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Western Carolinian Volume 37 Number 19

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  • The Western Carolinian VOICE OF THE STUDENTS VOL. XXXVII, No. 19 Western Carolina University November 16, 1971 Cullowhee, N.C. 680 RESTRAINING ORDER . Catamount funds frozen WMSJ now at 680, broadcasts nights WMSJ Radio in Sylva has changed frequencies. The ciiange not only permits nighttime broadcasting, it doubles the area covered by the station, said Jim Childress owner of WMSJ and other stations. Beginning Monday morning, WMSJ began broadcasting on frequency 680, changing to the lower end of the dial from 1480. Childress said the change, which began in the planning stages more than 8 years ago, increased the total area WMSJ covered from 14,000 to 28,000 square miles. The added coverage also increased the radio audience the station has the potential for reaching to over 100,000, not including urban communities of 2-500 or more and not including the student population of Wes- Thanksgiving recess Western Carolina University will dismiss classes at noon Wednesday, Nov. 24 forThanks- giving holidays, it has been announced by Dr. W, Newton Turner, vice president for academic affairs. All undergraduate and graduate on - campus extension courses will meet on schedules fixed and announced to classes by individual instructors. Residence halls atthe university wUl close at 6 p.m. Wednesday and reopen at noon Sunday. Cafeterias will serve the noon meal Wednesday and be closed until the evening meal on Sunday, November 28. tern Carolina. The first step in changing frequencies was an engineering job. WMSJ had to determine the best frequency to change to. When it was decided upon, WMSJ applied to the Federal Communications Commission, In April 1970 the permit was granted. "It's the best frequency we could have gotten," Childress said. During the daylight hours WMSJ operates as normal, reaching parts of Asheville to the east and Gatlinburg to the west, At night the station has to use a directional signal, though, so as not to interfere with WPTF in Raleigh and a Kentucky station. The directional signal, Childress said8 is aimed straight at Western Carolina, "This was one of those real lucky breaks we had," he said. Childress stated that stations on the air have priority and must be protected. It was just lucky that the only beam WMSJ could send was aimed at Cullowhee. He reported that there would be no basic policy changes with the frequency change. "My policy has always been the same," Childress said, "and that is to render service to the people of my area first, before even, I consider advertising. Listeners are the most important thing." He said, though, that some programs have been revamped and that the nighttime broadcasting was slanted more for the young people. Modern music would be played more in the evenings, as well as broadcasts of sporting events. "We hope to broadcast the WCU football games, and a big part of the basketball games, as well as high school games," he said. WMSJ is on the air until 12 midnight now, and could broadcast 24 hours a day. Childress said the station may be on the air around the clock if he ever felt there was a need and enough support. By W, WAT HOPKINS Editor In-Chief The Catamount may not use any student funds until they reimburse students that did not receive annuals or until they see that the students get their yearbooks. The Superior Court has granted the restraining order requested by the public defender, and, in effect, has frozen the Catamo int appropriations, Attorney General David Harling reported that the court action was only a restraining order, not a decision, and that the Catamount could present evidence Li a hearing and possibly have the order removed, The order was the result of six st.idents complaining to the public defender that they had paid for annuals and had neither received them, nor had the money they paid through student appropriations for the yearbook been returned. Harling said that approximately 100 other students who had not received annuals could be named co-defendants in the case. More than 300 yearbooks that were supposed to have been delivered to campus were maUed to students receiving master's degrees last year by mistake. Reports state that Delmar Studios; who print the annual, were given the wrong mailing list, thereby delivering the an ■ nuals to graduate students who had not paid for them, Livingston Kelley, editor of the 1970-71 Catamount is in the process of writingthegrad • uate students asking that they return the yearbooks, If the yearbooks are not returned, or at least 100 are not returned, the Catamount will probably not be able to reimburse the 100 students, Austell explained the reason. In 1968-69 the Catamount went from Spring publication to late Summer publication in order to eliminate a supplement and allow spring activities to be included in the yearbook, On June 27, 1969 the Catamount had a balance of $23, 160.86. When the new academ • ic year began on July 1 this balance was reverted to the gen • eral fund, leaving the Catamount without any money. In fact, on July 14, 1969, the Catamount was in the red for $1.66. Therefore each year's appropriations to the Catamount must pay the debt the year before. The Catamount's appropri ations, then, for 1969 70 had to pay for the 1968-69 yearbook. The 1970 71 funds had to pay for the 1969-70 yearbook, and so on until 1971-72, The Catamount this year was appropriated $24,000. Of that, $21,000 is left The missing $3,000 probably went to pay for debts last year. But the Caumount has not yet received last year's Delmar bill, which lias run to $20,000 and more in the past, leaving the yearbook $1,000 at most to cover other expenses. Austell also said that the belief that students pay $9 a year for the Catamount is false, He said that if a student misses a quarter, he is asked to pay $3 to cover costs, but the annual is not appropriated $9 per student per year for the yearbook. If the Catamount in effect did receive $9 per year, they would have been appropriated close to $54,000 this year, instead of $24,000, The Catamount receives a- bout $1,50 per quarter per student to produce the volume. The Catamount staff has not yet requested a hearing, though they have consulted with Harling. Firebugs, 4A learning play,' saved by final half-hour by Stephanie Phillips News Editor Though the THE FIREBUGS is billed as "A Learning-Play Without A Lesson," one inevitably leaves the play thinking there must be a lesson somewhere, And that may be the strongest point of the play—that one leaves the theatre with some- thing new to talk about, Max Frisch had jumbled motives and roles into an almost indiscernable mass. Yet one still has the sensation that the play was ABOUT something. The question, at least for this layman, is what was it about? Was it about the insanity of trusting one's fellow man, or the insanity of nottrustinghim? Was it about fear and what one does about it? Was it about hypocrisy or about the consequences of truth? Though I can almost hear Frisch mumbling the word "about" and thumbing his nose at me, the play does lend itself to that question. And just as surely, there seems to be no answer. Where is that lesson? Evaluation of the production is more simple, Or is it? If I were asked to say whether the play was"worth seeing" or was "good" or "bad," I would have to be as obscure as the play itself. The first hour of the play is something of a disappointment . . a disappointment in that one yawns a lot and wonders where the entire thing is leading, And the actors don't help matters much. Louis P. Bell, as Gottlieb Biedermann, seems wrapped up in a performance ofThe Christmas Carol, doing a wonderful portrayal of Scrooge interacting with the Marley's ghost. Nancy HammUl, as the maidservant Anna, is wrapped up in the role of a boop-boop-e-doop idiot (unconvincJngly, at that). Bell at least pulls himself out of the role during the last 30 minutes of the play, and in those last scenes is truly great, Miss CONTINUED Page 6. . . . Sorryl a machine was at fault The WESTERN CAROLINIANdidnotpublishlastThursday due to a machine breakdown. With the copy work about half through at 10:45 p.m., and with no warning, the justowriter read machine stopped working, This made it Impossible to complete the corrections and part of the copy for the regular paper. The Editor-in-Chief and Associate Editor worked on the machine until about 12:30 midnight, but to no avaiL Writers, it seems, are not always mechanically oriented. We apologize to the readers and advertisers, and hope that this 12-page edition will help make up for the missed publication. Many of the regular features in the CAROLINIAN'S Thursday edition are printed today, such as Drama by Dan Dietz, The Cat's Paw, and others. Hopefully, the CAROLINIAN will not miss another publication date throughout the rest of the academic year.
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