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<pb facs="00057589_0001"/>
?hc i?ast Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.5 No-21 A 3<lb/>
Thursday, November 10,1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
8 Pages,<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Faculty Evaluations<lb/>
Change Causes Confusion<lb/>
Bv PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Mftriki<lb/>
Last month's Faculty Senate<lb/>
?won to conduct student<lb/>
evaluations of teacher perfor-<lb/>
mance in the spring semester in-<lb/>
cad of the fall is causing some<lb/>
confusion among department<lb/>
ids and staff members about<lb/>
university policies overseeing<lb/>
eacher evaluation.<lb/>
The senate decision could mean<lb/>
at 1983-84 student evaluation<lb/>
reports will not be included in<lb/>
.artmental recommendations<lb/>
acuity promotions and salary<lb/>
raises, which are due at the end of<lb/>
pnng semester. The evaluations<lb/>
are a primary criterion by which<lb/>
acuity are judged for pay raises<lb/>
.1 promotions, and if conducted<lb/>
he spring the results would not<lb/>
be available until late summer.<lb/>
To solve the problem, many<lb/>
department heads are making<lb/>
contingency plans to conduct their<lb/>
own student evaluation surveys ?<lb/>
a process which could be costly<lb/>
and time consuming for some<lb/>
departments.<lb/>
According to Vice Chancellor<lb/>
for Academic Affairs Angelo A.<lb/>
Volpe, the recommendation to<lb/>
conduct the survey in the spring<lb/>
was suggested to his office by the<lb/>
Faculty Senate after the senate's<lb/>
Teaching Effectiveness Commit-<lb/>
tee recommended the action.<lb/>
Committee members were ac-<lb/>
ting on the request of some facul-<lb/>
ty who felt student surveys only in<lb/>
the fall gave an incomplete picture<lb/>
of their overall performance. The<lb/>
student surveys will now be rotate<lb/>
annually between the fall and spr-<lb/>
ing semesters.<lb/>
"There are a number of courses<lb/>
that are taught in the spring<lb/>
semester that are not taught in the<lb/>
fall Volpe said. "You wouldn't<lb/>
get the total picture if you had on-<lb/>
ly the fall semester courses that<lb/>
were being evaluated all of the<lb/>
time<lb/>
James LeRoy Smith, acting<lb/>
chairman of the philosopy depart-<lb/>
ment and chairman of the Faculty<lb/>
Senate, agreed with Volpe, saying<lb/>
that some professors taught only<lb/>
introductory level courses in the<lb/>
fall and advanced courses in the<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
"The faculty members ?<lb/>
several of them ? say you're only<lb/>
looking at half of my professional<lb/>
performance Smith said.<lb/>
"What the Teaching Effectiveness<lb/>
Committee is trying to do this<lb/>
year is honor that portion of the<lb/>
faculty who have made the point<lb/>
that they want to be analyzed over<lb/>
the long term and have all of their<lb/>
teaching responsibilities<lb/>
covered<lb/>
The senate decision is not being<lb/>
supported by some faculty who<lb/>
see the move creating ad-<lb/>
ministrative burdens for their<lb/>
departments. "I think it's unfair<lb/>
to me because I'm supposed to use<lb/>
that information in making<lb/>
recommendations in evaluating<lb/>
the faculty said chairman of the<lb/>
English department William<lb/>
Bloodworth. "I won't have that<lb/>
information to use even though<lb/>
I'm supposed to use it<lb/>
Bloodworth said his depart-<lb/>
ment hopes to conduct its own<lb/>
student evaluation survey and to<lb/>
rely more on other methods of<lb/>
evaluation such as review of facul-<lb/>
ty syllabi and tests as well as<lb/>
classroom observation.<lb/>
According to Bloodworth,<lb/>
faculty evaluation is conducted in<lb/>
three parts: teaching, research or<lb/>
creative activity and service.<lb/>
"Last year the student opinion<lb/>
survey was an important source of<lb/>
Volpe<lb/>
information about our instruc-<lb/>
tors' teaching effectiveness, and<lb/>
so it's going to be difficult to do<lb/>
that evaluation the same way as it<lb/>
was done last year if we do not<lb/>
have the same kind of informa-<lb/>
tion available Bloodworth said.<lb/>
Smith claims that each depart-<lb/>
ment has the option to conduct its<lb/>
own student survey if they wish to<lb/>
do so. "It's up to the unit Smith<lb/>
said, adding that he was still un-<lb/>
sure if he would draw up an<lb/>
evaluation for the philosophy<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Smith<lb/>
Smith said he was not "ab-<lb/>
solutely insistent" that a survey be<lb/>
conducted in his unit, but he did<lb/>
admit it was traditional to have<lb/>
the student opinion survey results<lb/>
processed before the conclusion<lb/>
of the academic year.<lb/>
Ray H. Martinez, chairman of<lb/>
the health, physical education,<lb/>
recreation and safety department,<lb/>
does not believe he has any op-<lb/>
tions on whether to conduct a fall<lb/>
survey at the departmental level.<lb/>
See STUDENT, Page 3<lb/>
Ex-Ambassador Says<lb/>
Military Clash Possible<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Memorial Day<lb/>
Cadets in ECU's Army and Air<lb/>
Fore ROTC units will conduct a<lb/>
brief Veteran's Day memorial ser-<lb/>
vice on campus Nov. 11. It will be<lb/>
at the flag in front of Joyner<lb/>
Library ?? U a.m.<lb/>
there is a "dramatic<lb/>
ol course" on the part of<lb/>
jve teagan administration in its<lb/>
Central American policy the<lb/>
United States will be involved in a<lb/>
military conflict in the region,<lb/>
claimed former U.S. Ambassador<lb/>
to El Salvador Robert White in a<lb/>
Wednesday night lecture at ECU.<lb/>
Speaking on the "Roots of the<lb/>
Crises in Central America<lb/>
White told his audience in<lb/>
Mendenhall's Hendrix Theater<lb/>
that U.S. Central American policy<lb/>
is really in the hands of the<lb/>
Defense Department and the CIA<lb/>
? a policy which could lead the<lb/>
United States into a war in Cen-<lb/>
tral America. "I think the logic of<lb/>
everything we're doing leads us in-<lb/>
exorably down the path of<lb/>
military involvement White<lb/>
said.<lb/>
White, an ambassador during<lb/>
the Carter administration, said<lb/>
"fear of change" is the phrase<lb/>
that sums up U.S. policy in Cen-<lb/>
tral America since World War II.<lb/>
White accused the United States<lb/>
of participating in the overthrow<lb/>
of governments and of violating<lb/>
treaties in the region. "Those who<lb/>
make peaceful revolution impossi-<lb/>
ble make violent revolution in-<lb/>
evitable he said.<lb/>
White said four factions ? the<lb/>
rich, the poor, the military and<lb/>
the church ? were active in Cen-<lb/>
tral America. The rich control the<lb/>
country and rule the military<lb/>
while the church people counsel<lb/>
the poor to wait and hope, White<lb/>
said.<lb/>
When the churcn and the poor<lb/>
began to work together in Central<lb/>
America, the beginnings of the<lb/>
establishment of a more just<lb/>
society began, White said. When<lb/>
the poor began to become more<lb/>
effective in resisting the rich by<lb/>
forming labor unions and base<lb/>
communities, the opposition<lb/>
mounted and the rich reacted<lb/>
with, "alarm and honor"<lb/>
characterizing the new opposition<lb/>
as Marxists and traitors.<lb/>
White claims this led the rich to<lb/>
send in military resistence to<lb/>
spread terror among the poor.<lb/>
"First they warned, and then they<lb/>
tortured and then they killed<lb/>
White said.<lb/>
White praised the efforts of the<lb/>
Carter administrarion to forward<lb/>
Vandalism Affects<lb/>
All ECU Students<lb/>
By STEPHEN HARDING<lb/>
M.ff ? flirt<lb/>
Ambassador White<lb/>
peace and justice in the region<lb/>
noting that a sign of Carter's suc-<lb/>
cess came when right-wing pro-<lb/>
testors marched on U.S. em-<lb/>
bassies and accussed the United<lb/>
States of Communisim.<lb/>
White said the recent appoint-<lb/>
ment of Henry Kissinger to review<lb/>
U.S. policy in Central America<lb/>
would do little to change policy.<lb/>
White referred to Kissinger as<lb/>
probably being too "intellectually<lb/>
arrogant" to provide any short-<lb/>
term solutions in the region. He<lb/>
added that Kissinger would pro-<lb/>
bably "rubber stamp" the current<lb/>
administration's policies.<lb/>
Though vandalism in the dorms<lb/>
is not as great as people thirk, it is<lb/>
affecting all students, dorm<lb/>
residents as well as commuters,<lb/>
Director of Housing Operations<lb/>
Dan Wooten said. Tuition and<lb/>
fees have to be raised to cover the<lb/>
cost of fixing damages.<lb/>
Wooten said the most common<lb/>
damage is broken window panes.<lb/>
There are also problems with<lb/>
destruction of window screens,<lb/>
sheetroc. -vails and marble parti-<lb/>
tions in athrooms, as well as<lb/>
damage to room doors, fire ex-<lb/>
tinguishers, smoke detectors and<lb/>
telephones. Vandalism to cars<lb/>
around dorms is also a problem,<lb/>
according to Joseph Calder, direc-<lb/>
tor of the Department of Public<lb/>
Safety.<lb/>
Since Nov. 1 there have been<lb/>
eight incidents of vandalism in<lb/>
dorms, Calder said. He added<lb/>
vandalism in College Hill dorms,<lb/>
especially in Jones, Ay cock and<lb/>
Scott, has risen substantially this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Jerry Rhodes, manager of<lb/>
Thorpe Music and Vending Ser-<lb/>
vice, which provides vending<lb/>
machines for the dorms, said<lb/>
there are numerous cases of van-<lb/>
dalism to Thorpe's equipment.<lb/>
The most common problem is<lb/>
theft of change and cigarette<lb/>
machines. There is an average of<lb/>
two break-ins each week with a<lb/>
loss of $85 to $125 each time.<lb/>
Each case of vandalism means a<lb/>
loss of commission to ECU.<lb/>
In cases involving damage to<lb/>
dorm rooms, the student occupy-<lb/>
ing the room is responsible for<lb/>
any damages, according to<lb/>
Wooten. The person responsible<lb/>
is sometimes reported by other<lb/>
residents.<lb/>
"The only way we find out<lb/>
(about vandalism) is when other<lb/>
residents get mad about someone<lb/>
tearing up their dorm and tell us<lb/>
said Jones Resident Hall Director<lb/>
Vanessa Higdon.<lb/>
The student staff in dorms han-<lb/>
dle minor vandalism problems,<lb/>
while the public safety department<lb/>
handles larger incidents. Calder<lb/>
said people are taken to court for<lb/>
damages over $100.<lb/>
Wooten said some cases of van-<lb/>
dalism are accidents, often the<lb/>
person responsible reports it.<lb/>
Greenville Elects Woman Mayor<lb/>
But I Don't Want To Get Married<lb/>
At least not until after I graduate. I'm just not ready to settle down. I mean, my mother still does my<lb/>
laundry and balances my check book ? not to mention my research papers.<lb/>
By DENNIS KILCOYNE<lb/>
SUff Writer<lb/>
Greenville voters turned out in<lb/>
light numbers on Tuesday to<lb/>
return four incumbents to the City<lb/>
Council and elect the city's first<lb/>
woman mayor.<lb/>
Janice Buck, an ECU graduate,<lb/>
narrowly defeated A. B. Whitley<lb/>
for the mayor's office by just over<lb/>
200 votes. Buck won six of the ci-<lb/>
ty's 10 precincts.<lb/>
Voters also chose Edward<lb/>
Carter as their new mayor pro-<lb/>
tem, a position which goes to the<lb/>
councilman who receives the most<lb/>
votes. Carter's vote total was<lb/>
3,234, which he says is the highest<lb/>
vote ever cast for a councilman.<lb/>
Carter will also be the only black<lb/>
on the council.<lb/>
"I'm elated Carter said.<lb/>
"Especially since I've lost two<lb/>
very close races before Carter<lb/>
said his main goal as mayor pro-<lb/>
tein is "proving to the people that<lb/>
I'm deserving of their support<lb/>
The Reverend William Hadden,<lb/>
ECU's Episcopal chaplain, was<lb/>
re-elected to his scat on the coun-<lb/>
cil. Hadden plans to emphasize<lb/>
downtown revitalization, which<lb/>
he says will be "better for ECU<lb/>
students<lb/>
"Every city needs a physical<lb/>
heart Hadden said. "And if it<lb/>
doesn't have one, it loses its per-<lb/>
sonality Hadden proposes to<lb/>
revitalize downtown by getting<lb/>
more people to live in the area. He<lb/>
also believes a downtown super-<lb/>
market should be built, which he<lb/>
claims would be good for<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Buck thinks students should<lb/>
always be concerned with city<lb/>
elections. "It's the students' city<lb/>
too, and they should take pride in<lb/>
it and give input into city govern-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Other candidates elected to the<lb/>
council are Judy Greene, Stuart<lb/>
Shinn, Louis Clark and M.W.<lb/>
Aldridge. All except Aldridge<lb/>
were incumbents.<lb/>
Quality Education Heads Jenkins' Priority List<lb/>
B, MILLIE WHITE damentals-reading, writing and room for them, we fmd room for one of our biggest Jiness, sh?7J1?ghJe J<lb/>
Although former ECU<lb/>
Chancellor Leo Jenkins has not<lb/>
yet thrown his hat into the gubcr<lb/>
natorial ring, his campaign is<lb/>
gearing up. "I'm going to an-<lb/>
nounce probably as late as I<lb/>
possibly can. You've heard all of<lb/>
the others, and if you want to talk<lb/>
issues, here I am Jenkins said in<lb/>
a recent interview<lb/>
calculus He added, "I'm the<lb/>
only experienced educator among<lb/>
all the candidates, in both<lb/>
parties<lb/>
Another important issue accor-<lb/>
ding to Jenkins is day-care for the<lb/>
children of working mothers. He<lb/>
said North Carolina probably<lb/>
leads the nation in working<lb/>
mothers "and there's no use in<lb/>
talking about productivity; if a<lb/>
mother is worrying where her little<lb/>
Among the issues most impor- baby is, her mind's not going to<lb/>
tant to Jenkins are education, be on working '<lb/>
everything else<lb/>
North Carolina should also<lb/>
consider day-care programs for<lb/>
the eldery, Jenkins said. Accor-<lb/>
ding to Jenkins, some nursing<lb/>
homes cost as much as $1700 a<lb/>
month. "Many people don't<lb/>
realize how expensive they are;<lb/>
many can't afford them he said.<lb/>
Because family members can't af-<lb/>
ford to pay for round-the-clock<lb/>
care, Jenkins suggests day-care<lb/>
biggest<lb/>
People talk about tobbacco when<lb/>
they talk about North Carolina<lb/>
but tobbacco became a billion-<lb/>
dollar industry about a year or<lb/>
two ago; the military has been a<lb/>
muli-billion dollar industry for<lb/>
years Jenkins added. "We<lb/>
ought to do all we can to protect<lb/>
our status with the military<lb/>
One thing North Carolina does<lb/>
not do concerning the military, candidacy, it<lb/>
according to Jenkins, is treat the boys now,<lb/>
issues<lb/>
should out-weigh money in an<lb/>
election. "We ought to elect peo-<lb/>
ple on issues, their track record,<lb/>
their experience and not on their<lb/>
ability to raise money he said.<lb/>
"Spending hundreds of dollars on<lb/>
each vote to me is contrary to the<lb/>
American ideal<lb/>
Money is one of the reasons<lb/>
Jenkins has not announced his<lb/>
I became one of<lb/>
I'd just have to<lb/>
To combat this problem,<lb/>
Jenkins advocates that the state,<lb/>
as a big employer, set an example, look at that if we possibly can<lb/>
"We ought to have day-care The military is another big con-<lb/>
centers at the universities and the cern for Jenkins. "We've got to<lb/>
,?? , - community colleges, any place look particuilary in North<lb/>
We've got to take it very serious- where many state workers work Car0"?4, at ?? military, he<lb/>
ly and concentrate on the fun- Jenkins added, "the state can find said. The military is probably<lb/>
day-care for both children and<lb/>
senior citizens, and the rnilitary.<lb/>
Jenkins, who was the<lb/>
chancellor of ECU for 18 years,<lb/>
said quality education is the<lb/>
primary issue facing the state.<lb/>
care, jcnKins suggests uay-caic. dtiuiumg iu jciiruk, 13 ?? , - , ? , .? ,lt nft<lb/>
"If we had day-care for the senior military dependents as citizens of chase around and try to out-spend<lb/>
citizens many of them would be the state. "The military children, this one and that one<lb/>
able to come home at night and the dependents, are not treated as JgSSSSlSSd<lb/>
sleep, so we've got to take a hard citizens in North Carolina - they of North Carolina for all the good<lb/>
must pay out-of-state tuition it's done for me Jenkins said<lb/>
Jenkins said. "Some of them are "It's given me a beautiful career<lb/>
based here four or five years and<lb/>
they pay out-of-state tuition.<lb/>
They ought to pay in-state<lb/>
tuition<lb/>
as senior chancellor for 18 years<lb/>
here. I feel I owe a little debt, I'm<lb/>
not climbing anywhere. I just<lb/>
want to serve<lb/>
"<lb/>
-  ,<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10, 1983<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
?<lb/>
COMPUTERS<lb/>
Tna East Carolina Mlcrocom<lb/>
potar users Group (ECMUG)<lb/>
will mwt Thursday. Nov 10 at<lb/>
7 30 p m , Room 106 Rawl, on<lb/>
ma ECU campus Tha spaaker<lb/>
will ba Susan Spaar, who will<lb/>
demonstrate Base Anyone in<lb/>
terestad In microcomputers is<lb/>
invited to attend<lb/>
SKIING<lb/>
CHRISTMAS<lb/>
BREAK<lb/>
There are still a tew spaces<lb/>
available for me Christmas ski<lb/>
trip to Snowshoe W Va come to<lb/>
memorial Gym, room 108 Tues<lb/>
dav at 430 to register and pay<lb/>
tees This is me last week to sign<lb/>
up So, all you hot doggers and<lb/>
ski bunnies get your act<lb/>
together Bring your friends and<lb/>
sign up to go with us to Snowshoe<lb/>
during Christmas break<lb/>
AMERICAN<lb/>
MARKETING<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
The American Marketing<lb/>
Association will be having a<lb/>
meeting Thursday November<lb/>
10 1913 at 4 00 PM at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center in<lb/>
room 221 Northwestern Mutual<lb/>
Lite Insurance Co will be giving<lb/>
a sales aptitude 'est and a talk<lb/>
on "Your future in Sales<lb/>
CAREER<lb/>
PLACEMENT<lb/>
The American Marketing<lb/>
Association win ba sponsoring a<lb/>
Caretr Placement Registry<lb/>
November 15 14 from 9 00 2 00<lb/>
in front of me student store<lb/>
Piease stop by and see us<lb/>
LIBERAL<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
The Society of United Liberal<lb/>
Students will meet Thursday,<lb/>
November 10, 19t3 at 7 p m Tha<lb/>
meeting will be held In Room Ml<lb/>
Mendenhall Your attendance Is<lb/>
very Important PLEASE GET<lb/>
INVOLVED<lb/>
PHILOSOPHY CLUB<lb/>
The Philosophy club will be<lb/>
having a meeting on Thursday,<lb/>
November 10. !e3. In<lb/>
Mendenhall room 24T Jay Stone<lb/>
will present a paper entitled:<lb/>
Politics of Conciousnas and<lb/>
vice versa the student's role<lb/>
Everyone Is welcome<lb/>
VETERAN'S<lb/>
DAY CEREMONY<lb/>
The Army and Air Force<lb/>
ROTC will loin In a ceremony<lb/>
honoring American Veterans<lb/>
The ceremony will be held in<lb/>
front of Joyner Library at 11 00<lb/>
am on Friday. 11th of<lb/>
November The general public Is<lb/>
invited and encouraged to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
NASA Headquarters,<lb/>
Washington, DC. will be hiring<lb/>
caop students beginning Spring<lb/>
194 undergraduate Juniors<lb/>
malorlng In Accounting or MBA<lb/>
students should apply Job will<lb/>
entail a variety of duties but will<lb/>
be adapted around students' ma<lb/>
jor. Students who have a 3.0<lb/>
GPA or higher are urged to app<lb/>
ly Salary level will be $11,949<lb/>
for undergraduate juniors and<lb/>
$13,369 for MBA students In<lb/>
terested students should contact<lb/>
Mrs. Carolyn Powell, 311 Rawl<lb/>
immediately to apply<lb/>
ALLIED HEALTH<lb/>
The Allied Health Professions<lb/>
Admission Test will be offered<lb/>
at ECU on Saturday. January<lb/>
U 1984 Application blanks are<lb/>
to be completed and mailed to<lb/>
the Psychological Corp, 304<lb/>
East 45th Street New York, NY<lb/>
10017 to arrive by December 9,<lb/>
193 Applications may be ob<lb/>
tamed from the ECU Testing<lb/>
Center Room 105, Speight<lb/>
Building<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
The Greouata Management<lb/>
Admission Tot (GMAT) will b<lb/>
offered at ECU on Saturday,<lb/>
January 2 1984. Application<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to GMAT. Educational<lb/>
Testing Service, Box 966 R.<lb/>
Princeton N J. 08540 Applica<lb/>
'ions must be postmarked no<lb/>
afer than December 26. 1983<lb/>
Applications may be obtained<lb/>
? rom the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
Room 105, Speight Building,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
DIABETES<lb/>
How to take charge of your<lb/>
Diabetes Monday. November<lb/>
14 1983, at 6 p m in the Student<lb/>
Health Center Conference<lb/>
Room This program Is spon<lb/>
sored by Student Health Ser<lb/>
vices<lb/>
PREPROFESSIONAL<lb/>
HEALTH ALLIANCE<lb/>
The Preprofeasional Health<lb/>
Alliance will heat spaaker, Dr.<lb/>
Angela Stuart, MO, Thursday.<lb/>
November 10, 1983 at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
in tha Ledona Wright Cultural<lb/>
Cantar.<lb/>
There will ba an Important<lb/>
business meeting at t 45 direct<lb/>
ly before Dr Stuart speak. All<lb/>
member are asked to attend<lb/>
GOSPEL SHOW<lb/>
This weekend on the Con tern<lb/>
porary goapel show, tha feature<lb/>
artist I tha imperials Also,<lb/>
Saturday Nov. 19th at 1 00 pm<lb/>
there will ba an Impalrals Fraa<lb/>
Concert in tha Wright<lb/>
Auditorium, live via sattelite So<lb/>
listen to the contemporary<lb/>
goapel show for more concert In<lb/>
formation, from 6-10 am on Sun<lb/>
day morlnlngs, on WZMB 91.3<lb/>
FM<lb/>
EPISCOPAL<lb/>
STUDENT WORSHIP<lb/>
A student Episcopal Service of<lb/>
Holy Communion will be<lb/>
celebrated on Tuesday evening,<lb/>
Nov. 15th In the Chapel of St<lb/>
Pauls Episcopal Church, 406<lb/>
West Fourth St. (One block from<lb/>
Garrett Dorm.) The service will<lb/>
be at 5:30 P.M. with the<lb/>
Episcopal Campus Chaplain,<lb/>
Tha Rev. Bill Hidden.<lb/>
celebrating<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
If you art looking for<lb/>
fellowship with people who love<lb/>
the Lord, then come out to<lb/>
Jenkins Auditorium on Wednes<lb/>
day nights at 6:30 and ex<lb/>
perlence inter varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship.<lb/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ Is<lb/>
sponsoring "Prime Time" this<lb/>
Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Nurs<lb/>
ing Buldlng room 101 Please<lb/>
join us tor tun, fellowship, and<lb/>
Bible study. W are looking for<lb/>
ward to meeting you.<lb/>
GOODS FOR<lb/>
THE NEEDY<lb/>
Tna ECU Biology Club will<lb/>
have booth aa up at me Student<lb/>
Supply Star and ttta Biology<lb/>
buikMng tabby an Wad Nov H<lb/>
and ?r1 Maw. Mfront 0:30-1 00<lb/>
All aoada collected will ba<lb/>
sMMMM noddy lamina for<lb/>
Thanaaglvln through tha<lb/>
OraanwtNa Sadat Service. Do<lb/>
your good daad by contributing<lb/>
on ana of tha daalgnatad daysi<lb/>
OCCUPATIONAL<lb/>
THERAPY<lb/>
The ECSCOTA will be meeting<lb/>
Wad November 23 at 5 30 p.m.<lb/>
All Interested students please<lb/>
com an attend. We are working<lb/>
on our fund raising projects for<lb/>
me club and community. The<lb/>
meeting will be held in Room 205<lb/>
at the Balk Building.<lb/>
ELECTRIC<lb/>
RAINBOW<lb/>
RADIO SHOW<lb/>
Keith Mitchell's Heavy metal<lb/>
arsenal this weekend will<lb/>
feature the following album<lb/>
specials: Friday at 2 am, Judas<lb/>
Priest with, "Unleashed In the<lb/>
East Saturday at 4 am Its Blue<lb/>
Oyster Cults brand new release<lb/>
"Revolution by Night The<lb/>
Elecric Rainbow Radio Show<lb/>
can be heard exclusively on 91 3<lb/>
WZMB.<lb/>
REAL<lb/>
ESTATE FRAT<lb/>
There will ba ?n organize<lb/>
tlonal meeting of East<lb/>
Carolina' Real Estate Frater<lb/>
nary, Rho-Epslion on Wad. Nov.<lb/>
16 In Rawl 130. This will fake<lb/>
place after the Banking<lb/>
Finance Fraternity meeting All<lb/>
interested are welcome.<lb/>
SEMIT<lb/>
Semi important meeting for all<lb/>
sort of interested apathetic<lb/>
studetns. We will kind of get<lb/>
together for an orglnazatlon<lb/>
(ha I) meeting In front of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Store Friday. If your<lb/>
classes permit It sort of come on<lb/>
by and try not to let your vote<lb/>
be heard.<lb/>
ART STUDENTS<lb/>
Enter the REBEL art contest.<lb/>
Bring your entrle by the con<lb/>
ference room In the office of<lb/>
Jenkins with a $1.00 entry fee<lb/>
per work on Monday, 10-5.<lb/>
Categories include: Ceramics,<lb/>
Painting, Sculpture, Drawing,<lb/>
Photography, Design (metals,<lb/>
wood, add fibers). Graphic Art,<lb/>
Illustration First place In each<lb/>
category will be awarded $30.00<lb/>
and the Best In show will be<lb/>
awarded $125 00. Prize money<lb/>
provided by the ATTIC and<lb/>
BUDWEISER The show and<lb/>
reception will be held at me Art<lb/>
and Camera Gallery, Saturday,<lb/>
Nov 19, from 7 9 p.m. Winners<lb/>
will be announced there.<lb/>
TURKEY SHOOT<lb/>
Tha Department of University<lb/>
Unions I sponsoring a Turkey<lb/>
Shoot in Bowling an Thursday,<lb/>
Nov. 17, from 7 p.m. until 10p.m.<lb/>
In tha Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Cantar Bowling Allay. Tha entry<lb/>
fee I $2 00 Bowl on ball at a<lb/>
full cat of pin on ton consecutive<lb/>
lanes Knock down at least eight<lb/>
pins on all tan tana and win a<lb/>
turkey I All ECU students and<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
members may only win one<lb/>
turkey. Try your luck at bowling<lb/>
and win a turkey for Thanksglv<lb/>
Ing. Remember you are what<lb/>
you eat I For additional Informa<lb/>
tlon, call ma Craft and REcraa<lb/>
tlon Offica at 757 Ml 1 ext 20 or<lb/>
the Bowling Center at ext. 247.<lb/>
SPORT CLUB<lb/>
