<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
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<pb facs="00057642_0001"/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
She<lb/>
(Earolmian<lb/>
Serving the Last Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vote In<lb/>
Referendum<lb/>
Today<lb/>
Vol.58 No.? S<lb/>
Tuesday, April 24, 1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
B JENNIFER JENDRAS1AK<lb/>
Nw? Editor<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina got its first taste of the<lb/>
1984 presidential campaign last week when<lb/>
Democratic presidential candidate Jesse Jackson<lb/>
visited Greenville and Rocky Mount.<lb/>
Jackson arrived two hours late to speak to a<lb/>
capacity crowd at the Ebenezer Baptist Church in<lb/>
Rocky Mount. The crowd waited patiently, however,<lb/>
and when Jackson arrived, greeted him fervently.<lb/>
Jackson said his goals as president would be to<lb/>
defend the poor and delier the needy.<lb/>
"Somebody must feed the hungry and clothe the<lb/>
naked and they must study war no more he said.<lb/>
Poverty is not limited to one race or sex, Jackson<lb/>
stressed. baby crying because it's hungry does not<lb/>
cry in black or white or brown or yellow he said.<lb/>
We must educate our<lb/>
ed away from school,<lb/>
children he said.<lb/>
The directions taken to maintain the national<lb/>
defense system are wrong, Jackson said. "When we<lb/>
cut aid to American education and increase aid to El<lb/>
Salvador, we need to go another way he said, ad-<lb/>
ding that "in the world arena we must use guided<lb/>
minds, not guided missiles. If we train our youth<lb/>
there is a way out<lb/>
He maintained a theme of racial unity throughout<lb/>
the speech but still stressed the distinctiveness of in-<lb/>
dividual races. "American life is not like a blanket<lb/>
Jackson said. "The quilt ? that's America.<lb/>
Everybody fits somewhere<lb/>
"Women do what they've got to do he said while<lb/>
stating the need for more aid to households headed<lb/>
by women. Jackson also said he felt a woman was<lb/>
Ja.kson came out very strongly in support of in- capable of being president "If the poor folks can<lb/>
mmTto letnann"1 T " ?" t a SUrV1Ve three ? of Reaan sure.v'a woman an<lb/>
mind to learn and a desire to learn ought not be turn- run this nation he said.<lb/>
While Campaigning<lb/>
Finally, Jackson stressed the need for voter<lb/>
registration "If you're tired of the lack of scholar-<lb/>
snips, or of substandard housing, vote about it "he<lb/>
said "But if you don't get registered back home you<lb/>
can t vote about it<lb/>
 GIf ?.lle' Jackson spoke to a crowd of about<lb/>
200 atThe King and Queen North. He told the crowd<lb/>
that we can realize the impossible dream because<lb/>
there is no impossible dream<lb/>
Fifteen percent of the nation is currently in pover-<lb/>
ty, Jackson said, calling this a "rising misery index "<lb/>
He incited the audience to "take off the masks and<lb/>
face tne facts ? don't color poverty black<lb/>
He also stressed his rainbow coalition theme "The<lb/>
rainbow s a combination of sunshine and rain It's<lb/>
not easy to get but it's worthwhile, it's worth work-<lb/>
ing for because at the end we find a pot of gold "<lb/>
Jackson said.<lb/>
"We need to rise above race and sex as a measure-<lb/>
ment for judging the worth of somebody he added.<lb/>
Jackson<lb/>
SGA Committee Establishes<lb/>
New Book Exchange System<lb/>
To Solve Student Complaints<lb/>
BRYAN HUMBERT - ECU Pm?to i?b<lb/>
Enjoying the weather at Barefoot on the<lb/>
Puppy Love<lb/>
Mall were this girl and her friend. Who needs men anyway?<lb/>
Bv JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
According to a recent survey<lb/>
taken by the SGA Student<lb/>
Welfare Committee, many<lb/>
students are unhappy with the<lb/>
current textbook purchasing<lb/>
situation at ECU. In an effort to<lb/>
alleviate this problem, the Student<lb/>
Welfare Committee is offering a<lb/>
new book exchange system which<lb/>
will debut today.<lb/>
"We found that a majority of<lb/>
students are very disturbed with<lb/>
the current book purchasing situa-<lb/>
tion said committee chairman<lb/>
David Brown. "We're hoping this<lb/>
will save them some money<lb/>
The system will be centered<lb/>
around a bulletin board in the<lb/>
Student Supply Store. Students<lb/>
will fill out a card listing the title<lb/>
of the book, the asking price and<lb/>
their name and telephone number.<lb/>
A student who wants to purchase<lb/>
a particular book may then search<lb/>
through the cards already posted<lb/>
and contact the person offering<lb/>
the needed book.<lb/>
Brown said he hoped that it<lb/>
would be possible in some cases<lb/>
for students to just exchange<lb/>
books w ithout any money actualh<lb/>
changing hands.<lb/>
The bulletin board will remain<lb/>
in place through May 3. Brown<lb/>
said this is just a test marketing of<lb/>
the concept and he hopes the pro-<lb/>
gram can be implemented on a<lb/>
larger scale next year. "We want<lb/>
to start small and grow he said,<lb/>
adding that he is uncertain of how<lb/>
response to the idea will be. "It<lb/>
might be a flop or a success he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Eventually, if response to the<lb/>
idea is positive, the committee<lb/>
hopes to initiate a much farther<lb/>
reaching program, possibly<lb/>
publishing the listings in a paper.<lb/>
In the meantime, students wan-<lb/>
ting to buy or sell books should<lb/>
take advantage of this opportuni-<lb/>
ty and visit the bulletin board at<lb/>
the Student Supply Store this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Students Surveyed Want More Parking, Better Instruction<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK S?hW?. f, ?  HlUUVUVJU<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Nrw r dltor<lb/>
The SGA Student Welfare<lb/>
Committee in conjunction with<lb/>
the ECU Marketing Department<lb/>
recently took a major survey aim-<lb/>
ed at pinpointing students' feel-<lb/>
ings about a variety of campus<lb/>
issues. Although the results of the<lb/>
survey will not be tabulated until<lb/>
later according to Committee<lb/>
Chairman David Brown, there<lb/>
as space left on the survey for<lb/>
students to provide additional<lb/>
comments on ECU and many<lb/>
students provided lengthy<lb/>
responses.<lb/>
Subjects for responses ranged<lb/>
from parking, to educational<lb/>
quality to the attitudes of campus<lb/>
security. There were several<lb/>
responses on the subject of park-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"The parking situation is hell<lb/>
around campus said one stu-<lb/>
dent. "It is hard for students to<lb/>
find parking places at any time<lb/>
during the day. I'm an off-<lb/>
campus student and have several<lb/>
meetings at night and it is impossi-<lb/>
ble to find a place to park<lb/>
Another student said he felt park-<lb/>
ing students for bicycles and cars<lb/>
should not be as expensive as they<lb/>
are. One student even suggested<lb/>
that Howard House should be<lb/>
torn down and a parking deck<lb/>
built in its place.<lb/>
The image of ECU also<lb/>
generated student comments.<lb/>
"The reputation of ECU as a par-<lb/>
ty school should be changed<lb/>
said one student. "I feel the<lb/>
academic standards need to be<lb/>
raised said another student. "I<lb/>
have been very disillusioned with<lb/>
the quality of instruction. East<lb/>
Carolina has the potential to be a<lb/>
One student felt that graduate<lb/>
students are not given enough<lb/>
respect. "If this school is ever to<lb/>
live up to its title as 'university' it<lb/>
should start treating its grad<lb/>
students with the respect they<lb/>
deserve he said. " I f you want to<lb/>
compete with the other univer-<lb/>
sities in this state some fundamen-<lb/>
tal changes in attitude will have to<lb/>
occur<lb/>
The UNC system affirmative<lb/>
action program was cited by one<lb/>
respondent. "I think in the after-<lb/>
great school, I think the university math of all the hoopla of the UNC<lb/>
should take the steps to make it system affirmative action pro-<lb/>
better" gram, school officials have<lb/>
Hart Speaks At UNC,<lb/>
Supports Educational<lb/>
Funding, Domestic Aid<lb/>
forgotten one of the primary<lb/>
reasons why it was initiated he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"One of the most depressing<lb/>
aspects of the student bus service<lb/>
is lack of transportation to the<lb/>
Brody Building said one<lb/>
respondent. "It is ridiculous to rid<lb/>
a bike from ECU to Brody when<lb/>
you many need to check out more<lb/>
books than you can carry on your<lb/>
bike. If ECU could afford bigger,<lb/>
longer buses, then why can't they<lb/>
afford to transport students to<lb/>
Brody?"<lb/>
"Highway robbery" was the<lb/>
terminology used by o le student<lb/>
to refer to the textbook buvback<lb/>
system used at ECU. "The book<lb/>
are far too expensive and there is<lb/>
no reason to make students buv<lb/>
new editions at a his her price<lb/>
every year he said.<lb/>
The Student Welfare Commit-<lb/>
tee plans to use the results to in-<lb/>
form present and future<lb/>
legislators of the opinions of the<lb/>
students they represen Brown<lb/>
satd he is quite pleased with the<lb/>
results and hopes to have them<lb/>
made available to students earl<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
By PAMA MITCHELL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
U.S. Sen. Gary Hart Thursday<lb/>
criticized the Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion's policies in Central America<lb/>
as representative of national<lb/>
leadership that places a higher<lb/>
priority on militarism abroad than<lb/>
on America's domestic needs.<lb/>
Also, speaking to thousands of<lb/>
college students at the University<lb/>
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,<lb/>
Hart promised to restore recent<lb/>
cuts in federal spending for educa-<lb/>
tion, including loan funds for col-<lb/>
lege students.<lb/>
Excessive military spending,<lb/>
along with a Reagan tax structure<lb/>
that exempts corporations from<lb/>
"assuming a fair share of the tax<lb/>
burden Hart said, have caused a<lb/>
national budget deficit "that mor-<lb/>
tgages your future Therefore,<lb/>
he told his mostly student au-<lb/>
dience, "You have a stake in this<lb/>
election that's perhaps greater<lb/>
than anyone else's. Because it's<lb/>
your future that this election is<lb/>
about<lb/>
With a small army of Secret<lb/>
Service guards stationed around<lb/>
the arena and a larger army of<lb/>
local and national media clustered<lb/>
in front of the stage, Hart's<lb/>
wannest applause came when he<lb/>
vowed to pay for increased aid to<lb/>
education and other domestic pro-<lb/>
grams "by cancelling the MX mis-<lb/>
sle, by cancelling the B-l<lb/>
bomber<lb/>
Hart's appearance Thursday at<lb/>
UNC's Carmichael Auditorium<lb/>
was arranged through the UNC<lb/>
Students With Hart organization,<lb/>
which has chapters on nine UNC<lb/>
system campuses. Three represen-<lb/>
tatives from ECU's Students With<lb/>
Hart attended the event, which<lb/>
drew a crowd of more than 3,000.<lb/>
The Democratic presidential<lb/>
candidate's aides wanted to kick<lb/>
off Hart's personal campaigning<lb/>
in North Carolina at a location<lb/>
where a large, enthusiastic au-<lb/>
dience could be expected. Ever<lb/>
since the pre-New Hampshire<lb/>
days of Hart's campaign, students<lb/>
have been attracted to the Col-<lb/>
orado senator's future-oriented<lb/>
policy ideas, and much of the<lb/>
credit for Hart's upset win in New<lb/>
Hampshire has gone to student<lb/>
volunteers working in that state.<lb/>
Charles Sune, founder of<lb/>
ECU's Students With Hart<lb/>
chapter, says that the candidate is<lb/>
scheduled to visit eastern North<lb/>
Carolina at least once more before<lb/>
the May 8 primary, probably dur-<lb/>
ing the week of April 30.<lb/>
Republicans Unite Behind<lb/>
Martin's Platform Of<lb/>
Merit Pay, Tax Changes<lb/>
??VAN HUMIIRT - 1CU<lb/>
The Amateurs performed at Barefoot on the Mall Thursday.<lb/>
By DENNIS KILCOYNE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A curious and rare trend is tak-<lb/>
ing place in this year's guber-<lb/>
natorial race. Democrats are ac-<lb/>
tually concerned about a<lb/>
Republican candidate.<lb/>
Jim Martin, the likely<lb/>
Republican nominee in the race<lb/>
for governor, appears to be the<lb/>
strongest candidate the<lb/>
Republicans have offered in<lb/>
years. "He has an excellent<lb/>
chance of winning, and the<lb/>
Democrats know it said ECU<lb/>
alumna Lisa Sharrard, Martin's<lb/>
campaign chairman in New<lb/>
Hanover county. "When the<lb/>
Democrats discuss their can-<lb/>
didates for governor, the number<lb/>
one question is always, 'Who can<lb/>
beat Jim Martin?' We've got them<lb/>
scared<lb/>
Since 1972, Martin has been the<lb/>
congressman for the 9th Congres-<lb/>
sional District. In the past, this<lb/>
former chemistry professor served<lb/>
as chairman of the Mecklenburg<lb/>
County Commissioners and chair-<lb/>
man of the N.C. Association of<lb/>
County Commissioners.<lb/>
Martin's congressional record<lb/>
establishes him as an impeccable<lb/>
conservative with an ability to<lb/>
compromise with liberal col-<lb/>
leagues. Recently, as the ranking<lb/>
Republican on the powerful<lb/>
House Ways and Means Commit-<lb/>
tee, Martin led N.C. Democrats<lb/>
Walter Jones, Charlie Whitley,<lb/>
and Charlie Rose to achieving a<lb/>
reduction in the tobacco tax from<lb/>
sixteen cents to twelve cents, with<lb/>
another four-cent reduction in<lb/>
1988. Martin received much praise<lb/>
from his tobacco allie in the<lb/>
Democratic aisle.<lb/>
Martin's major proposals in-<lb/>
clude:<lb/>
? the elimination of the in-<lb/>
tangibles and inventory taxes, to<lb/>
encourage savings and invest-<lb/>
ment, and to attract industry.<lb/>
? a comprehensive merit pay-<lb/>
plan for teachers, and a greater<lb/>
emphasis on discipline and<lb/>
classroom basics.<lb/>
? the opening up of governmen-<lb/>
tal meetings to conduct public<lb/>
business in public.<lb/>
? the streamlining of state<lb/>
government with an emphasis on<lb/>
reduction of the bureaucracy.<lb/>
? a concentration on reducing<lb/>
drug trafficking, including the use<lb/>
of National Guard units to survey<lb/>
the coastline for smuggling.<lb/>
? the completion of Interstate<lb/>
40 highway.<lb/>
"While the Democrats squab-<lb/>
ble over their six candidates, the<lb/>
Republican Party is uniting<lb/>
behind Martin said Sharrard.<lb/>
Indeed, even if Martin should<lb/>
lose, the race is likely to be close.<lb/>
" ? 4. , .?<lb/>
? ' - - f-<lb/>
'<lb/>
i . v - - ?? ? ? m ? ? <lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 24. 1984<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community<lb/>
since 192!<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the ot<lb/>
ficial newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated, and published for and<lb/>
by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rate: lie yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located In the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU,<lb/>
Greenville N C.<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send address<lb/>
changes to The East Carolinian,<lb/>
Old South Building. ECU Green<lb/>
ville, NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone: 757-4144, M7. MM<lb/>
ROCK CONCERT<lb/>
All Campus Rock Concert The<lb/>
 s and the Miller Brewing Co<lb/>
c E working together to bring the<lb/>
campus of ECU the second con<lb/>
cert of the 'College Rock<lb/>
Series ' The concert will take<lb/>
place at the KA House on April<lb/>
28th from 1 00 until 6 00 The<lb/>
bands are The Usuals" which<lb/>
play 60s craze music and "Lefty<lb/>
which plays high powered ROCK<lb/>
N ROLL The main attraction<lb/>
will be Oh Boy an all girl band<lb/>
from Va Beach These girls are<lb/>
wild There will be thousands of<lb/>
collectors cups given away along<lb/>
with T shirts, caps. hats, and<lb/>
posters Remember this is a ma<lb/>
ior concert so be ready to party<lb/>
Don't forget BYOB<lb/>
EDMISTEN84<lb/>
Ail students interested in join<lb/>
ing the campus organization to<lb/>
elect Rufus Edmisten as Gover<lb/>
nor in 1984. Please contact Betty<lb/>
Casey or Macon Moye (ECU<lb/>
Coordinator) at 752 0312.<lb/>
DIETETIC ASSOC<lb/>
The Student Dietetic Associa<lb/>
tlon will have their last annual<lb/>
meeting on April 24 at 5:30 p.m<lb/>
The meeting will be held In the<lb/>
Dining room In the Home<lb/>
Economics Building. There will<lb/>
be a covered dish dinner during<lb/>
the meeting so all old and new<lb/>
members should bring their<lb/>
favorite dish The dessert will be<lb/>
furnished Also, ail of the final<lb/>
business for this year will be<lb/>
discussed Come get involved In<lb/>
the SDA and have a good meal<lb/>
too! Everyone is invited!<lb/>
FREE FOR SENIORS<lb/>
Now Is your chance to keep up<lb/>
with events at ECU. after you<lb/>
graduate The Pirate Club Is of<lb/>
ferlng free "Crew Club"<lb/>
memberships for graduating<lb/>
seniors This consists of purple<lb/>
and gold report, decals, priority<lb/>
on season football and basketball<lb/>
tickers and much more and this Is<lb/>
completely free Contact the<lb/>
Pirate Club office at 757 61748, or<lb/>
Mark Niewald at 757 4009 or stop<lb/>
by our booth at the Student Supp<lb/>
ly April 12 8. 13, or Barefoot on the<lb/>
Mall April 19<lb/>
PHYE MAJORS<lb/>
All students who plan to<lb/>
declare physical education as a<lb/>
major should report to Minges<lb/>
coliseum at 10:00 am Wednes<lb/>
day, April 25, for a motor and<lb/>
physical fitness test. Satisfactory<lb/>
performance on this test is re<lb/>
quired as a prerequisite for of<lb/>
ficial admittance to the physical<lb/>
education major program More<lb/>
detailed information is available<lb/>
by calling 757 4441 or 6442<lb/>
Any student with a medical<lb/>
condition that would contrain<lb/>
dicate participation in the testing<lb/>
program should contact Dr.<lb/>
Israel at 757 4497 Examples<lb/>
would include heart murmurs,<lb/>
congenital heart disease,<lb/>
respiratory disorders or signifi<lb/>
cant musculoskeletal problems.<lb/>
If you have any significant<lb/>
medical conditions, please notify<lb/>
Dr Israel if you plan to be tested<lb/>
BASIC SAILING<lb/>
For the first time. Basic Sail<lb/>
Ing. PHYE 1040. will be offered In<lb/>
summer school. It Is a one hour<lb/>
elective In which you will learn h<lb/>
" Sunflsh well and have two<lb/>
nours. at least, sailing Instruction<lb/>
on a day sailer, a Flying Scot.<lb/>
The class meets May 15 18 and<lb/>
21 24 on campus from 2:40-3:40<lb/>
p.m and then a trip to Camp<lb/>
Don Lee from the afternoon of<lb/>
May 25 through Sunday, May 27.<lb/>
The S45 00 fee Includes 4 meals,<lb/>
lodging, and use of the boats<lb/>
When you get back to campus,<lb/>
the course will be completed, so It<lb/>
only last two weeks.<lb/>
CAMPUS VOTE<lb/>
On April 24, from 9 am. to 4<lb/>
p.m there will be a campus wide<lb/>
referendum In the form of a vote<lb/>
on the question of establishing a<lb/>
Public interest Research Group<lb/>
(PIRG) at ECU. To vote: bring<lb/>
your student id and current ac<lb/>
flvity card to any of 4 SGA polling<lb/>
precincts located at the Croitan,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, the<lb/>
Student Supply Store, College<lb/>
Hill, and Central and West Cam<lb/>
pus Dormitories<lb/>
TWIRLER TRY OUTS<lb/>
When: April 15th, 2?fh and May<lb/>
5th Where i Meet In the Lobby of<lb/>
the Music Building at 2:00. Try<lb/>
outs start at 300 For more Infor<lb/>
mation contact Tom Goolsby<lb/>
757 4982 or Beth Webster 752 5490<lb/>
TEACHER<lb/>
APPLICANTS<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
The Foreign &amp; Domestic<lb/>
Teachers Organization needs<lb/>
teacher applicants in all fields<lb/>
from Kindergarten through Col<lb/>
lege to fill over six hundred<lb/>
teaching vacancies both at home<lb/>
and abroad.<lb/>
Should you wish additional in<lb/>
formation about our organize<lb/>
tlon, you may write the National<lb/>
Teacher's Placement Agency,<lb/>
Universal Teacher, Box 5231.<lb/>
Portland, Oregon 97208<lb/>
Stye i?uBt (ftarnltman<lb/>
SUBCRIPTION FORM<lb/>
Name:<lb/>
Address:<lb/>
Date to Begin:<lb/>
Complimentary<lb/>
Business<lb/>
Amount Paid $<lb/>
Date to End<lb/>
Individual<lb/>
Date Paid<lb/>
Students wanting to have their parents receive<lb/>
The East Carolinian can fill out the form<lb/>
above and drop it by The East Carolinian of-<lb/>
fices on the second floor of the Publications<lb/>
building, across from the entrance of Joyner<lb/>
Library. Rates are $30 for one year and $20 for<lb/>
six months.<lb/>
?<lb/>
? 8 golden fried Shrimp breaded daily!<lb/>
? French Fries or Rice Pilaf<lb/>
? Toasted Grecian Bread<lb/>
? Cocktail Sauce<lb/>
? AND ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
40-lTEM SOUP AND<lb/>
GARDEN-FRESH SALAD BAR!<lb/>
All You Can Eat Fisherman Buffet Every Friday. 5-9pm<lb/>
I CJSUfotfaJti. everything nice<lb/>
Coca-Cola and Coke are registered trade-marks which<lb/>
identify the same product of The Coca-Cola Company<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
205 Grwnriil Bird<lb/>
 ?T?'<lb/>
MANAGEMENT DEPT.<lb/>
The Management Department<lb/>
has established a new honary<lb/>
fraternity. Sigma lota Epsilon<lb/>
recognizes and promotes<lb/>
academic achievement, as well<lb/>
as, encourages cooperation bet<lb/>
ween the academic and more<lb/>
practical uses ot management<lb/>
SIE has six classes ot members<lb/>
undergraduate and graduate<lb/>
students, members of Instltu<lb/>
tlonal research and administra<lb/>
fion staffs, alumni, honary and<lb/>
professional On April 13, 1964 at<lb/>
Western Sizzlin, 40 members<lb/>
were Inducted into the new<lb/>
establishment. Officers of SIE<lb/>
are Linda Grey President,<lb/>
Melanle Bunch-Vice President,<lb/>
Joan Glllete Secretary, Lorna<lb/>
Ely Treasurer.<lb/>
SCUBA DIVING<lb/>
DIVE the GRAND CAYMAN<lb/>
ISLANDS August 14th 21st 1984<lb/>
