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<pb facs="00059384_0001"/>
<lb/>
'AGE A12<lb/>
www.theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Volume 81 Number 42<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
January 24, 2006<lb/>
More than 100 students took part in the Polar Bear Plunge. Ice was poured into the water to make it colder.<lb/>
Polar Bear Party attracts<lb/>
crowds<lb/>
CLAYTON BAUMAN<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The annual Polar Bear Pool<lb/>
Party kicked off its 10th year<lb/>
running this past Thursday.<lb/>
The event consists of par-<lb/>
ticipants, primarily students<lb/>
and faculty, getting into their<lb/>
bathing suits and jumping into<lb/>
the cold waters of the Student<lb/>
Recreation Center outdoor pool.<lb/>
With more than 100 people in<lb/>
attendance and prizes up for<lb/>
raffle, students appeared eager<lb/>
to jump into the water.<lb/>
"Everybody has their defini-<lb/>
tion of like, what a rush is and<lb/>
this is that for a lot of people<lb/>
said Phillip Hamilton, sopho-<lb/>
more political science major,<lb/>
in regard to why people want<lb/>
to do it.<lb/>
"Because we can't go to the<lb/>
ocean, this is our way to plunge<lb/>
into the cold and start the<lb/>
New Year off with something<lb/>
exciting said Nancy Mize,<lb/>
assistant vice chancellor of<lb/>
 Recreation Development and<lb/>
S5 the official in charge of the<lb/>
g event.<lb/>
fl Participants would come<lb/>
S out of the recreational center<lb/>
o in groups of 15 and line up at<lb/>
s the edge of the pool. After the<lb/>
crowd gave a 10 second count-<lb/>
down, the participants plunged<lb/>
into the water only to scramble<lb/>
out just as quickly.<lb/>
Shortly after jumping in,<lb/>
Kimberly Yow, freshman exer-<lb/>
cise physiology major, spoke in<lb/>
regard to whether or not it was<lb/>
worth it.<lb/>
see PLUNGE page A2<lb/>
Colombian graphic artist visits campus<lb/>
Refugee speaks to<lb/>
students on art, life<lb/>
RACHEL KING<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Enrique Seba, Colombian<lb/>
graphic artist, was on hand Jan.<lb/>
19 at Speight Auditorium to speak<lb/>
with Richard Tichich, director<lb/>
of the School of Art and Design,<lb/>
about his art and his recent relo-<lb/>
cation to Greenville.<lb/>
Seba, who graduated from<lb/>
the School of Design in Medel-<lb/>
lin, Colombia, with a Graphic-<lb/>
Arts degree, is responsible for the<lb/>
world's largest finger painting<lb/>
by children, as well a mural that<lb/>
holds the place of honor in Boli-<lb/>
var Square, the political center of<lb/>
Colombia, located in Bogota.<lb/>
His story begins in college,<lb/>
where he first became interested<lb/>
in art.<lb/>
"I think when 1 was in high<lb/>
school, many people said 'You<lb/>
could be an artist said Seba.<lb/>
"In college, I studied law until<lb/>
1 had enough  In my free time,<lb/>
I went to the art school to paint,<lb/>
to draw and to model. A teacher<lb/>
told me that I should do art, so<lb/>
I studied fine arts in Medellin.<lb/>
1 finished  and then worked<lb/>
for a publisher, and one day, a<lb/>
friend of mine told me to go to<lb/>
this advertising agency for some<lb/>
work<lb/>
At this job, he would meet his<lb/>
wife and begin a new chapter in<lb/>
life helping the victims of vio-<lb/>
lence in Colombia.<lb/>
' Violence, drug cartels, pros-<lb/>
titution and the like are a huge<lb/>
problem in Colombia today.<lb/>
Tichich pointed out a particular<lb/>
statistic that describes the situa-<lb/>
tion in Colombia.<lb/>
Medellin, the capital of the<lb/>
state Antiquia, has a population<lb/>
of about 2 million. Approxi-<lb/>
mately 4,637 people were killed<lb/>
there last year. This was com-<lb/>
pared to Philadelphia, who, with<lb/>
a population of only 1.6 million,<lb/>
had approximately 525 victims of<lb/>
violent death. Seba commented<lb/>
that as a teenager, his quality<lb/>
of life was limited because of all<lb/>
the danger in his home town.<lb/>
He then said kidnappings are so<lb/>
prevalent in Medellin that the<lb/>
local newspaper has a section for<lb/>
the names of people kidnapped.<lb/>
"Medellin is the most violent<lb/>
SGA Senate discusses Academic Bill of Rights<lb/>
Senators look into<lb/>
building bus stop shelters<lb/>
CHRIS MUNIER<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association Senate passed a<lb/>
resolution to move toward imple-<lb/>
menting an Academic Bill of<lb/>
Rights at ECU.<lb/>
SGA Senator Justin Byrd<lb/>
endorsed the resolution because<lb/>
such policies already exist in<lb/>
many other universities. The idea<lb/>
behind the proposed bill of rights<lb/>
is providing freedom to students<lb/>
to express political and religious<lb/>
beliefs without being chastised.<lb/>
"Academic freedom consists<lb/>
in protecting the intellectual<lb/>
independence of professors,<lb/>
researchers and students in<lb/>
the pursuit of knowledge and<lb/>
the expression of ideas from<lb/>
interference by legislators or<lb/>
authorities within the institution<lb/>
itself stated in the proposed<lb/>
Academic Bill of Rights.<lb/>
In other SGA affairs, SGA Sen-<lb/>
ator Jonathan Masachi brought<lb/>
forth an initiative to build shel-<lb/>
ters at some of the bus stops on<lb/>
campus. Masachi appealed to<lb/>
senators by elaborating on the<lb/>
necessity to ameliorate bus stop<lb/>
conditions.<lb/>
"You want shelters so that if<lb/>
it rains, you don't get wet waiting<lb/>
for the bus said Masachi.<lb/>
The plan is to put shelters<lb/>
at the most populated bus stops<lb/>
like the ones at Joyner Library<lb/>
or Minges Coliseum. Senate<lb/>
Resolution 12-2 was not<lb/>
conceived with the thought<lb/>
of getting the shelters built<lb/>
immediately though. The<lb/>
resolution, which passed<lb/>
unanimously, was designed to<lb/>
Lee Hyde speaks about opportunities for student lobbying<lb/>
serve as a catalyst to get the<lb/>
administration to examine it and<lb/>
figure out a price tag for it. SGA<lb/>
hopes passing the resolution will<lb/>
indicate to the administration<lb/>
that there is student interest in<lb/>
the project. Once SGA finds out<lb/>
what the expenses will be for<lb/>
this endeavor, they will debate<lb/>
whether or not to follow through<lb/>
with it.<lb/>
The other issue involving<lb/>
transportation was the plan<lb/>
to add parking spaces to the<lb/>
Joyner Library parking lot. Bill<lb/>
Koch, Parking and Transpor-<lb/>
tation Committee chair, said<lb/>
there is an argument between<lb/>
the Parking and Transportation<lb/>
Committee and the Greenspace<lb/>
see SGA page A2<lb/>
Costa speaks to faculty and students at this year's first forum.<lb/>
Great Decisions One:<lb/>
Brazilian affairs<lb/>
Analysis of BrazilU.S.<lb/>
relations<lb/>
CHRIS MUNIER<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
place Seba said.<lb/>
"It's the industrial center<lb/>
of the country and many rich<lb/>
people live there, so it's a good<lb/>
place for bad people<lb/>
Seba's wife recalled a conver-<lb/>
sation she had with her husband<lb/>
when he came to work with the<lb/>
foundation in which he com-<lb/>
pared life to a blank canvas.<lb/>
"If you mess it up, you erase it<lb/>
and do it again she said.<lb/>
With that, Seba began a new<lb/>
project.<lb/>
Seba and his wife joined<lb/>
others for a project called "48<lb/>
Hours" in which they began<lb/>
working with displaced people<lb/>
of Medellin. Desiring to create<lb/>
a tribute to the victims of the<lb/>
see ARTIST page A2<lb/>
Last Saturday, the second<lb/>
annual Great Decisions series<lb/>
on global politics started with<lb/>
a presentation by an expert on<lb/>
Latin American politics.<lb/>
This was the first of eight<lb/>
forums running weekly at 10 a.m.<lb/>
in Rivers Auditorium. Last week's<lb/>
speaker was Thomaz Guedes da<lb/>
Costa, professor of national secu-<lb/>
rity affairs at National Defense<lb/>
University in Washington.<lb/>
Costa's lecture centered on<lb/>
the bilateral relationship between<lb/>
the United States and Brazil,<lb/>
national security issues and the<lb/>
lack of attention given to Brazil's<lb/>
role in U.S. foreign policy.<lb/>
"Latin America is not on the<lb/>
radar said Costa.<lb/>
Costa said there is too little<lb/>
attention given to a country that<lb/>
has the fifth largest population<lb/>
in the world. He does not think<lb/>
the media focuses on substantive<lb/>
Latin American issues. Instead,<lb/>
newspapers tend to devote time<lb/>
covering obscure things. He<lb/>
gave an example of newspapers<lb/>
reporting on a Brazilian mayor<lb/>
who made dying illegal because<lb/>
of a lack of cemetery space. There<lb/>
are reports like this, but nothing<lb/>
on wide-scale issues.<lb/>
"This does not give us a<lb/>
systemic look at Latin American<lb/>
countries Costa said.<lb/>
The United States has many<lb/>
reasons to be interested in Brazil's<lb/>
role in trade and their fight<lb/>
against terrorism. Even those not<lb/>
normally concerned with com-<lb/>
plex trade issues have reason to<lb/>
be interested in Brazil's copious<lb/>
flip-flop industry, front lined by<lb/>
the popular Havaianas.<lb/>
"Brazil has a very desirable<lb/>
flip-flop, they don't break when<lb/>
bent, don't smell and middle part<lb/>
does not come up Costa said.<lb/>
This is an example of how<lb/>
Brazil, like China, has a huge scope<lb/>
of influence on what Americans<lb/>
and other consumers purchase.<lb/>
How do the United States and<lb/>
Brazil interact globally?<lb/>
"What Brazil and the United<lb/>
States do together is out of self-<lb/>
interest Costa said.<lb/>
He does not think they are<lb/>
friends or even allies. They work<lb/>
together out of a mutual desire to<lb/>
advance economically.<lb/>
However, there have been<lb/>
problems with corruption and<lb/>
organized crime. There have been<lb/>
intelligence problems, govern-<lb/>
ment slush funds and counterfeit.<lb/>
The price on cigarettes in Brazil<lb/>
is roughly $1.50 a pack with $1<lb/>
from taxes according to Costa.<lb/>
He said this and other economic<lb/>
abnormalities lend to trouble.<lb/>
<lb/>
Great<lb/>
Decisions 2<lb/>
Great Decisions 2 will be held<lb/>
Saturday at Rivers Auditorium at<lb/>
10 a.m. The topic will be "Human<lb/>
Rights In the Age of Terrorism and<lb/>
will be hosted by Scott Slllman,<lb/>
professor from Duke University. The<lb/>
other topics that will be covered<lb/>
In future forums are global health<lb/>
pandemics and security, United<lb/>
States and Iran, UN Reform, China<lb/>
and India, Energy Resources and the<lb/>
last presentation will be on Turkey.<lb/>
"You have strong economic<lb/>
incentives for organized crime<lb/>
Costa said.<lb/>
Brazil also has a complex<lb/>
multicultural identity. Among<lb/>
Japanese people living outside<lb/>
of Japan, Brazil is home to more<lb/>
than any other country.<lb/>
"One of the most valuable<lb/>
passports is the Brazilian pass-<lb/>
port Costa said.<lb/>
The Brazilian passport proves<lb/>
to be useful because of the mul-<lb/>
ticulturalism. It is difficult for<lb/>
officials to look at a passport and<lb/>
conclude it is forged based solely<lb/>
on appearance.<lb/>
Costa was asked what he<lb/>
thought about Brazil's potential<lb/>
to develop nuclear weapons. He<lb/>
said they were doing it in 1981 and<lb/>
1982 but never tested anything.<lb/>
"Brazil was playing a game<lb/>
with Argentina as well as the<lb/>
United States regarding prolifera-<lb/>
tion Costa said.<lb/>
They eventually gave up their<lb/>
ambitions, but Costa believes<lb/>
Brazil should have done a better<lb/>
job bluffing.<lb/>
"I was one the few who thought<lb/>
they should not have signed the<lb/>
Non-Proliferation Treaty because<lb/>
when you play global politics, ydu<lb/>
have to leave the doubt out there<lb/>
Costa said.<lb/>
Costa gave the audience long,<lb/>
detailed explanations for many of<lb/>
the questions answered. All Great<lb/>
Decisions forums allow for the<lb/>
public to ask anything about the<lb/>
topics being discussed.<lb/>
At the end of the presenta-<lb/>
tion, audience members are<lb/>
allowed to fill out voting ballots<lb/>
that work like referenda. On the<lb/>
voting ballots, there are ques-<lb/>
tions regarding policy decisions.<lb/>
People can voice their opinion<lb/>
on issues and have their opin-<lb/>
ions considered by the U.S. State<lb/>
Department. Last year's results<lb/>
showed that the ECU forums<lb/>
were very successful.<lb/>
"North Carolina was one of<lb/>
the leading states to participate<lb/>
in the program said Richard<lb/>
Kilroy, visiting assistant profes-<lb/>
sor and coordinator of the Great<lb/>
Decisions series.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
Bush Unplugged: Audience Q-and-A js new feature for presidential speeches<lb/>
Bush has agreed to answer questions with an interactive audience.<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)  Move<lb/>
over, Oprah. President Bush is<lb/>
making himself into television's<lb/>
newest talk show host by making<lb/>
audience participation a feature<lb/>
of his appearances.<lb/>
Bush has been taking<lb/>
questions from audience mem-<lb/>
bers in recent speeches, and<lb/>
the White House says none has<lb/>
been prescreened. It's a throw-<lb/>
back to the folksy style ort the<lb/>
campaign trail that helped him<lb/>
win re-election and a depar-<lb/>
ture from the heavily scripted<lb/>
speeches that were the norm<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
His answers have resulted in<lb/>
some revelations, both personal<lb/>
and political.<lb/>
The White House has grown<lb/>
so comfortable with the format<lb/>
that most of his appearance<lb/>
Monday at Kansas State Univer-<lb/>
sity was reserved for Q-and-A<lb/>
with the audience.<lb/>
And unlike the more intimate<lb/>
settings where the president<lb/>
has taken questions before, this<lb/>
appearance was set in front of<lb/>
a coliseum full of several thou-<lb/>
sands, Including students, sol-<lb/>
diers from nearby Fort Riley and<lb/>
invited guests.<lb/>
Bush has taken a wide variety<lb/>
of questions in three appearances<lb/>
during the last six weeks. Many<lb/>
of the people he has called on<lb/>
have fawned over him, thanking<lb/>
him for his wartime leadership,<lb/>
saying they pray for him and<lb/>
bringing best wishes from other<lb/>
fans in their family who couldn't<lb/>
be there.<lb/>
"It's always good to have a<lb/>
plant in every audience Bush<lb/>
joked last week in Sterling, Va<lb/>
after a woman rose and said she<lb/>
was proud of him.<lb/>
But he has gotten some tough<lb/>
questions - too, such as the<lb/>
one from a woman in Philadel-<lb/>
phia last month who challenged<lb/>
the administration's linkage<lb/>
of the Iraq war to the Sept. 11,<lb/>
2001, terrorist attacks. Bush said<lb/>
Saddam Hussein was a threat<lb/>
