The East Carolinian, May 23, 2007


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





The East Carolinian VOLUME 82, ISSUE 77 May 23, 2007

EastCarolinian

ECU's International
House offers students
a variety of foreign
exchange opportunities
to quench anyone Ts
thirst to get out of
town.......Page 6

The ECU baseball team
opens up the C-USA
Baseball Tournament in
front of the rowdy Pirate
faithful tonight at Keith-
LeClair Stadium. Turn
to the sports section for
an in-depth preview of
what the Pirates need
to do to take home a
championship....Page 9

SPORTS
OPINION
CLASSIFIEDS

{ www.theeastcarolinian.com }

SUMMER
EDITION
WEDNESDAY MAY 23, 2007

Brody School of Medicine
students awarded fellowships

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Lef to right standing to sitting: Holly Moye, Wyllie Carhartt, Rita Sridaran, Bari Eberhardt, Catherine Knight, Courney Weems and Natalie Desouza.

Seven selected as
Schweitzer Fellows

ZACK HILL
SENIOR WRITER

Seven ECU medical students
were awarded Albert Schweitzer
fellowships. The fellowship is a one-
year interdisciplinary program that
focuses on community service and
leadership development.

Requirements for the fellowship
include 200 hours ofa health-related
service project, reports and evalua-

tions, organizing a health sympo-
sium and recruiting future fellows.

Wylie Carhartt and Holly
Moye will be providing nutrition
education to Latino families at the
Greene County Family Residency
Program called Project FUN that
will begin June 19.

oPeople across the country
know about the great things Sch-
weitzer Fellows do for the under
served and this will help provide
efficacy to many of my future ser-
vice projects as I settle into other
communities throughout my life, ?
said Carhartt.

Natalie Desouza and Rita Sri-
daran are Working on creating,
Autism Star, a social training
summer program for autistic chil-
dren and their siblings. The camp
is already in the planning stages
and will run from July 2 through
mid August.

oI have always enjoyed -help-
ing others and even regarding the
responses we have gotten from our
summer camp, I believe we are going
to fulfill a great need, ? said Sridaran.

see BRODY page 2

Women in health care traveling
exhibit and panel discussion

Laupus Library to
host the event

NIA RICHARDSON
STAFF WRITER

The William E. Laupus library

is hosting a national traveling

hibit honoring American women

10 have made a profound impact
ical field.

hibit titled, oChangi

in tt
n tne

The Face of Medicine: Celebrating
America Ts Women Physicians, ? is
made up of a series of 10-foot-high
panels that display the biographies
and accomplishments of great
women in medicine.

oThe exhibit brings out the
women Ts personalities. They fought
against the odds whether they were
financial or institutional, ? said
Gina Firnhaber, Laupus Library
research associate.

The women displayed in the
it come from many different

backgrounds and cultures.

Some of the women included in
the exhibit are Elizabeth Blackwell,
first woman to receive a medical
degree, and Antonia Novello, the
first female and Hispanic surgeon
general of the United States.

The exhibit includes two inter-
active workstations that allow visi-
tors to look deeper into the lives and
achievements of female physicians
from across the country. In addition

see WOMEN page 2

Faculty members
represent
university at

conferences

College of Technology
and Computer Science
faculty present work

KIMBERLY BELLAMY
NEWS EDITOR

. Faculty members in the Col-
lege of lechnology and Computer
Science were selected to present
their work at conferences in Nash-
ville, 1 N and Minneapolis, MN.

_ Dr. Merwan Mehta, asso-
ciate professor of technology

systems, was the only professor

that attended both conferences in
Nashville and Minneapolis.
Mehta was a keynote
speaker at the International
Conference on Software Pro-
cess _1CSP] in Minneapolis,
which was held on May 19-20.
From Minneapolis, Mehta
flew to Nashville to join five
other ECU faculty members at the
Annual Conference of the Insti-
tute of Industrial Engineers. The
Nashville conference took place
from May 19 to May 23.
Participants in the Nashville
conference were Dr. Paul Kauff-
man, chair of the department
of engineering, Dr Erol Ozan,
professor of technology systems,
Dr. B.J. Kim, assistant professor
of engineering; Dr. Andrew Jack-
son, chair of the department of
technology, Dr Sandra Furterer,
professor of technology systems
and Dr. Evelyn Brown, associate
professor of engineering.
_ Mehta and Jackson presented
a co-authored paper entitled,
oTheory of Constraints and Lean:

A Natural Fit for Manufacturing. ?

_ Furterer presented a paper
titled, oA Framework and Case
Study for Implementing Lean Six
Sigma in Small Companies, ?

Furterer got the inspiration
to choose this topic from work
completed by one of the students
in her class.

oMy student, Blake Smelcer,
applied Lean and Six Sigma tools

see CONFERENCE page 2







PAGE 2

THE EAST CAROLINIAN * NEWS

WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2007

Mendenhall Art Gallery exhibit WOMEN connie tom poe 1

displayed throughout May

An example of one of the many works of art on display the Mendenhall Art Gallery exhibition is shown above.

