<?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">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057344_0001"/>
?he iEaHt (Earnlinian<lb/>
Vol. 55 No. y<lb/>
6 Pages<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Wednesday, June 3, 1981<lb/>
Greenville. Northarolina<lb/>
Outstanding Loans Cause System ys Suspension<lb/>
Lester Nail<lb/>
B DEBORAH HOTALING<lb/>
Vf? fdllnr<lb/>
Students who might need that $25 emergency loan<lb/>
from the SGA will have to find an alternative source of<lb/>
funds until at least fall semester.<lb/>
In a move thai also affects medical emergency loans,<lb/>
which were once available in the maximum amount of<lb/>
$150, all furthei SGA loans have been suspended due to<lb/>
ovei $6,800 in outstanding loans which have ac-<lb/>
cumulated since the 1977-78 school year.<lb/>
1 ester Nail, SGA president, and Marvin Braxton,<lb/>
vice president, outvoted Treasurer Kirk I it tie in a deci-<lb/>
sion to suspend all loans until a solution to the problem<lb/>
of unpaid loans is found.<lb/>
"1 became concerned when 1 started talking with<lb/>
Debbie and Mrs. Clark in the Student Fund Accounting<lb/>
Office about outstanding loans Nail explained. "Yes,<lb/>
1 agree, it's the students' money but it's being abused by<lb/>
a tew. That's why I cut it. A few were abusing<lb/>
everyone's money<lb/>
I ittle disagreed with Nail's and Braxton's decision to<lb/>
suspend the loans. "We can serve the students and im-<lb/>
prove the situation at the same time. I'm totally against<lb/>
this decision but it's done now . I want to continue work-<lb/>
ing on the same proposals I've been working on. I think<lb/>
stopping the service to the students is a mistake because<lb/>
we can sere the students while making progress<lb/>
In the $25 category, there were $3,698.90 in outstan-<lb/>
ding loans as of May 27. This, in addition to the<lb/>
$6,803.95 in outstanding loans since 1977, produces a<lb/>
total of $10,502.85 due to the loan fund. At the end of<lb/>
the first session ol summer school $420.10 will have<lb/>
been loaned out, which, it paid back, will drop the<lb/>
outstanding loan figure to $10,082.75.<lb/>
Under former president Charlie Sherrod's ad-<lb/>
ministration, this $25 loan changed from the status of<lb/>
an emergency loan to just a regular loan which any stu-<lb/>
dent with an identification and activity card could apply<lb/>
tor and receive.<lb/>
According to Nail, several reminders are sent to the<lb/>
student who is delinquent in paying back the loan in the<lb/>
given time. After 30 davs, another reminder is sent. The<lb/>
procedure is to then inform the appointed attorney who<lb/>
also sends a reminder to the student. If, after 30 days,<lb/>
the money is still not paid, another letter is sent.<lb/>
It is not until the attorney's second reminder is sent<lb/>
that the student's transcripts and records are tagged by<lb/>
the registrar's office.<lb/>
This tagging system will prevent the student from<lb/>
registering on registration day tor classes and also from<lb/>
obtaining copies of his her transcripts.<lb/>
See DELINQUENT, Page 2<lb/>
Marvin Braxton<lb/>
R I s,<lb/>
Gas Hike Planned<lb/>
Tax Tenatively Passes<lb/>
RAl E1GH,<lb/>
fie<lb/>
Hn<lb/>
UPI) By a sl-<lb/>
I uesday ten-<lb/>
pproved om. James B.<lb/>
 proposal to raise the<lb/>
a bv 3 cent; . gallon to<lb/>
state's beleaguere d<lb/>
fund<lb/>
Senate will consider the<lb/>
e a final time Wednesday. If<lb/>
s then, the bill will nune to<lb/>
Su f the so-called Good<lb/>
? - Hexed surprising<lb/>
strei irst defeating an amend-<lb/>
ment creating a cigarette manufac-<lb/>
?rs' tax and then winning the<lb/>
e bill in genera w it<lb/>
i spare Mo; bsen<lb/>
ly 27 or 28 senatoi - to<lb/>
? he bill.<lb/>
 '? tes were Den,<lb/>
c h amber's seven o 1 h e r<lb/>
; Republican<lb/>
npi ipposition.<lb/>
  praised the Senate<lb/>
:  c ritically important step<lb/>
?<lb/>
"? l he membe ision and<lb/>
g foi ? ure that<lb/>
Nor: I a keep<lb/>
I ?? ' i!<lb/>
bs I in a Mate-<lb/>
are forcing the state to renovate on-<lb/>
! about x miles annually.<lb/>
I he bill's supporters have said the<lb/>
state need- about $200 million extra<lb/>
a year to help the Highway fund,<lb/>
which has been plagued b reduced<lb/>
gas tax revenues because of the<lb/>
wmg numbei o fuel-efficient<lb/>
vehicles at a time when inflation is<lb/>
skyrocketing.<lb/>
But Sen c ass Ballenger, R.<lb/>
Catawba, led off a group ol GOP<lb/>
w nen<lb/>
tie<lb/>
said<lb/>
Li<lb/>
opponent -<lb/>
spend money for <lb/>
Transportation Department racked<lb/>
bv bid-rigging and claims ol ineffi-<lb/>
money pena, tne<lb/>
things that caused the problem<lb/>
should ? i aned up he said.<lb/>
Othei senators disagreed,<lb/>
ting thai North Carolina's<lb/>
76,OQO-mile highway system is the<lb/>
finest in America and the Transpor-<lb/>
tation Department is one of the best<lb/>
run.<lb/>
Sen. Marshall Rauch, D, Gaston,<lb/>
called the tax bill a "Band-Aid"<lb/>
solution and proposed an amend-<lb/>
ment banning 100 percent state fun-<lb/>
ding on roads where the majority of<lb/>
the paving money could come from<lb/>
the federal government.<lb/>
Rauch later withdrew that amend-<lb/>
ment when Sen. Harold Hardison,<lb/>
D-Lenoir, promised his Appropria-<lb/>
tions Committee would include that<lb/>
proviso in its budget bill.<lb/>
Senate President Pro Tern Craig<lb/>
I awing, D-Mecklenburg, said he<lb/>
doesn't like the bill or any other<lb/>
legislation to raise tax. But the state<lb/>
See (.AS. Page 2<lb/>
Production Delayed<lb/>
On ECU Magazine<lb/>
Gov. James Hunt<lb/>
B DEBORAH HOI VI IV.<lb/>
History seems to be repeati<lb/>
itself. This time it's with the campus<lb/>
literary magazine, the Rebel.<lb/>
As with last year's Rebel, this<lb/>
veai's edition was sent back to<lb/>
printers foi a second printing du(<lb/>
numerous errors in the lay-oul and<lb/>
production of the magazine.<lb/>
Kathy Crisp, 1980-81 editoi of the<lb/>
Rebel, explained why the magazine<lb/>
will be almost three months late in<lb/>
reaching the students' hands: "It<lb/>
v. a supposed to b beei<lb/>
the week alter graduation. Wei<lb/>
was delivered but we hadn'1 see<lb/>
copy before the 6,(KM) copies came.<lb/>
We had to send it back because ol<lb/>
the errors which, although there<lb/>
weren't grave errors, there r<lb/>
Drug Law Draws Controversy<lb/>
:<lb/>
in m-<lb/>
detai<lb/>
?  mts-per-<lb/>
, b ottering a refund<lb/>
individuals tor<lb/>
driving.<lb/>
ire also transfers S5S<lb/>
related -ales tax<lb/>
ie Highway 1 und and<lb/>
license tees. Hunt<lb/>
i - ?? pe:cent hike in<lb/>
t d:d now levies on<lb/>
age rentals,<lb/>
? ?se taxes have not<lb/>
:ompleted.<lb/>
fuesday's 90-minute debate over<lb/>
bill swung on whether a gas tax<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
Sen. J.J. "Monk" Harrington,<lb/>
1) Bertie, said additional revenues<lb/>
lintain current roads and build<lb/>
news ones is vital because the state's<lb/>
way system is "only about 18<lb/>
months away from being a total<lb/>
ister<lb/>
He ?-aid the state should resurface<lb/>
iboul 2,700 miles of the roads each<lb/>
, but inflation and paving costs<lb/>
Bv KM MMBFKIA<lb/>
No one can pi edict the exact<lb/>
result- ol any law until it is put into<lb/>
effect, but almost everyone would<lb/>
ee thai North Carolina's propos-<lb/>
ed Drug Paraphernalia Act is bound<lb/>
to cause quite a stir it Gov. Jim<lb/>
Hunt signs it into law.<lb/>
I he bill, which was passed in the<lb/>
state Sei tie last week and earlier<lb/>
cleared the House, would make it il-<lb/>
il to sell, posses, oi use any kind<lb/>
of paraphernalia in connection with<lb/>
the consumption of marijuana.<lb/>
Thus far, the bill has stirred<lb/>
strong partisan support on both<lb/>
-ides ol the issue.<lb/>
According to a May 15 1 egislative<lb/>
Alert put out bv the North Carolina<lb/>
il I iberties Union (NCC1 U),<lb/>
"the bill would make it illegal to<lb/>
knowingly use or posses with intent<lb/>
to use any drug paraphernalia;<lb/>
manufacture or deliver drug<lb/>
paraphernatia;or<lb/>
advertise drug paraphernalia.<lb/>
'Drug paraphernalia is defined as<lb/>
such things as kits for planting,<lb/>
scales and balances, blenders,<lb/>
spoons, bowls, balloons, pipes, etc.<lb/>
furthermore, possession of each<lb/>
separate item could become a<lb/>
separate, one year misdemeanor of-<lb/>
fense<lb/>
1 he bill, if passed, will cause ma-<lb/>
jor problems for any North<lb/>
Carolina merchants who deal in<lb/>
paraphernalia, according to the NC-<lb/>
CLU. In-state manufacturers and<lb/>
distributors will have to shut down,<lb/>
and "head shops which deal<lb/>
almost exclusively in paraphernalia,<lb/>
will be forced to close or sell another<lb/>
product.<lb/>
Pipe Dreams, a downtown Green-<lb/>
ville head shop, receives at least 95<lb/>
percent oi its revenue from the sale<lb/>
ol paraphernalia, according to<lb/>
owner Carol Martoccia.<lb/>
Zack Perkinson, also ol Pipe<lb/>
Dreams, called the proposed law un-<lb/>
constitutional and anticipates trou-<lb/>
ble with enforcement because of its<lb/>
vagueness.<lb/>
Martoccia feels that the law will<lb/>
not serve as a deterrent. "I'm all for<lb/>
drug abuse control Martoccia<lb/>
said, "but if a dog bites you, you<lb/>
don't cut oft its tail; you go to the<lb/>
root of the problem<lb/>
When asked what Pipe Dreams<lb/>
would do if the law passed, Perkin-<lb/>
son said. "Beats me. Persevere in<lb/>
the illustrious tradition of American<lb/>
enterprise Martoccia speculated<lb/>
on the possibility of selling tee shirts<lb/>
after October 1, the proposed date<lb/>
o enactment for the law<lb/>
Perkinson feels that the bill has<lb/>
progressed as tar as it has because<lb/>
retailers have not been able to bring<lb/>
a strong enough lobby against it. He<lb/>
attributes the bill to a conservative<lb/>
political resurgence and sees the<lb/>
banning of paraphernalia as an in-<lb/>
vasion of privacy. "Political con-<lb/>
sciousness is at its lowest ebb since<lb/>
the end ol the Vietnam War" he<lb/>
said. "The 'hippie radicals' ol the<lb/>
late '60's and early '70's tough;<lb/>
social derision to change a culture<lb/>
they (we) saw as oppressive. 1 he<lb/>
youth of today takes social freedom<lb/>
for granted. It's time to realize you<lb/>
are ultimately responsible tor the<lb/>
way you live and the choices you<lb/>
make in life<lb/>
See I AW, Page 2<lb/>
such thing ;i sloppy artwork<lb/>
