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<pb facs="00059375_0001"/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
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www.theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Volume 81 Number 34<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
December 6 2005<lb/>
Student Poll<lb/>
Higher One cards:<lb/>
yea or nay?<lb/>
ATHANASIOS<lb/>
STERGIOULAS<lb/>
SOPHOMORE<lb/>
COMMUNICATION<lb/>
BUSINESS MAJOR<lb/>
"The debit card is<lb/>
something new and is a<lb/>
step up for students<lb/>
IH<lb/>
KIMBERLY WESTON<lb/>
SOPHOMORE<lb/>
COMMUNICATION<lb/>
MAJOR<lb/>
"I think if you want<lb/>
the card, yop should get it.<lb/>
It sounds like a good idea,<lb/>
but some things need to be<lb/>
implemented better such<lb/>
as distribution and infor-<lb/>
mation - people don't<lb/>
understand it<lb/>
BILLY ANDERSON<lb/>
SOPHOMORE CRIMINAL<lb/>
JUSTICE MAJOR<lb/>
"I'm a little skeptical<lb/>
about a third party having<lb/>
my money<lb/>
NATE PETERSON<lb/>
SENIOR IDIS MAJOR<lb/>
"I think the debit card<lb/>
simplifies the process by<lb/>
eliminating some of the<lb/>
paperwork. It seems more<lb/>
efficient<lb/>
M. COLE JONES<lb/>
SENIOR MARKETING<lb/>
PRE-PHYSICAL THERAPY<lb/>
MAJOR<lb/>
"On behalf of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government, we<lb/>
totally agree that the stu-<lb/>
dents of ECU have not been<lb/>
properly educated about the<lb/>
truth of the Higher One ini-<lb/>
tiative - therefore we have<lb/>
created a student forum so<lb/>
students can get all of their<lb/>
questions and concerns<lb/>
officially addressed from<lb/>
representatives of Higher<lb/>
One and the university<lb/>
Pros, cons of new Higher One Card<lb/>
Pros <lb/>
No more long lines<lb/>
for refund checks<lb/>
Advantages of new debit<lb/>
card<lb/>
KIMBERLY BELLAMY<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
ECU has teamed up with<lb/>
Higher One to initiate the system<lb/>
of getting refunds through a<lb/>
debit card.<lb/>
A total of 33 institutions,<lb/>
including ECU, are under con-<lb/>
tract with Higher One to distrib-<lb/>
ute refunds through debit cards.<lb/>
Many students are skepti-<lb/>
cal of receiving their refunds<lb/>
through Higher One and wonder<lb/>
how credible the company is at<lb/>
keeping their personal informa-<lb/>
tion confidential.<lb/>
Charles M. Hawkins, senior<lb/>
associate vice chancellor for<lb/>
financial services, checked out<lb/>
the company's credibility before<lb/>
agreeing to a contract with the<lb/>
company.<lb/>
"We called other institutions,<lb/>
and they were very positive about<lb/>
their experience with this said<lb/>
Hawkins.<lb/>
Students are also worried<lb/>
that the company will be able to<lb/>
release or sell their information<lb/>
to other companies.<lb/>
"This is still a very secure<lb/>
environment Hawkins said.<lb/>
"The company cannot sell<lb/>
this information. They are held<lb/>
to the same standards ECU is<lb/>
held to<lb/>
There are two main reasons<lb/>
why ECU decided to introduce<lb/>
the debit card. The school was<lb/>
receiving a lot of complaints<lb/>
about the long wait for the refund<lb/>
checks and the school would not<lb/>
be able to continue to produce<lb/>
the checks with the same admin-<lb/>
istrative systems.<lb/>
"We're putting in new admin-<lb/>
istrative systems and as part of<lb/>
that, it's going to be a very dif-<lb/>
ficult process for us to produce<lb/>
these types of checks Hawkins<lb/>
said.<lb/>
A misconception students<lb/>
may have is that the debit card<lb/>
would be the only source for<lb/>
receiving their refunds.<lb/>
A direct deposit to your<lb/>
OneAccount is just one of the<lb/>
options available to students to<lb/>
get their refunds. The two previ-<lb/>
ous options of direct deposit to<lb/>
another bank of your choice and<lb/>
a mailed paper check are still<lb/>
available.<lb/>
There are three options in<lb/>
total. All of these options are<lb/>
available through Higher One.<lb/>
There are numerous advan-<lb/>
tages to students getting their<lb/>
refunds through the new card<lb/>
versus the previous way. Some of<lb/>
the advantages include reduction<lb/>
in waiting time for a refund and<lb/>
summary and status of refund<lb/>
viewable 24 hours a day online<lb/>
at Higher One's Web site.<lb/>
Students are not locked in<lb/>
their method of receiving their<lb/>
refunds. They are free to choose<lb/>
an alternative method to get their<lb/>
refunds from the three options<lb/>
see PROS page A3<lb/>
Chris LaConte with the new ECU Debit Card. LaConte is Higher One's Student Liaison for ECU.<lb/>
ons<lb/>
Disadvantages of ECU Debit Card<lb/>
Students express<lb/>
negative opinions<lb/>
TAYLEIQH DAVIS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER <lb/>
Many students are upset<lb/>
with the ECU debit card that has<lb/>
been distributed throughout the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
Students are concerned about<lb/>
whether or not they are secure<lb/>
using the ECU debit card and<lb/>
many still question how the<lb/>
process works.<lb/>
Portland State University<lb/>
already attempted to boycott<lb/>
the Higher One financial man-<lb/>
agement company, and now<lb/>
ECU students are following a<lb/>
similar pattern. Many students<lb/>
who walked by the Wright Plaza<lb/>
Friday were handed flyers saying<lb/>
to boycott the ECU debit card.<lb/>
Even though the problem was<lb/>
resolved with PSU, some people<lb/>
at ECU still do not trust Higher<lb/>
One. David Mason, senior Eng-<lb/>
lish major who passed out the<lb/>
flyers, said he did not want to<lb/>
sign up with Higher One because<lb/>
he was concerned they already<lb/>
have too much of his personal<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Mason does not trust Higher<lb/>
One because they are not a<lb/>
member of the Better Business<lb/>
Bureau.<lb/>
Higher One, a Connecticut-<lb/>
based company, partnered with<lb/>
Stereotypes, racism discussed in forum<lb/>
'Can you judge a book<lb/>
by its cover?'<lb/>
ZACK HILL<lb/>
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR <lb/>
What is racism? Is it a part<lb/>
of human nature What are ste-<lb/>
reotypes?<lb/>
These are just a few of the<lb/>
questions posed at "Can You<lb/>
Judge a Book by Its Cover?" a<lb/>
forum on stereotypes, racism,<lb/>
and discrimination held by the<lb/>
Black Student Union in Bate 1032<lb/>
on Wednesday, Dec. 30.<lb/>
"This is a program for the<lb/>
whole campus said Patrick<lb/>
Dixon, event facilitator.<lb/>
"We want to break down mis-<lb/>
conceptions about certain groups<lb/>
and people<lb/>
In response to the question<lb/>
"what is racism?" the panelists<lb/>
had varying responses.<lb/>
"Race is something that is<lb/>
socially constructed, we have<lb/>
to unlearn this behavior said<lb/>
David Dennard, professor of<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Carolyn Schacht, professor of<lb/>
sociology, pointed out that race<lb/>
is not always easy to see.<lb/>
"Today racism has mutated<lb/>
into a more subtle form Schacht<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"You might find whites with<lb/>
attitudes that whites are smarter,<lb/>
not blacks are dumb. It is not<lb/>
necessarily an overt hatred, but<lb/>
a slight discomfort, distrust or<lb/>
fear<lb/>
Another topic evoking an<lb/>
array of answers was stereotyp-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"We all stereotype. Our brain<lb/>
uses it to make sense of the<lb/>
world Schacht said.<lb/>
"But when we become fixated<lb/>
on them, we can't learn from<lb/>
experience and then we're stuck<lb/>
Reginald Watson, professor<lb/>
of English, pointed out the con-<lb/>
nection between stereotyping<lb/>
and racism.<lb/>
"It's the foundation for<lb/>
racism Watson said.<lb/>
As an example, he recalled<lb/>
an incident during his first days<lb/>
of college in which a profes-<lb/>
sor assumed he was an athlete<lb/>
instead of an English major<lb/>
because he was black.<lb/>
"We have to deal with stereo-<lb/>
types on all levels Watson said.<lb/>
"Stereotypes cross all bound-<lb/>
aries.<lb/>
Dennard said stereotypes<lb/>
are not necessarily the result of<lb/>
ignorance.<lb/>
"In some cases, they are cre-<lb/>
ated to justify something, like<lb/>
slavery Dennard said.<lb/>
Dea Papajorgji, graduate stu-<lb/>
dent in International Studies,<lb/>
warned against developing bias.<lb/>
"You're setting yourself up<lb/>
that if you don't look like me, we<lb/>
don't have anything in common<lb/>
Papajorgii said.<lb/>
"You don't learn as much<lb/>
about your environment<lb/>
Allison King of the Intervar-<lb/>
sity Christian Fellowship noted<lb/>
that stereotyping and racism<lb/>
often come from feelings of<lb/>
apprehension.<lb/>
"At the heart of stereotyping<lb/>
there is a fear of the unknown<lb/>
King said.<lb/>
Discrimination does not<lb/>
always follow racial boundaries,<lb/>
as homosexuals are often more<lb/>
outcast than any other group.<lb/>
"It'snot learned, it'ssomething<lb/>
you are born with said Thomas<lb/>
Doyle, senior class president<lb/>
Dennard followed by express-<lb/>
ing some of his own personal<lb/>
views on homosexuality, namely<lb/>
that there are no certain behaviors<lb/>
and appearances by which homo-<lb/>
sexuals can be determined.<lb/>
"If we were to try and get rid<lb/>
of all the gays and lesbians in<lb/>
society, civilization would crum-<lb/>
see FORUM page A2<lb/>
ECU in October 2005 to improve<lb/>
the disbursement of financial aid<lb/>
checks, which will take affect Jan.<lb/>
4, 2006.<lb/>
Along with students who<lb/>
have expressed their opinions on<lb/>
ECU OneStop and PartyEastCaro-<lb/>
lina.com, Mason said Higher One<lb/>
gave out his personal informa-<lb/>
tion including a photo without<lb/>
his consent and he feels that is<lb/>
neither right nor legal.<lb/>
ECU provided Higher One<lb/>
with students' names, addresses<lb/>
and Social Security numbers.<lb/>
However, ECU spokesman John<lb/>
Durham said in an article with<lb/>
The Daily Reflector that ECU<lb/>
see CONS page A3<lb/>
Boll's: Best<lb/>
pizza three<lb/>
years strong<lb/>
Pizza in downtown area<lb/>
CLAYTON BAUMAN<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
A decade later, Lasik good, not revolutionary<lb/>
CHICAGO (AP) � Chris-<lb/>
topher Tomes, 43, opened his<lb/>
eyes one morning, looked out<lb/>
the window and could read the<lb/>
license plate of a parked car with-<lb/>
out his glasses.<lb/>
He'd had Lasik eye surgery the<lb/>
day before, becoming one of the S<lb/>
million Americans seeking to shed<lb/>
their eyeglasses with laser vision<lb/>
correction during the past decade.<lb/>
"It's exceptional Tomes said of<lb/>
his vision nine days after surgery.<lb/>
"I'm extremely happy I did it<lb/>
Since U.S. doctors began<lb/>
offering laser vision correction<lb/>
in 1995, safety has improved and<lb/>
new methods give people with<lb/>
more severe vision problems a<lb/>
chance to have the procedure.<lb/>
But there's still no guarantee<lb/>
of 2020 eyesight, the procedure's<lb/>
long-term safety is unknown and<lb/>
one recent study showed nearly<lb/>
18 percent of patients require a<lb/>
second Lasik treatment. A lack of<lb/>
health insurance coverage keeps<lb/>
the procedure a luxury item,<lb/>
affordable only to people who<lb/>
can spare $3,000 to $5,000.<lb/>
In addition, a technology<lb/>
arms race means some vision<lb/>
clinics are bragging about their<lb/>
new equipment and techniques,<lb/>
such as wavefront-guided Lasik<lb/>
and a new "blade-free" method.<lb/>
That further complicates a con-<lb/>
sumer's decision.<lb/>
"You listen to the radio, you<lb/>
hear the ads said Chicago refractive<lb/>
surgeon Dr. Colman Kraff. "A lot of<lb/>
it is trying to market to the patient<lb/>
to scare them a little bit into having<lb/>
one procedure over another<lb/>
The average Lasik patient<lb/>
is about 39 years old with an<lb/>
income of about $88,000, said<lb/>
Dave Harmon, president of<lb/>
Market Scope, a company that<lb/>
tracks the industry.<lb/>
"Their education level is sig-<lb/>
nificantly higher than average<lb/>
1 larmon said. "Very few people in<lb/>
their 20s have it done. Very few<lb/>
people in their 50s have it done S<lb/>
Patients choose their doctors<lb/>
by word of mouth, Harmon said.<lb/>
Friends' endorsements led<lb/>
Tomes, the Chicago Lasik patient,<lb/>
to Kraff's downtown clinic.<lb/>
Tomes, who heads a company<lb/>
that creates animated advertising<lb/>
for the Web, had grown tired of<lb/>
misplacing his glasses.<lb/>
"Glasses are easy to leave<lb/>
on an airplane he said. "I was<lb/>
losing, on average, three or four<lb/>
pairs of glasses a year, and that<lb/>
got expensive<lb/>
Tomes met with Kraff and<lb/>
learned he was a good candidate<lb/>
for Lasik. He chose all the new tech-<lb/>
Lasik recipients tend to be wealthier with higher education levels.<lb/>
nology Kraff had to offer: both the<lb/>
"wavefront" method, which creates<lb/>
a custom map of the corneas, and<lb/>
the "blade-free" procedure.<lb/>
Conventional Lasik surgery<lb/>
is based on the patient's glasses<lb/>
prescription. Wavefront-guided<lb/>
Lasik bounces light waves off the<lb/>
back of the eye to create a 3-D<lb/>
map that's used to guide the laser<lb/>
treatment. One small study of 25<lb/>
patients suggested that wavefront<lb/>
Lasik yielded fewer nighttime<lb/>
distortions, such as halos and<lb/>
glare, than conventional Lasik,<lb/>
and resulted in better vision for<lb/>
slightly more patients.<lb/>
Tomes didn't have severe<lb/>
nearsightedness or an astig-<lb/>
matism, but wavefront-guided<lb/>
Lasik recently was approved by<lb/>
the Food and Drug Administra-<lb/>
tion for both those conditions,<lb/>
expanding the number of people<lb/>
eligible for the surgery by about<lb/>
1 million. It's also been approved<lb/>
for farsightedness.<lb/>
Tomes also chose to go "blade-<lb/>
see LASIK page A2<lb/>
Students and faculty alike<lb/>
searching for delicious pizza must<lb/>
search no longer.<lb/>
Just take a walk down to 123<lb/>
East Fifth St. to be greeted by<lb/>
Boli's Pizzeria, home of the best<lb/>
pizza in Greenville for three years<lb/>
running.<lb/>
In a recent taste test held<lb/>
in pursuit of the best pizza this<lb/>
year, Boli's was voted tops by the<lb/>
city of Greenville for its third<lb/>
consecutive year.<lb/>
Currently in its 15th year of<lb/>
operation, Boli's was founded in<lb/>
1991. Since then, it has become<lb/>
a popular eatery as well as night-<lb/>
spot featuring live music, bar<lb/>
specials and an entertaining<lb/>
atmosphere.<lb/>
Owner John Tesoriero, who<lb/>
has been running the restaurant<lb/>
for three of the 15 years the estab-<lb/>
lishment has been around, attri-<lb/>
butes Boli's success to a number<lb/>
of things.<lb/>
"We have a waiting staff that<lb/>
pays attention to its custom-<lb/>
ers. We make everything from<lb/>
scratch. Everything is fresh and<lb/>
I think quality is a big part of it<lb/>
all Tesoriero said.<lb/>
Tesoriero was asked which<lb/>
pizza venues he thought were the<lb/>
best competition.<lb/>
"As far as pizza goes,<lb/>
Michaelangelo's Tesoriero said.<lb/>
"And CPW's is a good restau-<lb/>
rant as far as comparing us with<lb/>
them<lb/>
Boli's is purely local to the<lb/>
Greenville area. There was an<lb/>
expansion of Boli's some years<lb/>
ago in Nags Head named Cicero's.<lb/>
The establishment is no longer<lb/>
there.<lb/>
Tesoriero, while focusing<lb/>
solely on Boli's management<lb/>
right now, is considering expand-<lb/>
ing the Boli's name again.<lb/>
"I'm in the process of buying<lb/>
this out right now, and then we'll<lb/>
go from there Tesoriero said.<lb/>
"But we are thinking about<lb/>
opening another location<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com. .<lb/>
INSIDE I News: A2 I Classifieds: A91 Opinion: A4 I Student Life: A5 I Sports: A7 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059375_0002"/><lb/>
12-6-05<lb/>
Pros<lb/>
Page A2 news@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366<lb/>
CHRIS MUNIER News Editor ZACK HILL Assistant News Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY December 6, 2005<lb/>
Announcements News Briefs<lb/>
Tuition increase forum<lb/>
Students are invited to an open<lb/>
forum to discuss proposed<lb/>
tuition increases Tuesday, Dec.<lb/>
6 at 5 p.m. in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Multipurpose room. This will be<lb/>
