Iirsday, October 18, 1984 The Pendulum Page 7 5 "The Right Job, there's nothing like it!" "When you're confident that you're working wtTere God wants you. you ve got the right joc Intercristo helped find the nghr job for me »a Chnstian orgarvzatton I h»ghy recommend Intercrrsto to others' Contaa Intercristo for work opportuTNtfes n Christian organizatKxis Career, short-temi and summer posJtKxis for professKXials. tradespeople and students are availat)le in the U.S. arxJ overseas Call 1bll-Fr«e f800| 426-1342 AK. HI, WA or Canada 1206) 546-7330 • Honor society inducts 16 Photo by Steve Pearce Sigma Tau Delta, the English Honor society, inducted new members last Thurs day night at their induction and banquet on second floor McEwen. New members are from left to right: Frank Isley, Missy Jones, Susan Bowling, Donna McNeill, Marie Burns, Felicia Fogleman, Jim Cahill, Chris Quad, Kim Morrison, Chuck Parks, Alice Essen, Ann Butler, Becky House. Absent from the picture are induc tees David Bartenfield, Gerald Gibson and Pricilla Hayworth. i'owlie relates his problems a writing autobiographies By Penny Thomas Associate Editor Dr. Wallace Fowlie, author ,d professor emeritus of ike University, is working on s third volume of his auto- >graphy Memoirs. He said It this section deals with fees,” in other words he said, laces that have meant a great |b1 to me.” owlie spoke in Mooney atre last Thursday as a :st of Sigma Tau Delta Hon- Society. He said that when I started on this project, “an iotion takes over when I be- l writing on an episode in my ’e." This emotion, Fowlie Id, is “panic.” “"e went on to discuss other blems of autobiographical iting and said that no one taow anyone else’s life un it is written about and read ut—inevitably, he said, it icomes an allegory. Some- les this allegory of a peron’s te “is not far away from fic- l>n” since the writer has to link back and sometimes frange episodes by memory. Fowlie said that he goes Eiinst what he was taught in lege in the 1930s and 1940s lout the “new critics” way of ewing written work. The new itics, Fowlie said, tend to dis card author’s intentions and elings and hold that the work lould be looked at for the ork itself and not let any of the author’s influences inter rupt the piece. But Fowlie said that he be lieved that the true self of man is always displaced in the lan guage. He also relates auto biographical writing as similar to self-portraiture in painting and perhaps even to dance and other literature. He said written autobiogra phy is like Van Gogh’s or Rem- brant’s paintings of themselves and even Martha Graham’s dances can be forms of auto biographical expression. Fowlie said that he tries to “record particulars to stir the imagination of his readers.” A writer turns the story into a personal myth and images per sistently return in this cycle, he said. Fowlie strongly emphasized the phrase, “It is myself I re make” as almost an oath that he goes by. He said he also be lieved that “we are always weaving novels,: and said, “My self is the groundwork of my book” Subscribe to the Pendulum *7.50 per year Send one home! CaU 584-2331 or 584-2467 1®“ Annual Oktoberfest Saturday, Oct. 20 in Jordan Gym from 7-12 p.m. Live entertainment by Kilby and The Rulebreakers and Out to Lunch Booths will include a dunking machine!! Campus organizations will also set up booths Come out and join the fun! Free Admission w/Elon I.D. Sponsored by SUB/SGA Two Locations 2423 S. Church St d#trtUBor Cum-Park Plaza OAK GROVE CAFE 226-7392 HOME COOKED VEGETABLES Hot Biscuits Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner Open 6:00 a.m.-7;45 p.m. Daily (tSX) 1824 S. Church St. in Burlington