Art work contributed
by graduate and
undergraduates

JOSHUA NELMS
STAFF WRITER

The Mendenhall Art Gallery
is hosting an art exhibition titled
oSpace and Boundary, ? throughout
the month of May.

Coordinated by The Visual Arts
committee, oSpace and Boundary ?
is an exhibit that hopes to bridge
the gap between different mediums
of artistic diversity and reflect aes-
thetic value in both tangible space
and internal mental capacity.

Theartmediums involved include
textiles, sculpture and photography.

Ben Lustig, photographer, was

an-inspiration for the name of the

exhibition. Lustig Ts photography
incorporates many different parts
of nature and captures the elements
of landscapes.

Lustig Ts fascination with nature
has a great deal to do with him
growing up in a rural area.

oMy-images seek to re-visit the
same close connection to the land I
experienced as a child, ? said Lustig.

Maria Modlin designed a tex-
tiles portion of the exhibition.
Modlin created different types
of clothing using Photoshop to
manipulate images of disease cells
on to fabric. oThe imagery of these
diseases is actually beautiful and
mimics other forms of organic life, ?
said Modlin.

Adam Adcock, sculptor, also
has work displayed in the exhibit.
Adcock creates abstract, mixed-
media sculptures as a physical rep-

resentation of intangible ideas.
oThe motivation to create comes
from my desire to comprehend the

complex, mysterious world that

surrounds me, ? said Adcock.

Other artists involved in the
exhibit include sculptor Chris Lee,
along with textiles students Ellie
McGlaufin and Jenn Brantley.

oSpace and Boundary ? is one
of the many monthly exhibitions
that the Visual Arts Committee
has hosted.

The exhibit will be displayed in
the Mendenhall Art Gallery until
Thursday, May 31.

The Visual Arts Committee
is responsible for managing the
Mendenhall Art Gallery through-
out the academic year.

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

Photos.com

to displaying the breakthroughs
that women have made in medicine,
the workstations provide informa-
tion to educate visitors on health
issues that affect the community.
Laupus Library is one of the
61 libraries in the country that
was awarded the grant to host the
exhibit, which is sponsored by the
National Library of Medicine.
» A panel discussion was held
2 in conjunction with the travel-
Ning exhibit, which involved local
women that hold various leader-
3 ship positions who spoke on health
2 issues that affect the community.
Afterwards, attendees got a

In recent years women have made many advances in the health care field.

chance to present questions to the
speakers.

oThe panel will serve to edu-
cate the community and share the
things that they've gone through to
represent who they are, ? said Kelly
Rogers, information and communi-
cation specialist of Laupus Library.

The panel discussion was held
yesterday at 7 p.m. in the Edwin W.
Monroe AHEC Conference Center.

The exhibit was placed in the
library on Saturday, April 28, where
it will remain until Monday, May 28.

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

BRODY continued from page 1

_ Bari Eberhardt and Mary Cath-
erine Knight will be working to
create a bone health education
program focusing on nutrition,
lifestyle and physical activity for
middle school students in Pitt
County Schools.

Most of their project will be
carried out during the 2007-2008
school year in Pitt County.

oIt is a huge honor to be among
the North Carolina Schweitzer fel-
lows and I look forward to working
on this project during the upcoming
year, ? said Knight.

Promoting Education and Pro-
tection [PEP], is the project Court-
ney Weems will be involved in.

It is designed to promote skin
cancer education and awareness to

community workers in the tourism
industry.

oBecoming a Schweitzer for
life has been one of my proudest
moments to date. I know my par-
ticipation in this fellowship will
affect all of my future plans and it
will allow an outlet for my desire to
serve, ? said Weems.

The fellowships have been
offered since. 1991 and have been
implemented in Baltimore, Boston,
Chicago, Pittsburgh, New York,
New Hampshire and Vermont.
They were first offered in North
Carolina in 1994.

This writer can be contacted at
news@theeastcarolinian.com







WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2007



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THE EAST CAROLINIAN ¢ NEWS

PAGE 3

CONFERENCE continued from page 1

to his family owned business where

he is general manager, to reduce

~ the cost of doing business and to
enhance the customer service. _

oI adapted my framework that

I had developed for my disserta-

tion research from 2004, where I

implemented Lean and Six Sigma.

improvement methodologies in
small companies, ? said Furterer.
oEffects of External Stimuli on
Stair Descent in Older Adults, ? is
the paper Kim presented.
Kauffman and Ozan also

co-authored a paper called,
oA Quality Function Develop-
ment-Based Decision Model
for the Avionics Industry. ?

Their paper has also received
recognition in the March 2007 edi-
tion of the Engineering Management
Journal in which it was published.

To learn more about the Col-

_lege of Technology and Computer

Science, visit-tec.ecu.edu.

