The Michigan Daily, Sunday, October 30, 1983 - Page 5 Trick-or-treating taboo in some towns From the Associated Press Trick-or-treating has been banned in one small West Virginia town, while police officers will be doling out the sweets in Louisville, Ky., and adults in the Midwest and South might see a few hobgoblins if they drink too much Wit- ch's Brew on Halloween. The tampered candy scares that marred last year's celebrations are just a memory, say town officials, but some are still a little spooked. IN HURRICANE, W. Va., Mayor Raymond Peak has declared any trick- or-treating tomorrow taboo to protect children in this small community about 25 miles west of Charleston. "We had a couple of cases last year where children were given apples with razor blades in them," Peak said. As an alternative, the community is sponsoring a costume party for children 13 and under and a "haunted house" for older teen-agers. "WE DON'T want to take anything away from the kids," Peak said. "We stil want them to have Halloween. It's just that we want to centralize it so we can control it." However, local children seemed less than thrilled. I don't like it," said Kevin Bell, a fourth-grader. "I'd rather go trick-or- treating any day than go to some old party." LAST YEAR, trick-or-treating was banned in at least 40 communities after a nationwide rash of candy-tampering, apparently triggered by seven Chicago- area deaths from cyanide-laced Extra- Strength Tylenol capsules. In com- munities where trick-or-treating was permitted, there were no reports of problems. This year, children in Louisville, Ky., will be chaisng down police cars tomorrow night, if all goes as planned. Uniformed officers in marked cars will be cruising the streets, stopping periodically to pass out treats to children, said police spokesman Carl Yates. The variation on the door-to- door tradition is to insure that children get untampered candy, he said. IN WESTPORT, Conn., a hypodermic syringe with traces of heroin and cocaine on it was discovered in a carton of Halloween candy at a supermarket, but authorities said Friday they doub- ted intentional tampering was the motive. The state Health Services Department in Hartford confirmed the presence of the drugs on the syringe but said the candy was not contaminated. Officials speculated a drug user discarded the needle in the box. And while Halloween is traditionally children's night out, a St. Louis bar owner and small-time beer baron has created Witch's Brew for the young at heart. "NO, IT'S not orange," said Joe Edwards. "But it does come in a distin- ctive orange-and-black can which says right on the label that it is distrubuted by the Full Moon Distributing Co." The beer will be available in seven states in the Midwest and South this year, "and so far the response has been great," Edwards said. _________________________________ -. -" . Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS Once a student at the University, now a professor, Frank Beaver, widely known for his communication class - Introduction to Film - threads another movie in the TV Studio of the Freize Building. ENCOURAGES FILM MAKING AS A CAREER : Prof directs students into film By KAREN TENSA Since he was nine years old, Frank Beaver has wanted to be a theatre and film director. "I wrote a letter addressed to one of the studios in Hollywood saying I was available if they needed any talent," recalled the communications professor. FOR BEAVER, a native of Elmwood, N.C., population 250, "movies were my escape." "I saw every film made in the late 1940s and early 1950s. I'd go to the PROFILE_ p.m. show, dash to the 3 p.m., and then to the five o'clock movie and then I would catch a bus home by seven," he said. "It made me really want to be a part of the business." In addition to his interest in movies, Beaver also had a "special interest in writing and the arts" while he was growing up. "THE TEACHERS were interested in helping people with special interest," he said. "I had an English teacher who was a major influence in my life. She tutored me in Latin, in addition to teaching me playwrighting and writing criticism." As a result of winning several essay writing contests in high school, Beaver received a four-year scholarship to the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill where he earned a bachelor's degree in radio, television, and motion pictures and a master's in television/film direction. "My goal was to go to Greenwich Village," said Beaver, who had several of his plays produced at Chapel Hill. BUT HIS DRAFT deferment ran out after he graduated, and in 1962 he en- tered the army. Beaver attended army intelligence school and went to Vietnam at the end of the year. When he left the army a year later, Beaver reconsidered his career goals. Because his teachers at Chapel Hill and in high school had been such an influen- ce on him, he considered teaching as an option to working directly on films. Although he only had a master's degree, Beaver found a job at Memphis State University. "I COULD write criticism, make films the way artists do in art school, and still exercise what I had learned and support my family at the same time." he said. The next year, Chapel Hill invited Beaver to