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<pb facs="00059365_0001"/>
11-8-05<lb/>
<lb/>
www.theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
tec<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Volume 81 Number 26 Wl ESDAY November 9,2005<lb/>
ECU hosts Fall Open House starting<lb/>
Saturday morning at various locations<lb/>
The Fall Open House will take place on Saturday at various locations around campus.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha does walk<lb/>
for Ronald McDonald House<lb/>
Prospective students<lb/>
may choose from a<lb/>
variety of events<lb/>
TAYLEIGH DAVIS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Kathy Bernstein, planner and<lb/>
assistant director of admissions<lb/>
at ECU, said 2,000 people have<lb/>
already signed up for Fall Open<lb/>
House, which begins Saturday,<lb/>
Nov. 12.<lb/>
Open House is for all students<lb/>
who are still deciding whether<lb/>
they will apply to ECU.<lb/>
"It's important we make ECU<lb/>
look nice and we want to show<lb/>
them everything our university<lb/>
has offer said Bernstein.<lb/>
Open House lasts from 9 a.m.<lb/>
- 2 p.m. and during that time stu-<lb/>
dents can choose from a number<lb/>
of events offered.<lb/>
Beginning at 9 a.m the<lb/>
?q opening session will include<lb/>
o a welcome from Don Joyner,<lb/>
 assistant vice chancellor for<lb/>
academic services along<lb/>
with the Mayor Don Parrot<lb/>
and Thomas Powell, director<lb/>
of admissions.<lb/>
From 9:30 a.m. to noon, the<lb/>
Academic Fair in Bate building<lb/>
will begin. Professors from every<lb/>
department at ECU will be avail-<lb/>
able on the first floor to speak<lb/>
with students and answer ques-<lb/>
tions they may have.<lb/>
On the second floor, Stu-<lb/>
dent Life will have information<lb/>
tables set up. Representatives<lb/>
will be available to speak with<lb/>
students about Campus Safety,<lb/>
Campus Living, Greek Life, Stu-<lb/>
dent Transit and Health Services<lb/>
among many other student-life<lb/>
related topics.<lb/>
Two 30-minute "special<lb/>
sessions" will be held beginning<lb/>
at 9:45 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.<lb/>
in the Science and Technology<lb/>
building.<lb/>
"The first session will cover<lb/>
the admissions process, in case<lb/>
someone hasn't applied and<lb/>
the other will cover the multi-<lb/>
cultural student panel where<lb/>
students can see what type of<lb/>
diversity ECU has on Campus<lb/>
Bernstein said.<lb/>
The sessions will also<lb/>
include information on general<lb/>
requirements for degrees and the<lb/>
Honors Program.<lb/>
Lasting from 9:45 a.m. to<lb/>
noon, Student Ambassadors and<lb/>
the Alumni Association will pro-<lb/>
vide walking tours and bus tours<lb/>
for students and parents.<lb/>
Six buses will serve as shut-<lb/>
tles in the morning getting<lb/>
people from the stadium park-<lb/>
ing lot at Minges over to Central<lb/>
Campus where Open House<lb/>
takes place. Around 9:30 in the<lb/>
morning, the buses will switch<lb/>
over to tours where they will<lb/>
show people around in main<lb/>
campus including the dorms in<lb/>
that area.<lb/>
During lunch break between<lb/>
11 a.m. and noon, students can<lb/>
go to the Financial Aid work-<lb/>
shop which will be open from<lb/>
11 a.m. to noon. They can also<lb/>
use their $5 meal card to eat at<lb/>
see SATURDAY page A2<lb/>
Vascular surgeons take<lb/>
steps in treating condition<lb/>
First-of-its-kind device proves successful<lb/>
in treating certain kinds ofaneurysms<lb/>
RACHEL KING<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The members of ECU'S PI Kappa Alpha walked to Wilmington this past weekend to raise<lb/>
money for the Ronald McDonald house of Greenville. On Friday morning, Pi Kappa Alpha<lb/>
presented a check to Phyllis Flye, on behalf of the Ronald McDonald House, for the amount<lb/>
of $15,750. This Is their fourth Annual Walk to Wilmington bringing their total to a little more<lb/>
than $50,000 In the past four years.<lb/>
After the ceremony In Wright Plaza, members of the fraternity walked down Fifth street<lb/>
together with the help of Greenville Police. After that, groups took turns walking all 120 miles<lb/>
down to Wilmington where they had another ceremony Saturday afternoon around 3 p.m.<lb/>
in Wilmington with all the brothers to end the walk.<lb/>
Biologist receives NSF grant<lb/>
As of March, when the Food and Drug Adminis-<lb/>
tration approved it, a new, minimally invasive device<lb/>
has been used to treat thoracic aortic aneurysms and<lb/>
other related thoracic aortic conditions.<lb/>
At the Brody School of Medicine, the device has<lb/>
been used twice in the last six weeks. According to<lb/>
Dr. Steven Powell, chief of vascular surgery at the<lb/>
Brody School of Medicine, doctors may soon treat<lb/>
30 or more patients a year using the device.<lb/>
Thoracic aortic aneurysms are abnormal bulges<lb/>
in the thoracic aorta, which is the main artery that<lb/>
carries blood to the body. Aneurysms can rupture<lb/>
if left untreated, causing internal bleeding that is<lb/>
potentially fatal.<lb/>
The technique, performed under general<lb/>
anesthesia, involves making a four-inch incision in<lb/>
the groin, where the femoral artery can be accessed.<lb/>
From there, surgeons can thread a reinforced tube<lb/>
containing a graft up the artery to the thoracic<lb/>
aorta, which is near the heart. The graft is then<lb/>
positioned using X-ray guidance, where it can be<lb/>
deployed inside the aneurysm. The purpose of this<lb/>
is to "reinforce the weakened aortic wall and relieve<lb/>
the pressure that could cause a rupture<lb/>
It is far more preferable than the other ways<lb/>
thoracic aortic aneurysms have been treated in the<lb/>
past. Traditionally, doctors have had to resort to<lb/>
open-chest surgery. Unfortunately, all people do not<lb/>
qualify for that. Even if a patient does qualify, the<lb/>
complication rate is "in the 30-40 percent range<lb/>
said Dr. Michael Stoner, assistant professor of sur-<lb/>
gery at the Brody School of Medicine.<lb/>
That compares to only "a 5-10 percent com-<lb/>
plication rate" with the new technique. Another<lb/>
benefit is the time it takes after the procedure to<lb/>
heal. With open-chest surgery, recovery time is<lb/>
twice as long as it is with the new technique. If all<lb/>
goes well with open-chest surgery, a patient may<lb/>
stay 10 -14 days in the hospital versus one day with<lb/>
the new procedure. Basically, there is a "dramatic<lb/>
decrease" in complications with the new procedure,<lb/>
Stoner said.<lb/>
What did patients with this condition do if they<lb/>
were not good candidates for open-chest surgery?<lb/>
Mostly, they were treated with medications and a<lb/>
"wait-and-see" approach.<lb/>
"One of the only drawbacks we know of is that<lb/>
this Is the first go-around for this device's use for<lb/>
thoracic aortic problems Stoner said.<lb/>
"It's newer. We don't know how durable it is and<lb/>
whether, 10 years from now, the patients are going<lb/>
to have proftlems or not<lb/>
For most patients, though, this new procedure<lb/>
will be the way to go.<lb/>
"The problems that may exist now may be fixed<lb/>
10 years from now because the companies produc-<lb/>
ing them will continue to improve these devices<lb/>
Stoner said.<lb/>
In addition to this new, cutting-edge procedure,<lb/>
ECU doctors are working to establish a center for<lb/>
"the treatment of patients with complex aortic<lb/>
problems under the auspices of the Eastern Carolina<lb/>
Cardiovascular Institute Stoner said.<lb/>
"It's in the planning stages<lb/>
"The cardiovascular center will break ground<lb/>
in January, and the aortic part of the treatment<lb/>
center will be a part of that<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Studies protein involved<lb/>
in photosynthesis<lb/>
JOSHUA CONNER<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Cindy Putnam-Evans, profes-<lb/>
sor of biology, received a three-<lb/>
year grant from the National<lb/>
Science Foundation, totaling<lb/>
nearly $280,000, to further study<lb/>
the role of protein CP43 during<lb/>
photosynthesis.<lb/>
Putnam-Evans said she<lb/>
applied for the grant in Janu-<lb/>
ary and received the funding<lb/>
in August. This is her fourth<lb/>
research based grant from the<lb/>
NSF.<lb/>
Putnam-Evans will study how<lb/>
CP43 reacts and splits water mol-<lb/>
ecules during photosynthesis. By<lb/>
replacing an amlno acid found in<lb/>
CP43 with a different amino acid<lb/>
and then inserting the protein<lb/>
into blue-green algae, she would<lb/>
be able to see what affects the<lb/>
changed protein has on photo-<lb/>
synthesis.<lb/>
"We've shown that this pro-<lb/>
tein is intimately involved in the<lb/>
water splitting reaction  then<lb/>
this Is still one of the important<lb/>
and unsolved questions about<lb/>
the water splitting reaction said<lb/>
Putnam-Evans.<lb/>
"And that is exactly how it<lb/>
occurs. The exact catalytic mech-<lb/>
anism is unknown at this point,<lb/>
but we're getting closer<lb/>
According to Putnam-Evans,<lb/>
CP43 plays a critical role in the<lb/>
processes of oxygen evolution<lb/>
and light harvesting.<lb/>
"That's important because<lb/>
oxygen evolution by Photosystem<lb/>
II is virtually the only source of<lb/>
oxygen on the planet and almost<lb/>
all forms of life depend upon<lb/>
that oxygen source for survival<lb/>
Putnam-Evans said.<lb/>
According to Putnam-Evans,<lb/>
understanding CP43 could have a<lb/>
profound impact on agriculture.<lb/>
"When you're talking about<lb/>
agriculture you're talking about<lb/>
crop production, right? Crop<lb/>
yield  you're increasing your<lb/>
yield if you can increase the effi-<lb/>
ciency, right, of photosynthesis,<lb/>
which is already a very efficient<lb/>
process Putnam-Evans said.<lb/>
According to Putnam-Evans,<lb/>
studying photosynthesis has<lb/>
helped agriculture in terms of<lb/>
crop improvement and the devel-<lb/>
opment of new herbicides.<lb/>
The grant, which is a renewal<lb/>
grant, provides funds for two<lb/>
graduates and two undergradu-<lb/>
ates to assist Putnam-Evans with<lb/>
her research.<lb/>
PUTNAM-EVANS<lb/>
Putnam-Evans, who came<lb/>
to ECU in 1993 from Louisiana<lb/>
State University where she was<lb/>
doing post-doctoral work, has<lb/>
researched CP43 for the past 12<lb/>
years, and said she has had NSF<lb/>
funding for that research since<lb/>
1994.<lb/>
Putnam-Evans earned her<lb/>
undergraduate degree at Gardner<lb/>
Webb University and went on to<lb/>
earn a master's degree at Clem-<lb/>
son and a doctoral degree at the<lb/>
University of Georgia.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.coni.<lb/>
France has a history of rioting and civic unrest. Reports show rioting in 226 towns in France.<lb/>
France declares state of emergency<lb/>
to impose curfews against rioting<lb/>
PARIS (AP) ? President<lb/>
Jacques Chirac declared a state<lb/>
of emergency Tuesday, paving the<lb/>
way for curfews to be imposed<lb/>
on riot-hit cities and towns in<lb/>
an extraordinary measure to<lb/>
halt France's worst civil unrest<lb/>
in decades after 12 nights of<lb/>
violence.<lb/>
Police, meanwhile, said<lb/>
overnight unrest Monday-Tues-<lb/>
day, while still widespread and<lb/>
destructive, was not as violent as<lb/>
previous nights.<lb/>
"The intensity of this violence<lb/>
is on the way down National<lb/>
Police Chief Michel Gaudin said,<lb/>
citing fewer attacks on public<lb/>
buildings and fewer direct clashes<lb/>
between youths and police. He<lb/>
said rioting was reported in 226<lb/>
towns across France, compared to<lb/>
nearly 300 the night before<lb/>
The state-of-emergency<lb/>
decree invoked under'a SO-year-<lb/>
old law allows curfews where<lb/>
needed and will become effective<lb/>
at midnight Tuesday, with an<lb/>
initial 12-day limit. Police mas-<lb/>
sively reinforced as the violence<lb/>
has fanned out from its initial<lb/>
see FRANCE page A2<lb/>
INSIDE I News:A2 I Classifieds: A9 I Opinion: A3 I What's Hot: A4 I Sports: A6 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059365_0002"/><lb/>
NEWS<lb/>
Page A2 news@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366<lb/>
CHRIS MUNIER News Editor ZACK HILL Assistant News Editor<lb/>
WEDNESDAY November 9, 2005<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Dances<lb/>
The ECU Folk and Country<lb/>
Dancers will sponsor a disco<lb/>
dance and a contra dance from<lb/>
8-11 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 12 at the<lb/>
Willis Building located downtown<lb/>
on First and Reade Streets. DJs<lb/>
will be on hand to provide music.<lb/>
Beginner lessons will begin at<lb/>
7:30. There is a potluck supper<lb/>
at 6 p.m. for the contra dance.<lb/>
Tickets for each event are $3 for<lb/>
students, $5 for FASG members,<lb/>
and $8 for the public. This is an<lb/>
alcohol and smoke free event For<lb/>
more information call 752-7350.<lb/>
Charity Fashion Show<lb/>
The Apparel and Interiors<lb/>
Merchandising Organization<lb/>
will present "Ripped, Torn and<lb/>
Fabulous a charity fashion event,<lb/>
at 9 p.m. Friday, Nov. 11 at Club<lb/>
Aqua. Tickets can be purchased<lb/>
in advance at Wright Place or for<lb/>
$5 at the door. All proceeds will<lb/>
benefit Give2theTroops.<lb/>
Asian Studies Lecture<lb/>
The 2005-2006 ECU Lecture<lb/>
in Asian Studies "Zen Hermits<lb/>
and Zen Samurai" has been<lb/>
rescheduled for Wednesday, Nov.<lb/>
9 from 4-5:30 p.m. In Science and<lb/>
Technology Building OC-307 The<lb/>
lecture is sponsored by the Harriot<lb/>
College of Arts and Sciences,<lb/>
the Interdisciplinary Program<lb/>
in Asian Studies, the History<lb/>
Department, Phi Kappa Phi, the<lb/>
Honor's Program and the Office<lb/>
of International Affairs and will<lb/>
feature Steven Heine, Professor<lb/>
of Religion at Florida International<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Gospel Choir<lb/>
The ECU gospel choir will perform<lb/>
at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 15 In<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. Tickets are<lb/>
$3 with a student ID and $5 for<lb/>
general admission. For more<lb/>
information, call Tarrrick Cox at<lb/>
328-1518.<lb/>
Jhe Importance of<lb/>
Being tamest<lb/>
Oscar Wilde's play The Importance<lb/>
ol Being Earnest will begin<lb/>
performances on Thursday, Nov.<lb/>
17 and will run through Tuesday,<lb/>
Nov. 22. Performances will be<lb/>
held in McGinnis Theatre. Tickets<lb/>
are $12 for the general public,<lb/>
$10 for senior citizens and ECU<lb/>
faculty and staff, and $8 for ECU<lb/>
students. For more information,<lb/>
call 318-6829 or 1-800-ECU-<lb/>
ARTS.<lb/>
Chamber Choir<lb/>
The ECU Chamber Singers will<lb/>
perform Durufle's Requiem at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 13 at St<lb/>
Paul's Episcopal Church. The<lb/>
event Is free to the public. For<lb/>
more information, visit music.<lb/>
ecu.edumuslc calendar or<lb/>
call 328-4270.<lb/>
Professor Honored<lb/>
Dozens of people will read from<lb/>
multicultural works in honor of<lb/>
the life and career of ECU English<lb/>
professor Gay Wilentz from 4-6<lb/>
p.m. Monday, Nov. 14 in C209 of<lb/>
the Science and Technology<lb/>
Building. For more information,<lb/>
contact Michael Bassman at<lb/>
328-6373.<lb/>
Brewster Lecture<lb/>
The ECU Brewster Lecture "A Tale<lb/>
of Three Cities: How the U.S. won<lb/>
WWII" will be presented at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 16 in Science<lb/>
and Technology Building room<lb/>
OC-307. ECU'S history department<lb/>
and the Harriot College of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences will host the 24th annual<lb/>
Lawrence F. Brewster Lecture<lb/>
In History. David Kennedy, the<lb/>
Donald J. McLachlan Professor<lb/>
of History at Stanford University,<lb/>
will offer the guest lecture.<lb/>
Fall Open House<lb/>
ECU will host its annual fall open<lb/>
house Saturday, Nov. 12. The<lb/>
event is an opportunity for those<lb/>
interested In attending ECU to<lb/>
learn more about the university.<lb/>
Campus tours are provided along<lb/>
with an Academic and Student<lb/>
Life Fair. Call 328-6640 or 328-<lb/>
4965 for more information.<lb/>
Japan League<lb/>
Meetings are on Thursdays from<lb/>
5 - 9 p.m. In Bate 1010. Japan<lb/>
League is a Japanese film club<lb/>
that shows movies of all kinds<lb/>
as well as television shows and<lb/>
animation. They can be visited<lb/>
online at jl.pgtternblue.net.<lb/>
Local<lb/>
UNC-Wllmlngton sends notices<lb/>
about news segment about<lb/>
murders<lb/>
WILMINGTON, NC (AP) - Officials<lb/>
at the University of North Carolina-<lb/>
Wilmington have sent letters and<lb/>
e-mails to students, parents, faculty,<lb/>
staff and alumni about a nationally<lb/>
televised news segment about the<lb/>
murders of two students last year.<lb/>
University spokeswoman Mimi<lb/>
Cunningham said the university<lb/>
did not want the community to<lb/>
be surprised by the show. School<lb/>
officials also wanted to make sure<lb/>
the community knew about the<lb/>
new programs and safety measure,<lb/>
Cunningham said.<lb/>
"We have cooperated with the<lb/>
producer in providing information,<lb/>
