<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>

<pb facs="00059390_0001"/>
<lb/>
2-02-06<lb/>
www.theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Volume 81 Number 48<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
February 7, 2006<lb/>
ECU Folk and Country Dancers<lb/>
celebrate six more weeks of winter<lb/>
Concert very lively,<lb/>
successful<lb/>
KIMBERLY BELLAMY<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The ECU Folk and Coun-<lb/>
try Dancers had a free concert<lb/>
at Mudslinger's Coffee Co. on<lb/>
Thursday, Groundhog Day.<lb/>
Leanne Smith, English major<lb/>
graduate student and president of<lb/>
the group, explained that having<lb/>
the concert on Groundhog's Day<lb/>
wasn't for any special reason or<lb/>
to honor the holiday.<lb/>
"We chose this date because<lb/>
it was the first holiday coming<lb/>
up after we began to plan for the<lb/>
event said Smith.<lb/>
Smith said the idea to have a<lb/>
concert like this one came from<lb/>
a similar concert they had about<lb/>
seven years ago called Dylan<lb/>
night, in which they danced and<lb/>
sang to Bob Dylan music.<lb/>
The dance group had a variety<lb/>
of different performances that<lb/>
didn't just specifically include<lb/>
dancing.<lb/>
Undergraduate students,<lb/>
graduate students and professors<lb/>
performed a variety of different<lb/>
styles that included playing the<lb/>
drums, fiddle, bass, guitar and<lb/>
Native American flutes. The Folk<lb/>
Arts Society of Greenville also<lb/>
participated in the concert.<lb/>
Smith described the concert<lb/>
as having an "eclectic mixture<lb/>
of music Roger Robbins, biol-<lb/>
ogy visiting assistant professor,<lb/>
played the Native American flutes<lb/>
at the concert.<lb/>
When asked how he joined<lb/>
the ECU Folk and Country Danc-<lb/>
ers, Robbins said, "I belonged to a<lb/>
group in Beaufort before I moved<lb/>
here and then I just transferred to<lb/>
this group<lb/>
The group includes experi-<lb/>
enced performers like Robbins,<lb/>
who said he has been playing<lb/>
the Native American flutes for<lb/>
about eight years, but the group<lb/>
is also open to inexperienced<lb/>
performers.<lb/>
"It's open to everyone, kind of<lb/>
the folk aspect to it. It's all about<lb/>
learning and we're very tolerant<lb/>
of beginners Smith said.<lb/>
"We have beginner lessons<lb/>
before every one of our dances, so <lb/>
it's not a progression or anything. <lb/>
Anyone can come to any of the <lb/>
events <lb/>
Smith said that they had the g<lb/>
' event at Mudslinger's to bring c<lb/>
in a different kind of crowd and<lb/>
to get people to the downtown<lb/>
Greenville area.<lb/>
This is the first time they<lb/>
had this concert, but they plan<lb/>
to have it again next year along<lb/>
with other performances based<lb/>
on the success of the Groundhog<lb/>
The concert, hosted at Mudslinger's, was held on Groundhog Day because it was the nearest holiday to the pre-planned event date.<lb/>
Day concert.<lb/>
The group has at least three<lb/>
performances each month<lb/>
according to Smith and encour-<lb/>
ages everyone to come and watch<lb/>
or perform in one of the events.<lb/>
Where to go for good advice<lb/>
The dance group does contra,<lb/>
salsa, swing and, sometimes,<lb/>
disco dances.<lb/>
The next performances they<lb/>
have scheduled are Feb. 11 at 6<lb/>
p.m. and Feb. 17 at 7:30 p.m. at<lb/>
  :<lb/>
the Willis Building at First and<lb/>
Reade Streets. The dance on Feb.<lb/>
11 will be a contra dance and the<lb/>
dance on Feb. 17 will be a salsa<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
To learn more about the<lb/>
ECU Folk and Country Dancers,<lb/>
visit their Web site at geocities.<lb/>
comecufolkandcountrydancers.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Prioritizing comes first<lb/>
BY CLAIRE MURPHY<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
A seminar on marriage and<lb/>
relationships was held in the Brew-<lb/>
ster building Friday, led by Janie<lb/>
Sowers. Five females attended and<lb/>
were at all different ages and situ-<lb/>
ations in life. All, however, seem<lb/>
to have the faith and power to<lb/>
follow their hearts when it seems<lb/>
nearly impossible. Sowers was a<lb/>
very attentive and truly interested<lb/>
listener when anyone spoke of<lb/>
their own experiences.<lb/>
The main focus of the seminar<lb/>
was how to prioritize everything<lb/>
in life. Many people are balancing<lb/>
school, jobs, financial situations,<lb/>
significant others and a social<lb/>
life.<lb/>
"I haven't mastered how to get<lb/>
those extra five hours in my day<lb/>
said Sowers.<lb/>
She seemed to empathize with<lb/>
everyone in the room. Twenty-four<lb/>
hours is not always enough time,<lb/>
and you don't have to lose control<lb/>
if you can't finish everything.<lb/>
On that level, it is important<lb/>
to focus on your day-to-day goals,<lb/>
and let the long term goals work<lb/>
themselves out as well. It feels<lb/>
good to finish everything you set<lb/>
out to do.<lb/>
"Working smarter is better<lb/>
than working harder Sowers<lb/>
said.<lb/>
She also encourages every-<lb/>
one to find their passion and<lb/>
follow it. It is crucial to know<lb/>
your job and not try to control<lb/>
everything. She is very eager to<lb/>
help anyone who could ben-<lb/>
efit from her empowering semi-<lb/>
nars and has realistic messages.<lb/>
When on the subject of not attend-<lb/>
ing to everyone else when you<lb/>
need time for yourself, she said,<lb/>
"The sun comes up the next<lb/>
morning, and it's not my job to<lb/>
hang it<lb/>
Next time she gives one of<lb/>
these seminars, it would be a<lb/>
good idea to go. Sowers lets<lb/>
you know right off the bat<lb/>
that she is really there for you.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
newstheeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
'Vagina Monologues'<lb/>
opens this Friday<lb/>
S0AD Iron Pour<lb/>
The Vagina Monologues, featuring the powerful stories of women of all backgrounds and<lb/>
lifestyles, will be open from Friday, Feb. 10, to Sunday, Feb. 12 in Wright Auditorium. Tickets are<lb/>
available at ecuarts.com and will be sold outside of Wright Place this week.<lb/>
Southern winters unfamiliar to<lb/>
many native Northerners<lb/>
The School of Art and Design hosted an iron pour outside of the Jenkins Fine Arts building this<lb/>
past Saturday. The event lasted from 1 - 4 p.m. The hot Iron was poured into molds to make<lb/>
creations for both class and enjoyment.<lb/>
Unfamiliar but not<lb/>
unpleasant for most<lb/>
BY CLAIRE MURPHY<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
We long for those white win-<lb/>
ters and slay rides in the South,<lb/>
but is walking to class in mis-<lb/>
erably freezing weather really<lb/>
worth it? As it turns out, most<lb/>
ECU students who have come<lb/>
here from the northern states are<lb/>
glad to be away from the bitter<lb/>
cold of their hometowns.<lb/>
"It's much warmer and it still<lb/>
hasn't snowed The warmer win-<lb/>
ters are part of the reason why I went<lb/>
south for school said Kate Chi-<lb/>
quoine, a freshman from Delaware.<lb/>
Sure it would be nice to have<lb/>
a snowball fight once in a while<lb/>
and maybe write your name<lb/>
on the ground with your own<lb/>
urine, but with the reality of a<lb/>
winter wonderland comes a lot<lb/>
of responsibility. When there is<lb/>
tons of snow, shoveling paths<lb/>
and actually being a cautious<lb/>
driver are among the main safety<lb/>
precautions. When people aren't<lb/>
used to it, they think it is neces-<lb/>
sary to cancel school, appoint-<lb/>
ments and many other important<lb/>
things when there is less than<lb/>
one inch on the ground. Most<lb/>
of the time, they are not seri-<lb/>
ously affected. In most cases, the<lb/>
snow sticks for maybe half a day.<lb/>
"It snows an inch and every-<lb/>
one here runs to stock up on a<lb/>
month's worth of food said<lb/>
Chris Grare, a New Jersey native.<lb/>
On the other hand, is it worth<lb/>
bearing the cold months without<lb/>
seeing the beauty of the snowy<lb/>
ground even once?<lb/>
"I miss the feeling of a white<lb/>
Christmas. Here, it kind of makes<lb/>
the season lose what's important to<lb/>
some of us said Terence Murphy,<lb/>
a sophomore from New York.<lb/>
"When 1 grew up on Long<lb/>
Island, I remember walking 12<lb/>
blocks (or three) to school in 2 feet<lb/>
of snow (4 inches) and maybe I am<lb/>
a better person for it. It really just<lb/>
depends on your personal outlook<lb/>
of dealing with the burdensome<lb/>
weather patterns<lb/>
For the most part, the North-<lb/>
ern students prefer wearing the<lb/>
comfortable winter clothes and<lb/>
skipping having to wear ski gear to<lb/>
class. Then again, even if it is just<lb/>
for a day, a lot of Southern students<lb/>
here are thinking "let it snow, let it<lb/>
snow, let it snow<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
INSIDE I News: A2 I Classifieds: A7 I Opinion: A3 I Student Life: A4 I Sports: A6<lb/>
<pb facs="00059390_0002"/><lb/>
Page A2 news@theeastcarollnian.com 252.328.6366<lb/>
RACHEL KING News Editor ZACK HILL Assistant News Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY February 7, 2006<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Contra Dance<lb/>
The ECU Folk and Country<lb/>
Dancers are sponsoring a contra<lb/>
dance Saturday, Feb. 12 at the<lb/>
Willis Building, located at First and<lb/>
Reade Streets. Potluck supper will<lb/>
be at 6 p.m concert at 7 p.m<lb/>
beginners lesson at 7:30 p.m. and<lb/>
contra dance from 8 -10:30 p.m.<lb/>
Live, old-time and Celtic music<lb/>
will be provided by a string band.<lb/>
Admission is $3 for students, $5<lb/>
for FASG members and $8 for the<lb/>
public. For more information call<lb/>
752-7350. This is a smoke and<lb/>
alcohol-free event.<lb/>
Romary Workshop<lb/>
The Women's Studies Program<lb/>
is sponsoring a workshop<lb/>
entitled "Conflict Resolution: The<lb/>
Essential Skill of Leaders in Life,<lb/>
the Classroom, the Board Room<lb/>
and the International Halls of<lb/>
Power" Wednesday, Feb. 8. The<lb/>
workshop will start at 5:30 p.m. In<lb/>
Bate 1031. For more information,<lb/>
e-mail Cheryl Dudasik-Wiggs at<lb/>
dudasikwiggsc ecu.edu.<lb/>
Vagina Monologues<lb/>
The Vagina Monologues will<lb/>
run from Friday, Feb. 10 through<lb/>
Sunday, Feb. 12 at 8 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium. Proceeds will go to<lb/>
the Family Violence Program, Inc.<lb/>
of Pitt County. Co-sponsors are<lb/>
the Women's Studies Program<lb/>
and VOICE. For ticket information,<lb/>
call 1-800-ECU-ARTS. Tickets will<lb/>
also be sold outside the Wrigh;<lb/>
Place the week of performances.<lb/>
Elite Pirates<lb/>
Applications are now being<lb/>
accepted for induction into this<lb/>
premiere recognition program<lb/>
designed to honor the top student<lb/>
leaders at ECU. Only 11 student<lb/>
leaders will be selected for this<lb/>
honor based on their academics,<lb/>
leadership and community<lb/>
service.<lb/>
"The Elite Pirates" selected will<lb/>
receive a university plaque,<lb/>
induction into The Elite Pirates"<lb/>
Student Hall of Fame, a $150<lb/>
leadership honorarium and<lb/>
receive recognition with other<lb/>
campuscommunity leaders<lb/>
during ECU Founder's Week.<lb/>
Applications are available in 207<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. The<lb/>
deadline is Friday, Feb. 10 at 4:30<lb/>
p.m. for submitting your application.<lb/>
Interviews will be conducted Feb.<lb/>
20 - 24. The Induction Program will<lb/>
take place March 29 at 2:30 p.m.<lb/>
in MSC Hendrix Theatre. Founder's<lb/>
Week is March 27 - 31. For more<lb/>
information contact the Office of<lb/>
the Assistant Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Student Experiences at 328-4702.<lb/>
Criminal Justice<lb/>
Application Deadline<lb/>
Students interested in applying for<lb/>
admission to the undergraduate<lb/>
criminal justice program need<lb/>
to submit applications by<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 15. Applications<lb/>
are available outside of Rivers<lb/>
105. For more information, call<lb/>
328-4695<lb/>
Take My Picture<lb/>
Joyner Library is looking for<lb/>
students who are interested in<lb/>
volunteering as models for photos<lb/>
to be used in library publications<lb/>
and other materials. Interested<lb/>
individuals should contact Bill<lb/>
Bunting at buntingw(,ecu.edu.<lb/>
Student Homecoming<lb/>
Chair Applications<lb/>
The Homecoming Committee is<lb/>
currently looking for a persori to<lb/>
fill the 2006 position of Student<lb/>
Homecoming Chairperson.<lb/>
The position calls for the applicant<lb/>
to oversee seven subcommittees,<lb/>
managea$19,000 budget, process<lb/>
expenditures in a timely fashion<lb/>