; crooked, son irk<lb/>
was upside down<lb/>
e print tny handling<lb/>
keai s Rebe ! sten's<lb/>
lie, I ennes  I red Pulley,<lb/>
the company's representative here in<lb/>
Greenvile, said, "We are helping to<lb/>
? problems in<lb/>
the s ?ming year. 1 he we've<lb/>
set up now is sending" two sets<lb/>
h eliminates all errors in<lb/>
the first set. I hen the pi '<lb/>
Rebel office to be ap-<lb/>
proved. Iheie are many problems in<lb/>
putting mil this complex of a<lb/>
1 d Midgett, who is in charge ol<lb/>
entire layii<lb/>
tazine, said he dela ?<lb/>
inters' mistakes. "V.<lb/>
inters are going to try to gel<lb/>
ay with what they can. 11<lb/>
just business. I his year, we di<lb/>
pay 'hem to begin with like we did<lb/>
with the company we used last year.<lb/>
1 hev (the printer) told me out<lb/>
out that it was theii fault.<lb/>
I hev didn't meet the deadline and<lb/>
we didn't get The proofs like we<lb/>
were supposed to. We fell it would<lb/>
be belter to go ahead with a second<lb/>
printing to be fair to the students,<lb/>
the artists, and the commpany's<lb/>
representation of their work<lb/>
1 he Rebel will be redehvered to<lb/>
the campus sometime during the<lb/>
first week ol August. 1 ess than halt<lb/>
ol the 6,000 copies will be handed<lb/>
out at the end cl the second session<lb/>
ol summer school with the remain-<lb/>
ing copies being distributed in the<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
" I hev (the printing company) ad-<lb/>
mitted that they were responsible<lb/>
for the mistakes Crisp added.<lb/>
"I hev're definitely paying tor the<lb/>
reprinting<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
n last Wednesday's issue ol I hi<lb/>
Hastaroiinian in the story concer<lb/>
riing budget approvals, we tailed t<lb/>
ecify thai the entire media budge<lb/>
?ci. approved. We apologia<lb/>
1 e a<lb/>
le's vagueness and am<lb/>
convenience it may have caused.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Editorials ?<lb/>
features <lb/>
Sports <lb/>
Classifieds <lb/>
Mendenhall To Get<lb/>
New Bus Station<lb/>
New Bus Station<lb/>
is expected to be completed in July<lb/>
Photo oy JILL ADAMS<lb/>
By KAREN WEND!<lb/>
wMnni Sr?v Editor<lb/>
ECU students should have a new<lb/>
bus shelter at Mendenhall by the end<lb/>
of July, according to Rudolph Alex-<lb/>
ander, Associate Dean of Student<lb/>
Life.<lb/>
According to Alexander, t he-<lb/>
shelter, which was designed bv two<lb/>
ECU art professors, will be a help to<lb/>
students, bus drivers and<lb/>
Mendenhall officials.<lb/>
The shelter is designed to provide<lb/>
shelter for students using the ser-<lb/>
vices of the SGA bus service. Up to<lb/>
this time the students had to either<lb/>
stand in inclement weather to get the<lb/>
buses or to wait in the Mendenhall<lb/>
lobby and try to sec the buses as<lb/>
they went by. This created a pro-<lb/>
blem for both students and the<lb/>
students center.<lb/>
The new bus stop will also<lb/>
eliminate the drivers need to go<lb/>
through the Mendenhall parking<lb/>
lot.<lb/>
1 he project was begun when the<lb/>
president ol the class oi 1979, Nicky<lb/>
1 rancis, came to Alexander asking<lb/>
for help in choosing a project tor a<lb/>
senior class gift. 1 he shelter was one<lb/>
ol the ideas given to Francis.<lb/>
Alexander cited that the building<lb/>
would be designed in a similar style<lb/>
to that ol Mendenhall, using the<lb/>
same type of brickwork and similar<lb/>
design. The interior will contain<lb/>
covered seating area shaped in the<lb/>
letters EC U.<lb/>
I he projects funding comes from<lb/>
several sources, the classes oi 1979<lb/>
and 1980, the SGA and Mendenhall<lb/>
itslf. 1 he overall concept was<lb/>
finalized bv a commitee containing<lb/>
representatives from the Student<lb/>
Center, the SGA and the Student<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
Alexander was uncertain of just<lb/>
how the decision was made for the<lb/>
shelter to be the gift of the senior<lb/>
class.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057344_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
June 3,1981<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
Phi fcta Sigma freshman honoi<lb/>
society will award book scholar<lb/>
ships to a rising junior and a rising<lb/>
senior in the amount of $100 each<lb/>
to be used during the IV81 82 school<lb/>
year Applicants must be<lb/>
members ot Phi fcta Sigma<lb/>
Qualifications emphasize par<lb/>
ticipation in the uCU chapter ot<lb/>
Phi b ta Sigma and high academic<lb/>
achievement interested students<lb/>
Should see Dr John D fcbbs Pro<lb/>
lessor ot English, at 214 Austin<lb/>
GAME ROOM<lb/>
The College Hih Came R<lb/>
located m the Aycork basement<lb/>
features electronic games, pm<lb/>
ball, pool, pmg pong and (ooseball<lb/>
Hours are Mon Ihurs 12 II<lb/>
p m , Friday 12 5pm and Sun 8<lb/>
11 p m All proieeds are returned<lb/>
to the students through the Student<lb/>
Residence Association please<lb/>
support the game room<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
Homecoming IV8! is now in 'he<lb/>
planning process Ttn<lb/>
mg tesiivities w.n be held on Nov<lb/>
; 1981 where the uvs a<lb/>
playing East Tenness. ?<lb/>
theme will be "Paint tne m<lb/>
Purple and Gold Ae wai<lb/>
courage any one inl<lb/>
helping plan homecoming ac<lb/>
hvities to conta't D.ane I<lb/>
; 841 a bea I<lb/>
planned for that Saturday<lb/>
CAMPUS CRUSADE<lb/>
Come to Farr ? N<lb/>
-<lb/>
,ng unging and grow<lb/>
dynamics it tri.<lb/>
Every ue0fly b JO P M<lb/>
?<lb/>
Photo by ROCHELE ROLAND<lb/>
Paraphernalia Shelves<lb/>
 may soon he a thing of the past.<lb/>
Law Draws Comments<lb/>
GMAT<lb/>
Tne (graduate Management Ad<lb/>
mission Test iGMATl will be ot<lb/>
tered at East Carolina University<lb/>
on Wednesday July 15,1981. at<lb/>
4 00 CM Application blanks art-<lb/>
to be completed and mailed to<lb/>
GAAAT Educational Testing Ser<lb/>
vice, Box 96 R, Princeton. NJ<lb/>
08540 Applications must be<lb/>
postmarked no later than June<lb/>
9.1981 Applications may be ob<lb/>
tamed from the ECU Testing<lb/>
Cener, Room 105, Speight<lb/>
Building<lb/>
BINGO ICE CREAM<lb/>
he first I<lb/>
I inn sun<lb/>
June 9 a' 00 PM<lb/>
?:<lb/>
?<lb/>
IT a ??? ? a ? ? . . ? ? I<lb/>
prizes such as I Shirts I ?<lb/>
album- ?<lb/>
Th s tree event is sponsored by<lb/>
Mendenhait student Cent<lb/>
ECU students stait faculty ano<lb/>
their quests<lb/>
E ver rone' saw nnei ' l<lb/>
Binge Part so don't<lb/>
miss itl<lb/>
EXTRA! EXTRA!<lb/>
?. I .<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
 i ?<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
rne<lb/>
?<lb/>
an ani<lb/>
I<lb/>
. ? <lb/>
noun- ?<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
Marl occi a .1 n<lb/>
ticipates no problems in<lb/>
selling hei remaining<lb/>
merchandise it it<lb/>
becomes necessan and<lb/>
will continue to order<lb/>
more until about two<lb/>
weeks bet ore the law<lb/>
goes into effect. Mar-<lb/>
toccia also said,4l<lb/>
should not be responsi<lb/>
ble for what anyone<lb/>
does with this stut t<lb/>
once it leases this store.<lb/>
1 don't want to know <lb/>
Jay Dillon of Apple<lb/>
Records mentioned the<lb/>
possibility ot passing<lb/>
out stamped receipts to<lb/>
be signed when selling<lb/>
any. product that could<lb/>
be used as parapher-<lb/>
nalia. The receipts<lb/>
would state that the<lb/>
customer is of legal age<lb/>
and will not use the<lb/>
product for illicit pur-<lb/>
poses. Dillon fell cer-<lb/>
tain that a large<lb/>
undei ground mo e-<lb/>
ment and possible<lb/>
Mafia involvemeni<lb/>
would result it<lb/>
paraphernalia were<lb/>
completely banned.<lb/>
"Responsibility will<lb/>
be on the consumer,<lb/>
ultimately, and I don't<lb/>
think signing a receipt<lb/>
is going to stop too<lb/>
main people" Dillon<lb/>
said<lb/>
V hen asked about<lb/>
problems m enforce<lb/>
men! ot the law . Joseph<lb/>
(alder, directoi of I ast<lb/>
Carolina t am pus<lb/>
Security, expressed<lb/>
doubts as to the con-<lb/>
stitutionality t the<lb/>
law. and the definition<lb/>
of paraphernalia.<lb/>
"How do I know what<lb/>
they're going to use it<lb/>
for? Until it passes,<lb/>
we're not going to<lb/>
worry about it<lb/>
Captain Briley ot the<lb/>
Greenville Police said.<lb/>
"It the law is spelled<lb/>
out, and what is legal<lb/>
or illegal specified, we<lb/>
will have no difficult)<lb/>
in enforcing it<lb/>
However, he added<lb/>
thai if the definition ot<lb/>
paraphernalia is left up<lb/>
10 the individual of-<lb/>
fice! . it w ill be up to the<lb/>
district attorney what<lb/>
to prosecute<lb/>
Cherrj Stokes, a<lb/>
Greenville lawyer, is<lb/>
skeptical ol the ability<lb/>
of the police to enforce<lb/>
the proposed I a w .<lb/>
"How are they going to<lb/>
prove what it (the<lb/>
paraphernalia) is being<lb/>
,old<lb/>
as?<lb/>
Some<lb/>
Gas Tax Proposal<lb/>
Tenatively Approved<lb/>
paraphernalia is used<lb/>
for legal purposes such<lb/>
as home rolled cigaret-<lb/>
tes, and insulin injec-<lb/>
tions for diabetics<lb/>
He voiced the opi-<lb/>
nion that although in-<lb/>
state manufacturers<lb/>
will be illegal, most<lb/>
paraphernalia is ship<lb/>
ped in from other states<lb/>
and is controlled b<lb/>
tederal law.<lb/>
"It's like saying,<lb/>
'I'm nol going to sell<lb/>
automobiles to people<lb/>
who are going to<lb/>
speed I'm not in favoi<lb/>
ol drugs, but 1 am in<lb/>
favor of good laws that<lb/>
are backed by public<lb/>
sentiment and are easy<lb/>
to enforce<lb/>
Several students also<lb/>
expressed opinions on<lb/>
the subject. Dan Neil, a<lb/>
senior English major,<lb/>
said, "1 don't think it'll<lb/>
last more than a year<lb/>
without being challeng-<lb/>
ed in court and found<lb/>
unconstitutional<lb/>
Another English ma-<lb/>
jor stated1 find it far<lb/>
cical that almost<lb/>
anyone can buy a gun,<lb/>
but no one will be able<lb/>
to bin a bong<lb/>
One downtown mer-<lb/>
chant said. "It the<lb/>
drugs are illegal, the<lb/>
paraphernalia should<lb/>
be too<lb/>
One senioi said,<lb/>
"People are always go-<lb/>
ing to tinJ tools foi<lb/>
their drugs. Drugs are<lb/>
illegal, but there are<lb/>
plenty ol them around;<lb/>
paraphernalia is jus!<lb/>
going 1 o g o<lb/>
underground, too<lb/>
FACULTYSTAFF<lb/>
AH ECU faculty and staff<lb/>
Vendnnhan Student Center<lb/>
members take advantage of your<lb/>
11 scount oay at the Bowling<lb/>
Center m VXendenhall Every<lb/>
Weonesda, from 5 00 p m unr.<lb/>