Spend eight days and seven<lb/>
nights at South Cove on Grand<lb/>
Cayman, Fly Eastern Airlines<lb/>
from Raleigh, three meals, lodg<lb/>
ing and diving Cost ?970 00 for a<lb/>
diver and $784 for a non diver in<lb/>
eludes a $100.00 non refundable<lb/>
deposit For registration and in<lb/>
formation call Ray Scharf, Direc<lb/>
tor of Aquatics at 7574441 or<lb/>
evenings at 754 9339<lb/>
CANOE RACE<lb/>
Win Trophies and Prizes at the<lb/>
Eleventh Annual Canoe Race<lb/>
sponsored by Cape Fear River<lb/>
Research Institute and Riverside<lb/>
Sports Center The Race is Sun<lb/>
day, April 29, 1984 from 1 to5p m<lb/>
The place is the Riverside Sports<lb/>
Center, 1122 Person Street<lb/>
Registration starts at 100 p m<lb/>
racing at 2:00. The entry fee is<lb/>
$3.00 per team For preregistra<lb/>
tion information call or write<lb/>
Or. Sid Gautam Cape Fear River<lb/>
Research Institute, 5212<lb/>
Chesapeake Road. Fayetteville,<lb/>
NC 28301<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may um the form at right or<lb/>
um a separate sheet of paper If<lb/>
you need more Hoes. Thar arc 33<lb/>
units per line. Each letter, punc<lb/>
tuatlon mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit. Capitalize and<lb/>
hyphenate words properly. Leave<lb/>
space at end of line If word<lb/>
doesn't fit. No ads will be ac<lb/>
cepted over the phone. We<lb/>
reserve the right to raact any ad.<lb/>
All ads must be prepaid. Eadose<lb/>
'? pa line of fraction of ? bae<lb/>
Pleaac print leapblyl Use capital and<lb/>
lower case letters.<lb/>
?Hare to THE EAST CAMKJNUN<lb/>
efflee ay M Teeaaay before<lb/>
WeJataeay<lb/>
Name.<lb/>
' Address.?<lb/>
City State.<lb/>
Np. lines ?<lb/>
.Zsp.<lb/>
.tfi pa kaci.<lb/>
.No uuerttom.<lb/>
PHI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
New members of Phi Kappa<lb/>
Phi who were not able to attend<lb/>
the initiation on Tuesday, April<lb/>
17, may pick up their certificates<lb/>
and emblems from Erwin Hester,<lb/>
101 English Department Annex<lb/>
(behind Flanagan Building) bet<lb/>
ween 10 00 and 12:00 from Tues<lb/>
day, April 24, through Friday<lb/>
April 27.<lb/>
STUDENTS WITH<lb/>
HART<lb/>
Now is the time for a new<lb/>
generation of leadership if you<lb/>
are fed up with the politics of<lb/>
nostalgia and looking for new<lb/>
solution to the nation's problems,<lb/>
join us. Students with Hart. We<lb/>
are the vanguard of a new<lb/>
democracy We will be meeting<lb/>
at the headquarters at 207A E. 5th<lb/>
St next to the Blue Moon Cafe,<lb/>
on Wednesday night at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
For more information call<lb/>
752 4935 or 757 3544.<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
Congratulations are in order<lb/>
for all Kappa Sigs It is now of<lb/>
ficial that we have won the<lb/>
Chancellor's Trophy, and that we<lb/>
are Intramural champions for<lb/>
the 83 84 year. We were close last<lb/>
year, but this past year we have<lb/>
proven that Kappa Sigma is the<lb/>
top intramural organization on<lb/>
campus. We had a strong finish<lb/>
with all campus championships<lb/>
in team-handball and the golf<lb/>
tournament. Also, our Softball<lb/>
teams both had good seasons with<lb/>
B team successfully defending its<lb/>
title from a year ago Trey let's<lb/>
party tonight to celebrate the<lb/>
Trophy we have worked so hard<lb/>
to win.<lb/>
GALA AFFAIR<lb/>
NAACP will be sponsoring an<lb/>
extraordinary and informative<lb/>
finale for the semester on Satur<lb/>
day, April 28, 1984, at the Holiday<lb/>
inn at 7:00 p.m The guest<lb/>
speaker will be Mr D. D Gar<lb/>
rett, Pesident of the NAACP<lb/>
Chapter in Greenville There will<lb/>
be a social affair (dance! follow<lb/>
ing the lecture.<lb/>
Use the<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
of The East Carolinian if your<lb/>
campus group or organization<lb/>
tias a meeting or project of in-<lb/>
erest to ECU students.<lb/>
And don't forget<lb/>
The Classifieds<lb/>
At just 75 cents per line,<lb/>
classified ads in The East<lb/>
Carolinian are the best way in<lb/>
town to advertise to the campus<lb/>
community.<lb/>
Student Organizations<lb/>
A 50 Percent Discount<lb/>
When They Advertise With<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
ANYTIME<lb/>
Pitcher $1.50<lb/>
Subs &amp; Burger $.99<lb/>
I Pita Sandwiches<lb/>
I Homemade Biscuits<lb/>
I Blue Moon Cafe<lb/>
I 205 E. 5th St.<lb/>
 Loca ted Across from Apple Records<lb/>
Demo<lb/>
(CPSi - National stu-<lb/>
dent leaders tried<lb/>
a massive show of stud<lb/>
opposition to p<lb/>
federal financial aid cuts<lb/>
last week, but not many<lb/>
student showed jp.<lb/>
About 300<lb/>
rallied outside the Car<lb/>
March 1-<lb/>
prot<lb/>
Reagan's pi<lb/>
budget. I' the<lb/>
passe-  .<lb/>
into about 900,001<lb/>
iear<lb/>
the 1984 ?<lb/>
The event<lb/>
annual N<lb/>
Lobb <lb/>
about 20C<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
in Ma<lb/>
rVs rca<lb/>
Stude<lb/>
(CPS) - Re:<lb/>
the:<lb/>
year ag<lb/>
wer;<lb/>
cent week:<lb/>
bills that v.<lb/>
ed Lie legal di<lb/>
in Georgia<lb/>
Warttatton, o.c.<lb/>
if also ha<lb/>
anenspu to<lb/>
'AH<lb/>
Atten<lb/>
B DAIT NSON<lb/>
Stall I<lb/>
Th ursdav' -<lb/>
preview of A Me.<lb/>
starring Steve Mai<lb/>
Lily Tc m<lb/>
presented<lb/>
Eastman K<lb/>
ECU Student I<lb/>
D tee, did no .<lb/>
the same I .<lb/>
month's sneak p<lb/>
'Police A<lb/>
500 people a:<lb/>
screening<lb/>
Hendnx Tieater.<lb/>
crowds should a<lb/>
word gets<lb/>
hilarious - ;? . ?<lb/>
Program<lb/>
Aid Wi<lb/>
Poor Fi<lb/>
CPS) ? M, ?<lb/>
? grarm that :e parent<lb/>
tax<lb/>
 nelp<lb/>
5 fan: es<lb/>
: their children to<lb/>
? anyway ex-<lb/>
: elude I - a need<lb/>
: the mo-<lb/>
he<lb/>
: College Board has found<lb/>
: in a tuc: ?<lb/>
: tax exo<lb/>
Moreover, Pre<lb/>
I Reagan's<lb/>
; bro exemp-<lb/>
II ions :oiege<lb/>
; payments could cut into<lb/>
 funding c direct stu-<lb/>
: dent aid programs that<lb/>
: help the neediest stuaents<lb/>
j the most, says Lawrence<lb/>
: Gladieux. director of the<lb/>
"College Board's<lb/>
; Washington office.<lb/>
: The boar. estimates<lb/>
: that about 65 percent of<lb/>
: the families that benefit<lb/>
: from :he federal tax law s<lb/>
j aimed a: helping them<lb/>
j pay for college have in-<lb/>
comes above the national<lb/>
?median.<lb/>
"Although middle and<lb/>
? upper-middle income<lb/>
families benefit most<lb/>
from current and propos-<lb/>
ed tax shelters, most of<lb/>
;them probably would<lb/>
have participated or in-<lb/>
vested in a college educa-<lb/>
tion without these incen-<lb/>
Vote<lb/>
1 M?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0003"/><lb/>
 ? 1 1??<lb/>
?<lb/>
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J?,?j X<lb/>
<lb/>
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-4-1 ,<lb/>
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Kements<lb/>
it your<lb/>
iiarion<lb/>
I eel of in-<lb/>
sifieds<lb/>
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The East j<lb/>
I<lb/>
hest way in<lb/>
o the campus<lb/>
PPY HOUR<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
ANYTIME<lb/>
.50<lb/>
rger $.99<lb/>
Kiches<lb/>
ie Biscuits<lb/>
m Cafe<lb/>
ithSt.<lb/>
m Apple Records<lb/>
C:<lb/>
i x?'?"3<lb/>
Demonstrat<lb/>
IHftAShAKoilNus Afmi 24 143<lb/>
(CPS) ? National stu-<lb/>
dent leaders tried to stage<lb/>
a massive show of student<lb/>
opposition to proposed<lb/>
federal financial aid cuts<lb/>
last week, but not many<lb/>
students showed up.<lb/>
About 300 students<lb/>
rallied outside the Capitol<lb/>
March 26 to register their<lb/>
protest of President<lb/>
Reagan's proposed aid<lb/>
budget. If the budget<lb/>
passes it would translate<lb/>
into about 900,000 fewer<lb/>
loans and grants during<lb/>
the 1984-85 school year.<lb/>
The event, part of the<lb/>
annual National Student<lb/>
Lobby Action Day, drew<lb/>
about 200 students last<lb/>
March, and about 4,500<lb/>
in March, 1982.<lb/>
As recently as the end<lb/>
of February, event<lb/>
organizer Kathy Ozer<lb/>
told College Press Service<lb/>
she hoped some 7,000<lb/>
students would par-<lb/>
ticipate this year.<lb/>
The U.S. Student<lb/>
Association, of which<lb/>
Ozer is legislative direc-<lb/>
tor, the Coalition of In-<lb/>
dependent College and<lb/>
University Students, and<lb/>
the National Organiza-<lb/>
tion of Black University<lb/>
and College Students, co-<lb/>
sponsored the event.<lb/>
"Looking around,<lb/>
there are not as many<lb/>
people here as I<lb/>
expected said Matt<lb/>
Carroll, a Brown Univer-<lb/>
sity sophomore who at-<lb/>
tended the rally.<lb/>
"I was disappointed by<lb/>
the turnout added<lb/>
Karen Canaday, an<lb/>
American University<lb/>
junior, said. "The more I<lb/>
think of it, the project<lb/>
turned out to be a dud<lb/>
Ozer, putting the best<lb/>
face on it, disagreed.<lb/>
"The numbers weren't<lb/>
as important as the infor-<lb/>
mation the students<lb/>
brought she asserts.<lb/>
The effort, which includ-<lb/>
ed talking to legislators<lb/>
before the rally, "was<lb/>
one of the most effective<lb/>
we've ever had<lb/>
It was also one of the<lb/>
latest lobby days.<lb/>
Organizers traditionally<lb/>
stage the event the first<lb/>
Monday of March to<lb/>
avoid conflict with<lb/>
schools' spring breaks.<lb/>
t But this year, vague<lb/>
"scheduling problems"<lb/>
forced moving the lobby-<lb/>
ing effort back to March<lb/>
26th, when many schools<lb/>
were on break, explains<lb/>
Bruce Barton of COPUS.<lb/>
Ozer believes the effort<lb/>
drew very well, consider-<lb/>
ing the timing. "We had<lb/>
350 students at our lobby-<lb/>
ing conference last<lb/>
weekend, and we know<lb/>
that 500 students came in<lb/>
buses and vans to the lob-<lb/>
bying<lb/>
She speculates that<lb/>
many of the lobbyists<lb/>
simply left before the ral-<lb/>
ly, which was supposed to<lb/>
be the public show of stu-<lb/>
dent force.<lb/>
"Many students had to<lb/>
catch planes, or were still<lb/>
talking with their con-<lb/>
gressmen" when the rally<lb/>
began, she says.<lb/>
But lobbying, not the<lb/>
rally, was the major order<lb/>
of the day, Ozer says, and<lb/>
students patrolling the<lb/>
Capitol's halls wearing<lb/>
"Education Cuts Never<lb/>
Heal buttons did get to<lb/>
speak to many legislators<lb/>
and legislators' staff<lb/>
members.<lb/>
The legislative timing<lb/>
moreover, was for-<lb/>
tuitous. Different com-<lb/>
mittees were in the midst<lb/>
of debating the all-<lb/>
important Higher Educa-<lb/>
tion Reauthorization Act<lb/>
of 1985 - which will in-<lb/>
fluence aid programs<lb/>
through the remainder of<lb/>
the decade ? and Presi<lb/>
dent Reagan's proposed<lb/>
$17 billion Department of<lb/>
Education budget.<lb/>
Students themselves<lb/>
had mixed feelings about<lb/>
how effective they were in<lb/>
their lobbying.<lb/>
"I know I had an effect<lb/>
today said Scott<lb/>
Altman, student presi-<lb/>
dent at Iowa's Buena<lb/>
Vista College. "I spoke<lb/>
with both my senators<lb/>
and my representative,<lb/>
and they were very recep-<lb/>
tive<lb/>
Sue Nowak, a Rutgers<lb/>
freshman, reported Rep.<lb/>
James Howard (D-NJ)<lb/>
promised to help her<lb/>
regain her federal student<lb/>
aid. Just before leaving<lb/>
campus, she learned she<lb/>
would be cut out of the<lb/>
aid program next vcar<lb/>
"Somehow. F think it<lb/>
doesn't have anv effect<lb/>
observed Brown's Car<lb/>
roll, who calls his con<lb/>
essman ? Ohio<lb/>
republican Willis<lb/>
Gradison - "the Prince<lb/>
of Darkness as far as<lb/>
education is concerned<lb/>
But Carroll, although<lb/>
looking a bit disgruntled<lb/>
as he later surveyed the<lb/>
sparse crowd, went to the<lb/>
rally anyway.<lb/>
There, he and others<lb/>
heard a succession of<lb/>
speakers that included<lb/>
Rep Paul Simon (D-IIL),<lb/>
chairman of the House<lb/>
Subcommittee on<lb/>
Postsecondarv Educa-<lb/>
tion, and Sen. Claiborne<lb/>
Pell (D-RI)<lb/>
Pell, somehow remind-<lb/>
ed bv the small crowd of<lb/>
the thousands of students<lb/>
who regularly descended<lb/>
on Washington, DC. to<lb/>
protest American in-<lb/>
volvement in Vietnam,<lb/>
urged the assemblage to<lb/>
register to vote and to<lb/>
emulate the demonstra-<lb/>
tions of the past.<lb/>
"Demonstrate, and<lb/>
demonstrate again he<lb/>
advised the students.<lb/>
(CPS) ? Repeating<lb/>
their performance of a<lb/>
year ago, student groups<lb/>
were instrumental in re-<lb/>
cent weeks in defeating<lb/>
bills that would have rais-<lb/>
ed the legal drinking age<lb/>
??OWfii and<lb/>
Watttnyon, D.C.<lb/>
1 Jmu also just re-<lb/>
1 attempts to in-<lb/>
drinking &amp;ge<lb/>
legislation, although stu-<lb/>
dent groups there were<lb/>
not as significantly in-<lb/>
volved in the lobbying<lb/>
against the bill, reports<lb/>
Bob Bingaman, director<lb/>
of the State Student<lb/>
Association jn<lb/>
Washington, D.C, who<lb/>
has helped organized stu-<lb/>
W g W m-m ?? "uuiu oe cut out of the Pell (D-RI)<lb/>
Defeat Bill To Raise Drinking Age<lb/>
D!u tgt dent opposition to drink- "Drinking a?e is still a ane" .h  " O<lb/>
dent opposition to drink<lb/>
mg age bills in a number<lb/>
of states.<lb/>
But many state<lb/>
legislatures that have not<lb/>
finished their spring ses-<lb/>
sions are still weighing<lb/>
laws that would either<lb/>
raise the legal drinking<lb/>
age or limit 18-year-olds<lb/>
to buying wine or beer.<lb/>
"Drinking age is still a<lb/>
hot issue, and probably<lb/>
will be for a while<lb/>
observes Michele Glastet-<lb/>
ter, who tracks drinking<lb/>
laws for the National<lb/>
Conference of State<lb/>
Legislatures.<lb/>
"There are still bills in<lb/>
quite a few states propos-<lb/>
ing to raise their drinking<lb/>
age she says.<lb/>
Twenty-six states have<lb/>
raised their legal drinking<lb/>
limits since 1976. At least<lb/>
a dozen - including<lb/>
South Carolina!<lb/>
Alabama, Vermont, Col-<lb/>
orado Connecticut,<lb/>
Florida, Tennessee,<lb/>
South Dakota, Hawaii,<lb/>
Kansas, Mississippi and<lb/>
Virgmia ? have bills pen-<lb/>
ding to hike the minimum<lb/>
age, Glastetter reports.<lb/>
"We thought this year<lb/>
it would be a relatively<lb/>
dead issue Bingaman<lb/>
says.<lb/>
Bingaman says his<lb/>
campaigns against raising<lb/>
the minimum drinking<lb/>
age argue that better<lb/>
education and tougher<lb/>
drunk driving laws are<lb/>
more effective solutions<lb/>
to alcohol abuse.<lb/>
"I think many students<lb/>
are duped into thinking<lb/>
that raising the drinking<lb/>
age is a sort of panacea<lb/>
for all the traffic ac-<lb/>
cidents and other pro-<lb/>
blems associated with<lb/>
All Of Me Previews I Exam schedule<lb/>
Attendance Is Low<lb/>
alcohol abuse<lb/>
Bingaman be ieves.<lb/>
While Bingaman<lb/>
organizes students oppos-<lb/>
ed to drinking age in-<lb/>
creases, Students Against<lb/>
Drunk Driving has<lb/>
established chapters on a<lb/>
number of campuses to<lb/>
lobby in favor of raising<lb/>
the minimum age.<lb/>
By DALE SWANSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Thursday's sneak<lb/>
preview of All of Me,<lb/>
starring Steve Martin and<lb/>
Lily Tomlin, and<lb/>
presented by Universal,<lb/>
Eastman Kodak and the<lb/>
ECU Student Film Com-<lb/>
mittee, did not get quite<lb/>
the same turn-out as last<lb/>
month's sneak preview of<lb/>
'Police Academy About<lb/>
500 people attended the<lb/>
screening in the 800-seat<lb/>
Hendrix Theater, but the<lb/>
crowds should grow once<lb/>
word gets out about this<lb/>
hilarious new comedy.<lb/>
In the past, Martin's<lb/>
movies have been<lb/>
generally well done and<lb/>
funny but not big box of-<lb/>
fice busters. This latest<lb/>
film, though, should pro-<lb/>
ve a turning point with<lb/>
Lily Tomlin as his reluc-<lb/>
tant side-kick. Martin<lb/>
Plays a 38-year-old<lb/>
lawyer, Roger Cobb, who<lb/>
is handling Edwina Cut-<lb/>
stableman's daughter,<lb/>
Terry, played by Victoria<lb/>
Tennant. Doing the<lb/>
transferring is the clumsy<lb/>
guru, Prakha Lasa,<lb/>
played by Richard Liber-<lb/>
tini, who botches the<lb/>
whole affair so Edwina<lb/>
accidentally winds up in<lb/>
Roger, with complete<lb/>
control of his right side.<lb/>
The results prove<lb/>
Z?" !uJM,LTom challenging for Martin,<lb/>
actor, and side<lb/>
plays the bedridden and<lb/>
eccentric Edwina who is<lb/>
planning on have her soul<lb/>
transferred from her dy-<lb/>
ing body into the volup-<lb/>
tous young body of her<lb/>
as an<lb/>
splitting for the audience.<lb/>
Despite the "far-fetched-<lb/>
ness" of the plot, Martin<lb/>
is absolutely convincing.<lb/>
The situations that arise<lb/>
are simply hilarious.<lb/>
Roger loses his girlfriend,<lb/>
his job, and his respect,<lb/>
but, like all good comedy<lb/>
love stories everything<lb/>
comes back together the<lb/>
way it ought to be. Too<lb/>
bad for all of you who<lb/>
missed it for free at Hen-<lb/>
drix. Be sure not to miss<lb/>
it this summer, though. It<lb/>
will be well worth the<lb/>
price of admission.<lb/>
Although this is only<lb/>
the second sneak preview<lb/>
to be held at ECU, the<lb/>
Films Committee hopes<lb/>
to obtains more of these<lb/>
previews.<lb/>
8 am MWF<lb/>
Il. MoiKl?y. April 30<lb/>
8a.m. TTr) ? ,? <lb/>
?10. Friday. April ?<lb/>
9a.m. MWF  . .<lb/>
11-1. Wcdncsdiv Mat 2<lb/>
9a.m. TTh  , <lb/>
 Thursday, may 3<lb/>
10am MWF , . .<lb/>
2 Thursday. April 26<lb/>
10a.m. rrh , . <lb/>
4i Thursday. April 30<lb/>
11 a.m. MWF . <lb/>
2-4. Friday. April 2"<lb/>
lla.m TTh , . <lb/>
2-4. Tuesday. Mas 1<lb/>
12 noon MWF  .<lb/>
2-4. Wednesday. May 2<lb/>
12 noon TTh , , <lb/>
2-4. Thursday. May <lb/>
I p.m. MWF . .? <lb/>
HO. Thursday. April 26<lb/>
1 p.m. TTh ,<lb/>
11-1. Tuesday. May I<lb/>
2p.m. MWF .  w .<lb/>
?-10. Monday. April 30<lb/>
2 pm. TTH . ,n <lb/>
10, Tuesday. May I<lb/>
3 p.m. MWF , ,n .<lb/>
?I0. Wednesday. May 2<lb/>
3 p.m. TTh <lb/>
8-10. Thursday, May 3<lb/>
4p.m. MWF  . .<lb/>
H-l. Thursday. April 26<lb/>
4p.m TTh Illmu<lb/>
ll-l. Fndav ? rt<lb/>
?? ?-<lb/>
l?ur Car Ready for That Trip To ?<lb/>
The Bsach?<lb/>
Complete 5 Point<lb/>
Brake Safety<lb/>
Check<lb/>
i?iFtarfif?22?cbuot<lb/>
"3uw- i 4Cvlinder<lb/>
CAR SHAKES?<lb/>
WE ELIMINATE !jZV.VJ<lb/>
' -$14.88 U and 8 cylinder<lb/>
I or . slightly higher<lb/>
I Alignment1?<lb/>
MJJlJlr,j(ll,l mim romTCM<lb/>
 SE"V ICk NAIIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
fBPGoodrich<lb/>
All size<lb/>
tires<lb/>
avaiiaoic<lb/>
Programs Offering Tax Breaks<lb/>
Aid Wealthy Families, Hinder<lb/>
P??rFamil? Study Contends<lb/>
(CPS) - Most pro<lb/>
grams that give parents<lb/>
tax breaks for paying for<lb/>
; college tend to help<lb/>
 families that would send<lb/>
their children to college<lb/>
 anyway, and virtually ex-<lb/>
. elude families who need<lb/>
: the most help in financing<lb/>
 college educations, the<lb/>
: College Board has found<lb/>
: in a study of education<lb/>
: tax exemptions.<lb/>
: Moreover, President<lb/>
: Reagan's proposals to<lb/>
: broaden some tax exemp-<lb/>
?tions for college<lb/>
? payments could cut into<lb/>
: funding for the direct stu-<lb/>
: dent aid programs that<lb/>
: help the neediest students<lb/>
; the most, says Lawrence<lb/>
: Gladieux, director of the<lb/>
?College Board's<lb/>
: Washington office.<lb/>
: The board estimates<lb/>
: that about 65 percent of<lb/>
:the families that benefit<lb/>
: from the federal tax laws<lb/>
j aimed at helping them<lb/>
?pay for college have in-<lb/>
comes above the national<lb/>
median.<lb/>
"Although middle and<lb/>
upper-middle income<lb/>
families benefit most<lb/>
tives Gladieux says<lb/>
The incentives now in-<lb/>
clude exempting scholar-<lb/>
ship and grant money<lb/>
from taxes, letting<lb/>
parents take deductions<lb/>
for their college-<lb/>
attending children, and<lb/>
subtracting the amounts<lb/>
of college loans from tax-<lb/>
able income, as well as<lb/>
other accounting<lb/>
measures.<lb/>
President Reagan has<lb/>
proposed enacting new<lb/>
tax incentives, too.<lb/>
In February, he again<lb/>
proposed allowing<lb/>
parents to deduct part of<lb/>
what they pay in tuition<lb/>
from what they owe in<lb/>
taxes, and letting people<lb/>
set up special education<lb/>
savings accounts that<lb/>
would generate tax-free<lb/>
interest.<lb/>
"We wanted to raise a '<lb/>
caution about adopting<lb/>
policies that sound good<lb/>
? such as reinforcing<lb/>
family saving for a col-<lb/>
lege fund ? but which 4<lb/>
are very expensive ?<lb/>
Gladieux explains. "I I<lb/>
fear that if (they are) put<lb/>
in place,<lb/>
Typesetters<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Apply at The East<lb/>
Carolinian office<lb/>
TOE CENTER<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
? OOA.MlrOOP M.<lb/>
OPENMON Ffil<lb/>
? 00A.M. 10P.M<lb/>
youngsters from less- on need<lb/>
advantaged families to at-<lb/>
tend college, current and<lb/>
proposed tax breaks do<lb/>
not appear to meet that<lb/>
goal as well as conven-<lb/>
tional student aid based<lb/>
' 'Consider us your cars '<lb/>
 HomeAwayJrom Home'<lb/>
Coggins Car Care<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
320 West Greenville B?vd<lb/>
The study also found<lb/>
the tax breaks reduced<lb/>
the amount of money the<lb/>
government took in<lb/>
1982 by $1.85 billion<lb/>
in<lb/>
RESEARCH PAPERS<lb/>
TOLL-FREE HOTLINE<lb/>
800-621-5745<lb/>
IN ILLINOIS CALL 312 922-0300<lb/>
? ?t?"1 ??te??o. IL 9DB0S<lb/>
DEO<lb/>
ir<lb/>
phone<lb/>
752-3172<lb/>
Located 1 mile past<lb/>
Hastings Ford on<lb/>
10th St. Ext.<lb/>
i&amp;<lb/>
2<lb/>
 A.<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
m<lb/>
,v<lb/>
?<lb/>
r it would in-<lb/>
from current andjjropos- directly cut into the sup-<lb/>
P?rt for direct student aid<lb/>
programs<lb/>
He adds that "if the<lb/>
nation wants to give<lb/>
priority to encouraging<lb/>
ed tax shelters, most of<lb/>
them probably would<lb/>
have participated or in-<lb/>
vested in a college educa-<lb/>
tion without these incen-<lb/>
Monday thru Thursday<lb/>
?Popcorn Shrimi<lb/>
$2.95<lb/>
Ocean Perch $1.99<lb/>
WH<lb/>
A'<lb/>
M<lb/>
M<lb/>
<lb/>
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TuuifWx Kftffl'H" for slaw 35- extra<lb/>
Deaunite the Iwro of rtur 7kkv at<lb/>
Suhum: Our fixmY make a hearty<lb/>
hero-iiiten hesh lettuce, cheese.<lb/>