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

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PAGE 4 . THE EAST CAROLINIAN ¢ NEWS WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2007

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Opinion

Racial profiling
infects society

Stereotypes run deep

ELISE PHILLIPS
PULSE EDITOR

The other day as I was riding the bus, I noticed something that
I have heard a lot about in classes and in the news, but had never
experienced directly.

Sitting right across from me was a beautiful Middle Eastern woman,

wearing traditional clothing with her head wrapped tightly. I had seen.

women like this before, mostly on television, but also in America. However,
I noticed something different this time.

As I looked into the woman Ts brown eyes, I saw something disturbing;
I saw an almost shameful fear in her eyes.

I looked around and saw all of the other passengers on the bus trying
to steal a glance of the woman, but she continued to stare intently at the
floor, with that look in her eyes.

I started to wonder if maybe she was feeling out of place, or maybe she
was feeling that the other passengers were thinking that she was a terror-
ist. Maybe that Ts why her eyes portrayed the feeling that they did.

Why in America do people judge others based on their race?

It Ts probably an age-old question, but it seems that there are many
stereotypes for different races in the United States, despite how open-
minded some people consider themselves to be.

African-Americans are viewed as criminals, Caucasians as wealthy
and privileged, some Asians are portrayed as intelligent, while others are
considered only goo oenough to work in a nail salon. American Indians
are portrayed as drug addicts or alcoholics, Hispanics as non-English-
speaking construction workers and Middle Easterners as terrorists.

At ECU, I have noticed that even college students, a new generation
of Americans, are still engaging in these racial stereotypes.

For the most part students still tend to socialize primarily with people
of the same race. id :

Why does this type of thinking still govern in today Ts society?

Maybe the media perpetuates these ideas, or perhaps these ideas are
so deeply ingrained in our mindsets that they can Tt be removed.

Maybe humans like to find people who are different from them to
find fault with.

The US is not the only country to have problems between races. Just
look at the struggle in Iran between the Kurds and Iranians as yet another
example of how racial profiling plagues today Ts society.

Although the aforementioned racial struggles resulted in war, the
stereotypes that we assign races in the US can be just as deadly.

For a country that prides itself on freedom. and independence, we
are oppressing certain ethnicities with our closed-minded molds of their
expected behavior.

Maybe my writing on this subject is not even worth the time. Will
our country ever change?

Maybe not, but I know that keeping quiet about these injustices will
only further them.

This writer can be contacted at opinion@theeastcarolinian.com

{ www.theeastcarolinian.com }

WEDNESDAY MAY 23, 2007

RANT OF THE DAY

I Tm not even in school this summer

and | still read the pirate rants!!!

PAGE 5

GENILY

oe
MERRIDY HOY MERRIE MERRILY, Nea

DREAM...

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.:

Dear Guitar Hero, Can | have my
boyfriend back now? Thanks.

| have a new idea when your sun burnt
and have no aloe- use cold carrots!
It Ts very soothing.

I Tm not even in school this summer
and | still read-the pirate rants!!!

Does anyone know how to train a dog
to play frisbee? | keep throwing one at
my dog but it just hits her in the head

| look forward to getting out of class
on Fridays at 11:00 and going home
for the weekend until | get on the
Minges bus and see the driver. Just
looking at him makes me-want to stay
on the bus. He is super hot

If Quidditch were a real sport, | would
so play

Just because you believe in
something doesn Tt mean you should
shove it down other people Ts throats.
That goes for both sides of any and
every debate

Being the oother woman T is nothing to
brag about

You know you spend too much time in
the library when you walk by the desk
after hours and the guard doesn Tt
even check your ID because he
recognizes you.

| wish life had background music.
| know the editor Ts boyfriend.

My mother thinks | am an alcoholic,
and | don Tt go out half as much as
everyone else | know.

I like my job, but hate the people |
work with.

| woke up this morning and my
horoscope told me to blow off life for
the day, so | did.

My-best friend is leaving ECU for
another school next year and | think |
am going to die without her!!

| hate it when your dating someone
and they are all lovie dovie when you
are alone but then they act like total
jerks in front of their friends!

Sarah Campbell
Editor in Chief

Kimberly Bellamy
News Editor

Elise Phillips
Features Editor
Greg Katski Lizz Wells
Sports Editor Photo Editor

Stephanie Smith
Production Manager

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 Eas T
Carolinian, SelfHelp Building, Greenville,
N.C. 27858-4353. Gall 252-328-9238 fo;

more information. One copy of the East Car

olinian is free, each additional copy is $1







Features

Horoscopes:

Aries

Decide what you want to accomplish.
Get the picture in your mind. Next, of
course, the work part will begin. Be
convinced this is worthwhile.

Taurus

You can write limericks or ad jingles,
and send them off in the mail. Your

odds of winning such intellectual.

contests from home are now higher
than ever.

Gemini

Hold yourself to high standards.
Back up your theory with facts. No
fair deciding what Ts going on until
all the evidence is in. Leave yourself
room to learn.

