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<pb facs="00059401_0001"/>
www.theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Volume 81 Number 52<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
February 28, 2006<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
Connection<lb/>
bridges<lb/>
the gap<lb/>
A tool for campus<lb/>
involvement<lb/>
KIMBERLY BELLAMY<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The Pirate Connection Pro-<lb/>
gram is an innovative way for<lb/>
students to connect with a vari-<lb/>
ety of organizations and clubs<lb/>
and a good source for organiza-<lb/>
tions to spread to word about<lb/>
their group.<lb/>
The program started<lb/>
last summer as a jtool for<lb/>
incoming freshmen to gain a<lb/>
sense of belonging to the uni-<lb/>
versity before the start of the<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
A survey was created with<lb/>
a large variety of organizations<lb/>
and clubs available at ECU to<lb/>
find out what types of orga-<lb/>
nizations students would find<lb/>
Interesting.<lb/>
Approximately 86 percent of<lb/>
incoming freshmen completed<lb/>
the survey last summer, which<lb/>
suggests that a large number of<lb/>
students want to become active<lb/>
in some type of activity outside<lb/>
of their class work.<lb/>
Al Smith, assistant vice chan-<lb/>
cellor for student development,<lb/>
said, "This reflects a national<lb/>
trend that students are looking<lb/>
to get involved in civic and social<lb/>
responsibilities s<lb/>
Following the survey 8<lb/>
responses, the organizations <lb/>
send out a letter to let students <lb/>
know more information about<lb/>
their organization, usually<lb/>
within 14 days of the start of<lb/>
the school year.<lb/>
Rather than just informing<lb/>
students during orientation and<lb/>
the Get a Clue program that is<lb/>
normally during the first month<lb/>
of the fall semester, the Pirate<lb/>
Connection is an additional<lb/>
method available to spread the<lb/>
word about these organiza-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Smith said that according<lb/>
to research on retention rates,<lb/>
the first few weeks of school are<lb/>
crucial, in making the student<lb/>
feel welcome.<lb/>
"We want our students to<lb/>
be involved in educational,<lb/>
purposeful activities right at<lb/>
the start of their college career<lb/>
Smith said.<lb/>
Also, commuter students<lb/>
andor students who live more<lb/>
than 100 miles away have<lb/>
lower retention rates. Exposing<lb/>
these students to activities and<lb/>
organizations can help increase<lb/>
or stabilize enrollment.<lb/>
Being a part of an organiza-<lb/>
tion is a "life shaping" experi-<lb/>
ence in college and is "like a<lb/>
relationship in which you have<lb/>
to be involved and engaged<lb/>
Smith said.<lb/>
Upperclassmen should use<lb/>
the Pirate Connection as a<lb/>
method of getting involved in<lb/>
more organizations or joining a<lb/>
group for the first time.<lb/>
This program can also be<lb/>
used as a recruiting method for<lb/>
clubs and organizations wanting<lb/>
to increase their membership.<lb/>
One of the big problems with<lb/>
this is letting all the organiza-<lb/>
tions know about the program<lb/>
and what a big asset it could be to<lb/>
them, according to Smith. Smith<lb/>
said that students expressed<lb/>
interest in all clubs that were on<lb/>
the survey.<lb/>
Last summer, about 36 out<lb/>
of 280 organizations and clubs<lb/>
were listed on the Pirate Connec-<lb/>
tion survey. Smith said they are<lb/>
trying to increase that number<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Funding is also available to<lb/>
new organizations or to clubs<lb/>
who have activities planned for<lb/>
their group.<lb/>
Organizations still have the<lb/>
opportunity to receive fund-<lb/>
ing and to let the student body<lb/>
know about their organization<lb/>
by being a part of the Pirate<lb/>
Connection.<lb/>
To receive funding for<lb/>
your organization, register<lb/>
with the Office of Organiza-<lb/>
tions and Activities by Feb. 28.<lb/>
Organizations have until March<lb/>
15 to get on the Pirate Connec-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
'I Hope They Serve Beer in Heir<lb/>
Tucker Max is an icon to<lb/>
many college students<lb/>
EUSA BIZZOTTO<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Though Max made a best-seller out of partying, he also holds various degrees from multiple schools.<lb/>
Senior wins $1,000<lb/>
scholarship for 2006<lb/>
Internet legend Max Tucker<lb/>
has taken his ability of story-tell-<lb/>
ing a step further.<lb/>
With the continued increase<lb/>
of an already impressive fan<lb/>
base, Max compiled a book of 27<lb/>
of his most outlandish personal<lb/>
exploits and titled it Hope They<lb/>
Serve Beer in Hell.<lb/>
The book, which was pub-<lb/>
lished earlier this year, chronicles<lb/>
Max's wild stories of belligerence<lb/>
and debauchery and invites read-<lb/>
ers to experience each tale as if<lb/>
they were right there with Max<lb/>
every step of the way.<lb/>
Interestingly enough, the<lb/>
premise for the book stemmed<lb/>
from a bet while Max was work-<lb/>
ing toward hisJ.D. at Duke Law<lb/>
School. As a result of the bet,<lb/>
TUckerMax.com was created and<lb/>
once Max had gained somewhat<lb/>
of a following, he began to post<lb/>
what were originally e-mails to<lb/>
his friends relaying his experi-<lb/>
ences the night before. Max's fol-<lb/>
lowing increased significantly as<lb/>
a result and the stories of exces-<lb/>
sive drinking, relentless partying<lb/>
and sexual conquests ultimately<lb/>
transcribed into his book that Is<lb/>
now climbing the New York Times<lb/>
Best-Seller list.<lb/>
Naturally, Max has critics,<lb/>
especially those college students<lb/>
that make up most of his fan<lb/>
base who see their own weekend<lb/>
excursions in his tales. However,<lb/>
it is Max's writing style and unde-<lb/>
niable wit that have catapulted<lb/>
him to success.<lb/>
Max does not let his readers<lb/>
forget his ivy-like education. He<lb/>
holds a B.A. from the University<lb/>
of Chicago, which he achieved in<lb/>
three years with honors, no less,<lb/>
and aJ.D. from Duke Law School,<lb/>
which he received on a full aca-<lb/>
demic scholarship. Although<lb/>
many see irony in Max's situa-<lb/>
tion, noting his divergence from<lb/>
these degrees, it is he who made<lb/>
the most out of simply being<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
When asked about the claims<lb/>
that the true message of the book<lb/>
is for one to be himself, Max<lb/>