1 00 pm faculty and statt MSC<lb/>
members may bowl two (2) games<lb/>
and get a 3rd game FREE Don t<lb/>
-?dnesday is savings<lb/>
?' . Bowl ng Center<lb/>
GENERAL COLLEGE<lb/>
Effective . " the 1981 tan<lb/>
semester the us ot Memorial<lb/>
Gymnasium as an advising center<lb/>
a ? discontinued Each student<lb/>
will be assigned to a specif 11<lb/>
. ser in<lb/>
' ? ' " ? ?<lb/>
Each stu '?<lb/>
his her ss gne  -ner Oy<lb/>
printed<lb/>
on thi ? . class<lb/>
schedule or by pers<lb/>
I<lb/>
Brewste' Bl<lb/>
tog of the fa<lb/>
assignment <lb/>
1<lb/>
ATTIC ATTIC<lb/>
j C1 fret at lission<lb/>
 f-l free beverage<lb/>
with this<lb/>
coupon tor<lb/>
orientation<lb/>
students<lb/>
Souths No. 6<lb/>
Rock Nightclub<lb/>
V<lb/>
fcfc'<lb/>
:<lb/>
$&amp;? WED ?<lb/>
V RAY <lb/>
PITTMAN BAND<lb/>
THURS.<lb/>
SKIP CASTRO<lb/>
FRISATSUN.<lb/>
THE EAZE<lb/>
TUES.<lb/>
(FREE)<lb/>
VIDEO ROCK<lb/>
WED. -J.D.WALKER<lb/>
s<lb/>
i!<lb/>
I!<lb/>
I<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
needs the extra revenue, he said, and<lb/>
tViat is why he voted for the bill.<lb/>
Several citizens' groups have been<lb/>
formed to tight the tax proposal,<lb/>
some of them with the help of the<lb/>
Congressional Club, Sen. Bill Red-<lb/>
man, R I red ell, noted the club's<lb/>
help in produeing some critical<lb/>
television advertisements.<lb/>
You're going to use that as the<lb/>
excuse to vote for the package when<lb/>
you wanted to vote against it he<lb/>
said. "1 hope you won't vote that<lb/>
way, but vote for the almost es<lb/>
million people in North Carolina<lb/>
w ho don't want the tax<lb/>
The cigarette tax proposed b<lb/>
Sen. Rachel Gray, D-Guilford,<lb/>
would have raised ?25 million a<lb/>
year by taxing manufacturers 2<lb/>
cents for every pack of cigarette<lb/>
they produce. The current 2-cent<lb/>
pack on a cigarettes sold in the state<lb/>
would have been dropped.<lb/>
Mrs. Gray called her amendment<lb/>
"almost too good to be true<lb/>
because of the money it generates.<lb/>
She said it was tar superior to<lb/>
Hunt's gas tax plan, which she<lb/>
labeled "the most unpopular piece<lb/>
of legislation I have seen in the<lb/>
(ieneral Assembly<lb/>
" I he climate is right to tax tobac-<lb/>
co in North Carolina she said. "It<lb/>
needs to bear its load<lb/>
Eac of th<lb/>
is required to be<lb/>
sale in ea I " ger Sav<lb/>
ally noted m this ad II a- I n we w<lb/>
fer you your choice ot a comparable item <lb/>
?? . same savings or a ramcheck hich will entitle you I<lb/>
Used 'tem at the advertised price within 30 days<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
? "?? : .e Thurs Jun 4<lb/>
. Sat June 6 198 1<lb/>
Copyright 1981<lb/>
Kroger Sav on<lb/>
Quantity Rights Res<lb/>
None Sold to Deaiers<lb/>
Delinquent Payments<lb/>
Cause Supension Of<lb/>
SGA Student Loans<lb/>
k<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Continued trom Page 1<lb/>
Although the loans<lb/>
have been suspended<lb/>
until the fall semester.<lb/>
Nail and Braxton said<lb/>
that the collection pro-<lb/>
cedure would continue.<lb/>
"We expect them to<lb/>
pav the money back<lb/>
Nail said. "We have a<lb/>
small group running up<lb/>
these loans, not paying<lb/>
them back and hurting<lb/>
the rest o t the<lb/>
students<lb/>
"1 don't feel like, as<lb/>
SGA vice president, 1<lb/>
should allow this to go<lb/>
on Braxton com-<lb/>
mented. "There's no<lb/>
reason we would do<lb/>
this unless it was in the<lb/>
best interest of the<lb/>
students. There's too<lb/>
much money out and<lb/>
we need to do<lb/>
something about it.<lb/>
Maybe someone could<lb/>
offer a resolution<lb/>
Braxton said.<lb/>
In the past year, the<lb/>
$25 loans were not ot-<lb/>
tered to the students by<lb/>
the second month in<lb/>
each semester. Signs<lb/>
were placed in the Stu-<lb/>
dent Fund Accounting<lb/>
Office and in the recep-<lb/>
tion area in front of the<lb/>
SGA president's office<lb/>
which notified students<lb/>
that no more loans<lb/>
would be offered for<lb/>
the remainder of the<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
" I he students are<lb/>
not being set ved. 1 hev<lb/>
(the loans) run out by<lb/>
October in the fall and<lb/>
February in the spring.<lb/>
I here's no point in go-<lb/>
ing on with tins until<lb/>
some resolutions arc<lb/>
made Nail said.<lb/>
During Brett<lb/>
Melvm term as SGA<lb/>
president, all debts up<lb/>
until 19 were termed<lb/>
uncollectable and were<lb/>
written off. Until the<lb/>
near $7,000 unpaid<lb/>
loan situation is resoh -<lb/>
ed, the regular collec-<lb/>
tion procedure will con-<lb/>
tinue.<lb/>
Main of these un-<lb/>
paid debts will be writ-<lb/>
ten off sometime in the<lb/>
future also because it<lb/>
would cost more to<lb/>
take the student to<lb/>
court than it would to<lb/>
write off the $25.<lb/>
For those students<lb/>
who will sutter from<lb/>
the suspension of the<lb/>
SGA loans, there is an<lb/>
alternative. The Sarah<lb/>
C lenient Emergency<lb/>
Loan Fund is available<lb/>
through the financial<lb/>
Aid Office for any<lb/>
amount up to $400 if<lb/>
the student qualifies.<lb/>
Nail has said he wil<lb/>
conduct a survey on<lb/>
campus this fall in<lb/>
order to determine<lb/>
whether or not the<lb/>
students want a loan<lb/>
program and if so.<lb/>
what kind of program<lb/>
they want.<lb/>
Until the fall<lb/>
legislature meets and<lb/>
resolves the unpaid<lb/>
loan situation, those<lb/>
students needing loans<lb/>
because ot an emergen-<lb/>
cy should contact the<lb/>
financial aid office.<lb/>
the Fast Carolinian<lb/>
'?<lb/>
One Stop<lb/>
Shopping<lb/>
your Way<lb/>
the Great<lb/>
Outdoors!<lb/>
S C JOHNSON'S<lb/>
J-Wax Kit<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during rne academic<lb/>
peai nd every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the ot<lb/>
t'Ciai newspaper ot East<lb/>
Carolina University owned,<lb/>
operated, and published tor and<lb/>
by the students ot East Carolina<lb/>
Jniversity<lb/>
Subscription Rates<lb/>
Business J3S yearly<lb/>
AH others 125 yearly<lb/>
Second class postage paid at<lb/>
.???nvlle, N C<lb/>
The East Carolinian oftices<lb/>
are located m the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus o ECU,<lb/>
Greenville. N C<lb/>
Telephone 7S7 6366 4347. 6309<lb/>
VANILLA. STRAWBERRY OR<lb/>
CHOCOLATE COUNTRY CLUB<lb/>
Ice Milk<lb/>
PREMIUM BEER<lb/>
Schlitz<lb/>
12-Oz<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
MT DEW<lb/>
DIET PEPSI OR<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
2-Ltr.<lb/>
N R<lb/>
Btl<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
30<lb/>
U S GOVT INSPECTED<lb/>
QUALITY CONTROLLED<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
QfiiAhlx<lb/>
WiTH ROLLS<lb/>
WISHBONE<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
BAGGED<lb/>
foSffiCrS<lb/>
i-<lb/>
TIC OPEN 8 AM TO MIDNIGHT<lb/>
?PEN SUNOAY<lb/>
AM TO 9 PM<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
Phone 756-7031<lb/>
S<lb/>
.<lb/>
;<lb/>
<lb/>
vv<lb/>
Si<lb/>
VI<lb/>
-V<lb/>
JQ<lb/>
<pb facs="00057344_0003"/><lb/>
kUSADE<lb/>
v N.ghttor a<lb/>
?? '?shiphar<lb/>
.wingm the<lb/>
i i istianlite<lb/>
1 MP M<lb/>
?ored by<lb/>
?<lb/>
EMENTS<lb/>
Hurvm ,s<lb/>
I ' t ast<lb/>
r n This<lb/>
rs ,n ao<lb/>
any an<lb/>
"owed<lb/>
's to the<lb/>
Desk<lb/>
D<lb/>
II<lb/>
?LICY<lb/>
temsl<lb/>
ver<lb/>
P<lb/>
n<lb/>
o<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
o<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
SUGG<lb/>
RETAIL<lb/>
Stye iEaat (Earnlfman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins, f,?hiw<lb/>
Jimmy DuPRLH, vanontdno<lb/>
Chuck Foster, o?m ? Deborah Hotai inc v?, ?,??<lb/>
Chris Lkhok, ???, ?f.f,Mrr Wn ham YELVERTON omamor<lb/>
Alison Bartei . p ?n?nm? Steve Bachnfr. mH?w<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
June 3, 19 I<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
SGA Loans<lb/>
Should Funds Be Frozen?<lb/>
Barely into the second month of<lb/>
their terms, SGA President Lester<lb/>
Nail and Vice President Marvin ?<lb/>
Braxton have had to make one of<lb/>
the toughest decisions they are likely<lb/>
to face while in office. They have<lb/>
decided, with Treasurer Kirk little<lb/>
dissenting, to suspend the SGA loan<lb/>
fund until the fall legislature can<lb/>
review the program and reform it.<lb/>
Nail and Braxton voted to sus-<lb/>
pend the program because more<lb/>
than $7,000 worth o loans have<lb/>
gone uncollected since 1977. They<lb/>
felt that the situation called for such<lb/>
decisive and immediate action in<lb/>
order to preclude further losses.<lb/>
Little, on the other hand, felt that<lb/>
the program could be improved<lb/>
while continuing service to students.<lb/>
"There's an old iddish saying?<lb/>
don't throw out the dirty water until<lb/>
you have clean water to replace it<lb/>
lie said.<lb/>
The three officers agree on the<lb/>
goal of the program? to serve<lb/>
students? the hitch has come in<lb/>
deciding the best means by which to<lb/>
achieve this end.<lb/>
They also agreed that there were<lb/>
serious problems with the program<lb/>
as it existed. But how to solve these<lb/>
problems?<lb/>
The question became to suspend<lb/>
the program and allow the<lb/>
legislature to formulate a new pro-<lb/>
gram in the fall or to continue the<lb/>
program while seeking a solution at<lb/>
the same time.<lb/>
Nail and-Braxton felt that little<lb/>
progress was being made toward<lb/>
solving'the program's problems and<lb/>
seemed to I eel that some sort of<lb/>
drastic action was needed to<lb/>
alleviate the situation.<lb/>
Little felt that progress had been<lb/>
made and that further im-<lb/>
provements were on the way. He<lb/>
pointed out that loan forms had<lb/>
finally been "legalized" during spr-<lb/>
ing semester and that penalties<lb/>
could be levied against students<lb/>
delinquent in their payments.<lb/>
In evaluating the points of view.<lb/>
o' Nail, Braxton and Little, it is in-<lb/>
teresting to note their past ties to the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
Little is now in his second year as<lb/>
treausurer, while Nail and Braxton<lb/>
are relative newcomers to the SGA's<lb/>
executive-political arena. Little has<lb/>
been deeply involved in working<lb/>
with the loan program for more<lb/>
than a year and obviously feels that<lb/>
it is hisbaby<lb/>
Braxton and Nail feel no such at-<lb/>
tachment to the program. They feel<lb/>