Cancer

Don't invest in a new gadget until you're
sure you need it. You can wait, and
while you do, think of something better.

Leo

Amazingly, the money comes in from
somewhere. It doesn Tt seem to be
work-related, but not gaming-related
either. It Ts more like a gift or a legacy.
Or it could be from under couch
cushions. Check it out.

Virgo

Be careful, you're getting stronger.
You're more likely to offer what you
really think instead of what others
expect. Be prepared for ihe verbal
assault that could result.

Libra

The very thing that annoys you about

another person could be similar
to something you don Tt like about
yourself. Think and be nice.

Scorpio
The pressure is easing, and soon youl
be able to relax with your friends.

Don't tell them everything you've been
doing. Get them to talking instead.

Sagittarius

Make your decision early; confusion
increases later. If you've already set your
perimeters, they'll be easier to maintain.

Capricorn

Count up your winnings and you
should find more than you thought
you had. Stash it away in a safe place,
and continue to plan your escape.

Aquarius

Ask a person who Ts good with money
to help you devise a sound budget.
Don Tt ask the person who keeps trying
to get you to go into debt. Cut that one
out of the loop.

Pisces

By focusing on your work, you're
making a.good impression. Do that
intently now. You can relax later.

Photo by Lizz

Foreign Exchange
programs offers diversity

LAURA HUHN
STAFF WRITER

Are you tired of only traveling
to the library to study? Do you
want to be able to travel, but know
that as soon as the real world calls,
there won't be any time? Would you
like to be able to put your foreign
language knowledge to good use?

Then ECU Ts Foreign Exchange
Program is perfect for you.

The Foreign. Exchange Pro-
gram, which is offered through
the Office of International Affairs,
is focused on bringing once-in-a-
lifetime international study expe-
riences to ECU students of all
concentrations. The-exchange
programs include either semester
or year long stays. The cost is typi-
cally the same as ECU Ts tuition, and
the room and board is usually paid
to the host institution. "

In the foreign exchange pro-
gram, the goal is to bring as many
international students over to ECU
as they send overseas.

oFor every student we send
overseas, we get another one back.
It Ts a great way to internation-

{ www.theeastcarolinian «°° }

Students:

orn

$

McLa

Photo by Robyn

WEDNESDAY MAY 23, 2007

PAGE 6

need a change of scenery?

alize our campus, ? said Brandi

Dudley, Assistant Director for

Study Abroad.

When students participate in
an exchange, their lives are often
changed in a big way.

oWhen students come back,
they'll have a glitter in their eye, ?

International House offers students a number of chances to study abroad.

Dudley said. oThey are typically
better students, and will often go on
to grad school and job ventures they
would have never before considered. ?

There are three different
options within the exchange pro-
gram. First is the ECU Bi-Lateral
Exchange, in which students are

exchanged with an institution in
direct relationship with ECU. The
next program is UNC-EP, which is
a statewide program that focuses
on statewide relations within the
exchange. Finally is ISEP, a global
exchange program that is the larg-

- est of its type in the world.

Some of the many destinations
included in the Foreign Exchange
Program are Germany, Costa Rica,
Finland, Australia, Japan, Poland,
Russia, Uruguay, Ghana, Chile and
Lithuania. The United Kingdom
and France are among the most
popular destination choices.

Not only does this program
include a seemingly endless
amount of different experiences,
but its aim is also to provide
the students with the most eco-
nomical opportunities possible.

oT Tm always looking for the
most cost-effective way to get stu-
dents abroad, ? Dudley said.

There.are even ways of get-
ting financial aid. There are two
scholarships offered through the
Office of International Affairs--
The Rivers Scholarship and the
Benjamin A. Gilman Scholarship.
There are often other scholarships
offered through organizations and
academic departments, which the
Office of International Affairs

see TRAVEL page 8

Finding a place to call home during college

Student apartments .
offer variety

ELISE PHILLIPS
PULSE EDITOR

College life can be crazy enough
without worrying about where
to live.

Most students at ECU live at
least one year in the dorms, where
everything is included and where
classes, food, the gym and other
facilities are only a walk away.
While dorms can be convenient for
students, sometimes living with a
roommate, combined with a lack of
privacy can prove to be too much
for some.

oWhen I lived in the dorms, I

couldn't believe how little privacy I
actually got. That little room with
a person I didn Tt really even know
was really stressful. I needed my
own space before I went crazy, ? said
Tiara Street, sophomore psychol-
ogy major

So what do most students do
when dorm life is simply not for them?

Many students do what sopho-
more Adrian Williams did: they
move to a student apartment.

oAfter living in a dorm where
everything was all-inclusive, I
wanted to find something that
would only require one bill for rent,
electricity, cable, and internet. I
wanted my privacy, but I also wanted
the convenience of payment that the

see APARTMENTS page 8







WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2007

WE HAVE A

University Mano
3535 East 10th

THE EAST CAROLINIAN ¢ FEATURES

UNIVERSITY MANOR

PAGE 7

Movie of the Week:
Shrek the Third ©

Third Shrek Proves to
be Best of the Series

BEN HARRIS
STAFF WRITER

Even though the summer movie
season Just began, three huge films
are already battling it out to become
this year Ts leading moneymaker.

