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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>

<pb facs="00059393_0001"/>
<lb/>
2-09-06<lb/>
:er<lb/>
us<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
TEC WISHES EVERYONE A<lb/>
ENTIiAY!<lb/>
www.theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Volume 81 Number 50<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
February 14, 2006<lb/>
ECU remembers Coretta Scott King<lb/>
Dried fruit is a beneficial alternative to mountains of chocolate.<lb/>
Celebrating Valentine's Day<lb/>
with candy or carrots?<lb/>
I Some things to consider<lb/>
The life and times of Coretta Scott King were fondly remembered Friday by a variety of people, including<lb/>
Memorial held in Hendrix<lb/>
CLAYTON BAUMAN<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
ECU students, faculty and<lb/>
area officials gathered in remem-<lb/>
brance of the life and work of<lb/>
Coretta Scott King Friday rriorn-<lb/>
ing in Hendrix Theater.<lb/>
The near hour-long ceremony<lb/>
began with a Microsoft Power<lb/>
Point presentation. The presenta-<lb/>
tion included famous voice clips<lb/>
of King complete with famous<lb/>
pictures of the civil rights activist.<lb/>
"Today we assemble to remem-<lb/>
ber the first lady of the civil rights<lb/>
movement said Taffye Benson<lb/>
Clayton, assistant to the Provost<lb/>
EEOADA Compliance Officer.<lb/>
Clayton played a key role in the<lb/>
presentation taking place.<lb/>
Dr. Marilyn Sheerer, dean<lb/>
of the College of Education and<lb/>
interim vice chancellor for insti-<lb/>
tutional advancement, provided<lb/>
opening remarks.<lb/>
"She and Dr. King had<lb/>
such power in their words<lb/>
said Sheerer.<lb/>
"She knew who she was and<lb/>
understood her purpose in life<lb/>
M. Cole Jones, president of the<lb/>
Student Government Association,<lb/>
introduced the keynote speaker.<lb/>
The keynote speaker was<lb/>
Congressman G.K. Butterfield of<lb/>
the first district. The representa-<lb/>
tive had recently returned from<lb/>
King's funeral.<lb/>
"It's good to be back and see<lb/>
all of you said Butterfield.<lb/>
"When you talk about Dr.<lb/>
Martin Luther King, Jr out of<lb/>
necessity, you must talk about<lb/>
his wife and life mate Coretta<lb/>
Scott King<lb/>
The congressman went on<lb/>
to talk about many historic<lb/>
moments of the civil rights era,<lb/>
namely the passage of the equal<lb/>
voting rights.act. He emphasized<lb/>
its historic significance and<lb/>
Coretta's motivating demeanor.<lb/>
"Coretta Scott King was key<lb/>
in motivating Martin Luther<lb/>
King, Jr in his endeavor for equal<lb/>
voting rights sail) Butterfield.<lb/>
He went on to discuss how<lb/>
the first district is one of the<lb/>
poorest in the country.<lb/>
"We have a lot of work to do<lb/>
in eastern North Carolina. We've<lb/>
made tremendous progress. We<lb/>
have work to do<lb/>
The congressman cited Presi-<lb/>
dent Bush as part of the reason,<lb/>
emphasizingthehugesumofmoney<lb/>
that is spent in Iraq every week.<lb/>
"The president refuses to talk<lb/>
about tax cuts Butterfield said.<lb/>
The congressman was followed<lb/>
by the ECU Gospel Ensemble,<lb/>
who provided a spirited and soul-<lb/>
ful selection fitting for the event.<lb/>
A personal reflection was then<lb/>
provided by Regina Twine, presi-<lb/>
Congressman G.K. Butterfield.<lb/>
dent of the Black Student Union.<lb/>
She discussed that despite<lb/>
her age, she can still appreciate<lb/>
Coretta Scott King.<lb/>
"I am not too young to under-<lb/>
stand the mark Coretta Scott<lb/>
King made. We, as a young gen-<lb/>
eration, need to take up the torch<lb/>
for peace said Twine.<lb/>
Following Twine was Dr. Glen<lb/>
Gilbert, dean of the College of<lb/>
Health and Human Performance,<lb/>
with closing remarks.<lb/>
"Clearly Coretta Scott King was<lb/>
a woman of courage said Gilbert.<lb/>
Dr. Gilbert discussed some of<lb/>
the more personal moments in<lb/>
Mrs. King's life, such as how Dr.<lb/>
King had to wait six months for<lb/>
Coretta to accept his proposal.<lb/>
The presentation thereafter<lb/>
concluded with refreshments<lb/>
provided to all who attended.<lb/>
This writer can be reached at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
2 CLAIRE MURPHY<lb/>
 STAFF WRITER<lb/>
It is very important to many<lb/>
college students to maintain a<lb/>
healthy lifestyle while living<lb/>
away from home. We all know<lb/>
you need fruits and vegetables,<lb/>
but when it comes to the holiday<lb/>
of chocolates and fancy dinners,<lb/>
what can you do instead of going<lb/>
on a candy binge? Simply having<lb/>
chocolate covered strawberries,<lb/>
cherries or bananas is better for<lb/>
you than chocolate covered cara-<lb/>
mel or marshmallows.<lb/>
Eating healthy seems to be<lb/>
difficult when your mom isn't<lb/>
making you do it, but it is a<lb/>
crucial way of life. A balanced<lb/>
diet gives you'energy, helps you<lb/>
concentrate, helps maintain<lb/>
healthy weight and reduces your<lb/>
risk of many diseases such as<lb/>
type-two diabetes, obesity and<lb/>
some cancers. Keep portion sizes<lb/>
small and don't go overboard<lb/>
with the fried food. Grilled and<lb/>
baked options are a much better<lb/>
choice.<lb/>
When it comes to going<lb/>
out on a dinner date with<lb/>
your valentine, go for a salad<lb/>
with grilled chicken and a<lb/>
diet soda. You can get full and<lb/>
not fat. It's a dream come true.<lb/>
Fish is also packed with<lb/>
vitamins and minerals. Even if<lb/>
you think it tastes like wet sand,<lb/>
I find that ketchup can fix almost<lb/>
any problem (unless you are in<lb/>
need of hair gel, then forget I<lb/>
mentioned it). If you have to<lb/>
get the chicken fingers, go with<lb/>
broccoli instead of fries and water<lb/>
instead of sweat tea.<lb/>
This is the time of year when<lb/>
everyone wants to shed some<lb/>
baggage, so why not start feel-<lb/>
ing hotter and healthier while<lb/>
having fun with the one you<lb/>
love?<lb/>
Take a jog instead of a nap<lb/>
and drink skim milk instead<lb/>
of whole. Even if you don't see<lb/>
physical results immediately, you<lb/>
will feel on top of the world.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
SGA encourages student<lb/>
involvement and proposes<lb/>
ideas for the near future<lb/>
ECU Folk and Country Dancers<lb/>
co-sponsor contra dance<lb/>
Contra dance is a form of dancing with English and Scottish roots, similar to the square dance.<lb/>
A new proposal may bring music downloading to campus through a program called Ruckus.<lb/>
Undergraduate students<lb/>
are being presented with<lb/>
many opportunities<lb/>
Dances held every<lb/>
second Saturday and<lb/>
fourth Friday each month<lb/>
ELISA BIZZOTTO<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
CLAIRE MURPHY<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The ECU Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association held their<lb/>
15th meeting in the Mendenhall<lb/>
multi-purpose room yesterday.<lb/>
Many important issues were<lb/>
discussed and recognized by all<lb/>
of the senators. Four new sena-<lb/>
tors were officially sworn in at<lb/>
the beginning of the meeting.<lb/>
There were many opportu-<lb/>
nities to ask questions. Several<lb/>
people took advantage of this<lb/>
time. There are a lot of issues<lb/>
being processed that I had no<lb/>
idea were happening here.<lb/>
Dr. Al Smith was one of the<lb/>
first speakers and discussed<lb/>
the "pirate connection This<lb/>
idea proposed a way for ECU<lb/>
to retain more students from<lb/>
their freshman year until gradu-<lb/>
atloxu Ine answei seemed to<lb/>
simply be to "get the students<lb/>
more involved said Dr. Smith.<lb/>
Steps have been taken to send<lb/>
out information about all of<lb/>
the organizations on campus<lb/>
to upcoming freshmen. It was<lb/>
also suggested to send this<lb/>
information to all undergrads<lb/>
and transfer students. Any<lb/>
ideas can be given to Dr. Smith<lb/>
at his office in room 214 in<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
One of the main proposals<lb/>
of the evening was the idea of<lb/>
providing free music download-<lb/>
ing for ECU students. ITCSand<lb/>
Campus Living have already<lb/>
met and are excited to try a<lb/>
Ruckus pilot starting after spring<lb/>
break. Ruckus is an online music<lb/>
library with more than 1.5 mil-<lb/>
lion songs available. It will be<lb/>
available for free to students<lb/>
living on campus and for $10<lb/>
per semester for off-campus stu-<lb/>
dents. There will also be a movie<lb/>
subscription that will only be<lb/>
available on campus for $15<lb/>
per semester. The movies you<lb/>
can download are full sxieen<lb/>
with good quality. Ruckus is<lb/>
compatible with almost all<lb/>
portable players except for<lb/>
the iPod. This is because of<lb/>
iPod's strict policy with Apple.<lb/>
Most of you know that ECU<lb/>
uses Apple products and pro-<lb/>
vides a discount on il'ods. It<lb/>
was mentioned at the meeting<lb/>
that it is very possible for the<lb/>
school to do the same thing<lb/>
with other devices in the future<lb/>
to enhance the convenience<lb/>
of Ruckus. There will also be a<lb/>
faculty music subscription avail-<lb/>
able for $5.99 a month frorri any<lb/>
location. Subscriptions have to<lb/>
be updated regularly and must<lb/>
be canceled if you do not want<lb/>
it anymore, are graduating or are<lb/>
not returning to ECU.<lb/>
If there is an organization<lb/>
that you are a part of that you<lb/>
know is not represented by SGA,<lb/>
you can go to 109 Mendenhall<lb/>
and make sure your group is<lb/>
included.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Last Saturday night, the ECU<lb/>
Folk and Country Dancers and<lb/>
the Folk and Arts Society of<lb/>
Greenville sponsored a contra<lb/>
dancing event, which included<lb/>
a potluck dinner, concert, begin-<lb/>
ner's lesson and a two-hour long<lb/>
dance session. The event was held<lb/>
at the Willis Building in down-<lb/>
town Greenville and was one of<lb/>
six bi-monthly contra sessions to<lb/>
be held this spring. The contra<lb/>
dances, which are one of several<lb/>
types of dances put on by these<lb/>
two organizations, are held on<lb/>
the second Saturday and fourth<lb/>
Friday of each month and have<lb/>
been taking place throughout<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
Contra dancing derives from<lb/>
English and Scottish country<lb/>
dancing and holds some resem-<lb/>
blance to American square danc-<lb/>
ing. The basic structure of the<lb/>
dance calls for two parallel lines<lb/>
of participants, requiring that<lb/>
one be accompanied by a part-<lb/>
ner. Participants move through<lb/>
the lines with their partners and<lb/>
follow a simple dance sequence,<lb/>
repeating with a new set of part-<lb/>
ners every rotation. This repeti-<lb/>
tion allows for each participant<lb/>
to dance with every individual<lb/>
in both lines and, essentially,<lb/>
every individual in the room. The<lb/>
see DANCE page A3<lb/>
Enron proceedings underway<lb/>
as the blame is examined<lb/>
Who is responsible?<lb/>
LEE SCHWARZ<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Surely four years after the<lb/>
second largest corporate account-<lb/>
ing scandal in Corporate Ameri-<lb/>
can history, nearly everyone<lb/>
has at least heard of Enron.<lb/>
What a shame Enron's fall from<lb/>
power was. Enron was founded<lb/>
in 1985 in Houston, Texas and<lb/>
looked to potentially be placed<lb/>
on the prestigious Dow Jones<lb/>
30, which is comprised of the 30<lb/>
largest companies in America.<lb/>
However, through the use<lb/>
of offshore entities, which are<lb/>
subsidies that a company places<lb/>
out in other companies to avoid<lb/>
taxation - there are more than<lb/>
60 countries in the world that<lb/>
charge little or no corporate taxes<lb/>
on foreign subsidies - Enron hid<lb/>
its losses from mis-management<lb/>
of the business. Enron's stock<lb/>
price climbed as high as $90 per<lb/>
share in August 2000 based upon<lb/>
inaccurate earnings which failed<lb/>
to reflect losing entities. Former<lb/>
Enron CFO Andrew Fastow was<lb/>
in charge of creating these vir-<lb/>
tual "dummy" companies. New<lb/>
accounting legislation called the<lb/>
Sarbanes-Oxley act was passed in<lb/>
2002 to impose tighter regulation<lb/>
on accounting and to crack down<lb/>
on white-collar crimes.<lb/>
Former CEO Ken Lay is<lb/>
charged with using insider trad-<lb/>
ing, which occurs when a cor-<lb/>
porate officer uses non-public<lb/>
information in stock trades for<lb/>
his own benefit, to make $70 mil-<lb/>
lion. The Insiiier Trading Act 135<lb/>
of 1998 in addition to the SEC act<lb/>
of 1934, strictly prohibits these<lb/>
practices as part of the sweeping<lb/>
see ENRON page A3<lb/>
INSIDE I News: A2 I Classifieds: All I Opinion: A4 I What's Hot: A5 I Sports: A7<lb/>
<pb facs="00059393_0002"/><lb/>
'<lb/>
v<lb/>
. <lb/>
Page A2 news@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366<lb/>
RACHEL KING News Editor<lb/>
ZACK HILL Assistant News Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY February 14, 2006<lb/>
Announcements News Briefs<lb/>
Buccaneer Photo<lb/>
Sessions<lb/>
The ECU yearbook staff would like<lb/>
to invite all May 2006 graduates<lb/>
to have their photo taken for the<lb/>
next ediffon of the Buccaneer<lb/>
Sessions will be held March<lb/>
22 at Hendrix Theatre from 9<lb/>
a.m. - 5 p.m. and March 23 and<lb/>
24 at Ledonia Wright Cultural<lb/>
Center from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Call<lb/>
328-9236 to reserve your time<lb/>
Slot. Reservations are strongly<lb/>
encouraged, but not required. For<lb/>
more information, visit buccaneer.<lb/>
ecu.edu.<lb/>
Art Sale<lb/>
The School of Art and Design's<lb/>
annual Valentine sale will take<lb/>
place Tuesday, Feb. 14 from<lb/>
10 a.m. - 7 p.m. in the front<lb/>
foyer of Jenkins Fine Arts Center.<lb/>
The Small Metals Guild and<lb/>
Painting Guilds will be displaying<lb/>
their jewelry, small metals and<lb/>
paintings. Students and faculty<lb/>
are encouraged to remember<lb/>
someone special in their life or<lb/>
treat themselves to a creative<lb/>
gift.<lb/>
Salsa Dance<lb/>
The ECU Folk and Country Dancers<lb/>
are sponsoring a salsa dance<lb/>
on Friday, Feb. 18 at the Willis<lb/>
Building, located downtown at<lb/>
1st and Reade Streets. Instruction<lb/>
will be provided by Procopio and<lb/>
friends at 7:30 p.m. with the dance<lb/>
following at 8:30 p.m. Music by DJ<lb/>
Ramon. Fees are $3 for students,<lb/>
$5 for FASG members and $8 for<lb/>
the public. This a non-alcoholic,<lb/>
non-smoking event. For more<lb/>
information, call 752-7350.<lb/>
Career Fairs<lb/>
The Technology Career Fair will<lb/>
be held Wednesday, Feb. 15<lb/>
from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum The Science Fair will<lb/>
be held Friday, Feb. 17 from 11<lb/>
a.m. - 1 p.m. in the Science<lb/>
and Technology Building. The<lb/>
Business Career Fair will be held<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 22 from 10 a.m.<lb/>
- 3 p.m. in Minges Coliseum. The<lb/>
Education Fair will be held Friday<lb/>
Feb. 24 from 9 a.m. - 12 p.m. In<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. The Health Fair<lb/>
will be held Thursday, March 2<lb/>
from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. in the Carol<lb/>
Belk Building.<lb/>
Teachers and Applied<lb/>
Linguistic Students<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
A student-run conference offering<lb/>
opportunities for grad students and<lb/>
public school teachers to present<lb/>
their work, both practical and<lb/>
theoretical, in the areas of applied<lb/>
linguistics and TESL will be held<lb/>
in the Bate Building on Saturday,<lb/>
Feb. 18. This year's workshop<lb/>
features Dr. Melissa Cahnmann<lb/>
of the University of Georgia,<lb/>
who will present "Rehearsing<lb/>
the Revolution: Using 'Theater<lb/>
of the Oppressed' to Address<lb/>
Identity and Power in Language<lb/>
Education Dr. Cahnmann will give<lb/>
an additional presentation titled<lb/>
The Study and Use of Metaphor<lb/>
to Understand Bilingualism and<lb/>
Bilingual Education" on Friday,<lb/>
Feb. 17 at 3:30 p.m. in Bate 3008.<lb/>
Fees are $10 for ECU students<lb/>
and faculty, and $15 for all others.<lb/>
For more information, visit core.<lb/>
ecu.eduengltalgsconference<lb/>
registration.htm.<lb/>
'Godspeir<lb/>
Performance<lb/>
The musical "Godspell" will begin<lb/>
performances on Thursday, Feb.<lb/>
16 at 8:00 p.m in McGinnls<lb/>
Theatre. The show uses songs<lb/>
to bring the parables of Jesus<lb/>
Christ to life The story utilizes<lb/>
various theatrical traditions<lb/>
such as clowning, pantomime,<lb/>
acrobatics and vaudeville and<lb/>
is based on the book by John<lb/>
Michael Tebelak. Music and Lyrics<lb/>
by Stephen Schwartz. For more<lb/>
information and other shows, call<lb/>
328-6829 or 1-800-ECU-ARTS.<lb/>
Scholarships<lb/>
The College of Human Ecology<lb/>
announces the availability of four<lb/>
scholarships for the 2006-07<lb/>