but, of course, we have no control<lb/>
over how the information will be<lb/>
presented Chancellor Rosemary<lb/>
DePaolo wrote in the letter. "I am<lb/>
writing to make you aware of how<lb/>
UNCW has responded to these<lb/>
untimely deaths and to help you<lb/>
respond should the program raise<lb/>
questions for your friends or family<lb/>
Christen Marie Naujoks, 22, and<lb/>
Jessica Lee Faulkner, 19, were both<lb/>
killed in 2004.<lb/>
Faulkner was killed in her dorm May<lb/>
5. Fellow student Curtis Dixon was<lb/>
charged with kidnapping, raping and<lb/>
murdering her. He committed suicide<lb/>
in December while In custody.<lb/>
Naujoks was shot to death June 4,<lb/>
allegedly by former boyfriend, John<lb/>
Brian Peck. Peck, a former UNCW<lb/>
student killed himself three days later<lb/>
as he fled from police.<lb/>
The news segment on the murders<lb/>
is scheduled to air at 10 p.m. Nov. 17<lb/>
on ABC News Primetime. The date is<lb/>
subject to change.<lb/>
Letters went to the families of 11,600<lb/>
students, Cunningham said. E-mail<lb/>
messages were sent to all students<lb/>
and to more than 13,000 people on<lb/>
an alumni list, 1,900 university and<lb/>
faculty staff, and 300 members of<lb/>
the university's leadership boards,<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
National<lb/>
Five terror suspects charged as<lb/>
Supreme Court sets up spring<lb/>
showdown over military trials<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Five suspected<lb/>
al-Qalda terrorists, Including one<lb/>
accused of killing a US. Special Forces<lb/>
medic, are the latest Guantanamo<lb/>
Bay detainees headed for the kind of<lb/>
military trials that now face a Supreme<lb/>
Court review. ,<lb/>
The high court agreed Monday to<lb/>
consider a constitutional challenge<lb/>
to military trials for foreign terror<lb/>
suspects. The justices will decide<lb/>
whether President Bush overstepped<lb/>
his authority with plans for a military<lb/>
trial for Osama bin Laden's former<lb/>
driver, who is also being held at<lb/>
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.<lb/>
His trial and those of three other terror<lb/>
suspects who were charged more<lb/>
than a year ago would be the first<lb/>
such tribunals since World War II. The<lb/>
five newly charged suspects, who<lb/>
have been held in the U.S. detention<lb/>
center in Cuba since 2002, will also<lb/>
have a stake in the Supreme Court<lb/>
hearing.<lb/>
Meanwhile, key members of Congress<lb/>
are pushing for a ban on torture<lb/>
and other inhumane treatment of<lb/>
prisoners in U.S. custody. The White<lb/>
House has threatened to veto the<lb/>
defense-spending bill If the ban Is<lb/>
included.<lb/>
"America's image throughout the<lb/>
world Is very bad said Sen. John<lb/>
McCain, R-Ariz a former prisoner<lb/>
of war in Vietnam. "Mistreatment of<lb/>
prisoners is one of the factors that<lb/>
has caused us to suffer so much in<lb/>
the eyes of the world Besides being<lb/>
cruel and inhumane, McCain said<lb/>
Tuesday on CBS' The Early Show<lb/>
"torture doesn't work<lb/>
The five suspects charged Monday<lb/>
embody the military's most daunting<lb/>
challenge: the use of homemade<lb/>
roadside bombs or improvised<lb/>
Saturday from page <lb/>
the dining halls.<lb/>
"We encourage people to eat<lb/>
at Todd or West End dinning<lb/>
halls or try the other food on<lb/>
campus Bernstein said.<lb/>
From noon to 1:30 p.m ECU<lb/>
will also provide a tour of all 14<lb/>
resident halls on campus.<lb/>
In the spring, ECU will host<lb/>
an Open House for accepted<lb/>
students who are will be making<lb/>
their decision whether or not to<lb/>
attend ECU.<lb/>
Bernstein gives a big thanks<lb/>
to the Army ROTC and the Air<lb/>
Force ROTC who will work with<lb/>
Parking and Transportation to<lb/>
help facilitate parking. They will<lb/>
have 10 cadets in the morning to<lb/>
help with parking at Minges and<lb/>
around campus.<lb/>
"They are a really big help to<lb/>
us Bernstein said.<lb/>
This writer may be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
All eyes on GOP to see how<lb/>
Bush woes affect outcome of<lb/>
gubernatorial, mayoral races<lb/>
(AP) ? U.S. Sen. Jon Corzine<lb/>
acknowledged a little nervous-<lb/>
ness as he voted Tuesday in his<lb/>
race for governor of New Jersey,<lb/>
one of several contests being<lb/>
closely monitored for evidence<lb/>
of how the GOP's recent struggles<lb/>
are influencing voters.<lb/>
Tuesday's voting in New<lb/>
Jersey concluded a campaign that<lb/>
featured more personal attacks<lb/>
than actual talk about the issues.<lb/>
The races there and in Virginia<lb/>
together the biggest contests<lb/>
in this off-year election season<lb/>
broke spending records in both<lb/>
states, got progressively nasty and<lb/>
yet remained close.<lb/>
Corzine, facing Republican<lb/>
businessman Doug Forrester,<lb/>
voted shortly after the polls<lb/>
opened at a fire station in Hobo-<lb/>
ken. Coming out of the voting<lb/>
booth, he told reporters he was<lb/>
"a little nervous, a little worried<lb/>
but confident<lb/>
A few hours later, Forrester<lb/>
voted at a senior center, giving a<lb/>
thumbs-up and expressing only<lb/>
optimism about his chances.<lb/>
In Virginia, Democratic<lb/>
gubernatorial candidate Tim<lb/>
Kalne chatted with neighbors<lb/>
in his Richmond neighborhood<lb/>
before going to the polls with his<lb/>
wife, Anne Holton.<lb/>
Kaine's Republican chal-<lb/>
lenger, Jerry Kilgore, got a boost<lb/>
Monday from President Bush,<lb/>
who made a last-minute dash into<lb/>
Virginia to urge die-hard conser-<lb/>
vatives to help turn out voters for<lb/>
the former attorney general.<lb/>
"The thing 1 like about this<lb/>
fellow is he grew up on a farm<lb/>
Bush said in a brief stop on his<lb/>
return from a South American<lb/>
trade mission. "He doesn't have<lb/>
a lot of fancy airs<lb/>
At a campaign event ior Kaine,<lb/>
Democratic Gov. Mark R. Warner<lb/>
welcomed the arrival of Bush,<lb/>
who even in reliably Republican<lb/>
Virginia suffers job-approval rat-<lb/>
ings of around 40 percent.<lb/>
"If they want to compare how<lb/>
things are going in Washington<lb/>
versus how things are going in<lb/>
Virginia, I'll take that comparison<lb/>
every day of the week Warner said.<lb/>
In other contests Tuesday,<lb/>
the cities of New York, Detroit,<lb/>
Houston, Boston, San Diego<lb/>
and Atlanta had mayoral races.<lb/>
Seven states considered ballot<lb/>
issues, including four proposals<lb/>
backed by California Gov. Arnold<lb/>
Schwarzenegger that were trail-<lb/>
ing in the polls.<lb/>
Schwarzenegger's initiatives<lb/>
would cap state spending and<lb/>
give him more power to cut<lb/>
budgets, rein in public employee<lb/>
unions, and take away legislators'<lb/>
power to redistrict.<lb/>
"I'm never going to give up<lb/>
because I have the people power<lb/>
Schwarzenegger told supporters at<lb/>
a retirement community in subur-<lb/>
ban Sacramento. But in a widely<lb/>
played radio ad, Schwarzenegger<lb/>
nemesis Warren Beatty tells voters:<lb/>
"Don't give him more power<lb/>
In New York City, Republican<lb/>
Mayor Michael Bloomberg held<lb/>
onto a clear lead against Demo-<lb/>
cratic underdog Fernando Ferrer,<lb/>
who campaigned with the Rev. Al<lb/>
Sharpton and Sen. Barack Obama<lb/>
of Illinois.<lb/>
Ferrer, the former Bronx bor-<lb/>
ough president, had spent only<lb/>
about an eighth of the more than<lb/>
$66 million that the billionaire<lb/>
mayor has tunneled toward win-<lb/>
ning a second term.<lb/>
In Boston, Mayor Thomas M.<lb/>
Menino hopes to set a record for<lb/>
the longest serving mayor in city<lb/>
history, while challenger Maura<lb/>
Hennigan wants to become Bos-<lb/>
ton's first elected female mayor.<lb/>
Detroit Mayor Kwame Kil-<lb/>
patrick was seeking another<lb/>
term while fending off allega-<lb/>
tions of misspending. Kilpatrick<lb/>
blames the fiscal problems on<lb/>
his predecessor, Dennis Archer,<lb/>
for whom challenger Freman<lb/>
Hendrix worked.<lb/>
Allegations of ballot impropri-<lb/>
eties also have surfaced. A judge<lb/>
ordered Detroit election officials to<lb/>
oversee absentee voting after find-<lb/>
ing problems with the way the city<lb/>
clerk organized the effort.<lb/>
Texas voters were asked to<lb/>
decide whether a state constitu-<lb/>
tional ban should be placed on<lb/>
same-sex marriage. And in Maine,<lb/>
a referendum seeks to repeal the<lb/>
state's anti-discrimination law.<lb/>
explosive devices that are the No. 1<lb/>
killer of troops In Iraq.<lb/>
Toronto-born Omar Khadr was<lb/>
charged with murder, attempted<lb/>
murder, aiding the enemy and<lb/>
conspiracy, for allegedly tossing a<lb/>
grenade that killed a U.S. Special<lb/>
Forces medic while fighting with the<lb/>
Taliban in Afghanistan, planting mines<lb/>
to target US. convoys, and gathering<lb/>
surveillance.<lb/>
The other four Ghassan Abdullah<lb/>
al Sharbi and Jabran Said bin al<lb/>
Qahtani of Saudi Arabia; Sufylan<lb/>
Barhouml of Algeria; and Blnyam<lb/>
Ahmed Muhammad of Ethiopia were<lb/>
charged with conspiracy.<lb/>
Barhouml allegedly was an al-Qalda<lb/>
explosives trainer who taught al<lb/>
Qahtani and al Sharbi how to build<lb/>
remote-detonation explosive devices.<lb/>
And al Qahtani allegedly wrote<lb/>
two Instruction manuals on how to<lb/>
build timing devices for roadside<lb/>
bombs. Muhammad was allegedly<lb/>
trained to build dirty bombs and<lb/>
was planning terror attacks against<lb/>
high-rise apartment buildings in the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
Their prospects for a full trial are<lb/>
now In the hands of the Supreme<lb/>
Court a troubling development for<lb/>
the White House, which has been<lb/>
battered by criticism of its treatment<lb/>
of detainees and was rebuked by the<lb/>
high court last year for holding enemy<lb/>
combatants in legal limbo.<lb/>
The court's announcement came<lb/>
shortly after Bush, asked about<lb/>
reports of secret U.S. prisons In<lb/>
Eastern Europe for terrorism suspects,<lb/>
declared anew that his administration<lb/>
does not torture anyone.<lb/>
"Anything we do to that end in this<lb/>
effort, any activity we conduct, Is<lb/>
within the law. We do not torture<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Chief Justice John Roberts took<lb/>
himself out of the case because, as<lb/>
a judge on the court that considered<lb/>
the appeal, he supported the<lb/>
government's position.<lb/>
The case the court will decide Involves<lb/>
Salim Ahmed Hamdan, who was<lb/>
captured in Afghanistan in November<lb/>
2001. He denies conspiring to engage<lb/>
in acts of terrorism and denies he was<lb/>
a member of al-Qaida. He has been<lb/>
charged with conspiracy to commit<lb/>
war crimes, murder and terrorism.<lb/>
There are about 500 detainees being<lb/>
held at Guantanamo.<lb/>
World<lb/>
Defense attorney In Saddam<lb/>
Hussein's trial killed and another<lb/>
lawyer wounded In drive-by<lb/>
shooting<lb/>
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Three gunmen<lb/>
in a speeding car killed a lawyer for<lb/>
a co-defendant in Saddam Hussein's<lb/>
trial and wounded another attorney<lb/>
Tuesday in Baghdad, a member of the<lb/>
defense team and police said.<lb/>
Adel al-Zubeldl, who was representing<lb/>
former Iraqi Vice President Taha<lb/>
Yassln Ramadan, was shot to death<lb/>
and attorney Thamir al-Khuzale was<lb/>
wounded in the ambush In the Adil<lb/>
neighborhood, according to lawyer<lb/>
Khamees Hamld al-Ubaidi.<lb/>
Al-Zubeldl was the second defense<lb/>
attorney to be killed In less than a<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Saddam's main lawyer, Khalll al-<lb/>
Dulalml, blamed the government for<lb/>
Tuesday's attack, telling Al-Jazeera<lb/>
television that the shooting was<lb/>
carried by "an armed group using<lb/>
government vehicles<lb/>
He called for moving Saddam and his<lb/>
colleagues into a neutral country. Al-<lb/>
Dulaiml said defense lawyers do not<lb/>
recognize the trial's next date, which<lb/>
comes on Nov. 28.<lb/>
A police general said the attack<lb/>
occurred when three gunmen In a<lb/>
speeding car pulled alongside the<lb/>
lawyers' vehicle and opened fire.<lb/>
The general spoke on condition of<lb/>
anonymity because the sensitive<lb/>
case was In the early stages of<lb/>
investigation.<lb/>
Al-Zubeldl also represented Abdullah<lb/>
Kazim Ruwayyid, a former Baath<lb/>
party official.<lb/>
Saddam and seven others have<lb/>
been charged with the 1982 killings<lb/>
of Shilte villagers in Dujall, a town<lb/>
north of Baghdad, following an<lb/>
assassination attempt. The trial<lb/>
opened Oct. 19 and was suspended<lb/>
until Nov. 28 to allow the defense time<lb/>
to prepare its case.<lb/>
On Oct. 20, Saadoun al-Janabl,<lb/>
was abducted from his office by<lb/>
10 masked gunmen, a day after he<lb/>
attended the first session of the trial,<lb/>
acting as the lawyer for co-defendant<lb/>
Awad al-Bandar.<lb/>
Al-Janabl's body, with two bullet shots<lb/>
to the head, was found hours later on<lb/>
a sidewalk near Fardous Mosque in<lb/>
the eastern neighborhood of Ur in<lb/>
Baghdad, near the site of his office.<lb/>
The assassination of a second lawyer<lb/>
associated with the trial was likely to<lb/>
raise new questions about whether<lb/>
this country can conduct such a<lb/>
sensitive prosecution in the midst of<lb/>
insurgency and domestic turmoil.<lb/>
Following al-Janabi's death, members<lb/>
of the defense team said they had<lb/>
suspended further dealings with<lb/>
the special court until their safety Is<lb/>
guaranteed. Al-Ubaidi said that the<lb/>
entire defense team had rejected<lb/>
an offer of guards from the Interior<lb/>
Ministry, pointing to frequent Sunni<lb/>
Arab accusations that ministry<lb/>
forces or Shilte militias linked to the<lb/>
government have killed members of<lb/>
the minority that was dominant under<lb/>
Saddam.<lb/>
He said then that they were talking<lb/>
with U.S. officials about getting<lb/>
protection from American troops. But<lb/>
a later defense team statement said<lb/>
that It would seek United Nations<lb/>
protection for the Iraqi lawyers<lb/>
because they do not trust either the<lb/>
U.S. military or the Iraqi government<lb/>
to ensure their safety.<lb/>
Saddam's defense team, which<lb/>
includes some 1,500 lawyers who<lb/>
act as advisers, is led by Khalid al-<lb/>
Dulaimi and Abdel Haq Aiani, an Iraqi-<lb/>
bom lawyer based in Britain. Aiani is<lb/>
the top legal consultant to Saddam's<lb/>
daughter, Raghad, and believed to be<lb/>
backbone of defense team.<lb/>
FranCB from page A1<lb/>
flash point in the northeastern<lb/>
suburbs of Paris were expected<lb/>
to enforce the curfews. The army<lb/>
has not been called in.<lb/>
Nationwide, vandals burned<lb/>
1,173 cars, compared to 1,408 vehi-<lb/>
cles Sunday-Monday, police said. A<lb/>
total of 330 people were arrested,<lb/>
down from 395 the night before<lb/>
Local officials "will be able<lb/>
to Impose curfews on the areas<lb/>
where this decision applies<lb/>
Chirac said at a Cabinet meeting.<lb/>
"It is necessary to accelerate the<lb/>
return to calm<lb/>
The recourse to a 19S5.state-<lb/>
of-emergency law that dates back<lb/>
to France's war in Algeria was<lb/>
a measure both of the gravity<lb/>
of mayhem that has spread to<lb/>
hundreds of French towns and<lb/>
cities and of the determination<lb/>
of Chirac's sorely tested govern-<lb/>
ment to quash it.<lb/>
Prime Minister Dominique<lb/>
de Villepin said curfew viola-<lb/>
tors could be sentenced to up to<lb/>
two months imprisonment,<lb/>
adding that restoring order "will<lb/>
take time<lb/>
"We are facing determined<lb/>
individuals, structured gangs<lb/>
Villepin told parliament on Tues-<lb/>
day. He vowed that France will<lb/>
"guarantee public order to all of<lb/>
our citizens<lb/>
Nationwide, vandals over-<lb/>
night burned 1,173 cars, com-<lb/>
pared to 1,408 vehicles Sunday<lb/>
to Monday, police said. A total of<lb/>
330 people were arrested, down<lb/>
from 395 the night before.<lb/>
The violence erupted on Oct.<lb/>
27 as a localized riot in a north-<lb/>
east Paris suburb angry over the<lb/>
accidental deaths of two teenag-<lb/>
ers, of Mauritanian and Tunisian<lb/>
descent, who were electrocuted<lb/>
while hiding from police in a<lb/>
power substation.<lb/>
It has grown into a nationwide<lb/>
insurrection by disillusioned sub-<lb/>
urban youths, many French-born<lb/>
children of immigrants from<lb/>
Kiwi Lli L'l IIB ? JJ<lb/>
19B? J<lb/>
Minister of Interior, Nicolas Sarkozy, addresses the riot problem.<lb/>
France's former territories like<lb/>
Algeria. France's suburbs have<lb/>
long been neglected and their<lb/>
youth complain of a lack of jobs<lb/>
and widespread discrimination,<lb/>
some of it racial.<lb/>
The violence claimed its first<lb/>
victim Monday, with the death<lb/>
of a 61-year-old man beaten<lb/>
into a coma last week. Foreign<lb/>
governments have warned tour-<lb/>
ists to be careful in France.<lb/>
Apparent copycat attacks have<lb/>
spread to Belgium and Germany,<lb/>
where cars were burned. France is<lb/>
using fast-track trials to punish<lb/>
rioters, worrying some human<lb/>
rights campaigners.<lb/>
The resort to curfews drew<lb/>
immediate criticism from Chi-<lb/>
