The East Carolinian, June 6, 2007


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





The East Carolinian VOLUME 82, ISSUE 79 June 6, 2007

The

ECU Ts Counseling
Center in Wright offers
students a chance to
talk to a counselor free
of charge....Page 6

Sophomore Stephen
Batts got the job done
over the weekend at the
plate, breaking an ECU
baseball record. Check
out the sports section to
see if the rest of Pirates
did their part at the
Chapel Hill, N.C. NCAA
Regional...Page 9

Page 6
Page 9
Page 5
Page 12

astC

{ www.theeastcarolinian.com }

SUMMER
EDITION
' WEDNESDAY JUNE 6, 2007

University hosts otopping-out?"?
ceremony for Heart Institute

Milestone in
construction of heart
institute

NIA RICHARDSON
STAFF WRITER

ECU hosted a traditional otop-
ping-out ? ceremony on the ECU
Health Sciences Campus Thursday,
May 31 beginning at 8:30 a.m. at
the construction site next to the
Warren Life Sciences building.

The purpose of the ceremony
was to recognize a milestone in
the construction on the university
sponsored portion of the East Caro-
lina Heart Institute.

University officials signed the
final beam that will be installed at

the top of the frame structure for

Contributed image

the 206,000-square foot clinical
research and educational building.
The East Carolina Heart Insti-
tute is one of two building that are
being built. Pitt Memorial Hospital
[PMH] is also building a health
facility on Moye Boulevard.

see CEREMONY page 2

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University officials sign the last beam that will be installed at the top of the building.

ECU students benefit from fellowship

Valerie Grussing, recipient of the NC
SeaGrant Fellowship. Fellow recipient
Jeremy Eamick not pictured.

Scholars selected
for program
acknowledgement

JAMI DAVIA
STAFF WRITER

ECU students Jeremy Eamick
and Valerie Grussing were awarded
the first North Carolina Sea Grant/
East Carolina University Maritime
Heritage Fellowship. -

The fellowship strives to
advance graduate research and
education within the maritime
heritage field.

All students on the graduate
level had the opportunity to apply
for this joint fellowship, which pro-
vided $3,000 to each of its deserv-
ing recipients.

oThe fellowship is open to any
student on almost any topic that
involves North Carolina maritime
matters, ? said Larry Babits, direc-

tor of the ECU Program in Mari-
time Studies.

oStudents are chosen on the
merits of their proposal by a com-
mittee of scholars and the North
Carolina Sea Grant leadership, ?
Babits said.

Under the fellowship, Eamick
will be studying the landscape and
maritime trading culture of Union
Point in New Bern, NC.

Eamick, a graduate student
in maritime studies, received his
bachelor Ts degree from ECU.

oJeremy was a hard working
student and almost always the first
to show up to class in the morn-
ings, ? said Randolph Daniel, associ-
ate professor of anthropology. oI Tm
not surprised at all that he was
awarded this fellowship. ?

Grussing will be conducting
research and analysis of the role
of shipwrecks on tourism develop-

see GRANT page 2

Dog scams
become
common in
North Carolina

Beware of dishonest
dog se llers

_ JAMI DAVIA-
_ STAFF \ WRITER

Dog-sellers around the coun-
try are advising customers to
exercise caution when purchasing

dogs from unfamiliar sources.

According to both the Ameri-

can Kennel Club® (AKC@) and

the Better Business Bureau of
Eastern North Carolina (BBB),

hundreds of consumers have
fallen prey to recent opuppy
scams ? targeting both online and
media printed sources.

Advertisements displaying
free or reasonably priced puppies
have been used to lure customers.

Such swindlers have been
known to attach empathetic sto-
ries to the sale, making consum-
ers believe they are desperate
and that the puppy will die if not
given away.

According to Peter Romary,
director of Student Legal Ser-
vices, the legal stipulations
behind such scams hold high
accountability within the state
and federal government.

The violation of scamming is
described as obtaining property
by false pretense, and stands as
a felony in North Carolina. The
specifications of the described
felony include intentionally forg-
ing information in order to take
anything of value.

Ways that the violation occurs
includes doing business over the
phone, via email, media print or

_in person.

If transactions take place over
state lines, the Federal Bureau
of Investigation (FBI) becomes
involved and the crime is looked
upon more seriously.

_ When asked if he would ever
purchase an animal over the
internet, Jason Miller, senior
accounting student said, oNever,

see SCAMS page 3







PAGE 2

THE EAST CAROLINIAN * NEWS

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2007

Contributed image

Dr. James LeRoy Smith, provost and
vice chancellor for academic affairs at East
Carolina University, has announced that he is
stepping down from his administrative duties
to return to teaching. :

olam honored to have been able to serve
ECU as provost, but it is time to get back
into the classroom, ? Smith said. oIhave
always been proud of this university, and | am
especially proud of what we achieved over the
last four years. ?