responded accordingly.<lb/>
"The message developed on<lb/>
its own. I really just don't let<lb/>
other people dictate my behav-<lb/>
ior said Max.<lb/>
It is apparent that Max is<lb/>
highly interested in pleasing<lb/>
himself before others in reading<lb/>
his accounts and it is difficult<lb/>
to see him strive to produce a<lb/>
theme of morality throughout<lb/>
the book while he finds pure<lb/>
joy in making fun of fat women,<lb/>
for example, and having no<lb/>
regard for the consequences of<lb/>
his actions. Still, many see an<lb/>
underlying message that is more<lb/>
telling of Max than his actual<lb/>
excursions.<lb/>
Regardless of the message,<lb/>
Max has achieved undeni-<lb/>
able success. He has gained an<lb/>
extraordinary fan base in both<lb/>
men and women. Pictures on<lb/>
Max's Web site show military<lb/>
men overseas holding a sign that<lb/>
reads "Max Tucker for President<lb/>
He has received recognition by<lb/>
The Wall Street Journal, The<lb/>
New York Times and Playboy. A<lb/>
according to his publicist, "The<lb/>
Daily Show Jay Leno, David<lb/>
Letterman and Jimmy Kimmel<lb/>
see BEER page A3<lb/>
Organization receives funds<lb/>
RCZKO<lb/>
Scholarship given by<lb/>
Women in Transportation<lb/>
KIMBERLY BELLAMY<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Samantha Ficzko, ECU senior,<lb/>
was awarded a $1,000 Women<lb/>
in Transportation scholarship<lb/>
by the Women in Transporta-<lb/>
tion Seminar North Carolina<lb/>
Chapter.<lb/>
The Women in Transporta-<lb/>
tion organization is dedicated to<lb/>
the advancement of women in<lb/>
the fields of transportation and<lb/>
urban planning, which are both<lb/>
heavily dominated by men.<lb/>
Ficzko was a strong candidate<lb/>
for the scholarship with a double<lb/>
major in urban and regional<lb/>
planning and communication<lb/>
with a concentration in public<lb/>
relations.<lb/>
The requirements for the<lb/>
scholarship include being a<lb/>
I female studying transportation<lb/>
 or a closely related field, such as<lb/>
I planning. The student was also<lb/>
I required to submit an application<lb/>
I letter including their experience<lb/>
and education related to trans-<lb/>
portation and their goals and<lb/>
ambitions for the future.<lb/>
The scholarship was applied<lb/>
to Ficzko's spring 2006 tuition<lb/>
bill. Ficzko was also nominated<lb/>
for the Women in Transporta-<lb/>
tion undergraduate leadership<lb/>
award.<lb/>
Dr. Mohamad Kashef, assis-<lb/>
tant professor in the department<lb/>
of planning, gave her the nomi-<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
Kashef was also gave her the<lb/>
chance to apply for the $1,000<lb/>
scholarship by giving her details<lb/>
and encouraging her to apply.<lb/>
Ficzko was inspired to apply<lb/>
for this scholarship after hear-<lb/>
see SENIOR page A3<lb/>
ECU VOICE and the Office of Student Experiences presented a check on Sunday for $14,000.<lb/>
It was received by Student Life, Family Violence Program of Pitt County, the Mayor and the<lb/>
Chief of Police. The check was donated to the Family Violence Program in honor of V-Day, a<lb/>
global movement to stop violence against women and girls through the performance of The<lb/>
Vagina Monologues. V-Day generates awareness, raises money and promotes creative events.<lb/>
How much does your GPA really matter?<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
(CareerBuilder.com)  Stud-<lb/>
ies have shown college graduates<lb/>
earn up to 75 percent more than<lb/>
people with just a high school<lb/>
diploma. So students earn good<lb/>
grades, study for the SATs and rack<lb/>
up an impressive list of extracur-<lb/>
ricular in their quest for that oh-<lb/>
so-important acceptance letter.<lb/>
But now that you're in, can<lb/>
you relax? Just how important<lb/>
are your college grades to future<lb/>
employers? Are those long hours<lb/>
at the library and those all-night<lb/>
study sessions really worth it?<lb/>
Keeping your grade point<lb/>
average (GPA) up can be vital to<lb/>
your academic success. Slacking<lb/>
off could land you on academic<lb/>
probation or the university could<lb/>
yank your scholarship. Plus,<lb/>
according to the U.S. News and<lb/>
World Report, maintaining a high<lb/>
GPA is crucial to those who dream<lb/>
of attending top graduate schools<lb/>
like Harvard medical school (3.8<lb/>
average GPA), Yale law (3.9) or<lb/>
Stanford business school (3.6).<lb/>
Thankfully, most employ-<lb/>
ers don't enforce these same<lb/>
academic standards on their<lb/>
applicants. According to the<lb/>
National Association of Colleges<lb/>
and Employers' "Job Outlook<lb/>
2005" survey, 70 percent of<lb/>
hiring managers do report screen-<lb/>
ing applicants based on their GPA,<lb/>
but the largest group says<lb/>
they use a 3.0 as their cutoff.<lb/>
All other factors being<lb/>
equal, an employer is more<lb/>
likely to choose the candidate<lb/>
with stellar grades, but that<lb/>
doesn't mean a so-so student<lb/>
can't land a competitive job<lb/>
with a prestigious company.<lb/>
Employers understand<lb/>
that students have different<lb/>
circumstances. Employers do<lb/>
take a university's reputation<lb/>
into consideration, but they<lb/>
also understand working to<lb/>
pay your way through school,<lb/>
extracurricular involvement and<lb/>
extenuating circumstances can<lb/>
lower your academic marks.<lb/>
Having relevant experience<lb/>
like internships is key to get-<lb/>
ting ahead in today's cutthroat<lb/>
job market. Luckily, a superior<lb/>
GPA from a top-ranked uni-<lb/>
versity isn't required to get an<lb/>
internship, according to the<lb/>
Princeton Review. Internship<lb/>
coordinators look for candidates<lb/>
with a go-getter attitude, .some-<lb/>
thing that can be expressed in a<lb/>
cover letter and interview-not a<lb/>
resume or transcript.<lb/>
Although employers may no<lb/>
automatically cut you for your<lb/>
low grades, leaving your GPA off<lb/>
of your resume completely may<lb/>
do you more harm than good. If<lb/>
you're a new grad and omit your<lb/>
GPA from your resume, you might<lb/>
find employers warily wondering<lb/>
how terrible your grades really<lb/>
are. One career adviser even said<lb/>
if there's no GPA on a resume,<lb/>
he automatically assumes it's<lb/>
under a 3.0. And it should go<lb/>
without saying that you should<lb/>
never lie and tell an employer<lb/>
you have better grades than<lb/>
you really do.<lb/>
If your GPA falls below<lb/>
your dream employer's mini-<lb/>
mum standards, you do have<lb/>
options. Again, leaving the<lb/>