an opportunity to provide input<lb/>
and ask questions.<lb/>
Book Donations<lb/>
The Department of Library Science<lb/>
and Instructional Technology will<lb/>
be accepting book donations for<lb/>
the Greenville Community Shelter.<lb/>
Books can be dropped off at the<lb/>
Joyner Library Conference Room<lb/>
2406 through Dec. 15. For more<lb/>
information, contact Al Jones at<lb/>
328-6803.<lb/>
Computer Science<lb/>
Club Meeting<lb/>
The Computer Science Club is<lb/>
meeting this Tuesday, Dec. 6 at 6<lb/>
p.m. in Austin 307. They welcome<lb/>
anyone who has an interest in<lb/>
computers or technology.<lb/>
New Musical<lb/>
John o.ndJen, a new musical, will<lb/>
be performed at 8 p.m. Saturday,<lb/>
Dec. 10 and at 2 p.m. Sunday, Dec.<lb/>
11 in the Studio Theatre John and<lb/>
Jen is an original musical that<lb/>
takes a look at the complexities<lb/>
of relationships between brothers<lb/>
and sisters and parents and<lb/>
children. The story is set against<lb/>
the background of a changing<lb/>
America between 1950 and 1990.<lb/>
The event is free, but tickets are<lb/>
required and seating is limited. For<lb/>
more information, call 328-6829.<lb/>
ECU Arts Tickets<lb/>
Subscriptions for the S. Rudolph<lb/>
Alexander Performing Arts<lb/>
Series and Family Fare are both<lb/>
currently on sale. The S. Rudolph<lb/>
Alexander Series is ECU'S flagship<lb/>
performing arts series, presenting<lb/>
a season of nine of the world's<lb/>
top orchestras, ballet companies,<lb/>
jazz artists, dance ensembles,<lb/>
Broadway shows and much more.<lb/>
The Family Fare series provides<lb/>
kid-centered cultural excursions<lb/>
for the entire family. For more<lb/>
information, contact the Cultural<lb/>
Outreach Office, or visit ecu.<lb/>
eduecuarts.<lb/>
Globalization lecture<lb/>
Dr. Victor Da Rosa, a professor<lb/>
of sociology at the University of<lb/>
Ottawa in Canada, will present<lb/>
"Globalization and the Impact<lb/>
on South America Wednesday,<lb/>
Dec. 7 at 6:45 p.m. In Flanagan<lb/>
265. Dr. Da Rosa is a native of<lb/>
Portugal and has conducted<lb/>
research all over the world. For<lb/>
more information, contact the<lb/>
office of International Affairs.<lb/>
Semester wrap-up<lb/>
The last day of classes is<lb/>
Wednesday, Dec. 7. Thursday, Dec.<lb/>
8 is Reading Day. Exams begin<lb/>
Friday, Dec. 9 and end at 4.30 p.m.<lb/>
Friday, Dec. 16. Commencement<lb/>
is Friday, Dec. 17. Classes for<lb/>
the spring semester resume on<lb/>
Friday, Jan. 6.<lb/>
ECU sculptor wins<lb/>
best in show<lb/>
Hanna Jubran, a sculpture<lb/>
professor at ECU, was awarded<lb/>
best in show this month for his<lb/>
work. Mountain Landscape.<lb/>
Jubran won the Great Eastern<lb/>
Management Prize for Best<lb/>
in Show 2005-2006 from<lb/>
the ArtlnPlace Foundation of<lb/>
Chariottesville, Va.<lb/>
Landscapes are often depicted<lb/>
in two-dimensional formats,<lb/>
Jubran said, and he wanted to<lb/>
challenge himself to capture a<lb/>
landscape in a three-dimensional<lb/>
format The circle represents<lb/>
either the sun rising or setting,<lb/>
and the diagonal forms<lb/>
represent the clouds, mountains<lb/>
or the horizon, he said. <lb/>
"Although this sculpture is<lb/>
painted specific colors, its hues<lb/>
change depending on the time<lb/>
of day and season Jubran said.<lb/>
They also change as you move<lb/>
around the sculpture and as<lb/>
its relation to the background<lb/>
shifts. Between nature and the<lb/>
sculpture I am condensing time<lb/>
and space" <lb/>
The painted steel sculpture,<lb/>
located on Emmet Street near<lb/>
Barracks Road in Chariottesville,<lb/>
will be on display through<lb/>
September 2006. Jubran shares<lb/>
the best in show title with<lb/>
another sculptor. <lb/>
State<lb/>
NC Democrat among four<lb/>
proposing changes to curb<lb/>
lobbyist Influence<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Four Democratic<lb/>
House members, including one from<lb/>
North Carolina, on Monday proposed<lb/>
rules changes that would make it<lb/>
more difficult for lawmakers to sneak<lb/>
provisions into legislation on behalf of<lb/>
special interests.<lb/>
The proposals also aim to stop<lb/>
lobbyists from arranging and secretly<lb/>
financing travel for House members.<lb/>
Rep. David Obey of Wisconsin,<lb/>
ranking Democrat on the House<lb/>
Appropriations Committee, said he<lb/>
did not seek support from majority<lb/>
Republicans and didn't expect any.<lb/>
Rather, Obey and his colleagues<lb/>
hope for public support, following<lb/>
revelations that members of Congress<lb/>
gave legislative help to lobbyist Jack<lb/>
Abramoff who returned the favors with<lb/>
contributions and privately financed<lb/>
travel.<lb/>
Obey Is joined in the effort by Reps.<lb/>
Barney Frank of Massachusetts, Tom<lb/>
Allen of Maine and David Price of<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Obey, in an interview, said he was<lb/>
angry that a recently passed food and<lb/>
farm spending bill included a measure<lb/>
that allowed small amounts of non-<lb/>
organic substances in products<lb/>
labeled "USDA Organic He said<lb/>
many appropriators who approved<lb/>
the compromise bill did not know the<lb/>
provision was there.<lb/>
"If you got some lobbyist working the<lb/>
system so he gets something slipped<lb/>
in without a vote, or he convinces the<lb/>
leadership to take something out, you<lb/>
might as well hire the lobbyist to be<lb/>
your congressman Obey said.<lb/>
The Justice Department is investigating<lb/>
whether Abramoff, already charged<lb/>
with fraud in a Florida case, won any<lb/>
undue influence through donations<lb/>
and favors for lawmakers.<lb/>
Obey said the travel restrictions were<lb/>
travel from illegitimate travel. You get<lb/>
stories that make the whole institution<lb/>
look bad<lb/>
Former House Majority Leader<lb/>
Tom DeLay, R-Texas, was among<lb/>
lawmakers whose travel was financed<lb/>
by Abramoff, although DeLay said he<lb/>
was not aware of that at the time. A<lb/>
nonprofit group was listed as the<lb/>
sponsor.<lb/>
House ethics rules ban lawmakers<lb/>
from accepting trips financed by<lb/>
lobbyists or registered agents of<lb/>
foreign countries.<lb/>
Former N.C. congressman gets<lb/>
send-off before prison<lb/>
MURFREESBORO, N.C. (AP) - Several<lb/>
hundred supporters of former Rep.<lb/>
Frank Ballance Jr. gathered for a<lb/>
farewell lunch before the Democrat<lb/>
heads to prison at the end of the<lb/>
month.<lb/>
"It just validates what I've already<lb/>
known, that friends stand by you.<lb/>
Regardless of hardships and<lb/>
difficulties in life, friends don't let you<lb/>
down Ballance said.<lb/>
The gathering was held Saturday<lb/>
at Nebo Baptist Church in Hertford<lb/>
County.<lb/>
Ballance, who resigned his seat<lb/>
in Congress for health reasons, is<lb/>
scheduled to report to federal prison<lb/>
Dec. 30. A federal judge sentenced<lb/>
him to four years in prison after<lb/>
Ballance pleaded guilty to tunneling<lb/>
tax dollars into his foundation and<lb/>
using $100,000 for himself and his<lb/>
family.<lb/>
Many of his family members also<lb/>
attended the luncheon including his<lb/>
son, former District Court Judge Garey<lb/>
Ballance who was sentenced to nine<lb/>
months in prison on a misdemeanor<lb/>
tax charge.<lb/>
not financing the travel or having<lb/>
influence over it.<lb/>
National<lb/>
Former Sept. 11 panel: U.S.<lb/>
ASHINGTON (AP) - The former Sept.<lb/>
11 commission is giving Congress<lb/>
and the White House poor marks<lb/>
on protecting the U.S. against an<lb/>
inevitable terror attack because of<lb/>
their failure to enact several strong<lb/>
security measures.<lb/>
The 10-member panel, equally<lb/>
divided between Republicans and<lb/>
Democrats, prepared to release a<lb/>
report Monday assessing how well<lb/>
their recommendations have been<lb/>
followed. They say the government<lb/>
deserves "more F's than A's" In<lb/>
responding to their 41 Since the<lb/>
commission's final report in July<lb/>
2004, the government has enacted<lb/>
the centerpiece proposal to create<lb/>
a national intelligence director. But it<lb/>
has stalled on other ideas, including<lb/>
improving communication among<lb/>
emergency responders and shifting<lb/>
federal terrorism-fighting money so it<lb/>
goes to states based on risk level.<lb/>
Congress established the<lb/>
commission in 2002 to investigate<lb/>
government missteps that led to the<lb/>
attacks of Sept. 11,2001. Nearly 3,000<lb/>
people were killed when 19 Arab<lb/>
hijackers organized by al-Qaida flew<lb/>
airliners into New York City's World<lb/>
Trade Center and the Pentagon and<lb/>
caused a crash in the Pennsylvania<lb/>
countryside.<lb/>
The panel's 567-page final report,<lb/>
which became a national best<lb/>
seller, did not blame Bush or former<lb/>
President Clinton for missteps<lb/>
contributing to the attacks but did<lb/>
say they failed to make anti-terrorism<lb/>
a higher priority.<lb/>
The commission also concluded that<lb/>
the Sept. 11 attack would not be the<lb/>
nation's last, noting that al-Qaida had<lb/>
tried for at least 10 years to acquire<lb/>
weapons of mass destruction.<lb/>
Rice defends U.S. terrorism policy as<lb/>
she heads to Europe amid reports of<lb/>
secret CIA prisons<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of<lb/>
State Condoleezza Rice turned the<lb/>
designed to "separate legitimate unprepared for next terror attack tables on European critics of tough<lb/>
Christmas economy should<lb/>
feature heavy retail sales<lb/>
I i 1 i t 1 ill t l ll � I I I I i �! I li it I V I II �,<lb/>
U.S. tactics in the war on terror<lb/>
Monday, maintaining that intelligence<lb/>
gathered by the CIA has saved<lb/>
European lives.<lb/>
Responding for the first time in<lb/>
detail to the outcry over reports of<lb/>
secret CIA-run prisons in European<lb/>
democracies, Rice said the United<lb/>
States "will use every lawful weapon<lb/>
to defeat these terrorists<lb/>
But in remarks as she prepared<lb/>
to leave on a trip to Europe, she<lb/>
steadfastly refused to answer the<lb/>
underlying question of whether the<lb/>
United States had CIA-operated<lb/>
secret prisons there.<lb/>
World<lb/>
Strong earthquake Jolts east<lb/>
Africa, workers In Nairobi flee<lb/>
buildings In panic<lb/>
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - A strong<lb/>
earthquake struck the Lake<lb/>
Tanganyika region of east Africa<lb/>
on Monday, sending workers in tall<lb/>
buildings in downtown Nairobi fleeing<lb/>
their offices in panic. There were<lb/>
no immediate reports of injuries or<lb/>
damage.<lb/>
The quake, with a preliminary<lb/>
magnitude of 6.8, struck at 2:20 p.m.<lb/>
(7:20 a.m. EST) and was centered<lb/>
near the Congo-Tanzania border,<lb/>
about 600 miles southwest of the<lb/>
Kenyan capital, the U.S. Geological<lb/>
Survey said.<lb/>
The USGS said the quake was<lb/>
located about six miles below the<lb/>
surface, and shook the ground in at<lb/>
least three Kenyan towns, including<lb/>
Nairobi. It also was felt in the Kenyan<lb/>
coastal city of Mombasa.<lb/>
"We felt the tremor in our offices.<lb/>
People fled their buildings to save<lb/>
their lives, but so far we have no<lb/>
reports of casualties said Elmon<lb/>
Mahawa, the regional commissioner<lb/>
for Kigoma, a Tanzanian town on the<lb/>
shores of Lake Tanganyika.<lb/>
In Bujumbura, the capital of the<lb/>
central African nation of Burundi,<lb/>
an Associated Press reporter felt<lb/>
the three-story building sway in two<lb/>
waves of the quake.<lb/>
The region is located along the Great<lb/>
Rift Valley, which runs for 3,000 miles<lb/>
between Syria and Mozambique and<lb/>
passes through the Dead Sea, below<lb/>
Jerusalem's eastern hills.<lb/>
Not quite marriage, but gay civil<lb/>
unions are coming to a taboo-<lb/>
smashing Britain<lb/>
By THOMAS WAGNER<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
LONDON (AP) - Pop star Elton John<lb/>
is tying the knot with filmmaker David<lb/>
Furnish four days before Christmas,<lb/>
when gay civil unions become legal<lb/>
in England. Fellow pop star George<lb/>
Michael says he'll follow suit next<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Dec. 21 marks a transformation in<lb/>
social attitudes in this country, where<lb/>
only 17 years ago Margaret Thatcher's<lb/>
government enacted "Clause 28"<lb/>
a law banning local authorities<lb/>
and schools from doing anything<lb/>
that could be seen as promoting<lb/>
homosexuality.<lb/>
The change has been generally<lb/>
cheered and Britain's two gay<lb/>
meccas, Soho in London and the<lb/>
southern beach resort of Brighton,<lb/>
are competing to be the center<lb/>
of attention on Dec. 21. London's<lb/>
Westminster borough, which is run<lb/>
by the same Conservative Party that<lb/>
enacted "Clause 28 is opening its<lb/>
town hall to gay couples early on<lb/>
the big day.<lb/>
The Netherlands, Canada, Belgium<lb/>
and Spain have legalized same-<lb/>
sex marriage. But Prime Minister<lb/>
Tony Blair's center-left government<lb/>
dropped the word "marriage" from<lb/>
its legislation rather than run afoul<lb/>
of legislators who feel the word has<lb/>
religious connotations.<lb/>
The law passed last year permits civil<lb/>
ceremonies that will give same-sex<lb/>
couples such benefits as the right to<lb/>
a partner's pensions and exemption<lb/>
from paying inheritance tax on a<lb/>
partner's home.<lb/>
Buying presents is a large part of what makes the economy go<lb/>
Spending overload can<lb/>
occur<lb/>
CLAYTON BAUMAN<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
With the Impending Christ-<lb/>
mas holiday only weeks away, the<lb/>
American economy is braced to<lb/>
feel the effects of a massive shop-<lb/>
ping flock at malls and depart-<lb/>
ment stores around the country.<lb/>
With children and teenag-<lb/>
ers being a big proportion of<lb/>
Christmas gift giving, the toy<lb/>
industry comes away from the<lb/>
season smiling. Toy sales alone<lb/>
accounted for nearly $30.6 billion<lb/>
in 2002 according to the Census<lb/>
Bureau's Web site census.gov. Of<lb/>
this amount, $10.3 billion was a<lb/>
Sell Trips, Earn Cash, Co free!<lb/>
Now Hiring On-iampus Reps<lb/>
Call tor group i<lb/>
�mvicu<lb/>
pa�n<lb/>
result of video game sales. With<lb/>
the release of Microsoft's X-Box<lb/>
360, expect this number to rise<lb/>
dramatically this year.<lb/>
Dec. 2002 had retail stores<lb/>
pocket around $32.4 billion in<lb/>
consumer cash. This amount<lb/>
was up 47 percent from the pre-<lb/>
vious month, which was $21.9<lb/>
billion. Other stores that had<lb/>
sizable jumps in profit between<lb/>
November and December were<lb/>
clothing stores (44 percent),<lb/>
jewelry stores (163 percent),<lb/>
book stores (87 percent), sport-<lb/>
ing goods stores (59 percent) and<lb/>
radio, TV and other electronics<lb/>
stores (56 percent).<lb/>
The Internet managed to pull<lb/>
in $13.8 billion in sales back in<lb/>
2002. With the increasing popu-<lb/>
$180<lb/>
Per<lb/>
Month<lb/>
This coupon good for<lb/>
an extra $5 on your<lb/>
2nd and 4th donation<lb/>
larity of the Internet, expect this<lb/>
number to increase even more<lb/>
three years later.<lb/>
Many holiday shoppers fall<lb/>
victim to the allure of credit card<lb/>
spending. According to holidays.<lb/>
about.com, many people do<lb/>
their holiday shopping with a<lb/>
credit card, promising them-<lb/>
selves that they will pay off the<lb/>
debt in the next few months.<lb/>
Thanks to credit card interest<lb/>
and other factors, people end<lb/>
up over their heads in debt<lb/>
unexpectedly. Most people refer<lb/>
to this as "holiday hangover<lb/>
The Web site goes on to offer<lb/>
advice as to how to avoid the mis-<lb/>
conceived credit card benefits.<lb/>
Cash is the best way. Throughout<lb/>
the year, set aside money for the<lb/>
purpose of buying gifts. It helps<lb/>
to figure out ahead of time who<lb/>
you are purchasing gifts for and<lb/>
how much you plan to spend.<lb/>
Once your money runs out, you<lb/>
are finished with your shopping.<lb/>
Many students have found<lb/>
responsible ways of dealing with<lb/>
an alternative to cash, while<lb/>
5 othersaredeterminedtostickwith<lb/>
o cash when paying for their gifts.<lb/>
11 "I attempt to use a depart-<lb/>
ment store cards like Sears and<lb/>
Belks said Derrick Foss, sopho-<lb/>
more political science major.<lb/>
"I've found that interest rates<lb/>
are lower with these cards than<lb/>