no sentimental attachment to it that<lb/>
might cloud their judgement, but by<lb/>
the same token, they lack Little's<lb/>
experience ?and feel for the situa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
And perhaps they should have<lb/>
listened a bit more closely to what<lb/>
he had to say. As Little put it, the<lb/>
suspension means that students are<lb/>
not realizing what they should from<lb/>
their student fees.<lb/>
He was also right when he said<lb/>
that improvements have been made<lb/>
in the program in recent years. So<lb/>
was a total suspension really<lb/>
necessary?<lb/>
Probably not. It would have been<lb/>
more sensible to seek a solution<lb/>
while continuing service to students.<lb/>
The money lost in the interim would<lb/>
be minimal in comparison with the<lb/>
good accomplished. SGA loans<lb/>
have been the saving grace for many<lb/>
a student.<lb/>
So, students, next 'time your<lb/>
downtown and about to buy one<lb/>
last be'er, remember that the SGA<lb/>
won't b" there to bail you out at the<lb/>
end of the month.<lb/>
Exams Still Begin<lb/>
After Drop Period<lb/>
Well, the last day to drop a class<lb/>
has come and gone, and students<lb/>
are still awaiting the results of their<lb/>
first test in some classes.<lb/>
Students know that there are few<lb/>
things worse than finding out that<lb/>
you have flunked that crucial first<lb/>
test? after the deadline for dropp-<lb/>
ing has passed.<lb/>
Some professors seem to take<lb/>
morbid pleasure in witholding these<lb/>
results from students until that<lb/>
deadline has faded into obscurity.<lb/>
Others seem unaware that such a<lb/>
day even exists.<lb/>
To both varieties of professors we<lb/>
would say that a little bit of compas-<lb/>
sion and "understanding would be<lb/>
sincerely appreciated. Let's make<lb/>
college a learning experience, not an<lb/>
agonizing one.<lb/>
(dealer<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN <lb/>
Relationship Fosters Resentment<lb/>
By JANE DODGE<lb/>
Role differentiation between students<lb/>
and professors here often creates a tremen-<lb/>
dous gap between the two groups. Some<lb/>
professors treat students as "underlings<lb/>
and the students respond with inward<lb/>
resentment and low morale.<lb/>
Professors wield huge power over the<lb/>
students. The professors are entrusted with<lb/>
this power by virtue of holding a position<lb/>
on the ECU faculty. Most are fair in deal-<lb/>
ing with their students, but there are those<lb/>
few who manipulate their students<lb/>
psychologically and academically. For ex-<lb/>
ample, some professors undermine<lb/>
students by making sarcastic comments in<lb/>
response to legitimate questions from<lb/>
students. They refuse to talk with the<lb/>
students outside of class about assignments<lb/>
or give very vague assignments which are<lb/>
graded subjectively, as many professors<lb/>
will admit. As a result, students of such<lb/>
professors are disillusioned and discourag-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Professors who misuse power may want<lb/>
to examine their motives. Whose interests<lb/>
do they have at heart? the students' or<lb/>
their own?<lb/>
Such professors seem to have a need to<lb/>
gain ego gratification through the<lb/>
manipulation of students. What other ex-<lb/>
planation could there be for such<lb/>
behavior?<lb/>
But students are at a distinct disadvan-<lb/>
tage in such a situation. Because of the role<lb/>
differentiaton or powerful position of the<lb/>
professor, there is little recourse for the<lb/>
students. They must "put up with it<lb/>
On the other hand, there are professors<lb/>
who go out of their way to understand<lb/>
students and their points of view. They<lb/>
treat students as individuals worthy of con-<lb/>
sideration and show appreciation of their<lb/>
efforts. These are the professors who<lb/>
students work beyond the call of duty.<lb/>
They do more than is required because<lb/>
they have been encouraged by their pro-<lb/>
fessors. These teachers are the ones who<lb/>
are true pedagogues.<lb/>
The administration would do well to re-<lb/>
quire students to evaluate professors<lb/>
anonymously at some point in each course,<lb/>
both at the undergraduate and graduate<lb/>
level. Some of the results might be surpris-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Professors might be encouraged to re-<lb/>
evaluate their attitudes and practices.<lb/>
Students might feel that they were being<lb/>
heard and perhaps the role differentiation<lb/>
gap would not be so great.<lb/>
Thus, students' morale and goals would<lb/>
be raised, and professors would see more<lb/>
effort on the part of the students and be<lb/>
pleased as a result.<lb/>
(Jane Dodge is graduate student and has a<lb/>
B.A. in English Jrom ECJU.)<lb/>
New Book Details 'Doing It' Right<lb/>
lenville<lb/>
By DAVID ARMSTRONG<lb/>
Most guys don't go around telling other<lb/>
guys that they're not Doing It right.<lb/>
Michael Castleman does. Wisely,<lb/>
Castleman has elected to forego giving his<lb/>
advice on male sexuality in rowdy bars. In-<lb/>
stead, Castleman, a professional counselor<lb/>
for men with sex-related problems, lays<lb/>
out his humanistic philosophy of<lb/>
"problem-free lovemaking" in the pages<lb/>
of a new book that is refreshingly free of<lb/>
pop psychology cliches.<lb/>
In Sexual Solutions: An Injormation<lb/>
Guide, Castleman does not assume, as do<lb/>
many popular writers on "the war between<lb/>
the sexes that men and women are ir-<lb/>
retrievably at odds. Instead, he works<lb/>
from the premise that people, regardless of<lb/>
gender, want pretty much the same thing<lb/>
out of life: a partner who is warm, attrac-<lb/>
tive and trustworthy. So why isn't it easier<lb/>
to find such a person, one might ask.<lb/>
In Castleman's reckoning, most love<lb/>
and sex snafus are rooted in the way men<lb/>
are brought up in this culture. Bred to be<lb/>
tough and competitive, American men<lb/>
often take one of two extreme approaches<lb/>
in their relationships with women. Either<lb/>
they become what Castleman calls<lb/>
"Caveman brutully using and disregar-<lb/>
ding women, or?marinating in guilt about<lb/>
their supposed sexism, past and<lb/>
present?they turn into "Delivery Boy<lb/>
subordinating their own needs to those of<lb/>
their lovers. Neither extreme takes the<lb/>
place of communication between equals.<lb/>
Castleman balances his descriptions of<lb/>
machismo and its anxiety-ridden opposite<lb/>
(masochismo?) with prescriptions for per-<lb/>
sonal and social change derived from the<lb/>
holistic health movement. He explains<lb/>
deep-breathing exercises and sensual<lb/>
massage designed to counter what he con-<lb/>
siders the male fixation with genital-<lb/>
centered sex. The idea, Castleman submits,<lb/>
is to promote playful, relaxed<lb/>
"whole-body sensuality" as an antidote to<lb/>
quick, compulsive sex.<lb/>
Like other popular sex how-tos, Sexual<lb/>
Solutions includes anatomical sketches and<lb/>
descriptive text on the body, plus a section<lb/>
on popular methods of birth control. This<lb/>
may seem elementary, but in aountry<lb/>
where sex education in the schools is under<lb/>
attack as a sign of moral degeneracy, such<lb/>
basic information cannot be assumed to be<lb/>
common knowledge. The really interesting<lb/>
thing about Castleman's hook, though, is<lb/>
not its wealth of data, but the<lb/>
philosophical vantage point that gives<lb/>
focus to the information.<lb/>
In detailing, for example, the dangers to<lb/>
women of the birth control pill and lUDs,<lb/>
Castleman also describes new, non-<lb/>
invasive forms of contraception such as,<lb/>
"fertility awareness" (not to be confused<lb/>
with the old rhythm method), and urges<lb/>
men to put the condoms they happily<lb/>
threw away when the Pill was invented<lb/>
back in their wallets (not the same as con-<lb/>
doms). That way, he writes, women nd<lb/>
men can share the birth control burden. In<lb/>
a section representative of the mix of<lb/>
serious-and-funny that Castleman employs<lb/>
throughout, he warns of possible cancer-<lb/>
causing agents in colored condoms, shortly<lb/>
after observing that the number of rubbers<lb/>
produced worldwide in 1977, "if placed<lb/>
end-to-end, would circle the equator 13<lb/>
times<lb/>
In discussing male sexual snafus like<lb/>
premature ejaculation and erection pro-<lb/>
blems, Castleman joins psychological in-<lb/>
sights and remedial techniques with a run-<lb/>
down of health and environmental factors<lb/>
that can contribute to such difficulties;<lb/>
high blood pressure, ulcers, heart disease,<lb/>
diabetes, drugs, and the toxic chemicals to<lb/>
which men and women alike are exposed<lb/>
ever more often.<lb/>
Finally, Castleman dissects still-<lb/>
prevalent myths about rape that suggest<lb/>
the victim was just asking for it, and<lb/>
analyzes the stereotyped images of women<lb/>
in hardcore pornography and slick men's<lb/>
magazines as pliant, pleasure-giving<lb/>
machines. "We read little in men's<lb/>
magazines Castleman writes, "about<lb/>
massage, contraception, women's<lb/>
lovemaking preferences, relationship pro-<lb/>
blemsor suggestions for working them<lb/>
out. We never read anything about sexual<lb/>
assaultbecause it would inject a jarring<lb/>
note of reality into the daydream world the<lb/>
men's magazines create<lb/>
In Sexual Solutions, Michael Castleman<lb/>
does a thorough job of replacing<lb/>
daydreams with reality, and dominance-<lb/>
submission rigidity with reciprocity. As he<lb/>
put it, "Problem-free lovemaking means<lb/>
that nobody gets screwed<lb/>
r Campus Forum<lb/>
Education The Key<lb/>
I have been a student at E.C.U. for<lb/>
two and a half years and I have become<lb/>
increasingly incredulous as well as<lb/>
disgusted at the attitude of the majority<lb/>
of students on this campus. The general<lb/>
student population is in college not, as I<lb/>
had assumed, to get an education, but<lb/>
only to get a degree in as short a time as<lb/>
possible in order to get a job making<lb/>
"good" money.<lb/>
Now, as someone once pointed out to<lb/>
me, all jobs pay "good" money; some<lb/>
just pay more good money than others.<lb/>
A brick layer on the average, makes<lb/>
more good money in a year than the re-<lb/>
cent college grad. But how does one en-<lb/>
joy all that good money if one is not<lb/>
happy in his career, or if one does not<lb/>