COUNCIL<lb/>
The third meeting for the<lb/>
1903-84 Sport Club Council will<lb/>
be held Wednesday November<lb/>
16, 1903 at 4:00 p.m. In Room<lb/>
105B of Memorial Gymnasium<lb/>
Represenatives of active sport<lb/>
clubs are required to attend and<lb/>
should have ready to turn in a<lb/>
Mid Semester update of all club<lb/>
activities ? budget, fund raisers,<lb/>
practices, games, trip, etc.<lb/>
Person or group interested in<lb/>
the sport club program should<lb/>
attend thl meeting Sport Club<lb/>
Council Meeting, Weds. Nov 16,<lb/>
1903, 4:00 p.m Room 10SB,<lb/>
Mam. Gym.<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
important meeting for all<lb/>
NCSL member who ?r? going<lb/>
to State Nov 16 Be prepared to<lb/>
report on your resolution, alo<lb/>
we will be having a parllmen<lb/>
tary proceedure proceedure<lb/>
work shop Let1 gaar up tor a<lb/>
great showing at the last IC for<lb/>
tha yaarl Room 212 Mendenhall,<lb/>
7 pm Monday<lb/>
CRUSE FAMILY<lb/>
This Friday night In the<lb/>
Wright Auditorium at 7 30 the<lb/>
Cruse Family will be having a<lb/>
free concert All are welcome<lb/>
TABLE SOCCER<lb/>
All full time ECU students<lb/>
with at least a 2.0 GPA are eilgi<lb/>
ble to compete in a Table Soccer<lb/>
(FootsbalD tournament In<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center on<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov 15 at 6 pm<lb/>
Anyone Interested must sign<lb/>
hlm?etfhrself up with a part<lb/>
ner and fill out a registration<lb/>
form from the MSC Billiards<lb/>
Center by Tuesday, Nov 15 at 12<lb/>
noon The entry fee per team is<lb/>
$4.00. Trophies will be awarded<lb/>
to the top two teams The winn<lb/>
Ing team will travel to the ACU I<lb/>
Regional tournament in<lb/>
Charlotte on February 9,10, and<lb/>
11, 194. This Is al all expense<lb/>
paid trip sponsored by the<lb/>
Department of University<lb/>
Unions Stop by the Billiards<lb/>
Center for any additional infor<lb/>
matlon<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP<lb/>
This is me final week to apply<lb/>
for membership in Psi Chi. the<lb/>
National Honor Society in<lb/>
Psychology Applications are<lb/>
available in the Psychology<lb/>
department office or In the Psi<lb/>
Chi library If you have already<lb/>
applied, you will be notified this<lb/>
week as to whether or not you<lb/>
have been accepted if you plan<lb/>
to be a member, the life time<lb/>
membership is $35 must be paid<lb/>
on or by Monday, Nov 14 Inltie<lb/>
tlon will be held Wednesday,<lb/>
Nov 16 You will be notified<lb/>
where and when this will take<lb/>
place You cannot be initiated<lb/>
unles you have paid your<lb/>
lifetime membership tee! if you<lb/>
have any questions, call Trina<lb/>
Harrison at 758 8552<lb/>
CHINESE<lb/>
STUDENT<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
The Chinese Student Assooa<lb/>
tion. a new organization whose<lb/>
purpose '? to provide service to<lb/>
Chinese students and promote<lb/>
cultural exhange between<lb/>
Chinese stuoetns and the com<lb/>
munity, will be having a<lb/>
BBZpicnic on Saturday.<lb/>
November 26 2 PM at Havens<lb/>
Garden, Washington. NC All<lb/>
members are interested<lb/>
studetns and faculty are<lb/>
welcome to attend We hope to<lb/>
see you there<lb/>
THANKS<lb/>
BURGER KINO<lb/>
we're gtad wa ewttchaoi a<lb/>
Whopping Big thanks to Burger<lb/>
King from the Lady Pirates<lb/>
Volleyball Team for giving j,<lb/>
our pre game meals<lb/>
STOP SMOKING<lb/>
Nov 17 Is the day for <lb/>
smokers to stop With Alpha Phi<lb/>
Omega helping, the or. ? be<lb/>
much easier Come iofn us N<lb/>
front of me student supply ?tv?<lb/>
Nov 17 from 9 a m to 4 p m<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
The Pi Kapps would like to la<lb/>
vite everyone to come out ?e<lb/>
Papa Katz every Tuesdey mgM<lb/>
for Happy Hour<lb/>
Congratulations to me new'y<lb/>
elected executive counsel "???.<lb/>
arm Archon Matt Perry, vice<lb/>
Archon Steve Hall, VIceArchor<lb/>
(fund raiser) Cralg King<lb/>
Treasurer Bill Bullock<lb/>
Secretary Johnny ?? -(.<lb/>
Warden Bill Austin. Historian<lb/>
Mark Holland, and Chaplain<lb/>
Richard Torres<lb/>
November 19 is "Pi Kaoc<lb/>
Day" This is me day all P<lb/>
Kapps will be recognized Loo<lb/>
and listen for itl<lb/>
CHRISTMAS MUGS<lb/>
Don't forget mat ZB iw<lb/>
Sisters will be taking orders ?or<lb/>
engraved glass mugs ??.?<lb/>
Christmas Gifts' 11 See any little<lb/>
sister for details<lb/>
m ,i ?<lb/>
n<lb/>
Ui -<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
There will be a meeting<lb/>
Thurs , Nov. 10 at 5:00 In Rm.<lb/>
212 Mendenhall. W will discuss<lb/>
proiecs for Christmas and<lb/>
Thanksgiving We need all the<lb/>
members there to supply their<lb/>
input and Ideas Please attend<lb/>
this meeting and become active<lb/>
in the club<lb/>
ZBT LITTLE SISTERS<lb/>
ZBT Little Sisters don't forget<lb/>
that me meeting for Nov 10 will<lb/>
be held in Mendenhall 212 at 5<lb/>
pm<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
Northern Telecom, Research<lb/>
Triangle Park, NC ha ad<lb/>
mlnlstratlv co-op positions In<lb/>
clerical and technical areas.<lb/>
Duties and related to electrical<lb/>
engineering, mechanical<lb/>
engineering Would also assit<lb/>
with the routine of shop<lb/>
documentation and labor<lb/>
routing utilization, time and mo<lb/>
tlon studies which require data<lb/>
collection and tabulation Must<lb/>
be willing to work three coop<lb/>
periods and have a 2 9 GPA So<lb/>
cond semester sophomore or<lb/>
first semester iunlors are urged<lb/>
to apply immediately If In-<lb/>
terested at 313 Rawl<lb/>
' &amp; Qdau Hm '<lb/>
J ?<lb/>
b I- Al Ml L<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
Spring Break Cruise<lb/>
March 5th-9th Cruise From Miami to<lb/>
Nassau ?&amp; Freeport, S.S. Emerald Seas<lb/>
$517.75 per person 4 people per room<lb/>
For more info:<lb/>
Call Greenville Travel Center<lb/>
756-1521<lb/>
T&amp;HtAe V 76oU<lb/>
403 S. fV AW St.<lb/>
?9UENVIUI. N.C<lb/>
Latest Styles in<lb/>
Ladies Hats and accessories<lb/>
1Q.MAM-fc.WM<lb/>
r<lb/>
The Brothers of<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
National Honor Fraternity<lb/>
Would Like to THANK<lb/>
SZECHUAN GARDEN<lb/>
UBE<lb/>
TREE HOUSE<lb/>
H.L. HODGES<lb/>
VILLA ROMA<lb/>
PTA<lb/>
And ALL others who helped to make Our<lb/>
Project For the Cancer Society a Success.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$195.00 Abotion from 13<lb/>
to II weeks at additioaal<lb/>
cost. Pirfaano lev Birth<lb/>
 Control, and Problem -<lb/>
PretMKJ Counseling For<lb/>
further information rail"<lb/>
832-0535 (Toil Free Namhe'r<lb/>
Mki-111-2568) between<lb/>
9 A.M. and S P.M. weekdays<lb/>
ILALEIGHSWOMIkrS<lb/>
MfcAL I H<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
tl 7 WmI Morgans'<lb/>
lima ? C<lb/>
YOUR BSN IS WORTH AN<lb/>
OFFICERS COMMISSION<lb/>
IN THE ARMY.<lb/>
Your BSN means ou're 4 profeaaioaal- In the Am , it eJao<lb/>
means you're an officer. You start as a full-fledged member of oar<lb/>
medical team. Write: Army Nurse Opportunities.<lb/>
P.O. Box 7713, Burbank. CA 91510.<lb/>
ARMY NURSE CORPS.<lb/>
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
u<lb/>
AND LOSE UP TO 30 POUNDS<lb/>
BY CHRISTMAS .<lb/>
Coll<lb/>
mWFOOD<lb/>
Don t settle for pre-<lb/>
cooked uarmedoii<lb/>
stsrrtiXKketJ burden<lb/>
)m hate a fresh alternant?<lb/>
a!Mihua Garden fresh lettuce.<lb/>
tumaloes.I mions and all the "firm I are free<lb/>
Choice sin ed meats and cheeses xthot meat<lb/>
hails and wusage. and freshh, bake! oof-fong<lb/>
nMs Andeimsanduichorsaiada'Subumis<lb/>
made to vtxjr order not made tn adiance<lb/>
WITHOUT DRUGS, INJECTIONS,<lb/>
HUNGER!<lb/>
The holidays are closer than you think. But<lb/>
you can be ready for the fun because Nutri<lb/>
System wi help you lose up to a pound a<lb/>
day wtthout drugs, without strenuous<lb/>
exercise, wtthout being hungry!<lb/>
? ENJOY GOURMET NuSYSTEM<lb/>
CUISINE<lb/>
Lose up to a pound a day while enjoying<lb/>
NuSystem Cuisine" foods .Iirtefnattoral<lb/>
gourmet dofcades featuring such dishes as<lb/>
Chicken Polynesian and Shrimp Creole.<lb/>
? MEDICAL SUPERVISION<lb/>
The NirtriSystem trained weight counselors<lb/>
wi give you al the help and support you need<lb/>
whJe losing. And the Behavior Education wN<lb/>
retrain your eating habits to keep you sam<lb/>
forever.<lb/>
? THE WEIGHTMINDER" GUARANTEE<lb/>
Folow the NutriSystem program and you<lb/>
mult retch the goal set by our exclusive<lb/>
AMghtmmderTM Computer by the date speckled<lb/>
or there's no additional charge far pur services<lb/>
untlyou do.<lb/>
CM Today For Froo. No-oMtfatl?i<lb/>
LOST 4S LBS.<lb/>
Student<lb/>
Coot. From Page 1<lb/>
Quoting from Appendix C ol<lb/>
ECU faculty manual, Mar<lb/>
said: "The quality of teac<lb/>
must be evaluated by me<lb/>
data from survev of student<lb/>
ruon. "<lb/>
"The best way is to use th<lb/>
dent opinioneer that's<lb/>
created by the committee)<lb/>
teaching effectiveness Mar<lb/>
said "That's first choice, bv<lb/>
cond choice, since I don't<lb/>
that, is conducting our<lb/>
survev There's no choice. y<lb/>
got to go by appendix C<lb/>
"We can live with it<lb/>
John R Maiolo, chairman<lb/>
sociology, anthropology<lb/>
economics department.<lb/>
got the assessments on most<lb/>
people, with the newer peot<lb/>
Correct!<lb/>
In the Tuesdav. Nov. 1 e<lb/>
Carolinian, Barbara Mann<lb/>
Information Service was<lb/>
stated that a final warning<lb/>
to non-registrant v This<lb/>
occured is that in Septem<lb/>
series of driver's license let)<lb/>
to maies who haven't sign<lb/>
be termed a final notice wj<lb/>
out if you failed to respoi<lb/>
license letter.<lb/>
This final notice would<lb/>
not return the license letter<lb/>
possibly be turned over to<lb/>
Justice From the names<lb/>
them, a small number cot<lb/>
further prosecution. This<lb/>
people would then re.e<lb/>
termed a "final notice "<lb/>
the form of a rew<lb/>
District Attorn-<lb/>
Now. at any step in this<lb/>
small possibility that a Fl<lb/>
you, but it is not likely J<lb/>
quoted as saying you arl<lb/>
obligation to talk to the ag(<lb/>
is that you are under no<lb/>
talk to the agen, until j<lb/>
talk with legal counsel.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
OPItt<lb/>
AUD<lb/>
19:<lb/>
!<lb/>
?<lb/>
 m ltQp,<lb/>
w ? ?<lb/>
thstag<lb/>
E<lb/>
ptingres<lb/>
and stag ? - -<lb/>
spe ? j<lb/>
necessan<lb/>
provided. Goo<lb/>
H U'H Hli<lb/>
-?<lb/>
i<lb/>
355-2470<lb/>
kg nutri system<lb/>
M<lb/>
20S<lb/>
E. 5th St.<lb/>
.SUB<lb/>
2fS<lb/>
E. 5th St.<lb/>
ftaWfcalaa tat a? fat MX at I<lb/>
ln. u<lb/>
$<lb/>
GreenviiU<lb/>
Shopping<lb/>
Greeir<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10, JSS3<lb/>
With<lb/>
THANKS<lb/>
itUROER KINO<lb/>
a? ?? 910 ??"? ?Wdg a<lb/>
A-vwtHf B'C ???? to Burg,<lb/>
?vka ??" ?o? giving ?,<lb/>
MM p'? 9?m? ??)?<lb/>
STOP SMOKING<lb/>
s , ? d?V tor ?<lb/>
ska ? v ttac wti Aiph? Pw<lb/>
??t -e  o m? it will tw<lb/>
-av?f Com lota u in<lb/>
?' "x jvd?fit loooiy ??or?<lb/>
mntLn ?o 4 p rn<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
? ?cp? wouK) ilk? to in<lb/>
? ?,on. to com out to<lb/>
?o ? ?? Tu??o?y n?ght<lb/>
- ?? now'<lb/>
. ? aons to m n?nwty<lb/>
? ?. lad nacwtlM couna?i Tn?y<lb/>
. ? ivon Win P?rry Vtc<lb/>
? nai' Vic. Arc hoc<lb/>
- a itf Cr?lQ King.<lb/>
" p Bullock<lb/>
or nny ? in.y ,<lb/>
a . - - Austin Historian<lb/>
? - am) and Chapiam<lb/>
. hard Tors<lb/>
s .?0r '? i? Pi Kaoo<lb/>
h ? i rn? day all Pi<lb/>
r . ogn.rw Look<lb/>
? - ' ?' '<lb/>
CHRISTMASMUGS<lb/>
taryrl mat zbt um?<lb/>
:? faking orders tor<lb/>
? M g ? msssjMI Groat<lb/>
M - ,r? ' Saa any little<lb/>
? ??? i'a is<lb/>
t?f of 76at<lb/>
v fVAKS CT.<lb/>
liNVtixi. M C<lb/>
stlev in<lb/>
liv and accessories<lb/>
M30PM<lb/>
a<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12fhWEEK<lb/>
IF PREGNANCY<lb/>
SlfS.tt .bo-tion from 13<lb/>
S weeks at ?dditlo?ml<lb/>
Preflnino lest. Birt<lb/>
Iontroi. inC Problem<lb/>
Prtf n??c Council. For<lb/>
further information rail<lb/>
I32-4S3S (Toll Free Number<lb/>
?jl 21 -1568) between<lb/>
A M and 5 P M weekdays.<lb/>
R A UpGHS WOMEN'S<lb/>
nktllH<lb/>
OBGANIZATICN<lb/>
? Waal MarcattSt<lb/>
ai?)?h N C<lb/>
RTHAN<lb/>
ISSION<lb/>
IY<lb/>
in ihf nn . il also<lb/>
li fledged member of oar<lb/>
i ipportunitiev<lb/>
 91510<lb/>
RPS.<lb/>
BE.<lb/>
Coll<lb/>
Today<lb/>
For<lb/>
Free<lb/>
No<lb/>
Obligation<lb/>
onsuitatio<lb/>
Cont. From Page 1<lb/>
Quoting from Appendix C of the<lb/>
ECU faculty manual, Martinez<lb/>
said: 'The quality of teaching<lb/>
must be evaluated by means of<lb/>
Jata from survey of student opi-<lb/>
nion<lb/>
'The best way is to use the stu-<lb/>
dent opinioneer that's been<lb/>
created by the committee for<lb/>
teaching effectiveness Martinez<lb/>
said. "That's first choice, but se-<lb/>
cond choice, since I don't have<lb/>
that, is conducting our own<lb/>
survey. There's no choice, you've<lb/>
got to go by appendix C<lb/>
"We can live with it said<lb/>
John R. Maiolo, chairman of the<lb/>
sociology, anthropology and<lb/>
economics department. "We've<lb/>
got the assessments on most of the<lb/>
people; with the newer people it's<lb/>
a problem, but we're going to get<lb/>
around that. It's not something<lb/>
we're going to worry about<lb/>
Maiolo plans to avoid the pro-<lb/>
blem with a "short survey"<lb/>
primarily for the new members of<lb/>
his faculty. His department has a<lb/>
total of 25 faculty, while the<lb/>
departments of English and<lb/>
physical education have 47 each.<lb/>
Philosophy has 14 faculty<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Bloodworth said his depart-<lb/>
ment and others of similar size<lb/>
would suffer greater inconve-<lb/>
nience in conducting an internal<lb/>
survey. The English department<lb/>
includes approximately 3,000<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Ms. Madge S. McGrath, an<lb/>
assistant medical technology pro-<lb/>
fessor and chairperson of the<lb/>
Teacher Effectiveness Committee,<lb/>
supported her committee's deci-<lb/>
sion to rotate the student evalua-<lb/>
tions. In order to begin to give a<lb/>
more comprehensive look at a<lb/>
faculty member's "total testing<lb/>
ability McGrath said the stu-<lb/>
dent survey should be rotated<lb/>
because some faculty members<lb/>
were not being evaluated on their<lb/>
"major courses" which were be-<lb/>
ing taught in the spring.<lb/>
Asked why the Faculty Senate<lb/>
didn't tecommend a semesterly<lb/>
student survey as a compromise,<lb/>
Smith cited "institutional ex-<lb/>
pense" claiming that ECU's<lb/>
Department of Institutional<lb/>
Research could not afford to con-<lb/>
duct a survey each semester.<lb/>
But Robert Ussery, director of<lb/>
institutional research, angrily<lb/>
denied that his department had<lb/>
anything to do with the dicision to<lb/>
not conduct serveys each<lb/>
semester. Ussery said a decision to<lb/>
conduct a survey was ultimately<lb/>
decided by the Faculty Senate.<lb/>
"Many chairpersons and deans<lb/>
have called me asking if we were<lb/>
going to do this survey this fall<lb/>
Ussery said, "and I've had to say,<lb/>
'no, university policy prohibits<lb/>
that this fall<lb/>
Ussery said his department<lb/>
could conduct the surveys for the<lb/>
entire university at a cost of<lb/>
$3,000 per survey. "That's just<lb/>
paper cost because the computer<lb/>
is a resource we have here, and we<lb/>
don't have to pay for that direct-<lb/>
ly Ussery said.<lb/>
Ussery criticized the senate<lb/>
decision and said that individual<lb/>
departmental surveys would not<lb/>
be cost-effective. "What they're<lb/>
going to do is take the content of<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
In the Tuesday, Nov. 1 edition of The East<lb/>
Carolinian, Barbara Mann of the N.C. Draft<lb/>
Information Service was misquoted. It was<lb/>
stated that a final warning had been sent out<lb/>
to non-registrants. This is false. What has<lb/>
occured is that in September, the third in a<lb/>
series of driver's license letters was sent out<lb/>
to males who haven't signed up. What could<lb/>
be termed a final notice would only be sent<lb/>
out if you failed to respond to this driver's<lb/>
license letter.<lb/>
This final notice would be rare. If you did<lb/>
not return the license letter, your name could<lb/>
possibly be turned over to the Department of<lb/>
Justice. From the names turned over to<lb/>
them, a small number could be picked for<lb/>
further prosecution. This small group of<lb/>
people would then receive what could be<lb/>
termed a "final notice It would come in<lb/>
the form of a registered letter from a U.S.<lb/>
District Attorney.<lb/>
Now, at any step in this process, there is a<lb/>
small possibility that a FBI agent will visit<lb/>
you, but it is not likely. Mann was mis-<lb/>
quoted as saying you are under no legal<lb/>
obligation to talk to the agent. W;hat she said<lb/>
is that you are under no legal obligation to<lb/>
talk to the agent until m first are able to<lb/>
talk with legal counsel.<lb/>
The East Carolinian regrets the error.<lb/>
Greenville Soup Kitchen Opens<lb/>
A soup kitchen for<lb/>
those in need of food<lb/>
opened Tuesday on<lb/>
West 5th Street in<lb/>
Greenville, and its<lb/>
main goal is "to reach<lb/>
those who are not be-<lb/>
ing reached ? the<lb/>
ones who fall between<lb/>
the cracks accor-<lb/>
ding to organizer<lb/>
Gloria Chestang.<lb/>
Chestang, who has<lb/>
worked with the<lb/>
Greenville Social Ser-<lb/>
vices for several years,<lb/>
said there has been a<lb/>
need for this service<lb/>
for some time. Lucille<lb/>
Gorham, a "soup kit-<lb/>
chen" volunteer,<lb/>
agreed. "I really do<lb/>
think there is hunger<lb/>
in Greenville. We're<lb/>
trying to get to the<lb/>
ones that are really<lb/>
suffering she said.<lb/>
The service is run<lb/>
by a group of 21 local<lb/>
volunteers, including<lb/>
several ECU faculty<lb/>
members. Father<lb/>
Jerry Sherba of St.<lb/>
Gabriels Catholic<lb/>
Church said he is try-<lb/>
ing to get ECU<lb/>
students involved as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
The soup kitchen,<lb/>
located in the Pope<lb/>
John XXIII Center, is<lb/>
open every Tuesday<lb/>
thru Thursday at 1<lb/>
p.m. Chestang said<lb/>
they have the capacity<lb/>
to serve 24 people at<lb/>
each 15-minute sit-<lb/>
ting, or approximate-<lb/>
ly 100 people each<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Anyone wishing to<lb/>
donate soup or cann-<lb/>
ed vegetables should<lb/>
contact Chestang or<lb/>
Sherba.<lb/>
that questionaire ? some of the poor evaluation. Ussery added<lb/>
questions ? type them up on that because student surveys are a<lb/>
master sheets and then put them sensitive matter, his department<lb/>
on a mimeograph and grind them would only distribute results when<lb/>
out, stick them in their classes the faculty is here "en masse" at<lb/>
Then the real problem starts, that<lb/>
is, getting that data off those<lb/>
sheets into some kind of talley<lb/>
forms that make sense.<lb/>
"That's going to eat up person<lb/>
time, and I can tell you it's going<lb/>
to use several person-months<lb/>
throughout the campus to com-<lb/>
bine it all Ussery said. "It's not<lb/>
cost-effective<lb/>
Ussery also said the results of<lb/>
the spring surveys would not be<lb/>
available for distribution to<lb/>
departments until nost fall ?<lb/>
possibly too late to be used in the<lb/>
determination of salary raises for<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
Student evaluation results can<lb/>
not be given to teachers until the<lb/>
last final exam of the semester is<lb/>
taken. This is to avoid the chance<lb/>
of a faculty member being harder<lb/>
on a class that gives him or her a<lb/>
"en masse"<lb/>
the start of the fall semester.<lb/>
Smith said the chance of a<lb/>
faculty member being awarded a<lb/>
salary raise without the aid of a<lb/>
student evaluation was "possible<lb/>
but not probable If this were to<lb/>
occur it would most likely happen<lb/>
to a first-year faculty member<lb/>
because other faculty could be<lb/>
evaluated from previous year's<lb/>
surveys, he added.<lb/>
Volpe said all pay raises were<lb/>
ultimately determined by the State<lb/>
Legislature and were conditioned<lb/>
on whether or not state funds<lb/>
were available to provide for such<lb/>
raises.<lb/>
Smith acknowledged there was<lb/>
some confusion over the Faculty<lb/>
Senate decision, and he would be<lb/>
working to clear up the problems<lb/>
immediately.<lb/>
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November 10. 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Student Apathy<lb/>
Laziness Not Marketable<lb/>
What's a State of the University<lb/>
address? In a precedent setting<lb/>
move Monday night, SGA Presi-<lb/>
dent Paul Naso addressed the stu-<lb/>
dent legislature. The president did<lb/>
what few politicians ? student or<lb/>
otherwise ? do: tackle an issue he<lb/>
promised to during his campaign.<lb/>
He's after students who are<lb/>
apathetic. That's the good news;<lb/>
the bad news is he's found them,<lb/>
but he's hard put to change them.<lb/>
As Naso noted in his speech,<lb/>
students are primarily interested<lb/>
todav in little more than getting a<lb/>
job. Their college experience is<lb/>
oriented toward little more than<lb/>
vocational training ? whatever<lb/>
will aid them in bringing home a<lb/>
bigger paycheck. Interest in cam-<lb/>
pus activities and organizations is<lb/>
nominal at best, limited to only a<lb/>
core of diligent, aware and capable<lb/>
students.<lb/>
In fact, students' laziness may<lb/>
be hurting them, in more ways<lb/>
than one. Campus organizations<lb/>
aren't working up to their poten-<lb/>
tial, and neither are students.<lb/>
Though student interest in campus<lb/>
activities and organizations seems<lb/>
to be declining, presumably<lb/>
because they are more interested in<lb/>
classes oriented toward their future<lb/>
careers, the average gpa has not<lb/>
gone up over the past 10 years. In-<lb/>
terest in academics over activities,<lb/>
it seems, creates only more party<lb/>
time, not personal advancement.<lb/>
So, if a student wants to get a<lb/>
job. We're going to put it to you<lb/>
this way: If you haven't been in-<lb/>
volved in campus activities or<lb/>
haven't held a career-oriented job<lb/>
? forget it. With nothing to show<lb/>
for four years of college except a<lb/>
gpa and summer work, an applica-<lb/>
tion will be less impressive. There<lb/>
are opportunities on campus for<lb/>
students to assume important<lb/>
management, leadership and com-<lb/>
mittee duties, and these positions<lb/>
can develop tangible trade skills<lb/>
and personal confidence.<lb/>
Working at a major campus<lb/>
organization, the student<lb/>
newspaper, we can assure students<lb/>
that competent, interested student<lb/>
staff is hard to come by on all the<lb/>
campus media, not to mention the<lb/>
SGA and a myriad of other student<lb/>
jobs in Mendenhall, university<lb/>
committees and residence halls.<lb/>
Naso is right when he says students<lb/>
will grow socially and emotionally<lb/>
from campus involvement; many<lb/>
of the best benefits are somewhat<lb/>
intangible ? improved awareness<lb/>
of important issues, ability to work<lb/>
with a team, to assume respon-<lb/>
sibility, to carry out far reaching<lb/>
plans. Intangible, but also in-<lb/>
valuable. Naso and the SGA are<lb/>
extending a hand to help students<lb/>
get involved, but it is the students<lb/>
themselves who must make an in-<lb/>
itiative.<lb/>
t Hi-<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Candidates Sing Office Blues;<lb/>
Mondale Looking For'Stuff<lb/>
The Mondale people are going ga-ga<lb/>
trying to figure out how to counteract all<lb/>
the publicity John Glenn is getting from<lb/>
the film The Right Stuff. The movie hype<lb/>
has made Glenn a far more serious can-<lb/>
didate than he was before, and Mondale's<lb/>
headquarters is running scared.<lb/>
"What we need said one of<lb/>
Mondale's top advisers, "is our own film<lb/>
with Mondale as a hero. We could call it<lb/>
'The Real Thing "<lb/>
"The title's fine but what about a story<lb/>
line? Fritz never orbited into space<lb/>
"He flew in Air Force One when he was<lb/>
vice president<lb/>
"I'm not sure most people would con-<lb/>
sider that as risky as being an astronaut<lb/>
Art Buchwald<lb/>
<lb/>
'But we could make it into a dramatic<lb/>
story. No one has ever done the thrilling<lb/>
saga of what goes into becoming a vice<lb/>
president of the United States. We could<lb/>
show how they're chosen after rigorous<lb/>
testing, and how they're trained to handle<lb/>
one of the most important missions in the<lb/>
country<lb/>
"Yeh, so what role does Fritz play?"<lb/>
"He's the serious one who rides herd<lb/>
on the other vice presidential candidates,<lb/>
who are always horsing around and get-<lb/>
ting into trouble with their superiors and<lb/>
sometimes their wives. Fritz is a tru-blu<lb/>
straight ?' w, because he knows how<lb/>
much is nding on the vice presidential<lb/>
program<lb/>
"You really think people will pay<lb/>
money to see that?"<lb/>
"It all depends on the way it's done.<lb/>
This has to be a human story and what<lb/>
makes it human is the vice presidential<lb/>
candidates' wives who have to support<lb/>
them, not showing fear and trepidation<lb/>
whenever their men are sent on a training<lb/>
mission to raise a million dollars for the<lb/>
party.<lb/>
"Joan will be the heroine of our story.<lb/>
We'll show her trying to keep busy, ignor-<lb/>
ing the thought that at the very moment<lb/>
she and her children are watching him on<lb/>
television, her husband has his band on<lb/>
