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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>

<pb facs="00059361_0001"/>
www.theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Volume 81 Number 22<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
November 1, 2005<lb/>
'Midnight Madness' Mania Sm<lb/>
With activities such as "Fear Factor Bingo, karaoke, movie challenge, palm reading and a DJ dance, "Midnight Madness" had to spread out to the SRC this year.<lb/>
The festivities lasted from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. and served as a great way for students uninterested in going Uptown to fill their night with fun activities.<lb/>
Professor speaks on<lb/>
the West's search for<lb/>
universal community<lb/>
Natural law preserves a<lb/>
key role<lb/>
TAYLEIGH DAVIS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
John M. Headley, professor<lb/>
of history, gave a lecture last<lb/>
Thursday at the Science and<lb/>
Technology Building titled, "The<lb/>
West in Its Search for a Universal<lb/>
Community<lb/>
He explained western civili-<lb/>
zation and its place in the global<lb/>
community. The theme focused<lb/>
on two main points: a "common<lb/>
humanity" and the "capacity for<lb/>
self-criticism which both date<lb/>
back to our European roots.<lb/>
A major part of Headley's<lb/>
lecture focused on natural law:<lb/>
life, liberty and state.<lb/>
"Natural law is very impor-<lb/>
tant in the foundation of the<lb/>
United States, which is embedded<lb/>
in the Declaration of Indepen-<lb/>
dence said Angela Thompson,<lb/>
professor of history.<lb/>
Headley emphasized John<lb/>
Locke and Thomas Jefferson's<lb/>
efforts to develop specific con-<lb/>
cepts of natural law which<lb/>
became more concrete by the<lb/>
end of the 17th century.<lb/>
When speaking about natural<lb/>
law, Headley compared Thomas<lb/>
Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln as<lb/>
anomalies. The common thought<lb/>
of philosophers of the 18th cen-<lb/>
tury was that "all men are equal<lb/>
"How can you be so inti-<lb/>
mately associated with having<lb/>
slaves when all men are in fact<lb/>
equal said Headley.<lb/>
Headley considers Lincoln to<lb/>
be more of a believer of natural<lb/>
law principles unlike Jefferson,<lb/>
who was a slave owner.<lb/>
"Lincoln I found helpful in<lb/>
that 100 years later, he not only<lb/>
believes in the idea of equality,<lb/>
but he's in the position to act on<lb/>
it. Normally, we have great ideas,<lb/>
but we can't act upon them<lb/>
Headley said.<lb/>
Eleanor Roosevelt was<lb/>
one woman who acted upon<lb/>
great ideas as she experienced<lb/>
the sufferings of the poor and<lb/>
needy. Roosevelt was a social<lb/>
worker who also had a back-<lb/>
ground in her husband's admin-<lb/>
istration.<lb/>
By the end of World War 11,<lb/>
President Harry Truman gave<lb/>
Eleanor Roosevelt a diplomatic role<lb/>
to hold together members of other<lb/>
cultures who were focused on<lb/>
producing a statement on human<lb/>
rights. Her work on the universal<lb/>
Declaration of Human Rights in<lb/>
1948 was her greatest legacy.<lb/>
"Her responsibility stands at<lb/>
the end of what I've been talking<lb/>
about Headley said.<lb/>
Human rights and natural<lb/>
law date back to ancient history.<lb/>
"It was quite stimulating how<lb/>
Headley drew a line from Ancient<lb/>
Greece in 500 B.C. to natural<lb/>
law in the 17th century said<lb/>
Anthony Papalas, professor of<lb/>
Greek history.<lb/>
Western Europe has used<lb/>
natural law as their main concept<lb/>
of life, but Headley said it was<lb/>
see HEADLEY page A2<lb/>
The other side of Halloween<lb/>
Greenville was lively with "trick-or-treaters" during the Halloween festivities even though<lb/>
party-goers have classes the next day.<lb/>
Charles Hawkins speaks to SGA<lb/>
WYCHE<lb/>
No business decided<lb/>
during short Halloween<lb/>
eve session<lb/>
JOSHUA CONNER<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The SGA held their weekly<lb/>
meeting yesterday evening in<lb/>
the social room at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Benjamin Wyche, President<lb/>
of the Senate, called the meeting<lb/>
to order at 5:03 p.m.<lb/>
The majority of the meeting<lb/>
was dominated by discussion<lb/>
of the student fees committee.<lb/>
Charles Hawkins, vice chancel-<lb/>
lor for financial services, asked<lb/>
the senate for seven volunteers<lb/>
to gather information for the<lb/>
student fees committee. The<lb/>
committee will allow the senate<lb/>
to vote on budgets that will affect<lb/>
student fees supported units, fees<lb/>
that appear on students' tuition<lb/>
bills.<lb/>
According to Hawkins, the<lb/>
committee allows the students<lb/>
to have a say in the budget and<lb/>
will help them to have a detailed<lb/>
understanding of their fees.<lb/>
"We want you the senate to<lb/>
understand what our goals are,<lb/>
and also provide feedback said<lb/>
Hawkins.<lb/>
The seriate is expected to vote<lb/>
on the budgets on Nov. 28, if<lb/>
passed the budgets will then go to<lb/>
the ECU board of directors.<lb/>
In other SGA news, Wyche<lb/>
informed the senate that consis-<lb/>
tently absent groups have been<lb/>
notified and will be kicked out<lb/>
of SGA and have their funding<lb/>
frozen if they do not show up by<lb/>
Nov. 11.<lb/>
The parking and transporta-<lb/>
tion committee attended their<lb/>
first meeting as a standing com-<lb/>
mittee - it had been an ad-hoc<lb/>
committee since 2001 and was<lb/>
selected to have full representa-<lb/>
tive powers last week.<lb/>
According to Wyche, the new<lb/>
committee will act as a resource<lb/>
for students who have transporta-<lb/>
tion issues.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news� theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
'Meet the Faculty' features talented artist, Hartley<lb/>
Event enlightens<lb/>
students, artists alike<lb/>
TAWANDA CARLTON<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Last Thursday was a night<lb/>
of question and discovery as<lb/>
Richard Tichich, director of the<lb/>
School of Art and Design, inter-<lb/>
viewed Paul Hartley, coordinator<lb/>
of painting and drawing.<lb/>
With more than 31 years of<lb/>
instruction under his belt, Hart-<lb/>
ley discussed his career, his life<lb/>
and what led him to ECU.<lb/>
Hartley was a senior in col-<lb/>
lege at the University of North<lb/>
Texas before he knew he wanted<lb/>
to go into art school. His previ-<lb/>
ous major was aerospace and<lb/>
engineering, which made for<lb/>
an interesting career change.<lb/>
Although it may seem that this<lb/>
artist found his niche at a young<lb/>
age, Hartley begs to differ.<lb/>
"I started to like the arts and the<lb/>
art education classes that I started<lb/>
taking  1 don't know when I<lb/>
knew I was creative said Hartley.<lb/>
Hartley describes his high<lb/>
school teaching experience as a<lb/>
learning experience as well.<lb/>
"It was difficult and I admire<lb/>
people who can do it Hartley said.<lb/>
What brought Hartley to<lb/>
ECU, however, was the fact that<lb/>
his aunt loved the university so<lb/>
much.<lb/>
"My aunt had gone to ECU<lb/>
many years ago and she loved it,<lb/>
so that is how I was introduced<lb/>
to ECU Hartley said.<lb/>
The fact that Hartley has<lb/>
dedicated almost his entire life<lb/>
to the "art" of teaching says a<lb/>
lot on its own, but Hartley said<lb/>
he loves to teach and enjoys the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"I try to help students develop<lb/>
their talents as all teachers do<lb/>
Hartley said.<lb/>
However, even when trying to<lb/>
get students to feel comfortable<lb/>
with their work, Hartley agrees it<lb/>
is hard to make students feel secure<lb/>
when it comes to painting.<lb/>
"Everything means some-<lb/>
thing. The aura can change the<lb/>
meaning with one little dot, it's<lb/>
hard to be secure when you're<lb/>
painting, that's hard to deal<lb/>
with Hartley said.<lb/>
Even one of his previous stu-<lb/>
dents, Georgia Carroll, senior art<lb/>
education major, described how<lb/>
much of an influence Hartley has<lb/>
had on her view of art.<lb/>
"Hartley is a very good pro-<lb/>
fessor and because of him, I will<lb/>
never look at paintings the same<lb/>
said Carroll.<lb/>
"When 1 took advanced com-<lb/>
position with him, he showed us<lb/>
how all of the different shapes<lb/>
come together to make one<lb/>
picture<lb/>
The interviewer of the night,<lb/>
Richard Tichich, said the reason<lb/>
they have the "meet the faculty"<lb/>
series is because this is a large<lb/>
university and we do not get to<lb/>
talk enough.<lb/>
"We don't get to know what<lb/>
a person is thinking, and people<lb/>
can now get to know the quality<lb/>
of the faculty said Tichich.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news� theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
on New<lb/>
Orleans<lb/>
City has had history of<lb/>
environmental problems<lb/>
JOSHUA CONNER<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Approximately 100 students<lb/>
and geography enthusiasts<lb/>
crammed into 349 Flanagan<lb/>
Friday afternoon to hear Craig<lb/>
Colten, a Louisiana State Univer-<lb/>
sity geography professor, lecture<lb/>
on the history of New Orleans'<lb/>
flooding problems.<lb/>
According to Derek Alder-<lb/>
man, geography professor, Colten<lb/>
was invited to ECU for his exper-<lb/>
tise and his "excellent and timely<lb/>
nature of research<lb/>
Colten started his lecture by<lb/>
explaining the inverted topogra-<lb/>
phy of New Orleans.<lb/>
"If you drive away from the<lb/>
Tar River, you generally go up,<lb/>
right? In New Orleans, you drive<lb/>
away from the river and you go<lb/>
down said Colten.<lb/>
Colten said the city has had<lb/>
a long and nasty relationship<lb/>
with Mother Nature since its<lb/>
inception as a commerce port<lb/>
and defensive position from the<lb/>
French empire.<lb/>
"They have had a long-stand-<lb/>
ing struggle to wrest itself from<lb/>
a reckless environment, an envi-<lb/>
ronment that was a lousy place to<lb/>
build a major metropolitan area<lb/>
said Colten.<lb/>
"It's had to contend with<lb/>
environmental problems from<lb/>
day one<lb/>
Colten said New Orleans has a<lb/>
three-part flood prevention plan<lb/>
of levees, seawall and drainage.<lb/>
The levees are there to protect<lb/>
from river flooding, the seawall<lb/>
is to protect against storm surge<lb/>
and the drainage system is to<lb/>
filter out anything that gets by.<lb/>
Colten said this system served<lb/>
the city efficiently until Hurri-<lb/>
cane Betsy challenged its durabil-<lb/>
ity in 1965.<lb/>
"People climbed into their<lb/>
attics and ended up, some of<lb/>
them, beating their way through<lb/>
their roof to escape the flooding<lb/>
Colten said.<lb/>
"It's an urban legend in New<lb/>
Orleans that people kept axes in<lb/>
their attics in these neighbor-<lb/>
hoods because of what happened<lb/>
in 1965<lb/>
During the question and<lb/>
answer segment at the end of<lb/>
the lecture, Colten added evacu-<lb/>
ation to the flood prevention<lb/>
plan, which he said was "wholly<lb/>
inadequate" in regard to Katrina<lb/>
planning.<lb/>
"People went to bed Monday<lb/>
night thinking the worst was<lb/>
over - on Tuesday morning, New<lb/>
Orleans became an inlet or bay of<lb/>
Lake Ponchatrain Colten said.<lb/>
Colten pointed out that the<lb/>
images of suffering the media<lb/>
used would not have been differ-<lb/>
ent for any other major city in the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
"The poor have consistently<lb/>
suffered Colten said.<lb/>
"In this case, the poor and<lb/>
African Americans were the same<lb/>
group<lb/>
According to Colten, we may<lb/>
not know the full impact of<lb/>
Katrina for some time.<lb/>
"Everyday something new<lb/>
unfolds that tells us this is some-<lb/>
thing so much bigger, so much<lb/>
more influential than we ever<lb/>
imagined the first week or two<lb/>
weeks after the event Colten<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He said the city has perse-<lb/>
vered through many floods, and<lb/>
New Orleans must learn from<lb/>
Katrina.<lb/>
"We need to build a city with<lb/>
the environment in mind and<lb/>
with people in mind Colten said.<lb/>
Pat Pertalion, a New Orleans<lb/>
native and Greenville resident,<lb/>
said Cohen's lecture was infor-<lb/>
mative.<lb/>
"I thought it was extremely<lb/>
well presented because they gave<lb/>
so much history there, but physi-<lb/>
cally we understood the whole<lb/>
thing, and then he was very clear,<lb/>
too, when the questions came on<lb/>
a more personal level about what<lb/>
all the implications were, racially<lb/>
and financially said Pertalion.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
INSIDE I News: A2 I Classifieds: A9 I Opinion: A3 I Student Life: A4 I Sports: A6<lb/>
i <lb/>
<pb facs="00059361_0002"/><lb/>
EWS<lb/>
Page A2 news@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366<lb/>
CHRIS MUNIER News Editor ZACK HILL Assistant News Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY November 1, 2005<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Mexican Consulate<lb/>
visiting ECU<lb/>
The Mexican Consulate will be<lb/>
visiting ECU.<lb/>
The Consulate will have dinner<lb/>
with select community leaders<lb/>
on Friday, Nov. 18 at the Greenville<lb/>
Centre (Charles Blvd.) starting at<lb/>
6:30 p.m. Dinnerdiscussion will<lb/>
be by invitation only, but is open<lb/>
to the media for coverage and<lb/>
questions.<lb/>
The Consulate will meet with<lb/>
community members (primarily<lb/>
Mexican and Latino community<lb/>
members) at ECU'S Willis Building<lb/>
(300 East First Street) from 8 a.m.<lb/>
- 5 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 19. Media<lb/>
coverage is encouraged on this<lb/>
day as well.<lb/>
Services and discussions on<lb/>
Saturday include marriage<lb/>
certificates, citizenship,<lb/>
identification (national ID), legal<lb/>
advice, military service registration,<lb/>
birth and death certificates and<lb/>
voting registration.<lb/>
The Association of Mexicans<lb/>
in North Carolina sponsors the<lb/>
event.<lb/>
For more information on this<lb/>