figure out isn't wise, but you<lb/>
should emphasize your academic<lb/>
strengths as much as possible.<lb/>
Luckily, some business schools<lb/>
and other graduate programs pay<lb/>
closer attention to the grades you<lb/>
earned during your junior and<lb/>
senior years than to your overall<lb/>
transcript .This can really help out<lb/>
people who are struggling to raise<lb/>
their averages after a rough<lb/>
transition into college life.<lb/>
Another option is to list your<lb/>
major GPA, or your average<lb/>
grades for only the classes<lb/>
taken in your major.<lb/>
Collegegrad.com offers<lb/>
these tips for choosing which<lb/>
GPA to include: If your major<lb/>
GPA is higher than a 3.0,<lb/>
and your overall grades fall below<lb/>
 that cutoff, only list your major<lb/>
average. If both averages are<lb/>
higher than a 3.0 and your<lb/>
major GPA is at least three-tenths<lb/>
of a point higher than your<lb/>
overall average, feel free to<lb/>
list both. Always round<lb/>
to the nearest tenth of point.<lb/>
And remember what<lb/>
President George W. Bush told<lb/>
a group of graduates in 2001:<lb/>
"To all the C-students, I say,<lb/>
you too can be president<lb/>
of the United States<lb/>
INSIDE I News: A2 I Classifieds: A121 Opinion: A5 I Student Life: A61 Sports: A8<lb/>
<pb facs="00059401_0002"/><lb/>
Page A2 news@theeastcarollnian.com 252.328.6366<lb/>
NEWS<lb/>
RACHEL KING News Editor CLAIRE MURPHY Assistant News Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY February 28,2006<lb/>
Announcements:<lb/>
Cultural Outreach<lb/>
season schedule<lb/>
The S. Rudolph Alexander<lb/>
Performing Arts Series, ECU'S<lb/>
flagship performing arts series,<lb/>
annually presents a season of<lb/>
nine of the world's top orchestras,<lb/>
ballet companies, jazz artists,<lb/>
soloists, modern dance<lb/>
ensembles, Broadway shows,<lb/>
opera companies, chamber<lb/>
ensembles and pop artists.<lb/>
The Family Fare Series features<lb/>
kid-centered cultural excursions<lb/>
for the entire family. This series<lb/>
features four curriculum-based<lb/>
performances by the nation's<lb/>
finest young-audience touring<lb/>
companies. The season is<lb/>
currently underway and will<lb/>
continue through April.<lb/>
For more information, call 328-<lb/>
4788 or 1-800-ECU-ARTS<lb/>
2006 majors fair<lb/>
Wednesday, March 1 from 10:30<lb/>
a.m. -1:30 p.m. on first floor Bate.<lb/>
Take another step toward your<lb/>
career decision. There are more<lb/>
than 100 majors at ECU; attend<lb/>
the fair to learn more about them.<lb/>
This program is sponsored<lb/>
by the Academic Enrichment<lb/>
Center, the Academic Advising<lb/>
and Support Center, the Career<lb/>
Center, Campus Living and the<lb/>
Office of Student Experiences.<lb/>
For ticket information, contact<lb/>
the Academic Enrichment Center<lb/>
at 328-2645 or visit Brewster B-<lb/>
103.<lb/>
Storybook Theatre,<lb/>
My HeroReachlng<lb/>
for the Stars!<lb/>
Back by popular demandl<lb/>
Following their successful debut<lb/>
at Wrlgrlt Auditorium last year,<lb/>
ECU'S Storybook Theatre returns<lb/>
March 4 at 2 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium with stories about<lb/>
ordinary youngsters who make<lb/>
extraordinary contributions to the<lb/>
world. Purchase subscriptions<lb/>
by Oct. 8 for best options. Family<lb/>
Pass (four tickets to each show)<lb/>
$96, Public Subscription (one<lb/>
adult ticket to each show) $30,<lb/>
ECU facultystaff Subscription<lb/>
(one adult ticket to each snow)<lb/>
$25, ECU StudentYouth<lb/>
Subscription (one student<lb/>
youth ticket to each show) $20.<lb/>
Advance individual tickets, if<lb/>
available, may be purchased<lb/>
beginning Oct. 17 and cost $9<lb/>
public, $8 ECU facultystaff, $6<lb/>
ECU studentsyouth. All tickets<lb/>
at the door are $9. Tickets are<lb/>
required. For more information,<lb/>
contact the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
at 328-4788 or 1-800-ECU-<lb/>
ARTS.<lb/>
Bachelor of<lb/>
Science degree<lb/>
In Rehabilitation<lb/>
Services<lb/>
March 15 is the application<lb/>
deadline for students<lb/>
interested in pursuing<lb/>
a BS degree In Rehabilitation<lb/>
Services. Applications<lb/>
can be obtained online at<lb/>
ecu.edurehb or from the<lb/>
Department of Rehabilitation<lb/>
Studies, 312 Belk<lb/>
Building.If you have<lb/>
any questions regarding the<lb/>
degree, contact Dr. Martha<lb/>
Chapin at 328-4424.<lb/>
PRSSA teams up<lb/>
with MAC Cosmetics<lb/>
ECU'S Public Relations<lb/>
Student Society of America<lb/>
is bringing MAC Cosmetics<lb/>
to Wright Plaza March 2 from<lb/>
10 a.m. - 2 p.m. The Wright<lb/>
display is part of the PRSSA-<lb/>
sponsored campaign to help<lb/>
promote MAC'S Culturebloom<lb/>
Makeover Event March 4 at<lb/>
Belk's MAC counter In Colonial<lb/>
Mall of Greenville. Students can<lb/>
schedule appointments and<lb/>
browse the limited edition spring<lb/>
line at the PRSSA table outside<lb/>
of Wright Plaza. Students can<lb/>
begin scheduling appointments<lb/>
now by calling the MAC counter<lb/>
at 758-7540.<lb/>
Japan Center East<lb/>
hosts "Trip to Japan"<lb/>
On March 1, Japan Center East<lb/>
is holding a free presentation<lb/>
called "Experience Japan from<lb/>
5:30 - 7:30 p.m. at the Willis<lb/>
Building. The event will include<lb/>
a slide presentation on Japan<lb/>
and Information on an economy<lb/>
trip to Japan being offered in<lb/>
2006. For more Information or to<lb/>
reserve a seat, contact Chlkako<lb/>
Massey at 737-1352.<lb/>
State:<lb/>
N.C. electronic health records<lb/>
SAUGERT1ES, NY. (AP) - Some day,<lb/>
paper records will disappear from the<lb/>
doctor's office, scrawled prescriptions<lb/>
slips will be history, patient histories<lb/>
will pop up on screens in seconds.<lb/>
For now, high-tech access looks<lb/>
more like what Dr. Eugene Heslin has<lb/>
at his family practice in the Hudson<lb/>
Valley. From a laptop computer on his<lb/>
desk, he checks a cancer patient's<lb/>
hematology report from one lab and<lb/>
an X-ray report on another patient;<lb/>
tasks that used to require phone<lb/>
calls or paper files. The beauty of the<lb/>
system Is I can pull lab data for two<lb/>
or three different hospitals Heslin<lb/>
said. The doctor's office is involved in<lb/>
a federally funded effort to figure out<lb/>
how to create a system in which every<lb/>
American has an electronic medical<lb/>
record. The Bush administration<lb/>
wants to make the conversion by<lb/>
2014, aiming to reduce medical errors<lb/>
and save lives. But first researchers<lb/>
in the Hudson Valley and 11 other<lb/>
areas around the country are trying<lb/>