and chair all student homecoming<lb/>
bi-weekly meetings.<lb/>
To apply for the position, all<lb/>
applicants must be full-time<lb/>
students in good standing with<lb/>
the university, have a minimum<lb/>
cumulative GPA of 2.5 and have<lb/>
a class standing of sophomore<lb/>
or higher. This is a paid student<lb/>
position. All applications must<lb/>
include a letter of interest and<lb/>
resume of related experience<lb/>
and should be e-mailed no later<lb/>
than Feb 10 to Adeea Rogers at<lb/>
rogersa(a;ecu edu. You may also<lb/>
drop off your letter of interest<lb/>
and resume to 218 Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, Mon. - Fri. from<lb/>
8 a.m. - 5 p.m.<lb/>
News Briefs<lb/>
State<lb/>
Body parts cache leads to arrest<lb/>
of Selma couple<lb/>
SELMA, N.C. (AP)  Decom-<lb/>
posing body parts of one or possi-<lb/>
bly two people were found near a<lb/>
Johnston County farmhouse, and<lb/>
the husband and wife who lived<lb/>
there have been arrested.<lb/>
Investigators were looking for<lb/>
a man named Ceasar Ruvalcava<lb/>
Ortiz, after receiving a tip Friday<lb/>
that someone had been killed<lb/>
on the farm property on Aug. 4,<lb/>
1997, Johnston County Sheriff<lb/>
Steve Bizzell said.<lb/>
Deputies searched the prop-<lb/>
erty Saturday and found plas-<lb/>
tic bags of decomposing body<lb/>
parts. A local medical examiner<lb/>
said the remains might be of<lb/>
two people.<lb/>
Investigators suspect that<lb/>
at least some of the remains<lb/>
are those of Ruvalcava, Bizzell<lb/>
said Sunday.<lb/>
Robert "Bobby" Bruce Pollard,<lb/>
34, was charged Saturday with<lb/>
first-degree murder and his wife,<lb/>
Cecelia Louise Pollard, 34, was<lb/>
charged with being an accessory<lb/>
to murder.<lb/>
Bobby Pollard was also<lb/>
charged with possessing mari-<lb/>
juana and a weapon of mass<lb/>
destruction- a sawed-off shot-<lb/>
gun. He was held without bond<lb/>
and Cecelia Pollard was held on<lb/>
$500,000 bond.<lb/>
Bizzell said Ruvalcava and his<lb/>
girlfriend, Robin Clark who was<lb/>
related to Louise Pollard often<lb/>
stayed with the Pollards in 1997,<lb/>
Bizzell said.<lb/>
Relatives reported Clark miss-<lb/>
ing on Aug. 9, 1997, when she was<lb/>
17 years old, said Ronnie Stewart,<lb/>
chief of operations for the Wake<lb/>
County Sheriff's Department.<lb/>
Last year, a Carrboro police<lb/>
officer responding to a call at an<lb/>
apartment met a woman who<lb/>
identified herself as Robin Clark<lb/>
and said she simply had a falling<lb/>
out with her parents. Her name<lb/>
was removed from a statewide<lb/>
database of missing person's<lb/>
reports in January 2005.<lb/>
Robida<lb/>
left note<lb/>
planning<lb/>
violence<lb/>
(AP)  Jacob D. Robida, 18,<lb/>
was fatally wounded Saturday<lb/>
when he opened fire on police<lb/>
at a roadblock following a high-<lb/>
speed chase in Arkansas. He was<lb/>
shot twice in the head and died at<lb/>
a hospital the following day.<lb/>
In New Bedford, where police<lb/>
say Robida attacked patrons at<lb/>
Puzzles Lounge with a hatchet<lb/>
early Thursday and then opened<lb/>
fire with a handgun, detectives<lb/>
found what they considered a<lb/>
troubling message in Robida's<lb/>
room at his mother's home.<lb/>
"We didn't interpret it neces-<lb/>
sarily as a suicide note, but it was<lb/>
certainly the note of a desperate<lb/>
man who had some plans to con-<lb/>
tinue doing something violent<lb/>
Bristol County District Attorney<lb/>
Paul Walsh Jr. said.<lb/>
The contents of the note<lb/>
were not released. It was unclear<lb/>
whether Robida left the note before<lb/>
or after the nightclub attack.<lb/>
Robida's mother told police<lb/>
her son had come home after<lb/>
the attack around 1 a.m. with his<lb/>
head bleeding, then left again.<lb/>
Police searched his room,<lb/>
finding the message, an appar-<lb/>
ently homemade poster with a<lb/>
Nazi swastika and anti-Semitic<lb/>
writings, as well as a makeshift<lb/>
coffin, Walsh said.<lb/>
The significance of the coffin<lb/>
was unknown, he said.<lb/>
A police report released<lb/>
Monday said investigators also<lb/>
found weapons, including 85<lb/>
rounds of ammunition, a Samu-<lb/>
rai sword, one knife and two<lb/>
knife sheaths in Robida's room. A<lb/>
knife without a sheath was found<lb/>
outside of Puzzles.<lb/>
They also found two bumper<lb/>
stickers that read: "I dress this way<lb/>
to scare your kids" and "My day is<lb/>
not complete until I've terrified a<lb/>
complete stranger the report said.<lb/>
Police were trying to deter-<lb/>
mine whether Robida had any<lb/>
accomplices in New Bedford or<lb/>
elsewhere, though evidence sug-<lb/>
gests he acted alone, Walsh said.<lb/>
After the tavern attack, Robida<lb/>
surfaced Saturday in Arkansas,<lb/>
where he killed Gassville police<lb/>
officer Jim Sell at a traffic stop,<lb/>
setting off a 20-mile chase that<lb/>
ended in a gun battle when<lb/>
Robida allegedly shot and killed<lb/>
his passenger, 33-year-old Jen-<lb/>
nifer Rena Bailey.<lb/>
Authorities now believe the<lb/>
woman was a relative of Clark's,<lb/>
Stewart said.<lb/>
Bizzell said deputies are trying<lb/>
to track down Ruvalcava's family<lb/>
members in Texas and Mexico.<lb/>
Troops returning from war zones<lb/>
dying on motorcycles<lb/>
CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. (AP)<lb/>
 More troops have died in off-<lb/>
duty motorcycle accidents since<lb/>
the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11,<lb/>
2001, than have been killed in<lb/>
combat in Afghanistan over that<lb/>
same time, according to safety<lb/>
records.<lb/>
Military commanders in<lb/>
North Carolina say the deaths<lb/>
are largely the result of boredom,<lb/>
bonus pay, and adrenalin to burn<lb/>
off after troops return from wars<lb/>
in Iraq and Afghanistan.<lb/>
Nearly 350 troops have died<lb/>
on bikes since the 2001 terror-<lb/>
ist attacks. That's compared<lb/>
to 259 killed while serving in<lb/>
Afghanistan.<lb/>
Nearly 1,000 more troops<lb/>
have been injured on bikes.<lb/>
The military has enough of<lb/>
a challenge maintaining a force<lb/>
that repeated deployments have<lb/>
left severely stretched, accord-<lb/>
ing to two reports released last<lb/>
month, one commissioned by the<lb/>
Pentagon, the other by Congres-<lb/>
sional Democrats.<lb/>
Troops say the bikes fill the<lb/>
adrenalin void they left behind<lb/>
in the war zone.<lb/>
"Riders who have been in<lb/>
accidents have told us that it's<lb/>
the legal crack cocaine said J.T.<lb/>
Coleman, a civilian spokesman<lb/>
for the Army's Combat Readi-<lb/>
ness Center in Fort Rucker, Ala<lb/>
which tracks accidents among<lb/>
soldiers. "They say it gives them<lb/>
the same adrenaline rush they<lb/>
get driving their tank through<lb/>
Baghdad or whatever<lb/>
National<lb/>
Owner of bus that exploded,<lb/>
killing 23 during hurricane<lb/>
evacuation, pleads not guilty<lb/>
MCALLEN, Texas (AP)  The<lb/>
owner of a tour company whose<lb/>
bus exploded and killed 23 nurs-<lb/>
ing home residents as they fled<lb/>
Hurricane Rita pleaded not guilty<lb/>
Monday to conspiracy and safety<lb/>
violations.<lb/>
Global Limo Inc. and its<lb/>
president and director, James<lb/>
H. Maples, are accused in<lb/>
a three-count federal indict-<lb/>
ment of conspiring to falsify<lb/>
driver time records and failing<lb/>
to inspect buses to ensure their<lb/>
safety.<lb/>
Maples, 65, didn't comment<lb/>
as he left the courtroom. His<lb/>
attorney, Charles Banker III, has<lb/>
said the government was blam-<lb/>
ing Maples for "something that<lb/>
was really completely out of his<lb/>
control Maples was arrested<lb/>
Wednesday and released on a<lb/>
$75,000 bond.<lb/>
The bus erupted into flames<lb/>
Sept. 23 on a freeway near Dallas<lb/>
while carrying evacuees from a<lb/>
Houston nursing home as Rita<lb/>
gathered strength in the Gulf of<lb/>
Mexico. The driver and some pas-<lb/>
sengers escaped, but others were<lb/>
caught inside as patients' oxygen<lb/>
tanks exploded.<lb/>
The accident accounted for<lb/>
almost one-fourth of the approxi-<lb/>
mately 100 deaths linked to Hur-<lb/>
ricane Rita.<lb/>
Federal regulators shut down<lb/>
Global Limo's bus operations<lb/>
after the fire, saying the condi-<lb/>
tions of its vehicles and drivers<lb/>
"are likely to result in serious<lb/>
injury or death A grand jury<lb/>
declined to indict the driver.<lb/>
The conspiracy charge, the<lb/>
most serious, carries up to five<lb/>
years in prison and a $250,000<lb/>
fine. If the company is convicted<lb/>
on that charge, it could be fined<lb/>
$500,000.<lb/>
U.S. Magistrate Judge Dorina<lb/>
Ramos scheduled jury selection<lb/>
for early April.<lb/>
Seizing property for religious<lb/>
school ruled unconstitutional by<lb/>
Pennsylvania court<lb/>
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP)  A<lb/>
city agency violated the separa-<lb/>
tion of church and state when it<lb/>
CM something to say? Send<lb/>
us yow Pirate Ranis!<lb/>
ViMts must be ud within 7 consecutive day.<lb/>
First Time Customers Only. ID required.<lb/>
Level 1 Beds Only.<lb/>
FIVE TANNING<lb/>
SESSIONS<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
Greenville Blvd. (Across from Pizza Inn)<lb/>
9311147  Evans Sfrwi  353.5400<lb/>
's www.tannbed.com<lb/>
Regularly Priced $30<lb/>
Expires 2U06<lb/>
CODE: 5V5TEC<lb/>
Live Music<lb/>
Meet New People.<lb/>
Fellowship.<lb/>
Pure Fun.<lb/>
Campus Crusade<lb/>
for Christ<lb/>
www.ccc.ecu.edu<lb/>
Will Graham<lb/>
grandson of<lb/>
Christian evangelist<lb/>
Billy Graham<lb/>
will be speaking<lb/>
in Hendrix Theater<lb/>
on Tuesday, February 7th<lb/>
at 7:00 pm.<lb/>
Don't miss this FREEevent!<lb/>
seized a woman's home to help<lb/>
a religious group build a private<lb/>
school in a blighted Philadelphia<lb/>
neighborhood, a state appeals<lb/>
court ruled Monday.<lb/>
In a 4-3 ruling, the Com-<lb/>
monwealth Court said the<lb/>
Philadelphia Redevelopment<lb/>
Authority should not have taken<lb/>
the property in 2003 to allow<lb/>
the Hope Partnership to build<lb/>
a middle school.<lb/>
The court said the seizure by<lb/>
eminent domain ran afoul of a<lb/>
clause in the U.S. Constitution<lb/>
that keeps Congress from estab-<lb/>
lishing religion or preventing its<lb/>
free exercise. The Hope Partner-<lb/>
ship is a venture of the Society<lb/>
of the Holy Child Jesus and the<lb/>
Sisters of Mercy.<lb/>
"The evidence shows that<lb/>
the Hope Partnership desig-<lb/>
nated the land that it wanted<lb/>
and requested the authority to<lb/>
acquire it, and the authority<lb/>
proceeded to do so wrote Judge<lb/>
Doris A. Smith-Ribner, writing<lb/>
for the majority. "This joint effort<lb/>
demonstrates the entanglement<lb/>
between church and state<lb/>
The authority may not take<lb/>
private property, and then give<lb/>
it to a religious group for its pri-<lb/>
vate development purposes, the<lb/>
court ruled.<lb/>
In a dissent, Judge Dan Pel-<lb/>
legrini said there was no evidence<lb/>
that the project was designed to<lb/>
establish a religion, but rather<lb/>
was meant to serve residents of a<lb/>
poor neighborhood.<lb/>
Last June, the U.S. Supreme<lb/>
Court ruled 5-4 that New London,<lb/>
Conn had the authority to take<lb/>
homes for a private develop-<lb/>
ment project. That ruling has<lb/>
been greeted with widespread<lb/>
criticism, and several states have<lb/>
been reviewing their laws related<lb/>
to eminent domain.<lb/>
World<lb/>
Face transplant patient says<lb/>
she looks 'like everyone else'<lb/>
AMIENS, France (AP)  The<lb/>
Frenchwoman who made<lb/>
medical history as the recipient<lb/>
of a partial face transplant gave<lb/>
the world its first look at the<lb/>
results on Monday.<lb/>
"I now have a face like every-<lb/>
one else Isabelle Dinoire said at<lb/>
her first news conference since the<lb/>
groundbreaking surgery<lb/>
in November.<lb/>
In speech that was heavily<lb/>
slurred, she explained how she<lb/>
was mauled by a dog last year<lb/>
and thanked the family of the<lb/>
donor who gave her new lips, a<lb/>
chin and nose.<lb/>
A circular scar was still vis-<lb/>
ible where the face tissue was<lb/>
attached in the 15-hour opera-<lb/>
tion in Amiens.<lb/>
Dinoire appeared to still have<lb/>
great difficulty moving or even<lb/>
closing her mouth, which often<lb/>
hung open. But she said that she<lb/>
was regaining sensation.<lb/>
"I can open my mouth and<lb/>
eat. I feel my lips, my nose and<lb/>
my mouth she said. During<lb/>
the news conference, while one<lb/>
of her surgeons was speaking,<lb/>
she lifted a cup to her lips and<lb/>
appeared to drink.<lb/>
In terms of coloring, the<lb/>
match between her own skin and<lb/>
the graft was remarkable.<lb/>
"I expect to resume a normal<lb/>
life I pay homage to the donor's<lb/>
family she said.<lb/>
"My operation could help<lb/>
others to live again<lb/>
