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<pb facs="00059343_0001"/>
www.theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
tec<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Volume 81 Number 4<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
September 13, 2005<lb/>
State gas shortage disrupts<lb/>
ECU bus routes<lb/>
John roberts faces the U.S. Senate during his confirmation<lb/>
hearing.<lb/>
John Roberts likely to<lb/>
be next chief justice<lb/>
I Making the post-<lb/>
 Rehnquist court<lb/>
? CHRIS MUNIER<lb/>
o NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
ECU'S Student Transit Services will curb several late night routes in wake of the fuel shortage<lb/>
Hurricane Katrina affects<lb/>
east coast economy<lb/>
LISA DEVRIES<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
In the wake of Hurricane<lb/>
Katrina and Governor Mike<lb/>
Easley's mandate, ECU had to<lb/>
make sweeping changes concern-<lb/>
ing fuel conservation on campus.<lb/>
TWo major gasoline pipelines that<lb/>
not only provide fuel to North<lb/>
Carolina, but also to much of<lb/>
the southeast, had no electricity.<lb/>
Gasoline in the state was run-<lb/>
ning low.<lb/>
Easley asked that all "non-<lb/>
essential" travel be restricted in<lb/>
the state, which included some of<lb/>
ECU'S bus routes. University vehi-<lb/>
cles were also not allowed to keep<lb/>
air conditioning running, mail<lb/>
delivery routes had to be cur-<lb/>
tailed and landscapers had to dis-<lb/>
continue the use of gas-powered<lb/>
lawn mowers. A gasoline shortage<lb/>
throughout North Carolina is<lb/>
expected to be short term, how-<lb/>
ever, and ECU's transit system is<lb/>
expected to be back to its normal<lb/>
running schedule by Sept. IS.<lb/>
The routes affected by the<lb/>
gas shortage were the blue line,<lb/>
which did not run during Labor<lb/>
Day weekend, and the Pirate<lb/>
"Students need to make smart<lb/>
choices about transportation<lb/>
in the late evening hours said<lb/>
Wood Davidson, general manager<lb/>
of ECU student transit authority.<lb/>
"Transit service schedules<lb/>
have been posted, and students<lb/>
should utilize the buses before<lb/>
the 12:30 a.m. shutdown time<lb/>
Also, Scott Alford, ECU's tran-<lb/>
sit adviser, said no drunk-driving<lb/>
accidents were reported down-<lb/>
Express, which normally run&amp;ai?0wn on Labor Day weekend<lb/>
until 3:30a.m. Instead, it stopped v apd the Safe Ride service still ran<lb/>
running at 12:30 a.m. The Pirate " 'on schedule.<lb/>
Express is a Thursday through<lb/>
Saturday night bus service that<lb/>
runs to predominantly student<lb/>
housing areas such as Pirate's<lb/>
Cove, University Manor and<lb/>
College Hill.<lb/>
Some students were con-<lb/>
cerned this might increase<lb/>
drunk-driving accidents over<lb/>
the weekend.<lb/>
Students are encouraged to<lb/>
ride the bus as often'as possible.<lb/>
Not only is it more economically<lb/>
and ecologically sound, Alford<lb/>
addresses another interesting point.<lb/>
"You've already paid for<lb/>
the service through school fees<lb/>
whether you ride the bus or not<lb/>
said Alford.<lb/>
"Why not use ECU transit if<lb/>
it's available in your neighbor-<lb/>
hood? It would save you from<lb/>
buying a commuter parking decal<lb/>
and it could save you on gas<lb/>
, Gasoline prices seem to be<lb/>
holding steady at three dol-<lb/>
lars per gallon but the cost is<lb/>
still exorbitantly high. The U.S.<lb/>
Department of Energy offers<lb/>
some tips on how commuters can<lb/>
drive more efficiently. Their first<lb/>
instruction, and probably the<lb/>
most abused, is to avoid speeding.<lb/>
Rapid acceleration and braking<lb/>
can lower gas mileage by up to<lb/>
five percent. Removing excess<lb/>
weight from your car can also<lb/>
affect your gas mileage. Avoid<lb/>
idling, if you have to sit in your<lb/>
car, turn off your engine. Air<lb/>
conditioning can overheat the<lb/>
engine and also wastes gas. Use<lb/>
cruise control during highway<lb/>
see ROUTES pageA2<lb/>
With the death of Chief Jus-<lb/>
tice of the Supreme Court Wil-<lb/>
liam Rehnquist and the potential<lb/>
retirement of Associate Justice<lb/>
Sandra Day O'Connor, the highest<lb/>
court in the U.S. will have its first<lb/>
vacancies in more than 10 years.<lb/>
Tinsley Yarbrough, distin-<lb/>
guished professor of political sci-<lb/>
ence, said Rehnquist had probably<lb/>
been terminally ill for quite some<lb/>
time but remained on the court<lb/>
because his mind still functioned<lb/>
well enough to continue.<lb/>
"He probably saw that pros-<lb/>
pect as much better than simply<lb/>
retiring from the court and going<lb/>
home to die said Yarbrough.<lb/>
Attention is focused even<lb/>
more on John Roberts, U.S.<lb/>
Court of Appeals judge. Roberts<lb/>
was originally nominated by<lb/>
President Bush to succeed to<lb/>
O'Connor but now Bush wants<lb/>
Roberts to take over the chief<lb/>
justice position. This has also<lb/>
caused O'Connor to postpone<lb/>
leaving the court.<lb/>
"Her retirement was contin-<lb/>
gent on the confirmation of her<lb/>
successor Yarbrough said.<lb/>
According to the Supreme<lb/>
Court Historical Society, O'Connor<lb/>
wrote to Bush to announce her<lb/>
retirement on July 1.<lb/>
"It has been a great privi-<lb/>
lege indeed to have served as<lb/>
a member of the court for 24<lb/>
terms said O'Connor.<lb/>
"I will leave it with enormous<lb/>
respect for the integrity of the<lb/>
court and its role under our con-<lb/>
stitutional structure<lb/>
However, O'Connor will prob-<lb/>
ably stay another year in order to<lb/>
take the pressure off Bush by<lb/>
relieving him of the task of get-<lb/>
ting two nominees confirmed.<lb/>
These could be nominations Bush<lb/>
may be wary of making in light of<lb/>
the recent drops in his approval<lb/>
rating. O'Connor was considered<lb/>
the "swing vote" of the court and<lb/>
Bush could have trouble getting<lb/>
a more conservative nominee<lb/>
confirmed by the Senate.<lb/>
"He may not want to pick a<lb/>
very controversial replacement<lb/>
see ROBERTS page A2<lb/>
Bassman becomes editor of UNC<lb/>
system's undergraduate<lb/>
Palestinians stand atop an empty Jewish synagogue after Israelis were forced to leave Gaza.<lb/>
Triumphant Palestinians take<lb/>
over abandoned Gaza synagogue<lb/>
NEVE DEKALIM, Gaza Strip<lb/>
(AP) ? Ecstatic crowds of Pal-<lb/>
estinians flooded into empty<lb/>
Jewish settlements early Monday,<lb/>
setting abandoned synagogues<lb/>
on fire in a chaotic celebration of<lb/>
the end of 38 years of Israeli mili-<lb/>
tary rule over the Gaza Strip.<lb/>
Plans by Palestinian police<lb/>
to bar crowds from the settle-<lb/>
ments quickly disintegrated, and<lb/>
militant groups hoisted flags and<lb/>
fired wildly into the air, illustrat-<lb/>
ing the weakness of the security<lb/>
forces and concerns about their<lb/>
ability to control growing chaos<lb/>
In Gaza. The pullout is widely<lb/>
seen as a test for Palestinian<lb/>
aspirations of statehood.<lb/>
Just after sunrise, the last<lb/>
column of Israeli tanks rumbled<lb/>
out of Gaza. Troops locked a<lb/>
metal gate and hoisted their<lb/>
national flag, removed from the<lb/>
Gaza military headquarters, on<lb/>
the Israeli side of the border.<lb/>
"The mission has been com-<lb/>
pleted, and an era has ended<lb/>
said Israel's Gaza commander,<lb/>
Brig. Gen. Aviv Kochavl, the last<lb/>
soldier to leave the strip.<lb/>
As soldiers poured out of Gaza<lb/>
throughout the night, jubilant<lb/>
Palestinians rushed into the<lb/>
abandoned settlements, turning<lb/>
Gaza's night sky orange as fires<lb/>
roared across the settlements.<lb/>
Women shrieked in joy, teens set<lb/>
off fireworks and crowds chanted<lb/>
"God is great<lb/>
"Today is a day of joy and<lb/>
happiness that our people were<lb/>
deprived of in the past century<lb/>
said Palestinian leader Mahmoud<lb/>
Abbas, adding that the Palestin-<lb/>
ians still have a long path toward<lb/>
statehood. He denounced Israeli<lb/>
rule in Gaza as "aggression, injus-<lb/>
tice, humiliation, killing and<lb/>
settlement activity<lb/>
By midday, the situation had<lb/>
calmed, and curious Palestinians<lb/>
quietly toured the abandoned<lb/>
Jewish settlements, as feelings<lb/>
of newfound freedom began to<lb/>
sink in.<lb/>
"Since last night, I have been<lb/>
in the street, for no reason, just<lb/>
to breathe the air of freedom<lb/>
said Samir Khader, a farmer<lb/>
in northern Gaza who needed<lb/>
Israeli permits to go in and out<lb/>
of his village, flanked by Israeli<lb/>
settlements. "I don't know what<lb/>
the future will bring, but at least I<lb/>
can come in and out of my house<lb/>
at any time<lb/>
Palestinians hope to build<lb/>
their state in Gaza, the West Bank<lb/>
and east Jerusalem - areas that<lb/>
Israel captured in the 1967 Mid-<lb/>
east War - but fear that Israel will<lb/>
not hand over additional terri-<lb/>
tory. They say Israel's occupation<lb/>
of Gaza has not ended because it<lb/>
retains control over borders and<lb/>
the air space.<lb/>
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel<lb/>
Sharon has said he remains com-<lb/>
mitted to the U.Sbacked "road<lb/>
map" peace plan, which calls for<lb/>
an independent Palestinian state,<lb/>
but linked any further withdraw-<lb/>
als to Abbas' ability to rein in<lb/>
militant groups.<lb/>
Israeli Defense Minister Shaul<lb/>
Mofaz urged the Palestinian to<lb/>
impose law and order or face a<lb/>
tough response. "We shall know<lb/>
how to act decisively and inten-<lb/>
sively in the face of any terror-<lb/>
ism he said.<lb/>
Abbas refuses to confront mil-<lb/>
itants, insisting he can persuade<lb/>
them to disarm peacefully. He<lb/>
has outlined an ambitious plan<lb/>
to reconstruct Gaza's shattered<lb/>
BASSMAN<lb/>
First statewide<lb/>
undergraduate research<lb/>
symposium this fall<lb/>
CHRIS MUNIER<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
see FIRE page A2<lb/>
In an effort to collaborate the<lb/>
research work of undergraduates<lb/>
across the state, the UNC system<lb/>
is forming a consortium that<lb/>
will provide for the documenta-<lb/>
tion of research accolades in a<lb/>
journal put together by ECU's<lb/>
Michael Bassman, associate vice<lb/>
chancellor and director of the<lb/>
honors program, EC Scholars and<lb/>
undergraduate research.<lb/>
"The 16 campuses have been<lb/>
meeting and we've decided we<lb/>
need to work closer together<lb/>
said Bassman.<lb/>
Directors of research from the<lb/>
UNC schools decided to begin<lb/>
organizing annual statewide<lb/>
research symposiums, and the<lb/>
journal will record everything<lb/>
that is presented at the sympo-<lb/>
sium by students. The Under-<lb/>
graduate Research Creativities<lb/>
Committee does the job of orga-<lb/>
nizing the symposium.<lb/>
"I asked each of the deans to<lb/>
submit the names of two faculty<lb/>
members from their school,<lb/>
who are on the committee, and<lb/>
the committee puts together the<lb/>
symposium Bassman said.<lb/>
ECU has done these types of<lb/>
S events in the past but now there<lb/>
? will be one collectively for all<lb/>
 public schools each year. The first<lb/>
 symposium is slated to take place<lb/>
 Nov. 12 at the Jane McKimmon<lb/>
O Center on the NC State campus.<lb/>
It will be titled, "State of North<lb/>
Carolina Undergraduate Research<lb/>
Symposium The first journal<lb/>
will follow that symposium.<lb/>
Research and working with<lb/>
professors is no longer a privilege<lb/>
exclusively for graduate students.<lb/>
ECU's honors program allows<lb/>
honors students to gain assistant-<lb/>
ships when they enroll in Univer-<lb/>
sity Honors to do a senior project.<lb/>
Undergraduates get to do some<lb/>
of the work graduate assistants<lb/>
normally do.<lb/>
"You assist the professor in<lb/>
hisher research Bassman said.<lb/>
"The idea is you have the<lb/>
opportunity to see what research<lb/>
is all about, get to know a profes-<lb/>
sor and get the opportunity to<lb/>
co-author or co-present with a<lb/>
professor<lb/>
Students' work is even being<lb/>
put into respected publications.<lb/>
"You'd be amazed at the<lb/>
number of students who have<lb/>
papers that are co-authored<lb/>
with professors or have articles<lb/>
accepted in journals Bassman<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Gaining an assistantshlp is<lb/>
reserved for honors students but<lb/>
participating in the symposium<lb/>
is open to all students. During<lb/>
ECU's Second Annual Research<lb/>
and Scholarship Day in 2004,<lb/>
students had the opportunity to<lb/>
give oral presentations and dis-<lb/>
play exhibits all over Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
In today's job market, students<lb/>
almost have to have research<lb/>
experience in order to be com-<lb/>
petitive applicants for graduate<lb/>
and professional schools.<lb/>
"Undergraduates are expected<lb/>
to do research now Bassman<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The work being showcased<lb/>
at symposiums is largely focused<lb/>
on the natural sciences. Bassman<lb/>
is working to emphasize a more<lb/>
multi-disciplinary symposium.<lb/>
The fields of humanities and<lb/>
fine arts in particular need more<lb/>
improvement.<lb/>
Bassman Is glad ECU will lead<lb/>
something that encompasses all<lb/>
UNC schools.<lb/>
"The editorial board will con-<lb/>
sist of people from all universities<lb/>
and colleges in North Carolina,<lb/>
but the nice thing is it will be<lb/>
housed here on our campus<lb/>
Bassman said.<lb/>
Bassman's department has<lb/>
received requests of $93,000 for<lb/>
research this year. They are will-<lb/>
ing to give each student up to<lb/>
$2,500 of grant money to com-<lb/>
plete a project.<lb/>
The Council on Undergradu-<lb/>
ate Research was designed to dis-<lb/>
tribute grants and help students<lb/>
organize their work to produce a<lb/>
thesis or other projects.<lb/>
Their mission statement is<lb/>
"to support and promote high-<lb/>
quality undergraduate student-<lb/>
faculty collaborative research and<lb/>