rac's political opponents. Former<lb/>
Socialist Prime Minister Laurent<lb/>
Fabius said the emergency mea-<lb/>
sures must be "controlled very,<lb/>
very closely<lb/>
Communist Party leader<lb/>
Marie-George Buffet said the<lb/>
decree could inflame rioters. "It<lb/>
could be taken anew as a sort<lb/>
of challenge to carry out more<lb/>
violence she said.<lb/>
Rioters in the southern city<lb/>
of Toulouse ordered passengers<lb/>
off a bus, then set it on fire<lb/>
and pelted police with gaso-<lb/>
line bombs and rocks. Youths<lb/>
also torched another bus in the<lb/>
northeastern Paris suburb of<lb/>
Stains, national police spokes-<lb/>
man Patrick Hamon said.<lb/>
Outside Paris in Sevran, a<lb/>
junior high school was set ablaze,<lb/>
while in the suburb of Vltry-<lb/>
sur-Seine youths threw gasoline<lb/>
bombs at a hospital, Hamon said.<lb/>
Nobody was injured.<lb/>
Rioters also attacked a police<lb/>
station with gasoline bombs in<lb/>
Chenove, in Burgundy's Cote<lb/>
D'Or, Hamon said. A nursery<lb/>
school in Lille-Fives, in northern<lb/>
France, was set on fire, regional<lb/>
officials said.<lb/>
In terms of material destruc-<lb/>
tion, the unrest is France's worst<lb/>
since World War II. Never has<lb/>
rioting struck so many French<lb/>
cities simultaneously, said secu-<lb/>
rity expert Sebastian Roche, a<lb/>
director of research at the state-<lb/>
funded National Center for Sci-<lb/>
entific Research.<lb/>
North Korea promises 'sincere efforts' in new<lb/>
round of nuclear talks, fifth conference since '03<lb/>
BEIJING (AP) ? North Korea's<lb/>
envoy promised to make "sincere<lb/>
efforts" as diplomats prepared to<lb/>
resume six-nation talks Wednes-<lb/>
day aimed at stripping Pyongyang<lb/>
of its nuclear weapons program,<lb/>
although analysts warned against<lb/>
expecting a breakthrough.<lb/>
China says the talks in Beijing,<lb/>
the fifth since 2003, will last three<lb/>
days before a recess to let the<lb/>
diplomats attend an Asia-Pacific<lb/>
economic forum in South Korea.<lb/>
Participants in the nuclear talks<lb/>
are the two Koreas, China, the<lb/>
United States, Japan and Russia.<lb/>
Both the United States and<lb/>
North Korea, meanwhile, kept up<lb/>
their tough talk Tuesday.<lb/>
Pyongyang condemned Presi-<lb/>
dent Bush for calling Its leader<lb/>
a "tyrant" on Sunday, saying it<lb/>
raised doubts about the pros-<lb/>
pect of the talks, while the new<lb/>
U.S. ambassador to South Korea<lb/>
accused the communist country<lb/>
of human rights abuses.<lb/>
The last round of talks ended<lb/>
in September with North Korea<lb/>
promising to disarm in exchange<lb/>
for aid and a security guarantee.<lb/>
But negotiators haven't taken up<lb/>
the most difficult Issues: how<lb/>
the North will disarm, and how<lb/>
to verify it.<lb/>
North Korea has raised doubts<lb/>
about its intentions by demand-<lb/>
ing it be given a civilian nuclear<lb/>
reactor before it disarms a demand<lb/>
the United States has rejected.<lb/>
Pyongyang appears to be<lb/>
dragging its feet, said Peter Beck,<lb/>
the Seoul-based director of the<lb/>
North East Asia Project for the<lb/>
I<lb/>
International Crisis Group, an<lb/>
independent think tank.<lb/>
"I don't think they're serious<lb/>
about progress yet he said. In<lb/>
the meantime, he said, "Wash-<lb/>
ington has no choice but to go<lb/>
along with this charade<lb/>
Even host China tried to<lb/>
moderate expectations, saying<lb/>
this week's meeting could be<lb/>
considered a success even if it<lb/>
produces no written agreement.<lb/>
"I do not think that progress<lb/>
of the talks needs to be measured<lb/>
by the signing of a document<lb/>
Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu<lb/>
Jianchao said Tuesday.<lb/>
A joint statement at the end<lb/>
of September's talks sidestepped<lb/>
the North's demand for a nuclear<lb/>
reactor, saying it would be dis-<lb/>
cussed "at an appropriate time<lb/>
k<lb/>
Tony Zo<lb/>
Sports Ed<lb/>
Nina Co<lb/>
Head Cop<lb/>
Herb Sri<lb/>
Photo Edit<lb/>
Alexanci<lb/>
Web Edito<lb/>
Newsroc<lb/>
Fax<lb/>
Advertisi<lb/>
Serving EC<lb/>
every Tues(<lb/>
regular ac<lb/>
during the<lb/>
the editoria<lb/>
members<lb/>
are limited<lb/>
decency o<lb/>
reject lette<lb/>
Include a tr<lb/>
e-mail to ec<lb/>
Carolinian,<lb/>
4353. Call<lb/>
copy of TE 1<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059365_0003"/><lb/>
(j<lb/>
LLo hi<lb/>
Page A3<lb/>
edltor@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.9238<lb/>
JENNIFER L HOBBS Editor In Chief<lb/>
November 9,2005<lb/>
My Random Column<lb/>
Why, oh why, do we<lb/>
do these things?<lb/>
I never thought I would laugh AT people so<lb/>
much in my life, and then I came to college.<lb/>
Where else in the world do two people stand<lb/>
in a turning lane to catch up with each other?<lb/>
Two people stand, oblivious to the cars<lb/>
speeding by, just chatting away. It made me<lb/>
laugh when I drove by as the other cars are<lb/>
avoiding them and they stood there. Where<lb/>
else can you get away with that?<lb/>
People without Scantrons on test days in<lb/>
upper level classes I mean really people<lb/>
- you have made it two, three or four years<lb/>
at this establishment with the same kind of<lb/>
classes and the same kind of tests. For years jPod iNsanity<lb/>
now you have done the routine and you walk<lb/>
in on test day and are completely baffled<lb/>
when you have a test.<lb/>
Pirate Rant<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
15,000 songs! Are we that crazy for music?<lb/>
Internet sites like Facebook or MySpace<lb/>
waste hours and hours and days and days<lb/>
of our lives. Who would have thought a little<lb/>
idea like that would turn into such a time<lb/>
consuming pastime? I don't have enough<lb/>
time to waste on those sites, but I do anyway.<lb/>
It doesn't make sense to me.<lb/>
I received a Pirate Rant about coming to col-<lb/>
lege because of "underwear parties" and my<lb/>
problem with that is, if you came to college<lb/>
to waste four years of your life on partying,<lb/>
you could have just skipped the school part.<lb/>
Living at home with your parents saves on<lb/>
rent and keeps a roof over your head. I am<lb/>
here to learn, why are you here?<lb/>
The last thing that.makes me laugh is when<lb/>
people have a fake ID and they get caught and<lb/>
turned down for buying a drink or getting into a<lb/>
club. I am not yet 21 and I know I am not I am<lb/>
used to the fact that I can't drink in a club or restau-<lb/>
rant soon enough it will be OK But using a fake<lb/>
ID and then getting upset when you can't use it<lb/>
please, you arent old enough already, dont make<lb/>
it seem like you are a toddler whose mommy told<lb/>
them they couldnt play with a toy.<lb/>
Until next week ? Jennifer Hobbs<lb/>
BENJAMIN CORMACK<lb/>
CAUSAL OBSERVER<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<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Tony Zoppo<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Nina Coefleld<lb/>
Head Copy Editor<lb/>
Herb Sneed<lb/>
Photo Editor<lb/>
Alexander Marciniak<lb/>
Web Editor<lb/>
Kristin Murnane<lb/>
Asst. Features Editor<lb/>
Brandon Hughes<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
April Barnes<lb/>
Asst. Copy Editor<lb/>
Rachael Loner<lb/>
Asst Photo Editor<lb/>
Dustln Jones<lb/>
Asst Web Editor<lb/>
Edward McKIm<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Newsroom252.328.9238<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 editorWtheeastcarolinlan.com or to 777? East<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/>
I did a story for my Basic<lb/>
Reporting class recently on the<lb/>
Macintosh iPod, the popular mp3<lb/>
player and data storage device.<lb/>
While doing my research I came<lb/>
up with some surprising figures<lb/>
when It came to the iPod's well<lb/>
known storage capacity.<lb/>
According to the Apple Com-<lb/>
puter, Inc. Web site, with a hard<lb/>
drive of 60 gigabytes the iPod can<lb/>
potentially hold 15,000 songs,<lb/>
25,000 photos, or 150 hours of<lb/>
video. Now the 60 GB iPod is<lb/>
the largest model that Apple<lb/>
makes, with smaller models<lb/>
available. While 1 don't own an<lb/>
iPod or plan to anytime soon,<lb/>
the sheer size of this thing got<lb/>
me thinking. Exactly how much<lb/>
space or information is this thing<lb/>
capable of holding? So I did some<lb/>
number crunching to try and<lb/>
grasp this in some kind of visual<lb/>
concept. Forgive me if these fig-<lb/>
ures aren't exact to the very last<lb/>
decimal. I'm an English major<lb/>
darn it, not a math major.<lb/>
If the average CD holds 12<lb/>
songs, then one 60 GB iPod can hold<lb/>
1,250 CDs worth of songs, which in<lb/>
their cases would stand nearly 42<lb/>
feet in height. That's taller than six<lb/>
Shaquille O'Neals standing on each<lb/>
others' shoulders.<lb/>
If each song stored on a<lb/>
60 GB iPod was three minutes<lb/>
long, that would equal 45,000<lb/>
minutes, nearly 750 hours, or<lb/>
31.25 days, which is a little bit<lb/>
more than an actual month's<lb/>
worth of music. If you listened<lb/>
to music for eight hours a day, it<lb/>
would take you nearly 94 days or<lb/>
almost three months to listen to<lb/>
all that music.<lb/>
Now in terms of the iPod's<lb/>
video capabilities, 150 hours<lb/>
of video is equal to 6.25 days.<lb/>
Watching all of these video files<lb/>
for eight hours a day would take<lb/>
you almost 19 days.<lb/>
Phew! I haven't done math<lb/>
like that in a while. Now as far<lb/>
as the other iPod models go<lb/>
you'd better do the math on your<lb/>
own my head hurts<lb/>
After doing all of this math, I've<lb/>
come to a conclusion of sorts:<lb/>
When it comes to music, we<lb/>
are gradually growing more and<lb/>
more insane.<lb/>
I can not think of any reason<lb/>
whatsoever for someone need-<lb/>
ing to be able to listen to 15,000<lb/>
songs. Who needs to listen to that<lb/>
much music? The only people I<lb/>
could think of are people with<lb/>
levels of attention deficit disor-<lb/>
der the likes of which science<lb/>
has never seen, people who love<lb/>
music to a degree that I obviously<lb/>
can't begin to fathom or someone<lb/>
so busy and on the go that they<lb/>
barely have time for organizing<lb/>
their music preferences.<lb/>
I like music as much the next<lb/>
guy, but I barely listen to the<lb/>
music 1 have on my mp3 player,<lb/>
which is 512 megabytes. I got<lb/>
it for Christmas, and it's even<lb/>
bigger than I originally wanted.<lb/>
I'll admit that it gets a little frus-<lb/>
trating to load and unload music<lb/>
on it, where as with an iPod it<lb/>
might be easier. I just refuse<lb/>
to have to search through that<lb/>
much music.<lb/>
The iPod also looks kind of<lb/>
weird, like somebody crossed a<lb/>
palm-pilot with a portable CD<lb/>
player. Some of them are so thin,<lb/>
too. I feel like I'm going to break<lb/>
them just by looking at them.<lb/>
Then again, based on their<lb/>
obvious popularity I guess I don't<lb/>
really know all that much. I'll<lb/>
admit the idea of having that<lb/>
much music at my disposal is a<lb/>
great concept. Not to mention<lb/>
that with all of the accessories<lb/>
you can buy for it, it can become<lb/>
a home entertainment center.<lb/>
Then again, I'm the kind of<lb/>
guy who wants something to<lb/>
do just what he wants it to do.<lb/>
When my mom and I got new<lb/>
cell phones, all we really wanted<lb/>
was one that we could use as a<lb/>
phone. We ended-up with a cell<lb/>
phone that had a camera, text<lb/>
messaging, downloadable ring<lb/>
tones and more features that I<lb/>
still haven't quite figured out yet.<lb/>
All I really wanted was a phone.<lb/>
The guy at the store told us that<lb/>
these features have just become<lb/>
the standard now.<lb/>
Technology is great, I love it.<lb/>
1 just wonder if as a society we<lb/>
are asking technology for more<lb/>
quantity and less quality. Like<lb/>
in the case of cell phones, more<lb/>
and more technology gets packed<lb/>
into them with each model that<lb/>
seems to come out every few<lb/>
months or so. A camera is nice,<lb/>
but I fail to see a great deal of<lb/>
practical use for it. Then again,<lb/>
I still haven't quite figured out<lb/>
how to get the pictures I take off<lb/>
of it. But of course there's one<lb/>
factor I'm forgetting: fun. The<lb/>
greatest thing about technol-<lb/>
ogy, other than improving our<lb/>
lives and making tasks easier, is<lb/>
generating and creating new fun<lb/>
activities and thus even more<lb/>
precious memories. I guess what<lb/>
I'm saying is that I like improving<lb/>
technology -1 just wish it would<lb/>
slow down so I could appreciate<lb/>
it more.<lb/>
Finally, I'd just like to share<lb/>
a piece of information on a<lb/>
technology that is almost as good<lb/>
as the iPod. It even comes with<lb/>
free service. Instead of buying<lb/>
the unit, paying fees, and down-<lb/>
loading songs, you just buy the<lb/>
initial unit, flip a switch, and<lb/>
music is instantaneous. Sure<lb/>
you don't always hear the exact<lb/>
song you want, but variety and<lb/>
the latest songs are available to<lb/>
you for free. The great thing is<lb/>
you can find them in your car,<lb/>
on stereos, in some mp3 players<lb/>
and even on the Internet. It's<lb/>
called radio.<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
(KRT) ? I take you back<lb/>
now to the news headlines one<lb/>
year ago.<lb/>
"Emboldened by a solid elec-<lb/>
tion victory, President Bush<lb/>
heads into his second term with<lb/>
an ambitious agenda to change<lb/>
America and the world<lb/>
Whoops.<lb/>
A year ago, on the heels of<lb/>
a popular-vote majority and<lb/>
Republican gains in the Senate<lb/>
and House, a tired but elated<lb/>
George W. Bush happily accepted<lb/>
what he called a "mandate" after<lb/>
a closely fought election against<lb/>
a Democrat with lots of head but<lb/>
not enough heart for the jittery<lb/>
American electorate.<lb/>
The plain-spoken Texan<lb/>
promised to use his "political<lb/>
capital" to get stuff done in a<lb/>
national capital that was all but<lb/>
draped in the official colors of<lb/>
his party.<lb/>
lie was going to set Iraq on<lb/>
the road to democracy, defeat<lb/>
global terrorism, and send a wave<lb/>
of freedom across the Middle<lb/>
East. At home, he planned to<lb/>
extend his tax cuts to future<lb/>
generations, revamp the legal<lb/>
system and the tax code, and<lb/>
bring about dramatic changes in<lb/>
Social Security.<lb/>
Not to mention attacking<lb/>
the pesky budget deficit that<lb/>
somehow ballooned to historic<lb/>
proportions in the first term, his<lb/>
conservative fiscal credentials<lb/>
notwithstanding.<lb/>
Well, how did he do, folks?<lb/>
Are you happier now than a<lb/>
year ago? Do you feel safer? Is<lb/>
our government working more<lb/>
efficiently and ethically? Have<lb/>
the "moral values" that many<lb/>
claimed (inaccurately, as it turned<lb/>
out) to be the sole reason for the<lb/>
GOP juggernaut transformed a<lb/>
profligate and profane nation?<lb/>
OK, so I'm not being fair. The<lb/>
president is going through a bit<lb/>
of a rough patch, what with the<lb/>
U.S. death toll in Iraq climbing<lb/>
to new, heartbreaking numbers,<lb/>
the withdrawal of a Supreme<lb/>
Court nominee his enemies<lb/>
didn't much like and his friends<lb/>
hated, and the indictment of<lb/>
the top aide and alter ego to the<lb/>
most powerful vice president in<lb/>
American history.<lb/>
To paraphrase a book I used<lb/>
to read to my kids when they<lb/>
were young, last week was a<lb/>
terrible, horrible, no-good, very<lb/>
bad week.<lb/>
Some weeks are like that in<lb/>
politics.<lb/>
What I'm worried about is<lb/>
that we're looking at a terrible,<lb/>
horrible, no-good, very bad 39<lb/>
more months.<lb/>
Sure, second terms are noto-<lb/>
riously messy, as the flaws and<lb/>
foibles of the first heady years<lb/>
come back to haunt any admin-<lb/>
istration that is automatically old<lb/>
news the moment it begins.<lb/>
And sure, this worry reflects<lb/>
the biases of someone who's never<lb/>
been a member of W's fan club.<lb/>
If some of the items on the presi-<lb/>
dent's do-to-in-a-second-term list<lb/>
don't get done like "reforming"<lb/>
Social Security out of existence<lb/>
and extending unnecessary tax<lb/>
breaks for the wealthy you won't<lb/>
hear me complain.<lb/>
But like a growing number<lb/>
of Americans, well more than a<lb/>
majority by now, I have lost faith<lb/>
in this administration's ability to<lb/>
prosecute the war in Iraq, a war<lb/>
that it is now clear they were hell-<lb/>
bent on pursuing no matter the<lb/>
evidence or the risks.<lb/>
After the Katrina debacle,<lb/>
when the federal government's<lb/>
key role in coordinating state and<lb/>
local emergency efforts was badly<lb/>
handled, I have little faith that<lb/>
the first administration run by<lb/>
a Harvard Business School grad<lb/>
knows how to manage in a crisis.<lb/>
After the unending list of<lb/>
new spending proposals offered<lb/>
by a White House with nary a<lb/>
word on how to pay for them<lb/>
except to cut programs to the<lb/>
poor, I despair that the federal<lb/>
budget will be balanced again in<lb/>
my lifetime.<lb/>