HMHtan mmrns, ukrea. ptffcs and<lb/>
rfi<lb/>
peppers. All maae-toorder and servet<lb/>
on Subums famous freshly bakeo<lb/>
rolls. So come in to Subum, when<lb/>
heroes get decorated every dav<lb/>
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208<lb/>
E. 5th St.<lb/>
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(Bit Saat (Ear0ltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher. Gr?.w?<lb/>
Darryl Brown. wona?n, Ed?o,<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiakw,mm. j.T. Pietrzak. ???<lb/>
Ed Nicki as. ?, EM MlKE McPartland. ???, Manattr<lb/>
I IN A MAROSCHAK. fmmm Sm TOM NORTON. cnt Manner<lb/>
ALU N G UY, sw. KATH Y FUERST, Wucf.o Managtr<lb/>
Mark Barker, on, Mta?r Mike Mayo, mmh, r?-???.<lb/>
April 24. 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Aid Regulation<lb/>
Court Should Drop Registration Rule<lb/>
The U.S. Supreme Court is set to<lb/>
take up soon a case addressing<lb/>
whether or not the federal govern-<lb/>
ment can require proof of draft<lb/>
registration as a prerequisite for col-<lb/>
lege financial aid.<lb/>
The question is separate from<lb/>
that of draft registration itself.<lb/>
Regardless of the Court's ruling,<lb/>
registration will continue. But<lb/>
should, by some imaginative leap of<lb/>
logic, college aid be linked to draft<lb/>
registration? Certainly not.<lb/>
How they came up with college<lb/>
aid as a way of enforcing draft<lb/>
registration (and making sure that<lb/>
no one takes money from the<lb/>
federal government without signing<lb/>
up to support it), we may never<lb/>
w. Most draft age men don't<lb/>
even a'tend college.<lb/>
So, 18-year-olds can ignore<lb/>
registration rules and still get<lb/>
federal money in the form of Social<lb/>
Security, CETA funds or<lb/>
unemployment benefits, but if they<lb/>
try to go to college with Uncle<lb/>
Sam's help, they better be signed<lb/>
up. Oh, and rich kids, or some kids<lb/>
going to pubic colleges where they<lb/>
don't have to borrow money, aren't<lb/>
bothered by the registration-college<lb/>
aid connection either. But if your<lb/>
family is not well off or you decide<lb/>
to borrow money so you can go to<lb/>
Duke University, the government<lb/>
will be checking up on you.<lb/>
So, enforcing Selective Service<lb/>
sign-up is pretty selective, and it's<lb/>
slanted against those in financial<lb/>
need. Then, since one must tell on<lb/>
financial aid forms whether one is<lb/>
registered and thus breaking ihe law<lb/>
ox not, there's the matter of self-<lb/>
incrimination in that troublesome<lb/>
Fifth Amendment. Or, how about<lb/>
convicting someone without a trial,<lb/>
since if they aren't registered and<lb/>
check so on the form, they are de<lb/>
facto guilty and can't get a Pell<lb/>
Grant or loan to save their lives.<lb/>
One can also question making<lb/>
college aid officials act as campus<lb/>
police officers. ECU's own Finan-<lb/>
cial Aid Office has lamented from<lb/>
the beginning that the registration<lb/>
requirement would add a heavy<lb/>
burden and complication to the aid<lb/>
office's staff and procedure. Then<lb/>
consider, is it right that aid officials<lb/>
should have to enforce a federal<lb/>
regulation concerning the draft?<lb/>
Why don't they also verify that<lb/>
you've paid your taxes, or that<lb/>
you've registered to vote?<lb/>
One can only hope the Supreme<lb/>
Court will see the inequities and in-<lb/>
adequacies of tying registration to<lb/>
college aid and will overturn the<lb/>
federal regulation.<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
Several errors of fact appeared on the<lb/>
Thursday, April 19 Other Opinion page of<lb/>
The East Carolinian. The "No on PIRG"<lb/>
column claimed 98 percent of the funding<lb/>
collected by a PIRG at ECU would be sent<lb/>
to a state headquarters of NC-PIRG, who<lb/>
then decide how much to send back to<lb/>
ECU. There is no state board or organiza-<lb/>
tion of NC-PIRG, and no money must be<lb/>
sent away from ECU chapter. An elected<lb/>
board of ECU students decides how ECU-<lb/>
PIRG funding is allocated. They have to<lb/>
send money to any national organization.<lb/>
The column also said a waivable-fee col-<lb/>
lection system "would give (PIRG) only<lb/>
about $2,500 by their own estimation<lb/>
The PIRG Organizing Committee at ECU<lb/>
has made no estimation of how much it ex-<lb/>
pects from the funding system, and never<lb/>
mentioned a $2,500 figure.<lb/>
The article claimed 80 percent of PIRGs<lb/>
in the country started out with a waivable<lb/>
fee then went to a mandatory fee. No<lb/>
PIRGs in the states of Florida, New York,<lb/>
Oregon, Massachusetts, Colorado or<lb/>
California, in which more than half of na-<lb/>
tion's PIRGs are located, went from a<lb/>
waivable fee to a mandatory fee.<lb/>
We regret the errors.<lb/>
Setting The Record Straight; Or<lb/>
Where Is The Chancellor, Really?<lb/>
By PICK LAPOCK<lb/>
True or false quiz:<lb/>
1) ECU squirrels hunger for human<lb/>
flesh.<lb/>
TRUE. In the mid-1970s, an 18-year-<lb/>
old coed freshman was attacked by as<lb/>
many as fourteen squirrels. Passing<lb/>
football players came to her rescue. She<lb/>
suffered minor cuts and bites on her<lb/>
legs. Since then, Grounds Department<lb/>
men have systematically destroyed all<lb/>
rabid-suspicous squirrels, as many as<lb/>
twenty a year. (With a record of four<lb/>
dozen in 1977).<lb/>
2) ECU coach Ed Emory is beloved<lb/>
TV personality The Cool Ghoul.<lb/>
FALSE. This is one rumour that will<lb/>
not die. However, ECU basketball<lb/>
coach Charlie Harrison is TV's<lb/>
Whitney the Hobo.<lb/>
3) An ECU student was on the meal<lb/>
plan for four consecutive years and liv-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
TRUE. However, he was a computer<lb/>
science major.<lb/>
4) Gordon Ipock is the illegimate son<lb/>
of Patrick O'Neill.<lb/>
TRUE. However, Gordon resented<lb/>
having to wear red and found out he<lb/>
had a secret fetish for nuclear weapons.<lb/>
"Daddy" has since dis-owned him.<lb/>
5) Mick LaSalle has impregnated as<lb/>
many as 17 women.<lb/>
FALSE. Be Real! Why do you think<lb/>
he identified so closely with William<lb/>
Hurt's character in the film, The Big<lb/>
Chill?<lb/>
6) Chancellor John Howell is dead.<lb/>
FALSE. But, some of the clues are<lb/>
disturbing. One of them is that if you<lb/>
hold a Kroger Bingo Card at a certain<lb/>
angle up to a mirror, you can see<lb/>
"JMH-R.I.P Two, that if you look<lb/>
at an ECU yearbook, Vice Chancellor<lb/>
for Student Life Elmer Meyer is making<lb/>
the Egyptian sign for the dead at the<lb/>
chancellor. Three, an anonymous<lb/>
paperboy for The Daily Reflector<lb/>
claims he stopped delivering to the<lb/>
Howell household in 1973. Founh, if<lb/>
you dial the number J-H-O-W-E-L-L<lb/>
on the Rolm system phones on campus,<lb/>
that you will hear a message, reportedly<lb/>
recorded by Joseph Calder, saying "I<lb/>
buried Howell The fifth clue is that if<lb/>
you look at the license plate of the<lb/>
"Purple" SGA transit bus, it reads<lb/>
"JMH-64IF meaning that Chancellor<lb/>
would be sixty-four if he had lived.<lb/>
Some rumours say that he is alive, but<lb/>
severly brain-damaged. Some say he is<lb/>
in a Swiss clinic, three doors down from<lb/>
John F. Kennedy; or, even stranger,<lb/>
that he is in a "suspended animation<lb/>
unit" in the basement of the infirmary.<lb/>
In truth, Chancellor John Howell is<lb/>
alive and well and working somewhere<lb/>
on campus. However, we could not ob-<lb/>
tain an interview.<lb/>
7) WZMB campus radio station is<lb/>
run by only one person.<lb/>
FALSE. It is run by a family named<lb/>
Montana. However, they only have six<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
albums in the station collection.<lb/>
Therefore, all requests for musi are<lb/>
never honored. In fact, the new wave<lb/>
music is simplv the six albums pla ed at<lb/>
45 RPM.<lb/>
8) The Book Surveillance Device in<lb/>
Joyner Library is an X-ray camerj and<lb/>
the librarians have videotapes of over<lb/>
20,000 ECU students in the nude The<lb/>
films are only showed to library science<lb/>
majors.<lb/>
FALSE. No, it is a Subversive Brain<lb/>
Sscan, which is the reason no one ever<lb/>
saw Patrick O'Neill or Jay Sto le in<lb/>
Joyner.<lb/>
9) Jim Morrison is alive and<lb/>
teaching history at ECU.<lb/>
TRUE. However, his true identit has<lb/>
yet to be revealed.<lb/>
Pick LaPock is a macho, ' idle,<lb/>
conservative-liberal, Republ: can-<lb/>
Democrat, who likes Garbo film- and<lb/>
stringing up pinkos. When not fig ruing<lb/>
the International Communist Con-<lb/>
spiracy, he is working for unilateral<lb/>
disarmament in the U.S. In the 1984,<lb/>
senatorial and presidential, election,<lb/>
Pick intends to vote for Jesse Helms<lb/>
and Gary Hart. Pick will go out with<lb/>
any females, even Godless commies.<lb/>
 (Editor's note: This article was writ-<lb/>
ten by an energetic, creative and<lb/>
somewhat gifted ensemble of emi-<lb/>
professionals at our fellow campus<lb/>
media, WZMB. They had nothing better<lb/>
to do late one night since they can't<lb/>
honor record requests.)<lb/>
One Last Round Of Yea And Nay For PIRG Referendum<lb/>
I urge all students to vote NO today<lb/>
on the NC-PIRG funding issue. No<lb/>
organization should be able to use the<lb/>
university term bill, Cashier's Office<lb/>
and university employees to collect<lb/>
funds. The student government already<lb/>
has a funding program for campus<lb/>
organizations who can prove a need for<lb/>
such allocations. Why does NC-PIRG<lb/>
want to become a privileged elite among<lb/>
other established campus organiza-<lb/>
tions? The reason is simple ? they want<lb/>
your money! With NC-PIRG you won't<lb/>
see service projects to raise funds, nor<lb/>
will you see car washes, bake sales, raf-<lb/>
fles, etc. to obtain money for their<lb/>
treasury. If established, our university<lb/>
fees will be supporting NC-PIRG col-<lb/>
lection agency ? the East Carolina<lb/>
Cashier's Office! Students, VOTE NO<lb/>
on the funding issue! The rest of us<lb/>
have to work for our money, NC-PIRG<lb/>
should also!<lb/>
I have been asked what have the Col-<lb/>
lege Republicans done wrong to be<lb/>
spoken by with such disapproval by<lb/>
Pro-PIRG supporters. What the Col-<lb/>
lege Republicans did was alert the stu-<lb/>
dent body of PIRG's covert negative<lb/>
check-off system. Because of the CRs,<lb/>
the PIRG people couldn't tax the<lb/>
students as easily as if no one spoke out<lb/>
in opposition. It is easy for PIRG to try<lb/>
to use a smear campaign to discredit the<lb/>
CRs than to explain why they need a<lb/>
special funding system. Their own<lb/>
organizing manual tells them to "avoid<lb/>
discussion" on the funding system.<lb/>
They would rather talk about anything<lb/>
else, even use distortion of facts against<lb/>
the CRs, than to tell you why they need<lb/>
the special privilege of using the univer-<lb/>
sity term bill to obtain funds.<lb/>
This issue today is (whether) PIRG<lb/>
should receive a privilege funding<lb/>
system instead of obtaining funds<lb/>
through the same channels as everyone<lb/>
else. This issue is not if PIRG should<lb/>
come to ECU. They have the right to<lb/>
form an organization here as any<lb/>
group.<lb/>
But do they have the right to use the<lb/>
university term bill, the Cashier's Of-<lb/>
fice and university employees to collect<lb/>
funds for PIRG's treasury? 1 say NO!<lb/>
(Any tuition increase due to extra paper<lb/>
work, manhours, etc will be passed on<lb/>
to you, the student, not PIRG ? they<lb/>
want this "free" fee collection service.<lb/>
It's "free" to support NC-PIRG in-<lb/>
voluntarily.)<lb/>
Again, I urge all students to vote<lb/>
"NO" today against the PIRG funding<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
Bryan King<lb/>
Committee Against<lb/>
Student Exploitation<lb/>
In listening to the debate over form-<lb/>
ing a Public Interest Research Group<lb/>
which has engulfed ECU for the past<lb/>
week I have had an opportunity to<lb/>
listen to spokespersons representing<lb/>
both sides of the issue. I have recently<lb/>
concluded that I am going to vote Yes<lb/>
for PIRG on the referendum on Tues-<lb/>
day. I would like to share my reasons<lb/>
for coming to this conclusion with other<lb/>
students.<lb/>
1) PIRGs do good things for people.<lb/>
Many PIRGs help keep the environ-<lb/>
ment clean by testing industrial run-off<lb/>
which is discharged into streams and<lb/>
rivers for high levels of pollutants and<lb/>
by working to expose and prevent il-<lb/>
legal dumping to toxic wastes. Others<lb/>
vork on consumer issues, renter's<lb/>
rights, and voter registration.<lb/>
2) I cannot see anything objectionable<lb/>
about PIRG's funding system. A<lb/>
"waivable fee" is one which nobody<lb/>
has to pay. It is neither mandatory or<lb/>
automatic. Every student can decide,<lb/>
when he pays his regular tuition,<lb/>
whether or not he wants to pay the<lb/>
PIRG fee. This fee would be more<lb/>
democratic than the fee for any other<lb/>
organization on campus. Posters on<lb/>
campus which object to PIRG funding<lb/>
are misleading.<lb/>
3) Every PIRG is run democratically.<lb/>
The students at each given school<lb/>
choose the issues which their PIRG will<lb/>
work on.<lb/>
4) Students receive academic credit<lb/>
for doing work which sharpens their<lb/>
research skills, writing skillls, and<lb/>
public speaking skills. They also<lb/>
become more astute citizens, better able<lb/>
to participate in our political system. It<lb/>
is important for students to develop<lb/>
themselves in this way, particularly to-<lb/>
day. These are the reasons why I urge<lb/>
other students to join me in voting yes<lb/>
for PIRG on Tuesday, April 24.<lb/>
Einar R.<lb/>
Rasmussen<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Geography<lb/>
Vote No on NC-PIRG. Why are they<lb/>
better than other student groups on<lb/>
campus? Why do they insist on such an<lb/>
odious method of collecting funds?<lb/>
Why did, in August 1982, The Wall<lb/>
Street Journal state, "These PIRGs are<lb/>
not non-partisan 'public interest'<lb/>
groups but rather fixed ideological ob-<lb/>
jectives?" Why are there so many law<lb/>
suits against PIRGs from non-political<lb/>
student groups? Why do PIRGs<lb/>
associate themselves with groups such<lb/>
as the Socialist Workers Party,<lb/>
Women's Strike for Peace (identified<lb/>
by the FBI as a Soviet front group), the<lb/>
Institute for Policy Studies (a marxist<lb/>
think-tank) and the radical United<lb/>
States Student Association (left overs<lb/>
from the 60s peace movement)? Why<lb/>
don't they tell us about their work for<lb/>
homosexual affirmitive action, against<lb/>
draft registration and for nuclear freeze<lb/>
rallies. Vote No Tuesday 24, 1984.<lb/>
Erik Ojakaar<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Political Science<lb/>
Today ? now ? before you vote:<lb/>
consider this ? do those who oppose<lb/>
the establishment of a Public Interest<lb/>
Research Group at ECU actually op-<lb/>
pose: cleaner air, streams rivers and<lb/>
lakes that are free of pollution; purer<lb/>
drinking water; a fairer market place<lb/>
and laws which protect consumers? Do<lb/>
they oppose voter registration and<lb/>
groups which make renters aware of<lb/>
their rights as well?<lb/>
Moreover, what can possibly be ob-<lb/>
jectionable about a three-dollar<lb/>
waivable fee which any student can<lb/>
waive and decline to pay at the time<lb/>
they pay their regular tuition? This<lb/>
would, after all, be a far more<lb/>
democratic fee than activity fees for<lb/>
other student groups on campus which<lb/>
the student must pay whether they want<lb/>
to or not. In addition, what is wrong<lb/>
with students getting academic credit<lb/>
for working through their own student<lb/>
group on issues they they have chosen<lb/>
themselves? What is wrong with a<lb/>
PIRG? Answer: nothing.<lb/>
Vote yes for PIRG today!<lb/>
Al Maginnes<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
English<lb/>
Republican Response<lb/>
A writer in a recent Campus Forum<lb/>
letter bitterly attacked the College<lb/>
Republican Club. He is a rookie SGA<lb/>
legislator who was this year's chairman<lb/>
of the legislature's Rules and Judiciary<lb/>
Committee. He has also been active in<lb/>
the fight to impose the funding system<lb/>
of PIRG on the students, a scheme<lb/>
which would give PIRG the right to<lb/>
pick the pockets of unaware students at<lb/>
the time they pay their fees. With his ef-<lb/>
forts on behalf of PIRG in a failing<lb/>
state, the writer lashed out at the Col-<lb/>
lege Republicans, who spearheaded the<lb/>
fight to unmask the real goals of PIRG.<lb/>
First of all, he says he is a<lb/>
Republican. For a Republican to fight<lb/>
for PIRG would be like a supporter of<lb/>
Gov. Jim Hunt to claim membership in<lb/>
Senator Helms' Congressional Club.<lb/>
Moreover, no o?.c has ever seen the<lb/>
writer at any meeting of the College<lb/>
Republicans, nor has he spoken to any<lb/>
of us. With these facts in mind we have<lb/>
to challenge his bona fides.<lb/>
Now for his complaints. He contends<lb/>
that our Executive Committee "clid-<lb/>
tates policy" to its members. Article<lb/>
IV, Section 2 of our constitution suites<lb/>
that our Executive Committee shall on-<lb/>
ly "recommend policy Had he ever<lb/>
bothered to come to any of our<lb/>
meetings he would know that his cha-ge<lb/>
was untrue. I too am a member of he<lb/>
SGA Legislature; there, the writer<lb/>
could have taken advantage of oppor-<lb/>
tunities to question me about his con-<lb/>
cern Whey did he never ask?<lb/>
He states that the Executive Commit-<lb/>
tee has a policy of expelling "noncon-<lb/>
formists Article X, Section 3 of our<lb/>
constitution provides for a lengt :iy,<lb/>
democratic process for the removal of<lb/>
any member. This section has ne er<lb/>
been used to expel any "nonconfor-<lb/>
mist If he thought his charges were<lb/>
true, why did he never ask?<lb/>
He tried to indict the integrity of cur<lb/>
club by saying that a member had<lb/>
recently misused funds and that we<lb/>
were guilty of "embezzlement and cor-<lb/>
ruption Here are the facts. When the<lb/>
transgressor in this case was found, ihe<lb/>
officials of the club at once handed him<lb/>
a letter of resignation which he v as<lb/>
forced to sign; he was also compelled to<lb/>
make immediate restituion of ihe<lb/>
funds. We at the same time infonr ed<lb/>
senior Republican offices of our action,<lb/>
in the case they might want to take fur-<lb/>
ther action. About ascertaining he<lb/>
farts of this case, why did he not ask?<lb/>
Incidentally, the writer himself guid-<lb/>
ed the draft of our constitution through<lb/>
his committee to unanimous approval<lb/>
by the Student Legislature. If he sees so<lb/>
many problems with our group and its<lb/>
constitution, why did he do this? Was<lb/>
he afraid that, had he brought out lis<lb/>
charges at the legislature's meeting, he<lb/>
would have been made a fool of !y<lb/>
yours truly (as he definitely would<lb/>
have)? As he so eloquently stated in liis<lb/>
letter, "Something's wrong here.<lb/>
?<lb/>
. . Dennis Kilcovie<lb/>
Chairman, ECU CoUege Republicaas<lb/>
Junior, Political Science<lb/>
-4?<lb/>
g?pi 'Mfc?a? mn 0? i O <lb/>
Jeans i<lb/>
By STEPHEN<lb/>
HARDING<lb/>
MalTWiMcf<lb/>
Crime decreased only<lb/>
slightly last week Forty-<lb/>
two incidents ere<lb/>
reported. The majority<lb/>
took place Mondav,<lb/>
Thursday and Fndav<lb/>
Only six events were<lb/>
reported after Saturday<lb/>
Several unusual crimes<lb/>
took place. A pair of blue<lb/>
jeans was stolen from a<lb/>
dryer in Umstead Hall on<lb/>
Wednesday. On Thurs-<lb/>
day night an unidentified<lb/>
male destroyed a univer-<lb/>
sity broom.<lb/>
There was one report<lb/>
of a female student being<lb/>
solicited.<lb/>
Four criminal sum-<lb/>
monses were served for<lb/>
worthless check?<lb/>
Five repo.is were<lb/>
received about tampering<lb/>
done to veh.cles. There<lb/>
were also reports of van-<lb/>
dalism to dorm rooms<lb/>
and larcenv of items.<lb/>
Cri<lb/>
Publ<lb/>
me<lb/>
?<lb/>
A<lb/>
A<lb/>
rn<lb/>
I'm<lb/>
to I<lb/>
the<lb/>
5 <lb/>
doc<lb/>
in I<lb/>
A re<lb/>
third<lb/>
wer<lb/>
sum<lb/>
.<lb/>
Yai<lb/>
Gre<lb/>
Stude<lb/>
Citing increasec<lb/>
dent involvement<lb/>
response to a growing pot<lb/>
concern about the issue- poj<lb/>
of the day. a coalition of SGj<lb/>
prominent student Na4<lb/>
leaders and organizations Gei<lb/>
have endorsed the ECU SO<lb/>
Public Interest Research Hal<lb/>
Group proposal. Co<lb/>
Organizations endors-<lb/>
ing PIRG include the Ffl<lb/>
Visual Arts Forum, the end<lb/>
Young Democrats, the R<lb/>
Poetry Forum, the Col<lb/>
Sculpture Group and the M<lb/>
Society Of United Liberal ieg<lb/>
News<lb/>
For Bothl<lb/>
Apply in person as<lb/>
summer session. O<lb/>
on the second floorj<lb/>
across from the ent<lb/>
Fror<lb/>
V tf<lb/>
Childi<lb/>
And a<lb/>
STEPHEN K<lb/>
StamiHj rET<lb/>
Screen<lb/>
Gaxxl upon the ?or bv S 1<lb/>
Executive Producers<lb/>
Produced t DOflAL<lb/>
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ith our group and its<lb/>
I Jid he do this? Was<lb/>
F he brought out his<lb/>
?Nature's meeting, he<lb/>
made a fool of by<lb/>
I he definitely would<lb/>
loquemly stated in his<lb/>
1 I wrong here<lb/>
Dennis Kilcoyne<lb/>
College Republicans<lb/>
nor. Political Science<lb/>
Jeans<lb/>
By STEPHEN<lb/>
HARDING<lb/>
?Ml VMM<lb/>
Crime decreased only<lb/>
slightly last week. Forty-<lb/>
two incidents were<lb/>
reported. The majority<lb/>
took place Monday,<lb/>
Thursday and Friday.<lb/>
Only six events were<lb/>
reported after Saturday.<lb/>
Several unusual crimes<lb/>
took place. A pair of blue<lb/>
jeans was stolen from a<lb/>
dryer in Umstead Hall on<lb/>
Wednesday. On Thurs-<lb/>
day night an unidentified<lb/>
male destroyed a univer-<lb/>
sity broom.<lb/>
There was one report<lb/>
of a female student being<lb/>
solicited.<lb/>
Four criminal sum-<lb/>
monses were served for<lb/>
worthless checks.<lb/>
Five reports were<lb/>
received about tampering<lb/>