to answer some basic questions: How<lb/>
will the system work? How will a lab in<lb/>
Wichita communicate with a doctor in<lb/>
Washington? How do you encourage<lb/>
doctors to sign on? "We do believe<lb/>
this Is going to happen said Neil de<lb/>
Crescenzo, a vice president with IBM<lb/>
Business Consulting Services, which<lb/>
is involved the project "It's just going<lb/>
to happen in smaller chunks, which<lb/>
hopefully will become larger and<lb/>
larger chunks<lb/>
In November, the Department of<lb/>
Health and Human Services awarded<lb/>
$18.6 million in contracts to four<lb/>
groups to create electronic health<lb/>
information network prototypes. The<lb/>
IBM-led consortium is working in the<lb/>
Hudson Valley and two areas'in North<lb/>
Carolina, in Rockingham County and<lb/>
Research Triangle Park. The hospitals<lb/>
aren't trying to shirk away from their<lb/>
responsibility to do this.<lb/>
Given the cost and controversies, the<lb/>
government Is taking a step-by-step<lb/>
approach. IBM in the Hudson Valley is<lb/>
working with the Taconic Independent<lb/>
Physicians Association, which already<lb/>
Is rolling out a secure, Web-based<lb/>
system that allows Heslin and some<lb/>
500 other doctors share electronic<lb/>
information with participating labs and<lb/>
hospitals. Federal officials hope these<lb/>
sorts of incentives will spur doctors<lb/>
and hospitals to make the changeover.<lb/>
Dr. David Brailer, appointed by Bush to<lb/>
coordinate the government's health<lb/>
information technology, said using<lb/>
taxpayer money to "subsidize" the<lb/>
changeover is not being considered.<lb/>
'We basically are saying that this<lb/>
is going to cost a lot of money de<lb/>
Crescenzo said. "But then again, It<lb/>
took a lot of money to build out the<lb/>
infrastructure for the banking system.<lb/>
But I don't see anybody complaining<lb/>
about that The yearlong contract<lb/>
runs through the fall. Brailer hopes the<lb/>
government will be closer to a system<lb/>
architecture that allows hospitals, labs<lb/>
and doctors to share information.<lb/>
Consumer access and security issues<lb/>
are also being looked at he said. Then<lb/>
government officials will fund another<lb/>
round of demonstration projects. "A<lb/>
lot of communities are on the fence<lb/>
watching this, seeing where they need<lb/>
to head said Dr. John Blair, president<lb/>
and chief executive officer of Taconic<lb/>
IPA. "So this is going to have a big<lb/>
Impact<lb/>
College high school<lb/>
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - Sixteen-year-<lb/>
old Lilians Marquez admits that<lb/>
starting at noon instead of the more<lb/>
traditional 8 am. was one of the Initial<lb/>
perks of Middle College High School<lb/>
at Durham Technical Community<lb/>
College. But when the 11th-grader<lb/>
from Hillsborough learned she'd<lb/>
have to come In early to take college<lb/>
courses through Durham Tech, she<lb/>
wasn't deterred from staying. "I like<lb/>
the smaller classes said Marquez,<lb/>
who went to Orange High School last<lb/>
year. "It's not as crowded. I like that"<lb/>
Marquez and about 50 other students<lb/>
from the Orange County, Chapel Hill-<lb/>
Carrboro and Durham school systems<lb/>
are reaping the benefits of classes with<lb/>
as few as three students at the school,<lb/>
which is housed at the community<lb/>
college's Durham campus.<lb/>
And students say the fledgling program<lb/>
has blossomed from something a<lb/>
little bit disorganized to a haven for<lb/>
students who crave smaller classes<lb/>
and better relationships with teachers.<lb/>
"Although it was a little disorganized<lb/>
at the beginning, the faculty are doing<lb/>
a good job of getting this together<lb/>
said Mario Boni, 17. "It's working out all<lb/>
right" A collaboration among the three<lb/>
local school districts, Middle College<lb/>
opened, it seemed, almost on a whim.<lb/>
Planners didn't hire a principal until<lb/>
late spring, leaving little time to recruit<lb/>
students. The school had room for 100<lb/>
juniors, but only enrolled 38 by the time<lb/>
of the opening.<lb/>
By January, the school's enrollment<lb/>
had jumped to 48, and officials hope<lb/>
to have at least twice that next year.<lb/>
Of the 48,10 are from Chapel Hill-<lb/>
Carrboro, 11 are from Orange County<lb/>
and 27 are from Durham. School<lb/>
officials are now enrolling a new class<lb/>
of juniors for next fall, along with more<lb/>
seniors. "It's about getting the word<lb/>
out Principal Charles Nolan said. "We<lb/>
couldve waited a year to open, and<lb/>
fill this whole school up. But we are<lb/>
ambitious, and it turned out great It's a<lb/>
great program Students at the school<lb/>
are on a block schedule, meaning they<lb/>
take four longer-length classes each<lb/>
semester. The students have access<lb/>
to the same Durham Tech resources<lb/>
as college students. They research in<lb/>
the library, eat lunch in the cafeteria<lb/>
and use the computer labs. The first<lb/>
semester, the school was a little bit<lb/>
more like their old high schools.<lb/>
The students took only high school<lb/>
courses In four classrooms in a<lb/>
Durham Tech hallway. They all arrived<lb/>
at 12:30 and left at 5:30. Keith Sweezy<lb/>
takes psychology and trigonometry<lb/>
through Durham Tech. The classes,<lb/>
he said, are similar to ones he used to<lb/>
take at East Chapel Hill High School,<lb/>
except he's earning college credit.<lb/>
And his English class, which is a<lb/>
high school course, has only eight<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"At East, it could get up to 30 people<lb/>
said Sweezy, 17. "It's a lot easier to have<lb/>
seminar types of course discussions<lb/>
With the potential to take eight college<lb/>
courses a year, students could, in<lb/>
theory, come close to earning an<lb/>
associate's degree while in high<lb/>
school, Nolan noted. Unlike college,<lb/>
however, the classes are free to the<lb/>
students. "Once I tell parents, they're<lb/>
like, 'Why havent I heard this before?'<lb/>
 Nolan said. "Once they know, they<lb/>
dont need any more convincing<lb/>
National:<lb/>
Church shooting<lb/>
DETROIT (AP) - A man opened fire<lb/>
at a church service Sunday, killing<lb/>
an 18-year-old woman and wounding<lb/>
her child before shooting another<lb/>
man outside, according to police and<lb/>
broadcast reports.<lb/>
Second Deputy Police Chief James<lb/>
Tate confirmed that three people<lb/>
were shot, one fatally, at Zion Hope<lb/>
Missionary Baptist Church, about<lb/>
11 a.m.<lb/>
The child did not have life-threatening<lb/>