event, you can contact Juvencio<lb/>
Peralta at 258-9967 or via e-<lb/>
mail at<lb/>
. Juvencio is the Community<lb/>
Advocate for the Association of<lb/>
Mexicans in North Carolina and is<lb/>
a member of ECU'S Chancellor's<lb/>
Community Advisory Council.<lb/>
Think-In Technology<lb/>
Fair<lb/>
This fall, Academic Outreach<lb/>
and Information Technology and<lb/>
Computing Services will host<lb/>
Teaching with Technology 2005:<lb/>
A Think-In of Best Practices It<lb/>
takes place tomorrow, Nov. 2. This<lb/>
event will provide ECU faculty the<lb/>
opportunity to share their expertise<lb/>
using technology in both face-to-<lb/>
face and distance education<lb/>
courses. Faculty members are<lb/>
invited to submit proposals for<lb/>
laptop poster sessions. The poster<lb/>
sessions will be available from 10<lb/>
am. - 2 p.m. and should include<lb/>
course demonstrations that<lb/>
showcase the use of technology.<lb/>
Faculty and staff attendees will<lb/>
have the opportunity to judge<lb/>
presenlations, and a first prize will<lb/>
be awarded in each category.<lb/>
Friends of Joyner<lb/>
Library Banquet and<lb/>
Silent Auction<lb/>
On Nov. 4 at 6 p.m join the<lb/>
Friends of Joyner Library as<lb/>
we support the library's efforts,<lb/>
ensuring students have the<lb/>
research materials they need to<lb/>
become world-class graduates,<lb/>
while also providing literally<lb/>
millions of valuable resources to<lb/>
faculty, citizens and other patrons.<lb/>
Margaret Hoffman, author of<lb/>
Blackbeard: A Tale of Villainy and<lb/>
Murder m Colonial America, will<lb/>
share why for almost 300 years<lb/>
the infamous pirate still haunts<lb/>
our coastline. We will revisit the<lb/>
fascinating history lesson and<lb/>
view artifacts from the pirate's<lb/>
ship, the Queen Anne's Revenge,<lb/>
courtesy of the NC Maritime<lb/>
Museum, all from a lit skyline<lb/>
providing a spectacular view<lb/>
of Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium and<lb/>
Bagwell Field. Tickets are $40<lb/>
per individual $65 per couple <lb/>
$250 per sponsor. Please call for<lb/>
reservations: 328-5685 Contact<lb/>
Sarah Q. Dickens of Joyner Library<lb/>
at 328-5685 or e-mail her at<lb/>
dickenss@mail.ecu.edu.<lb/>
The Rainbow Fish<lb/>
When Rainbow Fish refuses to<lb/>
share her shiny silver scales,<lb/>
her friends no longer want to<lb/>
play with her. The octopus<lb/>
advises her to share, and she<lb/>
finds that making others happy<lb/>
makes her happy too. Based<lb/>
on Marcus Pfister's bestselllng<lb/>
book. The event takes place Nov.<lb/>
8 at 2 p m in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Purchase subscriptions by Oct. 8<lb/>
for best options. Family Pass (4<lb/>
tickets to each show) $96, Public<lb/>
Subscription (one adult ticket to<lb/>
each show) $30. ECU facultystaff<lb/>
Subscription (one adult ticket to<lb/>
each show): $25, ECU Student<lb/>
Youth Subscription (one student<lb/>
youth ticket to each show): $20.<lb/>
Advance individual tickets, if<lb/>
available, may be purchased<lb/>
beginning Oct. 16 and cost $9<lb/>
public, $8 ECU facultystaff, $6<lb/>
ECU studentsyouth. All tickets<lb/>
at the door are $9. For more<lb/>
information, contact the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office at 328-4788,1-800-<lb/>
ECU-ARTS or visit ecuarts.com.<lb/>
News Briefs<lb/>
Local<lb/>
Goodyear and Steelworkers look<lb/>
ahead to 2006 talks<lb/>
CLEVELAND (AP) - When the<lb/>
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co. opens<lb/>
contract talks next year, it may<lb/>
want the United Steelworkers of America<lb/>
to draw on some tough lessons learned<lb/>
in the union's past struggles with a<lb/>
consolidated steel industry.<lb/>
Goodyear executives said in an<lb/>
investors' meeting in New York on<lb/>
Sept. 23 they are considering closing<lb/>
an undisclosed number of plants and<lb/>
saving up to $1 billion over the next<lb/>
three years. Goodyear did not say how<lb/>
many jobs would be cut how many<lb/>
plants would be closed or identify<lb/>
the locations. One union-represented<lb/>
plant is in Fayetteville, NC.<lb/>
But the company expected the<lb/>
union, which has seen the American<lb/>
steel industry shrink from several<lb/>
powerhouses to a handful of<lb/>
companies part of global firms, to go<lb/>
along with the reductions.<lb/>
"The Steelworkers understand what<lb/>
happened in the steel industry<lb/>
said Jonathan Rich, who heads the<lb/>
company's North American tire unit,<lb/>
at that investors' meeting.<lb/>
The Steelworkers' three-year contract<lb/>
is set to expire July 22,2006.<lb/>
"They support Goodyear, and I<lb/>
anticipate we will work together and<lb/>
take another step to make sure we<lb/>
have the right balance Rich said.<lb/>
One steel industry model Goodyear<lb/>
might follow is mogul Wilbur Ross. As<lb/>
head of the former International Steel<lb/>
Group in Cleveland, which he created<lb/>
from steel assets in bankruptcy, Ross<lb/>
convinced the USWA to shed hard<lb/>
feelings toward steel's old guard in<lb/>
favor of collaboration aimed at saving<lb/>
the U.S. steel industry within global<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
Steelworkers agreed to drop retiree<lb/>
benefits and took on more work at<lb/>
lower pay in favor of profit sharing,<lb/>
bonuses and a say in how the<lb/>
company was run.<lb/>
The USWA represents more than<lb/>
850,000 workers in North America.<lb/>
About 70,000 of them work in the<lb/>
tire, rubber and plastics industries<lb/>
as former United Rubber Workers<lb/>
members, a union now merged into<lb/>
the Steelworkers.<lb/>
The Goodyear contractapproved<lb/>
in 2003 after about five months of<lb/>
tense negotiations, covered about<lb/>
16,000 employees and gave the<lb/>
company the option to cut jobs if<lb/>
production and cost-cutting goals<lb/>
aren't met. The union agreed to<lb/>
productivity-improvement targets at<lb/>
every union plant in North America.<lb/>
The contract provides for minimum<lb/>
employment levels and guaranteed<lb/>
capital Investments.<lb/>
Ron Hoover, the union's Goodyear<lb/>
contract coordinator, acknowledged<lb/>
that health care and pension costs<lb/>
are ongoing issues. He also said<lb/>
the union and Goodyear can work<lb/>
together to maintain benefits while<lb/>
controlling costs.<lb/>
National<lb/>
'Saw ir preys on Halloween fear<lb/>
factor to grab $30.5 million<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Horror swung<lb/>
a sharper blade than Zorro at the<lb/>
box office.<lb/>
With Halloween at hand, the bloody<lb/>
Saw II won the weekend with<lb/>
$30.5 million, almost double the<lb/>
$16.5 million opening of Antonio<lb/>
Banderas and Catherine Zeta-Jones'<lb/>
swashbuckling sequel The Legend of<lb/>
Zorro, according to studio estimates<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
The weekend's other big-name<lb/>
wide releases had so-so premieres.<lb/>
Prime, starring Uma Thurman and<lb/>
Meryl Streep in a romance between<lb/>
a thirtysomething woman and a<lb/>
younger man, debuted at No. 3 with<lb/>
$6.4 million.<lb/>
Nicolas Cage's The Weather Man, in<lb/>
which he plays a materially successful<lb/>
TV forecaster whose personal life is a<lb/>
tempest of disorder, opened at No. 6<lb/>
with $4.3 million.<lb/>
Hollywood's box-office slump abated<lb/>
from the double-digit percentage<lb/>
declines of recent weekends, though<lb/>
receipts still were down. The top 12<lb/>
movies took in $86.3 million, off 6.5<lb/>
percent from the same weekend<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
Saw II, featuring Donnie Wahlberg<lb/>
as a cop drawn into a deadly game<lb/>
with the serial killer of the 2004 horror<lb/>
hit Saw, easily outdid the original<lb/>
movie's $18.3 million opening over<lb/>
last Halloween weekend.<lb/>
Distributor Uons Gate, which acquired<lb/>
the low-budgeted Saw at the 2004<lb/>
Sundance Film Festival, rushed<lb/>
ahead to get the sequel in theaters<lb/>
just a year after the original's release.<lb/>
Saw did a respectable $55.2 million<lb/>
at the domestic box office, but the<lb/>
sequel got a big boost from fans who<lb/>
discovered the franchise on DVD.<lb/>
"A lot of talk is devoted to the theatrical<lb/>
moviegoing experience being like a<lb/>
warmup for the DVD release. In this<lb/>
case, the DVD release of the first<lb/>
film was a warmup for the huge<lb/>
debut of the sequel said Paul<lb/>
Dergarabedian, president of box-<lb/>
office tracker Exhibitor Relations.<lb/>
"Plus, it's a no-brainer. It's Halloween<lb/>
weekend<lb/>
The Legend of Zorro, with Banderas'<lb/>
masked swordsman fighting a<lb/>
secret society aiming to ravage the<lb/>
United States amid California's<lb/>
statehood drive in 1850, came in<lb/>
well behind the 1998 summer hit 7he<lb/>
Mask of Zorro, which opened with<lb/>
$22.3 million.<lb/>
Considering ticket prices are up<lb/>
about one-third since then, Legend of<lb/>
Zorro drew only about half the crowds<lb/>
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Pumpkin carving is a favored tradition for many people across generations and political ideologies.<lb/>
In contrast to 2004, Halloween<lb/>
pumpkins are not as partisan<lb/>
CHARLOTTE, NC (AP) � It<lb/>
was part street art, part political<lb/>
theater - a giant wall of pro-Kerry<lb/>
and anti-Bush pumpkins that<lb/>
became a rallying spot for Demo-<lb/>
cratic partisans in a Republican<lb/>
city at the climax of last year's<lb/>
presidential campaign.<lb/>
A year later, the Great Pump-<lb/>
kin Wall is back - a block of 400<lb/>
pumpkins set on eight levels of<lb/>
shelving, reaching 12 feet into the<lb/>
sky and stretching 50 feet wide.<lb/>
And though this year's wall is<lb/>
located in the front yard of a Dem-<lb/>
ocratic state senator, It has been<lb/>
mostly drained of partisan politics.<lb/>
After last year's fervor, orga-<lb/>
nizer Jeff Dalzell said the aim this<lb/>
year is to make the wall a tradition<lb/>
in the Elizabeth neighborhood<lb/>
just south of downtown Charlotte.<lb/>
"We talked about, 'Oh, do<lb/>
we (make it political)? Dal-<lb/>
zell said Friday evening as he<lb/>
scooped seeds and pulp from<lb/>
the inside of one of the dozens<lb/>
of pumpkins being prepared for<lb/>
carving and placement on the<lb/>
wall. "And we said, 'No, make<lb/>
it for the whole community<lb/>
As twilight fell Friday, parents<lb/>
and children swarmed around the<lb/>
wall and a set of tables set up for<lb/>
carving in the driveway of Sen.<lb/>
Dan Clodfelter, who gamely cut<lb/>
into his 20th pumpkin of the day.<lb/>
"I was told all I had to do was<lb/>
let them use my front yard the<lb/>
lawyer said ruefully.<lb/>
Clodfelter is responsible for just<lb/>
about the only political touch on<lb/>
this year's wall - a row of a dozen<lb/>
pumpkins, each carved with a<lb/>
different letter to form the phrase<lb/>
"VOTE YES BONDS" - a reference<lb/>
to a package of bond proposals<lb/>
on the county's Nov. 8 ballot.<lb/>
Otherwise, most of the jacko'<lb/>
lanterns decorating this year's wall<lb/>
aimed for artistry or spookiness.<lb/>
Organizers strung Christmas lights<lb/>
inside the pumpkins to light them<lb/>
without having to burn candles.<lb/>
There were ghoulish grins and<lb/>
a cutout of a coyote howling at the<lb/>
moon. There was a two-pumpkin<lb/>
tribute to Hurricane Katrina-rav-<lb/>
aged New Orleans: one with a<lb/>
cutout of the state of Louisiana,<lb/>
Colon Cancsxv<lb/>
Get the test.<lb/>
Get the polyp.<lb/>
Get the cure.<lb/>
l-8O0-ACS-23lt-5 or cancer.org<lb/>
the other carved with the letters<lb/>
NOLA in a stacked pattern similar<lb/>
to the famous "LOVE" sculpture.<lb/>
One pumpkin featured a peace<lb/>
sign, another a question mark, a<lb/>
third the letters "JENNA There<lb/>
was a "W" pumpkin, but that was<lb/>
a reference to the first letter In<lb/>
young Will Cuthbertson's name.<lb/>
A year ago, any "W" pumpkin<lb/>
on the wall was liable to have<lb/>
a slash mark through it. The<lb/>
display featured glowing orange<lb/>
protests against the war in Iraq<lb/>
and for the Democratic presiden-<lb/>
tial ticket of U.S. senators John<lb/>
Kerry of Massachusetts and John<lb/>
Edwards of North Carolina. Blue<lb/>
lights strung across the face of the<lb/>
wall spelled out "Kerry<lb/>
Dalzell, a designer and archi-<lb/>
tect who friends credit with<lb/>
dreaming up the wall, said he was<lb/>
trying to create "the city's biggest<lb/>
yard sign He is no stranger to<lb/>
such statements, having gained<lb/>
local notoriety in 2000 for paint-<lb/>
ing a giant Al Gore sign on the<lb/>
roof of his home in another<lb/>
Charlotte neighborhood.<lb/>
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domestically as the first movie over<lb/>
opening weekend.<lb/>
Distributor Sony noted that solid<lb/>
returns in Latin America and Europe<lb/>
offset the weaker showing for Legend<lb/>
of Zorro on the homefront. In about 50<lb/>
international markets, the sequel took<lb/>
in $27 million, up 22 percent from the<lb/>
debut of Mas of Zorro in those same<lb/>
countries, said Rory Bruer, Sony head<lb/>
of distribution.<lb/>
"In regards to how you go about<lb/>
releasing your film, it's just a matter<lb/>
of what brings the most dollars in<lb/>
box office, whether domestic or<lb/>
worldwide Bruer said.<lb/>
Estimated ticket sales for Friday<lb/>
through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian<lb/>
theaters, according to Exhibitor<lb/>
Relations Co. Inc. Final figures will be<lb/>
released Monday.<lb/>
World<lb/>
Beta hits Nicaragua's east coast<lb/>
as thousands hunker down In<lb/>
boarded-up homes and shelters<lb/>
PUERTO CABEZAS, Nicaragua (AP) -<lb/>
Hurricane Beta pounded Nicaragua's<lb/>
Caribbean coast with heavy rains and<lb/>
powerful winds Sunday as thousands<lb/>
of people rode out the storm in<lb/>
boarded-up homes or government<lb/>
shelters.<lb/>
The storm came ashore near the<lb/>
remote town of La Barra as a category<lb/>
2 hurricane with 105 mph winds. But<lb/>
it weakened to a category 1 with<lb/>
90 mph winds as it moved inland,<lb/>
dumping up to 15 inches of rain, the<lb/>
National Hurricane Center in Miami<lb/>
said.<lb/>
While powerful, Beta was a small<lb/>
hurricane, with hurricane force winds<lb/>
extending outward only up to 15<lb/>