Dinoire, a divorced mother<lb/>
of two teenage daughters, spoke<lb/>
frankly about the attack in May<lb/>
by her Labrador. She said she was<lb/>
passed out when the dog mauled<lb/>
her and that she did not imme-<lb/>
diately realize the extent of her<lb/>
disfigurement when she awoke.<lb/>
"When I woke up, I tried to<lb/>
light a cigarette, and I didn't<lb/>
understand why I couldn't hold it<lb/>
between my lips she said.<lb/>
She added that she then<lb/>
went to look at herself in a<lb/>
mirror and was horrified by<lb/>
what she saw. She also explained<lb/>
the difficulties of life with<lb/>
disfigurement, saying she suf-<lb/>
fered stares when she went out.<lb/>
"I understand all people who<lb/>
have a handicap she said.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059390_0003"/><lb/>
Page A3<lb/>
editor@theeastcarolinlan.com 252.328.9238<lb/>
JENNIFER L HOBBS Editor in Chief<lb/>
TUESDAY February 7, 2006<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
Technology today<lb/>
I love cell phones. I really do. I think that the<lb/>
invention of the cellular telephone has been<lb/>
one of the milestones in our society. We have<lb/>
the capability to contact anyone, anywhere, at<lb/>
any time. E-mail is no longer confined to the<lb/>
realm of a computer. Cell phones have the<lb/>
ability to connect friends and families and even<lb/>
save lives by giving us access to lines of com-<lb/>
munication with emergency services instantly. <lb/>
Whether it is for work or play, cell phones place<lb/>
the world at your fingertips.<lb/>
Technology in our society has given us power<lb/>
that was unimaginable just a decade or so ago.<lb/>
The benefits of cell phones are undeniable.<lb/>
However, with power comes responsibility.<lb/>
Our society holds standards of etiquette for our<lb/>
everyday interactions. Why do those lines of<lb/>
appropriateness become so blurred when we<lb/>
move from the real world to the world of tech-<lb/>
nology? We all know that talking loudly in a<lb/>
movie theater is unacceptable and distracting<lb/>
to the people around us. Why then do some<lb/>
people assume that the ringing of a cell phone<lb/>
is not just as - if not more - distracting?<lb/>
General societal standards dictate ttat it<lb/>
would be rude to completely ignore someone<lb/>
when they speak to you. So why do some<lb/>
people think it is OK to interrupt a sales clerk<lb/>
assisting them in a store in order to have a 15<lb/>
minute conversation on the phone? Have we<lb/>
allowed technology - and its ability to render<lb/>
face-to-face communication unnecessary<lb/>
- to diminish our appreciation for the people<lb/>
around us?<lb/>
Cell phones are amazingly powerful tools, for<lb/>
which we should all be thankful. Just remem-<lb/>
ber that like all power tools, cell phones can be<lb/>
destructive if they land in careless hands.<lb/>
IF ALL TWE SPEECHES EY ALL<lb/>
THE POLITICIANS CONCEPNED ABOUT<lb/>
ENERGY WERE CONVERTED TO<lb/>
ALTERNATIVE FUELS.<lb/>
Shooting themselves in the foot and other places<lb/>
Drugs, Violence<lb/>
Permeate Hip-Hop<lb/>
DANIEL BROCK<lb/>
OPINION COLUMNIST<lb/>
Our Staff<lb/>
Jennifer L Hobbs<lb/>
Editor In Chief<lb/>
Rachel King 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/>
Alexander Marciniak<lb/>
Web Editor<lb/>
Kristin Murnane<lb/>
Asst. Features Editor<lb/>
Brandon Hughes<lb/>
Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
April Barnes<lb/>
Asst. Copy Editor<lb/>
Rachael Lotter<lb/>
Asst. Photo Editor<lb/>
Dustln Jones<lb/>
Asst. Web Editor<lb/>
Mainstream hip-hop culture<lb/>
is senseless, needlessly violent<lb/>
and a large reason why African-<lb/>
Americans still face negative<lb/>
stereotypes concerning illicit<lb/>
activities and behaviors.<lb/>
As Black History Month rolls<lb/>
on, Black Americans should con-<lb/>
sider ways to improve their social<lb/>
image, and to begin doing so they<lb/>
need to examine why they are<lb/>
sometimes looked upon nega-<lb/>
tively. Many African-Americans<lb/>
may claim that latent racism is the<lb/>
reason for their negative portrayal<lb/>
in modern America, but at least<lb/>
some of the responsibility for their<lb/>
current plight falls on themselves.<lb/>
Mainstream hip-hop culture is<lb/>
one that celebrates violence and<lb/>
crime, and, in so doing, ignorance.<lb/>
African-Americans contend<lb/>
that they are portrayed less than<lb/>
positively by the media, and<lb/>
while that is often the case, they<lb/>
are at least partly to blame for<lb/>
that situation. Their most popu-<lb/>
lar celebrities are rappers and<lb/>
hip-hop artists that receive adu-<lb/>
lation in the African-American<lb/>
community akin to Messianic<lb/>
status (see this month's cover of<lb/>
Rolling Stone feat. Kanye West).<lb/>
The negative influence of hip-<lb/>
hop culture is broad in its reach.<lb/>
A generation of African-Ameri-<lb/>
can youths have been raised<lb/>
on the violence and inanity of<lb/>
hip-hop, and it has produced a<lb/>
crop of young people who believe<lb/>
that violence, drugs and criminal<lb/>
activity are not only acceptable<lb/>
behaviors, but are also their best,<lb/>
and perhaps only, options to rise<lb/>
above the abject poverty that<lb/>
many of them are raised in.<lb/>
Rappers both past and present<lb/>
have ascended to the pinnacle of<lb/>
the hip-hop world based on thug<lb/>
personas and "street cred Tupac<lb/>
Shakur, considered by many not<lb/>
only to be the best rapper ever,<lb/>
but also a visionary and poet, was<lb/>
immersed in the so called "thug<lb/>
life" and its unnecessary violence<lb/>
to such a degree that it led to his<lb/>
untimely death.<lb/>
A myriad of high profile hip-<lb/>
hop artists have been incarcerated,<lb/>
due to their violent behavior and<lb/>
involvement in illicit activities.<lb/>
Suge Knight, the oft-maligned co-<lb/>
founder of Death Row Records, was<lb/>
sent to prison for five years for vio-<lb/>
lating his parole when he stomped<lb/>
someone's head in a Las Vegas<lb/>
melee. Mystlkal is currently serving<lb/>
six years for forcing his hair stylist<lb/>
to perform sex acts, and of course<lb/>
the much-ballyhooed 50 Cent has<lb/>
spent time in the stony lonesome.<lb/>
50 Cent's crack business, and<lb/>
an incident in 2000 in which<lb/>
he was shot several times, gave<lb/>
him unlimited "street cred" and<lb/>
made him a hero in the 'hood.<lb/>
Since when was getting shot cool?<lb/>
Since when was dealing rocks<lb/>
cool? Who knows? Apparently<lb/>
in hip-hop, people involved in<lb/>
those sorts of things are to be<lb/>
looked up to. That is where hip-<lb/>
hop is letting African-Americans<lb/>
down. Oprah is not the only<lb/>
African-American to be duped<lb/>
recently. The intoxicating sums<lb/>
of money generated by the rap<lb/>
industry are blinding many Afri-<lb/>
can-Americans, and they are sell-<lb/>
ing the hard work and sacrifices<lb/>
of past Civil Rights leaders down<lb/>
the river in order to make a buck<lb/>
and live the mythical "thug life<lb/>
A radical culture shift seems<lb/>
unlikely as creativity is generally<lb/>
lacking in the hip-hop genre. A<lb/>
Black "Grunge" revolution does<lb/>
not seem imminent, or even<lb/>
possible, as there is presently<lb/>
a dearth of Black musical vari-<lb/>
ety. While soul and R&amp;B have<lb/>
their niches, hip-hop dominates<lb/>
African-American culture. From<lb/>
fashion and styles to general<lb/>
attitudes, hip-hop has left its<lb/>
indelible mark on Black America.<lb/>
The progression of musical styles<lb/>
and content has stagnated to<lb/>
the point that the majority of<lb/>
hip-hop is a cesspool of same-<lb/>
ness. Countless 50 Cent and<lb/>
Jay-Z clones fill MTV and BET<lb/>
programming with indistin-<lb/>
guishable rhymes degrading<lb/>
women while glorifying drugs<lb/>
and violence. A majority of Afri-<lb/>
can-Americans, especially the<lb/>
younger generations, are more<lb/>
than happy to go along for the<lb/>
ride as they run out to buy art-<lb/>
ist's albums, shoes and apparel.<lb/>
Hip-hop is not an entirely<lb/>
negative genre of course. Art-<lb/>
ists from KRS-One to Common<lb/>
have been positive influences<lb/>
with socially and politically<lb/>
conscious messages. For many<lb/>
years Common was an under-<lb/>
ground voice, fighting against<lb/>
the onslaught of mainstream<lb/>
"gangsta rap It's unfortunate<lb/>
that artists such as Common<lb/>
along with Mos Def and Talib<lb/>
Kweli are often overlooked and<lb/>
under promoted. The responsibil-<lb/>
ity for that lack of exposure falls<lb/>
not only on the record labels that<lb/>
push commercial "gangsta rap<lb/>
but also the legions of fans, both<lb/>
Black and White, that eagerly<lb/>
gobble up the fodder.<lb/>
The line between fantasy and<lb/>
reality becomes dangerously blurred<lb/>
in the hip-hop world, and that<lb/>
spills over into every day life as<lb/>
well. People are being robbed and<lb/>
gunned down all over Greenville,<lb/>
and to say that hip-hop culture<lb/>
hasn't played some role in that<lb/>
would be naive. Black youths across<lb/>
town have been involved in numer-<lb/>
ous violent incidents recently, and<lb/>
such acts are condoned, if not<lb/>
applauded, in the hip-hop culture.<lb/>
Rap and hip-hop are leading<lb/>
exports of the Black community<lb/>
and that is why they tend to reflect<lb/>
so poorly on the whole. The drugs<lb/>
and violence touted in hip-hop<lb/>
are bad for the African-American<lb/>
image, but good for business (i.e.<lb/>
50 Cent's gratuitously violent<lb/>
video game). It is up to the Afri-<lb/>
can-American community to<lb/>
decide whether they think money<lb/>
or a positive social image is more<lb/>
important. If any movement or<lb/>
culture lauded drugs, violen.ce<lb/>
and misogyny it would be wrong.<lb/>
Hip-hop, especially its mainstream<lb/>
forms, does that today. That in<lb/>
turn, leads to a negative perception<lb/>
of African-Americans in general.<lb/>
Slavery has been gone for nearly<lb/>
150 years, and the Civil Rights<lb/>
movement revolutionized America<lb/>
decades ago. It is time for African-<lb/>
Americans to become more pro-<lb/>
active and take responsibility for<lb/>
their social image. I seriously doubt<lb/>
Dr. King would ever stand behind<lb/>
a podium in Washington, D.C<lb/>
and proclaim, "Skeet, skeet, skeet<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 editor@theeastcarolinian.com or to The East<lb/>
Carolinian, SelfHelp Building, Greenville, NC 27858-<lb/>
4353. Call 252-328-9238 for more information. One<lb/>
copy of TEC is free, each additional copy is $1.<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
(KRT)  It would be easy, with<lb/>
Samuel Alito now on the Supreme<lb/>
Court, to predict that if another<lb/>
seat comes open before President<lb/>
Bush leaves office the ensuing<lb/>
confirmation battle would be one<lb/>
for the record books.<lb/>
After all, if Bush did fill a<lb/>
third seat, he essentially would<lb/>
be able to remake the nation's<lb/>
highest court in his own image.<lb/>
However, given what we have<lb/>
learned from the confirmation<lb/>
battles over John G. Roberts Jr. and<lb/>
Alito, the idea that Ted Kennedy &amp;<lb/>
Co. might be able to stop another<lb/>
Bush nominee who is similar to<lb/>
those two men might well be more<lb/>
rhetoric than reality.<lb/>
Last year, before the death of<lb/>
Chief Justice William Rehnquist<lb/>
and the retirement of Sandra<lb/>
Day O'Connor, both Roberts and<lb/>
Alito fit the profile of the type of<lb/>
judge who conventional wisdom<lb/>
held would inspire a Democratic<lb/>
battle to the death.<lb/>
Democratic interest groups<lb/>
had boasted they would never<lb/>
allow Bush to put that kind of<lb/>
justice on the court, much less<lb/>
two of them, or would at the least<lb/>
wage a scorched earth campaign<lb/>
that made the president pay a<lb/>
heavy political price.<lb/>
That is because with Alito<lb/>
joining Antonin Scalia, Clarence<lb/>
Thomas and Roberts on the court,<lb/>
that provides four strongly conser-<lb/>
vative votes. The swing member<lb/>
is now Anthony Kennedy, who<lb/>
most Democrats have always<lb/>
thought was less inclined toward<lb/>
their legal philosophy than<lb/>
O'Connor, whom Alito replaced.<lb/>
But should another vacancy<lb/>
occur, it is hard to look at the<lb/>
past six months of Supreme Court<lb/>
politics and conclude that even if<lb/>
Bush gets to appoint what would<lb/>
be the fifth vote on the nine-<lb/>
member court, the confirmation<lb/>
fight would turn out differently.<lb/>
To borrow a phrase from Saddam<lb/>
Hussein, Bush's foes predicted the<lb/>
mother of all battles to stop anyone<lb/>
they considered to be a strict-con-<lb/>
structionist conservative on the high<lb/>
court. But they could not deliver.<lb/>
Bush's opponents could not<lb/>
even muster enough votes to<lb/>