scholarship<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news?theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
INSIDE I News: A2 I Classifieds: A8 I Opinion: A3 I Student Life: A4 I Sports: A6 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059343_0002"/><lb/>
Page A2 news@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366<lb/>
CHRIS MUNIER News Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY September 13, 2005<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Salsa Dance<lb/>
The ECU Folk and Country<lb/>
Dancers are sponsoring a salsa<lb/>
dance on Friday, Sept. 16, at the<lb/>
Willis Building, 1st and Reade<lb/>
St. downtown. Instruction by<lb/>
Procopio and Heidi at 7:30 p.m<lb/>
dance from 8:30-11 p.m. and DJ<lb/>
- Ramon. Students $3, FASG<lb/>
members $5, public $8. A non-<lb/>
alcoholicnon-smoking event<lb/>
Emergency Preparation<lb/>
In preparation for Emergency,<lb/>
please refer to the ECU Alert<lb/>
Web site, www.plratemail.<lb/>
ecu.eduexchwebblnredir.<lb/>
asp?URL-http:www.ecu.edu<lb/>
alert'ecu.edualert.<lb/>
This link can also be found on the<lb/>
main ECU webpage "Hurricane<lb/>
Ophelia Advisory"<lb/>
Constitution Day<lb/>
On Sept. 17,1787, members of the<lb/>
Constitutional Convention signed<lb/>
the final draft of the Constitution<lb/>
and presented it to the American<lb/>
public. Constitutions are under<lb/>
debate around the world as<lb/>
governmental systems as different<lb/>
as the European Union and Iraq<lb/>
struggle to adopt a workable<lb/>
constitution. ECU will recognize<lb/>
Constitution Day during the week<lb/>
of Sept. 12-16. The official day of<lb/>
observation is Sept 17 every year.<lb/>
The Division of Academic Affairs<lb/>
and the Division of Student U'fe<lb/>
are sponsoring recognition of<lb/>
Constitution Day this year with the<lb/>
following programs and events.<lb/>
Schedule of Events<lb/>
Sept. 12-16, Joyner Library<lb/>
Hours: The following areas<lb/>
will host displays: Government<lb/>
Documents, the North Carolina<lb/>
Room, and the Teaching Resource<lb/>
Center<lb/>
Sept. 12-16, Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Hours: There will<lb/>
be a display from Joyner Library<lb/>
Special Collections, near the ATM<lb/>
entrance.<lb/>
Sept. 14-16, Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center Hours: Offices<lb/>
within the Department of University<lb/>
Unions will be hosting a door<lb/>
decorations contest. Students,<lb/>
faculty, and staff are encouraged<lb/>
to tour the building and vote<lb/>
on their favorite doors at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Welcome Center.<lb/>
Sept. 15, 3 p.m Students,<lb/>
faculty, and staff are encouraged<lb/>
to wear patriotic clothing to show<lb/>
their American pride. Anyone<lb/>
interested is encouraged to come<lb/>
to Mendenhall Student Center's<lb/>
main entrance, near Destination<lb/>
360, to take a group photograph.<lb/>
Cake and lemonade will be<lb/>
served.<lb/>
Sept. 15,4 p.m Presentation<lb/>
by Dr. Tinsley Yarbrough of ECU's<lb/>
Political Science Department. Dr.<lb/>
Yarbrough's presentation, "The<lb/>
Constitution and the Supreme<lb/>
Court will be held In the Teaching<lb/>
Resource Center of Joyner Library<lb/>
(2nd Floor).<lb/>
Sept. 16,12 p.m Webcast of<lb/>
Supreme Court Justices O'Connor<lb/>
and Breyer. To be held in Joyner<lb/>
Library Room 1418, doors open at<lb/>
11:30 a.m.<lb/>
Sept. 16,1:30 p.m Webcast<lb/>
from Margot Adler of National<lb/>
Public Radio, on the topic "Free<lb/>
Speech in the Digital Age<lb/>
For more information, contact the<lb/>
Office of Student Experiences at<lb/>
328-4965.<lb/>
Peace Week<lb/>
Peace Week, Sept. 18-24, your<lb/>
participation is needed. This is<lb/>
a yearly event that celebrates<lb/>
world peace through a variety<lb/>
of programs that is meant to<lb/>
bring students together. This<lb/>
year Peace Week starts on<lb/>
Sunday Sept. 18 until Saturday<lb/>
Sept. 24. We are looking for your<lb/>
organization to help, promote and<lb/>
support this program to make It<lb/>
another success<lb/>
Ebony Fashion Fair<lb/>
Ledonia Wright Cultural Center<lb/>
will host an Ebony Fashion Fair in<lb/>
the Wright Auditorium on Monday,<lb/>
Oct. 31,2005 at 7 p.m. Tickets are<lb/>
$23 and will go on sale starting<lb/>
Sept. 1 through the Central ticket<lb/>
office. For more information<lb/>
contact 328-6495.<lb/>
News Briefs<lb/>
Local<lb/>
Edwards' push against poverty<lb/>
has political benefits, pitfalls<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, NC (AP) - John<lb/>
Edwards says America is obliged<lb/>
to help the working poor escape the<lb/>
poverty cycle.<lb/>
As head of a new university think tank<lb/>
dedicated to examining the Issue,<lb/>
the former North Carolina senator<lb/>
now has a platform to deliver that<lb/>
message, one that helped lead him to<lb/>
John Kerry's side in 2004 and could<lb/>
help him down the presidential trail<lb/>
again in 2008.<lb/>
Keeping the "two Americas" theme<lb/>
he used during last year's campaign<lb/>
also could reinforce a message of<lb/>
widening disparity between rich<lb/>
and poor that many voters rejected,<lb/>
since Edwards lost the run for his<lb/>
party's nomination and then joined<lb/>
a Democratic ticket that didn't<lb/>
win a single southern state in the<lb/>
general election.<lb/>
Since ieaving the Senate in January,<lb/>
"he's got to generate his own media<lb/>
attention from that center said Merle<lb/>
Black, a political scientist at Emory<lb/>
University In Atlanta. "Right now, he<lb/>
risks the problem of being viewed as<lb/>
a one-Issue candidate<lb/>
Politicians who make a second run at<lb/>
the same office usually "dont win with<lb/>
the same message Black added.<lb/>
That kind of thinking hasn't kept<lb/>
Edwards from repeating the theme that<lb/>
drove his presidential campaign.<lb/>
"People In this country have to see<lb/>
this is a great moral cause Edwards<lb/>
said after a lecture earlier this week<lb/>
at the Center on Poverty, Work and<lb/>
Opportunity at the University of North<lb/>
Carolina School of Law.<lb/>
The tragedy of Hurricane Katrina gives<lb/>
Edwards a powerful Illustration of<lb/>
Edwards' call to reconcile the nation's<lb/>
economic gap. The poor, he argued,<lb/>
have suffered disproportionately<lb/>
because of the storm.<lb/>
"It's an ugly and horrifying wake-up<lb/>
call for America Edwards told an<lb/>
overflow crowd of more than 200<lb/>
students and staff members at UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill. "And it's time to act<lb/>
Law school students who attended<lb/>
the lecture said they like what<lb/>
Edwards is saying.<lb/>
"I'd love to see a lot of candidates on<lb/>
both sides of the aisle talking about<lb/>
poverty today said Erik Johnson, 26,<lb/>
a first-year student from Greensboro.<lb/>
"If Senator Edwards wants to make<lb/>
poverty a focus of a presidential<lb/>
campaign that would be exciting<lb/>
National<lb/>
Little In way to block chief Justice<lb/>
nominee as Senate hearings open<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Less than three<lb/>
years after first donning a judge's<lb/>
robe, John Glover Roberts Jr. is on a<lb/>
path toward speedy confirmation for<lb/>
becoming, at age 50, chief justice of<lb/>
the United States.<lb/>
A turbulent week that included the<lb/>
funeral of William H. Rehnquist,<lb/>
his mentor and the man he hopes<lb/>
to replace, his renomination by<lb/>
President Bush for chief justice and<lb/>
controversy over the government's<lb/>
tardy response to Hurricane Katrina<lb/>
has not dampened Roberts' candidacy<lb/>
to join the Supreme Court.<lb/>
Republicans and Democrats see<lb/>
no serious obstacle to Roberts'<lb/>
confirmation. Uberal, civil rights, civil<lb/>
libertarian and abortion rights groups<lb/>
have come out against him but not<lb/>
one of the Senate's 100 members<lb/>
has declared opposition.<lb/>
"I expect these hearings will show<lb/>
that you have the appropriate<lb/>
philosophy to lead our nation into<lb/>
the future said Sen. Mike DeWine,<lb/>
R-Ohlo, and a Judiciary Committee<lb/>
member, in a written copy of his<lb/>
opening statement.<lb/>
The committee was to open what<lb/>
is expected to be a four- or five-<lb/>
day hearing Monday. How Roberts<lb/>
answers questions from the panel's<lb/>
18 members about his record as a<lb/>
conservative lawyer in the Reagan and<lb/>
George H.W. Bush administrations will<lb/>
play heavily Into the confirmation vote<lb/>
by the full Senate, expected before<lb/>
the end of September. The Supreme<lb/>
Court begins a new term Oct. 3.<lb/>
Roberts originally was chosen to<lb/>
succeed retiring Justice Sandra Day<lb/>
O'Connor. But Rehnquist's death<lb/>
prompted the president to renominate<lb/>
him for chief justice, putting him in<lb/>
position to shape the court, possibly<lb/>
for decades.<lb/>
Senate Democrats have bitterly<lb/>
fought Bush's attempts to move the<lb/>
federal judiciary to the right. They<lb/>
plan even more intense questioning<lb/>
of Roberts now that he is slated to<lb/>
move all the way from a junior judge<lb/>
on the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals<lb/>
for the District of Columbia to the top<lb/>
spot on the Supreme Court.<lb/>
"The tragedy of Katrina shows<lb/>
In the starkest terms why every<lb/>
American needs an effective national<lb/>
government that will step In to meet<lb/>
urgent needs that Individual states<lb/>
and communities cannot meet on<lb/>
their own Sen. Edward M. Kennedy<lb/>
said in a statement prepared for the<lb/>
opening of hearings.<lb/>
The Massachusetts Democrat called<lb/>
Roberts an "intelligent, well-educated<lb/>
and serious man" but said the Senate<lb/>
"must also determine whether he has<lb/>
demonstrated a commitment to the<lb/>
constitutional principles that have<lb/>
been so vital in advancing fairness,<lb/>
decency and equal opportunity in<lb/>
our society<lb/>
International<lb/>
Disney opens Its newest theme<lb/>
park In Hong Kong<lb/>
HONG KONG (AP) - When Mickey<lb/>
Mouse and Donald Duck landed<lb/>
in Paris in 1992, French officials<lb/>
shunned the opening of Euro Disney,<lb/>
Intellectuals decried the Invasion<lb/>
of American pop culture and park<lb/>
workers protested the strict dress<lb/>
code.<lb/>
Disney's latest experience - its new<lb/>
park in Hong Kong - couldn't have<lb/>
been more different.<lb/>
Hong Kong Disneyland opened<lb/>
Monday with musicians clanging<lb/>
cymbals, Chinese lion dancers<lb/>
prancing precariously on tall poles<lb/>
and fireworks bursting In the sky.<lb/>
Chinese Vice President Zeng<lb/>
Qinghong joined Disney executives<lb/>
in front of the Sleeping Beauty Castle,<lb/>
declaring the park Hong Kong's<lb/>
"eternal carnival<lb/>
The ceremony ended with a parade<lb/>
of skipping Disney characters old and<lb/>
new: Mickey, Donald Duck, Mushu the<lb/>
dragon, Ulo and Winnie the Pooh.<lb/>
Earlier, hundreds of people lined up<lb/>
RObertS from page ?<lb/>
for Justice O'Connor Yarbrough<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"If he can get Roberts in, he<lb/>
is going to be getting someone<lb/>
of the Rehnquist mold who<lb/>
will be more conservative than<lb/>
O'Connor was<lb/>
Possible replacements for<lb/>
O'Connor include Judge Edith<lb/>
Clement, Judge Edith Jones and<lb/>
U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gon-<lb/>
zalez. Since O'Connor was the first<lb/>
woman to serve on the Supreme<lb/>
Court, Bush may feel compelled to<lb/>
replace her with a woman or choose<lb/>
Gonzalez, who would be the first<lb/>
Hispanic on the bench.<lb/>
"Gonzalez has been criti-<lb/>
cized for not being conservative<lb/>
enough Yarbrough said.<lb/>
"But he would probably be a<lb/>
consensus candidate who could win<lb/>
support, particularly as a Hispanic<lb/>
Roberts may get confirmed<lb/>
quickly by the Senate. Only<lb/>
recently has Roberts been any<lb/>
kind of judge, but that may not<lb/>
matter much. Yarbrough does not<lb/>
think Roberts' short experience as<lb/>
a judge will hinder his chances of<lb/>
getting approved as chief justice.<lb/>
"He has not been a judge,<lb/>
but some of the greatest Supreme<lb/>
Court justices were not judges<lb/>
at all before they became chief<lb/>
justices Yarbrough said.<lb/>
"That is not a reflection on<lb/>
John Roberts<lb/>
Former justices like John Mar-<lb/>
shall, Earl Warren and Hugo Black<lb/>
were not judges before making it<lb/>
to the Supreme Court.<lb/>
Yarbrough said the Rehnquist<lb/>
court was possibly one of the<lb/>
most involved courts in terms<lb/>
of judicial activism in American<lb/>
history. Roberts may not be as<lb/>
active though.<lb/>
"The conventional wisdom<lb/>
would be that someone like<lb/>
John Roberts would favor a more<lb/>
restrained court in civil liberties<lb/>
cases Yarbrough said.<lb/>
He said this may be a court<lb/>
that is less likely to over-rule the<lb/>
federal government in criminal<lb/>
cases or first amendment cases.<lb/>
Many of the other justices have<lb/>
been on the bench for a while but<lb/>
even Justice John Paul Stevens, the<lb/>
oldest court member, is in good<lb/>
health. The decision for justices<lb/>
to step down can be political and<lb/>
often depends on who is presi-<lb/>
dent at the time. Yarbrough said<lb/>
Rehnquist considered retiring' after<lb/>
Thurgood Marshall did in 1991<lb/>
but changed his mind once Presi-<lb/>
dent Clinton won the presidency.<lb/>
Rehnquist also felt the need to<lb/>
hang on longer after 2002 when<lb/>
the Senate got tighter amongst<lb/>
Democrats and Republicans.<lb/>
The next big development<lb/>
surrounding Supreme Court<lb/>
affairs will be finding out who<lb/>
will replace O'Connor.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
outside the gate, waiting to get in<lb/>
despite the sweltering heat.<lb/>
Michael Kuzma, of Celebration, Fla,<lb/>
was first in line. 'For over 50 years, the<lb/>
American people have experienced<lb/>
the happiness of Disney theme parks.<lb/>
I hope the people of China can enjoy<lb/>
the happiness the 36-year-old<lb/>
consultant said.<lb/>
It was a much warmer welcome than<lb/>