credit cards. Plus, it's easier to<lb/>
budget because that money is<lb/>
only going toward one store<lb/>
"I usually use cash. It makes<lb/>
it easier to balance my money<lb/>
without going into debt said<lb/>
Kathy 0, freshman print journal-<lb/>
ism major.<lb/>
People who have difficulty<lb/>
saving money can join groups<lb/>
at banks that specialize in set-<lb/>
ting aside money for the holiday<lb/>
season. Knowing where you will<lb/>
be shopping is important as well.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
FOmm from page A1<lb/>
ble because they are all over the<lb/>
map Dennard said.<lb/>
Jon Massachi recalled some<lb/>
his own difficulties caused by<lb/>
people's preconceptions about<lb/>
people with disabilities.<lb/>
"People will ask because I use<lb/>
crutches, am I also deaf, dumb or<lb/>
retarded Massachi said.<lb/>
"Theanswersareno, noandno<lb/>
Because of his middle eastern<lb/>
and Jewish heritage, Massachi<lb/>
has encountered additional dis-<lb/>
crimination.<lb/>
"I get searched every time I go<lb/>
to the airport Massachi said.<lb/>
"They ask, 'Is he Jewish? Is he<lb/>
Muslim?' It doesn't matter, I'm<lb/>
an American citizen<lb/>
Hanna Zhu, White Hall resi-<lb/>
dence coordinator, feels that<lb/>
many problems of racism and<lb/>
discrimination are rooted in<lb/>
people's lack of effort in forming<lb/>
their own beliefs.<lb/>
"1 think we tend not to think<lb/>
for ourselves, we just believe what<lb/>
we're told Zhu said.<lb/>
"But we're all capable of<lb/>
thinking for ourselves<lb/>
Refreshments were available to<lb/>
the near 100 attendees, and audi-<lb/>
ence members were invited to pose<lb/>
their own questions after the panel<lb/>
finished discussing the topics.<lb/>
"This is a way to share our<lb/>
knowledge in an open dialogue<lb/>
and strengthen the Black Student<lb/>
Union at ECU Dixon said.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
LdSIK from page A1<lb/>
free that is, the doctor used a<lb/>
new laser technique, instead of a<lb/>
disposable blade, to create a flap<lb/>
in the cornea. All Lasik surgeries<lb/>
include making this thin, hinged<lb/>
flap, a layer that is folded back<lb/>
into place after the laser treat-<lb/>
ment to speed healing.<lb/>
In the blade-free procedure,<lb/>
the surgeon uses a brand-name<lb/>
laser, called the IntraLase, to create<lb/>
thousands of tiny bubbles under<lb/>
the surface of the cornea. The<lb/>
bubbles allow the surgeon to peel<lb/>
a flap from the cornea with a small<lb/>
blunt tool, called a spatula.<lb/>
The blade-free procedure<lb/>
takes a few minutes longer com-<lb/>
pared to the usual method, is<lb/>
more expensive and is not neces-<lb/>
sarily superior for every patient,<lb/>
Kraff said.<lb/>
Although the only studies<lb/>
comparing the two techniques are<lb/>
small or funded by industry, results<lb/>
in vision correction appear similar.<lb/>
Some doctors have reported more<lb/>
redness of the eyes with the blade-<lb/>
less technique, possibly due to the<lb/>
longer time the patient's eye is held<lb/>
still by suction.<lb/>
But the word "blade-free"<lb/>
makes patients more comfort-<lb/>
able psychologically, Minne-<lb/>
apolis refractive surgeon Dr.<lb/>
Elizabeth Davis said. "They have<lb/>
the heebie-jeebies about a blade<lb/>
going across the eye she said.<lb/>
Even with "blade-free" in<lb/>
his plans, Tomes felt a moment<lb/>
of anxiety before his operation.<lb/>
That was when he read and signed<lb/>
forms listing all Lasik's risks.<lb/>
"It was quite daunting: a list of<lb/>
many, many complications he<lb/>
said. "One in particular jumped<lb/>
out at me. It was the potential,<lb/>
but rare, that the machine in the<lb/>
middle of the procedure could<lb/>
malfunction with a quarter of the<lb/>
eye still to be done. And it would<lb/>
be difficult to fix that<lb/>
Report news students need to know, fee<lb/>
Accepting applications for SfAFf MUERS<lb/>
Learn investigative reporting skills<lb/>
� Must nave at least a 2.0 GRA<lb/>
WE'VE MOVED" Apply at our NEW office located uptown al the Sell Help Building - 100F E. 3rd St<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 K. 10th Street � Down the Street from ECU � www.dciplasma.com <lb/>
<pb facs="00059375_0003"/><lb/>
12-6-05<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN � NEWS<lb/>
PAGE A3<lb/>
PrOS from page A1<lb/>
given by Higher One.<lb/>
Students would not have to<lb/>
worry about using the card in<lb/>
select locations. The card would<lb/>
practically be accepted every-<lb/>
where.<lb/>
"Students have the flexibility<lb/>
of using the card anywhere in<lb/>
town that accepts MasterCard<lb/>
said Dee Bowling, cash opera-<lb/>
tions manager.<lb/>
"Students do need to realize<lb/>
the card can only be used under<lb/>
those circumstances and that it<lb/>
isn't a credit card<lb/>
A free checking account<lb/>
with no minimum deposit or<lb/>
overdrafts is included. An option<lb/>
called "friends and family" is<lb/>
also available.<lb/>
"So if parents want to deposit<lb/>
money or send money to a<lb/>
student's account to be depos-<lb/>
ited on behalf of the student,<lb/>
it's a way for the family to make<lb/>
funds available to students also<lb/>
Bowling said.<lb/>
There is a huge difference<lb/>
in the amount of waiting time<lb/>
students would have to endure<lb/>
under the new system versus the<lb/>
old one.<lb/>
Students will be able to<lb/>
access their funds the same day<lb/>
through the choice of receiv-<lb/>
ing the refund through the<lb/>
debit card. The options of direct<lb/>
deposit and paper check would<lb/>
also be a lot faster.<lb/>
"With the debit card, they<lb/>
will receive their funds the same<lb/>
day Bowling said.<lb/>
"We will transfer that data<lb/>
to Higher One daily. Direct<lb/>
deposit is one to two days and<lb/>
then five to seven days, taking<lb/>
into account the mailing for a<lb/>
COnS from page<lb/>
A1<lb/>
paper check<lb/>
Some students seem to real-<lb/>
ize how much faster they will be<lb/>
able to access their funds using<lb/>
the new ECU Debit Card.<lb/>
When asked if the new card<lb/>
was a good alternative to the pre-<lb/>
vious ways of receiving refunds,<lb/>
Craig Brown, freshman archi-<lb/>
tecture design major, quickly<lb/>
responded on the matter.<lb/>
"Yes, because with some<lb/>
people, they might need the<lb/>
money right away said Brown.<lb/>
, "Instead of waiting because<lb/>
of a posting date, they could go<lb/>
ahead and slide the card through<lb/>
and get the money they need if<lb/>
they have to pay a bill or some-<lb/>
thing<lb/>
Brown also believes the new<lb/>
card will cut back on the hassle<lb/>
involved in getting refunds if an<lb/>
incident were to occur with a dis-<lb/>
crepancy in not getting money<lb/>
on the correct date or not getting<lb/>
the correct amount.<lb/>
The contract with Higher<lb/>
One is not a permanent setup.<lb/>
ECU has a three-year contract<lb/>
with the company. After the<lb/>
contract expires, ECU will resort<lb/>
to other methods of disbursing<lb/>
refunds.<lb/>
According to I lawkins, during<lb/>
the three-year period, proposals<lb/>
will be sent to other companies<lb/>
and banks in hopes of finding<lb/>
someone who will be able to offer<lb/>
the same options to students to<lb/>
receive their refunds and also<lb/>
combine the OneCard services<lb/>
with the debit card.<lb/>
There is student involvement<lb/>
in the distribution of infor-<lb/>
mation about the debit card.<lb/>
Hawkins admits that there have<lb/>
been a lot of questions about<lb/>
whether or not students were<lb/>
involved in the implementation<lb/>
of the card.<lb/>
"Part of the implementation<lb/>
plan with Higher One includes<lb/>
what they call the B-4 cam-<lb/>
paign Bowling said.<lb/>
"Basically, Higher One e-<lb/>
mailed all students and said<lb/>
'here's what we're getting ready<lb/>
to do, and we would like to invite<lb/>
students to participate in the<lb/>
B4 campaign, learn more about<lb/>
Higher One and your refund<lb/>
options<lb/>
"The first 100 students who<lb/>
signed up for B-4 were also the<lb/>
first 100 students to receive their<lb/>
cards, so they got their cards<lb/>
before anyone else Bowling<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"As far I understand, these<lb/>
students have been meeting with<lb/>
�other students so that students<lb/>
can talk to students about the<lb/>
program<lb/>
SGA also has been involved<lb/>
in letting students know about<lb/>
the new card system and how it<lb/>
works. To answer any questions<lb/>
and concerns that students may<lb/>
still have about how the card<lb/>
works, they can attend the open<lb/>
forum that will explain how the<lb/>
card works.<lb/>
The forum will be Wednesday<lb/>
at 5 p.m. in Hendrix Theater. The<lb/>
forum will be open to questions<lb/>
for ECU administrators, SGA and<lb/>
Higher One representatives.<lb/>
More information can be<lb/>
obtained from their Web site at<lb/>
ECUCard.com.<lb/>
This writer can be contact at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Stepfather trying to keep daughter<lb/>
alive after he violently beat her<lb/>
WESTF1ELD, Mass. (AP)<lb/>
� Photos hanging on Allison<lb/>
Avrett's living room wall show<lb/>
her daughter Haleigh as a smiling<lb/>
little girl with brown bangs hang-<lb/>
ing over her squinting eyes.<lb/>
Most of the pictures were<lb/>
taken before Avrett gave 1 laleigh<lb/>
up for adoption five years ago<lb/>
and long before the alleged beat-<lb/>
ing that landed the 11-year-old<lb/>
in a hospital attached to the<lb/>
ventilator and feeding tube that<lb/>
keep her alive.<lb/>
Now, with Haleigh's dpctors<lb/>
saying she will never recover<lb/>
from her vegetative state, the<lb/>
child is at the center of a right-<lb/>
to-die legal struggle.<lb/>
The state Department of<lb/>
Social Services, which has had<lb/>
custody of Haleigh since she was<lb/>
hospitalized Sept. 11, wants to<lb/>
remove her from life support.<lb/>
Her stepfather, Jason Strick-<lb/>
land, who is charged in her beat-<lb/>
ing and could be tried for murder<lb/>
if she dies, wants to keep her<lb/>
alive. Strickland is free on bail<lb/>
while awaiting trial.<lb/>
A juvenile court judge has<lb/>
ruled that Haleigh should be<lb/>
allowed to die. Strickland has<lb/>
appealed, and the state's highest<lb/>
court is scheduled to hear argu-<lb/>
ments in the case Tuesday.<lb/>
Avrett, who gave up her<lb/>
parental rights when she let her<lb/>
sister Holli adopt Haleigh in<lb/>
2000, says her daughter should<lb/>
not suffer anymore.<lb/>
"They say the most she might<lb/>
ever do is open her eyes said<lb/>
Avrett, a 29-year-old stay-at-<lb/>
home mom with two other<lb/>
children. "I don't want her to sit<lb/>
there longer than she needs to<lb/>
Police say the injuries that<lb/>
left Haleigh with severe brain<lb/>
stem injuries came at the hands<lb/>
of Strickland and his wife Holli,<lb/>
Allison Avrett's sister.<lb/>
Within two weeks of the<lb/>
couple pleading innocent to the<lb/>
beating, Holli Strickland was<lb/>
dead, fatally shot in her grand-<lb/>
mother's West Springfield apart-<lb/>
ment. The body of her 71-year-old<lb/>
grandmother, Constance Young,<lb/>
was beside her. The possible<lb/>
double suicide or murder-suicide<lb/>
is still under investigation.<lb/>
In a legal brief filed ahead of<lb/>
Tuesday's hearing, Strickland,<lb/>
31, asks to be declared Haleigh's<lb/>
de facto parent. His lawyer,<lb/>
John Egan, insists his client is<lb/>
not motivated by the chance he<lb/>
could be charged with murder if<lb/>
the girl dies.<lb/>
"We should be coming down<lb/>
on the side of life as opposed to<lb/>
death he said.<lb/>
In 1998, Avrett moved with<lb/>
Haleigh to Virginia to live with<lb/>
her boyfriend. A few months later,<lb/>
Avrett sent Haleigh back to Mas-<lb/>
sachusetts to spend the summer<lb/>
with Holli and her former hus-<lb/>
band, Jonathan Poutre.<lb/>
Within a few weeks of<lb/>
her daughter's return to Mas-<lb/>
sachusetts, the Department of<lb/>
Social Services took custody of<lb/>
Haleigh and began investigating<lb/>
allegations she was abused by<lb/>
Avrett's boyfriend in Virginia. A<lb/>
DSS spokeswoman refused to com-<lb/>
ment because of privacy issues.<lb/>
Avrett said her boyfriend was<lb/>
ultimately cleared. But by then,<lb/>
the Department of Social Services<lb/>
had placed Haleigh in permanent<lb/>
foster care with Holli and Jonathan<lb/>
Poutre. By her own admission,<lb/>
Avrett was not doing everything<lb/>
she could to regain custody.<lb/>
"I stopped all contact for<lb/>
a while with DSS, my sister<lb/>
and Haleigh Avrett said. "I<lb/>
couldn't handle the stress, so<lb/>
I took myself out of the situa-<lb/>
tion. I needed a break from it<lb/>
Avrett broke up with her boy-<lb/>
friend and married another man<lb/>
in 1999. A year later, after what<lb/>
Avrett said had been several years<lb/>
of strong recommendation by<lb/>
the social services department,<lb/>
she agreed to let her older sister<lb/>
formally adopt Haleigh.<lb/>
Holli had a degree in child<lb/>
care and had been Avrett's role<lb/>
model growing up. The arrange-<lb/>
ment was OK for Avrett, who<lb/>
was content to have frequent<lb/>
visits with Haleigh and still felt<lb/>
involved in her life.<lb/>
"We were always a close<lb/>
family Avrett said.<lb/>
But Avrett said things started<lb/>
to change after her sister divorced<lb/>
Jonathan Poutre and married<lb/>
Jason Strickland.<lb/>
"When Jason came into the<lb/>
picture, we started seeing less of<lb/>
Haleigh she said.<lb/>
According to court docu-<lb/>
ments filed by Strickland's<lb/>
lawyer, Haleigh had been hos-<lb/>
pitalized during the past three<lb/>
years for self-inflicted injuries.<lb/>
The girl's alleged tendency to<lb/>
hurt herself is a cornerstone of<lb/>
Strickland's defense.<lb/>
complied with federal laws to<lb/>
provide information with Higher<lb/>
One, which is considered to be a<lb/>
university partner.<lb/>
Under the Federal Educa-<lb/>
tion Right to Privacy Act, ECU<lb/>
is allowed to share information<lb/>
with its partners.<lb/>
Students are also afraid that<lb/>
Higher One could sell their<lb/>
information to other companies<lb/>
or schools.<lb/>
"I want to know what's going<lb/>
on with my money because<lb/>
1 don't trust this company<lb/>
Mason said.<lb/>
"The card is only complicat-<lb/>
ing things said Jesse Creech,<lb/>
sophomore psychology major.<lb/>
"Most people already have<lb/>
a bank account and either�a<lb/>
credit or debit card. Everyone on<lb/>
campus has a OneCard, so 1 don't<lb/>
see the point of having an ECU<lb/>
debit card too<lb/>
Chuck Hawkins, senior asso-<lb/>
ciate vice chancellor for financial<lb/>
services, said the only advantage<lb/>
to having a debit card is for stu-<lb/>
dents receiving financial aid who<lb/>
do not already have a checking<lb/>
account.<lb/>
There are three options to<lb/>
receive financial aid refunds<lb/>
- through the debit card, direct<lb/>
deposit or a mailed check.<lb/>
Dee Bowling, cash operations<lb/>
manager, said each student who<lb/>
anticipates receiving a refund<lb/>
of any sort still needs to use the<lb/>
card data to authenticate them-<lb/>
selves to Higher One and then<lb/>
make a choice.<lb/>
Steps for authenticating the<lb/>
ECU debit card can be found on<lb/>
their Web site at ECUCard.com.<lb/>
Using this third party system<lb/>
brings up concerns among stu-<lb/>
dents who think the money will<lb/>
still take longer to transfer from<lb/>
a bank so far away, but it will still<lb/>
take the same amount of time or<lb/>
even quicker.<lb/>
Students also do not under-<lb/>
stand why ECU cannot direct<lb/>
deposit checks directly into their<lb/>
existing account.<lb/>
Students can still use their<lb/>
bank accounts to directly deposit<lb/>
financial aid, but since the uni-<lb/>
versity is in contract with Higher<lb/>
One, they must first sign into the<lb/>
Higher One system and make the<lb/>
choice between continuing their<lb/>
own accounts or signing up for<lb/>
the Higher One account.<lb/>
ECU never directly deposited<lb/>
checks directly from the univer-<lb/>
sity into students' accounts. They<lb/>
always used a third party system.<lb/>
The system will be exactly the<lb/>
same, except ECU will be going<lb/>
through Higher One instead.<lb/>
"I would still have to give<lb/>
Higher One my banking account<lb/>
numbers, and I really don't trust<lb/>
that Mason said.<lb/>
The Higher One bank also<lb/>