filibuster either man, much less<lb/>
defeat Roberts or Alito on an up-<lb/>
or-down vote.<lb/>
Candidly, the lessons of the<lb/>
Alito and Roberts confirmations<lb/>
are that Democrats had better<lb/>
either take back control of the<lb/>
Senate this November or get<lb/>
darned close, if they really want<lb/>
to stop the next Bush nominee,<lb/>
should that be in the cards.<lb/>
And, they had better pray for t he<lb/>
health of John Paul Stevens, who<lb/>
is both the most liberal member<lb/>
of the court and its most senior<lb/>
member. He will be 86 in April.<lb/>
Stevens, who has served on<lb/>
the court for 30 years, spends<lb/>
much of his time at his Florida<lb/>
home. The expectation is that<lb/>
he will wait for a Democratic<lb/>
president before giving up his<lb/>
seat willingly. The court's next<lb/>
most liberal member is Ruth<lb/>
Bader Ginsburg who will be 73<lb/>
in March and has been treated<lb/>
for colon cancer.<lb/>
Yet, the 2008 presidential<lb/>
election is almost three years<lb/>
away. If the Democrats were to<lb/>
win back control of the Senate<lb/>
this year - an unlikely but not<lb/>
impossible task - that would<lb/>
change the dynamics of any<lb/>
Supreme Court appointment.<lb/>
Republicans currently hold 55<lb/>
of the 100 seats plus the tiebreaker<lb/>
in Vice President Dick Cheney.<lb/>
History teaches they will lose<lb/>
some of those seats in November<lb/>
and current polls show Americans<lb/>
saying they are in the mood for<lb/>
political change.<lb/>
Absent such a major elec-<lb/>
toral shift, however, the Alito<lb/>
and Roberts confirmation fights<lb/>
show that Democrats claiming<lb/>
a nominee is out of the judicial<lb/>
mainstream - which was their<lb/>
argument made against both<lb/>
men - doesn't cut it. Neither<lb/>
were opponents' cries that by<lb/>
confirming Roberts and Alito<lb/>
senators were endangering the<lb/>
continuation of legal abortion,<lb/>
which was aimed at energizing<lb/>
Democrats and a handful of<lb/>
moderate Republicans.<lb/>
Thus, should Bush get another<lb/>
Supreme Court appointment and<lb/>
offer a third conservative who<lb/>
passes the competence test, the<lb/>
Democrats will need to find a<lb/>
new strategy, either that or hope<lb/>
for election gains in November.<lb/>
Pirate Rant<lb/>
Everyone needs to start going to the hockey games.<lb/>
They cost less than any other ticketed sport, and<lb/>
these guys are awesome and exciting. No one seems<lb/>
to notice that they are among the few elite teams in<lb/>
the South, and boast an impressive record.<lb/>
No thanks to the guy that practically ran to steal the<lb/>
last seat on the bus. Thanks to the true gentleman<lb/>
that gave up his seat, walked to the front of the bus<lb/>
and offered it to me<lb/>
To the guys who have been fencing at the bottom of<lb/>
the hill late at night, you guys are freaking awesome,<lb/>
makes me wish I knew how to do that.<lb/>
I can't stand Oprah!<lb/>
To the person that wrote the article about jean shorts<lb/>
being out of style. Screw you and your jacked up sense<lb/>
of style. If you got a problem with me wearing jean<lb/>
shorts come see me, I'll be the one wearing jean short<lb/>
the whole summer.<lb/>
Tuesday Night: Carolina vs. Duke, enough said.<lb/>
ECU looks out for their own, if you go here as an<lb/>
undergrad and want to go to the medical school,<lb/>
they'll take you before they take someone from<lb/>
another college.<lb/>
In response to the letter to the editor in Thursday's<lb/>
issue: I understand your plight, however, do you need<lb/>
a month to truly remind you of what your people<lb/>
have overcome? It is not just African Americans that<lb/>
overcome adversity in this country, you don't see any<lb/>
other minority groups with a month set aside. Are you<lb/>
using the month as a reminder or as a crutch?<lb/>
Thank you Target for scheduling me to work on<lb/>
Superbowl Sunday when I asked off three weeks ago<lb/>
 thank you.<lb/>
So yeah I saw that article about jean shorts making a<lb/>
comeback! I don't think so and I better not see anyone<lb/>
wearing one or my head might just explode.<lb/>
I need a friend, somebody help<lb/>
Maybe I'm biased since I'm a redhead, but what's with<lb/>
all the bleach blondes at ECU? We all know that's not<lb/>
your real hair color, give it up already.<lb/>
Who decided it would be a good idea to start selling<lb/>
ice cream in the Rec Center?<lb/>
To: ECU Students - Rude is a horrible way to go<lb/>
through life. From: A fed up waitress.<lb/>
If it is your friend's birthday and you are to go out<lb/>
with that person with everyone to a club, don't leave<lb/>
i to go somewhere else because (a) you can't drink or<lb/>
(b) you are not having fun. True friends will stay and<lb/>
make themselves have fun. Be a true friend to your<lb/>
friends. The world does not have to bend to your ways<lb/>
but they way that you should act.<lb/>
No seriously PICK UP YOUR FEET!<lb/>
 For the Band: He's in the clarinet section, I also think<lb/>
the conductor is cute.<lb/>
 To the person that almost hit me on Friday, I was<lb/>
already crossing the street when you turned to go<lb/>
down behind the dorms And I had looked before<lb/>
I crossed and I did not see any cars that had a signal<lb/>
blinking. So maybe if you were more courteous and<lb/>
aware of proper driving skills you would not have had<lb/>
to drive all up on me and I would not have given you<lb/>
a go to hell look. You are on a campus that is mainly<lb/>
pedestrian, oh and by the way North Carolina law<lb/>
states that pedestrians have the right of way no matter<lb/>
what, even if they are in the wrong!<lb/>
Does our tuition pay for all the lame modern art<lb/>
sculptures on campus? If so do something cool for<lb/>
once like a statue of David Garrard.<lb/>
Alright, you can keep your Black History Month on a<lb/>
few conditions. When they come out with a White<lb/>
History Month and White Entertainment Television,<lb/>
you can't say a word.<lb/>
I think Jake Gyllenhaal and Heath Ledger have a secret<lb/>
love affair going on, beyond Brokeback Mountain!<lb/>
Does anybody notice how many squirrels are on<lb/>
campus? They are just rats with fuzzy tails.<lb/>
Who needs an alarm clock when they start drilling in<lb/>
 the basement of Fleming promptly at 8 a.m.? What are<lb/>
they doing down there? I'm trying to sleep!<lb/>
So you know that area on 10th Street down past Uni-<lb/>
versity Manor where the street signs say that we can<lb/>
resume a safe speed? What exactly does that mean?<lb/>
Are we supposed to stay around 45 mph since that<lb/>
was the last speed limit posted, or can we drive faster?<lb/>
Because, to me, a "safe speed" could be 80 mph as long<lb/>
as I'm not running any red lights or ramming other<lb/>
cars. This confuses me.<lb/>
A note for all of the girls. Guys don't care what is in<lb/>
fashion or not. Simple fact - Southern guys will con-<lb/>
tinue to wear jean shorts because we don't care what<lb/>
Northern girls think. Get rid of the hideous UGGs<lb/>
before you mention a word about fashion!<lb/>
First and foremost: Kanye West is not an idiot, he is<lb/>
a very intelligent and well-informed individual who<lb/>
deserves a lot of respect. Second: Kanye was appear-<lb/>
ing on Rolling Stone not in a literal but in a figurative<lb/>
sense- illustrating his commitment to spread his<lb/>
"word" and to uplift the black community. Proof?<lb/>
Look at Kanye's blatantly truthful statement about<lb/>
Bush's attitudes toward the Black Community in the<lb/>
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.<lb/>
I've decided physics is a foreign language that can<lb/>
never be understood.<lb/>
To the girl who believes she figured out the mystery<lb/>
of Greeks. Not all members of fraternities and sorori-<lb/>
ties dress up for class. And we choose people based<lb/>
on values and common interest as ourselves. So go<lb/>
ahead and stereotype us, you obviously have no idea<lb/>
what we're all about.<lb/>
I take the elevator to the second floor because I just<lb/>
had knee and hip surgery and can't walk up stairs.<lb/>
Not all of us are lazy.<lb/>
Black History month is the only month that African<lb/>
Americans idealize people they should, like Bob John-<lb/>
son, JC Watts or MLK Jr. Usually ignorant rappers get<lb/>
all the respect. Yeah for black history month!<lb/>
Editor's Note; The Pirate Rant is an anonymous way for students and staff tn the<lb/>
ECU community to voice their opinions. Submissions can be submitted anonymously<lb/>
online at www.theeastiarolinian.com. or e-malled to edttor&amp;theeastcarollnian.<lb/>
com. The editor reserves the right to edit opinions for content and brevity.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059390_0004"/><lb/>
'<lb/>
r O<lb/>
ntU<lb/>
c-<lb/>
2-07-06<lb/>
rO<lb/>
Page A4 features@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 CAROLYN SCANDURA Features Editor KRISTIN MURNANE Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY February 7, 2006<lb/>
Names in the News:<lb/>
Madonna opens event<lb/>
Five-time Grammy winner Madonna<lb/>
will team up with virtual band Gorillaz<lb/>
to open the 48th annual Grammy<lb/>
Awards. The Recording Academy<lb/>
said Gorillaz will perform in 3-D<lb/>
color animation, a first for network<lb/>
TV, Billboard.com reported. Madonna<lb/>
has no nominations this year, but<lb/>
Gorillaz's Feel Good Inc featuring<lb/>
De La Soul, is nominated for record<lb/>
of the year, best pop collaboration<lb/>
with vocals and best short-form<lb/>
music video. The brainchild of Blur<lb/>
frontman Damon Albarn, the Gorillaz<lb/>
are a blending of rock and hip-hop<lb/>
that represents band members<lb/>
as cartoon alter egos created by<lb/>
animator Jamie Hewlett.<lb/>
Manson hits the hookah<lb/>
Brian Warner, better known as<lb/>
Marilyn Manson, will portray Alice in<lb/>
Wonderland author Lewis Carroll in<lb/>
a new movie. Phantasmagoria: The<lb/>
Visions of Lewis Carroll will also mark<lb/>
Manson's writing and directing debut.<lb/>
"It's a kind of art-house horror;<lb/>
what people expect from Manson,<lb/>
they're going to get here said<lb/>
the film's producer, Alain de la<lb/>
Mata. Manson will head to the<lb/>
Berlin Rim Festival's European Rim<lb/>
Market to drum up financial support<lb/>
for the flick, which is budgeted at<lb/>
about $4.2 million. The film is set<lb/>
to begin production in the summer.<lb/>
Reunited and It feels so good<lb/>
The three teenage stars of the<lb/>
Harry Potter films are gathering<lb/>
for the fifth film in the wizard saga,<lb/>
Harry Potter and the Order of the<lb/>
Phoenix. Filming begins next week<lb/>
with Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson<lb/>
and Rupert Grint reprising their roles<lb/>
as teenage wizards. Britain's David<lb/>
Yates will direct and Vera Drake<lb/>
star Imelda Staunton will star as the<lb/>
new "Defense Against the Dark Arts'<lb/>
teacher at Hogwarts school. Phoenix<lb/>
is expected to be released next year.<lb/>
Broadway bound<lb/>
The divine Martin Short is preparing<lb/>
to take on Broadway Aug. 10 in Martin<lb/>
Short: Fame Becomes Me, after stops<lb/>
in Los Angeles and Chicago.<lb/>
"It's kind of a loving satire of one-man<lb/>
shows and my struggle to open a<lb/>
vein and be forthright and pour out<lb/>
the angst of my life, even though I<lb/>
don't have any angst he told the<lb/>
New York Times.<lb/>
"So I'm forced to make it up<lb/>
Boy George pleads not guilty<lb/>
Ex-Culture Club diva Boy George<lb/>
protested his innocence of a cocaine<lb/>
possession charge Wednesday in<lb/>
Manhattan Criminal Court. George,<lb/>
44, whose real name is George<lb/>
O'Dowd, was arrested in October<lb/>
of last year after police responding<lb/>
to a burglary call at his apartment<lb/>
in Manhattan found 13 plastic bags<lb/>
of cocaine. He could face up to five<lb/>
years in prison if convicted.<lb/>
Local Concerts:<lb/>
Nada Surf will be at the Cat's Cradle<lb/>
in Carrboro Friday, Feb. 10.<lb/>
The Pietasters will be at the Cat's<lb/>
Cradle in Carrboro Saturday, Feb. 11.<lb/>
Larry the Cable Guy will be performing<lb/>
at the RBC Center in Raleigh Saturday,<lb/>
Feb. 11.<lb/>
Matisyahu will be performing at the<lb/>
Cat's Cradle in Carrboro Wednesday,<lb/>
Feb. 15.<lb/>
Keith Urban and Pat Green will be<lb/>
performing at the Charlotte Bobcats<lb/>
Arena Thursday, Feb. 16.<lb/>
The Jagermiester Music Tour<lb/>
with Disturbed, Nothingface and<lb/>
Bloodsimple will come to the House<lb/>
of Blues in Myrtle Beach, S.C Sunday,<lb/>
Feb. 19.<lb/>
INXS and special guest Marty<lb/>
Casey &amp; The Lovehammers will be<lb/>
performing at Ovens Auditorium in<lb/>
Charlotte Tuesday, Feb. 21.<lb/>
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club and<lb/>
special guests Elefant will be<lb/>
