposed to , hde of society that this play repre- ^ saw an article in the paper that ^ that the prison population in the , '^as at an all-time high. So this is a life for an increasingly large por- „ our population.” . he play also changes my viewpoint opinion that I have held for a long , ^nd that is that I have never be- that people are products of their PiPent,” he added, “I have al- felt that if people are motivated they can pull themselves up by bootstraps. This play, which was by Marsha Norman from first- ^ ^’^Periences, changes my mind on V ^he kinds of pressures that are ' on these people by their peer ?leaves almost no way out.” language in this play is not the he continued, “the issue is the ([I ^his play gives into the tortuous i( people lead, why they go back the stressees brought on them f environment.” ^lory is of Arlene Holsclaw and i,ij Place on the day of her release Prison in Alabama. The main is actually played by two ac- One is Arlie, the young, street- i/ brash, foul-mouthed punk who lnjj’lsd a cab driver. The other is ’ Who has undergone a conversion in prison under the guidance 'Chaplain. Arlene’s story is told Continued on page 3 2,^‘ 2 5 gain' es) n PI £S -7^ Russ White and Mary Leigh Jones rehearse a scene from Mars Hill’s next drama production, “Getting Out.’’ Hilltop *£856, VOLUME LV, Number 9 MARCH 5, 1982 The Hilltop MARS HILL COLLEGE Mars Hill, N.C. 28754 ^ions End “Better” Season with 88-77 Loss to Bears by Bobby Hayes b'^ars Hill Lions concluded the season with a win and a loss in the final week. Barber-Scotia 88-78 in overtime and losing to Livingstone 88-77. C'Pst Barber-Scotia, the Lions used 22 points and 10 rebounds from freshman Raymond Lettsome and Lewis Taylor’s 6 for 6 effort from the foul line in ® to record the victory. \7*ons led 68-54 with under five minutes left before the Sabers put on a furious that deadlocked the game at 72-72 at the end of regulation, overtime, Taylor’s foul shooting and five points from Lettsome spelled the ly ® Lions final game against Livingstone on Senior Night, senior guard Mike the most out of his last effort, scoring 24 points to end his career with \*''’ints, which places him fifth on the all-time Mars Hill scoring list. Raymond added 18 points and 18 rebounds for the Lions. ,\j,^’ons simply could not overcome a 38 percent shooting effort and the play of pi'd Antonio Davis, who scored 33 points. He was 13 of 14 from the field and 7 of 7 from the charity stripe. ^‘ons were down 44-37 at the half but closed the gap to 44-43 early in the se- Continued on page 6 Dr. Jolley Makes Committee Dr. Harley Jolley, professor of history and well-known regional author, has been named to the N.C. Highway Historical Marker advisory committee according to William S. Price, director of the Division of Archives and History of the state’s Department of Cultural Resources. The advisory committee has statutory authority to review and approve applica tions for historical markers throughout the state. The highway historical marker program was authorized by the General Assembly in 1935. Since then, over 1,100 markers have been approved and are currently located in every county in the state. Since its inception, the committee has consisted of well-qualified historians whose task is to review the dozens of re quests received every year. In addition, members are asked to confirm historical data related to particular marker re quests. Dr. Jolley has been a faculty member at Mars Hill since 1949. He has authored a large number of articles on history of the mountain region, and his best known book is “The Blue Ridge Parkway,” a history of the construction of the parkway. The Good Doctor Comes March 8 The Carolina Repertory Theatre, a non-profit theatre company based in Chapel Hill, will present Neil Simon’s “The Good Doctor” on Monday, March 8, in Moore Auditorium at 8 p.m. The show is sponsored at the college by Mars Hill’s Visiting Artists and Lec turers Committee and is, according to Robert Kramer, chairman of the com mittee, a “bonus” attraction which_was Continued on page 2 m Nicholas Searcy performs "Surgery" on John Goodnow In THE GOOD DOCTOR coming to Mars Hill March 8