injuries, WWJ-AM reported. The third<lb/>
victim, who was shot when trying to<lb/>
protect his wife from a carjacking<lb/>
attempt by the shooter, was in critical<lb/>
condition, the station said.<lb/>
Church members helped police<lb/>
identify a suspect, Tate said. Officers<lb/>
were looking for Kevin Lorenzo<lb/>
Collins, 24, who is considered armed<lb/>
and dangerous.<lb/>
The shooting was the result of a<lb/>
domestic dispute, Tate said.<lb/>
"Church had begun, and shots rang<lb/>
out" he said. After summoning help,<lb/>
church members continued the<lb/>
service.<lb/>
They didn't let this incident stop the<lb/>
reason why they came to church he<lb/>
said. They came to worship<lb/>
People In the news<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - The Sopranos"<lb/>
will definitely be taken out next year,<lb/>
the show's creator said, though he<lb/>
cant say it wont hit the big screen<lb/>
at some point.<lb/>
"It may be that In two or three or four<lb/>
years I could be sitting around and get<lb/>
an idea for a really great 'Sopranos'<lb/>
movie David Chase told The New<lb/>
York Times in a joint Interview with<lb/>
James Gandolflni, star of the HBO<lb/>
series. "I don't think that will happen.<lb/>
But If one morning somebody woke<lb/>
up and said this would make a really<lb/>
good, concise, contained 'Sopranos'<lb/>
story, I wouldnt rule that out<lb/>
Chase, also the series' executive<lb/>
producer, and Gandolflni reflected<lb/>
on the show and the trajectory of<lb/>
Its central character, mobster Tony<lb/>
Soprano, in an article appearing in<lb/>
Sunday's editions.<lb/>
Gandolfinl's character never crossed<lb/>
the line into killing family members,<lb/>
except to spare a cousin a worse<lb/>
death by enemies.<lb/>
"I think there's a place Tony knows that<lb/>
if he goes to, he's not coming back,<lb/>
and that's the place Gandolflni said.<lb/>
"If you siart killing family members,<lb/>
what's next?"<lb/>
The newest 12-episode season will<lb/>
begin March 12. The Emmy-winning<lb/>
show, which began airing in 1999,<lb/>
is to wrap up with eight episodes<lb/>
starting next January.<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)- Richard Gere fears<lb/>
that Asia will be "lost" if the AIDS<lb/>
epidemic hits India hard.<lb/>
The actor and AIDS activist is traveling<lb/>
to the subcontinent this week along<lb/>
with President Bush. Gere may not<lb/>
agree with Bush on everything, but he<lb/>
"certainly can praise him" for bringing<lb/>
attention to AIDS In India, the actor<lb/>
said on ABC News' This Week" on<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
The president of the United States<lb/>
coming there In a world where he's<lb/>
seemingly obsessed with terrorism,<lb/>
clearly obsessed with it, and talking<lb/>
about HIVAIDS in the same breath,<lb/>
in the same paragraph, extremely<lb/>
important Gere said.<lb/>
Bush has said he hopes to address<lb/>
the AIDS crisis with Indian Prime<lb/>
Minister Manmohan Singh.<lb/>
"India Is a country that I care about<lb/>
deeply Gere said. 'We're talking<lb/>
about a population in India that is<lb/>
close to a billion people. If this crisis<lb/>
hits them to the degree it's expected<lb/>
to, we've lost Asia<lb/>
LONDON (AP)- Best-selling novelist<lb/>
and former Conservative Party official<lb/>
Jeffrey Archer acknowledged Sunday<lb/>
that his political career was over after<lb/>
he served a two-year jail sentence<lb/>
for perjury.<lb/>
Archer, former deputy chairman of the<lb/>
main opposition Conservative Party,<lb/>
contirmed In a television Interview<lb/>
that he had rejoined a local branch of<lb/>
the party since leaving prison. But he<lb/>
said It was unlikely he would take his<lb/>
place in the House of Lords, Britain's<lb/>
unelected upper chamber.<lb/>
"I'm not taking any interest in politics.<lb/>
I'm not involved in politics In any<lb/>
way. My life is in writing now Archer<lb/>
told British Broadcasting Corp.<lb/>
television.<lb/>
Archer left prison in 2003 after serving<lb/>
two years for perjury and obstructing<lb/>
justice. He was convicted of lying<lb/>
during his successful 1987 libel<lb/>
action against Britain's Daily Star<lb/>
newspaper, which claimed he had<lb/>
hired a prostitute.<lb/>
A tireless fundraiser for the party, he<lb/>
was honored with a life peerage in<lb/>
1992. But the Conservatives expelled<lb/>
him in 2000 after he admitted asking<lb/>
a friend to lie for him during the libel<lb/>
suit.<lb/>
Archer is internationally known as the<lb/>
author of novels including "Kane and<lb/>
Abel" and "First Among Equals<lb/>
International:<lb/>
Saddam Hussein trial<lb/>
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Saddam<lb/>
Hussein's lawyers are asking for<lb/>
a delay in his trial because of the<lb/>
turmoil that swept Baghdad after the<lb/>
bombing of a Shiite shrine, one of his<lb/>
lawyers said Sunday. A court official<lb/>
said a postponement was possible<lb/>
for the next session on Tuesday.<lb/>
The defense team's request comes<lb/>
amid sectarian violence and<lb/>
movement restrictions after the<lb/>
bombing Wednesday of a revered<lb/>
Shiite Muslim shrine in Samarra and<lb/>
ensuing reprisal attacks on Sunni<lb/>
mosques and clerics across Iraq.<lb/>
More than 200 people have been<lb/>
killed.<lb/>
"We have asked for a delay because<lb/>
of the security situation. It will be<lb/>
difficult for our colleagues to attend<lb/>
and there is a curfew as well said<lb/>
Khamls al-Obeidi, one of Saddam's<lb/>
lawyers. "We have asked the court<lb/>
and are still waiting for an answer<lb/>
Some of Saddam's lawyers, among<lb/>
them foreigners, will have to fly into<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
The government imposed a daytime<lb/>
curfew in Baghdad and three nearby<lb/>
province in the three days after the<lb/>
shrine bombing. On Sunday, the<lb/>
curfew was lifted but driving was<lb/>
banned in Baghdad and its suburbs.<lb/>
Officials said roads would reopen<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
Judge Raid Juhi, a court spokesman,<lb/>
said he believed the next trial session<lb/>
might be put off if the situation<lb/>
continued unchanged. "In the end<lb/>
it Is the decision of the chief judge<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Saddam and co-defendants have<lb/>
been on trial since Oct. 19 In the killing<lb/>
of nearly 150 people from the town of<lb/>
Dujail after a 1982 assassination<lb/>
attempt against Saddam there. They<lb/>
face death by hanging If convicted.<lb/>
The trial has been dogged by the<lb/>