academic year. Awards are for<lb/>
tuition and fees, and all applicants<lb/>
must meet scholarship criteria.<lb/>
The application deadline is Feb.<lb/>
20,2006. For more information see<lb/>
your department office or contact<lb/>
Sandy Jackson at 328-5754.<lb/>
Valentine's Dinner<lb/>
Today at the Rock Springs Center<lb/>
from 6:30 -10:30 p.m. The annual<lb/>
fundraiser sponsored by the S.<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander Performing<lb/>
Arts Series will consist of dancing,<lb/>
music and French-themed<lb/>
cuisine. For more information call<lb/>
830-8900<lb/>
I<lb/>
State<lb/>
Nearly two feet of snow falls on<lb/>
N.C. mountains, border towns<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A weekend<lb/>
snowstorm brought nearly two feet<lb/>
of snow to the mountains of western<lb/>
North Carolina by Monday morning,<lb/>
with a few more inches expected<lb/>
before the weather system dissipated,<lb/>
probably by the end of the day.<lb/>
In Buncombe County, western North<lb/>
Carolina's biggest city, Asheville,<lb/>
got only an inch of accumulation by<lb/>
Monday morning, according to the<lb/>
National Weather Service in Greer,<lb/>
S.C. Much more fell in the nearby<lb/>
higher elevations, with 24 inches<lb/>
reported near Banner Elk.<lb/>
Glade Mountain, eight miles north of<lb/>
the Haywood County town of Canton,<lb/>
reported 18 inches, and even towns<lb/>
near Asheville in Buncombe County<lb/>
got their fair share 9.5 inches in<lb/>
Weaverville and 7 inches in Candler,<lb/>
meteorologist John Tomko said.<lb/>
The state Highway Patrol reported no<lb/>
fatal incidents on slippery mountain<lb/>
roads as of Monday morning. No<lb/>
significant power outages were<lb/>
reported by Progress Energy and<lb/>
Duke Power as of Monday morning.<lb/>
With snow continuing along the<lb/>
Tennessee border and another<lb/>
couple of inches of accumulation<lb/>
in the forecast, the Greer office was<lb/>
preparing another winter weather<lb/>
advisory at mid-morning, Tomko<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In the state's southwestern mountains,<lb/>
Robbinsville got 20 inches of snow.<lb/>
Heavy snow with drifts to six feet<lb/>
deep closed the Cherohala Skyway<lb/>
a scenic route from the Tennessee<lb/>
border to U.S. Highway 129 near<lb/>
Robbinsville.<lb/>
Navy plans test flights at landing<lb/>
field site<lb/>
PLYMOUTH, N.C. (AP) - The Navy<lb/>
said it will conduct more flight tests<lb/>
this week at a landing field site in<lb/>
Washington and Beaufort counties<lb/>
as it gathers more environmental<lb/>
information as ordered by a federal<lb/>
judge.<lb/>
Flights Monday and Wednesday<lb/>
will begin about 9 p.m. and last<lb/>
about an hour. Flights on Tuesday<lb/>
will start in the afternoon over the<lb/>
Navy's preferred site for an outlying<lb/>
landing field.<lb/>
These flights are designed to collect<lb/>
empirical data on aircraft noise levels<lb/>
and responses of migratory waterfowl<lb/>
to visual and-or noise stimuli from FA-<lb/>
18 EF Super Hornet flight operations<lb/>
a Navy statement said.<lb/>
"Data collected will support the<lb/>
assessment of potential impacts on<lb/>
migratory waterfowl from construction<lb/>
and operation of an OLF at sites near<lb/>
migratory waterfowl populations and<lb/>
to observe noise effects of jet aircraft<lb/>
on waterfowl<lb/>
The field would be used by jets<lb/>
stationed at Oceana Naval Air Station<lb/>
in Virginia Beach, Va and at Marine<lb/>
Corps Air Station Cherry Point in<lb/>
North Carolina. The planes would use<lb/>
the strip to simulate night landings on<lb/>
aircraft carriers.<lb/>
More test flights and environmental<lb/>
studies were conducted by the Navy<lb/>
after a judge said the service hadn't<lb/>
sufficiently studied the impact of the<lb/>
field on a nearby wildlife refuge that<lb/>
is the winter home for thousands of<lb/>
geese and swans.<lb/>
The Navy said it plans to complete<lb/>
the new study in August.<lb/>
National<lb/>
Five agencies reviewing<lb/>
classified evidence In White<lb/>
House aide's case<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - Five government<lb/>
agencies are reviewing classified<lb/>
evidence that I. Lewis "Scooter"<lb/>
Libby may want to use at his trial<lb/>
to fight perjury and obstruction-of-<lb/>
justice charges, according to a court<lb/>
transcript made public Monday.<lb/>
During a Feb. 3 hearing, Special<lb/>
Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald told<lb/>
a federal judge that the review of<lb/>
classified materials is being done by<lb/>
the CIA, National Security Council,<lb/>
National Security Agency, State<lb/>
Department and several components<lb/>
within the White House, including<lb/>
the offices of the president and vice<lb/>
Five must-haves for new grads<lb/>
Helpful tips for making a<lb/>
good impression<lb/>
LAURA MORSCH<lb/>
CAREERBUJLDER.COM WRITER<lb/>
After four (or more) years of<lb/>
college, that diploma is so close<lb/>
you can taste it. And that means<lb/>
a bitter reality: Ready or not, it's<lb/>
time to find a job.<lb/>
Fortunately for this year's<lb/>
seniors, 62 percent of hiring<lb/>
managers plan to recruit recent<lb/>
college graduates in 2005, and 28<lb/>
percent say they will be increas-<lb/>
ing starting salaries over those<lb/>
offered last year, according to a<lb/>
recent survey by online job board<lb/>
CareerBuilder.com.<lb/>
Still, competition will be tight<lb/>
for jobs in many industries, and<lb/>
to get an edge on their classmates,<lb/>
candidates should leverage every<lb/>
advantage they have. Career-<lb/>
Builder asked hiring managers for<lb/>
the top five things they look for<lb/>
when hiring new graduates. Here<lb/>
are their answers, and some ways<lb/>
college seniors can use them to<lb/>
maximize their job search.<lb/>
1. Relevant Experience<lb/>
Twenty-eight percent of<lb/>
hiring managers cited relevant<lb/>
experience as their most impor-<lb/>
tant factor in the hiring decision.<lb/>
"Unfortunately, college gradu-<lb/>
ates often underestimate the<lb/>
experience they have through<lb/>
internships, part-time jobs and<lb/>
extracurricular activities said<lb/>
Matt Ferguson, CareerBuilder's<lb/>
CEO.<lb/>
According to the Career-<lb/>
Builder survey, 63 percent of<lb/>
hiring managers say they con-<lb/>
sider volunteer work to be rel-<lb/>
evant experience. For students<lb/>
without much direct experience,<lb/>
a functional resume, which<lb/>
highlights a student's abilities<lb/>
rather than work history, Is a<lb/>
good choicei<lb/>
2. Professionalism During the<lb/>
Interview<lb/>
If new graduates want to be<lb/>
treated as professionals, they<lb/>
need to dress and act the part.<lb/>
A first impression can make<lb/>
or a break a candidate, so col-<lb/>
see JOBS page A3<lb/>
<lb/>
s '<lb/>
ENOUGH ABT IN<lb/>
U" "CHOO<lb/>
.<lb/>
NO WONDER PEOPLE THINK<lb/>
CARAYAGGIO<lb/>
IS A OUT ON THE SOPRANOS.<lb/>
ART. ASK FOR MORE.<lb/>
president.<lb/>
The outcome of those reviews will<lb/>
determine whether the case against<lb/>
Ubby, Vice President Dick Cheney's<lb/>
former chief of staff, gets bogged<lb/>
down in a legal battle pitting the<lb/>
government's desire to protect<lb/>
national security secrets against a<lb/>
defendant's right to a fair trial.<lb/>
Ubby, 55, was indicted late last year<lb/>
on charges that he lied about how he<lb/>
learned CIA operative Valerie Plame's<lb/>
identity and when he subsequently<lb/>
told reporters.<lb/>
Plame's identity was published<lb/>
in July 2003 by columnist Robert<lb/>
Novak after her husband, former<lb/>
U.S. Ambassador Joseph Wilson,<lb/>
accused the administration of twisting<lb/>
intelligence about Iraq's efforts to buy<lb/>
uranium "yellowcake" in Niger. The<lb/>
year before, the CIA had sent Wilson<lb/>
to Niger to determine the accuracy of<lb/>
the uranium reports.<lb/>
Ubby's trial is set for January 2007.<lb/>
The case against Libby is on two<lb/>
tracks one public, one secret. U.S.<lb/>
District Judge Reggie B. Walton and<lb/>
lawyers for both sides went into a<lb/>
secret session after a public hearing<lb/>
Feb. 3 to discuss classified evidence<lb/>
that could play a role in the case.<lb/>
Ga. woman who married<lb/>
teenager gives birth to couple's<lb/>
baby, lawyer says<lb/>
ATLANTA (AP) - A woman accused of<lb/>
molesting a 15-year-old boy she later<lb/>
married gave birth to the couple's<lb/>
child over the weekend, the woman's<lb/>
lawyer said Monday.<lb/>
Lisa Clark, 37, gave birth to a 7-<lb/>
pourfd, 9-ounce boy Saturday, Daniel<lb/>
Samrnons said.<lb/>
The baby could be put in state<lb/>
custody unless Clark can arrange the<lb/>
necessary paperwork for a friend to<lb/>
take temporary custody before Clark<lb/>
is discharged from the hospital and<lb/>
returned to jail, where she will be held<lb/>
without bond, Samrnons said.<lb/>
"Right now, she's struggling with the<lb/>
trauma of having the child torn loose<lb/>
from her arms and possibly placed<lb/>
in foster care while she goes back to<lb/>
jail Samrnons said in a telephone<lb/>
interview.<lb/>
Clark's teenage husband turned<lb/>
up in Ohio earlier this month after<lb/>
disappearing from a juvenile home in<lb/>
Georgia. It was not immediately clear<lb/>
where he was Monday.<lb/>
District Attorney Lee Darragh did not<lb/>
return calls seeking comment.<lb/>
Aspokeswoman forGeorgia's Division<lb/>
of Family and Children Services said<lb/>
the agency was not currently involved<lb/>
in the case.<lb/>
Clark and the boy she is accused<lb/>
of molesting married in November.<lb/>
Georgia law allows children<lb/>
regardless of age to wed if there is<lb/>
a pregnancy.<lb/>
Clark had been free on bond, but<lb/>
was arrested again last week after<lb/>
authorities said she had been<lb/>
communicating with her husband in<lb/>
violation of a condition of her release.<lb/>
Arraignment was set for Feb. 24.<lb/>
World<lb/>
Saddam back In courtroom,<lb/>
lashes out at Bush, Judge<lb/>
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Prosecutors<lb/>
tried to link Saddam Hussein directly<lb/>
to torture and executions, producing<lb/>
documents with his orders and<lb/>
handwriting and putting one of his<lb/>
closest confidants on the stand<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
The former Iraqi leader and his co-<lb/>
defendants were forced to attend<lb/>
the session. Saddam appeared in a<lb/>
traditional Arab robe and bedroom<lb/>
slippers instead of his usual crisp suit,<lb/>
arguing vehemently with the judge<lb/>
and shouting "Down with Bush as<lb/>
he waved his finger.<lb/>
His top co-defendant and half<lb/>
brother, Barzan Ibrahim dressed<lb/>
only in long underwear struggled<lb/>
with guards as he was pulled into the<lb/>
courtroom. Ibrahim, the former chief<lb/>
of intelligence, then sat on the floor<lb/>
with his back to the judge in protest<lb/>
for much of the session.<lb/>
The defendants have rejected<lb/>
court-appointed attorneys named<lb/>
to replace their own lawyers who<lb/>
walked out of the trial last month,<lb/>
and are demanding the removal of<lb/>
chief judge Rouf Abdel-Rahman.<lb/>
In Jordan, Saddam's chief defense<lb/>
lawyer said there were no plans to<lb/>
end the boycott and denounced the<lb/>
court for forcing the former leader<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
"This is a cheap attitude Khaled al-<lb/>
Dulaimi told The Associated Press.<lb/>
After the raucous start, prosecutors<lb/>
made their strongest attempt yet to<lb/>
prove Saddam's role in a wave of<lb/>
arrests and executions that followed<lb/>
a 1982 attempt on his life in the Shiite<lb/>
village of Dujail.<lb/>
Twenty-six prosecution witnesses<lb/>
have testified since the Saddam<lb/>
trial began Oct. 19, many providing<lb/>
accounts of torture and imprisonment<lb/>
in the crackdown, but they could not<lb/>
directly pin them on Saddam.<lb/>
Pro-Preval protests erupt In<lb/>
Haitian capital; at least one dead<lb/>
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) -<lb/>
Supporters of Haitian presidential<lb/>
candidate Rene Preval erected<lb/>
smoldering roadblocks across the<lb/>
capital and occupied a luxury hotel<lb/>
Monday. At least one protester was<lb/>
killed, but U.N. peacekeepers denied<lb/>
witness accounts that they had shot<lb/>
him.<lb/>
As Port-au-Prince descended into<lb/>
chaos, Preval returned to the capital<lb/>
for the first time since Tuesday's<lb/>
election. He was the clear winner<lb/>
with about 90 percent of the votes<lb/>
counted, but supporters claimed<lb/>
electoral officials were tampering with<lb/>
results to prevent him from getting the<lb/>
majority he needs to avoid a runoff.<lb/>
Barricades made of old tires were<lb/>
ablaze across the capital, sending<lb/>
plumes of acrid black smoke into the<lb/>
sky. Protesters let only journalists and<lb/>
Red Cross vehicles pass.<lb/>
"If they don't give us the final results,<lb/>
we're going to burn this country<lb/>
down a protester screamed.<lb/>
The election will replace an interim<lb/>
government installed after President<lb/>
Jean-Bertrand Aristide was ousted in<lb/>
a bloody rebellion two years ago. A<lb/>
popularly elected government with a<lb/>
clear mandate from the voters is seen<lb/>
as crucial to avoiding a political and<lb/>
economic meltdown in the Western<lb/>
Hemisphere's poorest nation. Gangs<lb/>
have gone on kidnapping sprees,<lb/>
and factories have closed for lack<lb/>
of security.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059393_0003"/><lb/>
2-14-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  NEWS<lb/>
PAGE A3<lb/>
Finally, TV is in living color in US householdsJobs<lb/>
from page A2<lb/>
(KRT)  When "My Name<lb/>
Is Earl" star Jaime Pressly traveled<lb/>
to her native Kinston, N.C for<lb/>
the holidays last December, she<lb/>
didn't know exactly what kind of<lb/>
reaction she'd elicit among the red-<lb/>
state citizenry. After all, her sitcom<lb/>
character Joy, a brassy blonde<lb/>
bombshell, is married to Darnell<lb/>
(aka Crab Man), a laid-back black<lb/>
guy and, well, she was braced for<lb/>
at least a little flak.<lb/>
Instead, she was smothered<lb/>
with enthusiastic inquiries about<lb/>
her onscreen mate, played by<lb/>
Eddie Steeples.<lb/>
"Everywhere I went it was,<lb/>
'Hey, where's Crab Man? Is he<lb/>
coming to visit?' 'Oh, he's cool<lb/>
'That's a good 'fro he's got going<lb/>
she recalls. "Yeah, they just love<lb/>
Crab Man<lb/>
Similarly, Steeples says he<lb/>
doesn't hear much feedback about<lb/>
the interracial pairing from the<lb/>
public. "To be honest he says, "I<lb/>
usually get 'Man, she's hot, huh?<lb/>
This matter-of-fact acceptance<lb/>
comes as good news to television<lb/>
writers and producers who are<lb/>
shrugging off hoary concerns<lb/>
about alienating viewers and<lb/>
advertisers as they allow love to<lb/>
bloom between characters of all<lb/>
races and cultures. Of course,<lb/>
anyone who has seen "I Love Lucy"<lb/>
or "The Jeffersons" knows this isn't<lb/>
exactly groundbreaking stuff, but<lb/>
with Valentine's Day upon us, it's<lb/>
worth noting that TV's portrait of<lb/>
romance is, more than ever, one of<lb/>
blended colors.<lb/>
A highly compelling coupling<lb/>
on the hit medical drama "Grey's<lb/>
Anatomy" involves a black man<lb/>
and an Asian woman. The critically<lb/>
acclaimed sitcom "Scrubs" features<lb/>
a marriage between a Latina and<lb/>
a black man. On "ER which has<lb/>
long been a monument to diver-<lb/>
sity, a woman of Indian descent is<lb/>
married to a black man.<lb/>
And those are just a few exam-<lb/>
ples involving key characters. Toss<lb/>
in all the various and far-flung tan-<lb/>
gential depictions and the interra-<lb/>
cial canvas becomes even broader.<lb/>
One of the most touching scenes<lb/>
on "Lost" this season featured the<lb/>
surprise reunion of Rose, a black<lb/>
woman, and Bernard, her white<lb/>
husband. On "Gilmore Girls the<lb/>
Korean teen, Lane Kim, just went<lb/>
through a messy breakup with<lb/>
her white boyfriend. Meanwhile,<lb/>
there's "Will &amp; Grace which<lb/>
recently had Will planting a big<lb/>
smooch on a black man played by<lb/>
Taye Diggs.<lb/>
Several industry observers<lb/>
are applauding the trend. Lillian<lb/>
Jackson, who writes a "Diversity<lb/>
Detail" column for the publication<lb/>
Television Week, spotlighted it as<lb/>
one of TV's major "breakthroughs<lb/>
or advances" of the 2005-06 season.<lb/>
And Dr. Todd Boyd, a professor of<lb/>
critical studies at the University<lb/>
of Southern California's School of<lb/>
Cinema-Television, said recently<lb/>
in a interview with National Public<lb/>
Radio that he thinks Hollywood<lb/>
is being "more open-minded and<lb/>
perhaps more progressive and will-<lb/>
ing to represent things" differently<lb/>
than they have in the past.<lb/>
Of course, in the not-so-dis-<lb/>
tant past, such onscreen couplings<lb/>
occasionally stirred up markedly<lb/>
different reactions. In 1999, for<lb/>
example, Eriq La Salle, then one of<lb/>
the main stars of "ER made head-<lb/>
lines when he prodded producers<lb/>