the throttle which will open a new federal<lb/>
dam in New Mexico<lb/>
"Don't forget the press, and the role<lb/>
they played in making our vice presidents<lb/>
America's heroes<lb/>
"It will be in the script. We'll show an<lb/>
ordinary guy from the wheat fields of<lb/>
Minnesota being thrust into the limelight<lb/>
by a hungry, voracious media. We'll<lb/>
depict the invasion of his private life, and<lb/>
how he and Joan were able to handle it.<lb/>
We'll have a scene in which Fritz chews<lb/>
out all the other Democratic vice<lb/>
presidential candidates because they're<lb/>
partying and living it up, and not taking<lb/>
their roles seriously<lb/>
"We don't want Fritz to look too much<lb/>
like a boy scout<lb/>
"Why not? The American people<lb/>
always believed their vice presidents were<lb/>
boy scouts.<lb/>
The Real Thing will portray Mondale as<lb/>
the most serious and the most qualified of<lb/>
all those who ever had the office<lb/>
"Yeah, that's all well and good. But<lb/>
what about drama? How do we match a<lb/>
guy going into orbit from the top of a<lb/>
rocket?"<lb/>
"The drama comes when President<lb/>
Jimmy Carter chooses Fritz over all the<lb/>
other members of his staff, and decides he<lb/>
will be the first American ever to attend<lb/>
the inauguration of the new chief of state<lb/>
of Sierra Leone<lb/>
"So?"<lb/>
"Fritz, cramped in Air Force One, sits<lb/>
waiting for the air controller's count-<lb/>
down. We cut to Joan nervously biting<lb/>
her nails. All systems are go and suddenly<lb/>
the 707 is streaking down the runway. The<lb/>
world, with bated breath, is waiting as it<lb/>
wings across the Atlantic Ocean. One of<lb/>
the engines starts giving trouble, and<lb/>
President Carter calls Mondale and asks<lb/>
him if he wants to abort the mission. But<lb/>
Fritz knows if he fails, the vice presiden-<lb/>
tial program will be set back for years. He<lb/>
says he'll keep going. Finally, with barely<lb/>
enough fuel to make it, Air Force One<lb/>
sees the Sierra Leone runway and makes a<lb/>
perfect landing.<lb/>
"When Fritz gets back to the U.S. he<lb/>
gets a ticker tape parade down Broadway.<lb/>
He has proven to America and the world<lb/>
he has 'The Real Thing "<lb/>
"It sounds good to me. Does anyone<lb/>
know somebody in Hollywood who win<lb/>
make it?"<lb/>
"Everybody will want to make it. How<lb/>
many pictures about former vice<lb/>
presidents have they produced in the last<lb/>
10 years?"<lb/>
Viewing the soapbox debate in front<lb/>
of the Student Store last Thursday, I<lb/>
was disturbed at the ignorance and<lb/>
narrow-mindedness of some of the<lb/>
students attending the forum ?<lb/>
especially in view of the notion that a<lb/>
university is a place where young men<lb/>
and women get to broaden their<lb/>
horizons through the learning and ex-<lb/>
changing of new ideas and different<lb/>
philosophies.<lb/>
My distaste became ignited as an op-<lb/>
ponent of the invasion of Grenada,<lb/>
and a member of the Peace Commit-<lb/>
tee, was abdridged his right to speak<lb/>
freely, when supporters of the inva-<lb/>
sion, gathering in Gestapo style, began<lb/>
yelling "kill the commies, kill the com-<lb/>
mies" and other obscenities. I smiled<lb/>
at their ignorance at first but became<lb/>
saddened when the Peace Committee<lb/>
members chose to leave, and smartly,<lb/>
because the possibly of a fight was evi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
As 1 was about to leave, 1 noticed a<lb/>
dark-haired, fair-skinned young man<lb/>
with dark-rimmed glasses wearing a<lb/>
green sport jacket, blue cords and ten-<lb/>
nis shoes, was being followed and sur-<lb/>
rounded .<lb/>
The young man, wearing buttons on<lb/>
his jacket exclaiming "If you want<lb/>
peace, work for justice" and "Take<lb/>
the toys away from the boys caught<lb/>
the attention of many onlookers, as he<lb/>
articulately expressed his views oppos-<lb/>
ing the invasion of Grenada.<lb/>
Impressed by his ability to debate, 1<lb/>
remained for a half an hour to listen to<lb/>
this person take on seven people at<lb/>
once.<lb/>
As the discussion progressed, the<lb/>
comments of onlookers and passersby<lb/>
reaffirmed my feeling of disgust. Com-<lb/>
ments such as "This dude's a jerk"<lb/>
and "I'd like to put that bastard in<lb/>
combat boots and see what he is made<lb/>
of were all blurted without hearing<lb/>
the entire context of his argument.<lb/>
One student, who 1 thought perhaps<lb/>
had a little insight, asked: "Why are<lb/>
these people not listening to him. It<lb/>
sounds like he is making sense<lb/>
I thought to myself, "Why was this<lb/>
young man being called a 'commie'? It<lb/>
is obvious, if you listen to him, that he<lb/>
is not in favor of communism nor is he<lb/>
less patriotic than anyone else<lb/>
The young man put it well when he<lb/>
I said: "I may have had my own opi-<lb/>
 nion, but I waited for other people to<lb/>
I speak out<lb/>
I supported the invasion of Grenada.<lb/>
But how can I, as an intelligent human<lb/>
being, frivolously disregard opinions<lb/>
that are crucial in weighing actions in-<lb/>
volving a dangerous matter, especially<lb/>
those opinions coming from people<lb/>
who are genuinely concerned with the<lb/>
lives of people due to their moral of<lb/>
religious beliefs?<lb/>
Ed Nicklas<lb/>
Senior, Pols<lb/>
Copyright LA<lb/>
13<lb/>
Hunger Helper<lb/>
Today's mail brought an amazing<lb/>
letter from Oxfam America, an inter-<lb/>
national, self-help hunger relief<lb/>
organization. I have received their<lb/>
materials for about seven years and<lb/>
never before have I seen a letter like<lb/>
this "Statement on Grenada They<lb/>
begin by saying that "with the invasion<lb/>
of over 8000 foreign troops, Grenada's<lb/>
experiment with political independence<lb/>
and self-reliant development has ap-<lb/>
parently been halted<lb/>
Oxfam has funded grass roots, self-<lb/>
help development programs on the<lb/>
island nation since 1980, and these ef-<lb/>
forts to reduce hunger have succeeded<lb/>
because they were run by the poor peo-<lb/>
ple themselves, claims Oxfam.<lb/>
According to Oxfam, the U.S. inva-<lb/>
sion following the murder of Prime<lb/>
Minister Maurice Bishop "destroys<lb/>
hope that Grenada's people will be able<lb/>
to reunite and develop their own solu-<lb/>
tions Discussing the damage to<lb/>
America caused by the invasion, Ox-<lb/>
fam stated, "the decision to overthrow<lb/>
a foreign government by military force<lb/>
without attempting negotiations, is<lb/>
seen by much of the world as un-<lb/>
justified and incomprehensible<lb/>
This, I believe, is one of the key<lb/>
issues in this event. I have even been<lb/>
told by someone quoting a military<lb/>
source that we invaded the small island<lb/>
to give our soldiers and marines some<lb/>
war experience because, except for the<lb/>
older officers, none had seen actual<lb/>
combat. What an incredibly awful<lb/>
reason to invade a sovereign state!<lb/>
The Oxfam letter then continues:<lb/>
"We risk making all Third World na-<lb/>
tions doubt and fear us. The message is<lb/>
that real problems of the developing<lb/>
world will not be solved; instead the<lb/>
political problems will be solved by<lb/>
sending in the United States Marines<lb/>
It's interesting that people who have<lb/>
been working in Grenada did not<lb/>
"welcome" the invasion, but rather<lb/>
deplored it. Why is it that development<lb/>
workers or missionaries, who actually<lb/>
work with the poor, consistently say<lb/>
that the answer to the problems of<lb/>
poor nations is development aid ? not<lb/>
military aid? And why do we keep<lb/>
branding these people as naive and<lb/>
communistic? I believe that we should<lb/>
trust missionaries and development<lb/>
workers who have nothing to gain per-<lb/>
sonally from their efforts to help the<lb/>
poor. We must stop our attempt at<lb/>
military control of sovereign nations.<lb/>
Sister Helen Shondell<lb/>
Catholic Campus Minister<lb/>
Mick's Mistake<lb/>
In response to the male<lb/>
chauvinistically slanted article written<lb/>
supposedly to obtain a closer observa-<lb/>
tion for ECU fans of the "real Golden<lb/>
Girls I have several comments per-<lb/>
taining to the article in the last issue<lb/>
and some suggestions for future repor-<lb/>
ting.<lb/>
First, I would like to be corrected if I<lb/>
stand alone in my interpretation of the<lb/>
article which focuses on the image<lb/>
change from "Pom-Poms" to<lb/>
"Golden Girls Was the article's pur-<lb/>
pose to support the "Golden Girls"<lb/>
new positive image? If so, it failed.<lb/>
Moreover, this failure seems to be due<lb/>
to the reporter's personal opinion. His<lb/>
opinion, reinforced by rude remarks,<lb/>
reflects his inabilUity to relate to<lb/>
women with any form of passion, com-<lb/>
passion or respect. It especially il-<lb/>
lustrated the reporters lack of<lb/>
knowledge of dance and professional<lb/>
entertainers. Perhaps more<lb/>
background research in selection of<lb/>
reporters to cover this type of subject<lb/>
matter would assist with the effec-<lb/>
tiveness of the report.<lb/>
The article was written with some<lb/>
degree of skill, evidenced by the levels<lb/>
of interpretation. Perhaps the reporter<lb/>
attempts to appeal to all audiences with<lb/>
this scheme. For example, the title<lb/>
"Golden Girls More Than Half-time<lb/>
Leg Show" leads to many interpreta-<lb/>
tions. This alone would be effective<lb/>
toward stimulating thought; however,<lb/>
within the closing paragraph the effect<lb/>
is destroyed due to the "macho's"<lb/>
comments. Thus, the surface level of<lb/>
the article is such that it benefits the<lb/>
"Golden Girls" whereas the underlin-<lb/>
ing level is so negative the author acts<lb/>
confused. Are you trying to insult the<lb/>
readers' intelligence? Frankly, who do<lb/>
you think you are?<lb/>
I fed the "Golden Girls" represent<lb/>
ECU in a positive way, and this type of<lb/>
foggy, narrow-minded reporting with<lb/>
Mean<lb/>
it's negative connotations isn't what<lb/>
any organization needs! These are in-<lb/>
telligent young women, and each have<lb/>
qualities that makes them unique in<lb/>
their individual (non-stereotyped)<lb/>
character in a respectable members of<lb/>
any organization. Thus, our university<lb/>
should be proud to have such "sexually<lb/>
appealing" dancers representing it.<lb/>
(Here! Here' Barbara Dobyns)<lb/>
C. Louise Lilley<lb/>
Home Economics Education<lb/>
Mick's My Man<lb/>
I was deeply offended by Barbara<lb/>
Dobyns attempt to discredit Mick<lb/>
LaSalle in the Nov. 8 issue of Campus<lb/>
Forum. Ms. Dobyns has only damaged<lb/>
her own reputation by announcing her<lb/>
lack of perception and sense. The Mick<lb/>
LaSalle articles are featured in the<lb/>
Entertainment section and they con-<lb/>
sistently make this section.<lb/>
LaSalle's articles are quality. Each<lb/>
one is well-written with a delightful<lb/>
humorous slant. Mick LaSalle is the<lb/>
best thing since Mike Hughes. Dobyns<lb/>
was right about one thing: LaSalle<lb/>
gives his opinions. He's not guilty of<lb/>
bland characterless writing. 1 find him<lb/>
well-informed, witty and perceptive.<lb/>
LaSalle is currently the best reason I<lb/>
know of to pick up a copy of The East<lb/>
Carolinian. Mick makes sense.<lb/>
Donna Lynch<lb/>
Senior, CompSci<lb/>
Kick Back <lb/>
In response to Michael Hays' letter<lb/>
The East Carolinian titled "Soccer<lb/>
Players Poor Sports" (Tuesday, Nov.<lb/>
1), I would like to defend the integrity<lb/>
of the soccer team.<lb/>
First, Mr. Hays states, soccer is an<lb/>
aggressive sport. However, Mr. Hays<lb/>
feels that the team's play against<lb/>
Methodist College was above and<lb/>
beyond the bounds of "good, ag-<lb/>
gressive play I would like to know<lb/>
whether Mr. Hays has ever played col-<lb/>
legiate soccer. Having played club,<lb/>
high school and collegiate soccer, I can<lb/>
say that soccer at the college level is<lb/>
typically a rougher game.<lb/>
In addition, Mr. Hays too quickly<lb/>
condemns the entire ECU team on the<lb/>
basis of just a few players' actions. He<lb/>
also assumes, after seeing just one<lb/>
match, that the team's poor record is<lb/>
due to the players' poor attitudes. Yet,<lb/>
he says nothing of the inadequate soc-<lb/>
cer budget or the apparent lack of sup-<lb/>
port the team receives from the univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
After reading Mr. Hays' letter, I was<lb/>
very angry. I felt as if the soccer team<lb/>
had been dealt a very cheap and low<lb/>
blow. Mr. Hays should have lodged his<lb/>
complaints with the teams' coach.<lb/>
Hanging the team out-to-dry the way<lb/>
he did was unfair and unnecessary.<lb/>
Jeff Langrehr<lb/>
Socctr Player<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail<lb/>
them to or drop them by the<lb/>
newspaper's offices on the second<lb/>
floor of the publications building,<lb/>
across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of authorfs). Letters are<lb/>
limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. All<lb/>
letters are subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
ty, obscenity and libel. Students, facul-<lb/>
ty and staff writing letters for this page<lb/>
arc reminded that they are limited to<lb/>
one every five issues.<lb/>
Who<lb/>
Mick LaSalle hammers out anoth<lb/>
Thursday's Style section. Tuesdaj<lb/>
oJonated ? but cleer ? movie<lb/>
Lady<lb/>
HARRISBLRG. NC (LPI<lb/>
Some people dream about th<lb/>
glamourus life of Hollywood. but<lb/>
Beverly Baker has lived the<lb/>
and now wants to work on I<lb/>
crew of a NASCAR Grand Ni <lb/>
tional car.<lb/>
Periodically during the j<lb/>
year, the 36-vear-oiu Baktf n.<lb/>
cleaned engine pans, swept gai<lb/>
rage floors, waxed cars, kept laj<lb/>
charts, and hauled gasoline an<lb/>
tires for drivers Dick Brooks an<lb/>
rookie Bobby Hillin Jr.<lb/>
She has also been an inter <lb/>
for Canadian driver Lauren<lb/>
Rioux, who recentlv joined M<lb/>
circuit, but speaks no English.<lb/>
Although Baker was aroui<lb/>
stock car racing about a year<lb/>
part of the crew filming the B;<lb/>
Reynolds movie Stroker Ace. hi<lb/>
desire to enter the male dominad<lb/>
Women In The M<lb/>
Changes<lb/>
(UPI) 'More and I<lb/>
women are getting intc 1<lb/>
ministry said Dr Carl ENai<lb/>
religious studies professor at U<lb/>
University of South CarohrJ<lb/>
"The seminary male-femaie raj<lb/>
is approaching 50-50 m ma<lb/>
areas<lb/>
Martin said there ere<lb/>
female ministers among Soutl<lb/>
Baptists 10 years ago. but n<lb/>
there are about 250.<lb/>
In the western North CarolJ<lb/>
conference of United Methodis<lb/>
there are about 15 ordair<lb/>
women and another 25 workj<lb/>
toward ordination. In Georg<lb/>
about 35 women have pastoratj<lb/>
"I believe the pastoral do<lb/>
opening wide to women in<lb/>
denominations and 1 think t<lb/>
wind is blowing over us said<lb/>
Rev. E.B. Turner, president of<lb/>
General Baptist State Convent<lb/>
of North Carolina<lb/>
Southern churches have<lb/>
East Carol<lb/>
Acting A<lb/>
Acting and singing auditij<lb/>
for the East Carolina Playho<lb/>
production of Home<lb/>
scheduled for Thursday and<lb/>
day, Nov. 17 and 18, in<lb/>
Messick Theatre Arts Center<lb/>
the campus of East Carol<lb/>
University. The auditions<lb/>
begin at 7:30 p.m. each<lb/>
rOfn 206.<lb/>
Home was first produced<lb/>
great acclaim by the Ne1<lb/>
Pnsembk Company, and<lb/>
??iiOi ?miifH?i'?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0005"/><lb/>
c<lb/>
? s Service<lb/>
Mean<lb/>
us in't what<lb/>
eeds! These are in-<lb/>
nen, and each have<lb/>
em unique in<lb/>
? non-stereotyped)<lb/>
ctablc members of<lb/>
Thu. our university<lb/>
esuch "sexually<lb/>
-er'eseniing it.<lb/>
Dobyns)<lb/>
C L ouise Lilley<lb/>
wnics Education<lb/>
k's My Man <lb/>
?ended by Barbara<lb/>
discredit Mick<lb/>
8 issue of Campus<lb/>
as only damaged<lb/>
 announcing her<lb/>
and sense. The Mick<lb/>
are featured in the<lb/>
. non and they con-<lb/>
is section.<lb/>
lea arc quality. Each<lb/>
tten with a delightful<lb/>
Mick LaSalle is the<lb/>
Mike Hughes. Dobyns<lb/>
ul one thing: LaSalle<lb/>
cms. He's not guilty of<lb/>
terless writing. I find him<lb/>
- tty and perceptive.<lb/>
rently the best reason I<lb/>
- .p a copy of The East<lb/>
A . k makes sense.<lb/>
Donna Lynch<lb/>
Senior. CompSci<lb/>
ick Back<lb/>
e to Michael Hays' letter<lb/>
hman titled "Soccer<lb/>
I sports" (Tuesda, Nov.<lb/>
Id like to defend the integrity<lb/>
leer team<lb/>
r Hays states, soccer is an<lb/>
sport. However, Mr. Hays<lb/>
I the team's play against<lb/>
College was above and<lb/>
the bounds of "good, ag-<lb/>
;av I would like to know<lb/>
Ir. Havs has ever played col-<lb/>
:cer Having played club,<lb/>
1 and collegiate soccer, I can<lb/>
I soccer at the college level is<lb/>
a rougher game.<lb/>
Mtion, Mr. Hays too quickly<lb/>
the enure ECU team on the<lb/>
just a few players' actions. He<lb/>
imes, after seeing just one<lb/>
hat the team's poor record is<lb/>
)e players' poor attitudes. Yet,<lb/>
lothing of the inadequate soc-<lb/>
Ict or the apparent lack of sup-<lb/>
Iteam receives from the univer-<lb/>
reading Mr Hays' letter, I was<lb/>
ry I felt as if the soccer team<lb/>
dealt a very cheap and low<lb/>
Hays should have lodged his<lb/>
us with the teams' coach.<lb/>
the team out-to-dry the way<lb/>
(ras unfair and unnecessary.<lb/>
Jeff Langrehr<lb/>
Socc-r Player<lb/>
I Forum Rules<lb/>
last Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
?? all points of view. Mail<lb/>
w or drop them by the<lb/>
?r's offices on the second<lb/>
f the publications building,<lb/>
yom Joyner Library,<lb/>
trposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
it include the name, major and<lb/>
twn, address, phone number<lb/>
tature of authorfs). Letters are<lb/>
to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
spaced or neatly printed. All<lb/>
re subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
rnity and libel. Students, facul-<lb/>
taff writing letters for this page<lb/>
inded that they are limited to<lb/>
five issues.<lb/>
THE BAST CAROL INJAN<lb/>
style<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10. 1983 Page 5<lb/>
Who Are The ECU Campus Studs?<lb/>
By MICK LASALLE<lb/>
Staff WrMar<lb/>
Between LaSalle and the un-<lb/>
skilled masses, there's a whole<lb/>
category of men: real men, ladies'<lb/>
men, studs ? call them what you<lb/>
like. They're Mick LaSalle's kind<lb/>
of guys.<lb/>
It's always hard to uncover the<lb/>
real studs on any campus. Most<lb/>
guys who talk a good game get<lb/>
their jollies only from talking. If<lb/>
you want the real scoop, you've<lb/>
got to take this question to the<lb/>
ladies.<lb/>
Mick<lb/>
LaSalle<lb/>
&amp;??,<lb/>
?cu<lb/>
'Making Deadline9<lb/>
Mick LaSalle hammers out another smoking analysis of life at ECU. Look for Mick's Campos Column In<lb/>
Thursday's Style section. Tuesday's Entertainment section will continue to feature Mick's highly opi-<lb/>
nionated ? but clever ? movie reviews.<lb/>
The charge that a guy gets from<lb/>
bragging about conquests to his<lb/>
less fortunate cronies is pathetic<lb/>
compared to all the things a man<lb/>
gets from a woman. A real man<lb/>
respects those things and respects<lb/>
his woman ? so long as she stays<lb/>
respectable.<lb/>
Still, good news travels. A<lb/>
broad'U say to me, "Eh, Mick, I<lb/>
once met a guy almost as cool as<lb/>
you And that'll be a lead. I'll<lb/>
walk into a bar ? or, more likely,<lb/>
Overton's, the Student Supply<lb/>
Store, Mendenhall, the library ?<lb/>
and I'll see some guy laying down<lb/>
his rap. Yeah, it's subtle stuff.<lb/>
But the guys who are best at this<lb/>
game are subtle.<lb/>
Anybody's list of campus<lb/>
ladies' men would have to include<lb/>
the following names: Clint Harris,<lb/>
Free Safety for the Pirates, whom<lb/>
sources say is the team's number<lb/>
one man with the women; Johnny<lb/>
Woods, outgoing and funny Kap-<lb/>
pa Sig brother, and former pledge<lb/>
trainer for that fraternity; Paul<lb/>
Naso, born with the Face that<lb/>
launched a thousand votes; and<lb/>
Gordon Ipock, who embodies the<lb/>
Mick LaSalle dictum, that if<lb/>
you've got the guts to fight for<lb/>
your beliefs, women will love you.<lb/>
David Johnston, a senior in<lb/>
computer science, also ranks high<lb/>
on the list of ECU ladies' men. A<lb/>
renaissance man for the 80s,<lb/>
Johnston has written and produc-<lb/>
ed award-winning radio comme;<lb/>
cials, worked as a disc jockey, and<lb/>
now designs and builds furniture<lb/>
for his own company. Several<lb/>
girls have told me Johnston's sub-<lb/>
tle but a killer.<lb/>
There are a few "probable<lb/>
ladies' men" on campus too.<lb/>
Guys I hear mentioned now and<lb/>
again but have been unable to find<lb/>
out more about. These include<lb/>
"Jeff-something-or-other who<lb/>
I'm told is fast becoming the big<lb/>
man on College Hill (though<lb/>
nobody knows the guy's last<lb/>
name); a grad student in Austin<lb/>
named "AT who at least one co-<lb/>
ed described as "devastating<lb/>
Robert<lb/>
Albanese, who combines intellec-<lb/>
tual brilliance with a winning<lb/>
sense of humor; Ron Dcmasi.<lb/>
who has been called "warm,<lb/>
outgoing and masculine and<lb/>
Barney Jernigan ? this guy's not<lb/>
telling you all he knows.<lb/>
Among the younger guys, guys<lb/>
under 20 who are making big<lb/>
waves among the freshman and<lb/>
sophomore classes, the up-and-<lb/>
coming stud, according to people<lb/>
in the know, is Jon Greif. Greif, a<lb/>
sophomore, ran for Homecoming<lb/>
Pirate a couple of weeks back.<lb/>
Who needs a guy as Homecoming<lb/>
Pirate, right? Still, it's obvious<lb/>
when you meet this guy that he's<lb/>
got the looks, the brains and the<lb/>
charm that legends are made of.<lb/>
Women are attracted to a wide<lb/>
variety of men ? and the names<lb/>
I've mentioned here bear this out.<lb/>
Still, there's something the<lb/>
average guy out there can learn.<lb/>
The men on this list, while all dif-<lb/>
ferent, share certain<lb/>
characteristics ? standard things<lb/>
found in the make-up of just<lb/>
about any guy who is successfull<lb/>
with women. They are not afraid<lb/>
to be themselves. They are not<lb/>
afraid of rejection. They like<lb/>
women ? not just sexually. And<lb/>
they're not afraid to walk ? and<lb/>
keep walking ? if a woman tries<lb/>
to give them any woman's game.<lb/>
Any guy out there can work on<lb/>
getting these characteristics.<lb/>
Studs, ladies' men ? whatever the<lb/>
name ? are rarely the best look-<lb/>
ing guys around. Most are made<lb/>
? not born.<lb/>
HollywoodGlamour For Garage<lb/>
HARR1SBURG. NC (UPl)?<lb/>
Some people dream about the<lb/>
glamourus life of Hollywood, but<lb/>
Beverly Baker has lived that life<lb/>
and now wants to work on the<lb/>
crew of a NASCAR Grand Na-<lb/>
tional car.<lb/>
Periodically during the last<lb/>
year, the 36-year-old Baker has<lb/>
cleaned engine parts, swept gar-<lb/>
rage floors, waxed cars, kept lap<lb/>
charts, and hauled gasoline and<lb/>
tires for drivers Dick Brooks and<lb/>
rookie Bobby Hillin Jr.<lb/>
She has also been an interpreter<lb/>
for Canadian driver Laurent<lb/>
Rioux, who recently joined the<lb/>
circuit, but speaks no English.<lb/>
Although Baker was around<lb/>
stock car racing about a year as<lb/>
part of the crew filming the Burt<lb/>
Reynolds movie Stroker Ace, her<lb/>
desire to enter the male dominate<lb/>
profession didn't solidify until<lb/>
last September at Darlington, SC,<lb/>
when she worked in the garage<lb/>
area.<lb/>
Baker likes being behind the<lb/>
scenes ? not on pit road fueling<lb/>
cars or changing tires.<lb/>
"Going over the wall is not the<lb/>
most important thing she said,<lb/>
"the most important thing to me<lb/>
is to be accepted as a hard work-<lb/>
ing crew member. I just want to<lb/>
be able to work on the car<lb/>
But Baker is quick to add that<lb/>
she couldn't work "with someone<lb/>
I don't believe in<lb/>
"There are some people I feel<lb/>
would use me for publicity and I<lb/>
would not work for their team<lb/>
she said. "I would have to believe<lb/>
they took me on because they<lb/>
believed in me and did not hire me<lb/>
just from a publicity standpoint<lb/>
Baker, who says she's not easily<lb/>
intimidated, said the people on<lb/>
the NASCAR circuit have been<lb/>
helpful.<lb/>
"I feel they have treated me the<lb/>
way they would treat any rookie.<lb/>
Junior Johnson told me he had to<lb/>
get me another job because I got<lb/>
dirtier than he did lifting tires<lb/>
And she has no desire to get<lb/>
behind the wheel of a Grand Na-<lb/>
tional racing machine.<lb/>
"I don't think I could be a fast,<lb/>
great race car driver. But I would<lb/>
like to work for one she said.<lb/>
"To be part of that support<lb/>
system is as good as it's probably<lb/>
going to be for me. I can't drive<lb/>
and I want to be a part of racing. I<lb/>
don't want to be a star. I prefer to<lb/>
work for the star<lb/>
She didn't get paid when she<lb/>
worked for Hillin and "I don't<lb/>
think I should she said.<lb/>
"In North Carolina in racing,<lb/>
there are thousands of epople who<lb/>
are better than me and 1 don't<lb/>
want to take jobs from them.<lb/>
When I know enough to compete<lb/>
with them, then 1 should be paid.<lb/>
"I've met a lot of people who<lb/>
have worked for years in racing<lb/>
without a salary until they got to<lb/>
the point where they felt they were<lb/>
worth being paid she added.<lb/>
"For most people on the racing<lb/>
circuit, it's a real passion. It's not<lb/>
a job but a passion and they<lb/>
would give up everything to do<lb/>
it<lb/>