and at the time was widely<lb/>
believed to have weapons of<lb/>
mass destruction - which later<lb/>
proved false.<lb/>
In response to another ques-<lb/>
tion in Philadelphia, he esti-<lb/>
mated 30,000 Iraqis had died in<lb/>
the war, the first time he publicly<lb/>
put a number on Iraqi deaths. In<lb/>
Louisville, Ky he signaled that<lb/>
after initial reservations, he was<lb/>
resigned to congressional hear-<lb/>
ings into his domestic spying<lb/>
program as long as they don't aid<lb/>
the enemy.<lb/>
INSIDE I News: A2 I Classifieds: A8 I Opinion: A3 I Student Life: A4 I Sports: A6<lb/>
<pb facs="00059384_0002"/><lb/>
KIEWS<lb/>
Page A2 news@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328,6366<lb/>
CHRIS MUNIER News Editor ZACK HILL Assistant News Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY January 24, 2006<lb/>
Announcements<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<lb/>
has become an immensely<lb/>
popular event. Sure to have<lb/>
something for dance aficionados<lb/>
and newcomers alike, this is a<lb/>
fast-paced and unpredictable<lb/>
cornucopia of dance styles.<lb/>
Toying with Science<lb/>
One-man marvel Garry Krinsky<lb/>
juggles, mimes, dances and<lb/>
even balances five ladders on<lb/>
his chin to bring the laws of<lb/>
science to life. Mr. Krinsky will<lb/>
be bringing his show "Garry<lb/>
Krinsky's Toying with Science" to<lb/>
ECU Saturday, Jan. 28 at 2 p.m.<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium. Non-stop<lb/>
energy and audience participation<lb/>
will keep all ages engaged in this<lb/>
inventive and informative show.<lb/>
Advance individual tickets are<lb/>
$8 for ECU faculty and staff and<lb/>
$6 for ECU students and youth.<lb/>
All tickets at the door are $9.<lb/>
Better ticket options are available<lb/>
through subscriptions. For more<lb/>
information, contact the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office at 328-4788 or go<lb/>
to ecuarts.com.<lb/>
RHA Winter Trip<lb/>
The Resident Hall Association is<lb/>
sponsoring a Winter Trip to the Jan.<lb/>
27 Charlotte Bobcats vs, Miami<lb/>
Heat basketball game. Attendance<lb/>
is open to all students. The cost<lb/>
to attend is $27 for students<lb/>
who live on campus and $40<lb/>
for commuting students. The price<lb/>
includes the cost of the basketball<lb/>
ticket and transportation. If<lb/>
interested, contact the RHA office<lb/>
at rha@mail.ecu.edu or 328-<lb/>
1679. Dispersal of tickets will be<lb/>
based onafirstcome, first serve basis.<lb/>
Study Abroad<lb/>
information Session<lb/>
For those interested in venturing<lb/>
outside of the country for part of their<lb/>
education, the Office of International<lb/>
Affairs is offering a Study Abroad<lb/>
Information Session Tuesday, Jan.<lb/>
24 from 3 - 5 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, Great Room 2.<lb/>
Refreshments will be provided<lb/>
and the event is open to the public.<lb/>
Great Decisions 2006<lb/>
The second in a series of<lb/>
discussions of major world political<lb/>
moves hits ECU Saturday, Jan. 28<lb/>
at 10 a.m. in Rivers Auditorium.<lb/>
Professor Scott Sillman of Duke<lb/>
University will present his lecture,<lb/>
entitled "Human Rights and the<lb/>
Age of Terrorism The cost for<lb/>
attending this and any individual<lb/>
session is $15. The fuM eight-<lb/>
week program costs $69, which<lb/>
includes the Great Decisions<lb/>
Book. Any full time student or<lb/>
teacher may attend free of charge.<lb/>
For more information, call 328-<lb/>
2349, or visit ecu.educs-acad<lb/>
cpegreat decisions.cfm.<lb/>
Alumni Association<lb/>
Scholarships<lb/>
The ECU Alumni Association<lb/>
annually awards scholarships<lb/>
funded by alumni contributions.<lb/>
Twelve $1,000 scholarships will<lb/>
be awarded to deserving ECU<lb/>
full-time undergraduate students<lb/>
for the following academic year<lb/>
Applications for scholarships are<lb/>
due by Tuesday, Feb. 28. For more<lb/>
information and to download an<lb/>
application, visit piratealumni.<lb/>
com and click on "Awards and<lb/>
Scholarships" or call the Alumni<lb/>
Association at 328-6072.<lb/>
Mentors Needed for<lb/>
Elementary School<lb/>
Mentors are needed to assist in the<lb/>
after school program at Northwest<lb/>
Elementary. The program runs<lb/>
Monday through Friday from 2:20<lb/>
- 5:30 p.m but mentors do not<lb/>
have to be available for the entire<lb/>
week or during breaks. Persons<lb/>
are needed with experience<lb/>
coordinating physical activities<lb/>
for children andor providing<lb/>
nutrition education. There will<lb/>
be a daily stipend to offset the<lb/>
cost of transportation. For more<lb/>
information, contact Correai<lb/>
Moore at mooreco@ecu.edu.<lb/>
News Briefs<lb/>
State<lb/>
New female commander at Lejeune<lb/>
CAMP LEJEUNE, NC (AP) - The<lb/>
first female commander in Camp<lb/>
Lejeune's six-decade history takes<lb/>
over Monday at the largest Marine<lb/>
Corps base on the East Coast.<lb/>
Col. Adele Hodges, 51, takes over as<lb/>
commander after more than 27 years<lb/>
of experience as a logistics officer.<lb/>
"As a Marine, I don't look at myself as<lb/>
a female she said.<lb/>
"I want to be a role model for the<lb/>
female Marines, but not just the<lb/>
females. Everybody'<lb/>
Hodges enlisted In 1978 at her<lb/>
sister's urging with the plan of serving<lb/>
for four years and then returning<lb/>
home to Bridgeport, Conn. But the<lb/>
admittedly shy Hodges discovered<lb/>
during her first assignment at Camp<lb/>
Pendleton, Calif, that she wanted to<lb/>
lead Marines.<lb/>
She already had a degree from<lb/>
Southern Connecticut State College<lb/>
and was accepted into the Enlisted<lb/>
Commissioning Program to become<lb/>
an officer. She became a second<lb/>
lieutenant in 1980.<lb/>
"I was shy and still am to some<lb/>
degree, but the Marine Corps forced<lb/>
me to come out of my shell a bit<lb/>
Hodges said.<lb/>
Organizational changes within the<lb/>
Marine Corps means a colonel is<lb/>
taking over for Maj. Gen. Robert<lb/>
Dickerson, the previous commander<lb/>
of Camp Lejeune who had the<lb/>
duty since August 2003. He was<lb/>
placed in charge of seven East Coast<lb/>
installations, including Camp Lejeune<lb/>
and New River Air Station, which are<lb/>
now all commanded by colonels.<lb/>
Hodges said her role would be very<lb/>
similar to Dickerson's, except that her<lb/>
predecessor will represent a layer of<lb/>
oversight above her team.<lb/>
Three ABC board members quit<lb/>
after scrutiny<lb/>
HIGH POINT, NC (AP) -Three members<lb/>
of the High Point ABC Board have<lb/>
resigned after scrutiny of a secret<lb/>
meeting to hire a lawyer at public<lb/>
expense following allegations that<lb/>
they mismanaged liquor sales and<lb/>
kept a slush fund.<lb/>
The three members held a meeting<lb/>
Aug. 30 to hire lawyer Arch Schoch<lb/>
IV, who was paid more than $18,000<lb/>
in public funds.<lb/>
Although public boards are allowed<lb/>
to have private meetings to discuss<lb/>
legal representation, they must vote<lb/>
in public to have the meeting and<lb/>
announce the results afterward. Board<lb/>
minutes don't show that happened<lb/>
until a reference in September to an<lb/>
"informal action<lb/>
State ABC officials have criticized<lb/>
the attorney fee and are conducting<lb/>
their own investigation. The state<lb/>
ABC Commission regulates state<lb/>
liquor sales.<lb/>
Michael Herring, the state ABC<lb/>
administrator, said the investigation<lb/>
that Schoch was paid to conduct for<lb/>
board members Fred Swartzberg,<lb/>
Charles McNeil and Gilbert Gates Jr.<lb/>
hasn't helped state investigators.<lb/>
Swartzberg, McNeil and Gates quit<lb/>
last week. McNeil and Swartzberg<lb/>
said they were stepping down<lb/>
Thursday because the state probe<lb/>
was biased. Gates is a lawyer<lb/>
who quit Tuesday after it was<lb/>
discovered he had charged the board<lb/>
$6,644 for legal work while serving<lb/>
as a member.<lb/>
A new board was appointed Thursday<lb/>
by the High Point City Council.<lb/>
National<lb/>
Demonstrators mark Roe vs.<lb/>
Wade anniversary<lb/>
ST. PAUL Minn. (AP) - On the 33rd<lb/>
anniversary of Roe v. Wade, Katie<lb/>
Whitte braved below-freezing<lb/>
temperatures outside Minnesota's<lb/>
Capitol to march for the first time<lb/>
against abortion.<lb/>
This year is special for me because<lb/>
I am a mother out of wedlock said<lb/>
Whitte, 20, whose daughter is five<lb/>
months old.<lb/>
"I wanted to get the message out that<lb/>
life is important. It doesn't matter what<lb/>
your circumstances are<lb/>
Whitte was among thousands of<lb/>
abortion opponents who rallied across<lb/>
Pllinge from page ?<lb/>
"Heck yeah it was said Yow.<lb/>
She went on to add that she<lb/>
expects to attend every year while<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
"When you hit the water,<lb/>
you're just like, get out it's so cold<lb/>
when you plunge said Ryan<lb/>
Mayo, freshman chemistry major.<lb/>
He, too, intends to return<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
Marisa Pascal, freshman psy-<lb/>
chology major, said people do it<lb/>
for "kicks and giggles<lb/>
Michael Grantham, junior<lb/>
outdoor recreation major, said he<lb/>
did it "So I can get a free T-shirt<lb/>
or maybe an iPod<lb/>
Despite the pool full of cold<lb/>
water, the Polar Bear Pool Party's<lb/>
turnout shows no signs of dimin-<lb/>
ishing any time soon.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Artist<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
violence, Seba obtained special<lb/>
permission from the govern-<lb/>
ment to create a mural in Bolivar<lb/>
Square.<lb/>
This mural, which is more<lb/>
than 10 feet high and IS feet<lb/>
long, would be finished in only<lb/>
43 hours with the help of Seba<lb/>
and two others. All the materials<lb/>
used to create it were donated,<lb/>
but for Seba, it isn't the finished<lb/>
product that is so special.<lb/>
"The real relationship was the<lb/>
one with the people coming by,<lb/>
especially at night Seba said.<lb/>
"There were poor people,<lb/>
prostitutes, police officers and<lb/>
others. We would take a few short<lb/>
breaks to have coffee with all of<lb/>
them Seba said with a smile.<lb/>
The mural is now on perma-<lb/>
nent display in the Republic of<lb/>
Colombia Congress Main Hall in<lb/>
Bolivar Square.<lb/>
In April 2005, Seba also com-<lb/>
pleted the largest finger painting<lb/>
by children in the world. It is a<lb/>
painting of the Colombian flag<lb/>
and measures 60 meters by 18<lb/>
meters. It was painted by 800<lb/>
children who were all victims of<lb/>
the violence.<lb/>
"They are the artists Seba<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"It was very emotional. In the<lb/>
first moments for the children,<lb/>
they were afraid and excited. But<lb/>
then I said, 'Okay. This is paint-<lb/>
ing. Use your hands and your<lb/>
feet. Enjoy yourself<lb/>
After that, the children, most<lb/>
of whom lived in foster homes,<lb/>
had a lot of fun creating the<lb/>
gigantic work of art.<lb/>
"When did you and your<lb/>
wife began to really feel the pres-<lb/>
sure to leave Colombia?" asked<lb/>
Tichich.<lb/>
Seba and his wife continued<lb/>
to work with Retorno, the founda-<lb/>
tion that sponsored "48 Hours<lb/>
until assassination attempts<lb/>
began on their very lives.<lb/>
"Our foundation was discov-<lb/>
ering money that was stolen<lb/>
and other things and the terror-<lb/>
ists found out and tried to kill us<lb/>
several times Seba said.<lb/>
After being shot at on more<lb/>
than one occasion, the Sebas<lb/>
decided it was time to go. The<lb/>
agency helped them look for a<lb/>
suitable location for four of five<lb/>
months before it was able to send<lb/>
Seba and his family to Ecuador,<lb/>
where they lived for a month<lb/>
before coming to Greenville this<lb/>
past September.<lb/>
Two local churches, St. James<lb/>
United Methodist and Jarvis<lb/>
Memorial, sponsor the family.<lb/>
"They help us out with almost<lb/>
everything Seba said.<lb/>
He and his family have plans to<lb/>
stay in Greenville permanently.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
Great Books at Great Prices!<lb/>
rncnih i'j Shchpanl Memorial I ihrary<lb/>
USED BOOK SALE<lb/>
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the nation over the weekend, many of<lb/>
whom said they were heartened by<lb/>
President Bush's choice of Samuel<lb/>
Alito to replace Justice Sandra Day<lb/>
O'Connor, a moderate who was often<lb/>
the court's swing vote.<lb/>
In Washington, abortion rights<lb/>
advocates held a candlelight vigil in<lb/>
front of the Supreme Court Sunday<lb/>
night, waving signs that read: "Alito<lb/>
- No Justice For Women and "Keep<lb/>
Abortion Legal<lb/>
Anti-abortion activists also were to<lb/>
converge in Washington, where they<lb/>
planned to march to Congress and<lb/>
the Supreme Court Monday.<lb/>
The nation's high court made abortion<lb/>
legal Jan. 22,1973. Thirty-four states<lb/>
have since passed laws requiring<lb/>
parents either to be notified or to<lb/>
give consent when their underage<lb/>
daughters seek abortions.<lb/>
Wind-fanned brush Are threatens<lb/>
homes In Los Angeles County<lb/>
LA CANADA FLINTRIDGE, Calif.<lb/>
(AP) - A brush fire driven by 40<lb/>
mph wind, with gusts to double<lb/>
that speed, threatened homes as it<lb/>
charred several acres early Monday<lb/>
in this upscale community near Los<lb/>
Angeles, officials said.<lb/>
Residents were evacuated from<lb/>
about 15 homes on a street near<lb/>
the blaze, Los Angeles County fire<lb/>
Inspector Sam Padilla told KABC-TV.<lb/>
Officials were concerned that the<lb/>
wind, which was gusting to 80 mph,<lb/>
could carry embers up to a mile away,<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
No injuries were reported. About<lb/>
100 firefighters were on scene,<lb/>
Padilla said<lb/>
The fire broke out around 2:35 a.m.<lb/>
in a steep canyon and quickly grew<lb/>
to about 5 acres in the foothills of<lb/>
the San Gabriel Mountains, said<lb/>
Los Angeles County Fire Inspector<lb/>
Edward Osorio. The cause had not<lb/>
been determined.<lb/>
A high wind advisory will be<lb/>
in effect in the area until Tuesday<lb/>
afternoon, the National Weather<lb/>
Service said.<lb/>
La Canada-Flintridge is 15 miles<lb/>
northeast of Los Angeles.<lb/>
WorldL<lb/>
Search slows for chopper<lb/>
missing along Afghan-Pakistan<lb/>
border<lb/>
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - On Monday,<lb/>
rescuers temporarily suspended a<lb/>
search for a helicopter with seven<lb/>
people aboard that disappeared in<lb/>
rugged mountains along the Afghan-<lb/>
Pakistan border, officials said.<lb/>
Contact with the Mi-8 transport<lb/>
chopper was lost Saturday after<lb/>
it took off from the northwestern<lb/>