Spiderman 3, Shrek the Third
and Pirates of the Caribbean 3, all
assumed pinnacles of three enor-
mously popular series, are sure to
be the biggest blockbusters of the
summer. Shrek 3, which opened
last weekend, is anticipated to
be the grand winner of them all.
While financial competition will
definitely not be a problem for
the film, the movie also gives its
cinematic competitors more than
ample competition with a beauti-
ful arsenal of a well-written and
hilarious screenplay, great vocal
acting and hypnotic animation.

The movie continues the story
line left open by the previous film,

Shrek 2. A reluctant Shrek and his

' wife Fiona try to cope with the rig-

orous demands of blossoming roy-
alty, all the while aided by their loyal
friends Puss in Boot and Donkey.

Shrek 3 is marvelously well
written. Most animated movies
exist purely for the Saturday after-
noon entertainment of children and
offer little thought, just mindless
filler intertwined with a few jokes
and a dash of pretty colors.

Shrek, on the other hand, shines
with intelligently conceived jokes
that appeal to all ages and a flow-
ing storyline that transitions
wonderfully from the previous
two films. The jokes are without a
doubt what make the film what it is.

The main reason people see the
film is because of the hilarious and

intelligent jokes that seem to never

run out of comedic steam. The film
manages to turn even the most seri-
ous and dark of childhood fairy tale "
characters into laughable messes.
Of course, the characters are

see SHREK page 8

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PAGE 8

THE EAST CAROLINIAN ¢ FEATURES

TRAVEL continued from page 6

would be able to help students find.
Vladim Bobrovnikov, a senior
neuroscience major, and Courtney
Elliott, a junior political science
major, both participated in the For-
eign Exchange Program last year.
Bobrovnikov spent a year at Man-
chester Metropolitan University in
Manchester, England, where Elliott
Joined him for the spring semester.
oI thought it would broaden my
perspective. I also saw that it could be
important for my academic and pro-
fessional goals, and could give mean
edge academically, T said Bobrovnikov. -
Elliott had her own reasons,
as well.
oI wanted a change of scenery,
and I recognized that it was just a
great opportunity, ? she said.

The students also found that
there was a lot to learn and bring
back from the exchange experience.

oAs a whole, it makes you more
mature, in the way you both per-
ceive and understand things. It also
makes you appreciate what you have
even more. In América, we have a
lot of everything, and you can Tt help
but make comparisons when you go
abroad. You might as well go when
you're young, ? Bobrovnikov said.

For more information on the
Foreign Exchange. Program, you
can visit the website at ecu.edu/

intlaffairs or send an email to.

studyabroad@ecu.edu.

This writer can be contacted at
features@theeastcarolinian.com

APARTMENTS Sie from page 6 )

dorm provided, ? said Williams, who
lives in North Campus Crossing.

One convenient aspect of dorm
life that is hard to dispute is that
one bill covers all of the necessities.
In apartment complexes, there are
sometimes many bills involved "
one for rent, electricity, cable and
internet service. However, many
student apartments in Greenville
offer a combined bill.

So which is better, the dorms or
student apartments?

Some students genuinely enjoy
living in a dorm.

oLiving on campus is great.
I Tve met so many great friends, and
everything is so close. Campus
facilities include two gyms, two
dining halls, a swimming pool and
I can basically roll out of bed and
go to class. I think that living with
a roommate is the least stressful
thing about living in a dorm, ? said
sophomore Danica Wanko.

However, with the influx of stu-
dent apartments in Greenville, such
as Pirate Ts Cove, North Campus
Crossing, Pirate Ts Place, University
Manor, The Exchange and Campus

Pointe Apartments, it seems that
many students like the idea of living
off-campus in a student apartment.

oWhen it comes down to it,
dorms are probably the more eco-
nomical choice, and the parking is
definitely simpler, but I would pay
more and be a little more inconve-
nienced if it meant having the pri-
vacy I want and need, ? said Street,
who lives in The Exchange.

oI feel like I Tm establishing a
sense of adulthood by living on my

. own, even if my complex is geared

toward students. I Tm learning how
to pay my rent on time, how to clean
up my very own living space and
how to keep myself focused while
living in my own apartment.. |

would much rather live here than .

in a dorm, ? Street said.

While most agree that living in
a dorm can prove to be cheaper and
more convenient, many students
would trade these things for a place
that they can call their own.

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

SH REK continued from

voiced by the very same people that
brought the previous two films to
life. Mike Myers does an incred-
ible characterization of Shrek. His
voice is almost a carbon copy of his
famous character Austin Powers.