During that time, the university has
been the fastest-growing campus in the
University of North Carolina system. Smith
has overseen the hiring of hundreds of faculty
members and has appointed deans of three of
theuniversity Ts colleges as well as the director
of Academic Library Services. The university
is awarding record numbers of degrees

Smith plans to return to classroom

and its retention and graduation rates are
higher than those that would be predicted
by the test scores of its incoming students.
Smith, who joined ECU 38 years ago as a
faculty member in the philosophy department,
said his first love has always been the
classroom. He continued to teach an ethics
course while he served as the university's
chief academic officer. He was named interim
provost in September 2003 and was selected
for the role after a national search in March
2005. His resignation is effective June 30.
Chancellor Steve Ballard praised Smith's
work as vital to the success of ECU. oMy first

~ three years here would have been much more

difficult without Jim Smith's guidance, advice
and assistance, ? Ballard said. oHis service to the
university over the last 38 years is unexcelled.
His knowledge of the institution is vast, and he
commands the respect and admiration of untold
numbers of current and former students, faculty
members and administrators. ?

In addition to his current role, Smith
has served as chair of the Department of
Philosophy; chair of the ECU Faculty Senate; .
chair of the University of North Carolina
Faculty Assembly, which represents faculty
members system-wide; chair of the committee
that led preparations for the university's
reaccredidation in 1990-92: chair of two
self-study committees preparing for NCAA
certification. executive assistant to the
chancellor; and assistant secretary to the ECU
Board of Trustees.

*For a Limited Time

Greenville Blvd. (Across from the Colonial Mall)

CEREMONY continued from page 1

The ECU building will include
research and educational facilities,
which will house cardiovascular
research labs, offices, outpatient
treatment and educational centers,
as well as a 375,000 square foot
clinical facility to treat cardiovas-
cular patients.

The PMH building will include
operating rooms, interventional
labs and 120 patient beds.

The ceremony was pre-
sided over by Dr. W. Randolph
Chitwood, future direc-
tor of the Heart Institute.

oThis will be a tremendous
learning center, for not only medi-
cal students, but also nurses and
other allied health proyiders of

cardiovascular care.

oWe will focus not just on end
stage care, but also prevention and
research, ? said Chitwood. Efforts
to create this building began as
early as 2004 when state funding
was approved for the construction
of the building.

March 2006 marked the date
that officials broke ground for
the building. The entire facility is
scheduled to be complete in 2008.

To find out more about the East
Carolina Heart Institute visit the
Web site at uhseast.com/home_
cardioinstitute.cfm?id=489.

This writer may be contacted at
news@theeastcarolinian.com.

GRANT continued from page 1

ment in North Carolina.

She received her bachelor Ts
degree from North Carolina State
University and her master Ts from
the University of Iowa, and is
currently enrolled in the Coastal
Resources Management doctoral
program at ECU.

oT think Valerie is an outstand-
ing student, ? said Timothy Runyan,
Coastal Resources Management
doctoral program advisor.

oShe is very energetic and will-
ing to try new opportunities "and

she has done an excellent job in
everything that she has attempted, ?
Runyan said.

This is the first year that
the North Carolina Sea Grant
has provided funding for this fel-
lowship.

Sea Grant is part of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Adminis-
tration (NOAA) and is a program of
North Carolina State University.

This writer may be contacted at
news@theeastcarolinian.com.

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THE EAST CAROLINIAN * NEWS

PAGE 3

I Tve read from many organizations,
including the American Kennel
Club®, that you should always
meet the dog you purchase and its
parents before deciding what to
do. They always advise that as the
safest way to do things. ?

Trisha McVicker, elementary

similar response when asked the
same question.

oI wouldn Tt buy an animal over
the internet unless I had met the pet
and its caretaker, ? McVicker said.

Sources are available
on the Internet to inform
consumers of the appro-
priate way to purchase a pet.

oThere are some Web sites
that keep you up-to-date on the
animals that become available
at shelters and those can be quite

education graduate student, had a -

SCAMS continued from page 1

helpful "t actually found my cat by
researching that way, ? McVicker
said.

oTo anyone who is consider-
ing buying anything over the
internet, make sure to go
through a reputable web-
site or dealer, ? Romary said.

oThere are laws that protect
individuals who are buying items,
but it can be very difficult and
expensive to track down criminals
who falsely display information, ?
Romary added.

_For more information, visit the
American Kennel Club® (AKC®)
at akc.org or the Better Business
Bureau of Eastern North Carolina
(BBB) at bbb.org

This writer can be contacted at
news@theeastcarolinian.com.

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Opinion

Iraqi artist brings "
war home

Wafaa Bilal Ts oDomestic Tension ? project

JARED WOFFORD
OPINION WRITER

Wafaa Bilal knows violence. On his turbulent path to the United States,
he has been arrested by Saddam Hussein's secret police, spent years in
a Saudi refugee camp and has narrowly averted execution. In 2005 his
brother was killed by American military forces in Iraq; and in his grief,
Bilal Ts father died two months later after refusing to eat.