Yeah, well, I'm a worrier.<lb/>
They say there is progress in Iraq,<lb/>
even if it's hard to discern on the<lb/>
nightly news. The economy is<lb/>
growing at a decent clip, even if<lb/>
that's news to the poor. Maybe<lb/>
what I see as terrible and horrible<lb/>
will actually turn out to be some<lb/>
version of OK or even good.<lb/>
But in case my worries are<lb/>
realized, I hope the hapless oppo-<lb/>
sition in Washington spends<lb/>
some of its waking moments<lb/>
crafting sensible, exciting alter-<lb/>
natives to the policies pursued by<lb/>
the arrogant crew now in charge.<lb/>
Three years suddenly seems like<lb/>
an awfully long time.<lb/>
No one reads long away messages. So don't waste your<lb/>
time writing them.<lb/>
I must be crazy, but when ECU builds sidewalks I<lb/>
swear they really are trying to build new highways on<lb/>
campus 1 can't stand it when I'm trying to walk on the<lb/>
sidewalk and the facilities trucks are always parked on<lb/>
the sidewalks or driving on them! Use the road!<lb/>
Where do the guys who don't obsess over partying hide?<lb/>
I need to find you!<lb/>
I'm the one who arrives late to class everyday. Ten, 15<lb/>
sometimes 20 minutes and I go through hell to get<lb/>
here and park a mile away. What's it to you? You're<lb/>
distracted? That's tough. How's it feel to have ADHD.<lb/>
Take your meds and mind your own business.<lb/>
To all the cleaning staff in the science and technology<lb/>
building: You are doing a great job! The building is<lb/>
always so bright and clean, and we appreciate it.<lb/>
I remember the good old days when politicians were<lb/>
well educated and intelligent when they spoke. Those<lb/>
were the days, in American History I.<lb/>
To the person who said that the police need to worry<lb/>
more about protecting students than writing alcohol<lb/>
tickets, for your information most of the crime that<lb/>
occurs in the downtown area can be attributed to<lb/>
alcohol consumption. So when police write you the<lb/>
underage drinking ticket, they are trying to protect you.<lb/>
Because if they just tell you to pour it out you would<lb/>
just go get another one.<lb/>
In the wise words of Angelica Pickles: If you have to<lb/>
ask, you'll never know.<lb/>
When people tell you to walk on the right side, they<lb/>
mean YOUR right.<lb/>
I played racquetball once too and found 40 bucks! It<lb/>
must be a good luck sport.<lb/>
I'm tired of hearing people complain about how our<lb/>
troops shouldn't be overseas. Dlcf you forget why they<lb/>
were over there?<lb/>
Hello! Girls don't flush toilets because they're made of<lb/>
sugar and spice and everything nice.<lb/>
It's pitiful when you wake up at nine in the morning to<lb/>
go to the bathroom and there are still drunk, puking<lb/>
girls in there.<lb/>
We need more love in the world! Because some people<lb/>
just don't know how to smile.<lb/>
Why don't they just give up on Fluid Dynamics 101 and<lb/>
turn Wright Fountain into a parking lot. However small<lb/>
it would be, it would still prove more useful.<lb/>
Make sure you register for spring classes or you will be<lb/>
stuck in the fall.<lb/>
The point of school spirit is to wear purple and gold not<lb/>
light or navy blue - or other college colors. Go pirates!<lb/>
To the guy playing the guitar in his room: You play great<lb/>
and I wish I could have heard more.<lb/>
How can you tell who really is a college student on campus?<lb/>
I've always found the librarians at Joyner to be friendly<lb/>
and nice. If you're working on a paper they're definitely<lb/>
there to help.<lb/>
Why can't I take any classes that I need for my major?<lb/>
Cinnamon buns should come with two things of icing.<lb/>
The Colbert Report is like "The Daily Show" on crack<lb/>
and it's great!<lb/>
Someone please tell my roommate to walk around the<lb/>
apartment in something other than his boxers.<lb/>
To the guy who keeps talking about the earring his<lb/>
girlfriend found: please shut up. You do not love your<lb/>
girlfriend. If you loved your girlfriend you would not<lb/>
have even wanted to cheat on her. But don't worry<lb/>
if she is stupid enough to stay with you, y'all deserve<lb/>
each other.<lb/>
Why is it that SGA thinks throwing more money at dif-<lb/>
ferent institutions will make their problems go away?<lb/>
Why not look back at the money that came in and do<lb/>
a better job of budgeting?<lb/>
I would like to thank the ECU bus driver who drove The<lb/>
Freshman Shuttle Bus Sunday night! He was officially<lb/>
the worst driver on the road! He is driving a $250,000<lb/>
extremely large vehicle reading a book for homework<lb/>
and taking an occasional break from that to send a text<lb/>
message on his cell phone while going 20 miles over the<lb/>
speed limit! I appreciate the necessary safety precautions!<lb/>
I thought Mr. McKee's article was better than the hog-<lb/>
wash that he usually provides. However, am I the only<lb/>
one that was disturbed that he "lost count" of how many<lb/>
people he saw use the urinaltoilet and didn't wash their<lb/>
hands? You had me at "hello Tony.<lb/>
I just want to say thanks to the frat that harassed me out-<lb/>
side of Wright Place on Wednesday. Yes I know someone<lb/>
with diabetes but no I really didn't have a dollar on me.<lb/>
So thanks for trying to make me look bad, how about<lb/>
you spend less money on "keggers" and shirts with cute<lb/>
little letters on it and donate that to diabetes.<lb/>
Screw major, I'm running for Emperor!<lb/>
That mohawk guy is bad news. He tried to ask me out<lb/>
and I said "eww<lb/>
The Womens' Rugby team could make the football team cry!<lb/>
Listening to your iPod during a test isn't cool. Trust me<lb/>
on this one.<lb/>
To the girl I almost ran over on Monday while turning<lb/>
off of Rotary onto 4th Street. I apologize. I was not<lb/>
paying attention.<lb/>
To the guy who cheated on his girlfriend and was<lb/>
caught: You say you love your girlfriend so much and<lb/>
you can't lose her. It seems you haven't once stopped<lb/>
to think of her this whole time. If you loved her you<lb/>
wouldn't have cheated on her, but they say people make<lb/>
mistakes so I will give you that one. But it you do care<lb/>
about her maybe you should stop with the pirate rants<lb/>
because now she is reminded when she reads TEC every<lb/>
Tues.Thurs. that you cheated on her. She is better off<lb/>
without you.<lb/>
No one cares that you are from New Jersey it doesn't<lb/>
make you cool. Please stop raving about Jersey - it is<lb/>
making it intolerable to be around you.<lb/>
Your diet should not consist of entirely McDonald's<lb/>
and Taco Bell. You are going to have a heart attack by<lb/>
the time you are 30.<lb/>
Edfort Note: Tile I'irate Hatit b an anonymous way for students and staff In the<lb/>
?( V community to wice their oplniotis. Submissions can be submitted anonymously<lb/>
online at www.theeastcantllnian.com, or e-mailed to edltormheeustcarolinian.<lb/>
com. Ttie editor reserxrs the right to edit opinions for content and brevity. <lb/>
<pb facs="00059365_0004"/><lb/>
11<lb/>
What's Hot<lb/>
Page A4 features@thefcastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 CAROIYN SCANDURA Features Editor KRISTIN MURNANE Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
WEDNESDAY November 9, 2005<lb/>
Top 5s:<lb/>
Top 5 Movies<lb/>
1. Chicken Little<lb/>
2. Jarhead<lb/>
3. Saw II<lb/>
4. The Legend ofZorro<lb/>
5. Prime<lb/>
Top 5 Pop Albums<lb/>
1. Destiny's Child<lb/>
2. Nickelback<lb/>
3 Martina McBride<lb/>
4. Rod Stewart<lb/>
5. Black Eyed Peas<lb/>
Top 5 TV Shows<lb/>
r-csr<lb/>
2. "Without a Trace"<lb/>
3. "CSI: Miami"<lb/>
4. "Lost"<lb/>
5. "NCIS"<lb/>
Top 5 0V0 Rentals<lb/>
1 Batman Begins<lb/>
2. Kingdom of Heaven<lb/>
3 Kicking and Screaming<lb/>
4. The Interpreter<lb/>
5 Land of the Dead<lb/>
Top 5 Books<lb/>
l.At First Sight<lb/>
2 Knife of Dreams<lb/>
3.77ie Lincoln Lawyer<lb/>
4. Consent to Kill<lb/>
5. Son of a Witch<lb/>
Horoscopes:<lb/>
Aries - The possibilities are pretty<lb/>
good that you and your team will<lb/>
achieve the previously thought<lb/>
impossible. Go for it.<lb/>
Taurus - You can bet therell be an<lb/>
argument on just about every point<lb/>
of possible contention. Stick to the<lb/>
important stuff.<lb/>
Gemini - If the bulk of the job is<lb/>
done, you should be able to take a<lb/>
mid-week excursion. Reward yourself<lb/>
for having made it this far.<lb/>
Cancer - Postpone a romantic<lb/>
interlude until after your shopping is<lb/>
done. Finish as many of your other<lb/>
tasks as you can now, too.<lb/>
Leo - Consider the possibilities and<lb/>
the consequences. Make lists of pros<lb/>
and cons, and wait. More Information<lb/>
is coming.<lb/>
Virgo - Careful analysis is required.<lb/>
Luckily, you're in the mood. Even a<lb/>
tricky problem can be solved. Read<lb/>
the marjual.<lb/>
Libra - Don't reach for the checkbook<lb/>
reach for your sketch pad and your<lb/>
lined paper, instead. You need to<lb/>
visualize first, then make a list<lb/>
Scorpio - Follow through with a<lb/>
recommendation. Check that item<lb/>
off your lists. Start making plans for a<lb/>
romantic interlude soon, but one that<lb/>
does not break your budget.<lb/>
Sagittarius - Odds are good you'll<lb/>
hit pay dirt soon. Don't get over-<lb/>
enthusiastic, though. Proceed with<lb/>
caution.<lb/>
Capricorn - Cash in your coupons,<lb/>
send in your rebates, recycle bottles<lb/>
and cans. You'll make enough to get<lb/>
yourself a well-earned special treat.<lb/>
Aquarius - The person who signs<lb/>
your paycheck has strong ideas<lb/>
about how things are done. He or she<lb/>
is not necessarily right Be cautious<lb/>
in pointing this out.<lb/>
Pisces - How do you advance in<lb/>
your career? Start by doing whatever<lb/>
you've already said you'd do. It works.<lb/>
Fun Facts:<lb/>
A snail can sleep for three years.<lb/>
'Jedi' is an official religion with over<lb/>
70,000 followers in Australia<lb/>
Male monkeys lose the hair on their<lb/>
heads the same way men do.<lb/>
Ancient Romans at one time used<lb/>
human urine as an ingredient in their<lb/>
toothpaste.<lb/>
The average NFL player's career lasts<lb/>
only three and a half years.<lb/>
More than 50 percent of people in the<lb/>
world have never made or received a<lb/>
telephone call.<lb/>
Baskin Robbins once made ketchup<lb/>
flavored ice cream.<lb/>
February 1865 is the only month in<lb/>
recorded history not to have a fuH moon<lb/>
There are 92 known cases of nuclear<lb/>
bombs lost at sea.<lb/>
The sloth, a mammal, moves so<lb/>
slowly that green algae can grow<lb/>
undisturbed on its fur.<lb/>
Oak trees are struck by lightning<lb/>
more than any other tree.<lb/>
Taken from funfacts.com<lb/>
Great places to meet people<lb/>
Where to meet people on<lb/>
campus and in Greenville<lb/>
SARAH CAMPBELL<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Meeting someone for the<lb/>
first time is one of the most<lb/>
nerve-racking, exhilarating and<lb/>
interesting things that a person<lb/>
can experience. Exploring<lb/>
the unknown worlds of new<lb/>
people that come into your life<lb/>
can sometimes leave you with<lb/>
a great new friend. So where do<lb/>
you meet new people? Well,<lb/>
there are a variety of places<lb/>
on campus and around<lb/>
Greenville where students<lb/>
can get to know someone new.<lb/>
One of the most obvious places<lb/>
to meet people is by simply going<lb/>
to class. Each class has a variety<lb/>
of different people to get to know.<lb/>
In some cases you may only form<lb/>
a study partner, but in others<lb/>
you may build a lifelong friend-<lb/>
ship. Two other common places<lb/>
to meet people on campus are<lb/>
outside of Joyner Library and the<lb/>
dining halls.<lb/>
Another common place to<lb/>
meet new people is by living in<lb/>
the dorms. Living in such close<lb/>
proximity allows students to bond<lb/>
with their roommate, hall mates<lb/>
and people from other floors.<lb/>
You never feel lonely living in<lb/>
the dorm because there is always<lb/>
a friend just footsteps away.<lb/>
Outside the Bate Building, 'the social circle' Is a great place to meet new and interesting people.<lb/>
Facebook.com is a growing<lb/>
trend among students - how-<lb/>
ever, I don't recommend it as<lb/>
your primary source for meeting<lb/>
people. The party listings allow<lb/>
students to attend a variety of<lb/>
different parties and meet tons<lb/>
of new people.<lb/>
"Party listings on facebook are<lb/>
a great way to meet new people<lb/>
said Will Mooney, junior exercise<lb/>
physiology major.<lb/>
Greenville is filled with tons<lb/>
of places to meet new people<lb/>
- however, my personal favorite<lb/>
is Barnes and Noble. Although<lb/>
I've never acquired any lifelong<lb/>
friendships there, I have met<lb/>
people willing to offer their<lb/>
insight into a number of books.<lb/>
Spending the afternoon chatting<lb/>
with someone about your favor-<lb/>
ite books can provide comfort<lb/>
that lasts for years to come. Also,<lb/>
many ECU students study here<lb/>
and though you may not find<lb/>
your soulmate, you may find out<lb/>
some interesting facts about the<lb/>
classes you are in now or classes<lb/>
you plan to take next semester.<lb/>
Starbucks is another locale<lb/>
where strangers can become<lb/>
friends.<lb/>
"A really good place to meet<lb/>
new people is at Starbucks, because<lb/>
people are always there studying<lb/>
and doing work said Brittney<lb/>
Batchelor, junior sociology<lb/>
major. On the next rainy day,<lb/>
grab your books and head to<lb/>
Starbucks to enjoy great coffee<lb/>
and company.<lb/>
I've found that the easiest way<lb/>
to bond with new people is by<lb/>
equally embarrassing yourselves.<lb/>
The ice-skating rink, Bladez on<lb/>
Ice, is the best place to enjoy this<lb/>
experience. There is no better way<lb/>
to bond than by completing wiping<lb/>
out at the same time as someone<lb/>
else, then laughing because you<lb/>
realize that you're not the only one.<lb/>
Striking up a conversation<lb/>
with a stranger can be rewarding<lb/>
for both you and them. You will<lb/>
get information about their lives,<lb/>
while they are comforted with the<lb/>
knowledge that someone cares.<lb/>
These friendships may fade<lb/>
fast, but probably neither one of<lb/>
you will ever forget one another,<lb/>
and who knows - you might<lb/>
create a lifelong friendship. Look<lb/>
around campus and Greenville<lb/>
for places to meet and greet new<lb/>
people that could be your new<lb/>
best friend.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
TrffeDof Or Fog?<lb/>
How to tell the difference<lb/>
between the two<lb/>
TOMEKA STEELE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
The collection is sacred. Some<lb/>
of us have one for each season<lb/>
and one in each color. Some<lb/>
of us would rather be stabbed<lb/>
than let that mugger run off<lb/>
with our favorite designer bag.<lb/>
But there's always that nagging<lb/>
thought in your head, "Is my<lb/>
bag real? Does it even matter?"<lb/>
Designer handbags are no<lb/>
doubt a symbol of status. Not<lb/>
only that, but they look really<lb/>
great too. Women out there who<lb/>
love purses know what it feels<lb/>
like to walk down the hallway<lb/>
of a mall or building and have<lb/>
every other woman's eyes on your<lb/>
gorgeous bag. It can be rather<lb/>
addicting just like shoes and<lb/>
clothes. The right bag can make<lb/>
a plain outfit into a fabulous<lb/>
ensemble. This is part of the draw<lb/>
into buying knock-offs.<lb/>
Well, of course, your bag<lb/>
Is real if you bought it from a<lb/>
legitimate place like Belk's or<lb/>
Nordstrom's, but beware - if<lb/>
you got your bag off eBay or<lb/>
Canal Street in New York City's<lb/>
Chinatown, chances are you're<lb/>
walking around with a knock-off.<lb/>
The bigger and more demand<lb/>
for a hot new designer bag,<lb/>
the more likely there will be<lb/>
knock-offs swarming around<lb/>
for those unwilling to shell out<lb/>
hundreds to thousands of dol-<lb/>
lars. The most replicated bags<lb/>
are Louis Vuitton, Kate Spade,<lb/>
Gucci, Christian Dior, Prada,<lb/>
Burberry, Coach and Chanel.<lb/>
These designer bags are very<lb/>
expensive for a college student.<lb/>
Many of us barely have enough<lb/>
money to pay the electric bill,<lb/>
and this is what makes knock-<lb/>
offs so much more realistic. They<lb/>
are just as good as the designer<lb/>
bags at a reasonable price. Some-<lb/>
times it's extremely hard to<lb/>
tell the difference between<lb/>
designer and replica, especially<lb/>
with the prized Louis Vuitton<lb/>
handbags with the LV symbol.<lb/>
"I feel like if a person can't<lb/>
afford the real thing, then they<lb/>
shouldn't buy a knock-off. I just<lb/>
think if people keep buying the<lb/>
fakes, it lessons the value of the<lb/>
authentic designer purses said<lb/>
senior biology major Niaja Cotton.<lb/>
Most replicas and the designer<lb/>
bag are made with the same<lb/>
materials, which have a vinyl or<lb/>
rubber coated canvas. This makes<lb/>
it hard to distinguish between<lb/>
them. The real designer bag often<lb/>
comes with a serial number or<lb/>
identity card and the stamp says<lb/>
"Louis Vuitton Paris, Made in<lb/>
France One should look closely<lb/>