Pakistani city of Peshawar. It had<lb/>
been scheduled to land at the Afghan<lb/>
capital, Kabul, before refueling and<lb/>
flying to neighboring Turkmenistan,<lb/>
where it was based.<lb/>
The helicopter was chartered by the<lb/>
Red Cross for earthquake relief work<lb/>
in Pakistan. Its crew were employees<lb/>
of Turkmenistan Airlines, which<lb/>
operated the aircraft. No Red Cross<lb/>
staff were on board.<lb/>
Monday, Afghan government<lb/>
helicopters and troops were still<lb/>
searching their side of the frontier,<lb/>
but aircraft belonging to a NATO-led<lb/>
peacekeeping force in Afghanistan<lb/>
had withdrawn from the area.<lb/>
A search on the Pakistani side<lb/>
also failed to locate any sign<lb/>
of the aircraft.<lb/>
The helicopter was still not located by<lb/>
nightfall Monday and the search was<lb/>
called off until morning, said James<lb/>
Reynolds, deputy head of the Red<lb/>
Cross in Pakistan.<lb/>
A Pakistani army official, who<lb/>
requested anonymity, as he was not<lb/>
authorized to speak to the media, said<lb/>
the helicopter was not in Pakistan.<lb/>
"Whatever happened to it, it happened<lb/>
in Afghanistan he said.<lb/>
But Afghan Deputy Transport Minister<lb/>
Raz Mohammed Alami said he<lb/>
doubted the helicopter had entered<lb/>
Afghan airspace.<lb/>
"We have been searching for this<lb/>
chopper for 48 hours but there's no<lb/>
sign of it Alami said.<lb/>
"If it had gone down on our side of the<lb/>
border, we would have found it<lb/>
Still, he said, government<lb/>
choppers and soldiers on<lb/>
the ground would continue<lb/>
their search.<lb/>
A spokesman for the NATO<lb/>
peacekeeping force in Afghanistan,<lb/>
Maj. Andrew Elmes, said the force's<lb/>
aircraft were still on the lookout for the<lb/>
missing chopper, but special search<lb/>
aircraft had been withdrawn.<lb/>
U.S. general says slaying<lb/>
of Japanese woman has<lb/>
'challenged' U.SJapan relations<lb/>
TOKYO (AP) - The top U.S. military<lb/>
official in Japan said Monday that the<lb/>
alleged slaying of a Japanese woman<lb/>
by a Navy sailor was "horrific" and<lb/>
has challenged the two countries'<lb/>
military alliance.<lb/>
Earlier in the day, however, the two<lb/>
nations said Tokyo would spend<lb/>
$1.2 billion in 2006 and 2007 to<lb/>
help cover the costs of keeping tens<lb/>
of thousands of U.S. troops in this<lb/>
country, and stressed that despite<lb/>
concerns over the slaying their<lb/>
bilateral ties are strong.<lb/>
Japanese authorities say William<lb/>
Oliver Reese, 21, fatally beat and<lb/>
robbed a Japanese woman of about<lb/>
$130 near a U.S. Navy base southwest<lb/>
of Tokyo Jan. 3. He has been turned<lb/>
over to Japanese custody.<lb/>
"The alliance is a partnership Lt.<lb/>
Gen. Bruce Wright told a news<lb/>
conference. "This alliance has just<lb/>
been significantly challenged. It's<lb/>
horrific. It's horrible<lb/>
Wright, head of the U.S. Forces<lb/>
in Japan, said he would instruct<lb/>
commanders to work harder<lb/>
toward a goal of "zero criminal<lb/>
incidents" involving American service<lb/>
personnel in Japan.<lb/>
The murder has rekindled<lb/>
lingering concerns over crime<lb/>
related to the roughly 50,000 U.S<lb/>
troops stationed here under a<lb/>
mutual security pact. Such concerns<lb/>
boiled over into huge protests after<lb/>
the rape of a schoolgirl on the island<lb/>
of Okinawa in 1995.<lb/>
Learning from experience, U.S.<lb/>
officials have been quick to<lb/>
express their regrets. Wright<lb/>
even attended the wake for the<lb/>
slain woman.<lb/>
SGA from page A1<lb/>
Committee regarding land usage<lb/>
conversions. The Greenspace<lb/>
Committee is concerned about<lb/>
the depletion of green space on<lb/>
campus. They do not want to<lb/>
lose the grassy areas near the<lb/>
library. Koch wants to prove that<lb/>
building a parking lot will have<lb/>
little effect on the green space on<lb/>
campus considering there is not<lb/>
that much there anyway.<lb/>
"It seems more useful for park-<lb/>
ing that green space said Koch.<lb/>
"At the same time, we're con-<lb/>
cerned about green space as well<lb/>
The plan is to build roughly<lb/>
15 - 20 parking spaces to allevi-<lb/>
ate parking congestion at Joyner<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
The senate also addressed<lb/>
an issue pertaining to fund-<lb/>
ing of partisan and religious<lb/>
groups on campus. SGA's legisla-<lb/>
tive bylaws forbid such funding<lb/>
but SGA voted two weeks ago<lb/>
to give money to the College<lb/>
Republicans to pay for confer-<lb/>
ences they wanted to attend.<lb/>
The senate realized they had to<lb/>
amend the bylaws or take away<lb/>
the funding. Speaker of the<lb/>
Senate Benjamin Wyche said<lb/>
contributing money to partisan<lb/>
groups did not violate federal<lb/>
or state laws insofar as they did<lb/>
not go to supporting a specific<lb/>
candidate's election campaign.<lb/>
Most senators agreed that the<lb/>
specific semantics of the bylaws<lb/>
needed adjustment.<lb/>
"It speaks to the fact that<lb/>
our Constitution and bylaws are<lb/>
outdated said Wyche.<lb/>
SGA Senator Terry Gore argued<lb/>
that the assembly should allow the<lb/>
judiciary a chance to review the.<lb/>
bylaws before making changes.<lb/>
"It may be better to let the<lb/>
judicial branch deal with that<lb/>
said Gore.<lb/>
Gore was not against updat-<lb/>
ing the bylaws but merely advo-<lb/>
cated letting SGA step back and<lb/>
analyze the situation before<lb/>
acting.<lb/>
However, the motion failed<lb/>
21 to 23. SGA will still be having<lb/>
a "constitutional steering meet-<lb/>
ing" tomorrow to review all their<lb/>
rules.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059384_0003"/><lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page A3<lb/>
edltor@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.9238<lb/>
JENNIFER L HOBBS Editor in Chief<lb/>
TUESDAY January 24,2006<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
Remember who<lb/>
was hot in 2001?<lb/>
Napster founder Shawn Fanning was battling it<lb/>
out in court with Metallica as his free download-<lb/>
able music service reached its peak of popularity.<lb/>
A bespectacled Brit named Harry Potter was<lb/>
topping the box offices.<lb/>
i<lb/>
And newly elected President George W. Bush<lb/>
was getting comfortable in the White House<lb/>
Oval Office.<lb/>
All of this was big news, but nothing compared to<lb/>
what defined the year and quite possibly a whole<lb/>
generation of Americans, September 11.<lb/>
And does everyone remember the man directly<lb/>
responsible for the attacks?<lb/>
It would not be surprising to hear some less<lb/>
informed people blame Saddam Hussein - after all,<lb/>
the US. military has spent the last few years taking<lb/>
over his country.Although undoubtedly a tyrant in his<lb/>
own right the deposed former leader of Iraq seems<lb/>
to be the scapegoat for a Bush administration that<lb/>
is desperate to conceal the horrible truth that they<lb/>
simply cannot find the real perpetrator of the attacks.<lb/>
Weapons of Mass Destruction in Iraq?<lb/>
I think not<lb/>
But we're there anyway.<lb/>
And now, as the number of American troops killed<lb/>
in Iraq has climbed past 2,000 and is rising daily,<lb/>
we got a message last week from Mr. Bin Laden,<lb/>
the first in over a year.<lb/>
He says that "the war against America and its<lb/>
allies will not be confined to Iraq And he's right<lb/>
(See London subway attacks.)<lb/>
He also says that Iraq has become a magnet for<lb/>
attracting and training talented fighters. Right again.<lb/>
And he goes on to threaten more attacks, which<lb/>
hopefully, he is wrong about<lb/>
We must give Bush credit, there have been no<lb/>
more terrorists attacks on American soil since 9-11.<lb/>
But whether that is good work or sheer luck is<lb/>
debatable. And when it comes down to it isn't<lb/>
it far more important to invest U.S. money and<lb/>
lives hunting down bin Laden, a fugitive with the<lb/>
blood of thousands of Americans still red on his<lb/>
hands than to launch a full-scale invasion and<lb/>
occupation of a country for reasons that are still<lb/>
not validated besides the fact that Saddam Hus-<lb/>
sein got into a big fight with your daddy?<lb/>
Ttie Bush administration as dismissed the newest<lb/>
tapes, saying that terrorists networks like Al-<lb/>
Quada are getting weak by the day.<lb/>
But Osama and his ilk are still out there, and though<lb/>
he may seem now like nothing more than a hermit<lb/>
hiding in a cave in remote Afghanistan, on a hot<lb/>
morning back in September 2001, he wielded<lb/>
enough powerto bring the United States to its knees,<lb/>
and we would all be fools to count him out now.<lb/>
Our Staff<lb/>
Jennifer L Hobbs<lb/>
Editor in Chief<lb/>
Chris Munler Zack Hill<lb/>
News Editor Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Carolyn Scandura<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Tony Zoppo<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Sarah Bell<lb/>
Head Copy Editor<lb/>
Herb Sneed<lb/>
Photo Editor<lb/>
Kristin Murnane<lb/>
Asst. Features Editor<lb/>
Brandon Hughes<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
April Barnes<lb/>
Asst. Copy Editor<lb/>
Rachael Lotter<lb/>
Asst. Photo Editor<lb/>
Alexander Marclniak<lb/>
Web 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 every<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday during the regular<lb/>
academic year and 5,000 on Wednesdays during the<lb/>
summer "Our View" is the opinion of the editorial board<lb/>
and is written by editorial board members. TEC welcomes<lb/>
letters to the editor which are limited to 250 words (which<lb/>
may be edited for decency or brevity). We reserve the<lb/>
right to edit or reject letters and all letters must be signed<lb/>
and include a telephone number Letters may be sent<lb/>
via e-mail to edrtor@theeastcaroliniancom 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 81,<lb/>
NO-ETHICS<lb/>
ZONE<lb/>
Pirate Rant<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
Thug Life: Marcus Vick on display for all to see<lb/>
Vick-tory!<lb/>
DANIEL BROCK<lb/>
OPINION COLUMNIST<lb/>
Marcus Vick is a thug, a goon<lb/>
and an idiot savant. All of which<lb/>
he has prominently put on dis-<lb/>
play recently.<lb/>
Vick's stint at Virginia Tech<lb/>
was tumultuous at best. Before<lb/>
the 2004 season, Vick was con-<lb/>
victed on charges relating to an<lb/>
incident during which he pro-<lb/>
vided alcohol to three underage<lb/>
girls. In July of that year, he was<lb/>
charged with reckless driving<lb/>
and possession of marijuana.<lb/>
Though he pleaded no contest,<lb/>
his license was suspended and he<lb/>
was kicked off the football team<lb/>
for the entire 2004 season.<lb/>
Vick had football-related<lb/>
problems as well. While the team<lb/>
may have been winning (which<lb/>
is a big reason why he stayed<lb/>
around as long as he did), his<lb/>
conduct showed little class. He<lb/>
flicked off the crowd, which had<lb/>
been pelting him with chants<lb/>
of "child molester at West<lb/>
-Virginia. He mumbled a half-<lb/>
hearted apology and nothing was<lb/>
heard of the incident again.<lb/>
After a loss to Florida State<lb/>
in the ACC Championship, Vick<lb/>
stormed past reporters claiming<lb/>
he didn't have to talk to them.<lb/>
Marcus' on-field coupe de grace<lb/>
was in the 2006 Gator Bowl.<lb/>
After being tackled, he got up<lb/>
and maliciously stomped on the<lb/>
leg of a Louisville lineman. Inex-<lb/>
plicably, the officials missed this<lb/>
ludicrous display, but it did not<lb/>
escape television cameras. There<lb/>
was a large fallout, and everyone<lb/>
from football analysts to politi-<lb/>
cians pondered and expounded<lb/>
on what should become of him.<lb/>
Virginia Tech, who most<lb/>
thought had been a little too long<lb/>
suffering, seemed as though they<lb/>
were going to administer another<lb/>
slap on the wrist until they<lb/>
learned that Vick had been pulled<lb/>
over Dec. 17 for speeding and<lb/>
driving with a revoked license.<lb/>
Vick had been on a so-called<lb/>
"No Tolerance" policy with the<lb/>
university since January 2005,<lb/>
and this was the final, final straw.<lb/>
Vick declared for the NFL Draft<lb/>
Jan. 6, but three days later was<lb/>
arrested for allegedly brandish-<lb/>
ing a firearm at three people in a<lb/>
McDonald's parking lot, (maybe<lb/>
he was there applying for a job)<lb/>
leaving his draft hopes in doubt.<lb/>
Who's to blame for all this?<lb/>
Obviously Marcus Vick. How-<lb/>
ever, that doesn't mean there<lb/>
weren't other contributing fac-<lb/>
tors. Vick's stupidity is rivaled<lb/>
only by his athletic prowess, and<lb/>
that allowed him to get away<lb/>
with as much as he did.<lb/>
Virginia Tech head football<lb/>
coach Frank Beamer is the boss<lb/>
in Blacksburg and he mishandled<lb/>
this situation at almost every<lb/>
turn. Beamer has taken a once<lb/>
middling program and turned it<lb/>
into a national powerhouse. He's<lb/>
overseen the expansion of their<lb/>
stadium into one of the finest<lb/>
facilities in the country, and<lb/>
he has made the university and<lb/>
himself a lot of money. Winning<lb/>
takes money and makes money.<lb/>
The only way to stay on top is<lb/>
to have the top athletes. Marcus<lb/>
Vick would certainly fall into that<lb/>
category. As the younger brother<lb/>
of Atlanta Falcon's quarterback<lb/>
Michael Vick a.k.a Ron Mexico,<lb/>
the apples apparently didn't fall<lb/>
far from the tree or each other.<lb/>
Before his dismissal, the younger<lb/>
Vick was ahead of his brother in<lb/>
some aspects of his game at the<lb/>
same point in their careers. Some<lb/>
even predicted he would be better<lb/>
than Michael. Beamer was will-<lb/>
ing to hold on to talent like that<lb/>
at any cost. It's doubtful that Vick<lb/>
would have been around after<lb/>
his first two arrests if he were a<lb/>
back-up lineman. But he was no<lb/>
lineman. He was the head-liner.<lb/>
Beamer continually made excep-<lb/>
tions for his star, not for Vick's<lb/>
sake, but for the continued suc-<lb/>
cess of the program. Even after<lb/>
informing Vick of his dismissal,<lb/>
Beamer put his football team<lb/>
ahead of a young man whose<lb/>
life is quickly falling apart stat-<lb/>
ing, "We wanted what's best for<lb/>
this football team and Marcus<lb/>
Another contributing factor<lb/>
to this debacle is hip-hop cul-<lb/>
ture. The Tidewater area from<lb/>
which Vick hails is known for<lb/>
producing outstanding athletes<lb/>
and for its areas of abject poverty<lb/>
and violence. The "757" - as it's<lb/>
known in hip-hop circles - has<lb/>
produced athletes such as Allen<lb/>
Iverson, Aaron Brooks, B.J. Upton<lb/>
and of course Michael Vick.<lb/>
Areas like Norfolk are known for<lb/>