in France, where officials skipped<lb/>
the opening ceremony and critics<lb/>
complained that Euro Disney was an<lb/>
assault on French culture.<lb/>
A government agency filed a<lb/>
complaint contending Euro Disney's<lb/>
ban on beards, mustaches and<lb/>
colored hosiery may have violated<lb/>
France's work code. And President<lb/>
Francois Mitterrand dismissed the<lb/>
park as "not exactly my cup of tea<lb/>
Hong Kong's government however, is<lb/>
the biggest investor in the new $3.5<lb/>
billion park, believing the attraction<lb/>
will help turn this global financial<lb/>
capital into Asia's best family holiday<lb/>
spot. Disneyland says it employs<lb/>
5,000 people and will draw 5.6 million<lb/>
visitors in Its first year.<lb/>
Hong Kong and Disney struck a deal<lb/>
to build the park in 1999 - just two<lb/>
years after the former British colony<lb/>
returned to Chinese rule. The city had<lb/>
been battered by the Asian financial<lb/>
crisis and desperately needed a<lb/>
new project to boost Its spirits and<lb/>
troubled economy.<lb/>
Hong Kong's embrace of Disneyland<lb/>
is also the product of a Westernized,<lb/>
ruthlessly capitalistic and non-<lb/>
Ideological mind-set that's short on<lb/>
cultural roots. The territory was ruled<lb/>
by Britain for more than 150 years,<lb/>
and it's still governed separately.<lb/>
ROUteS from page A1<lb/>
driving when at all possible.<lb/>
Even when there is not a gas<lb/>
shortage, it is still beneficial to<lb/>
the driver and the environment<lb/>
to take full advantage of ECU's<lb/>
transit system.<lb/>
"The buses and the driv-<lb/>
ers are here to help students,<lb/>
whether that be providing<lb/>
transportation to and from<lb/>
campus, or to help alleviate the<lb/>
pressures of rising fuel costs,<lb/>
fuel shortages or just everyday<lb/>
Greenville traffic said Stacey<lb/>
Thompson, senior English edu-<lb/>
cation major and bus driver.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Fire<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
economy, an effort he believes<lb/>
will bolster forces of moderation.<lb/>
But he faces a difficult task in<lb/>
Gaza, where militants and armed<lb/>
gangs operate freely and wield<lb/>
considerable power.<lb/>
Ismail Haniyeh, a Hamas<lb/>
leader in Gaza, said the group<lb/>
"will support any step that will<lb/>
produce something for our<lb/>
people" but made clear that it<lb/>
has no plans to disarm as long<lb/>
as Israel controls the West Bank<lb/>
and Jerusalem.<lb/>
"We should protect the resis-<lb/>
tance option and the resistance<lb/>
weapons he said. "These weap-<lb/>
ons liberated the land and by<lb/>
these weapons, we will continue<lb/>
the liberation process<lb/>
As Israel completed its pull-<lb/>
out, Palestinian jeeps decorated<lb/>
with the flags of the Hamas and<lb/>
Islamic Jihad militant groups<lb/>
stopped just near the border and<lb/>
a group of masked gunmen waved<lb/>
their weapons before Palestinian<lb/>
police moved them away.<lb/>
Pointing behind him at the<lb/>
border, Maj. Gen. Dan Harel,<lb/>
head of Israel's southern com-<lb/>
mand, said the pullout presented<lb/>
an important opportunity for the<lb/>
Palestinians to take control of<lb/>
their future.<lb/>
"The responsibility belongs<lb/>
to the Palestinian Authority<lb/>
he said. "We hope that they will<lb/>
know how to rise to the responsi-<lb/>
bility and enable all of us to leave<lb/>
in peace and security<lb/>
Palestinian authorities had<lb/>
promised an orderly transition<lb/>
after the pullout, but the calls for<lb/>
calm were ignored. Police stood<lb/>
by helplessly early Monday as<lb/>
gunmen raised flags of militant<lb/>
groups and crowds smashed what<lb/>
was left in the ruins or walked<lb/>
off with doors, window frames,<lb/>
toilets and scrap metals.<lb/>
After rushing into the settle-<lb/>
ments, Palestinians set fire to<lb/>
empty synagogues in the Morag,<lb/>
Kfar Darom and Netzarim settle-<lb/>
ments, as well as a Jewish semi-<lb/>
nary in Neve Dekalim. Later, a<lb/>
Palestinian bulldozer began<lb/>
knocking down the walls of the<lb/>
Netzarim synagogue.<lb/>
In Netzarim, two young Pal-<lb/>
estinians waving flags stomped<lb/>
on the smoldering debris outside<lb/>
the synagogue, and others took<lb/>
turns hitting the building with<lb/>
a large hammer.<lb/>
"They (Israelis) destroyed our<lb/>
homes and our mosques. Today it<lb/>
is our turn to destroy theirs said<lb/>
a man in Neve Dekalim who gave<lb/>
his name only as Abu Ahmed.<lb/>
Israel removed some 8,500<lb/>
Gaza settlers from their homes<lb/>
in 21 settlements last month and<lb/>
razed homes and most buildings<lb/>
in the communities. However, the<lb/>
Israeli Cabinet decided at the last<lb/>
minute Sunday to leave 19 syna-<lb/>
gogue buildings intact, drawing<lb/>
complaints from the Palestinians<lb/>
and criticism from the United<lb/>
States. In Washington, State<lb/>
Department spokesman Sean<lb/>
McCormack said the Israeli deci-<lb/>
sion "puts the Palestinian Author-<lb/>
ity into a situation where it may<lb/>
be criticized for whatever it does<lb/>
After daybreak, the situa-<lb/>
tion was largely calm. Dozens<lb/>
of curious Palestinians moved<lb/>
into Netzarim to get a glimpse of<lb/>
what was once a heavily fortified<lb/>
enclave in central Gaza. People<lb/>
inspected the rubble, and<lb/>
school children climbed on<lb/>
the ruins of a building. Envi-<lb/>
ronmental workers gathered<lb/>
samples of rubble for testing.<lb/>
Several people held posters<lb/>
of longtime Palestinian leader<lb/>
Yasser Arafat, who died last year,<lb/>
and pictures of the Hamas lead-<lb/>
ers killed by Israel, Sheik Ahmed<lb/>
Yassin and Abdel Aziz Rantisi.<lb/>
"Today is the beginning of<lb/>
a new era. The battle is still<lb/>
ahead of us. Gaza is only the<lb/>
first step said Mohammed al-<lb/>
Hindi, the leader of the Islamic<lb/>
Jihad militant group, who was<lb/>
accompanied by dozens of fol-<lb/>
lowers. "The beginning will be<lb/>
when we liberate Jerusalem and<lb/>
the West Bank<lb/>
Abdullah Franji, a top official<lb/>
in Abbas' Fatah party, put a Pales-<lb/>
tinian flag around his shoulders<lb/>
as he toured the northern settle-<lb/>
ment of Elei Sinai.<lb/>
"Today our people are smell-<lb/>
ing freedom he said. "We hope<lb/>
that our joy will be complete with<lb/>
free borders, with a connection to<lb/>
the West Bank and to have Gaza<lb/>
as the first step toward achieving<lb/>
the Palestinian state<lb/>
The withdrawal, code-named<lb/>
"Last Watch was overshadowed<lb/>
by Israeli-Palestinian disputes,<lb/>
including over border arrange-<lb/>
ments and movement between<lb/>
Gaza and the West Bank. The<lb/>
two territories lie on opposite<lb/>
sides of Israel.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059343_0003"/><lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
Page A3<lb/>
editor@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.9238<lb/>
JENNIFER L HOBBS Editor In Chief<lb/>
TUESDAY September 13, 2005<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
Ophelia's no Katrina, but<lb/>
we should still prepare<lb/>
With America's thoughts concentrated on the Gulf<lb/>
Coast in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, the last<lb/>
thing anyone wants to hear is that another hur-<lb/>
ricane is on its way. Lucky for them, Ophelia has<lb/>
turned her eye toward the North Carolina coast.<lb/>
Although at the time that this is being written<lb/>
Ophelia is only a Tropical Storm and is expected<lb/>
to hit land as a weak category one hurricane, that<lb/>
in no way means that we should just ignore her<lb/>
presence and think that nothing will happen.<lb/>
Forthose who might not be sure of exact statistics,<lb/>
tropical storms contain winds ranging from 39-73<lb/>
mph and a category one hurricane packs winds<lb/>
up to 95 mph. The National Weather Service's<lb/>
Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale states that cat-<lb/>
egory one hurricanes like Ophelia will contain<lb/>
"storm surge generally 4-5 feet above normal<lb/>
(and) Damage primarily to unanchored mobile<lb/>
homes, shrubbery and trees<lb/>
While this might not sound like much of a threat,<lb/>
hurricanes of any nature produce very heavy rainfall,<lb/>
resulting in both coastal and inland flooding. If you're<lb/>
still naive, think back to 2004 when Hurricane Gaston<lb/>
hit the South Carolina coast as a category one hur-<lb/>
ricane. Hooding from that storm resulted in eight<lb/>
casualties as far north and inland as Richmond, Va.<lb/>
We at TEC want our readers to not only be safe<lb/>
when these storms strike our area, but we want<lb/>
our readers to be prepared.<lb/>
The National Weather Service provides these tips<lb/>
to abide by when a storm is coming your way:<lb/>
Locate a safe room, or the safest areas in your home<lb/>
for each hurricane hazard. In certain circumstances<lb/>
the safest areas may not be within your home, but<lb/>
within your community. Determine escape routes<lb/>
from your home and places to meet. Make a plan<lb/>
now for what to do with your pets if you need to<lb/>
evacuate. Stock non-perishable emergency sup-<lb/>
plies and a disaster supply kit containing bottled<lb/>
water, canned foods and juices, paper plates, snack<lb/>
foods, non-electric can opener, blankets, pillows,<lb/>
clothing, a first aid kit toiletries, moisture wipes, flash-<lb/>
light batteries, radio, cash, keys and have important<lb/>
documents sealed in a waterproof container.<lb/>
Use these helpful tips in preparation for any hurricanes<lb/>
or tropical storms that may approach our area.<lb/>
Most importantly, take heed to all watches and<lb/>
warnings. If a mandatory evacuation is issued,<lb/>
please do what you can to get to a safe place.<lb/>
For more information, please log on to noaa.gov.<lb/>
Our Staff<lb/>
Jennifer L Hobbs<lb/>
Editor in Chief<lb/>
Chris Munler Alexander Marcinlak<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Carolyn Scandura<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Tony Zoppo<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Nina Coefield<lb/>
Head Copy Editor<lb/>
Tanesha Slstrunk<lb/>
Photo Editor<lb/>
Web Editor<lb/>
Kristin Murnane<lb/>
Asst Features Editor<lb/>
Brandon Hughes<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
April Barnes<lb/>
Asst Copy Editor<lb/>
Herb Sneed<lb/>
Asst Photo Editor<lb/>
Edward McKim<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Newsroom<lb/>
Fax<lb/>
Advertising<lb/>
252.328.9238<lb/>
252.328.9143<lb/>
252.328.9245<lb/>
Serving ECU since 1925, TEC prints 9,000 copies<lb/>
every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday during the<lb/>
regular academic year and 5,000 on Wednesdays<lb/>
during the summer. "Our View" Is the opinion of<lb/>
the editorial board and Is written by editorial board<lb/>
members. TEC welcomes letters to the editor which<lb/>
are limited to 250 words (which may be edited for<lb/>
decency or brevity). We reserve the right to edit or<lb/>
reject letters and all letters must be signed and<lb/>
include a telephone number. Letters may be sent via<lb/>
e-mail to edltor@theeastcarolinian.com or to The East<lb/>
Carolinian, Student Publications Building, Greenville,<lb/>
NC 27858-4353. Call 252-328-6366 for more<lb/>
Information. One copy of TEC Is free, each additional<lb/>
copy is $1.<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
Liberals show true face in time of crisis<lb/>
Others blamed for own<lb/>
mistakes<lb/>
TONY MCKEE<lb/>
CONSERVATIVE CORNER<lb/>
It is amazing what a crisis does to<lb/>
people. Some curl up into a ball and<lb/>
want to be left alone. Some respond<lb/>
with civil disobedience, looting, rape,<lb/>
murder and anarchy. Some respond<lb/>
with compassion, giving of themselves<lb/>
or their wallets to help other human<lb/>
beings in their time of need. Then<lb/>
there are Liberal Democrats and the<lb/>
mainstream media, who have nothing<lb/>
to offer but finger-pointing, hatred,<lb/>
anger, class warfare, lies, half-truths<lb/>
and vitriolic, haranguing, inflamma-<lb/>
tory commentary.<lb/>
Instead of spending their time and<lb/>
energy helping the country heal by<lb/>
showcasing the incredible efforts being<lb/>
undertaken by private organizations,<lb/>
churches and even individual citizens<lb/>
in Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana,<lb/>
they choose instead to incessantly<lb/>
blame President Bush for everything<lb/>
under the sun while purposefully and<lb/>
amorally ignoring the stupendous<lb/>
incompetence of the local and state<lb/>
officials of Louisiana, some of whose<lb/>
actions directly led to the deaths of<lb/>
their own people.<lb/>
I briefly touched on the "chain<lb/>
of command" that every citystate in<lb/>
this country follows in times of crisis,<lb/>
but I will reiterate it, since the Liberal<lb/>
press isn't. Responsibility starts at the<lb/>
citytownship, goes to the county (or<lb/>
Parrish) then goes through various<lb/>
state agencies, all of which ultimately<lb/>
report to the governor. Then, and only<lb/>
then, does the Federal government get<lb/>
involved. Now, how many times have<lb/>
you heard this from the Liberals in the<lb/>
last week or so?<lb/>
Instead of reporting the truth, or<lb/>
at least some semblance of reality, we<lb/>
have been treated to an increasing<lb/>
litany that the disaster in Louisiana<lb/>
was a direct result of President Bush's<lb/>
racism and lack of concern for minori-<lb/>
ties and the poor. This despite the fact<lb/>
that President Bush has appointed more<lb/>
minorities and women to positions of<lb/>
power than any other President. The<lb/>
argument that he doesn't care about<lb/>
the poor is hogwash also.<lb/>
Despite what has been widely<lb/>
reported (and ultimately hoped for),<lb/>
the economy was doing fine before<lb/>
Katrina hit. Government revenues were<lb/>
higher than expected (thank you tax<lb/>
cuts!), economic growth was healthy<lb/>
and steady and unemployment was<lb/>
around 5 percent (for those of you who<lb/>
have never taken an economics class, 5<lb/>