miles, the center said.<lb/>
At 10 a.m. EST, the storm's center was<lb/>
about 50 miles north of the coastal<lb/>
city of Bluefields. It was moving<lb/>
toward the southwest at nearly 7<lb/>
mph.<lb/>
Before reaching Central America, the<lb/>
record 13th hurricane of this year's<lb/>
Atlantic storm season lashed the<lb/>
Colombian island of Providencia with<lb/>
heavy winds, torrential rains and high<lb/>
surf. At least 30 people were injured,<lb/>
Colombian CMI Defense Col. Eugenio<lb/>
Alarcon said.<lb/>
The slow-moving storm battered the<lb/>
mountainous island for more than<lb/>
12 hours, damaging more than 300<lb/>
wooden homes and buildings, most<lb/>
with their roofs torn apart, he said.<lb/>
Most of the 5,000 islanders found<lb/>
safety at brick shelters in the hills.<lb/>
In Nicaragua, President Enrique<lb/>
Bolanos declared a maximum<lb/>
"red alert" late Saturday, ordering<lb/>
some 45,000 people from the port<lb/>
regions to stay in their homes or<lb/>
hole up in 15 shelters provided by<lb/>
the government.<lb/>
Earlier in the day, soldiers<lb/>
evacuated 10,000 people from the<lb/>
far eastern coastal port of Cabo de<lb/>
Gracias a Dios and from along the<lb/>
River Coco, both on the Honduras<lb/>
border, said Nicaragua's national<lb/>
civil defense director, Lt. Col. Mario<lb/>
Perez Cassar.<lb/>
The Civil Defense Department sent<lb/>
100 army rescue specialists along<lb/>
with various land and water vehicles.<lb/>
A tent hospital also was set up, while<lb/>
universities and public schools were<lb/>
closed and converted into shelters.<lb/>
Flights to the Nicaraguan islands Islas<lb/>
del Maiz were canceled.<lb/>
Residents of low-lying neighborhoods<lb/>
in Puerto Cabeza were taken to<lb/>
provisional shelters on higher<lb/>
ground as heavy rains and wind<lb/>
began to batter the coast, flooding<lb/>
some low-lying neighborhoods.<lb/>
Businesses raised food prices in<lb/>
response to the heavy demand,<lb/>
while bottled water supplies ran out.<lb/>
Authorities threatened to sanction<lb/>
price gougers.<lb/>
Headley from page 7<lb/>
put on a new track in the course<lb/>
of the 17th and 18th centuries.<lb/>
This shifted people away from<lb/>
natural law as something seen<lb/>
above human conduct to some-<lb/>
thing more familiar in terms of<lb/>
natural rights.<lb/>
Common law helped to<lb/>
form universities, languages and<lb/>
romance, which all stemmed<lb/>
from western Europeans' curios-<lb/>
ity in the 12th century.<lb/>
The upper west became<lb/>
more advanced than other<lb/>
countries because of their desire<lb/>
for intellect. Headley said the Chi-<lb/>
nese, for example, were more com-<lb/>
placent because they believed they<lb/>
had everything they needed.<lb/>
"They lacked the intellectual drive<lb/>
found in the West Headley said.<lb/>
"For American people, natural<lb/>
rights are something that springs<lb/>
out of John Locke Headley said.<lb/>
The Spaniards justified<lb/>
natural law as their purpose<lb/>
for coming to America in the<lb/>
16th century. Many Spanish<lb/>
scholars claimed they had human<lb/>
rights to pursue matters of trade and<lb/>
commerce in the New World.<lb/>
Headley made clear the prob-<lb/>
lem with America is that racism<lb/>
and social injustice are flawing<lb/>
the equality of our nation.<lb/>
"We cannot take these ideas<lb/>
and realize them in society, but<lb/>
they are there and they are a spur<lb/>
we can't get rid of Headley said.<lb/>
"There are always times when<lb/>
'Lincoln' will show up<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
yy<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059361_0003"/><lb/>
0 L LLxLLcj bl<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Page A3<lb/>
editor@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.9238<lb/>
JENNIFER L HOBBS Editor in Chief<lb/>
TUESDAY November 1, 2005<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
Could there be<lb/>
anymore stress?<lb/>
It's getting to be that time of year. You know,<lb/>
the time when three tests fall on the same<lb/>
day, you have to register for classes and<lb/>
your best friends are calling you left and<lb/>
right to go downtown with them. Partying<lb/>
on Halloween is practically a requirement,<lb/>
Thanksgiving is just around the corner,<lb/>
followed by those pesky exams and then<lb/>
Christmas with all of its inherent fun and<lb/>
inevitable stress. It seems like an unstop-<lb/>
pable force of nature that comes predict-<lb/>
ably toward the end of every semester, and<lb/>
it can get the best of all of us.<lb/>
It is easy to get frustrated and possibly<lb/>
neglect responsibilities when things seem<lb/>
to pile up uncontrollably. However, with<lb/>
the proper attitude, these times have<lb/>
the potential to be some of our brightest<lb/>
moments. Times of adversity are usually<lb/>
met with either one or two attitudes - the<lb/>
attitude of quitting or the attitude of deter-<lb/>
mination. While quitting is often the easier<lb/>
and more appealing option, quitting is<lb/>
ultimately a letdown to others, as well as<lb/>
yourself. Determination, on the other hand,<lb/>
is rewarding on many levels. For example,<lb/>
getting a good grade on an exam is<lb/>
always fulfilling, but that feeling of pride is<lb/>
only strengthened when you know of the<lb/>
hard work and dedication you applied to<lb/>
getting that grade. Friendships even seem<lb/>
more rewarding when you look obstacles<lb/>
in the eye and defeat them for the sake of<lb/>
having free time. Spending time with friends<lb/>
is much more fun when you don't have to<lb/>
worry about the ominous feeling of knowing<lb/>
you have a paper or exam for which you<lb/>
are not prepared.<lb/>
So don't let school fall on the back burner<lb/>
during this time of the year despite the<lb/>
many things pulling you in other directions.<lb/>
Keep a close eye on your calendar, use<lb/>
your free time to work ahead on assign-<lb/>
ments and study diligently for your exams,<lb/>
and don't forget to take a break to have fun<lb/>
every now and then. Relax - the stress is<lb/>
only temporary and Christmas break will<lb/>
be here sooner than you think.<lb/>
Our Staff<lb/>
Jennifer L Hobbs<lb/>
Editor in Chief<lb/>
Chris Munler Zack Hill<lb/>
News Editor Asst News Editor<lb/>
Carolyn Scandura Features EditorKristin Mumane Asst Features Editor<lb/>
Tony Zoppo Sports EditorBrandon Hughes Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Nina Coefield Head Copy EditorApril Barnes Asst Copy Editor<lb/>
Herb Sneed Photo EditorRachael Lotter Asst Photo Editor<lb/>
Alexander Marclnlak Oustln Jones Web Editor Asst Web Editor<lb/>
Edward McKIm Production Manager Newsroom 252.328.9238<lb/>
Fax252.328.9143<lb/>
Advertising252.328.9245<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 editor@theeastcarolinian.com or to The �asf<lb/>
Carolinian. SelfHelp Building, Greenville, NC 27858-<lb/>
4353. Call 252-328-9238 for more information. One<lb/>
copy of TEC is free, each additional copy is $1.<lb/>
?olc ?jq$ diont�nt" urrn gorn lACTe?<lb/>
TO<lb/>
, filL SMV JJK<lb/>
THAT UtfW HiuuARy<lb/>
Ti2Am?eN on &amp;e&amp;-<lb/>
wHev hz Juweof<lb/>
r"iL�ffi<lb/>
I<lb/>
SV �<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
Halloween, Rosa Parks inspire courage<lb/>
Learning to laugh and stand-<lb/>
up against our fears.<lb/>
BENJAMIN CORMACK<lb/>
CAUSAL OBSERVER<lb/>
By the time this is printed Hal-<lb/>
loween will be over, the decorations,<lb/>
costumes and all of the candy corn<lb/>
will be pushed into a storage facility<lb/>
until next year, sold at an extremely<lb/>
low price or, in the case of candy corn,<lb/>
recycled to make more candy corn (at<lb/>
least that's what my favorite commen-<lb/>
tatorcomedian Lewis Black believes).<lb/>
So I thought I would savor some of the<lb/>
memories of this and past Halloweens<lb/>
for this week's article.<lb/>
Now I could fill this space up with<lb/>
information on the history and tradi-<lb/>
tions of Halloween, but that would be<lb/>
boring wouldn't it? Go to Wikipedia<lb/>
Web site (en.wikipedia.orgwikiHal-<lb/>
loween) if you want to know more<lb/>
about Halloween. What I will talk about<lb/>
are my personal thoughts and reflec-<lb/>
tions on Halloween.<lb/>
Now I've been here for a little<lb/>
more than three years and I've seen<lb/>
a lot of crazy things. To be honest,<lb/>
before 1 came here Halloween wasn't<lb/>
really about parties and other mass<lb/>
gatherings of people. Mostly it was<lb/>
because Halloween hardly ever fell on<lb/>
a non-school-night, but also because<lb/>
my friends and I weren't social-but-<lb/>
terflies. 1 mostly just did what I could<lb/>
to make getting candy from my house<lb/>
somewhat scary for the neighborhood<lb/>
children. One of my fondest memories<lb/>
of Halloween was when my father and<lb/>
I would carve the pumpkin. While we<lb/>
never participated in any contests, I<lb/>
always felt that we had the best pump-<lb/>
kin on the street.<lb/>
One of my memories from my first<lb/>
Halloween here was seeing someone<lb/>
dressed in a surprisingly well done<lb/>
Optimus Prime costume constructed<lb/>
from cardboard. Which year I can't<lb/>
remember, but I do remember one<lb/>
couple winning best costume dressed<lb/>
as a pair of giant sandals made from<lb/>
cardboard. Another year I remember<lb/>
a friend of mine getting hypnotized<lb/>
and thinking her boyfriend didn't have<lb/>
pants on. 1 never did the downtown<lb/>
scene because I don't like large crowds,<lb/>
plus it seemed like a lot of hassle to just<lb/>
be stuck in a crowd.<lb/>
I think I've only not dressed-up once<lb/>
in all the years I've done Halloween. As<lb/>
best as I can remember, I've been: a dino-<lb/>
saur, a Ninja Turtle twice, Batman twice,<lb/>
Sting (the wrestler), The Undertaker<lb/>
(the wrestler), The Shadow, Sub Zero<lb/>
from Mortal Kombat twice, the Termi-<lb/>
nator twice, a thrown-together twice, a<lb/>
Dragonball Z character (Trunks, for you<lb/>
fans) and a samurai last year. This year, I<lb/>
went all-out to be as cool and scary as I<lb/>
possibly could. In my mind I was going<lb/>
for a half-dragon, but I probably looked<lb/>
more like a demon. 1 bought those really<lb/>
nice fangs you mold to your teeth - some<lb/>
really cool wings with a tail - two pairs<lb/>
of horns, one pair on a strap and another<lb/>
made of latex. Since you probably can't<lb/>
picture it, if you were at Mendenhall you<lb/>
may have seen me.<lb/>
What makes Halloween such a great<lb/>
holiday? Well I think it has to do with<lb/>
a lot of things. First of all, it's one of<lb/>
the only holidays based solely around<lb/>
fun and choice and despite its origins,<lb/>
not a religious event - there isn't really<lb/>
any sense of obligation to do anything.<lb/>
We don't HAVE to dress-up or spend<lb/>
money on costumes, we don't HAVE to<lb/>
pass-out candy and generally we don't<lb/>
HAVE to do anything we don't want<lb/>
to do. Then there are costumes. You<lb/>
can wear a costume and have it cost<lb/>
you as little as nothing (except maybe<lb/>
a little hard work) or even as much as a<lb/>
thousand dollars. Costumes provide us<lb/>
a way to act out a fantasy - to become<lb/>
something we wish we could be. We<lb/>
can be heroic, scary, silly or even sexy<lb/>
in a way that maybe we couldn't be in<lb/>
our normal, everyday lives. Third, who<lb/>
doesn't love free candy? Not to mention<lb/>
it really warms your heart to give out<lb/>
candy to wide-excited-eyed kids.<lb/>
Most of all, I think Halloween<lb/>
teaches us how to deal with fear. Think<lb/>
about it - we surround ourselves with<lb/>
decorations that would any other day<lb/>
frighten us, disgust us or just weird us<lb/>
out. Yet every Halloween we strive to go<lb/>
for just that. It's a time when we turn<lb/>
our fears into fun.<lb/>
It's seems kind of appropriate that<lb/>
Rosa Parks would be honored on a day<lb/>
when confronting fear is celebrated.<lb/>
On Halloween morning, I turned on<lb/>
C-SPAN2 and saw a coffin sitting in<lb/>
the U.S. Capitol Rotunda. It was Rosa<lb/>
Parks, who now is decorated as not only<lb/>
a major force in the Civil Rights Move-<lb/>
ment but also as the first woman to be<lb/>
honored at U.S. Capitol Rotunda. So<lb/>
what does Rosa Parks have to do with<lb/>
Halloween? Consider this: if Rosa Parks<lb/>
had not been brave enough to face the<lb/>
fear of saying "no" to a white man, then<lb/>
the Civil Rights Movement may have<lb/>
never had the inspiration that it had<lb/>
to peaceful and non-violent.<lb/>
While Rosa Parks may not have<lb/>
been the most popular costume this<lb/>
Halloween, I believe that it's because<lb/>
of people like her that we are able and<lb/>
can be inspired to face our fears every<lb/>
other day of the year.<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
(KRT) � Dick Cheney may have<lb/>
been a nontraditional vice presidential<lb/>
pick. But the indictment of Lewis Libby<lb/>
reflects the fact that he and his aides<lb/>
sometimes played a traditional vice<lb/>
presidential role: attacking political<lb/>
rivals.<lb/>
And though Karl Rove has at least<lb/>
temporarily escaped charges in a probe<lb/>
stemming from the leak of a CIA agent's<lb/>
name, the entire matter has long<lb/>
sounded like an operation from the<lb/>
playbook the top White House strate-<lb/>
gist used in past campaigns, including<lb/>
those he ran for President Bush.<lb/>
The Rove formula: Win at all costs.<lb/>
It's prompted sharp tactics against Bush<lb/>
foes like Sens. John McCain and John<lb/>
Kerry; former Agriculture Commis-<lb/>
sioner Jim Hightower; and Texas GOP<lb/>
rivals Rob Mosbacher and John Weaver,<lb/>
later an adviser to McCain.<lb/>
But the man who holds the some-<lb/>
what misleading title of deputy chief of<lb/>
staff has often avoided direct responsi-<lb/>
bility and now may have avoided some-<lb/>
thing even worse - a criminal charge.<lb/>
In this case, the target was former<lb/>
Ambassador Joseph Wilson. The reason:<lb/>
his role as a critic of a key rationale<lb/>
for Bush's decision to attack Iraq, the<lb/>
suggestion that Saddam Hussein was<lb/>
seeking nuclear weapons.<lb/>
Cheney, of course, was one of the<lb/>
main advocates of the attack that over-<lb/>
