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<pb facs="00059379_0001"/>
<lb/>
www.theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
volume 81  Number 37<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
January 10, 2006<lb/>
Supreme Court nominee<lb/>
beginning Senate hearings<lb/>
Moore<lb/>
SGA Senate holds<lb/>
first meeting of 2006<lb/>
Garrie Moore addresses<lb/>
the assembly<lb/>
CHRIS MUNIER<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
Judge Samuel Alito prepares for Senate questioning. He Is Bush's second nominee to replace the retiring Sandra Day O'Connor.<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)  Presi-<lb/>
dent Bush sent Supreme Court<lb/>
nominee Samuel Alito off to his<lb/>
confirmation hearings Monday<lb/>
with best wishes and a demand<lb/>
that senators "give this man a fair<lb/>
vote and an up or down vote<lb/>
Alito was facing close ques-<lb/>
tioning by the Judiciary Com-<lb/>
mittee to determine his fitness<lb/>
to be the nation's 110th Supreme<lb/>
Court justice. But first, he got<lb/>
some last-minute encouragement<lb/>
from the president over breakfast<lb/>
at the White House.<lb/>
Speaking to reporters after-<lb/>
ward, the president called Alito<lb/>
"eminently qualified" to be on<lb/>
the high court and said he told the<lb/>
judge that "he's conducting him-<lb/>
self with such dignity and class<lb/>
"Sam's got the intellect neces-<lb/>
sary to bring a lot of class to that<lb/>
court Bush said as he escorted<lb/>
Alito before news cameras in<lb/>
the Rose Garden. "He's got the<lb/>
judicial temperament necessary<lb/>
to make sure that the court is a<lb/>
body that interprets the law and<lb/>
doesn't try to write the law<lb/>
Alito, a conservative, 15-year<lb/>
member of the federal appeals<lb/>
court in Philadelphia, was chosen<lb/>
by Bush, an Oct. 31 to succeed<lb/>
the retiring Justice Sandra Day<lb/>
O'Connor, the first woman on<lb/>
the high court.<lb/>
O'Connor, a justice since<lb/>
1981, was a decisive swing vote<lb/>
on abortion, the death penalty,<lb/>
affirmative action and other<lb/>
highly contentious issues.<lb/>
"My hope, of course, is that<lb/>
the Senate bring dignity to the<lb/>
process and give this man a fair<lb/>
hearing and an up or down vote<lb/>
on the Senate floor Bush said. He<lb/>
added: "Sam, good luck to you<lb/>
Ten-minute opening state-<lb/>
ments by the panel's 18 members<lb/>
were likely to consume much of<lb/>
Monday's opening session, with<lb/>
direct questioning of Alito getting<lb/>
fully under way beginning Tues-<lb/>
day. The hearings are expected to<lb/>
last at least two days.<lb/>
Judiciary Chairman Arlen<lb/>
Specter, R-Pa said Sunday he will<lb/>
1rM"P the hearings this week.<lb/>
He has called for a committee<lb/>
vote by Jan. 17.<lb/>
Republican leaders hope for<lb/>
confirmation by the full Senate<lb/>
on Jan. 20, but Vermont Sen.<lb/>
Patrick Leahy, the committee's<lb/>
top Democrat, would not promise<lb/>
the schedule would hold.<lb/>
"Obviously, if (Alito) doesn't<lb/>
answer the questions, then it gets<lb/>
out of my control. Some senator<lb/>
would move to hold it over. Let's<lb/>
hope we get all the answers so<lb/>
that doesn't happen Leahy said<lb/>
Sunday on CBS' "Face the Nation<lb/>
Alito was Bush's second choice<lb/>
to replace O'Connor. White<lb/>
House counsel Harriet Miers<lb/>
withdrew from consideration<lb/>
after conservatives questioned<lb/>
her judicial philosophy and qual-<lb/>
ifications for the Supreme Court.<lb/>
Democrats also voiced doubts.<lb/>
Bush then turned to Alito,<lb/>
55, who previaqjjjr MM as a<lb/>
federal prosecuPnoa lawyer in<lb/>
the Reagan administration.<lb/>
Republicans-say there is no<lb/>
reason to delay or filibuster Alito.<lb/>
Senators who have met privately<lb/>
with Alito say he told them that<lb/>
his 1985 written comments<lb/>
maintaining there was no con-<lb/>
stitutional right to abortion were<lb/>
part of a job application for the<lb/>
Reagan administration, which<lb/>
opposed abortion.<lb/>
At the same time, he wrote in<lb/>
a separate legal memo while at<lb/>
see ALITO page A2<lb/>
The SGA Senate convened<lb/>
yesterday for the first time this<lb/>
semester in order to discuss items<lb/>
of appropriation as well as bus<lb/>
stop augmentations.<lb/>
The Senate was also greeted<lb/>
by Garrie Moore, vice chancel-<lb/>
lor for student life, who told<lb/>
the assembly about last month's<lb/>
Board of Trustees meeting and<lb/>
 how the Board Of Trustees was<lb/>
appreciative of student input.<lb/>
"It really made a difference<lb/>
said Moore.<lb/>
Moore's sentiment was<lb/>
shared by Senate President Ben-<lb/>
jamin Wythe. Wyche and Moore<lb/>
Splained how important it was<lb/>
r jtudentt to be at the BOT<lb/>
meeting especially considering<lb/>
the miscommunications between<lb/>
school administrators and stu-<lb/>
dents regarding the Higher One<lb/>
Card.<lb/>
"It was one of the first times<lb/>
the BOT apologized to the stu-<lb/>
dents said Wyche.<lb/>
Moore also alluded to some of<lb/>
the renovation projects that are<lb/>
being considered by the BOT. He<lb/>
said it is important for students<lb/>
to take control of changes that<lb/>
are happening to buildings like<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center and<lb/>
Ledonia Wright Cultural Center,<lb/>
places used heavily by students.<lb/>
He encouraged senators and all<lb/>
students to go to meetings where<lb/>
renovation plans are discussed.<lb/>
"These are your buildings <lb/>
when you see there is a meeting<lb/>
set up  it is really important<lb/>
you attend Moore said.<lb/>
Moore informed SGA last<lb/>
month about provisions involv-<lb/>
ing pre-paid legal services for<lb/>
ECU students. He said the Divi-<lb/>
sion of Student Life will cover the<lb/>
costs for the services.<lb/>
The $2.50 student fee increase<lb/>
was not accepted by the BOT<lb/>
because they want to remain<lb/>
within spending limits.<lb/>
John Massachi, chairman of<lb/>
the Senate parking and trans-<lb/>
portation committee, proposed<lb/>
two resolutions involving the<lb/>
availability of bus schedules to<lb/>
students. Senate Resolution 11-<lb/>
1 called for a mandate on ECU<lb/>
buses to post schedules perma-<lb/>
nently, securely in each bus.<lb/>
"Schedules are already on the<lb/>
buses said Massachi.<lb/>
"This is here to enforce it<lb/>
The problem with bus sched-<lb/>
ules not being securely posted<lb/>
on buses is related to another<lb/>
problem SGA addressed through<lb/>
SR 11-2. It was passed along with<lb/>
SR-11 in order to make sure bus<lb/>
schedules are posted at the bus<lb/>
stop as well as the buses in a<lb/>
secure manner. In the past, they<lb/>
were torn down or washed away<lb/>
from rain.<lb/>
The Senate also passed three<lb/>
bills involving appropriations.<lb/>
Senate Bill 11-1 provided ECU<lb/>
College Republicans $723 for two<lb/>
see SGA page A3<lb/>
Five new human cases of<lb/>
bird flu reported in Turkey<lb/>
Israeli residents express their concerns for their ailing prime minister.<lb/>
Doctors work to pull Sharon out of<lb/>
coma, Israeli leader breaths on own<lb/>
JERUSALEM (AP)  Doctors<lb/>
started bringing Prime Minister<lb/>
Ariel Sharon out of an induced<lb/>
coma Monday, and the stricken<lb/>
leader immediately began breath-<lb/>
ing on his own and reportedly<lb/>
moved one of his hands.<lb/>
Outside experts said that<lb/>
while independent breathing<lb/>
meant Sharon had better chances<lb/>
for survival, it gave no indica-<lb/>
tion about his other physical or<lb/>
mental capacities in the wake of<lb/>
his massive stroke Wednesday.<lb/>
The process of weaning<lb/>
Sharon, 77, from sedation could<lb/>
take anywhere from several hours<lb/>
to days, Hadassah Hospital direc-<lb/>
tor Dr. Shlomo Mor-Yosef said.<lb/>
Doctors made the decision to lift<lb/>
the anesthesia after a round of<lb/>
consultations Monday.<lb/>
Hadassah Hospital officials<lb/>
would not comment on a Chan-<lb/>
nel 10 TV report that Sharon<lb/>
moved his hand. The report did<lb/>
not say which hand.<lb/>
Hospital officials said they<lb/>
would not discuss Sharon's con-<lb/>
dition until a Monday afternoon<lb/>
briefing.<lb/>
"As soon as we started reduc-<lb/>
ing the drugs  the prime min-<lb/>
ister started to breathe inde-<lb/>
pendently, although he is still<lb/>
hooked up to a respirator that is<lb/>
used as an aid Mor-Yosef said,<lb/>
adding that Sharon remained in<lb/>
critical condition.<lb/>
Outside experts have said<lb/>
doctors should have a good idea<lb/>
of the extent of Sharon's brain<lb/>
damage by the end of the day.<lb/>
One Of Sharon's neurosurgeons<lb/>
said it was unlikely he could func-<lb/>
tion as prime minister again.<lb/>
Experts said the prime minis-<lb/>
ter suffered most of the damage to<lb/>
the right side of his brain, so he has<lb/>
a greater chance of regaining his<lb/>
speech and comprehension, which<lb/>
are controlled by the left side.<lb/>
After withdrawing the seda-<lb/>
tives, doctors will pass their<lb/>
assessment of brain damage to<lb/>
see SHARON page A2<lb/>
DOGUBAYAZIT, Turkey (AP)<lb/>
 Turkey reported five new<lb/>
human cases of the H5N1 strain<lb/>
of bird flu in preliminary tests<lb/>
Monday, a Health Ministry offi-<lb/>
cial said.<lb/>
The tests were conducted<lb/>
in Turkish labs on samples<lb/>
provided by five people sus-<lb/>
pected of having the disease,<lb/>
said the official, speaking<lb/>
on condition of anonymity<lb/>
because she was not autho-<lb/>
rized to speak to the media.<lb/>
The new cases raise the<lb/>
number of human bird flu cases<lb/>
in Turkey to 15. They have not<lb/>
yet been confirmed by the World<lb/>
Health Organization.<lb/>
Health Ministry official<lb/>
Turan Buzgan said the new cases<lb/>
were discovered in four separate<lb/>
provinces in eastern and central<lb/>
Turkey, as well as on the Black<lb/>
Sea coast, indicating the disease<lb/>
was continuing to spread across<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
Health officials note the<lb/>
virus so far has only been con-<lb/>
firmed in humans who were<lb/>
in close and prolonged contact<lb/>
with birds. But they are watching<lb/>
the disease's spread and devel-<lb/>
opment for fear it could mutate<lb/>
Into a form easily transmitted<lb/>
between humans, sparking a<lb/>
pandemic.<lb/>
The European Union took<lb/>
further steps Monday to con-<lb/>
tain the disease, agreeing to<lb/>
ban imports of untreated feath-<lb/>
ers from six nations bordering<lb/>
eastern Turkey. The ban on<lb/>
Bird flu continues to raise concerns for European countries.<lb/>
imports from Armenia, Azerbai-<lb/>
jan, Iraq, Iran, Georgia and Syria<lb/>
is expected to come into force<lb/>
after formal approval Tuesday by<lb/>
the European Commission.<lb/>
Other poultry imports from<lb/>
those countries are already<lb/>
banned, said Michael Mann,<lb/>
spokesman for the EU's head<lb/>
office.<lb/>
In Turkey, 10 people had pre-<lb/>
viously tested positive for H5N1<lb/>
in tests done in the country's<lb/>
labs, four of which were con-<lb/>
firmed by the World Health<lb/>
Organization.<lb/>
Those four include two sib-<lb/>
lings who died last week in the<lb/>
eastern city of Van, the first<lb/>
confirmed fatalities caused by<lb/>
the virus outside eastern Asia,<lb/>
where 74 people have been<lb/>
killed by H5N1 since 2003.<lb/>
A third sibling also died in<lb/>
Van of bird flu, but the WHO<lb/>
lab has yet to confirm H5N1.<lb/>
On Monday, Health Min-<lb/>
ister Recep Akdag visited with<lb/>
the father of the children in<lb/>
Dogubayazit, a largely Kurdish<lb/>
town near Van where most of<lb/>
the bird flu cases have origi-<lb/>
nated. He was accompanied by<lb/>
officials from WHO and the<lb/>
European Union.<lb/>
The doctor who treated the<lb/>
siblings said they probably con-<lb/>
tracted the illness by playing<lb/>
with dead chickens.<lb/>
Earlier Monday, authorities<lb/>
reported 18 additional people<lb/>
were hospitalized in southeast<lb/>
Turkey while undergoing testing<lb/>
for bird flu.<lb/>
see FLU page A3<lb/>
INSIDE I News: A2 I Classifieds: A101 Opinion: A4 I Student Life: A5 I Sports: A8<lb/>

<pb facs="00059379_0002"/><lb/>
1-10-06<lb/>
Page A2 news@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366<lb/>
CHRIS MUNIER News Editor ZACK HILL Assistant News Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY January 10, 2006<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
MLK Tribute Lecture<lb/>
Tutu celebrates Martin Luther King, Jr.<lb/>
Day at ECU. NaomiTutu, the daughter<lb/>
of famed South African Archbishop<lb/>
Desmond Tutu, will visit Greenville in<lb/>
observance of the holiday. The event<lb/>
will be held Wednesday, Jan. 11 at<lb/>
7 p.m. in Hendrix Theater. For more<lb/>
information, contact David Dennard<lb/>
at 328-4364 or the Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Cultural Center at 328-6495.<lb/>
Book Signing<lb/>
ECU foreign language professor<lb/>
Steven Cerutti will hold a book<lb/>
signing for his book Word of<lb/>
the Day: The Unlikely Evolution<lb/>
of College English. The book is<lb/>
inspired by CeruWs popular class<lb/>
on Greek and Latin Vocabulary<lb/>
Building (CLAS 1300). For more<lb/>
information, contact Steven Cerutti at<lb/>
328-6031 orcerrutis@mail.ecu.edu.<lb/>
MLK Vigil and March<lb/>
ECU will hold a candlelight vigil<lb/>
and march on College Hill at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Monday, Jan. 16 in celebration of<lb/>
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. Amusical<lb/>
performance by ECU professors<lb/>
Louise Toppin and Gerald Knight<lb/>
with Gregory Thompson of Johnson<lb/>
University, followed by selections<lb/>
from the ECU Gospel Choir, the choir<lb/>
from the Immanuel Baptist Church<lb/>
and the ECU choral students will<lb/>
follow at 7 p.m. in Hendrix Theater.<lb/>
All events are free and open to the<lb/>
public. For more information, contact<lb/>
David Dennard at 328-4363 or the<lb/>
Ledonia Wright Cultural Center at<lb/>
328-6495.<lb/>
Student Volunteer<lb/>
Projects<lb/>
Students at ECU will be encouraged<lb/>
to participate in the MLK Day<lb/>
Volunteer Challenge Monday, Jan.<lb/>
16. Volunteers will contribute to a<lb/>
daylong effort organized by ECU'S<lb/>
Volunteer and Service Learning<lb/>
Center. Volunteer Venues include<lb/>
the Boys and Girls Club, Creating<lb/>
Cheer, Hope Lodge and the Mariey<lb/>
Fund. Students will sign in at 8 am. in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, attend<lb/>
at memorial at 9 a.m. and begin<lb/>
their volunteer projects at 9:45 am.<lb/>
Registration forms are available at<lb/>
ecu.educs-studentlifevolunteer<lb/>
mlk.cfm. For more Information,<lb/>
contact the Volunteer and Service<lb/>
Learning Center at 328-2735.<lb/>
Important Calendar<lb/>
Dates<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 12 at 5 p.m.is the<lb/>
deadline for late registration and<lb/>
schedule changes (drop and add).<lb/>
Friday, Jan. 13 is the last day for<lb/>
schedule changes (add only).<lb/>
Monday, Jan. 16 is Martin Luther<lb/>