done to vehicles. There<lb/>
were also reports of van-<lb/>
dalism to dorm rooms<lb/>
and larceny of items.<lb/>
Broom<lb/>
THE EASTCAHOUNiAN APKi 24 j4<lb/>
Crimes reported to the<lb/>
Public Safety Depart-<lb/>
ment of ECU for April 16<lb/>
through April 23 were:<lb/>
April 16, 1:23 p.m. ?<lb/>
A report of the larceny of<lb/>
money from a room in<lb/>
Umstead Hall; 5:23 p.m.<lb/>
? A report of vandalism<lb/>
to two mailbox doors in<lb/>
the lobby of Belk Hall;<lb/>
5:28 p.m. ? A report of<lb/>
vandalism to the east<lb/>
door of the laundry room<lb/>
in Belk Hall; 5:30 p.m. ?<lb/>
A report of vandalism to<lb/>
a fire alarm box on the<lb/>
third floor of Aycock<lb/>
Hall; 8 p.m. ? a report<lb/>
the panic bars to the<lb/>
doors of the Recital Hall<lb/>
in the music Building<lb/>
were malfunctioning;<lb/>
8:30 p.m. ? Lucinda<lb/>
Irene Alston of 611 Green<lb/>
hall was served a criminal<lb/>
summons for a worthless<lb/>
check; 9 p.m. ? Janice<lb/>
Valentina Faulk of 1019<lb/>
Greene Hall was served a<lb/>
criminal summons for a<lb/>
worthless check; 9:15<lb/>
p.m. ? Carol Annette<lb/>
Furlough of 516 Fletcher<lb/>
Hall was served a<lb/>
criminal summons for a<lb/>
worthless check; 9:45<lb/>
p.m. ? Kendal Diane<lb/>
Carrigan of 309 Fletcher<lb/>
Hall was served a<lb/>
criminal summons for a<lb/>
worthless check; 10:50<lb/>
p.m. ? An anonymous<lb/>
complaintant reported<lb/>
unescorted males were<lb/>
creating a disturbance in<lb/>
Fleming Hall; 11:05 p.m.<lb/>
? Philip Spring of 301 -D<lb/>
Belk was served an order<lb/>
for arrest for failure to<lb/>
appear in court.<lb/>
April 17, 7:17 p.m. ?<lb/>
a report that person(s)<lb/>
unknown had vandalized<lb/>
the northeast and sou-<lb/>
theast fire alarm boxes on<lb/>
the first floor of Jones<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
April 18, 1:40 a.n. ?<lb/>
Diane M. Clark of 606<lb/>
Tyler Hall and Matthew<lb/>
W. Grezeszczak of<lb/>
Greensboro, NC were<lb/>
found in violation of<lb/>
curfew in Tyler Hall,<lb/>
Grzeszczak was banned<lb/>
from Tyler Hall only; 11<lb/>
a.m. ? A report of the<lb/>
larceny of the receiver<lb/>
and ball from the trailer<lb/>
hitch of a vehicle parked<lb/>
on College Hill Drive;<lb/>
12:50 p.m. ? A report of<lb/>
the larceny of keys from<lb/>
room 152 in the Nursing<lb/>
Building; 1:50 p.m. ? A<lb/>
report of the larceny of a<lb/>
pair of blue jeans from a<lb/>
dryer in the laundrv room<lb/>
of Umstead Hall; 4 p.m.<lb/>
? A report of the larceny<lb/>
of $28 from a room in<lb/>
Umstead Hall by<lb/>
person(s) unknown;<lb/>
10:50 p.m. ? a report of<lb/>
the larceny of a key ring<lb/>
and keys from a room in<lb/>
Jones Hall.<lb/>
April 19, 12:24 a.m. ?<lb/>
A report of a stop sign<lb/>
hanging over the nor-<lb/>
thwest second floor<lb/>
hallway window in<lb/>
Aycock Hall, i a ,?<lb/>
Eric Ojakaar and Joseph<lb/>
James Bernwinklcr both<lb/>
of 132 Jones Hall were<lb/>
found in possession of a<lb/>
controlled substance in<lb/>
room 132 Jones Hall<lb/>
2:15 a.m. - a male stu-<lb/>
dent was transported to<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital Emergency<lb/>
Room by an officer for<lb/>
injuries received from a<lb/>
hit and run accident; 2:35<lb/>
a.m. ? A report of possi-<lb/>
ble drug overdose by a<lb/>
student, the report was<lb/>
unfounded; 1.J0 p.m. ?<lb/>
A report of thelarceny of<lb/>
the metal rim covers from<lb/>
a vehicle in the 14th and<lb/>
Berkely freshman park-<lb/>
ing lot; 6:39 p.m ? A<lb/>
report of a kev stuck in<lb/>
the east curfew door of<lb/>
Jones hall; 9:09 p.m. ?<lb/>
A report by the HR of<lb/>
Unstead Hall that John<lb/>
C. North of 141 Umstead<lb/>
Hall had vandalized a<lb/>
vending machine and<lb/>
caused damage to a wall<lb/>
?" room 110 Umstead<lb/>
Hall; 10:45 p.m ? A<lb/>
report an unidentified<lb/>
white male had destroyed<lb/>
a broom belonging to the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
April 20, 1.15 a.m. ?<lb/>
Wright R. Archer III was<lb/>
arrested for DWI on Col-<lb/>
lege Hill Drive; 1:50 a.m.<lb/>
? A report of a window<lb/>
of room 148 Garrett Hall<lb/>
was vandalized, Andreas<lb/>
R. Hay of 148 Garrett<lb/>
Hall was charged and<lb/>
referred to the Dean; 6:45<lb/>
a.m. ? A report a vehicle<lb/>
west of Scott was<lb/>
tampered with; 8:14 a.m.<lb/>
? A report of the break-<lb/>
ing and entering of and<lb/>
larceny of stereo from a<lb/>
vehicle parked east of<lb/>
?Scott Hall; 9:30 p.m. ?<lb/>
A male student reported<lb/>
being assaulted by Terry<lb/>
Paige of 204-DBeik Hall,<lb/>
Tony F. Baker and Larry<lb/>
G. Berry both of 204-B<lb/>
Belk Hall at the second<lb/>
v . KUU m me SeCOr<lb/>
Student Leaders Endorsing PIRG<lb/>
Citing increaSed stu- Students. Maushan anH A.  <lb/>
floor breeeway of Belk<lb/>
Hall; 12:15 p.m - A<lb/>
report of thelarceny of a<lb/>
stereo equalizer from a<lb/>
vehicle parked east of<lb/>
Scott Hall; 12:49 p.m. ?<lb/>
A report of the breaking<lb/>
and entering and larceny<lb/>
from a vehicle parked in<lb/>
the 14th and Berkeley<lb/>
Freshman parking lot;<lb/>
2:50 p.m. ? A report of<lb/>
vandalism to a vehicle<lb/>
parked east of Jones<lb/>
Hall; 7:35 p.m. - A<lb/>
report of larceny of<lb/>
money from a room in<lb/>
Umstead Hall; 11:30<lb/>
p.m. ? A report by a stu-<lb/>
dent who was assaulted<lb/>
on the third floor balcony<lb/>
of Belk Hall;<lb/>
April 21, 10:47 p.m. ?<lb/>
A report of the larceny of<lb/>
message board from a<lb/>
room in Umstead Hall; A<lb/>
report of vandalism to<lb/>
the first floor hallway in<lb/>
the east wing of Umstead<lb/>
Hall; 11:47 p.m. ?<lb/>
Christopher William<lb/>
I.oncar oi 407 Jones Hall<lb/>
and Scott Wilson Stutts<lb/>
of 401-D Scott Hall were<lb/>
arrested for activating a<lb/>
false fire alarm in Slav<lb/>
Hall<lb/>
April 22, 2.30 p.m. -<lb/>
Several white males were<lb/>
ovserved throwing bottles<lb/>
and cans out of the win-<lb/>
dow of 412-B Scott Hall<lb/>
and onto the parking lot<lb/>
south of Scott Hall; 1.10<lb/>
p.m. ? A female student<lb/>
reported a black male<lb/>
identified as Allen Don-<lb/>
nell Suggs of Ayden, NC<lb/>
was soliciting in the 9th<lb/>
and Contanche St. park-<lb/>
ing lot; 6:30 p.m. ? A<lb/>
confidential and reliable<lb/>
source reported a quanti-<lb/>
ty of marijuana in a room<lb/>
of Scott Hall, the report<lb/>
was unfounded.<lb/>
April 23, 1:18 a.m. ?<lb/>
Johnny Warren Jones of<lb/>
460 Aycock Hall was ar-<lb/>
rested damage to a ven-<lb/>
ding machine in Avcock<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Citing increased stu<lb/>
dent involvement in<lb/>
response to a growing<lb/>
concern about the issues<lb/>
of the day, a coalition of<lb/>
prominent student<lb/>
leaders and organizations<lb/>
have endorsed the ECU<lb/>
Public Interest Research<lb/>
Group proposal.<lb/>
Organizations endors-<lb/>
ing PIRG include the<lb/>
Visual Arts Forum, the<lb/>
Young Democrats, the<lb/>
Poetry Forum, the<lb/>
Sculpture Group and the<lb/>
Society Of United Liberal<lb/>
Students.<lb/>
Student leaders<lb/>
Porting the PIRG pro-<lb/>
posal include former<lb/>
SGA President Paul<lb/>
Naso, student Attorney<lb/>
General Harry Dest,<lb/>
SOULS President Jimmy<lb/>
Hackett, and David<lb/>
Cobb, who is chairman<lb/>
of the Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee. Also<lb/>
endorsing PIRG are SGA<lb/>
Rules and Judiciary<lb/>
Committee Chairman<lb/>
Mike Dixon, SGA<lb/>
legislator Glenn<lb/>
Maughan and Assistant<lb/>
Attorney General Harry<lb/>
Dest. J<lb/>
'PIRG will give<lb/>
students a voice on issues<lb/>
like hazardous waste and<lb/>
voter registration Naso<lb/>
said. "Students have the<lb/>
ability to make North<lb/>
Carolina a better place to<lb/>
live, benefitting not just<lb/>
ourselves but all citizens<lb/>
of the state he said.<lb/>
According to SOULS<lb/>
President Hackett,<lb/>
'There has been a<lb/>
deliberate attempt to<lb/>
News Writers Needed<lb/>
For Both Summer Sessions<lb/>
Apply in person as soon as possible at beginning of<lb/>
summer session. Come to The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
on the second floor of the Publications building,<lb/>
across from the entrance of Joyner Library.<lb/>
mislead student about<lb/>
PIRG's optional fee<lb/>
Maughan claimed the<lb/>
real issue is one of stu-<lb/>
dent power and input into<lb/>
the decision making pro-<lb/>
cess. "We as students<lb/>
should be involved in<lb/>
campus, community and<lb/>
state-wide issues which<lb/>
are of concern to us as<lb/>
citizens of North<lb/>
Carolina. The university<lb/>
is not an island<lb/>
Associate Professor of<lb/>
Anthropology Michael<lb/>
Orbach also endorsed the<lb/>
PIRG concept. "At<lb/>
universities with which I<lb/>
have been associated<lb/>
PIRG has been a very ef-<lb/>
fective means for raising<lb/>
and addressing issues<lb/>
which are not normally<lb/>
addressed by special in-<lb/>
terest groups, and student<lb/>
involvemnt in PIRG can<lb/>
be a very beneficial<lb/>
educational tool he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
A PIRG is defined by<lb/>
its organizing committee<lb/>
as a student directed<lb/>
organization thar works<lb/>
on consumer and en-<lb/>
vironmental projects on<lb/>
campus and in the com-<lb/>
munity. The ECU pro-<lb/>
posal includes a $3 op-<lb/>
tional fee on the universi-<lb/>
ty tuition bill which<lb/>
students could pay if they<lb/>
wanted to join and sup-<lb/>
port PIRG.<lb/>
A student body<lb/>
referendum is set for to-<lb/>
day to allow students to<lb/>
decide whether they want<lb/>
to establish a PIRG at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Final Exam Schedule<lb/>
listed on Page 3<lb/>
Reproductive Health Can;<lb/>
- ? ? ? , <lb/>
Special Sen, re, ini rate for students<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each o? irM adwiMK! itma ? r.<lb/>
Quirad to 00 rmmaiiy avail) frx<lb/>
??? n iich Kroaar Sa oo a?caoi<lb/>
m ?oacificaiiy noiao m thi? ad it ??<lb/>
do run out of an it ?? ?m oU0f<lb/>
you your cho?c of a comparator<lb/>
itam wh?n avatlafeta ratitirvj th?<lb/>
sama aavings of a ramenack which<lb/>
? antitia you to purchaaa th<lb/>
?dvart.aad .lam at th? advartiaad<lb/>
O'ica within x days<lb/>
.CMMaaiBBiaaaM<lb/>
items ana Prices<lb/>
Effective Tnru Sat<lb/>
April 28 1984<lb/>
1<lb/>
Ks<lb/>
From the author of CARRIE<lb/>
THE SHINING<lb/>
THE DEAD ZONE,<lb/>
and CHRISTINE.<lb/>
COOvrlgnt 1984<lb/>
roger Savon<lb/>
Ouantitv eigntt erservec<lb/>
Mone soio To Diaiers<lb/>
J OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Red Ripe<lb/>
Strawberries<lb/>
ot<lb/>
M<lb/>
M'<lb/>
?<lb/>
5r1<lb/>
FRESH CALIFORM<lb/>
Head<lb/>
Lettuce<lb/>
An adult<lb/>
nightmare.<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
COLORS<lb/>
cottonelie<lb/>
Tissue<lb/>
kV<lb/>
Hd.<lb/>
i<lb/>
i v t<lb/>
Limit One Please<lb/>
IN OIL OR WATER<lb/>
Kroger<lb/>
Tuna<lb/>
ASSORTED<lb/>
VARIETIES JENO i<lb/>
Crisp N Tasty<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
TASTY<lb/>
1 PIZZA<lb/>
10 Oz.<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
Stephen King's<lb/>
Children of toe Corn<lb/>
And a child shall lead them<lb/>
STEPHEN WHO'S XHILDREM Or THE CORN<lb/>
su,mng PETER HORTON LINDA HAMILTON<lb/>
Screenplav tn GEORGE GOLDSMITH<lb/>
TUNA<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
pot<lb/>
pies<lb/>
fTnija aliaA ??? a?aaE<lb/>
In association wMh<lb/>
?gele Entertainment Group lix<lb/>
? . ??" ?"? aidiiaDic<lb/>
varev Sa.atMn.1c Ri-rnrn.<lb/>
' i??f?r?i?omrpicTi;nr?<lb/>
rtJMTI<lb/>
STARTS FRIDAY April 27th<lb/>
at a theatre near you<lb/>
8 0z.<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
PEPSI FREE,<lb/>
DIET PEPSI FREE OR<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
$109<lb/>
' SAVE f<lb/>
ASSORTED CENTER -<lb/>
AND END CUT Jgi<lb/>
pork K<lb/>
chops t<lb/>
;?<lb/>
r<lb/>
TROPICANA<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
REGULAR OR LIGHT<lb/>
COOTS<lb/>
l $259<lb/>
ins mm,<lb/>
BIANCO, ROSATO OR<lb/>
Ceila<lb/>
Lambruseo<lb/>
2M<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
v2 cai.<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
10 Van. Or More<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0006"/><lb/>
Feuinres<lb/>
Hard To Hole<lb/>
Lacks Spunk<lb/>
Sexual h<lb/>
Stori<lb/>
H MK K<lb/>
and Hansen.<lb/>
B UNA MAHOSCHAK<lb/>
Kick Springfield may live u,<lb/>
the image of a popul I<lb/>
songwriter and sex symbol, ?<lb/>
acting is definitely not his th .<lb/>
at leas; not in the Universal City<lb/>
Studies motion picture Hard To<lb/>
Hold. Springfield shouldn<lb/>
all the blame for the mo.<lb/>
however. It seems that part ol<lb/>
problem lies in the script<lb/>
Rock idol Springfield (h?<lb/>
the part t rock star nan<lb/>
"Jamie" Roberts) and<lb/>
lanei Eilber (Diana) were m-<lb/>
into a storyline :har is both "com-<lb/>
mon" and "simple<lb/>
be a love<lb/>
where lamie <lb/>
entertains i<lb/>
?<lb/>
stag ? betwe<lb/>
Jamie bitch<lb/>
songwriting partner Ni k ?<lb/>
Hansen) and his manager Tr<lb/>
scene makes Hansen look<lb/>
tho .<lb/>
her Not a j<lb/>
'<lb/>
Springfield<lb/>
as luring<lb/>
scenes new<lb/>
acr<lb/>
Dui .<lb/>
rhe<lb/>
etimes have a tender<lb/>
unrealistic, but falling<lb/>
between when Jamie I<lb/>
coun ? - Diana's afl<lb/>
she "h<lb/>
tak<lb/>
.<lb/>
S , .<lb/>
" ?? ?<lb/>
M<lb/>
Li . 1<lb/>
?<lb/>
m ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
SfS<lb/>
Host<lb/>
i<lb/>
Hat<lb/>
Nebulous Concepts<lb/>
On The Disco Fad<lb/>
1<lb/>
! hey<lb/>
So<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
D<lb/>
A<lb/>
1<lb/>
'<lb/>
I<lb/>
times .is it uerc<lb/>
disco statemei ii<lb/>
S4ai k ! :oonskii<lb/>
c oal -? ? pfd ? . . .<lb/>
sunglasses and blue leans<lb/>
holes in the knees and 1 s ?<lb/>
hold o' the idea I tai ling it I<lb/>
entrance to the 1 Ibo o b<lb/>
bet-<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
'Hill<lb/>
ist ai<lb/>
i<lb/>
Utf<lb/>
irs arrived<lb/>
in an<lb/>
tpidly<lb/>
rowd<lb/>
ru back to<lb/>
ial and what did<lb/>
i : i Aftei all, these events<lb/>
 ears ago<lb/>
Vet, l ear, the<lb/>
one message thai rises out of the<lb/>
rubble to . us and affirm<lb/>
" ai tas met its<lb/>
nise "i es, disco is dead oi<lb/>
has undergone a signifi<lb/>
amorphosis No longer<lb/>
does one see men uith raon shirts<lb/>
Fall '84 Movies<lb/>
August 23 ? 25<lb/>
August 2s)<lb/>
August 30<lb/>
Vptember 1 2<lb/>
September 5<lb/>
September h ? 8<lb/>
September 7 ? 8<lb/>
September 13 ? 15<lb/>
September 19<lb/>
September 20 ? 22<lb/>
sudden Imp<lb/>
Montinegi<lb/>
The r mpire Strikes Ii<lb/>
f he (General<lb/>
satetv First<lb/>
1 he (.reat Dire t<lb/>
Silkwood<lb/>
spinal Up<lb/>
(.?rk Park<lb/>
Fann And Alexander<lb/>
lerms Of rndearmenl<lb/>
September 23<lb/>
I ad<lb/>
bar ra<lb/>
Walrus pe<lb/>
i ii net k .<lb/>
fronted I .<lb/>
hairstyles<lb/>
they dance, a<lb/>
so III ?<lb/>
reminiscent<lb/>
Southw esi I<lb/>
there will I<lb/>
More to tl<lb/>
pears to be .<lb/>
i ourse,<lb/>
be dance mu<lb/>
makers tell<lb/>
Ofl they<lb/>
Hut now the<lb/>
same (Ii me<lb/>
i<lb/>
? i<lb/>
itha<lb/>
the<lb/>
throb, thl<lb/>
throb and my<lb/>
body; everyboi . my (nub<lb/>
banalities thai vafted across<lb/>
the Ann ,  nstead,<lb/>
the air is now oc upied by su h<lb/>
strains as. "There is nothing safe<lb/>
: I here is nothing sure<lb/>
Id nd it's a great da<lb/>
te wedding<lb/>
btedly, and who can la-<lb/>
the fact that some people<lb/>
Url thai it's in vogue to discuss<lb/>
1 xistentialism again' I, for one,<lb/>
was noi surprised to see angst,<lb/>
and dread three<lb/>
 ieti?? ol emotional trauma ?<lb/>
W rhis is the atomic age<lb/>
and people keep remin-<lb/>
ding me ol ii Perhaps that is. m<lb/>
he essence or the matter.<lb/>
rhe fact is that it is probably not a<lb/>
fcularl) healthy thing foi the<lb/>
people ol a great nation to turn to<lb/>
an obsession with sex. quaaiudes,<lb/>
.md cocaine in the face o serious<lb/>
Problems concerning human sur-<lb/>
vival (certainly this is the aesthetic<lb/>
disco prornulgates( No<lb/>
probably not far better to get'it<lb/>
See DISCO, Page 7<lb/>
September 26<lb/>
September 27 ? 29<lb/>
October 4 ? 6<lb/>
October 17<lb/>
October 18 ? 20<lb/>
October 25 ? 27<lb/>
October 31<lb/>
November 1 ? 3<lb/>
November 15 ? 17<lb/>
November 16 ? 17<lb/>
November 29 ? December 1<lb/>
December 5<lb/>
1 hehase<lb/>
Jeremiah Johnson<lb/>
Three l)as Ol I he t ?ndor<lb/>
One Eyed Jacks<lb/>
The Wild Bunch<lb/>
Scarface<lb/>
Footloose<lb/>
Rules Of rhe (,am?<lb/>
Educating Rita<lb/>
R?stmar Bah<lb/>
1 he Exorcist<lb/>
The Dead one<lb/>
(?host Morv<lb/>
.revtoke. The legend Of aran<lb/>
liquid Sky<lb/>
The Right Stuff<lb/>
Das Boot<lb/>
f<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
P<lb/>
Male c<lb/>
Gri<lb/>
Ladil<lb/>
Pe<lb/>
i<lb/>
B<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0007"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Hold<lb/>
unk<lb/>
j ick but it doesn't<lb/>
two long to get emo-<lb/>
ved<lb/>
or) takes Place in a San<lb/>
?tcl where Jamie dab-<lb/>
ting a new album<lb/>
rig time with his<lb/>
worker, Diana.<lb/>
tgwriting partner.<lb/>
- louse and ruins<lb/>
with both Jamie<lb/>
- s<lb/>
stor evolves<lb/>
Diana and Jamie's ab-<lb/>
with sex (yes, this<lb/>
G so it's not too<lb/>
are severai<lb/>
tail that is all<lb/>
ich ? then the<lb/>
this movie is por-<lb/>
rtie's social life irt-<lb/>
s work.<lb/>
go through their<lb/>
nit all ends well.<lb/>
the movie is a con-<lb/>
gfieid performs<lb/>
i new songs "Stand Up"<lb/>
- mebody<lb/>
ting complimented<lb/>
h more in his part<lb/>
Drake on General<lb/>
i Hard To Hold, but<lb/>
:ould be worse.<lb/>
To Hold is playing at the<lb/>
j M ? e Theatre at<lb/>
Iv.iie Square Mall.<lb/>
ones<lb/>
sudden Impact<lb/>
Monfinegro<lb/>
e Kmpire Strikes Back<lb/>
The General<lb/>
afet First<lb/>
The Great Director<lb/>
ilkwood<lb/>
spinal Tap<lb/>
Gork Park<lb/>
ann And Alexander<lb/>
rms Of Endearment<lb/>
1<lb/>
The Chase<lb/>
Jeremiah Johnson<lb/>
?ree Days Of The Condor<lb/>
One Eed Jacks<lb/>
The Wild Bunch<lb/>
Scarface<lb/>
Footloose<lb/>
Rules Of The Game<lb/>
Educating Rita<lb/>
Rosemary's Baby<lb/>
The Exorcist<lb/>
The Dead Zone<lb/>
Ghost Story<lb/>
?ke: The Legend Of Tarzan<lb/>
Liquid Sky<lb/>
The Right Stuff<lb/>
Das Boot<lb/>
SexualHarassment<lb/>
fHHAStUltOIIMAS ApR,<lb/>
24. VM<lb/>
Stories Revealed<lb/>
By MICK LASALLE<lb/>
Staff Writ<lb/>
I was at Abrams, that<lb/>
seafood place, talking to<lb/>
Dave Johnston and Bob<lb/>
Albanese. I was blowing<lb/>
off steam, talking about<lb/>
this girl I knew and how a<lb/>
couple of professors had<lb/>
been really putting the big<lb/>
move on her. Johnston<lb/>
started talking about a<lb/>
girl he knew and what<lb/>
had happened to her, and<lb/>
we all started getting<lb/>
mad.<lb/>
None of us are hot<lb/>
heads. But inside of ten<lb/>
minutes the three of us<lb/>
had each told stories that<lb/>
made us seriously con-<lb/>
sider walking into a few<lb/>
offices on this campus<lb/>
and breaking heads.<lb/>
Go ahead and laugh if<lb/>
you like. But it's no joke.<lb/>
A couple of girls told me<lb/>
stories that actually<lb/>
brought tears to my eyes.<lb/>
I wasn't in love with<lb/>
either of them; I wasn't<lb/>
i?-J,ist the way jt is' Unc and a1" a woman<lb/>
? Third, it's late in the out to dinner. The bad<lb/>
year. By April, a lot of guys are the ones who<lb/>
tne sexually harrassed abuse their position, who<lb/>
women have either rear- use their power, either in<lb/>
25?J thcir class a ? or an overt way,<lb/>
schedules or have figured to psychologically and<lb/>
out a way to live with the sexually manipulate their<lb/>
problem. female students. Guys<lb/>
? Fourth, even when like that are sleazes<lb/>
women did speak with us, Next semester, Tina<lb/>
au of them were too Maroschak and Jennifer<lb/>
frightened to let us use Jendrasiak will be taking<lb/>
the professors' names, over this investigation,<lb/>
(borne women were They'll probably be able<lb/>
atraid to tell us their own to do a better job. Both<lb/>
names-) As a result, even are editors of this paper<lb/>
though I'm itching to do And anyone with a story<lb/>
it, I can't put the finger will be able to reach them<lb/>
on individual professors at the newspaper office<lb/>
without facing a libel Ultimately, they'll be able<lb/>
"t- u t0 print the names of the<lb/>
Mill, the proof will out. offending parties. Once<lb/>
If you're a professor, or a individual women realize<lb/>
teacher, or a campus they're not alone in their<lb/>
security officer, and you complaints about in-<lb/>
know you've been doing dividual professors<lb/>
wrong, chances are we they'll be less afraid to<lb/>
know about you too. stand behind the stories<lb/>
Don t breathe a sigh of they tell us.<lb/>
-r? . relief We've already The thing about the<lb/>
drunk and I m not lying passed on your names to sexual harrassers that gets<lb/>
I s just that the the two women who'll be me most angry is their ar-<lb/>
continumg this investiga- rogance. They just<lb/>
tion next semester. Sorry,<lb/>
fellas.<lb/>
What are some<lb/>
representative stories we<lb/>
heard? ? Well, a pretty<lb/>
junior told us about get-<lb/>
Barefoot On The Mall "YAN MUMT ECU PfcL"<lb/>
Caricatures Unlimited Inc.was on nt ?.? ? ? ?<lb/>
o?? of m.ny ,r.ups who offered xnlm .? ?????,?? ,? Ecu <lb/>
DiscoGone The<lb/>
WayOf Corvaires<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
stories were that bad.<lb/>
There are a handful of<lb/>
men on this campus ?<lb/>
professors and teachers<lb/>
who are no doubt reading<lb/>
this ? who don't have<lb/>
any idea how close they<lb/>
came to getting the<lb/>
beating of their lives. For<lb/>
the record, it was Bob<lb/>
Albanese who saved<lb/>
them.<lb/>
Albanese looked up<lb/>
from his Alaskan crab<lb/>
legs and suggested we<lb/>
launch an investigation.<lb/>
"For cryin' out loud,<lb/>
LaSalle. Everybody reads<lb/>
your column. Hit these<lb/>
guys where it'll hurt them<lb/>
most: in their credibility,<lb/>
in their careers. Besides,<lb/>
these guys are cowards.<lb/>
Once they find out you're<lb/>
after them, a lot of the<lb/>
ones you don't catch will<lb/>
probably cut it out<lb/>
anyway. ' '<lb/>
It was an investigation<lb/>
hampered in a lot of<lb/>
ways:<lb/>