to end his character's interracial<lb/>
romance with a white woman,<lb/>
played by Alex Kingston, because<lb/>
he was "not comfortable" with the<lb/>
message it sent to black people. And<lb/>
Aaron Sorkin, creator of "The West<lb/>
Wing has spoken of the hate mail<lb/>
he received when he introduced a<lb/>
story line that had the president's<lb/>
young white daughter kissing a black<lb/>
presidential aide.<lb/>
But 38 years after Captain<lb/>
Kirk raised eyebrows by kissing<lb/>
the sexy - and black - Lieuten-<lb/>
ant Uhura on "Star Trek people<lb/>
generally are making less of a fuss<lb/>
about interracial relationships<lb/>
on television and in real life. In<lb/>
the past 20 years, the number of<lb/>
interracial marriages has climbed<lb/>
from fewer than 700,000 couples<lb/>
to 1.7 million, according to<lb/>
the U.S. Census Bureau. That<lb/>
number is likely to rise because,<lb/>
as sociologists point out, the<lb/>
world is becoming more of a<lb/>
melting pot, and young people<lb/>
tend to be more blind to race<lb/>
when it comes to relationships.<lb/>
Wanting to be in tune with<lb/>
what's going on in the real world,<lb/>
television writers - along with their<lb/>
feature-film counterparts - not only<lb/>
have become less hesitant to cross<lb/>
the color line, but they're mostly<lb/>
handling interracial relationships<lb/>
in an offhanded manner, refusing<lb/>
to make race much of an issue.<lb/>
On "Grey's Anatomy for exam-<lb/>
ple, other differences between live-<lb/>
in mates Cristina Yang (Sandra Oh)<lb/>
and Preston Burke (Isaiah Washing-<lb/>
ton) have been emphasized: He's<lb/>
neat; she's messy; he's quietly arro-<lb/>
gant; she's openly abrasive; he has a<lb/>
sense of spirituality; she doesn't.<lb/>
"It's incredibly encouraging<lb/>
that our viewers haven't gotten<lb/>
hung up on the race thing says<lb/>
"Grey's Anatomy" creator Shonda<lb/>
Rhimes, the only black woman<lb/>
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Go Pirates!<lb/>
p<lb/>
FUN<lb/>
TooaW<lb/>
Z0NS-<lb/>
currently running a major network<lb/>
drama. "It's not about the fact that<lb/>
she's Asian and he's black. It's about<lb/>
the fact that she's a slob, and he's a<lb/>
neat freak. That's what the whole<lb/>
relationship is all about<lb/>
Washington, who plays oppo-<lb/>
site the Golden Globe-winning<lb/>
Oh, echoes that sentiment. "That's<lb/>
beautiful, right? The fact that we've<lb/>
got (fans) hooked on the human-<lb/>
ity of these characters - I dig that.<lb/>
Interracial relationships have been<lb/>
happening since the beginning of<lb/>
mankind, and it's great to see tele-<lb/>
vision becoming less conservative<lb/>
when it comes to the subject<lb/>
The "Grey's Anatomy"<lb/>
approach is prevalent throughout<lb/>
prime time. A recent episode of<lb/>
"Supernatural" featured a sizzling<lb/>
sex scene between one of the show's<lb/>
white male leads and a black guest<lb/>
star. Later, the characters acknowl-<lb/>
edged that their hot-cold rela-<lb/>
tionship had its pitfalls, but race<lb/>
wasn't mentioned as one of them.<lb/>
Similarly, Joy and Darnell occa-<lb/>
sionally lock horns on "Earl but<lb/>
skin color hasn't been a factor so<lb/>
far. As for "ER producer David<lb/>
Zabel recently told USA Today that<lb/>
"we don't even talk about (race)<lb/>
or consider that it's an interracial<lb/>
relationship" when they deal with<lb/>
characters played by Parminder<lb/>
Nagra and Sharif Atkins.<lb/>
While some consider this color-<lb/>
blind treatment to be noble- a way<lb/>
of normalizing such relationships<lb/>
- others consider it to be a cop-out.<lb/>
They insist that the medium is too<lb/>
reluctant to wrestle with the chal-<lb/>
lenges and complexities of such<lb/>
unions.<lb/>
"Face it, some writers are just<lb/>
afraid of going there says Eric<lb/>
Deggans, a media critic for the<lb/>
St. Petersburg Times. "Taking on<lb/>
cultural differences isn't easy, so<lb/>
they simply make believe they<lb/>
don't exist<lb/>
Deggans, a black man, has<lb/>
been married to a white woman<lb/>
for nearly 15 years. He says that<lb/>
even in the most cosmopolitan<lb/>
of American cities, many citizens<lb/>
remain race-conscious, and that<lb/>
interracial couples continually<lb/>
confront various forms of discrimi-<lb/>
nation when in public andor when<lb/>
families mingle.<lb/>
"When 1 see shows that dwell<lb/>
in a universe that doesn't actually<lb/>
exist, it feels somewhat artificial<lb/>
and it takes me out of the show<lb/>
he says. "In the future, I'd like to see<lb/>
producers take more chances and<lb/>
take the blinders off. To me, that<lb/>
would make for great drama<lb/>
He might get his wish, because<lb/>
TV has more interracial subject<lb/>
matter on the way. Comedian<lb/>
George Lopez recently struck a<lb/>
deal with ABC to produce a sitcom<lb/>
starring Lisa, Christina and Tanya<lb/>
Vidal about an interracial family of<lb/>
three adult sisters and their spouses.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the forthcoming WB<lb/>
drama "The Bedford Diaries" fea-<lb/>
tures scenes of a black college<lb/>
freshman struggling through a<lb/>
relationship with a pregnant white<lb/>
girl still in high school, and an FX<lb/>
drama called "Thief" places Emmy-<lb/>
winning actor Andre Braugher in a<lb/>
marriage with a white woman.<lb/>
Norman Morrill, creator and<lb/>
executive producer of "Thief<lb/>
says he wrote an interracial cou-<lb/>
pling into the show long before<lb/>
the current wave of diversified<lb/>
unions hit the air. Asked why he<lb/>
felt compelled to cross the color<lb/>
line, Morrill, who is married to a<lb/>
Mexican woman, replied, "Because<lb/>
it feels real to me - because it's<lb/>
part of the American experience<lb/>
<lb/>
A rundown of a few inter-ethnic<lb/>
moments on television:<lb/>
1951<lb/>
- In mulling whether to produce "I Love Lucy CBS honchos worry<lb/>
that viewers will never believe Cuban-born Desl Arnaz as Lucille Ball's<lb/>
husband - even though they're married In real life. "I Love Lucy"<lb/>
becomes an Instant hit.<lb/>
1957<lb/>
- Alan Freed begins hosting a weekly rock It roll show on ABC, but the<lb/>
program Is abruptly canceled shortly after black singer Frankle Lymon Is<lb/>
seen dancing with a white teenage girl.<lb/>
1968<lb/>
- Captain Kirk (William Shatner) of "Star Trek" makes history when he<lb/>
plants a smooch on Lieutenant Uhura INIchelle Nichols). It's heralded as<lb/>
network television's first black-white kiss.<lb/>
1968<lb/>
- While taping a duet with Harry Belafonte for an NBC special, Petula<lb/>
Clark smiles and briefly touches his arm. Nervous sponsors, fearing the<lb/>
segment would rile Southern viewers, request that It be cut. Clark stands<lb/>
her ground and the special airs Intact to big ratings.<lb/>
1975<lb/>
- "The Jeffersons" Introduces America to George's married neighbors<lb/>
- an African-American woman and white man IRoxle Roker and Franklin<lb/>
Cover,<lb/>
1998<lb/>
- "Ally McBeal" dishes out a double-dose of Interracial romance as the<lb/>
show's heroine (Callsta Flockhart) falls for Greg (Jesse L. Martin), an<lb/>
African-American doctor. Meanwhile, Richard Fish (Greg Germann) cozies<lb/>
up to Ling Woo (Lucy Liu).<lb/>
1999<lb/>
- "ER" actor Erlq La Salle, whose character on the show Is dating a white<lb/>
woman (Alex Kingston), pushes producers to halt the story line because<lb/>
he's uncomfortable with the message It sends to African-Americans.<lb/>
2000<lb/>
- On "Will &amp; Grace Debra Messlng's Grace dates guest-star Gregory<lb/>
Hlnes In an ongoing story line.<lb/>
2001<lb/>
- "Six Feet Under" brings a twist to TV's portrayal of Interracial romance<lb/>
with a gay couple consisting of a white Michael C. Hall) and a black<lb/>
(Mathew St. Patrick) man.<lb/>
2003<lb/>
- "Friends often criticized for Its lack of diversity, Introduces Charlie<lb/>
(Alsha Tyler), a black woman who catches the eye of Ross (David<lb/>
Schwlmmer).<lb/>
lege students should invest in<lb/>
a good, conservative business<lb/>
suit and arrive at the interview<lb/>
well-groomed and on time. Before<lb/>
the interview, students should<lb/>
have thoroughly researched<lb/>
the company and prepared<lb/>
answers to common interview<lb/>
questions.<lb/>
3. Fit Within the Company<lb/>
Culture<lb/>
Every company has its own<lb/>
style, and hiring managers<lb/>
want to be sure a candidate's<lb/>
personality and work style will<lb/>
blend seamlessly into the orga-<lb/>
nization. Before the interview,<lb/>
job seekers should visit the com-<lb/>
pany's Web site to read up on<lb/>
the organization's culture and<lb/>
mission. New grads should also<lb/>
try to talk to as many people as<lb/>
possible who work for the com-<lb/>
pany to try to get an insider's<lb/>
perspective.<lb/>
4. Education<lb/>
Employers do consider where<lb/>
a candidate went to school and<lb/>
his or her degree, major and<lb/>
GPA - so it's important to resist<lb/>
slipping into senioritis. If stu-<lb/>
dents have finished courses that<lb/>
directly relate to the position,<lb/>
they can include it on their<lb/>
resume in a special "related<lb/>
coursework" section.<lb/>
5. Enthusiasm<lb/>
New graduates should clearly<lb/>
express their interest in the posi-<lb/>
tion and convey the energy they<lb/>
would bring to the job.<lb/>
When college graduates<lb/>
finally land that coveted first<lb/>
job, it's important to recognize<lb/>
that the first 90 days at work are<lb/>
really an extended interview.<lb/>
During this time, it's crucial to<lb/>
make a positive, professional first<lb/>
impression to management and<lb/>
co-workers.<lb/>
But because many new<lb/>
graduates aren't accustomed to<lb/>
a corporate environment, they<lb/>
can make serious mistakes that<lb/>
can cost them credibility or even<lb/>
their jobs. According to hiring<lb/>
managers, the biggest mistakes<lb/>
new graduates make on their first<lb/>
three months on board are:<lb/>
 Coming in late for work<lb/>
 Presenting negative atti-<lb/>
tudes to co-workers and cus-<lb/>
tomers<lb/>
 Spending too much time on<lb/>
personal business at the office<lb/>
 Not asking questions<lb/>
Laura Morsch is a writer<lb/>
for CareerBuilder.com. She<lb/>
researches and writes about job<lb/>
search strategy, career manage-<lb/>
ment, hiring trends and work-<lb/>
place issues.<lb/>
EnrOIl from page A1<lb/>
stock market reform following<lb/>
the Great Depression.<lb/>
Four years after these alle-<lb/>
gations were made public, the<lb/>
beginnings of the trial of these<lb/>
officers begins. There is a pleth-<lb/>
ora of criminal charges leveled<lb/>
against Lay, his wife and former<lb/>
CEO Jeffrey Skilling. In addition<lb/>
to the criminal charges, the SEC<lb/>
seeks to collect compensatory<lb/>
damages as well as punitive dam-<lb/>
ages against the accused. Both<lb/>
officers could receive decades<lb/>
in jail if convicted while paying<lb/>
millions of dollars in fines<lb/>
Several former officers have<lb/>
already confessed and been<lb/>
sentenced such as former Chief<lb/>
Accounting Officer Richard<lb/>
Causey, who received 10 years in<lb/>
jail and forfeited $23.8 million.<lb/>
He received a reduced sentence<lb/>
in exchange for testifying against<lb/>
Lay and Skilling. Lay continues to<lb/>
perpetuate his innocence saying<lb/>
"I think the primary reason for<lb/>
Enron's collapse was Andy Fastow<lb/>
and his little group of people and<lb/>
what they did<lb/>
Skilling has a similar mindset<lb/>
saying "Quite frankly, there is<lb/>
nothing I can come up with that I<lb/>
would think I would do different<lb/>
given the facts I had at the time<lb/>
While who is to blame in<lb/>
the management of the busi-<lb/>
ness Enron is also used as an<lb/>
example of stock trading gone<lb/>
awry. During the late 1990s<lb/>
during the "Tech Bubble" many<lb/>
small internet companies were<lb/>
trading for incredulously high<lb/>
prices when in fact that had no<lb/>
earnings to speak of.<lb/>
"How can Amazon.com trade<lb/>
for more than Ford and GM<lb/>
combined? Amazon has never<lb/>
made a dime. This does not<lb/>
even make sense said Warren<lb/>
Buffett, the second richest man<lb/>
in the world.<lb/>
Buffett was criticized at<lb/>
length for his refusal to enter<lb/>
the tech bubble, as he is notorious<lb/>
for selecting low-tech companies,<lb/>
but it seems that Buffett was<lb/>
right about the tech bubble as he<lb/>
emerged unscathed when many<lb/>
Enron's stock price was grossly<lb/>
inflated on false news but the<lb/>
hype was promulgated by over-<lb/>
eager and greedy investors who<lb/>
wanted to make a quick buck. It<lb/>
is unfortunate that stock prices<lb/>
are decided more so on news and<lb/>
demand than on actual perfor-<lb/>
mance such as earnings growth,<lb/>
asset management and efficiency.<lb/>
Too many times are a stock's fun-<lb/>
damentals overlooked in favor of<lb/>
the sexy stock pick which may not<lb/>
have substance or value.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
DanCe from page A1<lb/>
heavy person-to-person involve-<lb/>
ment reflects the basic function<lb/>
of the dance, which is to promote<lb/>
a communal atmosphere that is<lb/>
friendly and welcoming.<lb/>
Roger Rulifson, ECU biology<lb/>
professor, described contra danc-<lb/>
ing as a means of gathering and,<lb/>
especially years ago, a way for<lb/>
young people to court each other<lb/>
and participate in a fun activity<lb/>
that provided an atmosphere for<lb/>
being intimate in a legitimate<lb/>
manner.<lb/>
The dance movements<lb/>
involved in contra dancing<lb/>
include dos-a-dos and swing,<lb/>
hence the square dance com-<lb/>
parison.<lb/>
The dance is accompanied<lb/>
by live music, which can vary<lb/>
between events, but usually con-<lb/>
sists of some form of old-time,<lb/>
$180<lb/>
Per<lb/>
Month<lb/>
This coupon good lor<lb/>
Celtic or blue grass according to<lb/>
ECU Folk and Country Dancers<lb/>
president, Leanne Smith. Smith<lb/>
confessed that she has even<lb/>
contra danced to jazz music and<lb/>
that as long as the music has a<lb/>
beat, it can be applied to contra<lb/>
dancing.<lb/>
What is known as a caller is<lb/>
also customary at contra dances<lb/>
and is similar to a guide by whom<lb/>
heshe teaches the dance move-<lb/>
ments to participants before<lb/>
the music begins? The caller<lb/>
continues to guide participants<lb/>
throughout the dance and may<lb/>
or may not cease teaching if the<lb/>
participants seem to have learned<lb/>
the movements.<lb/>
Individuals of all differ-<lb/>
ent ages and from all different<lb/>
backgrounds are drawn to the<lb/>
dance, and newcomers and<lb/>
experts alike take part. Actu-<lb/>
ally, those who are unfamiliar<lb/>
with the dance are welcomed<lb/>
and expected as there are intro-<lb/>
ductory sessions almost always<lb/>
held before a contra dance.<lb/>
Contra dancing is espe-<lb/>
cially popular in New<lb/>
England, where it was initially<lb/>
brought to the country, but has<lb/>
gained a significant following<lb/>
throughout the U.S. Rulifson<lb/>
let on that the Triangle area of<lb/>
N.C. is host to many contra<lb/>
dancing activities and that contra<lb/>
cruises have just recently been<lb/>
created in which the theme of<lb/>
the cruise would be everything<lb/>
contra.<lb/>
According to Smith, contra<lb/>
dancing has been an activity at<lb/>
ECU since the 1970s and while<lb/>
it is somewhat underground, the<lb/>
events have grown in popularity<lb/>
over the years. Different callers<lb/>
and musicians are featured at<lb/>
the bi-monthly events, and the<lb/>
organizations are able to work<lb/>
with regional bands in addition<lb/>
to the local musicians.<lb/>
Smith encourages students<lb/>
to participate in the events and<lb/>
welcomes all regardless of their<lb/>
familiarity with the dances.<lb/>
The next contra dance will take<lb/>
place Friday, Feb. 24 at the Willis<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
To access more informa-<lb/>
tion on contra dancing or any<lb/>
of the other dances that the<lb/>
organizations host, visit geoci-<lb/>
ties.comecufolkandcountry-<lb/>
dancers.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
2nd mikI 4th donation<lb/>
I'm a Student and a Plasma Donor<lb/>
Names: Jennifer<lb/>
Majors: Nursing<lb/>
Hobbies: Swimming &amp; going to the beach<lb/>
Why do I donate Plasma?<lb/>
Extra spending money for the beach.<lb/>
Earn up to $170mo. donating plasma in a friendly place.<lb/>
DCI Biological of Greenville  252-757-0171<lb/>
2727 E.10th Street  Down the Street from ECU  www.dciplasma.com<lb/>
UARD.com8B<lb/>
<pb facs="00059393_0004"/><lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
Page A4<lb/>
editor@theeastcarollnian.com 252.328.9238<lb/>
JENNIFER L HOBBS Editor In Chief<lb/>
TUESDAY February 14,2006<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
Valentine's Day:<lb/>
What does it really<lb/>
mean?<lb/>
Everyone has their own little rituals for Valen-<lb/>
tine's Day. If you are in a long-term relationship,<lb/>
you and your significant other may trade Hall-<lb/>
mark Kissing Bears each year or write love-filled<lb/>