return there to teach. Through a multi-million dollar grant the university received to produce films on population, Beaver wrote, directed, produced, and edited a documentary for the South Population Council. The film was translated into other languages and distributed abroad. "That really made me committed to the experience of being able to teach filmmaking, which a lot of drama teachers don't want to do, as well as to be a film critic and write about films and teach about the art of film," he said. BEAVER EVENTUALLY decided he wanted to get a Ph.D and the University was one of five schools which accepted him. "It was the kind of program I wan- ted," he said. "It combined an oppor- tunity to work with theatre directing, playwrighting, offered a lot of produc- tion couses as well as having English department courses in literary criticism and playwrighting. "For someone who sees himself as an artist-critic-historian, it seemed like the perfect place to go." BEAVER EARNED a Ph.D in 1969 with a major in speech communication and a minor in film theory, history, and directing. He won "a couple of Hop- woods" while a student and had one of his plays produced. Beaver's play was about a flower- child traveling from Greenwich Village to Haight-Asbury to meet her boyfriend. At a bus station, she meets the brother of a dead soldier from Viet- nam waiting to receive his brother's belongings which are being delivered by military personnel. The dead brother's plane had been shot down, but his body was never recovered. The woman didn't know why the man was in the bus station. The Hopwood Award-winning play, which Beaver remembers as being "kind of funny," was the first play on Vietnam produced in the United States. "I WAS interested in the rhetoric - what would happen if two people of that generation got together," he explained. "Being a student here in the late 1960s, I was very curious about the way ac- tivists spoke. The way they talked about revolution. Their need to talk- to get out into the streets." Because of his personal tie to Viet- nam, Beaver said he has a special in- terest in movies about the war. He compares himself to the characters at the end of The Deer Hunter - people who want to believe there was a reason behind fighting in Southeast Asia. When Beaver taught his first film class at the University in the fall of 1968, one of his students was Lawrence Kasden, writer and director of Body Heat and The Big Chill, who was in town last week to speak to classes. "I THOUGHT Larry had tremendous talent. He's certainly a product of the University," he said. Although Beaver admits the Univer- sity's film program "is not highly sophisticated," students who are in- terested in film do have the opportunity to learn what they need t know. "University graduates are exposed to good films, they get good training and they get good jobs," he said. Beaver said the most frustrating aspect f the program is that few students get to work in production. To ease the problem, Beaver said he tries to get them into graduate workshops so they can gain some exposure. According to Beaver many Univer- sity film students become nationally competitive. Two years ago, for example, two University students were nominated for Academy Awards in the documentary category. "We do a lot in our program with very little money," Beaver explained. "The students don't become discouraged and there's a miracle in that." INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th A e of sbe ty 7614-700 $2 00 WED. SAT. SUN. SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM EXCEPT "NEVER" $3.00 ENDS THURS. "SIMMERS AND PULSATES-A ONE-OF- A-KIND MOVIE." -Newsweek MON. 7:25, 9:40 (R) SAT. SUN. 12:45, 2:55, 5:10, 7:25, 9:40 AN ACTION ADVENTURE WITH NON-STOP THRILLS .s"ACNNERY is JAMES BOND in DOLBY STEREO 0 MON 7 00 9 30 SAT. SUN. 12:00, 2:20, 4:40, 7:00, 9:30 31rb1!3ta :43aiIQ Classifieds get results! Ann Arbor Civic Theatre presents THE PHILADELPHIA STORY E\ 1 3 3 A ,M J _° A MP "1 At4' '4 ' y S ) ". -. d A 4 -W" o.A.A.AMUGL G q leua.. ~A .W11.A. 17,AbA w. Al.AAAu - pCI er l At 1N.. w , 1 11hAMAA I -AAAAA,,A~rA, N'A..: r t F..An * A.. A~pWA~t'AE, C.AAAA A , N.dAWeA ' apAAA.W A ATyA''A l b A c .Wq~AW I'llWIb Y WWWY. '"L I 1P S gA a s s ' 12v W "Q ,AWPA nP.ms' A ~,A i. .353 -a r. M yameelwAAl.fl N 1:4df [M : .IIW" rv.~eMnON1Wt' 1M..AAAAA0AAAwA ArAt PAA CA2!pAI MAAA }fL.aA,.~A l" @g{A*AVAAAA 4AAAAIA -vim j'$ 4-.AIv-AAW A.AI' curtain 8pm.Sat. 2 p BoffieOesDi:Y At2 Noo Mihiga Thate dWtickets bt,8-8470 STUDENT SECALDICONT$1.0 O AL ICET - N THE924th ANNUAL w7nfIN JII m'-V I N I Prsnttonafnuicadac 9 ItentonlExrsiosofHp 3- foriPeaceqand Understandingd h n vl . m 1 The University of Michigan COLLEGE OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND THE ARTS Eighth Distinguished Senior Faculty Lecture Series GARDNER ACKLEY Henry Carter Adams Distinguished University Professor of Political Economy in a three-part series, will discuss Some Uses of Economics NOVEMBER 1 The Growth of Economic Knowledge NOVEMBER 3 The Size and Economic Roles of Government NOVEMBER 8 tC-,n brnmant *CtEahiU'h- inn P li FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1983 -~ a 0 Mom a 1CAui~ Cr r1 IC A .r t%f *rT C 7- 1'f.._-LK ..