at a bag when deciphering if it's<lb/>
a real or fake. The quality of the<lb/>
stitching Is a big give-away when<lb/>
it's a fake.<lb/>
According to Alice Temple's<lb/>
article "Faking it: How to spot a<lb/>
fake a person won't see shoddy<lb/>
workmanship on a legitimate bag<lb/>
- puckered leather and wonky<lb/>
stitching are sure signs of a fake.<lb/>
Only accept an article in pristine<lb/>
condition - if you're questioning<lb/>
the quality, it's likely to be suspect.<lb/>
Some purses are replicas,<lb/>
which means they have the<lb/>
same symbols as the designer<lb/>
bags. These are usually illegal.<lb/>
Other knock-offs are "designer<lb/>
see PURSES page A5<lb/>
m '?" H<lb/>
<lb/>
; ?<lb/>
i H<lb/>
f I<lb/>
i i ????<lb/>
1? jm<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
x<lb/>
?v.s .ftB<lb/>
a"0" ? rf: 'jBBBBBBBBb<lb/>
B<lb/>
1<lb/>
Models will wear donated clothes.<lb/>
AIMO chanty<lb/>
fashion show<lb/>
'Ripped, Torn and<lb/>
Fabulous'<lb/>
TOMEKA STEELE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Celebrity Profile: Adam Carolla, comedic genius<lb/>
A funny man with a plan<lb/>
EMILY JORDAN<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Italian-American funny man<lb/>
Adam Carolla has worked on a<lb/>
smorgasbord of projects. From<lb/>
carpentry to boxing, radio, TV<lb/>
and film, he's tried his hand<lb/>
at everything. Carolla goes<lb/>
to show that having a college<lb/>
education does not necessarily<lb/>
get you into the limelight - it<lb/>
simply takes a charismatic per-<lb/>
sonality and probably some good<lb/>
old-fashioned luck.<lb/>
Adam Carolla was born May<lb/>
27, 1964 In Philadelphia, Pa.<lb/>
Later, his family moved to Cali-<lb/>
fornia. Carolla attended North<lb/>
Hollywood High School where<lb/>
his jokes were better than his<lb/>
grades. Though not a serious<lb/>
student, Carolla briefly attended<lb/>
L.A. Valley Junior College before<lb/>
dropping out to pursue a series of<lb/>
menial jobs.<lb/>
Carolla's comedy career<lb/>
started while he was in his twen-<lb/>
ties. He spent years training in<lb/>
stand-up with Acme Improv<lb/>
groups and the Groundlings in<lb/>
Los Angeles, but he really got his<lb/>
start when he met Jimmy Kimmel.<lb/>
One day Kimmel just happened<lb/>
to announce on the radio that<lb/>
he was looking for a boxing<lb/>
instructor. Carolla answered the<lb/>
ad and became not only Kim-<lb/>
mel's coach, but also his friend.<lb/>
Carolla soon joined up with<lb/>
Kimmel on a KROQ morning<lb/>
radio show in Los Angeles, where<lb/>
the "Crank Yankers" characters<lb/>
Mr. Birchum and the Vietnam<lb/>
veteran shop teacher were born.<lb/>
Carolla was first known for<lb/>
the radio talk show "Loveline<lb/>
which he began co-hosting with<lb/>
Dr. Drew Pinsky in 199S. Like<lb/>
the sitcom "Seinfeld the show<lb/>
was about nothing and it was a<lb/>
hit. After 10 years on-air with<lb/>
"Loveline Carolla left the show<lb/>
August 4, 2005 to take over<lb/>
Howard Stern's morning radio<lb/>
program. But, Carolla and Dr.<lb/>
Drew's "Loveline" legacy lives<lb/>
forever in print - in 1998 the two<lb/>
published A Survival Guide to Life<lb/>
and Love.<lb/>
Carolla's voice has not only<lb/>
appeared on radio. He has been<lb/>
the voice for Commander Nebula<lb/>
on Disney's "Buzz Lightyear of<lb/>
Star Command" TV series, as<lb/>
well as two Buzz Lightyear films.<lb/>
He also replaced Norm Mac-<lb/>
Donald as the voice of Death on<lb/>
see CAROLLA page A5<lb/>
On Nov. 11 at club Aqua, the<lb/>
Apparel and Interior Merchan-<lb/>
dising Organization of ECU will<lb/>
put on its semester fashion show<lb/>
event. The fashion show is titled<lb/>
"Ripped, Torn and Fabulous<lb/>
and doors will open at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The show will begin promptly<lb/>
at 9 p.m.<lb/>
This fashion show is the third<lb/>
show put on by AIMO. There<lb/>
is a fashion show sponsored<lb/>
by AIMO each semester. The<lb/>
proceeds from this show will<lb/>
go toward the Give2theTroops<lb/>
foundation, which is a non-profit<lb/>
organization that makes care<lb/>
packages for the troops fighting<lb/>
overseas.<lb/>
AIMO's main goal as an<lb/>
organization is to do as much<lb/>
charity and volunteer work as<lb/>
possible. They volunteer at<lb/>
numerous places in the Greenville<lb/>
community such as Operation<lb/>
Sunshine, and they are eager<lb/>
to get their name out more on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
"Ripped, Torn and Fabulous"<lb/>
will showcase a variety of fash-<lb/>
ions at Greenville's hottest down-<lb/>
town nightclub. There will be<lb/>
four segments of fall and winter<lb/>
fashion that include urban street<lb/>
wear, cooperate corruption, punk<lb/>
rock and classy lingerie ensem-<lb/>
bles.<lb/>
"Many of the outfits have<lb/>
shirts that have been ripped or<lb/>
pants that have been torn. This is<lb/>
how we came up with the name<lb/>
for this fashion shpw. We're<lb/>
basically trying to show how to<lb/>
turn old clothes into new ones<lb/>
with just a few minor alterations<lb/>
said fashion show coordinator<lb/>
Brittnay Furse.<lb/>
Most of the pieces that will<lb/>
showcase in the fashion show will<lb/>
be put together by the models.<lb/>
The models in the show are all<lb/>
ECU students. Most outfits were<lb/>
put together with the things that<lb/>
were already in the models' clos-<lb/>
ets but with an added twist.<lb/>
There is a special piece in the<lb/>
see FASHION page A5 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059365_0005"/><lb/>
Her 9,2005<lb/>
le<lb/>
11-9-05<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? FEATURES<lb/>
PAGE A5<lb/>
another locale<lb/>
s can become<lb/>
1 place to meet<lb/>
irbucks, because<lb/>
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" said Brittney<lb/>
ior sociology<lb/>
lext rainy day,<lb/>
s and head to<lb/>
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is no better way<lb/>
mpleting wiping<lb/>
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not the only one.<lb/>
i conversation<lb/>
,n be rewarding<lb/>
them. You will<lb/>
bout their lives,<lb/>
lforted with the<lb/>
meone cares,<lb/>
hips may fade<lb/>
neither one of<lb/>
;et one another,<lb/>
; - you might<lb/>
riendship. Look<lb/>
ind Greenville<lb/>
: and greet new<lb/>
d be your new<lb/>
e contacted at<lb/>
carolinian.com.<lb/>
lonated clothes.<lb/>
iiarity<lb/>
show<lb/>
nd<lb/>
club Aqua, the<lb/>
irior Merchan-<lb/>
3n of ECU will<lb/>
r fashion show<lb/>
l show is titled<lb/>
nd Fabulous<lb/>
ipen at 8 p.m.<lb/>
:gin promptly<lb/>
tow is the third<lb/>
AIMO. There<lb/>
w sponsored<lb/>
iemester. The<lb/>
his show will<lb/>
ive2theTroops<lb/>
i is a non-profit<lb/>
it makes care<lb/>
roops fighting<lb/>
ii goal as an<lb/>
o do as much<lb/>
nteer work as<lb/>
volunteer at<lb/>
i the Greenville<lb/>
as Operation<lb/>
hey are eager<lb/>
: out more on<lb/>
and Fabulous"<lb/>
'ariety of fash-<lb/>
s hottest down-<lb/>
There will be<lb/>
fall and winter<lb/>
de urban street<lb/>
rruption, punk<lb/>
ingerie ensem-<lb/>
outfits have<lb/>
een ripped or<lb/>
en torn. This is<lb/>
ivith the name<lb/>
shpw. We're<lb/>
) show how to<lb/>
Into new ones<lb/>
ior alterations<lb/>
?v coordinator<lb/>
ieces that will<lb/>
hion show will<lb/>
y the models,<lb/>
e show are all<lb/>
ist outfits were<lb/>
the things that<lb/>
e models' clos-<lb/>
ded twist.<lb/>
Ial piece in the<lb/>
irON page A5<lb/>
CdrOlld from page A4<lb/>
"Family Guy<lb/>
And that's not all. Carolla<lb/>
has made numerous TV appear-<lb/>
ances on a variety of television<lb/>
series and on film. Currently he<lb/>
is the executive producer of "The<lb/>
Adam Carolla Project aired on<lb/>
TLC and he is writer and execu-<lb/>
tive producer of "Too Late With<lb/>
Adam Carolla He was co-creator<lb/>
and writer of "The Man Show"<lb/>
with Jimmy Kimmel. He was also<lb/>
co-creator of Comedy Central's<lb/>
"Crank Yankers And his list of<lb/>
TV guest appearances is quite<lb/>
extensive. The man's voice and<lb/>
his face are everywhere it seems.<lb/>
His most recent endeavor is<lb/>
being the spokesman for Lance<lb/>
Snack Crackers with his catch<lb/>
phrase, "I've got Lance in my<lb/>
pants No one can help but<lb/>
laugh at his commercials and<lb/>
think about the crackers.<lb/>
If anybody knows anything<lb/>
about Carolla, they wouldn't find<lb/>
this too shocking: along with a<lb/>
number of notable people, he's<lb/>
a member of the advisory board<lb/>
of the Marijuana Policy Project,<lb/>
which supports the medical use<lb/>
of marijuana. The project uses<lb/>
famous faces and voices through-<lb/>
out the country to fight the war<lb/>
on marijuana.<lb/>
This happy-go-lucky guy has<lb/>
quickly earned his way to the top.<lb/>
From tlc.discovery.com, Kimmel<lb/>
says that Adam Carolla is "the<lb/>
busiest lazy man in history It<lb/>
certainly seems that Carolla<lb/>
struck it rich with the personal-<lb/>
ity that America was looking for.<lb/>
With shows like "Crank Yankers"<lb/>
in national syndication and new<lb/>
films and TV shows popping up<lb/>
every year or so, Adam Carolla<lb/>
is not going anywhere for quite<lb/>
some time.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Mltrl mm<lb/>
STRIP<lb/>
,Ov<lb/>
Funny man Adam Carolla has a very successful career in comedy.<lb/>
CLIP &amp; SAVE<lb/>
Garry's Skin Grafix Tattoo<lb/>
PlirSBS from page A4<lb/>
inspired These, for instance,<lb/>
may use the LV purse's little<lb/>
symbols, but not the actual LV<lb/>
logo or may have G's turned in<lb/>
toward each other instead of C's<lb/>
like the designer Coach bags.<lb/>
If you are really going to try<lb/>
to make a knock-off look real, do<lb/>
some research before purchasing<lb/>
your new bag. Go to the depart-<lb/>
ment stores and look at the real<lb/>
bags, study the stitching, where<lb/>
the designer's name is located, if<lb/>
there are any tags inside, what<lb/>
colors the bag really comes in<lb/>
and what the name-brand mate-<lb/>
rials feel like. A true connoisseur<lb/>
can see a knock-off a mile away.<lb/>
If you care that your bag is fake,<lb/>
you may want to just save up the<lb/>
money for the real thing. If you<lb/>
don't care, sport it.<lb/>
Every woman out there<lb/>
whose fetish is handbags wants<lb/>
to know every tiny detail and<lb/>
secret to distinguish between<lb/>
real and fake purses. Many<lb/>
books are devoted to doing just<lb/>
that for a price. There are also<lb/>
tons of Web sites that divulge<lb/>
designer handbag secrets as well.<lb/>
Whether bags are real or fake<lb/>
all just depends on the woman.<lb/>
Some are ashamed to wear a<lb/>
knock-off and others could care<lb/>
less, but at least now you have the<lb/>
information so if you want the real<lb/>
deal, you know what to look for.<lb/>
Another thing for consumers<lb/>
to remember is that "knock-off"<lb/>
bags are being illegally made, so<lb/>
be careful where you purchase.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
<lb/>
How to spot a<lb/>
fake purse:<lb/>
Look lor more tips at<lb/>
authentlc-handbag.com.<lb/>
Wide stitching<lb/>
Puckered seams<lb/>
No Identification code<lb/>
No Emblem Inside<lb/>
Quality ol materials<lb/>
Be a smart consumer and look over<lb/>
all of your purchases before you buy.<lb/>
3398-E S. Memorial Dr.<lb/>
Greenville NC 27858<lb/>
252-756-0600<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
429 Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville NC 27858<lb/>
252-758-SK1N<lb/>
5 ?FF KrTtU SfW?ewr D<lb/>
Fashion<lb/>
from page A4<lb/>
fashion show that was made by<lb/>
a professor in the merchandising<lb/>
department. This outfit will open<lb/>
the show in a two minute scene,<lb/>
telling the story of the piece<lb/>
and introducing the rest of the<lb/>
fashion show.<lb/>
The Black Student Union<lb/>
Dance Team will perform a dance<lb/>
routine during the intermission<lb/>
of the charity fashion show.<lb/>
There will also be some selec-<lb/>
tions read by DEF Poetry poets.<lb/>
"Ripped, Torn and Fabulous" will<lb/>
be an hour and a half of fashion<lb/>
packed fabulousness.<lb/>
Anyone can attend this char-<lb/>
ity event at club Aqua. Tickets will<lb/>
be sold Monday through Friday at<lb/>
a table in the Wright Plaza from<lb/>
11 a.m. - 2 p.m. The price for<lb/>
a ticket is $5 in advance. Admis-<lb/>
sion tickets will be sold at the<lb/>
door, as well, for the same amount.<lb/>
"This is going to be a very<lb/>
interesting fall and winter fash-<lb/>
ion show. Some of the pieces will<lb/>
<lb/>
Ripped, Torn and<lb/>
Fabulous Fashion Show<lb/>
When: Nov. 11<lb/>
Where: Club Aqua<lb/>
Tickets: Wright Plaza or door $5<lb/>
Doors open: 8 p.m.<lb/>
Show starts: 9 p.m.<lb/>
Why: Proceeds go to the<lb/>
Give2theTroops foundation<lb/>
look like something you'd see<lb/>
every day around campus and<lb/>
others will be very high fashion.<lb/>
"Aqua is a great club and the h<lb/>
music's going to be loud and it's j<lb/>
going to be exciting from one seg- j<lb/>
ment to the next. Students will ??<lb/>
enjoy this fashion show and it's ?<lb/>
for a good cause Furse said. i<lb/>
I<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
fff Wjf ??????<lb/>
10 Discount to<lb/>
ALL Students<lb/>
1525 S. Evans St, Greenville, NC<lb/>
MonSat. 9:30-6:00 ? Sun. 1:00-4:00<lb/>
Special Home Game Hours: Friday 8am-9pm<lb/>
Polo Shim ? Jarkrtt ? Swranhins<lb/>
T shirt. ? Wallets<lb/>
Dcik Acctssorivs and imicli. much itwif!<lb/>
www.HiratfStuff.com<lb/>
Saturday 7am-10pm<lb/>
Sunday 9:30am-4:30pm ty<lb/>
??????????<lb/>
?<lb/>
TON I Mil<lb/>
COMEDY NIGHT<lb/>
1.50 Kami<lb/>
2.00 Hk.hba<lb/>
3.00 wore<lb/>
'2.50 IMPORT<lb/>
2 SHOWS<lb/>
at 9:00<lb/>
411:00.<lb/>
Participants at the AIMO fashion show rehearsed Sunday at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
fcTOB Free Admission WLWi<lb/>
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Your Coupon<lb/>
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Call our advertising reps at 328-9243<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059365_0006"/><lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
Page A6 sports@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 TONY ZOPPO Sports Editor BRANDON HUGHES Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
WEDNESDAY November 9,2005<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Williams steps down from<lb/>
golf post<lb/>
Kevin Williams has resigned<lb/>
his position as head coach of the<lb/>
ECU men and women's golf teams,<lb/>
effective Dec. 31, to become the<lb/>
head golf professional at Walnut<lb/>
Creek Country Club in Goldsboro,<lb/>
NC, athletic department officials<lb/>
announced Tuesday. Williams leaves<lb/>
with a 987-808-26 overall record<lb/>
with the men's team and an overall<lb/>
583-271-10 mark with the women.<lb/>
In 10-plus seasons with the men,<lb/>
he guided the Pirates to six team<lb/>
tournament titles, 12 individual crowns<lb/>
and coached five Academic All-<lb/>
America selections. In 2000, Williams<lb/>
became the first head coach of the<lb/>
women's program and guided the<lb/>
Lady Pirates to a pair of NCAA at-large<lb/>
bids in 2003 and 2005, and coached<lb/>
Adrienne Mlllican in the 2004 NCAA<lb/>
Women's Golf Championships. During<lb/>
the 2003 season, Williams was<lb/>
named Conference USA Women's<lb/>
Golf Coach-of-the-Year after leading<lb/>
the Pirates to a 132-21-2 record,<lb/>
which included three wins over top-<lb/>
25 teams, three team titles and nine<lb/>
top-five finishes. In five seasons at<lb/>
the helm of the Lady Pirates Williams<lb/>
coached five National Golf Collegiate<lb/>
Association All-America Scholars,<lb/>
seven All-C-USA selections, two<lb/>
C-USA All-Freshman Team choices<lb/>
and one C-USA All-Decade member<lb/>
in Mlllican. ECU Senior Associate<lb/>
Director of Athletics Nick Floyd said<lb/>
a search would begin immediately to<lb/>
find Williams' replacement<lb/>
Duke's Redick, Williams named<lb/>
preseason Ail-Americans<lb/>
Senior teammates J.J. Redick<lb/>
and Shelden Williams of the No. 1<lb/>
Blue Devils were the leading vote-<lb/>
getters Tuesday on the Associated<lb/>
Press' preseason All-America team.<lb/>
It is the fifth time since the AP started<lb/>
the preseason team in 1986-87 that<lb/>
teammates were chosen by the<lb/>
national media panel that selects<lb/>
the weekly Top 25. Seniors Dee<lb/>
Brown of Illinois and Craig Smith of<lb/>
Boston College also made the team,<lb/>
along with junior Adam Morrison of<lb/>
Gonzaga. Redick, the only returning<lb/>
first-teamerfrom last season, received<lb/>
67 of 72 votes, while Williams, a<lb/>
third-team choice last season, was<lb/>
on 63 ballots. The 6-foot-4 Redick<lb/>
averaged 21.8 points last season,<lb/>
shooting 40.3 percent from 3-point<lb/>
range and 93.8 percent from the<lb/>
free throw line. His most impressive<lb/>
statistic was averaging 37.3 minutes<lb/>
per game, a number that should<lb/>
drop this season because of added<lb/>
depth. The 6-9 Williams debated<lb/>
about leaving for the NBA, but Is<lb/>
back after averaging 15.5 points, 11.2<lb/>
rebounds and 3.7 blocks last season<lb/>
while shooting 58.2 percent from the<lb/>
field. It is the second time Duke has<lb/>
had two players on the preseason<lb/>