poems. If you are in a new relationship you may<lb/>
have big, expensive plans for this romantic<lb/>
day. Sometimes those who are single have<lb/>
elaborate Valentine's Day plans of their own. No<lb/>
matter who you are or what kind of plans you<lb/>
have for February 14, it is important to remem-<lb/>
ber why this day even exists and what message<lb/>
we should all be sending to each other.<lb/>
There are many possible creation legends<lb/>
when it comes to the day that we affection-<lb/>
ately call St. Valentine's Day. According to<lb/>
The History Channel, the first of these legends<lb/>
suggests that St. Valentine was a third century<lb/>
Roman priest who lived during a time when<lb/>
Claudius II decided that single men made<lb/>
much stronger soldiers and forbid his soldiers<lb/>
to marry. Valentine, who did not agree with this<lb/>
decree, performed marriages for young lovers<lb/>
in secret, thus making him the saint of love.<lb/>
Another possibility is that Valentine was killed<lb/>
for helping Christians escape from Roman<lb/>
prisons where the Christians were being beaten<lb/>
and tortured, allowing them to be reunited<lb/>
with their loved ones. In another legend, St.<lb/>
Valentine was in prison, where he fell in love<lb/>
with a prison guard's daughter with whom he<lb/>
wrote love notes that he signed "From your<lb/>
Valentine Whether one of these legends is<lb/>
the true origin or if the truth is still unknown,<lb/>
the moral of the story remains the same - love<lb/>
will overcome all.<lb/>
That statement can apply in many different<lb/>
situations and in many different types of rela-<lb/>
tionships - love between friends, love between<lb/>
girls, love between guys, love between family<lb/>
members and love between lovers. This<lb/>
Valentine's Day, remember and cherish all of<lb/>
the love in your life.<lb/>
Our Staff<lb/>
Jennifer L Hobbs<lb/>
Editor in Chief<lb/>
Rachel King<lb/>
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/>
Zack Hill<lb/>
Asst News 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/>
Dustin Jones<lb/>
Asst. Web Editor<lb/>
Edward McKim<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Newsroom<lb/>
Fax<lb/>
Advertising<lb/>
252.328.9238<lb/>
252.328.9143<lb/>
252.328.9245<lb/>
Serving ECU since 1925, TEC prints 9,000 copies every<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday during the regular<lb/>
academic year and 5,000 on Wednesdays during the<lb/>
summer "Our View" is the opinion of the editorial board<lb/>
and is written by editorial board members. 7EC 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 editorfvtheeastcaioliniaacom 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/>
ftB4l<lb/>
raudW<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
Park it right there, Mister or not<lb/>
Night time apparently<lb/>
not the right time<lb/>
DANIEL BROCK<lb/>
OPINION COLUMNIST<lb/>
Why is it that every time I see<lb/>
an ECU vehicle with "Parking and<lb/>
Transportation" slapped on the<lb/>
side, I hear the theme from Jaws?<lb/>
Parking and Transportation vehicles<lb/>
slowly circle the campus looking<lb/>
I for their prey, and when they spot<lb/>
an illegally parked car they make a<lb/>
bee-line for it. The flashing light on<lb/>
top of the PStT vehicles cuts through<lb/>
1 the air like a shark fin through the<lb/>
water, and the perilously parked<lb/>
automobile is left with a ticket that<lb/>
generally ranges between $5-$35.<lb/>
The Fourth Reich, as the ECU<lb/>
Department of Parking and Trans-<lb/>
portation is sometimes affection-<lb/>
ately referred to, rules automobile<lb/>
activity on campus with an iron<lb/>
fist. Ticketing first and asking<lb/>
questions  well, never, the Park-<lb/>
ing Gestapo roams the campus<lb/>
seeking those they may devour.<lb/>
Commandant Mike VanDerven<lb/>
rules the "Axel of Evil" from his<lb/>
palatial offices on 10th Street,<lb/>
dispatching his Parking Control<lb/>
Officers across campus like they<lb/>
were Black Riders issuing forth<lb/>
from the gates of Mordor. They<lb/>
administer their citations with an<lb/>
insidious glee that stokes the fire of<lb/>
hate in their souls. Alright, they're<lb/>
just doing their job, but they do<lb/>
seem to take a certain perverse<lb/>
pleasure in it. The foot soldiers<lb/>
are professionally uniformed and<lb/>
outfitted with high tech ticket<lb/>
dispensers. Such well-dressed<lb/>
henchmen lead me to envision<lb/>
VanDerven sitting in a high-<lb/>
backed leather chair, sporting a<lb/>
monocle, a riding crop and a uni-<lb/>
form festooned with iron crosses.<lb/>
The ECU Department of Park-<lb/>
ing and Transportation Services<lb/>
does not beat around the bush,<lb/>
and if you park around the bush<lb/>
(or most any other place on<lb/>
campus) you're more than likely<lb/>
going to get ticketed or towed.<lb/>
There are no excuses and no<lb/>
tolerance in the Department of<lb/>
P flt T. It doesn't matter if your<lb/>
dog was still in the car, or your<lb/>
baby was in the backseat. If you<lb/>
infringe on their domain, thou<lb/>
shalt surely be towed.<lb/>
I'm not saying these people<lb/>
take themselves too seriously,<lb/>
but after reading the Parking and<lb/>
Transportation Ordinance, one gets<lb/>
the feeling that the fine people at<lb/>
P&amp;T think it is a divinely inspired<lb/>
document. There are 17 articles<lb/>
and 42 fineable offenses in the<lb/>
P&amp;T Ordinance (my favorite is 42-<lb/>
Trick Riding of Bicycles). As points<lb/>
of reference, there were seven<lb/>
articles in the original American<lb/>
Constitution and a mere 10 Com-<lb/>
mandments. However, the P&amp;T<lb/>
Ordinance is a complex document<lb/>
containing sub-sections and para-<lb/>
graphs as well as the main Articles<lb/>
with such menacing titles as "Pun-<lb/>
ishment" and "Enforcement<lb/>
P&amp;T does have a Citations<lb/>
Appeals Board where one can<lb/>
grovel before them in hopes of<lb/>
reducing their citation or (laugh-<lb/>
ably) request a total annulment.<lb/>
The Citation Board of Appeals<lb/>
makes the Spanish Inquisition<lb/>
seem lame. You can go before<lb/>
them with your hat in your hand<lb/>
if you would like, but they might<lb/>
ticket you for that too.<lb/>
Enforcing rules and regula-<lb/>
tions is what the people at the<lb/>
P&amp;T do best in their vigilant<lb/>
quest to rid the campus of per-<lb/>
verse parking. Now I realize that<lb/>
these rules are legitimate and are<lb/>
sponsored by the university, but<lb/>
the Parking Control officers are<lb/>
certainly some of the most zeal-<lb/>
ous ECU employees in the execu-<lb/>
tion of their responsibilities.<lb/>
Perhaps we should spend some of<lb/>
the parking budget on additional<lb/>
security measures. After all,<lb/>
people deserve to be safe when<lb/>
they walk to their illegally parked<lb/>
vehicles in the dead of night.<lb/>
Speaking of the dead of<lb/>
night, after 6 p.m. parking offi-<lb/>
cials should cut the public some<lb/>
slack. The incident that sparked<lb/>
this little diatribe occurred last<lb/>
Wednesday night. I had a 6:30<lb/>
p.m. class which, in my typi-<lb/>
cal fashion, I was running late<lb/>
for. I generally park in a spot in<lb/>
between Austin and Rawl for this<lb/>
class, but to my chagrin, all the<lb/>
spaces were taken. I whipped my<lb/>
car into a space behind Speight<lb/>
and bounded off for class. Joy-<lb/>
ously, I was released from class<lb/>
early so I made my way back to my<lb/>
vehicle (which I will not describe<lb/>
in this piece for fear of retribution.<lb/>
P&amp;T have eyes everywhere) under<lb/>
the lights of campus. Upon reach-<lb/>
ing my uh, "Festiva I saw the<lb/>
familiar tan envelope under my<lb/>
windshield wiper and knew that<lb/>
1 had been busted. The drum roll<lb/>
started as I opened the envelope<lb/>
to see what the damage would be.<lb/>
Sadly it was a $35 ticket, which as<lb/>
of print time I have yet to pay.<lb/>
A $35 fine for parking on<lb/>
campus for a night class is absurd.<lb/>
I'm not really interested in walk-<lb/>
ing to class and getting mugged<lb/>
on my way home, but P&amp;T is<lb/>
throwing students to the wolves.<lb/>
The same debacle is reenacted far<lb/>
too often at the library. The regu-<lb/>
lar parking lot, perhaps, should<lb/>
be monitored after dark due to<lb/>
the fact that it facilitates traffic<lb/>
to both Joyner and the SRC.<lb/>
However, the metered parking<lb/>
should be complimentary. At that<lb/>
time of night students are just<lb/>
trying to augment their minds<lb/>
or bodies, and isn't college really<lb/>
about self improvement?<lb/>
A mind worried with thoughts<lb/>
of parking tickets and meter<lb/>
times cannot fully concentrate<lb/>
on the work at hand, and in turn<lb/>
performance suffers. There is a<lb/>
correlation between the meddling<lb/>
P&amp;T and poor grades at ECU.<lb/>
That is correct. I am holding Mike<lb/>
Vanderven and his minions per-<lb/>
sonally responsible for a myriad of<lb/>
academic troubles here at ECU.<lb/>
People may disgustedly tell<lb/>
me to get a parking permit, but I<lb/>
ask, have we not paid enough fees<lb/>
and fines here at ECU already?<lb/>
Free, campus-wide after-dark<lb/>
parking should seriously be con-<lb/>
sidered. Personal safety and con-<lb/>
tinued academic success hang in<lb/>
the balance. After all, good grades<lb/>
are my ticket out of here. Assum-<lb/>
ing, that is, that I don't have a<lb/>
hold tag due to my actual ticket.<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
(KRT)  In the 19th and early<lb/>
20th centuries when, for politi-<lb/>
cal or economic reasons, one left<lb/>
one's homeland for somewhere<lb/>
else, there was finality in the<lb/>
journey. People landing on Ellis<lb/>
Island, for example, had a one-<lb/>
way ticket. Their future lay in the<lb/>
land in front of them. The land<lb/>
behind them was history - an<lb/>
ever-fading memory.<lb/>
Nowadays, immigrants have it<lb/>
both ways. They move, mostly for<lb/>
economic reasons, to new lands,<lb/>
but remain strongly connected to<lb/>
their homelands. Cheap airfares,<lb/>
telephones and the Internet keep<lb/>
them tethered to the moth-<lb/>
erlands that bore them. They<lb/>
are psychologically bifurcated<lb/>
between the old and the new.<lb/>
Modern transport and commu-<lb/>
nications play a role in the duality of<lb/>
today's immigrants, whether they<lb/>
have moved from North Africa to<lb/>
Europe or from El Salvador to the<lb/>
United States. Today's immigrant<lb/>
assimilates slowly, or not at all.<lb/>
I can speak to this as an immi-<lb/>
grant myself. Asl was born in Africa<lb/>
and lived in England, there is that<lb/>
part of me that is not totally Ameri-<lb/>
can. After 40 years of living here and<lb/>
endeavoring to absorb an American<lb/>
viewpoint, I still find myself with<lb/>
an outsider's perspective. And I<lb/>
launched into Americanism vigor-<lb/>
ously: I signed up at my draft board<lb/>
before I was called, and I avoided<lb/>
the company of other expatriates.<lb/>
Yet, I follow British politics as<lb/>
keenly as I follow American poli-<lb/>
tics. And I spend hours reading the<lb/>
news from Africa on the Internet. If<lb/>
English were not my first language,<lb/>
if I had come with a family, and if I<lb/>
had been welcomed into an expa-<lb/>
triate community would be that<lb/>
much less American than I am.<lb/>
Since the bizarre global protests<lb/>
against the depiction of the Prophet<lb/>
Muhammad in a Danish newspa-<lb/>
per, people have been asking why<lb/>
Muslims who have migrated to new<lb/>
lands have not assimilated. Well,<lb/>
they have moved physically but<lb/>
not spiritually or psychologically.<lb/>
Pakistanis in Britain fly back to<lb/>
the Subcontinent regularly and<lb/>
speak to their own communities<lb/>
by telephone almost daily.<lb/>
The British Pakistanis live in<lb/>
the shadow of their mosques, that<lb/>
forever will be for them a corner<lb/>
of Pakistan in Britain. While they<lb/>
enjoy the benefits of Britain's<lb/>
welfare society, they treasure<lb/>
their alien status: the continu-<lb/>
ation of the life and values that<lb/>
they failed to leave behind.<lb/>
The same goes for Muslim<lb/>
immigrants to Belgium, Denmark,<lb/>
France, and even faraway New<lb/>
Zealand. They live not in those<lb/>
countries but in a virtual caliph-<lb/>
ate, made possible by technology<lb/>
and the tolerance of their hosts.<lb/>
The larger the immigrant<lb/>
community, the more self-suf-<lb/>
ficient and the less pressure to<lb/>
assimilate. It is as true in the<lb/>
United States as it is in Europe.<lb/>
Do you think that the Soma-<lb/>
lis living in Maine will be New<lb/>
Englanders in one or two gen-<lb/>
erations? It has not happened to<lb/>
Moroccans living in France, or<lb/>
Turks living in Germany. The<lb/>
famous American melting pot<lb/>
may no longer be on the boil.<lb/>
As if language and custom<lb/>
are not barriers enough to a new<lb/>
identity and way of life, the bind-<lb/>
ing absolutism of Islam cauter-<lb/>
izes its immigrants against new<lb/>
values, loyalties and possibilities.<lb/>
When I became an American<lb/>
dtizen-andl wanted to be an Amer-<lb/>
ican because America was someplace<lb/>
special that I wanted to be part of -<lb/>
my friends celebrated and presented<lb/>
me with a flag that had flown over<lb/>
the Capitol. I was glad of my accep-<lb/>
tance as a full-blooded American<lb/>
and just a little sad at what seemed<lb/>
like a rejection of my British past.<lb/>
This thing of being an immi-<lb/>
grant is not that easy, even when<lb/>
you are prepared to bid adieu to<lb/>
the culture that formed you. There<lb/>
are no more one-way tickets.<lb/>
Pirate Rant<lb/>
Valentine's Day is so overrated.<lb/>
I didn't know most guys wanted another mother,<lb/>
not a girlfriend. Hey buddy, when you get your nerve<lb/>
back give me a call.<lb/>
Is it mandatory for a guy to dump his girlfriend right<lb/>
before Valentine's Day? Is it really that torturous of a<lb/>
holiday? If losing the person most important to me<lb/>
two years in a row is due to this holiday, I will just<lb/>
cross it off my calendar in the future!<lb/>
Don't forget to bring your resumes to the Technology<lb/>
Career Fair Wednesday, Feb. 15 from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.<lb/>
at Minges Coliseum!<lb/>
Some people just don't understand the concept of a<lb/>
little goes along way, or less is more for that matter,<lb/>
at least not in the decorating sense of it.<lb/>
Satires of the Holocaust are extremely more disre-<lb/>
spectful than Sabres of the prophet Mohammed. The<lb/>
death of six million people is not equivalent to mis-<lb/>
representing a holy figure. Iran is taking this too far!<lb/>
Equality means that everyone should be treated the<lb/>
same. Is giving minorities things that the majority<lb/>
does not nave equality? That sounds like the complete<lb/>
definition of inequality.<lb/>
As a white person, I am excluded from many types of<lb/>
financial aid that goes to people who are in far better<lb/>
situations than me. Is this equality? Should not two<lb/>
people competing for the same aid he judged on their<lb/>
financial situation rather than their race?<lb/>
Does anyone get the crap shocked out of them when<lb/>
they touch stuff on campus?<lb/>
Newsflash! Cologne does not cover up stank! Take<lb/>
a shower and stop subjecting me to your body odor<lb/>
and horrible smelling cologne.<lb/>
So I've got a little situation. There are these two girls<lb/>
who are roommates and I'm crazy about botn of<lb/>
them, but I don't know which one to pursue. They are<lb/>
both unique but also very similar, what should I do?<lb/>
My suitemate has rage attacks and blames them on<lb/>
being pregnant. It's not my fault you got knocked up,<lb/>
don't take it out on me when your hormones act up.<lb/>
I hate finance!<lb/>
Of North America's 50 largest corporations, 43 are<lb/>
headed by fraternity men and sorority women. Seven<lb/>
out of 10 people listed in the Who's Who are Greek.<lb/>
Eighty-five percent of Fortune 500 executives belong<lb/>
to a fraternity or sorority. Forty of 47 Supreme Court<lb/>
Justices since 1910 were fraternity men. Seventy-six<lb/>
percent of all Congressmen and Senators belong<lb/>
to a fraternity or sorority. Every U.S. President and<lb/>
Vice-President, except two in each office, born since<lb/>
the first social fraternity was founded in 1825, and<lb/>
three Canadian Prime Ministers,<lb/>
have been members of a fraternity.<lb/>
OK, Kayne West compares himself to Jesus because<lb/>
he struggles like Jesus struggled? Has he read that<lb/>
whole chapter about Jesus dying on the cross or being<lb/>
whipped to near death? Oh unless, of course, he means<lb/>
when Jesus said, "Caesar doesn't care about black<lb/>
people which then made his album sales skyrocket<lb/>
Why is it that on Sundays when we want to bowl in<lb/>
Mendenhall, we have to wait for people who don't<lb/>
even go to ECU to finish bowling? This past Sunday<lb/>
there were a bunch of middle schoolers in there!<lb/>