King, Jr. Day, which is a state holiday.<lb/>
There will be no class.<lb/>
Award-winning Piano<lb/>
Performance<lb/>
Joyce Yang, 12th Van Clibun<lb/>
International Piano Competition<lb/>
Silver Medalist, will perform at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Wright Auditorium Thursday,<lb/>
Jan. 19. Yang has recently had<lb/>
several concert engagements and<lb/>
has recorded a CD. Upcoming<lb/>
collaborations include the<lb/>
Indianapolis and Tucson Orchestras<lb/>
and the Grammy award-winning<lb/>
Takacs Quartet Tickets are required.<lb/>
For more information, contact the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office at 328-4788<lb/>
or 1-800-ECU-ARTS.<lb/>
National Folic Acid<lb/>
Week<lb/>
The week of Jan, 9-15 is National<lb/>
Folic Acid Awareness Week<lb/>
sponsored by the NC Folic Acid<lb/>
Council. The week highlights the<lb/>
necessity for people to consume<lb/>
enough folic acid, which is crucial to<lb/>
cell growth. Pregnant women are at<lb/>
a particularty high risk of a deficiency.<lb/>
North Carolina is in a region of the<lb/>
country with high incidence rates<lb/>
of neubal tube birth defect, and<lb/>
consuming 400 meg of folk; acid<lb/>
per day can reduce the risks of<lb/>
NTD by as much as 70 percent For<lb/>
more information, visit getfolic.com.<lb/>
Dance 2006<lb/>
The week of Jan. 22-28 will be<lb/>
Dance 2006. Highlights include<lb/>
choreography by ECU School of<lb/>
Theatre and Dance faculty and<lb/>
guest artists. Sometimes serious,<lb/>
sometimes funny, sometimes<lb/>
lyrical and sometimes eccentric,<lb/>
this annual dance showcase has<lb/>
become an immensely popular<lb/>
event Sure to have something for<lb/>
dance aficionados and newcomers<lb/>
alike, this is a fast-paced and<lb/>
unpredictable cornucopia of dance<lb/>
styles.<lb/>
News Briefs<lb/>
State<lb/>
NC panel to study effectiveness<lb/>
of sentencing teens as adults<lb/>
RALEIGH, NC (AP) - They can't vote or<lb/>
join the military. But in North Carolina,<lb/>
16-year-olds are treated as adults<lb/>
in criminal matters even earning a<lb/>
life'sentence if their crime is serious<lb/>
enough.<lb/>
North Carolina is one of three states<lb/>
that automatically treats 16-year-olds<lb/>
as adults in criminal cases. Now a<lb/>
commission is studying whether it<lb/>
should join the majority of states,<lb/>
which set the minimum age at 17<lb/>
or 18.<lb/>
The NC Sentencing and Policy<lb/>
Advisory Commission will spend at<lb/>
least a year studying ramifications<lb/>
of the law, such as the number of<lb/>
teenagers with adult convictions who<lb/>
commit additional crimes, versus<lb/>
those who receive juvenile status.<lb/>
The commission subcommittee<lb/>
studying the issue is scheduled to<lb/>
meet Friday.<lb/>
Criminal courts also automatically<lb/>
treat 16-year-olds as adults in New<lb/>
York and Connecticut. But those<lb/>
states allow 16- and 17-year-old<lb/>
defendants to petition to be treated as<lb/>
youthful offenders, according to state<lb/>
Rep. Alice Bordsen, D-Alamance,<lb/>
who asked the commission to study<lb/>
the statute.<lb/>
North Carolina's law has been on the<lb/>
books since at least 1919 and makes<lb/>
no sense in current times, she said.<lb/>
The state law also requires defendants<lb/>
as young as 13 to be considered<lb/>
adults in first-degree murder cases.<lb/>
Juvenile court judges can rule that<lb/>
those aged 14 and 15 be tried as<lb/>
adults for violent crimes such as rape<lb/>
or robbery.<lb/>
Young people convicted as juveniles<lb/>
can have their conviction record<lb/>
sealed, while sentences are geared<lb/>
toward treatment, counseling and<lb/>
education. They must be freed by the<lb/>
time they turn 21.<lb/>
Tight budgets require creative<lb/>
solutions from gym teachers<lb/>
LEXINGTON, NC (AP) - Many people<lb/>
have heard the stories of teachers<lb/>
using their own money to buy<lb/>
classroom supplies for their 28 to 32<lb/>
students because school budgets do<lb/>
not cover everything needed.<lb/>
But what do you do if you have 1,092<lb/>
students?<lb/>
You get really resourceful and<lb/>
thrifty, said Lisa Snow, Southwood<lb/>
Elementary School's physical<lb/>
education teacher. With 20 years<lb/>
of teaching under her belt, she<lb/>
can make ordinary objects into<lb/>
extraordinary gym tools and activities<lb/>
for her students.<lb/>
For example, when she tore down<lb/>
a porch from her home, she wasn't<lb/>
about to waste all that wood. She<lb/>
knew it had a second life as a tool to<lb/>
help her preschoolers through first-<lb/>
graders master the skill of lacing and<lb/>
tying shoes. She cut the wood into<lb/>
six-inch blocks, painted it white and<lb/>
drilled holes into each block. After a<lb/>
short search on eBay, an Internet site<lb/>
offering millions of Inexpensive items<lb/>
up for auction, she purchased a box<lb/>
of shoe strings.<lb/>
Jump ropes are an expensive buy on<lb/>
a small budget. But Snow knows you<lb/>
can buy really, really long ropes at<lb/>
Lowe's and cut it yourself into several<lb/>
jump ropes.<lb/>
When she wanted stretch bands for<lb/>
her physical education classes, the<lb/>
$50 price tag for a bundle seemed<lb/>
steep. She improvised, getting about<lb/>
50 recycled bicycle inner tubes free<lb/>
from an area bicycle shop, which<lb/>
work just as well.<lb/>
National<lb/>
With a federally banned<lb/>
expletive, Howard Stern makes<lb/>
his debut on satellite radio<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Howard Stern<lb/>
began his new satellite radio show<lb/>
on Monday by putting to rest rumors<lb/>
that he got married to his longtime<lb/>
girlfriend, model Beth Ostrosky in a<lb/>
comment complete with a federally<lb/>
banned expletive,<lb/>
"I am not married. It's a nice feeling<lb/>
that we get along great. We're very<lb/>
happy and I dont want to (blank) it<lb/>
up said Stern, who Is finally free of<lb/>
government decency laws on Sinus<lb/>
Satellite Radio.<lb/>
Stem has promised everything from<lb/>
Alito<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
the Justice Department that the<lb/>
department should try to chip<lb/>
away at abortion rights rather<lb/>
than mount an all-out assault.<lb/>
Specter said in an advance copy<lb/>
of his opening statement that the<lb/>
hearing will be an opportunity for<lb/>
Alito to say publicly what he has<lb/>
been telling senators in private<lb/>
about how he would deal with the<lb/>
Supreme Court's 1973 Roe v. Wade<lb/>
decision establishing a wom-<lb/>
an's right to have an abortion.<lb/>
"This hearing will give Judge<lb/>
Alito the public forum to address<lb/>
the issue, as he has with senators<lb/>
in private meetings, that his per-<lb/>
sonal views and prior advocacy<lb/>
will not determine his judicial<lb/>
decision  said Specter, a mod-<lb/>
erate on the issue.<lb/>
But no matter what Alito says,<lb/>
some Democrats will oppose him,<lb/>
Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said<lb/>
in his opening statement, a copy<lb/>
of which was obtained by The<lb/>
Associated Press.<lb/>
"I am reluctantly inclined to<lb/>
the view that you and any other<lb/>
nominee of this president for<lb/>
the Supreme Court start with no<lb/>
more than 13 votes in this com-<lb/>
mittee, and only 78 votes in the<lb/>
full Senate with a solid, immov-<lb/>
able and unpersuadable block of<lb/>
at least 22 votes against you, no<lb/>
matter what you say or do the<lb/>
statement said.<lb/>
Abortion and presidential<lb/>
war powers are expected to be<lb/>
the main focus of the opening<lb/>
rounds of questions. Two areas<lb/>
that "Democrats and moderate<lb/>
Republicans feel are important:<lb/>
reproductive freedom is one, and<lb/>
all of these issues around execu-<lb/>
tive authority said Carl Tobias<lb/>
of the University of Richmond<lb/>
School of Law.<lb/>
Specter, along with several<lb/>
Democrats, also told Alito before<lb/>
the hearing that they would press<lb/>
him on his feelings about presi-<lb/>
dential power during wartime.<lb/>
The same senators who will<lb/>
question Alito will also hold hear-<lb/>
ings later this year on whether<lb/>
Bush can authorize the National<lb/>
Security Agency to eavesdrop<lb/>
on conversations involving sus-<lb/>
pected terrorists in the United<lb/>
States without getting a court-<lb/>
ordered warrant.<lb/>
Bush contended that his<lb/>
constitutional powers and the<lb/>
prewar resolution gave him that<lb/>
legal authority.<lb/>
One of Alito's Democratic crit-<lb/>
ics, Massachusetts Sen. Edward<lb/>
Kennedy, said he sees tendencies<lb/>
by Alito to defer to the executive<lb/>
branch.<lb/>
"In an era when the White<lb/>
House is abusing power, has<lb/>
authorized torture and Is spying<lb/>
on American citizens, I find your<lb/>
support for an all-powerful execu-<lb/>
tive branch and almost unlimited<lb/>
power for government agents to<lb/>
be deeply troubling Kennedy<lb/>
said in a pre-released excerpt<lb/>
from his opening statement.<lb/>
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stripper poles to live sex on his new<lb/>
show. His deal could be worth up<lb/>
to $500 million over five years to<lb/>
headline two Sirius channels.<lb/>
At the start of the show Monday, Stem<lb/>
dished up some phone sex with<lb/>
Playboy bunny Heidi Cortez, who has<lb/>
her own phone-sex nighttime show<lb/>
iined up on Sirius.<lb/>
Even before his first day on the job,<lb/>
the shock jock recruited listeners<lb/>
for the $13-per-month service: Its<lb/>
audience expanded from 600,000<lb/>
to 2.2 million subscribers after Stem<lb/>
announced his switch last year.<lb/>
That's hardly a surprise. Stem's wildly<lb/>
popular syndicated show proved a<lb/>
cash cow for Infinity Broadcasting,<lb/>
raking in about $100 million in annual<lb/>
advertising revenues and capturing<lb/>
12 million listeners with raunchy,<lb/>
boundary-pushing programming.<lb/>
Stern had frequently tested and<lb/>
sparred with the regulatory Federal<lb/>
Communications Commission<lb/>
during his 25-year run on the public<lb/>
airwaves, often having his morning<lb/>
show interrupted by censors.<lb/>
Vice president hospitalized with<lb/>
shortness of breath<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Vice President<lb/>
Dick Cheney was taken to George<lb/>
Washington Hospital early Monday<lb/>
experiencing shortness of breath, a<lb/>
spokeswoman said. He was released<lb/>
four and a half hours later.<lb/>
Cheney spokeswoman Lea Anne<lb/>
McBride said Cheney was taken<lb/>
to the hospital at 3 a.m. He was<lb/>
released about 7:30 a.m. Doctors<lb/>
found his EKG, or electrocardiogram,<lb/>
unchanged and determined he was<lb/>
retaining fluid because of medication<lb/>
he was taking for a foot problem.<lb/>
Cheney, who has a long history of<lb/>
heart problems and has a pacemaker,<lb/>
was placed on a diuretic at the<lb/>
hospital.<lb/>
The foot ailment forced Cheney to use<lb/>
a cane on Friday.<lb/>
McBride said the foot condition was<lb/>
not related to surgery last September<lb/>
to repair aneurysms behind both<lb/>
knees or the 64-year-old vice<lb/>
president's lengthy history of heart<lb/>
problems. He has had four heart<lb/>
attacks, quadruple bypass surgery,<lb/>
two artery-clearing angioplasties<lb/>
and an operation to implant a special<lb/>
pacemaker in his chest.<lb/>
Cheney has a long history of health<lb/>
problems and suffered his first heart<lb/>
attack in 1978 when he was 37. Ten<lb/>
years later, after his third heart attack,<lb/>
he had quadruple bypass surgery to<lb/>
clear clogged arteries.<lb/>
Cheney, who has not suffered a<lb/>
heart attack since he became vice<lb/>
president in 2001, began a daily<lb/>
exercise program in 2000 and started<lb/>
eating healthier.<lb/>
He quit smoking in 1978 and takes<lb/>
medication to lower his cholesterol.<lb/>
World<lb/>
New attacks kill 21 Iraqis; U.S.<lb/>
says eight troops, four civilians<lb/>
were aboard crashed helicopter<lb/>
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Insurgents<lb/>
exploded a suicide car bomb and<lb/>
launched two mortar shells at Iraq's<lb/>
Interior Ministry during National Police<lb/>
Day celebrations Monday, killing 21<lb/>
people and injuring 24, police said.<lb/>
An Internet statement by Abu Musab<lb/>
al-Zarqawi in the name of his al-Qaida<lb/>
in Iraq terrorist group rebuked Sunni<lb/>
Arabs for taking part in last month's<lb/>
parliamentary elections, saying they<lb/>
had "thrown a rope" to save U.S.<lb/>
policy.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the U.S. military said eight<lb/>
U.S. troops and four American civilians<lb/>
died aboard a U.S. Army Black Hawk<lb/>
helicopter that crashed late Saturday<lb/>
in northern Iraq. The military initially<lb/>
said only that there were eight<lb/>
passengers and four crew aboard.<lb/>
With the latest military deaths, at<lb/>
least 2,207 U.S. service members<lb/>
have died since the war started in<lb/>
2003, according to an Associated<lb/>
Press count.<lb/>
It was the deadliest helicopter crash<lb/>
in Iraq since a CH-53 Sea Stallion<lb/>
went down in bad weather in western<lb/>
Iraq on Jan. 26, 2005, killing 31 U.S.<lb/>
service members.<lb/>
The attack on the Interior Ministry<lb/>
began with a suicide car bomber<lb/>
who exploded his vehicle near an<lb/>
entrance checkpoint. Less than an<lb/>
hour later, two mortar rounds landed<lb/>
about a half-mile from where police<lb/>
were gathered to mark National<lb/>
Police Day.<lb/>
At least 21 people were killed and 24<lb/>
injured, mostly policemen, said police<lb/>
Sgt. Abdel Hadi Hassan. Several<lb/>
police cars were destroyed in the<lb/>
explosions, and pieces of body parts<lb/>
could be seen on the ground.<lb/>
In other violence Monday gunmen<lb/>
assassinated an investigative judge<lb/>
in Kirkuk, police Capt Farhad Talabani<lb/>
said. In Baghdad, gunmen fired on<lb/>
three people working on Iraq's de-<lb/>
Baathification commission, killing<lb/>
one, police Capt. Qassim Hussein<lb/>
said. Gunmen also killed an Iraqi<lb/>
intelligence officer and a doctor in<lb/>
separate attacks, Hussein said. Five<lb/>
bodies bound and blindfolded were<lb/>
found shot to death in Baghdad late<lb/>
Sunday, police said.<lb/>
Five people died in separate attacks<lb/>
in Baghdad on Sunday, including<lb/>
a policeman killed by a suicide car<lb/>
bomber targeting an Interior Ministry<lb/>
patrol. Seven others were wounded.<lb/>
At least 13 killed In Iranian plane<lb/>
crash, Including Revolutionary<lb/>
Guards commander<lb/>
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - A small military<lb/>
jet crashed in northwestern Iran<lb/>
on Monday, killing the commander<lb/>
of the ground forces of Iran's elite<lb/>
Revolutionary Guards and at least 12<lb/>
other people, state media said.<lb/>
It was the second time in two months<lb/>
that a military plane crashed in<lb/>
Iran while attempting to make an<lb/>
emergency landing.<lb/>
In Monday's crash, the plane was<lb/>
trying to make an emergency<lb/>
landing at Oroumieh, about 560<lb/>
miles northwest of Tehran near the<lb/>
Turkish border, when its landing gear<lb/>