Baker's love for cars was<lb/>
cultivated by her father when the<lb/>
family lived in Brazil, the Philip-<lb/>
pines, and Switzerland.<lb/>
"Dad encouraged me to drive<lb/>
fast she said.<lb/>
While living in Europe, she at-<lb/>
tended auto races and drove in<lb/>
rallies.<lb/>
"1 used to go to the Formula<lb/>
races a lot said the 5-foot-6<lb/>
Baker, who sports waist-length<lb/>
blonde hair. "I got to know a lot<lb/>
of drivers because of a friend who<lb/>
was a mechanic<lb/>
But is was several years before<lb/>
she decided to cast her lot with the<lb/>
good ol boys.<lb/>
After marriages to actor Peter<lb/>
Strauss adn Universal Pictures<lb/>
President Thorn Mount, working<lb/>
on the sets of Sharkys Machine<lb/>
and Young Doctors In Love and<lb/>
being production manager for<lb/>
commercials and industrial films<lb/>
Baker turned her back on<lb/>
Hollywood.<lb/>
"Everything is based on who<lb/>
you arc married to or what you<lb/>
do she said. "I was serously<lb/>
thinking about it (working on a<lb/>
Grand National Team) when we<lb/>
were doing Stroker Ace. I just had<lb/>
to get my personal life together<lb/>
and do it<lb/>
Baker said she chose Grand Na-<lb/>
tional racing because it's safe and<lb/>
she likes the sport's basic idea.<lb/>
"Safety is so important<lb/>
Baker said. "(In the Formula<lb/>
cars) the ground effects are so<lb/>
dangerous. It's for only the stupid<lb/>
or the young who want to go out<lb/>
and die. Car racing is for the rich.<lb/>
"But in Grand Nationl racing,<lb/>
the basic idea is you take a stock<lb/>
car and race it. I love it because<lb/>
they look more like street cars<lb/>
she continued. "They're not<lb/>
winged monsters<lb/>
i<lb/>
Ministry<lb/>
Changes On The Bible Belt<lb/>
(UPl) ? "More and more<lb/>
women are getting into the<lb/>
ministry said Dr. Carl Evans,<lb/>
religious studies professor at the<lb/>
University of South Carolina.<lb/>
"The seminary male-female ratio<lb/>
is approaching 50-50 in many<lb/>
areas<lb/>
Martin said there were no<lb/>
female ministers among Southern<lb/>
Baptists 10 years ago, but now<lb/>
there are about 250.<lb/>
In the western North Carolina<lb/>
conference of United Methodists,<lb/>
there are about 15 ordained<lb/>
women and another 25 working<lb/>
toward ordination. In Georgia,<lb/>
about 35 women have pastorates.<lb/>
"I believe the pastoral door is<lb/>
opening wide to women in all<lb/>
denominations and I think that<lb/>
wind is blowing over us said the<lb/>
Rev. E.B. Turner, president of the<lb/>
General Baptist State Convention<lb/>
of North Carolina.<lb/>
Southern churches have also<lb/>
taken on a new role ? filling<lb/>
voids in social programs left by<lb/>
federal budget cuts.<lb/>
Most large churches have child<lb/>
care centers and nearly every ma-<lb/>
jor denomination supports<lb/>
welfare centers, soup kitchens and<lb/>
intensified ministries to senior<lb/>
citizens.<lb/>
In Virginia, the United<lb/>
Methodists have started a pro-<lb/>
gram to feed the poor with surplus<lb/>
potatoes from the Eastern Shore.<lb/>
"We're distributing tons and<lb/>
tons of potatoes and nearly every<lb/>
city has and inner-city food pro-<lb/>
gram said Blackburn.<lb/>
Religious scholars say the social<lb/>
programs are helping individual<lb/>
churches return to their roots ?<lb/>
working with their neighbors.<lb/>
Cemetary United Methodist<lb/>
Church in Richmond is an exam-<lb/>
ple. It shares a downtown block<lb/>
with a bookstore, health food<lb/>
store and a bank. The church<lb/>
chose not to join the white flight<lb/>
to surburbia and opted to stay<lb/>
downtown and minister to the<lb/>
60,000 business commuters and<lb/>
the "street people" who sleep in<lb/>
its doorways by night.<lb/>
"When someone comes in on a<lb/>
given day, we sit down and talk<lb/>
with them and direct them to a<lb/>
proper agency, and serve them<lb/>
lunch said the Rev. Dave Jarvis.<lb/>
"As downtown Richmond chang-<lb/>
ed, we became more aware of peo-<lb/>
ple immediately around it. We're<lb/>
trying to minister to that con-<lb/>
tingency.<lb/>
While Cenetary sufered finan-<lb/>
cial and membership losses ? on-<lb/>
ly 200 attend Sunday school and<lb/>
250 attend wordhip services ?<lb/>
Jarvis said the church "provides a<lb/>
place for people to come and have<lb/>
lunch. We've developed during<lb/>
the season a certain group of peo-<lb/>
ple who enjoy coming here. That,<lb/>
in itself, is a ministry<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse Schedules<lb/>
Acting Auditions For New Play<lb/>
Acting and singing auditions<lb/>
for the East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
production of Home rc<lb/>
scheduled for Thursday and Fri-<lb/>
day, Nov. 17 and 18, in the<lb/>
Measick Theatre Arts Center on<lb/>
the campus of East Carolina<lb/>
University. The auditions will<lb/>
begin at 7:30 p.m. etch evening in<lb/>
room 206.<lb/>
Home was first produced to<lb/>
great acclaim by the Negro<lb/>
Ensemble Company, and later<lb/>
transferred to Broadway. It was<lb/>
written by North Carolina<lb/>
Playwright Samm-Art Williams<lb/>
and deals joyfully with coming of<lb/>
age of a young black man from<lb/>
rural South Carolina.<lb/>
There are roles for one black<lb/>
man and two black women. All<lb/>
actors must be capable of playing<lb/>
ages from the teens to mid-forties.<lb/>
The women should be prepared to<lb/>
sing a verse from "Great Gett'in<lb/>
Up Morning<lb/>
Scripts of the play are available<lb/>
to everyone and are on reserve in<lb/>
Joyner Library on the ECU Cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
Home is scheduled for pro-<lb/>
duction on January 25-28, at 8:15<lb/>
p.m. nightly in the Studio Theatre<lb/>
of the Messick Theatre Arts<lb/>
Center. ECU students, faculty,<lb/>
staff, and local residents are all in-<lb/>
vited to audition.<lb/>
For further information call<lb/>
737-6390 in Greenville.<lb/>
 i<lb/>
11<lb/>
 <lb/>
 i<lb/>
11<lb/>
i <lb/>
! i<lb/>
 i<lb/>
1.<lb/>
11<lb/>
1 <lb/>
Ufa I <lb/>
S<lb/>
??<lb/>
No, Not Ballet<lb/>
Scott Takott, Junior, practices Mi phenomenal fr ?, .<lb/>
ssssstttisssitrtttrtrrrtrrrrrrrrrrrr-? ?????????????????<lb/>
mmmim?l<lb/>
? mm$m<lb/>
n?mmi'imi,iim wm<lb/>
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hi ? m i?n<lb/>
mmmmmit<lb/>
??"i?'? I wmp?iwinnf 0??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10, 1983<lb/>
Best Picture Of The Year 'Gandhi9<lb/>
Support businesses that support<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
The Best Picture of the Year<lb/>
New York Film Critics<lb/>
National Board of Review<lb/>
Best Actor of the Year<lb/>
? Ben Kingsley<lb/>
New York Film Critics<lb/>
National Board of Review<lb/>
Ixs Angeles Film Critics Assoc.<lb/>
It took one British actor Ben<lb/>
remarkable man to Kingsley as Gandhi<lb/>
defeat the British Em- captures the very<lb/>
pire and free a nation essence of the Mahat-<lb/>
of 350 million ma in what is possibly<lb/>
peopleGandhi! His the greaest<lb/>
goal was freedom for biographicl perfor-<lb/>
India; his strategy was mance in screen<lb/>
peace; his weapon was<lb/>
his humanity.<lb/>
Director Richard<lb/>
Attenborough worked<lb/>
for nearly 20 years to<lb/>
bring to the screen<lb/>
this extraordinary<lb/>
motion picture epic<lb/>
about the Indian<lb/>
leader who changed<lb/>
the world forever.<lb/>
history.<lb/>
"Once in a long<lb/>
while, a motion pic-<lb/>
ture so eloquently ex-<lb/>
pressive and<lb/>
technically exquisite<lb/>
comes along that one<lb/>
is tempted to hail it as<lb/>
being near perfect.<lb/>
Such a film is GAN-<lb/>
DHI.<lb/>
BUYING -<lb/>
LOANS<lb/>
TVs. Air Conditional,<lb/>
Stereoj. guns, gold A nlvtr,<lb/>
diamonds, cameras and<lb/>
equipment, typewriters,<lb/>
kerosene heaters,<lb/>
refrigerators (dorm siie on-<lb/>
ly), video games A car-<lb/>
tridges, power tools,<lb/>
musical instruments,<lb/>
microwave ovens, video<lb/>
recorders, bicycles, and<lb/>
anything else of value.<lb/>
Southern Pawn Shop,<lb/>
located 405 Evans Street,<lb/>
downtown. 7S2-2444.<lb/>
GANDHI<lb/>
His triumph changed the world forever.<lb/>
PG?<lb/>
?i?U COLUMN K??i 'MXiS'X'IS iWC<lb/>
'Gandhi1 shows tonight, Friday and Saturday night at 5<lb/>
and 8:30 p.m. in Mendenhall's Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Warwick Productions Present: "Maurice Williams<lb/>
&amp; The Zodiacs' also Carson Kooncee &amp; The<lb/>
Country Caravan wConnie Owens<lb/>
Fri. Nov 18th at D.H. Conley High School Gym<lb/>
Located 6 miles out of Greenville on 43 towards Vanceboro,<lb/>
Take a right at Caution Light.<lb/>
2 Shows 7:00 rim &amp; 9:30 pm<lb/>
Show &amp; Dance (Sock - Hod)<lb/>
. Bob's T.VAydenA Greenville<lb/>
Tickets Available at Fri?ndy Hair feigners . Greenvillt.<lb/>
I Bowen's Open Air Market - Avden 1<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
? 10 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756 3023 ?24 HRS.<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
L Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
SSSs<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
"Afore Than A Laundromat<lb/>
??<lb/>
Video Games<lb/>
Color Cable T.V<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
Happy Hour Every Day<lb/>
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 Enjoy Winterfest Carnival<lb/>
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ART CONTEST<lb/>
ENTRY DATE NOV. 14 (MONDAY!)<lb/>
10AM - 5PM Conference Room, Jenkins Art Building<lb/>
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Photography<lb/>
Design (metals,<lb/>
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Three Works Per Artist.<lb/>
 Entry Fee $1.00 per work.<lb/>
? Non-placing Entries Must Be Picked<lb/>
? Up By 5PM Monday, Nov. 21st<lb/>
i BEST-IN-SHOW AWARDED $125<lb/>
? 1st place in each category awarded $20<lb/>
 Art Show &amp; Reception at Art &amp;<lb/>
 Camera Galley Saturday,<lb/>
 Nov 19 7-9pm Winners announced <lb/>
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Sunday, Nov. 13 Ladies $1.00 Men $3.00<lb/>
ENJOY OUR HAPPY HOUR 8:30-10:30<lb/>
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While Ordering Your<lb/>
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DATE: Nov. 17,18 TIME: 9:00-4:00p.m<lb/>
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Check Our Low Prices on ALL Official styles!<lb/>
Frus<lb/>
By CINDY PLEAsA V<lb/>
East Carolina head coi<lb/>
Emory still hasn't recuf<lb/>
from the Pirates' 12-7 last-<lb/>
loss against sixth-ranked<lb/>
this weekend.<lb/>
"As head football cc<lb/>
should have found some<lb/>
bring that victorv nor<lb/>
North Carolina Emor <lb/>
"We're 13 points awa<lb/>
ing 9-0 and compel .<lb/>
tional championship That<lb/>
it's so damn frustrating '<lb/>
The Pirates were leadil<lb/>
against the Hurricanes laU<lb/>
fourth quarter, but<lb/>
quarterback Bernie Kosar<lb/>
the endzone with 1:04<lb/>
clinch the tightly-piayed g<lb/>
Emory said the offense<lb/>
too conservatively in the<lb/>
half. "We knew v-e needed<lb/>
than seven points to be <lb/>
he said, "but if you I ad<lb/>
that we would hold Miami<lb/>
points, I would have<lb/>
were gonna win.<lb/>
"We've been to-<lb/>
in all the Florida game- N<lb/>
halftime against Flo: i<lb/>
(47-46) and Florida 24<lb/>
just got too careful.<lb/>
"If I had to do ti<lb/>
would've thrown more arc<lb/>
endzone and in our I<lb/>
The Pirates did hat<lb/>
tunities, even in the 1<lb/>
seconds of the ?.<lb/>
quarterback Kevin Ing i<lb/>
this week's ECAC D j<lb/>
Offensive Player Of the<lb/>
threw a victory pass to<lb/>
Adams, but teammate N<lb/>
Vann collided w<lb/>
knocking the bail out<lb/>
hands.<lb/>
Ingram went 12-tor-22<lb/>
yards, and Emory said th<lb/>
quarterback played good<lb/>
Andt<lb/>
By RAND MEW<lb/>
mmmi ??om Hue<lb/>
With the loss of Mi-<lb/>
Mar? Denkler. ECU<lb/>
basketball coach Cathy i<lb/>
is unsure what to expect<lb/>
1983-84 basketball U<lb/>
"We could have a got<lb/>
but we would have to do j<lb/>
very inexperienced team<lb/>
druzzi said. "We lost<lb/>
players to graduation, ar<lb/>
we're really looking j<lb/>
is leadership<lb/>
The Pirates return<lb/>
players from last<lb/>
lone senior being Daere<lb/>
"Darlene has seen limited<lb/>
in her career fcndnu<lb/>
"but the one advantage<lb/>
over the other girls -<lb/>
knows our style of p<lb/>
According to Andruzzi.<lb/>
the leadership will co<lb/>
sophomores Sylvia<lb/>
Delphine Mab: an<lb/>
Squirewell.<lb/>
Bragg is the or i<lb/>
player to see action<lb/>
last year. She averageo 9<lb/>
per game and is consk<lb/>
have the best outside shoi<lb/>
Socc<lb/>
Bf BANDY MEW<lb/>
The ECU soccer tea<lb/>
their final game of th<lb/>
yesterday, dropping a 4 I<lb/>
to powerful N.C. State<lb/>
Pirate head coach<lb/>
Church called the Woifl<lb/>
toughest team ECU haj<lb/>
face all year, and was pro<lb/>
team's play. "Our kids<lb/>
really hard, and never<lb/>
whole game. Three goals j<lb/>
lose by, but you have to<lb/>
who we were up against<lb/>
The N.C. State soccer<lb/>
offers 11 full scholarship<lb/>
three Nigerian nationi<lb/>
members on its squad.<lb/>
State opened the sconj<lb/>
Nigerian Sam Oktodu pif<lb/>
by Pirate goalie Georj<lb/>
dgoney. Playing the entij<lb/>
Pordgoney had 13 sav<lb/>
credit on the day.<lb/>
ECU came right ba;j<lb/>
Brian Colgan fed a per ft<lb/>
Mark Hardy, leaving<lb/>
teams tied at halftime.<lb/>
The Wolfpack cootn<lb/>
second half, as David<lb/>
tc4b. Trey Phuket and<lb/>
doted out the game's sd<lb/>
ECU dropped to 3-lj<lb/>
year, but Church doesnl<lb/>
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rHEEASTCAROI IN1AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10. 1983<lb/>
Page?<lb/>
Frustrated Bucs Ready For Rivalry<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
East Carolina head coach Ed<lb/>
Fmory still hasn't recuperated<lb/>
from the Pirates' 12-7 last-minute<lb/>
loss against sixth-ranked Miami<lb/>
this weekend.<lb/>
"As head football coach, I<lb/>
should have found some way to<lb/>
bring that victory home to Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina Emory said.<lb/>
"We're 13 points away from be-<lb/>
ing 9-0 and competing for a na-<lb/>
tional championship. That's why<lb/>
it's so damn frustrating<lb/>
The Pirates were leading 7-6<lb/>
against the Hurricanes late in the<lb/>
fourth quarter, but Miami<lb/>
quarterback Bernie Kosar ran into<lb/>
the endzone with 1:04 left to<lb/>
clinch the tightly-played game.<lb/>
Emory said the offense played<lb/>
too conservatively in the second<lb/>
half. "We knew we needed more<lb/>
than seven points to beat Miami<lb/>
he said, "but if you had told me<lb/>
that we would hold Miami to 12<lb/>
points, I would have said that we<lb/>
were gonna win.<lb/>
"We've been too conservative<lb/>
in all the Florida games. We led at<lb/>
halftime against Florida State<lb/>
(446) and Florida (24-17) and<lb/>
just got too careful.<lb/>
"If I had to do it again, I<lb/>
would've thrown more around the<lb/>
endzone and in our territory<lb/>
The Pirates did have oppor-<lb/>
tunities, even in the last four<lb/>
seconds of the game. ECU<lb/>
quarterback Kevin Ingram, who is<lb/>
this week's ECAC Division I-A<lb/>
Offensive Player Of the Week,<lb/>
threw a victory pass to Stephon<lb/>
Adams, but teammate Norwood<lb/>
Vann collided with Adams,<lb/>
knocking the baT out of his<lb/>
hands.<lb/>
to win. "He didn't throw any in-<lb/>
terceptions, and he did a good<lb/>
job he said. "We just didn't get<lb/>
the ball in the endzone like we<lb/>
should have<lb/>
There were two more missed<lb/>
opportunities in the First half.<lb/>
ECU tailback Jimmy Walden<lb/>
fumbled on Miami's 14-yard line<lb/>
in the first quarter. Sophomore<lb/>
Jeff Heath later missed a 49-yard<lb/>
field goal attempts in the second<lb/>
quarter and another 21-yard kick<lb/>
with less than Five minutes re-<lb/>
maining in the game.<lb/>
"I just missed the short one<lb/>
Heath said. "Those cheerleaders<lb/>
in the endzone fired off a cannon<lb/>
as I was approaching the ball, and<lb/>
it really threw me. 1 barely hit the<lb/>
ball at all<lb/>
Emory said he thought Miami<lb/>
should have been penalized for<lb/>
letting off the cannon. "Heath<lb/>
has kicked those with his eyes shut<lb/>
time and time again he said.<lb/>
"Do you think that (cannon<lb/>
noise) wouldn't have bothered<lb/>
any kicker in the country?"<lb/>
Although the Miami loss dash-<lb/>
ed the Pirates' hopes of an im-<lb/>
mediate national ranking and an<lb/>
automatic bowl bid, Coach<lb/>
Emory believes the Pirates deserve<lb/>
to still be considered as a bowl<lb/>
prospect. "I think we're the best<lb/>
6-3 team in the country he said.<lb/>
"If they consider a team in this<lb/>
state, it's got to be us.<lb/>
"We're the only Division I<lb/>
team to play seven teams on the<lb/>
road, and we've played three of<lb/>
the top 10 teams in the country<lb/>
Emory said he would like to see<lb/>
the Pirates meet one neighboring<lb/>
Ingram went 12-for 22 for 151 ECU linebacker Mike Grmnt (49) prowls after Miami halfback Keith Griffin daring Saturday's game. Head<lb/>
yards, and Emory said the senior Football Coach Ed Emory said the Bucs will have to play great defense if they're going to beat William St<lb/>
quarterback played good enough Man this weekend.<lb/>
Andruzzi Unsure Of Squad<lb/>
team in a bowl game. "We'd like<lb/>
to play Carolina in the Peach<lb/>
Bowl he said. "We challenge<lb/>
them today. We'll line up with<lb/>
anybody. We just want the<lb/>
chance<lb/>
Emory said he thinks his<lb/>
players deserve the opportunity to<lb/>
play in a bowl. "We've had great<lb/>
practices this week he said.<lb/>
"These kids are just amazing. I<lb/>
can't say enough about them.<lb/>
They've competed in every<lb/>
quarter they've played.<lb/>
"They've played with adversity<lb/>
that would break other teams<lb/>
Playing against top-ranked<lb/>
teams has also gotten the Pirates<lb/>
something else ? national<lb/>
recognition. This week, the<lb/>
Pirates were ranked 25th in U.S.<lb/>
Today. "We're the only team I<lb/>
know that has moved up after los-<lb/>
ing Emory said.<lb/>
The New York Daily Sews<lb/>
ranked ECU 19th in the nation a<lb/>
few weeks ago, and the Pirates<lb/>
were also featured in Sports Il-<lb/>
lustrated last month.<lb/>
But although the Pirates have<lb/>
been enjoying a little national<lb/>
limelight, one reporter pointed<lb/>
out to Coach Emory that the Bucs<lb/>
still lacked prestige.<lb/>
"No, we don't have prestige<lb/>
right now Emory said. "That's<lb/>
why we're so frustrated, but just<lb/>
give us a shot. The Pirates will<lb/>
play with anybody, come rain,<lb/>
sleet or snow<lb/>
The Pirates want to gain some<lb/>
of that prestige by playing in a<lb/>
bowl, but the Bucs will have to<lb/>
soundly defeat William &amp; Mary<lb/>
this Saturday, followed by a<lb/>
season Finale win against strong<lb/>
Southern Mississippi.<lb/>
"If we don't win the next two<lb/>
games, we don't deserve to go to a<lb/>
bowl Emory said. "We can't<lb/>
worry about a bowl, though. If<lb/>
something comes out of what<lb/>
we've done, then Fine, but there<lb/>
are a lot of politics in bowl selec-<lb/>
tions. People buy their way. They<lb/>
buy their tickets<lb/>
Emory said ECU fans shoud<lb/>
count on seeing another tradi-<lb/>
tional battle between William &amp;<lb/>
Mary and the Pirates this Satur-<lb/>
day. "This will probably be the<lb/>
best football game in the stadium<lb/>
in four years he said. "We've<lb/>
got to score more than seven<lb/>
points to beat them. They're<lb/>
(W&amp;M) averaging 20 points a<lb/>
game<lb/>
The Indians, now 5-4, will be<lb/>
using their strong passing attack<lb/>
against the Pirates. "They are far<lb/>
one of the most potent offenses<lb/>
we have played against to date<lb/>
he said. "We're gonna have to<lb/>
play great defense<lb/>
ECU leads the two teams'<lb/>
series, 10-4-1.The Pirates' last<lb/>
home loss came in 1981. That loss<lb/>
cost the Emory a winning season.<lb/>
"They've been a thorn in my<lb/>
side Emory said. "We want this<lb/>
game bad. We have to get this<lb/>
Miami game out of our system<lb/>
Emory said the Pirates can't<lb/>
look back to what might have<lb/>
been. "I promise you, 1 would<lb/>
change some things if I could he<lb/>
said. "I'd change some travel<lb/>
plans, some play selections, some<lb/>
personnel, but you can't do that.<lb/>
"You've got to go forward<lb/>
That's easier said than done.<lb/>
Even when discussing this week's<lb/>
game against William &amp; Mary<lb/>
Emory still had those Florida trips<lb/>
in the back of his mind.<lb/>
"William &amp; Mary will be a<lb/>
tough game he said. We're gon-<lb/>
na have to throw the ball more.<lb/>
"We're not gonna sit on it like<lb/>
we have in some of those close<lb/>
games<lb/>
B RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Mutual Hporto MHor<lb/>
With the loss of All-American<lb/>
Mary Denkler, ECU women's<lb/>
basketball coach Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
is unsure what to expect from her<lb/>
1983-84 basketball team.<lb/>
"Wre could have a good year,<lb/>
but we would have to do so with a<lb/>
very inexperienced team An-<lb/>
druzzi said. "We lost three<lb/>
players to graduation, and what<lb/>
we're really looking for right now<lb/>
is leadership<lb/>
The Pirates return only four<lb/>
players from last year with the<lb/>
lone senior being Darlene Hedges.<lb/>
"Darlene has seen limited action<lb/>
in her career Andruzzi said,<lb/>
"but the one advantage she has<lb/>
over the other girls is that she<lb/>
knows our style of play<lb/>
According to Andruzzi, most of<lb/>
the leadership will come from<lb/>
sophomores Sylvia Bragg,<lb/>
Delphine Mabry and Lisa<lb/>
Squirewell.<lb/>
Bragg is the only returning<lb/>
player to see action in all 26 games<lb/>
last year. She averaged 9.8 points<lb/>
per game and is considered to<lb/>
have the best outside shot on the<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Mabry returns after sitting out<lb/>
the last half of the season due to<lb/>
hand surgery. She started in 10 of<lb/>
14 games and is the second leading<lb/>
scorer with 7.3 points per game.<lb/>
Andruzzi said she is looking for<lb/>
Mabry to start at point guard this<lb/>
season, a position which will com-<lb/>
pliment her tremendous speed and<lb/>
quickness.<lb/>
Lisa Squirewell is the third<lb/>
returning sophomore, but she was<lb/>
also injured last season during a<lb/>
six-game strech. She averaged 5.6<lb/>
points and 4.3 rebounds per<lb/>
game, and according to Andruzzi<lb/>
can play inside or outside.<lb/>
"The three sophomores along<lb/>
with Darlene must give us the<lb/>
East Carolina experience we<lb/>
need Andruzzi said. "They<lb/>
know our system, what we expect<lb/>
on the court and they have to be<lb/>
our leaders<lb/>
Transfer student Annette<lb/>
Phillips from Louisburg Juinor<lb/>
College is the top newcomer for<lb/>
the Pirates. Her team went to the<lb/>
Nationals for two consecutive<lb/>
years, and Andruzzi feels it's that<lb/>
kind of experience that will really<lb/>
help the Pirates. "She has ex-<lb/>
cellent defensive skills and should<lb/>
see action immediately Andruz-<lb/>
zi added.<lb/>
Another top recruit is 6-0 Anita<lb/>
Anderson from Chowan College.<lb/>
"Her height should help us a lot<lb/>
Andruzzi said. "Once she gets to<lb/>
know our style of play she should<lb/>
do very well<lb/>
Andruzzi said her team has a lot<lb/>
of potential, but it's going to take<lb/>
time for the team to blend<lb/>
together. "Six of our 10 players<lb/>
are totally unfamilar with the way<lb/>
we want them to play basketball,<lb/>
and that's going to take some<lb/>
time<lb/>
Andruzzi said she plans on<lb/>
playing a fast-tempo game, with<lb/>
constant breaking and agressive<lb/>
play on defense. "Our style of<lb/>
play is so much different from<lb/>
what the new girls were taught on<lb/>
the teams they use to play for<lb/>
Andruzzi said. "It's a frustrating<lb/>
situation because I know how<lb/>
hard they're trying. It's just that<lb/>
they weren't taught the correct<lb/>
habits<lb/>
Andruzzi said that she's having<lb/>
to take some players and com-<lb/>
pletely start from scratch. "A few<lb/>
of the girls don't have any concept<lb/>
of the basic offensive fundamen-<lb/>
tals and were only taught simple<lb/>
zones on defense<lb/>
"It's like taking all the new<lb/>
players and putting them in the<lb/>
First grade again Andruzzi add-<lb/>
ed. "Every practice is a<lb/>
classroom, and they're learning<lb/>
each and every day how we want<lb/>
them to play the game<lb/>
Andruzzi said the success of the<lb/>
team will rest largely on how fast<lb/>
each individual is able to absorb<lb/>
what she's trying to teach them.<lb/>
"Once our players reach their in-<lb/>
dividual potential and get ac-<lb/>
custommed to our style of play,<lb/>
we should have a very exciting<lb/>
team<lb/>
The Pirates will play 15 home<lb/>
games this year, six more than last<lb/>
year. Old Dominion, Notre<lb/>
Dame, North Carolina State and<lb/>
Cheyney State are a few of the na-<lb/>
tion's elite the Pirates will face,<lb/>
but Andruzzi is expecting every<lb/>
game to be a challenge.<lb/>
The Pirates will open their<lb/>
season against George University<lb/>
University, Nov. 20 in Minges<lb/>
Soccer Team Bows To Pack<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
AatotaM Som E4M?r<lb/>
The ECU soccer team played<lb/>
their Final game of the season<lb/>
yesterday, dropping a 4-1 decision<lb/>
to powerful N.C. State.<lb/>
Pirate head coach Robbie<lb/>
Church called the Wolfpack the<lb/>
toughest team ECU has had to<lb/>
face all year, and was proud of his<lb/>
team's play. "Our kids played<lb/>
really hard, and never let up the<lb/>