We hear students often complain, "We pay your<lb/>
salary Newsflash, if you pay in-state tuition, taxes<lb/>
or alumni pay 80 percent of your salary. Effectively,<lb/>
you're on welfare. So justify our investment in you.<lb/>
Why do some of these RAs take their jobs so seri-<lb/>
ously? Who is going to tell on them when they give<lb/>
me a warning instead of writing me up. You guys are<lb/>
there to keep us safe, not try to kick us out. Instead<lb/>
of coming up to my room because someone let my<lb/>
guest in and writing me up, pay attention to the two<lb/>
sketch guys standing outside of mv building at 2 a.m.<lb/>
with a Gatorade cap Keeping the door open trying to<lb/>
follow me to my room!<lb/>
Why does Campus Living have to bribe us with prizes<lb/>
to stay on campus? Maybe because it's cheaper to<lb/>
live off campus, no restrictions, no RAs and maybe<lb/>
because you feel like you are 18 instead of six!<lb/>
This is not a rant. This is a "Thank You" to Faheem<lb/>
for his awesome iTunes. We anticipate accessing your<lb/>
play list. Don't ever sign off please. -Jarvis Music<lb/>
Gurus<lb/>
Would you prefer to walk? That allegedly empty<lb/>
Safe Ride van (not that you can actually tell since<lb/>
the windows are tinted) is very necessary at 11 a.m.<lb/>
and any other time of day to transport bus drivers<lb/>
between the Transit garage and campus so they can<lb/>
get to the hubs. So byv'another great way ECU spends<lb/>
those tuition dollars" you mean spending a negligible<lb/>
amount of tuition on transporting a few drivers to<lb/>
a bus system that gets thousands of people to class<lb/>
every day? What a novel idea! The buses certainly<lb/>
won t dnve themselves.<lb/>
I want to move to Africa so that I can be called an<lb/>
American-African!<lb/>
To the know-it-all who has taken too many English<lb/>
courses, starting a sentence with a conjunction is<lb/>
grammatically correct you nimrod - as long as you<lb/>
are writing in a medium such as news or sports jour-<lb/>
nalism or writing of that sort. It is even OK in your<lb/>
English term papers, just not recommended. You<lb/>
have a college education and haven't been taught<lb/>
that yet? Sad.<lb/>
I am still waiting for TEC topublish the Danish Car-<lb/>
toons, like the University of Illinois newspaper has,<lb/>
so all ECU students can understand the situation and<lb/>
controversy over this free speech issue.<lb/>
What's with all the skateboarders on the brick walk-<lb/>
ways of campus? That is so loud, and annoying. And<lb/>
to the guy who nearly broke his neck by attempting<lb/>
to ollie over a bush because he wanted to get around<lb/>
me, all you had to do was say excuse me.<lb/>
To the girl who's a firefighter, I don't care what any<lb/>
other guy says, it makes you that much hotter!<lb/>
Yea I stomp when I walk  what are you going to<lb/>
do about it?<lb/>
My friend sprays her dog with Febreze. I'm sorry but<lb/>
that does not qualify as giving it a bath.<lb/>
Editor's Note: The Pirate Rant is an anonymous way for students and staff m the<lb/>
ftVifwnrnunlt'ttiwketheir(numySiuLuwilanbesutmltteltanwymntsiy<lb/>
online at www.theeastcarolinian.com, or e-mailed to editortheeas1camltntan.<lb/>
com. The editor reserves the right to edit opinions for content and brevity.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059393_0005"/><lb/>
What's Hot<lb/>
Page A5 features@theeastcarollnian.com 252.328.6366 CAROLYN SCANDURA Features Editor KRISTIN MURNANE Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY February 14, 2006<lb/>
Names In the News:<lb/>
Vargas expecting<lb/>
Some good news for the folks<lb/>
at ABC's "World News Tonight" -<lb/>
Elizabeth Vargas is expecting again.<lb/>
Vargas, 43, debuted as co-anchor<lb/>
of the evening newcast with Bob<lb/>
Woodruff, 44, in January. He was<lb/>
injured Jan. 29 while covering the war<lb/>
in Iraq and remains hospitalized.<lb/>
Now Vargas and her husband,<lb/>
singer-songwriter Marc Cohn, have<lb/>
announced they are expecting their<lb/>
second child in late summer.<lb/>
The couple have a son, Zachary,<lb/>
three, and Cohn has two children<lb/>
from a previous marriage - Max,<lb/>
14, and Emily, 11. Vargas, who also<lb/>
co-anchors the ABC newsmagazine<lb/>
"2020 will continue to anchor both<lb/>
broadcasts through late summer.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Diane Sawyer and<lb/>
Charles Gibson will continue to fill in<lb/>
for Woodruff until the end of February<lb/>
as he recovers.<lb/>
Coming attractions<lb/>
How did we learn what might end<lb/>
up at our local Cineplex's in the<lb/>
days before there were film festivals?<lb/>
Sigourney Weaver (Alien, The<lb/>
Ice Storm) was at the Berlin Film<lb/>
Festival Thursday for the premiere<lb/>
of Snow Cake, a British-Canadian<lb/>
production from director Marc Evans,<lb/>
in which Alan Rickman plays an<lb/>
English expat living in Canada<lb/>
who develops a relationship with<lb/>
Weaver's character, who is autistic.<lb/>
Scriptwriter Angela Pell said the<lb/>
inspiration for Snow Cake came<lb/>
in part from her autistic son.<lb/>
The lineup in Berlin, where the fun<lb/>
continues through Feb. 19, also<lb/>
features a new movie from Sidney<lb/>
Lumet, Find Me Guilty, based on the<lb/>
longest Mafia trial in U.S. history and<lb/>
starring Vin Diesel, Peter Dinklage,<lb/>
Annabella Sciorra and Linus Roache.<lb/>
Word has it that the surprise hit of<lb/>
the festival will premiere on Sunday<lb/>
- The Night Listener, directed by<lb/>
Patrick Stettner and based on<lb/>
Armistead Maupin's best-selling<lb/>
novel of the same name. Stars<lb/>
include Robin Williams, Toni Collette,<lb/>
Rory Culkin, Bobby Cannavale,<lb/>
Joe Morton and Sandra Oh.<lb/>
South by Southwest<lb/>
Meanwhile, we're perking up our<lb/>
ears for news from the South<lb/>
by Southwest Festival, which<lb/>
runs March 10 - 18 in Austin.<lb/>
Among the film debuts expected<lb/>
are American Dreamz, a satire by<lb/>
Paul Weitz about American identity<lb/>
starring Mandy Moore, Hugh Grant<lb/>
and Dennis Quaid; 95 Miles to Go,<lb/>
which follows "Everybody Loves<lb/>
Raymond" star Ray Romano on a<lb/>
stand-up comedy tour; and Even<lb/>
Money, a tale about gambling addicts<lb/>
starring Kim Basinger, Danny DeVito,<lb/>
Kelsey Grammar and Ray Liotta,<lb/>
Let the games begin<lb/>
Donald Trump wants to test the<lb/>
mettle of someone hoping for an !<lb/>
Olympic medal. For season six of<lb/>
The Apprentice to start production<lb/>
this summer and for the first time<lb/>
in Los Angeles, NBC invites fans to<lb/>
pick an Olympian to join the ranks of<lb/>
Trump Corp. would-be employees.<lb/>
Through Feb. 26, viewers can go to<lb/>
NBCOIympics.com to vote for one of<lb/>
12 participating athletes to brave the<lb/>
boardroom this fall. (The Apprentice<lb/>
season five meanwhile, premieres<lb/>
Feb. 27, featuring regular business-<lb/>
minded folk who can't luge.)<lb/>
Local Concerts:<lb/>
Keith Urban and Pat Green will be<lb/>
performing at the Charlotte Bobcats<lb/>
Arena Thursday, Feb. 16.<lb/>
The Brooks Wood Band will play at Dr.<lb/>
Unks in Greenville Saturday, Feb. 18.<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 Casey<lb/>
&amp; The Lovehamers will be performing<lb/>
at Ovens Auditorium in Charlotte<lb/>
Tuesday, Feb. 21.<lb/>
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club and<lb/>
Elefant will be at the Cat's Cradle<lb/>
in Carrboro Wednesday, Feb. 22.<lb/>
The Kelly Bell Band will be performing<lb/>
at Dr. Unks in Greenville Saturday,<lb/>
Feb. 25.<lb/>
OAR will be performing at Ovens<lb/>
Auditorium in Charlotte Saturday, Feb. 25.<lb/>
G. Love and Special Sauce will be<lb/>
performing at the Lincoln Theatre in<lb/>
Raleigh Friday, March 3.<lb/>
Carbon Leaf will be performing at<lb/>
ECU Saturday, March 4.<lb/>
The Take Action Tour will come to<lb/>
Myrtle Beach, S.C. Tuesday, March 7.<lb/>
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah will be<lb/>
at the Cat's Cradle in Carrboro, N.C.<lb/>
Thursday, March 9.<lb/>
Oappy Valentine's 0ay<lb/>
View from both sides: Guys vs. Gals<lb/>
A view of Valentine's Day rarely heard<lb/>
t,i <lb/>
AARON BORREGO<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
It has recently come to my attention that this<lb/>
week we will be celebrating Valentine's Day and all<lb/>
of the splendor it has to offer. I am personally look-<lb/>
ing forward to this year's incarnation of the love<lb/>
fest because I will be looking forward to spending<lb/>
that time with a certain pack of ladies. I'm just<lb/>
joshing you guys, it is more like a herd O' ladies.<lb/>
Do we need special days to remind us that we<lb/>
can say or do something nice for one another when<lb/>
we could just do things any or every day for no<lb/>
reason. I don't know, it is just a suggestion and may<lb/>
make things a little nicer around here. However, I<lb/>
won't hold my breath long enough to see it catch<lb/>
on, I will only hope.<lb/>
There is something very nice and magical about<lb/>
this time of the year, whether you have someone to<lb/>
spend this day with or not. It makes you appreciate<lb/>
everything that your significant other does for you.<lb/>
It is one of the few days when you can tell someone<lb/>
how much you care about them.<lb/>
I will try to show what men think about this<lb/>
day from three perspectives: the single guy, the<lb/>
semi-married guy and the married guy. Hopefully,<lb/>
this article will provide some insight into what men<lb/>
truly think of this day. Well, here it goes, straight<lb/>
from the horse's mouth.<lb/>
The single guy I asked about Valentine's Day was<lb/>
Austin Tew. When asked about what he thought of<lb/>
the event he remarked, "It's nothing to me because<lb/>
I don't have a girlfriend to spend it with<lb/>
Tew went further on to implicate that it is a<lb/>
"buy chocolate and go to the movies" type of day.<lb/>
see GUYS page A6 <lb/>
A day for love or franchise?<lb/>
TOMEKA STEELE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
How can we miss the coming of the infamous<lb/>
"day for lovers" or Valentine's Day? We can't - it is<lb/>
everywhere. It's in your e-mail in the form of a virus.<lb/>
It's in Wal-Mart with red bears and roses smother-<lb/>
ing you at the automatic doors. It's in the yard with<lb/>
raffles and drawings for dinners for two and carna-<lb/>
tions. It's enveloping Wright Place with red boxes<lb/>
of candy and balloons. It's supposed to be a day of<lb/>
love, but most people hate Valentine's Day.<lb/>
I dislike Valentine's Day for many reasons. For<lb/>
one, it's all about businesses making money. It's the<lb/>
day for the selling of flowers, candy, cards, balloons<lb/>
and jewelry. This is mostly because it's considered<lb/>
a woman's holiday. At least, that's what every guy<lb/>
I asked said. Most guys could care less whether or<lb/>
not their girlfriend gets them anything.<lb/>
"It's a made-up holiday just to make money,<lb/>
and you don't need just one day to tell someone<lb/>
you love them said Stephen Reed, senior exercise<lb/>
physiology major.<lb/>
I think everyone knows this holiday is more<lb/>
about businesses making money than about love.<lb/>
Love should be shown every day, not just one day<lb/>
of the year. I'd rather get a card on a random day<lb/>
for no reason at all than it strictly being reserved<lb/>
for Valentine's Day, which would make the gesture<lb/>
seem somewhat forced.<lb/>
Valentine's Day also has the capacity to make<lb/>
someone who is single feel like an outcast. People<lb/>
are always asking what you got for Valentine's Day<lb/>
like it's Christmas or something, like if you didn't<lb/>
receive some bouquet of rare night-blooming jas-<lb/>
see GALS page A6<lb/>
iTr<lb/>
tt JL1LH<lb/>
-fcm<lb/>
1j M W<lb/>
? kpr<lb/>
 :ijk <lb/>
1y4<lb/>
Getting stupid with Cupid<lb/>
Hitting the bulls-eye with<lb/>
an interview<lb/>
DANIEL BROCK<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
It's Valentine's Day, and love<lb/>
is in the air. Someone must be<lb/>
held responsible for that debacle.<lb/>
In a TEC exclusive, I imagined<lb/>
tracking down the Longbows-<lb/>
man of Love, Cupid himself, to<lb/>
get the facts on breaking hearts,<lb/>
making love and Bon Jovi.<lb/>
I met Cupid at a bar on the<lb/>
outskirts of Sandusky, Ohio. He<lb/>
asked me to wager on a game of<lb/>
darts. Fancying myself some-<lb/>
thing of a marksman, I agreed. I<lb/>
quickly found myself down $75.<lb/>
We sat down for some hard liquor<lb/>
and hard questions, and by the<lb/>
time we were finished, we'd had<lb/>
enough of both.<lb/>
TEC: Could you put some more<lb/>
clothes on before we start the<lb/>
interview?<lb/>
Cupid: Play it as it lies, baby.<lb/>
TEC: Fair enough. How do you<lb/>
keep your youthful appearance?<lb/>
Cupid: It's actually a rare genetic<lb/>
condition known as GCD, Gary<lb/>
Coleman Disease.<lb/>
TEC: Whatchu talkin' bout,<lb/>
Willis?<lb/>
Cupid: That's not funny.<lb/>
TEC: You're right. Moving on,<lb/>
what possessed you to start<lb/>
shooting people with arrows,<lb/>
thus causing them fall into this<lb/>
accursed thing called "love"?<lb/>
Cupid: Well, when I was seven<lb/>
I got a Nerf bow and arrow. My<lb/>
mother (Roman goddess of love,<lb/>
Venus) said I'd shoot my eye out,<lb/>
which I nearly did. We got sick of<lb/>
saying "You're it" when someone<lb/>
got shot. To spice it up a little, we<lb/>
worked up some magic so that<lb/>
when you got shot, you'd fall in<lb/>
love with a girl and get cooties.<lb/>
In college, we used it for other<lb/>
purposes  if you catch my drift.<lb/>
TEC: You injected yourself?<lb/>
Cupid: Who do I look like, Jose<lb/>
Canseco?<lb/>
TEC: Not even close.<lb/>
Cupid: I might have poked<lb/>
myself a time or two.<lb/>
TEC: You had a highly publi-<lb/>
cized romance with the Roman<lb/>
socialite Psyche. Can you tell me<lb/>
about that?<lb/>
Cupid: Psyche? More like Psycho.<lb/>
She was insane. She literally<lb/>
loved me to death. I actually<lb/>
had to bring that chick back to<lb/>
life. A decision I, and my bank<lb/>
account, regret on a daily basis.<lb/>
TEC: Indeed. It was an odd pre-<lb/>
nup. She wasn't allowed to look<lb/>
at you, but apparently she was<lb/>
entitled to half of your net worth?<lb/>
Cupid: Seemed like a good idea<lb/>
at the time.<lb/>
TEC: Love hurts.<lb/>
Cupid: So does alimony.<lb/>
TEC: Name the top three archers<lb/>
of all-time.<lb/>
Cupid: Cupid, Cupid and let me<lb/>
see Cupid.<lb/>
TEC: Robin Hood and Legolas<lb/>
don't make the list?<lb/>
Cupid: Are you familiar with<lb/>
the phrase, "You couldn't hit the<lb/>
broad side of a barn?" Yeah, well<lb/>
that was about Robin Hood. As<lb/>
for Legolas, he's a fairy.<lb/>
TEC: Actually, he's an elf.<lb/>
Cupid: Whatever.<lb/>
TEC: Finish this quote, "Shot<lb/>
through the heart and you're to<lb/>
blame<lb/>
Cupid: Says who?<lb/>
TEC: Uh, Bon Jovi.<lb/>
Cupid: Figures.<lb/>
TEC: People have said many<lb/>
things about love: love stinks,<lb/>
love bites, love can keep us<lb/>
together. What does Cupid say<lb/>
about love?<lb/>
Cupid: If loving you is wrong,<lb/>
how much will it cost me to be<lb/>
right?<lb/>
TEC: Any final thoughts?<lb/>
Cupid: Love is a battlefield, and<lb/>
I'm packin' heat.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
ieatures@theeaitcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Buy my valentine<lb/>
U.S. consumers will spend almost (&amp;<lb/>
$14 billion on Valentine s Day gifts this<lb/>
year, mostly on their spouses or sweeties. j<lb/>
Spending going<lb/>
Average spending per person<lb/>
$120 -<lb/>
100<lb/>
Top<lb/>
How much average consumer<lb/>
will spend on<lb/>
Spousesignificant<lb/>
other i $64.63<lb/>
60 <lb/>
40<lb/>
20<lb/>
2001<lb/>
$82.60<lb/>
2006<lb/>
$100 89<lb/>
Other family<lb/>
$20.74<lb/>
Friends<lb/>
I $5.06<lb/>
Child s school $3.52<lb/>
'01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06<lb/>
Men spend<lb/>
What average consumer plans to<lb/>
spend on hisher significant other<lb/>
Men<lb/>
$128<lb/>
Women<lb/>
$74<lb/>
Co-workers I $2.56<lb/>
Other<lb/>
I $4.38<lb/>
By age<lb/>
Highest, lowest<lb/>
spenders<lb/>
Ages 25-34<lb/>
Ages 55-64<lb/>
Great expectations<lb/>
What men and women plan to give their significant others<lb/>
and what they want to get<lb/>
Plan to give<lb/>
Night out 71<lb/>
Nomen<lb/>
Plan to give<lb/>
Night out 6f <lb/>
Flowers66<lb/>
Jewelry52<lb/>
Want to get Night out62<lb/>
Book, CD45<lb/>
Jewelry26<lb/>
Book, CD53<lb/>
Candy42<lb/>
Want to get Night out62<lb/>
Flowers55<lb/>
Candy44<lb/>
Source: National<lb/>
Retail Federation<lb/>
survey of 6,618 U.S.<lb/>
adults, Jan. 4-11,<lb/>
2006, margin of<lb/>
error: -1<lb/>
percentage points;<lb/>
Discover Card<lb/>
survey of 1,016 US<lb/>
adults, Jan. 26-29,<lb/>
. 2006, margin of<lb/>
error: - 3<lb/>
percentage points<lb/>
Graphic: T.G. Tso,<lb/>
Judy Treible<lb/>
 2006 KRT<lb/>
"Includes DVDs, games<lb/>
Gifts that will drive them wild<lb/>
It's the thought that<lb/>
counts, right?<lb/>
MEREDITH STEWART<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Valentine's Day is a day for<lb/>