does not have local ATMs nor<lb/>
does it have a local branch office.<lb/>
ECU will soon have three ATMs<lb/>
on campus, two on east campus<lb/>
and one on west campus said<lb/>
Bowling.<lb/>
There is no service charge for<lb/>
students who choose to withdraw<lb/>
from a Higher One ATM.<lb/>
However, students who<lb/>
choose to withdraw money from<lb/>
other bank companies aside from<lb/>
Higher One, like Wachovia or<lb/>
BB&amp;T, will have to pay a service<lb/>
charge.<lb/>
When asked if ECU thought<lb/>
about the rarity of Higher. One<lb/>
ATM machines nationwide,<lb/>
Bowling said she could certainly<lb/>
talk to Higher One about some<lb/>
change, but for now the mar-<lb/>
keting plan includes the three<lb/>
Higher One ATMs that will soon<lb/>
be on campus.<lb/>
If students are not near the<lb/>
university, the only way they<lb/>
can have access to a Higher One<lb/>
ATM is if they are near a univer-<lb/>
sity town that is partnered with<lb/>
Higher One.<lb/>
"It doesn't make sense<lb/>
because if you can't find a Higher<lb/>
One ATM, you're going to get<lb/>
charged using another ATM<lb/>
said Starla Wood, junior dance<lb/>
performance major.<lb/>
This is especially true since<lb/>
there are only 33 schools in the<lb/>
nation who have Higher One<lb/>
ATMs.<lb/>
Students are still concerned<lb/>
that Higher One charges hidden<lb/>
fees. When he entered his debit<lb/>
card pin number, Mason said<lb/>
he was charged 50 cents every<lb/>
time.<lb/>
It is important for students<lb/>
using the ECU debit card to select<lb/>
the "credit" option when paying<lb/>
rather than "debit" in order to<lb/>
avoid being charged an extra SO<lb/>
cents from their account.<lb/>
"Don't treat the ECU debit<lb/>
card as a pin transaction and you<lb/>
will be fine Bowling said.<lb/>
Like any checking account,<lb/>
there are fees for additional<lb/>
services such as overdrafts, wire<lb/>
transfers or stop payments.<lb/>
Yet, students are concerned<lb/>
they can only take out a maxi-<lb/>
mum of $S00 a day out of their<lb/>
Higher One account. However,<lb/>
that is a common process among<lb/>
the banking industry for there to<lb/>
be a limit on daily withdrawals<lb/>
Bowling said.<lb/>
The ECU debit card is not the<lb/>
same as the ECU One Card, and<lb/>
ECU does not currently have the<lb/>
software capability to combine<lb/>
both cards.<lb/>
Willy Lee, director of uni-<lb/>
versity printing and graphics, is<lb/>
currently working on a system to<lb/>
allow the One Card to be com-<lb/>
bined with the ECU Debit Card.<lb/>
When the temporary arrange-<lb/>
ment with Higher One expires<lb/>
in 2007-2008, the university<lb/>
plans to look at a request for<lb/>
proposal to eventually integrate<lb/>
both systems.<lb/>
Soon the system will be simi-<lb/>
lar to that of UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
and NC State, which are both<lb/>
partnered with Wachovia Bank.<lb/>
Katie Tinney, sophomore at<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill, said she loves<lb/>
her UNC One Card.<lb/>
"I use it every day, mainly the<lb/>
debit part of it said Tinney.<lb/>
In the meantime, Higher One<lb/>
has launched its B-4 campaign to<lb/>
serve as a liaison between SGA<lb/>
and students. Considering that<lb/>
Higher One is such a new com-<lb/>
pany, students in the campaign<lb/>
may not know all there is to<lb/>
know about the company, which<lb/>
may pose problems.<lb/>
Michael Bannister, junior<lb/>
nursing major, said he has not<lb/>
heard much about the B-4 cam-<lb/>
paign but he did read about the<lb/>
Higher One Card Forum, which<lb/>
will allow students to ask ques-<lb/>
tions about the debit card.<lb/>
"Even though Higher One<lb/>
has contracts with 32 schools,<lb/>
these three guys who graduated<lb/>
from Yale four years ago who<lb/>
opened up this business can do<lb/>
whatever they want with stu-<lb/>
dents' money Mason said.<lb/>
A question and answer ses-<lb/>
sion will be held Wednesday at<lb/>
5 p.m. at Hendrix Theater. Stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty are welcome<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
For more involved questions,<lb/>
students may also contact the<lb/>
student liaison department at<lb/>
1-888-809-6180. The Higher<lb/>
One customer service number is<lb/>
1-866-663-1313.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059375_0004"/><lb/>
OPINIO<lb/>
Page A4<lb/>
editor@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.9238<lb/>
JENNIFER LHOBBS Editor In Chief<lb/>
TUESDAY December 6,2005<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
Basketball season<lb/>
finally underway<lb/>
As the ECU men's basketball season gets<lb/>
underway, Pirate fans can only wonder what<lb/>
might have been. ECU has started the year 3-2<lb/>
under the direction of new head coach Ricky<lb/>
Stokes. A solid yet humble beginning as the<lb/>
Pirates have fallen to Gardner-Webb and Old<lb/>
Dominion with two wins against Wofford and<lb/>
another over North Carolina A&amp;T.<lb/>
The Pirates have some young talent anchored<lb/>
by veterans Corey Rouse and Japhet McNeil<lb/>
and Rouse has been exceptional thus far, aver-<lb/>
aging 18.2 points and 11.8 points per game.<lb/>
Newcomers Sam Hinnant and Courtney Cap-<lb/>
tain have also provided offensive firepower.<lb/>
Unfortunately, Stokes has little depth on his<lb/>
bench. That has fans wondering how far the<lb/>
Pirates could go in Conference-USA with the<lb/>
services of recent transfers Frank Robinson,<lb/>
Belton Rivers and Mike Cook.<lb/>
All three could have been stars in the league<lb/>
and with Rouse down low, given ECU a great<lb/>
chance to make the NCAA tournament. But as<lb/>
it stands now, Robinson is averaging almost 10<lb/>
points per game at Cal St. Fullerton, Rivers is<lb/>
scoring 15 points per game for Tennessee Tech<lb/>
and Cook is sitting out a year after transferring<lb/>
to Pittsburgh.<lb/>
Hopefully Stokes can keep his current talent in<lb/>
the program while continuing to bring in fresh<lb/>
faces that will take ECU to the next echelon in<lb/>
Conference-USA.<lb/>
With the former conference powerhouses<lb/>
departing, such as Louisville, Cincinnati and<lb/>
Marquette, the Pirates looked primed to finally<lb/>
make a run at the top of the standings in the<lb/>
2005-2006. It's still early, but it looks as though<lb/>
ECU will not be making a NCAA appearance<lb/>
come March with the lack of size and depth<lb/>
on their roster.<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 Kristin Murnane<lb/>
Features Editor Asst Features Editor<lb/>
Tony Zoppo<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Nina Coefield<lb/>
Head Copy Editor<lb/>
Herb Sneed<lb/>
Photo Editor<lb/>
Alexander Marcinlak<lb/>
Web Editor<lb/>
Edward McKim<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Newsroom<lb/>
Fax<lb/>
Advertising<lb/>
252.328.9238<lb/>
252.328.9143<lb/>
252.328.9245<lb/>
Brandon Hughes<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
April Barnes<lb/>
Asst. Copy Editor<lb/>
Rachael Lotter<lb/>
Asst Photo Editor<lb/>
Dustln Jones<lb/>
Asst Web Editor<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 editors theeastcarollnlan.com or to The East<lb/>
Carolinian. SeHHelp 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/>
2003.<lb/>
MISSION<lb/>
2005<lb/>
VICTORY<lb/>
2007?<lb/>
REFINING<lb/>
Remission<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
Liberals can't change<lb/>
What has happened to<lb/>
Christmas?<lb/>
TONYMCKEE<lb/>
CONSEflVATIVE CORINER<lb/>
I noticed a rather disturb-<lb/>
ing and troubling thing when<lb/>
Christmas decorations started<lb/>
appearing in stores shortly after<lb/>
Memorial Day Christmas is<lb/>
missing.<lb/>
As the decorations gradually<lb/>
appeared "Season's Greetings"<lb/>
"Happy Holidays "Merry X-<lb/>
mas" and other generic greetings<lb/>
proliferated while "Merry Christ-<lb/>
mas" appeared to be missing in<lb/>
action. Christmas' disappearance<lb/>
didn't really register at first,<lb/>
especially since few stores put<lb/>
out Christmas decorations in<lb/>
September. As the months have<lb/>
progressed however, and more<lb/>
and more stores and businesses<lb/>
have put up decorations, Christ-<lb/>
mas has become conspicuous in<lb/>
its absence, both in writing and<lb/>
as a verbal greeting.<lb/>
That is wrong.<lb/>
I have heard and read news<lb/>
reports highlighting the actions<lb/>
of sick, morally bankrupt indi-<lb/>
viduals who have destroyed<lb/>
Nativity scenes or sent threaten-<lb/>
ing letters to homeowners who<lb/>
put up Christmas decorations.<lb/>
That is wrong.<lb/>
1 have followed the court<lb/>
rulings stating that towns and<lb/>
municipalities cannot display<lb/>
Nativities or any decorations<lb/>
that even slightly hint at a reli-<lb/>
gious theme. As always, the jus-<lb/>
tification for this lunacy is the<lb/>
non-existent, wholly invented<lb/>
Constitutional "separation of<lb/>
Church and State" clause.<lb/>
That is wrong.<lb/>
I, along with every clear<lb/>
thinking person who heard or<lb/>
read the news report, shook<lb/>
my head in amazement and<lb/>
contempt at Boston's attempt to<lb/>
rename their official Christmas<lb/>
tree the "Holiday Tree Their<lb/>
reasoning? They did not want to<lb/>
offend anyone.<lb/>
THAT is wrong on SO man<lb/>
levels as to be incalculable.<lb/>
All this nonsense is the result<lb/>
of Liberalism and Political Cor-<lb/>
rectness run amok. We are now<lb/>
reaping the rewards of years<lb/>
of policy making by head-in-<lb/>
the-orlfice Liberal politicians<lb/>
and judges who have made it a<lb/>
personal goal to outlaw any refer-<lb/>
ence to Christianity in this coun-<lb/>
try, all in the name of 'diversity"<lb/>
and not "offending" people from<lb/>
other culturesreligions. What a<lb/>
load of crap.<lb/>
This country was founded by<lb/>
Christians as a Christian nation.<lb/>
Even the most cursory examina-<lb/>
tion of historical documents will<lb/>
bear that out. God is as much a<lb/>
part of the fabric of this nation<lb/>
as the land we stand on, and<lb/>
nothing that Liberals do or say<lb/>
can change that fact, no matter<lb/>
how hard they try. And they have<lb/>
been trying.<lb/>
They have managed to get the<lb/>
Ten Commandments out of many<lb/>
public buildings and courthouses<lb/>
despite the fact that the Western<lb/>
system of laws and morals are<lb/>
built upon those Command-<lb/>
ments. They have made it illegal<lb/>
to pray in schools or on public<lb/>
property despite the fact that<lb/>
Congress, the Supreme Court<lb/>
and many other Federal Courts<lb/>
start each session with a prayer.<lb/>
Liberals have done all this, and<lb/>
are doing still more, with a straight<lb/>
face while hypocritically violating<lb/>
their own top Commandment:<lb/>
offend no one. It strikes me as<lb/>
odd that Liberals are so willing<lb/>
to offend the vast majority of the<lb/>
citizens of this country (i.e. Chris-<lb/>
tians) in the name of promoting<lb/>
diversity and not offending people<lb/>
Christmas<lb/>
from other cultures.<lb/>
Liberals tell us that they<lb/>
know more, understand more<lb/>
and care more than the rest of us<lb/>
and that we should just let them<lb/>
run our lives for us. We are told<lb/>
that our beliefs and culture are<lb/>
evil and we shouldn't try to force<lb/>
them upon others. They tell us<lb/>
all this without giving a damn<lb/>
that they are defecating on the<lb/>
culture of the very people who<lb/>
put them in power. I don't get it.<lb/>
Then again, I'm not supposed to<lb/>
- I'm not a Liberal.<lb/>
There is a backlash begin-<lb/>
ning against such insanity.<lb/>
There is a Pastor in Raleigh who<lb/>
has started a movement to not<lb/>
spend money at establishments<lb/>
that do not display or say "Merry<lb/>
Christmas This movement is<lb/>
growing extremely rapidly, and<lb/>
it is not just a local phenome-<lb/>
non. There are grass root groups<lb/>
popping up all over the country<lb/>
with the same message: you<lb/>
want our business you respect<lb/>
our beliefs. Things will change<lb/>
very rapidly once the wallet feels<lb/>
the pinch.<lb/>
I am not advocating or sug-<lb/>
gesting you only spend money<lb/>
at establishments that respect<lb/>
this country's Christian heritage.<lb/>
That choice is yours. I am sug-<lb/>
gesting that if you are tired of<lb/>
being trod upon, bad mouthed,<lb/>
and derided by Liberals for what<lb/>
you believe, do something.<lb/>
Say "Merry Christmas" to<lb/>
everyone you see or off campus.<lb/>
Say it to every cashier and door<lb/>
greeter. Say it to every stinking<lb/>
Liberal you know just to watch the<lb/>
steam come out of their ears.<lb/>
This is the season to celebrate<lb/>
the birth of Christ. It has been<lb/>
Christmas for centuries Liberal-<lb/>
ism cannot change that.<lb/>
So, say it loud. Say it proud.<lb/>
Just say it.<lb/>
MERRY CHRISTMAS.<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
(KRT) � Happy holidays,<lb/>
workers of the world! It's that<lb/>
joyous time of year when work-<lb/>
places resemble the joke about<lb/>
Russian factory workers: "We<lb/>
pretend to work, and the bosses<lb/>
preiend to pay us<lb/>
Alas, for those without secure<lb/>
employment, that's not funny.<lb/>
Recall the old social con-<lb/>
tract regarding work: A person<lb/>
started his career as an enthusi-<lb/>
astic young person who overper-<lb/>
formed and was undercompen-<lb/>
sated for it. That was acceptable<lb/>
because, over the next 35 years,<lb/>
he rose to a position where he<lb/>
could underperform and be<lb/>
overcompensated. It all evened<lb/>
out over the lifetime.<lb/>
This caricature of secure<lb/>
employment is now just another<lb/>
joke. That industrial-era bar-<lb/>
gain is going, going, gone. See<lb/>
General Motors' big reductions<lb/>
in employee health insurance,<lb/>
while its suppliers seek wage cuts<lb/>
of as much as two-thirds.<lb/>
The old industrial-era system<lb/>
assumed fixed employment, not<lb/>
mobility, with education and<lb/>
training primarily associated<lb/>
with promotion (and college<lb/>
tuition deductible only If improv-<lb/>
ing skills in the present job). That<lb/>
system gave us employer-funded<lb/>
health insurance and pensions<lb/>
 benefits that were lost if the<lb/>
employee left. That era also<lb/>
produced legal definitions of<lb/>
full-time, part-time and overtime<lb/>
that seem quaint when work can<lb/>
occur anytime, anywhere linked<lb/>
by communications networks.<lb/>
Today, people have been cut<lb/>
loose. For some, this is liberation<lb/>
from indentured servitude; they<lb/>
set their own terms of work as<lb/>
self-employed "free agents But<lb/>
most are simply adrift.<lb/>
For well over a decade, some<lb/>
companies have tried to make<lb/>
people a "variable cost" rather<lb/>
than a fixed obligation by con-<lb/>
verting employees into inde-<lb/>
pendent contractors without<lb/>
benefits. The term "outsourcing"<lb/>
originally referred not to shifting<lb/>
jobs to China and India but to<lb/>
replacing permanent employees<lb/>
with temporary ones on some-<lb/>
one else's payroll. In the 1990s,<lb/>
the temporary-staffing industry<lb/>
accounted for 10 percent of all<lb/>
U.S. job growth, despite account-<lb/>
ing for only about 2 percent of<lb/>
total jobs, an MIT economist<lb/>
found. In 2000, Microsoft settled<lb/>
a lawsuit by "permatemps" (who<lb/>
claimed they were indistinguish-<lb/>
able from regular employees) for<lb/>
$97 million, ending a dispute<lb/>
that started in 1992.<lb/>
Demographic changes pose<lb/>
a further challenge. If you've<lb/>
missed the media hype, baby<lb/>
boomers start to turn 60 on<lb/>
Jan. 1. Surveys show that a high<lb/>
proportion of them want to keep<lb/>
working, perhaps at a new career,<lb/>
perhaps community service, but<lb/>
with time for leisure or grand-<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Social policies and organi-<lb/>
zational practices have not fully<lb/>
dealt with new realities. America<lb/>
needs creative ideas that are good<lb/>
for people and for the future of a<lb/>
dynamic economy:<lb/>
Health care. Instead of<lb/>
demanding more from employ-<lb/>
ers, including squeezing small<lb/>
businesses as some states pro-<lb/>
pose, let's work toward universal<lb/>
tax-supported health-care cover-<lb/>
age. A Gallup poll shows that 79<lb/>
Pirate Rant<lb/>
percent of Americans want it,<lb/>
and 69 percent are willing to pay<lb/>
for it with higher taxes.<lb/>