whole game. Three goals is a lot to<lb/>
lose by, but you have to consider<lb/>
who we were up against<lb/>
The N.C. State soccer program<lb/>
offers 11 full scholarships and has<lb/>
three Nigerian national team<lb/>
members on its squad.<lb/>
State opened the scoring when<lb/>
Nigerian Sam Oktodu put a shot<lb/>
by Pirate goalie George Por-<lb/>
dgoney. Playing the entire game,<lb/>
Pordgoney had 13 saves to his<lb/>
credit on the day.<lb/>
ECU came right back when<lb/>
Brian Colgan fed a perfect pass to<lb/>
Mark Hardy, leaving the two<lb/>
teams tied at halftime.<lb/>
The Wolfpack controlled the<lb/>
second half, as David Intrabar-<lb/>
tolo, Trey Plunket and Chris Ogu<lb/>
closed out the game's scoring.<lb/>
ECU dropped to 3-16 on the<lb/>
year, but Church doesn't look at<lb/>
the season as a failure. "More<lb/>
then half the team is composed of<lb/>
freshmen, and I think this year<lb/>
will help us down the road<lb/>
Church also said the year was<lb/>
Filled with a lot of adversity, citing<lb/>
several disciplinary problems as<lb/>
well as a high number of injuries<lb/>
the team suffered.<lb/>
Foremost among the injuries<lb/>
was David Skeffington who was<lb/>
lost for the year with a broken col-<lb/>
larbone, and Doug Patmore and<lb/>
Matt Evans who both sat out a<lb/>
large portion of the season.<lb/>
Church said there were a lot of<lb/>
people who played well for the<lb/>
Pirates during the course of the<lb/>
year, but goalies George<lb/>
Podgorney and Grant Pearson<lb/>
both had exceptional seasons.<lb/>
Both are freshmen, and Church<lb/>
added the competition between<lb/>
the two made each into a better<lb/>
player.<lb/>
The Pirates will take two weeks<lb/>
off before resuming practice for<lb/>
their indoor season which begins<lb/>
in January.<lb/>
?A?Y PftTTIBOM FCU<lb/>
Women's Basketball Coach Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
Lady Volleyballers End<lb/>
Year With Bitter Loss<lb/>
LOW CLaMMONS-aCU<lb/>
ECU'S Alan Smith (5) takes control against one of the team's earlier<lb/>
opponents this year. i<lb/>
Bucs Missing<lb/>
Did you notice the little Pirate<lb/>
mascots alongside the road at<lb/>
ECU's last home game?<lb/>
Well, a few of the little hit<lb/>
chhikers got unwanted lifts.<lb/>
Whoever gave the Mascots a<lb/>
ride is being asked to return the<lb/>
miniatrue Pirates back to the<lb/>
stadium. No questions asked<lb/>
Seven were stolen from the<lb/>
stadium two weeks ago.<lb/>
Call 757-6491 if you'd like to<lb/>
clear up the missing Pirates'<lb/>
whereabouts.<lb/>
By JIMMY DON ATELLI<lb/>
The ECU women's volleyball<lb/>
team ended its 1983 home season<lb/>
by losing to UNC-Chapel Hill,<lb/>
10-15, 10-15 and 13-15.<lb/>
"I thought out transition was<lb/>
improved First-year coach Im-<lb/>
ogene Turner said. "We worked<lb/>
hard in practice on our transition<lb/>
and our serving.<lb/>
"I think our serving hurt us; if<lb/>
we could have gotten more serves<lb/>
in, it would have helped us<lb/>
In the first game, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates trailed early, 5-12, and<lb/>
then ran off five straight points,<lb/>
making the score 10-12. The Tar<lb/>
Heels came back with three<lb/>
unanswered points, ending the<lb/>
first game 15-10.<lb/>
ECU opened an early 4-0 lead<lb/>
in the second game behind the ser-<lb/>
ving of Kim Halsaver. With the<lb/>
score, 5-3, UNC ran off six points<lb/>
due mainly to the serving of Don-<lb/>
na Meier. The Lady Pirates closed<lb/>
the gap, 10-13, but the Tar Heels<lb/>
counterattacked to take the game,<lb/>
15-10.<lb/>
In the third and final game,<lb/>
ECU opened up a 12-4 lead, but<lb/>
Carolina battled back, taking the<lb/>
game and match, 15-13.<lb/>
As far as individual perfor-<lb/>
mances, Turner praised the play<lb/>
of senior Lita Lamas. "Lita<lb/>
played another strong game<lb/>
around the net for us Turner<lb/>
said.<lb/>
With the loss, the team's record<lb/>
dropped to 3-19. Turner, who did<lb/>
not have a chance to recruit any<lb/>
players before taking over this<lb/>
season, said her biggest problem<lb/>
has been dealing with the team's<lb/>
lack of size. "We have to get out<lb/>
and recruit taller players she<lb/>
said. "Every team we play is big-<lb/>
ger than we are<lb/>
The team will end the season at<lb/>
the Wake Forest Quadrangular<lb/>
tournament on Friday.<lb/>
f<lb/>
 -??<lb/>
ajg<lb/>
?prv?<lb/>
t - m<lb/>
k<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 10, 1983<lb/>
?<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOST: Canon AF35mm Camera.<lb/>
Vicinity Sigma Tau Oamma<lb/>
Fratarnlty Party Oct 31<lb/>
Reward oHered Call 7jj i?7t<lb/>
LOST Bs wltti ?1 ?nd<lb/>
whit ttonei tJOO reward Call<lb/>
7Si -IIP<lb/>
FOUND Pr engagement or<lb/>
engagement ring it you have<lb/>
lost and can describe It, call<lb/>
HMt<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
JOBS OVERSEAS MF (In<lb/>
eluding Australia. South Pacific,<lb/>
Europe. Africa Alaska. Cruise<lb/>
Ship, Airlines) Tempoiery and<lb/>
lull time no ooo to MO,000 Call<lb/>
nowl JO 73 5103 Ext US<lb/>
INTERESTED IN JOBS<lb/>
Overseas? There's a company in<lb/>
Contrail WA that publishes an<lb/>
international employment direc<lb/>
tory Cost SP Their directory<lb/>
lists hundreds ol US Companies<lb/>
Organizations with world wide<lb/>
operations For further mfor<lb/>
maitofl call 10 73 V03<lb/>
COLLEGE REP WANTED to<lb/>
distribute Student Rate<lb/>
subscription card at ttili cam-<lb/>
pus. Oood Income, no selling in-<lb/>
volved. For Information and ap-<lb/>
plication writ to Allan S.<lb/>
Lowrance, Oirector ?S1 Olen<lb/>
wood Drive Mooresvllle NC<lb/>
II1U.<lb/>
ARE YOU READY FOR A<lb/>
CHANOE of pace Par 133 M<lb/>
and ll utilities and phone you<lb/>
can move into a 1 bdrm apt. at<lb/>
Langston Parti available In Dae.<lb/>
Female protorod Call 7H-17S.<lb/>
WANTED: Student assistants to<lb/>
evaluate leseerch protect No<lb/>
special training Is nsadad. but<lb/>
science maors, musicians, and<lb/>
visually impaired students are<lb/>
encouraged to apply. Pay Is<lb/>
moo par hour. Call David Lun<lb/>
nay at 7S7-713 or Robery C.<lb/>
Morrison at 757711, or leave<lb/>
your name and telephone<lb/>
number in the Chen is try Depart<lb/>
ment office.<lb/>
NEEDED: On female Rmmat<lb/>
for Jan. Georgetown Apts. S7S.M<lb/>
rent ? one fourth utll Call<lb/>
7S4-SA34.<lb/>
WANTED: Female to share on<lb/>
bedroom apt 1 blocks form<lb/>
campus. Si 10 per month ? one<lb/>
half utll Avail Dec l 7S7 1371 or<lb/>
7St U4 after 3 00<lb/>
help pay nw pas Call Kim at<lb/>
7si rtn PLKASK<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
POX RADAR DETECTOR, only<lb/>
t7S? CPU 7S7-141. <lb/>
TBAJM ?OLT surfboard for safe.<lb/>
Call 7Sa-?3a MUST SELL<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: To Richmond<lb/>
V A weekend of Nov PTh Will<lb/>
LOWEST TYFMNO RATES an<lb/>
campus inciude experienced<lb/>
professional work. Pre-<lb/>
ofroadlng, spelling and gram<lb/>
mattcal corrections 333 74l<lb/>
after S:3.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING.<lb/>
MMWj<lb/>
ACADEMIC AND PROFES-<lb/>
SIONAL typing Call Julia<lb/>
?loadworth at 7Se-T?7.<lb/>
TYPING. TERM, TNSSIS,<lb/>
75U.<lb/>
TYPING: Rush Jab Evenings<lb/>
Scientific symbol element Pro-<lb/>
fessional Can 7S?-?p.<lb/>
QUALITY TypiNO IBM<lb/>
typewriter. IS years of ex<lb/>
parlance. Pull time typing for<lb/>
faculty and students Call<lb/>
7s-ue.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: fast neat<lb/>
Reasonable call ISS-Kal.<lb/>
ORSALE<lb/>
l7t TOYOTA COROLLA<lb/>
deluxe Air cond 4 speed<lb/>
Brown, MM. Good condition<lb/>
Call 7Se-ap41.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
AMY: Happy two year anniver-<lb/>
sary. I love you very much 11<lb/>
Ricky.<lb/>
DEAR SECRET ADMIRER:<lb/>
Alas, I am timid. My imagine<lb/>
Man soars at ponderances of<lb/>
your wanton touch. Taach ma<lb/>
what I long to know I Little dove,<lb/>
your passion flower<lb/>
RICHARD Welcome back to EC<lb/>
buddy I Please stayi Ann luvs ya<lb/>
mucholl<lb/>
ATTENTION ECU SKIERS<lb/>
AND SUNBATHERSI January<lb/>
Vermont ski weeks from SP2.<lb/>
Sprlngbreak Florida weeks<lb/>
from tm. Call for yourself or<lb/>
organiie a group and travel<lb/>
FREEl LUV Tours ? 34 1004<lb/>
Ask for Laura.<lb/>
ART CONTEST FOR<lb/>
STUDENTS: Sponsored by the<lb/>
REBEL magazine. Bring en-<lb/>
tries by Jenkins conference<lb/>
roam on Monday, 10-5 Limit 3<lb/>
entries. SI fee per entry. Rules<lb/>
posted outside REBEL office on<lb/>
the 2nd floor of publications<lb/>
bid.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
SOPHMORES AND JUNIORS<lb/>
who are maortng In<lb/>
HISTORY AND POLITICAL<lb/>
SCIENCE<lb/>
History and political science<lb/>
m?or? who have good writing<lb/>
skills and are knowledgable<lb/>
about currant events are urged<lb/>
to apply at THE EAST CAROLI<lb/>
NIAN for upper level eitorlal<lb/>
positions for itM-SS school year.<lb/>
CAKYOUCAM<lb/>
DEPfNDON. ajonmorsfrvKKt<lb/>
?hG women of rtm V tem?ngCjntei <lb/>
ovagoto, dcjv ov3 nrjd ?? support arvd unom<lb/>
sf and you Your longry comfort and prtvocv om<lb/>
SBrV?Ctl ? Tug?doy - SarURjrjy Abortion Ap-<lb/>
poentmeWief l$t?2rxJTr?wtej,APortlon?upto<lb/>
18 VVBBta B free P??gnancy TgjBts ? Vvy Early<lb/>
Ptgjgnancv Tgjgts ? All lncRjsv? FgM ? trmitancg)<lb/>
Accepted ? CAU T11M80 DAY Ot NpOMI ?<lb/>
I amjw i cow, emmmtng wk ? mmj<lb/>
ondeaXjcortontorwo- ? ruWJPW<lb/>
IbMbJ govM Tlb?<lb/>
gowns<lb/>
boll GOw rr(<lb/>
W?<lb/>
mt.<lb/>
JMM<lb/>
eaHwy M4<lb/>
St. We<lb/>
NC<lb/>
946-4046<lb/>
night 946-9885<lb/>
join<lb/>
the great<lb/>
arrerican<lb/>
smokeout<lb/>
Nov. 17<lb/>
AAAfcRtCAN<lb/>
A CANCER<lb/>
?SOCIETY<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECU Dept. of University Unions <lb/>
presents <lb/>
The Annual <lb/>
MADRIGAL<lb/>
DINNERS<lb/>
November 29.30, <lb/>
December 1,2,3, &amp; 5 :<lb/>
7:00 P.M. Mendenhall <lb/>
Student Center :<lb/>
Call 757-6611 ext. 266 ?<lb/>
for Tickets and Information j<lb/>
Hours: Mondav-Fridav :<lb/>
: 10:00AM - 4:00PM :<lb/>
HURRY! i<lb/>
 <lb/>
j Limited Seating Available :<lb/>
"P s(?tM??SSf?ltfSSfft pp??4l4l ? 4 ?Jj4a44X<lb/>
Pre-Thanksgiving Party<lb/>
for the needed<lb/>
with all proceeds going to<lb/>
the needy in the community.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Date: November 11th<lb/>
Price: $1.00 donation for admission<lb/>
Place: Memorial Gym<lb/>
Time: 9:00 - 1AM<lb/>
Music: The Dream Team<lb/>
Sponsored by: East Carolina<lb/>
University Track Team.<lb/>
PAPA KATZ and<lb/>
PLAYBOY<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Girls of The Altantic<lb/>
Coast Conference<lb/>
FRIDAY, NOV. 11th<lb/>
open at 8:00<lb/>
"Get your picture taken with your<lb/>
favorite ACC Playmate<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR SPECIALS<lb/>
TILL 10:00<lb/>
"Guys they're here; and there real"<lb/>
Papa Katz is a Private Club For Members &amp; Guest<lb/>
758-7912 10th St. Ext. At Riverblutt Rd.<lb/>
 Where The Night Life Comes A live<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
ZXYC<lb/>
rxx:<lb/>
-7XXZ<lb/>
zxxz<lb/>
one<lb/>
:xic<lb/>
:x?c<lb/>
THE<lb/>
Come Celebrate<lb/>
the Last Home<lb/>
Oueen Game with Us!<lb/>
to8<lb/>
x? and<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru sat<lb/>
NOV. 15, 1983.<lb/>
Open Mon. thru Sat. 8am to Midnight - Sun. 9 am to 9 pm<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
ADVERTISED EM<lb/>
POLICY<lb/>
Each of these adver<lb/>
tised items is e<lb/>
quired to be read-iy<lb/>
available (or sate in<lb/>
each Kroger Savon<lb/>
except as specifically<lb/>
noted m this ad if we<lb/>
do run out of an item<lb/>
we will otter yOu vOur<lb/>
choice of a com<lb/>
parab'e item when<lb/>
available reflecting<lb/>
the same savings or a<lb/>
ramchecK which will<lb/>
entitle you to pur<lb/>
chase the adveMsed<lb/>
item at the advertised<lb/>
price within 3C das<lb/>
NORTH<lb/>
?i<lb/>
SAT NOV. 12th<lb/>
Talk of The Town<lb/>
Happy Hour 6:00 - 8:00<lb/>
College Students Free<lb/>
6:00-7:30<lb/>
DOC<lb/>
I<lb/>
iiiiiiiiiiixmiiiinim:<lb/>
?J?iei<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
REG. OR SUGAR FREE<lb/>
PEPSI FREE, PEPSI LIGHT OR<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
12-Gal.<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
2-Ltr.<lb/>
N.R.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
THUR. NOV 10<lb/>
STORMZ<lb/>
WZMB Ladies<lb/>
Light Night<lb/>
Free till 11:00<lb/>
55C Beer till 11:00<lb/>
FRI. NOV. 11<lb/>
NO VACANCY<lb/>
Just Back From<lb/>
Their European Tour<lb/>
? ? ? ? WSFL ? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
Join The Attic WSFL Record Bar, and Major Label<lb/>
Reps, m two special evenings featuring the live<lb/>
music of the 10 finalists of the 2nd Annual Rock To<lb/>
Riches Contest to be video taped for TV.<lb/>
eaMMMMMM ?????????? ??????:<lb/>
SAi. ? AFTER THE W&amp;M GAME<lb/>
TILL 8:30 ? A Special Happy Hour<lb/>
with <lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Fried<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
PREMIUM <lb/>
Old Milwaukee<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
12 -<lb/>
12-OZ.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
REG. OR BUTTERMILK<lb/>
KROGER OLD FASHION<lb/>
Sandwich Bread<lb/>
2188<lb/>
<lb/>
WISE PLAIN RIDGIES<lb/>
potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
r?<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Lowfat<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
SAT. 1MN 4 LWTINTAYLH OJSStN SUN.<lb/>
? ?????????? i<lb/>
Stt HH V SAT - 8:30-TILL 1KX)<lb/>
25C DRAFT SAKI1.C. ANi NMiEl<lb/>
STfWN' MITIKfiMU MX<lb/>
?????????<lb/>
SUN. - 7:30 TILL 1:00<lb/>
USA UYANIMKiESTIIANS<lb/>
fXNtT kfPim<lb/>
55C H.H.<lb/>
BEGINS<lb/>
AT 7:30<lb/>
Gal.<lb/>
Jug<lb/>
HOLLY FARMS<lb/>
CUT UP MIXED<lb/>
Fryer<lb/>
Parts<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
?Jt<lb/>
Umlt<lb/>
3<lb/>
Pkgs.<lb/>
W<lb/>
:yXH<lb/>
 ??????????? ?? a<lb/>
????????????o<lb/>
All SAT. EVENTS ARE 12 PRICE wGAME STUB<lb/>
JSUN. AT 7:30 ROLL TO RICHES FOOTBALL TOURN1<lb/>
HHUHUIIIHI<lb/>
? ????????<lb/>
VARIETY<lb/>
Cake<lb/>
Donuts<lb/>
GOURMET SHAVED<lb/>
Deli<lb/>
Meats<lb/>
DOS.<lb/>
$169 $799<lb/>
1 afc<lb/>
eejea ?aaJweM -<lb/>
' ? ? m em ??<lb/>
a. ?? -?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0009"/><lb/>
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IS IT LIVE.<lb/>
OR IS IT<lb/>
T-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0014"/><lb/>
X<lb/>
MOVIE<lb/>
M A G A<lb/>
I N E<lb/>
THE LONELY GUY<lb/>
S7c Martin, t<lb/>
alone S mivmble "<lb/>
HARD TO HOLD<lb/>
Ruk Springfield's<lb/>
big-screen debut<lb/>
8<lb/>
D.C. CAB<lb/>
Gary Busey<lb/>
cr the nuht Mr. I<lb/>
10<lb/>
SCARFACE<lb/>
Al fat did stars,<lb/>
Rritni Dtl'tilrna tin cts<lb/>
12<lb/>
Publisher<lb/>
DCRAND W. ACHEE<lb/>
Editor m-l.hief<lb/>
JUDITH SIMS<lb/>
AsMCMfc t filter<lb/>
BYRON LALRSEN<lb/>
Art Directors<lb/>
CHIP JONES<lb/>
DAN EICHOLTZ<lb/>
Production<lb/>
ART &amp; DESIGN<lb/>
(.initiation Manager<lb/>
ROXANNE PADILLA<lb/>
Office Manager<lb/>
BARBARA HARRIS<lb/>
Awt t$ Publisher<lb/>
LYNNE BARSTOW<lb/>
fs'xigrafibs<lb/>
COMPOSITION TYPE. INC.<lb/>
fflBK.<lb/>
Steve Martin (left I illustrates one of many pttfaOs of being a Lonely Guy: sleeping<lb/>
alone. Rick Springfield and Janet Eilber (right I find and almost lose each other in<lb/>
Hard to Hold, a rock (s roO love story.<lb/>
Timothy Hutton is Lindsay<lb/>
Crouse -tat in Iceman (14);<lb/>
Where the Nvs Ait- -till It<lb/>
Lauderdale, Florida) has sand,<lb/>
int and lift hotls i6?. Ri-jm)<lb/>
Man 11 I -tar- Harry Ihan<lb/>
Stanton cjT Emilio Estevez m<lb/>
L.As auto repossession racket.<lb/>
COMING SOON<lb/>
Films in tin- wings<lb/>
18<lb/>
OUR COVER<lb/>
Al Pacino as Ii?i Montana,<lb/>
Cuban Marielito, who takes<lb/>
Al Pacino in Scarface (left) u the picture of success, gangster-style, while Gary y ms  r ut,j( fn st(lim<lb/>
Busey (right) looks slightly bemused as a uhacko drix-er for a bizarre taxi company<lb/>
in D.C. Cab.<lb/>
in Scarface.<lb/>
President. Sales anil Marketing<lb/>
JEFF DICKEY<lb/>
Atti ertt.sing Offices<lb/>
West Coast<lb/>
1680 North Vine, Su 900<lb/>
Hollvwixxl. CA 90088<lb/>
(213) 462-7175<lb/>
m<lb/>
FTfFn<lb/>
FT1<lb/>
Sales Manager<lb/>
JENNIFER OWENS<lb/>
Sales (loorttinalor<lb/>
NORMA CORTES<lb/>
East Coast<lb/>
134 Lexington Ae . 1 bird Hi<lb/>
NY 10016 (212) 696-0994<lb/>
Sales Manager<lb/>
JACKLYN M. PETCHEN1K<lb/>
Account Executives<lb/>
SARAH GALVIN<lb/>
ADRIENNE SCOTT<lb/>
Marketing (.unsultant<lb/>
LARRY SMUCKLER<lb/>
?1983 Alan Weslon Publishing, a division of Alan Weston Communi-<lb/>
rations. Inc corporate offices - 1680 North Vine. Suite 900. Hol-<lb/>
lywood, CA 90028, Richard J. Kreuz. President. All rights reserved<lb/>
Some materials herein are used with permission off then copyright<lb/>
owner. Universal City Studios, Inc letters become the property off<lb/>
the publisher and may be edited Publisher assumes no responsibility<lb/>
for unsolicited manuscripts Published three times during the year<lb/>
Annual subscription rate is $3.00. lb order subscriptions or notify<lb/>
change of address, write The Movie Magazxne. 1680 North Vine. Suite<lb/>
900. Hollywood. CA 90028.<lb/>
Folks, it vy.is disturbing to read<lb/>
about R. Ben Miami's new<lb/>
movie, PrivaU School As a stu-<lb/>
(ietit t marketing, 1 have<lb/>
learned thai responsibl) catering<lb/>
to consumei needs is the way to<lb/>
make money. However, Mr. Ef-<lb/>
raim lias taken this principle too<lb/>
I at.<lb/>
Hud Powell<lb/>
Sun I- rant in o, CA<lb/>
Iiealk enjoyed youi review ol<lb/>
Mtmt Python's I lit lttinmg of<lb/>
lift and the review ol Going Hn<lb/>
srik. Being a follower (diehard)<lb/>
ol SCTV, von can ex-it me to<lb/>
see Going Hnserk. I was a little<lb/>
disappointed though with The<lb/>
Meaning t Life and so were mv<lb/>
Friends (the) saw it as Ix-mg too<lb/>
much in the stvle ol Mel Brooks.<lb/>
i.e the tiger hunt, the restau-<lb/>
rant, etc.). It seems as though<lb/>
I he Meaning of Life was missing<lb/>
the element so vital to all Python<lb/>
productions, the element ot sui -<lb/>
prise It appeared that the<lb/>
Pvthons weren't even going to<lb/>
sIkh k. titillate ot try to solu it anv<lb/>
ol the reactions thev got when<lb/>
we watt lied (and laughed at)<lb/>
then 1 Y series Now it teems the<lb/>
Pvthons have in lat reached<lb/>
(heii pi line: they cannot (nor<lb/>
i an anvone elsei surpass The Holy<lb/>
Grail.<lb/>
As lor Going Berserh, I hope<lb/>
that the troupe will lx" xissihlv<lb/>
hall as tiinnv as the series was<lb/>
(NBC has canceled the series).<lb/>
Perhaps the troupe will continue<lb/>
i hen work and some cable chan-<lb/>
nel will pick up the tights to the<lb/>
old sy iidu ated show.<lb/>
Mu hafl Stranathon<lb/>
Stous I'll<lb/>
I read your article on Monty<lb/>
Python's The Meaning of Lift<lb/>
and 1 loved it' I'm an avid tan ot<lb/>
Monty Python, esjK-tiallv Ierrv<lb/>
Jones. Frit Idle and Graham<lb/>
Chapman.<lb/>
PS Your magazine is great!<lb/>
Keep up the good work!<lb/>
Sancy Jones<lb/>
Wohcin. MA<lb/>
I was fortunate enough to re-<lb/>
teive a copy ot votii magazine<lb/>
nxlav. 1 loved it! I'll he honest,<lb/>
the main reason I loved it was<lb/>
because Bun Reynolds was in it<lb/>
? he's the best'<lb/>
I'am HUiydes<lb/>
l.anoga Park, CA<lb/>
r H I l (i I 1 MAGAZINE<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0015"/><lb/>
Ford<lb/>
EXP Turbo.<lb/>
New Dash.<lb/>
The new EXP Turbo s full<lb/>
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placed And fi r improved per<lb/>
ft irmance i f ant ther kind,<lb/>
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New Dash.<lb/>
Cubic inch for cubic inch, the<lb/>
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it is projected to deliver<lb/>
amazing rat i ngs i f 2(i<lb/>
MPG 42hwy.est<lb/>
est<lb/>
Although EPA mileage ratings were n <lb/>
available at he time i4 publication.<lb/>
thee estimates are pr nested R rd<lb/>
ratings based i n R rd Engineering test<lb/>
data, and are expected ti l be very CM se<lb/>
loofficul EPA ratings I se tor a impart<lb/>
son Your mileage ma var depending<lb/>
or speed, trip length, weather Actual<lb/>
highway mileage will probabh be lower<lb/>
New Dash.<lb/>
You II also find new spoilers,<lb/>
new aluminum wheels and a<lb/>
new bubble back hatch The<lb/>
end result is something rather<lb/>
rare in today's world Acar<lb/>
with all the dash you could<lb/>
ask for.<lb/>
Quality is Job 1 An indepen<lb/>
dent survey established Ford<lb/>
makes the best-built American<lb/>
cars The survey measured<lb/>
owner reported problems<lb/>
during the first three months<lb/>
of ownership of 1983 cars<lb/>
designed and built in the IS<lb/>
Have you driven a Ford<lb/>
lately?<lb/>
Uord<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0016"/><lb/>
Steve Martin and Charles Grodin<lb/>
are sitting on the bakon) ol a<lb/>
highrise Manhattan apartment,<lb/>
theii backs to the panoramic,<lb/>
nighttime Mew A gentle breeze<lb/>
is blowing ail oss the potted<lb/>
plants that share the balcony;<lb/>
Martin is sipping a beer, Grodin<lb/>
.1 ol.iss ot milk. I he) are talking<lb/>
to c.u h othei quietly, recounting<lb/>
past, siighth disastrous dealings<lb/>
with the opposite sex. Martin re-<lb/>
calls a particular!) unsuccessful<lb/>
encountei with a high-school<lb/>
d.ue in a movie theater, pauses<lb/>
!ni .1 moment, then adds. "It was<lb/>
fun, though. . . <lb/>
ithui HiBei says "Cut Mar-<lb/>
tin and Grodin stand up, the<lb/>
breeze suddenh stops and the<lb/>
lights ot New Vnk are switched<lb/>
of! It's the last da ol principal<lb/>
photography foi The lntl (tu<lb/>
and Martin and Grodin have<lb/>
just completed one ol a num-<lb/>
bei ot ad-libbed conversations<lb/>
that are sprinkled throughout<lb/>
the tuov ie<lb/>
'Maybe 30 perceni ol the<lb/>
scenes between c hmk and me<lb/>
are ad-libbed savs Martin in his<lb/>
dressing room later m the Li.<lb/>
' 1 hese are lnile stories from oui<lb/>
experience that drop into the<lb/>
him at an point, just iwo guys<lb/>
talking It was actualhbuck's<lb/>
idea, and they've worked out real<lb/>
well, so it we're on a set, we s.n<lb/>
Well, let's iiv a loneh gu) story<lb/>
and we iist sel U up and irv II "<lb/>
rhese little conversations be-<lb/>
tween Martin and Grodin repre-<lb/>
sent one tavet ol creative contri-<lb/>
bution to a him thai contains the<lb/>
work ol .i numbei ol very tal-<lb/>
ented people. Tht Loneh Guy is<lb/>
based on Bruce a) Friedman's<lb/>
book Tht Loneh f? (?unit to<lb/>
I ?? Friedman is a prohtu writer.<lb/>
perhaps lest known foi his pla<lb/>
Steambath and for co-writing the<lb/>
movie Dr. Detroit, which was<lb/>
based on his sioi v<lb/>
Directoi Hillei explains how<lb/>
the movie reached us final form:<lb/>
I he book was brought to Steve<lb/>
Martin's attention, and he said<lb/>
Hey, this should be a movie<lb/>
Neil Simon created a story from<lb/>
Friedmans lxok. but he became<lb/>
tied up with othei projects, so Ed<lb/>
Weinburgei and Stan Daniels did<lb/>
the final screenplay (Wem-<lb/>
burget and Daniels will lx- famil-<lb/>
ial to I viewers foi their woik<lb/>
on I fit Mary Tylei Moore Skoin<lb/>
lux anil Phyllis, foi wlu h thev<lb/>
accumulated s Emmys foi writ-<lb/>
ing and pi"iui nig. i<lb/>
Adding to the contributions ol<lb/>
Simon. Daniels. Weinburger,<lb/>
Martin and Grodin is director<lb/>
producei Arthur Miller, whose<lb/>
length) screen careei includes<lb/>
Stlvet Streak, Plaza Suite. The<lb/>
Out t Tovmers, Loot Story, and The<lb/>
Americanization of t.mil as v II as<lb/>
the recent Author, Author<lb/>
1 he story of The Lot h Guy<lb/>
concerns larrv Hubbard (Mar<lb/>
Steve Martin in<lb/>
h i oieve iviarui<lb/>
ifELY GUY<lb/>
His fern is his only friend<lb/>
(and the fern may be faking it!)<lb/>
B V RICHARD LEVINSON<lb/>
tin) a struggling young writei<lb/>
from Iowa, who finds his live-in<lb/>
girlfriend Danielle (Rolnn Doug-<lb/>
lass, first seen in Breaking An n i<lb/>
in lx-d with another man Sud-<lb/>
denh. he is transformed into a<lb/>
"loneh guv" and there are ropes<lb/>
to le learned about how one lx<lb/>
haves m that soi l state<lb/>
In Warren (Charles Grodin),<lb/>
Martin finds an experienced<lb/>
teacher. Grodin, who has ap-<lb/>
peared in The Great Muppet Caper,<lb/>
Heaven Can Wait, Cateh-22, and<lb/>
Albert Brooks' Real Life, among<lb/>
mam other films, describes Wai-<lb/>
itMi as a "raaven, prototypical<lb/>
lonei) guv. the guv who always<lb/>
looks like he was hit hv a bus '<lb/>
Martin savs. "I plav a basicallv<lb/>
optimistu guv who becomes<lb/>
loneh. while Chuck is die" true<lb/>
loneh gu, who's kind ot depre-<lb/>
ssed all the tune, who savs he<lb/>
never reallv gets su k but always<lb/>
feels a little su k<lb/>
(rodin shows Martin the ti u ks<lb/>
ot the loneliness trade, and here<lb/>
much of the original lxok is ap-<lb/>
parent.<lb/>
"Its amazing how man) of the<lb/>
vignettes from the book have<lb/>
survived savs Miller "Foi in-<lb/>
stance, yesterday, we did a se-<lb/>
quence where Sieve goes into a<lb/>
restaurant alone, and its about<lb/>
how you handle leing alone in a<lb/>
restaurant when you leel that all<lb/>
the people are looking a! you,<lb/>
how vou ian take notes and pre-<lb/>
tend you're a restaurant critic.<lb/>
1 hal tomes right from the lxok "<lb/>
I heie is, of course, a not-so-<lb/>
lonelv guv who fuels the fan-<lb/>
tasies ot Martin and Grodin.<lb/>
Played bv singer Steve Lawrence,<lb/>
this paragon of social success<lb/>
doesn't just get the girl ? he<lb/>
seems to get every girl.<lb/>
Judith Ivev, the Ionv award<lb/>
winning (foi Steaming) stage ac -<lb/>
tiess. plavs Martins elusive love<lb/>
interest in the film. She les ribes<lb/>