? First of all, even<lb/>
though I'm without a<lb/>
doubt the most well-<lb/>
known personality on this<lb/>
campus, I'm not well-<lb/>
known for investigative<lb/>
journalism. Even a few of<lb/>
my colleagues thought I<lb/>
might be joking around.<lb/>
And one nasty letter even<lb/>
accused me of doing the<lb/>
assume they can do<lb/>
whatever they want<lb/>
without getting punished, wedding<lb/>
And they're probably<lb/>
right.<lb/>
The kind of guy who<lb/>
world. There is nothing<lb/>
sure in this world. And<lb/>
it's a great day for a white<lb/>
serious problems concer-<lb/>
ning human survival (cer-<lb/>
tainly this is the aesthetic<lb/>
that disco promulgates<lb/>
No . . . probably not. Far<lb/>
better to get it all out in<lb/>
ting verbally harrassed by goes Downtown .<lb/>
a department bigwig all week to beat up<lb/>
over Greenville. She was everybody because he<lb/>
in one of the many ma- can't score to save his life<lb/>
jors on campus where is just as unappealing to<lb/>
progress has to be assess- me as he is to anybody<lb/>
ed subjectively, so she else. I'm not a violent<lb/>
was nervous about it. guy. It takes a hell of a lot<lb/>
? A freshman told us to get me mad. But<lb/>
how a private tutoring sometimes a punch in the<lb/>
wound up with face is necessary<lb/>
it j l j, ??? hp gel u ui out in<lb/>
Undoubtedly, and who the open, like a bad case<lb/>
can lament the fact that of genital herpes, and<lb/>
Features Writers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
For Summer And Fall Sessions<lb/>
some people feel that it's<lb/>
in vogue to discuss Ex-<lb/>
istentialism again? I, for<lb/>
one, was not surprised to<lb/>
see angst, anguish, and<lb/>
dread ? three varieties of<lb/>
emotional trauma ? go<lb/>
top 40. This is the atomic<lb/>
deal with it; even dwell on<lb/>
t if need be. One must<lb/>
assume that anything is<lb/>
more intelligent than get-<lb/>
ting zooted on 'ludes,<lb/>
stoked on cocaine, and<lb/>
balled till your brains run<lb/>
out your naval when<lb/>
her getting pressed to the<lb/>
wall by a 40-year old<lb/>
man.<lb/>
? "Clarisse" told us<lb/>
about an incident with a<lb/>
campus security guard.<lb/>
He got her into his car<lb/>
and started telling her,<lb/>
"You're one of my<lb/>
girls Maybe there was<lb/>
no clanger there, but she<lb/>
sure thought so. He let<lb/>
her think so.<lb/>
? A former graduate<lb/>
student at ECU dropped<lb/>
out of her Master's pro-<lb/>
gram because of<lb/>
widespread sexual har-<lb/>
rassment within her ma-<lb/>
jor department. She told<lb/>
us the name of the<lb/>
department and some<lb/>
stories that I wish I could<lb/>
print here. But there's no<lb/>
The fact is, in 1984, a<lb/>
professor can press your<lb/>
girlfriend or your sister to<lb/>
the wall of his office and<lb/>
know nothing unfor-<lb/>
tunate is going to happen<lb/>
to him in return.<lb/>
4rADilthat's too bad.<lb/>
age atter all and people ominous Existential ques-<lb/>
keep reminding me of it. tions loomed on the not-<lb/>
Perhaps that is, in fact, too-distant horizon<lb/>
the essence of the matter. And that, in essence, is<lb/>
The fact is that it is pro- why I believe that it is a<lb/>
hlill ?? S ParticularlV 8?od thing that disco has<lb/>
healthy thing for the peo- passed us by and gone the<lb/>
Pie of a great nation to way of Corvaires, plat-<lb/>
turn to an obsession with form shoes, and bell-<lb/>
sex, quaaludes, and co- bottom jeans. America<lb/>
came in the face of will be nobler for it<lb/>
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investigation for the sake point in tipping off the<lb/>
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course, the letter was sent<lb/>
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was saying it, probably<lb/>
more were thinking it,<lb/>
and that's too bad.<lb/>
? Second, Johnston and<lb/>
I are men. Some women<lb/>
have trouble talking to<lb/>
men about these things.<lb/>
Who are the bad guys?<lb/>
It's important that the<lb/>
reader realizes we're not<lb/>
talking about a majority<lb/>
of the professors on this<lb/>
campus. We're not talk-<lb/>
ing about a professor<lb/>
who puts his ego on the<lb/>
P MAY8,1984<lb/>
DON HICKS has twice the experience<lb/>
In Law: As a praticing attorney in Greenville;<lb/>
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made famous in the long-<lb/>
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Orphan Annie. That's the<lb/>
classified ad being run in<lb/>
several N.C. newspapers<lb/>
bv the Fast Carolina<lb/>
Summer Theatre.<lb/>
On July 2-7, the Sum-<lb/>
mer Theatre will present<lb/>
the Tony Award winning<lb/>
Broadway musical Annie,<lb/>
which numbers among its<lb/>
featured players a<lb/>
runaway dog named San-<lb/>
dy To find just the right<lb/>
personality for the role,<lb/>
the Summer Theatre has<lb/>
scheduled auditions on<lb/>
Wednesday, May 2 at<lb/>
50 p.m. in McGinnis<lb/>
Theatre. Dogs who yearn<lb/>
for the smell of grease-<lb/>
paint and the roar of the<lb/>
crowd are encouraged to<lb/>
attend. According to<lb/>
director Edgar Loessin.<lb/>
"We are looking for a<lb/>
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ham and yet has the<lb/>
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be trained (or easily<lb/>
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commands, certainly not<lb/>
shy in front of large<lb/>
crowds, love children,<lb/>
and be available for<lb/>
rehearsals which begin<lb/>
June 17<lb/>
Dog owners should<lb/>
prepare their pets to walk<lb/>
alone across the 40-foot<lb/>
idth of the McGinnis<lb/>
Theatre stage and to res-<lb/>
pond to simple com-<lb/>
mands. Although special-<lb/>
ty tricks are not called<lb/>
for, they will be allowed<lb/>
during the audition.<lb/>
There is no age limit or<lb/>
specific sex required, and<lb/>
those dogs who appear to<lb/>
be mixed terrier, wire-<lb/>
haircoated, tan color,<lb/>
20-45 pounds are<lb/>
preferable.<lb/>
I oessin went on to say,<lb/>
"We are also looking for<lb/>
a understudy dog for<lb/>
Sandy just in case the<lb/>
principal dog comes<lb/>
down with a case of stage<lb/>
fright opening night<lb/>
Dogs being cast can ex-<lb/>
pect to have their travel<lb/>
expenses met by the<lb/>
theatre, and owners<lb/>
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rehearsals and perfor-<lb/>
mances if needed. As a<lb/>
contractual bonus, the<lb/>
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For further informa-<lb/>
tion call 757-6390.<lb/>
Engrossing Film<lb/>
Zany, Unique<lb/>
JENORAsfAJpsiHR<lb/>
wi FiJtl.w<lb/>
a movie starts<lb/>
a large hotel, a<lb/>
When<lb/>
out with<lb/>
'uest named Freud and a<lb/>
?notorcycle-nding bear<lb/>
named State CV Maine,<lb/>
it's destined to be in-<lb/>
teresting. The Hotel Sen<lb/>
Hampshire, based on the<lb/>
txok of the same title by<lb/>
John Irving, is not only<lb/>
interesting, it i. unique.<lb/>
Far too many movies<lb/>
have the same kind of<lb/>
Plot. There is a macho<lb/>
hero, a tough-but-<lb/>
teminine heroine, and an<lb/>
excessive dose of trials<lb/>
and tribulations, all sum-<lb/>
med up with a suitably<lb/>
happy ending. The Hotel<lb/>
Vh Hampshire deviates<lb/>
from the norm, with ex-<lb/>
cellent results.<lb/>
Beau Bridges<lb/>
patnach of the<lb/>
family. a family<lb/>
ould make<lb/>
characters from<lb/>
House On The<lb/>
run screaming with hor-<lb/>
There are five<lb/>
children and a dog named<lb/>
Sorrow m the Berry fami-<lb/>
and each one ha a<lb/>
unique problem.<lb/>
Frannie, played by<lb/>
Jodie Foster, has an ex-<lb/>
tremely healthy sex drive<lb/>
- unfortunately, the ob-<lb/>
ject of her affections is<lb/>
her brother, played by-<lb/>
Rob Lowe. Lilly stopped<lb/>
growing while still a child<lb/>
and, in her frustration,<lb/>
turns to writing novels<lb/>
trying to be "big<lb/>
enough Frank is a<lb/>
homosexual with a knack<lb/>
for taxidermy, while Egg<lb/>
is just a normal kid ?<lb/>
th a strange name.<lb/>
'He's named Egg<lb/>
because he started as an<lb/>
egg and he's still an egg "<lb/>
Lilly says.)<lb/>
Natassja Kmski makes<lb/>
an appearance as Susie<lb/>
the Bear, a girl with a<lb/>
selt-image so poor she<lb/>
needs to disguise herself<lb/>
with a bear suit. This role<lb/>
was certainly a change of<lb/>
pace for Kinski ? she re-<lb/>
mained fully clothed<lb/>
throughout the entire<lb/>
movie, and without anv<lb/>
makeup she projects an<lb/>
entirely different image<lb/>
After all. who ever heard<lb/>
of a glamorous bear?<lb/>
is the<lb/>
Berry<lb/>
which<lb/>
the<lb/>
little<lb/>
Prairie<lb/>
The movie is, above<lb/>
all, engrossing. With each<lb/>
wist of the plot the<lb/>
viewer becomes more<lb/>
uncertain of what will<lb/>
happen next. The scenes<lb/>
go from a hotel, to an old<lb/>
school, to a gasthaus in<lb/>
Vienna and to an expen-<lb/>
sive hotel in New York<lb/>
The Hotel Sen<lb/>
Hampshire is a zany,<lb/>
entertaining comedy<lb/>
with some serious sym-<lb/>
bolism and meanings. It's<lb/>
well worth the time and<lb/>
money and is now show-<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057642_0009"/><lb/>
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ntEEASTCAROI INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 24. 1984 Page 9<lb/>
9<lb/>
B<lb/>
8<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
 Grade J<lb/>
ken<lb/>
ists<lb/>
TKE boxing spurred more enthusiasm than<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
some revenue sports at ECU.<lb/>
? ECU Pfcoio Lab<lb/>
MARK BARBER - EC U Photo Lab,<lb/>
Losing is no fun: Ask Charlie.<lb/>
RIV?r ? w1 w ?.t STANLEY LEARY ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Byaef was best before a N.C. record crowd at State.<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
t-tS1<lb/>
.V<lb/>
THE<lb/>
By ED MCKLAS<lb/>
Sportj f dl?. ?<lb/>
Thirteen points.<lb/>
Catastrophic.<lb/>
Best season ever.<lb/>
Olympics.<lb/>
First first team All-America.<lb/>
Sophomore season blues.<lb/>
Is there life A.D.?<lb/>
One needn't go beyond these<lb/>
simple phrases to describe ECU<lb/>
sports this season, especially the<lb/>
thirteen points. Thirteen lousv<lb/>
points. Thirteen doggone points<lb/>
and football coach Ed Emory<lb/>
might have taken his team to the<lb/>
Orange Bowl and competed for<lb/>
the national championship.<lb/>
It turned out that Emory's<lb/>
squad didn't even get a bowl in-<lb/>
vitation despite coming that close<lb/>
to fame and fortune. But deep<lb/>
down, it didn't matter to ECU<lb/>
fans, as they suffered with the<lb/>
team as if the they were an in-<lb/>
tegral part, and bit each nail down<lb/>
to the bone with every victory and<lb/>
defeat.<lb/>
Many a dorm room desk was<lb/>
kicked in by those listening to<lb/>
ECU's only three losses of the<lb/>
season: 47-46 to Florida State,<lb/>
24-17 to Florida and 12-7 to<lb/>
Miami. Frustration overwhelmed<lb/>
the listeners as each of the three<lb/>
teams went on to bowl games ?<lb/>
Pirate fans knew it could have<lb/>
been them.<lb/>
I don't think anyone will forget<lb/>
the defeats, or more specifically,<lb/>
the way the came about. With the<lb/>
final minutes waning against<lb/>
Florida State, and ECU down<lb/>
47-46 with a third and one at their<lb/>
32-yard line, quarterback Kevin<lb/>
Ingram optioned right and raced<lb/>
all the way to the FSU 30. Field<lb/>
goal range! Major upset indeed!<lb/>
? The students thought. But In-<lb/>
gram was hit from behind and<lb/>
fumbled ? FSU recovered.<lb/>
At Florida, the game was tied in<lb/>
the fourth quarter, 17-17, and the<lb/>
Gators were driving in ECU ter-<lb/>
ritory. Wayne Peace dropped<lb/>
back to pass and threw in the<lb/>
direction he knew he shouldn't<lb/>
have ? near ECU safety Clint<lb/>
Harris. Harris picked off the<lb/>
throw, his fourth of the game,<lb/>
and the Pirates appeared to have<lb/>
shifted the momentum dras:ically.<lb/>
But once again, the Pirates were<lb/>
snake bitten ? the officials called<lb/>
ECU for pass interference away<lb/>
from the ball on the interception.<lb/>
Florida had a first down and new<lb/>
life. They took the ball in and<lb/>
scored.<lb/>
Miami. The Hurricanes didn't<lb/>
even move the ball past the ECU<lb/>
47-yard line in the first half. In the<lb/>
second half, the Pirates took the<lb/>
ball ? via ground level ? and<lb/>
knocked the Hurricanes into a<lb/>
state of disillusion. Earnest Byner<lb/>
up the middle. Tony Baker on the<lb/>
sweep. Ingram on the option ?<lb/>
See INGRAM, Page II)<lb/>
Shank's shot sent Heels sinking.<lb/>
OARY PATTERSON - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
?envtf'e<lb/>
LOU CLEMMONS - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
The place to be was at Minges Pool.<lb/>
OARY PATT<lb/>
Indoor soccer<lb/>
ERSON ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
was sensational.<lb/>
OARY PATTERSON - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Cathy's team never gave up.<lb/>
05<lb/>
? Ci't m Ff?? t?<lb/>
PiL?fSebaU Team Ho,ds ?n To 6-0 Lead To Run Record To 25-9<lb/>
H ?? Oit' Csi<lb/>
oca<lb/>
ola<lb/>
4buai Nxx-u hdlicw<lb/>
ECU forged a commanding 6-0<lb/>
iead against North Carolina<lb/>
Weslyan Saturday night but had<lb/>
to hang on in the final inning of<lb/>
play to escape with a 7-5 baseball<lb/>
victory at Harrington Field.<lb/>
Starting pitcher Robbie Mc-<lb/>
Clanahan only allowed two hits<lb/>
through the first seven innings,<lb/>
but began to tire in the final two<lb/>
frames, enabling the Bishops to<lb/>
narrow the margin.<lb/>
Wesleyan first got on the board<lb/>
in the top of the eighth, scoring an<lb/>
unearned run to spoil Mc-<lb/>
Clanahan's bid for a shutout.<lb/>
In the ninth, McClanahan<lb/>
walked the first batter, gave up<lb/>
two singles that scored a run, then<lb/>
walked another batter to load the<lb/>
bases before Pirate head coach<lb/>
Hai Baird brought on Bob David-<lb/>
9<lb/>
0ff<lb/>
son in relief.<lb/>
Baird said he hadn't considered<lb/>
pulling McClanahan earlier in the<lb/>
contest, but later remarked: "Bob<lb/>
has had pretty good stuff lately,<lb/>
so we decided to go with the fresh<lb/>
arm<lb/>
Davidson gave up a single and<lb/>
two sacrifice flies, all of which<lb/>
scored runs, before finally retiring<lb/>
the third batter to earn his third<lb/>
save of the season.<lb/>
After the game, Baird was<lb/>
supnsed at McClanahan's early<lb/>
departure, the senior pitched<lb/>
hadn't thrown that many pitches.<lb/>
"He was pretty much in .rontrol<lb/>
until the end Baird said. "If he<lb/>
had been able to get more break-<lb/>
ing stuff in there, he might have<lb/>
finished the game<lb/>
The Bishops, who came into the<lb/>
See PIRATES, Page II<lb/>
Who Are The Leading Hitters This Season?<lb/>
BRYAN HUMBERT - ECU Photo I<lb/>
Assistant baseball coach Gary Overton collects his thoughts between innings.<lb/>
By ED NICKLAS<lb/>
Sport Editor<lb/>
Who are the leading batsmen on the ECU baseball<lb/>
team this season?<lb/>
Are they the players with the highest average? The<lb/>
most hits? The most total bases? The most RBI's?<lb/>
The most runs scored?<lb/>
?,?T,et'S lo,?? the leaders in ba"ing average: Mike<lb/>
Williams (.322) Greg Hardison (.321), Mark Shank<lb/>
5JS' "P"s Bradberry (.309), Winfred Johnson<lb/>
(.306), Todd Evans (.290).<lb/>
xve hi?!eatdeuS: Hardison (43), Evans (40),<lb/>
Williams (38), Johnson (34).<lb/>
tPw-S-1 Ieaders: Johnson (78), Hardison<lb/>
(74), Williams (62), Evans (60).<lb/>
c ThC ?S ?ders: Johnson (30), Hardison (27),<lb/>
Evans (22), Williams (21).<lb/>
All these figures give some idea which players are<lb/>
leading the Pirates to their 25-9 mark this season, but<lb/>
how can all of these statistics be computed into one<lb/>
number that accurately rates the top hitters?<lb/>
In Baseball Abstract, Bill James, the eccentric, as<lb/>
he calls himself, has created a formula that by and<lb/>
large accurately rates the top hitters on baseball<lb/>
teams. Says James in Baseball Abstract: "It is my<lb/>
belief that a hitter's job is to create runs, and with<lb/>
tha in mind I searched for several years to find a for-<lb/>
mula which would take the player's totals of singles<lb/>
doubles, home runs, etc. and translate them into a<lb/>
number of runs. I eventually found a very simp.e for-<lb/>
mula which does this with astonishing accuracy "<lb/>
James' formula:<lb/>
(HW - Caught Stealing)(TB.7 Stolen Bas,?o<lb/>
ABtWt Caught Stealing<lb/>
 Runs Created<lb/>
Applying this formula, these are the real hitting<lb/>
leaders on the ECU baseball team:<lb/>
Runs Created this season<lb/>
Winfred Johnson:<lb/>
Greg Hardison:<lb/>
Mike Williams:<lb/>
Todd Evans<lb/>
Mark Shank:<lb/>
Steve Sides:<lb/>
Chris Bradberry:<lb/>
33<lb/>
27<lb/>
23<lb/>
19<lb/>
14<lb/>
13<lb/>
12<lb/>
Notice that this formula has put Sides up among<lb/>
the leaders although he sports a .235 average The<lb/>
reason Sides is up there is that he ranks high in two<lb/>
important offensive categories: steals and walk<lb/>
is I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
I HI f -S r c k( , M AN<lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL T<lb/>
<lb/>
'Ingram Takes The Snap From Center In The Shotgun, Looks Down Students<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
the Hurricanes couldn't<lb/>
stop the Pirates. Utilizing<lb/>
the ground game, ECU.<lb/>
leading 7-6, drove from<lb/>
its own territory to inside<lb/>
the Miami ten with time<lb/>
running out. A<lb/>
touchdown would have<lb/>
sealed victory, but the of-<lb/>
fense sputtered, and<lb/>
kicker Jeff Heath missed<lb/>
a chip shot.<lb/>
Tired and shocked, but<lb/>
not yet surrendering,<lb/>
ECU gave it one final<lb/>
shot on the last play of<lb/>
the game, losing 12<lb/>
Radio announcer Jim<lb/>
Woods' voice penetrated<lb/>
the listeners and will<lb/>
perhaps never be forgot-<lb/>
ten. It went something<lb/>
like this:<lb/>
Kevin Ingram in the<lb/>
shotgun final play of<lb/>
the game coming up He<lb/>
takes the snap from<lb/>
center He's got to<lb/>
heave it into the<lb/>
endzone I-I-I-I-I-t 's<lb/>
Caught by ECU Oh-h-<lb/>
h-h-h-h no Stephon<lb/>
Adams had it, but Nor-<lb/>
wood 'ann knocked it<lb/>
loose going for the ball<lb/>
O-O-O-O-6-h my-y-y-y-<lb/>
y What a way to lose a<lb/>
ballgame, going down to<lb/>
the final play<lb/>
Failing a test or having<lb/>
100 pages of accounting<lb/>
homework could not<lb/>
have hurt so much.<lb/>
But there were pain<lb/>
relievers during and after<lb/>
the season. The Pirates<lb/>
beat up on arch-rival<lb/>
N.C. State and kicked<lb/>
Big Eight power Missouri<lb/>
around a bit. Also. Terry<lb/>
Long became ECU's first<lb/>
first team All-America at<lb/>
his offensive guard posi-<lb/>
tion. The year was never-<lb/>
theless highly successful.<lb/>
If the three losses in<lb/>
football were frustrating,<lb/>
then the 24 in basketball<lb/>
were catastrophic. At<lb/>
least that is how that<lb/>
number must have looked<lb/>
to coach Charlie Har-<lb/>
rison, as his team went<lb/>
4-24 in setting a school<lb/>
record for losses.<lb/>
It was a frustrating<lb/>
season for Harrison, as<lb/>
he was relegated to star-<lb/>
ting three freshman most<lb/>
of the year, and the inex-<lb/>
perience could not be hid-<lb/>
den ? turnovers, missed<lb/>
shots and foul trouble<lb/>
kept the Pirates from<lb/>
winning close games.<lb/>
Harrison didn't have<lb/>
anything up his sleeve to<lb/>
Pull out the victories<lb/>
either.<lb/>
While Harrison was<lb/>
pulling out his hair, ECU<lb/>
fans were asking the<lb/>
question, "Is there life<lb/>
A.D. (After Denkler)?"<lb/>
Well the Lady Pirates<lb/>
didn't have a scorer like<lb/>
Denkler or a rebounder<lb/>
like Denkler, but they<lb/>
sure had the tenacity of<lb/>
Denkler. And although<lb/>
they didn't achieve as<lb/>
good a record as when<lb/>
Denkler was playing, they<lb/>
were competent enough<lb/>
to take the ECAC South<lb/>
basketball tournament to<lb/>
end the regular season on<lb/>
a high note.<lb/>
Swimming gained the<lb/>
spotlight as one of the<lb/>
most prolific of all ECU<lb/>
sports. Coach Rick Kobe,<lb/>
exciting optimism<lb/>
throughout the season,<lb/>
guided the swimmers to<lb/>
their best record ever, as<lb/>
the men and women com-<lb/>
bined for 17 victories.<lb/>
School records were set<lb/>
by Kevin Richards,<lb/>
Chema Larranaga, Cindy<lb/>
Newman, Caycee Poust,<lb/>
Lori Livingston, Renee<lb/>
Seech, Jessica Feinberg<lb/>
and Lori Miller in in-<lb/>
dividual events.<lb/>
While the swim team<lb/>
was enjoying a pleasant<lb/>
year, soccer coach Rob-<lb/>
bie ChurJi couldn't<lb/>
avoid the sophomore<lb/>
jinx. After his first-year<lb/>
team tied an ECU record<lb/>
for wins in a season, the<lb/>
Pirates dropped down to<lb/>
3-16 last fall. Church,<lb/>
however, mentored ECU<lb/>
to an impressive indoor<lb/>
season. Saying he<lb/>
couldn't live on the salary<lb/>
the athletic department<lb/>
was paying him, Church<lb/>
decided this spring to call<lb/>
it quits and concentrate<lb/>
on his graduate degree.<lb/>
The Olympics came<lb/>
home to ECU, as several<lb/>
athletes were determined<lb/>
to reach that once-in-a-<lb/>
lifetime-dream. And<lb/>
some have made it.<lb/>
Former basketball player<lb/>
Sam Jones took up a new<lb/>
sport, team handball, and<lb/>
practically mastered the<lb/>
sport overnight,<lb/>
spreading the ECU name<lb/>
all the way around the<lb/>
world. Trackster Craig<lb/>
White has high-hurdled<lb/>
his way to the trials, and<lb/>
swimmer Larranaga<lb/>
should be freestylin' for<lb/>
his native country, Peru,<lb/>
come July.<lb/>
Spring came, and with<lb/>
it the winning tradit:<lb/>
E I baseball, which<lb/>
had only one lo<lb/>
season since 1951.<lb/>
baseball team rna b<lb/>
onlv sport at ECU to .<lb/>
to the NCAA plaj<lb/>
this year, as it is presei<lb/>
has a 25 y record.<lb/>
Now it is ill over<lb/>
least for the maj<lb/>
students. Fxausted bo<lb/>
will load their cars<lb/>
head home where<lb/>
home may be. The<lb/>
have all summer<lb/>
prepare them<lb/>
another pulsat<lb/>
Pirate sport,<lb/>
thing will sticl<lb/>
minJ over the s<lb/>
those lousy 13<lb/>
"??lHas Chance For Nationals, Olympics In Four Seperate Events<lb/>
By PETE FERNALD<lb/>
SUff W ntr<lb/>
With two National and<lb/>