their high crime rates and low<lb/>
incomes. Athletes in these places<lb/>
are looked upon as heroes and<lb/>
tickets out. Exceptions are made<lb/>
and people often times look<lb/>
the other way at bad behavior,<lb/>
which creates a false reality for<lb/>
these talented individuals. The<lb/>
violence and machismo that<lb/>
surround the hip-hop lifestyle<lb/>
furthers these notions of supe-<lb/>
riority and entitlement. Guns,<lb/>
drugs and other illicit activities<lb/>
are glorified in this culture that<lb/>
permeates African-American life<lb/>
in this country. It's not a stretch<lb/>
to imagine that high profile ath-<lb/>
letes and high profile thugs living<lb/>
in the same impoverished neigh-<lb/>
borhoods would fall in together.<lb/>
They are, after all, both a certain<lb/>
type of celebrity and have prob-<lb/>
ably even grown up together.<lb/>
Poverty is really the common<lb/>
bond and everyone is looking for<lb/>
a way out - some through illicit -<lb/>
activities, some through music,<lb/>
some through hard work and<lb/>
some through sports. Parents<lb/>
often overlook the flaws of their<lb/>
children if they see even the<lb/>
slightest chance of them escap-<lb/>
ing such bad circumstances.<lb/>
Vick's mother, Brenda Boddie,<lb/>
made numerous excuses for her<lb/>
son, recently claiming about his<lb/>
vicious stomp, "Everybody does<lb/>
it in the NFL and college football.<lb/>
He just got caught doing it, and<lb/>
since he's been in trouble in the<lb/>
past everything just got blown all<lb/>
out of proportion<lb/>
It was not blown out of pro-<lb/>
portion. It was a heinous move,<lb/>
and it fit perfectly into a pattern<lb/>
of unacceptable behavior that<lb/>
has tarnished not only his family<lb/>
name but also the university for<lb/>
which he starred.<lb/>
That university provided him<lb/>
with his ticket out of the ghetto,<lb/>
albeit with an ulterior motive.<lb/>
When it comes down to it, do<lb/>
you think that Frank Beamer<lb/>
and Virginia Tech really care<lb/>
about Marcus Vick as a person?<lb/>
Probably not as much as they<lb/>
would like you to believe. They<lb/>
were just using this kid and every<lb/>
poor black athlete they can find<lb/>
to facilitate their success. They'll<lb/>
bring kids in, use them for what<lb/>
they can and then cut them loose<lb/>
without caring what happens in<lb/>
their future. Graduation rates<lb/>
for African-American players are<lb/>
low. That means coaches need to<lb/>
do more to ensure their success or<lb/>
not bring them to school at all.<lb/>
Wasting money on athletes that<lb/>
coaches know can't handle the<lb/>
school work or won't act prop-<lb/>
erly is irresponsible and selfish.<lb/>
Also it provides false hope to<lb/>
youths in the poor communi-<lb/>
ties. What good is a couple years<lb/>
on a college sports team going<lb/>
to do someone when they're 25,<lb/>
without a diploma and working<lb/>
at McDonald's (and Marcus Vick<lb/>
comes in wildly waving a gun)?<lb/>
Be all that as it may, everyone<lb/>
makes their own choices. Marcus<lb/>
Vick was blessed with unbeliev-<lb/>
able athletic ability and talent.<lb/>
As an All-ACC quarterback, a<lb/>
lucrative NFL contract was almost<lb/>
guaranteed. However, he acted<lb/>
arrogantly and stupidly and the<lb/>
next thing you know he's waving<lb/>
a gun in a kid's face at McDonald's.<lb/>
Vick himself doesn't seem too<lb/>
concerned about things. When<lb/>
asked what he planned to do<lb/>
after being kicked off the team he<lb/>
replied, "It's not a big deal. I'll just<lb/>
move on to the next level, baby<lb/>
Maybe he thinks if all else fails<lb/>
he can just live off this brother.<lb/>
Marcus Vick isn't the first<lb/>
athlete to have off the field prob-<lb/>
lems. In 2004 quarterback James<lb/>
Pinkey was suspended from<lb/>
school and the team for poor<lb/>
grades and was also involved in<lb/>
a dubious car crash. During his<lb/>
time out of school, we were co-<lb/>
workers at Logan's Roadhouse.<lb/>
I thought it was terrible that he<lb/>
had gone from starting quarter-<lb/>
back to a bus boy in a couple of<lb/>
weeks. However, he never had<lb/>
a bad attitude and he was great<lb/>
to work with. Apparently he hit<lb/>
the books and the practice fields<lb/>
hard as well, getting back into<lb/>
school and having an outstand-<lb/>
ing junior season.<lb/>
That really illustrates the fact<lb/>
that it's up to each individual<lb/>
whether they are going to suc-<lb/>
ceed or not. It doesn't matter if<lb/>
you're a star athlete or a business<lb/>
major. The thing that determines<lb/>
success isn't found on the streets<lb/>
of Norfolk or on a football field<lb/>
in Blacksburg or in a McDonald's<lb/>
parking lot. It's character and it's<lb/>
found inside yourself.<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
Dear Editor,<lb/>
As a student of ECU for the<lb/>
better part of a decade, I have<lb/>
seen many things around campus<lb/>
that have upset me, but nothing<lb/>
as much as the military uniforms<lb/>
rant in last week's paper. I have<lb/>
been a service member in the NC<lb/>
Army National Guard for the last<lb/>
nine years and I wonder where<lb/>
someone gets the nerve to say<lb/>
something like that.<lb/>
During my nine years of<lb/>
service I have been pulled out of<lb/>
ECU twice to serve my country.<lb/>
The first time was for one and<lb/>
a half years from 2000 to 2001<lb/>
to serve on SFOR-8 in Bosnia-<lb/>
Herzegovina. I came back for<lb/>
a couple more years of classes<lb/>
and was pulled out again for<lb/>
two more years to serve in OIF-2<lb/>
in Iraq. Since my return, I have<lb/>
reenroUed in classes and plan to<lb/>
graduate this coming summer.<lb/>
Hearing someone complain<lb/>
about the "army uniforms" being<lb/>
worn on campus causes me to<lb/>
doubt their sincerity in saying<lb/>
that they support the troops.<lb/>
Just because you have a yellow<lb/>
ribbon magnet on the back of<lb/>
your car that says "Support Our<lb/>
Troops" does not mean that you<lb/>
are doing so. As a veteran of<lb/>
two conflicts, I suggest that this<lb/>
person thinks about the reason<lb/>
that they have the freedom to<lb/>
rant or wear what they want.<lb/>
Hopefully they will realize that it<lb/>
is because of the men and women<lb/>
who serve in the military that we<lb/>
have these rights. So until this<lb/>
"ranter" walks 20 miles in a pair<lb/>
of combat boots, they should be<lb/>
quiet and accept the fact that<lb/>
we will continue to wear our<lb/>
uniforms with pride whenever<lb/>
we please.<lb/>
Thank you,<lb/>
SGT Dan M. Blalock,<lb/>
M1A1 Tank Gunner<lb/>
Co. D 1252 CAB,<lb/>
30th BCT, NCARNG<lb/>
Bosnia &amp; Iraq Veteran<lb/>
Construction Management<lb/>
I am a smoker. If my smoking ever offends or bothers<lb/>
you, please tell me to stop or go somewhere else -1 will<lb/>
gladly oblige. Smoking is a filthy, disgusting habit,<lb/>
and nobody - smoker or not - should even attempt<lb/>
to defend it.<lb/>
Why is it that the majority of the girls who go to ECU<lb/>
are gorgeous and the majority of the guys own at least<lb/>
one pair of overalls, a gun, wear something camo<lb/>
everyday and would love to hang a deer head on their<lb/>
dorm room wall if given the chance?<lb/>
I just want to thank the nice girl who drove all the way<lb/>
back to campus after finding my cell phone sitting on<lb/>
one of the buses to return it to me. I can't thank you<lb/>
enough. It was the greatest thing that happened to<lb/>
me all week!<lb/>
Thank you ladies at Java City Mendenhall so much for<lb/>
a nice attitude and serving me even before it is time to<lb/>
open. You should get a raise.<lb/>
Oh my God. Somebody get the media. TEC, for the<lb/>
first time this year, has managed to fill the entire front<lb/>
page with news that is actually somewhat relevant to<lb/>
ECU in each of their week's issues. I wonder how long<lb/>
that'll last.<lb/>
Roommate, I am kind and considerate to your guests.<lb/>
It would be great if you could do the same to mine.<lb/>
OK, 1 was almost late for class on Friday because after<lb/>
riding around campus looking for a parking meter,<lb/>
the only three I could find were broken. If we are only<lb/>
going to have that much available parking on campus,<lb/>
the meters should at least be in service. Thanks ECU<lb/>
parking for nothing.<lb/>
Yes, my Lacoste is real, but yours obviously is not.<lb/>
I'm so happy that next semester Fletcher (seventh floor<lb/>
only) will be smoking again. Thanks ECU for thinking<lb/>
about the students!<lb/>
I really hope you people don't drive as bad as you walk<lb/>
through campus. How hard is it to walk on your side<lb/>
of the sidewalk and go in the "IN" door and out the<lb/>
"OUT" door?<lb/>
The chairs in Bate have the most annoying squeaks<lb/>
ever so why do people insist on twisting back and<lb/>
forward all through class?<lb/>
I hate it when dudes drink out of straws.<lb/>
Is it me or is that guy in the Pep band at Minges with<lb/>
the short black hair and stubble hot?<lb/>
I've been trying to do this new thing called "going to<lb/>
sleep early" (and by early I mean before 3 a.m.) I'm<lb/>
struggling!<lb/>
TEC works great for starting my barbecue grill. Using<lb/>
TEC to ignite the coals eliminates the need for lighter<lb/>
fluid and hence takes away the lighter fluid taste.<lb/>
The new College Hill Suites looks sweet, but where's the<lb/>
price? Every other apartment complex in the newspaper<lb/>
has their price listed, what's the deal?<lb/>
To the person who said "my heart will always be at<lb/>
Carolina Why don't you take the rest of you up to<lb/>
Chapel Hill along with your "heart We don't need<lb/>
anymore wannabe Carolina fans at ECU.<lb/>
Thank God that the lobby is 24-hour visitation! Would<lb/>
it be too inappropriate to camp out down there with<lb/>
my boyfriend who drove hours to come visit me or<lb/>
should I just continue to secretly hold him hostage in<lb/>
my room? He really enjoys not being able to leave my<lb/>
room to pee in the middle of the night. That's not a<lb/>
fold out couch down there is it?<lb/>
How hot are boys who love bluegrass and dancing in<lb/>
the dark?<lb/>
For those of you wondering why some people are<lb/>
wearing their Military uniforms around on campus,<lb/>
it's because they are part of the ROTC program at ECU.<lb/>
ECU has a Army &amp; Air Force program. So no, they are<lb/>
not wearing it for their health or just because they are<lb/>
extra motivated!<lb/>
How dare NBC not show "The Office" on Thursday! I<lb/>
recorded it on my DVR and all I saw was some lawyer<lb/>
show! This is not OK!<lb/>
Why waste money on ECU sports when all they do<lb/>
is disappoint the school? Just look at the declining<lb/>
attendance to football games and other sports and<lb/>
the number of coaches we pay who do not actually<lb/>
coach!<lb/>
We at Croatan do all we can to keep our work place<lb/>
clean and we can't help it if someone makes a bad move.<lb/>
We can't control the scent that flows in the air. All we<lb/>
can do about that is spray disinfectant. We are here for<lb/>
the kids. This remark about our bathroom shouldn't<lb/>
have been printed. We checked the bathroom, and it<lb/>
was clean. It had a smell, but like I said who can control<lb/>
what flows in the air? Thank you.<lb/>
Don't get me wrong, TEC is wonderful, but it's not<lb/>
completely satisfying. I mean, how can you expect us<lb/>
to get through the first few weeks without a crossword<lb/>
puzzle?! Please, save us from the stress!<lb/>
Why is it that West End was closed all weekend and 360<lb/>
closed at seven every night? Do people on west campus<lb/>
not get hungry like the people on the hill?<lb/>
I wear a uniform because I'm required to. Sure beats<lb/>
prancing around campus looking like an 8th gTader<lb/>
wannabe American Idol. Who requires you to wear<lb/>
that clown suit?<lb/>
To the person looking for Ed Try in and around the<lb/>
art building, that's where I always see him!<lb/>
JJ Redick is a tool<lb/>
I think its awesome how Pirate Rants are anonymous<lb/>
 because if they weren't, then there would probably<lb/>
be a crap load of people getting their rear ends beat<lb/>
because they are so ignorant and don't know what<lb/>
the heck they are talking about. Lesson to be learned,<lb/>
don't be ignorant!<lb/>
i<lb/>
Editor's Note. The Pirate Rant Is an anonymous way for students and staff In the<lb/>
K Vcommunitytowiatheir opinions Sulmlssions cm tt submitted anonymously<lb/>
online at www.theeastcawHnian.com, or e-mailed to edlmnmheeastcaroltnian<lb/>
com. The editor reserves the right fo edit opinions for content and brevity<lb/>
<pb facs="00059384_0004"/><lb/>
. . .  .<lb/>
tudent Llff<lb/>
1-24-0(<lb/>
Page A4 features@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 CAROLYN SCANDURA Features Editor KRISTIN MURNANE Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY January 24, 2006<lb/>
Names in the News:<lb/>
And on the lefty side<lb/>
Amazon.com is launching a weekly<lb/>
talk show on the Internet hosted by<lb/>
Bill Maher.<lb/>
The show, "Amazon Fishbowl will<lb/>
begin with a Maher monologue and<lb/>
will feature interviews with authors,<lb/>
conversations with filmmakers, and<lb/>
musical performances.<lb/>
Maher, who you may recall lost his<lb/>
show "Politically Incorrect" after<lb/>
suggesting that the Sept. 11 terrorists<lb/>
were not cowards, reemerged on HBO<lb/>
with "Real Time With Bill Maher<lb/>
Each "Fishbowl" segment will include<lb/>
a commercial for its sponsor, UPS, in<lb/>
which a celebrity makes a surprise<lb/>
delivery to an Amazon customer. The<lb/>
show will be Webcast live Thursdays<lb/>
at 11 p.m. starting June 1.<lb/>
He wouldn't hurt a giraffe<lb/>
Say what you want about Michael<lb/>
Jackson's beastly behavior, the U.S.<lb/>
Department of Agriculture says that<lb/>
at least he's kind to animals.<lb/>
"I'm unaware of any violations of the<lb/>
Animal Welfare Act at Neverland<lb/>
a USDA spokesman said after<lb/>
an investigation into reports that<lb/>
exotic (four-legged) creatures on<lb/>
Jackson's 2,700-acre ranch were<lb/>
being mistreated. Last December,<lb/>
the radical animal-rights group<lb/>
People for the Ethical Treatment of<lb/>
Animals (PETA) filed a complaint<lb/>
against Neverland Ranch after<lb/>
aerial photographs seemed to show<lb/>
giraffes, crocodiles and elephants<lb/>
living in squalid conditions.<lb/>
"We take all complaints seriously,<lb/>
and on Dec. 21 a USDA veterinary<lb/>
officer went on site for an inspection<lb/>
but found that nothing was amiss<lb/>
and that the animals were in good<lb/>
shape the spokesman said. But<lb/>
PETA reportedly plans to file another<lb/>
complaint, this one with the U.S.<lb/>
Fish and Wildlife Service, claiming<lb/>
Jackson's elephants and orangutans<lb/>
are protected under the federal<lb/>
Endangered Species Act.<lb/>