hei character, the six-tune mar-<lb/>
ried Ins. as a woman who always<lb/>
marries men she is destined to<lb/>
divorce Ivev has unbridled en-<lb/>
thusiasm foi this, hei his! lead-<lb/>
ing role in a movie "It audiences<lb/>
have as much tun watching it as<lb/>
1 did doing it. the film should do<lb/>
vei v. vei v well "<lb/>
Martin sees liis as a woman<lb/>
w hi. in spue ot hei e?en-<lb/>
ti nines, understands loneh guvs<lb/>
"She likes me as a person savs<lb/>
Martin, and thev eventual) get<lb/>
togethei in a romantk finale<lb/>
I henv ot New Yoi k figures<lb/>
piominentlv in the look and the<lb/>
stoi v ot the movie, with much oi<lb/>
New Vi k let i catcd on the<lb/>
soundstage n? pai tii ulai I)<lb/>
impressive set is a 120-foot-long<lb/>
section ol the Manhattan bridge,<lb/>
built m life-size scale, suspended<lb/>
B feet in the aii with a width ol<lb/>
1 feet I he budge typifies Mill<lb/>
ei's attention to detail "We<lb/>
needed to shoot the scene with a<lb/>
tot ot tog. and vou taut create<lb/>
that constant mist out in the<lb/>
open, and vou i an t sit waking<lb/>
foi the mist toome<lb/>
1 he scene u which Millei re-<lb/>
fers involves a thwarted suicide<lb/>
attempt bv Grodin. 1 he scene<lb/>
remains comic, beginning with a<lb/>
phone message on Mai tins an-<lb/>
swering machine informing him<lb/>
that Grodin "can't make the<lb/>
movies' because lies decided to<lb/>
end it all Happily, Martin<lb/>
reaches him in time, although<lb/>
HiBei teeh thai Grodins charac-<lb/>
iei probabl) wouldn't have<lb/>
jumped anvwav.<lb/>
1 his giav aiea between corn-<lb/>
ed) and uagedv is particular!)<lb/>
tilting in New Vork. 1 he i Hv<lb/>
provides an enlarged backdrop<lb/>
that illuminates the tuiuuei as-<lb/>
K- is ot loneliness as well as the<lb/>
moie serious. "The premise is<lb/>
that loneliness can strike anyone,<lb/>
anywhere, al anytime Martin<lb/>
explains "New Yolk happens to<lb/>
lx- a good selling to point that<lb/>
up. its so bustling, it's easy to lx<lb/>
loneh It's good because it pres-<lb/>
ents more opportunities for vig-<lb/>
nettes Fating Chinese food is<lb/>
just son ot a loneh, thing to do.<lb/>
but it wouldn't happen in Iowa.<lb/>
Grodin finds ihat the feelings<lb/>
in the movie "strike deep chords.<lb/>
touching everybody He likens<lb/>
parts of the film to the Fifties<lb/>
dassit Marty, which explored<lb/>
loneliness and the pressures ol<lb/>
"finding somebody" on a group<lb/>
of single men. "Its a verv gcxxl<lb/>
part, better than am I've ever<lb/>
played he savs.<lb/>
The l.onfh (.m represents an-<lb/>
other step in Martin's long and<lb/>
successful career. Aside from the<lb/>
experimental Pennies from<lb/>
Heaven, Martin is primarilv as-<lb/>
sociated with the maniccomic<lb/>
I H r M () t i MAGAZINE<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0017"/><lb/>
K<lb/>
tilms Tkt (irk. Dead Men Don't<lb/>
Weai Plaid, and I In Man with lw<lb/>
Brains tin a comedian who has<lb/>
two Grammys, .in Emmy, an<lb/>
Academy Award nomination.<lb/>
i lui his shot i subjet i hi<lb/>
hsent-Mmded Waiter) and .1 hcst-<lb/>
seliing txMik and who is hugely<lb/>
populai Foi his appearances ?n<lb/>
Saturday Sight I r. . Fht Lonely<lb/>
Guy provides .1 different kind l<lb/>
1 iMii tunitv.<lb/>
Millet himself s.tvs thai he i?<lb/>
extremeh happy with Martin's<lb/>
woi k in the film "He comes up<lb/>
with ideas .til the time, and<lb/>
ihev're terrifk What people are<lb/>
going to see is Steve Martin play-<lb/>
ing .1 realistic, straight role, de-<lb/>
spite 11 being .1 comedy In the<lb/>
sense t relationships, there are<lb/>
main scenes dial arc very real<lb/>
"The original hook was a<lb/>
guide HiBei tKS n. a series<lb/>
ol vignettes We do have times<lb/>
when he (Martin) is alone, water-<lb/>
ing Ins plains, talking t himself,<lb/>
eating a can ut tuna. Bui when<lb/>
you're doing a movie. u need a<lb/>
sdi. and in oidei ti do dial.<lb/>
ni need relationships<lb/>
Martin describes what he's<lb/>
drawn n lot the pan "Its the<lb/>
experience t being lonely cjh-<lb/>
rience with women, dating.<lb/>
1 lute's a vague feeling that even<lb/>
when vou're with youi friends,<lb/>
you're still alone. Its a different<lb/>
kind oi lite from the matt ted.<lb/>
family personality. 1 tist teel. 1<lb/>
think Chuck ami 1 lth teel. that<lb/>
there's a concept t loneliness<lb/>
that he and I understand, that<lb/>
doesn't relate t anything<lb/>
stK- if it. its iist a general attitude<lb/>
alxMii life<lb/>
Steve Martin's girlfriend (soon to be ex-girlfriend). plaed by Robyn<lb/>
Douglass, is found in bed utth another man (Richard Del Montei. uhich<lb/>
leaves Martin out in the loneh cold. The pointing man itop) is director<lb/>
Arthur Hiller. Martin then tries to uoo Judith hey (above). Loneh guys<lb/>
Martin and Charles C.rodin (left) share a happy moment utth their best<lb/>
friends -ferns. The Lonely Guy opens Febmar l.<lb/>
The First Annual<lb/>
(and Never Again)<lb/>
Lonely Guy<lb/>
(or Gal) Contest<lb/>
DO NOt (.O HOMI to AN<lb/>
EMPTi MAILBOX? Oi an emptv<lb/>
loom, m ninth the onlv other living<lb/>
llung is youi pel fern? When vou<lb/>
walk into .1 restaurant, does everyone<lb/>
else gel up and leave- lo von teel<lb/>
von are all alone unattended, un-<lb/>
appreciated and unwanted?<lb/>
You're a Lonely Guy. Or<lb/>
Gal. Or both.<lb/>
Well, lonelv wretches, here's some-<lb/>
thing iist tor von a contest no one<lb/>
else would want!<lb/>
I here is onlv one prize. 1 That's all<lb/>
vou deserve.) Heres what some lucky,<lb/>
lonelv creature's Grand Prize will<lb/>
iih hide<lb/>
? An tare tor one to Lot Angeles<lb/>
(unless die winner lives in l.os<lb/>
Angeles, m which use we'll p tor<lb/>
l)us tatel ? No one will sit next to the<lb/>
winner on the plane ? No tree headset<lb/>
will he provided ? With any luik. no<lb/>
meal will he served, either ? The win-<lb/>
ner will not he met t the airport ? A<lb/>
single room in a lonelv hotel will<lb/>
tx- provided ? No ear will he placed<lb/>
at the winner's disposal ? lire winner<lb/>
will "etiov" dinner for one at a tine<lb/>
Lot Angeles restaurant (preferably<lb/>
empty) ? The winner will attend a<lb/>
screening tor one (ot l'hf Loneh Ou<lb/>
nanirallvl ? The winner will receive a<lb/>
pet tern ? Also a lonelv GuvGal ad-<lb/>
dress hook - hlank. ot course ? The<lb/>
winner will not meet Steve Martin<lb/>
lies loo busy ? I he winner will re-<lb/>
ceive a poster ot Fhe Ijoneh (.in. not<lb/>
autographed ? llie winner will receive<lb/>
two hooks: rhe loneh Gmf's Guidf U<lb/>
l.ilr hv Bruce av tried man. and Hem<lb/>
to Win Fritmdl ami lnti:n(t Vtople. bv<lb/>
Dale Carnegie ? rhe winner will also<lb/>
All vou need to do is till in tins<lb/>
torm 101 a Sx5 card) wiih VOU1 name<lb/>
and address, antl then tell us in J:<lb/>
words 01 less ipretetablv lessi whv<lb/>
vou are a lonelv Guv ior Gah<lb/>
All entries will te judged hv ht<lb/>
f: j- Waiu imt siatt. .1 piuelv subjec-<lb/>
I he winnei will he notified hv mail,<lb/>
or maybe telegram or phone 01<lb/>
mavhc not at all We ian he prettv<lb/>
nnxxfv<lb/>
Void where prohibited bv law or<lb/>
good taste<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
t Itv<lb/>
State<lb/>
ip Code<lb/>
College<lb/>
Year Phone<lb/>
Yes. I am a lonelv Guv tjot Gal) because<lb/>
receive an assortment ot the finest<lb/>
personal care products deodorant,<lb/>
mouth wash, dandruff shampoo.<lb/>
Preparation D. Maalox. Milk ot Mag<lb/>
nesia. Kaopectate and air freshener ?<lb/>
The winner will be presented with<lb/>
Loneh Guv boxer shorts Suitable<lb/>
tor feminine wear because the flv<lb/>
doesn't open.<lb/>
r H I M O V I I<lb/>
live and vindictive buiuh We promise<lb/>
not to choose our relatives or pals<lb/>
dhev all have friends, anyway)<lb/>
All entries must be received bv<lb/>
midnight. December 15<lb/>
All entries become the propenv ot<lb/>
Alan Wesion (. omuumit ations. liu<lb/>
1 hey will not he at know ledged or re-<lb/>
turned ithev II prohahlv be bumed)<lb/>
M G A I N r<lb/>
Mail this lompleted -toi m to Loneh I<lb/>
Contest. 16S0 North Vine. Suite 900, Hol-<lb/>
lywood, I A 90088, betore mut; <lb/>
December IS, 19SS Wmne' will be an<lb/>
Bounced ? the Spring 1V4 issue of I <lb/>
oe taga:ie<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0018"/><lb/>
Musician I'songwriter Iactor Rick<lb/>
Springfield plas rock &amp; roll hero<lb/>
James Roberts, whose perfor-<lb/>
mances (left) enthrall thousands,<lb/>
but whose private life is aimless<lb/>
and disconnected.<lb/>
Rock &amp; Roller<lb/>
General Hospital Heartthrob<lb/>
Stars in<lb/>
HAI I)<lb/>
TOHOU)<lb/>
BY R . SUE SMI T H<lb/>
Odessa, lexas. is oil countrv, tt.ii as .t l;ii1<lb/>
He and I w l ? h I<lb/>
Si. Mai ilie natives sa vou can stand on .1<lb/>
beei an and see 1 ui !? k. 15() miles north<lb/>
S( 1 hoi ih.it .1 lni.il politician blistered<lb/>
more than his careei when he suggested<lb/>
tint Mm want i" raise a family, go t"<lb/>
neighboring Midland, and it you want to<lb/>
raise lull. go to kiessa<lb/>
1 hai kind nt Imi<lb/>
lonighi the sign outside 1 he 11 toi<lb/>
( ount c oliseum reads 92 degrees .ii 6<lb/>
p.m .imi the (lcm teens lined up two<lb/>
hours before showtime -a this is the<lb/>
biggest event since the city fathers banned<lb/>
an Ix 'in ne 1 on ei 1<lb/>
( m stage, live, toi one night only,<lb/>
(iramrm award-winning stai of records,<lb/>
I. and his soon-to-be-released hrsl Fea-<lb/>
ture film, Hnd to Hold, the very, very hoi<lb/>
Mi K11 k Sningneld<lb/>
1 his stiip is somewhere midway in a<lb/>
90-day tout supporting this yearsLnvng m<lb/>
(: LP I h- grueling schedule will be<lb/>
Springfield's last chance tot a while to<lb/>
touch base with his rock &amp; mil roots before<lb/>
jumping from lus established mixed-media<lb/>
nan ml' 1 a new kind 1 it hi e<lb/>
It anything its hottet backstage than 11 is<lb/>
outside Springfields sleeveless 1cm jacket<lb/>
and sweatpants seem almost formal, given<lb/>
the temperature, and not even the city<lb/>
fathers could blame him it he wore a led<lb/>
Nugent-style loincloth on stae<lb/>
He wont, nt course rhough right now<lb/>
his han is short and punkish, controversy,<lb/>
exploitation, sleaze t any kind, are not<lb/>
pan nt the image Ki k Springfield knows<lb/>
how t give a good show without showing<lb/>
too mm h Attei 15 years of r? k &amp; 1 oil lite.<lb/>
including 11 years on the American tread-<lb/>
mill to siKiess. Ru k Springfield is a pro.<lb/>
His show (backed l si1iiil; youngsters<lb/>
called I he Fabulous Eels) is a solid pai k-<lb/>
age, choreographed and timed with no<lb/>
loom tin erroi From the moment<lb/>
Springfield appeals m a dry ice t? until<lb/>
his spectaculai leaps from speakei to<lb/>
speakei while leading the crowd through<lb/>
the chorus of Don't lalk to Strangers<lb/>
the slat Ki?'s llls aM Hits hlast out one<lb/>
soit attei the other, each tune performed<lb/>
the way the kids like them, just like the<lb/>
record, and Springfields exuberant en-<lb/>
core is a It lumph m Uselt<lb/>
Retreating to the air-conditioned dies-<lb/>
sin 100m. Springfield carefully moves<lb/>
aside debris, clearing space tot conversa-<lb/>
tion. One-thing-at-a-time, Ins movements<lb/>
ate relaxed ?-t deliberate, intent When he<lb/>
sets his toi us on Hard to Hold, n stays<lb/>
then-<lb/>
It's a love story he explains, "about a<lb/>
musician, lames Roberts, who's at the<lb/>
r n i i 1 y m a g a z i n i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0019"/><lb/>
crossroads ol success He's worried aboul<lb/>
lilt- Inline, uliclhei he ? .til iii.iiiil.nii the<lb/>
pate, when he meets Diana I awson<lb/>
I fi.in.i I awson (plaved anel r ilbei I i-<lb/>
a San r rant ist o t hild jisvt hologisl who, tin<lb/>
like .ill ilu othei women ovei ti vears.<lb/>
doesn'l particularly want antes Roberts<lb/>
sin- has .1 life t het own. .i sense of dire<lb/>
lion slu- has whal (antes i- missing, and .1-<lb/>
Springfield tells it. "He's looking i tin- re-<lb/>
lationshtp with Diana to pul .i mum ol<lb/>
t n del inn i hi- lite<lb/>
It the charactei and his quesi sound po<lb/>
tentiallv autobiographical, u - because<lb/>
Springfield worked with directoi l.ni<lb/>
Peerce and writei lorn Hedle m the de-<lb/>
velopmeni of this 1 onsiantine onte<lb/>
rs:4<lb/>
second since vou're vout own hardest i ti-<lb/>
nt You have in be such .t strivei to !?? an<lb/>
.it iti<lb/>
Kit k savs thai In- and the charactei t<lb/>
lames Roberts don't realh have .tli thai<lb/>
unit li m tiimmi'ii. unless it's thai contron-<lb/>
lation In calls The battle between taking<lb/>
charge .mil ntH taking charge, living l??i<lb/>
voursell oi whats expected "t vou<lb/>
llnii- m.t be t i nit v who tlini expeel<lb/>
unit h "t Springfield's nwrtMHi picture de-<lb/>
but, classifying him l In- ardent teen au-<lb/>
dience and somewhai second-class soap<lb/>
opera success Whal thev re not reckoning<lb/>
ttii i- thai Springfield 'ike ames Roberts.<lb/>
i- .1 "striven" .i man with several respected<lb/>
acting workshops (such a- with Makolm<lb/>
McDowell and Marv Sieenburgen in I V<lb/>
undei in- Ih-Ii and who i- indeed hi- own<lb/>
harshesi tritk. -turn goals In- verv much<lb/>
intends t t ? 11 till<lb/>
Setting goals Hi savs. i- aboul living<lb/>
ti. go further, go deeper l! I'm going t"<lb/>
reach mv full potential its not going t?i<lb/>
i inic In mi sitting i m tin real<lb/>
Will Hard I II he a step toward thai<lb/>
full potential? Hard to a In addition i<lb/>
tin- It?v- -toi between antes and Diana<lb/>
there's .t second storv involving ames co<lb/>
writei and lormei girlfriend kkv Nides.<lb/>
piaved l? lormei lashion model Kim Han<lb/>
sen I urthei conflki comes in the present<lb/>
of Diana's longshoreman lather. ??hnnv.<lb/>
brought i" ilu screen b veteran charactei<lb/>
.Him Ylben Salmi I he alinosi obligattrv<lb/>
conceri Itiotage introduces twti new<lb/>
Springfield songs, aking with .1 band in<lb/>
i liKiing loi mii i hil'i stai bill ?' ? s' . ?<lb/>
Mumv ?ii keyboards and one-time teem<lb/>
Im iplte! 1 t ? kt! loll ' ?' ?'  ' I -? ' ?<lb/>
Sale- on guitai<lb/>
It .?;? H i i- hot box iithc ?' -<lb/>
will Ik- mon adventures ah? id<lb/>
Springfield. movie stai Vgents an<lb/>
ie.tiling scripts, thinking aboul .t set<lb/>
film without musk i showcase<lb/>
V  ? the Hp phenomena n It not<lb/>
Springhekl is willing ti see tin- as<lb/>
necessarv step in the target scheme<lb/>
things Hi recalls thai anothet muskiai<lb/>
turned-actt?i gav? this advice to a ?<lb/>
-tai<lb/>
"Bmgrosbv said the important tl<lb/>
was lo become multimedia 1 don'i ki<lb/>
.ill this was pan of a game plan tin m<lb/>
was n-t l tli.inn- thai I got into<lb/>
bm now ii leels like it's son e kind I dt<lb/>
sign<lb/>
Whatevei happens. vou need t<lb/>
i.tin tin private place, somewhen<lb/>
uiit goals, voui secret goals 1 here's i<lb/>
wav vou tan leel normal as .i recogruzi<lb/>
personalitv walking down the streei You<lb/>
have to have that real span when i tet<lb/>
n tunded again<lb/>
"That's something James k berts<lb/>
learns<lb/>
From ilu t .?'l -mile on Ru k Sprn gl ?<lb/>
t.it e. pin iti and m i ontrol despite all ?<lb/>
ol heat, he must have figured that mil<lb/>
ago Hard t H opens Ypril 6<lb/>
production I he screenpkn is lv Hedlev.<lb/>
based on a sum hv Hedlev and Rkhard<lb/>
Rothstein 1 In- stai and his advisors had<lb/>
input "ii plot, casting, technical authentic-<lb/>
u Springlield lound n salishing and lun.<lb/>
.limit ,i luxun in the economics ol shoot<lb/>
111ti t utit-<lb/>
I he freedom ol 111 iron ies attei I <lb/>
was like going titm .i wading pool t" the<lb/>
ocean Ik- savs "We hat! time to work on<lb/>
the characters and the scenes When I did<lb/>
weekb shows (such .i- I Roikford rilr<lb/>
and Six Million Dollai fai the pace was<lb/>
Iii-i lu Daytime acting ((irtieru Hospital. ol<lb/>
11 mi -? u .i- 11 ijtli- i li.ii pat i-<lb/>
Bui what ilu- movies give in time, the<lb/>
lake awav in i ontrol It's .i distui bing<lb/>
though) in .i m.m who like- working akme.<lb/>
writing songs alone, doesn't even ronsidei<lb/>
collaboration since he's not interested in<lb/>
tin compromises thai would entail.<lb/>
? I he tilm i- iii"i ? "I a puzzle, an<lb/>
enigma, than an album he considers<lb/>
"With .in album. 1 see ii thrtmgh .ill its<lb/>
phases writing, performing, product kin<lb/>
Whereas with the him 1 was involved in<lb/>
pre-produt tkin, had more input than 1<lb/>
expected to have, but then thev take ii .ill<lb/>
awav<lb/>
"Filming fell gotid, and it lotiked ii???'?f n<lb/>
the t.tke- I saw l.i-i spring Bui I tltni ex-<lb/>
pect tt like mvsell I'm ven rritical t mv<lb/>
W l 11 k<lb/>
"One thing I've learned i- not Ui put .i<lb/>
time limn tn mv uo.il- I thought success<lb/>
would happen when 1 arrived m the Matt-<lb/>
in 72.11 I'd kiion bow king it would take.<lb/>
1 might not have tried Bui you can't gauge<lb/>
yourself b others, you'll always come in<lb/>
Springfield falls for Janet t.ilher 'Mm i.<lb/>
a capable, secure psychologist uho doesn't<lb/>
need a flamhoant rock star m her life ?<lb/>
or so she sas. Model f'atti Hansen (right i<lb/>
plas Rick's strung-out songunttng part-<lb/>
ner, the perfect uoman for our hero ? or<lb/>
so she thinks.<lb/>
lit v 11 1 t M A C A Z I N I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0020"/><lb/>
. BMMM<lb/>
Gary Busey &amp;<lb/>
Mr. T: The New<lb/>
Team in<lb/>
wywjwwmwwMwww<lb/>
wmmwfflfflwvw<lb/>
B V BILL I1AUNSTEIN<lb/>
Screenplays get written in<lb/>
main was in Hollvwocxi.<lb/>
Some get adapted Irom<lb/>
best-selling books, or<lb/>
long-playing shows. Others are<lb/>
developed b a writer over a pe-<lb/>
riod ot months, even years, ot<lb/>
writing. There is a third meth-<lb/>
od<lb/>
lake writer director Joel<lb/>
Schumacher Independent pro-<lb/>
ducer lopper Carew came to<lb/>
Schumacher with a simple idea.<lb/>
Would Schumacher be interested<lb/>
in doing a movie about a cab<lb/>
company that was located in<lb/>
Washington, D.C.? Schumacher<lb/>
said yes. "Fine said Carew. "Go<lb/>
write it 1 he result is D.C Cab.<lb/>
which Schumacher not only<lb/>
wrote, but also directed.<lb/>
" The idea appealed to me<lb/>
from the start sas Schumacher,<lb/>
a sc reenwriting veteran Sptirklr,<lb/>
Carwash, the screen adaption ot<lb/>
Broadwav's The 'iz) who made<lb/>
his directorial debut with The In-<lb/>
credible Shrinking Woman. "I went<lb/>
to Washington and spent quite a<lb/>
bit ot time there with lopper,<lb/>
who knew Washington extremelv<lb/>
well. 1 had onlv seen our capital<lb/>
as a tourist. I never realized that<lb/>
Washington was 75 per cent<lb/>
black, or that it had a huge<lb/>
Cuban population.<lb/>
I learned that there was this in<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
credible street lite that Mil-<lb/>
rounded the monuments, the<lb/>
museums and the ottice build-<lb/>
ings. And that's when 1 realized<lb/>
that no one had ever made a<lb/>
movie alxuit the real people ot<lb/>
our nation's capital.<lb/>
"The storv just sort ot came<lb/>
together That storv is ).(. Cab.<lb/>
an ensemble corned) that stars<lb/>
Mr. 1 and C.arv Busev. but also<lb/>
teatures Jose Perez. Irene Cara<lb/>
as herselt and main newcomers<lb/>
to the screen, as well as some old<lb/>
television veterans.<lb/>
The storv concerns a voting<lb/>
man. plaved bv Adam Baldwin<lb/>
(who is test remembered as the<lb/>
bodv guard in Tom Bill's film My<lb/>
Bodyguard), who arrives in<lb/>
Washington. DC trom the<lb/>
.South to join a cab companv that<lb/>
was owned bv a Vietnam war<lb/>
buddv ot his late father. When<lb/>
Baldwin gets to the companv he<lb/>
discovers that it consists of a<lb/>
group of bizarre cab drivers,<lb/>
misfits in one wav or another.<lb/>
Baldwin manages to instill in the<lb/>
group a new sense of pride and<lb/>
helps turn the cab garage into a<lb/>
respectable business.<lb/>
However, when Baldwin is<lb/>
kidnapped, along with two chil-<lb/>
dren of the Canadian ambas-<lb/>
sador, the evidence seems to<lb/>
txiint to the cabbies. The drivers<lb/>
then hand together into a cohe-<lb/>
sive unit and search out the kid-<lb/>
I H E M () V I E<lb/>
tappers. It is one ot the- tew<lb/>
times m their lives that thev have<lb/>
shared a common goal. And this<lb/>
seems to underscore one ot the<lb/>
points that Schumacher is living<lb/>
to make.<lb/>
1 he storv is about how a<lb/>
bunch ot misfits find themselves.<lb/>
Mv philosophy is that most<lb/>
people go through their lives<lb/>
with the illusion that once thev<lb/>
get that big break, thev are going<lb/>
to lx" great. Well, no one grows<lb/>
up to want to be a cab driver: It's<lb/>
a corridor people take in lite on<lb/>
the wav to doing something else.<lb/>
The point is that it vou want<lb/>
other opportunities, you've got<lb/>
to do whatever it is that vou art-<lb/>
doing rum- well. Then that will<lb/>
help vou get those future oppoT<lb/>
t unities<lb/>
The opportunity to write an<lb/>
entire screenplav from virtuallv a<lb/>
one-sentence idea isn't unusual<lb/>
tor Schumacher. One of his ear-<lb/>
liest films came from just one<lb/>
word ? carwash. Schumacher<lb/>
got the idea tor the him when he-<lb/>
was sitting in his car earlv one<lb/>
Sunday morning in front of a<lb/>
carwash. He saw a hooker drink-<lb/>
ing a Ix-er in a paper bag. living,<lb/>
with much effort, to line up<lb/>
some business on the phone. In a<lb/>
Hash Schumacher realized that<lb/>
there was more to the carwash<lb/>
than met the eye. He wrote the<lb/>
screenplay on that simple inspi<lb/>
M A (I A I N E<lb/>
Gary Busey (left center) and the<lb/>
redoubtable Mr. T (right center),<lb/>
flanked by muscle twins Peter and<lb/>
David Paul, are rough-and-tumble<lb/>
drivers for a ramshackle D.C. taxi<lb/>
outfit.<lb/>
ration<lb/>
li) resean h ).(. Cab, however,<lb/>
Schumachei found himseli in<lb/>
New York libraries, reading<lb/>
every available storv he could on<lb/>
cab drivers, and then interview-<lb/>
ing a nunibci ot cabbies. He<lb/>
found thai the- stories could be<lb/>
broken down into definite<lb/>
categories. Cabbies ripping ofl<lb/>
passengers. Passengers ripping<lb/>
olt cabbies. Items lost in cabs<lb/>
"Unbebevabk things are left ill<lb/>
the bac k of taxis savs<lb/>
Schumacher. "Everything from a<lb/>
million doll.ns m (ash to babies.<lb/>
Stiadivaiius violins, lust drafts<lb/>
of novels, drugs. 1 hen, theie's<lb/>
this amazing amount of sexual<lb/>
activitv that takes place in cabs.<lb/>
Almost every driver 1 sjMike to<lb/>
said so. Some ot the stones that<lb/>
vou heat ate so extreme, are so<lb/>
insane, vou can't use them I he<lb/>
audience would never believe<lb/>
them<lb/>
1 he audience should have no<lb/>
trouble believing the divergent<lb/>
cast plaving the group ot cabbies.<lb/>
They come trom almost every<lb/>
ethnic background. But it was<lb/>
Mi I. savs Schumachei. who<lb/>
managed to attract crowds wher-<lb/>
c-vc-i the new was Riming, par-<lb/>
ticularly in Washington's heavv<lb/>
black areas At tunes, remembers<lb/>
Schumacher, there would Ik- as<lb/>
many as 1,000 people crowding<lb/>
in to watch the action, shouting<lb/>
and chanting Mi. Is name. At<lb/>
one point in the filming the crew<lb/>
had to call in a sH-cial scpiad ot<lb/>
police to help control the crowd.<lb/>
Mr. I is as surprised as anyone<lb/>
that he has received this kind of<lb/>
attention from children. It<lb/>
seems like I'm a modern i.i<lb/>
Pied Piper he savs, "because<lb/>
wherevei I go. thousands and<lb/>
thousands ot children are pres-<lb/>
ent. Children respond quicker to<lb/>
me than adults, because thev are<lb/>
honest and pure. Their hearts<lb/>
are open. Thev don't know racial<lb/>
hatred. Thev don't know preju-<lb/>
dice. Thev don't know jealousy<lb/>
or envy. When a kid savs 'I love<lb/>
you. Mr. T that's coming trom<lb/>
his heart<lb/>
It seems these days, though,<lb/>
that an entire nation has opened<lb/>
its heart to the man with the<lb/>
hard looks and soft heart. A<lb/>
former bodyguard for the likes<lb/>
of ex-Heavv Weight Champion<lb/>
I eon Spinks, T made his movie<lb/>
debut in I'riiitentiarx but he came<lb/>
to the world's attention as Rocky's<lb/>
arch nemesis Clubler Tang in<lb/>
the third round of that con-<lb/>
tinuing series. And it was his role<lb/>
in The A Team as B. A. Baraccus<lb/>
that gave NBC one ot its few cer-<lb/>
i<lb/>
)<lb/>
?,H$&amp; a<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0021"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
tifiable hits last season.<lb/>
). ( Cab presented I with the<lb/>
opportunity to do something a<lb/>
little different, naineh a straight<lb/>
out comedy. "Because this movie<lb/>
is a comedy, it leis people see m<lb/>
versatility. 1 can be very funny<lb/>
when I want to be. It blows<lb/>
peoples minds And tins was fun.<lb/>
On The learn, 1 don't smile but<lb/>
oiue ht episode, and in ). (<lb/>
Cab. 1 gel to joke and laugh and<lb/>
lealK have a good time<lb/>
There was anothei reason l).<lb/>
( Cab appealed to Mi. I. Ii was<lb/>
the film's message: II you stick<lb/>
together, you can accomplish<lb/>
your goals. "I can sink m teeth<lb/>
into movies like that,1 I savv<lb/>
People said I'd never gel ahead<lb/>
I tome from the ghetto. I didn't<lb/>
go to the fines! schools. I used to<lb/>
weai dniv panis and sinks wnh<lb/>
holes in them. Hut through it all.<lb/>
I made it. And that's mv message<lb/>
to othet people: It I (.in m ike it.<lb/>
you tan too<lb/>
for actor Gary Busey, whose<lb/>
varied career as a singer,<lb/>
songwutei and actor has landed<lb/>
him roles m films such as The<lb/>
Huiil Holh Story (for which he<lb/>
was nominated for an Oscar).<lb/>
Cartn. . Star l Horn and Hat-<lb/>
barosa, D.C. (ah presented the<lb/>
opportunity lor an acting first:<lb/>
"D.C. Cab was die lust ensemble<lb/>