Lifelong learning. Imagine a<lb/>
GI Bill for veterans of industry<lb/>
wars to pay for college after they<lb/>
suffer from corporate restructur-<lb/>
ing. Or Pell Grants (designed for<lb/>
young college students) extended<lb/>
to retirees who want education<lb/>
for a new career. Higher educa-<lb/>
tion builds skills that build the<lb/>
economy.<lb/>
Savings. It's time for portable<lb/>
tax-advantaged savings accounts<lb/>
accessible at times of greatest<lb/>
need and matched by low-interest<lb/>
loans as well as employer contri-<lb/>
butions. People could draw funds<lb/>
when the family is growing, or<lb/>
for education when changing<lb/>
fields, without losing tax advan-<lb/>
tages. This would supplement,<lb/>
not replace, Social Security.<lb/>
Work time. Some people<lb/>
have flexible work hours. Why<lb/>
not extend this and add flexible<lb/>
work years? Parents of young<lb/>
children might want months off<lb/>
during their kids' summer vaca-<lb/>
tion. Mature workers might want<lb/>
months off during the cold winter<lb/>
season. Internet auctions could<lb/>
be used to match them, inside a<lb/>
company or across. Continental<lb/>
Airlines' Web site enabling flight<lb/>
attendants to trade schedules is a<lb/>
useful model.<lb/>
What are your own needs,<lb/>
preferences and ideas? Whether<lb/>
you're burdened by end-of-year<lb/>
deadlines or pretending to work<lb/>
between holiday preparations,<lb/>
take a moment to e-mail me<lb/>
about your situation. A national<lb/>
dialogue about the future of work<lb/>
could produce the holiday gift<lb/>
that keeps giving.<lb/>
It's funny how PB's was charging $7 to get into that hole<lb/>
in the wall. Then we can wait shoulder to shoulder for<lb/>
20 minutes to get a warm beer and be expected to tip.<lb/>
Bars in NYC, DC, and Philly sometimes don't charge<lb/>
that much and their bathrooms are worth more than<lb/>
PB's Itself!<lb/>
Gary McCabe gives libertarians a bad name. First, he<lb/>
admits to arbitrarily writing off entire sections of the<lb/>
country, particularly the ones who wished to fight for<lb/>
self government instead of submitting to the federal<lb/>
government, then he writes dumb opinion pieces which<lb/>
include him admitting to liking "Lost" while admonish-<lb/>
ing us for not watching "Arrested Development<lb/>
I've got Nextel tooturn OFF your DC speaker it's just<lb/>
obnoxious in public.<lb/>
Damn these final exams - is it our professor's job to<lb/>
. make our lives hell? Did you know suicide rates are up<lb/>
around exam time?<lb/>
Where are the rest stops and gas stations along 264? I'm<lb/>
getting tired of stopping on the side of the road!<lb/>
Is it me or does it seem like there are too many fake,<lb/>
shallow valley girls on campus?<lb/>
All the conservatives who are so against liberals, times<lb/>
are changing, so 1 suggest you open your minds a tiny<lb/>
bit and learn something about society.<lb/>
To the girl who doesn't think boys deserve to feel special,<lb/>
now there's a good reason why boys cheat on girls!<lb/>
Attention ECU students: Where is the school spirit?<lb/>
Majority of the students 1 see on campus are wearing<lb/>
shirts and hoodies displaying the names of schools<lb/>
other than ECU! Why don't you just go to that school<lb/>
instead?<lb/>
Never take your car to Aamco Transmission. My car was<lb/>
gone for two months, came back with more damage<lb/>
than it went in with and they still charged me for the<lb/>
repair. And customer service can't do jack!<lb/>
1 hate it when people who go to school on grants and<lb/>
stuff like that get that huge refund then brag about it<lb/>
and end up blowing it all away. Get a life.<lb/>
Hey Subway! Don't turn on your OPEN sign if you're<lb/>
not open, and won't be open for another 45 minutes!<lb/>
You-give us hungry people false hope.<lb/>
Why does the Political Science Library have a picture<lb/>
of every modern president except Richard Nixon? 1<lb/>
thought the Political Science Department was sup-<lb/>
posed to be the most unbiased department on a college<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
I am so sick and tired of coming to the library at night<lb/>
and there are kidsteenagers on the computers down-<lb/>
loading music. Where is the security? We need some<lb/>
type of system of knowing who is an ECU student to<lb/>
use our library!<lb/>
Everyone should attend the Higher One meeting on Dec.<lb/>
7. Come with questions, because we deserve answers!<lb/>
To the girl who decided to get the lab assistant to kick<lb/>
me off the computer lab in Mendenhall thank you. I<lb/>
understand that you needed to use the scanner but was<lb/>
it necessary for you to make me move when I was right<lb/>
in the middle of printing off my homework?<lb/>
Yaay! Classes will be over soon and I'll have plenty of<lb/>
free time to celebrate and what not. I'm sure some will<lb/>
spend ALL their time studying. Stop fooling yourselves<lb/>
thinking that makes you better than everyone. Go out,<lb/>
enjoy college and live a little. It costs you to come here,<lb/>
have fun while it lasts!<lb/>
I seen you downtown last weekend with your Michael<lb/>
Jackson jackets. Salt and Pepa WAS hot<lb/>
DEARTREVOR K1RKENDALL, You wrote in Thursday's<lb/>
paper that "the actors in Rentj have very poor singing<lb/>
skills yet you maintain that you would have liked to<lb/>
have seen the musical on the stage. Moron. The origi-<lb/>
nal Broadway cast (minus 2) stars in the movie so you<lb/>
wouldn't have liked the stage production either.<lb/>
1 understand that the Commuter Shuttle runs on a 20<lb/>
min. schedule but why does it have to sit at the bottom<lb/>
of Minges for so long? Why not have the library and<lb/>
the stadium be the stops where they sit? Because its<lb/>
a real pain to get off and get to class at Minges with a<lb/>
whole bus load of people who try to cram on the bus<lb/>
right before the classroom buildings.<lb/>
Why does WZMB play so much Kanye West? I tuned<lb/>
into Blue Note last week and heard I lip-Hop. There are<lb/>
ten stations in Greenville that play Kanye. Why can't<lb/>
WZMB be different?<lb/>
To the person who broke into my car when it was parked<lb/>
in my driveway and stole a whole bunch of my friend's<lb/>
stuff, you're a worthless loser. I mean seriously, who<lb/>
steals change?<lb/>
Fellow Rec center users: Please take the time to remove<lb/>
plates from bars, machines, etc. If you can shoulder<lb/>
press 270 pounds, you can move them back to the rack.<lb/>
It isn't as easy for some of us to lift that much - and<lb/>
I'd rather get the workout in correct form than from<lb/>
struggling to pick up behind you. And yes, I know<lb/>
there are weight-room attendants, but this isn't their<lb/>
sole responsibility.<lb/>
1 am pretty sure that the writer who "reviewed" RENT<lb/>
for this paper didn't see the same movie I did. I, as well<lb/>
as all the other people I know who have seen it, thought<lb/>
that It was absolutely amazing.<lb/>
Why does every computer in the Rawl computer lab<lb/>
take at least five minutes to boot?<lb/>
To everyone who rants about the smokers, cell phone<lb/>
users, and excessive partiers, get over it. North Carolina<lb/>
; is a tobacco state, everyone has one, and if they can<lb/>
! make It to their 8 o'clock the next day more power to<lb/>
j 'em. It's the same Pirate Rant every week. Thank you<lb/>
j everyone who has something original to say. God Bless<lb/>
i Whoever heshe may be.<lb/>
I Why do I do just fine with mediocre girls and when the<lb/>
gorgeous ones approach 1 panic?<lb/>
UM N. nr limit Kant li an anmfmm way far auaVnB and stall In tin<lb/>
Eiuiommmity ti mU, MwMm WnMmen (if �Mtttauamaaly<lb/>
onlln, at www.thtrattcamlauan.iom. or malht u, tdltnrmhmutcamllman<lb/>
cam. Tnt tdlla, mm the right t� ,dlt upi�hm fm ���, md bmily. <lb/>
<pb facs="00059375_0005"/><lb/>
r o<lb/>
rz<lb/>
Page A5 features@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 CAROLYN SCANDURA Features Editor KRISTIN MURNANE Assistant Features Editor TUESDAY December 6, 2005<lb/>
Picks of the Semester:<lb/>
40 Year-Old Virgin<lb/>
Harry Potter: The Goblet of Fire<lb/>
Jarhead<lb/>
Walk the Line<lb/>
Music<lb/>
Nickel Back - All the Right Reasons<lb/>
Spill Canvas - One Fell Swoop<lb/>
Madonna - Confessions on a Dance<lb/>
Floor<lb/>
Green Day - Sutef in a Bible<lb/>
Television<lb/>
"NipTuck"<lb/>
"Desperate Housewives"<lb/>
"Boston Legal"<lb/>
"Grey's Anatomy'<lb/>
Local Concerts:<lb/>
U2 will be at the Charlotte Bobcats<lb/>
Arena Monday, Dec. 12.<lb/>
Saves the Day, Senses Fail and The<lb/>
Early November will be at The NorVa<lb/>
in Norfolk, Va. Wednesday, Dec. 14.<lb/>
Dolly Parton will be at the Charlotte<lb/>
Bobcats Arena Thursday, Dec. 15.<lb/>
Clay Aiken will be performing at the RBC<lb/>
Center in Raleigh Thursday, Dec. 22.<lb/>
General Johnson and Chairman of<lb/>
the Board will be performing at the<lb/>
Lincoln Theatre In Raleigh Friday,<lb/>
Jan. 13,2006.<lb/>
Nada Surf will be at the Cat's Cradle In<lb/>
Carrboro Friday, Feb. 10,2006.<lb/>
Jerry Seinfeld will be performing<lb/>
at the Progress Energy Center for<lb/>
Performing Arts in Raleigh Friday,<lb/>
March 10,2006.<lb/>
Names In the News:<lb/>
It's a girl<lb/>
While the rest of the world is<lb/>
preoccupied with war and global<lb/>
warming, this column chews on<lb/>
different meat. Our philosophy is<lb/>
simple, sure, Baghdad doings are<lb/>
important, but, goodness gracious,<lb/>
we're dying for dish on that<lb/>
irrepressible Britney Spears (more<lb/>
on her later). Star struck as we are,<lb/>
we're telling about the good news<lb/>
out of the Jennifer Gamer-Ben Affleck<lb/>
camp. As The Associated Press<lb/>
tells it, the beautiful 33-year-olds<lb/>
have produced a beautiful offspring<lb/>
- Violet. "Mother, father and baby are<lb/>
doing great the couple's publicists<lb/>
say. The flower child was bom around<lb/>
6:30 p.m. Thursday, although no one<lb/>
will say where. Garner and Affleck<lb/>
were married in June. Little Violet is<lb/>
the first child for Bennlfer two. Affleck<lb/>
costarred with Garner in 2003's<lb/>
"Daredevil She divorced actor Scott<lb/>
Foley in March 2004 after a three year<lb/>
marriage. Affleck famously courted<lb/>
Jennifer Lopez (Bennlfer one) until<lb/>
the two broke off their engagement<lb/>
in January 2004.<lb/>
When titans meet<lb/>
Folks at CBS are agog, atwltter and<lb/>
very happy with the news that Oprah<lb/>
Winfrey's appearance Thursday night<lb/>
on "Late Show With David Letterman<lb/>
her first appearance with Dave In 16<lb/>
years drew an audience of 13.45<lb/>
million viewers. That's the largest<lb/>
group to tune into the program in<lb/>
more than 10 years, CBS officials say.<lb/>
Actors and alcohol, part one<lb/>
Vince Vaughn and Jennifer Aniston,<lb/>
another fun couple we love to keep<lb/>
track of, were pulled over by Scottsdale,<lb/>
Ariz police this week. Vaughn, who<lb/>
was driving, was given a sobriety test,<lb/>
which proved he was "not drunk<lb/>
We determined he had something<lb/>
to drink but was not over the legal<lb/>
(impairment) limit cops told The AP.<lb/>
"We suggested that he not continue<lb/>
to drive Vaughn parked the van he<lb/>
was driving, then he and Aniston<lb/>
got into the car of a friend who'd<lb/>
been following them. (Entourages<lb/>
can be oh-so handy.) Cops didn't<lb/>
say why they pulled Vaughn over in<lb/>
the first place. Maybe they wanted<lb/>
Vince's take on global warming.<lb/>
Vaughn and Aniston will costar in<lb/>
next summer's The Break Up. We're<lb/>
not sure whether it's biographical.<lb/>
Actors and alcohol, part two<lb/>
Apparently the pressure of starring<lb/>
in a hit TV show drives gals to drink<lb/>
a bit too much. Such is the word<lb/>
from Hawaii, where "Lost" actresses<lb/>
Michelle Rodriguez and Cynthia<lb/>
Watros were arrested in separate<lb/>
incidents on the same day for driving<lb/>
under the influence. The AP reports<lb/>
that each woman failed sobriety<lb/>
tests after their vehicles were spotted<lb/>
weaving on the same highway 15<lb/>
minutes apart Thursday. They were<lb/>
released on $500 bail apiece.<lb/>
Staying together?<lb/>
There is good news in Hollywood<lb/>
coupledom. The New York Post<lb/>
tells us that comedian Kathy Griffin<lb/>
Is "trying to make it work" with<lb/>
husband Matt Mollne. Though the<lb/>
marriage has had some bumps<lb/>
lately, the two were seen partying<lb/>
together in L.A. the other night.<lb/>
Survival of the Fittest: Final thoughts<lb/>
We are finally done with<lb/>
this semester challenge<lb/>
KRISTIN MURNANE<lb/>
ASSISTANT FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
Wow, what a crazy semester<lb/>
this has been. 1 would have<lb/>
never imagined back in Octo-<lb/>
ber that by the time December<lb/>
rolled around, I'd actually enjoy<lb/>
going to the gym and anxiously<lb/>
wait for each Friday afternoon<lb/>
where I'd get my butt kicked<lb/>
by one of our personal trainers.<lb/>
I know that I didn't win this<lb/>
competition, but I'm definitely<lb/>
pleased with my improvements.<lb/>
For me, it wasn't losing the<lb/>
pounds that was important, it<lb/>
was getting my BMI down (which<lb/>
I did) losing some inches (which<lb/>
I also did) and lowering my heart<lb/>
rate (which I definitely did). 1 feel<lb/>
healthier now than I did a few<lb/>
weeks ago, and I feel like I'm actu-<lb/>
ally kind of in shape. Granted I<lb/>
still eat pasta like it's my job, but<lb/>
I'm working on it.<lb/>
1 want to thank all of the<lb/>
higher-ups at the SRC for making<lb/>
this happen, but most impor-<lb/>
Kristln M. happily looks over her "before and after" fitness profiles<lb/>
The numbers say it all<lb/>
KRISTIN DAY<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Kristin D. gets her BP taken, proving her to be the "Survival" winner.<lb/>
of inches we lost in seven weeks<lb/>
is pretty amazing, so it's good to<lb/>
know we really did accomplish<lb/>
something we were all too lazy to<lb/>
do on our own. I think I did reach<lb/>
my goal to look better for my<lb/>
upcoming bridesmaid appear-<lb/>
ance and as long as I don't go<lb/>
out of control during Christmas,<lb/>
I shouldn't have to worry too<lb/>
much about the summer.<lb/>
We have to attribute most of<lb/>
our success to our trainers Nathan<lb/>
and Warren, but I also know most<lb/>
of us don't have a couple hundred<lb/>
dollars to spend. For anyone like<lb/>
me who wants to shape up but<lb/>
doesn't have the money for a per-<lb/>
sonal trainer, you should really<lb/>
consider getting a group fitness<lb/>
pass. They're not that expen-<lb/>
sive and the instructors really<lb/>
know how to push the class.<lb/>
Thanks to everyone at SRC for<lb/>
putting up with us and we'll defi-<lb/>
nitely be seeing you there a lot.<lb/>
It's over. It's finally over.<lb/>
No more skipping work to go<lb/>
to the gym. No more rampant<lb/>
delirium from hunger. But it was<lb/>
all worth it.<lb/>
Now that we're done, I'm<lb/>
actually kind of sad. While<lb/>
I struggled through many of<lb/>
Nathan's training sessions and<lb/>
Erin's insane RPM classes, the<lb/>
whole thing was starting to get<lb/>
easier and, surprisingly, more<lb/>
fun (although I'm sure discuss-<lb/>
ing Showgirls and Cartman in the<lb/>
Special Olympics helped).<lb/>
Most of all, now that I've<lb/>
"won" whatever competition we<lb/>
were having, I wish we would<lb/>
have put some sort of prize in the<lb/>
deal. Like, a bonus check or a car<lb/>
or even drinks at 519 on TEC'stab.<lb/>
Hell, I ended up there anyway.<lb/>
While we didn't lose many<lb/>
pounds, Nathan says the amount<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Ed M. is running so fast that no camera could capture a clear image.<lb/>
tantly, I'd like to thank our<lb/>
trainers Warren and Nathan<lb/>
for putting up with me. I've<lb/>
enjoyed this experience so much<lb/>
that I'm hiring Nathan to kick<lb/>
my butt for another couple<lb/>
of months next semester. So<lb/>
hopefully by the time school<lb/>
ends, I'll be one sexy assistant<lb/>
editor. Thanks for reading, and<lb/>
I hope that we've motivated<lb/>
you to start a healthier lifestyle.<lb/>
Heck, if I can do it, so can you.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
OK, so I didn't win, but it<lb/>
was all worth it<lb/>
ED MCKIM<lb/>
PRODUCTION MANAGER<lb/>
For this year's Survival of<lb/>
the Fittest competition, I had<lb/>
no doubt in my mind that I was<lb/>