jammed, preventing the wheels from<lb/>
being fully deployed, state media<lb/>
reported.<lb/>
The reports did not explain why<lb/>
the plane was trying to make an<lb/>
emergency landing.<lb/>
The Guards commander who died<lb/>
was identified as Gen. Ahmad Kazemi,<lb/>
the official Islamic Republic News<lb/>
Agency reported, quoting Guards<lb/>
spokesman Gen. Masoud Jazayeri.<lb/>
The agency said 10 other military<lb/>
officers also were killed.<lb/>
StiarOn from page A1<lb/>
Attorney General Meni Mazuz, who<lb/>
then will decide whether to declare<lb/>
the prime minister permanently<lb/>
Incapacitated.<lb/>
"The minute we know what<lb/>
damage has occurred, we will talk<lb/>
Justice Ministry spokesman Yaakov<lb/>
Galanti said.<lb/>
Since an acting prime minister<lb/>
is in place, there is no urgency to<lb/>
such a declaration, Galanti added.<lb/>
Ehud Olmert, Sharon's deputy, was<lb/>
named acting prime minister after<lb/>
Sharon's second stroke and can serve<lb/>
in that role for 100 days.<lb/>
In the event the attorney<lb/>
general declares permanent<lb/>
incapacitation, the Cabinet<lb/>
would elect a new prime min-<lb/>
ister within 24 hours, choosing<lb/>
from the five Cabinet min-<lb/>
isters from Sharon's Kadima<lb/>
Party who also are lawmakers,<lb/>
Galanti said.<lb/>
That group includes Olmert.<lb/>
Sharon, who suffered a mild<lb/>
stroke Dec. 18, felt weak Wednesday<lb/>
and was rushed to Hadassah from<lb/>
his ranch in southern Israel when a<lb/>
blood vessel on the right side of his<lb/>
brain burst, causing massive cerebral<lb/>
hemorrhaging. The stroke occurred<lb/>
the night before he was scheduled to<lb/>
undergo a procedure to close a hole<lb/>
in his heart that contributed to the<lb/>
earlier stroke.<lb/>
He has undergone two surgeries<lb/>
to stop the bleeding in his brain and<lb/>
relieve the pressure Inside his skull.<lb/>
Sharon, Israel's most popular<lb/>
politician, was seen by many here<lb/>
as the best hope for resolving<lb/>
the Israel-Palestinian conflict.<lb/>
His abrupt illness and expected<lb/>
departure from the Mideast politi-<lb/>
cal stage has raised concern that<lb/>
momentum on territorial con-<lb/>
cessions, created by his recent<lb/>
Gaza Strip withdrawal, would be<lb/>
stopped, and that Sharon's suc-<lb/>
cessor would not have the stature<lb/>
to forge ahead on drawing Israel's<lb/>
final borders.<lb/>
Before his collapse, Sharon<lb/>
appeared headed to a landslide<lb/>
victory in March 28 elections at<lb/>
the head of the Kadima Party,<lb/>
which seeks further pullbacks<lb/>
while strengthening Israel's hold<lb/>
over major settlement blocs.<lb/>
Olmert told the Cabinet on<lb/>
Sunday he would work to carry<lb/>
on Sharon's political legacy.<lb/>
Sharon's condition and the<lb/>
uncertainty it has generated<lb/>
has unsettled Israelis. At the<lb/>
hospital entrance Monday, three<lb/>
Jerusalemites hung up a white<lb/>
sheet with blue lettering in Eng-<lb/>
lish and Hebrew that read, "Ariel<lb/>
Sharon, there is more to do, please<lb/>
wake up<lb/>
Doctors have kept Sharon in a<lb/>
medically Induced coma and on a<lb/>
respirator since Thursday to give<lb/>
him time to heal from the trauma<lb/>
of the stroke and the surgeries.<lb/>
Doctors not involved in Sha-<lb/>
ron's care said that if he awakens,<lb/>
the extent of his responses could<lb/>
vary widely, from slight movements<lb/>
of the fingers or opening of the eyes,<lb/>
to a much fuller awakening. They<lb/>
also have cautioned that there is no<lb/>
guarantee Sharon will awaken from<lb/>
the anesthesia.<lb/>
That Sharon can breathe on his<lb/>
own "tells us that one part of his<lb/>
brain is functioning, the respiratory<lb/>
center said Dr. John Martin, a pro-<lb/>
fessor of cardiovascular medicine at<lb/>
University College in London. "It<lb/>
doesn't tell us how he is thinking,<lb/>
it doesn't tell us how he can speak,<lb/>
it doesn't teU us how he can move<lb/>
his arms and legs.<lb/>
"His chances of survival are<lb/>
better than if the respiratory<lb/>
center had been damaged, but<lb/>
that still doesn't mean he's going<lb/>
to survive.  It is still highly<lb/>
probable that he will die Martin<lb/>
added, noting that Sharon's<lb/>
weight and age work against<lb/>
him.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059379_0003"/><lb/>
1-10-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  NEWS<lb/>
PAGE A3<lb/>
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SGA from page A1<lb/>
conferences they are attending,<lb/>
one with the state government<lb/>
and another with the national<lb/>
government. The state project<lb/>
received more funding than the<lb/>
national one.<lb/>
The Asian Student Associa-<lb/>
tion was allocated $350 for proj-<lb/>
ects as well through SB 11-2.<lb/>
The new organization, "Edu-<lb/>
cate received $180 for recruit-<lb/>
ment purposes. Educate is a<lb/>
group that advocates minorities<lb/>
going into the education field.<lb/>
The Senate also had an attor-<lb/>
ney general appointment to<lb/>
confirm during the meeting as<lb/>
well. Former SGA judicial board<lb/>
member, Nick Genty, was con-<lb/>
firmed to be the next attorney<lb/>
general.<lb/>
He was sworn in by current<lb/>
attorney general, Brian Mitch-<lb/>
ell after a brief confirmation<lb/>
discussion amongst assembly<lb/>
members.<lb/>
SGA President M. Cole Jones<lb/>
welcomed back the Senate with<lb/>
an opening speech.<lb/>
"We have new initiatives<lb/>
we will finally be able to push<lb/>
through said Jones.<lb/>
Jones gave an update on the<lb/>
movement of the SGA offices<lb/>
to the first floor of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. He said the move<lb/>
might be completed by the end<lb/>
of the month. The new office<lb/>
will be where The Spot used<lb/>
to be located. The old offices<lb/>
upstairs will continued to be<lb/>
used by SGA.<lb/>
"Current offices will be main-<lb/>
tained for SGA office space said<lb/>
Heather Arrington, advisor for<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
Jones quoted Dr. Martin<lb/>
Luther King Jr. to convey to the<lb/>
Senate their need to be commit-<lb/>
ted to leadership and service.<lb/>
"Everyone can be great<lb/>
because everyone can serve<lb/>
said King.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeas tcarolinian.com.<lb/>
FLU from page A1<lb/>
Three new cases of H5N1<lb/>
were reported Sunday in Ankara,<lb/>
two young brothers and a 65-<lb/>
year-old man as well as two other<lb/>
cases in Van, about 600 miles to<lb/>
the east.<lb/>
The boys, Muharrem Canak,<lb/>
5, Iskender, apparently caught<lb/>
the virus while playing with<lb/>
gloves their father had used to<lb/>
handle two dead wild ducks out-<lb/>
side Ankara, their doctor Metin<lb/>
Dogan said. The boys did not<lb/>
appear sick, despite testing posi-<lb/>
tive for the virus in tests done at<lb/>
Turkish labs, Dogan said.<lb/>
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Health officials believe the<lb/>
best way to fight the spread of bird<lb/>
flu is the wholesale destruction of<lb/>
poultry in the affected area. But<lb/>
they often run into problems<lb/>
in rural areas like Dogubayazit,<lb/>
where villagers have resisted turn-<lb/>
ing in their birds.<lb/>
On Sunday, a group of Turk-<lb/>
ish workers in the town had to<lb/>
climb over a wall when a woman<lb/>
refused to open the door and<lb/>
hand over several chickens,<lb/>
insisting they were not sick. The<lb/>
workers said they would return<lb/>
with police.<lb/>
Boehner, Blunt vie to replace<lb/>
DeLay as GOP floor leader<lb/>
DELAY<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)  House<lb/>
Republicans, buffeted by a lobby-<lb/>
ing scandal and running poorly<lb/>
in opinion polls, are mulling<lb/>
a choice between two veteran<lb/>
Midwestern lawmakers to replace<lb/>
embattled former Majority Leader<lb/>
Tom DeLay.<lb/>
Rep. John Boehner of Ohio<lb/>
announced Sunday he is seeking<lb/>
to become the No. 2 GOP leader in<lb/>
the House. Republican Whip Rep.<lb/>
Roy Blunt of Missouri, the acting<lb/>
majority leader, campaigned for<lb/>
the job as well.<lb/>
DeLay is under indictment on<lb/>
campaign finance charges in his<lb/>
home state of Texas. He stepped<lb/>
down permanently Saturday as<lb/>
majority leader days after lobby-<lb/>
ist Jack Abramoff pleaded guilty<lb/>
to federal conspiracy, tax eva-<lb/>
sion and mail fraud charges in a<lb/>
congressional influence-peddling<lb/>
investigation.<lb/>
The leadership campaign will<lb/>
be fought mostly by telephone as<lb/>
Blunt and Boehner track down<lb/>
colleagues scattered while on an<lb/>
extended holiday break. The vote<lb/>
is slated when lawmakers return to<lb/>
Washington the week of Jan. 30.<lb/>
"We've had a tough run<lb/>
recently, some of it of our own<lb/>
making Boehner wrote fellow<lb/>
Republicans in a letter declaring<lb/>
his candidacy. "But I also believe<lb/>
that if we are able to renew our<lb/>
energy and our commitment to<lb/>
our basic principles, the best is yet<lb/>
to come<lb/>
Blunt made a similar observa-<lb/>
tion in a letter appealing for votes.<lb/>
c "Unfortunately, the recent scandals<lb/>
have caused some to question<lb/>
whether we have lost our vision and<lb/>
whether the faith they have placed<lb/>
in us is justified he wrote.<lb/>
"While I have no doubt that<lb/>
it is, it will be difficult to move<lb/>
forward  until we regain the<lb/>
trust and confidence of our con-<lb/>
stituents by enacting new lobbying<lb/>
reforms and enhanced penalties<lb/>
The majority leader's post is<lb/>
central to advancing the GOP<lb/>
agenda on Capitol Hill, and it could<lb/>
be a stepping stone to eventually<lb/>
succeeding Speaker Dennis Hast-<lb/>
en, R-Ill.<lb/>
Blunt said that despite setbacks<lb/>
such as Hurricane Katrina and the<lb/>
Abramoff lobbying scandal, "our<lb/>
conference performed well as a<lb/>
team, racking up impressive legisla-<lb/>
tive accomplishments" during his<lb/>
time as DeLay's stand-in.<lb/>
Blunt, 55, began his leadership<lb/>
career as a protege of DeLay, who<lb/>
named him a deputy whip in 1999.<lb/>
His voting record reflects the<lb/>
priorities of the GOP majority<lb/>
that he helps lead, including<lb/>
opposition to abortion, sup-<lb/>
port for tax cuts and approval<lb/>
for the landmark Medicare<lb/>
prescription drug benefit leg-<lb/>
islation that passed during<lb/>
President Bush's first term.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059379_0004"/><lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page A4<lb/>
editor@theeastcarolinian.com 252,328.9238<lb/>
JENNIFER L HOBBS Editor In Chief<lb/>
TUESDAY January 10, 2006<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
Welcome to ECU,<lb/>
or welcome back<lb/>
Welcome back to campus Pirates. For those of<lb/>
you freshmen, rejoice, you've got one semester<lb/>
behind you and only seven or so more to go. For<lb/>
you seniors, hang in there - in four months you'll<lb/>
be tossing your cap. For those of you who have<lb/>
transferred in here, welcome to your new home.<lb/>
We at TEC know that many of you are still in<lb/>
the frame of mind where you just want to lay<lb/>
around and watch football (or whatever else<lb/>
pleasures you), but it's time to crack open<lb/>
those books once again. It's hard to get back<lb/>
into the swing of things after just having nearly<lb/>
a month away from the classroom, so we're<lb/>
here to help you.<lb/>
eHow.com has a broad range of answers to<lb/>
stop procrastination (the most popular college<lb/>
activity) and a few of those will be highlighted<lb/>
now.<lb/>
When you're given an assignment even if the due<lb/>
date isn't until the end of the semester, start by<lb/>
either writing it on your calendar, programming it<lb/>
into your Palm Pilot, whatever. Just have it in mind.<lb/>
They then say that you should calculate about<lb/>
how long the assignment will take to complete.<lb/>
Schedule how long you'll spend working on the<lb/>
assignment each day or week, and don't let any<lb/>
other leisure activities get in the way.<lb/>
Some tips that eHow.com gives include:<lb/>
- For particularly long assignments, don't think<lb/>
too much about how much work it will actually<lb/>
take to finish. Instead, take small steps and have<lb/>
faith that they'll add up to something big. After<lb/>
all, as they say, a journey of a thousand miles<lb/>
begins with a single step.<lb/>
- Every person has his or her own style. Tweak<lb/>
this method in whatever way fits you best. For<lb/>
instance, if this process doesn't feel quite arm-<lb/>
, twisting enough, try marking off each day on<lb/>
the calendar when you get up that day.<lb/>
-Remember that you're not alone - lots of<lb/>
people are guilty of procrastinating.<lb/>
In our newspaper tomorrow, we will also point<lb/>
out various other ways to start the new year on a<lb/>
good note. We here at TEC want all of our peers<lb/>
to have an enjoyable and productive semes-<lb/>
ter. Once again, welcome back to the pirate<lb/>
nation. Summer will be here soon enough, but<lb/>
in the meantime, you might as well try your<lb/>
hardest to get the most out of your education.<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
God, monkeys and Rocky<lb/>
Banning Intelligent<lb/>
Design is downright<lb/>
stupid<lb/>
GARY MCCABE<lb/>
BITTER BOULEVARD<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/>
Being of sound mind and<lb/>
body<lb/>
It's been over 75 years since the<lb/>
 Scopes Monkey Trial, the extraordi-<lb/>
nary case which saw the Supreme<lb/>
Court of Tennessee overrule a lower<lb/>
court's judgment, ultimately lifting<lb/>
a ban prohibiting the teaching of<lb/>
Darwin's theory of evolution in<lb/>
public schools. Oh, what a differ-<lb/>
ence a couple of decades make.<lb/>
The tables were turned late<lb/>
in December when a U.S. District<lb/>
Court fudge issued a decision to<lb/>
a case more than a year in the<lb/>
making. The question at hand was<lb/>
whether a Pennsylvania public<lb/>
school system could teach Intel-<lb/>
ligent Design - an alternative to<lb/>
evolution as an explanation for<lb/>
our existence - in their biology<lb/>
classes. The ruling was a resound-<lb/>
ing "no<lb/>
If you've ever seen the Rocky<lb/>
series, the story of evolution follows<lb/>
a similar path. A true underdog<lb/>
- raw, undersized and dismissed by<lb/>
the boxing world - Rocky shocked<lb/>
the world when he knocked out<lb/>
the Heavyweight Champion of<lb/>
the World Apollo Creed in Rocky<lb/>
II. The Scopes Monkey Trial was<lb/>
evolution's prize fight and its vic-<lb/>
tory drastically changed the world<lb/>
of science in the same way that<lb/>
Rocky's victory changed the world<lb/>
of boxing.<lb/>
However, Rocky got lazy after<lb/>
years on top, sparsely defending his<lb/>
title against legitimate contenders.<lb/>
Evolution and its supporters have<lb/>
gotten just as lazy, opting to fight<lb/>
the teaching of an opposing theory<lb/>
rather than encourage new ideas<lb/>
in that field of science. And guess<lb/>
what - Rocky ducked fighting Club-<lb/>