Bidding Begins<lb/>
John Lennon's original manuscript to<lb/>
"A Day in the Life" is being offered by<lb/>
Bonhams auction house in New York<lb/>
until March 7. It is expected to fetch<lb/>
approximately $2 million. Lennon<lb/>
wrote the song, which begins, "I<lb/>
read the news today, oh boy while<lb/>
reading the London Daily Mail on<lb/>
Jan. 17.1967.<lb/>
Grammy lineup<lb/>
With a very short time until the<lb/>
Grammys, the lineup of performers<lb/>
is taking form. So far, Mariah Carey,<lb/>
Kanye West and John Legend are on<lb/>
the bill. Each has eight nominations<lb/>
this go-round, including album of the<lb/>
year for Carey The Emancipation of<lb/>
Mimi) and West (Late Registration).<lb/>
Legend's nominations include best<lb/>
new artist and best R&amp;B album for Get<lb/>
Lifted. The Feb. 8 show will be held<lb/>
at the Staples Center in Los Angeles<lb/>
and is sure to be an interesting night.<lb/>
Super bowl stars<lb/>
Aretha Franklin and Aaron Neville will<lb/>
perform the national anthem at the<lb/>
Super Bowl on Feb. 5, accompanied<lb/>
by pianist Dr. John and a 150-voice<lb/>
choir singing on a taped vocal track<lb/>
that will be recorded in the Motor City<lb/>
several days before the game at Ford<lb/>
Field, according to the Detroit Free<lb/>
Press. John Legend and Joss Stone<lb/>
will join Motown star Stevie Wonder in<lb/>
performing Wonder's hits as part of the<lb/>
Super Bowl pregame show on ABC.<lb/>
The NFL first announced the Rolling<lb/>
Stones would headline the halftime<lb/>
show, but that prompted demands<lb/>
that Detroit's musical legacy be<lb/>
recognized. So Wonder and Franklin<lb/>
were brought on board. (She was<lb/>
two when her family moved from<lb/>
Memphis, Tenn to Detroit in 1944,<lb/>
making her the lady for the job.)<lb/>
Local Concerts:<lb/>
Nada Surf will be at the Cat's Cradle<lb/>
in Carrboro on Friday, Feb. 10.<lb/>
Local Band Profile: Your Name in Vain<lb/>
Music lovers wanted<lb/>
SARAH CAMPBELL<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
After chatting with the band<lb/>
Your Name in Vain for only<lb/>
about five minutes it became<lb/>
crystal clear that these guys<lb/>
are not only incredibly nice,<lb/>
but also very passionate about<lb/>
making music. All of the guys in<lb/>
the band are not only avid music<lb/>
lovers, but also students here at<lb/>
ECU. Since exploding onto the<lb/>
local music scene during their<lb/>
first performance ever at The<lb/>
12"1 Annual Battle of the Bands<lb/>
in March 2005 with a second<lb/>
place victory, this band has seen<lb/>
nothing but success.<lb/>
When Josh Williams and<lb/>
Alex Jones met during a class in<lb/>
fall 2004 they probably didn't<lb/>
imagine that their newfound<lb/>
friendship would ultimately<lb/>
lead to the creation of a band.<lb/>
After several months of writing<lb/>
the two decided to form a band<lb/>
with long time friends, Shane<lb/>
Crump and Jason Thompson.<lb/>
However, they were still miss-<lb/>
ing one thing, a drummer. They<lb/>
began auditioning drummers<lb/>
and after hearing J.P. Prieto<lb/>
knew that he would complete<lb/>
their sound, so he joined the<lb/>
band the very night of his audi-<lb/>
tion and the five guys have<lb/>
been playing together ever since.<lb/>
Your Name in Vain describes<lb/>
their music as a mix of rock, post<lb/>
hardcore, pop, alternative and<lb/>
emo blended into one. The band<lb/>
cites Underoath, New Found<lb/>
Glory, Acceptance and music in<lb/>
general as their inspiration.<lb/>
"Everyone (in the band) brings<lb/>
something different, in order<lb/>
to provide a broad spectrum<lb/>
of musical talent said Jones.<lb/>
Williams provides mostly<lb/>
rhythm for the band through<lb/>
this guitar playing. He also acts<lb/>
as the bands business manager<lb/>
by booking shows and watch-<lb/>
ing out for their best interest.<lb/>
Jones writes lyrics, melodies and<lb/>
hooks as well as using his unique<lb/>
voice to sing lead vocals. Crump<lb/>
plays bass as well as singing back<lb/>
up vocals - his role is crucial<lb/>
considering the fact that with-<lb/>
out his bass performance the<lb/>
music would sound incomplete.<lb/>
Thompson plays guitar and pro-<lb/>
vides back up vocals. His taste in<lb/>
hardcore music influences the<lb/>
band's sound. Prieto's drum-<lb/>
ming creates structure and his<lb/>
experience from playing with<lb/>
other bands helps them navigate<lb/>
through key choices.<lb/>
It has been less than a year<lb/>
since their debut at the Battle<lb/>
of the Bands and Your Name in<lb/>
Vain has already accomplished<lb/>
many things. They have been<lb/>
signed by Tragic Hero Records,<lb/>
a Raleigh-based indie label, and<lb/>
in December 2005 released their<lb/>
debut album, Six Accounts of Skin<lb/>
Deep Beauty. They receive over<lb/>
6,000 plays and 1,000 down-<lb/>
loads each day, and add twenty<lb/>
new fans every two hours.<lb/>
Their music can be heard<lb/>
regularly on 99X or 99.5 WXNR,<lb/>
Greenville-New Bern-Jackson-<lb/>
ville, NC. You may have seen<lb/>
them headline the 2005 X-Fest<lb/>
with Chevelle, Taproot and<lb/>
Crossfade. MTV has invited a<lb/>
them to Ft. Worth, TX to per- f<lb/>
form for an episode of "My Super <lb/>
Sweet Sixteen" and In May they 5<lb/>
will be accompanying Alesana at I<lb/>
see VAIN page A5<lb/>
These five ECU students are definitely on their way to the top.<lb/>
Toying with Science<lb/>
KrinsKyJs coming<lb/>
m<lb/>
 1 r A'<lb/>
i flr Mm<lb/>
I IB<lb/>
mT 1 f<lb/>
The photo above from Dance 2005 shows just a glimpse of what to expect at Dance 2006 this year.<lb/>
Long awaited 'Dance 2006'<lb/>
Something mr everone<lb/>
SARAH CAMPBELL<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Garry Krinsky, an experienced showman, will perform here at ECU.<lb/>
ECU Family Fare Series<lb/>
does it again<lb/>
AMANDA WINAH<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
The Pietasters will be at the Cat's<lb/>
Cradle in Carrboro on Saturday,<lb/>
Febm<lb/>
?<lb/>
Matisyahu will be performing at<lb/>
the Cat's Cradle in Carrboro on<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 15.<lb/>
Keith Urban and Pat Green will be<lb/>
performing at the Charlotte Bobcats<lb/>
Arena on Thursday, Feb. 16.<lb/>
OAR. will be at Ovens Auditorium in<lb/>
Charlotte on Tuesday, Feb. 21.<lb/>
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club and<lb/>
special guests Elefant will be at<lb/>
the Cat's Cradle in Carrboro on<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 22.<lb/>
G. Love and Special Sauce will be<lb/>
performing at the Lincoln Theatre in<lb/>
Raleigh on Friday, March 3.<lb/>
Jerry Seinfeld will be performing<lb/>
at the Progress Energy Center for<lb/>
Performing Arts in Raleigh on Friday,<lb/>
Match 10.<lb/>
Martina McBride will be at the RBC<lb/>
Center in Raleigh on Sunday, April 2.<lb/>
Looking for a fun and<lb/>
educational show that your entire<lb/>
family will enjoy? Well Garry<lb/>
Krinsky's Toying with Science is<lb/>
coming to Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Saturday, Jan. 28 at 2 p.m. and<lb/>
Carol Woodruff, Cultural Arts<lb/>
director at ECU says it's a show<lb/>
that surely should not be missed.<lb/>
This dynamic and fast-paced<lb/>
show helps the<lb/>
young audience<lb/>
master basic prin-<lb/>
ciples of science<lb/>
while enjoying a<lb/>
fun and exciting<lb/>
show of colors and<lb/>
juggling acts.<lb/>
Garry Krinsky,<lb/>
is an experienced<lb/>
showman, as well<lb/>
as an original<lb/>
member of the<lb/>
Boston Buffoons,<lb/>
co-founder of the<lb/>
Patchwork Play-<lb/>
ers and member of<lb/>
the New England<lb/>
vaudeville troupe<lb/>
The Wright Bros.<lb/>
Krinsky has been enter-<lb/>
taining and educating the masses<lb/>
at schools, theaters and festivals<lb/>
since 1978.<lb/>
"I'm not a scientist, but I play<lb/>
one on stage Krinsky said in a<lb/>
press interview.<lb/>
"Toying with Science is about<lb/>
showing that the essence of sci-<lb/>
ence is all around us - science<lb/>
doesn't have to be a complex,<lb/>
intimidating idea, but rather<lb/>
a tool we can use to keep our<lb/>
mental muscles greased. When<lb/>
we have that passion for learning,<lb/>
it inspires us to keep our minds<lb/>
open and continue to learn<lb/>
and be fascinated by the world<lb/>
around us<lb/>
Toying with Science has been<lb/>
performed all over the United<lb/>
States and Canada, and Krinsky<lb/>
has even appeared on NBC's<lb/>
Today Show.<lb/>
People who go to see Krin-<lb/>
sky are in for a rare treat. He<lb/>
combines his circus skills,<lb/>
original music and involves<lb/>
the audience in exploring the<lb/>
scientific ideas of fulcrums,<lb/>
leverage, gravity and simple<lb/>
machines. He inserts the<lb/>
heroes of science and enter-<lb/>
tains through his motion, music,<lb/>
insight and humor. Some audi-<lb/>
ence members even get to<lb/>
participate in the exploration.<lb/>
Krinsky will entertain you<lb/>
through music, ideas and even<lb/>
one of his well known tricks,<lb/>
learning the concept of gravity.<lb/>
He centers many ladders on his<lb/>
chin with a giant beach umbrella<lb/>
on top in order to show how one<lb/>
can find the<lb/>
center of gravity.<lb/>
The Max-<lb/>
well C. King<lb/>
Center in<lb/>
Melbourne,<lb/>
Fla. raves that<lb/>
Krinsky was a<lb/>
Whether you are a dance<lb/>
enthusiast or someone just look-<lb/>
ing for something interesting to<lb/>
do, Dance 2006 is the perfect way<lb/>
to spend your time enjoying an<lb/>
experience you won't soon forget.<lb/>
Although this dance performance<lb/>
is held every year, the most vital<lb/>
part of the performance changes<lb/>
yearly, the choreography.<lb/>
This year students and faculty<lb/>
alike are excited and honored<lb/>
?o be able to perform a recon-<lb/>
structed version of "Sky Light<lb/>
Laura Dean's signature work.<lb/>
She is well known for her use of<lb/>
live music as well as distinctive<lb/>
form. The reconstruction was<lb/>
done by School of Theatre and<lb/>
Dance faculty member, Rodger<lb/>
Belman, who has danced "Sky<lb/>
Light" with Dean as part of her<lb/>
company, Laura Dean Dancers<lb/>
and Musicians. This classic ballet<lb/>
incorporates Indian, African and<lb/>
Asian dance rituals.<lb/>
During his residency with<lb/>
the School of Theatre and Dance<lb/>
earlier this year, Nicholas Pupillo<lb/>
created "Chronic Force espe-<lb/>
cially for the students who are<lb/>
going to be performing it.<lb/>
"The forces that are always<lb/>
present pressures us into physical<lb/>
n<lb/>
To purchase<lb/>
tickets:<lb/>
Visit ecuarts.com<lb/>
Call 328-6829<lb/>
Visit McGinnis Auditorium Box Office<lb/>
or the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
change. These weakening pres-<lb/>
sures have a capacity to affect the<lb/>
mind and behavior. A power can<lb/>
be made operative to change the<lb/>
Little known<lb/>
Krinsky facts:<lb/>
circumstances. You can choose to<lb/>
use that active power to regain<lb/>
energy and strength of let the<lb/>
force take control said Pupillo<lb/>
of "Chronic Force<lb/>
Also this year is the recon-<lb/>
struction of Victor Gsovsky's<lb/>
'Grand Pas Classique by Galina<lb/>
Panova. This ballet features<lb/>
intricate point pieces along with<lb/>
thrilling leaps and lifts. This<lb/>
piece will have audiences on the<lb/>
edge of their seats.<lb/>
Each year the dance perfor-<lb/>
mance features a tap number<lb/>
by Clarine Powell. This year's<lb/>
piece, "The Elevator Goes Up<lb/>
is based on several different<lb/>
forms of jazz music. The tap<lb/>
dancing in this number will<lb/>
enliven the audience and make<lb/>
them tap along to the beats<lb/>
from the comfort of their seats.<lb/>
Dance 2006 will be per-<lb/>
formed by about 120 students.<lb/>
see DANCE page A5<lb/>
Recreational Services springs into action<lb/>
Krinsky Is a marathon runner,<lb/>
which has given him a healthy<lb/>
body for the circus-type moves he "delight. The per-<lb/>
does on stage. At the conclusion formance was<lb/>
of his performance, Garry turns<lb/>
his backdrop around to reveal a<lb/>
quilt of 42 racing t-shlrts from<lb/>
marathons, triathlon and road races.<lb/>
Championing effort over victory In a<lb/>
humorous, yet sincere way, he then<lb/>
balances the entire backdrop on<lb/>
his chin, demonstrating how each<lb/>
of us Is the fulcrum of our own lives.<lb/>
felt with much<lb/>
enthusiasm by<lb/>
the audience.<lb/>
Garry was very<lb/>
professional,<lb/>
energetic and<lb/>
totally engaged<lb/>
the audience<lb/>
The Lowell<lb/>
Sun adds that<lb/>
"Krinsky's show<lb/>
is bright, fun-filled and audience<lb/>
interactive- and learning a thing<lb/>
or two didn't hurt either<lb/>
New this year, birthday boys<lb/>
and girls can celebrate with<lb/>
Family Fare! ECU'S Family Fare<lb/>
Series offers a birthday package<lb/>
that includes a party before or<lb/>
after any Family Fare show. Also,<lb/>
discount tickets are available to<lb/>
groups of 15 or more, including<lb/>
scout troops, youth groups, and<lb/>
daycare groups. For more details<lb/>
on birthday parties and group<lb/>
discounts, contact the Cultural<lb/>
Outreach Office at 252-328-4766.<lb/>
To purchase tickets, or for<lb/>
more information, visit the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, located on<lb/>
the main floor of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Advance<lb/>
tickets are $9 for the public, $8<lb/>
for ECU faculty and staff, and<lb/>
$6 for ECU students and youth.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features&amp;theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
On West Campus, the SRC offers activities everyone can enjoy.<lb/>
SRC offering events and<lb/>
opportunities to further<lb/>
teamwork<lb/>
SHANNON DAVIS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The Student Recreational<lb/>
Center has extraordinary equip-<lb/>
ment and facilities. Even more<lb/>
impressive than those, are the<lb/>
spring events for this semester.<lb/>
There are over 40 different<lb/>
sports in the Intramural Sports<lb/>
Program. According to David A.<lb/>
Gaskins, the associate director<lb/>
of programs at the Department<lb/>
of Recreational Services, the<lb/>
word "intramural" came from<lb/>
Greek origin meaning, "within<lb/>
the walls The intramural<lb/>
program is student run by ECU<lb/>
students who form their own<lb/>
teams, schedule games, referee<lb/>
and keep score. Students, staff<lb/>
and faculty from ECU are more<lb/>
than welcome to join the teams<lb/>
of the intramural sports.<lb/>
Club sports are student run<lb/>
organizations with over 31 sports<lb/>
available. These sports do their<lb/>
own recruiting and raise 40<lb/>
percent of their funding. They<lb/>
are competitive, spirited teams<lb/>
that teach the members team-<lb/>
work, time management and help<lb/>
improve their athletic abilities.<lb/>