in for a tough challenge. My<lb/>
lifestyle was sedentary at best<lb/>
and I needed to change that.<lb/>
Though I didn't get as dedicated<lb/>
as Kristin Day, I found the over-<lb/>
all experience very helpful. The<lb/>
fitness evaluation was thorough,<lb/>
heartbreaking and the trainers<lb/>
we worked with (Warren, Nathan<lb/>
and Chelsea) did a wonderful job.<lb/>
The trainers we worked with<lb/>
outside of our personal training<lb/>
sessions were demanding as well,<lb/>
(I did spinning with Hannah,<lb/>
and Erin) but it was very worth<lb/>
it. 1, unfortunately, got a little<lb/>
too caught up in schoolwork<lb/>
as I usually do and missed two<lb/>
workouts. It was at times like<lb/>
these I would kick myself for<lb/>
not listening to an old friend's<lb/>
adage, "It's just that you have<lb/>
terrible time-management skills<lb/>
Anyway, I learned a lot of<lb/>
good things, and I plan to spend<lb/>
the $50 on a GoldPass next<lb/>
semester so that I can continue<lb/>
to do the Wednesday and Sunday<lb/>
RPM spinning classes and any-<lb/>
thing else that looks good. The<lb/>
personal workouts topped all, but<lb/>
as a poor college student in one of<lb/>
the most demanding degree pro-<lb/>
grams at ECU, I can't afford to do<lb/>
that next semester until I make<lb/>
a Web site where I hold a little<lb/>
rabbit hostage until 1 earn enough<lb/>
money to set him free  which<lb/>
has already been done, so I'd<lb/>
have to think of something new.<lb/>
I would have also liked to<lb/>
have met with a dietician during<lb/>
this time, so that I could get a<lb/>
stable diet and grocery list that<lb/>
I could use to help me eat in a<lb/>
healthy manner again. But all<lb/>
and all I commend Kristen Mur-<lb/>
nane for the job she did setting<lb/>
this up and I commend Kristin<lb/>
Day for being the most dedicated.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
A day in the life of:<lb/>
Shopping Mall Santa<lb/>
Barnes and Noble<lb/>
book signing event<lb/>
What those jolly men<lb/>
have to go through<lb/>
DANIEL BROCK<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
One of Santa's little helpers sits on his lap for a well deserved break.<lb/>
Around the holidays, shop-<lb/>
ping malls are crazy places.<lb/>
People run amok buying as much<lb/>
as they can, as quickly as they<lb/>
can (except for those high school<lb/>
punks that loiter in and around<lb/>
the food court). In the center<lb/>
of all this someone thought it<lb/>
would be a good idea to construct<lb/>
a giant castle, bring in bushels of<lb/>
fake snow and have Santa come<lb/>
hang out to listen to the demands<lb/>
of insane children.<lb/>
Well it worked.<lb/>
Parents are pushed, pulled<lb/>
and dragged into line by kids<lb/>
demanding every toy on earth.<lb/>
Along with that they must wait<lb/>
 and wait  and wait in line<lb/>
to see "Santa Claus Once they<lb/>
reach the front of the line, they're<lb/>
face to face with The Man. It's<lb/>
time to put up or shut up for<lb/>
the kids, and when was the last<lb/>
time a kid shut up? They drone<lb/>
on and on, about this and that,<lb/>
blah, blah, blah. But when it's all<lb/>
done they get a photo with Chris<lb/>
Cringle, flash an adorable smile,<lb/>
ad behave like civilized people<lb/>
for at least the next 30 minutes.<lb/>
But after every kid leaves and<lb/>
Santa becomes a fading memory<lb/>
in their minds, there's another<lb/>
see SANTA page A6<lb/>
DUKE-CAROLINA<lb/>
INSIDE THE MOST STORIED RIVALRV IN COLLEGE HOOPS<lb/>
Barnes &amp; Noble Is hosting a discussion and book signing on<lb/>
Thursday, Dec. 8 at 7 p.m. with Art Chansky, author of Blue<lb/>
Blood: Duke-Carolina: Inside the Most Storied Rivalry in College<lb/>
Hoops. The book chronicles the 50 years of rivalry between Duke<lb/>
and University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill. Remember to get<lb/>
to the event early to purchase your copy of the book and get a<lb/>
good seat. Enjoy this amazing opportunity. <lb/>
<pb facs="00059375_0006"/><lb/>
WGEA6<lb/>
THE EAST CAROUNIAN � FEATURES<lb/>
12-6-05<lb/>
Lone Star Steakhouse and<lb/>
A little piece of Texas and<lb/>
Lone Star Steakhouse and Saloon Is located off of Greenville Boulevard<lb/>
The place to go for a<lb/>
great experience<lb/>
AARON BORREGO<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
There Is a place in Greenville<lb/>
that everyone should go to<lb/>
eat and it's called Lone Star.<lb/>
While many other places try to<lb/>
find an equal balance of good<lb/>
food and good service, this<lb/>
eatery stands alone. Not only do<lb/>
the servers at Lone Star possess<lb/>
unparalleled service but they<lb/>
also contain a kitchen staff able<lb/>
to properly create your favorite<lb/>
menu Items.<lb/>
As an example, I order a sir-<lb/>
loin steak medium rare expect-<lb/>
ing it too be well overcooked.<lb/>
However, much to my pleasant<lb/>
surprise, the steak was perfectly<lb/>
created. I was completely taken<lb/>
by surprise in the fact that<lb/>
this was the first time in all of<lb/>
Greenville I had ever received my<lb/>
food the way ! wanted it.<lb/>
Being a man from the great<lb/>
state of Texas, this establishment<lb/>
had a lot of pressure to overcome<lb/>
from my expectations. Equally<lb/>
as surprising was the service at<lb/>
Lone Star. The waiters and wait-<lb/>
resses were quite able to take care<lb/>
of my dinning needs. These indi-<lb/>
viduals actually anticipated what<lb/>
1 would potentially require next<lb/>
and would bring it to me before<lb/>
I even had to ask for anything<lb/>
at all. Doing something because<lb/>
you know it will have to be done<lb/>
is what I call service. Maintain-<lb/>
ing this type of service all the<lb/>
while talking to me about sports,<lb/>
my food quality and service<lb/>
made me feel quite comfortable.<lb/>
As impressed as I was by<lb/>
the service, this lets me further<lb/>
know that it couldn't have been<lb/>
possible without some great<lb/>
managers backing therr employ-<lb/>
ees and training them properly.<lb/>
Under new management, the<lb/>
Lone Star Steakhouse is fronted<lb/>
by the GM Gene McKain, Brice<lb/>
Baxter and manager Randy<lb/>
Watts. 1 personally met McKain<lb/>
and Watts, both of which were<lb/>
very interested in how the meal<lb/>
was meeting my expectations.<lb/>
Everyone at the establishment<lb/>
was so helpful and truly sincere<lb/>
about helping me with anything<lb/>
I needed which included recom-<lb/>
mending a few dishes and drinks<lb/>
to serve my palette. The rating<lb/>
process and some examples of<lb/>
offered Items are features of this<lb/>
article you are sure to enjoy.<lb/>
Food: A. Never have I been<lb/>
so satisfied with the actual get-<lb/>
ting of what I ordered. Some<lb/>
things to recommend steak and<lb/>
lobster combo, San Antonio<lb/>
sirloin, smoked prime rib and<lb/>
don't forget about the grilled<lb/>
chicken and sweet bourbon<lb/>
salmon. Honestly, you can't go<lb/>
wrong with any of their other<lb/>
combo's such as the filet &amp; king<lb/>
crab combo.<lb/>
Service: A. I can't over-<lb/>
state the importance of good and<lb/>
timely service. The staff holds<lb/>
Saloon:<lb/>
Heaven<lb/>
the air of really caring about<lb/>
serving their customers and<lb/>
getting it done right. I did not<lb/>
have to wait for anything while<lb/>
dinning, it was already there or<lb/>
in the process of getting there.<lb/>
Drinks: A. I personally<lb/>
tasted the mistletoe martini<lb/>
and thought it was great. Made<lb/>
of Malibu and Midori melon<lb/>
liqueur, it's a very nice smooth<lb/>
and sweet taste to balance the<lb/>
light alcohol taste. Also, try the<lb/>
holly jolly colada. This is one of<lb/>
the best drinks I have ever had.<lb/>
It was like a strawberry pifia<lb/>
colada with alcohol. Visit my<lb/>
friend Jeff Gorich, MBA In<lb/>
international business and get<lb/>
some of this goodness while it's<lb/>
still cold.<lb/>
To wrap up the review, an<lb/>
A is the order of the day. I fur-<lb/>
ther recommend the queso and<lb/>
spinach dip, as the spinach dip Is<lb/>
brand new and very tasty. If you<lb/>
have room, try the key lime pie<lb/>
or homemade cobbler. Be sure<lb/>
to get a great gift for someone in<lb/>
the form of gift certificates. I'm<lb/>
sure everyone involved would<lb/>
be very thankful for such a gift.<lb/>
Keep in mind that Lone Star<lb/>
also does large parties in their<lb/>
designated Alamo Room. Try<lb/>
this great eatery and see what I<lb/>
am talking about. I promise you<lb/>
will not be left unsatisfied.<lb/>
This writers can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Features fitness tips<lb/>
Person<lb/>
Exercise can lift the blues<lb/>
Getting active helps relieve the sleeplessness, anxiety and<lb/>
feelings of being overwhelmed that stress and moderate<lb/>
How different kinds of physical activity help<lb/>
Rhythmic<lb/>
MSrciM<lb/>
calms like<lb/>
meditation<lb/>
by raising<lb/>
brain s<lb/>
alpha wave<lb/>
activity M<lb/>
V- Fast-paced sports <lb/>
require concentration<lb/>
and displace negative thoughts<lb/>
Team sports<lb/>
provide pleasant<lb/>
company and<lb/>
prevent social<lb/>
isolation, a risk<lb/>
in depression<lb/>
Solo exerdM offers<lb/>
to calm your mind<lb/>
and work out<lb/>
hurt, aggressive<lb/>
feelings<lb/>
J<lb/>
Vigorous exercise tires<lb/>
muscles in a beneficial way<lb/>
relieves tension, lifts mood<lb/>
and promotes deep sleep<lb/>
Deep, persistent depression is a serious<lb/>
health problem; a counselor or therapist<lb/>
can provide effective relief<lb/>
Source1 The Physician Graphic: Helen Lee<lb/>
ana SporBmadfant MoComas, Paul Trap<lb/>
SKRT<lb/>
Around the winter holidays is one of the most common times for<lb/>
people to feel a little down in the dumps. It has been scientifically<lb/>
poven that exercislhg can help you get out of that slump, have more<lb/>
energy and reduce any stress or anxiety about the end of 2005.<lb/>
oBntd from page A5<lb/>
child poised to leap into Santa's<lb/>
lap. All day. Every day.<lb/>
Who is this man sitting in a<lb/>
castle, wearing a ridiculous suit,<lb/>
as children sit in his lap and<lb/>
babble on? No, in this instance it<lb/>
is not Michael Jackson. It's your<lb/>
local Shopping Mall Santa.<lb/>
If you're able to read this, it's<lb/>
fairly reasonable to assume that<lb/>
you know this man is not really<lb/>
Santa. He's not some sort of<lb/>
North Pole stem cell project, he's<lb/>
not a lieutenant in Santa's crime<lb/>
syndicate and he's not, contrary<lb/>
to popular belief, Santa's younger,<lb/>
less marketable brother. No, this is<lb/>
just a regular guy, but for all that<lb/>
he puts up with, he truly does<lb/>
possess the real Christmas Spirit.<lb/>
Many children remember<lb/>
sitting on Santa's lap when they<lb/>
were little, but whether that<lb/>
was a pleasant experience or<lb/>
not is another story entirely.<lb/>
Everyone knows that each mall<lb/>
Santa is different, which begs<lb/>
the question, what about Green-<lb/>
ville's Shopping Mall Santa?<lb/>
Having the curious mind that<lb/>
I do, I went to the Colonial Mall<lb/>
last week to have a word with<lb/>
the man that would be Santa.<lb/>
He seemed to be in good enough<lb/>
spirits, although he repeatedly<lb/>
berated women, referring to<lb/>
them as, "Ho, Ho, Ho's I could<lb/>
have thought of a more comfort-<lb/>
able place to do an interview<lb/>
than someone's lap, but I went<lb/>
with the flow. This St. Nick<lb/>
had plenty to say about being a<lb/>
Shopping Mall Santa, the Chris<lb/>
Cringle in whose image he was<lb/>
created and, of course, the ladies.<lb/>
TEC: How did you get started<lb/>
as a Shopping Mall Santa? Were<lb/>
there any special skills involved?<lb/>
Santa: No, you need a beard.<lb/>
Pretty much a beard and toler-<lb/>
ance for kids.<lb/>
TEC: Is there a Santa Union or<lb/>
Guild that you're required to join?<lb/>
Santa: Not that I'm aware of.<lb/>
TEC: One question I'm sure<lb/>
many people have: What do you<lb/>
do the rest of the year?<lb/>
"Before giving, I always look<lb/>
for the Humane Seal<lb/>
E, Star of NBC's hit show ER<lb/>
The Humane Charity Seal of Approval<lb/>
guarantees that a health charity funds<lb/>
vital patient services or life-saving<lb/>
medical research, but never animal experiments.<lb/>
Council on Humane Giving www.HumaneSeal.org<lb/>
Washington, DC � 202-686-2210, ext. 335<lb/>
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Convenient To ECU, Pitt Community College &amp; The Medical District <lb/>
Santa: I'm unemployed rij;ht<lb/>
now. I'm on disability. <lb/>
TEC: Is it a point of pride for<lb/>
you that you're the premier Santa<lb/>
in Greenville and not the Santa<lb/>
at the crummy mall across town?<lb/>
Santa: I think being a Santa<lb/>
anywhere is a good thing. I'm<lb/>
not so proud of a mall, or any<lb/>
particular place. As long as you're<lb/>
a good Santa with the kids.<lb/>
TEC: Walk me through your<lb/>
typical day being a Shopping<lb/>
Mall Santa.<lb/>
Santa: Well you come in<lb/>
and you put your Santa suit on<lb/>
(pauses). And then you come and<lb/>
you sit here, and you wait for chil-<lb/>
dren to come and visit you.<lb/>
TEC: Do you have any horror<lb/>
stories or amusing anecdotes that<lb/>
have happened with the kids?<lb/>
Santa: Not horror stories<lb/>
really. One time 1 had a boss'<lb/>
daughter throw up on my lap <lb/>
she wanted a pony.<lb/>
TEC: Did she end up getting<lb/>
that pony?<lb/>
Santa: No, I don't think so.<lb/>
TEC: A question that I know<lb/>
the public wants to hear the<lb/>
answer to, when you're taking<lb/>
photos with the kids, which side<lb/>
is your good side?<lb/>
Santa: I don't know if there<lb/>
is a good side to tell you the truth.<lb/>
Whatever side they take it on.<lb/>
TEC: All right. Finally, is<lb/>
being a Shopping Mall Santa<lb/>
a young man's game and how<lb/>
much longer do you see yourself<lb/>
being Santa?<lb/>
Santa: I'll do Santa till I<lb/>
can't do it anymore. When you<lb/>
reach a certain age you're better<lb/>
at it than when you're younger.<lb/>
I did it when I was young too,<lb/>
because I've had the white beard<lb/>
for years now. I think you get<lb/>
better with age.<lb/>
TEC: Like wine?<lb/>
Santa: Like wine and women.<lb/>
TEC: Ha, ha, ha.<lb/>
Santa: Ho, ho, ho.<lb/>
This writers can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
THE BEST SELECTION AT THE<lb/>
BEST PRICES AVAILABLE AT<lb/>
&amp;�&amp;<lb/>
U.B.E Uptown Greenville � 516 South Cotanche St.<lb/>
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Saturday, December 10 10 a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, December 11 CLOSED<lb/>
Monday - Friday, December 12-16 9a.m7p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, December 17 9a.m6p.m.<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059375_0007"/><lb/>
12-6-05<lb/>
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;ports<lb/>
Page A7 sports@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 TONY Z0PP0 Sports Editor BRANDON HUGHES Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY December 6, 2005<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Kansas State hires Prince as<lb/>
Snyder's replacement<lb/>
Kansas State has hired Vir-<lb/>
ginia offensive coordinator Ron<lb/>
Prince to replace Bill Snyder as<lb/>
head coach, athletic director<lb/>
Tim Weiser said Sunday. Weiser<lb/>
said the school will formally<lb/>
announce the hiring Monday.<lb/>
The 36-year-old Prince, raised<lb/>
about 20 miles from Manhattan<lb/>
in Junction City, will become<lb/>
only the fourth black head foot-<lb/>
ball coach in Division I-A, join-<lb/>
ing Washington's Ty Willing-<lb/>
ham, Mississippi State's Sylvester<lb/>
Croom and UCLA's Karl Dorrell.<lb/>
A lineman at Dodge City Com-<lb/>
munity College and Appalachian<lb/>
State, Prince spent five seasons at<lb/>
Virginia, the last three as offen-<lb/>
sive coordinator. He also coached<lb/>
at Dodge City, Alabama A&amp;M,<lb/>
Cornell, South Carolina State and<lb/>
James Madison, and spent four<lb/>
seasons as an NFL Minority Fel-<lb/>
lowship intern with Jacksonville,<lb/>
Washington, Atlanta and the New<lb/>
York Giants. Snyder led Kansas<lb/>
State to a 5-6 mark this season.<lb/>
He took the Wildcats from being<lb/>
the nation's only 500-loss team in<lb/>
1989 to 11 consecutive winning<lb/>
seasons through 2003, when the<lb/>
they won thfe Big 12 title. Two of<lb/>
Snyder's former assistants who<lb/>
had been prominently mentioned<lb/>