Wafaa is being shot right now.

As I am writing this, the-Iraqi-born artist is sitting in a gallery in
Chicago as part of his current project oDomestic Tension. ? For 30 days
he has lived in this gallery, where he has set up a webcam and paintball
gun such that Internet users can aim the gun at him and decide whether
to shoot or not. Tonight he is celebrating the last few hours he must

spend here, and after ducking to avoid gunfire, he raises his glass to ~

make a toast.

oCheers. ?

After visiting this Web site several times, I finally catch Wafaa sit-
ting at the computer, engaging visitors on the site Ts chat room. I use this
opportunity to congratulate him and to tell him that I admire his work.

I thought he might find it interesting to know that at that moment I
was actually writing an article about him and his project-- to which he
responds, in a startling gesture, by volunteering his phone number and
inviting me to call him. Astonished, I dial the number he has given me and
watch as he gets up from his computer desk and walks off the screen.

oHello? ?

Ill-prepared and fumbling for a pen, I introduce myself and clumsily
mispronounce his name. Not knowing how long I might have to speak with
him, I ask the broadest question I can muster, in the hopes of securing the
most substantial and applicable response. I ask what he has come away
with from this experience and before any silence can frame his answer,
he replies, his voice curiously placid.

Wafaa Bilal--after being shot at more than 70,000 times-- then began
to praise human kindness. :

The man had spent a month, in seclusion, suffering from paintball
wounds, sleep deprivation and egregious stress "and then began to praise
human kindness.

In explanation, Wafaa told me about how he had received the blessings
of so many people through the chat room on his Web site. He said that he
had lived on their good energy while processing the bad energy which, to
me, seemed to deluge him constantly. He proceeded to talk to me about
the layers that cover human life; layers like our culture, our experiences,
our religion and their tendencies to separate and polarize people.

Perhaps the most profound part of our conversation was a story he
related about one particularly hostile man from Ohio who had fired over
2000 rounds at him. After quite some time Wafaa grew hungry and
attempted to eat, but conditions of the man Ts incessant attacks proved

unbearable. Knowing that his only hope was through talking to his
~ assailant, he told the man that the paint was getting into his soup and
simply asked him to stop.

The man obliged.

All Wafaa had to do was ask. A more poignant allegory of the inhu-
mane, impersonal nature of war couldn't be written. After saying goodbye
to this extraordinarily amicable and lucid man, I couldn't help but silently
muse to myself. Perhaps if our politicians, military leaders, businessmen
and communities around the world could communicate just a little more;
we might all be able to enjoy our soup.

This writer can be contacted at opinion@theeastcarolinian.com

WEDNESDAY JUNE 6, 2007

RANT OF THE DAY

PAGE 5

My friend sprays her dog with febreze...I Tm sorry
but that does not qualify as giving it a bath.

{ www.theeastcarolinian.com }

NEWS (TEM: MAN STOLE 1,500 PAIRS OF

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The East Carolinian does not endorse statements made in Pirate
Rants. Questions regarding Rants can be directed to Sarah
Campbell, Editor in Chief, at opinion@theeastcarolinian.com.
Log onto theeastcarolinian.com to submit a Rant of your own.

My online ethics course is impossible!
I Tm pretty sure the teacher is trying to
prove that not all online courses are
cake classes!

My mom says she wants to come back
in her next life as a squirrel on ECU
campus.

My friend sprays her dog with
Febreze...I Tm sorry but that does not
qualify as giving it a bath.

| think it would be awesome if our
Marching Pirates perfomed half time
shows with music from the soundtrack
of Pirates of the Caribbean 3. After all,
we are Pirates!

It Ts a little easier to get out of the

bed on Wednesday mornings in the
summertime because | know that new
Pirate Rants are waiting for me to read

| don Tt dress up for class, | dress up
in TEC.

for the job | have to go to AFTER
class. Some of us can Tt sit around in :

sweatpants everyday. Paris Hilton in prison? Now that Ts hot!
I'm sorry to say this, but people that
ride skateboards on campus look like
darn fools!

Fish sticks rock my socks!

If you read between the lines you can
see that | want you. Just give me a
shot.

Whatever happened to lovely, rubbery,
erasers?

Are they having fireworks at Pirate
Palooza this year? That would be
rockin T

What's up with guys wearing super
short shorts? | don Tt want to see your
boxers hanging out from underneath
or your pasty white thighs!

My professor looks like Run Ts wife.
Everytime | enter the classroom |
always want to shout owhos house?
Run Ts house! ?

| get confused when | go into a building
that doesn Tt have signs up telling you
what is in each room.

Its always better when we are
together!