Jennifer Larrimore, a sophomore<lb/>
Biology major, is on the Women's<lb/>
Rugby team. She expresses how<lb/>
beneficial the Club sports are by<lb/>
stating, "I found something more<lb/>
than I imagined. I found a place<lb/>
to really be myself. I value the<lb/>
friendships I made on the team<lb/>
Fitness Lifestyle Enhance-<lb/>
ment Program, LEP, is group<lb/>
fitness with a group leader who<lb/>
facilitates a group with music<lb/>
and a proper work out. Students<lb/>
have an opportunity to be per-<lb/>
sonal instructors and personal<lb/>
trainers. Fitness assessments are<lb/>
offered, which enables students<lb/>
to evaluate their strength and<lb/>
flexibility with a sit and reach<lb/>
and a bicycle test. The fitness<lb/>
trainers can help these students<lb/>
improve their health and fitness<lb/>
by using components of the<lb/>
assessment results<lb/>
A Real Integrated Sports Experi-<lb/>
ence, ARISE, is a program intended<lb/>
to provide students, faculty, staff,<lb/>
alumni and community members<lb/>
with or without disabilities the<lb/>
opportunity for involvement in a<lb/>
variety of sports and fitness. Mary<lb/>
Antor, a senior psychology major<lb/>
does not have any disabilities but<lb/>
has participated in Wheelchair<lb/>
Rugby and believes it "was a good<lb/>
opportunity to appreciate the dif-<lb/>
ficulties quadriplegics face every<lb/>
day, yet a way to see that it is not<lb/>
totally limiting ARISE is going<lb/>
on an Active Living Beach Retreat<lb/>
where students can experience the<lb/>
outdoors in an adapted adventure<lb/>
camping style. The program is<lb/>
Friday, April 7 - Sunday, April 9 at<lb/>
the Pine Knolls Shores. Registration<lb/>
begins March 1, at the SRC 128.<lb/>
The Youth and Family pro-<lb/>
gram is available for children<lb/>
of ECU students and faculty.<lb/>
Among the various activities<lb/>
they deliver, a highly anticipated<lb/>
date is Family Fun Day, which is<lb/>
an annual event with activities<lb/>
including fitness, sports, wall<lb/>
climbing, cart racing and arts<lb/>
and crafts. A free lunch will be<lb/>
provided for all participants. This<lb/>
event is Saturday March 25 from<lb/>
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the SRC.<lb/>
The Adventure program<lb/>
encourages students to develop<lb/>
skills, knowledge and apprecia-<lb/>
tion for nature. The Adventure<lb/>
program offers more than 20<lb/>
trips in each semester including<lb/>
kayaking, canoeing, skiing, back-<lb/>
POBox<lb/>
phonei<lb/>
Office!<lb/>
J<lb/>
y<lb/>
The I<lb/>
senti<lb/>
E<lb/>
Toqu<lb/>
ori<lb/>
see SRC page AS<lb/>
<pb facs="00059384_0005"/><lb/>
1-24-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  FEATURES<lb/>
PAGE A5<lb/>
is<lb/>
PO Box 873  108 Brownlea Drive Suite A  Greenville, NC 27835-0873<lb/>
phone (252) 758-1921 Ext. 60  fax (252) 757-7722<lb/>
Office Hours: Mon-Fri 9am-5pm, Sat By Appointment Only<lb/>
Apartments &amp; Rental Houses<lb/>
ATTENTION:<lb/>
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS<lb/>
Please join us for the 2nd annual<lb/>
ECU GRADUATE<lb/>
HEALTH PROGRAMS<lb/>
CONFERENCE<lb/>
Wednesday, January 26.2006<lb/>
4:007:15pm<lb/>
Bate 1032<lb/>
The Conference Schedule:<lb/>
t ECU Graduate Health Programs Workshops including<lb/>
Communication Science and Disorders, Occupational<lb/>
Therapy, Health Education, Physical Activity Promotion,<lb/>
Physical Therapy, Physician's Assistant, Brody School of<lb/>
Medicine, Nursing and many more!<lb/>
: Professional Workshops on topics such as Interviewing,<lb/>
Obtaining Reference Letters and others!<lb/>
 Graduate Student Panel session will take place and<lb/>
Resource Tables will also be available!<lb/>
Partfctoants must pro register by i<lb/>
Hi miliiwlii Enrichment Cfr it 252-328-2046.<lb/>
w<lb/>
m"<lb/>
Jam is free stuff- ringtones,song downloads, gift cards -<lb/>
you get just for dining on campus. It's easy and it's free.<lb/>
Ucj-ftee @<lb/>
REVIrWXOH<lb/>
The ECU Media Board<lb/>
welcomes applications for<lb/>
ill ST0PI1T<lb/>
raiswrinn<lb/>
The board is seeking fulltime students interested in serving as the day student repre-<lb/>
sentative on the Media Board, the 11-person board which governs student media at<lb/>
ECU, WZMB, The Rebel, The East Carolinian, Expressions, and Buccaneer.<lb/>
To qualify, you must be a student living off campus who is not a member of a sorority<lb/>
or fraternity and you will be expected to attend a late afternoon meeting monthly.<lb/>
For information, contact: ECU Media Board Office<lb/>
205A Self Help Center<lb/>
301 S. Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
328-9200<lb/>
Applications due Friday, February 10th at 5p.m.<lb/>
Who has a library question?<lb/>
Answering all your<lb/>
questions through AIM<lb/>
AARON BORREGO<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
It has come to my atten-<lb/>
tion that we, as students of<lb/>
ECU, have a great tool at our<lb/>
disposable, "Ask a Librarian<lb/>
through AIM This relatively<lb/>
new service is quite easy to<lb/>
establish and easy to use. If<lb/>
you have AIM, the AOL based<lb/>
Instant Messenger system, this<lb/>
process is only a click away.<lb/>
IM "JoynerRef" with any<lb/>
questions pertaining to the<lb/>
regular reference section and<lb/>
IM "JoynerCirc" with circula-<lb/>
tion questions such as book<lb/>
due dates and renewing books.<lb/>
Also, you can i nquire about<lb/>
interlibrary loans through-<lb/>
out the North Carolina state<lb/>
funded school system. The<lb/>
nice thing about the service<lb/>
is the convenience of asking<lb/>
questions at home for distance<lb/>
education students and lazy<lb/>
students like myself.<lb/>
Since the service is AIM,<lb/>
many already have it and also<lb/>
know that it supports file send-<lb/>
ing which the librarians will<lb/>
be happy to do if need be. So,<lb/>
you can ask them to send you<lb/>
something such as a report or<lb/>
statistic for your viewing rather<lb/>
than having to go to the library.<lb/>
Thereby, making us students<lb/>
even lazier.<lb/>
If you don't have AIM, it<lb/>
is a free service, which you<lb/>
can download at the AOL<lb/>
home page. I would also like<lb/>
to point out the helpfulness of<lb/>
the people who monitor this<lb/>
system throughout the day,<lb/>
which is normally about one<lb/>
or two people.<lb/>
These people are knowl-<lb/>
edgeable and well versed to find<lb/>
whatever you may need for your<lb/>
topics of research. These people<lb/>
are there from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.<lb/>
during normal business hours<lb/>
and are always very friendly,<lb/>
so try it out people and not let<lb/>
this go to waste. Why didn't I,<lb/>
as a student, know about some-<lb/>
thing like this?<lb/>
Thank you to Mark Sanders<lb/>
for the time he took to provide<lb/>
information about this great,<lb/>
new service.<lb/>
Test it out people, don't let<lb/>
this valuable, potentially time<lb/>
saving, resource go to waste.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
DdflCG from page A4<lb/>
"The primary focus of Dance<lb/>
2006 is to give dance students a<lb/>
main stage performance oppor-<lb/>
tunity, and secondly to give<lb/>
students an opportunity to<lb/>
experience something they<lb/>
would not have normally been<lb/>
exposed to<lb/>
"Our annual dance concerts<lb/>
are truly something special for<lb/>
audiences. Most dance concerts<lb/>
are either an evening of a story-<lb/>
length ballet or a series of shorter<lb/>
dances but with a similarity of<lb/>
dance styles. Our productions run<lb/>
the gamut of styles and themes<lb/>
making it fun and enlighten-<lb/>
ing at the same time said Jeff<lb/>
Woodruff, managing director of<lb/>
the School of Theatre and Dance.<lb/>
Tickets in advance for this<lb/>
event are12 for the general public,<lb/>
$ 10 for senior citizens and current<lb/>
ECU facultystaff and $8 for youth<lb/>
and current ECU students. How-<lb/>
ever, tickets at the door will be sold<lb/>
for a standard rate of $12.<lb/>
You can experience the magic<lb/>
of Dance 2006 first hand begin-<lb/>
ning Thursday, Jan. 26-31 at<lb/>
the McGinnis Auditorium on<lb/>
campus. Times are 8 p.m. for<lb/>
everyday except Sunday, which<lb/>
will be 2 p.m. For more informa-<lb/>
tion visit the School of Theatre<lb/>
and Dance Web site at theatre-<lb/>
dance.ecu.edu.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
SRC from page A4<lb/>
packing, climbing, caving and<lb/>
surfing. Among the many trips<lb/>
that are available this semester,<lb/>
the program is taking a journey<lb/>
kayaking in the Cumberland<lb/>
Island Sea. If interested in the<lb/>
program contact the Adventure<lb/>
Program Director at 328 - 6387.<lb/>
The Student Recreational<lb/>
Center provides numerous events<lb/>
and programs for students inter-<lb/>
ested in improving their physical,<lb/>
social, emotional and mental<lb/>
well-being. This spring semester<lb/>
is filled with opportunities for<lb/>
every ECU student. Get out there<lb/>
and have some fun.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
V3in from page A4<lb/>
the Brewery in Raleigh to film an<lb/>
episode of "A Day in the Life of<lb/>
They are planning a full six week<lb/>
tour of the East Coast and Mid-<lb/>
west this summer and are head-<lb/>
ing into the studio to record a full<lb/>
length album.<lb/>
The band may be on their way<lb/>
to the top, but they still have their<lb/>
feet planted firmly on the ground.<lb/>
"We want to reach a larger<lb/>
audience through our fan base<lb/>
and record label, we want our<lb/>
music to mean something to<lb/>
people Jones said. Although<lb/>
they have a large local fan base<lb/>
they are still striving for national<lb/>
recognition, a dream that may<lb/>
become reality soon.<lb/>
"Tragic Hero Records is try ing to<lb/>
get national distribution through<lb/>
Tower Records said Crump.<lb/>
"The bottom line is that people<lb/>
want to have fun at shows and<lb/>
when they come to see us they<lb/>
do, because we aren't only fun to<lb/>
listen to, but also fun to watch<lb/>
said Williams. Check out Your<lb/>
Name in Vain on Saturday, Feb.<lb/>
4 at 9 p.m. at the Salty Dawg in<lb/>
New Bern.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Want to listen?<lb/>
More Information and great ways to<lb/>
listen to Your Name In Vain music:<lb/>
myspace.comyournameinvain<lb/>
purevolume.comyournamelnvalnnc<lb/>
traglchererecords.com<lb/>
Keep reading TEC lor more<lb/>
Information about this band and a<lb/>
review of their recently released CO.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059384_0006"/><lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
1-24-06<lb/>
Page A6 sports@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 TUNY ZOPPO Sports Editor BRANDON HUGHES Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY January 24, 2006<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Jauron, takes reins with Bills<lb/>
Dick Jauron will get a second<lb/>
chance to prove himself as a head<lb/>
coach after being hired by the Buffalo<lb/>
Bills on Monday Jauron's hiring was<lb/>
announced by Bills owner Ralph<lb/>
Wilson and general manager Marv<lb/>
Levy at a news conference. This is<lb/>
Jauron's second time as a head<lb/>
coach after going 35-46 - including<lb/>
one playoff loss - in five years with<lb/>
the Chicago Bears. Fired by the Bears<lb/>
after the 2003 season, he had only<lb/>
one winning season, going 13-3 in<lb/>
2001 when he was named the NFLs<lb/>
coach of the year. Jauron spent the<lb/>
past two years as the Detroit Lions<lb/>
defensive coordinator, and finished<lb/>
last season as the team's interim<lb/>
head coach after Steve Mariucci was<lb/>
fired in late November. He replaces<lb/>
Mike Mularkey, who resigned 10 days<lb/>
ago, and becomes Buffalo's fourth<lb/>
head coach since Levy, the Hall of<lb/>
Fame coach, retired after the 1997<lb/>
season. Jauron takes over a team<lb/>
that underachieved with a 5-11 finish<lb/>
last season, missing the playoffs<lb/>
for the sixth straight year - the<lb/>
team's longest drought since the NFL<lb/>
merger. The Bills have gone 31-49<lb/>
since 2001, tied with Cleveland for the<lb/>
third worst record in the NFL over that<lb/>
span - not including Houston, which<lb/>
joined the league in 2002. That's<lb/>
a significant drop off for the AFC's<lb/>
winningest franchise in the 1990s.<lb/>
The team made an unprecedented<lb/>
four straight Super Bowl appearances<lb/>
under Levy. Jauron is a defensive<lb/>
specialist who, as Jacksonville's<lb/>
defensive coordinator from 1995-98,<lb/>
helped the expansion team reach<lb/>
the playoffs three times. A former<lb/>
NFL defensive back, Jauron broke<lb/>
into coaching as an assistant with<lb/>
the Bills in 1985 and also spent nine<lb/>
years as a defensive backs coach<lb/>
with Green Bay.<lb/>
UConn climbs to top for first<lb/>
time since Dec. '04<lb/>
With no more unbeaten teams<lb/>
left, Connecticut took over the No. 1<lb/>
spot in the Associated Press college<lb/>
basketball poll Monday. Two days<lb/>
after Duke, Florida and Pittsburgh<lb/>
lost, the Huskies (16-1) moved from<lb/>
No. 3 to the top of the rankings for<lb/>
the sixth time in school history and<lb/>
the first since a one-week run In<lb/>
December 2004. The Blue Devils,<lb/>
Gators and Panthers were the final<lb/>
three undefeated Division I teams.<lb/>
The Huskies are one of seven Big<lb/>
East teams in the Top 25, tying<lb/>
the record for most schools from<lb/>
one conference. The Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference and Big Ten have each<lb/>
done it twice, and the ACC did it<lb/>
most recently last season. Duke (17-<lb/>
1), which had been No. 1 since the<lb/>
preseason poll, dropped one spot<lb/>
after losing 87-84 at Georgetown on<lb/>
Saturday. The win sent the Hoyas<lb/>
(12-4) into the Top 25 for the first<lb/>
time since Dec. 31, 2001. Florida (17-<lb/>
1), second in the poll the past two<lb/>
weeks, dropped to No. 5 after losing<lb/>
80-76 at Tennessee on Saturday. The<lb/>
win got the Volunteers (12-3) back in<lb/>
the rankings after being out lor four<lb/>
weeks. Pittsburgh (15-1) lost 55-50 at<lb/>
St. John's on Saturday and fell from<lb/>
ninth to No. 12. Connecticut received<lb/>
64 first-place votes and 1,790 points<lb/>
from the 72-member national media<lb/>
panel. The Huskies have spent a total<lb/>
of 21 weeks at No. 1. The longest run<lb/>
was 10 straight polls in 1998-99, when<lb/>
they won the first of their two national<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
Dallas chosen as host for All-<lb/>
star Game In '07 <lb/>
The Dallas Stars will host the<lb/>
2007 All-Star Game, the NHL's first<lb/>
since 2004. The game will be played<lb/>
on Jan. 24 at the American Airlines<lb/>
Center, the league said Monday.<lb/>