assassination of two defense lawyers,<lb/>
replacement of the chief judge and<lb/>
criticism by international human<lb/>
rights groups questioning whether<lb/>
Saddam can get a fair trial in Iraq's<lb/>
polarized climate.<lb/>
Al-Obeidi, the lawyer, said Saddam<lb/>
and some of his co-defendants had<lb/>
ended a hunger strike they started<lb/>
two days before the last trial session<lb/>
on Feb. 14. Members of the defense<lb/>
team also met with their clients for the<lb/>
first time In weeks, he said, without<lb/>
giving a specific day.<lb/>
He added that members of the<lb/>
defense team planned to return to<lb/>
court when the trial resumes.<lb/>
The trial has been repeatedly<lb/>
disrupted since it began. The first<lb/>
chief judge stepped down last month<lb/>
amid charges of political interference<lb/>
in the case and criticism accusing him<lb/>
of failing to control the proceedings.<lb/>
Two defense attorneys have been<lb/>
assassinated.<lb/>
Chief prosecutor Jaafar al-Moussawl,<lb/>
who confirmed that some of the<lb/>
defense lawyers met with their clients<lb/>
recently, said the next trial session<lb/>
will Include reading the testimony of<lb/>
six witnesses and presenting more<lb/>
documentary evidence.<lb/>
The court has heard 26 prosecution<lb/>
witnesses, mostly recounting their<lb/>
imprisonment and torture at the<lb/>
intelligence service headquarters<lb/>
in Baghdad, Abu Ghraib prison and<lb/>
a desert detention camp near the<lb/>
Saudi border.<lb/>
None linked Saddam directly to their<lb/>
ordeal, but some witnesses identified<lb/>
his half brother Barzan Ibrahim, who<lb/>
also is on trial, as having personally<lb/>
taken part in their torture.<lb/>
Another defendant, former Vice<lb/>
President Taha Yassin Ramadan, was<lb/>
linked by witnesses to the destruction<lb/>
of Dujail's orchards and farm fields.<lb/>
Iran nuclear<lb/>
BUSHEHR, Iran (AP) - Iran's nuclear<lb/>
chief said an agreement was reached<lb/>
with Moscow on Sunday to set up<lb/>
a joint uranium enrichment facility<lb/>
on Russian soil, a deal that could<lb/>
assuage global concerns that Tehran<lb/>
wants to build atomic bombs.<lb/>
The plan proposed by Russia is<lb/>
backed by the United States and<lb/>
European Union.<lb/>
The agreement was announced<lb/>
after a meeting between Russian<lb/>
nuclear chief Sergei Klriyenko and<lb/>
Gholamreza Aghazadeh, head of the<lb/>
Atomic Energy Organization of Iran<lb/>
and the country's vice president<lb/>
The two countries "reached a basic<lb/>
agreement on the creation of a<lb/>
joint venture (to enrich uranium)<lb/>
Aghazadeh told a news conference.<lb/>
The International Atomic Energy<lb/>
Agency's 35-nation board of<lb/>
governors is scheduled to meet<lb/>
March 6 to consider what to do about<lb/>
Iran's recent resumption of nuclear<lb/>
activity. The meeting could start a<lb/>
process leading to punishment by<lb/>
the U.N. Security Council, which has<lb/>
the authority to impose economic and<lb/>
political sanctions on Iran.<lb/>
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey<lb/>
Lavrovwas quoted by Russian media<lb/>
as saying Moscow will continue its<lb/>
talks with Iran until the March 6 IAEA<lb/>
board meeting in an effort to resolve<lb/>
the crisis.<lb/>
Moscow has been struggling to<lb/>
persuade Tehran to reinstate a<lb/>
moratorium on uranium enrichment<lb/>
and agree to shift its enrichment<lb/>
program to Russian territory to<lb/>
ease world concerns it could divert<lb/>
enriched uranium to a weapons<lb/>
program. Enriched uranium can be<lb/>
used for both nuclear energy and<lb/>
weapons.<lb/>
Kiriyenko said Moscow would Insist<lb/>
on resolving the Iranian nuclear<lb/>
dispute within the IAEA, Russia's<lb/>
RIA Novosti news agency reported.<lb/>
Russia is one of the five permanent<lb/>
Security Council members with veto<lb/>
power over any resolution.<lb/>
Russia has said its enrichment offer<lb/>
was contingent on Iran reinstating the<lb/>
moratorium on domestic enrichment,<lb/>
but Iran has rejected such a link and<lb/>
in the past insisted on its right to<lb/>
enrich uranium domestically.<lb/>
Kiriyenko was quoted by Russian<lb/>
media as saying the joint enrichment<lb/>
venture In Russia was just "one<lb/>
of the elements in the complex of<lb/>
issues related to the Iranian nuclear<lb/>
problem<lb/>
Asefi played down a secret nuclear<lb/>
project that U.S. intelligence has<lb/>
linked to warhead design, saying it<lb/>
would offer information on it to the<lb/>
IAEA.<lb/>
"We will discuss the issue, and<lb/>
the rumors surrounding It, with the<lb/>
agency. It is not very sensitive or<lb/>
ambiguous Asefi told reporters at a<lb/>
news conference when asked about<lb/>
the secret "Green Salt Project<lb/>
Public mention of the "Green Salt<lb/>
Project" first surfaced in an IAEA<lb/>
report drawn up earlier this month<lb/>
for a meeting of the agency's board<lb/>
of governors. The meeting ended<lb/>
with the board reporting Tehran to<lb/>
the Security Council over concerns it<lb/>
could be hiding a nuclear weapons<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Asefi reiterated that Iran would<lb/>
continue its nuclear fuel research<lb/>
activities and would not give in its<lb/>
rights under pressure and "bullying<lb/>
language<lb/>
He said his country expects the next<lb/>
IAEA board session to be held on<lb/>
a "nonpolitical, independent and<lb/>
professional" basis.<lb/>
Educators struggle to attract black men to campuses<lb/>
(KRT)  Chris Catching says<lb/>
that African-American men are<lb/>
being left behind.<lb/>
A doctoral student in educa-<lb/>
tion at Rutgers University, he<lb/>
doesn't think higher education<lb/>
knows what to do with black<lb/>
men. So he wants to show them.<lb/>
He's studying his fellow students<lb/>
and learning why they are stay-<lb/>
ing in school.<lb/>
"So much of the research<lb/>
focuses on the pathological<lb/>
Catching said. Instead, they<lb/>
should find out what works, he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Nationwide, women earn the<lb/>
lion's share of college degrees<lb/>
among African-Americans. The<lb/>
gender gap has been growing for<lb/>
years, and educators have been<lb/>
grasping for ways to close it.<lb/>
According to the U.S. Census<lb/>
Bureau, 68 percent of all bacca-<lb/>
laureate degrees awarded nation-<lb/>
wide to African-Americans are<lb/>
given to women. In New Jersey,<lb/>
the figure is 67 percent. African-<lb/>
American women graduate at<lb/>
a higher rate than their male<lb/>
counterparts. In addition, 52 per-<lb/>
cent of African-American women<lb/>