lovers everywhere. Guys usu-<lb/>
ally have a dinner date planned,<lb/>
whether it is out in a restaurant<lb/>
or something quiet and special<lb/>
at home. Girls are anxious to<lb/>
see what their significant other<lb/>
has planned and may even have<lb/>
plans of their own. Clothes,<lb/>
flowers, candy, cards, candles<lb/>
and jewelry are all basic gifts to<lb/>
give and receive on Valentine's<lb/>
Day. This tradition has been long<lb/>
lasting, and while there are many<lb/>
out there who love and anticipate<lb/>
this day of love, some still ques-<lb/>
tion this tradition.<lb/>
"1 don't understand why so<lb/>
many people get into Valentine's<lb/>
Day. Even if you do have some-<lb/>
one, why is there one specific day<lb/>
to show how you feel? I believe<lb/>
you should express that all of<lb/>
the time, so I don't really plan<lb/>
to do too much on this over-<lb/>
rated occasion said Jean Mar-<lb/>
shall, freshman business major.<lb/>
While it's not for everyone<lb/>
(even those who have a lover),<lb/>
this day you will find most flo-<lb/>
rists busy, grocery stores empty<lb/>
and Wal-Mart packed. You will<lb/>
find all the "last minute" people<lb/>
picking up a little something for<lb/>
their sweetie, trying to get just<lb/>
one more rose or meeting those<lb/>
who simply forgot.<lb/>
Many struggle to find that<lb/>
perfect "something" that will<lb/>
express their feelings. Material-<lb/>
istic things will work on some.<lb/>
Popular gifts include dress shirts,<lb/>
CDs, massage oils, gift certifi-<lb/>
see GIFTS page A6<lb/>
<pb facs="00059393_0006"/><lb/>
PAGE A6<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  FEATURES<lb/>
2-14-06<lb/>
Attention ECU Sophomores<lb/>
If you have earned 45-60 hours and at least 30 of them were<lb/>
completed at ECU (not counting Math 0001 or 0045),<lb/>
you are required to respond to the<lb/>
Sophomore Survey<lb/>
before you can pre-register for either<lb/>
Summer or Fall 2006 courses.<lb/>
If your earned credit hours fall within these limits you will receive a<lb/>
message at your ECU Exchange email address asking you to participate<lb/>
in the survey, and your record will be "tagged" so that you cannot register<lb/>
until you have responded to it. If you do not receive the email notice, it<lb/>
means that the survey and registration restriction does not apply to you.<lb/>
When you are taking the survey, as soon as you submit your responses<lb/>
the "tag" will be removed from your record so that you can pre-register.<lb/>
Registration staff can verify that your responses were received and that the<lb/>
tag was removed.<lb/>
Note: Although we really want your feedback to the survey questions,<lb/>
you may choose to opt out by submitting a blank form. Opting out will<lb/>
also remove the sophomore survey tag that would prevent you from<lb/>
pre-registering.<lb/>
The survey period is March 2 - April 24. During that period you can<lb/>
complete the survey by going to the ECU "One-Stop" web site, entering<lb/>
your ECU Exchange email userid and password to sign on, and clicking on<lb/>
"Sophomore Survey" in the box labeled "Surveys You can also access the<lb/>
"One-Stop" from:<lb/>
Mendenhall Computer Lab, Wright Place Cafeteria, the Austin Building,<lb/>
and Joyner Library East.<lb/>
For this survey you are emailed an announcement on March 2. Later you<lb/>
are sent an email reminder, and then a postcard, if you have not responded<lb/>
to the survey.<lb/>
Please respond to the survey as soon as possible after the survey opens on<lb/>
March 2 and certainly before sophomore pre-registration begins on March<lb/>
23. This will also help you avoid delays during pre-registration when the<lb/>
workload on ECU computers is at a peak. All remaining tags for this<lb/>
survey will be removed from student records on April 25, the day after<lb/>
the survey closes.<lb/>
GUyS from page A5<lb/>
GdlS from page A5<lb/>
It seems that many people share the sentiment of<lb/>
a commercialized holiday created by the Hallmark<lb/>
Card people working together with the Easter Bunny.<lb/>
Then I asked John Keefe, a guy in a serious relation-<lb/>
ship, what his thoughts were about the special day.<lb/>
"It is about celebrating the relationship and trying<lb/>
to expand into new areas all the time said Keefe.<lb/>
That is one great way to look at the day, as an<lb/>
event to get one another closer in the effort to grow<lb/>
together or at least trying something new.<lb/>
Now, why don't we hear what the married guy has<lb/>
to say about the day? I asked my father about what<lb/>
Valentine's Day meant to him. He stated, "Over the<lb/>
years it has meant to me how much love I have for<lb/>
your mother and also how much love she has for me<lb/>
This profound statement is no more evident in<lb/>
the recent celebration of my parents' silver anniver-<lb/>
sary - something I will hope to strive toward and be<lb/>
a part of one day. One day ladies, one day.<lb/>
For now, I will take the lesson of their enduring<lb/>
love and selfless sacrifices for each other as a big<lb/>
lesson on what growing up and finding someone<lb/>
special to share time with is all about. In my case,<lb/>
it might be finding someone who is great enough<lb/>
of a person to put up with my shenanigans. I bid<lb/>
everyone a sincere Happy Valentine's Day and hope<lb/>
it all works out for you and your endeavors. Guys,<lb/>
try doing something unique.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
mine and orchids, it automatically means you had<lb/>
a bad Valentine's Day and a night full of nothing<lb/>
but ice cream and re-runs.<lb/>
Of course, if you are in a committed, loving rela-<lb/>
tionship, even if you know Valentine's is a franchise<lb/>
holiday, you are still accustomed to receiving and<lb/>
giving a gift. Let's not kid ourselves, we all love gifts,<lb/>
but we shouldn't base whether we had a good day<lb/>
or not on the fact that we got a gift. We should be<lb/>
happy to have at least one person who loves us <lb/>
not just on Valentine's Day but every day - whether<lb/>
it's a parent, boyfriend, girlfriend or friend.<lb/>
Being single on Valentine's Day can be extremely<lb/>
depressing if you choose to sit and wallow in the<lb/>
fact that no one has realized your wonderful per-<lb/>
sonality and attributes yet. I've spent a Valentine's<lb/>
Day or two wondering what it was that I was miss-<lb/>
ing or lacking, then I got over it. Valentine's Day<lb/>
isn't just for lovers it's for friends and family too.<lb/>
I had to figure that out for myself.<lb/>
My mom and dad each send me a bouquet of<lb/>
flowers. Dad sends roses and mom sends wild flow-<lb/>
ers. My friends, who are also single, call me and we<lb/>
talk for hours or have some kind of girl's night in.<lb/>
So even though Valentine's Day is about making<lb/>
money, it's a gentle reminder that no one is prom-<lb/>
ised tomorrow and rather than just showing our<lb/>
love one day a year, we should show it every day.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Gifts<lb/>
from page A5<lb/>
cates, jewelry, iPod accessories, video games, bath<lb/>
stuff, magazine subscriptions and DVDs. While it's<lb/>
great that many can afford these gifts, remember<lb/>
it's not the price that counts. What does a gift like<lb/>
this say? Will your boyfriendgirlfriend love you<lb/>
more if you buy them pricey things? Does the gift<lb/>
truly represent how you feel? Store-bought gifts<lb/>
are nice, but keep in mind that you don't have to<lb/>
spend tons of money to let someone know how you<lb/>
feel. Around days like this, stores raise prices and<lb/>
customers become greedy when they are shopping;<lb/>
they want the last box of chocolates or the only<lb/>
pink teddy bear left in town. If you don't want to<lb/>
be caught in that crowd, hopefully you've finished<lb/>
your shopping and already have plans.<lb/>
"I like things that come from the heart. You<lb/>
can't buy true love, so thoughtful gifts mean<lb/>
the most to me. Homemade cards are the best<lb/>
and the gifts that have been thought out and are<lb/>
personalized really make me feel like someone<lb/>
cares said Lallie Jones, sophomore art major.<lb/>
Roses and chocolates are favorites, but nothing<lb/>
can replace a sweet card. Bring out the markers, scis-<lb/>
sors and glue and express your feelings through art<lb/>
or simply print a cute card from the Internet, both<lb/>
are free and easy ways to begin the gift. There are<lb/>
tons of ideas online and in magazines that can help<lb/>
create that perfect gift. Valentine's Day seems to be<lb/>
keeping up with the pace of technology, so creating<lb/>
CDs has been extremely popular over the past few<lb/>
years. If heshe likes poetry, gathering some love<lb/>
poems and creating a small book would be ideal.<lb/>
Valentine's Day has a long history, but seems to<lb/>
have evolved over time and has become a day that<lb/>
makes people stress and not really focus on the main<lb/>
idea. Express your true feelings this year the right way.<lb/>
It's not the gift's cost, but the thought that matters.<lb/>
One of the most popular gifts on Valentine's<lb/>
Day is a dozen roses. Their beauty and fragrance<lb/>
make them a traditional gift, and the red ones are a<lb/>
symbol of love. Whether you get a dozen or a single<lb/>
rose, they convey the depth of your feelings.<lb/>
Nothing melts one's heart like chocolate.<lb/>
Truffles, milk, dark or nutty, none of them last long,<lb/>
but the memory will last a lifetime. Valentine's Day<lb/>
gifts reflect your thoughtfulness and express your<lb/>
feelings, so be sure to demonstrate them in the right<lb/>
way on this very special day.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Wherever You Go, Go With Ail Your Heart. Confucius<lb/>
Pre-Med Week<lb/>
February 13-1<lb/>
Join us for these free, informative sessions!<lb/>
All students, faculty and staff are invited to attend<lb/>
Monday, Februar' 13<lb/>
5:00-6:00 pm<lb/>
Great Room I<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center (MSC)<lb/>
Tuesday, February 14<lb/>
4:00-4:45 pm<lb/>
Greal Room I<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center (MSC)<lb/>
4:45-5:30 pm<lb/>
Great Room I<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center (MSC)<lb/>
Wednesday, February 15<lb/>
4:00-4:50 pm<lb/>
Room 244<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center (MSC)<lb/>
5:00-6:00 pm<lb/>
Room 244<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center (MSC)<lb/>
Thursday, February 16<lb/>
4:00-5:00 pm<lb/>
Room 244<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center (MSC)<lb/>
Friday, February 17<lb/>
X:()()-10:00 am<lb/>
BrewsterB-104<lb/>
Stop by anytime between 8-1 Oam<lb/>
Preparing for the MCA T and Future Test Changes<lb/>
Anna Vaillancourt, Kaplan, Inc.<lb/>
Writins a Personal Statement<lb/>
Karen Floyd, Assistant Director<lb/>
Academic Enrichment Center<lb/>
The Medical School Application Process<lb/>
Shelly Myers, Director<lb/>
Academic Enrichment Center<lb/>
Brody School of Medicine Information Session<lb/>
Dr. Angela Kidd, BSOM Academic Support &amp;<lb/>
Enrichment Center<lb/>
Medical Student Panel<lb/>
Medical Students from the Brody School of Medicine<lb/>
Doctors Panel<lb/>
Doctors from the Brody School of Medicine<lb/>
(Doctors include: Dr. Janice Daughtery, Family<lb/>
Medicine, Dr. Sangnya Patel, Internal Medicine and<lb/>
Dr. Joseph Zanga, Pediatrics)<lb/>
Drop-In Breakfast &amp; Pre-Med Resources<lb/>
Staff will be available to answer questions about<lb/>
medical school.<lb/>
Sponsored by: Adult &amp; Commuter Student Services<lb/>
Interested<lb/>
;it 252-328-2645 or<lb/>
Applications now available for<lb/>
2006-2007 Elections Committee!<lb/>
 Deadline to apply for Elections Chair:<lb/>
Feb 15th<lb/>
 Deadline to apply for Elections Vice<lb/>
Chair or Committee Member:<lb/>
March 31st<lb/>
Applications available in the SGA office<lb/>
255 Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Questions?<lb/>
Please call 328-4742<lb/>
<pb facs="00059393_0007"/><lb/>
2-14-06<lb/>
means you had<lb/>
full of nothing<lb/>
tted, loving rela-<lb/>
y's is a franchise<lb/>
o receiving and<lb/>
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or friend.<lb/>
:an be extremely<lb/>
i wallow in the<lb/>
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nt a Valentine's<lb/>
that I was miss-<lb/>
Valentine's Day<lb/>
; and family too.<lb/>
ne a bouquet of<lb/>
sends wild f low-<lb/>
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if girl's night in.<lb/>
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no one is prom-<lb/>
ist showing our<lb/>
w it every day.<lb/>
ed at<lb/>
rcom.<lb/>
P<lb/>
ht that matters.<lb/>
on Valentine's<lb/>
and fragrance<lb/>
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ozen or a single<lb/>
r feelings,<lb/>
ike chocolate,<lb/>
f them last long,<lb/>
Valentine's Day<lb/>
id express your<lb/>
lem in the right<lb/>
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i.com.<lb/>
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ur:<lb/>
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ce<lb/>
Page A7 sports@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 TONY Z0PP0 Sports Editor BRANDON HUGHES Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY February 14, 2006<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Strength and Conditioning<lb/>
take championship<lb/>
ECU'S Strength and Conditioning<lb/>
staff, under the direction of second-<lb/>
year coach Mike Golden, practiced<lb/>
what they preach on a daily basis<lb/>
by capturing the mixed men's team<lb/>
division title at the 100 percent Raw<lb/>
World Powerlifting Championships<lb/>
at the Beyond Fitness Gym over the<lb/>
weekend. The squad, which competes<lb/>
under the team name "ECU Pirate<lb/>
Factory accumulated the highest<lb/>
number of total points based on<lb/>
individual performances throughout<lb/>
the competition, which included three<lb/>
basis lifts - the squat, bench press<lb/>
and dead lift. Individual champions,<lb/>
competing in different weight and<lb/>
age divisions, were determined by<lb/>
the highest combined sum of each<lb/>
of the three lifts. Each competitor<lb/>
was allowed three attempts at each<lb/>
event with the heaviest successful lift<lb/>
counting toward each athlete's total.<lb/>
Golden was one of six ECU Pirate<lb/>
Factory first-place winners, joining<lb/>
Danny Wheel (Director of Olympic<lb/>
Sports), Nate Barnes (strength and<lb/>
conditioning graduate assistant),<lb/>
Jason Spruill (intern), Mike Yartin<lb/>
(intern) and Kevin "Twitch" Ferelli<lb/>
(equipment room) in the champion's<lb/>
circle. In addition, weight room<lb/>
volunteers John Fisher and Bill<lb/>
Simmons earned second-place<lb/>
finishes. Golden also cited assistant<lb/>
coach Michelle Clayton-Boswell, who<lb/>
is currently ranked third nationally<lb/>
in the Olympic Lifting category,<lb/>
for her contributions assisting<lb/>
ECU Pirate Factory's preparation<lb/>
and development efforts. The 100<lb/>
percent Raw Powerlifting Federation<lb/>
is drug-free and prohibits the use of<lb/>
supportive lifting suits, knee or wrist<lb/>
wraps in its competitions.<lb/>
Harrell And Quick earn Weekly<lb/>
C-USA accolades<lb/>
For their efforts in leading ECU<lb/>
to a perfect 5-0 weekend record<lb/>
and the FAU Worth Invitational title,<lb/>
senior Ashley Quick and junior Keli<lb/>
Harrell were named Conference<lb/>
USA Hitter and Co-Pitcher of the<lb/>
Week, respectively. Harrell shares<lb/>
her honor with Houston sophomore<lb/>
Angel Shamblin, who one-hit No. 22<lb/>
Oregon in her first start of the season.<lb/>
Quick, who delivered two game-<lb/>
winning hits, and Harrell, who was<lb/>
3-0 in the circle with 21 strikeouts,<lb/>
were instrumental in leading the<lb/>
Pirates to the championship. Quick<lb/>
batted .455 (5-for-11) with five RBIs<lb/>
helping lead the Pirates to the FAU<lb/>
Worth Invitational championship. The<lb/>
senior delivered two game-winning<lb/>
hits during the Pirates' 5-0 start to the<lb/>
season. Quick had the lone RBI in a 1 -<lb/>
0 victory over FAU and also delivered<lb/>
a two-run, seventh-inning double in a<lb/>
3-1 victory over Purdue. Harrell went<lb/>
3-0 with complete game victories<lb/>
over Bethune-Cookman, Purdue<lb/>
and South Carolina on the weekend<lb/>
en route to earning MVP honors at<lb/>
the FAU Worth Invitational. The junior<lb/>
fanned 21 batters in 21 innings<lb/>
pitched, surpassing the 500 career<lb/>
strikeout mark. She is only the ninth<lb/>
player in C-USA history to achieve<lb/>
that feat. Harrell shares the Pitcher<lb/>
of the Week honor with Shamblin,<lb/>
who limited No. 22 Oregon to just<lb/>
one hit as she opened her season<lb/>
with a complete-game shutout at .<lb/>
the WilsonDeMarini Invitational, The<lb/>
sophomore fanned eight Ducks in<lb/>
her seven innings of work and carried<lb/>
a perfect game into the fifth inning<lb/>
before allowing a walk.<lb/>
Shortt agrees to plead guilty In<lb/>