threw Saddam. His questions about<lb/>
reports that the Iraqi despot had sought<lb/>
nuclear material from Niger apparently<lb/>
played a role in triggering Wilson's mis-<lb/>
sion to the African nation.<lb/>
What apparently set off the White<lb/>
House assault was Wilson's increasingly<lb/>
public role, climaxing with a 2003<lb/>
article in The New York Times that<lb/>
directly challenged the claim about<lb/>
Saddam and nuclear weapons.<lb/>
In the days after its publication,<lb/>
both Libby and Rove played an active<lb/>
role in seeking to undercut Wilson's<lb/>
credibility by suggesting to reporters<lb/>
that, because of his wife's role in the<lb/>
CIA, his criticism was part of an ongo-<lb/>
ing effort by the intelligence agency<lb/>
against the White House.<lb/>
The formal charges against Libby<lb/>
stem from his efforts to spread word<lb/>
of Wilson's connection, via his wife,<lb/>
to the CIA.<lb/>
When asked about this, the indict-<lb/>
ment said, he falsely testified that he<lb/>
got the information from reporters in<lb/>
what may have been an effort to shield<lb/>
the vice president from direct involve-<lb/>
ment in the effort to discredit Wilson.<lb/>
Still, it's been evident that Cheney,<lb/>
whom Bush picked primarily for his<lb/>
vast governmental experience, is no<lb/>
slouch in making pointed charges<lb/>
against political rivals. It's a role many<lb/>
past vice presidents and vice presiden-<lb/>
tial candidates have played.<lb/>
Last year, he caused a stir by sug-<lb/>
gesting that, if Kerry beat Bush, the<lb/>
nation would face an increased risk of<lb/>
terrorist attacks.<lb/>
As for Rove, he has long been<lb/>
known for the hard-nosed politics he<lb/>
learned as an ally of the late Lee Atwa-<lb/>
ter in Young Republican politics three<lb/>
decades ago.<lb/>
As he worked his way up the politi-<lb/>
cal ladder, controversy has accompa-<lb/>
nied the man whose mastery of politi-<lb/>
cal strategy helped him become one of<lb/>
the most powerful White House aides<lb/>
in history.<lb/>
An early incident was the bugging<lb/>
of his office during Bill Clements' 1986<lb/>
gubernatorial campaign, which some<lb/>
foes alleged he did himself. Another<lb/>
was his ouster from the 1992 campaign<lb/>
of Bush's father, when he was blamed<lb/>
for a leak aimed at Mosbacher.<lb/>
In the late 1980s, Rove had ties to<lb/>
an FBI probe of top Democrats that<lb/>
led to the conviction of three aides to<lb/>
Agriculture Commissioner Hightower.<lb/>
Rove, who was advising his Republican<lb/>
rival, Rick Perry, now the state's gover-<lb/>
nor, denied any direct role in the inci-<lb/>
dent, which contributed to Hightower's<lb/>
1990 defeat.<lb/>
In 2000 and 2004, it was widely<lb/>
believed Rove had ties to "indepen-<lb/>
dent" efforts aimed at Bush rivals, but<lb/>
he denied it and nothing was proved.<lb/>
In 2000, Weaver accused Rove of<lb/>
involvement in the anonymous phone<lb/>
calls during the critical South Carolina<lb/>
primary that falsely accused McCain,<lb/>
who adopted a child from Bangladesh,<lb/>
of having fathered an illegitimate black<lb/>
child. Later, some close Rove allies were<lb/>
involved in misleading ads against the<lb/>
senator's environmental record.<lb/>
In 2004, the issue was the so-called<lb/>
"Swift Boat" ads, sponsored by long-<lb/>
time GOP contributors, which accused<lb/>
Kerry of exaggerating his claims of<lb/>
heroism during the Vietnam War.<lb/>
But Rove has always managed to<lb/>
deflect criticism and avoid legal dif-<lb/>
ficulty. The fact that he has so far<lb/>
escaped indictment after a lengthy<lb/>
and intensive probe suggests he may<lb/>
do so again.<lb/>
Pirate Rant<lb/>
To the sweet girl I met outside of the Sci-<lb/>
ence and Tech buildingI am kicking<lb/>
myself for not giving you my number.<lb/>
Same time and place this week?<lb/>
Driving in Greenville 101 part 2it's<lb/>
called atxinker, it doesn't require a lot of<lb/>
movement and it will prevent people from<lb/>
rear ending you. It is not a decoration<lb/>
- it was put there for a reason so USE IT.<lb/>
It's great to laugh in the face of mis-<lb/>
fortune until you realize misfortune is<lb/>
going to have the last laugh.<lb/>
To the guy who wrote the article on<lb/>
The Libertines, you made my week. I<lb/>
didn't know anyone else on campus<lb/>
listened to them, which is a shame.<lb/>
Quit pretending to be politically cor-<lb/>
rect when you are a racist at heart.<lb/>
Why is it that the one place I can't get<lb/>
a signal on my cell phone is in my<lb/>
own room?<lb/>
Live strong is for testicular cancer, and<lb/>
the pink ones are for breast cancer, nei-<lb/>
ther of which are caused by smoking.<lb/>
Smoking causes LUNG cancer!<lb/>
I don't like you. That's why I don't<lb/>
answer my phone. Get a clue. I avoid<lb/>
you like the plague.<lb/>
To the guy who cheated on his girl-<lb/>
friend, don't thank the girl with one<lb/>
earring for your misery- thank yourself,<lb/>
you are the one that cheated!<lb/>
To ECU bus drivers that think they're<lb/>
competing in the Indy 500Hello!<lb/>
You're driving a huge bus with pas-<lb/>
sengers, not a stock car!<lb/>
An instructor from NC State said that<lb/>
black people should "exterminate<lb/>
white people of f the face of the planet<lb/>
If that s not racist I don't know what Is.<lb/>
That the story was only a blip on the<lb/>
media radar is disgusting. I shudder<lb/>
to think at the explosion if a white<lb/>
instructor said something similar<lb/>
regarding a minority.<lb/>
Someone explain to me WHY Java<lb/>
City at Wright Place has only ONE<lb/>
employee during the busiest part of the<lb/>
mornings! I need my coffee!<lb/>
SuperNintendoisgreat However, I went<lb/>
to EB Games to trade-in some cartridges<lb/>
and they offered me FIVE CENTS for my<lb/>
SuperMarioWodd Theysellfhosefor$15.<lb/>
To the guy who touched me on the<lb/>
crowded commuter bus, take that mess<lb/>
back to high school, when hallways<lb/>
used to be crowded. Next time I will<lb/>
slap you.<lb/>
Dr. Collins is my hero. Whoelse would<lb/>
include the words baby sandwich in a<lb/>
philosophical debate? The absurdity of<lb/>
his reply was freaking hilarious, and I<lb/>
want to buy him a drink.<lb/>
I feel like a failure as an English major<lb/>
-1 cannot seem to find a word to quite<lb/>
cover the awfulness of the stench<lb/>
coming from you.<lb/>
I bet in the Messiest Roommate Com-<lb/>
petition, my roommate would own<lb/>
all others. That's not necessarily a<lb/>
good thing.<lb/>
Why does Pirate Rant only publish<lb/>
rants concerning bashing girls or guys?<lb/>
Why not publish issues that matter, or<lb/>
issues that need to be heard like park-<lb/>
ing issues.<lb/>
Matt Cohen, I want to have your<lb/>
babies! I will vote for you.<lb/>
When rejected by a girl, NEVER go for<lb/>
the best friend.<lb/>
Who steals shampoo and conditioner?<lb/>
Seriously, now, vvho does that?<lb/>
Thank You Greenville police for giving<lb/>
me a ticket for not wearing my seatbelt<lb/>
in my roommate's car as I was about<lb/>
to get out of it in front of Bate. While<lb/>
people are getting shot downtown and<lb/>
drug busts are going on in the dorms,<lb/>
you are concerned for my safety in a car<lb/>
with no belt. THANK YOU.<lb/>
Clean up after yourself. We are your<lb/>
roommates, not your mother. Don t act<lb/>
like you didn't hear us when we ask you<lb/>
to help do the dishes. Also, please use<lb/>
your inside voice if you have one.<lb/>
GUYS - just because a girl has blonde hair<lb/>
and is skinny does nra necessarily make<lb/>
her attractive! Those two characteristics<lb/>
alone seriously do not make someone<lb/>
hot - she's skfriny and she has blonde<lb/>
hair, big deal - fake a sec and check<lb/>
out that busted face and those nasty<lb/>
teeth before making stupid comments!<lb/>
What is the point in the girls around<lb/>
here wearing Eskimo boots with a<lb/>
miniskirt. If it's cold enough to wear<lb/>
the boots then I might suggest you<lb/>
change the skirt for some pants.<lb/>
To the bartender in the back bar<lb/>
of The Element, watching you<lb/>
throw out that guy was the hot-<lb/>
test thing I've seen. I'd pay to see<lb/>
that again! From now on fin only<lb/>
going to The Element to see you.<lb/>
Why is it so hard being friends with<lb/>
females? Why do they talk so much<lb/>
crap about you behind your back<lb/>
and then put a fake smile on their<lb/>
face while around you. Do us both<lb/>
a favor by not wasting your energy<lb/>
being falce around me. Thanks!<lb/>
Are there any other black people who<lb/>
feel let down by their people?<lb/>
What is up with the rise of sequined<lb/>
purses? Ladies if it can double as a disco<lb/>
ball DONT BUY IT!<lb/>
To all RA's whose goal in life is to stick<lb/>
their ear up doors and listen to personal<lb/>
conversationsget a life.<lb/>
To all you boys and girls out there,<lb/>
whose Daddy leased you a beamer: it<lb/>
doesn't make you rich or cool. Maybe<lb/>
the hair gel, popped collar, and sleazy<lb/>
sorority girlfriend will.<lb/>
To everyone who still has a W. bumper<lb/>
sticker on his car: we told yew so.<lb/>
When did I get to be so old?<lb/>
Edlttir's Note: The llrateRont Ls on anonymous way for<lb/>
students and staffIntheElVoommurtttytovokr their<lb/>
opinions. Submissions can be submitted anonymously<lb/>
imllnr at wwv.theeastcmolinian.com, or e-mailed to<lb/>
edltor&amp;theeashamltnlanxom. The editor reserves<lb/>
the right to edit opinions for content and brevity. <lb/>
<pb facs="00059361_0004"/><lb/>
Student Life<lb/>
11-1-05<lb/>
Page A4 features@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 CAROLYN SCANDURA Features Editor KRISTIN MURNANE Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY November 1,2005<lb/>
Picks of the Week:<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Dashboard Confessional - Unplugged<lb/>
I'm not exactly sure how MTV can<lb/>
do an "Unplugged" for a band which<lb/>
(at the time) played only acoustic<lb/>
music, but this live performance<lb/>
illustrates more than singer Chris<lb/>
Carrabba's ability to make any young<lb/>
girl's heart melt. Before the trendy<lb/>
electrified days of "Vindicated" and<lb/>
"Hands Down" version 2.0, there<lb/>
was Carrabba and his guitar. It was<lb/>
stripped down, ft was raw. It was one<lb/>
of the best of the "Unplugged" series<lb/>
that I have ever seen (aside from<lb/>
Nirvana). This performance shows<lb/>
how intertwined Carrabba's vocals<lb/>
are with the crowd, with the fans,<lb/>
more often than not, singing louder<lb/>
than the band ever could. If the sound<lb/>
of Carrabba and company on electric<lb/>
guitar, singing for sub par comic book<lb/>
movies makes you cringe, pop in this<lb/>
CDDVD combination and hear the<lb/>
real version of "Hands Down<lb/>
Local Concerts<lb/>
Boysetsfire, From Autumn to Ashes<lb/>
and The Esoteric will be at the Uncoln<lb/>
Theatre in Raleigh on Monday, Nov. 7.<lb/>
The "Zippo Hot Tour" featuring the<lb/>
All-American Rejects and Rooney<lb/>
will make a stop at Cats Cradle in<lb/>
Carrboro on Tuesday, Nov. 8.<lb/>
The "Improv Allstars" featuring Drew<lb/>
Carey. Chip Esten, Greg Proops, Jeff<lb/>
Davis. Jonathan Mangum, Kathy<lb/>
Kinney and Sean Masterson will<lb/>
be performing at the Memorial<lb/>
Auditorium in Raleigh on Thursday,<lb/>
Nov. 10.<lb/>
Converge, Darkest Hour and The<lb/>
Red Chord will be at Cats Cradle<lb/>
in Carrboro on Thursday, Nov. 17.<lb/>
311 will be at the House of Blues in<lb/>
Myrtle Beach, SC on Saturday, Nov. 26.<lb/>
Clay Aiken will be performing at the RBC<lb/>
Center in Raleigh on Thursday, Dec. 22.<lb/>
Names In the News<lb/>
Pregnant Again<lb/>
Forever young in our hearts, Brooke<lb/>
Shields will always seem too much<lb/>
of a child herself to be having kids.<lb/>
But there the pretty baby Is, now<lb/>
pregnant with her second child, the<lb/>
New York Post reports. She already<lb/>
has a daughter, Rowan, 2, with<lb/>
husband Chris Henchy. Along with<lb/>
the little joy bundle, we are all, of<lb/>
course, awaiting Shields' book, Down<lb/>
Came the Rain: My Journey Through<lb/>
Postpartum Depression, scheduled<lb/>
to hit bookstores next spring. You may<lb/>
remember the battle royal Shields<lb/>
had with Tom Cruise, who criticized<lb/>
her for her use of prescription drugs<lb/>
to slog through depression. Incensed<lb/>
enough to rebut the boy on the op-ed<lb/>
page of the New York Times, Shields<lb/>
dissed Cruise, saying his rant was<lb/>
"a disservice to mothers everywhere"<lb/>
Kate's Back<lb/>
Bet you all remember where you were<lb/>
when model Kate Moss first entered<lb/>
drug rehabilitation a month ago.<lb/>
The big events linger. Anyway, she<lb/>
checked out of Arizona's Meadows<lb/>
clinic, says the Post, was reunited<lb/>
with daughter Lila, 3, and is looking<lb/>
forward to getting back to work. Moss,<lb/>
31, was seen on videotape snorting<lb/>
cocaine in a London recording studio.<lb/>
Those high and happy moments cost<lb/>
her lucrative contracts with H&amp;M,<lb/>
Burberry and Chanel.<lb/>
Dude, Where's my flying car?<lb/>
Don't let the kids read this one:<lb/>
The Ford Anglia we see flying<lb/>
through all the Harry Potter films<lb/>
has been swiped from a studio lot in<lb/>
England. Stored in the open under<lb/>
a tarpaulin, the car was un-drivable<lb/>
and could not have been moved on<lb/>
its own steam, according to cops<lb/>
quoted by British news services.<lb/>
More Dancing<lb/>
You've waited, and the gods of<lb/>
television answered. The second<lb/>
edition of ABC's "Dancing With the<lb/>
Stars" will be seen at 8 p.m. EST<lb/>
Thursdays beginning Jan. 5, ABC<lb/>
announced Friday. The program will<lb/>
run for two months, replacing "Alias<lb/>
which is going on hiatus while star<lb/>
Jennifer Garner is on maternity leave.<lb/>
The new dancing celebrities for the<lb/>
show have yet to be announced.<lb/>
Top 10<lb/>
A ranking of the 10 most egotistical<lb/>
celebrities has just been published by<lb/>
Teen People. The stars were selected<lb/>
by virtue of comments they have<lb/>
made which Indicate a breath-taking<lb/>
degree of self-involvement.<lb/>
The winners are (drumroll, please):<lb/>
10. Lindsay Lohan<lb/>
9. R. Kelly<lb/>
8. Avril Lavigne<lb/>