corned) that I've done he savs.<lb/>
"In fact, it was the fust ensemble<lb/>
acting thai I've done Mine I was<lb/>
in educational theater years ago<lb/>
1 he whole experience was .n<lb/>
education tor me<lb/>
The character Busev plavs is<lb/>
named Del Dorado, and Busev<lb/>
clesc rilx's him as a man who is<lb/>
"controlled insanitv laced with<lb/>
panic. He seems to know everv-<lb/>
thing about everything and he<lb/>
has in his head thai everything is<lb/>
a conspiracy. You don't know<lb/>
whethei he is taking anything se-<lb/>
riouslv. putting you on all the<lb/>
way, or is taking everything sen-<lb/>
oush. Wherever Del is. it's no! on<lb/>
this planet<lb/>
Even (hough Busev was the<lb/>
senior member on the set in<lb/>
terms of acting experience, he<lb/>
felt that fK'ing with all the new-<lb/>
comers in the film was a verv<lb/>
humbling experience and went<lb/>
out of his way to help first-time<lb/>
actors whenever he could. Main<lb/>
of the new faces that appear in<lb/>
D.C. Cab came to the film by way<lb/>
of small comedy clubs around<lb/>
the country. Bill Maher, for<lb/>
example, has often appeared on<lb/>
Tke Tonight Show. Paul Rodriguez<lb/>
is another stand-up comedian<lb/>
whose irreverent barrio-stvie<lb/>
humor has won him a large fol-<lb/>
lowing at Los Angeles comedv<lb/>
sjxrts such as the lmprov and the<lb/>
Comedv Store. Marsha Warfield<lb/>
was the winner of the 1979 San<lb/>
Francisco International Stand-up<lb/>
Comedv Competition. And an-<lb/>
other comedian. Charlie Barnett,<lb/>
was literal!) discovered on a<lb/>
street corner.<lb/>
"We found him on the streets<lb/>
of New York remembers<lb/>
Schumacher. "He was a street<lb/>
performer who walks up to you<lb/>
and starts doing his routine right<lb/>
Mr. T is happy with his role in<lb/>
D.C. Cab because "I get to joke<lb/>
and laugh and have a good time.<lb/>
On The A Team, don't smile but<lb/>
once per episode<lb/>
there. Alter about an hour of<lb/>
impromptu comedv, he passes<lb/>
around the hat. We signed him<lb/>
up<lb/>
Oilier acting veterans in D.C<lb/>
Cat include Anne DeSalvo. who<lb/>
was WcmmIv Aliens sistei in Star<lb/>
dmf Memories; Max Hail, better<lb/>
remembered as one of Barnev<lb/>
Millers detectives on the televi-<lb/>
sion show of the same name: and<lb/>
Whitman Mayo, who was a regu-<lb/>
lar on the Sanford and Son I <lb/>
show.<lb/>
"It was alwavs so much tun on<lb/>
the set because of all these tine<lb/>
voting comics remembers<lb/>
Schumacher. " Ihev would alwavs<lb/>
get up and compete for laughs<lb/>
against each other. There was<lb/>
alwavs this liltle show going on<lb/>
D.C. Cab. opening December<lb/>
16. was filmed in Los Angeles in<lb/>
a reconverted garage, and also<lb/>
in various locations throughout<lb/>
Washington, including places like<lb/>
the Washington Monument. Lin-<lb/>
coln Memorial. Capitol Hill. Ar-<lb/>
lington National Cemetery, Fm-<lb/>
bassv Row and. perhaps the most<lb/>
familiar to Washington's cabbies.<lb/>
Dulles Airport.<lb/>
Does Schumacher think that<lb/>
his send-up of the cab-driving<lb/>
protession will set back the in-<lb/>
dustry a tew hundred vearsr<lb/>
"No. I don't think so he laughs.<lb/>
"1 hope cab drivers like it. In tact.<lb/>
I hope everybody likes it. That's<lb/>
what we made it tor<lb/>
Producer Topper Carew (top right) asked writerdirector Joel<lb/>
Schumacher (top Uft) if he'd be interested in working on a comedy about<lb/>
D.C. cab drivers. "Sure" replied Schumacher. "Go write it said<lb/>
Carew. The beauties atop the yeBow beast are Marsha Warfield (above<lb/>
left) and Anne DeSalvo (aboie right).<lb/>
I H E M O V I E M A (. AIN E<lb/>
II<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0022"/><lb/>
,fc.<lb/>
gcacface-<lb/>
?i<lb/>
t<lb/>
ff<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
BKI Dl V 1 <lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
71<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0023"/><lb/>
American dreamtoo well<lb/>
BY ERIC ESTRIN<lb/>
Director Brian DePalma doesn't<lb/>
seem upset so much as surprised<lb/>
when he walks into producer<lb/>
Martin Bregman's office on the<lb/>
Universal lot in Los Angeles.<lb/>
'You'll love this. Mam he savs.<lb/>
tossing a cop of Variety onto<lb/>
Bregman's desk. "Here, read it<lb/>
Bregman scans an article in<lb/>
the show business trade paper<lb/>
until he comes to the paragraph<lb/>
in question. "Thirty-seven mil-<lb/>
lion dollars he exclaims, not<lb/>
sounding nearly as amused as<lb/>
DePalma. "1 hate that. Nobody<lb/>
checks out anything<lb/>
Bregman is still standing bv his<lb/>
desk halt-a-minute later when<lb/>
his secretarv reaches the article's<lb/>
author b phone. "Hello, Mr.<lb/>
McCarthy? This is Martin Breg-<lb/>
man I'm leading a piece that<lb/>
you did on (current) gangster<lb/>
epics where you sa Scarf ace,<lb/>
which I'm the producer of.<lb/>
has gone to a budget of S3"<lb/>
million . . .<lb/>
'Reportedly b whom- Would<lb/>
you care to find out what our<lb/>
budget is? Would you care to<lb/>
look at out cost runs? Well, whv<lb/>
don't you get off your little lxt-<lb/>
tom and get over here and I'll<lb/>
show you the cost runs, which<lb/>
are currently at $22 million, and<lb/>
after haing seen that. I would<lb/>
loe you to retract that state-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
At the other end of the line,<lb/>
the reporter can very possiblv<lb/>
smell smoke from the eight-inch<lb/>
cigar Bregman is waving at the<lb/>
phone. He promises to get a re-<lb/>
traction in the paper soon.<lb/>
"I'm getting to a point in life<lb/>
where that kind of reporting is<lb/>
unacceptable Bregman says,<lb/>
placing his black, half-frame<lb/>
glasses on the desk in front of<lb/>
him and settling down for an<lb/>
interview. His feelings are justifi-<lb/>
able. In the 10 vears since he<lb/>
branched out as a talent man-<lb/>
ager bv producing Serpico. star-<lb/>
ring his client Al Pacino, he's<lb/>
earned a reputation as a vigilant<lb/>
overseer of his projects with a<lb/>
much-appreciated talent for<lb/>
keeping costs down.<lb/>
Having produced films like<lb/>
Dog Day Afternoon. Simon and The<lb/>
Four Seasons (starring another<lb/>
client. Alan Alda). Bregman has<lb/>
no doubt grappled with compli-<lb/>
cations before. He dropped out<lb/>
of college at Indiana and NYU<lb/>
because it was "too slow and<lb/>
eventuallv started advising<lb/>
young actors and entertainers<lb/>
how to get ahead in show busi-<lb/>
ness. Among his earlv manager-<lb/>
ial clients: Candice Bergen, Faye<lb/>
Dunaway, Liza Minnelli, Bette<lb/>
Midler and Wood) Allen.<lb/>
With the adverse conditions<lb/>
facing him on Srarfnce. its im-<lb/>
pressive that Bregman was able<lb/>
to bring it in at any price. The<lb/>
picture deals with a recent<lb/>
Cuban immigrant's rise and fall<lb/>
in south Florida's cocaine busi-<lb/>
ness. Bregman conceived of the<lb/>
idea while watching the original<lb/>
on late-night TV, and instantly<lb/>
pictured Pacino in the lead role.<lb/>
He hired Olivet Stone (The<lb/>
Hand. Midnight Express) to write<lb/>
the screenplay and later signed<lb/>
DePalma (Carrie, Drewed to Kill)<lb/>
to direct.<lb/>
But when the crew arrived in<lb/>
Miami to begin filming last vear.<lb/>
thev round themselves embroiled<lb/>
in an intense controversv over<lb/>
how the finished product would<lb/>
portray south Florida's Latin<lb/>
community. After weeks of<lb/>
negotiations with Cuban leaders,<lb/>
during which time Bregman was<lb/>
alternatelv granted and denied<lb/>
permission to begin filming,<lb/>
word came down that the picture<lb/>
could roll in Miami ? if he ag-<lb/>
reed to certain conditions. But<lb/>
bv then. Bregman and the studio<lb/>
had decided to avoid the aggra-<lb/>
vation and moved most of the<lb/>
production to California.<lb/>
Pacinos co-star in the film.<lb/>
Steve Bauer, found the political<lb/>
uproar particularlv unfortunate.<lb/>
Bauer is a Cuban-born ex-<lb/>
Miamian, whose family and<lb/>
friends still reside in that citv.<lb/>
"It's too bad there were so many<lb/>
problems he savs, "because the<lb/>
Cubans, generally, are a verv<lb/>
open people with a sense of hu-<lb/>
mor. Thev take things with a<lb/>
grain of salt?that's the Cuban<lb/>
personality<lb/>
Nevertheless, neither Bauer<lb/>
nor Bregman was prepared for<lb/>
the negative reaction Scarface re-<lb/>
ceived from a small but vocal<lb/>
part of Miami's Cuban commu-<lb/>
nity. "There was this one guv<lb/>
Pere (a citv commissioner), who<lb/>
made a big political issue out of<lb/>
it Bregman savs in a voice<lb/>
made calm bv the grace<lb/>
of hindsight. "They kept escalat-<lb/>
ing this as an anti-Cuban movie<lb/>
Miami's reluctance to serve as<lb/>
a location stems from a serious<lb/>
public relations problem the area<lb/>
has had since the spring of 1980,<lb/>
when its population was swelled<lb/>
by the influx of 125,000 new<lb/>
Cuban exiles from the port of<lb/>
Mariel. At least a fifth of these<lb/>
Manelitos were said to be unde-<lb/>
sirables ? petty thieves, har-<lb/>
dened criminals and worse ? set<lb/>
free from prisons and mental in-<lb/>
stitutions in their native land to<lb/>
roam the streets of south Florida<lb/>
and make of their lives what thev<lb/>
would.<lb/>
In Scarface. Al Pacino plays<lb/>
one of these characters, Tony<lb/>
Montana. "He comes over here<lb/>
and sees gold in the streets, and<lb/>
he wants it says Bregman. "He<lb/>
seizes upon one opportunity<lb/>
after another; he makes his own<lb/>
opportunities, and he makes it<lb/>
happen For himself. But in the<lb/>
T H K MOVIE M A G A . I N E<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0024"/><lb/>
AI Pacino blazing his way to suc-<lb/>
cess (left) and enjoying the fruits<lb/>
of his labor (below left). The<lb/>
wedding party (I. to r.): Mary<lb/>
Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Michelle<lb/>
Pfeiffer, Pacino, Steven Bauer.<lb/>
end he's overwhelmed bv it. I'he<lb/>
power he achieves becomes a<lb/>
time bomb<lb/>
Montana's "gold of course, is<lb/>
mined in south Florida's runawa<lb/>
cocaine business, just as the orig-<lb/>
inal Scarface dealt with the booi-<lb/>
BRIAN DE PALMA<lb/>
From Razzle-Dazzle<lb/>
Violence To "An Epic, A<lb/>
Character Study"<lb/>
What attracted director Brian<lb/>
DePalma to Scarface was simple.<lb/>
"I've always wanted to make a<lb/>
gangster picture and I've always<lb/>
wanted to work with Al Pacino<lb/>
DePalmas involvement began<lb/>
a few years ago, when he talked<lb/>
to Pacino about taking the part<lb/>
in the movie Blowout (which John<lb/>
Travolta eventually landed).<lb/>
Pacino told DePalma he wanted<lb/>
to do Scarface, which was then<lb/>
being developed, and showed<lb/>
him a video cassette of the 1932<lb/>
version starring Paul Muni.<lb/>
"Its very challenging to work<lb/>
with an actor who's as good as<lb/>
Pacino. He carries such an<lb/>
ominous film presence with him.<lb/>
When he starts getting angry, its<lb/>
truly scary. What you saw him do<lb/>
in Godfather is nothing compared<lb/>
to this. It's an entirely different<lb/>
characterization, because in Scar-<lb/>
face he's playing a dynamic, dri-<lb/>
ven, flashy, energetic character.<lb/>
In Godfather he was a little more<lb/>
laid back, a little more controlled<lb/>
in playing a kid rising to take<lb/>
over his father's empire.<lb/>
"Here he's a guy arriving in<lb/>
town on a banana boat and wants<lb/>
legging fortune amassed bv Al<lb/>
Capone in the 1930s. But in<lb/>
Miami the stakes are higher and<lb/>
the consequences rougher than<lb/>
in anv Chicago gangster's wildest<lb/>
dreams.<lb/>
"You know how big that busi-<lb/>
ness is? A hundred billion dol-<lb/>
lars Bregman savs. "The whole<lb/>
motion picture business I think is<lb/>
seven or eight billion. Add an-<lb/>
other two billion for television<lb/>
and it's still not one-tenth of the<lb/>
drug industry in south Florida.<lb/>
That's crav<lb/>
Other than 10 das of extenoi<lb/>
shots filmed in south Florida.<lb/>
Scarface was filmed in locations<lb/>
around southern California, in-<lb/>
cluding the magnificent Santa<lb/>
Barbara estate where Charlie<lb/>
Chaplin and Oona O'Neill held<lb/>
their wedding reception m 191:<lb/>
Unfortunately, filming in Santa<lb/>
Barbara was twice interrupted bv<lb/>
the worst weather to hit Califor-<lb/>
nia this century.<lb/>
And the film's violent subject<lb/>
matter took a toll as well. In one<lb/>
sequence. Pacino hit the ground<lb/>
during a shootout, only to land<lb/>
atop a red-hot machinegun bar-<lb/>
rel. Filming had to be susjiended<lb/>
for a week while the stars hand<lb/>
recovered from serious burns<lb/>
Possibh even more difficult to<lb/>
deal with were the psychological<lb/>
pressures surrounding the new<lb/>
during their time in south<lb/>
Florida. For weeks thev mingled<lb/>
with drug kingpins and govern-<lb/>
ment agents in a world ot hostil-<lb/>
itv. paranoia and tear. "Ue had<lb/>
undercover agents with us most<lb/>
of the time ? without incident,<lb/>
but nevertheless there were some<lb/>
frightening experiences savs<lb/>
executive producer Stroller, who<lb/>
often teams with Bregman tor<lb/>
their New York-based produc-<lb/>
tion companv.<lb/>
"One night 1 had gone back to<lb/>
mv room Stroller continues,<lb/>
"and 1 told the guv who had been<lb/>
( i tinned "it f?i?' 1<lb/>
to own the town as fast as possi-<lb/>
ble, and he proceeds to do just<lb/>
that DePalma describes the<lb/>
Cuban gangsters ai Scarface as "a<lb/>
little more animalistic, a little<lb/>
more primitive" than the Cor-<lb/>
leones of the Godfather films<lb/>
After a controversial career<lb/>
that has included offbeat hits like<lb/>
Carrie, Dressed to Kill and The<lb/>
Fury, this 42-year-old director<lb/>
has settled down to make what<lb/>
he calls "an epic, a character<lb/>
study.<lb/>
"I think a director everv once<lb/>
in a while should go out and di-<lb/>
rect something that is awav from<lb/>
what he normally does, to trv<lb/>
and expand his vision to some<lb/>
extent. I think I've benefited<lb/>
from it he says.<lb/>
That doesn't mean he's thrown<lb/>
awav the flamboyant camera an-<lb/>
gles, the slow-motion action se-<lb/>
quences and the garish color<lb/>
schemes that marked his other<lb/>
movies. But all of that takes a<lb/>
back seat in Scarace, he says.<lb/>
"It doesn't have the total<lb/>
cinematic razzle-dazzle of The<lb/>
Fury and Dressed to Kill. There is<lb/>
one slow-motion scene, tor<lb/>
example, but it's very sparingly<lb/>
used. It does have visually dra-<lb/>
matic things, but I concentrated<lb/>
much more on straightforward<lb/>
storytelling. In the past the visual<lb/>
things were so strong thev almost<lb/>
overwhelmed everything else. In<lb/>
Scarjace. the characters and storv<lb/>
are so strong that everything<lb/>
falls into a natural balance.<lb/>
"I wouldn't say it is as violent<lb/>
as some of my other movies,<lb/>
which were visually violent. This<lb/>
isn't reallv violent because the kil-<lb/>
lings are mostly done in shoot<lb/>
outs. No people are being sliced<lb/>
up or things like that he adds.<lb/>
chuckling.<lb/>
DePalmas new stvle comes<lb/>
after Blowout was an unexpected<lb/>
191 flop after a string of box<lb/>
office successes. "I think one of<lb/>
the primary problems was that<lb/>
the advertising made it look like<lb/>
it was another Dressed to Kill, and<lb/>
it reallv wasn't. Plus it was a verv<lb/>
somber view of the American<lb/>
political svstem. and those pic-<lb/>
tures alwavs have problems A<lb/>
lot of people don't want to see<lb/>
that, basicallv<lb/>
"Now Scarface is the American<lb/>
dream ? gone crazv a little bit.<lb/>
but still the American dream<lb/>
DePalma's next project will be<lb/>
a "rock ft roll picture" with John<lb/>
Travolta called Fire, which he is<lb/>
to begin probably in February<lb/>
Will it be back to exploding<lb/>
heads? Our man just laughs and<lb/>
leaves us in suspense.<lb/>
Producer Martin Bregman (left),<lb/>
executive producer Louis Stroller<lb/>
(center) and director Brian De-<lb/>
Palma Scarface opens December<lb/>
9.<lb/>
IS<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0025"/><lb/>
KE<lb/>
MAN<lb/>
BY Z A N STEWART<lb/>
Mam films have given us an idea<lb/>
ot oui distant Future (2001, Out-<lb/>
land, Stat Wars and one lias<lb/>
imagined out distant past (Quest<lb/>
tot t't . but there hasn't been a<lb/>
him like Iceman, which at once<lb/>
explores out future and our dis-<lb/>
tant past.<lb/>
Iceman is Australian directot<lb/>
Fred Schepisis passion-filled<lb/>
science fantas) adventure that<lb/>
describes what happens when a<lb/>
cre? from an Amu mining<lb/>
company discovers a lo.ooo-<lb/>
vear-old man who has been<lb/>
crvogenkraih preserved deep in<lb/>
glacial ice. MainU through the<lb/>
work ol two intrepid scientists ?<lb/>
anthropologist Dr. Stanlev<lb/>
Shepard i Iliuothv Hutton) and<lb/>
cryobiologist Dr Diane Bradv<lb/>
(I.indsavrouse) ?the Iceman<lb/>
in thawed out and placed in a<lb/>
unique environment called the<lb/>
Vivarium, which simulates out<lb/>
prehistork landscape, ("here, as<lb/>
the Iceman and the scientists ob-<lb/>
set ve and intet a? t t? it h ea h<lb/>
other, the past and present<lb/>
met ge<lb/>
"Iceman is a wa ol looking at<lb/>
iiv u Schepisi, whose credits<lb/>
include the chilling Th Chant <lb/>
 ?? my Blacksmith, and the off-beat<lb/>
western, Barbarosa. "There is a<lb/>
wondet in looking at someone<lb/>
who is realh us from the Ix'gin-<lb/>
ning<lb/>
"When you go to the o mu<lb/>
see a monkev, u see the<lb/>
similarities and the differences as<lb/>
well, fake it a stage further and<lb/>
vou have a prison who is the<lb/>
next majoi step . . . not a mon-<lb/>
kev 01 an ajH- . hut a primitive<lb/>
human being. How much of<lb/>
what we were is still there in us<lb/>
11 ow mm h have we tost? How<lb/>
m iu h have we layered over?<lb/>
How much do we accuse other<lb/>
people of even though its realh<lb/>
out nature?<lb/>
"II we can reach a Ix'tter un-<lb/>
derstanding ot that, we will<lb/>
reach a lx-ttei understanding ol<lb/>
oui selves<lb/>
Iceman is the bra i in hi Id of<lb/>
ohn Drimmer. a former pro-<lb/>
du el and iliu umentarv<lb/>
filmmaket fot CBS News. In-<lb/>
trigued b news stories about<lb/>
frozen medicine and tlu- pros-<lb/>
pect of bringing jxople back to<lb/>
life aftet years, even centuries,<lb/>
Drimmer pondered what it would<lb/>
be like it a prehistoric man were<lb/>
ast. alive, into the 20th Century.<lb/>
He scripted his idea but did<lb/>
nothing with it until he was leav-<lb/>
ing CBS Then he arranged a<lb/>
fortuitous meeting with pro-<lb/>
I<lb/>
Timothy Hutton (left) plays an-<lb/>
thropologist Stanley Shepard who,<lb/>
with cryobiologist Diane Brady<lb/>
(played by Lindsay Crouse, above),<lb/>
discover and nurture, teach and<lb/>
learn from a unique individual -<lb/>
a prehistoric human (plaed b<lb/>
John Lone, below).<lb/>
Iceman is scheduled for April,<lb/>
19H4 release.<lb/>
din er-dn ei tor Norman Jewi-<lb/>
son i In tin Heat oj the Sight<lb/>
Ami Justin for All), who also ha. a<lb/>
personal interest m cryogenics.<lb/>
An immediate txnid between the<lb/>
men existed and the project<lb/>
started to roll. "1 was fascinated<lb/>
b this viewpoint ewison saw<lb/>
"Its a look at progress with a<lb/>
porthole to our past<lb/>
Together with his partner,<lb/>
producer Patrick Palmer tttut<lb/>
Friends), ewison contracted<lb/>
Schepisi to him the screenplay<lb/>
written b Drimmer and Chip<lb/>
Prosser. "We were looking lor<lb/>
someone who was as committed<lb/>
to Iceman as we were Palmer<lb/>
sas.<lb/>
Iimotln Hutton tell the same<lb/>
w.i ? he wanted verv much to<lb/>
pla the part of the an-<lb/>
thropologist Shepard. "It was the<lb/>
storv. the character and some-<lb/>
thing I've never done before . - .<lb/>
I'm playing older sas the 23-<lb/>
year-old Oscar winner.<lb/>
The part ot Shepard i ailed for<lb/>
a 27-year-old but. as Schepisi ac-<lb/>
knowledges. "We were Hexible<lb/>
and fun was persuasive. He had<lb/>
some great ideas. It helped us<lb/>
broaden the scope. When<lb/>
everyone was considered, he was<lb/>
the lx-st<lb/>
Hutton prepared himself for<lb/>
his role b immersing himself in<lb/>
the stud) ot anthropology, and<lb/>
he adds. "For the lust time. 1 was<lb/>
into the research from my point<lb/>
ot view instead ot soleK through<lb/>
the eyes ol m character<lb/>
l.indsav Crouse. who also co-<lb/>
stars with Hutton in Daniel, was<lb/>
looking tor something different<lb/>
,uh found Iceman "a refreshing<lb/>
change in a contemporary story<lb/>
She sas she liked playing a sci-<lb/>
entist, exploring a new realm,<lb/>
and that she discovered that sci-<lb/>
entists are a lot like actors ? the)<lb/>
go where the work is.<lb/>
The visual concept ot the Ice-<lb/>
man himself came from an<lb/>
amalgam ot general!) accepted<lb/>
scholar!) research on earl)<lb/>
North American native peoples.<lb/>
This included a lack ol excessive<lb/>
liodv hair, with layers ot lat sup-<lb/>
plving necessarv insulation<lb/>
against the elements. Addition-<lb/>
ally, a language lor the Iceman<lb/>
was developed by Philip l.ielx'i-<lb/>
tnan of Btown University, based<lb/>
on his theories ot what sounds<lb/>
the prehistoric voice box. jaw<lb/>
and tongue might lx- capable ot<lb/>
producing.<lb/>
John Lone, a classical!) trained<lb/>
Chinese actor who won an Obie<lb/>
for I hi Dance and the Railroad.<lb/>
was chosen for the title role.<lb/>
"John is reinarkablv talented<lb/>
savs Schepisi. "Although he's<lb/>
Oriental by birth, when vou put<lb/>
make-up on. what vou had was<lb/>
an indeterminate person . . . not<lb/>
Oriental, not European . but<lb/>
sort ot something out ot our<lb/>
past<lb/>
1<lb/>
I t<lb/>
f H I M Y 1 Y M A G A 1 N t<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0026"/><lb/>
<lb/>
f??oKtf<lb/>
BY BYRON LAl'RSEN<lb/>
"1 had m friend dressed up as an<lb/>
LA. cop, with the handcuffs on<lb/>
his bell and everything says<lb/>
wtiiri-diif(km Alex Cox. s he<lb/>
marched me mt this meeting t<lb/>
studio executives and said. lm<lb/>
going to give hint ten minutes to<lb/>
toll you his idoa. then I'm taking<lb/>
hmi downtown and booking<lb/>
him Ihon he made a big show<lb/>
t checking all the ons and he<lb/>
went out and waited in the hall<lb/>
wa with his arms folded over his<lb/>
chest<lb/>
Alex Cox sold his stotv that<lb/>
day.<lb/>
For the past three years, writ-<lb/>
ing scripts has been Cox's living<lb/>
tonight, surrounded bv the dr<lb/>
grass and eucalyptus trees ol Los<lb/>
Angeles KKsian Park, hesdirect-<lb/>
ing the hrsi of those se ripts to lx-<lb/>
put on celluloid, a fast-paced<lb/>
blaik comed) tailed Repo Mom.<lb/>
Independeni production is the<lb/>
miracle that made it happen tot<lb/>
this voting (28) English storytel-<lb/>
ler and his likewise voting pro-<lb/>
ducers, all of whom became<lb/>
friends at UCLA him school.<lb/>
While major studios are often af-<lb/>
raid of adventurous, unusual<lb/>
projects, thev'll sometimes get<lb/>
involved alter more daring tvjes<lb/>
have gotten the ball rolling Eat-<lb/>
ing Raoul was a completed movie<lb/>
and already a hit at several him<lb/>
lestivals belore a big studio came<lb/>
forth to help with its distribu-<lb/>
tion. RefH Man got luckv sooner.<lb/>
Harrv Dean Stan ton, the star, is<lb/>
one t Hollywood's most<lb/>
sought-after character actors.<lb/>
Emilio Estevez, the son ot actor<lb/>
Mat tin Sheen Apocalypse Now,<lb/>
Gandhi), plavs a punk who lx<lb/>
 ouies a repo (car reposession)<lb/>
man. Michael Nesmith. formei<lb/>
nip star l'7rv. hex we're the Mon-<lb/>
keesl") and currently an award-<lb/>
winning producer ot video dips,<lb/>
provided the timelv financing<lb/>
help thai escalated Repo Man<lb/>
from an extreme low-budget<lb/>
opus to a lull-out feature.<lb/>
A renegade nudeai scientist is<lb/>
somewhere in LA. driving a<lb/>
trunkful of something mvsteri-<lb/>
ous around in a Chevy Mafibu.<lb/>
His niece thinks its an L I. on<lb/>
ice. Others suspect an atomic<lb/>
bomb Stanton and his tellow ?<lb/>
repo workers only know that a<lb/>
$20,000 reward rides with that<lb/>
tunkv Malibu. lhe storv pivots<lb/>
n everyones crazed efforts to<lb/>
get it first<lb/>
Stanton s careei is based on<lb/>
playing charismatic loners,<lb/>
hard-luck guvs from the under-<lb/>
side He was a rustler in the<lb/>
western Missouri Break and one<lb/>
of the fust victims ot the<lb/>
ratchet-jawed outer space<lb/>
people-eater in Ahem. More re-<lb/>
centlv Stanton plaved Brain, the<lb/>
high I.Q. convut in Escape trom<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
Tonight he sits on the pas-<lb/>
senger side of a clapped-otit<lb/>
green Impala. alongside another<lb/>
clunker manned bv fellow repo<lb/>
specialist Light (plaved bv Sv<lb/>
Richardson). Stanton tells<lb/>
Richardson his plans, hnd that<lb/>
Malibu and go independent with<lb/>
a rein) vard of his own. buv a<lb/>
couple ot pit bulls and "let the<lb/>
I H b M O 1<lb/>
other punks do the work.<lb/>
Richardson replies with his own<lb/>
dream ? a large parcel of land<lb/>
up in Mendocmo County where,<lb/>
fie relates with a calculating grin,<lb/>
hell raise "tomato plants.<lb/>
hot the uninitiated. Men-<lb/>
docmo County, up towards the<lb/>
Oregon border, is one of Ameri-<lb/>
cas prime marijuana farming<lb/>
areas.<lb/>
Between takes. Stanton and<lb/>
Cox discuss whether "othei<lb/>
punks" works Ix'tter than "other<lb/>
guvs Earlier, Richardson had<lb/>
i hanged broccoli into tomatoes<lb/>
1 don't care it an actot<lb/>
changes a line (ox observes a<lb/>
moment later, while a camera<lb/>
man plots out the next shot trom<lb/>
the hood ot Rtchardsons car. "As<lb/>
long as the point gets across, whv<lb/>
A prized specialist in seed char-<lb/>