Cameron Diaz provides the
voice for Shrek Ts wife, Fiona. Brit-
ish actor Rupert Everett does a
terrific job with voicing Prince
Charming, and animation new-
comer Justin Timberlake voices the
young teenage King Arthur.

The film is expected to
attract huge numbers for the

page 7

first few weekends. Those plan-
ning to see the movie should
plan to buy tickets as early as
possible. In the already crowded
field for this year Ts summer movie
season, Shrek the Third definitely
stands out as one of the best
films to come out of the far far
away land known as Hollywood.

Overall Grade: A+

This writer can be contacted at
features@theeastcarolinian.com

WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2007

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Sports

Most Valuable Pirat
assatl ECU Base

ball Award

Josh Dowdy

Dowdy helped ECU clinch the second
seed in this nate Pr C-USA Tournament

oOur pitching staff has been a key
component this year and one the
reasons for our success..and Josh
Dowdy gave us another solid start on
Saturday. ?
- ECU baseball Head Coach Billy

_ Godwin. |

Online poll question:

Do you think that the ECU baseball
team will ever fulfill former coach Keith
LeClair Ts dream of playing inthe College ,
World Series in Omaha and someday ®
winning the championship?

-Yes, the team is making strides
under ECU baseball Head Coach Billy
Godwin

-No, the team has been digressing
ever since LeClair retired because of
complications with ALS.

-Maybe, it Ts too early to tell if the team
can get back to the competitive level it
was at under LeClair.

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
posted in next Wednesday's edition of
The East Carolinian.

{ www.theeastcarolinian.com }

WEDNESDAY MAY 23, 2007

PAGE 9

ECU rounds third, comes home to host

Pirates will lean on
weekend warriors and
10% man

RONNIE WOODWARD
SENIOR WRITER.

Postseason college baseball is
essentially a test of a team Ts pitch-
ing depth and durability, which is
why ECU cannot afford a loss to
Tulane in the first round of the C-
USA Tournament tonight.

The Pirates have found three
solid starting pitchers in T.J. Hose,
Dustin Sasser and Josh Dowdy, but
have been stuggling all season to
find a fourth. A loss to seventh-
seeded Tulane tonight would mean
that ECU would have to win five
consecutive games in the next four
days to capture the C-USA Cham-

Photo by Terrell Gordy

Junior starting pitcher T.J. Hose will take the mound after an exceptional season going against opponents aces.

pionship, which is very tough for
any team to do.

oIf you stay in the winner Ts
bracket, you only have to play four
games in five days, ? said ECU Head

Coach Billy Godwin after practice
on Monday. oThe tough part is
when you fall in the loser Ts bracket
and are forced to play two games in
one day or six games in five days,

that Ts when it becomes taxing. ?
The Pirates T haven Tt won a
game with someone other than

see KEY page 10

A hole is left on the defensive line

Donnie Thompson

Donnie Thompson was a
prolific recruiter

GREG KATSKI
SPORTS EDITOR
When ECU issued a press
release stating that assistant head
football coach and defensive line
coach Donnie Thompson was
arrested by campus police and sub-
sequently resigned from his posi-
tion many in the community were
left wondering why, but perhaps
an even bigger question should be
posed by the Pirate faithful.

Where does the team turn now
that Thompson has severed all ties
with the program?

With 32 years of coaching
experience at the collegiate level,
Thompson was the most experi-
enced assistant on ECU football
Head Coach Skip Holtz Ts staff.
More importantly, Thompson was
a seasoned recruiter with strong
ties to the eastern North Carolina
community.

While serving as the defensive
line coach and a special teams
assistant at UNC from 1989-1997
Thompson was credited with the
recruitment and development of

Pirates end regular s?,?aSOn On a

ECU finishes second in
C-USA

RONNIE WOODWARD
SENIOR WRITER

The ECU baseball team fin-
ished second in C-USA in the
regular season, but that feat didn Tt
come easy as it needed a win on the
last day of the season to secure its
second-place finish.

After losing the first two games
of their last conference series, the

- Pirates had a half-game lead over a

streaking Southern Miss club and

were in danger of losing the second
seed in this week Ts C-USA Tourna-
ment. But sixteen hits and a strong
performance by pitcher Josh Dowdy
led the Pirates to a 10-2 victory,
securing the second seed.

oThe difference in our season
were the two weekends when
we lost the first two games, but
responded on the last day and won, ?
said ECU baseball Head Coach
Billy Godwin earlier this week.
oWe were picked to finish fifth or
sixth in C-USA in some polls, but
we finished second and to win 36
games with the schedule we had is

positive, we just have to get hot at

the right time and play well. ?
~ Dowdy (4-1) allowed two runs

and struck out four in six innings -

on Saturday.

oI think I pitch better under
pressure, ? Dowdy said. oWe lost
those two games, which we prob-
ably shouldn't have lost, but that Ts
baseball and it happens. We came
out on Saturday and hopefully that
[win] will get us on a roll. ?