steroids case<lb/>
A doctor accused of writing<lb/>
illegal steroid prescriptions to football<lb/>
players has agreed to plead guilty to<lb/>
one federal conspiracy charge as<lb/>
part of a plea agreement, according<lb/>
to court documents. Alternative<lb/>
medicine physician James Shortt,<lb/>
59, will plead guilty to one count of<lb/>
conspiracy to distribute anabolic<lb/>
steroids and human growth hormone.<lb/>
In exchange, prosecutors will drop<lb/>
42 similar counts against the West<lb/>
Columbia doctor, according to<lb/>
papers filed Monday in U.S. District<lb/>
Court in South Carolina. Shortt faces<lb/>
up to five years in prison and a<lb/>
$250,000 fine. A spokeswoman for<lb/>
U.S. Attorney Johnny Gasser said<lb/>
in these types of cases, sentencing<lb/>
usually occurs two or three months<lb/>
after the plea agreement has been<lb/>
reached. Shortt has been free on<lb/>
bond since he was indicted last<lb/>
September. The indictment didn't<lb/>
specify who received the drugs Shortt<lb/>
prescribed but a person familiar<lb/>
with the indictment said they were<lb/>
current and former members of the<lb/>
Carolina Panthers, bodybuilders and<lb/>
at least one police officer. The source<lb/>
spoke to The Associated Press on<lb/>
the condition of anonymity because<lb/>
the investigation was ongoing and<lb/>
did not name players. Last week,<lb/>
U.S. District Court Chief Judge Joe<lb/>
Anderson said he would allow some<lb/>
parts of Shortt's interview on HBO's<lb/>
"CostasNow" program to be shown<lb/>
to jurors. In the interview, Shortt said<lb/>
he treated about 18 NFL players with<lb/>
anabolic steroids or human growth<lb/>
hormones.<lb/>
Pirates squeeze series from Terrapins<lb/>
Billy Godwin starts ECU<lb/>
career with two wins<lb/>
BRENT WYNNE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
It all happened so fast. After<lb/>
Adam Hodges hit a sacrifice fly to<lb/>
knot the rubber match between<lb/>
Maryland and ECU at four in the<lb/>
bottom of the ninth, ECU Head<lb/>
Coach Billy Godwin proved he<lb/>
belonged at the Division One<lb/>
level.<lb/>
On the very next pitch, he<lb/>
gave sophomore shortstop Dale<lb/>
Mollenhauer the sign for the<lb/>
squeeze play and it was executed<lb/>
to perfection, as the lefty laid<lb/>
down a perfect bunt to bring<lb/>
home Stephen Batts for the<lb/>
game and series winner Sunday<lb/>
afternoon at Clark-LeClair<lb/>
stadium.<lb/>
"I just thought the momen-<lb/>
tum right there was on our side<lb/>
said Godwin.<lb/>
"To react quickly on the first<lb/>
pitch is a thing I've done in the<lb/>
past. I just thought it was the<lb/>
right call<lb/>
Maryland Head Coach Terry<lb/>
Rupp sure didn't think it was<lb/>
the right call. However, the call<lb/>
he disagreed with was the one<lb/>
made by home plate umpire Larry<lb/>
Howard. It looked as if Terrapin<lb/>
catcher Chad Durakis had the<lb/>
plate fully blocked, but Batts<lb/>
apparently found an open spot<lb/>
and slid in safe.<lb/>
The Diamond Bucs opened<lb/>
the series with a 6-1 win and it<lb/>
looked as if they would Cakewalk S<lb/>
through their opening series, but 8<lb/>
Maryland responded strongly, 3<lb/>
beginning Sunday's double- g<lb/>
see BASEBALL page A9 The Diamond Bucs took two of three from ACC foe Maryland and will play next against the always-tough College of Charleston.<lb/>
ECU hangs tough, eventually falls, 72-64<lb/>
Pirates off to worst-ever<lb/>
start in Conference USA<lb/>
ERIC QILMORE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
The Pirates are still trying<lb/>
to find the right pieces to be<lb/>
consistent in Conference USA.<lb/>
The puzzle wasn't solved, as evi-<lb/>
denced by ECU'S 72-64 bow to<lb/>
a talented UAB team in front of<lb/>
6,365 fans at Bartow Arena.<lb/>
UAB guard Marvett McDon-<lb/>
ald scored 15 of his 18 points in<lb/>
the second half to notch the Blaz-<lb/>
ers 13th win in 15 games. Starting<lb/>
small forward Wen Mukubu and<lb/>
sophomore guard Paul Delaney<lb/>
scored 12 points apiece for UAB<lb/>
(17-5, 7-2 C-USA). Freshman for-<lb/>
ward Lawrence Kinnard added<lb/>
10 points.<lb/>
Corey Rouse dominated the<lb/>
interior by notching 18 points<lb/>
and adding 13 rebounds. The<lb/>
senior tallied his 13th double-<lb/>
double of the season on 8-for-ll<lb/>
shooting. Freshman guard Sam<lb/>
Hinnant connected on four treys<lb/>
and a field goal for 14 points,<lb/>
while Jeremy Ingram totaled 13.<lb/>
ECU (7-15, 1-8 C-USA) led by<lb/>
as many as six in the early going<lb/>
as both teams struggled to find<lb/>
the basket. However, UAB clawed<lb/>
to a 28-25 halftime lead despite a<lb/>
dismal 29.6 percent shooting.<lb/>
"We didn't make any shots<lb/>
said UAB Head Coach Mike<lb/>
Anderson in a press release<lb/>
according to UAB's Web site.<lb/>
"I didn't think we were attack-<lb/>
ing. We were tentative. We had<lb/>
some guys come off the bench<lb/>
and do some good things for us.<lb/>
We had a lot of guys doing a lot<lb/>
of things, and they gave us some<lb/>
quality minutes and allowed us to<lb/>
get the lead before halftime<lb/>
UAB built a 10-point lead due<lb/>
to seven consecutive points out<lb/>
of the gates in the second frame.<lb/>
The Blazers built up a 14-point<lb/>
margin with 13:58 remaining,<lb/>
but ECU, losers of eight of their<lb/>
last nine games, showed flashes<lb/>
of resiliency.<lb/>
The Pirates pulled within<lb/>
four points on four different<lb/>
occasions, but couldn't manage<lb/>
to inch closer. A Rouse dunk<lb/>
brought ECU to within 52-48,<lb/>
but McDonald's jumper and free<lb/>
throws from UAB senior forward<lb/>
Brandon Tobias sealed the Pirates'<lb/>
fate.<lb/>
ECU'S turnover bug-a-boo con-<lb/>
tinued as the Pirates committed 26<lb/>
unforced errors leading directly<lb/>
to 32 Blazer points. Point guard<lb/>
Courtney Captain and sophomore<lb/>
Tom Hammonds were guilty of<lb/>
five apiece, while two others com-<lb/>
mitted four each.<lb/>
Rouse and the Pirates domi-<lb/>
nated the glass, out-rebounding<lb/>
the guard-oriented Blazers by a<lb/>
41-28 margin. However, the Pirates<lb/>
early shooting woes and UAB con-<lb/>
necting on 53.8 percent (14-for-26)<lb/>
in the second half spelled doom.<lb/>
ECU played without Japhet<lb/>
McNeil and Jonathan Hart, who<lb/>
remain suspended due to a vio-<lb/>
lation of team policy. The sus-<lb/>
pended players corribined for 20<lb/>
starts and deprived Pirate Head<lb/>
Coach Ricky Stokes of 27.4 and<lb/>
16.7 minutes per game respec-<lb/>
tively. Eight players combined<lb/>
for double-digit minutes while<lb/>
all eligible players entered the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The Pirate loss continued<lb/>
ECU'S sole possession of last place<lb/>
in C-USA, while UAB remained<lb/>
in third. The Pirates are one<lb/>
game behind both Marshall and<lb/>
Southern Mississippi.<lb/>
ECU, which is off to its worst<lb/>
start ever in five years of C-USA<lb/>
play, will travel to Houston to<lb/>
take on Rice. The midweek game<lb/>
will be nationally televised on<lb/>
CSTV Wednesday. Tip-off is<lb/>
scheduled for 8:05 p.m.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sport5@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Lady Pirates end week<lb/>
in dramatic fashion<lb/>
ECU falls to UAB in triple-OT thriller<lb/>
JOSH FERNANDEZ<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The Lady Pirates lost a heartbreaker to UAB in triple-overtime.<lb/>
The past week was just one of several bumps in<lb/>
the road that is the 2005-06 season for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates basketball team. Now sitting at middle<lb/>
ground in the Conference USA standings with<lb/>
only a handful of games left in the season and the<lb/>
C-USA tournament fast approaching, it's in the<lb/>
hands of the Lady Pirate players to shape how this<lb/>
season ends.<lb/>
In the three games played during the week of<lb/>
Feb. 6 - 12, ECU (14-9, 6-6) picked up one substan-<lb/>
tial 20-point victory over Memphis, but dropped a<lb/>
couple later in the week.<lb/>
ECU began the week with a trip to Houston to<lb/>
take on Rice (11-12, 7-5). From the start, Rice out-<lb/>
paced the Pirates and got out to an early 17-point<lb/>
lead, 25-8.<lb/>
After shooting 45 percent (13-of-29) during the<lb/>
half to ECU'S 17 percent (6-of-36), the Owls entered<lb/>
halftime leading comfortably, 48-23. They would<lb/>
hold at least a 20-point lead until the final nine<lb/>
minutes when Jessica Slack hit a three to put the<lb/>
Pirates behind by 19.<lb/>
The play jump-started a 14-2 Pirate-run, which<lb/>
cut Rice's lead to seven. However, with only a<lb/>
minute left on the game-clock, the only thing ECU<lb/>
could do was foul and hope for missed attempts on<lb/>
the part of Owl shooters.<lb/>
Rice guard Latrice Elder, the primary target of<lb/>
the late game fouls, came up big for the Owls by<lb/>
connecting on 9-of-10 tries from the line, sealing<lb/>
the 73-65 win for the home team. Rice's win can<lb/>
largely be attributed to their bold performance at<lb/>
the free-throw line, hitting 36-of-41 attempts, a<lb/>
school record.<lb/>
ECU's potent force of freshmen guards Jasmine<lb/>
Young and LaCoya Terry each recorded a team-best<lb/>
15 points with Slack adding 10. Terry also grabbed<lb/>
a career-high seven boards.<lb/>
Friday night, the Lady Pirates looked for<lb/>
redemption at Williams Arena in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
as they took on bottom-of-the-barrel Memphis<lb/>
(3-19, 1-10).<lb/>
Less than four minutes into the game, ECU had<lb/>
see WOMEN page A12<lb/>
America's gold standard: no price too high<lb/>
(AP)  Americans are great at<lb/>
sports the rest of the world can<lb/>
barely afford.<lb/>
Sure, it's not the most hon-<lb/>
orable, most satisfying or even<lb/>
the most cost-effective way to<lb/>
become a Winter Olympics super-<lb/>
power, but guess what?<lb/>
It works.<lb/>
And with an American TV<lb/>
network still picking up the lion's<lb/>
share of the Olympic tab and<lb/>
exerting just as much influence<lb/>
on the roster of sports included<lb/>
in the games, that isn't going to<lb/>
change anytime soon.<lb/>
Through the close of play<lb/>
Monday, two of the four golds<lb/>
and four of the six medals<lb/>
claimed by Americans at these<lb/>
Olympics have been won by<lb/>
snowboarders.<lb/>
"This Gretchen Bleiler said<lb/>
moments after nailing down the<lb/>
silver half of another 1-2 U.S.<lb/>
medals punch in the halfpipe, "is<lb/>
absolutely unbelievable<lb/>
That just might hold up over<lb/>
the next two weeks as the over-<lb/>
statement of these Olympics.<lb/>
The only thing unbelievable<lb/>
about what happened in halfpipe<lb/>
Monday is that Norwegian Kjersti<lb/>
Buass managed to wedge herself<lb/>
between all the other Americans<lb/>
- Hannah Teter (gold), Kelly<lb/>
Clark (fourth) and Elena Hight<lb/>
(sixth) - to steal the bronze.<lb/>
Honestly now, who else did<lb/>
Bleiler think was going to win?<lb/>
Paulina Ligocka of Poland, a<lb/>
country with one halfpipe venue,<lb/>
and a square one at that?<lb/>
Svetlana Vinogradova of<lb/>
Russia, a country with two more<lb/>
halfpipes than Lenin's Tomb?<lb/>
Please.<lb/>
"Medaling at the Olympics<lb/>
Bleiler added, "has been a dream<lb/>
of mine since I was a little girl<lb/>
Good thing that Bleiler wasn't<lb/>
born until 1981, Since snow-<lb/>
boarding didn't became part of<lb/>
the Winter Olympics until eight<lb/>
years ago at Nagano. Before<lb/>
becoming a shredder, Bleiler tried<lb/>
swimming, diving, soccer and<lb/>
then women's hockey, another<lb/>
one of those sports that has<lb/>
been the equivalent of an ATM<lb/>
machine for a U.S. team looking<lb/>
to cash in medals.<lb/>
For all the fuss made over<lb/>
the best-ever U.S. effort at Salt<lb/>
Lake City four years ago, it's<lb/>
worth noting that nearly half of<lb/>
the haul - 16 of 34 medals - was<lb/>
in sports that cost a lot to play<lb/>
see PRICE page A9<lb/>
<pb facs="00059393_0008"/><lb/>
PAGE A8<lb/>
THE EAST CAHOUNIAN  SPORTS<lb/>
2-14-06<lb/>
U.S. women go 1-2 in half pipe<lb/>
(KRT)  Hannah Teter has spent her life trying<lb/>
to keep up with her three snowboarding brothers.<lb/>
On Monday, she quit following.<lb/>
Teter, 19, won the gold medal in the halfpipe,<lb/>
while her U.S. teammate, Gretchen Bleiler took the<lb/>
silver. Only Norway's Kjersti Buaas prevented an<lb/>
American sweep, stealing the bronze from defend-<lb/>
ing Olympic champion Kelly Clark.<lb/>
"(Hannah) was always the rag-tag little torn<lb/>
girl, kind of following around and trying to keep<lb/>
up with her older brothers and do her thing<lb/>
said Amen Teter, who manages the professional<lb/>
snowboarding careers of Hannah and brothers<lb/>
Elijah and Abe.<lb/>
"Hannah's always been about keeping up<lb/>
with the boys. It shows. She's always like, T can<lb/>
do that<lb/>
Snowboarding has been the best news for the<lb/>
U.S. Olympic team thus far. The U.S. won four of<lb/>
the six medals awarded in the all-American sport.<lb/>
Shaun White and Danny Kass won the gold and<lb/>
the silver respectively Sunday, with Mason Aguirre<lb/>
finishing fourth.<lb/>
"We set some high goals U.S. coach Bud<lb/>
Keene said.<lb/>
"We wanted to sweep everything. Our actual<lb/>
stated goals were two medals for men and two<lb/>
medals for women, which is exactly what we got.<lb/>
We're stoked about that<lb/>
Riders get two trips down the chute in the<lb/>
halfpipe final, with only their best score counting.<lb/>
On Clark's final run, knowing she was in fourth<lb/>
place, she went for broke with a go-big run. Clark<lb/>
had the gold medal until losing her balance on the<lb/>
landing of a 2 V4-spin jump at the end.<lb/>
"She would have won with that run Keene<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Clark, who scored a 47.9 out of 50 to win the<lb/>
gold in Salt Lake City in 2002, had a 41.1 on her<lb/>
first run Monday. Buaas scored a 42 on her second<lb/>
attempt for the bronze.<lb/>
But Clark was the first to congratulate Teter<lb/>
and Bleiler and stayed around to watch the flower<lb/>
ceremony afterward.<lb/>
"I really went for it said Clark, who was born<lb/>
in Newport, R.I and now resides in Mammoth<lb/>
Lakes, Calif. "I figured I might as well leave here<lb/>
not regretting anything, and that's how I'm leav-<lb/>
ing today. There was amazing riding thrown down<lb/>
today. The people who are on the podium are the<lb/>
people who should be on the podium  I'm so<lb/>
happy for my friends<lb/>
It was Teter's day from the start.<lb/>
The Belmont, Vt native had the gold medal<lb/>
won on her first run in the finals, with a frontside<lb/>
900 scoring her a 44.6. But her victory lap was<lb/>
even better.<lb/>
Teter turned "Strive Roots" on her iPod and<lb/>
put on a show.<lb/>
Jumping into a crystal-clear blue sky, Teter hit<lb/>
a frontside 540 followed by a frontside 900 to wow<lb/>
an estimated crowd of 7,000 and the fudges. She<lb/>
scored a 46.4.<lb/>
"I was standing up there, and Gretchen went<lb/>
and just threw down so hard, and I thought she<lb/>
had me Teter said of Bleiler, who had her final<lb/>
see SNOWBOARDING page A12<lb/>
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applications for the position of<lb/>
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for the 2006-07 academic year.<lb/>
Applications are available in the Media Board Office<lb/>
(Self Help Building, 301 Evans St. Suite 205A, Greenville NC)<lb/>
The deadline for submitting an application is<lb/>
THURSDAY, MARCH 9 2U06 AT 5 P.M.<lb/>
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Call 328-4751 or stop by the station In the basement of<lb/>
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DAT! 0 DJ SPEED DATING<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN  SPORTS<lb/>
PAGE A9<lb/>
As you begin your career, take a broader view of how far you can go. As one of the world's leading banks, Credit<lb/>
Suisse provides its clients with investment banking, private banking and asset management services worldwide,<lb/>
employing more than 40,000 people. Right now, we're looking for bright minds to join our Global Business<lb/>
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FinancialBrokerage Operations: Entry and mid-level trade support positions within derivatives, corporate actions,<lb/>
prime brokerage and mortgage-backed securities.<lb/>
Visit our booth at these fairs on campus:<lb/>
Technology Career Fair<lb/>
Wednesday, February 15<lb/>
10:00 am-2:00pm<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Business Career Fair<lb/>
Wednesday, February 22<lb/>
10:00am-2:00pm<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Find out how you can begin an amazing journey.<lb/>
www.credit-suisse.comrtp<lb/>
Thinking New Perspectives.<lb/>
Credit Suisse<lb/>
Investment banking services in the United States ate provided by Credit Suisse Secunties (USA) LLC. an affiliate of Credit Suisse Group Credit Suisse Secuntes<lb/>
(USA) LLC is an Equal Opportunity Employer and does not discriminate in its employment decisions on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age,<lb/>