percent is almost universally accepted<lb/>
as full employment capacity, and is<lb/>
better than previous President's record.<lb/>
Thank you tax cuts!). President Bush's<lb/>
economic policies have helped the poor<lb/>
more than hurt them.<lb/>
I can hear the howls already<lb/>
"what about New Orleans and other<lb/>
cities?" That is an excellent question.<lb/>
I hope someone can answer it. New<lb/>
Orleans, like almost every major Ameri-<lb/>
can city, is a bulwark of Liberalism. A<lb/>
quick glance at national voting trends<lb/>
bears this out. The cities are governed<lb/>
by Liberals, as are many of the States. As<lb/>
such, they should be worker's paradises<lb/>
- Utopia's even.<lb/>
New Orleans has been governed by<lb/>
Liberals for as long as I can remember,<lb/>
yet it is by no means a Utopian paradise.<lb/>
Instead, it is the epitome of some of<lb/>
the deepest poverty, racism and abject<lb/>
corruption that Liberal governance has<lb/>
to offer. It is comparable to New York,<lb/>
Detroit, Chicago, etc. And the well-to-<lb/>
do, Liberal, politicians who are respon-<lb/>
sible for this situation do not care and<lb/>
are now trying to cover their posteriors,<lb/>
with the willing help of the media.<lb/>
What I find mind boggling about<lb/>
the Liberal response, especially the<lb/>
demands that Bush be held account-<lb/>
able, is that these are the very same<lb/>
people who defended an earlier Presi-<lb/>
dent who on his watch saw the World<lb/>
Trade Center bombed, a building full<lb/>
of people burned to death in Waco,<lb/>
Texas, the Alfred P. Murrah Building<lb/>
in Oklahoma City destroyed, overseas<lb/>
embassies bombed, and the govern-<lb/>
ment sponsored kidnapping of Elian<lb/>
Gonzalez, among many, many other<lb/>
things. Not once can I remember any<lb/>
Liberal politician or reporter attempt<lb/>
to hold Bill Clinton responsible for<lb/>
any of the disasters of his Presidency.<lb/>
Why the sudden demand for account-<lb/>
ability now?<lb/>
Mayor Nag in was asked why the<lb/>
buses weren't used to evacuate people<lb/>
even though there was plenty of warn-<lb/>
ing about the storm. He responded that<lb/>
he didn't have an adequate number of<lb/>
drivers to run the buses under normal<lb/>
circumstances, let alone in a hurricane.<lb/>
Senator Mary Landrieu stated that<lb/>
Mayor Nagin, as well as most mayors,<lb/>
have trouble enough getting people to<lb/>
go to work when it is sunny, let alone in<lb/>
a hurricane. The vast majority of New<lb/>
Orleans' workers are minorities. Their<lb/>
own white, Liberal Senator said they are<lb/>
lazy bums who don't regularly show up<lb/>
for work. That sounds mighty racist to<lb/>
me, how about you? So where is the<lb/>
outrage and calls for her resignation?<lb/>
The spectacle we are suffering<lb/>
through with Liberals going orgasmic<lb/>
in their attempt to deflect blame away<lb/>
from them and their failed policies and<lb/>
onto President Bush will not soon be<lb/>
over, much to the dismay of many.<lb/>
At least one good thing is coming<lb/>
out of this- more and more people are<lb/>
seeing the true face of Liberalism in this<lb/>
crisis: The face of the elitist, arrogant,<lb/>
racist, angry hypocrite.<lb/>
Can you see it also?<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
Price-fixing on gasoline: Control yourself<lb/>
(KRT) ? Recent gasoline-price<lb/>
spikes have given new meaning to<lb/>
the phrase "pain at the pump And<lb/>
with demand from India, China and<lb/>
elsewhere growing, and the failure of<lb/>
the United States to open a single new<lb/>
oil refinery since the 1970s, supplies<lb/>
could remain tight and prices elevated<lb/>
for some time.<lb/>
Which means lawmakers will want<lb/>
to show they're "doing something" and<lb/>
try to rein in prices.<lb/>
But this would be a mistake. The<lb/>
answer is not to set limits on wholesale<lb/>
prices, as Hawaii is attempting to do,<lb/>
and it's certainly not to enact a system<lb/>
of price controls for oil and gas like the<lb/>
federal government did in the 1970s.<lb/>
In fact, lawmakers in Hawaii<lb/>
and anyone on the mainland who<lb/>
attempts such a solution needs a history<lb/>
lesson about the last time government<lb/>
attempted to control energy prices.<lb/>
Many blamed - and still blame - the<lb/>
OPEC oil embargo and the effects of<lb/>
the Iranian revolution. But for the most<lb/>
part, we were our own worst enemies.<lb/>
Long lines of cars snaked away from<lb/>
gas stations all over America because<lb/>
we lost faith in the power of markets<lb/>
to correct these problems, and we took<lb/>
shortcuts that only made things worse.<lb/>
By setting prices below market levels,<lb/>
the government, first under President<lb/>
Nixon but later under Presidents Ford<lb/>
and Carter, made it unprofitable for oil<lb/>
companies to respond to high prices as<lb/>
they normally would - by increasing<lb/>
production.<lb/>
This led to inadequate supplies and<lb/>
fuel shortages. Then, rather than lifting<lb/>
the price controls, government tried<lb/>
to fix the problem by imposing alloca-<lb/>
tion controls. Soon, we had centrally<lb/>
planned programs determining how<lb/>
much of various fuel types to produce,<lb/>
how much to send each state and how<lb/>
much various categories of purchasers<lb/>
were allowed to buy.<lb/>
"Scattered shortages led to hoarding<lb/>
and panic buying and worse shortages<lb/>
yet - and those gasoline lines wrote<lb/>
one energy analyst at the time. "No<lb/>
other consuming country cooked up<lb/>
this kind of purgatory for itself<lb/>
In trying to help, in trying to "do<lb/>
something government gave us the<lb/>
worst of both worlds: higher prices and<lb/>
shortages.<lb/>
Hawaiians are about to find out<lb/>
just how effective price controls can<lb/>
be. Thanks to a 2004 law set to take<lb/>
effect this month, Hawaii will institute<lb/>
controls on the wholesale price of gaso-<lb/>
line. The idea is to force gas stations in<lb/>
Hawaii to charge the same as those on<lb/>
the mainland - despite much higher<lb/>
delivery costs and state taxes.<lb/>
But if retailers can charge what<lb/>
they want, and the controlled price<lb/>
falls below the market price, expect the<lb/>
same thing to happen that occurred in<lb/>
the United States in 1973 and 1979. Gas<lb/>
lines appear, and, since the price at the<lb/>
pump is not controlled, prices spike.<lb/>
It's been a long time since the<lb/>
United States went down this road.<lb/>
Many of today's drivers are too young<lb/>
to remember odd-even days, 10-gallon<lb/>
limits and "Out of Gas" signs. Were<lb/>
it not so predictably sad and eco-<lb/>
nomically devastating, one would be<lb/>
tempted to give thanks that the people<lb/>
of Hawaii are willing to demonstrate<lb/>
the folly of government controls on gas<lb/>
prices yet again.<lb/>
What we can give thanks for is that<lb/>
oil and gas production on the Gulf<lb/>
Coast is beginning to return to normal<lb/>
after Hurricane Katrina. This will quiet<lb/>
calls on the mainland for government<lb/>
price controls on oil and gas. President<lb/>
Bush has done the right thing to speak<lb/>
out against gouging, but it's wrong to<lb/>
imply that government intervention<lb/>
might be at hand.<lb/>
Using the bully pulpit, the moral<lb/>
authority of the presidency, to urge<lb/>
merchants not to exploit a tragic situ-<lb/>
ation is right. Using the power of the<lb/>
office to arrest market forces in the<lb/>
process of correcting is not.<lb/>
Pirate Rant<lb/>
Who's the genius that built<lb/>
the dining hall without a park-<lb/>
ing lot? Don't tell me you can<lb/>
park across the street, or the hall<lb/>
is close to dorms so students can<lb/>
walk. They aren't the only dorms<lb/>
on campus, and some students<lb/>
live in other towns.<lb/>
I see Tony McKee has still yet<lb/>
to be fired and incarcerated. I'll<lb/>
bet you anything he's in charge<lb/>
of fixing the Fountain.<lb/>
I see the fountain isn't work-<lb/>
ing. Imagine that.<lb/>
I saw some fat slob of a human<lb/>
walk within arm's reach of a trash<lb/>
can on the mall and throw a Sty-<lb/>
rofoam container on the ground<lb/>
beside it! I got in his face and of<lb/>
course he came right back, but I<lb/>
actually scared him into putting<lb/>
it in the trash. The mall is ugly<lb/>
enough with all the construc-<lb/>
tion! Don't litter on it!<lb/>
Pretty sad when the only<lb/>
good thing on TV is hurricane<lb/>
coverage.<lb/>
I feel bad for New Orleans -1<lb/>
truly do. But they saw that thing<lb/>
coming for days at least and still<lb/>
stayedin a city shaped like a big<lb/>
bowl. And besides that, the first<lb/>
thing I thought of when I saw the<lb/>
destruction was "Sodom<lb/>
I wish I had my camera when<lb/>
the sorority girls were at their<lb/>
table at Wright Place trying to<lb/>
recruit girls  all three of them<lb/>
had the same long brown hair,<lb/>
same shirt, same bug eye sun<lb/>
glasses, and same "I'm better<lb/>
than you" smirk. I would have<lb/>
made a shirt with the picture<lb/>
saying "Look exactly like us and<lb/>
we might let you join<lb/>
Boy, that dining hall is really<lb/>
great. The food hasn't improved.<lb/>
But what an artistic building.<lb/>
Remind me what we pay these<lb/>
people for.<lb/>
I want it duly noted that if<lb/>
I had seen a pregnant woman<lb/>
trying to sit on a bus, I'd have<lb/>
given her my seat. We're not all<lb/>
horrible.<lb/>
Hey, idiots! Don't drink and<lb/>
drive and then complain about<lb/>
it all over campus. You deserve<lb/>
what you got, and probably a<lb/>
whole lot more. It's amazing<lb/>
how quickly people can go from<lb/>
acting like they are super-cool<lb/>
and all grown up for driving<lb/>
their buddies around after get-<lb/>
ting trashed downtown to acting<lb/>
like an immature brat when they<lb/>
are asked to gasp be responsible<lb/>
for their own actions. Suck it up<lb/>
already!<lb/>
To anybody who is skipping<lb/>
the football games because they<lb/>
think we aren't any good, you<lb/>
don't know what you're miss-<lb/>
ing. Aundrae Allison for class<lb/>
president.<lb/>
Is anyone else sick of seeing<lb/>
these bigger girls in the club with<lb/>
their pants so tight their bellies<lb/>
flop over, who think dancing is<lb/>
spreading your legs and humping<lb/>
the air? Can ECU adopt some<lb/>
class?<lb/>
Why does the music have<lb/>
to be so loud in the music class-<lb/>
rooms? I have a class in the<lb/>
Brewster Building and you can<lb/>
hear the music booming loudly<lb/>
through the entire building. It is<lb/>
so rude and annoying when we<lb/>
are trying to take tests or even<lb/>
taking notes is hard. I thought<lb/>
they had their own building to<lb/>
play music in.<lb/>
Maybe it's a sense of the<lb/>
tragic, but I haven't been so<lb/>
entertained by a hurricane in<lb/>
my life.<lb/>
Can we have some techno<lb/>
music in the clubs? For the<lb/>
people who don't like R&amp;B, let<lb/>
alone hearing the same songs<lb/>
over and over again.<lb/>
Well, its too bad hurricanes<lb/>
don't hit during Mardi Gras.<lb/>
You are ridiculous McKee,<lb/>
even Ann Coulter admits that<lb/>
Bush has made mistakes about<lb/>
Hurricane Katrina. It is obvi-<lb/>
ous that you have lost your grip<lb/>
on reality, and every thing has<lb/>
become a "liberal conspiracy<lb/>
Editor's Note: The Pirate Rant<lb/>
is an anonymous way for students<lb/>
and staff in the ECU community to<lb/>
voice their opinions. Submissions can<lb/>
be submitted anonymously online<lb/>
at www.theeastcarolinian.com, or<lb/>
e-mailed to editor@theeastcarolinian.<lb/>
com. The editor reserves the right to edit<lb/>
opinions for content and brevity.<lb/>
? <lb/>
<pb facs="00059343_0004"/><lb/>
Student Life<lb/>
Page A4 features@theeastcarollnian.com 252.328.6366 CAR01YN SCANDURA Features Editor KRISTIN MURNANE Assistant Features Editor TUESDAY September 13, 2005<lb/>
9-13-05<lb/>
Picks of the Week<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Fall Out Boy - From Under the Cork Tree<lb/>
MTV favorites Fall Out Boy have<lb/>
struck gold (literally, the album has<lb/>
sold more than 500,000 units) with<lb/>
their latest release. Granted "Sugar,<lb/>
We're Going Down" gets more airplay<lb/>
than any other pop song on the<lb/>
market, but this album goes beyond<lb/>
just catchy tunes. That's right, this<lb/>
release has catchy tunes with catchy<lb/>
names. My favorite track is "Nobody<lb/>
Puts Baby in the Comer Seriously,<lb/>
this is a fun album that will keep you<lb/>
and your friends singing together all<lb/>
night long.<lb/>
ECU'S sizzling top three hottest professors<lb/>
The 40 Year-Old Virgin<lb/>
II you haven't seen this movie yet,<lb/>
I don't know what you're waiting<lb/>
for. This is hands down one of the<lb/>
funniest movies I've seen yet If you<lb/>
think your love life is bad, it can't<lb/>
possibly be as bad as poor Andy's. If<lb/>
you don't laugh at some point in this<lb/>
movie, please come to our office and I<lb/>
will personally refund your money.<lb/>
Television<lb/>
NFL Football, Sunday at 1 p.m.<lb/>
Finally, preseason NFL football is over<lb/>
and we can get down to business.<lb/>
Watch as your Carolina Panthers<lb/>
take on the New England Patriots,<lb/>
Sept. 18. This could be a preview of<lb/>
this year's Super Bowl and a win for<lb/>
the Panthers in this game might start<lb/>
to heal the wounds from their Super<lb/>
Bowl loss two years ago.<lb/>
Books<lb/>
4 Blondes by Candace Bushnell<lb/>
Are you missing "Sex and the City?"<lb/>
Try this book by Candace Bushnell<lb/>
(the same woman who wrote "Sex<lb/>
and the City"). Follow four woman<lb/>
- a model, a columnist, a writer and<lb/>
a socialite as they struggle through<lb/>
relationship difficulties and thrive<lb/>
through personal successes. If you<lb/>
liked Samantha Jones, you'll love<lb/>
Janey Wilcox.<lb/>
Names In the News<lb/>
Martha's Back<lb/>
Martha Stewart chose NBC's<lb/>
"Today" show Thursday for her first<lb/>
TV appearance since her release<lb/>
from prison and subsequent house<lb/>
arrest.But the domestic diva's initial<lb/>
late-night talk-show chat will not be<lb/>