have the education to appreciate the<lb/>
things that money can buy.<lb/>
Even the aBvisors seem to advocate<lb/>
taking as few courses in as short a time<lb/>
as possible in order to graduate. I<lb/>
wanted to take an extra social science<lb/>
course-my advisor said, "Why? You<lb/>
don't need it for your major<lb/>
"1 know I responded. "But t need it<lb/>
for my education ? ?<lb/>
I, for one, refuse to let my greed and<lb/>
impatience rob me of a good education.<lb/>
KATHARINE KIMBERLY<lb/>
Junior, English<lb/>
Loans Suspended<lb/>
Due to the amount of money lost<lb/>
because of the large number of students<lb/>
who have refused to pay back their<lb/>
loans, we have been forced to temporari-<lb/>
ly suspend all loans made by the Student<lb/>
Government Association.<lb/>
Hopefully this fall, a better loan pro,<lb/>
gram with a more efficient collection<lb/>
procedure can be established.<lb/>
Any suggestions are welcome.<lb/>
LESTER NAIL<lb/>
SGA President<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classijication, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature oj the authorfs).<lb/>
.?m.? ?, <lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057344_0004"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JUNt 3. 1981<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
'Four Seasons'<lb/>
Alda, Burnett Head Cast<lb/>
By KATHY WFYLKR<lb/>
M?ff Wrilff<lb/>
Some folks have a strange desire to mix their pleasure<lb/>
with pain. One way of doing this is to take vacations<lb/>
with your friends, particularly if you and your friends<lb/>
come in couples.<lb/>
If you have ever wondered about the wisdom (or lack<lb/>
of it) in vacationing with non-family persons, "The<lb/>
Four Seasons now playing at the Buccaneer theatre in<lb/>
Greenville, will shed a great deal of light on the kinds of<lb/>
situations that can arise on such "pleasure" trips.<lb/>
Written and directed by Alan Alda, "The Four<lb/>
Seasons" is much like other pictures involving Alda in<lb/>
its enjoyability. Go expecting a good time, for that's<lb/>
what you'll have, in spite of the fact that the movie's<lb/>
characters don't always have barrel of fun.<lb/>
"The Four Seasons" chronicles the vacation adven-<lb/>
tures of three married couples, played against the<lb/>
backdrop of the changing seasons of the year. The<lb/>
jumps from season to season are accomplished<lb/>
smoothly, and, in general, the scenes flow well<lb/>
evidence of Alda's careful direction.<lb/>
The beautiful scenery, however, is dwarfed by an ex-<lb/>
cellent script and talented actors. The Burroughs,<lb/>
Calahans, and Zimmers become real, funny, moving,<lb/>
loveable people, thanks to the expertise of Alda's<lb/>
writing and a convincing cast.<lb/>
Alan Alda and Carol Burnett, lovers some year- ago<lb/>
in the TV movie "6 Rnis Ri Vu are together once<lb/>
again as stable married Jack and Kate Burroughs, and<lb/>
convey the warmth and closeness acquired through the<lb/>
weathering of countless ups and downs together.<lb/>
Nick and Anne Calahan. portrayed by Len Cariou<lb/>
(recently seen on Broadway in "Sweeney Todd") and<lb/>
Sandy Dennis, are not so fortunate. After twenty-one<lb/>
years together, successful real estate man Nick seeks ex-<lb/>
citement, divorces compulsive, complacent Anne, and,<lb/>
by the end of the film, remarries a youthful curvaceous<lb/>
blonde, beautifully played by Beth Armstrong.<lb/>
Volatile is the word for Claudia and Danny Zimmer's<lb/>
marriage. Claudia, a thoroughly likeable character por-<lb/>
trayed by Rita Moreno, is a hot-tempered Italian and<lb/>
reminds us of it at every opportunity. Portly Danny,<lb/>
portrayed by veteran Jack Weston, is a semi-paranoid<lb/>
dentist with a secret fear of death that he shares with us<lb/>
near the film's end. Together, the couple yell and bicker<lb/>
a lot, but their genuine love and compatability shine<lb/>
through.<lb/>
It also bears mentioning that Alda turned "The Four<lb/>
Seasons" into a real family picture. Two Alda<lb/>
daughters have small parts in the film and Arlene Alda<lb/>
(Mrs. Alda) contributed a series of vegetable<lb/>
photographs.<lb/>
The film is concerned with what happens when six<lb/>
adults, all friends, find themselves in a car, yacht or ski<lb/>
lodge together. Resentment and jealousy can surface,<lb/>
tensions must be faced-arguments are to be expected.<lb/>
As problem after problem arises, and is conquered,<lb/>
Claudia (Rita Moreno) quips, "I wonder what other<lb/>
people do on their vacations?" At the film's end, the six<lb/>
friends realize that no matter how much they often an-<lb/>
noy each other, being together is still very special and<lb/>
important.<lb/>
One final word of warning: "The Four Seasons"<lb/>
should be requited viewing for any couple considering a<lb/>
shared vacation with their friends!<lb/>
Carol Burnett and Alan Alda star in "The Four Seasor " currently playing at the Buccaneer Theatre.<lb/>
Graffiti: Leaving Subways For Art Galleries<lb/>
By ED LION<lb/>
1 IM Krporit'<lb/>
NEW YORK. L'PI Even as the<lb/>
city transit system spend, a sizable<lb/>
fortune each year to wipe ofl graf-<lb/>
fiti from the ubuaw a tew of New<lb/>
York's better known "graffiti ar-<lb/>
tists" are gaining acceptance in the<lb/>
art world ? and earning hundreds<lb/>
of dollars for their works.<lb/>
"It's really beginning to hap-<lb/>
pen said Futura 2000, a 25 year<lb/>
old graffiti writer who prefers to go<lb/>
by his "tag" graffiti name rather<lb/>
than his real name ? both tor pro-<lb/>
fessional reasons and possible legal<lb/>
ones<lb/>
"I have two works hanging on<lb/>
Park Avenue and one on Sutton<lb/>
(Mace. People are beginning to see<lb/>
that graffiti is legitimate art<lb/>
Works by Futura, a native New<lb/>
Yorker living near Spanish Harlem<lb/>
and other "graffiti artists" recently<lb/>
were featured at a fashionable Soho<lb/>
art gallery that had on display the<lb/>
graffiti artists tools ? spray cans,<lb/>
different sized nozzles for variation<lb/>
colored markers and for the well<lb/>
equipped skeleton keys to subway<lb/>
cars.<lb/>
"In the beginning, 1 did it to get<lb/>
mv name in the subwav cars ? it<lb/>
was something to do to strike out<lb/>
against the establishment and gam<lb/>
respect from said Frederick<lb/>
Brathwaite. 23, of Brooklyn whose<lb/>
"tag" of "Fab Five Freddie" has<lb/>
been seen by thousands of subwav<lb/>
riders across the city. "But now<lb/>
we're becoming more refined and<lb/>
some of our 'pieces' are really major<lb/>
works of art. Interest is basically in<lb/>
Europe<lb/>
Brathwaite has had his graffiti<lb/>
based works including scrawlings oi<lb/>
his "tag" and the word "sex"<lb/>
shown ? and sold ? in an Italian<lb/>
art gallery.<lb/>
Both Brathwaite and Futura, who<lb/>
have never been caught in their nine<lb/>
years each ot graffiti writing say<lb/>
they've alreadv netted about S5,(XX)<lb/>
each from their works.<lb/>
Graffiti: Art<lb/>
And Nuisance<lb/>
Futura said he recentlv sold a<lb/>
work to a collector for SI. 100 and<lb/>
one of Brathwaite's pieces is up for<lb/>
auction at the fashionable Sotheby<lb/>
Park Bernet gallery next month ?<lb/>
with a price estimate given b a<lb/>
Sotheby expert at up to S700. But<lb/>
despite some recognition in the art<lb/>
world the operators of the citv's<lb/>
subways don't think too highly of<lb/>
the graffiti. "If that constitutes art,<lb/>
then the way you have defined art is<lb/>
meaningless said Robert Huber, a<lb/>
spokesman for the New York City<lb/>
Transit Authority, which spends at<lb/>
least $5 million a year removing<lb/>
graffiti from subway cars and sta-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"Based on letters from riders,<lb/>
cthere is a ubiquitous contempt for<lb/>
graffiti. It falls in the category oi<lb/>
mental abuse and nuisance ? even<lb/>
beyond. You can't read a subway<lb/>
map anymore.<lb/>
"We'd rather see it in an art<lb/>
gailery than the train. But 'hen who<lb/>
would go to the gallery?"<lb/>
However, Steve Mass, owner of<lb/>
the Mudd C lub gallery that ran the<lb/>
recent show said the exhibition drew<lb/>
much interest. But he conceded the<lb/>
average subway rider does not ap-<lb/>
preciate graffiti.<lb/>
"It's new and people don't<lb/>
understand it Mass sa'j, walking<lb/>
through his gallery that featured<lb/>
"tag" names on the walls and<lb/>
photographs of mural emblazoned<lb/>
subway cars. "They just want an<lb/>
antiseptic environment in their sub-<lb/>
ways. But people also screamed at<lb/>
Picasso and the Impressionist<lb/>
painters, too<lb/>
Human Nature Is Revealed<lb/>
In America's Grocery Stores<lb/>
'Cool Hand Luke' Here Tonight<lb/>
Paul Newman stars in "Cool Hand Luke" tonight at 9 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall's Hendrix Theatre. On Monday, June 8, "Attack of<lb/>
the Killer Tomatoes" will he shown in Hendrix. All summer films<lb/>
are sponsored by the Student I nion Films Committee. Admission<lb/>
is by II) and Activity Card or MSC Membership.<lb/>
Tight Jeans Can Be<lb/>
Big Summer Hazard<lb/>
Tight jeans may cause vaginitis, a<lb/>
health hazard affecting one out of<lb/>
five women. And summertime in-<lb/>
creases the hazard.<lb/>
Hot weather, wet bathing suits,<lb/>
pantyhose, tight jeans, and syn-<lb/>
thetic underpants that don't<lb/>
"breathe" all provide the in-<lb/>
cubating environment that causes<lb/>
vaginitis or inflammation of the<lb/>
vagina.<lb/>
About half the cases of vaginitis<lb/>
are caused by monilia, a yeast infec-<lb/>
tion, with symptoms of itching, bur-<lb/>
ning, and abnormal discharge.<lb/>
Just in time for the vaginitis<lb/>
season is a new, quick, treatment<lb/>
for monilia. Treatment has been cut<lb/>
from 14to 7now to 3 days as a<lb/>
result of the FDA's approval of<lb/>
Mycelex-G 3-day therapy.<lb/>
This is especially helpful for the<lb/>
average woman who is apt to<lb/>
discontinue treatment when the<lb/>
symptoms subside, usually within<lb/>
three days, but before the infection<lb/>
is eliminated.<lb/>
The abbreviated treatment calls<lb/>
for insertion in the vagina of two<lb/>
100 mg. Mycelex-G clotrimazole<lb/>
tablets for three consecutive days.<lb/>
With vaginitis so prevalent and<lb/>
the need for quick treatment in de-<lb/>
mand, it finally seems like science<lb/>
has come up with a treatment that is<lb/>
just what the patient has ordered.<lb/>