graduate from college within six<lb/>
years in New Jersey, compared<lb/>
with 40 percent of black men,<lb/>
according to statistics collected<lb/>
by the National Collegiate Ath-<lb/>
letic Association.<lb/>
"It's just a very complex prob-<lb/>
lem. One of the things I know<lb/>
about boys is for boys, it's just not<lb/>
cool. It's just not macho to get an<lb/>
education, to speak properly, to<lb/>
be the top of the class. Among<lb/>
our boys, it's just not macho to be<lb/>
that person said Carey Jenkins,<lb/>
founder of Operation Link-Up, a<lb/>
program that helps children in<lb/>
the Paterson, N.J schools attend<lb/>
college.<lb/>
Jenkins has 27 students<lb/>
attending Syracuse University,<lb/>
but only five of them are men.<lb/>
Jenkins said there are a lot<lb/>
of messages in the media and in<lb/>
the classroom that discourage<lb/>
African-American boys, who can<lb/>
feel out of place in school.<lb/>
"I think a negative message is<lb/>
being sent out to boys he said.<lb/>
"There just seem to be more posi-<lb/>
tive role models for girls, more<lb/>
women who are out there who<lb/>
are doing something<lb/>
Jesse Gray attends Syracuse<lb/>
University with 26 of his peers<lb/>
from the Paterson schools. But<lb/>
he's only one of five male stu-<lb/>
dents there from his school<lb/>
district. He joined Operation<lb/>
Link-Up as a freshman at John F.<lb/>
Kennedy High School. He always<lb/>
knew he would go to college,<lb/>
even though he was the first in<lb/>
his family.<lb/>
"I wanted to get a good edu-<lb/>
cation and you can't expect to<lb/>
get out of high school and just<lb/>
have a great job waiting for you<lb/>
said Gray, a freshman study-<lb/>
ing mechanical engineering.<lb/>
He noticed quite quickly there<lb/>
weren't many other African-<lb/>
American boys following his<lb/>
path.<lb/>
"Looking around every year<lb/>
since grade school, there's always<lb/>
been a lot more girls Gray said.<lb/>
But the gap only made him more<lb/>
determined to succeed.<lb/>
"It was a little added pressure<lb/>
because there were only (a few)<lb/>
boys there; you had to hold your<lb/>
end of the bargain Gray said.<lb/>
The college gender gap isn't<lb/>
limited to African-Americans,<lb/>
even though the disparity<lb/>
between black men and women<lb/>
is the largest. According to the<lb/>
U.S. Department of Education,<lb/>
women make up 56 percent of<lb/>
all college students. It's a gap<lb/>
that's been growing for nearly<lb/>
three decades. The department<lb/>
estimates that if trends continue,<lb/>
3 million more women than men<lb/>
will be in college by 2014.<lb/>
At Rutgers' New Brunswick<lb/>
campus, the NCAA reports 619<lb/>
African-American men attended<lb/>
the college between 1998 and<lb/>
2002, but only 54 percent gradu-<lb/>
ated within six years.<lb/>
Meanwhile, 1,112 women<lb/>
attended the school, and 64 per-<lb/>
cent graduated.<lb/>
Princeton University had the<lb/>
highest graduation rate in New<lb/>
Jersey for both black men and<lb/>
women. The Ivy League school<lb/>
saw 91 percent of African-Ameri-<lb/>
can men and 95 percent of Afri-<lb/>
can-American women graduate<lb/>
within six years.<lb/>
None of the 17 African-Amer-<lb/>
ican men who attended Feli-<lb/>
cian College in Bergen County<lb/>
graduated within six years,<lb/>
giving it the lowest graduation<lb/>
rate for black men. New Jersey<lb/>
City University had the lowest<lb/>
graduation rate for African-<lb/>
American women, where only<lb/>
34 percent graduated within six<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Sandra Timmons of Hacken-<lb/>
sack, N.J president of A Better<lb/>
Chance, an organization that<lb/>
places talented young minori-<lb/>
ties in demanding public and<lb/>
private secondary schools, said<lb/>
she's noticed the percentage of<lb/>
see CAMPUS page A4<lb/>
STSTRAVEL.COM<lb/>
JAMAICA<lb/>
Don't Get<lb/>
left Behind<lb/>
Book Today<lb/>
Usonilabh:UMOIH<lb/>
ACAPWCQ BAHAMAS tlMIDA<lb/>
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2-28-06<lb/>
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Nancy Lee<lb/>
Funding<lb/>
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faculty's i<lb/>
KIMBERLY E<lb/>
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Nancy 1<lb/>
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learning th;<lb/>
studying p<lb/>
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"I am an<lb/>
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Ficzko.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059401_0003"/><lb/>
2-28-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  NEWS<lb/>
PAGE A3<lb/>
Childcare facilities for students<lb/>
and faculty proposed at meeting<lb/>
Nancy Lee speaks on behalf of the child development department.<lb/>
Funding for building to<lb/>
house students'and<lb/>
faculty's children<lb/>
KIMBERLY BELLAMY<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Nancy Lee of the child devel-<lb/>
opment and family relations<lb/>
department spoke about a pro-<lb/>
posal for students and faculty<lb/>
with children at the SGA meet-<lb/>
ing on Monday afternoon.<lb/>
This would allow more indi-<lb/>
viduals the opportunity to con-<lb/>
tinue their education without<lb/>
being concerned with hiring<lb/>
someone to take care of their<lb/>
children.<lb/>
The faculty would house<lb/>
approximately 150-200 children.<lb/>
The project would cost anywhere<lb/>
between $2 million to $2.5 mil-<lb/>
lion.<lb/>
To pay for the cost of the<lb/>
building, a possible increase in<lb/>
tuition of $3-5 for each student<lb/>
was a suggestion.<lb/>
Lee asked the administration<lb/>
to consider funding to the pro-<lb/>
gram, keep the program running<lb/>
and help fund students with<lb/>
children.<lb/>
The children would also be<lb/>
used for educational purposes.<lb/>
Currently, there are students in<lb/>
16 different fields that do service<lb/>
learning with children according<lb/>
to Lee.<lb/>
Lee said that the proposal has<lb/>
been on record for the last two<lb/>
years. Lee found that space and<lb/>
money are two major factors that<lb/>
ECU has problems with when<lb/>
receiving proposals for new<lb/>
building and programs.<lb/>
A student stated at the meet-<lb/>
ing that she knows personally<lb/>
that the facility would benefit<lb/>
students and faculty, being a<lb/>
g mother and a student herself.<lb/>
 She said she was shocked to<lb/>
&amp; find out that ECU didn't have<lb/>
 childcare facilities on campus.<lb/>
a Most universities offer this<lb/>
service to students and fac-<lb/>
ulty, which contributes to their<lb/>