Dowdy said that he has thrived
under pressure since his days at
Raleigh Ts Wakefield, High School.
The outspoken pitcher posted a
1.06 ERA and struck/out 85 batters,
which both still stand as school

future NFL stars, including Pro
Bowl defensive end Julius Peppers.
Under his tutelage during the
1997 season the Tar Heels posted
a program record 42 sacks and
ranked second nationally in rush-
ing defense.

Like so many other greats of the
game, including George O TLeary
and Lou Holtz, Thompson Ts legacy
has now been forever tainted. As
stated by an ECU press release,
a warrant was filed by the ECU
police claiming Thompson created
and submitted fictitious receipts to

see DONNIE page 10

high note
records, in his senior season at
Wakefield: He was also the Catfish
Hunter Award recipient as Wake
County Ts High School Player-of-
the-Year in 2005.

oT like it when our backs up
against the wall, and everything
is left up to me, ? said Dowdy. oI Tve
been that way since high school
and I think that Ts carried into col-
lege, I Tve kind of showed some of
the guys that even though I Tm a
younger guy, I can still step onto
the mound and be ready to go.

"Saturday's win gave ECU a

see RECAP page 12







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PAGE 10

THE EAST CAROLINIAN ¢ SPORTS

WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 2007

KEY continued from page 9

Hose, Sasser or Dowdy as the
starting pitcher since April 20,
when freshman Mike Anderson
started in ECU Ts 14-1 victory over
Savannah State. The struggle to
find a fourth starter was no more
evident than in ECU Ts midweek loss
to Elon last week. The Pirates used
seven pitchers in the game, four in
the first two innings, ultimately
resutling in a 4-2 loss.

Junior T.J. Hose will start for
the Pirates tonight. Hose has been
the Pirates T No 1. starter all season,
and has showed the ability to pitch
well in big games throughout his
career, especially at Clark-LeClair
Stadium.

oIt Ts a huge game, ? Hose said
of the first round matchup with
Tulane. oIt Ts a clean slate and a way
for us to get momentum back on
our side. I hope to go out there, do
the little things, command the zone
with all three of my pitches and go
out and get a win. ?

ECU and Tulane have some
history in the C-USA Tournament.
Tonight Ts match up will mark the
third year in a row that the two
clubs have faced each other in the
conference tournament.

In the 2006 tournament, ECU
beat Tulane in the first round, only
to be eliminated by the Green Wave
two days later. Tulane has won nine
of the last 12 games between the
two, including three of the last four
in the C-USA Tournament. .

oTulane has one of the best.

baseball programs in the country,
and when you have a good program,
you have a chance anytime you play
because the expectations are high, ?
said Godwin. oIt Ts going to be a dog
fight, but I think our guys are up
to that. ?

Tulane will start sophomore
right-hander Shooter Hunt. Hunt
finished the regular season with a
2:44 ERA and a 6-5 record in 14
starts. The University of Virginia
transfer shut down the Pirate

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SALE &

offense earlier this season, allow-

ing one earned run and striking
out nine In seven innings In an 8-2
Tulane win.

oThey're throwing Shooter
Hunt against us and we're expect-
ing a big outing out of T.J. Hose, ?
said Pirate leadoff hitter Har-
rison Eldridge. oIt Ts going to be
interesting to how this conference
tournament pans out, but we Tre
ready to go. ?

Hose pitched well against "

Tulane earlier this season despite
suffering the prior loss. He allowed
only two runs in six innings in a
pitching duel won by Tulane, 2-1.
Hose said he expects another pitch-
ing duel tonight.

oWe saw Hunt in probably his
best game of his year and he Ts going
to throw in the low 90s, with a good
breaking ball, ? Hose said of Hunt.

Hose is penciled in as tonight Ts
starting pitcher, but the rest is
still up in the air, according to
Godwin.

oWe're going to start Hose,
and after that it will be to be deter-
mined, ? he said. oWe'll match it up
with the pitcher who gives us the
best chance to win after that. ?

One thing Hose and the rest of
the Pirates will have on their side
this week is home-field advantage.
Clark-LeClair Stadium has been a
great atmosphere since it opened
in 2005, and should be the same
this week.

oT know I'll have the 10° man out
there, the fans behind us and it should
be a great crowd, ? Hose said.

ECU has three very strong
starting pitchers in Hose, Sasser
and Dowdy, and the conference Ts
best closer in junior Shane Mathews.
If the Pirates can win tonight and
preserve its pitching staff the rest
of the way, arun at the C-USA title
is a realistic possibility.

This writer can be contacted at
sports@theeastcarolinian.com

SID

DONNIE continued from page 9

be reimbursed for money said to be
spent while recruiting student ath-
letes. The receipts came to a total
of $11,373.70.

Thompson was,arrested by
campus police Tuesday, May. 8
and released under an unsecured
$10,000 bond, according to an
ECU press release.

On Friday, May 11 Thompson

. pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor

forgery charge in the Pitt County
courthouse and subsequently
resigned from his position on the
staff Tuesday, May 15.