ber Lang in Rocky III at first and he<lb/>
ended up getting his butt kicked by<lb/>
the young upstart.<lb/>
So am I saying that the theory<lb/>
of evolution isn't the best expla-<lb/>
nation for our existence and that<lb/>
Intelligent Design would kick<lb/>
its butt in a scientific debate?<lb/>
Absolutely not. Evolution has an<lb/>
overwhelming amount of scientific<lb/>
evidence supporting it and quite<lb/>
frankly, I'm 99 percent certain that<lb/>
evolution is the reason I'm sitting<lb/>
here at my computer typing this<lb/>
article, not because some Supreme<lb/>
Being created me so he'd have<lb/>
something to read.<lb/>
So why do I hesitate to dismiss<lb/>
all other theories about our exis-<lb/>
tence when I support evolution<lb/>
so fervently? It's because of that<lb/>
one percent of uncertainty still<lb/>
lingering in my head. After all, the<lb/>
theory of evolution is just that - a<lb/>
theory, not a scientific law. And<lb/>
while there is a ton of compelling<lb/>
evidence supporting evolution, it<lb/>
hasn't yet been proven with any<lb/>
absolute certainty. So until that day<lb/>
comes, I don't really feel that it's<lb/>
appropriate to disregard any other<lb/>
ideas brought to the table.<lb/>
I think it's ridiculous that a<lb/>
judge would interfere with a public<lb/>
school's decision to teach some-<lb/>
thing other than evolution - and<lb/>
I dare any detractors to bring up<lb/>
the separation of church and state<lb/>
alluded to in the U.S. Constitu-<lb/>
tion. That was written solely to<lb/>
keep religion from dominating the<lb/>
American government like it had<lb/>
done in several European nations.<lb/>
It hat nothing to do with control-<lb/>
ling some high school's science<lb/>
curriculum so I'm telling you in<lb/>
advance not to waste your time<lb/>
thinking that somehow it does.<lb/>
Granted, Intelligent Design is<lb/>
merely Creationism with a shiny<lb/>
new bow and a more science-<lb/>
minded title. If you've never heard<lb/>
of it, basically what proponents of<lb/>
Intelligent Design believe is that<lb/>
all of nature (the human body in<lb/>
particular) is far too complex to<lb/>
have been created by happenstance,<lb/>
or by natural selection, as Darwin<lb/>
suggests. So therefore, a divine agent<lb/>
had to have guided, or altogether<lb/>
created, all of humanity. What I<lb/>
think about the theory in terms of<lb/>
validity doesn't really matter - I've<lb/>
already given my stance.<lb/>
What 1 have a problem with<lb/>
is that valuable tax dollars and<lb/>
valuable time (again, this debate<lb/>
was in court for more than a<lb/>
year) were wasted just because<lb/>
a school board decided to beef<lb/>
up the curriculum by including<lb/>
a few new ideas for students to<lb/>
consider. And on what grounds<lb/>
was it denied? Is it because some<lb/>
students who don't believe in<lb/>
God would feel uncomfort-<lb/>
able learning about Intelligent<lb/>
Design?<lb/>
If that's the case, then what<lb/>
about the students who believe<lb/>
that God created the universe<lb/>
who have to sit through end-<lb/>
less lectures about evolution?<lb/>
I sincerely doubt that they feel<lb/>
any more comfortable in that<lb/>
situation, so if the courts want<lb/>
to keep Intelligent Design out of<lb/>
classrooms for that reason, evolu-<lb/>
tion has to go as well. I don't see<lb/>
much of a difference there.<lb/>
If it's a matter of scientific<lb/>
merit, I can honestly say that I'm<lb/>
no where near qualified to deter-<lb/>
mine whether Intelligent Design<lb/>
has any validity or not. There are<lb/>
many scientists who consider it<lb/>
a true science and many who<lb/>
consider it pseudoscience simply<lb/>
because any theory that involves<lb/>
God in some way is automatically<lb/>
suspect because it has never been<lb/>
proved or disproved with any cer-<lb/>
tainty that God even exists<lb/>
Clearly, banning the teach-<lb/>
ing of another theory - which<lb/>
obviously has its proponents - is<lb/>
a silly move. The logical solu-<lb/>
tion is simple - let's teach our<lb/>
students everything. Science<lb/>
classes should teach everything<lb/>
there is to know about evolu-<lb/>
tion because not only is it the<lb/>
most widely accepted theory,<lb/>
but there's a lot of evidence and<lb/>
information about it. And while<lb/>
teaching evolution, what's the<lb/>
big problem with saying, "Oh,<lb/>
here is another theory that some<lb/>
people believe Obviously,<lb/>
most students would agree with<lb/>
the theory with the best support-<lb/>
ing evidence (evolution) but it's<lb/>
not the school's place to make<lb/>
that judgment for them.<lb/>
Instead of preaching a theory<lb/>
to our students, let's lay out<lb/>
some options and let them make<lb/>
the decision- for themselves. It's<lb/>
not the school's place to set an<lb/>
agenda, whether it's promoting<lb/>
a religious idea or not. This is<lb/>
AmericaWe're not supposed to<lb/>
stifle ideas - that's what back-<lb/>
wards Islamic states do. We're<lb/>
better than that.<lb/>
I'm sure as the "liberal" col-<lb/>
umnist for TEC, you may be<lb/>
surprised that I'm supporting<lb/>
the Religious Right's side - but<lb/>
I'm not doing that at all. I'm<lb/>
supporting the true liberal ideal<lb/>
that's being attacked here - the<lb/>
freedom to believe whatever the<lb/>
hell you want to believe. That's<lb/>
what's really going on here.<lb/>
Tony Zoppo<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Sarah Bell<lb/>
Head Copy Editor<lb/>
Herb Sneed<lb/>
Photo Editor<lb/>
Alexander Marciniak<lb/>
Web Editor<lb/>
Brandon Hughes<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
April Barnes<lb/>
Asst Copy Editor<lb/>
Rachael Lotter<lb/>
Asst Photo Editor<lb/>
Dustin Jones<lb/>
Asst 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/>
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 editortotheeastcarolinian.com or to The East<lb/>
Carolinian, SelfHelp Building, Greenville, NC 27858-<lb/>
4353. Call 252-328-9238 for more information. One<lb/>
copy of TEC is free, each additional copy is $1. j<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
(KRT)  Like so many coal-<lb/>
field tragedies, the deaths of 12<lb/>
miners underground in West<lb/>
Virginia now seem to have been<lb/>
sadly predictable.<lb/>
The federal government<lb/>
knew the mine was dangerous.<lb/>
The company knew the mine<lb/>
was dangerous. And so did some<lb/>
of the men who worked there,<lb/>
according to their families.<lb/>
And, like other coalfield trag-<lb/>
edies that have riveted the nation<lb/>
for a few days, this one will prob-<lb/>
ably be forgotten all too soon.<lb/>
It was just a little more than<lb/>
four years ago that 13 miners died<lb/>
in an explosion in an underground<lb/>
mine in Brookwood, Ala. Then, as<lb/>
now, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao<lb/>
and officials of the U.S. Mine<lb/>
Safety and Health Administration<lb/>
promised a thorough investigation.<lb/>
They eventually levied $435,000<lb/>
in fines against the mine's oper-<lb/>
ator, Jim Walters Resources.<lb/>
But in November, the fines<lb/>
were reduced to just $3,000 by<lb/>
an administrative law judge who<lb/>
ruled that MSHA did not prove<lb/>
most of the violations.<lb/>
With that kind of record, it's<lb/>
little wonder that mining com-<lb/>
panies would feel free to flout<lb/>
safety laws, especially under the<lb/>
Bush administration, which has<lb/>
pushed "compliance assistance"<lb/>
over strict enforcement.<lb/>
At the Sago Mine where the<lb/>
12 died, the list of safety viola-<lb/>
tions was long and serious. Since<lb/>
May, federal inspectors had<lb/>
issued 13 unwarrantable failure<lb/>
orders, the most serious kind.<lb/>
Unwarrantable failures are<lb/>
issued when management knows<lb/>
about an unsafe condition and<lb/>
fails to fix it or when the danger is<lb/>
so obvious that there's no excuse.<lb/>
The citations against Sago<lb/>
included persistent problems with<lb/>
build-ups of flammable coal dust.<lb/>
The operation had been cited for<lb/>
not providing adequate ventilation<lb/>
to keep the mine clear of deadly<lb/>
combustible gases and failing to<lb/>
insulate electric wires. Sparks from<lb/>
electrical equipment can ignite<lb/>
coal dust and methane gas, thus<lb/>
causing underground explosions.<lb/>
It was an explosion early<lb/>
Monday, as the mine reopened<lb/>
after a holiday break, that trapped<lb/>
13 miners underground.<lb/>
The cause of the explosion still<lb/>
is undetermined. From what little<lb/>
we know, the miners did what<lb/>
they could to save themselves.<lb/>
They hung a curtain designed<lb/>
to block the spread of deadly<lb/>
carbon monoxide, and each had a<lb/>
personal rescuer that can provide<lb/>
oxygen for a short time.<lb/>
Twelve miners were found<lb/>
together behind the curtain; the one<lb/>
survivor was taken from the mine<lb/>
unconscious but moaning, accord-<lb/>
ing to The Associated Press. Another<lb/>
miner died elsewhere in the mine.<lb/>
Our hearts go out to the fami-<lb/>
lies, whose suffering was com-<lb/>
pounded by a false report that<lb/>
the 12 had been found alive.<lb/>
The jubilation lasted three<lb/>
hours before officials from the<lb/>
mining company, International<lb/>
Coal Group, informed the families<lb/>
that only one miner had survived.<lb/>
With that backdrop, the<lb/>
Investigation begins under a<lb/>
cloud of mistrust and suspicion.<lb/>
That's a good reason for<lb/>
MSHA to convene a public hear-<lb/>
ing into the causes of this disas-<lb/>
ter, as mine safety advocate and<lb/>
former state and federal official<lb/>
Tony - urges.<lb/>
The families of the miners<lb/>
and the public deserve to hear<lb/>
firsthand why their loved ones<lb/>
died, and that won't happen<lb/>
without a public hearing.<lb/>
Pirate Rant<lb/>
Am I the only person who didn't realize classes<lb/>
started Friday?<lb/>
Bring back the long lines, Higher One sucks.<lb/>
Why does ECU insist on starting the spring semes-<lb/>
ter on a Friday? It is so stupid. We should start on a<lb/>
Wednesday like we do in the fall.<lb/>
Why is Christmas so much more fun when you are<lb/>
a little kid? Growing up sucks.<lb/>
Okay, I don't go to ECU but I just wanted to say that<lb/>
this whole rant thing is almost the coolest ever! I<lb/>
want one  (University of Tennessee student!) Go<lb/>
Pirates!<lb/>
To the person who wanted to know about the hockey<lb/>
team's upcoming schedule: We'll be playing our next<lb/>
home game Jan. 27 at 9:30 p.m. at Bladez across from<lb/>
the Overton's on Red Banks Rd. We get a couple hun-<lb/>
dred people to come out to the games, and we always<lb/>
want more! Hopefully we'll see you there!<lb/>
To the girl who took my laundry out of the dryer and<lb/>
folded them for me on the last Wednesday before<lb/>
Christmas break in Aycock's laundry room, thank<lb/>
you very much for being so nice and considerate.<lb/>
You are the greatest!<lb/>
Thanks to the girl who stole my doorknob! Now I<lb/>
can't get into my room!<lb/>
To the person who ranted about finals not being the<lb/>
end of the world. I don't know what class you're in<lb/>
but my final exam is a big percentage of my grade.<lb/>
So yeah, failing would have been the end of the<lb/>
world!<lb/>
Thought you might want to ask administration what<lb/>
they were thinking when they scheduled the roof of<lb/>
Austin to be redone during a day of a final. I'm not<lb/>
talking about tight construction either. Imagine the<lb/>
whole building shaking and being pounded on a<lb/>
floor above you! What were they thinking?<lb/>
I cannot deal with safe ride. Every time I've ever<lb/>
called them they say we'll be there in 10 minutes<lb/>
and they either take much longer or don't show up.<lb/>
When Safe Ride comes when they're suppose to, 111<lb/>
stop complaining.<lb/>
Here's to you Gary McCabe. We may not always<lb/>
agree with what you say, but you've the balls to say<lb/>
what you think. It's easy for people to whine but<lb/>
not have the guts do anything to get their thoughts<lb/>
out there. And thanks for giving my roommate a<lb/>
shout out.<lb/>
I thought the class was called Shakespeare Tragedies,<lb/>
not Shakespeare as it relates to Christianity.<lb/>
I am the one who leaves parties because I am tired of<lb/>
listening to loud, annoying, drunk freshmen girls.<lb/>
Who drops a soccer program because they aren't win-<lb/>
ning? Hey! You know what the football team wasn't<lb/>
winning for how long? And this season wasn't all that<lb/>
better, just a minor improvement. So, I find myself<lb/>
asking why didn't the football team get dropped? Hey<lb/>
Terry Holland, why don't you just get a new coacn<lb/>
for the soccer team until someone works out, that's<lb/>
what you're best at.<lb/>
What's the deal with the clock tower? For once<lb/>
I'm here at 12 and there is no clown, and the thing<lb/>
doesn't even chime!<lb/>
Why not open up parking for everyone over the<lb/>
break? Some of us actually devote our lives to our<lb/>
studies and don't leave just because of a national<lb/>
observance.<lb/>
Since when does ECU Parking tow on Saturdays? The<lb/>
school is closed, right? Back in 2000 we used to park<lb/>
our cars on campus at 7 p.m. on Friday, and now the<lb/>
weekend's not safe until Sunday afternoon!<lb/>
Why didn't I get the memo that wearing "mix-<lb/>
match" colors were in style?<lb/>
Why did they cut the men's soccer team? The football<lb/>
and basketball team aren't doing any better.<lb/>
TEC really needs a new movie reviewer. Was there<lb/>
really a need to mention in the Aeon Flux review that<lb/>
he thought it was going to be as bad as Rent when<lb/>
the two movies are in no way comparable? One is a<lb/>
musical and the other is based after a TV show!<lb/>
I never could have imagined what a re-hydrated<lb/>
mummified corpse might taste like, but after eating<lb/>
the pears in West End, I think I have a pretty good<lb/>
idea.<lb/>
I think Tony McKee should go undercover and inves-<lb/>
tigate SGA's blatant abuse of power.<lb/>
Maybe I want to wear my State, UNC or Duke shirts<lb/>
because they're all in the ACC unlike ECU! And<lb/>
maybe if JJ Redick were to see me walking down the<lb/>
street in a Duke shirt, he would yell at me!<lb/>
Go Panthers!<lb/>
Graphic design students are a whole lot more com-<lb/>
puter nerds than they are artists - have you seen the<lb/>
crap they call art?<lb/>
Dear Java City and Aramark - Just because you're<lb/>
convenient to us students doesn't mean that you<lb/>
have to buy the cheapest crappiest coffee beans on<lb/>
the market.<lb/>
I can't wait until the greatest station in the world<lb/>
comes back - WZMB. The station rules!<lb/>
Hey administration! Thanks for cutting our break<lb/>
short by making us come back on Friday! What a<lb/>
waste of another couple days with our families!<lb/>
Should my roommate have been kicked out for<lb/>
having fireworks under her bed when it wasn't even<lb/>
her fault? I realize it is in the rulebook but who fol-<lb/>
lows the rules? When plenty of underage people are<lb/>
getting busted for possessing alcohol? Come on, this<lb/>