Other common causes of vaginitis<lb/>
include sexual contact, towels and<lb/>
washrags used by others, vitamin<lb/>
and diet deficiencies that weaken<lb/>
resistance, prolonged use of an-<lb/>
tibiotic and steroid medica-<lb/>
tions?like birth control pills?ir-<lb/>
ritating douches, and diabetes.<lb/>
By DAVID NORRIS<lb/>
Assistant teiiiurrs Fdtior<lb/>
Like many of the familiar features of American life, grocery stores are<lb/>
pretty much the same all over. Perhaps the biggest differences between<lb/>
individual stores is in their front doors: some have automatic doors, and<lb/>
others have doors you have to open yourself.<lb/>
When 1 was a kid. I really hated having to go along to the grocery store<lb/>
while my mom was shopping. It was especially bad after I got too old to<lb/>
ride in the shopping cart and had to hike all over the store. Somehow,<lb/>
shelves of produce and canned goods just don't capture a child's interest.<lb/>
I used to wish that I was grown up so that 1 wouldn't have to keep go-<lb/>
ing to the supermarket every Friday. The trouble is. being grown up (or<lb/>
at least, sort of grown up) does not exempt one from having to go<lb/>
grocery shopping. In fact, it's worse, since I have to pay for them now.<lb/>
Supermarkets have some of the world's most elaborate air condition-<lb/>
ing, judging by their Arctic temperatures at this time of year. (It's a good<lb/>
thing, I suppose, since nobody likes warm lettuce and melted frozen<lb/>
food.) Besides, the cold temperature gives you a chance to wear your<lb/>
winter coats in June without collapsing from the heat.<lb/>
After getting to the grocery store and putting on a jacket, the next<lb/>
thing to do is to find a shopping cart, preferably one with four wheels.<lb/>
Next, the obstacle race begins. First, you have to manuever the cart<lb/>
past the checkout counter and the mob of people clustered around them.<lb/>
Many passageways near the front of stores are not much wider th?.n a<lb/>
shopping cart, so nagivation can get tricky.<lb/>
Now the thing to do is to pick an aisle and browse through it. Some<lb/>
aisles will have puzzling titles like: "Aisle 7: Pickles, Deodorants, etc<lb/>
others will have less original headings like "Produce<lb/>
The produce section is often one of the more unpredictable areas of a<lb/>
supermarket. Unlike potato chips and pretzels, vegetables and things are<lb/>
sometimes out of season when you want them. The quality varies<lb/>
sometimes, too. You can find really scraggly-looking lettuce one week<lb/>
and really nice, top-quality lettuce the next, for example.<lb/>
The snack food section, by contrast, is pretty consistent. Snacks never<lb/>
go out of season, since pretzels, corn chips, etc are easily grown in fac-<lb/>
tories. They are put in nice, clean plastic bags, unlike vegetables which<lb/>
often lie in a big pile with dirt on them. The candy section can be<lb/>
L?orOG lftovj-r ConeG? Tne Hggg lA)?y<lb/>
located either bv its sign or the sound of little kids being dragged along<lb/>
behind harried mothers, yelling "I want that I want that! I want that<lb/>
at each different kind of candv. (When I was a kid, they'd knock a knot<lb/>
on my head if I acted like that in public.)<lb/>
Kids really liven up a trip to the grocery store. They add suspense by<lb/>
running around all over the place, making more obstacles in the crowded<lb/>
aisles to have to dodge around with the cart. They add pathos when they<lb/>
cry and throw tantrums on the floor because their mom won't buy them<lb/>
a "Klingon Blaster Ray Gun" or something like teat.<lb/>
The last batch of stuff to buy in the store is contained in the little<lb/>
shelves crowded around the checkout counter. Reading material assaults<lb/>
the eye ("Flying Saucer Kidnaps 'Chips' Star!Fantastic Doughnut Diet <lb/>
Lose Eight Pounds A Day! Hidden Heartbreaks of 'Loveboat' Cast)<lb/>
in the tabloid newspaper racks. Into another shelf is crammed every<lb/>
possible kind of candy and crackers.<lb/>
Sometimes, the lines at the checkout counter can be interminably long.<lb/>
(That's how I'm so familiar with the headline style of those screaming<lb/>
tabloids.) After reading the covers of The National This and the Mid-<lb/>
night That, there are still a couple of things to do to pass the time.<lb/>
One is to add up what the groceries cost, but that's not much fun.<lb/>
Usually watching the rich variety of customers trapped in the line with<lb/>
you is more worthwhile.<lb/>
There is usually a woman shopping for her large family, with a cart pil-<lb/>
ed precariously with tons of provisions. If you get behind her in line,<lb/>
you'll be there awhile.<lb/>
You might see the host of a spaghetti dinner, frantically buying the last<lb/>
ingredients before the ravenous guests arrive.<lb/>
The ones buying the sixpack of beer are probably college students.<lb/>
The father cooking for the kids while Mom is out of tow n is most like-<lb/>
ly buying another couple of packs of hot dogs.<lb/>
Last of all, you meet the checkout clerk, who has to put up with a<lb/>
never-ending parade of customers, many of whom are of the obnoxious<lb/>
variety. (I wrote about kids cutting up in the store, but there are plenty of<lb/>
adults who are much worse.)<lb/>
Being in the checkout line brings up one thing about shopping that's<lb/>
nicer now that when I was a kid: I can buy all the candy I want. It's just<lb/>
too bad that I don't like candv as much as I used to.<lb/>
gy 9jo Aoaus<lb/>
Trr? Qr? 0 TH?TA6JE<lb/>
COols fH? ?ooL.<lb/>
rrWC I W,s)0OvSaU?'O<lb/>
'<lb/>
 <lb/>
B<lb/>
I lie<lb/>
gold, i<lb/>
and t<lb/>
Cai<lb/>
Rennet<lb/>
speak <lb/>
car<lb/>
v? e<lb/>
deservel<lb/>
vear a'<lb/>
a B<lb/>
numbe<lb/>
1<lb/>
tion,<lb/>
ur<lb/>
"1 a<lb/>
hav<lb/>
fere<lb/>
he<lb/>
fid<lb/>
fer? <lb/>
hor<lb/>
po<lb/>
i<lb/>
det I<lb/>
agr<lb/>
ath<lb/>
an<lb/>
that pr<lb/>
tion thai<lb/>
it. 1<lb/>
sector<lb/>
karr<lb/>
from th<lb/>
he -<lb/>
the late<lb/>
vear.<lb/>
" I<lb/>
executii<lb/>
place w<lb/>
tuallv :<lb/>
ticular ;<lb/>
this yeai<lb/>
of<lb/>
details<lb/>
T.<lb/>
athletics<lb/>
d i<lb/>
IJ<lb/>
Aftthoi<lb/>
native<lb/>
<pb facs="00057344_0005"/><lb/>
at re<lb/>
list<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EASTC AROL IN1AN<lb/>
'Very Exciting Here'<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JUNE 3. 1981<lb/>
Dr. Ken Karr A Year Later<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Spnrl, tdiior<lb/>
1 he office, covered in purple and<lb/>
gold, is vast, but the smile is warm<lb/>
and the handshake firm. East<lb/>
Carolina Director of Athletics Dr.<lb/>
Kenneth Karr, dressed casually,<lb/>
speaks in a stern tone that seems to<lb/>
capture the room and its listener.<lb/>
When asked what grade he<lb/>
deserved after his first scholastic<lb/>
ear at ECU, Dr. Karr quicklv says<lb/>
a B He explains. "I set out a<lb/>
number of things that I wished to<lb/>
accomplish in the first year and like<lb/>
is so often the case in administra-<lb/>
tion, you're not able to close on all<lb/>
vour projects as swiftly as you<lb/>
Ould like.<lb/>
"1 am ver disappointed that we<lb/>
ive not been able to finalize our<lb/>
conference negotiations. That's one<lb/>
o the things I wanted. I'm verv con-<lb/>
fident we will be able to get our con-<lb/>
ference together in the next,<lb/>
hopefully, 18 months or sooner if<lb/>
possible<lb/>
"Another concern is that we<lb/>
definitely have to develop an<lb/>
agressive stance on improving our<lb/>
athletic facilities. We have need for<lb/>
an athletic support building, and<lb/>
that project needs a lot more atten-<lb/>
tion than we have been able to give<lb/>
it. It will be funded from the private<lb/>
sector<lb/>
karr arrived in Greenville on<lb/>
August 1, 1980. onlv a month away<lb/>
from the new football season. This.<lb/>
he says, caused some pressure due to<lb/>
the late start he had on the academic<lb/>
scar.<lb/>
"There's so much planning and<lb/>
execution o details that has to take<lb/>
place well in advance of what ac-<lb/>
tually transpires in any one par-<lb/>
ticular academic year that hopefully<lb/>
this vear we will do a much better<lb/>
job of coping with some of these<lb/>
details he says.<lb/>
The top priority for East Carolina<lb/>
athletics, Karr says, is to keep a<lb/>
nood relationship with North<lb/>
Carolina. N.C. State, Duke and<lb/>
Wake Forest. "We must always<lb/>
keep that high on our list. Unfor-<lb/>
tunatelv, for us, what may be high<lb/>
on our list might not be high on<lb/>
their list of priorities. So, we're go-<lb/>
ing to have to continue to agressive-<lb/>
lv pursue that and compete with<lb/>
them "That seems very ironic that<lb/>
one defeat could trigger this sort of<lb/>
over-reaction. But when you're<lb/>
dealing with human emotions, you<lb/>
don't know what decisions are emo-<lb/>
tional or irrational<lb/>
Karr says, along with many ECU<lb/>
supporters, that the UNC situation<lb/>
is very "frustrating. But you to look<lb/>
at it from their particular position.<lb/>
Thev have eventually reached a<lb/>
point where they think East<lb/>
Carolina is getting too strong, and<lb/>
they question the wisdom of making<lb/>
their program available to us. It is a<lb/>
very selfish instinct they are ex-<lb/>
hibiting<lb/>
The situation with N.C. State is<lb/>
different though, Karr suggests.<lb/>
"We have exchanged dates with<lb/>
them through about 1990. That rela-<lb/>
tionship seems to be very strong. We<lb/>
continue to compete with all these<lb/>
institutions in women's sports<lb/>
The upcoming football season,<lb/>
which includes powerful Miami-<lb/>
Florida. West Virginia and Toledo<lb/>
is a step in the right direction for<lb/>
upgrading ECU's athletic program,<lb/>
Karr says. The addition of the<lb/>
University o Missouri in the future<lb/>
doesn't hurt either.<lb/>
"1 think our goal says Karr "is<lb/>
to be accepted as a member of the<lb/>
College Football Association by -<lb/>
1985. which is a select group of the<lb/>
top 80 schools in Division 1 To I<lb/>
qualify, you have to play six of your<lb/>
11 games against members of this<lb/>
group. This past season, we played<lb/>
six. Next vear, we'll probably have<lb/>
five on our schedule<lb/>
The possibility of a conference,<lb/>
with possible candidates George<lb/>
Mason, Navy, UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
Dr. Ken Karr<lb/>
and Old Dominion, is for basketball<lb/>
and five other sports, Karr says.<lb/>