All-America team. Bobby Hurley and<lb/>
Grant Hill were the first teammates<lb/>
to do it in 1992. The other preseason<lb/>
teammates were Raef LaFrentz and<lb/>
Paul Pierce of Kansas and Mike<lb/>
Bibby and Miles Simon of Arizona, all<lb/>
chosen in 1997, and Luke Walton and<lb/>
Jason Gardner of Arizona in 2002.<lb/>
Urblna held pending formal<lb/>
charge of attempted murder<lb/>
Philadelphia Phillies pitcher<lb/>
Ugueth Urbina was arrested and<lb/>
held Tuesday pending a formal<lb/>
charge of attempted murder, police<lb/>
said Tuesday. Last month, Urbina and<lb/>
a group of men allegedly attacked five<lb/>
workers with machetes and poured<lb/>
gasoline on them in an attempt to set<lb/>
them on fire. All five were injured, some<lb/>
of them with cuts and one with burns<lb/>
on the badt and right arm, police<lb/>
said. Urbina, who was detained late<lb/>
Monday, has insisted he had nothing<lb/>
to do with the violence at his family's<lb/>
ranch on Oct. 16. The authorities said<lb/>
Urbina would be formally charged<lb/>
once he appears before a judge,<lb/>
and Urbina said he understood<lb/>
that hearing could be held Tuesday.<lb/>
Urblna's lawyer, Jose Luis Tamayo,<lb/>
said the pitcher was sleeping at the<lb/>
time of the Incident and was not<lb/>
involved. One victim, Argenls Farias,<lb/>
has accused Urbina of being among<lb/>
the attackers. Urbina was traded from<lb/>
Detroit to Philadelphia In the middle<lb/>
of last season. The reliever became<lb/>
a free agent after the season ended.<lb/>
Urbina was with his mother and other<lb/>
relatives late Monday at another of<lb/>
Urblna's homes on the outskirts of<lb/>
Caracas when the police came with<lb/>
an arrest warrant, Tamayo said. He<lb/>
called the arrest "inexplicable The<lb/>
lawyer said Urbina has cooperated<lb/>
with the authorities all along, noting<lb/>
he has come to the police voluntarily<lb/>
to provide testimony. The violence<lb/>
broke out at the ranch house where<lb/>
Urbina's mother, Maura Villareal, lives<lb/>
about 25 miles south of Caracas. But<lb/>
Urbina's lawyer has said the pitcher<lb/>
surprised the workers by showing<lb/>
up at the ranch that night while they<lb/>
were bathing In the pool without<lb/>
permission. He said Urbina spoke<lb/>
sharply to them, but later left and went<lb/>
to sleep. The 31-year-old Urbina has<lb/>
a 44-49 record with 237 saves and a<lb/>
3.45 ERA in 11 seasons.<lb/>
2006 Champions crowned<lb/>
in intramural flag football<lb/>
ECU students show off<lb/>
talent in fall flag football<lb/>
championships<lb/>
DAVID WASKIEWICZ<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
After weeks of battling it out<lb/>
at the Blount Fields, the time had<lb/>
finally come last week for the<lb/>
intramural flag football champi-<lb/>
onships. Twelve teams, made up<lb/>
of ECU students and staff, gath-<lb/>
ered around the wet fields last in<lb/>
hopes of coming away with an<lb/>
intramural flag football champi-<lb/>
onship T-shirt. Despite winning<lb/>
or losing, everyone could agree<lb/>
that the atmosphere of just<lb/>
making it to the championship<lb/>
game was a good one.<lb/>
The sorority championship<lb/>
game pitted Alpha Phi against<lb/>
Chi Omega. The game was hard<lb/>
fought as two evenly matched<lb/>
teams were deadlocked at the end<lb/>
of regulation. After numerous<lb/>
overtimes Alpha Phi was finally<lb/>
able to call themselves flag foot-<lb/>
bail champions as they came out<lb/>
on top 17-6 in the longest ECU<lb/>
flag football championship game<lb/>
in more than 15 years.<lb/>
In the co-rec champion-<lb/>
ship game, the Angry Tunas<lb/>
and Ridonkulous battled it out<lb/>
in hopes of winning the title.<lb/>
Both teams played a close game<lb/>
until the second half when the<lb/>
Angry Tunas were able to extend<lb/>
their lead and eventually take<lb/>
the championship 28-16. Matt<lb/>
Hill, a senior from Ridonkulous,<lb/>
blamed the loss on a combination<lb/>
of miscommunications within<lb/>
the team. "We should have had<lb/>
a practice in between our last<lb/>
games said Hill.<lb/>
"People did not really under-<lb/>
stand what each other were trying<lb/>
to say. We had a bad attitude and<lb/>
we probably should have lost the<lb/>
game because of that<lb/>
The Angry Tunas did not just<lb/>
settle for just one victory on the<lb/>
night as several members were also<lb/>
participants on the men's team of<lb/>
the same name that defeated Harry<lb/>
Caray in the men's purple final<lb/>
game 20-16. "It felt great to win<lb/>
tonight said the captain of the<lb/>
Angry Tunas, Jeffery Brock.<lb/>
"We won the co-rec champi-<lb/>
onship then we came back and<lb/>
won the men's tonight. Everyone<lb/>
on the team played as a whole<lb/>
and it brought us all together<lb/>
The men's gold champion-<lb/>
ship was hard fought as Bucho<lb/>
faced What. Bucho was an under-<lb/>
dog in the contest since they had<lb/>
played the regular season in the<lb/>
less competitive purple league.<lb/>
Since they dominated opponents<lb/>
in this division, they were then<lb/>
bumped up to the gold league for <lb/>
the playoffs in order to fill the ?<lb/>
see FOOTBALL page A8 Chi Phi took it to SAE in the fraternity championship game as they cruised to an impressive 21-0 win.<lb/>
Duke poised for title run<lb/>
Duke celebrates after defeating UNC 71-70 last year in Cameron Indoor Stadium.<lb/>
Blue Devils have by far<lb/>
the most talented squad<lb/>
JEFFF1LTON<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
According to the AP and<lb/>
the USA TodayESPN coaches<lb/>
polls, the Duke University Men's<lb/>
Basketball team opens the season<lb/>
as the unanimous number one<lb/>
team in the country. Led by<lb/>
senior All-American J.J. Redick<lb/>
and National Defensive Player<lb/>
of the Year Shelden Williams,<lb/>
the Blue Devils are also return-<lb/>
ing seniors Lee Melchionni and<lb/>
Sean Dockery.<lb/>
Complementing this<lb/>
deep senior class are sopho-<lb/>
more Demarcus Nelson and<lb/>
McDonald's High School All-<lb/>
Americans Josh McRoberts, Eric<lb/>
Boateng and Greg Paulus. Redick,<lb/>
who averaged 21.8 ppg, 2.6 apg<lb/>
and 3.3 rpg, should be the lead-<lb/>
ing candidate for the National<lb/>
Playtr of the Year Award. He<lb/>
might have some company for<lb/>
the prestigious award with team-<lb/>
mate Shelden Williams, who<lb/>
averaged 15.5 ppg, 11.2 rpg,<lb/>
and 3.7 bpg. McRoberts was the<lb/>
number one overall rated player<lb/>
coming out of high school and<lb/>
Paulus was a top point guard.<lb/>
One of the problems with<lb/>
last year's Duke team was a lack<lb/>
of depth, which Inevitably led to<lb/>
foul trouble and fatigue late in a<lb/>
game. This year's version of the<lb/>
Dukies should not be sucking<lb/>
wind come crunch time.<lb/>
With plenty of underclassmen<lb/>
and experienced seniors, Duke<lb/>
should be in Indianapolis playing<lb/>
for the National Championship.<lb/>
Throw in the fact that Coack K is<lb/>
running the show, arguably one<lb/>
of the greatest coaches In the his-<lb/>
tory of the game, the Devils are<lb/>
definitely the team to beat - not<lb/>
only in the ACC, but also in the<lb/>
national picture.<lb/>
In the ACC, the majority of<lb/>
the teams are down or rebuilding,<lb/>
with the exception of conference<lb/>
newcomer Boston College, who<lb/>
is returning all five starters from<lb/>
last year's 25-5 team.<lb/>
UNC has lost seven players<lb/>
to the NBA and are definitely In<lb/>
a rebuilding stage. NC State lost<lb/>
All-ACC player Julius Hodge, but<lb/>
are returning some talented play-<lb/>
ers including senior Mian Evti-<lb/>
mov. The Wake Forest Demon<lb/>
Deacons are without point guard<lb/>
Chris Paul, who is now in the<lb/>
NBA, but are still with guard<lb/>
Justin Gray and forward Eric<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
Along with these teams,<lb/>
Maryland should field a team<lb/>
that will hold its own with Nick<lb/>
Caner-Medley returning, but<lb/>
will feel the loss of guard John<lb/>
Gilchrist who is also in the NBA.<lb/>
Georgia Tech is also in a rebuild-<lb/>
ing year with the losses of guards<lb/>
Jarret Jack and B.J. Elder, but the<lb/>
loss of center Luke Schenscher<lb/>
may hurt the Jackets the most.<lb/>
The two surprise teams in<lb/>
the ACC last year, newcomers<lb/>
Miami and Virginia Tech, will<lb/>
look to continue to prove that<lb/>
they belong in the ACC. Florida<lb/>
State and Virginia round out the<lb/>
ACC's "down year So with all<lb/>
this rebuilding going on, the<lb/>
Dukies should be looking at an<lb/>
ACC championship. Then again,<lb/>
this Is the ACC - the cream of the<lb/>
crop in college basketball, where<lb/>
nothing is easy and no one is a<lb/>
pushover.<lb/>
In the national view of things,<lb/>
the contenders from last year's<lb/>
tournament are also experiencing<lb/>
down years. UCONN is returning<lb/>
some star power from suspension<lb/>
and injuries, but guard A.J. Price<lb/>
is suspended for the season for<lb/>
stealing laptop computers from<lb/>
university dormitories. Also the<lb/>
Huskies lost forward Charlie Vil-<lb/>
lanueva to the NBA.<lb/>
Texas appears to be a team<lb/>
on the rise, with the return of<lb/>
guard P.J. Tucker, who was ruled<lb/>
academically ineligible for the<lb/>
second half of last season, and<lb/>
also they are returning outstand-<lb/>
ing sophomore Daniel Gibson,<lb/>
who averaged 14.2 ppg, 3.9 apg,<lb/>
and 3.9 rpg in his freshman year<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
Villanova also looks pretty<lb/>
stacked this upcoming season,<lb/>
with all five starters return-<lb/>
ing from a 24-8 record last<lb/>
year and an appearance in the<lb/>
sweet sixteen.<lb/>
So with 64 teams in the "Big<lb/>
Dance anything can happen<lb/>
when It comes tournament time,<lb/>
but Duke definitely has the edge<lb/>
over the rest in experience and<lb/>
coaching, not to mention in fans<lb/>
(the Cameron Crazies). Anything<lb/>
less than a title for Duke in 2006<lb/>
would be a severe disappoint-<lb/>
ment with the talent they will be<lb/>
bringing to the table.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
Ownes has been suspended for four games by the Eagles<lb/>
Eagles: Owens<lb/>
won't return after<lb/>
suspension<lb/>
(AP) ? The Philadelphia<lb/>
Eagles have had enough.<lb/>
Terrell Owens' brief but<lb/>
tumultuous time in Philadelphia<lb/>
ended Monday when the All-Pro<lb/>
wide receiver was told not to<lb/>
return to the team this seaspn.<lb/>
"This decision is a result of a<lb/>
large number of situations that<lb/>
accumulated over a long period<lb/>
of time, during which Terrell had<lb/>
been warned repeatedly about<lb/>
the consequences of his actions<lb/>
Eagles coach Andy Reid said.<lb/>
Owens was suspended for<lb/>
Sunday night's 17-10 loss at<lb/>
Washington, and will remain<lb/>
suspended for three more games<lb/>
without pay. After that, the Eagles<lb/>
plan to deactivate him for the rest<lb/>
of the season.<lb/>
Though he's perhaps the<lb/>
best wideout in the NFL, Owens<lb/>
caused far too many distractions<lb/>
with his selfish behavior.<lb/>
"We gave Terrell every oppor-<lb/>
tunity to avoid this outcome<lb/>
Reid said.<lb/>
Owens and agent Drew<lb/>
Rosenhaus scheduled a Tuesday<lb/>
news conference at the player's<lb/>
house in Moorestown, N.J.<lb/>
Owens was suspended Satur-<lb/>
day, two days after he said the<lb/>
Eagles showed "a lack of class"<lb/>
for not publicly recognizing his<lb/>
100th career touchdown catch in<lb/>
a game on Oct. 23. In the same<lb/>
interview with ESPN.com on<lb/>
Thursday, Owens said the Eagles<lb/>
would be better off with Green<lb/>
Bay's Brett Favre at quarterback<lb/>
instead of Donovan McNabb.<lb/>
Owens also was involved in a<lb/>
fight last week with former Eagles<lb/>
defensive end Hugh Douglas,<lb/>
who remains with the team as<lb/>
its "ambassador Owens apolo-<lb/>
gized for his comments about the<lb/>
organization in a brief statement<lb/>
Friday, but didn't apologize to<lb/>
McNabb or the team.<lb/>
"The league has been notified<lb/>
by the players' union that they<lb/>
will be grieving our right to take<lb/>
that action Reid said, "therefore<lb/>
there is nothing more that I can<lb/>
say at this point<lb/>
Owens summoned police to<lb/>
his house late Monday because<lb/>
there were some people on his<lb/>
property. He said he wanted to be<lb/>
lett alone, had no comment and<lb/>
would contact the news media<lb/>
when he did want to speak, police<lb/>
at the scene said.<lb/>
Later, two pizzas were deliv-<lb/>
ered to Owens' home. Someone<lb/>
answered the door, not Owens,<lb/>
and gave deliveryman James<lb/>
McDevitt a $5 tip. McDevitt said<lb/>
he left the tip on the doorstep.<lb/>
Rosenhaus, refused to com-<lb/>
ment. Owens' relationship with<lb/>
the Eagles took a drastic turn<lb/>
after he fired longtime agent<lb/>
David Joseph, hired Rosenhaus<lb/>
and demanded a new contract<lb/>
just one season into the seven-<lb/>
year, $48.97 million deal he<lb/>
signed when he came to Phila-<lb/>
delphia in March 2004.<lb/>
see OWENS page A8 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059365_0007"/><lb/>
11-9-05<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? SPORTS<lb/>
PAGE A7<lb/>
;d<lb/>
3 21-0 win.<lb/>
1<lb/>
NBA's new rules on apparel<lb/>
are good fit for most players<lb/>
(KRT) ? There have been<lb/>
no reports of players thumb-<lb/>
ing their noses at the league<lb/>
with tlirowli.ii kv<lb/>
So far, no NBA player seems<lb/>
to be causing a to-do with do-<lb/>
rags or shades to stick it to Com-<lb/>
missioner David Stern.<lb/>
Even Philadelphia star Allen<lb/>
Iverson, whose usual appear-<lb/>
ance away from the court<lb/>
violates pretty much every facet<lb/>
of the NBA's new "business<lb/>
casual" dress code, said he's ready<lb/>
to conform.<lb/>
"1 don't have a problem with<lb/>
it Iverson said as the season<lb/>
opened and the dress code went<lb/>
into effect. "I'll do it for the rest<lb/>
of the season<lb/>
The current calm is in con-<lb/>
trast to some players' views when<lb/>
the league announced the new<lb/>
dress code in the preseason. At<lb/>
the time some players called the<lb/>
dress code unfair, unnecessary,<lb/>
an attack on hip-hop culture and<lb/>
even racist.<lb/>
None of that is true, accord-<lb/>
ing to Stern. He said the dress<lb/>
code, part of the collective bar-<lb/>
gaining negotiations with the<lb/>
players' union in the spring, is<lb/>
intended to improve the image<lb/>
of the league.<lb/>
Stern said a big part of that<lb/>
effort is related to the brawl<lb/>
between Indiana Pacers players<lb/>
and Detroit Pistons fans last<lb/>
November, which he called "a<lb/>
low point in the perception<lb/>
of our league But he strongly<lb/>
denied that explicit pressure<lb/>
from the league's business<lb/>
partners was a factor.<lb/>
If the dress code affects black<lb/>
players more than others it is<lb/>
more because of circumstance<lb/>
than design, Stern said.<lb/>
"There is nothing we do that<lb/>
doesn't affect several hundred<lb/>
young African-American men<lb/>
Stern said, referring to the high<lb/>
percentage of blacks among the<lb/>
league's 450 players. "But you<lb/>
can't play the race card here<lb/>
without it getting flipped back<lb/>
at you<lb/>
The dress code also specifi-<lb/>
cally bans, while on "league or<lb/>
team business sports apparel<lb/>
including (erseys, headphones,<lb/>
headgear and sunglasses<lb/>
worn indoors.<lb/>
All those items, including<lb/>
flashy jewelry, are elements of<lb/>
hip-hop style, which the league<lb/>
has embraced in some ways in an<lb/>
effort to appeal to young fans. It<lb/>
plays rap music at its arenas, has<lb/>
used hip-hop acts at recent All-<lb/>
Star games, has signed deals with<lb/>
urban apparel manufacturers<lb/>
such as FUBU and cashed in on<lb/>
the throwback jersey trend.<lb/>
Some players viewed the<lb/>
dress code as a step by the league<lb/>
to eliminate that influence.<lb/>
In response to such player<lb/>
criticism, Stern noted that only<lb/>
a fraction of the league's players<lb/>
have been quoted as speaking<lb/>
against the dress code. He said 28<lb/>
of the league's 30 teams already had<lb/>
their own dress code, though some<lb/>
had been lax with enforcement.<lb/>
 Q<lb/>
see NBA page A8<lb/>
LeBron James dresses accordingly for the NBA's new dress code.<lb/>
Carolina Panthers' cheerleader sex<lb/>
scandal creating major buzz<lb/>
KRT ? Take cheerleaders,<lb/>
dude, two of them, reports of<lb/>
sex and bathroom fights, and<lb/>
the raving imaginations of het-<lb/>
erosexual guys, and you get a<lb/>
Monday morning with little<lb/>
work done.<lb/>
In staid work cubicles<lb/>
around Charlotte and across the<lb/>
country, the lascivious tale of the<lb/>
arrest of two Carolina Panthers<lb/>
cheerleaders was catapulted from<lb/>
water-cooler talk to Internet<lb/>
phenomenon.<lb/>
The story ranked among the<lb/>
top three most-viewed in char-<lb/>
lotte.com's nine-year history. On<lb/>
ESPN.com, more people e-mailed<lb/>
it to friends Monday than any<lb/>
other story.<lb/>
The Panthers' Web site, which<lb/>
features photos of its cheerlead-<lb/>
ers, bent under so many hits that<lb/>
it was shut down.<lb/>
It all began early Sunday<lb/>
when customers at a Tampa<lb/>