with NBC's Tonight Show" star Jay<lb/>
Leno, it will be with his contentious<lb/>
CBS rival, David Letterman. Stewart<lb/>
is due to trade quips with Dave on<lb/>
Sept. 19, two days before the debut<lb/>
of "The Apprentice: Martha Stewart<lb/>
and a week after her daily syndicated<lb/>
lifestyle show, "Martha" debuts. The<lb/>
Hollywood Reporter calls the CBS<lb/>
booking "a surprise given that<lb/>
Stewart is ostensibly plugging her<lb/>
role as the host of a new version<lb/>
of NBC's The Apprentice" and that<lb/>
"Martha" is being distributed by NBC<lb/>
Universal's syndication. None of the<lb/>
involved parties had comments. On<lb/>
Today host Matt Lauer compared<lb/>
Stewart to a phoenix rising. "And I<lb/>
didn't burn she interjected. As for<lb/>
what it was like to lose her electronic<lb/>
monitoring device, she said it came<lb/>
off shortly after midnight, so rather<lb/>
than celebrate, she was "really tired<lb/>
and just ready to go to sleep"<lb/>
Foxx Helps Out<lb/>
Jamie Foxx, working with the NAACP<lb/>
on Hurricane Katrina relief efforts,<lb/>
says when the going gets tough,<lb/>
celebrities need to get giving.<lb/>
The reason you have to do this is you<lb/>
have to let them know that you're real<lb/>
said Foxx after a visit to Houston's<lb/>
Astrodome, where cots have been set<lb/>
up for victims of the hurricane. People<lb/>
were happy to see him. "He was so<lb/>
fine. I was just wishing he could have<lb/>
taken me home with him said Venus<lb/>
Junius, who was forced from her New<lb/>
Orleans home and spent three days<lb/>
on top of a bridge until a bus brought fc<lb/>
her to Houston. "When I saw him I 2?<lb/>
just ran to where he was at she said.<lb/>
Ruth Bibbs, a 72-year-old from New<lb/>
Orleans' Lower Garden District, said<lb/>
meeting Foxx helped take her mind<lb/>
off the devastation. "You forget about<lb/>
it for a moment, at least she said.<lb/>
PaMUp?<lb/>
Bobby Brown told a judge this week<lb/>
that he's up to date with his $5,000<lb/>
monthly child-support payments and<lb/>
with contributions to his children's<lb/>
educational fund.<lb/>
However, Norfolk Probate and<lb/>
Family Court Judge Paula Carey<lb/>
admonished the singer, calling his<lb/>
earlier excuses "unacceptable Carey<lb/>
had issued a warrant for Brown's<lb/>
arrest in June after he failed to appear<lb/>
at a compliance hearing.<lb/>
Brown said a stomach virus prevented<lb/>
him from attending.<lb/>
Brown lives in Alpharetta, Ga, with<lb/>
his wife, Whitney Houston. He has<lb/>
two children with Kim Ward, who<lb/>
lives In Massachusetts. He's currently<lb/>
starring with Houston in a Bravo<lb/>
Television show called "Being Bobby<lb/>
Brown Everyone is definitely on the<lb/>
edge of their seat.<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
Patrick Enderle<lb/>
Biology Department<lb/>
26 Chilli Peppers for "Honness<lb/>
Photo By: Kyle Fisher<lb/>
Students aren't just<lb/>
thinking about the<lb/>
lectures<lb/>
TOMEK A STEELE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
There you are walking<lb/>
into a class for the first<lb/>
time. You sit down and<lb/>
in walks the most gor-<lb/>
geous creature you've<lb/>
ever seen  your<lb/>
professor. All of<lb/>
us at one time or<lb/>
another have had<lb/>
that secret crush<lb/>
on an authority<lb/>
figure. It's human<lb/>
nature. So it's<lb/>
only natural that<lb/>
ECU students have<lb/>
thoughts about who<lb/>
the hottest professors are<lb/>
around campus.<lb/>
ECU has the reputa-<lb/>
tion of a "party school"<lb/>
but we also have some<lb/>
of the most well liked<lb/>
professors. Students<lb/>
are often seeking<lb/>
information on the<lb/>
professor who will<lb/>
be teaching their<lb/>
classes. Students<lb/>
are very inquisi-<lb/>
tive about asking<lb/>
around to see who<lb/>
the best professor is<lb/>
for a certain subject<lb/>
and how easy or hard<lb/>
a professor can be.<lb/>
The Web site<lb/>
RateMyProfessor.com<lb/>
has made answering<lb/>
all these questions a<lb/>
breeze for students.<lb/>
On this site profes-<lb/>
k sors are rated<lb/>
 by former<lb/>
students on their easiness, help-<lb/>
fulness, clarity, rater's interest,<lb/>
overall quality and of course, hot-<lb/>
ness. If a professor is considered<lb/>
hot, a chili pepper shows up next<lb/>
to the professor's rating. Many<lb/>
students also post comments for<lb/>
other students to read.<lb/>
Numerous students take<lb/>
full advantage of this Web site<lb/>
when choosing a professor and<lb/>
although it's mostly about the<lb/>
academics and a professor's<lb/>
overall quality score - we can't<lb/>
help but wonder if the hotness<lb/>
total affects a student's decision.<lb/>
I wouldn't mind having an awe-<lb/>
some professor who's also eye<lb/>
candy, especially during those<lb/>
early morning classes.<lb/>
Students often include in the<lb/>
comments section exactly what<lb/>
they are thinking about their<lb/>
professors. One student let it all<lb/>
hang out in their comment sec-<lb/>
tion last November about Steve<lb/>
Estes, a professor in the Exercise<lb/>
and Sports Science department.<lb/>
"This man is a really awesome<lb/>
guy. Talks about Crew a lot and<lb/>
is a pretty laid back guy. Do the<lb/>
labs and show up for class. Has a<lb/>
midterm and then a final. Inter-<lb/>
esting class. This man I think for<lb/>
being 55, he is so hot. I would do<lb/>
him. Wonder what he looks like<lb/>
naked the student posted in<lb/>
their comment section.<lb/>
I have had the joy of actually<lb/>
taking a class taught by the same<lb/>
professor and I totally see where<lb/>
the student was coming from.<lb/>
Estes is a wonderful teacher and<lb/>
very down to earth. He doesn't<lb/>
treat students like they don't<lb/>
know squat about the world.<lb/>
That's part of what makes him so<lb/>
likable and yes even hot.<lb/>
When polled many students<lb/>
had similar taste as to who they<lb/>
considered are hot professors. SO<lb/>
everyone wants to know, who<lb/>
made the cut? It all boils down<lb/>
to how many hot ratings a profes-<lb/>
sor received. Of course there is a<lb/>
Students set to party for<lb/>
Hurricane Katrina Relief<lb/>
A rescue worker from San Diego, in a boat donated from Illinois, helped rescue residents from homes.<lb/>
PRSSA to hold Katrina<lb/>
Fundraiser<lb/>
SARAH CAMPBELL<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
After a disaster many people<lb/>
search for ways to contribute<lb/>
to the cause. In the wake of<lb/>
Hurricane Katrina the suffering<lb/>
is profound which makes the<lb/>
need even more dire. One simple<lb/>
way to give relief is through a<lb/>
fundraiser sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU chapter of Public Relations<lb/>
Student Society of America.<lb/>
PRSSA was established in the<lb/>
spring of 1968 as an organiza-<lb/>
tion that allows students to learn<lb/>
more about public relations, as<lb/>
well as use skills that will be<lb/>
useful in other professions. The<lb/>
group is open to all students, but<lb/>
the members are primarily public<lb/>
relations majors.<lb/>
The mission of PRSSA as<lb/>
stated on their Web site, prssa.<lb/>
org, is "to serve our members<lb/>
by enhancing their knowledge<lb/>
in public relations and pro-<lb/>
viding access to professional<lb/>
development opportunities<lb/>
PRSSA's foundation is also built<lb/>
on the idea of providing qualified<lb/>
and prepared individuals to serve<lb/>
the public relations profession.<lb/>
PRSSA presently has about 30<lb/>
members, but hopes to increase<lb/>
that number this year. PRSSA is<lb/>
interested in allowing students<lb/>
to increase their knowledge<lb/>
of public relations and they<lb/>
invite all students to join their<lb/>
organization. Meetings are held<lb/>
Monday evenings at 5:30 p.m. at<lb/>
Joyner201.<lb/>
The club is trying to establish<lb/>
a solid group and make students<lb/>
aware of needs within their<lb/>
community and society as a whole.<lb/>
"We would like to establish a<lb/>
name for ourselves on campus and<lb/>
allow our club togrow in members.<lb/>
"We also want our members<lb/>
to be involved with the com-<lb/>
munity, and hopefully gain<lb/>
opportunities for internships<lb/>
and job interviews said Sarah<lb/>
Ledwlth, member of PRSSA.<lb/>
One step they are making<lb/>
to achieve this goal is a benefit<lb/>
to raise money for Hurricane<lb/>
Katrina victims.<lb/>
The fundraiser will be held<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 15 beginning at 9<lb/>
p.m. It will be located uptown on<lb/>
Fifth Street at The Other Place<lb/>
The group will be charging $5 at<lb/>
the door, and will be accepting<lb/>
donations inside throughout<lb/>
the night. Proceeds from the<lb/>
benefit will go directly to victims<lb/>
of Katrina rather than going<lb/>
through a large organization.<lb/>
PRSSA is hoping to raise at<lb/>
least $500 so they will need<lb/>
supporters out in full force. If<lb/>
you always go out on Thursday<lb/>
night, this week make your night<lb/>
out mean something. It's a great<lb/>
way to help out people in need<lb/>
while doing something you enjoy.<lb/>
People all over the country have<lb/>
helped, what have you done?<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
leatures@theeaitcarolinian.com.<lb/>
separate list for male and female<lb/>
professors. From the informa-<lb/>
tion gathered on RateMyProfes-<lb/>
sor.com and general surveying,<lb/>
ECU's top three hottest profes-<lb/>
sors list was compiled for your<lb/>
viewing pleasure.<lb/>
In at number three with a<lb/>
total of 21 chili peppers is chem-<lb/>
istry professor Toby Allen. Many<lb/>
of the comments posted about Dr.<lb/>
Allen are about his overall quality<lb/>
as a wonderful professor.<lb/>
"Dr. Allen is the best profes-<lb/>
sor at ECU. The other teachers<lb/>
should learn from him. He will<lb/>
spend however long you need<lb/>
offering help so you will do well.<lb/>
His tests are hard but everyone<lb/>
should take him. He will leave<lb/>
a lasting impression in your life<lb/>
because he's just so great one<lb/>
student posted in their comment<lb/>
section this April.<lb/>
In at second place with a<lb/>
grand total of 26 chili peppers is<lb/>
biology professor, Patrick Enderle.<lb/>
On the RateMyProfessor.com site<lb/>
one student posted, "Excellent<lb/>
teacher and a cutie too<lb/>
The hottest male professor at<lb/>
ECU is unanimously, CDFR pro-<lb/>
fessor Patrick Meadors. Students<lb/>
just love this guy. When polled<lb/>
his name popped up each and<lb/>
every time. With 34 chili peppers<lb/>
Meadors takes first place as the<lb/>
hottest male professor at ECU.<lb/>
"Patrick Meadors is definitely<lb/>
the cutest professor at ECU said<lb/>
senior psychology major Shenae<lb/>
Jones.<lb/>
Many other male professors<lb/>
came in close and were personal<lb/>
favorites to many students. Pro-<lb/>
fessors such as Geoff Thomp-<lb/>
son, Steve Estes, Mike Hale and<lb/>
Nate Vietor ranked high in the<lb/>
student polls.<lb/>
"The hottest professor I have<lb/>
seen at ECU is Nate Vietor in<lb/>
the psychology department.<lb/>
He's really hot and really nice,<lb/>
a winning combination said<lb/>
sociology graduate student<lb/>
Rhonda Breed.<lb/>
Now it's time for the top<lb/>
three hottest female professors<lb/>
at ECU. In third place is Business<lb/>
Department professor, Stephanie<lb/>
Edmondson, who came in with<lb/>
14 chili peppers on RateMyPro-<lb/>
fessor.com.<lb/>
Taking second place is Eng-<lb/>
lish professor Barri Piner. She<lb/>
had a total of 17 chili pepper<lb/>
ratings. There is no sense beat-<lb/>
ing around the bush about it,<lb/>
without further ado the hottest<lb/>
female professor at ECU is math<lb/>
professor Anna Butler with 25<lb/>
chili pepper ratings. On the site<lb/>
one student stated in their com-<lb/>
ment section that Butler is, "very<lb/>
easy and helpful, very sweet lady<lb/>
We are all sure her husband, also<lb/>
a professor in the mathematics<lb/>
department, is really happy about<lb/>
this recent finding.<lb/>
Basing classes off just a pro-<lb/>
fessor's hotness rating is very<lb/>
shallow but if you have to take<lb/>
the class anyway, why not enjoy<lb/>
the scenery. Fortunately, most<lb/>
students think what truly mat-<lb/>
ters is the professor's ability to<lb/>
teach the information and if that<lb/>
professor just happens to be hot,<lb/>
it doesn't hurt one bit.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
<lb/>
ECU'S top<lb/>
three hottest<lb/>
professors<lb/>
MALES:<lb/>
1st Patrick Meadors<lb/>
2nd Patrick Enderle<lb/>
3rd Toby Allen<lb/>
FEMALES:<lb/>
1st Anna Butler<lb/>
2nd Barri Piner<lb/>
3rd Stephanie Edmondson<lb/>
Ahoy there mateys!<lb/>
Sept. 19 is "International Talk Like a Pirate Day Started in 1995<lb/>
by "The Pirate Guys Mark-Cap'n Slappy-Summers and John-<lb/>
Ol' Chumbucket- Baur, this international celebration is one that<lb/>
Is sure to shiver ye timbers. Grab all of your booty and get into<lb/>
the pirate spirit. Avast me darlings, we'll have a jolly oP time.<lb/>
For more information on 'International Talk Like a Pirate Day<lb/>
including pirate pickup lines and pirate advice, head over to<lb/>
talkllkeapirate.com. Show your Pirate Pride with the world! Arrr!<lb/>
Finishing Touches<lb/>
Dan Corrett, a sculpture Graduate student, cleans his armature<lb/>
mosaic sculpture that he has been working on for a year and<lb/>
half. "I just want to finish the thing, you know said Corrett.<lb/>
ofP<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059343_0005"/><lb/>
9-13-05<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? FEATURES<lb/>
PAGE A5<lb/>
Semester events at a glance<lb/>
There's plenty to do, so<lb/>
get involved<lb/>
MEREDITH STEWART<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Now that students have<lb/>
gotten back into their school<lb/>
routine (and freshmen no longer<lb/>
use their schedules) it's time to<lb/>
get involved on campus. ECU<lb/>
offers so many clubs, activities,<lb/>
organizations and festivities<lb/>
to join and attend so there's<lb/>
no reason why anyone should<lb/>
be bored.<lb/>