at the Cat's Cradle in Carrboro<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 22<lb/>
OAR will be performing at Ovens<lb/>
Auditorium in Charlotte Saturday,<lb/>
Feb. 25.<lb/>
G. Love and Special Sauce will be<lb/>
performing at the Lincoln Theatre in<lb/>
Raleigh Friday, March 3.<lb/>
The Take Action Tour featuring<lb/>
Matchbook Romance, The Early<lb/>
November, Silverstein, Paramore and<lb/>
Amber Pacific will come to Myrtle<lb/>
Beach, SO Tuesday, March 7.<lb/>
Jerry Seinfeld will be performing<lb/>
at the Progress Energy Center for<lb/>
Performing Arts in Raleigh Friday,<lb/>
March 10.<lb/>
Circa Survive, Saves the Day and<lb/>
Moneen will be performing at the<lb/>
House of Blues in Myrtle Beach, S.C.<lb/>
Saturday, March 25.<lb/>
Black History Month at ECU<lb/>
Not just another month,<lb/>
celebrate with pride<lb/>
SARAH CAMPBELL<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
In the fast paced world that<lb/>
we live in today, many people<lb/>
often take for granted the every-<lb/>
day luxuries and rights that we<lb/>
enjoy thanks to the people who<lb/>
came before us. For 80 years,<lb/>
the United States has celebrated<lb/>
Black History Month by honor-<lb/>
ing the many black inventors,<lb/>
writers, activists and leaders<lb/>
who have come before us.<lb/>
The idea originated in 1926<lb/>
as Negro History Week by Carter<lb/>
Woodson. Woodson was the<lb/>
son of former slaves, who while<lb/>
attending school, was stunned<lb/>
to find that blacks were gener-<lb/>
ally forgotten in American his-<lb/>
tory books and that when they<lb/>
were mentioned, it was in an<lb/>
inferior manner. From then on<lb/>
Woodson made it his goal to<lb/>
acknowledge the contributions<lb/>
to this country made by blacks.<lb/>
He established the Associa-<lb/>
tion for the Study of Negro Life<lb/>
and History, now known as<lb/>
the Association for the Study<lb/>
of Afro-American Life and<lb/>
History, in 1915. This associa-<lb/>
tion charges blacks to become<lb/>
historians of their history by<lb/>
searching for and preserv-<lb/>
ing their accomplishments.<lb/>
Woodson decided that<lb/>
February was the appropriate<lb/>
time to celebrate black his-<lb/>
tory because the birthdays of<lb/>
two individuals who greatly<lb/>
Freedom's Journal was the first African American newspaperto be published in the United States. Copies<lb/>
of this paper are now on display for Black History Month at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.<lb/>
portrait of the American jazz<lb/>
legend as well as some of his<lb/>
most famous works. Tickets<lb/>
can be purchased in advance<lb/>
by calling 1-800-ECU-ARTS or<lb/>
by visiting ecuarts.com. Prices<lb/>
are $30 for the general public,<lb/>
$29 for ECU facultystaff, $15<lb/>
for youth and $10 for ECU stu-<lb/>
dents. All tickets purchased at<lb/>
the door will be sold for a flat<lb/>
rate of $30.<lb/>
Whatever your nationality,<lb/>
race or religion, remembering<lb/>
the contributions from our past<lb/>
can help us appreciate our pres-<lb/>
ent. By celebrating black history<lb/>
this month, we are celebrating<lb/>
a part of American history that<lb/>
was almost forgotten until one<lb/>
man decided to fight to bring it<lb/>
not only in our history books,<lb/>
but into our lives.<lb/>
For more information about<lb/>
Black History Month, please<lb/>
visit blackhistory.com.<lb/>
Thii writer can be contacted at<lb/>
featurei@theeaitcarolinian.com.<lb/>
influenced the black population,<lb/>
Frederick Douglass and Abraham<lb/>
Lincoln, occurred in this month.<lb/>
However, February is also a sig-<lb/>
nificant month because it was in<lb/>
February that blacks were granted<lb/>
the right to vote due to the 15th<lb/>
Amendment and the National<lb/>
Association for the Advancement<lb/>
for Colored People (NAACP) was<lb/>
established.<lb/>
"We should emphasize not<lb/>
negro history, but the negro in<lb/>
history. What we need is not<lb/>
a history of selected races or<lb/>
nations, but the history of the<lb/>
world void of national bias, race<lb/>
hate and religious prejudice<lb/>
said Woodson when speaking out<lb/>
about Negro History Week.<lb/>
This month on .campus there<lb/>
will be several events to honor<lb/>
Black History Month. Attending<lb/>
these events may prove to be not<lb/>
only enjoyable, but enlightening<lb/>
and educational as well.<lb/>
A Black History Month Con-<lb/>
cert, "A Tribute to Motown will<lb/>
be held Saturday, Feb. 18 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The concert is sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU Jazz Program and will fea-<lb/>
ture "Aishah<lb/>
An African American Reading<lb/>
Circle will take place from 7-8:30<lb/>
p.m on Thursday, Feb. 23. This<lb/>
event will take place in the Ledonia<lb/>
Wright Cultural Center Gallery.<lb/>
"Unforgettable: The Nat King<lb/>
Cole Story" will be performed Sat-<lb/>
urday, Feb. 25 at 8 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium. This production<lb/>
will feature an autobiographical<lb/>
<lb/>
Did You Know?<lb/>
African-Americans developed crop<lb/>
rotation, the traffic light the mail<lb/>
box, the gas mask, the fountain pen,<lb/>
the typewriter, the telegraph, the golf<lb/>
tee, the automatic gear shift, the<lb/>
commode toilet the method ot dry<lb/>
cleaning clothes, the electric lamp,<lb/>
the automatic car coupler and the air<lb/>
brake for the railroad; however, only<lb/>
four are Inducted Into the National<lb/>
Inventors Hall of Fame.<lb/>
VDAY<lb/>
UNTIL THE VIOLENCE STOPS<lb/>
<lb/>
'Vagina Monologues'<lb/>
will entertain, inform<lb/>
Valentine's Day Event from FRIENDS of<lb/>
S. Rudolph Alexander Performing Arts<lb/>
Dinner and dance soiree<lb/>
to be held<lb/>
AMANDA WINAR<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Much more to this event<lb/>
than meets the eye<lb/>
SARAH CAMPBELL<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
o<lb/>
Eve Ensler's The Vagina Mono-<lb/>
logues is coming to ECU Feb. 10<lb/>
- 12 as part of the V-Day College<lb/>
Campaign. The Vagina Mono-<lb/>
logues was written by Ensler to<lb/>
convey wom-<lb/>
en's sexuality<lb/>
and strength<lb/>
through humor<lb/>
and grace.<lb/>
Ensler wrote it<lb/>
ajter interview-<lb/>
ing more than<lb/>
200 women.<lb/>
The play has<lb/>
been translated<lb/>
into 35 differ-<lb/>
ent languages<lb/>
and runs in<lb/>
theatres all<lb/>
over the world.<lb/>
While performing The Vagina<lb/>
Monologues, Ensler was inspired<lb/>
to create a global movement to<lb/>
stop violence against women<lb/>
Did You Know?<lb/>
hence the creation of V-Day.<lb/>
"V-Day is a global movement<lb/>
to stop violence against women<lb/>
and girls. V-day is a catalyst<lb/>
that promotes creative events<lb/>
to increase awareness, raise<lb/>
money and revitalize the spirit of<lb/>
existing anti-violence organizations<lb/>
"Through benefit perfor-<lb/>
mances of The Vagina Monologues,<lb/>
unique documentary film proj-<lb/>
ects and inno-<lb/>
vative gather-<lb/>
ings designed<lb/>
to change<lb/>
social atti-<lb/>
tudes toward<lb/>
violence, V-<lb/>
Day generates<lb/>
broader atten-<lb/>
tion for the<lb/>
fight to stop<lb/>
worldwide vio-<lb/>
lence against<lb/>
women and<lb/>
girls including<lb/>
rape, battery,<lb/>
incest, female genital mutila-<lb/>
tion (FGM) and sexual slavery<lb/>
see V-DAY page A5<lb/>
-33 percent of all women have been<lb/>
abused In their lifetime.<lb/>
-In 2001 more than half a million<lb/>
women were victims of violence at<lb/>
the hands of an Intimate partner.<lb/>
-A convicted rapist Is 50 percent<lb/>
more likely to receive probation<lb/>
than a convicted robber.<lb/>
Romantic outings for Valen-<lb/>
tine's Day are usually detrimental<lb/>
to one's nerves, patience and<lb/>
wallet. February comes along<lb/>
and suddenly questions of what,<lb/>
when, where and how much<lb/>
come bombarding in from all<lb/>
directions. If you are looking<lb/>
for an outing that is low in cost,<lb/>
high in quality and won't leave<lb/>
you waiting for a table, then the<lb/>
FRIENDS of the S. Rudolph Alex-<lb/>
ander Performing Arts Series has<lb/>
an event for you.<lb/>
As part of their annual fund-<lb/>
raising event, the Valentine's<lb/>
Dinner Dance Soiree will be<lb/>
held at Rock Springs Center in<lb/>
Greenville on Valentine's Day<lb/>
from 6:30 - 10:30 p.m.<lb/>
Mary Ruth Helms, marketing<lb/>
associate for the Cultural Arts<lb/>
Outreach program, said "This<lb/>
is the seventh year we've put<lb/>
on the dance, and it has always<lb/>
been very successful for both<lb/>
the guests and our program<lb/>
Helms said on average<lb/>
there are about 200 guests that<lb/>
attend the event, and they usu-<lb/>
ally raise more than $9,000<lb/>
through auctions and drawings.<lb/>
This year the theme of the<lb/>
event is "An Evening at Ver-<lb/>
sailles The event will offer a<lb/>
fantastically elegant dinner full<lb/>
of candlelight, champagne, danc-<lb/>
ing, music and mouth-watering<lb/>
cuisine. Cocktail hour begins this<lb/>
evening before guests are seated<lb/>
Dance with the one you love on Valentine's Day through FRIENDS.<lb/>
in a room surrounded in hues<lb/>
of pink, creme and champagne.<lb/>
Alison Bennett-James and Peggy<lb/>
C. Taylor, who are in charge of all<lb/>
decorative elements of the affair,<lb/>
promise that "The guests who<lb/>
find the centerpieces irresistible<lb/>
will be pleased to know they will<lb/>
be available for purchase<lb/>
There are a variety of salads,<lb/>
main course meals and even<lb/>
vegetarian options for all guests,<lb/>
followed by a lovely dessert and<lb/>
champagne. Dancing follows<lb/>
see FRIENDS page A5<lb/>
ECU Campus Dining: Offering something for everyone<lb/>
There are a lot of options,<lb/>
choose wisely<lb/>
DANIEL BROCK<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
I remember Campus Dining.<lb/>
When 1 lived on the Hill, I ate<lb/>
at Todd almost every day. That<lb/>
was before the dawn of time<lb/>
when West End was but a dream.<lb/>
Anyway, Todd offered a scintil-<lb/>
lating menu, and as a freshman<lb/>
I thought I would eat as a king<lb/>
during my time at ECU. My<lb/>
parents certainly paid a king's<lb/>
ransom for my meal plan. Once<lb/>
I sat down to eat with some of my<lb/>
buddies, however, 1 realized that<lb/>
the food was not always a treat to<lb/>
the palate. Indeed, many people<lb/>
faced races against time to make<lb/>
it back to their hall to uh, take<lb/>
care of things. At any rate, Todd<lb/>
was there for some good times,<lb/>
and the Galley came through<lb/>
with some late night snacks.<lb/>
Since that time, Campus Dining<lb/>
has made some improvements to<lb/>
the campus dining experience to<lb/>
help students feel like they have<lb/>
gotten more bang for their buck.<lb/>
The Campus Dining Web site<lb/>
asks, "Who says you will miss<lb/>
mom and dad's cooking?"<lb/>
Well, I will actually. Espe-<lb/>
cially if you're from the South,<lb/>
no one cooks a meal like mama,<lb/>
and you know it. That being said,<lb/>
Campus Dining does offer some<lb/>
adequate services from which<lb/>
you can partake.<lb/>
Campus Dining offers 12 sites<lb/>
across campus where students<lb/>
can use their meal plans. The<lb/>
big two, of course, are Todd and<lb/>
West End Dining Halls. Every day<lb/>
students are offered a smorgas-<lb/>
bord of delights from which to<lb/>
choose. There is the old saying<lb/>
that preaches quality ahead of<lb/>
quantity, and it holds true here.<lb/>
Wright Place and Destination<lb/>
360 are convenience store type<lb/>
setups which are, true to the<lb/>
title, convenient. If you're on<lb/>
your way to class, you can grab<lb/>
a drink and a sandwich and be<lb/>
about your business. You'll look<lb/>
supremely important barreling<lb/>
across campus with a bottle of<lb/>
water, and nothing says "I've got<lb/>
money" like chomping on a bagel<lb/>
while talking on a cell phone.<lb/>
The Croatan is a popular<lb/>
choice for people to grab some<lb/>
food. Chick-Fil-A is featured<lb/>
there, and everyone knows it is<lb/>
delicious. There are also some<lb/>
other campus dining options<lb/>
offered, as well as a small conve-<lb/>
nience mart. More importantly,<lb/>
perhaps, the Croatan is a place<lb/>
to see and be seen. If you're<lb/>
going to pick up a biscuit there,<lb/>
be sure to bring a posse andor a<lb/>
lady friend.<lb/>
If you want to be really pre-<lb/>
tentious, you can pick up a latte<lb/>
or some other type of coffee<lb/>
drink at one of the Java City<lb/>
locations around campus. Be<lb/>
sure to be rude and huffy with<lb/>
the employees because that will<lb/>
Todd Dining Hall on College Hill<lb/>
surely make them work faster. (If<lb/>
you actually believe that, you are<lb/>
probably one of the rude ones.)<lb/>
If you're a 'meathead type you<lb/>