Survival of the fittest: Week four<lb/>
No pain, no gain:<lb/>
Personal trainers really<lb/>
do help<lb/>
KRISTIN MURNANE<lb/>
ASSISTANT FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
Before officially starting this<lb/>
whole ordeal, I became pretty<lb/>
certain that 1 would hate Fridays,<lb/>
the one day of the week where I<lb/>
actually have to get up off of my<lb/>
lazy butt and listen to a personal<lb/>
trainer tell me what to do for<lb/>
an hour. I'm basically a really<lb/>
stubborn person that doesn't<lb/>
take well to people telling me<lb/>
what to do. Lucky for me, and<lb/>
probably for my exercise com-<lb/>
rades as well, our trainers were<lb/>
not nearly as hard core as I had<lb/>
expected. They urged us to work<lb/>
hard, but not to strain ourselves.<lb/>
Like Kristin Day said last<lb/>
week, we did a lot of work with<lb/>
the elliptical and the rowing<lb/>
machine, in addition to working<lb/>
our backs and abs. Since that was<lb/>
my first week with the trainer,<lb/>
not only was I out of shape, but<lb/>
I was also experiencing pain in<lb/>
areas which 1 didn't even know I<lb/>
had prior to that day. This pain<lb/>
persisted for at least the next day<lb/>
or two - needless to say I was not<lb/>
a happy girl. On the flip side, I<lb/>
also felt a lot better, and by better<lb/>
I mean healthier. When 1 left the<lb/>
gym that day, I felt like I had more<lb/>
energy and I was in a much better<lb/>
mood than I was before 1 walked<lb/>
through the doors of the SRC.<lb/>
This actually made me sort of<lb/>
excited for our workout this week.<lb/>
Our week four workout con-<lb/>
sisted of us stepping onto my<lb/>
least favorite piece of exercise<lb/>
equipment ever invented - the<lb/>
treadmill. Oh treadmill, how 1<lb/>
loathe thee.<lb/>
Kristin Murnane listens intently to advice from her SRC personal trainer while Kristin Day and Ed McKim enjoy their elliptical time.<lb/>
Basically we walked, jogged<lb/>
and, if you're as ambitious as<lb/>
Ed, ran, for our weekly hour<lb/>
of training. Our only breaks<lb/>
from the monotony of our feet<lb/>
thumping, or in my case, trip-<lb/>
ping, involved weight training<lb/>
with the one and only Warren,<lb/>
personal trainer extraordinaire.<lb/>
My favorite part about this<lb/>
week's workout: not being in<lb/>
anywhere near as much pain as<lb/>
I was in last week.<lb/>
This week I started to become<lb/>
more comfortable with the gym.<lb/>
I used to think that all of the<lb/>
people there had these rock hard<lb/>
bodies and they were able to<lb/>
work out for hours on end, and<lb/>
it's made me more comfortable<lb/>
seeing more full-figured people<lb/>
like myself working out. I no<lb/>
longer have anxiety about going<lb/>
to the gym, and I'm actually<lb/>
looking forward to next week.<lb/>
In next Tuesday's article, Kris-<lb/>
tin Day will give you a rundown<lb/>
of the group fitness classes that<lb/>
she has been taking.<lb/>
Until next time  Maybe<lb/>
I will see you at the SRC this<lb/>
week, as I know I am inspiring<lb/>
the masses.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Fit Tip of the Week:<lb/>
Before you even get out of bed<lb/>
in the morning, do 10 stomach<lb/>
crunches while lying flat on your<lb/>
mattress. Increase daily by one<lb/>
until you get up to 100. Think<lb/>
you'll never get there? Try it. You<lb/>
may eventually have to set your<lb/>
clock to wake up IS minutes<lb/>
earlier, a small price to pay for<lb/>
a flatter stomach. Taken from<lb/>
health-fittness-tips.com.<lb/>
Joyner Library<lb/>
brings Blackbeard<lb/>
to Pirate Country<lb/>
Purple Reign Homecoming Parade<lb/>
Author of the novel will visit ECU Nov. 4 at the Murphy Center.<lb/>
7. Justin Timberlake<lb/>
6. Jack White<lb/>
5. Christina Aguilera<lb/>
4 Beyonce<lb/>
3. Usher<lb/>
2. KanyeWest<lb/>
1 Paris Hilton<lb/>
l ife" star topped the list<lb/>
nation: "(By) channeling<lb/>
myinner heiress, 1 created a new<lb/>
opportunity for young heiresses<lb/>
Author visits ECU to retell<lb/>
the tale<lb/>
TOMEKA STEELE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
PeeDee the Pirate is a near and<lb/>
dear symbol for all who attend<lb/>
this university. Joyner Library<lb/>
knows that and has put together,<lb/>
along with Friends of Joyner<lb/>
Library, a presentation about<lb/>
the infamous pirate, Blackbeard.<lb/>
Blackbeard, or Edward Teach,<lb/>
was a feared pirate from 1716<lb/>
until his brutal death in 1718.<lb/>
Most major ports of the east<lb/>
coast have some sort of docu-<lb/>
mentation of the famed pirate.<lb/>
Blackbeard lived out his last<lb/>
days in Bath on the Pamlico<lb/>
Sound of North Carolina. Many<lb/>
of his political transgressions<lb/>
. took place there with corrupt<lb/>
politicians and Governor Charles<lb/>
Eden. Blackbeard was killed in<lb/>
a bloody battle at sea by orders<lb/>
from the Royal Governor of<lb/>
Virginia in 1718. After his death<lb/>
his head hung from a pole on<lb/>
the Hampton River in Virginia.<lb/>
On Nov. 4 at the Murphy<lb/>
Center author Margaret Hoff-<lb/>
man will come to share the tales<lb/>
from her first novel, "Black-<lb/>
beard: A Tale of Villainy and<lb/>
Murder in Colonial America<lb/>
which was published in 1998.<lb/>
Hoffman's interest in pirate<lb/>
tales, and more importantly<lb/>
Blackbeard stories, began when<lb/>
she spent her summer vacations<lb/>
on the coast of the Carollnas.<lb/>
She learned a lot about the<lb/>
political side of the pirate tales.<lb/>
"The story is mainly about<lb/>
the scandal and political side<lb/>
of Blackbeards' life with the<lb/>
Governor Charles Eden said<lb/>
Sarah Dickens of the Office of<lb/>
Development at Joyner Library.<lb/>
The presentation will include<lb/>
a social hour, auction and ban-<lb/>
quet. There will also be a viewing<lb/>
of artifacts donated by the North<lb/>
Carolina Maritime Museum. The<lb/>
artifacts will include bullets, old<lb/>
rope, pieces of silver platters and<lb/>
glass relicts from what is believed<lb/>
to be Blackbeard's ship the Queen<lb/>
see BEARD page AS<lb/>
Greenville was alive early last Saturday morning with the Homecoming parade featuring<lb/>
floats from campus organizations and music from the Marching Pirates as they filled the<lb/>
streets near campus. <lb/>
<pb facs="00059361_0005"/><lb/>
11-1-05<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN � FEATURES<lb/>
PAGE A5<lb/>
305<lb/>
jr<lb/>
al time.<lb/>
iut of bed<lb/>
) stomach<lb/>
at on your<lb/>
ly by one<lb/>
30. Think<lb/>
Try it. You<lb/>
o set your<lb/>
minutes<lb/>
to pay for<lb/>
ken from<lb/>
m.<lb/>
de<lb/>
turlng<lb/>
id the<lb/>
Day in the life of: ECU Police Officer<lb/>
Major Frank Knight<lb/>
explains it all<lb/>
TOMEKA STEELE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
We see them patrolling<lb/>
campus, stationed downtown<lb/>
and possibly arresting drunken<lb/>
friends but we never stop to<lb/>
consider just how tough a day in<lb/>
the life of an ECU police officer<lb/>
can be. This campus is teeming<lb/>
with crimes of all sorts and police<lb/>
officers have to be alert at every<lb/>
possible moment on this campus.<lb/>
Police officers keep the peace<lb/>
downtown when things get crazy<lb/>
and form bonds with different<lb/>
departments on and around<lb/>
campus to establish effective<lb/>
crime prevention.<lb/>
Many of us take police<lb/>
for granted but without<lb/>
them this campus would<lb/>
be a raging crime spree.<lb/>
TEC: What is a typical day<lb/>
like for you?<lb/>
Major Knight: Well I am<lb/>
in the Support Services divi-<lb/>
sion of the ECU Police Depart-<lb/>
ment. My section and I work<lb/>
to provide materials and sup-<lb/>
port to the patrol division so<lb/>
they can enforce their duties.<lb/>
I deal with payroll and pur-<lb/>
chases of fuel, supplies and<lb/>
equipment for the patrol officers.<lb/>
I also deal with leasing vehicles.<lb/>
TEC: What are the dif-<lb/>
ferent divisions of the<lb/>
ECU Police Department?<lb/>
Major Knight: There are<lb/>
actually three divisions of the<lb/>
ECU Police Department. There is<lb/>
the Patrol Division who are all the<lb/>
police officers students usually<lb/>
see around campus and down-<lb/>
town. There is a Support Services<lb/>
division, which I am a part of,<lb/>
and we are like the administra-<lb/>
tive staff and deal mostly with<lb/>
assisting other divisions. Lastly,<lb/>
there is the Campus Safety divi-<lb/>
sion which deals exclusively with<lb/>
crime prevention, the police<lb/>
push button alarms on campus<lb/>
and dorm and campus safety.<lb/>
TEC: What do you like<lb/>
most and least about your job?<lb/>
Major Knight: What I like<lb/>
most is the camaraderie between<lb/>
the different divisions of the<lb/>
ECU Police Department. I like<lb/>
the interaction with the patrol<lb/>
division. There are a lot of good<lb/>
standing police officers at ECU.<lb/>
It feels good to work with other<lb/>
police officers and people of<lb/>
other departments in order to<lb/>
meet the expectations of the uni-<lb/>
ECU police vehicles are seen all over campus to maintain order.<lb/>
versity and to meet the needs of<lb/>
the officers patrolling the street.<lb/>
What I least like about my job<lb/>
is seeing when officers have to<lb/>
take enforcement actions on ECU<lb/>
students who are under the influ-<lb/>
ence of alcohol. These kids end<lb/>
up getting hurt in a fight or acci-<lb/>
dent or end up being involved<lb/>
in a crime or a victim of a crime.<lb/>
It's the saddest thing when I<lb/>
know they'd otherwise be great<lb/>
outstanding citizens of the uni-<lb/>
versity if only they weren't drunk<lb/>
TEC: So you'd say drinking is<lb/>
a problem at ECU?<lb/>
Major Knight: The three<lb/>
biggest problems at ECU are petty<lb/>
theft, underage drinking and<lb/>
over indulgence drinking. The<lb/>
petty theft on campus usually<lb/>
occurs when individuals fail to<lb/>
secure their property. Underage<lb/>
drinking is a major problem at<lb/>
ECU because our studies have<lb/>
shown that most violent crimes<lb/>
that take place here such as<lb/>
vandalism, assault, robbery and<lb/>
sexual assaults are associated<lb/>
with underage drinking and<lb/>
over-drinking.<lb/>
TEC: What can happen to<lb/>
those who are caught drinking<lb/>
underage?<lb/>
Major Knight: Underage<lb/>
drinkers are usually given a fine<lb/>
and have a campus appearance<lb/>
ticket at the office of student<lb/>
conflict and resolution. If the<lb/>
situation is serious, a student may<lb/>
be issued a state citation and have<lb/>
to appear in court. In the worst<lb/>
case, such as a fight, a student can<lb/>
be arrested and sent to the Pitt<lb/>
County Detention Facility.<lb/>
TEC: What made you want to<lb/>
become a police officer?<lb/>
Major Knight: Well it kind<lb/>
of happened by accident. I was<lb/>
in the military and there was a<lb/>
shortage of police officers so I<lb/>
got placed into the police career.<lb/>
I was a military police officer for<lb/>
23 years and have been with the<lb/>
ECU police department for more<lb/>
than nine years. I loved my job<lb/>
in the military and wanted to<lb/>
continue to be a police officer in<lb/>
civilian life and fortunately I was<lb/>
hired by ECU.<lb/>
TEC: What is it that you want<lb/>
students to know about ECU<lb/>
police officers?<lb/>
Major Knight: I just want<lb/>
students to know that we are<lb/>
here to protect and serve. We<lb/>
are here to provide safety to resi-<lb/>
dents in dorms and students on<lb/>
campus. Our primary concern is<lb/>
the welfare of the students. We<lb/>
have enforcement actions for<lb/>
those who violate the rules of the<lb/>
campus, city and state but mainly<lb/>
we are here to protect and serve<lb/>
the students of ECU.<lb/>
Next time you see an officer,<lb/>
think about what they do for you.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
The Academic Enrichment center is proud to sponsor<lb/>
Pre-Law Week<lb/>
Come join us for several law school sessions throughout the<lb/>
week! Pre-Law week is from November 7-1 1. The event schedule is<lb/>
as follows:<lb/>
monday, november 7, 5:00-6:oopm. bate 2015<lb/>
come hear from the Charlotte School of law as its representa-<lb/>
tive shares information about this new law school that is open-<lb/>
ing FALL 2006 AS WELL AS ITS ADMISSIONS PROCESS. CHECK IT OUT ON<lb/>
the web at www.charlottelaw.org<lb/>
monday. november 7, 6:00-7:oopm, bate 2015<lb/>
Come hear from Elon University as its representative shares<lb/>
information about this new law school that is also opening fall<lb/>
2006 as well as admissions information. check it out on the web<lb/>
at http:law.elon.edu<lb/>
tuesday, november 8, 6:00-7:oopm. bate 201b<lb/>
kaplan will provide a representative to share some inside infor-<lb/>
mation on the lsat as well as test taking strategies to help you<lb/>
PREPARE!<lb/>
Wednesday, November 9, -B:30-6:30pm, Bate 2015<lb/>
north Carolina Central university School of Law will provide<lb/>
a representative to share information about this law school and<lb/>
university. The representative will also cover admissions stan-<lb/>
dards and processes. Check it out on the web at www.nccu.edu<lb/>
LAW<lb/>
wednesday, november 9, 7:00-8:00pm, bate 201b<lb/>
Campbell university, Norman Adrian Wiggins School of law, will<lb/>
provide a representative to share information about this law<lb/>
school as well as its admissions process. check it out on the web<lb/>
at www.law.campbell.edu<lb/>
0<lb/>
Thursday, November to, 6:oo-7:OOpm, Bate 201S<lb/>
Lawyer Roundtable- Experienced lawyers will be here to share<lb/>
insights on what life is like as a lawyer today. they will reflect<lb/>
on their days in law school and offer advice on things to be pre-<lb/>
pared for both in and outside of the classroom. they will high-<lb/>
light the strengths and challenges of the profession as well as<lb/>
some personal reasons explaining why they choose law as their<lb/>
field of study. this engaging panel of lawyers has over so years<lb/>
of combined experience.<lb/>
FRIDAY, November 11, 1 1:30-1:30PM, BREWSTER B-104<lb/>
-Join the Academic enrichment center for a pre-law school open<lb/>
house! find out more about the law school admissions informa-<lb/>
tion that we have in our center as well as information for the<lb/>