nightclub complained that the<lb/>
two cheerleaders were engaged<lb/>
in sexual activity in a bathroom<lb/>
stall, according to police. A fight<lb/>
followed and police arrested the<lb/>
two women.<lb/>
Internet surfers followed<lb/>
every twist and turn as the story<lb/>
continued to unfold Monday:<lb/>
Renee Thomas, a 20-year-<lb/>
old UNC Charlotte student, was<lb/>
charged with using the driver's<lb/>
license of fellow cheerleader<lb/>
Kristen Owen. Thomas could<lb/>
face up to a year in prison on<lb/>
that charge, and is also charged<lb/>
with punching a third woman<lb/>
in the face.<lb/>
Thomas and fellow TopCat<lb/>
Angela Keathley, the other<lb/>
woman arrested, were booted<lb/>
from the squad for violating its<lb/>
code of conduct, which bans<lb/>
behavior that's embarrassing.<lb/>
Keathley is charged with resist-<lb/>
ing arrest. Neither could be<lb/>
reached for comment Monday.<lb/>
Owen was suspended indefi-<lb/>
nitely for violating the code of<lb/>
conduct.<lb/>
Among the questions swirl-<lb/>
ing Monday: How did Thomas<lb/>
get Owen's license? Owen's<lb/>
mother told the Chalotte<lb/>
Observer on Sunday night it had<lb/>
been stolen. Tampa detectives<lb/>
were still investigating.<lb/>
The women were in Tampa<lb/>
for the Panthers game with the<lb/>
Buccaneers. The cheerleading<lb/>
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squad does not appear at out-of-<lb/>
town games and the women were<lb/>
in the city on their own.<lb/>
Netizens stormed onto<lb/>
Web sites Monday swapping<lb/>
everything from wistful requests<lb/>
("pics, please?") to expressions of<lb/>
disappointment ("My little girl<lb/>
loves the TopCats. How do you<lb/>
explain this to a 10-year-old?")<lb/>
On macrumors.com, one<lb/>
thread is titled simply, "Giggidy-<lb/>
giggidy-giggidy-giggidy<lb/>
On Fark.com, a collection of<lb/>
weird news links, so-called "Fark-<lb/>
ers" posted over 250 comments<lb/>
on the relative attractiveness<lb/>
of each cheerleader. One post<lb/>
asked: "So, it would also have<lb/>
been spiffy if it had been two<lb/>
of the Panthers who got caught<lb/>
doing the deed in the John,<lb/>
right?"<lb/>
"It's titillating said Clay<lb/>
Johanson, a 37-year-old indepen-<lb/>
dent Web designer in Charlotte.<lb/>
Johanson estimates he spent<lb/>
two hours total posting updates<lb/>
on the TopCats story on various<lb/>
Web sites, and searching for<lb/>
more on his own.<lb/>
"You ask 100 guys, and 75 of<lb/>
them are going to be, Oh, yeah<lb/>
STSTRAVEL.COM<lb/>
Hi tmtrim't ?l Stmitml torn Oftnhr<lb/>
CANCUN<lb/>
ACAPULCO<lb/>
 JAMAICA<lb/>
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JuENT<lb/>
TRAVEL<lb/>
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It's probably more than that, but<lb/>
this is Charlotte, and I'm going<lb/>
to be conservative<lb/>
The TopCats turn heads in<lb/>
their short skirts, tight tops<lb/>
and ankle-high black boots.<lb/>
But most have full-time jobs<lb/>
outside cheerleading, ranging<lb/>
from mechanical engineers to<lb/>
financial analysts.<lb/>
They build houses for Habitat<lb/>
for Humanity, adopt a family<lb/>
at Christmas and volunteer at<lb/>
the battered women's shelter.<lb/>
They also make public appear-<lb/>
ances, and have many young<lb/>
admirers.<lb/>
Roger King, a police officer<lb/>
in the Myrtle Beach area, said<lb/>
his 10-year-old daughter last year<lb/>
attended a junior TopCat camp,<lb/>
where she got to meet members<lb/>
of the squad. He posted his disap-<lb/>
pointment Monday on charlotte,<lb/>
corn's forums.<lb/>
"A lot more guys are light-<lb/>
hearted about this King said,<lb/>
trying to figure out how to<lb/>
explain the news to his daughter<lb/>
when she returns from a trip to<lb/>
Chicago. "But they don't have<lb/>
a 10-year-old daughter that's a<lb/>
TopCat<lb/>
NOT IF YOU<lb/>
HAVEN'T TOID<lb/>
V<lb/>
www.shareyourlife org<lb/>
1-800-355-SHARE<lb/>
I CotWon on Orgw? I Trm Oonwn<lb/>
OtJ<lb/>
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Dept. of Health Services and<lb/>
Information Management<lb/>
Belk Building, Room 308<lb/>
252.328.2202<lb/>
www.ecu.eduhima<lb/>
November 6-12 is National Health Information<lb/>
and Technology Week<lb/>
Get Outside<lb/>
Make a Difference<lb/>
Thursday, November 10th - 5:30-6:30 PM<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, Room 15<lb/>
Come lo our Info Session where ECU student<lb/>
and SCA Alumnus Josh Copenhawr will tell you<lb/>
more about our Expense-Paid Internships<lb/>
www.theSCA.org<lb/>
Owens embodies<lb/>
all that's bad<lb/>
about pro sports<lb/>
KRT ? The thing about<lb/>
Leon was that Leon was<lb/>
a joke whom we looked for-<lb/>
ward to for a good laugh.<lb/>
"Leon's whole career is like<lb/>
a highlight reel, baby Leon<lb/>
states on his Web site main-<lb/>
tained by his sponsor, Bud-<lb/>
weiser. "My personal favorite<lb/>
moment came during the 1995<lb/>
playoffs. We were down 14-10<lb/>
in the final two minutes of the<lb/>
game and who gets the call?<lb/>
Leon. It was a call from my<lb/>
publicist, Tina, who had just<lb/>
landed a sweet photo op with<lb/>
me and the cheerleaders after<lb/>
the game<lb/>
The thing about Leon's real-<lb/>
life alter ego, Terrell Owens, is<lb/>
that he's just a joke, period.<lb/>
It is difficult at this moment<lb/>
to think of a more conceited<lb/>
character in the egotistical<lb/>
history of the self-absorbed<lb/>
world of professional athletics<lb/>
than the narcissistic fellow<lb/>
we've all come to know as<lb/>
T.O which, come to think<lb/>
of it, rhymes with pee-oh.<lb/>
He has taken self-indulgence<lb/>
to a level not even Leon<lb/>
could've invented.<lb/>
No wonder his latest<lb/>
employers, the Philadelphia<lb/>
Eagles, announced Monday<lb/>
that they'd had enough, kick-<lb/>
ing the attention-starved wide<lb/>
receiver off the team for the<lb/>
rest of the season, if not for<lb/>
good. What got Owens riled<lb/>
most recently? Was It his<lb/>
team's surprising struggles<lb/>
during the season's first half?<lb/>
No. Was it the momentum it<lb/>
lost coming off last season's<lb/>
Super Bowl? No. Was it even an<lb/>
understandable bout with ego,<lb/>
like the team wasn't calling his<lb/>
number enough and he felt he<lb/>
could help more? No.<lb/>
It was that the club didn't<lb/>
recognize to his satisfaction<lb/>
the 100th career touchdown<lb/>
reception of his career.<lb/>
"It just shows a lack of class<lb/>
they have Owens railed on<lb/>
ESPN.com last Thursday. "My<lb/>
publicist talked to the head PR<lb/>
guy, and they made an excuse<lb/>
they didn't recognize that was<lb/>
coming up. But that was a<lb/>
blatant lie. Had it been some-<lb/>
body else, they probably would<lb/>
have popped fireworks around<lb/>
the stadium<lb/>
And with Michael Irvln<lb/>
inexplicably egging him on in<lb/>
an ESPN television interview,<lb/>
Owens also continued throw-<lb/>
ing barbs at his quarterback,<lb/>
Donovan McNabb, for no good<lb/>
reason. After all, he'd caught 47<lb/>
passes for 763 and six touch-<lb/>
downs from McNabb through<lb/>
seven games, which made him,<lb/>
once again, one of the most<lb/>
prolific and dangerous receiv-<lb/>
ers in the game.<lb/>
Along with a locker room<lb/>
fistflght Owens got into with<lb/>
former Eagles defensive end<lb/>
Hugh Douglas last week, the<lb/>
public tongue-lashing of his<lb/>
quarterback led to Owens get-<lb/>
ting suspended from Sunday<lb/>
night's contest at Washing-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
Not that Owens cared. For<lb/>
if there is one thing he's made<lb/>
clear during his career, it is that<lb/>
he plays solely for himself.<lb/>
He ought to be a golfer.<lb/>
A tennis player. A marathon<lb/>
runner. One of those adventur-<lb/>
ers who only does things by his<lb/>
or her lonesome.<lb/>
The concept of team is<lb/>
anathema to Owens. He was<lb/>
one of those kids in kinder-<lb/>
garten who got a check mark<lb/>
on his progress report next to<lb/>
"no" after the statement "plays<lb/>
well with others<lb/>
Even Leon understood the<lb/>
importance of team play.<lb/>
"I gotta step back once in a<lb/>
while and give other athletes<lb/>
some air time he states. "Leon<lb/>
tends to steal the show. I mean,<lb/>
that's one day you get Leon the<lb/>
other 364<lb/>
What is most mind-<lb/>
boggling about Owens is that<lb/>
so many people have, in fact,<lb/>
gone the extra mile just for<lb/>
him. He seems to have forgot-<lb/>
ten that he should be with Bal-<lb/>
timore trying to catch passes<lb/>
from one of its lousy quarter-<lb/>
backs. That was due to a foul-<lb/>
up by his original agent, David<lb/>
Joseph, who failed to file his<lb/>
free-agent paperwork in time,<lb/>
leaving him property of the<lb/>
49ers, who then traded him to<lb/>
the Ravens.<lb/>
Owens broke into a tan-<lb/>
trum, not unlike a kindergarte-<lb/>
ner, and after a series of nego-<lb/>
tiations, he got his way, which<lb/>
was a trade to Super Bowl-con-<lb/>
tender Philadelphia to play<lb/>
with Pro Bowler McNabb.<lb/>
Then Owens signed a<lb/>
seven-year $49 million deal<lb/>
against the advice of the play-<lb/>
ers' union.<lb/>
Earlier this year, Owens<lb/>
hired loudmouth agent Drew<lb/>
Rosenhaus and immediately<lb/>
announced he was unhappy<lb/>
with his year-old contract and<lb/>
needed a bigger deal to "feed<lb/>
his family He threatened to<lb/>
hold out of training camp, and<lb/>
a confrontation with coach<lb/>
Andy Reld led to a one-week<lb/>
suspension before the season<lb/>
kicked off.<lb/>
The Eagles, however,<lb/>
refused to renegotiate the deal<lb/>
Owens had just signed. Good<lb/>
for them. Now they're refus-<lb/>
ing to pay Owens $800,000 in<lb/>
salary for the next four games,<lb/>
which is the most they can<lb/>
suspend him under the labor-<lb/>
management agreement.<lb/>
They're willing, however,<lb/>
to give their royal pain in<lb/>
the gluteus maximus the rest<lb/>
of his salary, roughly $1 mil-<lb/>
lion, and have him stay away.<lb/>
Given what we know of Ter-<lb/>
rell Owens, it's not having a<lb/>
platform that'll hurt him the<lb/>
most.<lb/>
Celebrating<lb/>
LUSB<lb/>
Health Professions Week<lb/>
November 6-12,2005<lb/>
ALLIED HEALTH PROFESSIONS WEEK is celebrated nationally to<lb/>
honor health care providers working in more than 80 allied<lb/>
health professions.<lb/>
Allied health professionals are an essential part of America's<lb/>
health care safety net. Because there is a critical shortage of<lb/>
health care providers-currently and predicted for years to<lb/>
come-there are many opportunities available for those<lb/>
looking for an allied health career.<lb/>
Take a minute to learn more about allied health professions<lb/>
by going to www.ecu.eduah.<lb/>
fil<lb/>
I A ? T<lb/>
School of Allied Health Sciences<lb/>
Carol Belk Building<lb/>
casque 252.328.4400<lb/>
122221 www.ecu.eduah<lb/>
? <lb/>
<pb facs="00059365_0008"/><lb/>
PAGEA8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROUNIAN ? SPORTS<lb/>
11-9-05<lb/>
i<lb/>
Coughlin allowing for a<lb/>
little fun with the G-men<lb/>
FOOtball from page A6<lb/>
bracket. Despite being the under-<lb/>
dog, Bucho proved that they were<lb/>
not to be messed with as they<lb/>
shut out their more decorated<lb/>
opponent which included several<lb/>
former ECU Pirate football play-<lb/>
ers 19-0. "It felt real good to win<lb/>
the championship this year said<lb/>
Bucho captain, Blake Dameron.<lb/>
"1 don't think anyone gave<lb/>
us a chance. We played in purple<lb/>
league all year and we were<lb/>
bumped up to gold for the play-<lb/>
offs. No one gave us a chance and<lb/>
we won, so it felt real good<lb/>
In the fraternity purple game<lb/>
Chi Phi dominated SAE 21-0.<lb/>
Things did not get better for SAE<lb/>
as they fell again in the fraternity<lb/>
gold game 7-0 to Pike. The gold<lb/>
game was a battle of the defense<lb/>
as Pike was able to put up the only<lb/>
score in the first half of play.<lb/>
Overall most students enjoyed<lb/>
Eli Manning Is beginning to blossom in his second year as the Giants' signal caller.<lb/>
KRT ? The man is rough and<lb/>
hard as oak bark, but somewhere<lb/>
inside him Tom Coughlin must<lb/>
have known he badly needed this<lb/>
kind of season. Coughlin came<lb/>
in with four straight losing years<lb/>
in the NFL, the last three at 6-10,<lb/>
and nobody ever gets five bad<lb/>
ones in a row unless he's Tom<lb/>
Landry starting up a brand new<lb/>
franchise in Dallas.<lb/>
Maybe Ernie Accorsi, the GM,<lb/>
would stick by him, but Coughlin<lb/>
would be fired by the Giants' fans<lb/>
and his own players, and that<lb/>
would be it. So he was, still is,<lb/>
under enormous pressure that<lb/>
comes with repeatedly coming<lb/>
up short, lie has no Super Bowl<lb/>
in his portfolio, and Coughlin<lb/>
has fashioned a harsh image<lb/>
that requires his players to invest<lb/>
heavily in the program. If you<lb/>
don't buy the schemes, if you<lb/>
don't think they lead to victory,<lb/>
then it is difficult to swallow the<lb/>
rigid layers of formality.<lb/>
We saw that at the start of<lb/>
this marriage, when the Giants<lb/>
rebelled against Coughlin<lb/>
and basically thought he was<lb/>
just a jerk. The more they lost<lb/>
last year, the more absurd<lb/>
it seemed to have that digital<lb/>
clock set five minutes fast in the<lb/>
locker room.<lb/>
Then came this season, and<lb/>
suddenly circumstance pulled<lb/>
everyone together. Coughlin and<lb/>
the Giants were in the middle<lb/>
of everything. They opened on<lb/>
911, and then they were a big<lb/>
part of the tragic story in New<lb/>
Orleans, playing the Saints at<lb/>
home instead of on the road,<lb/>
before a nation of curious view-<lb/>
$180<lb/>
Per<lb/>
Month<lb/>
I his coupon uocxl for<lb/>
ers. A couple weeks ago Wel-<lb/>
lington Mara died, and now the<lb/>
players wear his initials above<lb/>
their chest.<lb/>
It was one thing after another,<lb/>
to pull and tug this franchise in<lb/>
one direction. But the most amaz-<lb/>
ing thing that Coughlin has done<lb/>
- and this is not something you<lb/>
would ever think likely from the<lb/>
stoic man - is that he has made<lb/>
the Giants fun to watch.<lb/>
Fun is not something you<lb/>
associate with Coughlin or with<lb/>
the Giants franchise, even back<lb/>
when they were winning cham-<lb/>
pionships, using power football<lb/>
and a corps of rapacious lineback-<lb/>
ers. The Giants, at their best, were<lb/>
efficient and mean, and they ran<lb/>
you into the ground on both sides<lb/>
of the ball.<lb/>
This season, we are getting<lb/>
something different. We are<lb/>
still getting decent defense,<lb/>
which bends without breaking<lb/>
in the red zone. But we are also<lb/>
witnessing a new look, a fresh<lb/>
daring. We are getting Eli Man-<lb/>
ning looking downfield, throw-<lb/>
ing deep to Jeremy Shockey, on<lb/>
fourth-and-1.<lb/>
You just needed to see that<lb/>
call from Coughlin in the second<lb/>
quarter on Sunday to know<lb/>
Coughlin's circle of trust has<lb/>
grown to include Manning. A<lb/>
year ago, Coughlin admitted, he<lb/>
never would have put his young<lb/>
quarterback in that position,<lb/>
never taken that chance.<lb/>
"Would I put him in that<lb/>
situation last year? Probably<lb/>
not in a tight ballgame, fourth<lb/>
down Coughlin said Monday.<lb/>
"Their personnel indicated run.<lb/>
We thought we had a shot, and<lb/>
we took it<lb/>
They are taking plenty of<lb/>
shots, opening things up in a<lb/>
way that makes the Giants one<lb/>
of the more entertaining teams in<lb/>
the league. They are 12th in the<lb/>
league in offense, averaging 340.4<lb/>
yards per game (they averaged<lb/>
295.1 last season). Only eight<lb/>
other teams are averaging more<lb/>
yards per play, and the Giants<lb/>
are attempting more than 32<lb/>
passes a game (compared to 29.7<lb/>
last year).<lb/>
Here is the irony: Jim Fassel,<lb/>
who was a much more affable<lb/>
personality, never loosened up<lb/>
with his offense. He didn't have<lb/>
Manning, and he didn't have a<lb/>
playmaker like Plaxico Burress.<lb/>
But it is still hard to imagine<lb/>
Fassel, even with this person-<lb/>
nel, asking Manning to sidestep<lb/>
pressure in the pocket and wait,<lb/>
to read his options, and to hit<lb/>
Shockey on that fourth-and-1.<lb/>
What happens next? The<lb/>
schedule tightens in two weeks. It<lb/>
is not impossible that the Giants<lb/>
go into a homely swoon and<lb/>
Coughlin ends up with that fifth<lb/>
straight losing season.<lb/>
For now, you step back and<lb/>
watch a desperately hungry coach<lb/>
and his football team climb the<lb/>
standings as a daredevil act. The<lb/>
Giants are fun, for a change, and<lb/>
Coughlin is learning to smile a<lb/>
bit as he goes.<lb/>
Usually, we are firing coaches<lb/>
for losing just as they are learning<lb/>
what it may take to win. Cough-<lb/>
lin may have survived the worst,<lb/>
a wiser man, still head coach of<lb/>
an NFL team.<lb/>
OWenS from page A6<lb/>
Owens is scheduled to earn<lb/>
$3.25 million this season,<lb/>
meaning the four-game suspen-<lb/>
sion would cost him almost<lb/>
$800,000.<lb/>
The Eagles will have to pay<lb/>
Owens nearly $1 million to stay<lb/>
home the final five games. They<lb/>
could've simply released him<lb/>
already, but they didn't want<lb/>