This semester the School of<lb/>
Theatre and Dance is performing<lb/>
a wide variety of productions,<lb/>
sure to satisfy everyone's taste.<lb/>
Oct. 6 ECULoessin Playhouse<lb/>
will present "The Pajama Game<lb/>
In November "The Importance<lb/>
of Earnest" will be presented and<lb/>
then in December the musical<lb/>
"John and Jen: A new musical<lb/>
Although those are the main<lb/>
productions, other events<lb/>
will be going on throughout<lb/>
the semester. The Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra will perform several<lb/>
times, music festivals will be<lb/>
held as well as recitals, Opera<lb/>
Theatre and exhibitions will<lb/>
all be going on throughout the<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
If you love playing sports<lb/>
and being active then there are<lb/>
many hours to be spent at the<lb/>
Student Recreation Center. ECU<lb/>
offers many activities and trips<lb/>
to participate in at a reasonable<lb/>
cost. In September students<lb/>
can go kayaking, surfing, rock<lb/>
climbing and backpacking with<lb/>
the trained guides from the<lb/>
SRC. In October, kayaking and<lb/>
backpacking will be offered<lb/>
again so students will be able<lb/>
Anything but 'Frail' performance<lb/>
Frail, an original rock band, performed at Scores on Saturday night for a high-energy crowd. The<lb/>
band includes Chris West on lead vocals, Jon Patton on guitar, ECU Senior Chris Clement on<lb/>
bass and Brian Holder on drums. The group Is set to play at Dr. Unks Oasis later this fall.<lb/>
Students enjoy a popular campus event, the Polar Bear Pool Party.<lb/>
to fit the trips into their busy<lb/>
schedules. Oct. 28-30 a group will<lb/>
go caving in Virginia. The SRC<lb/>
also offers yoga, indoor climb-<lb/>
ing, group training, lifestyle<lb/>
enhancement programs and<lb/>
intramural sports.<lb/>
The Pirate Underground is<lb/>
rapidly growing, offering a wide<lb/>
variety of activities sure to fit<lb/>
the taste of each student. Jazz<lb/>
festivals, comedians, speakers,<lb/>
bingo, American Red Cross Blood<lb/>
Drive, World Fest and much<lb/>
more will be offered at the Pirate<lb/>
Underground.<lb/>
Want to build your resume?<lb/>
Volunteer at the Big Sweep<lb/>
where people come together<lb/>
and help clean up Greenville<lb/>
and Pitt County. Keep building<lb/>
by joining clubs. From salsa<lb/>
dancing to becoming a child<lb/>
mentor, there are more than 100<lb/>
clubs and organizations to be<lb/>
involved with.<lb/>
Are you a freshman who<lb/>
wants to discover and design<lb/>
leadership skills? "Shipmates"<lb/>
would love for you to be a part<lb/>
of their organization, after all<lb/>
you are the future of ECU. "Ship-<lb/>
mates" practices interpersonal<lb/>
skills, leadership development,<lb/>
effective communication and<lb/>
lifelong responsibility.<lb/>
Ledonia Wright Cultural<lb/>
Center is a wonderful place to be<lb/>
if you are interested in broaden-<lb/>
ing your horizons in the cultural<lb/>
field. Sept. 14 they will be spon-<lb/>
soring "cultural cuisine night<lb/>
where samples of food from many<lb/>
different cultures will be offered,<lb/>
along with prizes and music.<lb/>
Nov. 12 a Mini PowWow will be<lb/>
held, a celebration of the Native<lb/>
American culture.<lb/>
Computers are available to<lb/>
everyone and there is a friendly<lb/>
staff who can answer questions<lb/>
concerning other cultures and<lb/>
a nice atmosphere to get your<lb/>
work done, read or just fulfill<lb/>
your curiosity.<lb/>
One of the biggest events<lb/>
on campus this semester (other<lb/>
than Halloween of course) is<lb/>
"The Lord of the Rings Extended<lb/>
Edition Marathon It will be<lb/>
showing at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center's Hendrix Theatre. All<lb/>
"Lord of the Rings" lovers should<lb/>
dress-up as their favorite char-<lb/>
acter because there will be a<lb/>
costume contest along with<lb/>
raffles, trivia contests, free food<lb/>
and more than $700 in free door<lb/>
prizes. All fans should attend this<lb/>
extravagant event.<lb/>
If you still can't find<lb/>
anything to do, check out all of the<lb/>
sports schedules at ecu.edu, which<lb/>
provides students with informa-<lb/>
tion on campus organizations,<lb/>
carpooling information, campus<lb/>
calendars, off-campus housing<lb/>
directories and student surveys.<lb/>
For a complete list of events,<lb/>
plays and movies just go to<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center for<lb/>
a booklet of the times and dates.<lb/>
For easier access, you can just visit<lb/>
the ECU homepage and look for<lb/>
more updated events, activities<lb/>
and festivals.<lb/>
ECU is full of opportuni-<lb/>
ties for students to get involved<lb/>
and meet new, interesting<lb/>
people. College should be the<lb/>
best years of your life, take<lb/>
advantage.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
feature5@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059343_0006"/><lb/>
SPORlt<lb/>
Page A6 sports@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 TONY ZOPPO Sports Editor BRANDON HUGHES Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY September 13,2005<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Packers' Walker tears ACL<lb/>
Javon Walker, the Green.<lb/>
Bay Packers' best receiver, will<lb/>
miss the rest of the season after<lb/>
tearing up his right knee in the<lb/>
opener. Walker will need an<lb/>
operation once the swelling<lb/>
subsides to repair the torn anterior<lb/>
cruciate ligament and will require<lb/>
between eight and 12 months<lb/>
of rehabilitation. Walker was<lb/>
hurt in the third quarter of the<lb/>
Packers' 17-3 loss at Detroit on<lb/>
Sunday when he pushed off<lb/>
safety Terrence Holt on a 55-yard<lb/>
catch that was negated by his<lb/>
offensive interference. Walker, who<lb/>
made the Pro Bowl last season<lb/>
after catching 89 passes for<lb/>
1,382 yards and 12 touchdowns,<lb/>
threatened to hold out this year if<lb/>
the final two years of his contract<lb/>
weren't renegotiated. But he<lb/>
showed up in training camp on<lb/>
time, saying he wanted to prove<lb/>
he was worthy of a blockbuster<lb/>
contract through his play. The risk<lb/>
of course, was suffering a serious<lb/>
injury that would limit his earning<lb/>
power - just like the one he<lb/>
suffered Sunday, when he caught<lb/>
four passes for 27 yards. He's due<lb/>
$515,000 this season, the fourth<lb/>
of a five-year deal he signed in<lb/>
2002 for $7,485 million. When he<lb/>
was threatening to hold out, agent<lb/>
Drew Rosenhaus said he couldn't<lb/>
let Walker risk his health for that<lb/>
kind of money, but Walker said<lb/>
he couldn't fathom missing any<lb/>
games in a contract dispute. With<lb/>
Walker down, Robert Ferguson<lb/>
will start alongside Donald Driver,<lb/>
who will move from split end to<lb/>
flanker. Ferguson is the Packers'<lb/>
best special teams player, but<lb/>
might be taken off those units<lb/>
now, Sherman said.<lb/>
Jenkins done for season<lb/>
Carolina defensive tackle<lb/>
Kris Jenkins is out for the rest<lb/>
of the season after injuring his<lb/>
knee in the Panthers' loss to the<lb/>
New Orleans Saints. Jenkins, a<lb/>
2003 All-Pro, tore the anterior<lb/>
cruciate ligament in his right<lb/>
knee, the Panthers said Monday.<lb/>
Jenkins was Injured when he<lb/>
broke through the line and tried<lb/>
to tackle Deuce McAllister In<lb/>
the backfield in the first quarter.<lb/>
He left but returned briefly in the<lb/>
third quarter, only to have to be<lb/>
helped off the field again. Carolina<lb/>
coach John Fox said it wasn't<lb/>
clear if Jenkins tore the ligament<lb/>
in his knee on the first injury or<lb/>
the second. The two-time Pro<lb/>
Bowler also missed 12 games<lb/>
last season with a shoulder injury,<lb/>
but declared himself fit last week<lb/>
and ready to return as the NFLs<lb/>
top defensive tackle. Instead, he'll<lb/>
be sidelined again, creating a<lb/>
gaping hole on Carolina's vaunted<lb/>
defensive line. Jenkins' absence<lb/>
allows teams to Increase their<lb/>
coverage on All-Pro defensive end<lb/>
Julius Peppers and severely hurts<lb/>
the Panthers' run defense. Kindal<lb/>
Moorehead replaced Jenkins<lb/>
most of last season, but was<lb/>
inactive for Sunday's 23-20 loss<lb/>
to the Saints.<lb/>
Csonka one of six<lb/>
rescued from Bering Sea<lb/>
Pro Football Hall of Famer<lb/>
Larry Csonka was among six<lb/>
people plucked by helicopter<lb/>
from a stranded boat during a<lb/>
harrowing rescue in the Bering<lb/>
Sea, a newspaper reported<lb/>
Sunday. Csonka, his partner and a<lb/>
film crew from his television show<lb/>
were not injured, but the boat was<lb/>
abandoned at sea, the Anchorage<lb/>
Daily News reported in Sunday<lb/>
editions. Csonka was part of<lb/>
a group returning from filming<lb/>
a hunting trip on an isolated<lb/>
island about 100 miles west of<lb/>
Unalaska on Wednesday when<lb/>
their 28-foot boat encountered<lb/>
bad weather. The newspaper<lb/>
reported that 9-foot seas and<lb/>
gale force winds made it difficult<lb/>
to navigate the vessel, which<lb/>
then drifted away from the Aleut<lb/>
village of Nikolski. After hours of<lb/>
worsening conditions, the Coast<lb/>
Guard was called to help shortly<lb/>
after midnight Wednesday. A<lb/>
Coast Guard helicopter was<lb/>
dispatched from Kodiak, 600<lb/>
miles away; It arrived around<lb/>
10:45 a.m. Thursday and hoisted<lb/>
those on the battered boat one-<lb/>
by-one in a basket. Csonka, his<lb/>
partner Audrey Bradshaw, film<lb/>
crew members John Dietrich<lb/>
and Rich Larson, and Thomas<lb/>
McCay, the guide for the hunt,<lb/>
were taping the event for the show<lb/>
North to Alaska when the weather<lb/>
worsened. The former fullback for<lb/>
the Dolphins, Csonka runs Zonk!<lb/>
Productions, which films episodes<lb/>
for his outdoor sports TV show.<lb/>
The Sports<lb/>
Dictionary<lb/>
Hockey alive, kicking at ECU<lb/>
Club team holds tryouts this past<lb/>
weekend, preparing for first season<lb/>
SCOTTWILLIAMS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Just when you thought hockey in<lb/>
America had passed away and grass had grown<lb/>
over the grave, the ice is back. Well, it's back in<lb/>
Greenville, anyway.<lb/>
Starting in 2005, ECU's ice hockey club team<lb/>
will be competing in the Southwest division of<lb/>
the Blue Ridge Hockey Conference, with home<lb/>
games being played at Bladez on Ice. Division foes<lb/>
will include Appalachian State, Clemson, Radford,<lb/>
Virginia Military Institute and UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
(yes, they play hockey in Wilmington).<lb/>
So what if you want to play ice hockey at ECU?<lb/>
First, you have to shell out around $300 to play on<lb/>
the game squad and $100 to play on the practice<lb/>
squad, and that's just seasonal dues. You've got to<lb/>
be good in the classroom, because members are all<lb/>
required to have a GPA of at least 2.0 and be enrolled<lb/>
in at least nine semester hours.<lb/>
Shelling out a lot of money isn't new to anyone<lb/>
with at least a minimal background in hockey, how-<lb/>
ever, the sport gets to be very expensive as players<lb/>
usually have to buy their own equipment. Equip-<lb/>
ment includes pads, skates (and skate sharpening),<lb/>
gloves, a helmet and your own stick. Hockey's not<lb/>
exactly a pick-up and go sort of sport.<lb/>
Brent Falcon, Jordan Meyers and Corey Fleitz<lb/>
founded the club in October of 2004, but their first<lb/>
game in the BRHC will be a year later, Oct. 21 when<lb/>
they take on Virginia Commonwealth. If you want<lb/>
to watch this game, however, you'll have to drive to<lb/>
Richmond. The team's first home game will be in<lb/>
Greenville on Oct. 28 against Radford.<lb/>
To those of you who wonder if they're for real,<lb/>
they've already gathered a list of sponsors includ-<lb/>
ing Michaelangelo's Pizza, Pirate Radio 1250, Cafe<lb/>
Caribe, Graphix Unlimited in Tarboro and of course<lb/>
Bladez on Ice. If you're personally interested in<lb/>
sponsoring the ECU club team, they offer a package<lb/>
of donation levels. For just a $75 donation you get<lb/>
a pair of season passes and a listing on their Web<lb/>
site, ecuicehockey.com. For bigger businesses, they<lb/>
offer plans of up to a $2,000 donation where they<lb/>
place your business logos on ticket stubs and offer<lb/>
private party rooms.<lb/>
So if you get some time this fall (or more appro-<lb/>
priately, this winter), take some time and chill with <lb/>
the ECU Men's Ice Hockey club team. $<lb/>
I<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at <lb/>
sport5@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Tryouts for ECU concluded Monday night when the team held a full-scale scrimmage from 9:30 to 11:30 p.m.<lb/>
ECU volleyball team swept  . ? ,<lb/>
twice at BGSU Invitational LadV Prate soccer falls ,n<lb/>
double-overtime 2-1 to Oklahoma<lb/>
Krug leads the ladies in assists with 348 so far this season.<lb/>
(SID) ? The ECU women's<lb/>
soccer team dropped its fifth<lb/>
game of the season Sunday after-<lb/>
noon falling to the Oklahoma<lb/>
Sooners 2-1 in double-over-<lb/>
time at John Crain Field<lb/>
in Norman.<lb/>
The Pirates (1-5-0) scored<lb/>
the first half's only goal when<lb/>
Melissa Penney's (Damascus,<lb/>
Md.) free kick from 30 yards out<lb/>
on the left side climbed over<lb/>
the outstretched hands of OU<lb/>
keeper Jennifer Nichols into the<lb/>
upper right corner of the net at<lb/>
the 37:39 mark. For Penney it<lb/>
was her third goal of the season<lb/>
and the eighth of her career.<lb/>
Currently she leads the Pirates<lb/>
in scoring and points (7).<lb/>
The Sooners (5-1-0) got on<lb/>
the board in the 68th minute<lb/>
when Andrea Hurley weaved<lb/>
through several ECU defend-<lb/>
ers and found Tenesha Duncan<lb/>
who promptly sent the ball past<lb/>
Pirate goalkeeper Amber Camp-<lb/>
bell (Frederick, Md.).<lb/>
During the first overtime<lb/>
period, both teams had oppor-<lb/>
tunities to score but came away<lb/>
with nothing. OU took five shots<lb/>
to ECU'S two, including a point-<lb/>