The Wednesday night game marks<lb/>
the first time since the 1989 All-Star<lb/>
Game in Edmonton that the events<lb/>
won't be held on a weekend. The NHL<lb/>
lockout wiped out the All-Star Game<lb/>
last year, and players will compete<lb/>
in the Olympics next month. The<lb/>
Stars, who moved from Minnesota in<lb/>
1993, won a Stanley Cup title in 1999.<lb/>
The SuperSkills competition and<lb/>
YoungStars game will be Jan. 23.<lb/>
Bryant shoots to No. 2 behind Wilt<lb/>
(AP)  Kobe Bryant, often<lb/>
unstoppable, played at a higher<lb/>
level than even he Imagined<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
The Los Angeles Lakers' star<lb/>
scored a phenomenal 81 points<lb/>
Sunday night the second-high-<lb/>
est total in NBA history in a<lb/>
122-104 victory over the Toronto<lb/>
Raptors.<lb/>
Only Wilt Chamberlain's<lb/>
storied 100-point game nearly 44<lb/>
years ago ranks higher.<lb/>
"Not even in my dreams<lb/>
Bryant said.<lb/>
"That was something that just<lb/>
happened. It's tough to explain.<lb/>
It's just one of those things.<lb/>
"It really hasn't, like, set in<lb/>
for me. It's about the "W that's<lb/>
why I turned it on. It turned into<lb/>
something special. To sit here and<lb/>
say I grasp what happened, that<lb/>
would be lying<lb/>
The Lakers trailed by as many<lb/>
as 18 points early In the third<lb/>
quarter, angering Bryant.<lb/>
"He was ticked off team-<lb/>
mate Lamar Odom said.<lb/>
When asked what Bryant<lb/>
said at that stage, Odom replied:<lb/>
"Nothing. That's when it's bad<lb/>
Bryant scored 51 points after<lb/>
the Raptors extended a 63-49-<lb/>
halftime lead to 71-53. The Lakers<lb/>
outscored the Raptors 38-14 to<lb/>
finish the third quarter to go<lb/>
ahead for good.<lb/>
"That was incredible, remark-<lb/>
able Odom said.<lb/>
Bryant, the NBA's leading<lb/>
scorer, left to a standing ovation<lb/>
with 4.2 seconds remaining,<lb/>
having shot 28-of-46 from the<lb/>
floor, including 7-of-13 from 3-<lb/>
point range, and 18-of-20 from<lb/>
the foul line.<lb/>
With the 18,997 fans at Staples<lb/>
Center chanting "MVP! MVP <lb/>
Bryant made two free throws<lb/>
with 43.4 seconds remaining for<lb/>
his final points. He scored 27<lb/>
points in the third quarter, 28 in<lb/>
the fourth.<lb/>
"We are on a journey, and<lb/>
to put on a show like this for<lb/>
the fans here in L.A. is truly<lb/>
something special Bryant said.<lb/>
"I grew up in front of these<lb/>
people, and now they are seeing<lb/>
me as an older, young man<lb/>
The 27-year-old Bryant joined<lb/>
the Lakers out of high school, and<lb/>
is in his 10th NBA season.<lb/>
Chamberlain scored 100<lb/>
points for Philadelphia against<lb/>
the New York Knicks at Hershey,<lb/>
Pa on March 2, 1962, shooting<lb/>
36-of-63 from the field and 28-<lb/>
Bryant drives to the basket for two of his staggering 81 points Sunday night, the second-highest single game total in NBA history<lb/>
of-32 from the foul line while<lb/>
playing all 48 minutes.<lb/>
Chamberlain had 59 points<lb/>
in the second half the only<lb/>
player with more points in a half<lb/>
than Bryant's 55 after halftime in<lb/>
this game.<lb/>
Chamberlain's second-high-<lb/>
est total was 78 against the Lakers<lb/>
in three overtimes on Dec. 8,<lb/>
1961.<lb/>
Michael Jordan's career high<lb/>
was 69 points, and only four play-<lb/>
ers had ever scored more than 70<lb/>
Chamberlain, Elgin Baylor, David<lb/>
Thompson and David Robinson.<lb/>
Bryant made it five. His<lb/>
previous career high was 62<lb/>
points during a 112-90 victory<lb/>
over Dallas last month he sat out<lb/>
the fourth quarter because of the<lb/>
one-sided nature of the game.<lb/>
"I was just determined. I was<lb/>
just locked in, tuned into what<lb/>
was going on out there Bryant<lb/>
said. "These points tonight<lb/>
mattered. We needed them. The<lb/>
points I put in the basket were<lb/>
instrumental. It means a lot more<lb/>
Bryant raised his scoring aver-<lb/>
age to an NBA-leading 35.9 points<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
"I never imagined I would see<lb/>
history like that said Devean<lb/>
see KOBE page A7<lb/>
Breakdown of Kobe's 81<lb/>
Points<lb/>
FG-FGA<lb/>
FG<lb/>
3-pt. FG<lb/>
3-pt. FG<lb/>
FT-FTA<lb/>
FT<lb/>
1st Quarter Rs.<lb/>
2nd Quarter Pts.<lb/>
3rd Quarter Rs.<lb/>
4th Quarter Rs.<lb/>
81<lb/>
28-46<lb/>
60.8<lb/>
7-13<lb/>
53.8<lb/>
18-20<lb/>
90<lb/>
14<lb/>
12<lb/>
27<lb/>
28<lb/>
Pirates' ship sinks in New Orleans, lose 60-52<lb/>
Tulane leaves ECU as<lb/>
last winless C-USA team<lb/>
ERIC QILMORE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Dave Dickerson, Tulane men's<lb/>
basketball head coach and ECU<lb/>
head man Ricky Stokes vied for<lb/>
their first Conference USA win<lb/>
on Saturday night. Forty minutes<lb/>
later, Stokes found himself still<lb/>
searching for his.<lb/>
The Green Wave (5-11,<lb/>
1-3 C-USA) was boosted from<lb/>
a game-high 20 points from<lb/>
senior forward Quincy Davis<lb/>
and 15 points from Chris Moore.<lb/>
The Tulane junior guard is no<lb/>
relation to the ECU line-<lb/>
backer who garnered three solo<lb/>
tackles in the Hula Bowl over the<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
The Pirates' loss was their<lb/>
fourth consecutive, leaving ECU<lb/>
(6-11,0-4) alone at the bottom of<lb/>
the league standings.<lb/>
Sixth man Courtney<lb/>
Captain was the only ECU player<lb/>
to log double figures with 12,<lb/>
and senior forward Corey Rouse<lb/>
chipped in nine points and 11<lb/>
rebounds. The Kinston product<lb/>
now ranks eighth nationally in<lb/>
rebounding at 10.6 per contest.<lb/>
The Pirates' shooting woes,<lb/>
which has followed ECU like<lb/>
a shadow, continued to haunt<lb/>
chances of a winning season.<lb/>
ECU shot just 29.4 percent (15-of-<lb/>
51) from the field. Comparatively,<lb/>
the Green Wave knocked through<lb/>
50.1 percent (23-of-45) of their<lb/>
total field goals.<lb/>
ECU's sophomore guard<lb/>
Jeremy Ingram finished with<lb/>
just seven points on l-for-10<lb/>
shooting, while Sam Hinnant<lb/>
finished with seven points and<lb/>
a 2-for-7 shooting effort. Ingram<lb/>
and Hinnant, the second and<lb/>
third leading scorers respectively,<lb/>
average double figures.<lb/>
Tulane held a 53-47 lead<lb/>
with 39 ticks remaining when<lb/>
ECU hit a pair of free throws to<lb/>
pull within four. Tulane's Matt<lb/>
Wheaton hit the first of two from<lb/>
the charity stripe, but missed<lb/>
his second. The Green Wave<lb/>
recovered the rebound and junior c<lb/>
guard Andrew Garcia knocked 1<lb/>
down a pair of free throws for a <lb/>
56-49 advantage with 33.1 sec- $<lb/>
onds on the clock. A<lb/>
After an errant 3 attempt <lb/>
see PIRATES page A7<lb/>
Tulane defeated ECU Saturday night, making them the only squad winless in Conference USA play.<lb/>
Sizing up the Super Bowl<lb/>
(KRT)  Roethlisberger vs.<lb/>
Hasselbeck sounds more like a<lb/>
beer-tasting contest than a Super<lb/>
Bowl. In Pittsburgh and Seattle,<lb/>
they don't care. It is a match<lb/>
up not many expected, and the<lb/>
winner might be even harder to<lb/>
predict.<lb/>
The, Steelers have been to<lb/>
Super Bowls before. The Seahawks<lb/>
haven't been anyplace.<lb/>
Somebody will send a map of<lb/>
how to get to Detroit, and it will<lb/>
be fascinating to hear how many<lb/>
of Seattle's "12th man" fans can<lb/>
make the trip.<lb/>
"Everybody in the stadium<lb/>
is coming Seattle coach Mike<lb/>
Holmgren said.<lb/>
But this game will be a home<lb/>
date for the Steelers, and not just<lb/>
because running back Jerome<lb/>
Bettis grew up in Detroit.<lb/>
The Steelers are as national as<lb/>
a sports team gets. The Seahawks<lb/>
are so regional not everybody<lb/>
remembers they played in the<lb/>
AFC for most of their 30-year<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Pittsburgh fans will descend<lb/>
on Detroit in droves. For one<lb/>
thing, they can drive. They<lb/>
already have the chains on their<lb/>
tires. They have so much experi-<lb/>
ence finding tickets that places<lb/>
like Cincinnati, Cleveland and<lb/>
Indianapolis plot ways to keep<lb/>
them away.<lb/>
They invaded the Denver<lb/>
airport Saturday night waving<lb/>
their yellow Terrible Towels. They<lb/>
were on the streets, in parking<lb/>
lots and scattered throughout<lb/>
the stadium.<lb/>
"We're a road team safety<lb/>
Troy Polamalu said.<lb/>
"We're the Pittsburgh Steel-<lb/>
ers. We have fans everywhere<lb/>
Yet you can hear it now. The<lb/>
Steelers will do everything in<lb/>
their power to keep playing the<lb/>
underdog role.<lb/>
see SUPER BOWL page A7 Bettis is headed home to Detroitfor SupBowl xljargdS<lb/>
 Roethlisberger's stellar play during Pittsburgh's post-season run<lb/>
Sp<lb/>
(Inch<lb/>
ww<lb/>
<pb facs="00059384_0007"/><lb/>
1-24-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROUNIAN  SPORTS<lb/>
PAGE M<lb/>
CJot something to soy?<lb/>
Send us yow1 Pirate Rants!<lb/>
SPRING RUSH<lb/>
Awaiting our spring collection<lb/>
a.<lb/>
Tuesday January 24 and<lb/>
Thursday January 26<lb/>
Bate 1032 at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday January 25<lb/>
Bate 3006 at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
SUBJCCTS FO ftSRCH Bt NCCDCD<lb/>
ATTCNTION<lb/>
flNVONC BtD!<lb/>
The human performance laboratory at<lb/>
fist Carolina University is lookjng for<lb/>
research subjects that wish to be involved<lb/>
in studies examining the role of skeletal<lb/>
muscle in insulin action.<lb/>
Subjects which are not currently<lb/>
exercising will be examined. Certain<lb/>
I medications or health conditions may<lb/>
disqualify you from participation. We<lb/>
are looking for normal or overweight<lb/>
individuals. Men and women greater than<lb/>
18 years of age are eligible.<lb/>
Subjects will be compensated<lb/>
($80-250) for completing all aspects of<lb/>
the study. Tests include body composition<lb/>
assessmentbody fat), exercise<lb/>
resting (02max), and blood and<lb/>
muscle analysis.<lb/>
For further information contact Chris<lb/>
Evans at 328.4681, ECU Brody School of<lb/>
Medicine (principafl investigator: loseph<lb/>
A. Houmard, Ph.D.)<lb/>
Computer<lb/>
headaches?<lb/>
Need parts?<lb/>
Intrex has your<lb/>
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next to BEST BUY<lb/>
(252) 321-1200 www.intrex.cotn<lb/>
Lady Pirates squeak past UCF<lb/>
(SID)  The ECU women's<lb/>
basketball team hit key free<lb/>
throws down the stretch Sunday<lb/>
afternoon to pull away with a<lb/>
68-63 win over UCF for their<lb/>
third Conference USA victory of<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
Senior LaToya Horton netted<lb/>
a career-high 17 points, 13 of<lb/>
which came in the second half,<lb/>
to lead all scorers. The freshman<lb/>
duo of Jessica Slack and Jasmine<lb/>
Young each added 10 points to<lb/>
pace the Pirates.<lb/>
After trailing 30-27 at the<lb/>
intermission, ECU (11-6, 3-3)<lb/>
trimmed the Golden Knights<lb/>
(4-14, 2-5) lead to two, 42-40,<lb/>
with 11:23 left to play. ECU took<lb/>
its first lead of the game, since<lb/>
the 8.03 mark in the first, when<lb/>
Young drove the paint putting<lb/>
the Pirates up 44-42.<lb/>
The two teams would trade<lb/>
baskets and the game would be<lb/>
knotted up four times before the<lb/>
Pirates would take the lead for<lb/>
good on a pair of Cherie Mills<lb/>
The Lady Pirates pulled even in<lb/>
free throws at the 5:05 mark.<lb/>
Mills would finish the game<lb/>
one-point shy of recording her<lb/>
17th straight double-digit game<lb/>
of the season, while grabbing six<lb/>
rebounds.<lb/>
During the final 30 seconds<lb/>
of play, freshmen Impris Man-<lb/>
Conference USA to 3-3.<lb/>
ning and Jessica Honesty each<lb/>
cashed in on key free throws to<lb/>
secure the Pirates 11th win of<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
Each team opened the game<lb/>
changing possessions during<lb/>
the first 5:14 with the Golden<lb/>
Knights taking an early 5-4 lead<lb/>
on an Amber Long jumper. ECU<lb/>
would answer with a basket of<lb/>
their on a Jessica Slack lay-up at<lb/>
the 15:23 mark.<lb/>
UCF took a 15-11 lead<lb/>
with 9:48 remaining until the<lb/>
intermission before the Pirates<lb/>
went on an 8-0 run over the<lb/>
next 1:25 to take its largest lead<lb/>
of the half, 19-15. During the<lb/>
run, Slack connected on her lone<lb/>
three-pointer of the day and drained<lb/>
three consecutive free throws.<lb/>
Over the next four min-<lb/>
utes costly turnovers found the<lb/>
Pirates down six after a 10-0 UCF<lb/>
run, 25-19. The Golden Knights<lb/>
extended their lead to seven with<lb/>
1:09 remaining after a Keunta<lb/>
Miles free throw. The Pirates<lb/>
would cut into that lead during<lb/>
the closing minute, netting a<lb/>
pair of baskets to close the gap<lb/>
at 30-27.<lb/>
The Pirates will be back in<lb/>
action Friday night when they<lb/>
play host to SMU at 7 p.m. inside<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
KODG from page A6<lb/>
George, a teammate of Bryant's<lb/>
with the Lakers for 6 12 seasons.<lb/>
"I can't tell you where that came<lb/>
from. He just kept attacking,<lb/>
attacking, attacking every time<lb/>
he got the ball<lb/>
Bryant played nearly 42 min-<lb/>
utes, going the entire second half<lb/>
until being lifted by coach Phil<lb/>
Jackson.<lb/>
Jackson coached Jordan<lb/>
and the Chicago Bulls to six<lb/>
championships in the 1990s<lb/>
andthe Lakers, with Bryant and<lb/>
Shaquille O'Neal, to three more<lb/>
titles, from 2000-02.<lb/>
"That was something to<lb/>
behold Jackson said. "It was<lb/>
another level. I've seen some<lb/>
remarkable games, but I've never<lb/>
seen one like that before<lb/>
Baylor held the Lakers' previ-<lb/>
ous franchise record of 71 points<lb/>
at New York on Nov. 15, 1960.<lb/>
Lakers special assistant Kareem<lb/>
Abdul-Jabbar, the NBAs all-time<lb/>
leading scorer, saw that game, too.<lb/>
"Elgin's game was an incred-<lb/>
ible performance, also Abdul-<lb/>
Jabbar said.<lb/>
"I don't think there's any<lb/>
comparison. Elgin did it with-<lb/>
out 3-point lines. His game was<lb/>
attacking the hoop and hitting<lb/>
jumpers inside 20 feet. Kobe's<lb/>
range is unreal, and he does it<lb/>
his way.<lb/>
"It was a real treat. His ability<lb/>
to shoot from long range and also<lb/>
attack the hoop, split the defense<lb/>
and get in close for opportunities<lb/>
near the basket is unique. He's<lb/>
made a niche for himself, and<lb/>
he deserves It<lb/>
Bryant scored all but 15 of<lb/>
his team's 42 points in the third<lb/>
quarter, and all but three of their<lb/>
31 in the final period.<lb/>
"You're sitting and watching,<lb/>
and it's like a miracle unfolding<lb/>
in front of your eyes and you<lb/>
can't accept it Lakers owner<lb/>
Jerry Buss said. "Somehow, the<lb/>
brain won't work. The easiest<lb/>
way to look at it is everybody<lb/>