is a little ridiculous!<lb/>
To the girl who doesn't know if a guy likes her or not<lb/>
- If you've kissed him (or anything more), he likes<lb/>
you, but he may still be deciding whether it's going<lb/>
to be friends or more. He may be dating other women<lb/>
as well. If you like him, fight. Don't be lazy and don't<lb/>
get mad like a little baby, it's not attractive.<lb/>
The Constitution makes this a country of laws and<lb/>
equal rights. That means your beliefs are no better<lb/>
than anyone else's. Believe in whatever you want<lb/>
Marcus Vick is just as bad as his brother.<lb/>
editor's Note: The note Rant Is on anonymous way for students and staff m the<lb/>
&amp;-Vcommunltytowkethekopmiom.Submisslonsambesubmmedanonymo<lb/>
online at www.theemtcarollnlan.com, or emailed to edltortheeastcamllnlan<lb/>
com. The editor reserves the light to edit opinions for content and brevity.<lb/>

<pb facs="00059379_0005"/><lb/>
"mix-<lb/>
Life<lb/>
Page A5 features@theeastcarolinlan.com 252.328.6366 CAROLYN SCANDURA Features Editor KRISTIN MURNANE Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY January 10, 2006<lb/>
This week In Features:<lb/>
Look for<lb/>
-How to stay healthy in 2006<lb/>
-Organizational skills for success<lb/>
-Celebrity Profile: Heath Ledger<lb/>
-Golden Globes Preview<lb/>
-People Poll: Brad and Angelina<lb/>
-Top 10 Spring Music Choices<lb/>
Names in the News:<lb/>
Will Brad be there?<lb/>
Robert De Niro's new film, The<lb/>
Good Shepherd begins filming in<lb/>
the Dominican Republic next week.<lb/>
The film, based on the history of<lb/>
the CIA, stars Angelina Jolie as<lb/>
the wife of one of the agency's<lb/>
founders, James Wilson, who will<lb/>
be played by Matt Damon. No word<lb/>
yet on whether Jolie's "chum" Brad<lb/>
Pitt will be along for the one-week<lb/>
shoot. De Niro is stepping into the<lb/>
director's chair for the first time<lb/>
since the acclaimed A Bronx Tale.<lb/>
Airing out<lb/>
We can all breathe easier now that<lb/>
pop star Lindsay Lohan has been<lb/>
released from a Miami hospital<lb/>
after a bout with asthma. Lohan had<lb/>
been in Florida to ring in the new<lb/>
year. According to her mother and<lb/>
manager, Dina Lohan, Lindsay was<lb/>
heading home to New York to recover<lb/>
after her discharge Thursday. No<lb/>
longer content with the sugary roles<lb/>
she played in Herbie: Fully Loaded<lb/>
and Mean Girls, Lohan is diving into<lb/>
deeper waters with Robert Altman's<lb/>
A Prairie Home Companion, based on<lb/>
Garrison Keillor's radio show. Lohan<lb/>
will join the likes of Woody Harrelson, a<lb/>
Kevin Kline, Tommy Lee Jones and 5<lb/>
Keillor himself in the film. Other Lohan <lb/>
projects include Bobby, a film about 1<lb/>
Robert Kennedy that Emilio Estevez I<lb/>
will direct, and Chapter 27, about 3<lb/>
Mark David Chapman, who killed<lb/>
John Lennon 25 years ago.<lb/>
Oh, him again<lb/>
The best-selling book of 2005<lb/>
was - maestro, drum roll please<lb/>
- Harry Potter and the Half-Blood<lb/>
Prince, the sixth installment in J.K.<lb/>
Rowling's series, according to the<lb/>
Book Standard, a leading source<lb/>
of information in the publishing<lb/>
industry. Filling out the top 10: A<lb/>
Million Little Pieces by James Frey,<lb/>
The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseinl,<lb/>
1776 by David McCullough, The Da<lb/>
Vinci Code by Dan Brown, The World<lb/>
Is Flat by Thomas L Friedman, The<lb/>
Purpose-Driven Life by Rick Warren,<lb/>
Angels &amp; Demons by Dan Brown, Vou,<lb/>
The Owner's Manual by Mehmet Oz<lb/>
and Michael Roizen and Eldest by<lb/>
Christopher Paolini.<lb/>
Still Naked<lb/>
Kelly Reilly, the Irish actress who<lb/>
plays one of several lovely, unclothed<lb/>
starlets in Mrs. Henderson Presents,<lb/>
invited her parents to the film's<lb/>
London premiere. They are "very<lb/>
proud she told USA Today. Still, it<lb/>
couldn't have been easy for them<lb/>
to sit there along with 600 other<lb/>
people and see their daughter nude.<lb/>
Afterward, she took her dad to a bar<lb/>
"and gave him a stiff drink. He was<lb/>
absolutely fine No word on how her<lb/>
mother self-medicated. The film's<lb/>
director, Stephen Frears, wanted the<lb/>
showgirls to have the kind of bodies<lb/>
that women had during World War<lb/>
II the setting for the story so he<lb/>
discouraged the actresses from<lb/>
getting buff (as in muscular.) Reilly<lb/>
told USA Today, "I thought it was<lb/>
important that we weren't made to<lb/>
not look real<lb/>
shines with silver<lb/>
Joyce Yang coming to<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
MEREDITH STEWART<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
ECU welcomes 19-year-old<lb/>
Joyce Yang to the Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium Jan. 19. She is the winner<lb/>
of the silver medal at the 12th<lb/>
Van Cliburn International Piano<lb/>
Competition and will be per-<lb/>
forming in the S. Rudolph Alex-<lb/>
ander Performing Arts Series<lb/>
recital at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Yang was the youngest of<lb/>
the Van Cliburn Competition's<lb/>
35 contestants and was clearly<lb/>
favored by the audience. The<lb/>
Dallas Morning News described<lb/>
her as "a brilliant pianist" and<lb/>
her performance as "a million-<lb/>
volt presence onstage She also<lb/>
won the Steven De Groote Memo-<lb/>
rial Award for the "Best Perfor-<lb/>
mance of Chamber Music" along<lb/>
with the Beverly Taylor Smith<lb/>
Award for the "Best Performance<lb/>
of a New Work This young lady<lb/>
has captured and amazed many,<lb/>
and now it's ECU'S chance to wel-<lb/>
come her and attend her recital.<lb/>
The Van Cliburn Interna-<lb/>
tional Piano Competition stands<lb/>
as the most prestigious classi-<lb/>
cal piano contest in the world.<lb/>
Academy Award winner Anthony<lb/>
Hopkins hosted this competition<lb/>
in 2005 in Fort Worth, Texas.<lb/>
Yang's winning performances<lb/>
included Beethoven's Piano Con-<lb/>
certo No. 3 inC Minor, Op. 37 and<lb/>
Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 2<lb/>
in G Minor, Op.16.<lb/>
It was "Yang's finest moment,<lb/>
Above is Joyce Yang, a 19-year-old pianist who is sure to impress ECU. achieving a spine-tingling effect<lb/>
Advice for roommates<lb/>
hailed Susan Elliot of Musical-<lb/>
America.com.<lb/>
Joyce Yang was born Seoul,<lb/>
Korea and took her first piano<lb/>
lesson at the age of four. She<lb/>
quickly took a liking to the<lb/>
piano and she soon received<lb/>
one as a birthday gift. After<lb/>
much practice and dedication,<lb/>
Yang won several national piano<lb/>
competitions in Korea. By the<lb/>
time she was 10 years old, Yang<lb/>
entered the Korean National<lb/>
Conservatory and made multiple<lb/>
appearances in Seoul and Taejon<lb/>
playing recitals and leaving the<lb/>
crowd in awe.<lb/>
Yang moved to the United<lb/>
States in 1997 and began the pre-<lb/>
college division of the Juilliard<lb/>
School of Music in New York.<lb/>
It was only her first year when<lb/>
she won the Pre-College Divi-<lb/>
sion Concerto Competition. As<lb/>
a result, she was able to perform<lb/>
the Haydn Concerto in D Major<lb/>
with the Juilliard Pre-college<lb/>
Chamber Orchestra. Three years<lb/>
later, she won the Philadelphia<lb/>
Greenfield Competition, which<lb/>
opened a doorway to many new<lb/>
and exciting recitals.<lb/>
Among her many accom-<lb/>
plishments is performing on the<lb/>
Rising Stars Recital Series at both<lb/>
the Gilmore and the Ravinia Fes-<lb/>
tivals. She has also been honored<lb/>
by the La Jolla Music Society<lb/>
and has been invited to perform<lb/>
several pieces with the Grammy<lb/>
Award winning Takacs Quartet<lb/>
this season. She has debuted<lb/>
with the Albany, Baltimore, Fort<lb/>
Worth, Knoxville, Long Island<lb/>
and Houston Symphony Orches-<lb/>
tras. Since 2005, she has been<lb/>
Returning from holiday break is a great time to discuss new rules and do some much-needed cleaning.<lb/>
How to make the best of<lb/>
the situation<lb/>
TOMEKA STEELE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Local Concerts:<lb/>
General Johnson and Chairmen of the<lb/>
Board will be performing at the Lincoln<lb/>
Theatre in Raleigh Friday, Jan. 13.<lb/>
Nada Surf will be at the Cat's Cradle<lb/>
in Carrboro Friday, Feb. 10<lb/>
The Pietasters will be at the Cat's<lb/>
Cradle in Carrboro Saturday, Feb. 11.<lb/>
Southern funny man Larry the Cable<lb/>
Guy will be performing at the RBC<lb/>
Center in Raleigh Friday, Feb. 11.<lb/>
Matisyahu will be performing at the<lb/>
Cat's Cradle in Carrboro Wednesday,<lb/>
Feb. 15.<lb/>
Keith Urban and Pat Green will be<lb/>
performing at the Charlotte Bobcats<lb/>
Arena Thursday, Feb. 16.<lb/>
O.A.R. will be at Ovens Auditorium in<lb/>
Charlotte Tuesday, Feb. 21.<lb/>
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club aid special<lb/>
guests Befant will be at the Cat's Cradle<lb/>
in Carrboro Wednesday, Feb. 22.<lb/>
G. Love and Special Sauce will be<lb/>
performing at the Lincoln Theatre in<lb/>
Raleigh Friday, March 3.<lb/>
This is the start of a new<lb/>
semester and with that can come<lb/>
a new roommate. We've all expe-<lb/>
rienced the roommate from hell -<lb/>
the one who never pays their part<lb/>
of the bills on time and forgets<lb/>
to flush the toilet. For those who<lb/>
haven't experienced this person,<lb/>
consider yourself extremely<lb/>
lucky. There are ways to avoid<lb/>
tension and conflict and have a<lb/>
resolution to roommate problems.<lb/>
The trick to keep problems<lb/>
in the apartment or dorm room<lb/>
from escalating is to address<lb/>
problems ahead of time or right<lb/>
when they occur. Don't let the<lb/>
little things that bother you fester<lb/>
because it will only get worse.<lb/>
Besides having a lease for an<lb/>
apartment, roommates should<lb/>
draw up "house rules It may<lb/>
seem childish, but there's a<lb/>
need for them, especially when<lb/>
bringing two people from<lb/>
possibly two very different<lb/>
backgrounds together in a<lb/>
small space. House rules can be<lb/>
especially beneficial for dorm-<lb/>
mates since the space is so limited.<lb/>
Both roommates should<lb/>
make a list of the things they<lb/>
want done and things they don't<lb/>
want to happen in the dorm or<lb/>
apartment. Then both should<lb/>
read over each other's list and<lb/>
ask questions or get the specifics<lb/>
if necessary. From there, the two<lb/>
lists should be compiled into one<lb/>
list where both parties sign.<lb/>
Some important things that<lb/>
should be included are smoking<lb/>
preferences, how the bills will<lb/>
be split, how food will work and<lb/>
anything else of importance to<lb/>
you. Even the best of friends<lb/>
should do this because one never<lb/>
truly knows someone until they<lb/>
live with them.<lb/>
House rules are important<lb/>
because things like bills are<lb/>
a necessary evil in the real<lb/>
world. When they aren't paid<lb/>
on one person's side, it becomes<lb/>
see ROOMMATE page A6<lb/>
ECU School of Art and Design<lb/>
Jerry Seinfeld will be performing w<lb/>
at the Progress Energy Center for f<lb/>
Performing Arts in Raleigh Friday<lb/>
March 10.<lb/>
Martina McBride will be at the RBC<lb/>
Center in Raleigh Sunday, April 2.<lb/>
A guide to their offerings<lb/>
SARAH CAMPBELL<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The piece featured above is just one of the many<lb/>
intricate pieces that can be found at Gray Gallery.<lb/>
It is doubtful that many students know ECU'S<lb/>
School of Art and Design is the largest art school<lb/>
in North Carolina and one of the largest in the<lb/>
Southeast. Students are offered a variety of con-<lb/>
centrations which are tailored to each student's<lb/>
specific needs. Concentrations range from paint-<lb/>
ing to weaving design. The school is home to more<lb/>
than 700 undergraduate students and more than<lb/>
50 graduate students.<lb/>
Since 1962, the School of Art and Design has<lb/>
been accredited by the National Association of<lb/>
Schools, which is an honor because the ECU school<lb/>
is the only such accredited institution in NC and<lb/>
one of only 220 in the United States.<lb/>
"The School of Art and Design is dedicated<lb/>
to the idea that educating men and women in<lb/>
the visual arts constitutes a major responsibility<lb/>
in the total mission of higher education at ECU<lb/>
states the School of Art and Design's Web site.<lb/>
"The curriculum in both the undergraduate and<lb/>
graduate programs encourages experimentation,<lb/>
the development of ideas and problem solving in<lb/>
areas such as fine arts, applied arts, and art educa-<lb/>
tion and art history. The nearly 50 faculty and seven<lb/>
staff members believe that our graduates will make<lb/>
positive contributions to their communities and<lb/>
excel in their chosen professions is the School<lb/>
of Art and Design's commitment as stated at ecu.<lb/>
eduart.<lb/>
see ECU ART page A6<lb/>
working with the Indianapolis<lb/>
Chamber Orchestra as well as the<lb/>
Arkansas, Midland, Pacific and<lb/>
Tucson Symphony Orchestras,<lb/>
and she plans to work with them<lb/>
through 2006.<lb/>
To be so young, this<lb/>
extraordinary girl has touched<lb/>
many and created a new light for all<lb/>
who aspire to be successful one day.<lb/>
Joyce Yang will be perform-<lb/>
ing with a variety of other tal-<lb/>
ented musicians at the Wright<lb/>
Auditorium, so be sure to reserve<lb/>
your tickets today. The tickets<lb/>
are $10 for ECU students, $12 for<lb/>
youth, $22 for ECU faculty and<lb/>
staff, and $24 for the public. For<lb/>
groups of 15 or more, the prices<lb/>
will be $9 each for students, $11<lb/>
for youth, $21 for ECU faculty<lb/>
and staff, and $22 for the public.<lb/>
Groups are awarded one extra<lb/>
ticket for every 20 people. The<lb/>
Performing Arts Series will pro-<lb/>
vide a shuttle, and tickets are<lb/>
also available to assure a safe ride<lb/>
to and from Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
<lb/>
Central Ticket<lb/>
Office Hours<lb/>
Mon. - Frl.<lb/>
9 a.m. - 6 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. - Sun.<lb/>
1 p.m. - 5 p.m.<lb/>
Telephone: 326-4788<lb/>
Online: ecu.eduecuartscto.cfm<lb/>
Writer Opinion:<lb/>
Six predictions for '06<lb/>
Daniel Brock, a features writer, predicts sun and rain for today.<lb/>
One guy's view into the<lb/>
future for all to read<lb/>
DANIEL BROCK<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
I'm not clairvoyant. In fact,<lb/>
I am an average gambler at best.<lb/>
However, I have some hunches<lb/>
on a range of subjects, and I'm<lb/>
going to go out on a limb by<lb/>
making several (predictions,<lb/>
varying in boldness, for the<lb/>
Year of our Lord, 2006. Please<lb/>
keep in mind that these are<lb/>
my opinions, and they in no<lb/>
way reflect the opinions of<lb/>
anyone else at ECU or at TEC.<lb/>
Enough disclaimers: Prepare<lb/>
for a glimpse into the future.<lb/>
Sports:<lb/>
Terry Holland will fire at<lb/>
least three people. For those<lb/>
employed by the ECU Athletic<lb/>