Olympic hopefuls, Henry<lb/>
Williams and Craig<lb/>
White, the ECU men's<lb/>
track team has yet<lb/>
another potential<lb/>
qualifier, Chris Brooks.<lb/>
Between four events,<lb/>
Brooks has an outstan-<lb/>
ding chance to qualify for<lb/>
the Nationals and Olym-<lb/>
pic trials.<lb/>
'I need to make it to<lb/>
the Olympic trials<lb/>
Brooks said. "I should be<lb/>
able to qualify with no<lb/>
problem<lb/>
Brooks has won the<lb/>
long jump event only<lb/>
once this year, with the<lb/>
victory coming at the<lb/>
Duke Invitational in<lb/>
Durham.<lb/>
Brooks attributes his<lb/>
poor showing in the long<lb/>
jump to an injury he sus-<lb/>
tained at the Duke meet.<lb/>
"1 haven't jumped that<lb/>
good because I pulled a<lb/>
hamstring Brooks said.<lb/>
Brooks is recovering<lb/>
from the hamstring in-<lb/>
jury and according to<lb/>
head coach Bill Carson,<lb/>
"his speed is increasing<lb/>
due to the 4x100, 4x400,<lb/>
and quarter mile<lb/>
sprints<lb/>
Substituting for in-<lb/>
jured teammate Nathan<lb/>
McCorkle, Brooks is the<lb/>
lead-off man for the<lb/>
4x100 relay team.<lb/>
Brooks' times have<lb/>
been getting faster and he<lb/>
is enthusiastic about<lb/>
qualifying in the 4x100<lb/>
team for the Nationals<lb/>
and Olympic trialsWe<lb/>
need a 40-flat to<lb/>
qualify Brooks said.<lb/>
Leading his high school<lb/>
mile relay team to a Na-<lb/>
tional Championship,<lb/>
I<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
<lb/>
Brooks is a perfect can-<lb/>
didate to anchor the ECU<lb/>
mile relay team.<lb/>
"In the 4x400 I think a<lb/>
3.07 will qualify us<lb/>
Brooks said.<lb/>
Brooks has dominated<lb/>
the quarter mile as ex-<lb/>
hibited by a state record<lb/>
he held in high school,<lb/>
where he said he "was<lb/>
unbeatable<lb/>
This year Brooks'<lb/>
times in the quarter mile<lb/>
have improved, and he is<lb/>
looking to qualify for the<lb/>
Nationals and Olympic<lb/>
trials with a time of<lb/>
46-flat.<lb/>
In high school. Brooks<lb/>
was unequaled in his long<lb/>
jump distances, and as a<lb/>
result he was the Na-<lb/>
tionals long jump cham-<lb/>
pion for two consecutive<lb/>
years.<lb/>
As a senior in high<lb/>
school. Brooks par-<lb/>
ticipated in the<lb/>
prestigious Golden West<lb/>
track meet, a National<lb/>
event held in California<lb/>
which invites the top 8<lb/>
seniors in their event<lb/>
from across the country.<lb/>
Although he had only-<lb/>
been jumping for two<lb/>
years, Brooks came away<lb/>
as the best long jumper in<lb/>
the nation w ith a jump of<lb/>
25'9" feet.<lb/>
that "Brooks will jump<lb/>
well over 25 feet at the<lb/>
P e n n Relays in<lb/>
Philadelphia<lb/>
Being named an<lb/>
Adidas All-America, it's<lb/>
no wonder Brooks runs in<lb/>
four e ents ? i<lb/>
talent.<lb/>
I<lb/>
mef<lb/>
track 'ear:<lb/>
Relays in Philadelj<lb/>
April 2" ar . 2J<lb/>
FAMILY RESTAURANTS<lb/>
Brooks believes a<lb/>
26-foot leap in the long<lb/>
jump will ensure him to<lb/>
qualify for the National<lb/>
and Olympic trials.<lb/>
At an upcoming meet<lb/>
in Philadelphia, Brooks<lb/>
plans to contribute to the<lb/>
team's National and<lb/>
Olympic hopes by runn-<lb/>
ing and jumping well in<lb/>
all four events. "1 should<lb/>
do pretty well in the long<lb/>
jump and we should place<lb/>
in both relay events<lb/>
Brooks said.<lb/>
Coach Carson believes<lb/>
that Brooks has an ex-<lb/>
cellent chance to qualify<lb/>
for the National and<lb/>
Olympic trials and thinks 1<lb/>
? ?? .<lb/>
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Pirates only e<lb/>
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Afi.er going<lb/>
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three runs in ii<lb/>
Greg Hardison<lb/>
first runne- tc<lb/>
plate as he c - .<lb/>
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Winfred Johns?<lb/>
intentionally wali<lb/>
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but Weslyan's<lb/>
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The Pirates got c I<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057642_0012"/><lb/>
?'<lb/>
t<lb/>
INIAN<lb/>
APRIL 24, 1984<lb/>
own<lb/>
it the winning tradition of<lb/>
I ECU baseball, which has<lb/>
had only one losing<lb/>
season since 1951. The<lb/>
baseball team may be the<lb/>
only sport at ECU to go<lb/>
to the NCAA playoffs<lb/>
this year, as it is presently<lb/>
has a 25-9 record.<lb/>
Now it is all over ? at<lb/>
least for the majority of<lb/>
students. E.xausted bodies<lb/>
will load their cars and<lb/>
head home wherever<lb/>
home may be. They will<lb/>
have all summer to<lb/>
prepare themselves for<lb/>
.mother pulsating year of<lb/>
Pirate sport. But one<lb/>
hing will stick in their<lb/>
rtinds over the summer<lb/>
? those lousy 13 points!<lb/>
Events<lb/>
:our events ? he has the<lb/>
:alent.<lb/>
The next scheduled<lb/>
iieet tor the ECU men's<lb/>
rack team is the Penn<lb/>
Relays in Philadelphia on<lb/>
April 27 and 28.<lb/>
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? Jody Vaughn isn't<lb/>
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watching the video antics<lb/>
of Boy George, Michael<lb/>
Jackson and the Rolling<lb/>
Stones on Music Televi-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Vaughn, 16, discovered<lb/>
the action-filled videos of<lb/>
current rock music hits<lb/>
on a trip to Florida two<lb/>
years ago. "I thought it<lb/>
was a great idea he<lb/>
said. "I thought they<lb/>
would never get it in Em-<lb/>
poria, it's so far back in<lb/>
Pirates Hold Off<lb/>
Late Bishop Rally<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
game ranked third among<lb/>
NCAA Division III<lb/>
schools, allowed the<lb/>
Pirates only eight hits<lb/>
during the course of the<lb/>
game, but their downfall<lb/>
came as they gave up ten<lb/>
walks.<lb/>
After going scoreless<lb/>
through the first two inn-<lb/>
ings, ECU unleashed<lb/>
three runs in in the third.<lb/>
Greg Hardison was the<lb/>
first runner to cross the<lb/>
plate as he cracked a<lb/>
single, then came home<lb/>
on a David Wells double.<lb/>
Winfred Johnson was<lb/>
intentionally walked on<lb/>
the next at bat to put run-<lb/>
ners on first and second,<lb/>
but Weslyan's strategy<lb/>
backfired as Mike<lb/>
Williams followed with a<lb/>
double to score both<lb/>
Wells and Johnson.<lb/>
The Pirates got off to a<lb/>
quick start in the sixth, as<lb/>
Wells and Johnson led<lb/>
off with walks, then ad-<lb/>
vanced as Williams<lb/>
blooped a single over<lb/>
third to load the bases.<lb/>
Chris Bradberry was<lb/>
walked to force in David<lb/>
Wells for ECU'S first<lb/>
run, then Steve Sides beat<lb/>
out a grounder to score<lb/>
Johnson. After Williams<lb/>
was forced out at home<lb/>
on a Mark Shank<lb/>
grounder, Jim Riley was<lb/>
walked to bring in<lb/>
Bradberry for the Pirates<lb/>
sixth run of the game.<lb/>
The two teams ex-<lb/>
changed runs in the sixth,<lb/>
before Wesleyan knocked<lb/>
in four runs in the top of<lb/>
the ninth to make the<lb/>
final margin 7-5.<lb/>
The Pirates improve to<lb/>
25-9 with the victory and<lb/>
will return to action<lb/>
Wednesday night for a<lb/>
doubleheader with Atlan-<lb/>
tic Christian College<lb/>
scheduled for 6 p.m. at<lb/>
Harrington Field.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
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the boondocks<lb/>
Last summer MTV<lb/>
finally arrived, bringing<lb/>
Emporia, population<lb/>
4,800, into a family of<lb/>
viewers now estimated to<lb/>
exceed 19.4 million peo-<lb/>
ple.<lb/>
Two months ago it was<lb/>
removed after a con-<lb/>
troversy over the value<lb/>
and moral tone of MTV.<lb/>
"I find it vulgar and<lb/>
distasteful said Roger<lb/>
Wilcher, a supervisor of<lb/>
youth activities at<lb/>
Calvary Baptist Church.<lb/>
Wilcher joined many<lb/>
others in speaking against<lb/>
MTV during one of a<lb/>
series of City Council<lb/>
meetings leading to a<lb/>
resolution last winter to<lb/>
move MTV from the<lb/>
general access channel.<lb/>
At the council's behest,<lb/>
the local franchise moved<lb/>
the videos to a limited-<lb/>
access channel that costs<lb/>
an additional $120 an-<lb/>
nually, a price most<lb/>
families, including<lb/>
Jody's, aren't willing to<lb/>
Emporia, Virginia<lb/>
pay.<lb/>
So many teenagers in<lb/>
Emporia, about 70 miles<lb/>
south of Richmond and<lb/>
just north of the North<lb/>
Carolina line, are without<lb/>
the vivid, visual rendi-<lb/>
tions of their favorite<lb/>
music hits.<lb/>
"MTV is something<lb/>
almost everybody I like<lb/>
and know likes to<lb/>
watch said Vaughn, a<lb/>
junior at Greensville<lb/>
County High School.<lb/>
"MTV is new. There are<lb/>
not that many new things<lb/>
that come to Emporia.<lb/>
You can't justify taking<lb/>
off a channel for<lb/>
teenagers when there isn't<lb/>
that much to do<lb/>
anyway<lb/>
His frustration is not<lb/>
unique.<lb/>
"They messed up<lb/>
said Jim Goosby, also 16,<lb/>
who was lounging in the<lb/>
lawn of Greensville High<lb/>
one day after class. "It<lb/>
won't hurt. It was helping<lb/>
us. Seems like years since<lb/>
they took it off<lb/>
Dwayne Moore was so<lb/>
enchanted with MTV that<lb/>
he finds life "boring"<lb/>
without it. "They should<lb/>
have it on he said. "It<lb/>
was exciting<lb/>
For Leah Abernathy,<lb/>
14, the decision by Adults<lb/>
to restrict access to MTV<lb/>
marks an overreaction on<lb/>
their part. "If they don't<lb/>
like, they don't have to<lb/>
watch it she said.<lb/>
"If they want to take<lb/>
off MTV added<lb/>
another student, "there's<lb/>
no reason they shouldn't<lb/>
take off all of<lb/>
television<lb/>
But the student sen-<lb/>
timents are not shared by<lb/>
a large number of adults<lb/>
who pay the bills in the<lb/>
1,659 households that<lb/>
subscribe.<lb/>
Wilcher, a father, said<lb/>
he would not allow his<lb/>
own teenage daughter to<lb/>
watch the videos if they<lb/>
were still shown on the<lb/>
general channel. And he<lb/>
wishes they would be<lb/>
removed from the air en-<lb/>
tirely.<lb/>
"We as adults must<lb/>
guide our young people<lb/>
he said. "We mutt make<lb/>
some moral guidelines<lb/>
Council voted last<lb/>
November to ask the<lb/>
Pembroke Cablevision<lb/>
Corp which holds the<lb/>
local franchise, to restrict<lb/>
the access to MTV after it<lb/>
asked Pembroke to<lb/>
survey subscribing adults.<lb/>
Only 28 percent of the<lb/>
local subscribers respond-<lb/>
ed: 283 voted to move<lb/>
MTV to the restricted ac-<lb/>
cess channel. On the<lb/>
other hand, 186 said the<lb/>
council should leave it<lb/>
alone.<lb/>
Pembroke complied<lb/>
with the council request.<lb/>
The company also sends<lb/>
the program into South<lb/>
Hill and South Boston<lb/>
and two communities in<lb/>
North Carolina, none of<lb/>
which have complained.<lb/>
One adult leading the<lb/>
fight in favor of MTV<lb/>
was D. Scott Fisher, an<lb/>
insurance agent who said<lb/>
he is satisfied in defeat<lb/>
because the matter was<lb/>
resolved in a democratic<lb/>
manner. But he contends<lb/>
the community of Em-<lb/>
poria is sheltering its<lb/>
children.<lb/>
"I think the kids are<lb/>
the losers. I think the<lb/>
parents are the losers<lb/>
he said. "You can't<lb/>
create a controlled en-<lb/>
vironment for your kids<lb/>
to grow up in<lb/>
Fisher sees no move,<lb/>
however, to rescind the<lb/>
council resolution.<lb/>
MTV officials did not<lb/>
take the controversy<lb/>
lightly. "Our programm-<lb/>
ing is intended to enter-<lb/>
tain and inform -r- not to<lb/>
offend MTV Vice<lb/>
President and General<lb/>
Manager Domenick<lb/>
Floravanti wrote in a let-<lb/>
ter to Pembroke.<lb/>
W. Allan Sharrett, an<lb/>
attorney and rock music<lb/>
fan who helped to lead<lb/>
the fight to remove MTV,<lb/>
contends the video<lb/>
feature was not the major<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
The issue, Sharrett<lb/>
said, is quality.<lb/>
"This is selective pro-<lb/>
gramming he said.<lb/>
Many selections are<lb/>
available to fill the<lb/>
limited slots available on<lb/>
the cable television chan-<lb/>
nel, he said. "Realizing<lb/>
you had to make a<lb/>
choice, I preferred<lb/>
something other than<lb/>
MTV<lb/>
Sharrett, like Fisher, is<lb/>
a parent.<lb/>
"I'm not on a witch<lb/>
hunt he said. "My real<lb/>
concern is positive. It is<lb/>
to upgrade quality. I now<lb/>
have another channel for<lb/>
my 4-year-old to watch<lb/>
But Sharrett, too,<lb/>
hinted at concern over the<lb/>
quality of MTV. He call-<lb/>
ed it "fantastic" and<lb/>
"numbing<lb/>
"I know I've been<lb/>
numbed by it he said.<lb/>
"And a child has great<lb/>
difficulty discerning bet-<lb/>
ween reality and<lb/>
fantasy<lb/>
As Sharrett sees it, "if<lb/>
someone wanted to bump<lb/>
it out of Emporia<lb/>
altogether, I wouldn't op-<lb/>
pose it<lb/>
Cute.<lb/>
Clever.<lb/>
Mischievous.<lb/>
KKIG (H i<lb/>
VVlS lit<lb/>
it Jim toi<lb/>
j<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0013"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
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"I MIGHT GET WORKED UP.<lb/>
BUT I DON'T GET RUED UP<lb/>
John Madden<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0016"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
I saw tin- trailei for Streets ? Fin tin- last<lb/>
time I went t the theatei and it was<lb/>
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Gerald Gortnei<lb/>
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Arnold Schwarzenegger (aboie) throws his urijrAf around<lb/>
ALL OF ME<lb/>
Ster-e Marttr. (left) is tnvaded by Lit?<lb/>
Tomlm in thi I romantic comedx<lb/>
STICK<lb/>
Burt Reynold stars m Elmore<lb/>
Leonards talt of murder in Miami.<lb/>
CLOAK &amp; DAGGER<lb/>
Henry Thomns and Dabney Coleman<lb/>
combine force1 in a fantasy!espio-<lb/>
nage adventure set in San Antonio.<lb/>
UNDER THE VOLCANO<lb/>
Jacqueline Bisset (below) and Albert Fmney star in John Hustons fih<lb/>
of Malcolm Lowry's classic.<lb/>
PREVIEWS<lb/>
Wntei producer Cameron Crowe talks about The Wild Life: tbtxtm<lb/>
Bill Forsyth ilist usst I his latest. Comfort and o Moll Rmgu-ald<lb/>
tiiiy m T'nc Breakfast Club.<lb/>
OUR COVER<lb/>
Arnold Schwarzenegger photographed b Dink H ilstead.<lb/>
W<lb/>
Wy<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0017"/><lb/>
BY BYRON<lb/>
LAU1SEN<lb/>
'I think what they're gonna get is better<lb/>
than Fast Times asserts Cameron Crowe<lb/>
between on-location takes for his new<lb/>
movie. The Wild Life, in the hallways of<lb/>
Torrance High School, south of Los<lb/>
Angeles.<lb/>
Crowe is a fast mover. Published in Roll-<lb/>
ing Stan at age 15, he went on to author-<lb/>
ship of a bestseller ? Fast Times at<lb/>
Ridgemont High ? plus a hit screenplav<lb/>
based on that same book. But he takes<lb/>
enough time to be certain he gets his point<lb/>
across: The Wild Life, whose characters<lb/>
are taking their first steps awa from home<lb/>
and school, into the charms and pitfalls of<lb/>
swinging smglehood. is definitely not a<lb/>
sequel to Fast Times.<lb/>
Pressure has been on Crowe, who wrote<lb/>
the script of The Wild Life and is also<lb/>
working as a co-producer on the movie, to<lb/>
come up with a verv similar movie to his<lb/>
earlier opus ? heavy on antics and high<lb/>
sc hoot subculture. "A group of theatre<lb/>
owners even sent in a petition to the<lb/>
studio Crowe sas. "begging them to have<lb/>
us make Fast Times II. But 1 wanted to<lb/>
move forward, to take some growing-up<lb/>
steps and assume a slightlv different focus.<lb/>
"The Wild Life is an offshoot, sure, but<lb/>
it's muth more real. I think this has some<lb/>
Wasted youth in The Wild Life (I. to r.)<lb/>
Jenny Wright, Christopher Penn, Lea<lb/>
Thompson, Ilan-MitchtU Smith and Eric<lb/>
Stoltz.<lb/>
thing of a Diner feel for a younger group<lb/>
of kids<lb/>
I he mam characters of The Wild Life.<lb/>
as plaved bv hi it Stolt and Christophei<lb/>
Pena, ate a guv who just got his fust<lb/>
apartment and found out he can't afford it<lb/>
alone, and his choice lor a roommate, a<lb/>
"self-appointed love god and party connois-<lb/>
seur who tailed to graduate with his bud-<lb/>
dies.<lb/>
Penn. the younger brothei t memora-<lb/>
ble Fast Times star Sean Penn. stars in the<lb/>
current hit Footloose and was also in All<lb/>
the Right Moves and Rumblefish. "He's a<lb/>
more physical actor, a lot more extroverted<lb/>
than his brother savs Crowe. "He plavs a<lb/>
guv who thanges all the lives around him<lb/>
without knowing what he's doing<lb/>
The changes materialize during an in-<lb/>
tense week, the first week of the summer<lb/>
vacation following Stolt and Peon's senior<lb/>
year. It's the time ? as it was for the<lb/>
characters in the classic American Grafitti<lb/>
? to step over the line from childhood to<lb/>
adulthood. "This film is about the small<lb/>
moments in their lives that have monu-<lb/>
mental effects Crowe explains.<lb/>
Other stars include Ranch Quaid (of<lb/>
Breaking Away and Diner fame) and Ilan<lb/>
Mitchell-Smith ('He's our Win-A-Date-<lb/>
With character Crowe jokes, "a supet<lb/>
good-looking voting guv"), along with Lea<lb/>
Thompson (All the Right Moves), fenny<lb/>
Wright. Hart Bochner (who plaved. in<lb/>
Rich and Famous, a writer looselv based<lb/>
on Crowe himself) and Rick Moranis. re-<lb/>
centlv in C7T's popular ?(Meat White<lb/>
North" series of sketches. Art Linson is the<lb/>
director and a co-producer with Crowe<lb/>
and Don Phillips.<lb/>
The Wild Life opens this fall.<lb/>
I H E M OV1I M A G A 2 I N E<lb/>
Tidings ol Comfort ami - will be<lb/>
welcome news to followers of Scots<lb/>
director Bill Forsyth's wee smal<lb/>
films" ?Local firm. Gregorys Girl, and his<lb/>
recent!) released lt mm fust effort. That<lb/>
Sinking Feeling. He's reluctant to talk about<lb/>
Comfort and Joy except to sav "it's about a<lb/>
Fella having a reallv bad week. It In-gins on<lb/>
a Sundav and ends the following S.itutdav<lb/>
and it's quite unusual Everything happens<lb/>
to him. It's reallv a tough week he has . .<lb/>
savs the sh. canny, eccemrk humorist who<lb/>
current!) constitutes tin whole of the- Scot-<lb/>
tish film industry<lb/>
"Maybe I'm In-ing too paranoid about it.<lb/>
but it's because the story is so slight. If<lb/>
there were mote story, I'd Ik- quite bapp)<lb/>
to talk about it. But if people know what<lb/>
it's about before the) sec it, they won't<lb/>
enjov the film he savs gloomily. I he<lb/>
cinematicaliv cheerful Forsyth has his own<lb/>
down side in realitv. He can sound suicidal<lb/>
about the most casual pitfalls of filmmak-<lb/>
ing. It takes enormous effort to convince<lb/>
him thai disastei is not about to siiikc It<lb/>
took the British Academ) Award toi Best<lb/>
ScreenpJav (beating out Chariots "f Finto<lb/>
convince him that Gregory's Girl was not an<lb/>
utter failure, and the' New York Filmn-<lb/>
tic's Best Screenplav Award foi Local Hero<lb/>
cheered him up considerably. Frue t his<lb/>
nature he onlv seemed nonplussed when<lb/>
LiKiil H,ro was nominated foi 7 British<lb/>
Academ) .Wards.<lb/>
Forsyth, a lean, compact Glaswegian ol<lb/>
doleful mein. whose shoulders seem per-<lb/>
manent!) hunched in won v. comes bv his<lb/>
pessimism honestly, like- the British, the-<lb/>
se ots are at their best when then back- are<lb/>
to the wall. "We have- diffk ultv coping with<lb/>
success Forsyth savs. grinning cheerfully.<lb/>
(Continued on t"iK I I<lb/>
In Comfort and Joy, Scottish disc jockey<lb/>
Billy Paterson is abandoned by his girl-<lb/>
friend, leaving lonely Billy to wander<lb/>
around Glasgow in his spiffy BMW ? in<lb/>
optimistic pursuit of a mysterious woman.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0018"/><lb/>
ifl<lb/>
Henry Thomas draws<lb/>
a bead on the bad guys.<lb/>
BY JOHN MENDELSSOHN<lb/>
jis fust role since1. I. made him<lb/>
American moviegoers' favorite<lb/>
I young actor finds voting Hcnn<lb/>
Thomas roiling dastard!) spies,<lb/>
Ilearning something about the<lb/>
rue Nature of Heroism, and<lb/>
otherwise having a grand,<lb/>
grand old time in Clunk and Dmggn Wi nun<lb/>
hv loin Holland, tin- film goes<lb/>
back to the 1947 Cornel Wool-<lb/>
rich nailbiter The Window. In Fact,<lb/>
Cloak was conceived as a straight<lb/>
remake of the Woolrich film,<lb/>
about a lx whose penchant for<lb/>
(iving woH almost costs him his<lb/>
neck. But then director Richard<lb/>
Franklin, tush from Psycho II.<lb/>
noticed that n "nevei lcallv cs<lb/>
tallish?(l win no one will help<lb/>
the little l. who seemed quite a<lb/>
m c kid.<lb/>
"On the othei hand, in a more<lb/>
11 aditional bov -w ho-c ried-woH<lb/>
story the Australian fihnmaker<lb/>
explains to a visitor in Ins office,<lb/>
"onewould have had to establish<lb/>
the Ui"s l.uk oi uedibilitv And<lb/>
thai would have been sort of dull<lb/>
filmmaking.<lb/>
"I was pondering all this when<lb/>
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erything. You know she said, 'Henry's so<lb/>
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Well, m God 1 thought, 'tkeres the<lb/>
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mak?s ,ml "nodding reference" t that of<lb/>
which it was originallv intended to Ik a<lb/>
meie modernization<lb/>
Directing the wee Mi fhomas proved<lb/>
an eye-omening experience for Franklin,<lb/>
who adnuts, I had fell that acting. like li<lb/>
reeling ? I don'i want to appeal to be put-<lb/>
ting acting down, mind vou ? wascraft,<lb/>
something that one had to siudv and learn<lb/>
sid from one's good looks ?r something,<lb/>
it hadn't teemed t have much to do with<lb/>
talent But Henry reath, changed m mind<lb/>
Australian director Richard Franklin<lb/>
(Psycho II) rehearses a scene with Thomas<lb/>
and Christina S'igra.<lb/>
about thai.<lb/>
"He does something I've never mtii am<lb/>
othei acur do ? learns his fanes onh when<lb/>
its time to do the scene. Onh aftei <lb/>
scene's been blocked will he come over and<lb/>
look at I is s?npi to find out what he's<lb/>
meant to .n m it. Bringing no preconcep-<lb/>
tions to tie scene, he betkvci what you tell<lb/>
him and roes exacth what vou ask him to<lb/>
do<lb/>
But ma leahihtv is onh one of the main<lb/>