LSATI<lb/>
Personal Trainer<lb/>
Warning to 'weekend warriors'<lb/>
Trying to pack a week worth of sports and exercise into Saturday<lb/>
and Sunday sets up manyeekend waniorsfor injury<lb/>
Common Joint, muscle Injuries<lb/>
� Shoulder � Elbow<lb/>
� Knee<lb/>
Accidentai<lb/>
injuries<lb/>
in contact<lb/>
sports <lb/>
Lifting heavy<lb/>
weights � <lb/>
with few vv'pFT<lb/>
repetitions<lb/>
<lb/>
JHbW<lb/>
Does not None of these increase significantly if two-day<lb/>
Improve fitness workouts are followed by five sedentary days<lb/>
Strength<lb/>
Flexibility<lb/>
Endurance<lb/>
1 4 tfrtfefefe<lb/>
I syndrome<lb/>
moderate -<lb/>
Escaping the weekend syndrome<lb/>
Get at least 30 minutes of moderate<lb/>
physical activity every day<lb/>
� Playing with children<lb/>
� Working in garden<lb/>
� Walking dog<lb/>
Taking stairs instead of riding elevator<lb/>
Source: Dr. Kevin Plancher, WebMD, American<lb/>
Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons<lb/>
Graphic: Helen Lee McComas, Paul Trap<lb/>
BBdrd from page A4<lb/>
Anne's Revenge.<lb/>
This special event is spon-<lb/>
sored by the Friends of Joyner<lb/>
Library, which is a non-profit<lb/>
organization at ECU. The Friends<lb/>
of Joyner Library aid in the<lb/>
funding of library purchases.<lb/>
They often make purchases and<lb/>
donate gifts to the progression of<lb/>
the library.<lb/>
"The Friends of Joyner Library<lb/>
purchase things that the state<lb/>
doesn't. The new Java City in<lb/>
Joyner Library came from finan-<lb/>
cial support from The Friends<lb/>
of Joyner Library. The group is<lb/>
mostly made up of alumni but<lb/>
students can join for a very small<lb/>
fee. It's a way for current students<lb/>
to stay connected with what's<lb/>
going on at ECU even after they<lb/>
graduate Dickens said.<lb/>
There are great benefits to<lb/>
becoming a Friend of Joyner<lb/>
Library. Members receive a library<lb/>
card and have access to every<lb/>
collection in Joyner. Members<lb/>
also receive invitations to all of<lb/>
the libraries programs and the<lb/>
organizations annual banquet.<lb/>
Tickets for the Blackbeard ban-<lb/>
quet can be purchased at the<lb/>
Mendenhall Ticket Office.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
e<lb/>
Blackbeard<lb/>
Banquet<lb/>
Nov. 4, 2005<lb/>
Murphy Center<lb/>
6 p.m.<lb/>
For reservations call:<lb/>
252-328-4090<lb/>
Per Person $40<lb/>
Per Couple $65<lb/>
Per Sponsor $250<lb/>
Banquet will be sponsored by The<lb/>
Friends of Joyner Library who aid In<lb/>
the funding of library purchases.<lb/>
SGA gets a<lb/>
new number!<lb/>
The office of<lb/>
Student Government<lb/>
will be changing its phone<lb/>
number effective<lb/>
November 1st. The new<lb/>
number will be ECU-4SGA,<lb/>
that's 328-4742. <lb/>
<pb facs="00059361_0006"/><lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
Page A6 sports@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 TONY ZOPPO Sports Editor BRANDON HUGHES Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY November 1, 2005<lb/>
BCS Standings<lb/>
1.USC.9767<lb/>
2. Texas.9729<lb/>
3.VATech.9294<lb/>
4. Alabama.8695<lb/>
5. UCLA.7874<lb/>
6. Miami.7566<lb/>
7. Penn State.6905<lb/>
8.LSU.6875<lb/>
9. Florida.6277<lb/>
10. Onto State.5967<lb/>
AP Top 25<lb/>
1.USC8-0<lb/>
2 Texas8-0<lb/>
3.VATech8-0<lb/>
4. Alabama80<lb/>
5. Miami (Fl)6-1<lb/>
6.LSU6-1<lb/>
7. UCLA8-0<lb/>
8. Notre Dame5-2<lb/>
9. Florida St7-1<lb/>
10. Penn State8-1<lb/>
11. Georgia7-1<lb/>
12. Ohio State6-2<lb/>
13. Florida6-2<lb/>
14. Wisconsin8-1<lb/>
15. Oregon7-1<lb/>
16. Texas Tech7-1<lb/>
17 Auburn6-2<lb/>
18.WVU6-1<lb/>
19. BC6-2<lb/>
20.TCU8-1<lb/>
21. Fresno St6-1<lb/>
22. Michigan6-3<lb/>
23. California6-2<lb/>
24. Louisville5-2<lb/>
25. Colorado6-2<lb/>
Coaches Poll<lb/>
1.USC8-0<lb/>
2. Texas8-0<lb/>
3VATech8-0<lb/>
4. Alabama80<lb/>
5. Miami (Fl)6-1<lb/>
6.LSU6-1<lb/>
7 UCLA8-0<lb/>
8. Florida St.7-1<lb/>
9. Notre Dame5-2<lb/>
10. Georgia7-1<lb/>
11. Penn State8-1<lb/>
12. Ohio State6-2<lb/>
13. Oregon7-1<lb/>
14. Wisconsin8-1<lb/>
15. Florida6-2<lb/>
16.WVU6-1<lb/>
17. Texas Tech7-1<lb/>
18. Auburn6-2<lb/>
19. BC6-2<lb/>
20.TCU8-1<lb/>
21. California6-2<lb/>
22 Fresno St6-1<lb/>
23. Michigan6-3<lb/>
24. Colorado6-2<lb/>
25. Louisville5-2 . s<lb/>
Knights ruin Pirates' homecoming<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
1<lb/>
!<lb/>
Severe knee damage ends <lb/>
season for Culpepper f<lb/>
The Minnesota Vikings season<lb/>
of problems took another downturn<lb/>
Monday when it was learned that<lb/>
the damage to quarterback Daunte<lb/>
Culpepper's right knee would knock<lb/>
him out for the season, and possibly<lb/>
longer. Vikings coach Mike Tice said<lb/>
at his afternoon news conference<lb/>
that the veteran quarterback has<lb/>
damage to a number of different<lb/>
areas in the right knee, including the<lb/>
anterior cruciate ligament, medial<lb/>
collateral ligament and posterior<lb/>
cruciate ligament The damage was<lb/>
discovered in an MRI on Monday<lb/>
morning. Tice said Culpepper faced<lb/>
a long rehabilitation but that the injury<lb/>
wasn't career-ending.<lb/>
Autopsy reveals heart<lb/>
problems for Collier<lb/>
James Pinkney is sacked and fumbles the football in the second quarter of Saturday afternoon's game against Central Florida.<lb/>
Fumbles, interceptions<lb/>
lead to costly C-USA loss<lb/>
ERIC GILMORE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Tears dripped and heads hung<lb/>
low as ECU gimped off the field<lb/>
for their second consecutive loss.<lb/>
Massive men were humbled as<lb/>
excitement withered away only<lb/>
to be replaced by an eerie still-<lb/>
ness.<lb/>
Central Florida (5-3, 4-1)<lb/>
ruined ECU's homecoming cel-<lb/>
ebration winning 30-20 in a Con-<lb/>
ference USA divisional match-up.<lb/>
ECU's miscues and mistakes led<lb/>
to six turnovers, which resulted<lb/>
in 17 UCF points.<lb/>
Once again, the Pirates (3-5,<lb/>
2-3) were close. Close enough<lb/>
to smell the win, but not able<lb/>
to corral the victory. 'What-ifs'<lb/>
rained in the post game press<lb/>
conference. 'If only' was the<lb/>
jargon again, used in each of<lb/>
ECU's five losses.<lb/>
"I don't know what to say, I'm<lb/>
frustrated said first-year Head<lb/>
Coach Skip Holtz.<lb/>
"I'm not mad at the players).<lb/>
My heart just breaks for them. We<lb/>
just keep making the mistakes<lb/>
that get you beat<lb/>
On 2nd-and-3 at UCF's 17,<lb/>
Brandon Fractious became the<lb/>
culprit of ECU's turnover plague.<lb/>
Down 24-20, Fractious was fight-<lb/>
ing off an incoming UCF tackier<lb/>
when the ball struck offensive<lb/>
guard Matt Butler's helmet and<lb/>
jolted loose.<lb/>
"That fourth quarter drive, I<lb/>
fumbled the rock said a teary-<lb/>
eyed Fractious.<lb/>
"I just told myself to squeeze<lb/>
the ball. I squeezed it and the<lb/>
next you know, it came out<lb/>
Fractious earned 107 yards<lb/>
on 10 carries, both career-highs.<lb/>
The junior college transfer gained<lb/>
96 yards and two touchdowns<lb/>
in the second-half alone. How-<lb/>
ever, Fractious has been fighting<lb/>
fumbling problems as Johnson's<lb/>
backup since he coughed up the<lb/>
ball against USM.<lb/>
see FOOTBALL page A8<lb/>
ECU ice hockey team clubs Radford<lb/>
Investigators suspect Atlanta Hawks<lb/>
center Jason Collier died of a heart<lb/>
problem and will announce their<lb/>
findings Tuesday. The 28-year-old<lb/>
player died Oct. 15 after he had<lb/>
trouble breathing In his Georgia<lb/>
home. The autopsy was conducted by<lb/>
the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.<lb/>
GBI spokesman John Bankhead says<lb/>
the office performs all Forsyth County<lb/>
autopsies, and Bankhead said this<lb/>
autopsy showed the cause of death to<lb/>
be "heart-related' The comer's office<lb/>
announced a news conference for<lb/>
Tuesday. Coroner Lauren McDonald<lb/>
said his office pulled Collier's medical<lb/>
records from the Houston Rockets<lb/>
and Atlanta Hawks. The Hawks are<lb/>
wearing permanent black shoulder<lb/>
patches on their uniforms to honor the<lb/>
7-footer, who was a part-time starter<lb/>
the last two seasons for Atlanta after<lb/>
three years in Houston. He began<lb/>
his college career at Indiana before<lb/>
transferring to Georgia Tech. The<lb/>
Hawks will leave Collier's uniform in<lb/>
his locker through the season. f.<lb/>
Ian Falcon celebrates with brother Tyler Falcon and teammate John Koritz after ECU'S first goal Friday night.<lb/>
Huge crowd watches<lb/>
first-ever home game<lb/>
ERIC GILMORE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER <lb/>
ECU president and first-string<lb/>
goalie Brent Falcon imagined<lb/>
bringing hockey to Greenville<lb/>
over a year ago. What the elder<lb/>
Falcon didn't imagine was that<lb/>
his twin younger brothers would<lb/>
have the biggest impact when the<lb/>
day finally arrived.<lb/>
Tyler Falcon scored twice,<lb/>
both times assisted from his twin,<lb/>
Ian Falcon. ECU (3-1) used the<lb/>
Falcon trio to sweep Radford (0-<lb/>
3) for their first-ever home wins.<lb/>
ECU held on late for a 4-3 victory<lb/>
on Friday night in front of an<lb/>
estimated crowd of 300.<lb/>
"I was very proud the culmi-<lb/>
nation of the past year's worth of<lb/>
work said Brent Falcon.<lb/>
"I don't think I could have<lb/>
written it up any better than<lb/>
the way it turned out on Friday<lb/>
night<lb/>
The board-to-board crowd<lb/>
ignited the team despite their<lb/>
9:30 p.m. face-off. Neither team<lb/>
scored in the first period. After<lb/>
Tyler Falcon's first goal, forward<lb/>
Mike Ormsbee notched a power-<lb/>
play goal less than two minutes<lb/>
later.<lb/>
The Highlanders sandwiched<lb/>
scores between the third-period<lb/>
11-1-05<lb/>
The<lb/>
(Esj<lb/>
Alcohol<lb/>
Dani<lb/>
113 West<lb/>
�Spacious<lb/>
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�Central 1<lb/>
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LO(<lb/>
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Corr<lb/>
see HOCKEY page A8 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059361_0007"/><lb/>
11-1-05<lb/>
THE EAST CAROUNIAN � SPORTS<lb/>
PAGE A7<lb/>
1, 2005<lb/>
ig<lb/>
The Law Office of Daniel Hines Entzminger<lb/>
Historically,<lb/>
PIRATES<lb/>
were known for<lb/>
getting into trouble<lb/>
(Especially around Halloween.)<lb/>
Alcohol offenses? Drug charges? Traffic violations?<lb/>
Help is just a phone call away.<lb/>
252754-8004<lb/>
Daniel Hines Entzminger, Attorney at Law<lb/>
113 West Third Street (Across from the Courthouse)<lb/>
es<lb/>
�Cozy One 8cTwo BedroomOne Bath Units<lb/>
�Free Water and Sewer<lb/>
�Central Heat 8c Air in Two Bedrooms<lb/>
�Wall AC Unit 8c Baseboard Hear in One Bedroom<lb/>
�WasherDryer Connections<lb/>
�1st Floor Patio with Fence<lb/>
�2nd Floor Front or Back Balcony<lb/>
�Pets Allowed with Fee<lb/>
�Energy Efficient<lb/>
�On ECU Bus Route<lb/>
ut<lb/>
7 yards<lb/>
r-highs.<lb/>
r gained<lb/>
idowns<lb/>
 How-<lb/>
ighting<lb/>
hnson's<lb/>
I up the<lb/>
age A8<lb/>
d<lb/>
NVENIEt<lb/>
LOCATION<lb/>
WYNDHAM COURT<lb/>
2 Bedroom<lb/>
Energy Efficient � Kitchen Appliances,<lb/>
her &amp; Dryer Hookups � Central Air&amp; Heat. -<lb/>
On ECU Bus Route.<lb/>
Pets OK With Dep<lb/>
 M 'V'trt �! vF'ViT1 �'<lb/>
EASTGATE VILLAGE<lb/>
2 Bedroom<lb/>
Washer &amp; Dryer Hookups � Central Air &amp; Heat.<lb/>
On ECU Bus Route.<lb/>
24 Hour Emergency Maintenance.<lb/>
Pets OK With Deposit � Nightly security patrols.<lb/>
)FORD CREEK<lb/>
3 Bedroom<lb/>
Country Club Living witnout me price.<lb/>
On Bradford Creek Golf Course.<lb/>
Approximately 1,350 Sq.ft.<lb/>
Fully Equipped Kitchens � Washer &amp; Dryer.<lb/>
Pets OK With Deposit � Covered Parking.<lb/>
3 Bedroom And 2.5 Bath � 6 Blocks From ECU.<lb/>
Approximately 1350 Sq.ft.<lb/>
Fully Equipped Kitchens.<lb/>
Washer &amp; Dryer.<lb/>
Pets OK With Deposit � Covered Parking.<lb/>
561 -7679<lb/>
561-RENT<lb/>
3 Bedroom And 3 Bath Houses.<lb/>
Kitchen Appliances � Dishwasher.<lb/>
Washer &amp; Dryer � Central Air &amp; Heat.<lb/>
Covered Parking.<lb/>
No Pets Allowed.<lb/>
Offering Apartments &amp; Houses, Plus Duplex Communities<lb/>
Convenient To ECU, Pitt Community College &amp; The Medical District<lb/>
"Before giving, I always look<lb/>
for the Humane Seal<lb/>
:<lb/>
- NOAH WYLE, S� ��9C� iw �� ER<lb/>
The Humane Charity Seal of Approval guarantees that a health charity<lb/>
funds vital patient services or life-saving medical research, but never<lb/>
animal experiments.<lb/>
Because helping people doesn't<lb/>
have to mean harming animals.<lb/>
Council on Humane Giving<lb/>
Washington. D.C. www.HumaneSealorg<lb/>
202-686-2210. ext. 335<lb/>
ADMINISTERED BY PHYSICIANS COMMITTEE FOR RESPONSIBLE MEDICINE<lb/>
Pirates fall on Senior Day<lb/>
Team remains winless for<lb/>
the season<lb/>
RON CLEMENTS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
For the ECU men's soccer<lb/>
team, Sunday was another dis-<lb/>
appointing day as the Pirates<lb/>
dropped their 13th game of the<lb/>
season, losing to Tulsa 4-2. Even<lb/>
more disappointing for the five<lb/>
seniors on the team was that it<lb/>
was their final home game in a<lb/>
season where the Pirates (0-13-1,<lb/>
0-7-0 Conference USA) have yet<lb/>
to taste victory.<lb/>
"It's been real disappoint-<lb/>
ing said senior Matt Kowaleski,<lb/>
who shares the team lead in goals<lb/>
with six.<lb/>
"We've just had an unlucky<lb/>
year<lb/>
Kowaleski, Sean Harris, Shinn<lb/>
Takagi, David Rowe and Ryan<lb/>
Bostian closed out their careers<lb/>
at home.<lb/>
Things started well for the<lb/>
Pirates, who scored first 22 min-<lb/>
utes in, when Zach Matthews hit<lb/>
Calvin Simon, whose shot found<lb/>
the lower left corner of the net.<lb/>
It was Simon's sixth goal of the<lb/>
year and the Pirates held an early<lb/>
lead, something they have not<lb/>
been accustomed to this year.<lb/>
The attitude at the half was one<lb/>
of confidence.<lb/>
"Everybody was really<lb/>
pumped like we might be able<lb/>
to pull this game out Takagi<lb/>
said, "but I think everybody just<lb/>
got tired<lb/>
Tulsa (5-6-6,2-4-3) responded<lb/>
quickly as Daniel Wasson headed<lb/>
a ball to Matt Wiley, who then<lb/>
headed it past ECU keeper<lb/>
Zachery Roszel to tie the game at<lb/>