veteran or military status, disability, or any othe- protected category. O 2006 CREDIT SUISSE GROUP andor its affiliates. All rights reserved.<lb/>
You 're Invited<lb/>
To the Fourth Annual<lb/>
ECU Undergraduate<lb/>
Research and Creative Activities<lb/>
Symposium<lb/>
Friday April 21, 2006<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Abstracts are encouraged from all disciplines<lb/>
and include those describing;<lb/>
Research projects<lb/>
Class projects<lb/>
Service learning programsprojects<lb/>
Creative works<lb/>
Artistic expression<lb/>
h<lb/>
<lb/>
Submission deadline March 10. 2006<lb/>
Lunch will be served and prizes awarded for best oral and<lb/>
posterdisplay presentations<lb/>
For further information and abstract submission forms please see<lb/>
www.ecu.eduhonors<lb/>
BdSBDdll from page A7<lb/>
header with a 1-0 shutout, and after running out to<lb/>
a 4-0 lead in game three, things were not looking<lb/>
good for Purple Nation.<lb/>
"We lost that first game 1-0 and won the second<lb/>
game after being down 4-0 Godwin said.<lb/>
"We could have packed it in and folded up at<lb/>
that point, but they didn't. I was real proud of the<lb/>
club from the standpoint of the character of our<lb/>
players<lb/>
Maryland pitchers held the Pirates scoreless for<lb/>
IS innings straight dating back to game one, but<lb/>
finally in the sixth inning of game three down<lb/>
four runs, the bucs found their stride at the plate<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Freshman Drew Schieber singled to begin the<lb/>
inning. After Mollenhauer struck out, Jay Mattox<lb/>
stepped to the plate and delivered a two-run job,<lb/>
cutting the Terrapin lead down to two. Jake Smith<lb/>
later scored in the inning on a Jake Dean sac fly.<lb/>
Shane Matthews, in his first start since the<lb/>
first series of 2005, was shaky at times, going<lb/>
4.2 innings, giving up four runs off of four hits<lb/>
and two walks. Scott Andrews and Kevin Rhodes<lb/>
combined to hold Maryland scoreless for the rest<lb/>
of the game, allowing the Pirates to steal the game<lb/>
in the ninth.<lb/>
Rhodes was the beneficiary of the ninth inning<lb/>
rally as he picked up his first win of 2006.<lb/>
In game two, redshirt sophomore Dustin Sasser<lb/>
was the hard luck loser as he dazzled the Terrapins<lb/>
for seven innings only to watch Brett Tidball and<lb/>
Brett Cecil one-up him as the Pirates fell 1-0.<lb/>
Sasser, making his first start since undergo-<lb/>
ing Tommy John Surgery at the end of the 2004<lb/>
season, was very impressive, going 7.0 innings. The<lb/>
southpaw surrendered only five hits while striking<lb/>
out the same number.<lb/>
"Dustin was great today Godwin said.<lb/>
"I was certainly encouraged by that<lb/>
The one run Maryland mustered was unearned<lb/>
in the fifth inning, after freshman second baseman<lb/>
Chris Buss committed an error that later lead to the<lb/>
only run of the contest.<lb/>
The story of game one was the pitching per-<lb/>
formance of sophomore T.J. Hose. Hose struck<lb/>
out eight and walked only one batter, leading the<lb/>
Pirates to a 6-1 win to open the 2006 campaign.<lb/>
The Maryland native had the Terrapins wishing<lb/>
he were wearing red and black, as he pitched six<lb/>
strong innings before giving way to freshman<lb/>
Josh Dowdy.<lb/>
Maryland looked as if they would get to super<lb/>
sophomore in a big way as they began the fifth with<lb/>
runners on second and third with no one out after<lb/>
a throwing error by catcher Jake Smith.<lb/>
Hose, however, showed the poise of a major<lb/>
leaguer as he responded by striking out the next<lb/>
three Terp hitters to end the fifth.<lb/>
Infielder Stephen Batts was converted to out-<lb/>
fielder just hours before game one, and he immedi-<lb/>
ately made his presence felt, as he took a homerun<lb/>
away from leadoff batter Steve Braun to open the<lb/>
game. Batts then led the team at the plate on the<lb/>
day, collecting three hits.<lb/>
Adam Witter and Smith both homered for the<lb/>
Pirates (2-1).<lb/>
ECU returns to action Friday as they host the<lb/>
College of Charleston at 3 p.m. at Clark-Leclair<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
Price<lb/>
from page A7<lb/>
(think freestyle skiing) and weren't even part of<lb/>
the Olympic program as recently as 1988.<lb/>
Sixteen nations were represented on the start<lb/>
list for halfpipe, which says more about the tenacity<lb/>
of an American entrepreneur named Jake Burton<lb/>
than it does about the quality of the competition<lb/>
worldwide. As a teenager in Vermont in the late<lb/>
1960s, he figured there had to be a more entertain-<lb/>
ing way to get down a mountain than strapping<lb/>
on skis.<lb/>
Burton didn't invent the snowboard. A rough<lb/>
version, essentially two skis strapped together, was<lb/>
around almost 100 years ago. When Burton started<lb/>
shredding, it was on something called a "Snurfer a<lb/>
board with a rope attached to the front that surfers<lb/>
adopted to pass the time between days when it was<lb/>
too cold to ride waves.<lb/>
Convinced he was on the verge of the next big<lb/>
thing, Burton moved into the barn on a farm in<lb/>
Vermont, hired some friends, looked after the live-<lb/>
stock to pay the rent and started manufacturing 50<lb/>
snowboards a day. He sold 300 the first year.<lb/>
"Some genius I was Burton laughed Monday,<lb/>
about two hours before the U.S. women and plenty<lb/>
of the other competitors zoomed down the halfpipe<lb/>
on boards with his name writ large on the tips.<lb/>
Back then, few ski resorts in the U.S. allowed<lb/>
snowboarders on their slopes. First, they raised<lb/>
liability questions and then what Burton called<lb/>
"behavorial issues Lift operators weren't crazy<lb/>
about long hair and baggy clothes, and they liked<lb/>
the attitude least of all. But grudgingly, once the<lb/>
people in charge figured out kids who accompa-<lb/>
nied their parents would spend more money on<lb/>
the slopes than on the video games in the arcade,<lb/>
they started to come around.<lb/>
Burton's sales more than doubled every year<lb/>
for 15 straight years after that first one. His forays<lb/>
into Europe went nearly as well, and Japan and<lb/>
China are the latest frontier. As the number of<lb/>
skiers continues to drop steadily, the number of<lb/>
snowboarders has zoomed to the point where they<lb/>
make up one-third of all the visitors to a ski resort<lb/>
today. Almost overnight, as Burton likes to say,<lb/>
shredders went from being a threat to the saviors<lb/>
of the industry.<lb/>
But worldwide popularity isn't the same thing<lb/>
as worldwide competitiveness.<lb/>
As the gold and silver medalists enlightened<lb/>
and entertained a roomful of reporters with their<lb/>
take on American dominance, "USA! Represent-<lb/>
ing Bleiler called out at one point, or their taste<lb/>
in music, "Communicate" was the song Teter played<lb/>
on her iPod while shredding toward gold, "by a<lb/>
band you probably never heard of, called Strive<lb/>
Roots one of their coaches counted up the number<lb/>
of first-rate halfpipe venues back in America. He<lb/>
stopped at 20.<lb/>
The only halfpipe back in Poland, on the other<lb/>
hand, was constructed by a former engineer who<lb/>
quit his job to become that nation's coach and<lb/>
build it. His name is Wladyslaw Ligocki, and his<lb/>
see PRICE page A12<lb/>
Four Seasons<lb/>
of<lb/>
V<lb/>
It's Gonna Be One "HOT" Week!<lb/>
Sexual Responsibility Week<lb/>
FEBRUARY 14-16, 2006 11 am - 1 pm, Wright Plaza<lb/>
 Feb. 14 - Don't "Fall" for Anything<lb/>
Abstinence and Safe Sex Education<lb/>
 Feb. 15 - "Spring Fling"<lb/>
See how much you really know<lb/>
about sexual responsibility.<lb/>
  Feb. 16 - Love Shouldn't be "Cold"<lb/>
Sexual Assault Awareness<lb/>
FREE games and prizes!<lb/>
 Our Main Event - Feb. 16<lb/>
Family Feud - Battle of the Sexes<lb/>
Wright Auditorium, 7pm<lb/>
Sponsored by: ECU Healthy PIRATES,<lb/>
Health and Nutrition Education - Student Health Services,<lb/>
and Campus Wellness.<lb/>
Call 328.6794 for more information.<lb/>
RECREATIONAL<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
caiouna (252) 328-6387<lb/>
uwiymirr www.recserv.ecu.edu<lb/>
JUST PUSH<lb/>
i<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059393_0010"/><lb/>
PAGE A10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROUNIAN  SPORTS<lb/>
2-14-06<lb/>
GKreECT3<lb/>
Sign up for Campus Living and you<lb/>
could win one of these great prizes! <lb/>
 $750 Travel Gift Card  5 <lb/>
 iPod Nano <lb/>
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American Eagle Outfitters Gift Cards <lb/>
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 $250 Welcome Back Pizza Party <lb/>
for you and your friends<lb/>
For more information, please visit<lb/>
www.ecu.edueasyliving<lb/>
(?G83S(3<lb/>
 , <lb/>
the Ledonia Wright Cufturaf Center-presents<lb/>
m a s the Ledonia Wright Cultural tenter-presents s<lb/>
(Black 'History Month<lb/>
mS a celebration of events<lb/>
Poetry Siam featuring "tfBO's 'Def'PoetJ Ivy<lb/>
February 2nd - 7:00 pm in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
TamedAutfior Craig Mar berry<lb/>
February 15th - 7:30 pm in Room 244 Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Tribute to the (ate Tr. 'Andrew A. 'Best<lb/>
February, 21st - 6:30 pm in the Murphy Center<lb/>
African American 'Reading Circfe<lb/>
 Arrangements for all talent were<lb/>
February 23rd - 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm Ledonia Wright Cultural Center Gallery made fhroughSphinx Management<lb/>
Group, a National Association for<lb/>
Campus Activities Member<lb/>
J Ivy<lb/>
In the beginning there was<lb/>
the word, the foundation of<lb/>
all forms of art. And when<lb/>
it comes to the art of<lb/>
Poetry or new age Spoken<lb/>
Word, J Ivy has truly<lb/>
served as a poetic pioneer.<lb/>
Not only was the Chicago<lb/>
bred poet one of the first<lb/>
to grace the stage of the<lb/>
Award Winning HBO Russell Simmons Def Poetry Series,<lb/>
but he was asked to return to the show for two encore<lb/>
performances, where he received standing ovations on<lb/>
each of his appearances.<lb/>
Craig Marberry<lb/>
In Te9<lb/>
ruar<lb/>
y<lb/>
For more information contact:<lb/>
Ledonia Wright Cultural Center<lb/>
Bloxton House,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858-4353 USA<lb/>
Office: 252.328.6495<lb/>
Fax: 252.328.0370<lb/>
www.ecu.edulwcc<lb/>
Craig Marberry is author of Cuttin' Up:<lb/>
Wit and Wisdom from Black Barber<lb/>
Shops, Crowns: Portraits of Black<lb/>
Women in Church Hats, and Spirit of<lb/>
Harlem: A Portrait of America's Most<lb/>
Exciting Neighborhood. A former<lb/>
television reporter, Marberry has<lb/>
written for The Washington Post and<lb/>
Essence magazine. He's a graduate of<lb/>
Morehouse College and earned his<lb/>
Master's from the Columbia University Graduate School<lb/>
of Journalism.<lb/>
Individuals requesting accommodation under the Americans with<lb/>
Disabilities Act (ADA) should contact the Department for Disability<lb/>
Support Services at least 48 hours prior to the event at (252) 328-6799<lb/>
voice(252) J28-0899 TTY.<lb/>
m<lb/>
Ledonia Wright<lb/>
 Cultural Center<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059393_0011"/><lb/>
2-14-06<lb/>
CLASSIFIED<lb/>
Page A11<lb/>
TUESDAY February 14 2006<lb/>
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The Buccaneer is back! The ECU<lb/>
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GREEK PERSONALS<lb/>
Attention all Creeks: Dollar Night<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059393_0012"/><lb/>
PAGE A12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  SPORTS<lb/>
2-14-06<lb/>
WOmen from page A7 SnOWbOardJIig from page A8<lb/>
already pulled ahead to an 8-0<lb/>
lead, but within a few more min-<lb/>
utes, gained even more ground<lb/>
and sat 16-points ahead, 22-6.<lb/>
Memphis, however, wasn't<lb/>
going to go home quietly; a for-<lb/>
midable 23-15 run closed the gap<lb/>
to eight as the score stood at 37-29<lb/>
at halftime.<lb/>
The second half began with<lb/>
momentum still on the side of<lb/>
the Tigers as they cut the lead<lb/>
even thinner, reaching to within<lb/>
five points of the Lady Pirates.<lb/>
However, ECU tore off a 15-4<lb/>
run lead by freshman forward<lb/>
Jessica Honesty and Cherie Mills,<lb/>
the night's leading scorer with<lb/>
21 points accompanied by eight<lb/>
boards.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates were stingy<lb/>
on defense from that point on,<lb/>
holding the Tigers at bay and<lb/>
allowing a mere 12 points in the<lb/>
latter part of the second half.<lb/>
ECU would never look back, win-<lb/>
ning the game 74-54.<lb/>
Capping off the week was a<lb/>
seemingly normal game against<lb/>
UAB (13-10, 6-6) that turned in<lb/>
to one that Pirate fans don't see<lb/>
on a regular basis.<lb/>
Never parting by more than<lb/>
six points but changing leads<lb/>
17 times, the Pirates and Blaz-<lb/>
ers fought until the final horn<lb/>
- four times.<lb/>
During regulation, the two<lb/>
teams played on par with each<lb/>
other, entering the half tied-up<lb/>
at 38-38. Both teams scored 35<lb/>
points in the second half, send-<lb/>
ing the game to overtime with<lb/>
the score at 73-73.<lb/>
The first two overtime peri-<lb/>
ods ended with both teams scor-<lb/>
ing six and nine points in each<lb/>
period respectively. Both teams<lb/>
had a chance at the win in each<lb/>
period; UAB's Crystal McFadden<lb/>
missed a mid-range jumper in the<lb/>
first period, ECU'S LaCoya Terry<lb/>
hit the front of the rim on a six-<lb/>
footer in the second.<lb/>
In the third overtime period,<lb/>
senior guard Ebonee Downey<lb/>
came up big with 24 seconds to<lb/>
go, hitting a three to tie the game<lb/>
at 94-94. On the ensuing pos-<lb/>
session, UAB's Carmen Guzman<lb/>
drew a foul from Cherie Mills<lb/>
with 0.6 seconds left to send her<lb/>
to the free throw line for two<lb/>
shots. She converted both and<lb/>
sealed the win for the Blazers,<lb/>
96-94.<lb/>
Mills captured her 20th<lb/>
double-double of the season in<lb/>
the losing effort and was one<lb/>
of four Pirates to reach double<lb/>
figures. Senior LaToya Horton<lb/>
grabbed a game-high 14 rebounds<lb/>
and Terry reached a career-high<lb/>
in assists with six.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are on the<lb/>
road again this week. They travel<lb/>
to El-Paso Friday to take on UTEP<lb/>
(13-11, 5-7) and face Tulane (11-<lb/>
10, 5-7) Sunday in New Orleans.<lb/>
Only two games remain before<lb/>
the C-USA tournament, both<lb/>
of which will take place in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Price<lb/>
from page A9<lb/>
daughter and nephews fill out the<lb/>
Polish squad.<lb/>
Vinogradova, meanwhile,<lb/>
considers herself lucky to have<lb/>
grown up in Novosobirsk, Russia,<lb/>
where there was a halfpipe already<lb/>
built by the time her gymnastics<lb/>
coaches suggested that at age 15<lb/>
she find another route to the<lb/>
Olympics.<lb/>
"It is maybe half as long<lb/>
as this one she said wearily,<lb/>
nodding in the direction of the<lb/>
Bardonecchia venue, "but better<lb/>
than none at all<lb/>
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run immediately before Teter.<lb/>
"So I was like, 'Whoa, I'm going<lb/>
to have to step it up Then, my<lb/>
coach, Bud, was like, 'OK, victory<lb/>
lap 1 was like, 'No way, a victory<lb/>
lap 1 just wanted to step it up<lb/>
and do my thing and go as big as<lb/>
possible and totally represent. My<lb/>
brother, Abe, has helped me with<lb/>
my style so much throughout my<lb/>
career. Thank you family<lb/>
Bleiler's 43.4 on her final<lb/>
run allowed her to leapfrog<lb/>
Buaas. The Snowmass Village,<lb/>
Colo resident, had been in<lb/>
third place after Buaas surprised<lb/>
even herself by knocking Clark<lb/>
off the medal stand with the run<lb/>
of her life.<lb/>
"All of us were hoping for<lb/>
a (U.S.) sweep said Bleiler,<lb/>
who was kept out of the 2002<lb/>
Olympics on a tiebreaker.<lb/>
"But Kjersti stepped it up.<lb/>
She rode an amazing race. She<lb/>
deserves it. It's disappoint-<lb/>
ing because Kelly and Elena<lb/>
(Hight, who finished sixth) are<lb/>
amazing riders, too   On any<lb/>
given day, any of us could have<lb/>
gotten on the podium<lb/>
Buaas admitted she "never<lb/>
thought it was possible" to pre-<lb/>
vent an American sweep. The U.S.<lb/>
team had the rest of the rider's<lb/>
right where they wanted them.<lb/>
"We definitely were in the<lb/>
other teams' heads he said.<lb/>
"When these girls come<lb/>
rolling into a halfpipe compe-<lb/>
tition, we're rolling in like a<lb/>
freight train. It scares the crap<lb/>
out of everybody. You see the<lb/>
way they ride. It's head and<lb/>
shoulders above the rest of the<lb/>
competitors<lb/>
It was Teter who led the way<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
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