remembers every 50-point game<lb/>
they ever saw. He had 55 in the<lb/>
second half<lb/>
Bryant scored a season-<lb/>
low 11 points in the Lakers'<lb/>
102-91 victory over the Raptors<lb/>
in Toronto last month. He has led<lb/>
the Lakers in scoring in the last<lb/>
21 games in which he's played,<lb/>
and is averaging 45.5 points<lb/>
in 10 games since sitting out a<lb/>
two-game suspension.<lb/>
"We were just watching him<lb/>
shoot Toronto's Chris Bosh said.<lb/>
"He takes the type of shots<lb/>
where you don't think they're<lb/>
going in, but suddenly he's roll-<lb/>
ing, so he's kind of hard to stop.<lb/>
We tried three or four guys on<lb/>
him, but it seemed like nobody<lb/>
guarded him tonight<lb/>
Pirates from<lb/>
page A6<lb/>
from ECU on the next<lb/>
possession, Garcia netted four<lb/>
free throws over the last 23.2<lb/>
seconds to seal the victory.<lb/>
Dickerson, a rumored<lb/>
finalist to ECU'S coaching<lb/>
vacancy ultimately filled by<lb/>
Stokes, was more than ecstatic to<lb/>
grab his first conference win.<lb/>
"We needed this win for our<lb/>
confidence Dickerson said in<lb/>
a Tulane press release following<lb/>
the contest.<lb/>
"With our record, we<lb/>
need to get wins like this at<lb/>
home. The two things we did<lb/>
which were very important for<lb/>
us Saturday was we cut our<lb/>
turnovers and we made our<lb/>
free throws when it counted<lb/>
The Green Wave win<lb/>
dropped the Pirates to 3-31 on<lb/>
the road in C-USA. At 0-4 in the<lb/>
conference, ECU is a game behind<lb/>
Houston, Marshall, Southern Miss<lb/>
and Tulane. Unlike in previous<lb/>
seasons, all 12 teams advance to<lb/>
the conference tournament.<lb/>
The Pirates will search for its<lb/>
first C-USA win of the season on<lb/>
Wednesday when they return home<lb/>
to host UCF. Tip-off for the midweek<lb/>
matchup is scheduled for 7 p.m.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
iports@theeastcaroinian.com.<lb/>
SUper BOWl from page A6<lb/>
They are the first sixth seed<lb/>
to make it. The Seahawks are<lb/>
the No. 1 seed in the NFC. The<lb/>
Seahawks are the league's top-<lb/>
scoring team. The Seahawks have<lb/>
the league's most valuable player,<lb/>
Shaun Alexander. All the Steelers<lb/>
have is a run-down, 33-year-old<lb/>
Bettis.<lb/>
No quarterback as young as<lb/>
Ben Roethlisberger ever has won<lb/>
a Super Bowl. Seattle's Matt Has-<lb/>
selbeck has been around longer<lb/>
and paid more dues. Seahawks<lb/>
coach Mike Holmgren won a<lb/>
Super Bowl with Green Bay in<lb/>
1996. Steelers coach Bill Cowher<lb/>
lost one in 1995.<lb/>
The Seahawks led the league<lb/>
in sacks, so who are the Steelers to<lb/>
brag about their stifling defense?<lb/>
The Seahawks won the NFC<lb/>
title game Sunday by a bigger<lb/>
margin than the Steelers won<lb/>
the AFC.<lb/>
The Seahawks and Steelers<lb/>
last played in 2003, and Seattle<lb/>
won. The Seahawks have won<lb/>
eight of 14 games between the<lb/>
two franchises.<lb/>
The Seahawks got to stay<lb/>
home and win two playoff<lb/>
games. The Steelers had to go<lb/>
on the road for three games and<lb/>
beat the top three seeds, wearing<lb/>
themselves to a frazzle.<lb/>
By Monday night, the Steelers<lb/>
and their fans will happily con-<lb/>
clude that no one in their right<lb/>
mind will give them a chance of<lb/>
succeeding in Detroit.<lb/>
It will be tough duty, but<lb/>
they will find a way to stay "dis-<lb/>
respected On Sunday, they said<lb/>
this year was easier for them than<lb/>
last year, when they were 15-1<lb/>
and lost the AFC title game at<lb/>
home to New England.<lb/>
"Everyone put overwhelming<lb/>
pressure on us receiver Hines<lb/>
Ward said.<lb/>
"It was overwhelming for<lb/>
everyone, including the veterans<lb/>
This year?<lb/>
"People said there was no<lb/>
way we could do this three weeks<lb/>
in a row Ward said.<lb/>
"There was more pressure on<lb/>
(the Broncos) than on us<lb/>
The Steelers will use the same<lb/>
reasoning against the Seahawks,<lb/>
who coasted down the stretch<lb/>
after wrapping up home-field<lb/>
advantage.<lb/>
By contrast, the Steelers have<lb/>
been in playoff mode since Dec.<lb/>
11, when the Bears went to Pitts-<lb/>
burgh after the Steelers had lost<lb/>
three games in a row. The Steelers<lb/>
ran all over the Bears and started<lb/>
on a seven-game winning streak.<lb/>
"The Chicago game was a<lb/>
big game for us establishing<lb/>
ourselves as a running football<lb/>
team Cowher said.<lb/>
"We started to get Ben back<lb/>
at that time, too, when he came<lb/>
back from his (knee and thumb)<lb/>
injuries<lb/>
The Steelers and Seahawks<lb/>
both love to run and stop the<lb/>
run, the twin keys to success. It's<lb/>
a familiar formula on which the<lb/>
Bears pride themselves. It also<lb/>
is telling to note that both the<lb/>
Steelers and Seahawks ran and<lb/>
stopped the run better this year<lb/>
than the Bears did.<lb/>
Because the best teams play<lb/>
run defense as well as they run,<lb/>
the biggest games usually get<lb/>
decided by which quarterback<lb/>
passes better. Roethlisberger's<lb/>
passer efficiency rating for the<lb/>
season was 98.6, Hasselbeck's<lb/>
98.2.<lb/>
That makes it hard for either<lb/>
team to play underdog, not that<lb/>
both won't be trying every day<lb/>
for the next two weeks.<lb/>
Report news students need to know tec<lb/>
Accepting applications for STAFF WRITERS<lb/>
 Learn investigative reporting skills<lb/>
 Must have at least a 2.0 GPA<lb/>
WE'VE MOVED Apply at our NEW office located uptown at the Self Help Building - 100F E. 3rd St.<lb/>
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Bring In this ad for $10 off your next contact lens exam.<lb/>
Cmm( to tirtiri wftft mt Mmt 0mm m Imutmm oJm Off  lTtU-<lb/>
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Level 1 Beds Only.<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
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For more info go to<lb/>
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Why do I donate Plasma?<lb/>
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Earn up to $170mo. donating plasma in a friendly place.<lb/>
DCI Biologicals of Greenville  252-757-0171<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059384_0008"/><lb/>
Page A8<lb/>
TUESDAY January 24,2006<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
Whether You Need A Short Or Long<lb/>
Term Lease Come Check Us Out! We<lb/>
have several floor plans to choose<lb/>
from. Ask about our $1.00 special<lb/>
Walking distance to ECU and also<lb/>
on the bus line. Pets allowed with<lb/>
deposit. For more details visit us<lb/>
at University Park 1110 East 10th<lb/>
St. or call us at 252-752-8900<lb/>
$$$$$$$$$$<lb/>
Sublease Feb '06 thru jury '06 $387 a<lb/>
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1 will pay application fee. Call 781 -<lb/>
254-6031 for more details!<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/>
2 Rooms For Rent Pirates Cove Phase<lb/>
II - Fully Furnished - WD Available<lb/>
Now Contact Nicole 919-452-3849<lb/>
- NLH0320@mail.ecu.edu $387<lb/>
month utilities included<lb/>
Blocks to ECU, 2 or 3 Bdrm, All<lb/>
Appliances, collegeuniversityrentals.<lb/>
com 321-4712<lb/>
Beat This, No parking fees, No<lb/>
parking hassle, Walk to class,<lb/>
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2 bed 1.5 bath duplex available<lb/>
now, short term lease accepted.<lb/>
Buccaneer Village call 561-7368<lb/>
1 bdrm. Apt. for Rent. 2 blks from<lb/>
campus near City Mkt. $370mth.<lb/>
910-232-7884<lb/>
Large 2 &amp; 3 bedroom townhouses<lb/>
1.5 to 2.5 baths, full basement, WD<lb/>
hookups, great storage, enclosed<lb/>
patio, ECU bus route, no pets,<lb/>
752-7738<lb/>
Room for Rent E. 3rd Street<lb/>
Duplex 1 Bedroom 1 Bath $250<lb/>
Month Utilities Included Available<lb/>
Immediately Call Brendan 410-<lb/>
608-4732<lb/>
Fo; 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.<lb/>
Call 752-1000, ask for Murrell.<lb/>
One bedroom apartment for rent.<lb/>
Thru une 2006 with option to<lb/>
renew. Walking Distance to campus<lb/>
and on bus route Rent Negotiable!<lb/>
Call 252-412-4469<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
Female roommate needed to share<lb/>
4 bedroom2 bathroom 2 story<lb/>
house. Rent $435 all inclusive. Room<lb/>
available now. Internet, cable, WD,<lb/>
short walk to campus, driveway,<lb/>
fenced in back yard. Contact Jenni<lb/>
(336)918-8871.<lb/>
Roommates needed in beautiful 3<lb/>
BDR house, 2 Bath one block from<lb/>
campus, females non-smoking;<lb/>
high speed wireless internet option;<lb/>
WD, all kitchen appliances, parking.<lb/>
Please call 347-1231.<lb/>
Roommate Wanted. Two Bedroom<lb/>
one bath Rent Amount $220 per<lb/>
month plus utilities. Located on<lb/>
Evans next to Best Buy Call for more<lb/>
information 252-268-6720<lb/>
Private furnished bedroom, private<lb/>
bathroom; washer, dryer, cable,<lb/>
telephone, internet; walking distance<lb/>
to campus 325month shared<lb/>
utilities looking for responsible<lb/>
student Email santucci2@mail.clis.<lb/>
com Tel. (252)725-1703<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
For sale WRV surf board.<lb/>
Excellent cond. 2 yrs. old. 6'4<lb/>
with new FCS fins no damage.<lb/>
Minimal exposure $225 obo.<lb/>
Call 910 670 4098 for info.<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
Need help with Biology or<lb/>
Chemistry? Call Alex at 804-<lb/>
212-4678 for reasonably priced<lb/>
tutoring.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
Servant's Heart Christian Gifts.<lb/>
Looking for full or part time. Open<lb/>
8:30am-5:30pm M-F. Hours can<lb/>
vary Call 321-2451.<lb/>
Part-time Manager Professor O'Cools<lb/>
is now hiring PT Manager For nights<lb/>
and weekends apply after 2:00pm<lb/>
No phone calls please.<lb/>
Tiara Too jewelry Colonial Mall Part-<lb/>
time Retail Sales Associate Available<lb/>
year round! Day and Night hours<lb/>
Apply in Person<lb/>
Part-time Interior Decorators<lb/>
needed; morning and afternoon<lb/>
hours available; apply in person @<lb/>
Larry's Carpet One, 3010 East 10th<lb/>
Street, Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
Food Delivery Drivers wanted<lb/>
for Restaurant Runners. Part-time<lb/>
positions 100-150week. Perfect<lb/>
for college student Some Lunch<lb/>
Time (11a-2p) M-F and weekend<lb/>
availability required. 2-way radios<lb/>
allow you to be anywhere in<lb/>
Greenville when not on a delivery.<lb/>
Reliable transportation a must.<lb/>
Call 551-3279 between 2-5 only.<lb/>
Leave message if necessary. Sorry<lb/>
Greenville residents only.<lb/>
Bartenders wanted! Up to $250<lb/>
day. No experience necessary.<lb/>
Training provided. Call (800) 965-<lb/>
6520. ext. 202<lb/>
Professor O'Cools now hiring<lb/>
waitstaff must be available M-F 2<lb/>
lunch shifts nights and weekends<lb/>
apply after 2:00pm no phone calls<lb/>
please.<lb/>
GREEK PERSONALS<lb/>
To the brothers of Pi Kappa Phi:<lb/>
Thanks for the awesome 80's social!<lb/>
We had a blast! -The sisters of Delta<lb/>
Zeta<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi Spring<lb/>
Recruitment! January 25th<lb/>
anytime between 4-7 at 1407<lb/>
E. 5th Street (ADPi house). Call<lb/>
758-5447 for rides. Hope to see<lb/>
you there!<lb/>
Spring Recruitment 2006. Come<lb/>
meet the sisters of Alpha Phi at<lb/>
our open house from 6-8 on jan<lb/>
3031st. The show begins at 6:30.<lb/>
Attention all Greeks: Dollar Night<lb/>
Every Thursday at Cafe Caribe<lb/>
$3 Admission. Nicest Restrooms<lb/>
Downtown. Plenty of Room to<lb/>
Socialize. Come Check it Out<lb/>
you to Theta Chi for a social! Can't<lb/>
wait to do it again!<lb/>
Rush Gamma Sigma Sigma Service<lb/>
Sorority! Meetings will be held this<lb/>
Tuesday or Thursday in Bate 1032<lb/>
and this Wednesday in Bate 3006.<lb/>
All meetings are at 7:30pm.<lb/>
The sisters of Kappa Delta would like<lb/>
to thank Kelley Ann Ryan and Beth<lb/>
Ann Koury for being our sisters of<lb/>
the week. Congrats girls!<lb/>
The sisters of Alpha Delta Pi would<lb/>
like to thank Chi Phi for the fun<lb/>
social at El Ranchito. We all had a<lb/>
great time!<lb/>
Delta Zeta would like to thank<lb/>
Kappa Sigma for a great social! Way<lb/>
to start the semester off right!<lb/>
OTHER<lb/>
1 Spring Break Website! Low<lb/>
prices guaranteed. Free Meals &amp;<lb/>
Free Drinks. Book 11 people, get<lb/>
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6 www.SpringBreakDiscounts.<lb/>
com or www.LeisureTours.com or<lb/>
800-838-8202.<lb/>
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only $699! Includes transportation,<lb/>
condo, lift tickets. March 11-18. For<lb/>
more info go to www.skiouting.com<lb/>
or call 327-8101.<lb/>
Bahamas Spring Break Celebrity<lb/>
Cruise! 5 Days From $299! Includes<lb/>
Meals, Taxes, Entry To Exclusive<lb/>
MTVu Events, Beach Parties With<lb/>
Celebrities As Seen on Real World,<lb/>
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Needed! www.SpringBreakTravel.<lb/>
com Promo code: 34 1-800-678-<lb/>
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Want To Learn How Hundreds<lb/>
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Internet Connection? Visit<lb/>
www.morethanapartyschool.<lb/>
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makemoney12daily@yahoo.<lb/>
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All Psychology Majors and Minors!<lb/>
Come to Psi Chi's First meeting<lb/>
Wed. 25th @ 5pm in Rawl 302<lb/>
Refreshments provided.<lb/>
$199! Beachfront Rooms at<lb/>
Boardwalk, Holiday Inn! Free Party<lb/>
Package, Food at MTVu Party Tent!<lb/>
Bahamas Cruise $299. Daytona<lb/>
$179, Cancun, Acapulco, Nassau<lb/>
$599! SpringBreakTravel.com 800-<lb/>
678-6386.<lb/>
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l-866-NO-ATTACKS<lb/>
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Delta Zeta would like to say thank Spring Break Panama City From<lb/>
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Cancun, Jamaica, Acapulco, Nassau,<lb/>
South Padre, Daytona From $179!<lb/>
fiecognlied 3 Times For Ethlci! Ompus Reps Needed!<lb/>
SpringBreak1tavel.com<lb/>
1-800-678-6316<lb/>
University Suites Apartments<lb/>
liALiOM<lb/>
npF.wmBiinw<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! y<lb/>
Third Floor<lb/>
New units available immediately<lb/>
&amp; for Fall '06<lb/>
Townhome Style-<lb/>
No one above or below you<lb/>
3 bedroom3 bath<lb/>
Maximum Privacy-<lb/>
Only one bedroom per floor!<lb/>
Second Floor<lb/>
 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/>
AIOVI<lb/>
LJ<lb/>
to I <lb/>
LL<lb/>
UJJLEUUil<lb/>
LE4SIN<lb/>
First Floor<lb/>
Welcome to the "SUITE LIFE"<lb/>
1-v- 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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