1-1 less than a minute later.<lb/>
The Pirates regained the lead<lb/>
before the half when Kowaleski<lb/>
netted his sixth goal of the<lb/>
season off a free kick from Danny<lb/>
Lundquist.<lb/>
The second half was all Tulsa<lb/>
as the Golden Hurricane netted<lb/>
three unanswered goals. Kyle<lb/>
Brown got the scoring started<lb/>
10 minutes into the half, picking<lb/>
up his own rebound. Nine min-<lb/>
utes later, Wiley found the net<lb/>
again, fortuitously, off a<lb/>
blocked free kick. Jonathan<lb/>
Lange capped the scoring<lb/>
late in the game, with an assist<lb/>
from Eric Burkholder.<lb/>
The second halves of games<lb/>
have not been a strong suit for<lb/>
the Pirates this season, and<lb/>
conditioning may be part of the<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
"I don't know if we get tired<lb/>
or what Kowaleski said of the<lb/>
second half, "but we just seem<lb/>
to give it away<lb/>
Takagi said the key to strong<lb/>
finishes starts before the season<lb/>
begins.<lb/>
"We need more condition-<lb/>
ing in the preseason the native<lb/>
Japanese player said.<lb/>
"Our conditioning was pretty<lb/>
bad<lb/>
In just his fourth start of the<lb/>
season, Roszel recorded a season-<lb/>
high 14 saves on 19 shots. Roszel<lb/>
was filling in for normal starter<lb/>
Chris Hicks, who is out with a<lb/>
lacerated thumb.<lb/>
The Pirates will search for<lb/>
that elusive win this weekend<lb/>
when they travel to Florida for<lb/>
their final two matches of the<lb/>
season against UCF and Florida<lb/>
International, both make-up<lb/>
games from Hurricane Wilma.<lb/>
"We just need to have fun<lb/>
and get a win on the board said<lb/>
Kowaleski.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Lady Pirates earn No. 7<lb/>
seed in C-USA tournament<lb/>
SID � The ECU women's<lb/>
soccer team earned its fourth Con-<lb/>
ference USA Tournament berth<lb/>
in five years Saturday afternoon<lb/>
after defeating Marshal 1-0 in<lb/>
double-overtime. Head Coach Rob<lb/>
Donnenwirth and his squad will<lb/>
square-off against No. 2 seed SMU<lb/>
on Wednesday, Nov. 2 at 6 p.m. at<lb/>
the Rice TrackSoccer Stadium.<lb/>
The Pirates (8-11-0, 4-S-0)<lb/>
loss to SMU (Oct. 23) on Senior<lb/>
Day at Bunting Field 2-0 to<lb/>
close out the home portion of<lb/>
the schedule. In four C-USA<lb/>
Tournament matches, the Pirates<lb/>
are 1-3 all-time recording their<lb/>
lone win in 2002 after defeating<lb/>
Houston (2-1) to advance to the<lb/>
semi-finals.<lb/>
UCF and SMU both secured a<lb/>
share of the 200S C-USA regular<lb/>
season women's soccer champi-<lb/>
onship on Sunday by picking up<lb/>
2-1 victories over Houston and<lb/>
Memphis, respectively. Both<lb/>
squads finished the confer-<lb/>
ence schedule with identical 8-1<lb/>
records and 16 points. UCF earns<lb/>
the top seed in the upcoming<lb/>
C-USA Women's Soccer Tourna-<lb/>
ment by winning a tie-breaker<lb/>
between the schools. SMU will<lb/>
be the No. 2 seed, while the<lb/>
championship host Rice will be<lb/>
the third seed in the eight-team<lb/>
draw which is set to begin on<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 2.<lb/>
The remaining seeds are as<lb/>
follows: UTEP is No. 4, Mem-<lb/>
phis is No. 5, UAB is No. 6, ECU<lb/>
is No. 7 and Houston is No. 8.<lb/>
Top-seeded UCF will face No.<lb/>
8 Houston in the tournament's<lb/>
opening game at Noon (CT) on<lb/>
Wednesday. No. 4 UTEP will face<lb/>
No. S Memphis at 2:30 p.m. to<lb/>
conclude the afternoon match-<lb/>
ups. The evening games on<lb/>
Wednesday feature No. 2 SMU<lb/>
vs. No. 7 ECU at 5 p.m to be<lb/>
followed by home-standing No.<lb/>
3 Rice and the reigning C-USA<lb/>
Tournament champions, No. 6<lb/>
UAB at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Since the top two seeds did<lb/>
not meet in the regular season,<lb/>
UCF earned the No. 1 seed<lb/>
because of a 3-0 victory over<lb/>
Rice, the two schools' highest-<lb/>
seeded common opponent in the<lb/>
regular season, this past Friday,<lb/>
Oct. 28. The Owls defeated SMU<lb/>
2-1 in double-overtime on Oct. 9.<lb/>
UTEP and Rice finished in a tie<lb/>
for third in the standings with 13<lb/>
points each, but the Owls took<lb/>
a 3-1 decision from UTEP in a<lb/>
head-to-head match-up between<lb/>
the schools on Oct. 23 to earn<lb/>
the No. 3 seed.<lb/>
The Pirates and Cougars<lb/>
clinched the final two spots in<lb/>
the tournament this weekend to<lb/>
set the field of eight. ECU had to<lb/>
use a 1-0 double-overtime victory<lb/>
at Marshall on Saturday to make<lb/>
the field, while Houston regis-<lb/>
tered the one point it needed on<lb/>
Friday in a 1-1 tie with Southern<lb/>
Miss. The Pirates, the Cougars<lb/>
and Tulsa each finished the regu-<lb/>
lar season with eight points, but<lb/>
the Golden Hurricane was the<lb/>
odd team out after going 0-2 in<lb/>
the regular season with losses<lb/>
against ECU and Houston. The<lb/>
Pirates earned the No. 7 seed by<lb/>
defeating Houston in the regular<lb/>
season on Oct. 21.<lb/>
Epstein resigns, walks<lb/>
away from Red Sox<lb/>
(AP) � Red Sox general<lb/>
manager Theo Epstein resigned<lb/>
Monday, surprising Boston and<lb/>
the baseball world just one year<lb/>
after he helped build the fran-<lb/>
chise's first World Series cham-<lb/>
pionship team since 1918.<lb/>
The team said in a statement<lb/>
that Epstein will continue work-<lb/>
ing for several days to assist in<lb/>
the transition and prepare for<lb/>
the offseason.<lb/>
The Boston Herald, which<lb/>
first reported the news on its<lb/>
web site, said the Yale graduate<lb/>
has told associates that he may<lb/>
leave baseball, or at least take a<lb/>
year off.<lb/>
The Dodgers, Phillies and<lb/>
Devil Rays have GM openings,<lb/>
but none has a $120 million<lb/>
payroll to match the one Epstein<lb/>
was given in Boston.<lb/>
The 31-year-old Epstein was<lb/>
reportedly offered about $4.5<lb/>
million for a three-year exten-<lb/>
sion quadruple his previous<lb/>
salary. But it was still short of the<lb/>
$2.5 million a year the Red Sox<lb/>
offered Oakland's Billy Beane<lb/>
in 2002 before making Epstein<lb/>
the youngest GM in baseball<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Although Epstein and team<lb/>
president Larry Lucchino hag-<lb/>
gled over the usual issues of<lb/>
salary and authority, the Herald<lb/>
said Epstein went through "ago-<lb/>
nizing soul-searching" about his<lb/>
relationship with his mentor.<lb/>
The Herald said a Sunday news-<lb/>
paper column contained inside<lb/>
Information about their rela-<lb/>
tionship, "slanted too much in<lb/>
Lucchino's favor and convinced<lb/>
Epstein there had been a breach<lb/>
of trust.<lb/>
Epstein grew up blocks away<lb/>
from Fenway Park and worked<lb/>
for Lucchino with the Baltimore<lb/>
Orioles and San Diego Padres.<lb/>
A lifelong Red Sox fan, Epstein<lb/>
was brought to Boston to be the<lb/>
assistant GM and promoted to<lb/>
his dream job in 2002, about five<lb/>
weeks before his 29th birthday.<lb/>
Boston Red Sox general manager Theo Epstein resigned Monday, Oct. 31.<lb/>
A devotee of statistical analy-<lb/>
sis who values his scouts as<lb/>
well, Epstein's tenure has been<lb/>
marked by bold adventures that<lb/>
often conflicted with baseball<lb/>
orthodoxy:<lb/>
He signed first baseman<lb/>
Kevin Millar, despite an unspo-<lb/>
ken agreement not to poach from<lb/>
Japanese clubs.<lb/>
He went without a traditional<lb/>
closer In his first year, with disas-<lb/>
trous results.<lb/>
He tried to trade for reign-<lb/>
ing MVP Alex Rodriguez a deal<lb/>
that would have meant shipping<lb/>
out Manny Ramirez and Nomar<lb/>
Garciaparra and then, without<lb/>
remorse, pulled the plug when<lb/>
the deal became too expensive.<lb/>
He ate Thanksgiving dinner<lb/>
with Curt Schilling in a college<lb/>
football-style recruiting trip<lb/>
that lured the right-handed ace<lb/>
to Boston.<lb/>
He traded Garciaparra, the<lb/>
face of the franchise, for the parts<lb/>
he needed to complete the World<lb/>
Series puzzle.<lb/>
But the efforts have paid<lb/>
off.<lb/>
The Red Sox reached the AL<lb/>
championship series in 2003<lb/>
before the lack of a closer doomed<lb/>
Grady Little in Game 7 at Yankee<lb/>
Stadium. The next year, with a<lb/>
new manager and the closer it<lb/>
had lacked, the ballclub won its<lb/>
first World Series in 86 years.<lb/>
Boston reached the postsea-<lb/>
son for a third consecutive year<lb/>
this season before getting swept<lb/>
by the Chicago White Sox in the<lb/>
first round. <lb/>
<pb facs="00059361_0008"/><lb/>
PAGE A8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN � SPORTS<lb/>
11-1-05<lb/>
Football<lb/>
from page A6<lb/>
"I thought he competed<lb/>
hard Holtz said.<lb/>
"I told him, every time 1 see<lb/>
you put the ball on the ground, 1<lb/>
lose a little more confidence that<lb/>
you're going to hold onto it If<lb/>
everyday, you put the ball on the<lb/>
ground - you're not going to play.<lb/>
1 don't care who you are<lb/>
"We go through drills at prac-<lb/>
tice all the time Fractious said.<lb/>
"We're always focusing on<lb/>
holding the ball when you're<lb/>
running. It's a constant thing<lb/>
we're doing every, every day.<lb/>
It's disappointing when do you<lb/>
something everyday in practice<lb/>
and you just go out there and let<lb/>
everyone down<lb/>
Fractious and true freshman<lb/>
Dominque Lindsay spearheaded<lb/>
an otherwise stagnant rushing<lb/>
game in the second-half. As a<lb/>
team, ECU gained a season-high<lb/>
272 yards on the ground. Lindsay<lb/>
finished with 11 carries for 73<lb/>
yards including a 32-yarder.<lb/>
With no score due to an ECU<lb/>
goal-line stand, Travis Williams<lb/>
attempted to field a punt at his<lb/>
own 3-yard line. The sensational<lb/>
punt returner as a freshman<lb/>
muffed the punt allowing Curtis<lb/>
Francis to recover the ball inside<lb/>
ECU'S 1-yard line.<lb/>
"I made a careless mistake<lb/>
and I let my team down said<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
"I really didn't get square and<lb/>
it rubbed off on my shoulder pad.<lb/>
I'm still frustrated about it<lb/>
"We've got to stay the course<lb/>
Holtsaid.<lb/>
"We've got to keep teaching<lb/>
and teaching and teaching. It's<lb/>
frustrating we keep making these<lb/>
mistakes that are going to lose<lb/>
football games. Everybody has<lb/>
a job to do. Do your job. It's not<lb/>
all about Travis  it's about this<lb/>
football team<lb/>
UCF running back Jason<lb/>
Peters scored the first of his two<lb/>
rushing touchdowns immedi-<lb/>
ately after Williams' fumble on a<lb/>
1-yard scamper. James Pinkney's<lb/>
second interception led to a<lb/>
Matt Prater 26-yard field goal to<lb/>
extend UCF's second-quarter led<lb/>
to 10-0.<lb/>
On 3rd-and-l, Peters broke off<lb/>
a 67-yard touchdown run. The<lb/>
junior finished with 14 carries<lb/>
for 113 yards. UCF gained 249<lb/>
yards on the ground off of ECU's<lb/>
115th ranked rushing defense.<lb/>
Down 17-3, ECU ran off 17<lb/>
consecutive points capped off<lb/>
with Fractious' second touch-<lb/>
down run, a 7-yard dash with<lb/>
12:16 remaining in the fourth<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
Similar to last week's game<lb/>
against Memphis, the Pirate<lb/>
defense allowed a touchdown to<lb/>
reverse the game's momentum.<lb/>
Mike Walker beat Kasey Ross<lb/>
and Zach Baker on a 38-yard<lb/>
post route from Steven Moffett.<lb/>
After the Fractious fumble and<lb/>
Pinkney's third interception,<lb/>
Moffett again found Walker in<lb/>
the end zone- this time on a 31-<lb/>
yard play-action hookup.<lb/>
"UCF was a great team, but<lb/>
we're also a great team Fractious<lb/>
said. "We work just as hard as any<lb/>
football team in the nation. It's<lb/>
just real disappointing  we're<lb/>
so close<lb/>
"Of course, it hurts said<lb/>
Chris Moore about the loss. "We<lb/>
got to win these next three games v.<lb/>
to go to a bowl. I haven't been to -g<lb/>
a bowl here yet. I'm willing to do ?<lb/>
whatever it takes �<lb/>
ft<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at �<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com. �<lb/>
Skip Holtz speaks with his players on the sidelines during the game Saturday.<lb/>
HOCkCy from page A6<lb/>
intermission to even the score.<lb/>
After another Tyler Falcon goal,<lb/>
sophomore Corey Fleitz notched<lb/>
an insurance goal. Fleitz scored<lb/>
within two minutes of Falcon's<lb/>
second goal, this time with 11:44<lb/>
remaining.<lb/>
After a Highlander goal, ECU<lb/>
was forced to cling on amid a<lb/>
screaming crowd. Brent Falcon<lb/>
knocked away 26 third-period<lb/>
shots to seal the Blue Ridge<lb/>
Hockey Conference win.<lb/>
"ECU fans in basically every<lb/>
sport are ruthless, but hockey<lb/>
fans are no different Brent<lb/>
Falcon said.<lb/>
"They let Radford have it.<lb/>
We were pretty confident that<lb/>
they weren't going to come to<lb/>
our home rink and leave with a<lb/>
win. We were determined that we<lb/>
were going to win our first ever<lb/>
home game<lb/>
ECU dominated Radford<lb/>
10-2 in the Saturday matinee.<lb/>
The Pirates, fresh off Friday's<lb/>
win, scored the first seven goals<lb/>
to cruise to the easy win. ECU<lb/>
outnumbered Radford 40-25 in<lb/>
shots taken.<lb/>
"Radford came out flat and<lb/>
we took it to them from the<lb/>
beginning the team president<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We got up early on them<lb/>
and kept the pressure on. We<lb/>
controlled the tempo in both<lb/>
games<lb/>
Senior forward John Leonard<lb/>
notched three goals and one<lb/>
assist. Forward Mike Ormsbee<lb/>
knocked home a power-play goal<lb/>
and added three assists. Fresh-<lb/>
man Daniel Hopkins netted two<lb/>
goals and one assist.<lb/>
"Not only were we finally<lb/>
playing ice hockey in Greenville,<lb/>
just to see how many showed up<lb/>
and were excited to be there<lb/>
Brent Falcon said.<lb/>
"It was great to see that many<lb/>
people get behind a relatively<lb/>
new sport to Greenville. I think<lb/>
we did convert a decent amount<lb/>
of fans. I think there's a couple<lb/>
more hockey fans walking around<lb/>
campus now than there were<lb/>
even a couple of weeks ago. The<lb/>
atmosphere was awesome<lb/>
ECU's two wins moved them<lb/>