break shot by Savannah Scott<lb/>
that found Campbell's hands<lb/>
with less than a minute to play.<lb/>
In the 108th minute of play,<lb/>
the Sooners netted the game-<lb/>
winner when Lauren Maclver<lb/>
fired a shot off Campbell's<lb/>
hands into the upper left corner<lb/>
of the net with 2:03 remain-<lb/>
ing in the second overtime.<lb/>
Campbell would finish with<lb/>
a career-high 12 saves in 108<lb/>
minutes of play.<lb/>
"I'm pleased with the way<lb/>
we played this weekend said<lb/>
Head Coach Rob Donnen-<lb/>
wirth. "We played two great<lb/>
teams (Texas A&amp;M and Okla-<lb/>
homa) and I thought we played<lb/>
competitive enough to win.<lb/>
When you play nation-<lb/>
ally-ranked program you<lb/>
can only learn and become<lb/>
better and 1 think we did that<lb/>
this weekend<lb/>
ECU will be back in action<lb/>
Friday, Sept. 16 when they host<lb/>
Campbell at Bunting Field<lb/>
at 4 p.m.<lb/>
Lady Pirates finish 1-2<lb/>
over the weekend<lb/>
DAVID WASKIEWICZ<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
The road trip continued for<lb/>
the ECU Volleyball team last<lb/>
weekend as they entered the<lb/>
BGSU Invitational Tournament<lb/>
in Bowling Green, Ohio. Riding<lb/>
high on a two game winning<lb/>
streak over Tennessee Tech and<lb/>
High Point, the Lady Pirates were<lb/>
hoping to carry on the winning<lb/>
momentum as they faced No. 12<lb/>
Ohio State in the first game of the<lb/>
invitational last Friday.<lb/>
Despite a hard fought effort<lb/>
OSU proved to be too much for<lb/>
ECU as they were able to sweep<lb/>
the game 30-27, 30-17 and 30-<lb/>
28. Seniors Pam Ferris and Erica<lb/>
Wilson led the Lady Pirates in<lb/>
kills with nine and eight respec-<lb/>
tively. Junior Heidi Krug led ECU<lb/>
with 27 assists in the loss.<lb/>
Things did not get any easier<lb/>
for ECU as they entered the next<lb/>
day of the invitational against<lb/>
host Bowling Green. Wilson led<lb/>
the way with nine kills for ECU<lb/>
as Krug tallied 34 assists, but It<lb/>
still was not enough as the Lady<lb/>
Pirates were swept for the second<lb/>
time in the invitational 30-25,<lb/>
30-25 and 30-24. Bowling Green<lb/>
hit .222 in their win while ECU<lb/>
only managed .095.<lb/>
Determined not to be<lb/>
swept throughout the entire<lb/>
invitational ECU turned on<lb/>
their game faces later in the<lb/>
day as they faced their final<lb/>
opponent Chicago State. ECU<lb/>
racked up 49 kills and a hitting<lb/>
percentage of .424 as they<lb/>
bounced back from their previ-<lb/>
ous loss with a sweep of their own<lb/>
30-16, 30-17 and 30-19. With the<lb/>
win ECU improves their record to<lb/>
4-4 this season.<lb/>
Next week the road trip con-<lb/>
tinues as the Lady Pirates head<lb/>
to Spartanburg, SC to take part<lb/>
in the Enterprise Rent-a-Car Vol-<lb/>
leyball Classic. Play will begin<lb/>
Friday as ECU faces Charleston<lb/>
Southern and host Wofford. This<lb/>
weekend's games will lead up<lb/>
to ECU's first conference game<lb/>
of the season at home against<lb/>
Tulane in two weeks.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Mark Messier retires, ending 25-year NHL career<lb/>
(AP) ? Mark Messier retired Monday, ending<lb/>
a 25-year career in which he won six Stanley Cup<lb/>
championships and ranked second only to Wayne<lb/>
Gretzky on the NHL all-time scoring list.<lb/>
Messier became a star in Edmonton in the 1980s<lb/>
and a headlineron Broadway in the '90s, captaining<lb/>
the New York Rangers to the '94 championship that<lb/>
ended the team's 54-year title drought.<lb/>
"There was nothing else really for me to achieve<lb/>
the 44-year-old said on a conference call.<lb/>
Even though the official announcement came<lb/>
Monday, Messier all but said goodbye on March<lb/>
31, 2004, following the Rangers' final home<lb/>
game before the lockout that wiped out all of last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The Rangers held physicals for their players on<lb/>
Monday at the opening of training camp, but the<lb/>
longtime star never expressed intentions to return<lb/>
for another season.<lb/>
"It was a tough decision Messier said. "I'm<lb/>
healthy and feel good and I feel like I can play<lb/>
But Rangers general manager Glen Sather, the<lb/>
architect of the Oilers' dynasty that was spear-<lb/>
headed by Messier and Gretzky, always left room<lb/>
for the rock-jawed captain to come back.<lb/>
Messier teamed with Gretzky to win four cham-<lb/>
pionships in Edmonton during the 1980s and then <lb/>
won another in 1990 after Gretzky was traded to I<lb/>
see MESSIERoage A7 Messier finished his career as a Ranger.<lb/>
POOCh KlCk-A low line-drive<lb/>
type kick that is usually employed<lb/>
by the punting team when trying<lb/>
to pin an offense inside their own<lb/>
10-yard line.<lb/>
Flanker - A receiver who lines<lb/>
up just outside the tight end and<lb/>
usually inside of the wide out.<lb/>
Sometimes this position is also<lb/>
known as the "slot" receiver.<lb/>
Flat(s) - The area of the<lb/>
field between the hash marks<lb/>
and the sidelines and is<lb/>
within five or so yards of the line<lb/>
of scrimmage.<lb/>
Une of Scrimmage - An<lb/>
imaginary line that splits the two<lb/>
teams before the snap of the ball.<lb/>
The line dictates where both teams<lb/>
line up before any given play.<lb/>
lOOd - An offensive<lb/>
play that sends more receivers<lb/>
than the defense can usually<lb/>
cover to one side of the field. <lb/>
<pb facs="00059343_0007"/><lb/>
9-13-05<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? SPORTS<lb/>
PAGE A7<lb/>
Saints to play four games in Baton Rouge, three in San Antonio<lb/>
Saints' returner Michael Lewis visits refugees after the storm.<lb/>
(AP) ? The New Orleans<lb/>
Saints will play four home games<lb/>
at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge,<lb/>
La and three in the Alamodome<lb/>
in San Antonio this season.<lb/>
The Saints, displaced when<lb/>
Hurricane Katrina devastated<lb/>
the New Orleans area and their<lb/>
Superdome home, will play the<lb/>
weekends of Oct. 30-31, Nov. 6-7,<lb/>
Dec. 4-5 and Dec. 17-19 on the<lb/>
campus of LSU in Baton Rouge.<lb/>
The San Antonio games will be<lb/>
on the weekends of Oct. 2-3, Oct.<lb/>
16-17 and Dec. 24-26.<lb/>
Specific days and starting<lb/>
times for those games have not<lb/>
been determined.<lb/>
The four home games at<lb/>
Baton Rouge will be against<lb/>
Miami, Chicago, Tampa Bay<lb/>
and Carolina. The San Antonio<lb/>
games will be against Buffalo,<lb/>
Atlanta and Detroit.<lb/>
No decision was made on<lb/>
the site of potential Saints home<lb/>
playoff games this season.<lb/>
Agreement on the sched-<lb/>
ule was reached after a meet-<lb/>
ing Monday in Baton Rouge<lb/>
involving Saints owner Tom<lb/>
Benson, NFL commissioner Paul<lb/>
Tagliabue, LSU chancellor Sean<lb/>
O'Keefe and other school officials.<lb/>
"We had an excellent meet-<lb/>
ing this morning and quickly<lb/>
developed a dual consensus<lb/>
Tagliabue said. "The first was<lb/>
to continue to give priority to<lb/>
the needs of the region and the<lb/>
second to the scheduling of<lb/>
Saints games in a way that made<lb/>
sense under the total circum-<lb/>
stances.  We also appreciate the<lb/>
cooperation of the Alamodome<lb/>
officials and the hospitality of<lb/>
the people of San Antonio for<lb/>
their support of the Saints at this<lb/>
difficult time<lb/>
Benson scheduled a news<lb/>
conference for later Monday.<lb/>
The Saints won their season<lb/>
opener 23-20 at Carolina on<lb/>
Sunday. Their first home game<lb/>
was set for this coming Sunday,<lb/>
but was moved to Monday night<lb/>
and will be played at Giants Sta-<lb/>
dium against the Giants. Saints<lb/>
season-ticket holders and anyone<lb/>
who had purchased tickets for<lb/>
the Giants-Saints game at the<lb/>
Superdome were given first<lb/>
call for tickets to the relocated<lb/>
game. After that, however, Giants<lb/>
season-ticket holders were given<lb/>
priority, meaning it will be a true<lb/>
road game for the Saints.<lb/>
The manager of the Super-<lb/>
dome has said it will take months<lb/>
before the building's future can<lb/>
be determined. It's possible to<lb/>
stadium will be torn down,<lb/>
leaving the Saints to find a new<lb/>
home.<lb/>
During Hurricane Katrina,<lb/>
with thousands inside seeking<lb/>
refuge, three large holes were<lb/>
blown through the roof. In all,<lb/>
about 70 percent of the roof<lb/>
failed and water poured into the<lb/>
building during the storm, along<lb/>
with debris.<lb/>
M6SSI8r from page A6<lb/>
Los Angeles.<lb/>
He trails only Gretzky in<lb/>
playoff goals and assists, but he<lb/>
topped the Great One by adding<lb/>
one postseason guarantee that<lb/>
took him to heightened status<lb/>
in Manhattan.<lb/>
With the Rangers trailing<lb/>
New Jersey 3-2 in the 1994 East-<lb/>
ern Conference finals, Messier<lb/>
promised New York would force<lb/>
a seventh game. He made good<lb/>
on his word by posting his fourth<lb/>
and final playoff hat trick in a<lb/>
4-2 victory.<lb/>
New York won Game 7 In<lb/>
double overtime to advance to<lb/>
the finals, which also ended with<lb/>
a seventh game victory.<lb/>
His second stint with the<lb/>
Rangers, which covered the final<lb/>
four seasons of his career, wasn't<lb/>
nearly as successful. New York<lb/>
failed to make the playoffs in<lb/>
any of the years. Messier played<lb/>
in the postseason during his first<lb/>
13 NHL years, before New York<lb/>
missed in 1993.<lb/>
After leaving the Rangers fol-<lb/>
lowing their most recent playoff<lb/>
appearance in 1997, Messier was<lb/>
out of the playoffs for the next<lb/>
seven years - including three<lb/>
with Vancouver.<lb/>
He leaves with 1,887 NHL<lb/>
regular-season points, 970 fewer<lb/>
than Gretzky and 37 more than<lb/>
Gordie Howe, who sits in third<lb/>
place.<lb/>
"I never thought about any<lb/>
individual records Messier<lb/>
said. "Coming back to break<lb/>
any records, especially that<lb/>
record wasn't all that appealing<lb/>
to me<lb/>
Messier always did things on<lb/>
his terms, and his retirement is<lb/>
no different. After a year off, he<lb/>
wasn't spurred to play again even<lb/>
though he is only six goals away<lb/>
from 700 - a mark reached by<lb/>
only six players - and 11 games<lb/>
short of tying Howe's record of<lb/>
1,767.<lb/>
Edmonton general manager<lb/>
Kevin Lowe, Messier's longtime<lb/>
teammate on the great Oilers<lb/>
teams, tried to convince him to<lb/>
return to his hometown for a fare-<lb/>
well tour. But Messier really only<lb/>
considered playing in New York,<lb/>
where he has a young family.<lb/>
Messier was showered with<lb/>
applause from teammates,<lb/>
family, friends, fans and even the<lb/>
Buffalo Sabres when he skated<lb/>
off the ice for what turned out<lb/>
to be his final game 18 months<lb/>
ago, a 4-3 loss at Madison Square<lb/>
Garden.<lb/>
Messier and Gretzky have<lb/>
always been linked, whether on<lb/>
the ice or in the record book.<lb/>
Messier scored 109 playoff goals,<lb/>
13 fewer than Gretzky, and set<lb/>
up 186 others - 74 fewer than<lb/>
Gretzky, now the Phoenix Coy-<lb/>
otes coach.<lb/>
But the second partnership<lb/>
lasted just one year as Messier left<lb/>
the Rangers for Vancouver as a<lb/>
free agent following a surprising<lb/>
run with Gretzky to the Eastern<lb/>
Conference finals.<lb/>
When Sather took over as<lb/>
Rangers GM in 2000 he brought<lb/>
Messier back. Messier scored his<lb/>
final goal in his final game, No.<lb/>
698 with the Rangers.<lb/>
The inability to rekindle suc-<lb/>
cess in New York and the depar-<lb/>
ture of close friend Brian Leetch,<lb/>
who was traded to Toronto as<lb/>
part of the Rangers' salary dump<lb/>
of 2004, surely pushed Messier to<lb/>
his final goodbye to Broadway.<lb/>
Reid's job tougher because of<lb/>
Super Bowl hopes, offseason<lb/>
Gat something to say?<lb/>
Send us your pirate rants!<lb/>
Submit online at www.theeastcarolinian.com or e-mail editor@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
(KRT) ? Andy Reid lost a lot of<lb/>
weight this offseason, but it wasn't<lb/>
from worry over the soap-opera<lb/>
headlines his team was generating.<lb/>
The Eagles' coach has<lb/>
dropped more than 40 pounds,<lb/>
he said recently, because he felt<lb/>
he'd let his weight get away<lb/>
from him and needed to get it<lb/>
back under control. He saw a<lb/>
problem, he formulated a plan<lb/>
and he addressed it, in the same<lb/>
reasoned, matter-of-fact way Reid<lb/>
addresses all problems.<lb/>
As the Eagles prepare to open<lb/>
their 73rd season on Monday<lb/>
night in Atlanta the seventh<lb/>
season of the franchise's all-time<lb/>
winningest coach (71-37, includ-<lb/>
ing 7-5 in the playoffs) there is<lb/>
little question about the team's<lb/>
talent level. On paper, this bunch<lb/>
certainly seems capable of return-<lb/>
ing to the Super Bowl and actually<lb/>
winning it. Middle linebacker<lb/>
Jeremiah Trotter said recently<lb/>
that this is the most talented<lb/>
defensive unit he has ever played<lb/>
on. The offense still has Donovan<lb/>
McNabb, Terrell Owens, Brian<lb/>
Westbrook and a solid, stable<lb/>
offensive line, regardless of how<lb/>
any of those people might be<lb/>
feeling about one another or the<lb/>
organization at any given time.<lb/>
The main question other<lb/>
than what might happen with<lb/>
injuries, of course, which is<lb/>
always a big unknown entering<lb/>
a season seems to be whether<lb/>
Reid can hold it all together. The<lb/>
Eagles have seen a fair amount of<lb/>
controversy over the past three<lb/>
years or so - there was Trotter's<lb/>
messy 2002 departure, the Duce<lb/>
Staley rift and holdout the next<lb/>
year, bad blood with standouts<lb/>
such as cornerback Bobby Taylor<lb/>
in 2003 and defensive tackle<lb/>
Corey Simon last year, run-<lb/>
ning right up to Simon's recent<lb/>
release. This rift with Owens is<lb/>
different, though Reid says he is<lb/>
making a point of not handling<lb/>
it any differently.<lb/>
The Eagles already faced a<lb/>
formidable task to get to Super<lb/>
Bowl XL, given that no runner-<lb/>