Department, you're on notice.<lb/>
Terry Holland has axed more<lb/>
people in his short time here<lb/>
than Gimli did in the entire<lb/>
Lord of the Rings Trilogy. The<lb/>
head men's football, basketball<lb/>
and baseball coaches - not<lb/>
to mention the entire men's<lb/>
soccer program - have gotten<lb/>
the boot under Holland's reign.<lb/>
Holland's employees should<lb/>
start wearing the T-shirts made<lb/>
popular by late 90s professional<lb/>
wrestler Bill Goldberg with the<lb/>
slogan "Who's Next?" embla-<lb/>
zoned across the front. Cuts<lb/>
are coming and they're coming<lb/>
quickly. Coaches and custodi-<lb/>
ans, beware. Heck, knowing<lb/>
the broad strokes Holland<lb/>
works with, I might get fired<lb/>
for this article.<lb/>
As a side prediction: In<lb/>
a surprising move, Terry<lb/>
Holland may at some<lb/>
point fire himself this year!<lb/>
Movies:<lb/>
Rachel McAdams will be<lb/>
the most popular actress in<lb/>
the world. Rachel McAdams is<lb/>
ridiculously hot. So very, very<lb/>
hot. Inconceivably hot. Oh,<lb/>
and she's a good actress too.<lb/>
It is unfortunate that she's<lb/>
not American, so we can take<lb/>
no credit, but my hat is off<lb/>
to Canada. Thank you. She's<lb/>
been in some amazing movies<lb/>
during the past two years, and<lb/>
her star is going to continue<lb/>
to rise. Some of the triumphs<lb/>
she has appeared in recently<lb/>
include Mean Girls, The Note-<lb/>
book, Wedding Crashers and<lb/>
The Family Stone. McAdams is<lb/>
on her way to super-stardom<lb/>
whilst her Mean Girls co-star,<lb/>
Lindsay Lohan, is on her way<lb/>
to rehab. Rachel McAdams is<lb/>
my pick for Starlet of the Year,<lb/>
not that this really carries any<lb/>
weight.<lb/>
Music:<lb/>
The Black-Eyed Peas will<lb/>
spontaneously combust. You<lb/>
can only suck at something<lb/>
for so long. At some point,<lb/>
everyone is going to have their<lb/>
fill of the Black-Eyed Peas.<lb/>
Heeding their own advice to,<lb/>
'Get retarded in here the BEP's<lb/>
have filled the airwaves with<lb/>
more inanity than anyone<lb/>
since Vanilla Ice. They look<lb/>
weird, they sound weird, their<lb/>
songs are about weird things.<lb/>
They are literally un-listenable.<lb/>
The day they spontaneously<lb/>
combust will, for millions<lb/>
around the globe, be a day<lb/>
filled with much rejoicing and<lb/>
celebrating in the streets.<lb/>
However, for dozens, their<lb/>
favorite group will have<lb/>
ceased to be. Don't worry<lb/>
- there's always Chingy.<lb/>
Politics:<lb/>
George Bush will recover<lb/>
in a big way. Admittedly, 2005<lb/>
was not G-Dub's finest hour. A<lb/>
see SIX pape A7<lb/>

<pb facs="00059379_0006"/><lb/>
MGEA6<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  FEATURES<lb/>
1-10-06<lb/>
1-10-06<lb/>
Roommate<lb/>
from page A5<lb/>
a hassle for the responsible<lb/>
roommate who doesn't want<lb/>
the electricity to get cut off.<lb/>
This contract of house rules<lb/>
can always come in handy just<lb/>
in case you have to take some<lb/>
sort of legal action. It's a harsh<lb/>
thing to say, but it happens<lb/>
more often than you think.<lb/>
Another tool to use when<lb/>
dealing with a roommate from<lb/>
hell is just to speak up. There<lb/>
are those people you always<lb/>
hear complaining that their<lb/>
roommate is always loud when<lb/>
they are trying to study, but<lb/>
they themselves never say a<lb/>
word. If you want or need your<lb/>
roommate to do something and<lb/>
you think it will offend them<lb/>
if you say something, simply<lb/>
update the house rules and have<lb/>
them take a look at it. Talking<lb/>
the problems out right away is<lb/>
more effective than letting the<lb/>
problems build up over time.<lb/>
If things have gotten so<lb/>
heated between roommates<lb/>
that talking things out is<lb/>
impossible, it's better to bring in<lb/>
a non-biased party to mediate<lb/>
the situation. Preferably you<lb/>
want to choose someone who<lb/>
will be honest and possibly knows<lb/>
both you and your roommate.<lb/>
Living with a really good<lb/>
friend often isn't as good of an<lb/>
idea as it may seem. It seems<lb/>
rational, but it could be the<lb/>
death of a friendship. It's always<lb/>
best to room with someone<lb/>
you know and trust but don't<lb/>
hang around all the time.<lb/>
"My sophomore year, I<lb/>
roomed with a good friend and<lb/>
it was horrible. We basically<lb/>
drove each other crazy. Things<lb/>
went back to normal the next<lb/>
year when we weren't room-<lb/>
mates. I wouldn't advise living<lb/>
with a really good friend said<lb/>
senior CDFR major Tieren Evans.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
ECU All from page A5<lb/>
Students must go through<lb/>
a portfolio review before being<lb/>
accepted into the program of<lb/>
their choice. However, freshman<lb/>
admission does not require stu-<lb/>
dents to submit such a portfolio<lb/>
until they have completed the<lb/>
foundational courses. Upon port-<lb/>
folio submission, admission into<lb/>
these programs is limited and<lb/>
competitive. Therefore, students<lb/>
should have other alternatives in<lb/>
mind when applying.<lb/>
Once accepted into the pro-<lb/>
gram, students take classes in<lb/>
their concentration area and<lb/>
must submit a senior show before<lb/>
graduating. The senior show is<lb/>
exhibited in the Wellington B.<lb/>
Gray Gallery, which is located<lb/>
inside the home of the School of<lb/>
Art and Design, the Jenkins Fine<lb/>
Arts Building.<lb/>
The Gray Gallery exhibits<lb/>
rotating student, faculty and vis-<lb/>
iting artists' work throughout the<lb/>
year. A new exhibition, the North<lb/>
Carolina Sculpture Exhibition,<lb/>
will begin Jan. 9 and run until<lb/>
Feb. 3. The exhibition will fea-<lb/>
ture work by faculty throughout<lb/>
the NC University System.<lb/>
Several symposium presenta-<lb/>
tions will also be held during this<lb/>
time period. Richard Hunt, Hoss<lb/>
Haley and Jesus Morales will<lb/>
lecture in Speight Auditorium,<lb/>
which is inside the Jenkins Fine<lb/>
Arts Center.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
January 3,2006<lb/>
Dear Student Organization LeaderAdvisor:<lb/>
We are excited as a new office "Student Activities Center" to provide support to our 280 student<lb/>
organizations at East Carolina University. Over the past several months, my office has talked with<lb/>
numerous students about their needs within their student organizations. The top needs expressed<lb/>
were:<lb/>
 Improve space reservation process.<lb/>
 Increase communication among student organizations.<lb/>
 Better training and orientation for student leaders and faculty advisors.<lb/>
In response to these needs, the following process has been implemented.<lb/>
EARLY STUDENT ORGANIZATION REGISTRATION FOR 2006-2007:<lb/>
 All student organizations who desire to reserve space "early" for fall 2006 must register by<lb/>
February 28,2006.<lb/>
 All student organizations who desire to receive SGA funding must register by February 28,<lb/>
2006.<lb/>
REGULAR STUDENT ORGANIZATION REGISTRATION FOR 2006-2007<lb/>
 The final deadline for student organizations to register for 2006-2007 is September 29,2006.<lb/>
 Remember that student organizations must be registered to received SGA fund and reserve a<lb/>
space in MSC.<lb/>
Please know that this new process will be most beneficial to student organizations and will help<lb/>
alleviate registration and room reservation concerns. January I, 2006 will begin the early student<lb/>
organization process for fall 2006-spring 2007. Please view the important dates listed below regarding<lb/>
the new registration process for the upcoming year.<lb/>
IMPORTANT DATES (2006):<lb/>
 (January W)<lb/>
 (January 9-13th)<lb/>
 (February 28th)<lb/>
 (March 20th-3Ut)<lb/>
 (March 28-29th)<lb/>
 (April 1,2006)<lb/>
 (April 7,2006)<lb/>
 (September 29th)<lb/>
06-07 Early Student Organization Registration Begins<lb/>
Information sessions for registrationSGA funding.<lb/>
Deadline for 06-07 Early Student Organization Registration.<lb/>
06-07 Early Space Reservation<lb/>
(ONLY REGISTERED STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS)<lb/>
Founder's Day Student Leader Installation<lb/>
Mandatory Organizational Training Session<lb/>
SGA Annual Funding Deadline<lb/>
Final deadline for returning Student Organizations to register.<lb/>
The Student Activities Center is here to assist you in anyway we can. Please feel free to stop by our<lb/>
office in 109 Mcndenhall Student Center or email us at studentaclivities@ecu.edu.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Levy Brown Jr.<lb/>
Assistant Director for Student Activities &amp; Organizations<lb/>
AT BARRE,<lb/>
ITD.<lb/>
Celebrating 30 Years<lb/>
In business As Greenville's<lb/>
Premier Pancewear Shop<lb/>
Ballet, Tap and Jazz Shoes<lb/>
Leotards, Unitards, Tights<lb/>
Warm ups, Wraps &amp; Skirts<lb/>
For every dancer, for every budget!<lb/>
Arlington Village  756-6670 MonFri. 10-6, Sat. 10-4<lb/>
Visit our new website www.atbarre.com<lb/>
Six<lb/>
fro<lb/>
string of<lb/>
conspirei<lb/>
Express,<lb/>
to be ful<lb/>
all, he's<lb/>
concessk<lb/>
going to<lb/>
in this c<lb/>
- will pro<lb/>
Perhaps<lb/>
hopeful t<lb/>
of Iraq, 11<lb/>
had qui<lb/>
removinj<lb/>
Wyndham Court<lb/>
Dockside &amp; Bradford Creek<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
If ((  <lb/>
of poor maintenance f <lb/>
f Misy neighbors . oECU rking hasse$<lb/>
oPersonnel, of aft <lb/>
tugrtolandlords. of <lb/>
SWalkatWerenever '<lb/>
You<lb/>
OURCE<lb/>
OFFE<lb/>
Caroli<lb/>
561-RENT or 752-8561<lb/>
104 D Wyndham Cir.  wvvw.pinnaclepropertymanagement.com<lb/>
US TOURNAMENT TIME!<lb/>
You could represent ECU at Regional Competitions in<lb/>
Bowling  Chess  Table Tennis  Spades<lb/>
Poetry Slam  Nine Ball Dance Dance Revolution<lb/>
Tournament winners will be awarded trophies and the opportunity to<lb/>
represent ECU at regional competitions to be held at East Carolina<lb/>
University Greenville, NC the weekend of Feb. 17-19, 2006.<lb/>
All expenses paid by Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
A YOU THE BEST?<lb/>
If you think you could be, we want to give you the opportunity to find out!<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
k<lb/>
Chess<lb/>
Sat. Jan. 21 10:00 AM-5:00 PM<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Social Room<lb/>
r<lb/>
Bowling<lb/>
Thur. Jan. 26 6:00 PM<lb/>
The Outer Limitz<lb/>
Mendenhall Bowling Center<lb/>
(Women's and Men's Divisions)<lb/>
Spades<lb/>
Fri. Jan. 27 6:tyRfe<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Cente<lb/>
Great Room 1<lb/>
Billiards<lb/>
(Nine Ball)<lb/>
Mon. Jan.23 6:00 PM<lb/>
Mendenhall Billiards Center<lb/>
(Men's and Women's Divisions)<lb/>
Table Tennis -<lb/>
Tues. Jan. 17 6:00 PM<lb/>
Mendenhall Social Room<lb/>
(Men's and Women's Singles<lb/>
Team Divisions)<lb/>
Poetry Slam<lb/>
Thur. Jan. 19 6:00 PM<lb/>
Mendenhall Billiards<lb/>
i<lb/>
Dance Dance Revolution<lb/>
Mon. Jan. 30 6:00 PM<lb/>
Outer Limitz<lb/>
Game room<lb/>
There is a $2.00 registration fee for each tournament. Registration forms are<lb/>
available at the Mendenhall Billiards Center, and the Outer Limitz Bowling<lb/>
center located on the ground floor of Mendenhall Student Center. Call the<lb/>
Recreation Program Office, 328.4738 for more information.<lb/>

<pb facs="00059379_0007"/><lb/>
1-10-06<lb/>
1-10-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  FEATURES<lb/>
PAGE A7<lb/>
es<lb/>
ts<lb/>
ts<lb/>
jet!<lb/>
10-4<lb/>
SIX from page A5<lb/>
string of missteps and bad luck<lb/>
conspired to slow down the W<lb/>
Express, but in 2006 it's going<lb/>
to be full steam ahead. First of<lb/>
all, he's going to make some<lb/>
concessions about Iraq, but he's<lb/>
going to do it his way, which<lb/>
in this case - as in many cases<lb/>
- will probably be the right way.<lb/>
Perhaps we shouldn't be too<lb/>
hopeful that he's going to get out<lb/>
of Iraq, however, as he famously<lb/>
had quite a bit of trouble<lb/>
removing himself from a Novem-<lb/>
ber 200S press conference. Sec-<lb/>
ondly, neither Hurricane Katrina<lb/>
nor any other natural disaster<lb/>
was the President's fault. The<lb/>
weather was so bad in 2005 that<lb/>
people were beginning to think<lb/>
hell was a balmy destination.<lb/>
Not everything was handled<lb/>
correctly, but that doesn't mean<lb/>
George W. Bush doesn't care about<lb/>
black people. Bush has made<lb/>
some mistakes, but in 2006<lb/>
he's going to pick himself up and<lb/>
cement his legacy as a fine President.<lb/>
The East Carolinian:<lb/>
Gary McCabe will become<lb/>
even more embittered. TEC's<lb/>
resident curmudgeon Gary<lb/>
McCabe is certainly not the<lb/>
most popular man at ECU. His<lb/>
left wing views and dour outlook<lb/>
on life have endeared him to<lb/>
no one. This year shouldn't see<lb/>
a change in this trend. Unless<lb/>
McCabe had some sort of Christ-<lb/>
mas Eve Scrooge experience, he'll<lb/>
probably be as down in the<lb/>
mouth as always. Anyone who<lb/>
hates the South has obviously<lb/>
got some personal issues that<lb/>
they need to deal with. The<lb/>
South is a delicate flower that<lb/>
blooms for all to admire its<lb/>
beauty. If you can't appreciate<lb/>
that, it is a dark day indeed. Those<lb/>
opinions aside, Gary McCabe is<lb/>
going to continue his journey<lb/>
down Bitter Boulevard and it's<lb/>
going to be a lonely walk indeed.<lb/>
This Semester:<lb/>
Spring 2006 will be out of con-<lb/>
trol: Can you spell Spring 2006<lb/>
P-A-R-T-Y? The spring semester is<lb/>
just one bash after another. MLK<lb/>
Day, the Super Bowl, Valentine's<lb/>
Day, Easter, March Madness, most<lb/>
any week day after 5 p.m. and<lb/>
Spring Break are highlights of<lb/>
times to throw down and drink up.<lb/>
As the semester progresses and<lb/>
the weather warms up, the number<lb/>
of girls around becomes inversely<lb/>
proportional to the amount of<lb/>
clothes they're wearing. Basically,<lb/>
short shorts and bikinis in mass.<lb/>
Of course, girls don't want to be<lb/>
undressed with no place to go, so<lb/>
baseball games, frat parties such<lb/>
as Kappa Alpha's "Sun Up to Sun<lb/>
Down" and Phi Kappa Tau's "Fill<lb/>
the Tub" and apartment complex<lb/>
swimming pools will be swarming<lb/>
withpeoplereadytohaveagoodtime.<lb/>
Did I already mention that<lb/>
these opinions were mine and<lb/>
mine alone? Take them as you will.<lb/>
Rant away, Pirates.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
K<lb/>
Pregnant and scared?<lb/>
You have options.<lb/>
OUR CENTER  <lb/>
OFFERS<lb/>
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Features spring fitness tips<lb/>
To become a better swimmer<lb/>
Some recommendations that can help swimmers,<lb/>
from novice to veteran, swim better:<lb/>
Use good technique<lb/>
Use what you know about good swimming<lb/>
style whether you are swimming fast or slowly<lb/>
cafe<lb/>
ork<lb/>
1<lb/>
(25?) 757-0003<lb/>
(252)94G-8040<lb/>
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Washb f Dura CcNNBC-nc( Avajlabu<lb/>
Wasbk DnmPnmiDiDMScMBUMns<lb/>