Football will remain an indepen-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Some given reasons schools won't<lb/>
play football in Greenville is<lb/>
because of Ficklen Stadium's 35,000<lb/>
seating capacity. On the possibility<lb/>
of expanding so some of these<lb/>
"name" schools will come here,<lb/>
Karr says: "Your get caught up in<lb/>
which comes first, the chicken or the<lb/>
egg-<lb/>
"First of all, the friends, tans and<lb/>
alumni of eastern North Carolina<lb/>
have to show a willingness to buy<lb/>
tickets at Ficklen Stadium and sup-<lb/>
port the Pirates, no matter who we<lb/>
play. When we start showing the<lb/>
ability to follow our football team<lb/>
in Greenville, not at Chapel Hill or<lb/>
Raleigh or Durham, but in Green-<lb/>
ville, we'll think of it.<lb/>
"When we show that kind of<lb/>
fierce loyalty and dedication and<lb/>
willingness to pay the price, then we<lb/>
can go the next step and expand the<lb/>
stadium and attempt to get 50,000<lb/>
people in the stands for the most at-<lb/>
tractive people we can put in there<lb/>
Karr said that last year's crowds<lb/>
were "disappointing" but his<lb/>
department would take responsibili-<lb/>
ty for that. "We must do a better<lb/>
job in marketing our particulat pro-<lb/>
duct he says.<lb/>
One big change in the structure of<lb/>
the football program next season<lb/>
will be that of a ticket distrbution<lb/>
plan, a plan in which students will<lb/>
pick up their tickets for .heir<lb/>
designated sections. This is unlike<lb/>
the past in which students could sit<lb/>
where thev pleased in the North<lb/>
Stands while showing only their<lb/>
identification card.<lb/>
Karr believes the success of this<lb/>
program lies in the hands o the<lb/>
ECU students. "They will have to<lb/>
plan ahead in getting their tickets<lb/>
Karr says "and not leave everything<lb/>
until 6:45 on Saturday night. 1 think<lb/>
once the students have the ex<lb/>
perience of coming to the game with<lb/>
a hard ticket in hand, it will be a<lb/>
very positive experience<lb/>
Students will be seated in the<lb/>
north stands in section 21-26. This<lb/>
change was brought about to pre-<lb/>
vent hassles for students, such as<lb/>
been the case in the past when they<lb/>
had to wait in long lines on game<lb/>
day to enter the stadium. The plan<lb/>
was finalied by Karr in order to br-<lb/>
ing more reveue in the athletic<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Karr said he was quite happy with<lb/>
the resurgence of the East Carolina<lb/>
women's athletic program, especial-<lb/>
ly basketball and soft ball. "Those<lb/>
two programs had outstanding<lb/>
records this year, and it's a real<lb/>
pleasure to have a couple of teams<lb/>
out of your program that can really<lb/>
be catalysts and leaders for you.<lb/>
"We should also note that these<lb/>
two programs have been blessed<lb/>
with very adequate funds.<lb/>
Everybody is doing a good job in<lb/>
the women's program, but some<lb/>
programs are doing better than<lb/>
others<lb/>
Karr was under fire this year for<lb/>
cutting wrestling, gymnastics and<lb/>
field hockey from the athletic pro-<lb/>
gram because of economic reasons,<lb/>
this, he says, will become more<lb/>
,ommon in other institutions. "All<lb/>
over the nation, the non-revenue<lb/>
sports are in jeopardy to a degree,<lb/>
but I think that most schools are go-<lb/>
ing to streamline their programs<lb/>
down to eight sports for women and<lb/>
eight sports for men<lb/>
Karr says he is very pleased to be<lb/>
in the Greenville area. "The people<lb/>
here are very warm. As a group.<lb/>
thev all wani very much for Pirate<lb/>
athletics to be verv successful. It's<lb/>
going to be verv exciting here.<lb/>
We've got a lot of good things<lb/>
ahead of us<lb/>
Collins Picked By New England<lb/>
Leaves For Camp In Six Weeks<lb/>
Anthony<lb/>
native is<lb/>
By CHRIS HOI .OMAN<lb/>
ssi,l?nl NporlN tdilor<lb/>
Former Pirate football star An-<lb/>
thony Collins has just about ex-<lb/>
perienced it all while playing runn-<lb/>
ing back for the Purple and Gold<lb/>
the last four years. The speedy back<lb/>
from Penn Yan. New York, has<lb/>
been involved in great victories and<lb/>
disheartening defeats.<lb/>
But now, however, Collins life<lb/>
will under go a drastic change. In<lb/>
April he was drafted by the New<lb/>
England Patriots of the National<lb/>
Football League in the second<lb/>
round. For Collins, a chance to play<lb/>
pro ball was lode a dream come<lb/>
true.<lb/>
"1 was praying that I would be<lb/>
drafted in one of the early rounds,<lb/>
but I never suspected that 1 might go<lb/>
to New EnglandCollins said.<lb/>
"Things really worked out mice for<lb/>
me because Penn Yan is only about<lb/>
five hours from Foxboro<lb/>
Massachusetts (Where the Patriots<lb/>
are based), and that's a lot closer to<lb/>
home than ECU was<lb/>
Don't take Collins seriously,<lb/>
though, because as he will tell<lb/>
anyone his experiences at ECU were<lb/>
good ones.<lb/>
"If 1 had it to do all over again 1<lb/>
would still come to East Carolina<lb/>
Collins stated. "1 had signed a<lb/>
rtegional letter of intent to atend the<lb/>
University of Florida but after my<lb/>
last visit to ECU behind him Collins<lb/>
must turn his attention to pro foot-<lb/>
ball.<lb/>
"So far I have been lifting<lb/>
weights three times a week and run-<lb/>
ning to get ready for fall football<lb/>
camp Collins said. "The team<lb/>
had a mini-camp on May 10 and we<lb/>
ran a few plays and were timed in<lb/>
the forty. This gave me an idea of<lb/>
what the team expects of me<lb/>
As far as competition on the<lb/>
 Patriot team, Collins will most like-<lb/>
ly split time at the running back<lb/>
position with former Notre Dame<lb/>
great Vegas Ferguson. Collins is<lb/>
also expected to be a kickoff return<lb/>
man, a duty that he was nationally<lb/>
Collins romps for yardage against Wake Forest. The New York ranked in.<lb/>
Comns rompsiw r ? prepare tor the up-<lb/>
preparing for training camp. y 6<lb/>
coming tootball season, Collins has<lb/>
not ignored mental preparation as a<lb/>
means to better himself on the play-<lb/>
ing field. Collins got the advice of<lb/>
two former Pirate greats now play-<lb/>
ing pro football, Eddie Hicks and<lb/>
Zack Valentine.<lb/>
"1 talked to Zack and Eddie and<lb/>
they told me something about the<lb/>
blocking and pass-push schemes for<lb/>
the pro set offense, "Collins said.<lb/>
"Knowing things like that will help<lb/>
me a great deal later on<lb/>
Collins feels that he has a lot of<lb/>
people to thank for what he has ac-<lb/>
complished the last four years, but<lb/>
one person in peticular stands out in<lb/>
hes mind as being a great influence<lb/>
on him.<lb/>
"My brother Morns influenced<lb/>
me more than anybody else, " Col-<lb/>
lins explained. "He played college<lb/>
ball at Hudson Valley College (a<lb/>
Division 111 power) and later played<lb/>
some semi-pro ball with a team in<lb/>
Buffalo. Everyone called him<lb/>
"Moose" Collins.<lb/>
In six weeks Collins will be leav-<lb/>
ing East Carolina to start his pro<lb/>
career with the Patriots, but he will<lb/>
leave an impressive set of records<lb/>
for future Pirate players to shoot<lb/>
for.<lb/>
Collins' accomplishments for<lb/>
the past season are well<lb/>
documented. Though he finished<lb/>
sixth in the nation in kickoff<lb/>
returns with an average of 26.8<lb/>
yards per return, Collins led the<lb/>
nation in kickoff return yardage<lb/>
with 990 yards.<lb/>
He also ranked tenth national-<lb/>
ly in all-purpose running, averag-<lb/>
ing 146.5 yards per game. This<lb/>
figure put him ahead of such<lb/>
"big names" as Freemon<lb/>
McNeill of UCLA and Jarvis<lb/>
Redwine of Nebraska.<lb/>
Twice the darting halfback<lb/>
returned kickoffs for<lb/>
touchdowns, for 100 yards<lb/>
against nationally-ranked Florida<lb/>
State and for 97 against arch-<lb/>
rival N.C. State.<lb/>
Collins had what many con-<lb/>
sidered an off year running the<lb/>
football from scrimmage, gaining<lb/>
S()3 yards after scamping for<lb/>
1,130 in 1979.<lb/>
v XIiJ!ffi8&amp;8i<lb/>
Collins scores in last season's opening route of Duke<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
at Wallace Wade<lb/>
<lb/>
, i<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057344_0006"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
I HI t AS1 lAROl INIAN<lb/>
June i. is?M<lb/>
?V<lb/>
<lb/>
Intramurals Offer Many<lb/>
Ways To Pass Summer<lb/>
Where are all of our aid in-<lb/>
tramural participants tins summer?<lb/>
Are you all too busy to take one<lb/>
hour out of your busy schedule, one<lb/>
or two days a week, for some fun<lb/>
and exercise? This is iust a reminder<lb/>
for you to get fired up, and par<lb/>
ticipate rather than spectate!<lb/>
The Department of Intramural<lb/>
Recrewational Services is ottering a<lb/>
wide variety ot opportunities foi<lb/>
sou to become involved in your<lb/>
favorite pasttime. Whether it be ex-<lb/>
ercise and weight control classes 01 a<lb/>
putt-putt tournament, we have it<lb/>
all! So look for the yellow in-<lb/>
tramural fliers, and the mam<lb/>
posters that have been put up<lb/>
around campus to become more<lb/>
aware of what's happening in in-<lb/>
tramurals this summer. Or better<lb/>
yet, drop by the oft ice in 2()4<lb/>
Memorial Gvm, and fill out a rostei<lb/>
form for one or mote of our main<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
JOGGING AND CONDI 1 IONING<lb/>
Each Tuesdav and Thursda) bet-<lb/>
ween 6-7 p.m. the ECU Intramural<lb/>
Services Department is sponsoring a<lb/>
conditioning class. The class is<lb/>
designed to teach the basic tun-<lb/>
damentals involved in running, such<lb/>
as the proper diet, warm-up exer-<lb/>
cises, shoes and running techniques.<lb/>
We would like to invite all run-<lb/>
ners to come out no matter youi<lb/>
skill level or condition. I here will he<lb/>
time set aside for those wishing to<lb/>
iog and information available in-<lb/>
dicating different courses and trails<lb/>
around Greenville on which to run.<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
So whether your goal is to lose<lb/>
weight, learn more about running,<lb/>
get in shape or just have fun, come<lb/>
on out and join us. Share the<lb/>
positive experience that running can<lb/>
offer.<lb/>
THRU ON-THREE BASKETBALL<lb/>
Entries are now being accepted at<lb/>