to second in the Southwest Divi-<lb/>
sion standings of the Blue Ridge<lb/>
Hockey Conference. The Pirates'<lb/>
six points trail only Virginia<lb/>
Military by two. VMI has seven<lb/>
games remaining while ECU still<lb/>
has nine conference games left.<lb/>
Clemson and Appalachian State<lb/>
have two points and 11 games<lb/>
remaining.<lb/>
The Pirates will travel to<lb/>
Chesapeake, Va. to take on Old<lb/>
Dominion on Nov. 4. ECU will<lb/>
play the very next day (Nov. S) in<lb/>
Newport News, Va. against Wil-<lb/>
liam &amp; Mary. Both are conference<lb/>
match-ups.<lb/>
Further information can be<lb/>
found on their Web site at ecuice-<lb/>
hockey.com.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeas tcarolinian. com.<lb/>
r<lb/>
ART.<lb/>
ASK FOR<lb/>
MORE.<lb/>
"<lb/>
For mom information about the<lb/>
important! of arta education, pleaae contact<lb/>
www.AmencansForTheArta.org-<lb/>
.<lb/>
1!<lb/>
AMERICANS<lb/>
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New season brings new home for Hornets<lb/>
(AP) � There's a buzz in Okla-<lb/>
homa City. The NBA is in town.<lb/>
The Hornets, forced out<lb/>
of New Orleans by Hurricane<lb/>
Katrina, will face Sacramento<lb/>
on Tuesday night, the first of 35<lb/>
regular-season games at the Ford<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
"I think it's going to be wild<lb/>
and crazy Hornets coach Byron<lb/>
Scott said Monday. "It's going to<lb/>
be fun. It's going to be a great<lb/>
atmosphere<lb/>
Forward PJ. Brown, entering<lb/>
his 13th NBA season and his sixth<lb/>
with the Hornets, is the only<lb/>
player left from the team's move<lb/>
from Charlotte to New Orleans<lb/>
in 2002.<lb/>
"It's going to be a new city,<lb/>
kind of like a grand opening<lb/>
Brown said. "There's going to be<lb/>
a lot of excitement. It's going to<lb/>
be a festive-type atmosphere, and<lb/>
the fans are going to be going<lb/>
wild the first night.<lb/>
"1 expect it to be a lot like it<lb/>
was back home on opening night<lb/>
three years ago<lb/>
The Hornets have planned a<lb/>
"BuzzFest" street party with live<lb/>
music and the NBA's interactive<lb/>
Jam Van. Artis Gilmore and Bill<lb/>
Walton will sign autographs, and<lb/>
former Oklahoma standout and<lb/>
NBA All-Star Wayman Tisdale<lb/>
will sing the national anthem.<lb/>
The NBA released extra seats<lb/>
that it had on hold, and less than<lb/>
1,000 are available in the 19,163-<lb/>
seat arena. Fans will be given a<lb/>
limited edition T-shirt available<lb/>
only to those in attendance, and<lb/>
Jamal Maglore sits down during one of the Hornets' practices this week.<lb/>
a commemorative program will<lb/>
be on sale.<lb/>
"I'm anxious to see what the<lb/>
atmosphere's going to be like<lb/>
said point guard Chris Paul,<lb/>
the Hornets' No. 1 draft pick.<lb/>
"It was pretty wild for the pre-<lb/>
season games, but I'm sure they<lb/>
were saving some things for the<lb/>
opening night. I have no clue<lb/>
what it's going to be like. I just<lb/>
can't wait<lb/>
The Hornets, 18-64 last<lb/>
season, had been scheduled to<lb/>
start their season Wednesday<lb/>
night at Cleveland, but the NBA<lb/>
moved the team's home opener<lb/>
against Sacramento up to Tuesday<lb/>
night, where it joins three games<lb/>
featuring the league's marquee<lb/>
players and teams. The Hornets'<lb/>
opener won't be televised nation-<lb/>
ally, but TNT is planning live<lb/>
look-ins.<lb/>
In two preseason games in<lb/>
Oklahoma City, the Flornets<lb/>
' averaged more than 14,750 fans<lb/>
and overcame 20-point first-half<lb/>
deficits in both games - one a win<lb/>
and one a four-point loss.<lb/>
"We want to establish some<lb/>
type of a home-court advantage<lb/>
Scott said. "We've got a great<lb/>
crowd, so we've got to bring an<lb/>
energy and a physicality to the<lb/>
game that we haven't been bring-<lb/>
ing, and all our guys know that<lb/>
right now<lb/>
The Hornets opened last<lb/>
season 2-29 and were the NBA's<lb/>
lowest-scoring team with only<lb/>
88.4 points per game. But that<lb/>
hasn't mattered to fans in Okla-<lb/>
homa City who have been long-<lb/>
ing for a chance to prove their<lb/>
city is ready for a major-league<lb/>
franchise.<lb/>
Out at restaurants, fans recog-<lb/>
nize players, acknowledge them<lb/>
and say, "Welcome Paul said,<lb/>
and that goes a long way.<lb/>
"We're in a new city away<lb/>
from home Paul said, "but the<lb/>
more people embrace us the more<lb/>
we feel at home<lb/>
Studied it.<lb/>
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COLLEGE NIGHT<lb/>
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Earn up to $170mo. donating plasma in a friendly place.<lb/>
DCI Biological of Greenville � 252-757-0171<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059361_0009"/><lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
Page A9<lb/>
TUESDAY November 1, 2005<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
Gladiolus, Jasmine, &amp; Peony<lb/>
Gardens: 1, 2, &amp; 3 bedrooms.<lb/>
Close to ECU. Pets allowed with<lb/>
fee. For more information call<lb/>
Wainright Property Management<lb/>
756-6209 or visit our web-site www.<lb/>
rentingreenville.com<lb/>
Beech Street: 3 bedroom 2 bath<lb/>
apartment. Close to ECU. Cat allowed<lb/>
with fee. For more information call<lb/>
Wainright Property Management<lb/>
756-6209 or visit our web-site www.<lb/>
rentingreenville.com<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. SHOO.OOMo. 347-<lb/>
6504<lb/>
College Part: 1 &amp; 2 bedroom<lb/>
apartments, On ECU bus stop.<lb/>
WaterSewer included. For more<lb/>
information call Wainright Property<lb/>
Management 756-6209 or visit our<lb/>
web-site www.rentingreenville.<lb/>
com<lb/>
For Rent 2013A River Drive<lb/>
(Dockside) 2 Bedroom - 2 Bath - 1st<lb/>
month rent free - Available January<lb/>
- $600month - Call 252-355-6339<lb/>
or 252-341-1726<lb/>
One two Brs. on-site management<lb/>
maintenance Central heat air 6,9,12<lb/>
month leases Water Cable included<lb/>
ECU bus Wireless Internet pets<lb/>
dishwasher disposals pool laundry<lb/>
(252) 758-4015<lb/>
Cypress Gardens: 1 &amp; 2 bedroom 1<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
BREAK!<lb/>
Bahamas Party<lb/>
Cruise $299<lb/>
Cancun $559<lb/>
Acapulco $629<lb/>
Jamaica, Nassau, Panama City, Dayton From $179!<lb/>
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IF YOU'RE CARING FOR<lb/>
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MEMBER. TRYING YOUR<lb/>
HARDEST AND DOING<lb/>
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DIFFERENT THINGS.<lb/>
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One out of five adults finds<lb/>
themselves aB the designated<lb/>
"caregiver" for a loved one who<lb/>
can't manage alone. This role<lb/>
can often snowball, placing<lb/>
more and more demands on<lb/>
the family caregiver. In trying to<lb/>
do it all, you may reach a point<lb/>
of diminishing returns where<lb/>
the level of care - despite your<lb/>
best efforts - may be less than<lb/>
it could or should be. That's<lb/>
where we can help. Visit<lb/>
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support, answers and advice -<lb/>
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Caregiving<lb/>
It's not ill up to you.<lb/>
From the National Family<lb/>
Caregiven Association and<lb/>
the National Alliance for Caregiving<lb/>
with the generous support of Eisai Inc.<lb/>
bath apartment. On ECU bus stop.<lb/>
Basic Cable included. For more<lb/>
information call Wainright Property<lb/>
Management 756-6209 or visit our<lb/>
web-site www.rentingreenville.<lb/>
com<lb/>
Roommate needed in beautiful 3<lb/>
BDR house, 2 Bath one block from<lb/>
campus, females non-smoking ;<lb/>
high speed wireless internet option;<lb/>
WD, all kitchen appliances, parking,<lb/>
no pets. Please call 347-1231<lb/>
ParkVillage: 1 &amp; 2 bedrooms. Close<lb/>
to ECU. WaterSewer included. For<lb/>
more information call Wainright<lb/>
Property Management 756-<lb/>
6209 or visit or web-site www.<lb/>
rentingreenville.com<lb/>
Large 2 &amp; Bedroom townhouses,<lb/>
1.5 to 2.5 baths, full basement,<lb/>
WD Hook-ups, great storage,<lb/>
enclosed patio, ECU bus route, No<lb/>
pets 752-7738<lb/>
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments, walking<lb/>
distance to campus, WD conn<lb/>
pets ok no weight limit, free water<lb/>
and sewer. Call today for security<lb/>
deposit special - 758-1921.<lb/>
Cannon CourtCedar Court: 2<lb/>
bedroom 1.5 bath townhouse. One<lb/>
ECU bus stop. For more information<lb/>
call Wainright Property Management<lb/>
756-6209 or visit our web-site www.<lb/>
rentingreenville.com<lb/>
2 St 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/>
3 BDR 2 BA Plus Bonus Room All<lb/>
Appliances, Fenced Yard, Deck, Pets<lb/>
OK. 4 Blocks from ECU $850 Per<lb/>
Month. Sec. Dep. Negotiable. Avail.<lb/>
Now. Call 252-258-1810.<lb/>
2 and 3 bedroom houses for rent.<lb/>
Close to ECU. Pet allowed with<lb/>
fee. For more information call<lb/>
Wainright Property Management<lb/>
756-6209 or visit our web-site www.<lb/>
rentingreenville.com<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
Sublease $349 Utilities Included Call<lb/>
919-394-8315<lb/>
One room available in four bedroom<lb/>
house. 12 mailefrom campus. Rent<lb/>
is $325 plus 14 utilities. Available<lb/>
now. Call 757-348-6060 or e-mail<lb/>
ani1010@mail.ecu.edu<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
For Sale: Used Laptop: IBM ThinkPad<lb/>
600x with Windows XP Loaded,<lb/>
DVD Drive, Wireless Ready. Asking<lb/>
$400 O.B.O. Contact Stephanie @<lb/>
919-389-2541<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
LayoutDesign Assistance for new<lb/>
County Women's Journal. Great PT<lb/>
opportunity with growth potential.<lb/>
Must be flexible and dependable.<lb/>
252-341-8877.<lb/>
Bartenders Wanted! $250day<lb/>
potential. No experience necessary.<lb/>
Training provided. Call (800) 965-<lb/>
6520 ext. 202<lb/>
Part-time Sales position; afternoon<lb/>
hours; apply in person @ Larry's<lb/>
Carpet One, 3010 E. 10th Street,<lb/>
Greenville, NC - No Calls, please!<lb/>
Work on the Golf Course. Work<lb/>
includes mowing fairways, greens,<lb/>
and other grasses, weed eating,<lb/>
irrigation and other maintenance<lb/>
work. Must have valid drivers license.<lb/>
Flexible Hours depending on School<lb/>
Schedule between 6:30am to 3 pm.<lb/>
Some weekends required. $6.25 an<lb/>
hour plus excellent benefits for a<lb/>
golfer. Call 329-4659 for information<lb/>
or apply at the City of Greenville,<lb/>
Human Resources, City Hall, 201<lb/>
Martin L. King, Jr. Drive, Greenville<lb/>
or online at www.greenvillenc.gov<lb/>
under Employment.<lb/>
Active Handicapped Male Needs<lb/>
Personal Attendant M-F 7-1 Oam<lb/>
and Every Other Weekend. $9Hr.<lb/>
Call 756-9141.<lb/>
Greenville Recreation &amp; Parks<lb/>
Department is recruiting 14-18<lb/>
part-time youth basketball coaches<lb/>
and officials for the upcoming<lb/>
basketball program. Applicants<lb/>
must possess a good knowledge<lb/>
of basketball skills and have the<lb/>
ability and patience to work with<lb/>
youth. Applicants must be able to<lb/>
coach young people ages 5-18 in<lb/>
basketball fundamentals. Hours<lb/>
are from 4pm to 9pm, weekdays<lb/>
and some weekend coaching.<lb/>
Flexible with hours according to<lb/>
class schedules. This program will<lb/>
run from November 29 through<lb/>
the beginning of March. Salary<lb/>
rates start at $6.50 per hour. For<lb/>
more information, please contact<lb/>
the Athletic Office at 329-4550,<lb/>
Monday through Friday, 10am until<lb/>
7pm. Apply at the City of Greenville,<lb/>
Human Resources Department,<lb/>
201 Martin L. King Dr. Phone 329-<lb/>
4492.<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/>
Help wanted for sales and stock<lb/>
Heavy lifting required Apply at The<lb/>
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Arlington Village 756-2855<lb/>
Escorts For Social Club Agency.<lb/>
Safe, Friendly, Discreet Environment<lb/>
of Arts and Entertainment Now<lb/>
Hiring Females For Greenville<lb/>
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Mon Thru Fri Daytime Deli And<lb/>
Cashier Position Available. $6.00<lb/>
Per Hour Tips. Call for interview<lb/>
252-916-3712<lb/>
GREEK PERSONALS<lb/>
Congratulations to Katie and April<lb/>
for being Kappa Delta's sisters of the<lb/>
week! We love you!<lb/>
The sisters of Delta Zeta wanted to<lb/>
congratulate Kenzie Hood on her<lb/>
Homecoming Court nomination!<lb/>
Good Luck, we love you!<lb/>
Delta Zeta wants to thank Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi for throwing an awesome<lb/>
Reggae on the Lake!<lb/>
The sisters of Gamma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
would like to thank Sigma Pi for<lb/>
a great Twister social! We had an<lb/>
awesome time!<lb/>
OTHER<lb/>
Spring Break 2006. Travel with<lb/>
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Operator to Jamaica, Cancun,<lb/>
Acapulco, Bahamas, and<lb/>
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reps. Call for group discounts.<lb/>
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www.aad.org <lb/>
<pb facs="00059361_0010"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN � NEWS<lb/>
PAGE A10<lb/>
Congratulations 2005<lb/>
Homecoming Winners!<lb/>
KING<lb/>
Clifton Peele<lb/>
Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
QUEEN<lb/>
Jessica Mortenson<lb/>
ECU Ambassadors<lb/>
2005 SPIRIT CUP WINNER<lb/>
ECU Ambassadors<lb/>
jrd.<lb/>
LAWN COMPETITION<lb/>
1st - ECU Ambassadors<lb/>
2nd - Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
3rd - Delta Zeta<lb/>
SKIT COMPETITION<lb/>
Ist - Black Student Union<lb/>
2nd - NC Teaching Fellows<lb/>
Student Union &amp; ECU Cheerleaders<lb/>
BANNER COMPETITION<lb/>
1st - Baptist Student Union<lb/>
2nd - Healthy Pirates<lb/>
3rd - Epsilon Sigma Alpha<lb/>
FLOAT COMPETITION<lb/>
1st - ECU Cheerleaders<lb/>
2nd - NC Teaching Fellows<lb/>
3rd - Student Union<lb/>
Thank you to all Student Organizations for your participation in Homecoming 2005!<lb/>
Together we collected 10,700 food items that were donated to the Salvation Army. 
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