things af ut Henry that make duet tors<lb/>
like Hank m. (who II be familui to some as<lb/>
the co-producei ol Th, Btm Lag ? s,<lb/>
righttullv fond of him "He was<lb/>
able to express the most complex<lb/>
emotions too the director tells<lb/>
is We did two scenes, foi m-<lb/>
?taiue. m whuh he cried on cue.<lb/>
His mother told me that he has<lb/>
i ertain things that he thinks of to<lb/>
ut himself in the iikhmI. but 1<lb/>
hdn't ask what thev were I jusi<lb/>
tsked him. 'Do vou think vou<lb/>
an cry heie?" ami he aid yes,<lb/>
md did<lb/>
The ubiquitous Oabnev ol-<lb/>
?man. who plays both Henrv's<lb/>
iievouslv put-upon d.u and his<lb/>
magined accomplice in bad-<lb/>
guy-thwarting, Jaik Fl.uk.<lb/>
?uperspv. is hardlv less enthusias<lb/>
ii in his praise of his tclkiw Te-<lb/>
xan. "The nuances that Henry<lb/>
puts m his performance are as-<lb/>
tounding he asserts. I haven't<lb/>
seen mam child actors as adept<lb/>
s he. And. more importantly,<lb/>
he's a gtxKi kid<lb/>
franklii perceives Coleman's approach<lb/>
to acting is the complete opposite of his<lb/>
little iost.1 "Dahnev's j erv eating ac-<lb/>
tor. he notes, one who works ver hard<lb/>
at I'm rjtkmg, reallv labors over what and<lb/>
whv and where and how. He'd ask tor<lb/>
fContinued an pig, IS<lb/>
1 H r M O V 1 E M A G A Z 1 N E<lb/>
tov-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0019"/><lb/>
Bl'RT REYNOLDS<lb/>
IS STICK<lb/>
Drugs, Sex Csf Murder in Miami<lb/>
BY R. SUE SMITH<lb/>
ox Office King Burt Reynolds' 1984 hid for<lb/>
acclaim in the dual roles of ActorDirector calls<lb/>
for a vehicle more powerful than the Trans-Am Bandit<lb/>
used to out-fox Smokey; he may have found that slick<lb/>
ride with Elmore Leonard's Stick.<lb/>
Based on Leonard's best-selling action<lb/>
novel, and produced b veteran ennings<lb/>
1 ang. s' boasts a first-rate cast: Gilt-<lb/>
?ed .ui.nv supporting the st.u (in the<lb/>
title role ol I- rnesi Stick" Sik klev I iiu hide<lb/>
Georgi Segal. Candice Bergen.harles<lb/>
?' ng Vu Potts. os? Perez. Ri. harl<lb/>
! -lU - ' and in hei m reen debut. Sa? in<lb/>
Park ? daughtei ol Shirle Ma? 1 aim<lb/>
v' ? as . i?! foi tin- -i reen from<lb/>
 " it-bas d I eonards "23rd oi 2 ith<lb/>
published novel, and as the authoi ex-<lb/>
uns ws ' " rookie at making the page-<lb/>
screen doubleplav. having "relied foi<lb/>
 : ' " ? i areei on Hollvwood sales<lb/>
-veai - 'ii! I con.i! ii outlined his<lb/>
iareei and his hopes foi s'n.  in .t recent<lb/>
1 ' ' in in- Birmingham. Mi? htgan<lb/>
1 ? ?' n h r aftet noon sun plaved<lb/>
ss the . i ?( i v ol his collected uniks and<lb/>
 pages n! his current manuscript<lb/>
??? : seems to be living even writer's<lb/>
lr am - t pewi itet to the left, antique<lb/>
 U sk to the right. Adidas-shod feel<lb/>
rial h propped alongside letters<lb/>
? ' ishers and agents, he talks with<lb/>
e ease ol a man who has noi onh found<lb/>
his nu he but i- being paid to stav there<lb/>
? ai U-vear-old (areei began with a<lb/>
? ring ??: Western novels, most notabh<lb/>
Martin Ritt's 1967 filming ol  which<lb/>
starred Paul Newman and is "an extraor-<lb/>
??' ? ????? dmai k m th development ol<lb/>
iht Western' according to nitciii.iunii.il<lb/>
' n s holat Phillip Kreiu h<lb/>
Leonard made the swiu h to contempo-<lb/>
rar st 'i ies 1 hev're .i loi more fun") m<lb/>
" ?? earh Seventies with his screenplavs foi<lb/>
. - Bronson's Vf .  andlini<lb/>
Director star Reynolds (above) as Stick, just<lb/>
out of prison and about to fall in uith a<lb/>
dangerous croud, including stock market<lb/>
consultant Candice Bergen (left) and weirdo<lb/>
drug dealer Charles Durning (below, with<lb/>
April Clough). Stick is based on one of "2 ?<lb/>
or 2-t" novels by ace action writer Elmore<lb/>
Leonard ibelou left), who places most of his<lb/>
stories in Detroit and or Miami.<lb/>
Eastwood ?? , ,  hile I eonard's<lb/>
novels .tie praised foi then tightlv-knii<lb/>
plotting, the authoi shakes his head .it the<lb/>
idea tint he begins ea h hook w ith .1<lb/>
tulh-developed storv line I don't realh<lb/>
plot, he n.in 'I jusi go along from dav<lb/>
 dav I'loi isn't the main thing It's<lb/>
tin characters and whai comes ol then<lb/>
i I 'Iltlh t<lb/>
1 he , h.ii.n tei t Y i nc-t Stu klev ?<lb/>
"Stick ? u,i? introduced in Leonard's 1976<lb/>
novel Swag, which detailed Stick's I00-da<lb/>
careei in armed robberv. Stick pit ks up<lb/>
seven vears from where Swag left off, vears<lb/>
Stick spent doing time foi a final hot, hed<lb/>
c i line<lb/>
he action begins as Sti k rolls ofi .i<lb/>
southbound boxi .n into a Floi ida<lb/>
( oasi socien possibh seamiei than that he<lb/>
left behind in the pen Muk's idea of a<lb/>
media hero is Warren Oates. not Heming-<lb/>
way hut he's aboui to learn something that<lb/>
proves Iip.r right A t hance meeting<lb/>
with Puerto Rican emigre Rene "Rainy"<lb/>
Mova plunges Stick into  high stakes<lb/>
world where over-the-countei Wall Streei<lb/>
investments mix with under-the-table drug<lb/>
deals Rainv agrees to act as bagman foi<lb/>
wigged-out superdealei Charles "Chuck)<lb/>
Buck" Gorman (Durning in a led fright<lb/>
l"HI M O V I I MAGAZINE<lb/>
wig), taking Stick along foi the ride When<lb/>
the assignment nuns oui to be a prear-<lb/>
ranged negotiated murder, with Stick as<lb/>
( hucky's sacrificial offering to a fellow<lb/>
dealer. Sink becomes a wanted man run-<lb/>
ning fromhu k and from the assassins<lb/>
W hat the ntxlei urn Id hit nun don't<lb/>
know is th.it stuk doesn't take to being set<lb/>
up. It noes against his grain as  lUsi-<lb/>
nessman nd when Stick runs, it's m cir-<lb/>
i Its that lead the pursuers into Mu k 's trap<lb/>
Sheliei tomes from an unexpected offei<lb/>
Multimillionaire Barrv Sum (Segal) needs<lb/>
two assistants to maintain his fast-lane life:<lb/>
lovelv financial wizard Klc McLaren (Ber-<lb/>
llontinwd on pagt ?1<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057642_0021"/><lb/>
lTEYE MAKTln<lb/>
LILY TOMLin<lb/>
aving one a lor p!a two<lb/>
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Hollywood's favorite (and<lb/>
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tw isis 1 cue ii i,) the par-<lb/>
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Steve Martin and Carl<lb/>
Reinei to tui n this (li he around and offer<lb/>
fa o siai s m the samt role.<lb/>
In Ail oj Me, Sieve Martin and Lih lom-<lb/>
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Lih portrays Edwina Cutwater, a prim<lb/>
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Ilu- mystic's aim is a little ofl and ?<lb/>
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really iall it living. But it certainly can In-<lb/>
( ailed a f unnv mo ie<lb/>
Unfortunately, Steve Martin is not laugh-<lb/>
together in ui? form<lb/>
BY ERIC ESTRIN fc RICK McGUIRE<lb/>
Lily Tomlin as Edwina Cutwater, a<lb/>
very rich spinster with a terminal disease,<lb/>
who arranges to transfer her soul to the body<lb/>
of a beautiful young woman ?but the trick<lb/>
switch doesn't click and Lily ends up inside<lb/>
bumbling playboy lawyer Steie Martin ;<lb/>
one side of Steve swaggers manfully, while<lb/>
the other side minces primly. Xo wonder<lb/>
Steve is confused. . . .<lb/>
ing. Oh, the film is going well; it's his<lb/>
between-scenes gin game that's ailmg. His<lb/>
opponent, the screenplay's writer, I'hil<lb/>
Alden Robinson (Rhinestone), sas. "I take<lb/>
Steve for about ten bucks a week Mean-<lb/>
while. Martin just keeps mutteringWhere<lb/>
are the nines? Did 1 pass a king?<lb/>
it's very hard for Steve savs director<lb/>
Carl Reiner. "He's a real card shark, but<lb/>
he's wot king with a handicap; he's not al-<lb/>
lowed to (heat<lb/>
Reinei himself has been working with a<lb/>
lit of a handicap. Previously having di-<lb/>
rected Martin in The Jerk, Dead Men Don't<lb/>
Wrai Plaid, and The Man with Two Brains,<lb/>
lie claims, it's been ver difficult, because<lb/>
if you do one picture v ith a guy like<lb/>
Steve, well that's one thing, hut foul ?<lb/>
that's purgatory<lb/>
Based on the novel .W, Two, with an<lb/>
adaptation by Henry Olek. the story line<lb/>
itsell has also been troublesome. How<lb/>
do you handle the logistics ot two people<lb/>
sharing one body? Aftei much debate.<lb/>
it was finally agreed that each controls a<lb/>
different side ot ilu- body. I hus, Martin<lb/>
has developed an ingenious walk uheiehv<lb/>
his lelt side moves vsnh ,t feminine suish<lb/>
while his light stalks around in a mascu-<lb/>
line fashion<lb/>
1 Ills "split-peisonalitv" creates a vaiieiv<lb/>
of hazards, whethet die hapless law vet Is<lb/>
tooling around town with his sink shift.<lb/>
trying to use the men's room, or attempt-<lb/>
ing to seduce his decidedly bewildered<lb/>
Plant ee.<lb/>
Visually, he sees Edwina whenevei he<lb/>
looks in the mirror. This particulai special<lb/>
effect demands ilu set In- decorated with a<lb/>
numbei of take mirrors, which Reiner<lb/>
habitually catches himsell trying to use.<lb/>
"Hut I do it he savs defiantly, "despite<lb/>
all the problems. I mean. I was m the w.u<lb/>
with Hitler; I've learned to live with disav-<lb/>
ter<lb/>
While no majoi disasters occurred din-<lb/>
ing the filming of All oj Me, there were o -<lb/>
casional events guaranteeing some excite-<lb/>
ment around the set. Chm.h Madolyn<lb/>
Smith (who plavs Martin's fiancee) took the<lb/>
traditional good-luck admonishment to<lb/>
"break a leg seriously ? she'll he on<lb/>
crutches lor about six months. Martin<lb/>
caught the hum ot a thrown hat with his<lb/>
eve and required a weekend's recovery<lb/>
time.<lb/>
But what could have- been the biggest di-<lb/>
sastei of all never materialized. Instead of<lb/>
the- star wars which might be expected<lb/>
when two major celebrities share the same<lb/>
stage. Martin and Iomlm worked well to-<lb/>
gether. Robinson savs the two. who never<lb/>
performed with e.u h other outside of brief<lb/>
Saturday Night Live sken lies, have become<lb/>
great friends: "Our first rehearsal was at<lb/>
Steve's house. After ten minutes. I ilv was<lb/>
down on the- floor, saving. "Oh. Steve, why<lb/>
don't vou do this?' and he'd sav. "That's<lb/>
great, and vou could do this<lb/>
"We have- magical timing together savs<lb/>
Continued on page N)<lb/>
1<lb/>
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V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0023"/><lb/>
MIGHTY ARE THE MUSCLES<lb/>
OF ACTOR-BODYBUILDER-BUSINESSMAN<lb/>
ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER,<lb/>
WHO ONCE MORE LEAPS<lb/>
INTO THE FRAY AS CONAN<lb/>
BY DONALD ?<lb/>
PLAYITAQAI<lb/>
? mold Schwarzenegger, just re-<lb/>
J turned from the Mexico Citv doc-<lb/>
- -? tor who treated him for a minor<lb/>
leg injury, is hoth wincing in pain and<lb/>
aligning at the same time. In fact, he is<lb/>
laughing because, back among his cowor-<lb/>
kers at Churubusco Studios, he is finally in<lb/>
situation where he ran wince without suf-<lb/>
fering a loss of face.<lb/>
"In the waiting room and even while I<lb/>
was with the doctor he explains in a voice<lb/>
from which the accents of his native Au-<lb/>
stria are fast fading. "I felt I was really<lb/>
being watched. How is this macho body-<lb/>
builder, how is the fearless Conan. han-<lb/>
dling himself? And I didn't want to disap-<lb/>
point anybody, so I just acted as if I never<lb/>
felt belter<lb/>
The macho bodybuilder, five times Mr.<lb/>
Universe and seven times Mr. Olvmpia.<lb/>
sustained his injurv while plaving the fear-<lb/>
less hero of Conan the Destroyer, the sequel<lb/>
to his 1982 smash Conan the Barbarian. It<lb/>
happened on the final day of filming a<lb/>
scene in which Schwarzenegger and bas-<lb/>
ketball great Wilt Chamberlain pummel,<lb/>
slash, and bite each other to a fare-thee-<lb/>
well. (During the biting, the overzealous<lb/>
Chamberlain, who is making his film debut<lb/>
as a villain, was begged by Schwarzeneg-<lb/>
ger, "Wilt, the camera doesn't know if<lb/>
you're really biting mv ear. So please ? stop<lb/>
biting it and just pretend) It's one of<lb/>
manv scenes ? including ambushes,<lb/>
swordfights. and horseback stunts ? that<lb/>
continue the gorv. treacherous and some-<lb/>
what mvstical tradition of the first film<lb/>
The bottom line is prettv much the<lb/>
same in both films Schwarzenegger ad-<lb/>
mits. "Conan is good and he destroys evil.<lb/>
In this case, evil is the monster created bv<lb/>
Queen Tamaris (plaved bv Sarah Douglas,<lb/>
the black-clad villainess Ursa in Superman<lb/>
and Superman II, and the Joan Collins-tvpe<lb/>
on TV's Falcon Crest). It's called Dagoth ?<lb/>
it's a marble statue that comes alive when<lb/>
she plants a magical horn in its forehead<lb/>
The quest for the horn, which is joined bv<lb/>
a black Amazonian warrior (plaved bv nock<lb/>
singer Grace Jones) and a beautiful<lb/>
fairytale princess (played by Olivia D'Abo),<lb/>
comprises the film's plot.<lb/>
What's new about Conan the Destroyer,<lb/>
screenplay by Stanley Mann, story by Roy<lb/>
Thomas and Gerry Conway. is its sense of<lb/>
humor, partly an attempt bv producer Raf-<lb/>
faella DeLaurentiis to temper the film's<lb/>
violence in order to get a PC rating. "That<lb/>
way DeLaurentiis says, "it can be seen bv<lb/>
the millions of kids who complained that<lb/>
they couldn't get in to see Conan the Barba-<lb/>
rian because of its R rating<lb/>
The humor, savs Schwarzenegger, is also<lb/>
partlv the difference between John Milius,<lb/>
the director of the original, and Richard<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0024"/><lb/>
UN, ARNOLD<lb/>
Fleischer, director of the sequel. Milius. a<lb/>
'verv sweet, gentle man" offscreen, could<lb/>
get rather heavily philosophical onscreen,<lb/>
as in the allegedly right-wing quote from<lb/>
Neitzsche that opened the film: "That<lb/>
which does not kill you makes you<lb/>
stronger Milius' intentions were best<lb/>
served bv directing Schwarzenegger "step<lb/>
by step through scenes With Fleischer,<lb/>
"the approach is much lighter Schwar-<lb/>
zenegger savs. and lor that reason and be-<lb/>
cause his star is now that much more expe-<lb/>
rienced in the role of Conan. the director<lb/>
"lets vou have a certain responsibility. He'll<lb/>
watch you first and then iron out a few<lb/>
things ?or sav nothing at all<lb/>
Richard Fleischer, whose impressive<lb/>
credits in the action-adventure vein in-<lb/>
clude 20.000 Leagues Under the Sea. The Vik-<lb/>
ings, and Fantastic Voyage, savs that Conan<lb/>
the Destroyer will have a "kind of Three Mus-<lb/>
kateers feeling. We're going to see Arnold<lb/>
plav a verv funnv drunk scene, there will<lb/>
be jokes that relate back to the first film<lb/>
but which can be enjoved even if you don't<lb/>
know the first film. And there's some al-<lb/>
most tongue-in-cheek humor that takes off<lb/>
on Arnold's fantastic body and fantastic<lb/>
strength<lb/>
I t 220 pounds. Schwarzenegger is<lb/>
 20 pounds lighter and propor-<lb/>
- m tionatelv smaller in every dimen-<lb/>
sion than he was when he was a competing<lb/>
bodybuilder. His body is also more muscu-<lb/>
lar and better defined than it was when he<lb/>
made the first Conan ? though he hasn't<lb/>
sacrificed the strength, flexibility, speed,<lb/>
and endurance needed to perform the<lb/>
new film's manv stunts.<lb/>
"John Milius he explains, "said that<lb/>
slave labor doesn't give vou definition, and<lb/>
for his relatively realistic film, a less de-<lb/>
fined body was right. But Richard<lb/>
Fleischer wanted the definition, so m<lb/>
waist is smaller here and I reduced mv<lb/>
body-fat level bv 2 or 3 percent. Hes mak-<lb/>
ing more of an adventure-fantasy and in<lb/>
terms of that he's right<lb/>
The adventure-fantasv aspects of Conan.<lb/>
which opens July 6. are being plaved to the<lb/>
hilt bv jack Cardiff, the world-renowned<lb/>
cinematographer who has shot The Red<lb/>
Shoes, The African Queen, and Fleischer's<lb/>
The Vikings, among scores of films. "If<lb/>
there's anything in the film that sparkles<lb/>
he laughs, "it sparkles. I'm using special<lb/>
filters on the sets to make them sparkle.<lb/>
I'm using every trick in the book to pro-<lb/>
duce all kinds of strange atmospheric con-<lb/>
ditions. What we're aiming for is a sav-<lb/>
age splendor<lb/>
Some of the splendor will come from<lb/>
sets erected at Churubusco bv production<lb/>
Singer Grace Jones (left) and basketball star Wih Chambt rlain make their acting debuts as<lb/>
2;rri L U0h COnM " a? " t0 ?? ? "? Prberkeld<lb/>
against her uiU. said princess being in need of rescue (ah rescue .).<lb/>
designer Pierluigi Basile to represent roal<lb/>
palaces ot the mvthnal Hvhoiean Age. and<lb/>
from the "Dreaming god" Dagoth. the<lb/>
work of Carlo Rambaldi. famed for creat-<lb/>
ing E.T While working on Dagoth. Ram-<lb/>
baldi is simultaneously putting the finish-<lb/>
ing touches on his special effects contribu-<lb/>
tions to Raffaella Del.aureniiis" Dune.<lb/>
It was while scouting Dune locations that<lb/>
the pnxlucer saw the first of the several<lb/>
terrains that would give Conan the Designer<lb/>
the savagerv it required. This was the<lb/>
Salamavuia Desert surrounding Ciudad<lb/>
Juarez, where she ended up shooting por-<lb/>
tions of both Dune and Cum. Other Mexi-<lb/>
can exterior locations used in Conan in-<lb/>
clude an enormous waterfall near Pachuca<lb/>
that pours over hexagonal columns of<lb/>
white basalt rock; a preindustrial and thus<lb/>
ageless silver mill, also near Pachuca. to<lb/>
plav the exterior of Queen Tamaris<lb/>
palace: and. at Nevada de Toluca. an ex-<lb/>
tinct volcano holding a black lake in its cra-<lb/>
ter, used as the approach to the castle of<lb/>
the archvillam Thoth-Amon (Patrick<lb/>
Roach).<lb/>
The devaluation of the Mexican peso,<lb/>
along with the alreadv low cosi of Mexican<lb/>
labor and materials. mav make Conan the<lb/>
Destroyer more savagely splendid than its<lb/>
filmed-in-Spain predecessor. And for some<lb/>
S3 million less than the S19.7 million spent<lb/>
on Conan the Barhanan This is not exactly<lb/>
lost on Arnold Schwarzenegger, because it<lb/>
probably won't be too long before he him-<lb/>
self starts packaging and producing<lb/>
movies. It's a natural extension of acting in<lb/>
them, he feels. It's also probably an en-<lb/>
deavor marked for success, if Schwar-<lb/>
zenegger's track record with spinoffs is anv<lb/>
indication. In addition to his film-acting<lb/>
career, which began in 1976 with Stay Hun-<lb/>
gry. Schwarzenegger's bodybuilding pro-<lb/>
wess has edged him into appearing in and<lb/>
producing exercise tapes and TV specials<lb/>
and spawned three bestselling books.<lb/>
In fact, the bodybuilding spinoffs ac-<lb/>
count for just a fraction of Schwarzeneg-<lb/>
ger's current business empire. Having<lb/>
studied economics and business in<lb/>
THE MOVIE MA G A I I M E<lb/>
Munich and at UCLA and the Unhcnm<lb/>
ol Wisconsin, he is involved, through sew a<lb/>
corporations, in buying, selling. develop-<lb/>
ing, trading, renting and leasing Southern<lb/>
Califorria commercial and residential<lb/>
propertv<lb/>
"Then- is nothing you do toda that<lb/>
doesn't lave something to do with busi-<lb/>
ness he savs. "and its foolish not to ac-<lb/>
quainturself with the business aspect t<lb/>
whatever vou do. if onlv to protect vourself<lb/>
from being taken advantage of. But more<lb/>
than thai I eiqov busmevs I wouldn't do<lb/>
am of die things I do if I didn't enjot<lb/>
them. I'm not saying that everone should<lb/>
be as aggressive and competitive as I am<lb/>
because it thev were it would be tougher<lb/>
for me<lb/>
What ne is saving, however, is that<lb/>
everyone should go to the edge of their<lb/>
personal limits at anv given time ? and<lb/>
then expa id those limits. "Its a question of<lb/>
setting a goal verv clearlv. If vou have a viv-<lb/>
lon of whit vou want ?what kind of body<lb/>
what kinc of career ? vou will find voui-<lb/>
selt casually, almost subconsciouslv. making<lb/>
decisions on a dav-to-dav basis that will<lb/>
bring vou closer to it<lb/>
Schwarzenegger's belief in an ex-<lb/>
panding personal universe seemed<lb/>
to find official expression lasi<lb/>
Septemb. r when he achieved a long-<lb/>
sought goal. After much negotiation, he<lb/>
managed to become a citizen of the<lb/>
L nited Mates, which he loves for us<lb/>
"openhear edness. openmmdedness. and<lb/>
big thinking while remaining a citizen of<lb/>
Austria, o which he has a native s ties<lb/>
of affection.<lb/>
"Arnolc strives alwavs to do better than<lb/>
he's done before savs Fleischer. That s<lb/>
how he became what he became. He's a<lb/>
verv ambiiious man but not a driven man<lb/>
. . . As an actor, he's not at all self-<lb/>
conscious. He endeavors to do his best in<lb/>
every shot - he's giving 110 percent all the<lb/>
time  I his film is going to surprise a lot<lb/>
of people<lb/>
11<lb/>
A-<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0025"/><lb/>
ALBERT FINNEY<lb/>
JACQUELINE B1SSET &amp; ANTHONY<lb/>
ANDREWS IN JOHN HUSTONS <lb/>
UNDER THE VOLCANO<lb/>
B c O B V<lb/>
1 A S<lb/>
Seventy-seven-year-old di-<lb/>
rectoi ohn Huston is talking<lb/>
about luiii) thi Volcano, M.il-<lb/>
colm Lowry's 1947 novel, whu h<lb/>
he is nou turning into .i film<lb/>
starring Albert Finney, ac-<lb/>
queline Bisset and Anthony.<lb/>
Andrews (produced l Moritz<lb/>
Hoi in. m and Wul.md Schulz-<lb/>
Keil. with Michael Fitzgerald as<lb/>
exe? mi?? pi odiu ei ol i he<lb/>
Michael and katln Fitzgerald<lb/>
Presentation). Undn tin Volcano<lb/>
has been called ilu- novel Hus-<lb/>
ion was destined to film. Some-<lb/>
thing in the novel's theme, ol a<lb/>
civilization crumbling from<lb/>
within each man's soul, speaks<lb/>
to Huston's own life. "For .1<lb/>
numbei ot years tea luis .u<lb/>
universities, scholars and stu-<lb/>
dents have connected me with<lb/>
this novel he sas modestly<lb/>
I inlt tin Volcano, .is written<lb/>
t Lowry, is mostly an internal<lb/>
monologue conducted l? a<lb/>
liiuish ?-( cuisiil who is con-<lb/>
sumed with alcohol, mourning<lb/>
the estrangement ol his wife<lb/>