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Swimj (j.  Mim&amp;ivi.<lb/>
GiaaTV  Cat Fkumjlv<lb/>
Muuuu 2 PR Ruui Pi-am,<lb/>
I-ME I ItAT IN TdWNtlCMB<lb/>
HAiftwllw Pmxji in Scmf UNra<lb/>
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DOWN THE HILL<lb/>
1 BEDROOM 6(j5 SQFI.<lb/>
2 BEDROOM 875 Set FT.<lb/>
brentwoods<lb/>
2 bedroom 1000 so ft.<lb/>
Parkview Manor<lb/>
i bedroom 650 - 675 so i i.<lb/>
2 bedroom 840 so. Ft.<lb/>
1 Kl.l.lUKM ICWOScV 1 I<lb/>
Swim often<lb/>
It is difficult to<lb/>
improve without<lb/>
swimming about<lb/>
three times a week;<lb/>
three or four short<lb/>
workouts are. better<lb/>
than one or two<lb/>
long ones<lb/>
ree<lb/>
six kick switch<lb/>
free<lb/>
fingertip draq<lb/>
breast<lb/>
3 up, 3 down<lb/>
Do drills every<lb/>
time<lb/>
Swim coaches,<lb/>
books and web<lb/>
resources can<lb/>
teach you some<lb/>
useful drills<lb/>
Ask<lb/>
someone<lb/>
to watch<lb/>
This is the best<lb/>
kind of feedback,<lb/>
especially if he or<lb/>
she videos you<lb/>
COMINC. SOON TOOK POR - TFNNT5 COURTS &amp; PICNIC ARP.A<lb/>
FREE Wireless Internet &amp; FREE Cable<lb/>
Push hard<lb/>
sometimes<lb/>
About once<lb/>
a week,<lb/>
swim hard<lb/>
for a few<lb/>
minutes to<lb/>
learn what<lb/>
full exertion<lb/>
feels like<lb/>
2005KRT<lb/>
Source: Your GuidffWBfoimming by Mat Luebbers<lb/>
Graphic: Helen Lee McComas, Paul Trap<lb/>
NCCPA LEAD Conference<lb/>
Elon University<lb/>
Saturday, February 11,2006<lb/>
Saving the World, One Leader at a Time<lb/>
It's the 10th anniversary of the LEAD Conference and you're invited to the<lb/>
celebration! This year's winter conference will take place February 11th on Elon<lb/>
University's campus located in Burlington, North Carolina. ECU will be taking<lb/>
a delegation of 40 students to the conference. University Unions will pay $25<lb/>
of the $35 registration fees and we have chartered a bus to take everyone to<lb/>
the conference. If you are interested in attending, please fill out an ECU<lb/>
registration form that can be picked up in 255 Mendenhall Student Center and<lb/>
turn it in with your $10 to the same location no later than Friday, January 13,<lb/>
2006. Registration will be taken on a first come, first serve basis, so get your<lb/>
registration in early. This is a great leadership development opportunity<lb/>
To learn more about the conference, visit the conference website at<lb/>
http:www.nccpaweb.orgLEAD2006.html<lb/>
Questions call 328-4742<lb/>

<pb facs="00059379_0008"/><lb/>
SPO<lb/>
1-10-06<lb/>
Page A8 sports@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 TONY ZOPPO Sports Editor BRANDON HUGHES Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY January 10,2006<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Castro out Indefinitely,<lb/>
Hammonds will miss one game<lb/>
ECU senior forward Mike Castro<lb/>
will be out indefinitely after sustaining<lb/>
an injury to his right foot announced<lb/>
Head Coach Ricky Stokes on<lb/>
Monday. Stokes also announced that<lb/>
sophomore guard Tom Hammonds<lb/>
would not play in Wednesday night's<lb/>
game against Memphis after suffering<lb/>
a sprained left ankle against Saint<lb/>
Paul's this past Saturday. He is listed<lb/>
as questionable for Saturday's game<lb/>
at UTEP. Castro, who has not played<lb/>
since Dec. 18 at Winthrop, has been<lb/>
plagued by the nagging injury and<lb/>
has seen action in just seven games<lb/>
after playing in all 28 games a year<lb/>
ago. He is averaging 2.6 points<lb/>
and 2.3 rebounds in eight minutes<lb/>
per game this season. Hammonds<lb/>
is averaging 3.8 points and 1.7<lb/>
rebounds in 16 minutes of action per<lb/>
game this season.<lb/>
Marc Yellock Named Elon<lb/>
Defensive Line Coach<lb/>
Elon University Head Football<lb/>
Coach Pete Lembo announced today<lb/>
the hiring of ECU defensive graduate<lb/>
assistant coach Marc Yellock as the<lb/>
Phoenix defensive line coach. Yellock,<lb/>
27, joins Lembo's first Phoenix staff.<lb/>
Lembo was introduced as the 19th<lb/>
head coach in the 85-year history of<lb/>
Eton's football program on Dec. 19<lb/>
after coaching at Lehigh University<lb/>
for eight years, including the last five<lb/>
as the head coach. Yellock worked<lb/>
the past two seasons as ECU'S staff<lb/>
assistant coach, working primarily<lb/>
with the Pirates' defensive line. He<lb/>
served ECU as a video intern for the<lb/>
2003 campaign after coaching the<lb/>
linebackers at J.H. Rose High School,<lb/>
also located in Greenville, NC, for the<lb/>
2002 season. A four-year letterman as<lb/>
a linebacker at ECU, Yellock played<lb/>
for the Pirates' 1997, 1998, 1999<lb/>
and 2000 teams after red-shirting<lb/>
in 1996. He played in 26 games,<lb/>
making 18 starts during his playing<lb/>
career with the Pirates under coach<lb/>
Steve Logan. Prior to that, he was a<lb/>
four-year letterman as a defensive<lb/>
end for Person County High School<lb/>
in Roxboro, NC, playing for the 1992,<lb/>
1993,1994 and 1995 squads.<lb/>
Taylor fined $17,000 for spitting<lb/>
atPlttman<lb/>
Washington Redskins safety Sean<lb/>
Taylor was fined $17,000 Monday by<lb/>
the NFL for spitting in the face of<lb/>
Tampa Bay Buccaneers running back<lb/>
Michael Pittman. Taylor was ejected<lb/>
and penalized for unsportsmanlike<lb/>
conduct for spitting at Pittman in the<lb/>
third quarter of Saturday's playoff<lb/>
game The offense was considered<lb/>
so egregious that Pittman wasn't<lb/>
penalized for slapping Taylor in the<lb/>
helmet in retaliation. Taylor escaped<lb/>
suspension for his action, keeping<lb/>
him on the active roster for this week's<lb/>
game at Seattle. Taylor has been fined<lb/>
several times in his two-year career<lb/>
for a bevy of infractions, including<lb/>
$25,000 for skipping the league's<lb/>
mandatory rookie symposium. He<lb/>
has several in-season fines for illegal<lb/>
hits and uniform violations, including<lb/>
$5,000 for wearing striped socks<lb/>
that resembled a barber pole in<lb/>
this year's home game against<lb/>
Philadelphia. Taylor was investigated<lb/>
by the league last season for allegedly<lb/>
spitting at Cincinnati receiver T.J.<lb/>
Houshmandzadeh, but no fine was<lb/>
levied because there was no video<lb/>
evidence. Taylor also had a drunk<lb/>
driving charge last season that was<lb/>
later dismissed. He is scheduled to<lb/>
go on trial next week in Miami on a<lb/>
felony charge of aggravated assault<lb/>
stemming from a June 1 confrontation<lb/>
near his home, although he is expected<lb/>
to request a postponement because<lb/>
of the Redskins' playoff run.<lb/>
Roundball Pirates continue to progress<lb/>
ECU has won three of<lb/>
last four games<lb/>
ERIC GILMORE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Gretzky loses grandmother<lb/>
three weeks after mother's death<lb/>
Wayne Gretzky is mourning<lb/>
the death of his grandmother,<lb/>
three weeks after the ice hockey<lb/>
great's mother died. Betty Hockin,<lb/>
the grandmother of the Phoenix<lb/>
Coyotes coach, died Saturday at<lb/>
84 in a hospital in Brantford after<lb/>
being stricken with a heart attack<lb/>
last month. The funeral home, the<lb/>
Beckett-Glaves Family Center in<lb/>
Brantford, listed her death on its<lb/>
Web site Monday Hockin entered<lb/>
the hospital one day before daughter<lb/>
Phyllis Gretzky was admitted for<lb/>
deteriorating hearth from lung cancer.<lb/>
Hockin was released from the hospital<lb/>
to attend her daughter's funeral Dec.<lb/>
22 Wayne Gretzky took a 10-day<lb/>
leave of absence from the Coyotes to<lb/>
be with his mother, who died of lung<lb/>
cancer Dec. 19 in Brantford. Hockin,<lb/>
who had 21 grandchildren and 29<lb/>
great-grandchildren, is survived by<lb/>
sister Eileen Lockley and sisters-<lb/>
in-law Clara Cook and Elaine Van<lb/>
Bradt The funeral is scheduled for<lb/>
Wednesday in Brantford.<lb/>
While students were nest-<lb/>
ling in Holiday cheer following<lb/>
exams, the men's basketball team<lb/>
continued to be tested. Though<lb/>
the squad is far from perfection,<lb/>
their improvements have been<lb/>
dictated in recent scores.<lb/>
Evidence was Saturday night<lb/>
when the Pirates struggled early<lb/>
against Saint Paul's, an athletic<lb/>
Division II team. But ECU held<lb/>
tough and clawed back from a nine<lb/>
point halftime deficit to eventu-<lb/>
ally ink out an 80-74 home win.<lb/>
"I don't know if we'd have<lb/>
won this game three weeks ago,<lb/>
maybe two weeks ago said first<lb/>
year Head Coach Ricky Stokes.<lb/>
"1 think we've made some<lb/>
strides in battling adversity<lb/>
With the game in the<lb/>
balance, ECU closed the final<lb/>
four minutes with a 10-2 run.<lb/>
Senior leader Corey Rouse was<lb/>
good from the charity stripe<lb/>
to convert a three-point play<lb/>
with 3:48 remaining. After a<lb/>
Saint Paul's miss, an opportu-<lb/>
nistic Sam Hinnant put back an<lb/>
offensive rebound. A possession<lb/>
later, Japhet McNeil slithered<lb/>
through the lane to push the<lb/>
lead to six.<lb/>
Rouse led five double-<lb/>
figure scorers with a game-high<lb/>
22 points and 15 rebounds.<lb/>
Tyronne Beale, Jeremy Ingram and<lb/>
Hinnant notched 13 points each<lb/>
while Courtney Captain added 11.<lb/>
"We knew they were going to<lb/>
come at us and we just had to come<lb/>
back at them said Captain.<lb/>
"And in the first half, we<lb/>
didn't play like we normally play<lb/>
"The first 20 minutes for us<lb/>
was brutal" Stokes said.<lb/>
"We did not play very hard.<lb/>
We did not play with a lot of<lb/>
energy. And Saint Paul's took the<lb/>
fight to us<lb/>
"I was surprised with our<lb/>
play said Saint Paul's Head<lb/>
Coach Edward "Buck" Joyner.<lb/>
"I'll be honest with you<lb/>
see MEN page A9<lb/>
Results since TEC's lest Issue<lb/>
Dec. 10 Western Carolina 48-56 L<lb/>
ECU shot only 13-of-41 (31.7 percent) from the field en route to<lb/>
most disappointing loss of the season<lb/>
Dec. 18 at Winthrop 48-70 L<lb/>
ECU turned the ball over 27 times for Eagles second consecutive<lb/>
win over the Pirates<lb/>
Dec. 21 at Toledo 62-73 L<lb/>
Pirates 32-28 halftime advantage fizzled with poor second-half<lb/>
shooting and free-throw percentage<lb/>
Dec. 28 Limestone 87-54 W<lb/>
Jeremy Ingram notched a career-high 25 points over Division II<lb/>
opponent to end five-game losing streak<lb/>
Dec. 31 UNC Wilmington 82-69 W<lb/>
ECU snapped a three-game losing streak to the Seahawks leading<lb/>
from wire-to-wire<lb/>
Jan. 3 at Wake Forest 54-58 L<lb/>
Late game miscues cause the Pirates golden opportunity to upset<lb/>
ranked ACC team on the road<lb/>
Jan. 7 Saint Paul's 80-74 W<lb/>
ECU claws from largest halftime deficit to win for the 19 consecu-<lb/>
tive time over a Division II team<lb/>
Rouse recorded his ninth double-double of the season against St. Paul's Saturday.<lb/>
Lady Pirates continue streak against Memphis<lb/>
Four players reach double figures in<lb/>
fourth straight win<lb/>
The ECU women's basketball team could be<lb/>
the hottest thing to come out of Greenville since<lb/>
David Garrard. The Lady Pirates, after losing three<lb/>
straight games over winter break, have kicked-off<lb/>
2006 with four consecutive victories at an average<lb/>
of 11 points per game. Out of their last 13 games,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates have come out on top ten times.<lb/>
ECU holds the second-best record in Conference-<lb/>
USA, right behind Tulsa. To put it simply, this team<lb/>
is on a roll.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates (10-4, 2-1) defeated C-USA<lb/>
rival Memphis (2-11, 0-2) Sunday 81-68 after the<lb/>
season's longest road trip, spanning 11 days and<lb/>
five games.<lb/>
ECU's 40 first-half points were the most scored<lb/>
for the Lady Pirates this season. That can largely<lb/>
be attributed to the Pirates converting 5-11 three-<lb/>
pointers and 70 percent of their free throws in the<lb/>
first half.<lb/>
After putting on arguably one of their most<lb/>
dominating performances in the paint, outscoring<lb/>
the Tigers 40-20, partnered with eight team-threes,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates showed their versatility.<lb/>
Freshman Jessica Slack led Pirate-scorers with<lb/>
19 points, 15 of which came from three pointers.<lb/>
see WOMEN page A9 <lb/>
The Lady Pirates have improved to 10-4 on the season and won their first C-USA game against Memph<lb/>
USC speared by Longhorns' Young<lb/>
Vince Young proved his case for the Heisman trophy even further<lb/>
after torching the Trojans in the title game last week.<lb/>
Texas QB outshines USC stars, also<lb/>
declares for 2006 NFL draft<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
RON CLEMENTS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER '<lb/>
When Texas quarterback Vince Young walked off the<lb/>
field at the Rose Bowl Wednesday night, he left a cham-<lb/>
pion following one of the greatest single-game individual<lb/>
performances in college football history.<lb/>
The Heisman Trophy not-withstanding, Young was<lb/>
the best player on the field that night - a field shared by<lb/>
2004 Heisman winner Matt Leinart and 2005 Heisman<lb/>
winner Reggie Bush. Young finished second in the Heis-<lb/>
man this season to Bush, but was vindicated Wednesday<lb/>
night by upstaging Bush and winning the national<lb/>
championship for his Texas Longhorns.<lb/>
Trojan fans will say, as Leinart basically said in<lb/>
his arrogant post-game interviews, that Texas did<lb/>
not deserve to win the game because one of their<lb/>
touchdowns should not have counted. That is just<lb/>
a bunch of nonsense. Even if instant replay had<lb/>
overturned that call where Young pitched the ball<lb/>
to Selvin Young in the second quarter, Texas still<lb/>
probably would have scored on the subsequent plays<lb/>
to take the lead at that juncture of the game.<lb/>
The number one reason USC lost, aside from Vince<lb/>
Young, was arrogance and greed. It was Bush not being<lb/>
content with a 40-yard run, trying to lateral the ball<lb/>
to an un-expecting teammate who couldn't handle<lb/>
the pitch. The incomplete pitch resulted in a fumble<lb/>
which Texas recovered inside its own 20.<lb/>
It was also Trojans coach Pete Carroll deciding to go<lb/>
for a fourth-and-two at midfield with the lead and just<lb/>
over two minutes remaining instead of punting and<lb/>
forcing Vince Young to drive the Longhorns offense<lb/>
the length of the field.<lb/>
One could ask, "Why shouldn't USC have been<lb/>
arrogant?" The Trojans had won 34 straight games<lb/>
and were going for their third consecutive national<lb/>
championship and the first undisputed one If Bush<lb/>
completes that lateral, it's one of the plays of the year<lb/>
If USC converts that fourth-and-two, Pete Carroll is a<lb/>
genius with testicular fortitude. But things didn't turn<lb/>
out the way the folks in SoCal would have liked<lb/>
The game can be second-guessed to death, but the<lb/>
bottom hne is that the night belonged to Vince Youitk<lb/>
When to team needed to mala- a play, he made it<lb/>