his signing bonus to affect the<lb/>
salary cap or allow him to go to<lb/>
another team.<lb/>
Owens will either be traded or<lb/>
cut after the season. He's due to<lb/>
receive a $5 million roster bonus<lb/>
in March 2006, so the Eagles will<lb/>
decide his fate before then.<lb/>
Owens made more than $9<lb/>
million last season, when he<lb/>
? helped lead Philadelphia to the<lb/>
Super Bowl.<lb/>
Two years ago the Tampa Bay<lb/>
Buccaneers decided they'd had<lb/>
enough of Keyshawn Johnson<lb/>
and made a similar move.<lb/>
After Johnson criticized<lb/>
coach Jon Gruden, the Super<lb/>
Bowl champion Bucs deactivated<lb/>
the star receiver and sent him<lb/>
home for the final six games<lb/>
with pay.<lb/>
The Eagles are 4-4 this season.<lb/>
And McNabb, who feuded with<lb/>
Owens throughout the summer<lb/>
and has been a constant target<lb/>
of his criticism, finally took a<lb/>
stand in the matter, saying the<lb/>
team might be "better off" with-<lb/>
out Owens.<lb/>
"Obviously it is tough losing a<lb/>
guy of his caliber, his ability, but<lb/>
I think we might be better off<lb/>
McNabb said after throwing an<lb/>
interception that sealed the loss<lb/>
to Washington.<lb/>
"We're 4-4. We're not 1-7. I<lb/>
think that's the way to look at it.<lb/>
For the guys in the locker room,<lb/>
we win together and we lose<lb/>
together he said.<lb/>
Asked to elaborate on how the<lb/>
team could be better off without<lb/>
its top receiver, McNabb empha-<lb/>
sized the remaining players are<lb/>
united with the same goal of<lb/>
winning.<lb/>
Rookie Reggie Brown filled<lb/>
in for Owens against Washing-<lb/>
ton and caught five passes for<lb/>
94 yards, including a 56-yard<lb/>
TD reception. But the Eagles'<lb/>
offense continued to struggle and<lb/>
couldn't score the tying touch-<lb/>
down with three shots from the<lb/>
Redskins 7 in the final minutes.<lb/>
The Eagles were 17-5 with<lb/>
Owens, including a 24-21 loss to<lb/>
New England in the Super Bowl.<lb/>
In that game, Owens had nine<lb/>
catches for 122 yards after defying<lb/>
his doctor's advice and playing 6<lb/>
12 weeks after ankle surgery.<lb/>
They're 2-1 without him in<lb/>
games that matter, winning twice<lb/>
in the NFC playoffs.<lb/>
the experience not only of the<lb/>
championship night, but the<lb/>
entire flag football season. As<lb/>
games were played throughout<lb/>
the season, both competition and<lb/>
friendship formed. In the end<lb/>
only the best of the competition<lb/>
remained as they were crowned<lb/>
ECU Flag Football Champions.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
This was the second time<lb/>
Owens has been suspended<lb/>
during his controversial 10-year<lb/>
career. In 2000, he was suspended<lb/>
one game by San Francisco coach<lb/>
Steve Mariucci following his infa-<lb/>
mous touchdown celebrations on<lb/>
the Dallas Cowboys' star logo at<lb/>
the center of Texas Stadium.<lb/>
Owens clashed with manage-<lb/>
ment this summer and earned<lb/>
a one-week exile from training<lb/>
camp after a heated dispute with<lb/>
Reid that followed a shouting<lb/>
match with offensive coordinator<lb/>
Brad Childress.<lb/>
Owens forced a trade to the<lb/>
Eagles last year after eight seasons<lb/>
with the 49ers and invigorated<lb/>
the offense with his superior<lb/>
skills. He had 77 catches for 1,200<lb/>
yards and 14 TDs in 14 games.<lb/>
Soon after Philadelphia lost<lb/>
to the Patriots, Owens took his<lb/>
first shot at McNabb, suggesting<lb/>
the five-time Pro Bowl quar-<lb/>
terback was tired in the fourth<lb/>
quarter of the loss.<lb/>
McNabb responded harshly<lb/>
and the two didn't speak for a<lb/>
prolonged period in training<lb/>
camp. They eventually reconciled<lb/>
their relationship and performed<lb/>
well together on the field Owens<lb/>
has 47 catches for 763 yards and<lb/>
six TDs this season.<lb/>
However, Owens continued<lb/>
to throw verbal jabs at McNabb.<lb/>
NBA from page A7<lb/>
The Miami Heat, for instance,<lb/>
already had a dress code similar<lb/>
to the one adopted by the league,<lb/>
though chains and headphones<lb/>
were not forbidden. Heat forward<lb/>
Udonis Haslem had a particular<lb/>
problem with the ban on head-<lb/>
phones when players arrive at<lb/>
and leave arenas.<lb/>
"I don't see what that has to<lb/>
do with image or anything like<lb/>
that Haslem said. "Everyone<lb/>
wears headphones. Does that<lb/>
present a negative image by wear-<lb/>
ing your headphones when you<lb/>
are entering the arena?<lb/>
"For all they know, you could<lb/>
be listening to gospel<lb/>
Heat guard Dwyane Wade<lb/>
said he wasn't sure if there was a<lb/>
racial element to the dress code.<lb/>
He was among players who said<lb/>
the dress code is only a cosmetic<lb/>
change and that "the real person<lb/>
is going to come out no matter<lb/>
what clothes they are wearing<lb/>
To Heat center Alonzo<lb/>
Mourning, the two go hand<lb/>
in hand. He said a dress code<lb/>
wasn't needed but is "appropri-<lb/>
ate" because Stern is trying to sell<lb/>
a product and that the product<lb/>
needs to be presented in a way<lb/>
that customers want.<lb/>
Mourning, 35, said he is a<lb/>
fan of hip-hop music but that<lb/>
some facets of that image are<lb/>
not appropriate for the business<lb/>
of the NBA. He said the business<lb/>
success of Michael Jordan, who<lb/>
almost always appeared pub-<lb/>
licly in suits as a player, showed<lb/>
that image can be important to<lb/>
making money<lb/>
"What (Stern) is trying to<lb/>
do is improve the image of the<lb/>
league; he is not trying to run<lb/>
anybody's life Mourning said.<lb/>
It's not clear, though, if the<lb/>
NBA even needed to improve its<lb/>
image. The league set a record last<lb/>
season with average attendance<lb/>
of 17,313, and the year before<lb/>
had its highest attendance since<lb/>
Jordan retired for the final time.<lb/>
A survey commissioned by<lb/>
Dockers, the clothing brand, after<lb/>
the dress code was announced<lb/>
didn't show an overwhelmingly<lb/>
negative view of players among fans.<lb/>
Of the respondents who iden-<lb/>
tified themselves as NBA fans, 38<lb/>
percent of men and 37 percent<lb/>
of women answered "yes" or<lb/>
"somewhat" when asked if they<lb/>
thought the way NBA players<lb/>
dress is a negative reflection of<lb/>
the league. But when the NBA<lb/>
fans were asked if they supported<lb/>
the new dress code, 62 percent of<lb/>
men and 45 percent of women<lb/>
said yes.<lb/>
Stern said the league Is at the<lb/>
forefront of a cultural discussion.<lb/>
He said his feedback indicates that<lb/>
families and classrooms used the<lb/>
dress code to talk about "standards,<lb/>
professionalism, discipline<lb/>
"It struck a chord with a lot<lb/>
of people and (they) wanted to<lb/>
talk about it Stern said. "They<lb/>
use sports to talk about these<lb/>
things. We are in the middle of<lb/>
a debate now<lb/>
2nd .mil 4th domition<lb/>
I'm a Student and a Plasma Donor<lb/>
Names: Jennifer<lb/>
Majors: Nursing<lb/>
Hobbies: Swimming &amp; going to the beach<lb/>
Why do I donate Plasma?<lb/>
Extra spending money for the beach.<lb/>
Earn up to $170mo. donating plasma in a friendly place.<lb/>
DCI Biological of Greenville ? 252-757-0171<lb/>
2727 E.lOth Street ? Down the Street from ECU ? www.dclplasma.com'<lb/>
is now accepting<lb/>
applications.<lb/>
"ssPtfTX<lb/>
Ho applications mill be taken aftei<lb/>
January 10,2005 at 5:00p.m.<lb/>
Minimum 2.0 CPU required<lb/>
"Before giving, I<lb/>
always look for the<lb/>
Humane Seal<lb/>
.<lb/>
NQAH WYLE<lb/>
Star of NBC's hit show ER<lb/>
The Humane Charity Seal of<lb/>
Approval guarantees that a health<lb/>
charity funds vital<lb/>
patient services or<lb/>
life-saving medical<lb/>
research, but never<lb/>
animal experiments.<lb/>
Council on Humane Giving<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
www. HumaneSeal. org<lb/>
202-686-2210, ext. 335<lb/>
IYSICIANS COMMITTEE FOR RESPONSIBLE MEDICINE<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059365_0009"/><lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
Page A9<lb/>
WEDNESDAY November 9, 2005<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
4 Bedroom 2 Bath WashDryer<lb/>
Garage Completely remodeled<lb/>
Fenced-in backyard 252-361-2138<lb/>
113 N. Elm House<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/>
3 BDR 2 BA Plus Bonus Room All<lb/>
Appliances, Fenced Yard, Deck, Pets<lb/>
OK. 4 Blocks from ECU $750 Per<lb/>
Month. Sec. Dep. Negotiable. Avail.<lb/>
Now. Call 252-258-1810.<lb/>
Park Village: 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/>
Cypress Gardens: 1 &amp; 2 bedroom 1<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/>
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/>
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/>
404 E. Second Steel Duplex 2<lb/>
Bedroom 1 Bath with Fenced yard<lb/>
$450 252-361-2138<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/>
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/>
FREEI 1st Mo. Rent plus High Speed<lb/>
Internet- 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, Central<lb/>
heatAC, fireplace, fenced yard,<lb/>
dogs OK. Near ECU, PCMH, 427W.<lb/>
4th St. $1100.00Mo. 347-6504<lb/>
Cannon CourtCedar Court: 2<lb/>
bedroom 1.5 bath townhouse.<lb/>
One ECU bus stop. For more<lb/>
information call Wainright Property<lb/>
Management 756-6209 or visit our<lb/>
web-site www.rentingreenville.com<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/>
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/>
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/>
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 Jan. '06 thru June '06 Rent<lb/>
$235 a month plus split cable and<lb/>
utilities Near Campus On bus route<lb/>
call Stephanie 252-531-3217<lb/>
One room available in four bedroom<lb/>
house. 12 mail from 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/>
Light House Work for 2-3 Hrswk,<lb/>
Own Schedule At ECU Professors<lb/>
Home, Well Paid. Call 355-2217<lb/>
Bartenders Wanted! $250day<lb/>
potential. No experience necessary.<lb/>
Training provided. Call (800) 965-<lb/>
6520 ext. 202<lb/>
Professor O'Cools is now hiring wait<lb/>
staff and Part-time Manager. Must<lb/>
apply in person between 2-5pm.<lb/>
Must be available for day, evening,<lb/>
and night shifts.<lb/>
Needed: Someone good at tennis to<lb/>
work with and play with a 13 year<lb/>
old boy 3-4 times per week. Call<lb/>
917-6787 for more information.<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/>
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/>
Wanted Nanny for infant experience<lb/>
and references required please call<lb/>
341-8331<lb/>
Old Writer Needs Someone<lb/>
Reasonably Proficient in Computer<lb/>
Use to Tutor Him In Once A Week<lb/>
Sessions. Lyndale Area. Pays Very<lb/>
Well. 258-1707<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/>
Part-time Sales position; afternoon<lb/>
hours; apply in person @ Larry's<lb/>
Carpet One, 3010 E. 10th Street,<lb/>
Greenville, NIC - No Calls, please!<lb/>
OTHER<lb/>
Spring Break - Early Booking<lb/>
Specials - Free Meals &amp; Drinks -<lb/>
$50 Deposit - 800-234-7007 www.<lb/>
endlesssummertours.com<lb/>
Found bird between Belk BIdg. and<lb/>
Stratford Arm apts. Light blue belly<lb/>
yellow neck gray and white wings.<lb/>
Call 321-7427 for info<lb/>
Cancun, Acapulco, Jamaica From<lb/>
$499! Travel With America's Largest<lb/>
&amp; Ethics Award Winning Spring<lb/>
Break Company! Fly Scheduled<lb/>
Airlines, Free Meals, Drinks, Biggest<lb/>
Celebrity Parties! On-Campus<lb/>
Marketing Reps Needed! www.<lb/>
SpringBreakTravel.com Promo code:<lb/>
32 1-800-678-6386<lb/>
1 Spring Break Website! Low<lb/>
prices guaranteed. Free Meals &amp;<lb/>
Free Drinks. Book 11 people, get<lb/>
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6 www.SpringBreakDiscounts.<lb/>
com or www.LeisureTours.com or<lb/>
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Meals, Taxes, Entry To Exclusive<lb/>
MTVu Events, Beach Parties With<lb/>
Celebrities As Seen on Real World,<lb/>
Road Rules! On Campus Reps<lb/>
Needed! www.SpringBreakTravel.<lb/>
com Promo code: 32 1-800-678-<lb/>
6386<lb/>
Vixen Sky Productions Casting Call<lb/>
for models Seeking guys and girls of<lb/>
all types No experience necessary,<lb/>
photo requested Pirates Cove<lb/>
Apartments Lounge beside the office<lb/>
November 8th, 9th, 10th 6pm-8pm<lb/>
For information or directions call<lb/>
Joe Pisano at (252)321-8209 www.<lb/>
vixenskyproductions.com<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
SAGA's Fall Anime Marathon - On<lb/>
Friday the 11th and Saturday the<lb/>
12th we will be watching ALL of<lb/>
Saiyuki and first season of Super<lb/>
GALS. Mendenhall 221 from noon<lb/>
till 2am.<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
BREAK!<lb/>
Bahamas Party<lb/>
Cruise $299<lb/>
Cancun $559<lb/>
Acapulco $629<lb/>
Jamaica, Nassau, Panama City, Daytona From $1791<lb/>
Recognized 3 Times For Ethics! Campus Reps Needed!<lb/>
SpringBrBakTravcl.com<lb/>
1-800-678-6386<lb/>
Crossword<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Oscar winner<lb/>
Kedrova<lb/>
5 Carta<lb/>
10 Medicinal plant<lb/>
14 Big screen<lb/>
superstar<lb/>
15 Packing heat<lb/>
16 Gray wolf<lb/>
17 Summerville or<lb/>
Pickens<lb/>
18 Sea's end?<lb/>
19 Religious image<lb/>
20 Goose eggs<lb/>
22 Comparisons<lb/>
based on<lb/>
similarities<lb/>
24 Capital on the<lb/>
Delaware<lb/>
26 Low in fat<lb/>
27 Obliterate<lb/>
29 Irritable<lb/>
33 Assembling<lb/>
36 Winter hrs. in<lb/>
Boston<lb/>
38 Be gutsy<lb/>
39 Circle part<lb/>
40 Speaker's stand<lb/>
43 Pastoral spot<lb/>
44 Jet-set jet<lb/>
46 Greek letter<lb/>
47 Lent follower<lb/>
49 Work<lb/>
51 Put in a box<lb/>
53 Duration<lb/>
55 Inflexible<lb/>
59 Information<lb/>
collection<lb/>
63 One cubic<lb/>
decimeter<lb/>
64 Coup d'<lb/>
65 Jocularity<lb/>
67 Lima's country<lb/>
68 Alaska port<lb/>
69 Yogi of baseball<lb/>
70 Five-star review<lb/>
71 Went fast<lb/>
72 Fiery felony<lb/>
73 Actor Sharif<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
Composer<lb/>
Franz<lb/>
Couch potato<lb/>
French river<lb/>
Ellipsoidal nuts<lb/>
More in Mexico<lb/>
Mysterious<lb/>
Fed<lb/>
12341676'1 23.111213<lb/>
14<lb/>
171'<lb/>
20?"<lb/>
2425?26<lb/>
272B129 1303132<lb/>
333435?3636 1<lb/>
394041<lb/>
444546??<lb/>
49!)05152<lb/>
535455565758<lb/>
596061263<lb/>
641656667<lb/>
686970<lb/>
71173<lb/>
? 20C All rig? Trill hts reune H serveedia d.Services, Inc.110906<lb/>
 k mm&amp;<lb/>
8 Language of<lb/>
Katmandu<lb/>
9 Fred's first<lb/>
partner<lb/>
10 Trued up<lb/>
11 Focal points<lb/>
12 Tubular<lb/>
woodwind<lb/>
13 Many, many<lb/>
millennia<lb/>
21 Harden<lb/>
23 Cereal grain<lb/>
25 More senior<lb/>
28 Range of the<lb/>
Rockies<lb/>
30 Table seasoning<lb/>
31 Baobab or<lb/>
banyan<lb/>
32 Calendar length<lb/>
33 Galleria<lb/>
34 Neighborhood<lb/>
35 Sign of healing<lb/>
37 Tire feature<lb/>
41 More shoddy<lb/>
42 Twangy<lb/>
45 Spun<lb/>
48 Part-time<lb/>
athlete<lb/>
Solutions<lb/>
HV1AI0N0SHV1a3ds<lb/>
3AVdVHH3SIW0N<lb/>
nb3dH1U1WV13<lb/>
H3J11S3SVBV1Va<lb/>
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3sV0N "o"3u0aVi<lb/>
H31SV3HuHV3i<lb/>
V31Nu310333aV<lb/>
3HVCJ1S3a3SsVIAI<lb/>
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N03'13dV3sIAJ13s<lb/>
Oa01a3WHV10a1<lb/>
301vvN9VnV1i1<lb/>
50 Chest bone<lb/>
52 Fidel of Cuba<lb/>
54 Deadly African<lb/>
snake<lb/>
56 Mr. T's outfit<lb/>
57 Emperor before<lb/>
Trajan<lb/>
58 More authentic<lb/>
59 Lairs<lb/>
60 At the summit<lb/>
61 Domesticate<lb/>
62 Goofs<lb/>
66 Chinese<lb/>
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by Aaron Warner<lb/>
WE HAP SOME FUN &amp;O.RK&amp;,<lb/>
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AT MS PLACE.<lb/>
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by Aaron Warner<lb/>
IALREAPY<lb/>
THOUGHT FTm,<lb/>
CWE. THAT'S WHY<lb/>
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F1NPW.<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059365_0010"/><lb/>
11-9-05<lb/>
THE EAST CAROUNIAN ? SPORTS<lb/>
PAGE A10<lb/>
Be an Orientation<lb/>
Assistant!<lb/>
Develop your leadership skills, help the new students adjust to ECU,<lb/>
pass along Pirate Pride, earn some money, and have FUN<lb/>
Summer 2006 applications now<lb/>
available in Whichard 201.<lb/>
To learn more, attend an information session:<lb/>
Tuesday, November 15,10:00-11:00am, Whichard 106<lb/>
Monday, December 5,4:00-5:00pm, Whichard 106<lb/>
Wednesday, January 11,7:00-8:00pm, Mendenhall, Room 212<lb/>
Or contact the Office of Orientation,<lb/>
Whichard 201,328-4173, johnsonb@mail.ecu.edu.<lb/>
Apply today!<lb/>
II<lb/>
"I absolutely love this job.<lb/>
The opportunities it gives<lb/>
you are endless, not to<lb/>
mention lifetime friends<lb/>
?OA 2005<lb/>
It was so much fun If eft that we made<lb/>
a huge impact on the incoming freshmen<lb/>
?OA 2005<lb/>
has great hours and pay.<lb/>
I learned more about ECU. I met new<lb/>
people?coworkers, freshmen,<lb/>
and parents. Plus, I grew as a person<lb/>
-OA 2005<lb/>
I really like the<lb/>
program and feel<lb/>
it's a great way<lb/>
toinvestintothe<lb/>
future of ECU<lb/>
?OA 2004<lb/>
 
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