I'm in love with a stripper and I Tm
thinking about marrying her!

ee o* ee
et r P veee

Sarah Campbell

Editor in Chief
Kimberly Bellamy Elise Phillips
News Editor Features Editor
Greg Katski Lizz Wells
Sports Editor Photo Editor
Stephanie Smith Matthew Parker
Production Manager Web Editor
Newsroom 252.328.9238
Fax 252.328.9143
Advertising 252.328.9245

Serving ECU since 1925, the East Caro-
linian prints 9,000 copies every Tuesday,
-Wednesday and Thursday during the
regular academic year and 5,000 on
Wednesdays during the summer. oOur
View ? is the opinion of the editorial board
and is written by editorial board members.
The East Carolinian welcomes letters
to the editor which are limited to 250
words (which may be edited for decency
or brevity). We reserve the right to edit
or reject letters and all letters must be
signed and include a telephone number.
Letters may be sent via e-mail to editor@
theeastcarolinian.com or to the East
Carolinian, SelfHelp Building, Greenville,
N.C. 27858-4353. Call 252-328-9238 for
more information. One copy of the East Car-
olinian is free, each additional copy is $1.

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Features

WEDNESDAY JUNE 6, 2007

PAGE 6

Horoscopes:

Aries

If you spend more time on a household
project, you can spend less money. If
you have less money, this is required. If
you have plenty, it Ts just smart.

Taurus

As you well know, cookies are a good
way to help other people relax. You
won't have to resort to torture to get
the answers you seek.

Gemini

The task you're facing is challenging,
but you can figure it out. Provide what
a rather eccentric person wants, and
be well rewarded.

Cancer

You're finding it easier to express the
thoughts you've been pondering.
You've worked out a lot of the answers
now, and that helps.

Jahnaz: Savor the flavor of Jamaica

Experience Caribbean
cuisine at its best

BRITTANY JOHNSON
STAFF WRITER

Jahnaz Caribbean Cuisine kicks
downtown Greenville into a new
world of dining. Located at 403 S.
Evans St., Jahnaz first opened its
doors in August of 2001.

The restaurant provides
a bright Jamaican atmosphere,
and specializes in authen-
tic Caribbean dishes.

oWe decided to open the res-
taurant to bring the Jamaican food,
taste and culture to Greenville, ? said
Genara Smith, Jahnaz Ts manager.

Photo by Lizz Wells

Jahnaz Ts colorful interior and unique menu is a great choice for students.

Photo by Lizz Wells

One of Jahnaz Ts dining tables.

cozy uptown Greenville, sur-
rounded by offices and a variety
of locally owned retailers. It is
in a great location for those work-
ing in Greenville, and is only a
few blocks away from ECU Ts West
campus.

Although Jahnaz is a
small facility, it has four tables
as well as a bar for seating.
The walls and light fixtures are
splashed with the national Jamaican
colors: red, yellow, green and black.

Spicy Caribbean aromas continu-
ously waft through the restaurant
and add to the atmosphere.

Jahnaz is open from 11 a.m.
to 10 p.m. Monday through
Friday and noon to 10 p.m. on
Saturday. A discount is offered
to all ECU students with proper
identification.

Akiamaa Thomal, Jahnaz
employee, advises students to ocome

Ideal for a quick lunch, Jahnaz
offers a variety of chicken, beef and
seafood dishes that are great for
dinner as well.

Jahnaz Ts menu also includes
more exotic foods such as
curry goat, oxtail and vegetar-
ian dishes. Unique to Jahnaz is
the national Jamaican dish that
consists of ackee vegetables
paired with salted cod fish
laced with Jamaican seasonings.

Entrée prices range from veg-

etarian dishes at $5.75, to shrimp
and snapper at $11. A wide assort-
ment of breads, sides and juices are
available as well.

o{ would go back just for the
mango Reggaelade, ? said Chris
Neverve, ECU student. Reggaelade
is a drink with daily flavor changes.
It is made from natural juices and
is an absolute must for the thirsty
passerby! The juices range from
$3 to $6.

Jahnaz is nestled away in

Leo

You've thought everything out carefully,
well in advance. So everything goes
smoothly when the moment finally
comes. Good work.

Virgo
You and your team are developing a
very effective bond. You're joined in

the goal of producing results. You're
becoming a powerful force. :

Libra

see JAHNAZ page 7

You're ina very creative phase, and you
will be for a while. Use these skills to
increase your wealth. Take it past oart
for art's sake. ?

Scorpio

During the upcoming phase, you'll deal -

with jointly held money. This includes
your credit cards and all your stocks
and bonds. You're really good at this
stuff, once you get into it.

Sagittarius

One of the reasons you live life so close
to the edge is because you can. One

of the reasons you believe in miracles ?

is because they happen.
Capricorn

Friends can understand a lot of what
you've been going through. Talking with
awise older person helps you put it into
perspective.

Aquarius

inquiring minds want to know, but you
don Tt have to tell them. Wait until the
project Ts complete, and you have your
big unveiling.