up has returned the next season<lb/>
since the Bills in 1994, and no<lb/>
team has rebounded from losing<lb/>
to winning it in one year since the<lb/>
unbeaten 1972 Miami Dolphins.<lb/>
Owens has a much higher<lb/>
talent level and profile than any<lb/>
previous disgruntled Eagle. He<lb/>
seemingly can snap his fingers to<lb/>
summon cameras and sycophan-<lb/>
tic interviewers from ESPN when-<lb/>
ever he feels the need to vent<lb/>
about any of the tangential issues<lb/>
that have sprung up around his<lb/>
displeasure over not getting a new<lb/>
contract. He presents the most<lb/>
serious threat to Reid's authority<lb/>
the coach has ever faced.<lb/>
Not that you would ever get that<lb/>
sense from talking to Reid about it.<lb/>
"I like T.O Reid said a few<lb/>
weeks ago, not long after he wel-<lb/>
comed Owens back from a one-<lb/>
week training-camp banishment<lb/>
that some observers felt would<lb/>
lead to the end of the wideout's<lb/>
Eagles career. Instead, Owens<lb/>
returned, apparently accepted<lb/>
Reid's terms for remaining on the<lb/>
team, and the situation stabilized.<lb/>
"I've enjoyed having him here<lb/>
T.O he's a very visible guy and a<lb/>
great player. Those things happen.<lb/>
That comes with the territory<lb/>
Hey, planes circling the prac-<lb/>
tice field trailing "T.O. Must Go"<lb/>
banners, the wide receiver calling<lb/>
his quarterback "a hypocrite" on<lb/>
national TV these things happen.<lb/>
Just another day at the office.<lb/>
Reid said he doesn't worry<lb/>
about what Owens says on TV,<lb/>
or with whom he might or might<lb/>
not be speaking, as long as Reid<lb/>
and Owens are communicating.<lb/>
"T.Os a good person. I'm<lb/>
concerned about when T.O. and<lb/>
I are face-to-face and talking<lb/>
Reid said. "Things happen in this<lb/>
business. You work through it,<lb/>
and that's what we did<lb/>
Asked if this has been his most<lb/>
difficult offseason, Reid shrugged.<lb/>
"I look at it as part of the job<lb/>
he said. "Tough is going one-on-<lb/>
one with a defensive lineman.<lb/>
This is just things that happen.<lb/>
Things get magnified a bit when<lb/>
you've been successful<lb/>
BETTING<lb/>
COM<lb/>
www.sportsbetting.com<lb/>
Win mS99QQQ<lb/>
and a trip to the<lb/>
Fro Football<lb/>
All-Star Same<lb/>
In Hawaii<lb/>
Plus, these exciting<lb/>
prizes await you!<lb/>
? Sony BO" LCD Projection TV<lb/>
? BOSS Home Theatre System<lb/>
? HP iPAQ Color Pocket PC<lb/>
? Apple iPod<lb/>
PLAY FOR FREE AT<lb/>
http:www.sportsbetting.com<lb/>
? -??<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059343_0008"/><lb/>
L<lb/>
1<lb/>
Page A8<lb/>
TUESDAY September 13, 2005<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
Roommate Wanted Female non-<lb/>
smoker serious student only washer<lb/>
dryer ECU bus route $300mo.<lb/>
Plus half utilities cable and internet<lb/>
$200 deposit (252) 714-4578 or<lb/>
AEJ0115@mail.ecu.edu<lb/>
2 &amp; 3 Bedroom units 1-3.5 Baths -<lb/>
Rent from $575.00 Blocks from ECU<lb/>
&amp; ECU Bus Route. Call 717-9871;<lb/>
717-9872<lb/>
For Rent - Dockside a 3BR 2BA<lb/>
townhouse with Cathedral ceiling,<lb/>
close to campus. $900rho. - Call<lb/>
Carrett 252-258-0366<lb/>
Campus Crossing - directly across<lb/>
from campus; adjacent to new<lb/>
cafeteria &amp; downtown area. 2 BR<lb/>
$575 Call 355-8884.<lb/>
Townhouse, 3 Bedroom, 2.5<lb/>
Baths, Full Kitchen, WasherDryer,<lb/>
Fireplace, Enclosed Patio, Private<lb/>
End Unit, Large Yard, AC, Quiet<lb/>
Neighborhood, ECU Busline,<lb/>
No Pets, Deposit (Negotiable),<lb/>
References. ($725Month) 756-<lb/>
5222<lb/>
Houses for rent: 3 bedroom $750-<lb/>
$900,4 bedroom $900-$1,200 Call<lb/>
252-353-5107<lb/>
For rent: Twin Oaks townhouse,<lb/>
2 BR, 1 12 bath, end unit on ECU<lb/>
campus bus route. Patio, pool, WD<lb/>
hook-up. $555 per month. Call 864-<lb/>
982-2459 or 919-498-0520.<lb/>
Free! 1st Mo. Rent plus High Speed<lb/>
Internet- 4 bedrooms, 3 baths,<lb/>
Central heatAC, fireplace fenced<lb/>
yard, dogs OK. Near ECU, PCMH,<lb/>
427W. 4th St. $1200.00Mo. 347-<lb/>
6504<lb/>
Apartments for rent: 1 Bedroom<lb/>
$ 300 without utilities $400 including<lb/>
utilities Call 252-353-5107<lb/>
Walk to Campus - 3 BR 1<lb/>
Bath Duplex J650 month<lb/>
Includes wd, New appliances,<lb/>
New carpet, celling fans In<lb/>
bedrooms, Law i maintenance<lb/>
Included. Call 375 6447 to view.<lb/>
For rent - One bedroom wbath at<lb/>
Pirates Cove Apartments - 252-752-<lb/>
9995. Rent paid through 93005.<lb/>
Available immediately. Contact<lb/>
barbk@happy.com or 302-753-<lb/>
6947<lb/>
For Rent 3BDR 2BA Plus Bonus<lb/>
Room, Deck, Pets OK, 4 Blocks From<lb/>
ECU Avail. Now $275 Per BDR Per<lb/>
Month. Call 258-1810.<lb/>
Room for rent Pirates Place 1 Bdrm, 1<lb/>
study, 1 bathroom, shared kitchen<lb/>
living room $350 month. Call 717-<lb/>
330-7698<lb/>
Two bedroom condo $500. Short<lb/>
leases available. Pets OK, DW,<lb/>
fireplace, WD hookup, 1.5 baths.<lb/>
Available immediately. Very clean.<lb/>
Call 830-9502.<lb/>
ECU bus Wireless Internet pets<lb/>
dishwasher disposals pool laundry<lb/>
(252) 758-4015<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
Roommate Wanted To Share 3BR<lb/>
House W Two Others. Rent $250<lb/>
 Utilities. 5 Minute Drive From<lb/>
Campus If Interested Call Luke @<lb/>
347-6277<lb/>
Roommole wanted in Riverwalk<lb/>
home. Private bedroom and bath.<lb/>
Call josh 704-491-4902<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
For Sale: Team Fuji Road Bikes His 61<lb/>
cm (24") Her's 49 cm (19") Many<lb/>
extras. Great Condition. $225 (each<lb/>
bike) Call 321-8536<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
Health Insurance 1 Month to 12<lb/>
Month Major Medical Sign up<lb/>
online at www.johnaldenstm.com.<lb/>
Use Agent Code H6265 to activate<lb/>
policy. Or call us at 756-9496 for<lb/>
more information. Serving ECU<lb/>
since 1990.<lb/>
KELP WANTED<lb/>
Afternoon help needed to transport<lb/>
older children (2) to after school<lb/>
activities during September<lb/>
October. If interested call Lydia<lb/>
Rotondo at (252) 329-8080.<lb/>
Attractive, outgoing individual to<lb/>
lead a new cosmetic enhancing<lb/>
company. Must be a well dressed,<lb/>
well spoken, energetic non-smoker<lb/>
with mos? afternoons and evenings<lb/>
free. Call 252-752-1572 to arrange<lb/>
an interview.<lb/>
Get Practical! CFIPractical<lb/>
Route Miles Effective 12105!<lb/>
W. Memphis Orientation! $0.05<lb/>
NE Bonus Pay! Average 2004<lb/>
Solo Farnings $49,950! Top Solo:<lb/>
$70,526! XM Service Provided Class<lb/>
A CDL Required Student Grads<lb/>
Start at $0.26 Potential 1st Year<lb/>
Income $42,000! 1-800-CFI-DRIVE<lb/>
(800-234-3748) www.cfidrive.com<lb/>
Musicians wanted to play for Sunday,<lb/>
contemporary worship services. For<lb/>
more information contact Eric at<lb/>
410-251-8623 or 252-328-3040. All<lb/>
instruments welcome.<lb/>
Greenville Recreation &amp; Parks<lb/>
Department is recruiting Baseball<lb/>
Clinicians (6.50 per hour), Soccer<lb/>
and Flag Football Referees for out<lb/>
upcoming fall programs (10-17 per<lb/>
game). Referee hours range from<lb/>
5 pm to 9 pm, Monday-Friday and<lb/>
Saturday mon?ngs. Flexible with<lb/>
hours according to class schedules.<lb/>
All interested persons need to<lb/>
contact the Athletic Office at .329-<lb/>
4550 for information regarding<lb/>
upcoming training dates.<lb/>
with innovative Wireless Internet<lb/>
Company for Customer Response<lb/>
Team. If you are energetic, have a<lb/>
good phone voice and are computer<lb/>
literate we would like to hear from<lb/>
you. Please email resume' to<lb/>
swarner@wavelengthmail.com or<lb/>
fax to (252) 321-8186. Please no<lb/>
phone calls.<lb/>
Tiara Too Jewelry Colonial Mall Part-<lb/>
time Retail Sales Associate Available<lb/>
year round! Day and Night hours<lb/>
Apply in Person<lb/>
Guerilla MarketingPromoters<lb/>
needed! Leisure Tours needs<lb/>
students to promote our Spring<lb/>
Break travel packages on campus<lb/>
and with local vendors. Excellent<lb/>
Pay! 800-838-8202<lb/>
Memphis Orientation! 1-800-CFI-<lb/>
DRIVE (800-234-3748) Practical<lb/>
Route Miles Paid Effective 12105!<lb/>
$0.05 NE Bonus Pay! Average 2004<lb/>
Solo Earnings $49,950! Top Solo:<lb/>
$70,526! XM Service Provided Class<lb/>
A CDL Required Student Grads<lb/>
Start at $0.26 Potential 1st Year<lb/>
Income $42,000! www.cfidrive.<lb/>
com<lb/>
Area high school seeking field<lb/>
hockey officials during September-<lb/>
October for late afternoon games.<lb/>
If interested contact Lydia Rotondo<lb/>
at (252) 329-8080.<lb/>
Ming Dynasty. Waitstaff and Hostess<lb/>
needed. Come apply in person.<lb/>
Located East 10th St. Rivergate<lb/>
Shopping Center.<lb/>
Responsible, experienced, non-<lb/>
? smoking, babysitter, needed full-<lb/>
time for a 2-yr old and infant. Mon-<lb/>
Fri 7am-4pm. Please call 355-6680<lb/>
or email at ladypahe@cox.net.<lb/>
Starting 920.<lb/>
Bartenders Wanted! $250day<lb/>
potential. No experience necessary.<lb/>
Training provided. Call (800) 965-<lb/>
6520 ext. 202<lb/>
Reliable person needed for afternoon<lb/>
transport of 2 children from east fifth<lb/>
street school daily. Pay Negotiable.<lb/>
Call 717-7784<lb/>
Need assistance with school work<lb/>
for children ages 12 &amp; 8. Must<lb/>
have 3.2 GPA, non-smoker w<lb/>
transportation. Needed afternoons,<lb/>
early evenings and some weekends.<lb/>
Call 752-1572.<lb/>
com or www.LeisureTours.com or<lb/>
800-838-8202.<lb/>
Sigma Alpha Lambda, a National<lb/>
Leadership and Honors Organization<lb/>
with over 50 chapters across the<lb/>
country, is seeking motivated<lb/>
students to assist in starting a local<lb/>
chapter (3.0 GPA Required). Contact<lb/>
Rob Miner, Director of Chapter<lb/>
Development at rminer@salhonors.<lb/>
org<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
Psi Chi invites all psychology<lb/>
majorsminors to our first meeting<lb/>
Wednesday Sept. 14th at 4pm in<lb/>
Rawl 302. Refreshments provided.<lb/>
Speech &amp; Hearing Screenings for<lb/>
fall semester will be held Monday,<lb/>
September 19, 2005; Tuesday,<lb/>
September 20,2005; or Wednesday,<lb/>
September 21, 2005 from 5-6<lb/>
p.m. at Belk Annex 1, near the<lb/>
intersection of Charles Blvd. and<lb/>
the 264 By-pass. Sign-in begins at<lb/>
4:45 p.m. at the west entrance of<lb/>
the clinic and ends at 5:45 p.m.<lb/>
Screenings conducted on a first<lb/>
come, first serve basis. No calls<lb/>
accepted. Make-up sessions are held<lb/>
most Friday mornings, $20 fee. Call<lb/>
328-4405 for a make-up session<lb/>
appointment.<lb/>
When you're<lb/>
cruising the<lb/>
information<lb/>
highway,<lb/>
pull off on<lb/>
our new exit<lb/>
www.theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
GREEK PERSONALS<lb/>
Meet the sisters of Gamma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma! Our pre rush cookout will<lb/>
be Tuesday, September 13 from<lb/>
5-7pm. For directions, email Leah<lb/>
LMD0415@mail.ecu.edu<lb/>
OTHER<lb/>
fc?87 SB)<lb/>
v<lb/>
2 and 3 bedroom townhouses<lb/>
available now with 1.5 to 2.5 baths,<lb/>
full basement, enclosed patio, WD<lb/>
Hook-ups, plenty of storage, 1800<lb/>
sq. ft ECU bus route, No Pets,<lb/>
752-7738.<lb/>
One two Brs. on-site management<lb/>
maintenance Central heat air 6,9,12<lb/>
month leases Water Cable included<lb/>
Do You Need A Good Job?-The<lb/>
ECU Telefund is hiring students<lb/>
to contact alumni and parents for<lb/>
the ECU Annual Fund. $6.25 hour<lb/>
plus cash bonuses. Make your own<lb/>
schedule. If interested, visit our<lb/>
website at www.ecu.edutelefund<lb/>
and click on JOBS.<lb/>
Part-Time position(s) available<lb/>
Spring Break 2006. Travel with STS,<lb/>
America's1 Student Tour Operator<lb/>
to Jamaica, Cancun, Acapulco,<lb/>
Bahamas, and Florida. Now hiring<lb/>
on-campus reps. Call for group<lb/>
discounts. InformationReservations<lb/>
1 -800-648-4849 or www.ststravel.<lb/>
com.<lb/>
1 Spring Break Website! Low<lb/>
prices guaranteed. Free Meals &amp;<lb/>
Free Drinks. Book 11 people, get<lb/>
12th trip free! Group discounts for<lb/>
6 www.SpringBreakDiscounts.<lb/>
the- ,<lb/>
shoe<lb/>
crate<lb/>
3110 A South Evans Hours:<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834 Mon -Sat<lb/>
(252)353-7463 10am-6pm<lb/>
For Connoisseur and<lb/>
Collector of Contemporary<lb/>
and Trendy Footwear<lb/>
We are located near the intersection<lb/>
ofEvans Street &amp; creenvil!e Blvd<lb/>
between Eckerd &amp; Bowen Cleaners,<lb/>
in front of"Lowe's Foods md Best Buy.<lb/>
Great Designer Shoes for Women .uul Children.<lb/>
Yellow box<lb/>
Nicole<lb/>
A Ml U ClogS<lb/>
Rebels<lb/>
Two Lips<lb/>
.Mnit.i Clogs<lb/>
OverK<lb/>
style i<lb/>
shipment<lb/>
mwm<lb/>
MMlhMrWM org<lb/>
t-eOO-KS-SHAflf<lb/>
Nightly Dinner Specials $6.95<lb/>
Monday- Chicken Parmesan<lb/>
Tuesday- Country Fried Chicken<lb/>
Wednesday- Spaghetti ft Meatballs<lb/>
Thursday- Greek or Caesar Salad Chix<lb/>
Friday- Fish ft Chips<lb/>
Saturday- Meat or 5 Cheese Lasagna<lb/>
Sunday- Fried Shrimp Plate<lb/>
All DAY ALL NIGHT<lb/>
ake Out 758-2774 Take Out<lb/>
Daily Drink Specials<lb/>
Monday - $1.75 Domestic bottles<lb/>
Tuesday - $2.25 Imports Bottles<lb/>
Wednesday - $1.25 Mug Bud Lt $4.50 Pitchers<lb/>
Thursday - $2.50 House Hi-Balls ft $3 House Wine<lb/>
Friday - $2.50 Import of the Day ft $3 Margaritas<lb/>
Saturday - $3 Lits a $2.50 Import of the Day<lb/>
Sunday - $2.75 Pints Guinness, Bass,<lb/>
Newcastle, Black and Tan<lb/>
-V 1. : I?<lb/>
301 Jarvis (2 blocks from campus<lb/>
Hnwconi m?nmiiTflisi3Eauenn m<lb/>
ELT0R0<lb/>
Firate<lb/>
2800 E 10th St.<lb/>
Eastgate Shopping Center<lb/>
Across From Highway Patrol<lb/>
$180<lb/>
Per<lb/>
Month<lb/>
This coupon nood for<lb/>
;m extra $5 on your<lb/>
I'm a Student and a Plasma Donor<lb/>
Names: Jennifer<lb/>
Majors: Nursing<lb/>
Hobbies: Swimming &amp; going to the beach<lb/>
Why do I donate Plasma?<lb/>
Extra spending money for the beach.<lb/>
Earn up to $170mo. donating plasma in a friendly place.<lb/>
DCI Biologicals of Greenville ? 252-757-0171<lb/>
2727 E.10th Street ? Down the Street from ECU ? www.dciplasma.com 
</div></body></text></TEI>