can get a little pick-me-up at the<lb/>
Center Court Juice Bar at the<lb/>
Student Recreation Center.<lb/>
The Galley is the place to be<lb/>
on the Hill. You can get almost<lb/>
anything that you want there.<lb/>
With a convenience mart, Java<lb/>
can offer many culinary delights.<lb/>
City and a lot of good hot food,<lb/>
the Freshman 15 will be an inevi-<lb/>
tability. The Reade Street Market<lb/>
and Subway are the Galley's<lb/>
counterparts on the West End.<lb/>
I always hope to see Jared from<lb/>
the Subway commercials when<lb/>
I go there, but it never happens.<lb/>
There is a guy in my history<lb/>
see DINING page A5<lb/>
Spacioi<lb/>
Free W<lb/>
Centra<lb/>
 'Washei<lb/>
 'Dishw:<lb/>
Ceiling<lb/>
Each t<lb/>
Pets A<lb/>
Energy<lb/>
HE<lb/>
V<lb/>
Wi<lb/>
1<lb/>
L<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059390_0005"/><lb/>
2-07-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  FEATURES<lb/>
PAGE A5<lb/>
Cozy One 8cTwo BedroomOne Bath Units<lb/>
Free Water and Sewer<lb/>
Central Heat &amp;. Air in Two Bedrooms<lb/>
Wall AC Unit &amp; Baseboard Heat in One Bedroom<lb/>
WasherDryer Connections<lb/>
1st Floor Patio with Fence<lb/>
2nd Floor Front or Back Balcony<lb/>
Pets Allowed with Fee<lb/>
Energy Efficient<lb/>
On ECU Bus Route<lb/>
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-f ri 9am-5pm, Sat By Appointment Only<lb/>
fcuN<lb/>
onogemenc<lb/>
Apartments 4 Rental Houses<lb/>
 '.<lb/>
NEED A LITTLE LOVE THIS VALENTINE'S DAY?<lb/>
WANT TO GO OUT ON Q DOTE WITH A DJ?<lb/>
WANT TO MEET OTHER HOPEFUL SINGLES?<lb/>
<lb/>
Call 328-4751 or stop by the station in the basement ol<lb/>
Mendenhall to sign up to find love this Valentine's Day!<lb/>
DATE A OJ<lb/>
 February 14 2006<lb/>
Mendenhall Multipurpose Room<lb/>
6:00pm<lb/>
SPEED DATING<lb/>
February 14 2006<lb/>
Mendenhall Multipurpose Room<lb/>
7:30pm<lb/>
t<lb/>
 Refreshments will be served<lb/>
tfl!J<lb/>
FNendS from page A4<lb/>
the dinner, live music provided<lb/>
by the Emerald City Big Band, a<lb/>
popular 20-piece band featuring<lb/>
three vocalists. They will play<lb/>
a mix of swing, pop, jazz, big-<lb/>
band and beach music. Melba<lb/>
Tripp, a member of the Valen-<lb/>
tine's committee overseeing the<lb/>
event, remarked the band is "a<lb/>
wonderful dance band, and is<lb/>
entertaining for those who prefer<lb/>
to relax at the table and listen<lb/>
There will be a live and silent<lb/>
auction at this event, and items<lb/>
include spa packages, home<lb/>
decor items, gourmet dinners,<lb/>
NASCAR tickets, local artist<lb/>
paintings, golf extravaganza,<lb/>
golf shirts and countless other<lb/>
items.<lb/>
Another part of the fundraiser<lb/>
is the selling of 75 hand-decorated<lb/>
champagne flutes, one of which<lb/>
will hold the winning ticket for<lb/>
a Lagos silver and gold diamond<lb/>
pendant, compliments of Lau-<lb/>
tares Jewelers.<lb/>
Helms said there will be a lot<lb/>
of French-inspired decorations,<lb/>
like a 10-foot Eiffel Tower that<lb/>
was constructed for the event, as<lb/>
well as a wall of mirrors and other<lb/>
quaint decorations to set the<lb/>
ambience of France for the guests.<lb/>
"For those who can't make<lb/>
it to France for Valentine's<lb/>
Day, we have decided to do<lb/>
the next best thing - bring<lb/>
France to Greenville Helms<lb/>
added laughing. It is an event<lb/>
of wonderful food, dancing and<lb/>
prizes, and should give every-<lb/>
one a chance to have a great<lb/>
Valentine's Day. Couples and<lb/>
singles are encouraged to attend,<lb/>
and there will be special tables<lb/>
for those singles looking to find<lb/>
some love on Feb. 14 as well.<lb/>
Tickets can be purchased<lb/>
at the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
located in Mendenhall. Tickets<lb/>
are priced at $65 for individuals<lb/>
or $130 per couple and are only<lb/>
available for a limited time. For<lb/>
tickets or additional informa-<lb/>
tion, interested parties can<lb/>
contact the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
at 1-800-ECU-ARTS or visit the<lb/>
Cultural Arts department Web<lb/>
site at ecu.eduecuarts.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
V"U3y from page A4<lb/>
according to vday.org.<lb/>
V-Day strives to create a world<lb/>
where women can spend their<lb/>
lives thriving rather than surviv-<lb/>
ing or recovering from terrible<lb/>
things they have experienced.<lb/>
"By raising money and con-<lb/>
sciousness, it will unify and<lb/>
strengthen existing anti-vio-<lb/>
lence efforts. Triggering far-<lb/>
reaching awareness, it will<lb/>
lay the groundwork for new<lb/>
educational, protective and<lb/>
legislative endeavors through-<lb/>
out the world says the<lb/>
mission statement at vday.org.<lb/>
Since the creation of V-Day,<lb/>
the organization has raised<lb/>
more than $25 million.<lb/>
Tickets for The Vagina Mono-<lb/>
logues can be purchased online<lb/>
at ecuarts.com or by calling 1-<lb/>
800-ECU-ARTS. Student's prices<lb/>
are $8 in advance and $10 at the<lb/>
door. General admission tickets<lb/>
are $12 in advance and $15 at<lb/>
the door. The performance will<lb/>
begin at 8 p.m. each night.<lb/>
This event is sponsored by<lb/>
ECU Women's Studies Program,<lb/>
VOICE, the Office of Student<lb/>
Experiences and the ECU Student<lb/>
Union. All proceeds from the per-<lb/>
formance will go to the Family<lb/>
z y<lb/>
u r<lb/>
-fA <lb/>
?<lb/>
r<lb/>
It could be a Seaming Hroblem.<lb/>
Get your kid CJelp now!<lb/>
1-888-GR8 MIND- www.aboutLD.org<lb/>
Violence Program Inc. of Pitt<lb/>
County. The goal of the perfor-<lb/>
mance is to raise awareness to stop<lb/>
violence against women and girls.<lb/>
Do your part by attending an<lb/>
upcoming performance of The<lb/>
Vagina Monologues and learning<lb/>
more about V-Day. Knowledge<lb/>
is power, so by learning more,<lb/>
you can help fight abuse against<lb/>
women and girls.<lb/>
Formore information about The<lb/>
Vagina Monologues and the V-Day<lb/>
College Campaign, visit vday.org.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Dilling from page A4<lb/>
class that looks a lot like him<lb/>
though. There's also Marie's,<lb/>
a snack bar, located at Minges.<lb/>
For more information about<lb/>
Campus Dining and their<lb/>
services, you can visit their<lb/>
Web site at ecu.edudining.<lb/>
Well, that's your Campus<lb/>
Dining overview. You could<lb/>
bring your lunch to campus <lb/>
if you want to get beat up. Prices<lb/>
are a little steep, but try to find<lb/>
a college that doesn't charge<lb/>
an arm and a leg for their food.<lb/>
It will all be water under the<lb/>
bridge soon enough, however.<lb/>
So eat, drink and be merry,<lb/>
for tomorrow we graduate.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Cd somdiww to say?<lb/>
Send us your Pfrate Kanls!<lb/>
w-<lb/>
P$fc  r77<lb/>
Student Homecoming Chair<lb/>
Hie Homecoming Committee is currently looking for a person to fill the 2006 position of<lb/>
Student Homecoming Chairperson.<lb/>
- - <lb/>
The position calls for the applicant to:<lb/>
 Oversee seven (7) subcommittees<lb/>
 Manage a $19,000 budget and process expenditures in a timely fashion<lb/>
 Chair all student Homecoming bi-weekly (Spring) and weekly Fall meetings<lb/>
e<lb/>
To apply for the position, all applicants must:<lb/>
 Be a full-time student in good standing with the University<lb/>
 Have a minimum cumulative GPA of 2.5<lb/>
 Have a class standing of sophomore or up<lb/>
This is a paid student position. All applications must include a letter of interest and resume<lb/>
of related experience and emailed no later than February 10, 2006 to Charlie Brown,<lb/>
brownchar(2ecu.edu. You may also drop off your letter of interest and resume to<lb/>
239 Mendenhall Student Center, M-F, 8-5pm.<lb/>
You can make a difference!<lb/>
sjy<lb/>
.j.<lb/>
N ft.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059390_0006"/><lb/>
Page A6 sports@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 TONY Z0PP0 Sports Editor BRANDON HUGHES Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY February 7, 2006<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
u<lb/>
ECU'S McNeil, Hart suspended<lb/>
ECU junior guard Japhet<lb/>
McNeil and sophomore<lb/>
forward Jonathan Hart have<lb/>
been suspended indefinitely<lb/>
for conduct detrimental to the<lb/>
team, announced Head Coach<lb/>
Ricky Stokes on Monday. Neither<lb/>
will play in Saturday's game<lb/>
against UAB in Birmingham, Ala<lb/>
McNeil leads Conference USA in<lb/>
assists with 6.65 per game and<lb/>
ranked fifth in the latest NCAA<lb/>
statistics published Jan. 31. He<lb/>
has distributed 133 assists this<lb/>
season, which is an ECU single<lb/>
season record. McNeil had started<lb/>
15 games this season, while<lb/>
averaging 4.9 points in 27 minutes<lb/>
per game. Hart was averaging 4.2<lb/>
points and 3.3 rebounds in 17<lb/>
minutes of action per game this<lb/>
season and had started each of<lb/>
the past three games.<lb/>
ACC suspends ere w for tech call<lb/>
Referees who worked Satur-<lb/>
day's game between Florida State<lb/>
and Duke were given a one-game<lb/>
suspension for an unnecessary<lb/>
technical foul on a Seminoles<lb/>
player, the Atlantic Coast Confer-<lb/>
ence said Monday. The crew of<lb/>
Mike Eades. Ray Natili and Ed<lb/>
Corbett shouldn't have assessed<lb/>
a technical foul to Florida State's<lb/>
Alexander Johnson in the second<lb/>
half of Duke's 97-96 overtime win<lb/>
Saturday, said John Clougherty,<lb/>
ACC coordinator of men's basket-<lb/>
ball officials. The technical was<lb/>
Johnson's fifth foul, and he left<lb/>
the game with 9:23 remaining.<lb/>
Johnson had 13 points and 11<lb/>
rebounds before he went to the<lb/>
bench. Johnson picked up his<lb/>
fourth foul for an intentional foul<lb/>
on Duke center Shelden Williams,<lb/>
who quickly got to his feet and<lb/>
bumped into Johnson. Televi-<lb/>
sion replays showed Johnson<lb/>
attempting to back away from<lb/>
the altercation, which resulted in<lb/>
technicals for both players. Refer-<lb/>
ees also whistled Johnson for an<lb/>
intentional foul against Williams<lb/>
in the first half.<lb/>
Hedican replaces Miller on US.<lb/>
hockey team<lb/>
Carolina Hurricanes defen-<lb/>
seman Bret Hedican has a<lb/>
chance to match the gold medal<lb/>
his famous wife captured 14<lb/>
years ago. Hedican, who is mar-<lb/>
ried to Olympic champion skater<lb/>
Kristi Yamaguchi, was selected<lb/>
Monday to the U.S. hockey team<lb/>
to replace injured Los Angeles<lb/>
Kings defenseman Aaron Miller.<lb/>
USA Hockey also announced<lb/>
tne three-person taxi squad,<lb/>
whose members will be pressed<lb/>
into action in Turin, Italy, only if<lb/>
a player is knocked out of the<lb/>
tournament by injury. The addi-<lb/>
tions were Carolina forward Matt<lb/>
Cullen. New Jersey defenseman<lb/>
Paul Martin and Buffalo goalie<lb/>
Ryan Miller. When the original<lb/>
23-man roster was chosen in<lb/>
December, Ryan Miller was left<lb/>
off because he was recovering<lb/>
from a thumb injury. However,<lb/>
he has been in peak form since<lb/>
his return while team members<lb/>
Rick DiPietro (New York Island-<lb/>
ers), Robert Esche (Philadelphia<lb/>
Flyers) and John Grahame<lb/>
(Tampa Bay Lightning) have<lb/>
struggled with injuries and<lb/>
inconsistent play. Hedican will<lb/>
be making his second Olympic<lb/>
appearance. He had no points<lb/>
in eight games during the 1992<lb/>
Albertville Games, the same<lb/>
Olympics in which Yamaguchi<lb/>
won the women's figure skat-<lb/>
ing gold medal. Yamaguchi, a<lb/>
two-time world champion, was<lb/>
inducted Into the U.S. Olympic <lb/>
Hall of Fame in December, <lb/>
one month after giving birth to J<lb/>
the couple's second daughter. &amp;<lb/>
Hedican has five goals and 13 i.<lb/>
assists in 51 games with Caro- g<lb/>
lina this season while averaging <lb/>
more than 20 minutes played<lb/>
per game. With the additions of<lb/>
Hedican and Cullen, Carolina<lb/>
now has four players on the U.S.<lb/>
squad. Hurricanes right wing<lb/>
Eric Cole was an original pick<lb/>
as was Doug Weight, who was<lb/>
traded by St. Louis to Carolina<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
Steelers win the big one<lb/>
Hines Ward MVP in Super Bowl XL<lb/>
RON CLEMENTS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
All that talk between Joey Porter and Jerramy<lb/>
Stevens didn't amount to much. Porter had just<lb/>
three tackles in Super Bowl XL, while Stevens tallied<lb/>
three catches for 25 yards, but did score a touch-<lb/>
down following a Ben Roethlisberger interception.<lb/>
Roethlisberger had a miserable night statisti-<lb/>
cally. Big Ben was just 9-21 passing for only 123<lb/>
yards and two interceptions. Jerome Bettis, play-<lb/>
ing in the final game of his career, was held to 43<lb/>