in speculation about his replace-<lb/>
ment took themselves out of the<lb/>
running last week. Jim Leavitt<lb/>
agreed to a contract extension as<lb/>
South Florida's head coach, and<lb/>
Brent Venables said he wants to<lb/>
remain defensive coordinator at<lb/>
Oklahoma.<lb/>
Browns' Edwards out for season<lb/>
Browns' rookie wide receiver<lb/>
Braylon Edwards will miss the rest<lb/>
of the season with a knee injury,<lb/>
yet another setback for one of<lb/>
Cleveland's first-round draft<lb/>
picks. Edwards, the No. 3 overall<lb/>
selection in the draft, tore the<lb/>
anterior cruciate ligament in his<lb/>
right' knee while trying to make<lb/>
a leaping catch in the fourth<lb/>
quarter of Sunday's 20-14 loss to<lb/>
the Jacksonville Jaguars. Edwards'<lb/>
knee buckled awkwardly to the<lb/>
inside after he landed stiff-legged<lb/>
on the incompletion. Edwards<lb/>
had caught two touchdown<lb/>
passes from fellow rookie Charlie<lb/>
Frye. Coach Romeo Crennel said<lb/>
surgery has not been scheduled.<lb/>
Players with similar injuries typi-<lb/>
cally need eight to 12 months of<lb/>
rehab to recover. Since the Browns<lb/>
rejoined the NFL in 1999, their<lb/>
top picks have either been busts<lb/>
or injured. Of the seven picks,<lb/>
only center Jeff Falne (2003) is<lb/>
starting for the team. Last season,<lb/>
tight end Kellen Winslow, the<lb/>
club's top pick in 2004, broke his<lb/>
leg in Week 2. He missed all this<lb/>
season after injuring his knee in<lb/>
a motorcycle accident, and was<lb/>
on the sideline for the first time<lb/>
on Sunday.<lb/>
Indians sign Byrd - eye Nomar,<lb/>
Hoffman<lb/>
Free-agent pitcher Paul Byrd<lb/>
signed a two-year, $14.25 mil-<lb/>
lion contract Monday with the<lb/>
Cleveland Indians, the club's first<lb/>
move in what could be a busy few<lb/>
days at the winter meetings in<lb/>
Dallas. Byrd will make $7 million<lb/>
in 2006 and 2007, and the deal<lb/>
includes a club option for 2008<lb/>
that could raise the value to $22<lb/>
million over three seasons. The e<lb/>
35,year-old Byrd went 12-11 with '<lb/>
a 3.74 ERA in 31 starts for the Los<lb/>
Angeles Angels last season. He<lb/>
turned down a new deal with the<lb/>
Angels and offers from Baltimore,<lb/>
Kansas City and Texas to rejoin<lb/>
the Indians, who drafted him<lb/>
in 1991. Byrd joins a solid rota-<lb/>
tion that includes C.C. Sabathia<lb/>
(15-10), Cliff Lee (18-5) and Jake<lb/>
Westbrook (15-15), but still needs<lb/>
another starter. But a bigger pri-<lb/>
ority is a closer, and the Indians<lb/>
appear to be targeting Trevor<lb/>
Hoffman, who has been offered a<lb/>
two-year deal to stay with the San<lb/>
Diego Padres. Also, the Indians<lb/>
have expressed interest in signing<lb/>
free agent Nomar Garciaparra.<lb/>
The club has discussed using Gar-<lb/>
ciaparra as a utility player at first<lb/>
base, third base and right field.<lb/>
Byrd and Shapiro broke in with<lb/>
the Indians at roughly the same<lb/>
time, and have remained friends<lb/>
since the early 1990s. Cleveland<lb/>
selected Byrd in the fourth round<lb/>
in 1991, and he spent four seasons<lb/>
in the club's minor league system<lb/>
before being traded to the New<lb/>
York Mets in 1995. Byrd had his<lb/>
best season in 2002, going 17-11<lb/>
with a 3.90 ERA for the Royals. He<lb/>
brings the Indians some postsea-<lb/>
son experience. Byrd made two<lb/>
starts in the AL championship<lb/>
series, beating eventual World<lb/>
Series champion Chicago White<lb/>
Sox in Game 1.<lb/>
Women's basketball wins<lb/>
Lady Pirate Invitational<lb/>
ECU center Cherie Mills takes MVP<lb/>
honors, records second double-double<lb/>
JOSH FERNANDEZ<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Since their season-opening loss at Duquesne a<lb/>
couple weeks back, the Lady Pirates basketball team<lb/>
rebounded by collecting a tournament victory,<lb/>
six-straight wins, and a top spot in the Conference<lb/>
USA standings, not to mention getting off to their<lb/>
best start in 18 years.<lb/>
The Pirates (5-1) faced off against Southern<lb/>
University (2-2) on Saturday to kick off the CPW's<lb/>
Atavola Market Cafe Lady Pirate Invitational Tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
The teams went back and forth throughout the<lb/>
first half, exchanging the lead six times. However,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates dominated the Jaguars in the paint<lb/>
outscoring them 18-8.<lb/>
The give and take play continued in the second<lb/>
half yt the Lady Pirates maintained their lead<lb/>
throughout, staying ahead by a thin margin.<lb/>
"We have a really young team and, as you can<lb/>
tell sometimes, it really shows said Lady Pirates<lb/>
Head Coach Sharon Baldwin-Tener in a quote to<lb/>
ECU Sports Information.<lb/>
"Sometimes the players make bad decisions but<lb/>
every day they come out and they want to compete<lb/>
and they want to win<lb/>
With 1:30 left on the game clock, Southern<lb/>
guard Rolanda Monroe managed to cut the deficit<lb/>
to only two off an ECU turnover.<lb/>
A few moments later with the score 56-53,<lb/>
Southern missed a chance to tie it up with a three.<lb/>
see BASKETBALL page A8<lb/>
Freshman guard Alicia Person looks to escape a defender In the Lady Pirate Invitational.<lb/>
Heavyweights set to<lb/>
settle it on the field<lb/>
Hockey splits with VMi<lb/>
The ECU Club Hockey team split its weekend series against<lb/>
VMI, winning the first matchup 6-4 and dropping the second<lb/>
5-2. Mike Ormsbee, Ian Falcon and Tyler Falcon led the attack<lb/>
in game one, scoring a goal and notching one assist each.<lb/>
VMI rebounded In ame two, breaking a 2-2 tie with three<lb/>
goals in the final period. Seth Percy and Ormsbee tallied goals<lb/>
for the Pirates In that meeting. ECU now sits at 7-2 overall<lb/>
and In second place behind VMI in the Blue Ridge Hockey<lb/>
Conference. The Pirates will face Clemson on Jan. 13.<lb/>
Pirates fall to ODU<lb/>
USC running back Reggie Bush celebrates his team's blowout victory over rival UCLA on Saturday.<lb/>
(KRT) � Top-ranked USC<lb/>
pounded UCLA so badly in<lb/>
its 66-19 victory Saturday, the<lb/>
Coliseum scoreboard couldn't<lb/>
lake it, malfunctioning after the<lb/>
Trojans had scored their eighth<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
Some 1,500 miles away,<lb/>
second-ranked Texas already<lb/>
had made a statement of its own,<lb/>
scoring on nine of its first 10<lb/>
possessions in a 70-3 blowout of<lb/>
Colorado in the Big 12 champi-<lb/>
onship game in Houston.<lb/>
Now, these two undefeated<lb/>
heavyweights ranked 1-2 all<lb/>
season in the polls will square<lb/>
off in the BCS championship<lb/>
game Jan. 4 at the Rose Bowl.<lb/>
This is one time the BCS which<lb/>
is designed to match up the two<lb/>
best teams in the national title<lb/>
game got it right.<lb/>
The BCS' flaws have been<lb/>
cannon fodder for media criti-<lb/>
cism since 2000. But this time,<lb/>
there is no real controversy to<lb/>
explore no team like Auburn,<lb/>
which was knocked out of the<lb/>
BCS game last year by USC and<lb/>
Oklahoma, then finished 13-0<lb/>
after its Sugar Bowl win, to gum<lb/>
up the works - or no repeat of<lb/>
2003, when USC finished No. 1<lb/>
in both polls and still was elimi-<lb/>
nated from the BCS title game<lb/>
because the Trojans who eventu-<lb/>
ally split the title with LSU were<lb/>
No. 3 in the computers.<lb/>
"I saw Texas was winning big<lb/>
just like we did USC defensive<lb/>
end Frostee Rucker said.<lb/>
"They've been outstanding<lb/>
week in and week out. We're<lb/>
going to give the people the game<lb/>
they wanted<lb/>
The Trojans, who have won<lb/>
34 straight games and arguably<lb/>
have the best offense in modern<lb/>
history, are an early six-point<lb/>
favorite.<lb/>
"(USC) has just been blowing<lb/>
see FOOTBALL page A8<lb/>
Trade talk bubbling ahead<lb/>
of baseball meetings<lb/>
(AP) � The winter meetings<lb/>
are back in Texas for the first time<lb/>
since 2000, when teams spent<lb/>
nearly $739 million on 24 free<lb/>
agents, including $252 million<lb/>
on Alex Rodriguez and160 mil-<lb/>
lion to Manny Ramirez.<lb/>
With many top free agents<lb/>
this offseason already commit-<lb/>
ted, the focus this time around<lb/>
is likely to be on trades rather<lb/>
than signings.<lb/>
Relievers Billy Wagner and<lb/>
B.J. Ryan, first baseman Paul<lb/>
Konerko, outfielder Brian Giles<lb/>
and shortstop Rafael Furcal<lb/>
already have agreed to contracts,<lb/>
with Furcal leaving the Atlanta<lb/>
Braves over the weekend to accept<lb/>
a $39 million, three-year offer<lb/>
from the Los Angeles Dodgers.<lb/>
Top remaining players in a<lb/>
weak free-agent group include<lb/>
center fielder Johnny Damon and<lb/>
pitchers A.J. Burnett and Kevin<lb/>
Millwood. With a paucity of top<lb/>
talent available to sign, there will<lb/>
be plenty of trade talk going on<lb/>
at baseball's annual swap session,<lb/>
which had been devoid of big-<lb/>
name deals in recent years.<lb/>
"This particular free-agent<lb/>
market is difficult said New York<lb/>
Yankees general manager Brian<lb/>
Cashman, stymied in his search<lb/>
for a center fielder. "Because of<lb/>
that, it's going to promote a lot<lb/>
see BASEBALL page A8<lb/>
Corey Rouse poured in 14 points and pulled down nine<lb/>
rebounds in the Pirates 79-53 loss at Old Dominion Saturday<lb/>
night. Monarchs' senior guard Isaiah Hunter led the way for ODU<lb/>
with 20 points, sparking his team to their fifth win of the season<lb/>
as they improved to 5-1. Alex Loughton, another ODU senior,<lb/>
also played a big role in the Monachs efforts as he scored 12<lb/>
points and grabbed 10 rebounds for his third double-double of<lb/>
the season. ECU will return home this week for home games<lb/>
against UNC Greensboro and Western Carolina. The Pirates<lb/>
will take to the floor against UNCG tomorrow night at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Mlnges Coliseum. <lb/>
<pb facs="00059375_0008"/><lb/>
PAGE A8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN � SPORTS<lb/>
12-6-05<lb/>
Basketball from page A7<lb/>
The Jaguars were forced to foul to try to keep the<lb/>
win within reach but the Pirates converted three<lb/>
free throws to stay on top and take home the win,<lb/>
S9-SS.<lb/>
It is teaching us a lot by playing in these<lb/>
close games said Baldwin-Tener.<lb/>
ECU center Cherie Mills recorded her second<lb/>
double-double on the season, tallying 21 points<lb/>
and grabbing 14 boards.<lb/>
"Cherie is doing a great job said Baldwin-<lb/>
Tener.<lb/>
"She was big on the boards  I thought she<lb/>
played very physical against their players<lb/>
The Lady Pirates continued their winning<lb/>
ways Sunday against Drexel (2-3). The game saw<lb/>
three Pirates reach double figures in the 12-point<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
By the 10-minute mark in the first half, ECU<lb/>
was up 17-5. The Lady Pirates managed their lead<lb/>
the entire game, never giving it up once.<lb/>
"We have a lot of balance and depth and I knew<lb/>
that we were going to have to play a lot of people<lb/>
todav said Baldwin-Tener to ECU SID.<lb/>
"We had a tough game yesterday ,<lb/>
Jasmine Young led all Pirate scorers with 16<lb/>
points and four steals in 35 minutes.<lb/>
"She makes a lot of things happen and she<lb/>
played a really solid game today said Baldwin-<lb/>
Tener.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates held the Dragons at bay in<lb/>
the second half to seal the victory, 66-54. Almost<lb/>
a third of ECU's points came off the bench.<lb/>
"It is good when you can have people playing<lb/>
10-12 minutes, be able to help us and be productive<lb/>
on the floor said Baldwin-Tener.<lb/>
It is the first time since 2002-2003 that ECU<lb/>
took home the Lady Pirate Invitational tournament<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are back on the hard-<lb/>
wood again Dec. 7 as they take on Virginia<lb/>
Commonwealth in Greenville. They will be<lb/>
contending for their 500th win in program<lb/>
history.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Football<lb/>
from page A7<lb/>
people out right and left Texas<lb/>
coach Mack Brown said. "When<lb/>
I walked out of the stadium Sat-<lb/>
urday, I was feeling pretty good<lb/>
and a guy walks up to me and<lb/>
says, Don't get too comfortable,<lb/>
big boy. Reggie Bush has run for<lb/>
175 yards in the first quarter<lb/>
That will put a dent in your<lb/>
celebration<lb/>
Brown has enormous respect<lb/>
for what USC coach Pete Carroll<lb/>
has accomplished. Me made a<lb/>
point to call Carroll just last week<lb/>
to tell him as much.<lb/>
"We're sitting on 19 (straight<lb/>
wins) and there's tremendous<lb/>
pressure on our players to keep it<lb/>
going Brown said. "When I first<lb/>
got to Texas, somebody said to<lb/>
me, You know, coach (Darrell)<lb/>
Royal won 30 in a row You've<lb/>
got to be kidding<lb/>
Brown knows better than to<lb/>
bait the Trojans, especially after<lb/>
UCLA's trash-talk backfired.<lb/>
The Trojans ripped off 679<lb/>
yards of total offense against the<lb/>
Bruins and never punted once as<lb/>
they rolled to the most lopsided<lb/>
victory in the series since USC's<lb/>
76-0 victory in the schools' first<lb/>
meeting in 1929. As for USC's<lb/>
supposedly porous defense, it<lb/>
sacked UCLA quarterback Drew<lb/>
Olson five times, forced five<lb/>
turnovers, recovered three, and<lb/>
contributed one touchdown.<lb/>
"A lot of people were talking<lb/>
about our D-line and them being<lb/>
able to run on us defensive<lb/>
tackle Sedrick Ellis said. "I can't<lb/>
speak for the whole defense, but<lb/>
it bothered me<lb/>
Carroll has been bothered<lb/>
himself, according to an ESPN<lb/>
report, privately complaining<lb/>
to NFL scouts about the media<lb/>
trying to influence Bush's deci-<lb/>
sion whether to turn pro, sug-<lb/>
gesting his All-American junior<lb/>
tailback will come out if he is<lb/>
assured he will go No. 1 in the<lb/>
draft. Bush's father Lamar said<lb/>
after the game that it was time<lb/>
for his son to fake his talent to<lb/>
the next level.<lb/>
Bush, who rushed for 260<lb/>
yards against the Bruins, has<lb/>
been operating on a different<lb/>
planet and appears to be a lock<lb/>
for the Heisman Trophy, ahead of<lb/>
Texas quarterback Vince Young.<lb/>
Bush and junior tailback Len-<lb/>
Dale White, who added 154 yards<lb/>
on Saturday, should be salivating<lb/>
about the thought of running<lb/>
against a Texas defense that gave<lb/>
up 277 yards on the ground two<lb/>
weeks ago to Texas A&amp;M.<lb/>
As explosive as the Trojans<lb/>
are, though, it's the Longhorns<lb/>
who lead the country in scoring.<lb/>
They averaged 50.9 points and<lb/>
have gone over 60 points four<lb/>
times. They have the necessary<lb/>
speed to match the Trojans,<lb/>
along with the defense, quarter-<lb/>
back and special teams. And they<lb/>
will have additional motivation<lb/>
after Bush makes his Heisman<lb/>
acceptance speech on Saturday<lb/>
in New York.<lb/>
DUCKS, BUCKS AND BRADY<lb/>
QUINN<lb/>
While there was no contro-<lb/>
versy over the BCS champion-<lb/>
ship game, there was still Pac-10<lb/>
sentiment to make Oregon (10-1)<lb/>
one of the two at-large selections<lb/>
in the BCS.<lb/>
But the Fiesta Bowl, which<lb/>
lost its Big 12 anchor Texas to the<lb/>
Rose Bowl, had been salivating<lb/>
over the idea of selecting a resur-<lb/>
gent Notre Dame (9-2) with its<lb/>
first pick for the past month and<lb/>
had no choice but to take Big Ten<lb/>
co-champion Ohio State (9-2) as<lb/>
a second at-large after the Buck-<lb/>
eyes rose to fourth in the final<lb/>
BCS standings, guaranteeing<lb/>
themselves a spot in a BCS game.<lb/>
Notre Dame likely would beat<lb/>
Oregon on a neutral site, espe-<lb/>
cially with quarterback Brady<lb/>
Quinn. But the Irish figure to<lb/>
have a much more difficult time<lb/>
with the Buckeyes, who looked<lb/>
like they had Texas beaten at<lb/>
home early in the season and<lb/>
have a better defense by far than<lb/>
anything Notre Dame has seen.<lb/>
It should be interesting to<lb/>
see how Quinn, who grew up in<lb/>
Dublin, Ohio, not far from OSU's<lb/>
Columbus campus, does against<lb/>
his state school. A big day could<lb/>
make him a preseason favorite<lb/>
for next year's Heisman.<lb/>
BaSBball from page A7<lb/>
more aggressive trade discus-<lb/>
sions<lb/>
Ramirez, unhappy, with life<lb/>