Pisces

The money vanishes quickly, but it Ts
not the most important thing. You're
gaining confidence and you're providing
security. That matters a lot more.

Photo by Lizz Wells

ECU Counseling Center: Always lending an ear

The center offers free counseling to.ECU students.

Counseling center available to
assist students

BEN HARRIS
STAFF WRITER

For over a decade, the ECU Center for

Counseling and Student Development has
been a place where students can get a friendly,
attentive ear and priceless help with just about
any of the thousands of problems a college
student can experience.
- The center, located on the top floor of the
Wright Building, is accredited by the Inter-
national Association of Counseling Services,
the highest accreditation a counseling center
can receive.

The center Ts main purpose is to protect
the rights of students and their education,
deal with adjustment issues and support
students by means of a knowledgeable and
accessible staff. 1

There are over 20 licensed and accredited
counselors on the center Ts staff. The counsel-
ors all have either their Masters or Doctorate
degrees, and their expertise ranges from
mental health to rehabilitation.

Dr. Angela Holman has been with the
center for nearly two years and has seen a

wide range of students with an even wider
range of problems.

oI see students dealing with alcohol
and substance abuse, students dealing with
depression and anxiety, and J also see couples
who might be having relationship problems, ?
said Dr. Holman.

Since Dr. Holman and her colleagues are
counselors at a university with a large and
diverse population, it is easy to understand
why having so many areas of knowledge can
come in handy.

ECU Ts large student population also man-
ages to keep the staff members very busy.

However, counselors take appointments
all day long and they will do their best to fit
a student in. If waiting just isn Tt an option,
students can elect to walk into the center, but
this is a route best reserved for the worst of
emergencies.

Students do not even need to go into
the center to receive help. According to Dr.
Holman, there is a ocounselor on call 365 days
a year and during after hours. ? Students can
also call ECU campus police and ask to speak
to a counselor.

In addition to providing an open ear and
unbiased attention, counselors offer other

see COUNSELING page 7







THE EAST CAROLINIAN ¢ FEATURES PAGE 7

COUNSELING continued from page 6

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2007

ways to help students. The center Ts
psychiatrists can prescribe medica-
tion, but do so with great caution
and with the best interest of the
student at heart.

In an extreme case, such as
the threat of suicide, counselors
can recommend hospitalization for
the student.

According to Dr. Lynn M.
Roeder, Interim Dean of Stu-
dents and the Center Director, the
center works oas much as we can
with hospitals ? and counselors
can arrange for a student to go to
the hospital oeither voluntarily or
nonvoluntarily. ?

In the wake of the recent tragedy
at Virginia Tech, counseling centers
around the country are revamping
their entire evaluation processes.

One policy ECU is considering
is academic withdrawal.

oAcademic withdrawal is when
an administrator can withdraw a
student based on that student's well
being, ? Dr. Roeder said.

This policy is only intended

to comply with the students best

interests so that the student can
go home and rest long enough to
recover. Students can come back to
campus, but only with certain stip-
ulations regarding their actions.
As always, the center is com-
pletely free and confidential. Also,
records are not released T without

the consent of the student.

This commitment to confidenti-
ality, service and excellence is what
makes the Center for Counseling
and Student Development a price-
less asset to the ECU community.

This writer can be contacted at
features@theeastcarolinian.com*

JAH NAZ continued from page 6

get a taste of the Caribbean. ?

oIT would love to come back for
lunch sometime to try the jerk-
chicken. I had the curry chicken
[last time], ? said Evan Roberson,
an ECU student.

Jahnaz Ts atmosphere is fun

and inviting for both young and
old, especially those with a crav-
ing for the Caribbean that needs
satisfying!

This writer can be contacted at
features@theeastcarolinian.com.

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Sports

WEDNESDAY JUNE 6, 2007

PAGE 9

60%

10%

30%
Results from last
week Ts question:

Do you think that the ECU baseball
team received a fair seed in the NCAA
Regionals as the No. 2 seed at the Chapel
Hill, N.C. site?

60%- Yes, the team had some big wins
during the season but not enough to earn
a No. 1 seed or match up in a NCAA
Regional against a lower ranked No. 1
seed than UNC.

30%- No, the team proved in the C-USA
Tournament that they deserved a No. 1
seed or at least the chance to play a lower
seeded No. 1 team than the third best
overall club in the nation, UNC.

10%- Maybe, UNC is considered the third
best club in the nation but ECU has an
advantage matching up with the Tar Heels
because they are familiar with the team and
know what they need to do to beat them.

Online poll question:

~ Do you think that Vernon Hargreaves was
an exceptional hire to replace Donnie
Thompson on ECU football Head Coach
Skip Holtz Ts staff?

Yes, Hargreaves is a solid defensive coach
with a proven track record. He will fill in
well for Thompson as the defensive ends
coach and bolster the staff as the new
special teams coordinator.

No, Hargreaves will never be able to replace
Thompson, a veteran coach and solid
recruiter who lured the likes of Pro Bowl
defensive end Julius Peppers to his unit.