yards rushing. Seattle quarterback Matt Hasselbeck<lb/>
threw for 273 yards and a touchdown to Stevens,<lb/>
while league MVP Shaun Alexander was only five<lb/>
yards shy of 100. All this means Seattle won, right?<lb/>
Wrong.<lb/>
Pittsburgh's defense led the way and the offense<lb/>
made the plays it had to'make to earn the Steelers a<lb/>
21-10 victory over the Seahawks in Detroit Sunday<lb/>
for Pittsburgh's record-tying fifth Super Bowl title.<lb/>
Pittsburgh tied San Francisco and Dallas with its<lb/>
five Super Bowl titles.<lb/>
Two big plays busted the game open for the<lb/>
Steelers. On the second play of the third quarter,<lb/>
former UNC Tar Heel Willie Parker followed a<lb/>
great lead block by pulling guard Alan Faneca and<lb/>
out-sprinted the Seattle defenders 75 yards for a<lb/>
touchdown and a 14-3 lead. The run was the lon-<lb/>
gest rushing play in Super Bowl history, eclipsing<lb/>
Marcus Allen's 74-yard run in Super Bowl XVIII.<lb/>
An end-around pass from Antwaan Randle-El to<lb/>
game MVP Hines Ward for a 43-yard score sealed<lb/>
the win and the "One for the Thumb" for the city<lb/>
of Pittsburgh.<lb/>
The Seahawks scored first, marching down the<lb/>
field before their drive stalled following a ques-<lb/>
tionable offensive pass interference call on Darrell<lb/>
Jackson to negate a touchdown. Seattle settled for<lb/>
a 47-yard field goal. The Seahawks continued to<lb/>
move the ball up and down the field in the first<lb/>
half, only to have the Steelers defense force a field<lb/>
goal attempt. Seattle kicker Josh Brown missed a 50<lb/>
and a 54-yard field goal.<lb/>
Mistakes and questionable officiating plagued<lb/>
the Seahawks the entire game. Seattle receivers had<lb/>
several drops and bad footwork on two consecutive<lb/>
would-be completions near the sideline, one of<lb/>
which would have been a touchdown. Hasselbeck<lb/>
and Head Coach Mike Holmgren did a horrible job<lb/>
of clock management near the end of the game. <lb/>
see STEELERS page A8<lb/>
Pittsburgh Steelers running back Jerome Bettis holds up the Vince Lombardi Trophy after the Steelers'<lb/>
Super Bowl XL win over the Seattle Seahawks Feb. 5 in Detroit. The victory marked Bettis' last game.<lb/>
Houston holds off ECU in overtime, 64-60<lb/>
Questionable traveling call erases ECU<lb/>
last-ditch effort against Cougars<lb/>
ERIC GILMORE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
At the end of regulation, Houston point guard<lb/>
Lanny Smith sat in a rage, upset with a lack of a<lb/>
whistle during a last-second drive to the basket.<lb/>
But it was ECU and their respective fans that would<lb/>
leave in a firestorm following a referee's controver-<lb/>
sial overtime decision.<lb/>
With the Cougars holding a two-point advan-<lb/>
tage with just 4.6 seconds remaining in overtime,<lb/>
Houston's Brian Latham missed both free throws.<lb/>
ECU'S Taylor Gagnon corralled the rebound and<lb/>
sent a midcourt outlet pass to a streaking Jeremy<lb/>
Ingram. The sophomore guard received the ball and<lb/>
tried to dodge a Houston defender.<lb/>
It was then - with 1.2 seconds left - that a referee<lb/>
issued Ingram for a traveling violation. After the<lb/>
turnover, Ramon Dyer sank two free throws with<lb/>
0.2 remaining to seal the 64-60 Cougar road win.<lb/>
"Oh, man, I thought it wasa legit play said Ingram.<lb/>
"I was just trying to make a play, but 1 wasn't<lb/>
able to make a play. They made the call. I'm not<lb/>
going to bash the referees because that's not my<lb/>
style. They made the call, and 1 respect it<lb/>
Gagnon, visibly frustrated on the court, ques-<lb/>
tioned the official after the call was made.<lb/>
"When the referee first blew the whistle, I<lb/>
thought it was a blocking call said Gagnon.<lb/>
"That's a tough call to call, but we shouldn't<lb/>
have been in that position in the first place and<lb/>
have to live with it<lb/>
"It was a dogfight said Houston Head Coach<lb/>
Tom Penders.<lb/>
"I thought they matched up very well with<lb/>
us, and I'm happy, and proud to come out of here<lb/>
with a win. I think both teams were exhausted at<lb/>
the end, and we made a couple more shots than<lb/>
Head Coach Ricky Stokes stares out onto the court during the Pirates' heartbreaking overtime loss to Houston.<lb/>
see PIRATES page A8<lb/>
Lady Pirates victorious over Marshall<lb/>
Three Pirates net double figures<lb/>
Crisp gets deal from Bosox<lb/>
New Boston center fielder<lb/>
Coco Crisp avoided arbitration<lb/>
by agreeing to a $2.75 million,<lb/>
one-year contract with the Red<lb/>
Sox Monday. The team also<lb/>
announced a $3 million deal<lb/>
with free-agent shortstop Alex<lb/>
Gonzalez. The 26-year-old Crisp<lb/>
was traded to Boston last month<lb/>
after Johnny Damon agreed to<lb/>
sign with the New York Yankees.<lb/>
He inherits Damon's center<lb/>
field job and ieadoff position<lb/>
in a lineup expected to include<lb/>
five new starters, four acquired<lb/>
after last season. Crisp hit .300<lb/>
with 16 home runs and 69 RBI<lb/>
for Cleveland last year, while<lb/>
Damon batted .316 with 10 home<lb/>
runs and 75 RBI.<lb/>
JOSH FERNANDEZ<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
For the first time this season, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
were involved in a finish that separated them from<lb/>
their opponent by only one point. Coming out as<lb/>
the victor in Saturday's contest versus conference-<lb/>
foe Marshall (10-10, 5-4), ECU continued its long<lb/>
climb to the top of the Conference USA standings<lb/>
by beating the Thundering Herd 57-56.<lb/>
In front of a home crowd of over 1,600, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates (13-7, 5-4) fell to an early 14-point deficit<lb/>
as the score sat at 17-3. ECU Head Coach Sharon<lb/>
Baldwin-Tener called a timeout to regroup her play-<lb/>
ers. That move led to a 10-2 Pirate run, which cut<lb/>
Marshall's lead to six.<lb/>
During the remaining 10 minutes in the half,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates had trouble gaining any ground<lb/>
in the scoring department, but succeeded in not<lb/>
allowing the Herd to pull away. However, the last<lb/>
three-and-a-half minutes saw ECU mount a 9-3<lb/>
run headed by guards Impris Manning and LaCoya<lb/>
Terry, each of whom finished with 12 points.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates continued to play catch-up in<lb/>
the second half and tenaciously held the Herd to<lb/>
a maximum lead of only six. Freshman guard Jas-<lb/>
mine Young closed the gap to three with her first<lb/>
three-pointer of the game, shifting momentum to<lb/>
the Lady Pirates.<lb/>
With 12:33 left in the game, ECU acquired its<lb/>
first lead of the contest as Young snatched the ball<lb/>
from Marshall-guard Bridget Chacon, setting up<lb/>
the easy basket.<lb/>
This appeared to be the climax of the game as<lb/>
the Lady Pirates took over in the form of a 16-3 run.<lb/>
Up by nine with mere minutes left on the clock, all<lb/>
the Lady Pirates had to do was hold strong.<lb/>
However, Herd juniors KaShawna Curry and<lb/>
Modupe Ishola led a Marshall-rally and reclaimed<lb/>
the lead with 2:14 left on the game clock. Just 30 f<lb/>
seconds later, Terry hit a mid-range jumper to put 1<lb/>
see LADY PIRATES page A8 The Lady Pirates broke .500 again in Conference USA<lb/>
<pb facs="00059390_0007"/><lb/>
CLASSIFI<lb/>
7, 2006<lb/>
e<lb/>
Page A7<lb/>
TUESDAY February 7, 2006<lb/>
teelers'<lb/>
game.<lb/>
50<lb/>
sECU<lb/>
nt guard<lb/>
lack of a<lb/>
 basket,<lb/>
at would<lb/>
introver-<lb/>
t advan-<lb/>
vertime,<lb/>
throws,<lb/>
jnd and<lb/>
! Jeremy<lb/>
ball and<lb/>
a referee<lb/>
,fter the<lb/>
ws with<lb/>
ad win.<lb/>
Ingram.<lb/>
I wasn't<lb/>
I'm not<lb/>
not my<lb/>
t, ques-<lb/>
histle, I<lb/>
n.<lb/>
touldn't<lb/>
ace and<lb/>
I Coach<lb/>
11 with<lb/>
of here<lb/>
isted at<lb/>
ts than<lb/>
age A8<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
is 5pm 4-24-06<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 $387month<lb/>
utilities included<lb/>
Beat This, No parking tees, No parking<lb/>
hassle, Walk to class, downtown or to<lb/>
the rec. center, 2 bed 1.5 bath duplex<lb/>
available now, short term lease accepted.<lb/>
Buccaneer Village call 561-7368<lb/>
Sublease Feb '06 thru July '06<lb/>
$387 a month all Inclusive very<lb/>
negotiable. I will pay application<lb/>
fee. Call 781-254-6031 for more<lb/>
details)<lb/>
Two people needed to sublease 2<lb/>
bedroom, 1 bath apartment in<lb/>
Wyndham Court from May-uly. Pet<lb/>
friendly (deposit already paid for) and<lb/>
washerdryer included. Current tenants<lb/>
are willing to pay $50.00 of the rent each<lb/>
month! Call 252-675-7444 or 252-626-<lb/>
6975 for more information.<lb/>
Now accepting applications for summer<lb/>
and fall at Captains Quarters, University<lb/>
Terrace, Tower Village, The Trellis.<lb/>
Call Hearthside Rentals 355-2112 or<lb/>
355-5923. Visit our website at www.<lb/>
hearthsidemanagement.com<lb/>
One two Brs. on-site management<lb/>
maintenance Central heat air 6, 9, 12<lb/>
month leases Water Cable included ECU<lb/>
bus Wireless Internet pets dishwasher<lb/>
disposals pool laundry (252) 758-4015<lb/>
For Rent: Very nice 4 br, 2.5 bath<lb/>
house with 2 zone, central heatair; off<lb/>
street parking; close proximity to ECU<lb/>
campus. Completely renovated. 25<lb/>
rent discount for prompt pay. Call 752-<lb/>
1000, ask for Murrell.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
Roommate Wanted for Off-Campus<lb/>
House: Laid-back, but serious,<lb/>
student roommate wanted to share<lb/>
3 bedroom home. Pet- and smoker-<lb/>
friendly preferred. One bedroom and<lb/>
shared living areas for rent available<lb/>
immediately at $400month includes<lb/>
utilities. One month's security deposit<lb/>
and lease application required. Call<lb/>
252-480-1668 for Sheri or 252-599-<lb/>
7275 to speak to Evan. Owner is a<lb/>
licensed NC Realtor.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
The Buccaneer is back! The ECU<lb/>
yearbook has returned so make sure<lb/>
to reserve your copy. Order online at<lb/>
www.yearbookupdatesecu or call 1-<lb/>
888-298-3323 Hurry! Deadline to order<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
Bartenders wanted! Up to $250day. No<lb/>
experience necessary. Training provided.<lb/>
Call (800) 965-6520. ext. 202<lb/>
Secure your summer job before you<lb/>
go on Spring Break Part-time positions<lb/>
available (water analysis sales, hours<lb/>
from 8AM-1:30PM or 12:30PM-6PM.<lb/>
Must be able to work weekends and<lb/>
Training will start after Spring Break<lb/>
Apply Immediately Apps and Resumes<lb/>
must be in by Feb 20th Greenville<lb/>
Pool &amp; Supply Co, 3730 S. Charles<lb/>
Blvd Greenville, NC 27858 252-355-<lb/>
7121 Contact David Send Resume<lb/>
david@greenvillepool.com<lb/>
PoolBeach Managers in Pitt County<lb/>
and Atlantic Beach for summer. Call<lb/>
Bob 714-0576<lb/>
Help Wanted for Sales and Stock Heavy<lb/>
Lifting required Apply At The Youth<lb/>
Shop 923 Red Banks Rd Arlington Village<lb/>
756-2855<lb/>
Greenville Recreation &amp; Parks<lb/>
Department is recruiting part-time<lb/>
youth soccer coaches for the indoor<lb/>
soccer program. Applicants must possess<lb/>
a good knowledge of soccer skills and<lb/>
have the ability and patience to work<lb/>
with youth. Applicants must be able<lb/>
to coach young people ages 12-18 in<lb/>
soccer fundamentals. Hours are from<lb/>
6:45 pm to 9:30 pm, Monday-Thursday<lb/>
with some weekend coaching. Flexible<lb/>
hours according to class schedules. This<lb/>
program will run from March 7 to mid<lb/>
May. Salaries start at $6.25 per hour.<lb/>
Apply at the City of Greenville, Human<lb/>
Resources Department, 201 Martin L.<lb/>
King Jr. Dr Greenville NC 27834. For<lb/>
more information, please contact the<lb/>
Athletic Office at 329-4550, Monday<lb/>
through Friday, 10 am until 7 pm.<lb/>
Do You Need A Good ob?-The ECU<lb/>
Telefund is hiring students to contact<lb/>
alumni and parents for the ECU Annual<lb/>
Fund. $6.25 hour plus cash bonuses.<lb/>
Make your own schedule. If interested,<lb/>
visit our website at www.ecu.edu<lb/>
telefund and click on JOBS.<lb/>
Childcare needed for infant formal exp.<lb/>
required email exp. and contact info to<lb/>
mcadams@mail.ecu.edu<lb/>
$$$$$ Tutors Needed $$$$$: Looking<lb/>
for some extra money (-best opportunity<lb/>
on campus!) and a way to improve<lb/>
academically? Are you at least a<lb/>
sophomore with a 3.0 or better GPA?<lb/>
Become a tutor or mentor for the Office<lb/>
of Student Development-Athletics. We<lb/>
employ tutors in all subject areas and<lb/>
levels (1000-5999). Undergraduate<lb/>
students are paid $7hour and graduate<lb/>
students are paid $10hour. If this sounds<lb/>