acter roles (Missouri Breaks.<lb/>
Wise Blood. Alien . Harry Dean<lb/>
Stanton ibeloui graduates to lead-<lb/>
ing man in Repo Man.<lb/>
Emilw Esteiez I left) avs a burr-<lb/>
headed punk, under pressure to<lb/>
learn the car repossession racket.<lb/>
wotrv about it- Lankv, humor-<lb/>
oiis. with a i iew cut that's grown<lb/>
out to the length and textun<lb/>
puppv tut. Cox projects an es-<lb/>
sentially British antic son <lb/>
comedy. He'd be- at home in<lb/>
either the pop musk group<lb/>
Madness ot the Montv Python<lb/>
comedy troupe, fonighi he's<lb/>
dee ked out m heaw lxots. jeans<lb/>
with tall up-turned eutts and <lb/>
Mi Goodwrench-stvie mechanic's<lb/>
smock Formerly an Oxford stu-<lb/>
dent, he took film classes at the<lb/>
Old u 1 heat re School m Bii-<lb/>
tol and acted the lead m a well-<lb/>
received student film tailed<lb/>
Xearh Wait Awakt Self-effacing,<lb/>
he savs "the protagonist" insti<lb/>
of "the lead, and grimaces shv K<lb/>
when I mention his reputation is<lb/>
a wi net<lb/>
Last night scenes ol gunplav<lb/>
were filmed in from ol a lit-up<lb/>
oil refinery Latei tonight, past<lb/>
midnight, the crew is headed foi<lb/>
the Stlverlake Lounge. It's a dive,<lb/>
the perfeci image ot tutv.<lb/>
comic-book naturalism" that the<lb/>
producers ot Repo Mem desitc<lb/>
On many film projects, long<lb/>
hours of boredom between short<lb/>
segments of filming graduallx<lb/>
take their toll With hVe Man.<lb/>
savs assistant duectoi Allan, the<lb/>
i tew has ruined a few takes bv<lb/>
breaking out m laughter Hut,<lb/>
like the cop stotv. is a tribute to<lb/>
Alex Cox and his abilitv to ii.uk<lb/>
a tough, even jaded audience 1:<lb/>
lu-s halt no successful with the<lb/>
general public. Repo Mm could<lb/>
lx- one of the surprise hit movies<lb/>
ot earlv 198 f<lb/>
M A G A Z 1 N I<lb/>
15<lb/>
?w<lb/>
Ws<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0027"/><lb/>
B V DEBBV MARRLEY<lb/>
Mention It 1 auderdale. and a<lb/>
slv grin might appear on the tau-<lb/>
nt anyone who has evei partici-<lb/>
pated m the spring craziness<lb/>
there. I he Honda coastal city is<lb/>
a prmiai migration spot toi<lb/>
hordes ot class-weary northern<lb/>
college students who arrive en<lb/>
masse each spnnt; to party, tan<lb/>
and cavon with the opposite sex.<lb/>
1 tie bars pull out all the stops.<lb/>
offering every advertising gim-<lb/>
mick and contest imaginable to<lb/>
hue customers awa from the<lb/>
main othei competing lnhs.<lb/>
I'heie is ttu Mi Hot Bod Con-<lb/>
test, the Af Hot Bod Contest.<lb/>
the Wet lee Stun Contest, beer-<lb/>
drinking contests, pizza-eating<lb/>
contests and on into infinity. On<lb/>
the Ix'aihes. it is sitting loom<lb/>
only.<lb/>
I his i ui ions Ainct h an phe-<lb/>
nomenon was fust depicted on<lb/>
the screen In Joe Pasternak in<lb/>
I960 lot MGM in the original<lb/>
H ?? thi Bt Are. Now. over 20<lb/>
years later, producer Allan Can.<lb/>
who presented audiences with<lb/>
tin- film versions of Tommy,<lb/>
Grease, (.ant Slop the Musk and<lb/>
Greast II. returned to Ft.<lb/>
I.auderdale with director H<lb/>
Vverback to create a total) new<lb/>
motion picture, scripted by Stu<lb/>
Kriegei and Jeff Burkhart.<lb/>
I had nevei been in Ft.<lb/>
Laudcrdale during spring break<lb/>
before s.is isa Hartman, one<lb/>
ot the film's pniHipal stars. "I<lb/>
had beard it was incredibly<lb/>
pat ked w it h people hut<lb/>
whenevei I saw movies of it. I<lb/>
always thought they'd put in too<lb/>
mam extras. I was amazed to find<lb/>
it really is tint way<lb/>
Hartman. current!) a popular<lb/>
actress singer on the television<lb/>
series Knots Lauding, stars as<lb/>
Jennie, a reluttant participant in<lb/>
the Honda spring madness who<lb/>
is torn between two losers.<lb/>
played by Russell Eodd (as Sott<lb/>
Nash) and Daniel McDonald (as<lb/>
Cainden Roxbui III)<lb/>
Lorna Luft, an experienced<lb/>
Broadway performer who made<lb/>
her stieen debut in Grease II.<lb/>
portrays Carole, who would like<lb/>
to Ik- liberated from her jealous<lb/>
boyfriend. Chip (Howard MeCil-<lb/>
lin? ? until it actually happens.<lb/>
Instigating the girls' trip is the<lb/>
high-spirited Laurie, played by<lb/>
Lynn-Holly ohnson, whose star-<lb/>
ring debut in he Casdes was fol-<lb/>
lowed by a co-starring role with<lb/>
Roger Moore in Fot Yam Eyes<lb/>
Only. end Schaal completes<lb/>
the foursome, playing a high-<lb/>
brow lexas debutante named<lb/>
Sandra. S haal lias been a series<lb/>
regulai on It's a Living and Fan-<lb/>
tasy Island.<lb/>
Rounding out the asi are<lb/>
Xlana Stewart (wife of mckci<lb/>
Rod Stewart) and Louise Sore!<lb/>
representing hip members of the<lb/>
"over 30" i rowd.<lb/>
We didn't set out to make a<lb/>
chauvinistic film or an exploita-<lb/>
tive one clarifies director H<lb/>
Averback. "Where tin- Bow An at-<lb/>
tempts to i apt me the teal spirit<lb/>
of ft. I auderdale during spring<lb/>
Lorna Luft, Wendy Schaal, Lisa<lb/>
Hartman and Lynn-Holly Johnson<lb/>
tbelou. I. to r.) assemble on the fa-<lb/>
mous Ft. I.auderdale beach. Rus-<lb/>
sell Todd (left) stars as one of two<lb/>
men vying for Ms. Hartman's af-<lb/>
fections (he previously appeared<lb/>
in Friday the 13th, Part II and<lb/>
He Knows You're Alone).<lb/>
break I here are some sexual<lb/>
scenes, sine, hut that's realistic<lb/>
and natural ? like driving ears<lb/>
he sas, chuckling.<lb/>
Actual filming of the project<lb/>
went relatively smoothly, despite<lb/>
the c towels and intermittent<lb/>
rams. Unexpected occurrences,<lb/>
however, added comedic touches<lb/>
not found in the script. In one<lb/>
scene. lull's character has en-<lb/>
tered a Hot Bod Contest and is<lb/>
dancing on a raised platform by<lb/>
the water.<lb/>
"Dining the filming of this<lb/>
contest Hartman remembers,<lb/>
"one contestant was dancing top-<lb/>
less. Out production crew<lb/>
noticed that a big ship carrying<lb/>
elderly tourists would lx- sailing<lb/>
right past us. so the crew waited,<lb/>
hoping to catch on film the hon-<lb/>
est, shocked reactions from these<lb/>
people as they see the topless<lb/>
dam ing.<lb/>
But. they laved it Hartman<lb/>
continues, laughing. "Instead ot<lb/>
bring freaked out. these grand-<lb/>
mothers were smiling, laughing<lb/>
? they even started dancing on<lb/>
the ship! It was great! Shocked<lb/>
all ot us kids, though savs<lb/>
Hartman, shaking her head.<lb/>
"Ibis is a 'crossover1 picture<lb/>
Averback comments. " People in<lb/>
their 30s and 4()s remember the<lb/>
old film tondh and then there is,<lb/>
ot course, the vouth audience<lb/>
In any case, starting in March,<lb/>
moviegoers will surelv see the<lb/>
difference 23 vears can make on<lb/>
a eitv and its annual visitors.<lb/>
&amp;iui<lb/>
(Continued from pap ?)<lb/>
with me all day that it was sillv<lb/>
for him to come; 1 could find my<lb/>
way back. We were staving at a<lb/>
different hotel from most of the<lb/>
crew simplv for security reasons.<lb/>
As I started to walk to mv room,<lb/>
these two Colombian guvs came<lb/>
out of a room behind me and<lb/>
started walking right toward me.<lb/>
They walked up and said good<lb/>
evening and just walked right<lb/>
past. It was nothing, but you<lb/>
build these things up in your<lb/>
mind and you never know<lb/>
Stroller savs the atmosphere of<lb/>
paranoia is reflected perfectly in<lb/>
Pacinos performance. "He was<lb/>
just incredible to work with he<lb/>
savs. "I used to watch him after a<lb/>
dav's work. We'd go in and watch<lb/>
the dailies, and I'd come out<lb/>
exhausted just seeing how much<lb/>
he expended<lb/>
Bauer, who previously starred<lb/>
in the long-running Que I'asa,<lb/>
U.S.A.?, a bilingual situation<lb/>
comedy on public television, savs<lb/>
some of the humor in the film<lb/>
derives from the superior at-<lb/>
titude affected bv the lead<lb/>
characters upon their arrival in<lb/>
America ? an attitude common<lb/>
among the Cuban population. "I<lb/>
think they have kind of a funny<lb/>
elitism lie savs. "It's their sense<lb/>
that in a foreign country, they<lb/>
feel like thev know more than<lb/>
the natives. They feel like thev<lb/>
could own the place within a few<lb/>
weeks, as soon as thev get the<lb/>
hang of it<lb/>
It's this frame of mind that<lb/>
Pacino reflects, Bauer savs, not<lb/>
only in his perfectly accented<lb/>
sjxech, but in the way he moves<lb/>
as well. "He's very perceptive and<lb/>
quick, and he just soaked it right<lb/>
up Bauer says. "All the Cubans<lb/>
who came on the set in Miami,<lb/>
like mv family and friends,<lb/>
they'd get to meet him and<lb/>
they'd always sav. 'God, he lexiks<lb/>
so real! He looks so Cuban! <lb/>
Co-starring with Pacino and<lb/>
Bauer is Michelle Pfeiffer (Hol-<lb/>
lywood Knights, Grease 21 as Klvira,<lb/>
an embodiment of the American<lb/>
dream for Ibnv upon his arrival.<lb/>
Several Cuban actors have small<lb/>
roles in the film as well, a fact<lb/>
that Bregman finds sadlv ironic.<lb/>
"It's a shame that we didn't end<lb/>
up spending all that money in<lb/>
Miami the producer says, "be-<lb/>
cause the film really shows<lb/>
Miami the way it is. I would have<lb/>
built a club there if we had been<lb/>
welcomed, but 1 built it here.<lb/>
Nothing would have looked dif-<lb/>
ferent, but we would have drop-<lb/>
ped all that money there instead.<lb/>
It would have been better for<lb/>
every body<lb/>
Ih<lb/>
I H E MOVIE MA G A Z I X E<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0028"/><lb/>
Ford Escort Diesel:<lb/>
Better mileage<lb/>
than this leading<lb/>
import.<lb/>
We didn't believe it at<lb/>
first, either.<lb/>
But EPA testing figures<lb/>
established it. Our new<lb/>
Escort Diesel is rated<lb/>
approximately four<lb/>
miles per gallon higher<lb/>
than a Honda 750.<lb/>
Just take a look at our<lb/>
numbers:<lb/>
And because<lb/>
this diesel is<lb/>
an Escort,<lb/>
there's a lot<lb/>
more to talk<lb/>
46<lb/>
68<lb/>
EPA<lb/>
EST.<lb/>
MPG.<lb/>
EST.<lb/>
HWY.<lb/>
about than great economy<lb/>
Like the fact that<lb/>
Escorts the best-selling<lb/>
car in the world<lb/>
Or that it comes with<lb/>
more total passenger<lb/>
room and more total<lb/>
cargo room than a<lb/>
Honda Accord, t<lb/>
More standard features<lb/>
than a Toyota Tercel.t<lb/>
There's even a fully-<lb/>
independent suspension<lb/>
system for a smoother<lb/>
ride than a Nissan Sentra.<lb/>
All of which means<lb/>
Ford Escort not only<lb/>
gives you a big advan-<lb/>
tage over that motor-<lb/>
cycle pictured above.<lb/>
It also beats more than<lb/>
its share of cars.<lb/>
THE BEST BUILT<lb/>
AMERICAS CARS<lb/>
When we say "Quality-<lb/>
is Job 1 we are talking<lb/>
about more than a com-<lb/>
mitment. We are talking<lb/>
about results. An indepen-<lb/>
dent survey concluded<lb/>
Ford makes the best-<lb/>
built American cars. The<lb/>
survey measured owner-<lb/>
reported problems<lb/>
during the first three<lb/>
months of ownership of<lb/>
1983 cars designed<lb/>
and built in<lb/>
the U.S.<lb/>
And that commitment<lb/>
continues in 1984.<lb/>
 For comparison Honda S0<lb/>
mileage is obtained from EPA<lb/>
emissions testing and is not an<lb/>
official rating Your mileage<lb/>
may vary depending on speed.<lb/>
trip length, weather Actual<lb/>
highway mileage lower Escort<lb/>
Diesel mileage applicable<lb/>
to sedans with FS engine<lb/>
and without power steering<lb/>
and A C Not avaiLr le in<lb/>
California<lb/>
 Sales estimates based on wrrld<lb/>
wide production figures<lb/>
t Based (Xi EPA Interior Volume<lb/>
Index<lb/>
ttEscort GL (shown) compared<lb/>
to Tovota Tercel 3-door deluxe<lb/>
?Mm I<lb/>
Get it together - Buckle up.<lb/>
Have You Driven A Ford<lb/>
Lately?<lb/>
Cord<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0029"/><lb/>
NGSQQN<lb/>
British actress Francesco Annis<lb/>
as Jessica, mother of Paul At-<lb/>
reides and disciple of the Bene<lb/>
Gesserit sect in Dune.<lb/>
mightv blade again, with Rn hard<lb/>
I k-im hei directing Irom .1 Stan<lb/>
l( Mann s, 1 eenplat<lb/>
Meant hile, ba? k in I n<lb/>
Migeles. .11 leasi three othei less<lb/>
famousonans wield swords ,il<lb/>
the I inversal Studios Imn 1 hev<lb/>
1 .ill II .1 'SW I M ll .111(1 SOI 1 (I v SpCl<lb/>
i.u 111.n 1 111( (lit tel (lit .1st v<lb/>
i n me peiipit" eai li. im I in) iiil;<lb/>
( (iii.in. .i lissom? female fighter,<lb/>
tout villains, ont' vert had ill.nn.<lb/>
.mil ,i wiard latig and lash<lb/>
mam i in k - : .  im ii.ti ed I ' .i<lb/>
tne Iii .it11iiiu dragon Nexi u<lb/>
marks I Ik 'i M h annivel s.u (t<lb/>
the tout, .mil executives are<lb/>
huddling now t(plan majoi<lb/>
Im i hdat i elebi atioiis We e<lb/>
heaiil ,i i nunu 1the ill umv ihe<lb/>
di inns w ill lIka netn snp-1<lb/>
?: ii hen w ill be .i tin( mg. ii i.u<lb/>
H i hesi thumping Km kong<lb/>
 11 n ? hi relieved I d n 1 n i<lb/>
,tk .tn okes .11v?till going ,ipf<lb/>
"S i I C to l ll(tl-<lb/>
i i anothei Stephen King<lb/>
Ui lM i M ii hlo? khustei s 111 be rendered in<lb/>
(,ii photogtapl was telhlloid hirestarter. I he voting<lb/>
s pasi Seiit em her. gtrl with the extraordinary tort h<lb/>
talent is 1 m evs B.u i moi e 11 mi<lb/>
 . Ik i parents are plaved bv<lb/>
? was shol in Dtv id Kelt 11 i . ??; ' ' ? ? ?<lb/>
( i ,isi and i lew .ind Heathei I o kleai (ol I s<lb/>
ei all eight soundstages at '?? ? . ' and flunk, t i Mark<lb/>
Ihimh s" dios plus three lestei ditetts from .i screenplat<lb/>
seis iwu suhsidiatv" lo bt Stanlct Mann<lb/>
i within Mi Mm it im Duectoi Waltei Hill u-i hn<lb/>
ludmg 'lu ut dump.ailed ! ished Streets of hire, a luturistu<lb/>
i 11 u memhers the "dead ro? k-and-roll advent tire lantast<lb/>
' ? luiiiji and the Sa la mat m a whi? h he co-st ripted with I.arrt<lb/>
desert neai uaie nd how will Gross, starring Michael Pare and<lb/>
'i . ? .mil i ompant<lb/>
:? 11 I 1 ue - w 11 h 111 hi ue<lb/>
eves Bt (impute!<lb/>
It aim i eat tire<lb/>
'I iiai Ii i Kmihali li i w hi i did<lb/>
? hi n ih aliens in (<lb/>
? ?'? ? and r 1 himsell i- in<lb/>
ngeles working on the V Ian i luh Im the movie<lb/>
i and great sand X-k ?'?' s currenth heing<lb/>
i ? na slated lot ihi hig<lb/>
m:m: bin ihct II hati to wail<lb/>
it tion w i ii k spe-<lb/>
edilmi; will lake<lb/>
M<lb/>
Diane lane 11 ill soon sta 11 s<lb/>
work (Hi Ihck Tracy, which he'll<lb/>
du ei I next e.il 111 mi a M l ipl bv<lb/>
 upash and ai k 1- pps, i U.u<lb/>
icn Beatt is one ol a tew actors<lb/>
rnmored tin the role ol the<lb/>
m ii.11 c aw ed ill mesti ippei.<lb/>
inmii strip hero t? decades ol<lb/>
Sunda tunnies readers No<lb/>
wind vei on the plot, but 1 in<lb/>
tiild In an uniinpe.K liable source<lb/>
111.11 mam biarre and lamiliai<lb/>
i liai .k 1(1 - u ill appeal Breath<lb/>
less Mahonev. the Blank. Mum-<lb/>
bles. Primeiace. less fruehearl<lb/>
11 ai - true h ve I, Biu Bi it and<lb/>
1 Littop<lb/>
tict the Ihim Mi Hill deals<lb/>
with Du k 11 ,k v. he w ill direct the<lb/>
toiiith version ol I he Magnifi-<lb/>
cent Sexen (which be has aluadv<lb/>
to i litcn with I ai i (?! i inx I he<lb/>
original 1agn hcrnt Seven, le<lb/>
leased in I960, stai i ed t lie<lb/>
then ucN s(. McOueen and<lb/>
( bai Icn Bronson, taimmv N ul<lb/>
Bl n in I and i i mi pletelv u n<lb/>
km iw n amesohtirn<lb/>
Bun Renolds' next will In- the<lb/>
title lole in Stick, which he's also<lb/>
directing,  11 im t he Y hm n e<lb/>
I ei (li.il d IK ni'l .11h nit all ci HI<lb/>
vsbu hectimes a chautteui in<lb/>
Miami Beach a (?eis tangled<lb/>
up with lux hoss and his glamoi<lb/>
nils tin.im ial it msultanl and a<lb/>
ccxaine-dealing ihenl ol theirs<lb/>
I (( Hl.l! d 1 ( ll !( Ills p.lls I IS<lb/>
doing the screenplav the previ-<lb/>
ously 1 i ile I.i K ltd and<lb/>
liomhr,<lb/>
Cloak and Dagger si.us Ts<lb/>
Heniv 1 hum.is. Dabne Col-<lb/>
em.in WarGames and Is Buf-<lb/>
falo Bill) and Michael Murphv:<lb/>
it's all about a lxv. an espionage<lb/>
plot, an im.igmaiv superhero<lb/>
and a real friend Ruhard<lb/>
Fianklm directs from a screen-<lb/>
plat bv loin Holland and Bill<lb/>
Phillips<lb/>
Australia's Mel dihson it he<lb/>
heai Isioppei in Road H'arrioi mi<lb/>
I'ii )iiit i! Living Dangerously)<lb/>
plavs opposite Sisst Spacek in<lb/>
The River, a lennessee-locationed<lb/>
tale ot small farmers and big<lb/>
troubles (iibson ??. born in<lb/>
America ilus t.uiulv emigrated to<lb/>
Australia when he vs.is 12), so he<lb/>
shouldn't have anv ditlnullv<lb/>
tempoi ai ilv losing bis Aussie ,u-<lb/>
(cut Vcaderm ward nominee<lb/>
Mat k Rvdell (On Golden Pond) di-<lb/>
i c( ts Irom a st i eenplav In<lb/>
Kolxit Dillon ,tnd uhan Baiiv<lb/>
1(U I Ik ise ot us who m iss<lb/>
ames tiarner's face on prime-<lb/>
time television, we'll Ihp able to<lb/>
see it on the hutjc screen come<lb/>
spring In Tank, Garnet plavs a<lb/>
retired imv si Majoi whose<lb/>
voting son it I homas Howell,<lb/>
Imiii I h, Outsiders) is falseh im-<lb/>
prisoned t .ai nei just happens to<lb/>
have a tullv operational Sherman<lb/>
lank, and decides to roat to the<lb/>
rescue (Ah, how otteu on the<lb/>
tlcewav have 1 ve.lined lot a<lb/>
tullv operational Shei man<lb/>
lank Mai in t In Uliskv di-<lb/>
rec ted 111 mi a 1 a n (.01 don<lb/>
si t ipi. b ii 1 oi mi.ii ProdiK lions<lb/>
I im 11 utti hi is enjov ing an un-<lb/>
( b.u ai ui ist u calm spot in his<lb/>
career; his next him, Road Show,<lb/>
has been indehniteh postponed<lb/>
due to the illness ot direcloi<lb/>
Ruhaid Biooks (who replaced<lb/>
hisi directot Martin Kitt because<lb/>
ot illness) Bui while Hutton<lb/>
knot ks alxuit Malibu in his red<lb/>
Porsche and prepares tin Falcon<lb/>
and the Snowman with Sean lYnti.<lb/>
tans w ill have two ot his hlnis to<lb/>
oiiupv then tune Daniel and<lb/>
Iceman. 1 he latter, filmed in Van-<lb/>
couver, B.C. undei the direction<lb/>
ot 1 led Schepisi, has Mutton as a<lb/>
x(ien!ist who discovers, thaws<lb/>
and tx'li lends a piehistom hu-<lb/>
man 1 he screenplay is bv Chip<lb/>
I'll isei and ohn Di immei<lb/>
Judith Sims<lb/>
DUNE<lb/>
FAN CLUB<lb/>
A<lb/>
ilu? i paii ot Mexico<lb/>
i a ? ? ivat a. to lie ptec isi . i I? 11<lb/>
' (i ling nder the lol-<lb/>
(Win. the "ll 11 .ul in ivel bv<lb/>
ii Hied s( imeto lie-1 e in<lb/>
t be arid sands (t Mollv wood<lb/>
I hose readers interested in join-<lb/>
ing, oi receiving mine informa-<lb/>
tion, should send name and ,n<lb/>
Low i v isi reeuplav bv dress to<lb/>
' ? . i ? ii i I 11e Mm 111 (11 es .i<lb/>
( ? Bl t ish i i m s u 1. all a<lb/>
VIlM'I I I 111 ! K . U ho Is<lb/>
' 1 .i i ? the veal is<lb/>
? - Ins estranged will (Jai Suite 900<lb/>
? - B sm ? and In- half<lb/>
DUNE FAN CLUB<lb/>
1680 North Vine<lb/>
in i<lb/>
;<lb/>
l<lb/>
Hollywood, CA 90028<lb/>
Details will tie mailed as soon as<lb/>
tin-v are available<lb/>
I I . . 11 a I (? s I 11 (i s e<lb/>
i I  i ? ? soundstages Conan<lb/>
11 ???' ughl m Arnold StiUsuited u arriors on the planet<lb/>
I he Dune I right)<lb/>
eneggei wm<lb/>
lit M i I h M A G A Z I N I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0030"/><lb/>
Without Jensen speakers, you're not all there:<lb/>
r<lb/>
Okay vou ve got a Jensen ie<lb/>
out and stick m speakers that aren t Jensen quality But<lb/>
vou II be paving for it every time vou drive<lb/>
Remember vour speakers are the final?and mavbe<lb/>
most important?link m your car audio system And the<lb/>
technical excellence of Jensen speakers is legendary<lb/>
A truly great cat audio system starts with a Jensen<lb/>
receiver and goes all the way with the quality sound of<lb/>
Jensen speaners<lb/>
Hev it s areat to save monev But if it s the sound<lb/>
that moves vou speaKers aren t the place to do ?:<lb/>
Complete vour system with Jensen speakers Any-<lb/>
thinaelsemiqht be penny wise But sound foolish<lb/>
JENSEN<lb/>
CAR AUDIO<lb/>
When it's the sound that moves you.<lb/>
'cat.?' ts "?<lb/>
?<lb/>
-v v -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0031"/><lb/>
Mustang SVO<lb/>
A P5 li rsep cr" turb i<lb/>
charged electronicaIl fuel injected<lb/>
2 3 liter engine nli inter ?ler<lb/>
Adjustable K( wii' gas tilled<lb/>
sill H <lb/>
(n ?tdvear R rated N I tires<lb/>
i in I6x' inch i ast aluminum<lb/>
wheels<lb/>
l'i iwer f lur heel dist brakes<lb/>
Redesigned fn ni suspensii u<lb/>
t r .kklun ni.il vertual wheel travel<lb/>
1 lurst' shift linkage i m .i<lb/>
five speed gearbi <lb/>
ii it ulated dri ing seats<lb/>
Redesigned f i pedals t i<lb/>
.ill' heel and u c shifting and .i<lb/>
fixed f x t rest f r high speed<lb/>
 i trnering<lb/>
Jin lb tt ?t t ?rtue .it 3000 rpm<lb/>
Functk Mi.il iu h k scxp f r an<lb/>
t i .iir turb' intero Ier<lb/>
Functk 'ii.il .ur dam<lb/>
Funt tn nul Biplane sp ikr<lb/>
I'urbi i bt ist gauge i Maximum<lb/>
 m ?si 14 psi i<lb/>
Engine m ?uni damjxTs<lb/>
Premium regulai fuel selector<lb/>
s it li<lb/>
I imited slip. Ii.k lion U k axle<lb/>
? i . - .<lb/>
(ret it t igether Biu kk- up<lb/>
Have you driven a Ford<lb/>
lately?<lb/>
The Machine<lb/>
speaks for itself<lb/>
a lu<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0032"/><lb/>
to &amp;on(epqfrjibu cLon?.<lb/>
SJS9<lb/>
Give some hove this holiday.<lb/>
Tiiies stuffed animals.<lb/>
tetprgy-giving, they're lovable<lb/>
and huggaMe. And so well-made they can<lb/>
even survive the love and hugs of a child.<lb/>
 So come to Hardees, buy any sandwich<lb/>
and medium Coke (or any medium soft drink) at<lb/>
the regular price, and get a Shirt Tales stuffed<lb/>
animaijor our very special price.<lb/>
Come backjor more and get every child<lb/>
on your list a little someone to love.<lb/>
Collectall5.<lb/>
Price may vary. While supplies last.<lb/>
At participating Haraee restaurant.<lb/>
Coca-Cote and Coke are registered trademarks of The Coca-Cota Company<lb/>
 1980 1981 198? Hallrru.rk Cards Inc<lb/>
 Hardees Food Systems Inc 1983<lb/>
'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0033"/><lb/>
<lb/>
Shirt Tales?<lb/>
stuffed animals are coming<lb/>
to Hardee's November 14!<lb/>
A perfect gift ideajor someone you love at Christmas!<lb/>
Hardeer<lb/>
TWO HAM BISCUITS $1.29<lb/>
Offer good at participating Hardee's restaurants. Please present<lb/>
coupon before ordering One coupon per customer, per order, please<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax due Coupon not good in combina-<lb/>
tion with any other offers<lb/>
Otter good during regular breakfast menu hours Dec. 1-7.1983.<lb/>
2 Ham Bisc 2 Less Mam Bisc<lb/>
c 1963 Hardees Food Systems Inc<lb/>
Hatdeer<lb/>
TWO SAUSAGE &amp; EGG<lb/>
BISCUITS $1.29<lb/>
Offer good at participating Hardee's restaurants. Please present<lb/>
coupon before ordering One coupon per customer, per order, please<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax due. Coupon not good in combina-<lb/>
tion with any other offers.<lb/>
Otter good during regular breakfast menu hours Nov. 24-30,1983.<lb/>
2 SGEG 2'Less Sausage Bisc<lb/>
c 1983 Hardees Food Systems Inc<lb/>
Ytardezr<lb/>
TWO HAM BISCUITS $U9<lb/>
Offer good at participating Hardee's restaurants. Please present<lb/>
coupon before ordering. One coupon per customer, per order, please.<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax due. Coupon not good in combina-<lb/>
tion with any other offers.<lb/>
Otter good during regular breakfast menu hours Nov. 17-23,1983.<lb/>
2 Ham Bisc 2Less Ham Bisc<lb/>
c 1983 Hardees Food Systems Inc<lb/>
Hardees<lb/>
TWO SAUSAGE &amp; EGG<lb/>
BISCUITS $129<lb/>
Offer good at participating Hardee's restaurants Please present<lb/>
coupon before ordering. One coupon per customer, per order, please<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax due Coupon not good in combina-<lb/>
tion with any other offers.<lb/>
Otter good during regular breakfast menu hours through Nov. 16,<lb/>
1983.<lb/>
2 SGEG 2Less Sausage Bisc<lb/>
c 1983 Hardees Food Systems Inc<lb/>
Hardeer<lb/>
A BACON CHEESEBURGER, LARGE<lb/>
FRIES &amp; LARGE SOFT DRINK $2.29<lb/>
Offer good at participating Hardee's restaurants. Please present<lb/>
coupon before ordering One coupon per customer, per order, please<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax due Coupon not good in combina-<lb/>
tion with any other offers.<lb/>
Otter good after regular breakfast menu hours Dec. 1-7,1983.<lb/>
B CB. LGFry. LGDK, Meal Deal B CB<lb/>
C1983 Hardees Food Systems Inc<lb/>
Hardeer<lb/>
A MUSHROOM IT SWISS BURGER,<lb/>
LARGE FRIES &amp; LARGE SOFT DRINK SL29<lb/>
Offer good at participating Hardee's restaurants. Please present<lb/>
coupon beforeordering. One coupon per customer, per order, please.<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax due. Coupon not good in combina-<lb/>
tion with any other offers.<lb/>
Offer good after regular breakfast menu hours Nov. 24-30,1983.<lb/>
Mush LGFry. LGDK Meal Deal Mush<lb/>
c 1983 Hardees Food Systems Inc<lb/>
Uardeer<lb/>
A BIG DELUXE BURGER, LARGE<lb/>
FRIES &amp; LARGE SOFT DRINK $2J?<lb/>
Offer good at participating Hardee's restaurants. Please present<lb/>
coupon beforeordering. One coupon per customer, per order, please<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax due. Coupon not good in combina-<lb/>
tion with any other offers.<lb/>
Offer good after regular breakfast menu hours Nov. 17-23,1983.<lb/>
Del . LGFry. LGDK Meal Deal. Del<lb/>
C 1983 Hardees Food Systems Inc<lb/>
ttardcer<lb/>
<lb/>
A REGULAR HAMBURGER, REGULAR<lb/>
FRIES &amp; SMALL SOFT DRINK $100<lb/>
Offer good at participating Hardee's restaurants. Please present<lb/>
coupon beforeordering. One coupon per customer, per order, please.<lb/>
Customer must pay any sales tax due. Coupon not good in combina-<lb/>
tion with any other offers.<lb/>
Offer good after regular breakfast menu hours through Nov. 16,<lb/>
1983.<lb/>
HAMBG Reg Fry.SmDK.MealDeal.HAMBG<lb/>
C1983 Hardees Food Systems Inc<lb/>
Vt<lb/>
<pb facs="00057589_0034"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>