and ? ui stiit; Ins soul rhc novel<lb/>
takes place within twenty-foul<lb/>
houis on Novembei 1 ?<lb/>
Mexico's D.i ot the Ui;u. Ilu<lb/>
yeai is 1938; Europe is about to embark on<lb/>
a horrible war. and the Consul, like the<lb/>
protagonists ol Camus and Sartre, is trying<lb/>
to come to terms with epk despair. 1 Ins<lb/>
internal story, whu h jumps time and place<lb/>
.11 will, has been refashioned (In<lb/>
screenwritei Guy Galk) into a linear form<lb/>
with a concrete beginning, middle and<lb/>
end. It is Huston's nl concession to<lb/>
0i11men1.1l filmmaking. "I lie Consul is a<lb/>
hero Huston insists His reaction to lite<lb/>
is to gel rliunk. He gets drunk in a herok<lb/>
way. 1 pietei to think that God is not dead.<lb/>
iist drunk He took one look at what's<lb/>
going on 111 tins world and led on an ex-<lb/>
tended hat in anothei constellation. It's<lb/>
very deal that the man (Consul) sutlets<lb/>
From dipsomania ol the soul His drunk<lb/>
eness is not simply a response to being be-<lb/>
trayed l his wife, it is actual!) a mannei<lb/>
ol perceiving the world, a response to a<lb/>
disappointment in western civilization<lb/>
I hat theme has at one time or anothei<lb/>
attracted some ot the finest moviemakers<lb/>
in the world I he list ot those who (tied,<lb/>
and tailed, lo turn Lowry's novel into a<lb/>
movie is impressive: Luis Bunuel, Joseph<lb/>
1 ose. Jules Dassin, Ken Russell. Roman<lb/>
Polanski, Stanley Kubrick, rhe actors who<lb/>
saw the Consul as then own aher-ego are<lb/>
equally stellar: Richard Burton (he saw the<lb/>
Anthony Andrews (Brides-<lb/>
head Revisited) gives his<lb/>
alcoholic half-brother (Albert<lb/>
Finney) a shave (above) in the<lb/>
long-awaited film version of<lb/>
Malcolm Lowry's classic exis-<lb/>
tential novel. The director.<lb/>
John Huston (left), feels par-<lb/>
ticularly qualified for this<lb/>
project. Jacqueline Bisset (bot-<lb/>
tom right and below center)<lb/>
plays the ex-wife of former<lb/>
British consul Finney.<lb/>
VI<lb/>
( onsul as a way to re-establish his acting<lb/>
mettle). I'etei ()'look, even Jack Nichol-<lb/>
son. "Before Albert explains Huston.<lb/>
"the tole belonged to Burton He will not<lb/>
elaborate n win Button lost in the final<lb/>
round to Finney.<lb/>
Finney came to Cuernavaca, Mexico di-<lb/>
rectly from playing Pope John-Paul tot a<lb/>
CBS television movie. He shaved his head<lb/>
to plav the Pope and now. portraying the<lb/>
Consul, he wears a wig. Other than that,<lb/>
he is completely without artifice. "I can't<lb/>
live up to the despait of the Consul he<lb/>
admits, "and imagination has to take over.<lb/>
I he love story aspect ?well, one can draw<lb/>
on one's own experiences there. The tunes<lb/>
when one has been disappointed, 01 felt<lb/>
inadequate. Now in terms ot his self-<lb/>
destruction. I've onlv flirted with it. I un-<lb/>
derstand it. though. Perhaps I've never<lb/>
had a volcano, but I've had mv own little<lb/>
r H I MOVIE MAGAZINE<lb/>
hummocks ol sell destruction, it's a prettv<lb/>
common feeling, thai life is worthless.<lb/>
What 1 tiv lo do is get lo the edge ol thai<lb/>
111 mv imagination. Iiv to catch the d.nk-<lb/>
ncss <lb/>
It's Finney as much as Huston who sets<lb/>
ilu mood loi the filming. His costars ?<lb/>
Jacqueline Bisset, who plays his wife, A)d<lb/>
Anthony Andrews, who plays his half-<lb/>
hiothet ? are slightly m awe of Finney's<lb/>
powers ol creation. Andrews has re-<lb/>
sponded with slight competitiveness. living<lb/>
to capture Huston's attention: Bisset with<lb/>
quiet detet initiation. Huston speaks gently<lb/>
to her, patting her hand and calling lui<lb/>
"deal I his is probably the most demand-<lb/>
ing role ot hei rareei and she knows it.<lb/>
Huston has become something ol hei men-<lb/>
tot. "When we hist met in Mexico she<lb/>
savs with a smile, "he gave me a long list of<lb/>
hooks I should lead I'm hopelessly ill-<lb/>
lead Bisset savs this is the hist time the<lb/>
directoi has actuallv woiked with hei. de-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0026"/><lb/>
spite the 1972 film Ih,  and ,?? ((<lb/>
fudgt Roy Bean. I don't know where ohn<lb/>
was on that she says vaguely, "but mv<lb/>
scenes were mosth directed In Paul New-<lb/>
man<lb/>
On Under the Volcano, Huston ts veiv ,?u h<lb/>
"i evidence, lb conserve his energy, he<lb/>
moves about the locations in a ?oil can<lb/>
and views takes on a video monitor. But he<lb/>
directs with a hands on" attitude, touch-<lb/>
ing his anois. speaking m his low, soothing<lb/>
voice. Working entire!) in Mexico suits his<lb/>
temperament; it served as the backdrop<lb/>
lot twool his favorite Urns, The Treasure oj<lb/>
th, Sierra Madre (1948) and Tht Night of th,<lb/>
Iguana (1966). "There's an element of ad-<lb/>
venture in Mexico lie explains. I he<lb/>
country's exotic. I hist came here when I<lb/>
was is. 1 here were still leftovers from the<lb/>
revolution. I like the people, the variety,<lb/>
the wav thev think" He is working with<lb/>
Mexico's top cinematographer, Gabriel<lb/>
Figueroa, and sas the Mexican news are<lb/>
"among the finest m the world<lb/>
Each night at the Cuernavaca Racquet<lb/>
Club ?the hotel that serves as the produc-<lb/>
tion's home base ?everyone is welcome to<lb/>
view what was shot that d.i. Actors, new.<lb/>
friends and relatives, even the gardener<lb/>
from the Racquet Club, gathei in a from<lb/>
loom and watch what was put on film.<lb/>
1 lures no hierarchy, no privileged infor-<lb/>
mation. Voung directors in Hollywood mav<lb/>
le.ilousK guard then dailies, hut Huston<lb/>
knows thai his film can't Ih- copied: lies<lb/>
putting his 77 ve.ns f living on thai<lb/>
screen. I he him will open this fall.<lb/>
JJND?R<lb/>
VOLCANO<lb/>
COMFORT &amp; JOY<lb/>
(Continued from pagi t.<lb/>
"I he S,?,is have suivived on tailuie toi so<lb/>
bng that when one is sm.esstul he feels he<lb/>
has to Wave the country" He intends to In-<lb/>
die CXI eptlon<lb/>
I he protagonist f Comfort and  is <lb/>
aging dis, ,?kev whose girlfriend sud<lb/>
denlv leaves him Finding himsell on his<lb/>
own. he tools around the depressed anas<lb/>
of Glasgow in his bright red BMW He fol-<lb/>
lows a Kill in an u e .team van and finds<lb/>
himseif involved in an ice cream wai lx-<lb/>
tween Stoitish Italians of a somewhat smis<lb/>
tei caste. In his ln fI(?, innocence and<lb/>
his pursuit of the elusive, perfect woman.<lb/>
the dis jockei learns just a little about<lb/>
himself - and we ham a lot about Bill<lb/>
lot sv th<lb/>
Heading the ast of (mr and )<lb/>
win, h opens this tall, is Billv Paterson, a<lb/>
well-known Stottisli a, tot who lives m<lb/>
London and who came to I-oisvth eight<lb/>
ve.ns ago when he and his partnei were<lb/>
making industrial films Whv don't vu<lb/>
make tilm films, he said. v. 1 , an 1K- in<lb/>
them?' Its taken me all this time " Finding<lb/>
good Sottish a,iis isn't a problem, For-<lb/>
svth maintains. Most of the aitois m Lon-<lb/>
don cone from Glasgow, although thev<lb/>
don't let on except to anothei Not Its the<lb/>
onlv wav thev (an sutvive be savs<lb/>
In fact, most of Comfort and fm was cast<lb/>
in Glasgow In Susie hygis. one of Lon-<lb/>
don's premiere casting directors i(.??.lhi<lb/>
Local Hero, Ih, Kill Fields, Heat and Dust<lb/>
and the BBC's upcoming Fendei v th,<lb/>
Sight). "The problem, of course, was thai<lb/>
Hill needed foui s.oiush Italians who<lb/>
speak English with a Glasgow accent and<lb/>
can speak perfect Italian. I he amazing<lb/>
thing is thai we attuallv round them We<lb/>
needed a httvish gin for a leading part<lb/>
and I was m despair. I beard about some-<lb/>
one who worked in a kind of supper club<lb/>
as a compere Master of Ceremonies. We<lb/>
went to see him there and at hist we<lb/>
couldn't get m because Bill wasn't wearing<lb/>
a lie I hen suddenh thev realized who he<lb/>
was anil let us m. I hat's how we found<lb/>
Roberto Bernardi, this wonderful. won-<lb/>
derful man who speaks wnh a thick Italian<lb/>
accent Hied with Glasgow phrases. He<lb/>
plavs a t.uilv smistei character, the father<lb/>
"f tin- three voung men of the plot.<lb/>
Roberto turned out to be quite extraordi-<lb/>
nary. He has written songs, been to<lb/>
America where he won all the talent con-<lb/>
tests and played with Frank Sinatra He<lb/>
comes oil wonderfuJh in the film<lb/>
Figgis, whose saving grace is her sense of<lb/>
humor, savs that although Forsyth's films<lb/>
pit-sent special problems, thev offet<lb/>
greater rewards. "Like am other good di-<lb/>
rector. Bills difficult because he has a vis-<lb/>
ion It's hard to fulfill someone else's vis-<lb/>
ion, hut I understand Bill and we work<lb/>
well together I he upside, she savs is that<lb/>
Bill is changing in just the opposite wav<lb/>
from most directors who become more<lb/>
f?d up ami more paranoid as they be-<lb/>
lome successful. Bill has become happiei<lb/>
and easier<lb/>
F H I MOVII MAGAZINE<lb/>
Writer-director Bill Forsyth. looking uncom-<lb/>
fortable i his typical manner). In spite of his<lb/>
discomfort, his Local Hen.aoi auarded<lb/>
the eu York Film Critics' auard (best<lb/>
screenplay) and nominated for 7 British<lb/>
Academy Auards.<lb/>
l-otsvth agrees that his dims mav be<lb/>
therapeutu for him "The blackei things<lb/>
aie. tlu mote cheerful I am rhings<lb/>
could hardh have been blacker eight v?is<lb/>
ay when loisvth found himself ha. k in<lb/>
Glasgow attei a (wo-veai stint at the Ion<lb/>
don Film vh-l while holding down a ob<lb/>
as an ass stanl him -ditoi at tlu BB( ! .v.i.<lb/>
loot, an 1 London is no place t bt pool<lb/>
He Ixyan hanging around a Glasgow<lb/>
youth dub on Fridav nights and that gav?<lb/>
him the idea tor his hist film.  Sail<lb/>
Fitting, a heist film involving a plum- i s<lb/>
warehouse. He managed to raise (10.000<lb/>
and he used the amateui talent of the<lb/>
youth club. The him was the hit ol the<lb/>
Edinburgh Festival thai yeat<lb/>
I he sn of a plumbei and a housewife.<lb/>
Forsyth feels more comfortable Mukin to<lb/>
his roots Despite his successful tr.uk re-<lb/>
cord, In- savs his mother st, worries alx.ui<lb/>
lum. When I made Local H, I was veiv<lb/>
proud and I told bet how much tin fee<lb/>
was for making the film. She still worried<lb/>
She thought I had to pv Lancastet .<lb/>
make the trim with it as well<lb/>
rorsvth. who writes his own screenplavs<lb/>
a- well as directs, admits that there's quite<lb/>
a bit of himself in his characters. In Greg<lb/>
m- Girt, I ,n tht gym teacher. In <lb/>
H,u. I used to think I was Ham.v. hut I'm<lb/>
not sure anv more. He yets awav with<lb/>
more than I can And there's something<lb/>
ot him in the dis Hkev in 1 mfortandj v<lb/>
What all these characters have m common<lb/>
is the pursuit of the unattainable, elusive,<lb/>
perfect woman. "Yeah, that's true ot me<lb/>
savs tlu unattached dnectot with sh good<lb/>
humor; inv vision t not getting the per-<lb/>
fect girl inns deep "<lb/>
LH<lb/>
V.<lb/>
kA<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0027"/><lb/>
ALL OF ME<lb/>
Steve Martin uith lictoria Tennant. the<lb/>
beautiful daughter of a stable hand ? and<lb/>
the original destination for Lily Tomlin's<lb/>
soul.<lb/>
?ontmued from page 8)<lb/>
Martin, allowing his attention to momen-<lb/>
tarily wander from the card game. "Like<lb/>
when we have to mirror-image each other;<lb/>
sometimes we do things realh spontane-<lb/>
ously and well do exact)) the same thing<lb/>
L assure himself that such a brilliant ob-<lb/>
servation is not wasted, he offers, "You<lb/>
might want to wi ile that down<lb/>
Robinson las down his card and sas.<lb/>
"While you were gabbing, I got a 215-poini<lb/>
hand<lb/>
Pained shrieks and one disgruntled card<lb/>
shark aside, the set for All of Me is a de-<lb/>
cided!) civil one. Although he wasn't<lb/>
thrilled with the wa his Rhinestone script<lb/>
came to the screen, Robinson has no com-<lb/>
plaints about the handling of his latest<lb/>
work, which he sas is IxMtig treated as a<lb/>
sophisticated, romantic comedy. He says<lb/>
they're "not getting wild and crazy" with<lb/>
the movie, which is wise since the premise<lb/>
itself is so outrageous.<lb/>
Robinson also lias praise lor the director.<lb/>
"(ail's wonderful. He's ver collaborative<lb/>
and has a respect tot writers. A lot of (di-<lb/>
rectors) don't want the writer in the same<lb/>
count) with them hi- notes, throughout<lb/>
the si weeks ot shooting, Robinson has<lb/>
been on the set making necessar) script<lb/>
revisions and taking Martin's money.<lb/>
"I know you can't be saving eights<lb/>
again challenges Martin. "Well, you're<lb/>
saving eights again. I see<lb/>
Shortly after lunch, Victoria tennant<lb/>
(who plays the original target tor Edwina's<lb/>
soul) shows up. Martin's mood improves<lb/>
appreciably. His game isn't an) better, but.<lb/>
outfitted in a t-shirt And boxer shorts, he<lb/>
grabs his banjo and begins picking out<lb/>
blue Skies" while Reiner dances around<lb/>
happily<lb/>
In her trailer dressing room. Iomlin isn't<lb/>
as jovial as her co stars, but it is no reflec-<lb/>
tion ot her experience on the movie. It's<lb/>
been a long d.i of shooting and re-<lb/>
shooting some particular!) emotional<lb/>
scenes.<lb/>
Her t-shirt, in Spanish. sas: "That's<lb/>
wh.it the last girl said It's a line from<lb/>
Wukni Woman, a movie about a bu woman.<lb/>
Is Iomlin a bad woman "I aspire<lb/>
t too long ago. Hollywood gave her<lb/>
just such a label, saving she wasn't "safe"<lb/>
anymore. Although this is her first film in<lb/>
three years, Iomlin sas. "People make<lb/>
that stuff up. sou know. If anybody's the<lb/>
least bit different, they'll say you're un-<lb/>
usual or something. At that time. I was dif-<lb/>
ferent comedicalh<lb/>
Across the soundstage, the bloodbath<lb/>
continues. "lake this pig savs Martin, fi-<lb/>
nalK feeling he's gotten the upper hand.<lb/>
Robinson does indeed take it. "You can't!<lb/>
Every time I discard, you're saving it<lb/>
B mid-afternoon. Steve owes Phil<lb/>
S?iS.8(). "Let's finish this game savs Mar-<lb/>
tin, "then I'll pay mi<lb/>
Uith gambling debts like that. Martin<lb/>
hopes Ml l M, is a hit when it opens this<lb/>
STICK<lb/>
14<lb/>
(Continued from page 6)<lb/>
gen), and a discreet chauffeur. Stick takes<lb/>
the driving job. and pays attention to<lb/>
Stain's houseman Cornell Lewis (Lawson)<lb/>
who advises him to "learn something"<lb/>
from the country club set.<lb/>
What the enterprising Stick learns from<lb/>
the Stain lifestyle and from ksle's personal<lb/>
tutoring is enough to put together a con<lb/>
that saves his skin, asserts his hard-learned<lb/>
principles, and satisfies his newly-<lb/>
understood nved for cash flow. But not<lb/>
without a little blood on the fast lane along<lb/>
the way.<lb/>
Leonard's fast action and straight-<lb/>
forward stvle draw comparisons with<lb/>
hard-boiled masters Hammett and Chan-<lb/>
dler. But Leonard doesn't credit The I'hin<lb/>
Mem or l'h Hit; Sleep.<lb/>
"I was more influenced by ames M.<lb/>
Cain and Hemingway he says. "Heming-<lb/>
way taught me how to write. Since my at-<lb/>
titude is different from his. thank God, m<lb/>
sound finally developed into m own<lb/>
sound Still, he doesn't expect any of his<lb/>
work to emerge on film with the same tout-<lb/>
as his lHks. The hooks ate. lie explains,<lb/>
"too true to life<lb/>
Leonard's wife Joan brings coffee and<lb/>
cookies ? delectable morsels from a posh<lb/>
Birmingham bakery ? while a dog as big<lb/>
as a Kleenex box licks any hand it can<lb/>
reach Watching the action is Ernest<lb/>
Hemingway himself, in a framed, signed<lb/>
photograph.<lb/>
Leonard is current l at work on a novel<lb/>
which could, depending on Sticks success,<lb/>
be a sequel. Like Stick, the hero of this<lb/>
work-in-progress is a principled man who<lb/>
commits himself out of personal ethics<lb/>
rather than any guarantee of success.<lb/>
I hat's an action familiar to main of<lb/>
Leonard's heroes, who share an important<lb/>
common trait. "Of course they're a lot<lb/>
alike Leonard agrees. "They're all me!<lb/>
It's like when I'm asked where I get m<lb/>
dialogue That's easy. I make it up<lb/>
r H E M O V I E M A G A Z I N E<lb/>
The screenplay for Stick was written on<lb/>
the heels of the novel, with a short<lb/>
break for Leonard to begin his current<lb/>
best-seller, LaBrava. The author estimates<lb/>
he spent less than two months revising his<lb/>
screenpla) before and during Reynolds'<lb/>
Florida shooting.<lb/>
"It's not that I work fast he explains,<lb/>
"but that I stay with it. I don't wander off<lb/>
and talk about it. I've got to lx- left alone.<lb/>
After all. I don't know what it's alxmt. I'm<lb/>
having a gxd time making it up as I go<lb/>
along. I work better that way. The reader<lb/>
doesn't know what's going to happen it I<lb/>
don't know what's going to happen<lb/>
So how dcxs he know when a book is<lb/>
done? "It's around page 360 he sas with<lb/>
a smile.<lb/>
Despite Leonard's "surprise me" ap-<lb/>
proach to w titing. he has a sure feeling for<lb/>
the film's success. "Right from the start it<lb/>
was a pleasure to work with Reynolds<lb/>
Leonard savs. "especially because I could<lb/>
see he understood the character fully.<lb/>
"He wanted to play Stick as Stick, he<lb/>
didn't want to turn Stick into Butt<lb/>
Reynolds<lb/>
Sink opens this tall.<lb/>
Reynolds plays an ex-convict who becomes a<lb/>
Miami chauffeur; his employer is played by<lb/>
George Segal (left).<lb/>
?v<lb/>
<pb facs="00057642_0028"/><lb/>
aSakgaat-Oid<lb/>
Molly Ringwakd, currently visible on<lb/>
screens in Sixteen Candles, will again star<lb/>
in a -teenage" movie written, directed and<lb/>
co-produced In John Hughes (the man<lb/>
behind Sixteen Candles) Breakfast Club,<lb/>
opening later this t.ar. is about five kids'<lb/>
wh have Saturday detention at a Chicago<lb/>
high school (the entire film takes place<lb/>
from 8 a.m. until everyone goes home at 5<lb/>
p.m.). But its not about detention, ol<lb/>
course; its about awkward adolescence,<lb/>
and how teenagers an- often more mature<lb/>
than adults. Starring with Ms Ringwaid<lb/>
an- Fmilio Estevez (son of actor Martin<lb/>
Sheen, and an off-screen friend of Mol-<lb/>
ly's), Paul Gleason, Anthony Michael Hall<lb/>
(who also appeared m Sixteen Candles.<lb/>
Rick Moranis (ol SCTV fame) ami Alb<lb/>
Sheedy, who enhanced War Games. Break-<lb/>
fast Club .s produced In Ned fatten and<lb/>
John Hughes, and it marks the first effort<lb/>
by AfcM Films to reach the screen (A&amp;M<lb/>
being, of coune, a major independent rec-<lb/>
ord latiel).<lb/>
Breakfast Club unites writer-director John<lb/>
Hughes (below right) and star Moby<lb/>
Ringwaid (below left) once again (theirfirst<lb/>
collaboration was Sixteen Candles). This<lb/>
time Moby is one offii-e Chicago high school<lb/>
students forced to endure Saturday detention.<lb/>
CLOAK &amp; DAGGER<lb/>
Henry Thomas and Dabney Coleman as<lb/>
father and son - and something else in Hen-<lb/>
ry's imagination.<lb/>
tt.imtiHui from pogi 5<lb/>
motivation all the tune, whkfa is pretty<lb/>
hard when you're making a fantasy.<lb/>
"Dabney plays Jack Hack with quite a bit<lb/>
of humor Franklm nonetheless sus ,d-<lb/>
nunngh f his adult star, although no, ,?<lb/>
any way parodist alb Flu scene I'm hap-<lb/>
pus, with ls the one m which he instructs'<lb/>
IjveI homas) in driving a tar It turns<lb/>
out thai since he's only a figment ol<lb/>
D.ies imagination, he knows ,?, more<lb/>
about driving than Davey does Well bow<lb/>
Should know- he asks Davey. I'm tUSI a<lb/>
fantasy t tiaracterf"<lb/>
Set in San Antonio - coincidental!) its<lb/>
vounger stats hometown -Omk and Dag-<lb/>
K features exteriors of that dtv's most<lb/>
famous monument But when it came time<lb/>
to shoot msidc the Alamo, local offnials<lb/>
said no go "Apparenth. Franklin relates<lb/>
this went back to a time several wars .ti.(,<lb/>
when an Italian him new hammered some<lb/>
lights mt , the wall. We assured them that<lb/>
with the new ftlm sto ks. we didn't need to<lb/>
use lights at all. hut they didn't believe us.<lb/>
So we bad to build a replica of the interior<lb/>
Its so good that r,? sure ,jH San Intonio<lb/>
authorities, when they sec ,t. will think we<lb/>
somehow managed to sneak m'<lb/>
With the help of a twenty-eight-acre<lb/>
nylon and polyester tarpaulin, a nighttime<lb/>
scene in which a van that's chasing our<lb/>
heroes trashes into the front of a<lb/>
downtown San Antonio jewelry shop was<lb/>
shot in the brightest pan of a summer af-<lb/>
ternoon on the Universal lots -New York<lb/>
Street Number Richard Franklm among<lb/>
the tarpai fin's biggest fans It was terriht<lb/>
being able to shoot that way he ss I?<lb/>
Fact, I don't know what we'd have done<lb/>
without it. since night shooting is rtormath<lb/>
very unpleasant, and kids are rarely al-<lb/>
lowed to work late enough to get anything<lb/>
done<lb/>
But the stem- in which Henrysas-Davey<lb/>
sees an FBI agent being murdered in the<lb/>
mirrored ide of the building opposite the<lb/>
one he's in was as devihshb trick) to shoot<lb/>
as the van-crashing scene was simple<lb/>
"What was irickv" Franklm retails, shaking<lb/>
his head with the memory, was that from<lb/>
the angles we wanted, we kept getting the<lb/>
cameras in the shot. Normally when that<lb/>
happens. ne puts black velvet all around<lb/>
the earner but that didn't work in this<lb/>
case. We had to construct miniatures of the<lb/>
area that would have been reflected if the<lb/>
camera hatnt been there and plate them<lb/>
around the camera, turning it mto a minia-<lb/>
ture stairwdL In the rerk-ction you realh<lb/>
can't detect the camera, but it's sitting right<lb/>
in the middle of frame<lb/>
CJm and Dagger, opening August 17.<lb/>
presents an opportunity to see both<lb/>
America's favorite bov actor at work again<lb/>
as well as Dabney Coleman having great<lb/>
fun plaving something other than the<lb/>
venal, vainglorious Merle )eeter or Buffalo<lb/>
Bill-snle jerk, at which he's become one of<lb/>
America's Favorite adult actors.<lb/>
k<lb/>
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