the ECU 1M office for three-on-<lb/>
three basketball. Participants can<lb/>
sign-up through June 5th at 5 p.m.<lb/>
A meeting for participants will be<lb/>
held on June 8th at 6 p.m. in<lb/>
Memorial Gym, room 104.<lb/>
INFORMAL RECREATION<lb/>
Archery Range: Shooting range<lb/>
located at the bottom of College<lb/>
Hill across 10th Street.<lb/>
College Hill Complex: Outdoor<lb/>
facility located by Tyler Dorm for<lb/>
volleyball, badminton, horseshoes<lb/>
and basketball.<lb/>
Golf Driving Range: Located at<lb/>
rear of Allied Health (Belk)<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Memorial Gym: Swimming pool,<lb/>
weight room: dance and exercise<lb/>
room open specified hours for<lb/>
recreational opportunities.<lb/>
lennis Courts: Located behind<lb/>
College Hill area and at Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
Dillon Resigns<lb/>
ECU Position<lb/>
East Carolina head<lb/>
softball and volleyball<lb/>
coach Alita Dillon has<lb/>
resigned her position<lb/>
with the university and<lb/>
will head to Texas in<lb/>
July.<lb/>
Dillon will be return-<lb/>
ing to her home state<lb/>
with her husband Herb.<lb/>
He has been named<lb/>
assistant basketball<lb/>
coach at North Texas<lb/>
State University in<lb/>
Denton. He will serve<lb/>
under Mean Green<lb/>
head coach Bill<lb/>
Blakeley.<lb/>
Mrs. Dillon is hoping<lb/>
to find a coaching job<lb/>
in the Denton area.<lb/>
Dillon was responsi-<lb/>
ble for starting the<lb/>
Lady Pirate softball<lb/>
program and building<lb/>
the team into a national<lb/>
power. Her four year<lb/>
record at ECU is<lb/>
118-40. In 1980 the<lb/>
Lady Pirates finished<lb/>
37-5 and advanced to<lb/>
the AIAW Regional<lb/>
and came away as the<lb/>
regional champion, the<lb/>
furthest the team could<lb/>
go since there was no<lb/>
national tournament.<lb/>
This past season the<lb/>
Lady Pirates were<lb/>
ranked number one in<lb/>
the country most of the<lb/>
season and finished<lb/>
third in the national<lb/>
tournament. The<lb/>
team's final record was<lb/>
44-8.<lb/>
Dillon also served as<lb/>
ECU's volleyball<lb/>
coach. In 1975 she<lb/>
coached San Antonio<lb/>
Junior College to a na<lb/>
tional junior college ti-<lb/>
tle.<lb/>
TZ<lb/>
Lady Pirate Action<lb/>
<lb/>
TASTE<lb/>
Your Favorites<lb/>
A ssis tan t Nam ed<lb/>
 asi Carolina's head<lb/>
basketball coach, Dave<lb/>
()d om. an nou nc ed<lb/>
fuesday the hiring ot<lb/>
1 om Barrise as assis-<lb/>
tant coach.<lb/>
Barrise, a 28-year old<lb/>
Paterson, New Jersey<lb/>
native, worked as an<lb/>
assistant coach under<lb/>
former Clemson head<lb/>
coach. Tates 1 ocke, at<lb/>
Jacksonville University<lb/>
from 1978 to 1981. It was<lb/>
during this three-year<lb/>
period i h a t the<lb/>
Dolphins won the Sun<lb/>
Belt Conference cham-<lb/>
pionship once and ad-<lb/>
vanced to the NCAA<lb/>
regionals.<lb/>
In 1978-79, Jackson-<lb/>
ville played in the Na-<lb/>
tional Invitational<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
Barrise is a 1975<lb/>
graduate ot Fairleigh<lb/>
Dickinson I niversit)<lb/>
and has a B. V degree<lb/>
in social studies from<lb/>
that school. After col-<lb/>
lege, Barrise sei ved as a<lb/>
graduate assistam al<lb/>
Fairleigh Dickinson. In<lb/>
196. Barrise began a<lb/>
two-year hitch as an<lb/>
assistant coach ol the<lb/>
varsity and head junior<lb/>
varsitv Finished 23-2<lb/>
and 17-7.<lb/>
The 23-2 leant won<lb/>
the NCAA<lb/>
Regional<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
Coach Odem<lb/>
verv pleased with<lb/>
Division Hi<lb/>
champion-<lb/>
was<lb/>
Bar-<lb/>
rise's decision to join<lb/>
the Pirate program.<lb/>
" 1 om has the ability to<lb/>
put liis technical<lb/>
knowledge into practice<lb/>
tor us Coach Odom<lb/>
said, "lorn will also be<lb/>
in charee of our<lb/>
recruiting system as tar<lb/>
as knowing who and<lb/>
where we will recruit.<lb/>
" 1 om will also work<lb/>
hard to promote our<lb/>
program with Ken<lb/>
Smith (the ECU Sports<lb/>
Information Director)<lb/>
and act as a liason bet-<lb/>
ween the basketball<lb/>
team and Ken Odom<lb/>
continued. "He will<lb/>
handle other duties.<lb/>
such as on-1 he-floor<lb/>
coaching, film work<lb/>
and scouting<lb/>
Barrise joins former<lb/>
graduate assistant,<lb/>
Dave Pendergraft, as<lb/>
an assistant coach for<lb/>
the Pirates.<lb/>
They replace former<lb/>
Pirate coaches, Eddie<lb/>
Payne, now at Belmont<lb/>
Abbey, and George<lb/>
Felton, who is serving<lb/>
under Bobby Crim-<lb/>
mons at Georgia Tech.<lb/>
INSTRUCTION<lb/>
Jim Pulley Dead<lb/>
THURSDAY ?<lb/>
Broiled Beef <lb/>
Liver<lb/>
uith choice of 2 vegetables<lb/>
1<lb/>
99<lb/>
June 4th only<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
Trout<lb/>
Almondine<lb/>
with slaw and hush puppies<lb/>
$029<lb/>
2<lb/>
June 5th only<lb/>
Where America Comes Home To Eat!<lb/>
Serving daily 11 a.m - 8 p m. continuously<lb/>
(8 30 Friday &amp; Saturday)<lb/>
Mr. J. 1. "Jim"<lb/>
Pulley, the owner of<lb/>
krispy kreme<lb/>
Doughnut Company<lb/>
and active Pirate Club<lb/>
executive, died May 25<lb/>
after a brief illness. He<lb/>
vas 57.<lb/>
Mr. Pulley, a former<lb/>
resident of Buies Creek<lb/>
and Goldsboro, came<lb/>
to Greenville in 1972<lb/>
and became one of the<lb/>
Pirate' most en-<lb/>
thusiastic supporters.<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
SHORT TERM LEASES<lb/>
Available tor sharing house across<lb/>
from campus Call 752-021 or<lb/>
75 4017<lb/>
BABYSITTERS NEEDED Ocas<lb/>
sional Obs Own transportation<lb/>
preterred 75 543 or 75 J123<lb/>
THREE BEDROOM Apartment<lb/>
tor rent tor the summer and fall<lb/>
587 47 per month, one third<lb/>
utilities and phone, near campus,<lb/>
call 17 2370 or 631 2422.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED Furnished room in<lb/>
pleasant home one and a halt<lb/>
blocks from campus call now<lb/>
7 58 388<lb/>
FEMALE ROOM Needed from<lb/>
May 29 to August I, at Village<lb/>
Green Apartments Rent 5105 a<lb/>
month halt utilities Call 75 95<lb/>
and ask for Vanessa<lb/>
FOR SALE Pioneer Turntable.<lb/>
Manual, like new Best offer. Call<lb/>
757 501(8 5). 75 3587 after 5 30<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY Used Snuggli<lb/>
chilo carrier Call Susan 752 123<lb/>
FURNISHED Air Conditioned er<lb/>
ficiency apartment For one.<lb/>
utilities are included, across from<lb/>
College Call 75 255<lb/>
This past year, he serv-<lb/>
ed as one of the direc-<lb/>
tors of the Pirate Club.<lb/>
East Carolina's<lb/>
scholarship organiza-<lb/>
tion for athletics.<lb/>
Pulle also served on<lb/>
the Pirate Club Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Board and was<lb/>
a full scholarship<lb/>
donor. Pulley vas<lb/>
noted for his acme in-<lb/>
volvement in recruiting<lb/>
athletes for Past<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Surviving are his<lb/>
wife, Mrs. Fupha Jones<lb/>
Pulley ol the home; a<lb/>
son, J. 1 ee Pulley, Jr.<lb/>
of the home; a<lb/>
daughter, Mrs. Jan P.<lb/>
Carpenter of Cireen-<lb/>
ille; a brother, L . C .<lb/>
Pulley, Jr. of Fayet-<lb/>
teville; and a sister,<lb/>
Miss Elizabeth Pulley,<lb/>
o Buies Creek.<lb/>
Wed. ? Ladies' Lockout<lb/>
Thurs. ? Super Thursday<lb/>
one admission at the door<lb/>
? free beverage all night<lb/>
long<lb/>
Fri. ? Bucket Night<lb/>
Beverage in 32 oz. bucket<lb/>
for a buck. No cover from<lb/>
3 'til 9.<lb/>
Sat. ? A Night to<lb/>
Remember hors<lb/>
d'oeuvres<lb/>
Sun. ? Orientation<lb/>
Extravaganza<lb/>
Doors open at 9:00<lb/>
NO FUTURE?<lb/>
IncSSRut?<lb/>
m to pl.ii. ? ruff sional<lb/>
caret rdnvinga BtgR Oui<lb/>
trait tng a  ?<lb/>
structoi<lb/>
Utraii irtgfiekls Keep<lb/>
md trail i ; art time basts iSal &amp;<lb/>
? ? r full timr<lb/>
ht now fur<lb/>
lull information<lb/>
Revco Tractor-Trailer Training. Inc<lb/>
Greerille<lb/>
(919)7-5568<lb/>
CLASS RINGS<lb/>
TO COIN &amp; RING MAN!<lb/>
$<lb/>
:T<lb/>
The Doming Center has been here for you sinoe 1974<lb/>
providing private, understanding health oare<lb/>
to women of an ages at a reasonable oost<lb/>
Saturday abortion <lb/>
The Fleming Center we're here when you need us.<lb/>
0an7Sl-WS0tn?jarighapyttma.<lb/>
w:i<lb/>
FijacngQ gpnani<lb/>
SAAD'S SHOE<lb/>
RhPAIR<lb/>
I I 3 Grand Avf<lb/>
758 1228<lb/>
QuaI.iv R<lb/>
CONTACT LENSES<lb/>
Sufi Contacts s8995<lb/>
HEAT UNIT INCLUDED<lb/>
Guaranteed Fitting Or Your Money Refunded<lb/>
SEMI SOFT &amp; HARD LENSES AVAILABLE<lb/>
-EYEGLASSES<lb/>
SINGLE VISION<lb/>
PLASTIC OR GLASS<lb/>
LENSES<lb/>
95<lb/>
29<lb/>
5 0RMIN<lb/>
(SELECT<lb/>
GROUP OF<lb/>
FRAMES)<lb/>
UP TO PLUS OR MINUS 50<lb/>
Any Tint 36 95<lb/>
WESTERN<lb/>
SIZZLIN'<lb/>
Steakhouse<lb/>
Almost everyone his I High school or college class ring<lb/>
they don't wear anymore. Check your dresser drawers<lb/>
and bring your class ring Into Coin &amp; Ring Man. We're<lb/>
your professional buying service and we guarantee you<lb/>
fair prices and good service.<lb/>
EYEGLASSES<lb/>
BIFOCALS<lb/>
PLASTIC OR GLASS<lb/>
LENSES<lb/>
54951<lb/>
UP TO PLUS OR MINUS SO<lb/>
(SELECT GROUP<lb/>
OF FRAMES<lb/>
ANY TINT)<lb/>
MosMwCad<lb/>
fcfe<lb/>
plicians<lb/>
J1J PARKVIEW COMMONS<lb/>
?CROSS FROM DRS PARK PHONE 7U-1M<lb/>
Open Mon Fn 9am til 5 10 p m<lb/>
Also m Berkley Mall - Goldsboro and Kmiton<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIAL<lb/>
MonFri. 11:00-2:00<lb/>
4 oz. USDA Sirloin withk.ng<lb/>
baked potato or trench tries and Texas toast<lb/>
$1.89<lb/>
Free Iced Tea with College I.D.<lb/>
Offer good any time.<lb/>
Take Out Service 2903 E. 10th St? 758-2712<lb/>
264 By PaSS 756-0040<lb/>
Hours: 11:00a.m. 10:00p.m. ? Mon. Thurs.<lb/>
10:00a.m. 11:00p.m. Fri. Sun.<lb/>
WI PAY CAIM OM THI f POT<lb/>
FOt JfWILtT. V WUAIUS WTHHK<lb/>
MAMI910K-UK-1IK.<lb/>
S GQLD $<lb/>
? IIMCS ? MCIIACIS ? NATCMiS ? OIAM010S<lb/>
? CUSS IMKS ? NINIK BABBS ? BHTTAI<lb/>
(Oil ? MACiUTS ? MOOCH ? lOCfttTS<lb/>
? CHAIRS ? UC-RUIS ' tW UMS ? lAtttBCS<lb/>
PAYING ON-THI-SPOT<lb/>
cash ?? rruif MABKIB<lb/>
STERLING SIIVIR<lb/>
IMANUII Of CONMTION<lb/>
? COFFEE SERVICES ? GOBLETS<lb/>
? RINGS ? SPOONS ? TRAYS ? KNIVES<lb/>
? FORKS?NECKLACES?BRACELETS<lb/>
? FRANKLIN AND HAMILTON MINT<lb/>
MERCHANDISE1<lb/>
CoetfA MC i<lb/>
? i ? '(??"<lb/>
&amp; RING<lb/>
Of cv SAiCS C0" 'He.<lb/>
401 ? EVANS ST. "l"?"7"u;?'<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHONE 752-3866<lb/>
YOUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057344_0007"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>