In the wake of Thompson Ts
departure, ECU Athletic Direc-
tor Terry Holland and Holtz said
they would immediately look for a
replacement. While a replacement
will fill the needs of the team in
the short run, not even the best
coach can establish the relation-
ship that Thompson had with his
line. Thompson had close ties
with many of his young defensive
linemen, and even recruited some
of them.

As a defensive lineman and
three-year letter winner at the Uni-
versity of Connecticut, Thompson
knew how to relate to his big men
in the trenches; he Ts been there

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Donnie Thompson riles up his defensive line before a game against Duke.

his entire life. Before playing at
UConn, Thompson was a four-
year letter winner as a defensive
lineman at Bogalusa High School
in Bogalusa, La. Immediately after
graduating from UConn, Thomp-
son joined the Huskies coaching
staff as a linebackers and defensive
ends coach.

One defensive lineman that
truly thrived under Thompson

-was 6 feet 5, 277 pound, defensive

end Marcus Hands. Going into his
junior season, Hands, once rated
as the 40th best defensive end

nationally by Phil Steele Maga--

zine, must now become the leader
of an inexperienced and embattled
line without his mentor.

Of all the defensive linemen
listed on the ECU football spring
roster, nine are underclassmen. Of
the five seniors on the roster only 6
feet 3, 286 pound, Mark Robinson
has seen significant playing time
going into the 2007 season. He
is projected as the starting nose
guard, while fellow senior Wen-
dell Chavis is listed as his primary
backup..

Similar to Hands, junior stand-
out defensive end Zach Slate has
been mentored by Thompson

during his career at ECU. The
success of the line is in the hands
of these emerging players, as well
as UNC transfer and playmaker
Khalif Mitchell. .

The Pirates rush defense
has improved. with the
maturation of Slate and Hands,
but also the arrival of Thompson.
When Thompson joined the pro-
gram with Holtz in 2005, ECU Ts
rush defense was one of the worst
in the nation. In the wake of the
John Thompson disaster, Holtz
knew that the team could not win
until it improved on both sides of
the line.

Success was slow to come,
as the 4005 Pirates were last in
C-USA in rushing defense, sur-
rendering an astounding 217.6
yards per game on the ground.
ECU was only slightly better in
the red zone, where strength on the
defensive line is really tested. The
Pirates surrendered points to their
opponents 84.4 percent of the time
the team was in the red zone.

In 2006 ECU jumped from 12th
to 6th in the conference in rushing
defense, allowing only 145.2 yards
per game on the ground. Even
more astounding was the Pirates
red zone defense. ECU moved up
from 10th in the league to 2nd,
giving up a score only 76.7 percent
of the time their opponent was in
the red zone.

Time will tell if the Pirates will
be significantly affected by the loss
of the most respected and experi-
enced assistant on Holtz Ts staff. To
find any short term indication of
his loss just look ahead to the end
of next season and note where the
téam stands in rushing defense. In
the long run though, the program
will truly be able to tell if this was
merely a minor setback or a giant
leap back.

This writer can be contacted at
sports@theeastcarolinian.com

Mark A. Ward

ATTORNEY
Board Certified Specialist in State Criminal Law

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Classifieds

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For Rent 2BR 2Bath 2013-B River Drive
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{ www.theeastcarolinian.com }

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PAGE 12

THE EAST CAROLINIAN ¢ SPORTS

RECAP continued from page 9

36-20 record and a 14-9 mark in
C-USA. The Pirates hope that
Saturday Ts win will give them
momentum heading into the C-
USA Tournament, which will be
held in Greenville, starting today.
oT think that last win was huge, ?
Dowdy said. oAfter losing a couple
games in a row, we got the win and
now we come back home to our fans
and have the conference tournament
right here, which will hopefully let
us go to where we.need to get to. ?
The Pirate offense finally came
alive on Saturday after scoring only
two runs in each of the first two
games against UAB. Catcher David
Forbes recorded a career-high
three hits and drove in three runs in

C-USA baseball final reg

Conference

Ww
Rice : 22
ECU 14
S. Miss 14
Houston 12
Memphis 12
UAB 12
Tulane 9
UCF 7.
Marshall 5

the win, while sophomore Stephen
Batts extended his conference-long
hitting streak to 22 games. °

Rice, which is ranked second in
the nation and seeded first in the
C-USA Tournament, is looking to
defend its title after dominating the
2006 tournament. ECU and the
other teams in C-USA are hoping
to challenge the national power-
house this week.

oAll that matters now is confi-
dence, and believing in what you
can do, ? Godwin said. oIf we come
out and play well, we Tve proven that
we can beat anyone in the country. ?

This writer can be contacted at
sports@theeastcarolinian.com

ular season standings

Overall
WwW
45
36
37
28
33
25
32
26
21

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Title
The East Carolinian, May 23, 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
May 23, 2007
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
35.5cm x 57.5cm
Local Identifier
UA50.05.06.02.1989
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
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