Maybe, Thompson was a big-time
recruiter but Hargreaves excelled under
pressure at a big-time program in the
University of Miami (Fla.). It Ts too early to
tell at this point.

To vote on this weeks poll question go to
theeastcarolinian.com and submit your
vote. Current results can be found by
clicking on the View Results button under
the poll question. The final results will be

~ East Carolinian:

oto by Levinia Tyrell

Heartbreaker costs Pirates in Chapel Hill

7

Batts school record 29-game hitting-streak wasn Tt enough to beat UNC.
ECU eliminated

RONNIE WOODWARD
ASST. SPORTS EDITOR

This past weekend, ECU found

out just how thin the line between
winning and losing can be in post-
season college baseball.

The Pirates took a 10-8 lead
over North Carolina into the
bottom of the ninth Saturday night,

and were three outs away from
vaulting themselves into the cham-
pionship game and driver Ts seat of
the Chapel Hill Regional...then
disaster struck.

Pinch-hitter Mike Cease led

off the inning with a walk, and five.

batters later Dustin Ackley singled
up the middle, giving third-ranked
UNC a miraculous 11-10 win
and seemingly ending the Pirates
chance to win the regional.

Recruits commit to board ship

ECU lands three early
players

MATT SIMON
STAFF WRITER

Before Holtz took over the
program the Pirates accumulated a
mere three wins in a two-year span.
Since his arrival in 2005, ECU
has improved by leaps and bounds.
Last season Holtz led ECU to a 7-6
mark, it Ts first winning record since
the 2000 season and first bowl
appearance since 2001.

Because of the hard work done
on thé recruiting trail by Holtz and
his staff, ECU has gained national
recognition. ESPN praised the
program Ts recruiting class .as one
of the Top 40 in NCAA Divison I
football for the 2007 season, second
in the state only to Butch Davis T
Tar Heels.

Despite already having a dis-
tinguished incoming class this
season; ECU has received verbal
commitments from several recruits
expected to join the team in 2008.

Marquan Brown of Gray Ts
Creek High School is a speedy tail-
back with a 4.3 40-time that could
become a threat to take it to the _
house any time he touches the ball.

As a junior, Brown amassed
some impressive statistics, rifshing
for 1,500 yards and 17 touchdowns,
averaging a staggering 12.7 yards
per carry. He also had 20 recep-
tions for 631 yards and 5 touch-
downs (31.6 yards per reception).

Brown hits the hole with author-
ity, measuring only 5 foot 9 inches
and weighing in at 160 pounds, he
shows the ability to beat defend-
ers to the edge. His head coach at
Gray Ts Creek has been quoted as
saying that he believes Brown is
the best junior in the state. He was
also being recruited by N.C. State,
UNC, and the USC Gamecocks
before verbally committing to ECU.

Darius Spencer of AC Reyn-
olds High School is another early
commitment for the Pirates. As a
junior, Spencer ran for 1,200 yards
and 18 touchdowns. Spencer, 6-foot,
174 pounds, doesn Tt look to have the
blinding speed T of Brown but he
shows good vision, following his
blockers and taking-on defenders to
get extra yards at the end of runs.
He also looks to be a threat in the
return game on punts and kickoffs.
Spencer was also being recruited
by UNC and State along with the
University of Tennessee.

see FOOTBALL page 11

oIt Ts disappointing to get that
close, and have it slip away, ? said
ECU coach Billy Godwin after the
devastating loss. oWe came in here
and we didn Tt back down; I was very
proud of our effort and we Tll hold our
heads high. ?

In-between the Cavasinni walk
and Ackley single, Seth Williams
walked, Garrett Gore recorded a
sacrifice bunt, Cavasinni scored on
a wild pitch, Reid Fronk knocked
a RBI single and Tim Fedroff
singled.

Fronk scored the winning run,
sliding headfirst into home plate
and igniting a ruckus celebration
that ended with Fronk having to be
sent to the hospital for five stitches
in his head.

oIt Ts a tough loss, I Td rather lose
by 10 then lose by one, ? said ECU
freshman Kyle Roller, who gave the

Pirates a 9-8 lead with a solo home:

run in the eighth. oThat Ts just the
way baseball is sometimes, it Ts a
crazy game. ?

ECU closer Shane Mathews
entered the game in the bottom of
the ninth inning with 14 saves, but

he allowed three hits, two walks
and three runs in his last outing of
the season.

oIt definitely wasn Tt the atmo-
sphere or anything, I Just didn Tt have
it, T Mathews said.

ECU had leads of 5-1, 7-5 and
10-8 in the game, but ie a ates
couldn't hold on for the win. The Tar
Heels went on to win the Regional
two days later.

oT T'm obviously very excited that
we won, but I really feel for Billy
[Godwin], ? said UNC Head Coach
Mike Fox. oHe Ts a good friend of
mine and a former coach of mine.
He Ts done at great job and they
really played well, we took their
best shot. ?