in Boston despite winning the<lb/>
World Series MVP award in<lb/>
2004, is the biggest name avail-<lb/>
able. But he can veto trades and<lb/>
is owed $57 million over the<lb/>
final three years of his contract,<lb/>
complicating efforts to deal him<lb/>
by the Red Sox, the only major<lb/>
league team without a general<lb/>
manager.<lb/>
"He's still one of the top<lb/>
three or four hitters in baseball<lb/>
Boston assistant GM Jed Hoyer<lb/>
said, adding that more than<lb/>
a dozen teams have inquired.<lb/>
"They haven't been able to meet<lb/>
the price that we would want<lb/>
for Manny. We're certainly not<lb/>
going in with the expectation<lb/>
that we're going to have to make<lb/>
a trade. Teams would have to step<lb/>
up and beat our expectations<lb/>
Florida has been the most<lb/>
active team in the trade market,<lb/>
dealing 2003 World Series MVP<lb/>
Josh Beckett and third baseman<lb/>
Mike Lowell to Boston, first base-<lb/>
man Carlos Delgado to the New<lb/>
York Mets and second baseman<lb/>
Luis Castillo to Minnesota.<lb/>
Catcher Paul Lo Duca could<lb/>
be joining Delgado on the Mets,<lb/>
and center fielder Juan Pierre<lb/>
appears to be available.<lb/>
"Obviously we have been<lb/>
very active. I would anticipate as<lb/>
we head to Dallas we're going to<lb/>
remain active said Marlins gen-<lb/>
eral manager Larry Beinfest, who<lb/>
has cut about $32 million from<lb/>
a payroll that was $60 million at<lb/>
the start of last season.<lb/>
Pitchers who could be switch-<lb/>
ing teams include Boston's David<lb/>
Wells, Oakland's Barry Zito, the<lb/>
Mets' Kris Benson and Arizona's<lb/>
Javier Vazquez, who filed a trade<lb/>
demand last month. Texas might<lb/>
part with a pair of All-Stars,<lb/>
second baseman Alfonso Sori-<lb/>
ano and third baseman Hank<lb/>
Blalock, as it seeks pitching.<lb/>
Tampa Bay catcher Toby Hall<lb/>
and Philadelphia's Bobby Abreu<lb/>
and Pat Burrell could possibly get<lb/>
dealt, as could outfielder Jason<lb/>
Michaels.<lb/>
"We've had enough dialogue<lb/>
that something could happen<lb/>
said new Texas general manager<lb/>
Jon Daniels, at 28 the youngest<lb/>
GM in the majors.<lb/>
Blalock could be a fit for Min-<lb/>
nesota, looking for a third base-<lb/>
man and a designated hitter after<lb/>
acquiring Castillo on Friday.<lb/>
"You can kind of compress<lb/>
exactly who you need to talk<lb/>
to Twins general manager Terry<lb/>
Ryan said. "You diminish your<lb/>
needs a little bit, and now you<lb/>
can move on to the next<lb/>
Arizona, Baltimore, the Los<lb/>
Angeles Dodgers, Philadelphia,<lb/>
Tampa Bay, Texas head into the<lb/>
meetings with new GMs.<lb/>
"There are so many people<lb/>
down there, it can be some-<lb/>
what hectic Oakland general<lb/>
manager Billy Beane said. "We all<lb/>
go into the meetings expecting a<lb/>
lot. Once a guy signs, that speeds<lb/>
up trade talks. With a lot of new<lb/>
GMs in place who are probably<lb/>
looking to do something, there is<lb/>
an atmosphere of anticipation<lb/>
Free agents still on the market<lb/>
include designated hitters Mike<lb/>
Piazza and Frank Thomas, reliev-<lb/>
Colon Cancer.<lb/>
Get the test.<lb/>
Get the polyp.<lb/>
Get the cure.<lb/>
I-8OO-ACS-23U5 or cancer.org<lb/>
ers Bob Wickman and Trevor<lb/>
1 loff man, catchers Bengie Molina<lb/>
and Ramon Hernandez, and out-<lb/>
fielder Sammy Sosa. Then there's<lb/>
Nomar Garciaparra, who appears<lb/>
willing to play just about any<lb/>
position.<lb/>
Pitcher Paul Byrd and Cleve-<lb/>
land agreed Monday to a $14.25<lb/>
million, two-year deal.<lb/>
Baseball's big free-agent<lb/>
deadline passes at midnight F.ST<lb/>
on Wednesday. Free agents not<lb/>
offered salary arbitration by their<lb/>
former clubs before the deadline<lb/>
can't re-sign until May 1. After<lb/>
the deadline, teams won't lose<lb/>
draft picks for signing any free<lb/>
agent not offered arbitration.<lb/>
"It's quite possible it could be<lb/>
a dog and pony show until after<lb/>
Dec. 7 San Francisco Giants<lb/>
general manager Brian Sabean<lb/>
said late last week.<lb/>
Teams that didn't land their<lb/>
top free-agent choices are trying<lb/>
other paths.<lb/>
"We were looking at Konerko,<lb/>
but I think now what we're going<lb/>
to have to do is get some alterna-<lb/>
tives in place Angels manager<lb/>
Mike Scioscia said. "If a magic<lb/>
bat isn't added to our lineup,<lb/>
hopefully we'll have some help<lb/>
from in-house<lb/>
Cashman said the narrowing<lb/>
of choices forces decisions.<lb/>
"When people strike out on<lb/>
Plan A, B, C and D he said,<lb/>
"they go into overdrive for the<lb/>
remaining opportunities. And,<lb/>
therefore, teams are more will-<lb/>
ing to do certain things in mid-<lb/>
December and January that they<lb/>
may not have considered doing<lb/>
in early November<lb/>
mm<lb/>
NOT IF YOU<lb/>
HflfETTTQUI<lb/>
YOUR FAMIIY.<lb/>
www.shareyouriife.org<lb/>
1-800-355-SHARE<lb/>
ffi! CommonOjlnSTexDonaon<lb/>
Interested in<lb/>
Tuition Increases?<lb/>
All students are invited to an<lb/>
open forum to discuss proposed<lb/>
tuition increases.<lb/>
This will be an opportunity for<lb/>
you to provide input and ask<lb/>
questions.<lb/>
Tuesday, December 6<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Multipurpose Room <lb/>
<pb facs="00059375_0009"/><lb/>
Do you have<lb/>
questions about the<lb/>
ECU Debit Card?<lb/>
Then come to the open forum!<lb/>
Wednesday, December 7,2005<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix Theater<lb/>
After a short presentation, the forum<lb/>
will be open for questions to ECU<lb/>
Administrators. SGA and<lb/>
Higher One representatives.<lb/>
Forum sponsored by the Office of the Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Student Life and the Student Government Association<lb/>
Page A9<lb/>
TUESDAY December 6, 2005<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
out. call 758-5551<lb/>
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments, walking<lb/>
distance to campus, WD conn pets ok<lb/>
no weight limit, free water and sewer.<lb/>
Call today for security deposit special<lb/>
- 758-1921.<lb/>
3 BR 3 bath houses available now or next<lb/>
semester. Includes washer dryer. Short term<lb/>
leases available. $990 per month. Call Chip<lb/>
355-0664.<lb/>
Three bedroom new inside fenced in<lb/>
backyard and deck two blocks from campus<lb/>
$1100 341-8331<lb/>
2 Bedroom 1 Bath Duplex 404 E. Second<lb/>
St.(252)-361-2138<lb/>
3 BDR 2 BA Plus Bonus Room All Appliances,<lb/>
Fenced Yard, Deck, Pets OK. 4 Blocks from<lb/>
ECU $750 Per Month. Sec. Dep. Negotiable.<lb/>
Avail. Now. Call 252-258-1810. '<lb/>
3 Bedroom 1 Bath House 2 Blocks From<lb/>
Campus. Completely Remodeled. 308<lb/>
Student Street. $875.00 Month Plus Utilities.<lb/>
Call lack at Uptown Properties. 717-9711<lb/>
Duplex Apt. 811B Forbes St. Cr. Two Blocks<lb/>
From Library $400.00 month Plus Deposit<lb/>
Call Charles 252-745-4218<lb/>
Large 2 Si 3 bedroom townhouses 1.5 to 2.5<lb/>
baths, full basement, WD hookups, great<lb/>
storage, enclosed patio, ECU bus route, no<lb/>
pets, 752-7738<lb/>
2 B.R. Apt. @ 1212 A Charles Blvd. Near<lb/>
Campus. Air Con. Nat. Gas Heat, double<lb/>
glass windows. Dishwasher, Dryer, Washer<lb/>
Hook-Up. Carpet - $400 ph. 329-0385<lb/>
- Available Jan. 1st'06<lb/>
Blocks to ECU, 2 or 3 Bdrms, 2.5<lb/>
Baths, All appliances, Central Heat<lb/>
AC, Reasonable Rent, Available<lb/>
DecIan - Call 321-4712 or www.<lb/>
collegeunlverslty rentals.com<lb/>
4 Bedroom 2 Bath WD Dishwasher Garage<lb/>
Fenced Yard 113 N. Elm (252)-361-2138<lb/>
34 bedroom units 2-3 baths for Rent $0<lb/>
deposit just $99 down. Priced from $339-<lb/>
$425 includes water, sewage, electric,<lb/>
internet, and cable, going fast don't miss<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
BREfiK!<lb/>
EBnamas Party<lb/>
Iruise $299<lb/>
Cancun $559<lb/>
Acapulco $629<lb/>
Jamaica, Nassau, Panama City, Daytona From $179!<lb/>
Recognized 3 Times For Ethics! Campus Reps Neededl<lb/>
SpringBrt2akTravcl.c0m<lb/>
1800-6786386<lb/>
2 &amp; 3 Bedroom units 1-3.5 Baths - Rent<lb/>
from $575.00 Blocks from ECU &amp; ECU Bus<lb/>
Route. Call 717-9871; 717-9872<lb/>
University Court Apartments Newly<lb/>
remodeled 1 BR student apartments<lb/>
Walking distance to campus $365 rent with<lb/>
water included Call 758-2628 todayl<lb/>
Roommate needed in beautiful 3 BDR<lb/>
house, 2 Bath one block from campus,<lb/>
females non-smoking; high speed wireless<lb/>
internet option; WD, all kitchen appliances,<lb/>
parking, no pets. Please call 347-1231<lb/>
For Rent 2013A River Drive (Dockside) 2<lb/>
Bedroom - 2 Bath - 1st month rent free<lb/>
- Available January - $600month - Call<lb/>
252-355-6339 or 252-341-1726<lb/>
Three bedroom two bath new inside two<lb/>
blocks from campus anuary 1st $1100<lb/>
252-341-8331<lb/>
Two Bedroom Apartment For Rent<lb/>
Downtown Greenville Above Catalog<lb/>
Connection. $500 Per Month Plus Utilities.<lb/>
Available End of December. Call lack At<lb/>
Uptown Properties 717-9711.<lb/>
One two Brs. on-site management<lb/>
maintenance Central heat air 6,9,12 month<lb/>
leases Water Cable included ECU bus<lb/>
Wireless Internet pets dishwasher disposals<lb/>
pool laundry (252) 758-4015<lb/>
FREEI 1st Mo. Rent plus High Speed Internet<lb/>
- 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, Central heatAC,<lb/>
fireplace, fenced yard, dogs OK. Near ECU,<lb/>
PCMH, 427W. 4th St. SIOOOMo. 347-6504<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
Sublease an '06 thru ury '06 Rent $350<lb/>
plus split utilities and cable Private bedroom<lb/>
and bath close to ECU Bus route call Ashley<lb/>
315-447-4570<lb/>
Female roommate needed for Spring<lb/>
Semester. 4 Bedroom 2 Bathroom House<lb/>
walking distance to campus. $435 includes<lb/>
rent &amp; all utilities. Contact enni @ (336)<lb/>
918-8871.<lb/>
Sublease an. '06 thru une '06 Rent $235<lb/>
a month plus split cable and utilities Near<lb/>
Campus On bus route call Stephanie 252-<lb/>
531-3217<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
Food Delivery Drivers wanted for Restaurant<lb/>
Runners. Part-time positions 100-150week.<lb/>
Perfect for college student Some Lunch<lb/>
Time(1la-2p)M-F and weekend availability<lb/>
required. 2-way radios allow you to be<lb/>
anywhere in Greenville when not on a<lb/>
delivery. Reliable transportation a must.<lb/>
Call 551-3279 between 2-5 only. Sorry<lb/>
Greenville residents and year around dorm<lb/>
residents only.<lb/>
The Federal Public Defender for the Eastern<lb/>
District of NC is accepting applications for<lb/>
a temporary, part-time (up to 20 hours per<lb/>
week), Clerical Assistant for the Greenville<lb/>
office. The position will be available<lb/>
between December 12 and January 22,<lb/>
2005. Responsibilities include receptionist<lb/>
duties, word processing, and a variety of<lb/>
clerical tasks. Salary is $13.00 per hour and<lb/>
direct deposit is mandatory. Please submit<lb/>
a cover letter and resume to Thomas P.<lb/>
McNamara, Federal Public Defender,<lb/>
150 Fayetteville Street Mall, Suite 450,<lb/>
Raleigh, NC 27601. Application deadline is<lb/>
December 16,2005. No telephone inquiries<lb/>
will be accepted.<lb/>
One part-time position available for the 4-<lb/>
H After school program. Hours are 2:30-6<lb/>
and 12:30-6 on early out days. Experience<lb/>
preferred but not mandatory. Excellent for<lb/>
college students going into a child related<lb/>
field. For more information, please contact<lb/>
Sarah Best at 747-5831.<lb/>
Bartenders Wanted! $250day potential. No<lb/>
experience necessary. Training provided.<lb/>
Call (800) 965-6520 ext. 202<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
Adult Entertainment Escort Service hiring<lb/>
attractive ladies. Experience preferred<lb/>
but not necessary, Flexible schedule with<lb/>
great pay Please call (252)347-9134 for Rex<lb/>
(910)915-0028 for Ericka<lb/>
GREEK PERSONALS<lb/>
The sisters of Kappa Delta would like to<lb/>
thank all of the Greek organizations for<lb/>
supporting our Late Night Pancake Dinner.<lb/>
Kappa Delta would like to thank everyone<lb/>
that participated in our Late Night Pancake<lb/>
Dinner!<lb/>
Congrats to the Alpha Pi new member class,<lb/>
Jamie Allen, Melissa Benton, Jena Bradley,<lb/>
Jessica Brenton, Heather Clayton, Haley<lb/>
Hawkins, Taryn Hollister, Dayna Hohffeldt,<lb/>
Megan Lord, Molly Mace, Rachel Maddox,<lb/>
Rachel Melnick, Laura Modlin, Lauren<lb/>
Potter, Madison Riel, Ashley Rodman, and<lb/>
Stephanie Roqerson for being initiated on<lb/>
Thursday! Welcome to the sisterhood I Love<lb/>
the sisters of Zeta Tau Alpha!<lb/>
Congratulations to Meg and Blair for<lb/>
being Kappa Delta's sisters of the week!<lb/>
You did a great job with our semi-formal.<lb/>
OTHER<lb/>
Cancun, Acapulco, Jamaica From $499!<lb/>
Travel With America's Largest &amp; Ethics<lb/>
Award Winning Spring Break Company!<lb/>
Fly Scheduled Airlines, Free Meals,<lb/>
Drinks, Biggest Celebrity Parties! On-<lb/>
Campus Marketing Reps Needed! www.<lb/>
SpringBreakTraveLcom Promo code: 33<lb/>
1-800-678-6386<lb/>
1 Spring Break Website! Low prices<lb/>
?uaranteed. Free Meals &amp; Free Drinks. Book<lb/>
1 people, get 12th trip free! Group discounts<lb/>
for 6 www.SpringBreakDiscounts.com or<lb/>
www.Leisurelours.com or 800-838-8202<lb/>
Bahamas Spring Break Celebrity Cruise! 5<lb/>
Days From $299! Includes Meals, Taxes,<lb/>
Entry To Exclusive MTVu Events, Beach<lb/>
Parties With Celebrities As Seen on Real<lb/>
World, Road Rules! On Campus Reps<lb/>
Neededl www.SpringBreakTravel.com<lb/>
Promo code: 33 1-800-678-6386<lb/>
Spring Break Ski Trip - Killington, VTfor only<lb/>
$6991 Includes transportation, condo, lift<lb/>
tickets. March 11-18. For more info go to<lb/>
www.skiouting.com or call 327-8101.<lb/>
University Suites Apartments<lb/>
f!uBATHI. CLOSET II fciuij ttUtLVU<lb/>
pAirn;ak<lb/>
<lb/>
(1PF.N TO KEl.OW<lb/>
BtUKUOMi Uf)UW<lb/>
rMTHIftM UP W1THDMWEU<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Why Settle for limited patio space<lb/>
when you can have spacious<lb/>
indoor and outdoor living!<lb/>
Early Bird Special-<lb/>
12 MONTH FREE! ,N�,&amp; �.�,<lb/>
Third Floor<lb/>
� New units available immediately<lb/>
&amp; for Fall'06<lb/>
� Townhome Style-<lb/>
No one above or below you<lb/>
� 3 bedroom3 bath<lb/>
� Maximum Privacy-<lb/>
Only one bedroom per floor!<lb/>
Second Floor<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
r�.�<lb/>
Lei0<lb/>
Parking at your front door<lb/>
Extra large brick patio<lb/>
Private Bus Service<lb/>
Close to campus &amp;<lb/>
Near Shopping<lb/>
Unlike anything else!<lb/>
FREE Tanning, Fitness,<lb/>
Pool, and Clubhouse<lb/>
Wecome to the "SUITE LIFE'<lb/>
Open House MonFri. 9-8 Sat. 12-4<lb/>
University Suites � 551-3800<lb/>
Located at the corner of Arlington Blvd. and Evans Street - behind the Kangaroo Gas Station � www.universitysuites.net<lb/>
V <lb/>
<pb facs="00059375_0010"/><lb/>
PAGE A10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN � NEWS<lb/>
12-6-05<lb/>
There's hidden gold in those textbooks.<lb/>
A treasure just waiting for you when you sell your<lb/>
books at U.B.E. You'll move quickly through any line and<lb/>
get top dollar from the book buying experts at U.B.E.<lb/>
And you'll have a jingle in your pocket for end of<lb/>
semester festivities and holiday fun. So dig in, matey.<lb/>
Sell your books for cash during the U.B.E. Buyback.<lb/>
U.B.E. Uptown Greenville � 516 South Cotanche St.<lb/>
K D 0 IWednesday &amp; Thursday, December 7&amp;8 9:00.a to 6:00pm<lb/>
Friday, December 9 9:00am to 7:00pm<lb/>
Saturday, December 10 10:00�m to 5:00pm<lb/>
Sunday, December 11 closed<lb/>
Monday-Friday, December 12-16 9:00�m to 7:00pm<lb/>
We're Open on Commencement Day<lb/>
Do some Pirate shopping before heading out of town'<lb/>
HOURS Saturday, December 17<lb/>
9:00.m to 6:00-<lb/>
U.B.E. Remote Book Buyback at the Alpha Phi House<lb/>
(Bottom of College Hill) Just jog down to Alpha Phi and trade those books for cold cash!<lb/>
Wednesday, December 7<lb/>
9:00.m to 5:00-m<lb/>
Thursday, December 8<lb/>
NO REMOTE (READING DAY)<lb/>
Friday, December 9<lb/>
9:00.m to 5:00pm<lb/>
Saturday &amp; Sunday, December 10-11<lb/>
NO REMOTECLOSED<lb/>
Monday-Friday, December 12-16<lb/>
9:00.m to 5:00-m<lb/>
U.B.E. WE PAY MORE FOR USED BOOKS<lb/>
Uptown Greenville 516 South Cotanche Street www.ubeinc.com 758-2616<lb/>
L<lb/>
 
</div></body></text></TEI>