iike the job for you, please contact<lb/>
Jennifer Bonner at 737-4553 for further<lb/>
information.<lb/>
GREEK PERSONALS<lb/>
Attention all Greeks: Dollar Night Every<lb/>
Thursday at Cafe Caribe $3 Admission.<lb/>
Nicest Restrooms Downtown. Plenty<lb/>
of Room to Socialize. Come Check it<lb/>
Out<lb/>
The sisters of Alpha Delta Pi would like<lb/>
to congratulate our fabulous new girls!<lb/>
We're so excited!<lb/>
morethanapartyschool.com or Email<lb/>
Me makemoney12dally@yahoo.com<lb/>
Time Is Money!<lb/>
Spring Break Panama City From $199!<lb/>
Beachfront Rooms at Boardwalk, Holiday<lb/>
Inn! Free Party Package, Food at MTVu<lb/>
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Nassau $599! SpringBreakTravel.com<lb/>
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Reps Needed! www.SpringBreakTravel.<lb/>
com Promo code: 34 1-800-678-6386<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
After a lond absence, the East Carolina<lb/>
yearbook has returned. You can<lb/>
purchase your copy of Buccaneer by<lb/>
Calling 1-888-298-3323 or log on to<lb/>
www.yearbookupdates.comecu to<lb/>
create your personalized yearbook<lb/>
entry. Don't wait! Reserve your<lb/>
memories by April 24 at 5pm.<lb/>
CONVENIENCE<lb/>
WYNDHAM COURT<lb/>
OTHER<lb/>
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Travel Services to Jamaica, Mexico,<lb/>
Bahamas and Florida. Don't get<lb/>
left behind) Book now, limited<lb/>
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discounts. InfoReservations<lb/>
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free! Group discounts for 6 www.<lb/>
SpringBreakDiscounts.com or www.<lb/>
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Want To Learn How Hundreds<lb/>
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Ground I<lb/>
Is looking for PACKAGE HANDLERS lo load ans<lb/>
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Drive (near the aquatics center) Greenville.<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
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Bahamas Party<lb/>
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Energy Efficient  Kitchen Appliances.<lb/>
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Pets OK With De<lb/>
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On ECU Bus Route.<lb/>
24 Hour Emergency Maintenance.<lb/>
Pets OK With Deposit  Nightly security patrols.<lb/>
3 Bedroom And 2.5 Bath Duplexes.<lb/>
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On Bradford Creek Golf Course.<lb/>
Approximately 1,350 Sq.ft.<lb/>
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Pets OK With Deposit  Covered Parking.<lb/>
3 Bedroom And 2.5 Bath  6 Blocks From ECU.<lb/>
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Pets OK With Deposit  Covered Parking.<lb/>
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Cancun $559<lb/>
Acapulco $629<lb/>
Jamaica, Nassau, Panama City, Daytona from $179!<lb/>
Rtcogniied 3 Tlmei For Ethics! Campus Reps Needed!<lb/>
SpringBrcakTravl.com<lb/>
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Kitchen Appliances  Dishwasher.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059390_0008"/><lb/>
RAGEA8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  SPORTS<lb/>
2-07-06<lb/>
blBBIBrS from page A6<lb/>
If Seahawk fans are griping<lb/>
about anything today, though, it<lb/>
is the officiating. There was the<lb/>
controversial dive into the end<lb/>
zone by Roethlisberger in which<lb/>
the ball never really appeared<lb/>
to be over the goal line, but was<lb/>
ruled a touchdown. There was a<lb/>
controversial call on Jackson's pass<lb/>
interference to negate a touch-<lb/>
down. There was a phantom<lb/>
holding call on Shawn Locklear<lb/>
to wipe out a huge pass comple-<lb/>
tion inside the Pittsburgh three.<lb/>
In the next play, Hasselbeck made<lb/>
his only mistake - trying to throw<lb/>
over the top of Porter and, instead,<lb/>
overthrowingjackson and having<lb/>
the ball picked off by Ike Taylor.<lb/>
Hasselbeck made the tackle, but<lb/>
was penalized on the tackle for a<lb/>
hit below the waist, even though<lb/>
he never touched anyone other<lb/>
than Taylor.<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
from page A6<lb/>
they did<lb/>
Houston's Dyer notched 17<lb/>
points and added 18 rebounds<lb/>
during a game-long rebounding<lb/>
duel with ECU forward Corey<lb/>
Rouse. Dyer's biggest basket came<lb/>
from beyond-the-arc with 4:20<lb/>
remaining in the extra frame that<lb/>
swung the momentum directly<lb/>
in Houston's favor.<lb/>
"Ramon Dyer's three from the<lb/>
corner was huge said Pender.<lb/>
"It gave us a little separation<lb/>
Dyer received an open look<lb/>
due to Smith's dribble penetra-<lb/>
tion against ECU'S zone defense.<lb/>
Smith tallied a game-high 20<lb/>
points with six threes and dis-<lb/>
tributed eight assists. The tem-<lb/>
peramental junior missed an<lb/>
opportunity to seal the game<lb/>
inside regulation, misfiring on an<lb/>
off balance shot in the lane.<lb/>
But the Pirates' missed oppor-<lb/>
tunities as well. Rouse's off-bal-<lb/>
ance layup was errant on ECU'S<lb/>
last possession inside regulation.<lb/>
The junior finished with nine<lb/>
points and 17 rebounds, but went<lb/>
2-of-6 in overtime from the char-<lb/>
ity stripe. Courtney Captain's late<lb/>
turnover also erased a potential<lb/>
game-winning possession.<lb/>
"I was pleased with our effort,<lb/>
but I was not pleased with our<lb/>
execution down the stretch said<lb/>
ECU coach Ricky Stokes, alluding<lb/>
to ECU'S 23 turnovers.<lb/>
"We did have some opportu-<lb/>
nities to win the game<lb/>
Ingram led ECU in scor-<lb/>
ing, grabbing his second career<lb/>
double-double with 18 points and<lb/>
10 rebounds. Freshman guard<lb/>
Sam Hinnant added 13 points.<lb/>
ECU (7-14, 1-7 C-USA)<lb/>
stormed out of the gates to notch<lb/>
the game's first 12 points, ignit-<lb/>
ing a crowd of 5,641 fans inside<lb/>
Williams Arena at Minges Coli-<lb/>
seum. Houston (14-6, 5-3 C-USA)<lb/>
fought back, taking their first<lb/>
lead minutes later by scoring the<lb/>
next 14 straight points.<lb/>
After the teams traded three<lb/>
point jabs, ECU reeled off a 16-0<lb/>
run midway over a three minute,<lb/>
32 seconds span. The Pirates'<lb/>
consecutive threes from the left<lb/>
corner by Ingram and Hinnant<lb/>
capped the scoring streak.<lb/>
Officiating Problems<lb/>
Neither head coach was happy<lb/>
with the three-man officiating<lb/>
crew of Bill Kennedy, Kyle Neve<lb/>
andJebHartness.<lb/>
"There were plays like the ball<lb/>
going out of bounds where an ECU<lb/>
player literally punched it out of<lb/>
bounds and ECU got the ball<lb/>
Penders said of the officiating.<lb/>
"It evened out, you know.<lb/>
The calls were like 'flip a coin<lb/>
'get out the Ouija board for<lb/>
a good part of the night<lb/>
Stokes, a bit more reserved,<lb/>
declined to comment on the<lb/>
travel call or the entire crew.<lb/>
"1 thought the officiating was<lb/>
pretty consistent Stokes said<lb/>
without offering the direction of<lb/>
the consistency.<lb/>
"I think I'll leave it at that. I<lb/>
don't think you can get in trouble<lb/>
for saying that, can you?"<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeas tCarolinian, com.<lb/>
Lady PlBtBS from page A6<lb/>
ECU back on top by one.<lb/>
The final 90 seconds saw no<lb/>
more scoring from either side as<lb/>
the Lady Pirates held on to claim<lb/>
the victory.<lb/>
Junior Cherie Mills netted<lb/>
her eighth double-double of<lb/>
the season with a game-high 15<lb/>
points and 10 boards. Jasmine<lb/>
Young also added her own<lb/>
game-high statistic as she<lb/>
contributed nine assists<lb/>
to the Lady Pirate victory.<lb/>
Next weekend, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates will host Memphis and<lb/>
UAB at Williams Arena in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum, two must-wins if ECU<lb/>
desires to catch first and second<lb/>
place Tulsa and SMU in the C-<lb/>
USA standings.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
iports@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
But in the end, it was all about<lb/>
"The Bus Bettis announced prior<lb/>
to this season that it would be<lb/>
his last, and with the Lombardi<lb/>
Trophy in his hands, he confirmed<lb/>
his retirement on the podium fol-<lb/>
lowing the game.<lb/>
"I'm a champion. I think the<lb/>
Bus' last stop is here in Detroit<lb/>
Bettis said.<lb/>
"It's official, like the referee<lb/>
whistle<lb/>
It couldn't have been a better<lb/>
storybook ending for Bettis, play-<lb/>
ing in his hometown to cap a<lb/>
13-year NFL career, in which the<lb/>
last 10 years have been with the<lb/>
Steelers. The future Hall-of-Famer<lb/>
finishes his career fifth on the<lb/>
NFL's all-time rushing list and as<lb/>
a Super Bowl champion.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
'The most il.iinirrous<lb/>
janimals m thp lorist ;<lb/>
Jiton'l live there<lb/>
For Seahawks, it's Motor pity<lb/>
(KRT)  This loss will gnaw<lb/>
at them the rest of this winter. It<lb/>
will follow them into off-season<lb/>
workouts. It will haunt their<lb/>
dreams.<lb/>
The Seahawks will wake up<lb/>
out of a sound sleep in a cold<lb/>
sweat and remember the dropped<lb/>
passes, the missed field goals, the<lb/>
punt that rolled dead on their 2-<lb/>
yard line, the penalties.<lb/>
They will look at the game<lb/>
film later this week and realize<lb/>
they should have been ahead<lb/>
about 24-0 at halftime. They<lb/>
will see that they kicked the<lb/>
Pittsburgh Steelers up and down<lb/>
Ford Field.<lb/>
They will see Walter Jones<lb/>
burying Joey Porter deep into the<lb/>
artificial surface. They will see<lb/>
Jerramy Stevens running open<lb/>
in the middle of the field, time<lb/>
after time after time.<lb/>
But they will also see the<lb/>
blizzard of mistakes and they<lb/>
will wince at what might have<lb/>
been.<lb/>
"We stubbed our foot a<lb/>
couple of times wide receiver<lb/>
Joe Jurevicius said.<lb/>
"And that's all I have to say<lb/>
on that<lb/>
In a game that will be remem-<lb/>
bered for its lack of artistry, the<lb/>
better team didn't win Super<lb/>
Bowl XL. The Seahawks lost,<lb/>
21-10.<lb/>
"It hurts center Robbie<lb/>
Tobeck said.<lb/>
"It really, really hurts<lb/>
The Hawks outgained Pitts-<lb/>
burgh by 57 yards. They held the<lb/>
ball six minutes longer. They had<lb/>
six more first downs.<lb/>
Matt Hasselbeck, the losing<lb/>
quarterback, played well. Ben<lb/>
Roethlisberger, the winning<lb/>
quarterback, was awful. It was<lb/>
the worst performance by a win-<lb/>
ning quarterback in the 40-year<lb/>
history of this game.<lb/>
Roethlisberger was 9-for-21<lb/>
passing. His rating was 22.6. He<lb/>
threw two interceptions. But the<lb/>
Steelers are the world champions.<lb/>
The Steelers made three plays.<lb/>
That's all. But that was enough.<lb/>
"You can talk about X's and<lb/>
O's, this and that, story lines, all<lb/>
of that's well in good in the week<lb/>
leading up to it Tobeck said.<lb/>
"But on game day, it's who<lb/>
makes the most plays. We were<lb/>
prepared for what they showed<lb/>
us. But, you know, execution<lb/>
The Steelers' defense bent.<lb/>
The Seahawks' offense broke.<lb/>
The Steelers couldn't cover<lb/>
Stevens, but he covered him-<lb/>
self. He dropped three passes.<lb/>
If he had caught all three, the<lb/>
Seahawks would have won. Pitts-<lb/>
burgh's Hines Ward was the<lb/>
game's MVP, but Stevens was as<lb/>
much of a factor in the Steelers'<lb/>
win as Ward.<lb/>
It was the Seahawks' game to<lb/>
win. And they lost it. This was<lb/>
their chance to take a champi-<lb/>
onship back to Seattle. And they<lb/>
dropped it.<lb/>
Shoulda. Woulda. Coulda.<lb/>
Guard Chris Gray was flagged<lb/>
for a drive-stalling hold on one<lb/>
possession. Wide receiver Darrell<lb/>
Jackson and tackle Sean Locklear<lb/>
were victimized by bad penalty<lb/>
calls that cost the Seahawks two<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
Josh Brown missed long,<lb/>
but makeable, field goals from<lb/>
50 and 54 yards. Jackson didn't<lb/>
recognize a blitz, leading to an<lb/>
incompletion late in the first half.<lb/>
Peter Warrick failed to catch a<lb/>
punt and allowed the ball to roll<lb/>
dead on the 2. And Hasselbeck<lb/>
threw a fourth-quarter pick at the<lb/>
Steelers' 27, after the Hawks had<lb/>
driven 71 yards.<lb/>
"I can't really say much<lb/>
offensive coordinator Gil Haskell<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"What can you say?"<lb/>
A loss like this can leave<lb/>
you speechless. It can make you<lb/>
grope for answers that don't<lb/>
exist. It can make you look at<lb/>
your perfect game plan and<lb/>
wonder how it could have unrav-<lb/>
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