Godwin and Fox won a national
championship together at N.C. Wes-
leyan in 1989. Fox said Godwin, who
was the pitching coach under Fox for
two years, was very instrumental
in Wesleyan Ts NCAA Division III
National Championship.

oI just patted-him on the back,
I Tve been on those ends where you

see NCAA page 10

oag :

Hargreaves

Assistant reunited
with Holtz

SID--Vernon Hargreaves has
been named defensive ends coach
and special teams coordinator at
ECU according to an announce-
ment from head football coach
Skip Holtz Friday.

Hargreaves T appointment at
ECU will mark a reunion with
Holtz as the pair worked together
for four. seasons at Connecticut
beginning in 1994 when Holtz was
named the program Ts head coach
and ending in 1997 when Harg-
reaves accepted a position on the

- University-of Miami-(Fla.) staff.

Hargreaves | joins staff

oVernon obviously brings
a lot of big game experience to
our program and we Tre thrilled
to have a familiar face in our
new family at East Carolina, ?
Holtz said. oYou can run out of
adjectives to describe Vernon
but the words energetic, enthu-
siastic, positive and upbeat
come to mind pretty quickly. ? "

Hargreaves T assignment to
handle ECU Ts ends, coupled
with Donnie Thompson Ts recent
departure, enabled Holtz to
slightly realign other staff posi-
tions on the defensive side of the
ball. Former outside lineback-
ers coach Rock Roggeman will
take over responsibility for the
defensive tackles while coordina-
tor Greg Hudson, who handled
middle linebacking play in 2006,
will now directly guide all three
slots. Holtz also announced the
promotion of secondary coach
Rick Smith to the assistant head
coaching position.

In addition to his defensive
duties on Holtz T staff, Hargreaves
will also assume the special
teams coordinator Ts role formerly
held by Don Yanowsky.

see HARGREAVES page-1.1.







WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2007

DON TT

PAGE 10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN ¢ SPORTS

NCAA continued from page 9

Just want to shake hands and go __ year, T said Kemp. oWe're a team that
crawl in a hole, ? Fox said of his _ is never satisfied, we wanted to make
post-game gesture to Godwin. it to that next step and we just didn Tt

mow ll)

SoS a ee eS et

ot:

The Pirates pulled an emotional
comeback of their own in the first
round of the regional, beating West-
ern Carolina 9-8 on Friday.

Jamie Ray singled in the eighth,
scoring Ryan Wood and Harrison
Eldridge for the 9-8 lead.

oThe bases were loaded and I
was lucky enough to get a good,
hittable fastball, ? Ray said of his
game-winning hit.

Josh Ruhlman, Jason Neitz and
Mathews combined to throw 3 2/3
scoreless innings to end the game,
while Ray, Corey Kemp and senior
Ryan Tousley led the offense in the
comeback.

The Pirates scored the final five

runs of the game after falling behind .

8-4 in the sixth inning.

oCoach never lets us hang
our heads, ? said Tousley of
ECU Ts comeback ability. oThat Ts

just what this team is about, oThe key to having a good eee
we're in it for nine innings. ? program is to surround these guys ACROSS FROM U.B.E. COMMUNITY COLLEGE
ECU never really recovered who are returning with guys who DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE - COMMUNITY SQUARE

from the UNC comeback however,
as it .was eliminated by WCU on
Sunday with a 9-5 loss.

oAnytime you win 40 baseball
games, make it to a regional and do
some of the things we've done, you
can look back and call it a successful

get there, we fell a little short. ?

Sophomore Stephen Batts
extended his hitting streak to 29
games in the Pirates T last game,
breaking the school record held by
Steve Sides in 1987.

oTt was great, but I Td much rather
take a win, ? he said of the record.

According to some standards,
ECU overachieved this season. The
Pirates were picked to finish fifth in
C-USA, but ECU finished second in
the conference both in the regular
season and postseason.

oTo be picked by a lot of people
not to even be in the postseason and
fifth. in C-USA, and for us to end up
the way we did, I couldn't be any more
proud of our season, ? Godwin said.

Batts, Kemp, Ray and a host of
others are expected to return next
season. ECU will only lose seven
seniors to eligibility.

can come in take us to the next level,
and we feel like we Tve done that with
the recruiting class we have coming
in, ? said Godwin.

This writer can be contacted at
sports@theeastcarolinian.com

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THE EAST CAROLINIAN ¢ SPORTS

PAGE 11

HARGREAVES continued from page 9

oVernon Ts experience, back-
ground and presence certainly
provides us an opportunity to
have a special teams coordi-
nator on our staff entering
the season, ? Holtz added.