Tvv.ce m the fourth quarter, he converted a fourth-down<lb/>
himself. He threw for 267 yards while completing 75 per-<lb/>
cent oftapasseson me night.Heran for arwmeW<lb/>
and three touchdowns, including the game-winner with<lb/>
19 seconds remaining on the clock. He did not turn the<lb/>
ball over once, something both Leinart and Bush did<lb/>
After leading Texas to its first national champion-<lb/>
ship in 36 years, Young recanted his declaration hat<lb/>
he was going to remain in Austin for his senior yea<lb/>
and announced he was going to enter the NFL Draft Z<lb/>
capitalize on his great outing in Pasadena<lb/>
It is unlikely that Young will be the first pick in the<lb/>
rht u 1 UStKn TeXSnS have already t5d S5S<lb/>
Chris Mortensen that, assumingBush foregoes hisnior<lb/>
Wolk-I<lb/>
SI<lb/>
I Greenville Blv<lb/>
I<lb/>
ww<lb/>
W<lb/>
SI<lb/>
- <lb/>

<pb facs="00059379_0009"/><lb/>
1-10-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  SPORTS<lb/>
PAGE A9<lb/>
), 2006<lb/>
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Colts, Seahawks get four All-Pros - Gates<lb/>
unanimous choice<lb/>
(AP)  San Diego's Antonio<lb/>
Gates was the only unanimous<lb/>
choice to The Associated Press<lb/>
2005 All-Pro team featuring four<lb/>
players each from conference<lb/>
leaders Indianapolis and Seattle.<lb/>
The Chargers' brilliant tight<lb/>
end drew all 50 votes in balloting<lb/>
by a nationwide panel of sports<lb/>
writers and broadcasters who cover<lb/>
the NFL. Gates also made the team<lb/>
last year, with 32 12 votes.<lb/>
He's joined by NFL Most Valu-<lb/>
able Player Shaun Alexander. The<lb/>
Seattle running back, who also<lb/>
won the AP Offensive Player of the<lb/>
Year award, received 49 votes. And<lb/>
Chicago linebacker Brian Urlacher,<lb/>
the Defensive Player of the Year,<lb/>
also was chosen on 49 ballots.<lb/>
"This whole season was a<lb/>
blessing said Urlacher, who<lb/>
rebounded from leg injuries in<lb/>
2004 to lead the Bears to the NFC<lb/>
North crown.<lb/>
Alexander made the team for<lb/>
the first time, while Urlacher was<lb/>
chosen for the third.<lb/>
Peyton Manning was the All-<lb/>
Pro quarterback for the third<lb/>
straight time, getting 37 votes.<lb/>
He was joined by Colts center Jeff<lb/>
Saturday, defensive end Dwight<lb/>
Freeney and safety Bob Sanders. It<lb/>
was the first selection for Saturday<lb/>
and Sanders and the second for<lb/>
Freeney.<lb/>
The other Seahawks were<lb/>
tackle Walter Jones, guard Steve<lb/>
Hutchinson and fullback Mack<lb/>
Strong. Jones made it for the<lb/>
third time, Hutchinson for the<lb/>
second, and Strong for the first.<lb/>
"I came in and I had a bunch<lb/>
of 100-yard games real quick<lb/>
Alexander said. "I felt like, gosh,<lb/>
I didn't feel like I was really run-<lb/>
ning that hard.<lb/>
Walk-In Customers W.lcom.<lb/>
IVIfiil from page A8<lb/>
Hassan Robinson paced Saint<lb/>
Paul's with 21 points on 10-of-21<lb/>
shooting. Since the Tigers were<lb/>
severely undersized, they were<lb/>
forced to play at a rigorous pace.<lb/>
The speed forced ECU to go with<lb/>
a smaller lineup to keep up.<lb/>
But the Pirates' size advantage<lb/>
began to wear down the smaller<lb/>
Tigers midway through the<lb/>
second-half. ECU out-rebounded<lb/>
Saint Paul's by a 28-15 margin in<lb/>
the second frame.<lb/>
"In the second-half, we had an<lb/>
opportunity to regroup Stokes said.<lb/>
"We attacked a little<lb/>
more inside and were able to<lb/>
make some perimeter shots,<lb/>
but I thought defense was the<lb/>
difference. We were able to attack<lb/>
them defensively<lb/>
Japhet McNeil notched a<lb/>
career-high in assists with 12 in<lb/>
29 minutes. McNeil now has 305<lb/>
for his career, 21 shy of third on<lb/>
the career assists list. The junior<lb/>
scored four points.<lb/>
The Saint Paul's contest was<lb/>
supposed to be a final tune-up<lb/>
before No. 4 Memphis travels<lb/>
to Greenville. Instead, it served<lb/>
as a sobering reminder of how<lb/>
much room the Pirates still have<lb/>
to progress.<lb/>
"I'm pleased with the win<lb/>
Stokes said.<lb/>
"But I'm not pleased with<lb/>
how we played<lb/>
Tom Hammonds, the son<lb/>
of a former NBA star, sprained<lb/>
his ankle at the 9:54 mark of<lb/>
the second half against Saint<lb/>
Paul's. The sophomore guard,<lb/>
fresh off an impressive six point<lb/>
outing at Wake Forest, did not<lb/>
return. Hammonds slammed the<lb/>
floor repeatedly in an immense<lb/>
amount of pain. Stokes stated<lb/>
that Hammonds will not play<lb/>
against Memphis and is ques-<lb/>
tionable for the Pirates game<lb/>
against UTEP.<lb/>
Jeremy Ingram and Quen-<lb/>
tin Goods experienced their<lb/>
first minutes against Winthrop<lb/>
on Dec. 17. Ingram, a Kinston,<lb/>
NC native, was mandated to sit<lb/>
out the first eight games due to<lb/>
eligibility issues surrounding his<lb/>
transfer from Wake Forest. Since<lb/>
becoming eligible, Ingram has<lb/>
been a spark plug averaging 12.2<lb/>
points per game.<lb/>
Quentin Goods' redshirt bid<lb/>
was removed against Winthrop<lb/>
when he played 10 minutes.<lb/>
Goods' best outing was at Wake<lb/>
Forest when he notched two<lb/>
points and three rebounds in<lb/>
16 minutes. What was most<lb/>
impressive was Goods' defense<lb/>
on Wake Forest's premier center<lb/>
Eric Williams.<lb/>
With 16 players dressing<lb/>
for the team, Mike Castro<lb/>
has found himself regulated to the<lb/>
bench. The senior experienced<lb/>
an ankle injury in the preseason.<lb/>
Even so, the New York native<lb/>
logged 18 minutes against UNC<lb/>
Greensboro. Since then, Castro<lb/>
has played only one minute.<lb/>
According to Stokes, Castro<lb/>
is now practicing with the<lb/>
team. However, Stokes was<lb/>
unclear about whether the senior<lb/>
could see the floor versus Mem-<lb/>
phis. The latest on Castro is that<lb/>
he will be out indefinitely after<lb/>
suffering an injury to his right<lb/>
foot. Freshman Quinton Goods<lb/>
will fill in for the injured<lb/>
Castro.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
wmiiljmp)<lb/>
Standard Bds Only<lb/>
Greenville Blvd. (Across from Pizza Inn)  931.1147 <lb/>
Evans Street  353.5400<lb/>
www.tannbed.com<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
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STUDENTS<lb/>
FIVE<lb/>
TANNING<lb/>
SESSIONS<lb/>
WOlTien from page A8<lb/>
She also had four assists.<lb/>
Forwards LaToya Horton and<lb/>
Nicole Days dominated the boards<lb/>
with 22 combined rebounds, just<lb/>
under a quarter of the game's 89<lb/>
total. The tandem also contributed<lb/>
13 points and two blocks.<lb/>
Sunday's game was the first<lb/>
time the Lady Pirates scored at<lb/>
least 80 points in a contest since<lb/>
Jan. 28, 2005 versus Southern<lb/>
Miss.<lb/>
Other notable victories over<lb/>
the past few weeks such as a 61-55<lb/>
win over Alabama and Friday's six-<lb/>
point win over C-USA rival UAB<lb/>
display the Lady Pirates' ability to<lb/>
win on the road.<lb/>
ECU is back at home Friday to<lb/>
take on Houston in C-USA play.<lb/>
After that, the Pirates are back<lb/>
on the road until a much-needed<lb/>
three-game-home stand against<lb/>
SMU, Tulsa and Marshall starting<lb/>
Jan. 27.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
TeXaS VS USC from page 8<lb/>
year at USC, they will take him<lb/>
number one. The Texans just picked<lb/>
up an $8 million option on their<lb/>
current quarterback David Carr,<lb/>
who is in only his fourth year in the<lb/>
NFL with the four-year-old Texans.<lb/>
That being said, this is the<lb/>
right move for Young. What<lb/>
more can he do in college? He<lb/>
just turned in one of the best<lb/>
single-game bowl performances<lb/>
ever while leading his team to a<lb/>
national title, providing the icing<lb/>
on the cake for what was a Heis-<lb/>
man-worthy year. What would he<lb/>
come back for - to win the Heis-<lb/>
man? He already proved his point<lb/>
on the field last Wednesday night.<lb/>
Reggie Bush deserved to win<lb/>
the Heisman this past season, but<lb/>
for one night, and with all the<lb/>
marbles on the table, he was com-<lb/>
pletely outshined by the Heisman<lb/>
runner-up and somewhere Mat-<lb/>
thew McConaughey is still smiling.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Regularly Priced 530<lb/>
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Call for Applications:<lb/>
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Fund your original research or inquiry-based learning project, earn recognition for your efforts<lb/>
and secure a spot at the ECU Undergraduate Research and Creative Activities Symposium.<lb/>
To be considered for an award, an individual must:<lb/>
 Be a full-time degree seeking undergraduate student at ECU;<lb/>
 Have completed a minimum of 12 credits at ECU by time of application;<lb/>
 Have an acceptable record of academic achievement and a minimum GPA of 2.5;<lb/>
 Provide details of any extraordinary circumstances that might outweigh any<lb/>
of the above factors;<lb/>
 Submit a signed complete application.<lb/>
For more details and a downloadable application, visit:<lb/>
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Application Deadline: February I, 2006.<lb/>
Return all application materials to:<lb/>
Undergraduate ResearchCreative Activities Committee,<lb/>
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ceilings available immediately.<lb/>
One year lease. $625mo. Security<lb/>
deposit Rusty 717-1028. Like new.<lb/>
One two Brs. on-site management<lb/>
maintenance Central heat air 6, 9,12<lb/>
month leases Water Cable included<lb/>
ECU bus Wireless Internet pets<lb/>
dishwasher disposals pool laundry<lb/>
(252) 758-4015<lb/>
Spacious 2 Bedroom 2.5 Bath<lb/>
Townhouse Available WD k<lb/>
Water Sewer Included. Pet<lb/>
Friendly. Ask about our Student<lb/>
Specials! Call Kingston Rentals <lb/>
252-75S-757S For more details.<lb/>
4 Bedroom 2 Bath WD Dishwasher<lb/>
Garage Fenced Yard 113 N. Elm (252)-<lb/>
361-2138<lb/>
1 bdrm. Apt. for Rent. 2 blks from<lb/>
campus near City Mkt. J370mth.<lb/>
910-232-7884<lb/>
2 Bedroom 1 Bath Duplex 404 E.<lb/>
Second St. (252)-361-2138<lb/>
Large 2 &amp; 3 bedroom townhouses<lb/>
1.5 to 2.5 baths, full basement, WD<lb/>
hookups, great storage, enclosed patio,<lb/>
ECU bus route, no pets, 752-7738<lb/>
For Rent: Very nice 4 br, 2.5 bath<lb/>
house with 2 zone, central heatair;<lb/>
off street parking; close proximity to<lb/>
ECU campus. Completely renovated.<lb/>
25 rent discount for prompt pay. Call<lb/>
752-1000, ask for Murrell.<lb/>
Two bedroom one bath apartment<lb/>
currently available. WasherDryer<lb/>
Coin op. Downtown above Catalog<lb/>
Connection. $500.00 month plus<lb/>
utilities. Contact lack at Uptown<lb/>
Properties. 717-9711<lb/>
Three bedroom one bath house<lb/>
currently available. Recently Remodeled,<lb/>
WasherDryer, two blocks from<lb/>
campus. 308 Student Street. $750.00<lb/>
month plus utilities. Jack 717-9711<lb/>
Blocks to ECU, 2 or 3 Bdrm, All<lb/>
Appliances, collegeuniversityrentals.<lb/>
com 321-4712<lb/>
Prime Parking Spaces for Lease.<lb/>
The first 20 people will receive<lb/>
a 10 discount. Located within<lb/>
a 5 minute walk to the ECU<lb/>
campus. Call 252 378 5533 for<lb/>
more details.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
Roommates needed in beautiful 3<lb/>
BDR house, 2 Bath one block from<lb/>
campus, females non-smoking; high<lb/>
speed wireless internet option; WD,<lb/>
all kitchen appliances, parking. Please<lb/>
call 347-1231.<lb/>
Private furnished bedroom, private<lb/>
bathroom; washer, dryer, cable, telephone,<lb/>
internet; walking distance to campus<lb/>
325month shared utilities looking for<lb/>
responsible student Email santucci2@mail.<lb/>
clis.com Tel. (252)725-1703<lb/>
Sublease Jan. '06 thru une '06 Rent<lb/>
$235 a month plus split cable and<lb/>
utilities Near Campus On bus route<lb/>
call Stephanie 252-531-3217<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
Tiara Too Jewelry Colonial Mall Part-time<lb/>
Retail Sales AssociateAvailable year round!<lb/>
Day and Night hours Apply in Person<lb/>
Looking for Outgoing and<lb/>
Knowledgeable Sales Associates<lb/>
PETS Family Pet Center Retail andor<lb/>
Restaurant Experience a Must Please<lb/>
Apply in Person to 3700C S Memorial<lb/>
Dr in the Food Lion Shopping Center or<lb/>
call 252-439-1026 and ask for Dan<lb/>
Customer Service: Part-time. Assisting<lb/>
prospective tenants, answering<lb/>
telephones and filing. Apply at<lb/>
Wainright Property Management<lb/>
3481-A South Evans Street Greenville.<lb/>
Part-time Interior Decorators needed;<lb/>
morning and afternoon hours available;<lb/>
apply in person @ Larry's Carpet One, 3010<lb/>
East 10th Street, Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
PT babysitter needed in my Winterville<lb/>
home Tuesday and Thursday 8-11:30<lb/>
for my 3 year old daughter. Start<lb/>
immediately. 321-0424.<lb/>
Bartenders Wanted! $250day<lb/>
potential. No experience necessary.<lb/>
Training provided. Call (800) 965-<lb/>
6520 ext. 202<lb/>
GREEK PERSONALS<lb/>
Interested in joining a sorority? Come<lb/>
meet the sisters of Zeta Tau Alpha,<lb/>
Wednesday 111 and Thursday 112 at<lb/>
7:30pm. We can't wait to see you there!<lb/>
For directions or a ride, call 757-1811.<lb/>
OTHER<lb/>
Spring Break Panama City From $199!<lb/>
Beachfront Rooms at Boardwalk,<lb/>
Holiday Inn! Free Party Package, Food<lb/>
at MTVu Party Tent! Bahamas Cruise<lb/>
$299. Daytona $179, Cancun, Acapulco,<lb/>
Nassau $599! SpringBreakTravel.com<lb/>
800-678-6386.<lb/>
1 Spring Break Website! Low prices<lb/>
guaranteed. Free Meals &amp; Free<lb/>
Drinks. Book 11 people, get 12th trip<lb/>
free! Group discounts for 6 www.<lb/>
SpringBreakDiscounts.com or www.<lb/>
LeisureTours.com or 800-838-8202.<lb/>
Bahamas Spring Break Celebrity<lb/>
Cruise! 5 Days From $299! Includes<lb/>
Meals, Taxes, Entry To Exclusive MTVu<lb/>
Events, Beach Parties With Celebrities<lb/>
As Seen on Real World, Road Rules!<lb/>
On Campus Reps Needed! www.<lb/>
SpringBreakTravel.com Promo code:<lb/>
341-800-678-6386<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
BREAK!<lb/>
iahamas Party<lb/>
raise $299<lb/>
thesunshlnefaGtory.com<lb/>
BRAND<lb/>
NEW<lb/>
BULBS<lb/>
TAN FREE!<lb/>
for one week<lb/>
new customers only please<lb/>
Cancun $559<lb/>
Acapulco $629<lb/>
Jamaica, Nassau, Panama City, Daytona From $179!<lb/>
Recognized 3 Times Fw Ethics! Campus Reps Needed!<lb/>
SpringBreakTtawl.com<lb/>
1-800-678 6386<lb/>
Huge 32 bulb beds<lb/>
12 Minute Bronzing beds with Facials<lb/>
Mystic Tan<lb/>
Closest walk from Campus<lb/>
Located on 10th St. beside The Campus Store<lb/>
Call (252) 752 1179 for details!<lb/>
University Suites Apartments<lb/>
wai rnNY<lb/>
OPEMTnwrmw<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! (wnly)<lb/>
Third Floor<lb/>
New units available immediately<lb/>
&amp; for Fall'06<lb/>
Town home 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/>
 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/>

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