While with the Hurricanes,
Hargreaves is credited with mold-
ing some of the nation Ts finest

linebackers, including 2000 Butkus

_Award winner Dan Morgan and

2004 first-round draft choices Jon-
athan Vilma and D.J. Williams, as
well as playing a key role in devel-
oping the UM defense into one of
the nation Ts top units over a five-
season span under head coaches
Butch Davis and Larry Coker.

FOOTBALL continued from page 9

Joe Womack is the last of
ECU Ts early verbal commitments.

As ajunior quarterback for North-.

side High School, Womack com-
pleted 55 of 124 pass attempts
for 934 yards and 11 touchdowns
while rushing for 478 yards and
10 touchdowns on 126 carries.
Expected to be converted to wide
receiver at ECU, Womack could
use his 6 T2 frame, 180 pounds,
33-inch vertical leap and 4.4 40-
time to rise above defenders and
make big catches for the Pirates.

ECU is far from finished and
remains optimistic about recruit-
ing other members of the 2008
class. On defense they hope to
land four-star recruit, defensive
end Quinton Coples of Kinston
High School. The Pirates hope
Coples will prefer to play close

to home because they will be
recruiting against big-time schools
Clemson and Florida. ECU has
also extended offers to three-star
linebackers E.J. Abrams "Ward
of Thomasville High School and
Duane Maddox of Crest Senior
High School.

On offense the Pirates are tap-
ping reserves in Virginia, extend-
ing offers to Dyrell Roberts, a
running back/wide receiver who is
thought to be one of the best play-
ers in the state and highly touted
quarterback Tommy Reamon Jr.
Reamon Jr. is being coached by
his father, who mentored the likes
of the Vick brothers and Aaron
Brooks.

This writer can be contacted at
sports @theeastcarolinian.com

PARTTIME SALES "
OPPORTUNITY WITH AAA

Do you love talking about travel?
AAA is looking for a part time on-
campus representative interested
in travel to help promote services
to the college market. Earn cash
and possibly atrip to Europe.
Interested parties please contact "
Betsy Newnam at 252-443-711.





Rocky Mount -

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Office hours: Monday - Friday 8:30am-5:30p1

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Classifieds

FOR RENT

2 Bed/ 2 Bath Unit. 115A Wyndham
Circle. Washer/Dryer Included. ECU Bus
Stops across the street. Nicely Painted.
Nicest one on the street. August 1st.
Call 375-5010.

Wyndham Circle 3BR, 2BA duplex.
Washer/dryer, dishwasher. Central heat/
air, walk-in closet, vaulted ceiling. Off-
street parking, fenced back. $750/mo,
May 1st. 252-258-4365 or mennsm@
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NOW PRELEASING Reserve your
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2 & 3 Bedroom Townhouses For Rent.
1 1/2. to 2 1/2 baths. Dudley Ts Grant
off Fire Tower Rd. All Appliances.
Washer/Dryer hookups. $745-$845
per month. Call 341-0223 for more
information.

All size homes for rent near campus.
Excellent homes with outstanding
maintenance service included. All
amenities/dishwashers. oStroll to
Class with Class ? (252) 814-9894;
rentahouse@yahoo.com

STUDENT SPECIAL. Walk to class.
3BR/1BA Duplex at 111 N. Meade.
W/D, HW Floors, Pets OK. Available
Immediately. $650/month: Call 704-
953-7804.

For Rent 2BR 2Bath 2013-B River Drive
(Dockside) Available Aug. 1st Call 252-
355-6339

University Court Apartments 1Br 1Bath
$375/mo 1st month Rent free, 5 Blocks
from ECU Campus, Call 919-649-6915

WALK TO CAMPUS AND DOWNTOWN!

WALK TO CLASS! HOUSES AVAILABLE:
How about your own house with a yard
(some dogs OK), a large bedroom and
be able to walk to campus, downtown,
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heat/air, basic cable, high speed internet,
washer/dryer, monitored alarm system
allincluded. A5 bedroom unit is available

UNIWERSITY PARK

AMENITIES: Range, Refrigerator & Dishwasher; Water & Sewer
included; ECU Bus Pick-Up; Central Heat & AC; Energy Efficient;
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August 1st, a 3 bedroom immediately.
Call Mike at 252-916-5680.

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2 bedroom apartment with hard wood
floors and central heat/air. Washer,
dryer, dishwasher, high-speed internet,
basic cable, water & sewer all included.
Available August 1st. Call 252-916-
5680.

Walk to Campus 3 BR 1.5 BA Recently
Renovated, Meade St., Hardwood
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shed. Pets ok. $650/month Aug. Ist
341-4608

FOR RENT 2, 3, 4 Bedroom houses.
Include washer, dryer and dishwasher.
Great Locations walking distance to
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WEDNESDAY JUNE 6, 2007

PAGE 12

THE EAST CAROLINIAN, SELF HELP BUILDING
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Title
The East Carolinian, June 6, 2007
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
June 06, 2007
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
35.5cm x 57.5cm
Local Identifier
UA50.05.06.02.1991
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Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
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