retention rates according to<lb/>
Lee.<lb/>
The current facilities have<lb/>
lack of space and a high demand<lb/>
to house more children accord<lb/>
ing to Lee.<lb/>
Lee said that she receives<lb/>
more than 100 calls a month<lb/>
from students asking them to<lb/>
allow their children to come to<lb/>
the facility.<lb/>
A childcare task force is some-<lb/>
thing that the administration is<lb/>
considering.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
Local N.C. school boards sue<lb/>
over eye exam requirement<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP)  Nearly<lb/>
a dozen local school boards sued<lb/>
the state Tuesday over a new<lb/>
law requiring comprehensive<lb/>
eye exams for children entering<lb/>
kindergarten, arguing it violates<lb/>
the U.S. constitution and the<lb/>
state constitution's mandate for<lb/>
free public education.<lb/>
Flanked by a pediatrician,<lb/>
eye doctor and others opposed<lb/>
to the exam, local schools repre-<lb/>
sentatives said the examinations,<lb/>
which cost $65 to $120, are too<lb/>
expensive and unnecessary since<lb/>
children already must receive<lb/>
vision screenings before enter-<lb/>
ing school.<lb/>
"The effect of this new law<lb/>
is to put an unconstitutional<lb/>
price tag on admissions to.public<lb/>
schools said Ann Majestic<lb/>
of the North Carolina School<lb/>
Boards Association, a party to<lb/>
the lawsuit.<lb/>
"The law leaves out thou-<lb/>
sands of families who do not<lb/>
qualify for public assistance<lb/>
The law set aside $2 million<lb/>
to help parents pay for exams<lb/>
uncovered by Medicaid or other<lb/>
government programs. Oppo-<lb/>
nents say that won't go very far.<lb/>
They ask in the lawsuit filed<lb/>
in Wake Superior Court for the<lb/>
law to be declared unconsti-<lb/>
tutional before an estimated<lb/>
119,000 children seek entrance<lb/>
into kindergarten for the coming<lb/>
school year. The exams must be<lb/>
performed within six months<lb/>
of the start of school, so the<lb/>
window to perform exams opens<lb/>
next week.<lb/>
While Gov. Mike Easley is<lb/>
listed among the lawsuit's defen-<lb/>
dants, the largest booster of the<lb/>
"Governor's Vision Care Pro-<lb/>
gram" has been House Speaker<lb/>
Jim Black, a Charlotte-area<lb/>
optometrist. The program was<lb/>
inserted into the House ver-<lb/>
sion of the budget last June and<lb/>
passed without even a public<lb/>
hearing.<lb/>
An optometrist or ophthal-<lb/>
mologist to check for seven dif-<lb/>
ferent disorders would conduct<lb/>
the exam. As justification for the<lb/>
requirement, Black, D-Mecklen-<lb/>
burg, cited a National Institutes<lb/>
for Health study that found that<lb/>
vision problems weren't caught<lb/>
in at least 10 percent of children<lb/>
who received basic screenings.<lb/>
Black received tens of thou-<lb/>
sands of dollars in campaign<lb/>
donations from fellow optom-<lb/>
etrists during the 2003-04-elec-<lb/>
tion cycle. A State Board of Elec-<lb/>
tions investigators said earlier<lb/>
this month that Black's campaign<lb/>
and the N.C. State Optometric<lb/>
Society's political action com-<lb/>
mittee appear to have violated<lb/>
the law by filling in the payee<lb/>
line on incomplete checks from<lb/>
committee members. The board<lb/>
hasn't completed its investigation.<lb/>
Black's office didn't imme-<lb/>
diately return a message Tues-<lb/>
day seeking comment on the<lb/>
lawsuit.<lb/>
Ophthalmologist Cindy<lb/>
Hampton of Henderson said<lb/>
even comprehensive exams of a<lb/>
4- or 5-year-old can't guarantee<lb/>
that problems such as myopia or<lb/>
lazy eye will be discovered.<lb/>
"This is not the most oppor-<lb/>
tune time for visual develop-<lb/>
ment said Hampton, represent 'm<lb/>
ing the North Carolina Society ,<lb/>
of Eye Physicians and Surgeons. <lb/>
Screening programs already eval-<lb/>
uate the vision of 500,000 chil-<lb/>
dren annually, the lawsuit says,<lb/>
and about 35,000 are referred for<lb/>
follow-up exams.<lb/>
And seven eastern counties<lb/>
have no eye doctors, meaning par-<lb/>
ents would have to travel up to 50<lb/>
miles with their children to get the<lb/>
exams, said Shelia Owens, princi-<lb/>
pal of Tyrrell Elementary School.<lb/>
Educators say they also worry<lb/>
about having to decide between<lb/>
preventing a child from enter-<lb/>
ing kindergarten without the<lb/>
ee exam, or breaking the con-<lb/>
stitutional right to a free public<lb/>
education.<lb/>
"Surely, this is not the choice<lb/>
that the General Assembly<lb/>
intended for North Carolina<lb/>
schools to make Owens said.<lb/>
The lawsuit also contends<lb/>
the exam violates the U.S. con- <lb/>
stitution because it violates a<lb/>
federal requirement to provide<lb/>
free public education to children<lb/>
with disabilities and another<lb/>
requirement to allow homeless<lb/>
children to enroll in school<lb/>
even without all of the normally<lb/>
required documentation.<lb/>
Several state senators have<lb/>
joined advocacy groups to ask<lb/>
for the repeal of the law. Black<lb/>
has said he will seek changes<lb/>
when the General Assembly<lb/>
reconvenes in May, including<lb/>
giving children up to six months<lb/>
after the start of school to get<lb/>
the exam.<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
'<lb/>
ing about it from Kashef and<lb/>
learning that a student who was<lb/>
studying planning received a<lb/>
scholarship from the organiza-<lb/>
tion last year.<lb/>
If Ficzko receives this award,<lb/>
she will also earn a larger scholar-<lb/>
ship that will be applied to her<lb/>
bill for graduate school.<lb/>
"I am anxious to hear whether<lb/>
I will be awarded the leadership<lb/>
award. If so, I will definitely be<lb/>
able to attend graduate school.<lb/>
Right now, I am not sure whether<lb/>
I will be able to go or not said<lb/>
Ficzko.<lb/>
If Ficzko is awarded the<lb/>
scholarship, she said she is sure<lb/>
that wants to attend graduate<lb/>
school but unsure of which one<lb/>
at this point. Ficzko plans to<lb/>
pursue a career in community<lb/>
development.<lb/>
Notification by letter will be<lb/>
sent to Ficzko to invite her to a<lb/>
banquet the organization will<lb/>
have to announce the winner of<lb/>
scholarship.<lb/>
If Ficzko chooses not to attend<lb/>
the banquet, the organization will<lb/>
notify her by mail again to inform<lb/>
her if she is the winner of the<lb/>
scholarship.<lb/>
When asked how she feels<lb/>
about receiving this scholar-<lb/>
ship and the chance to receive<lb/>
an additional scholarship that<lb/>
will be a determining factor in<lb/>
her attending graduate school,<lb/>
Ficzko seemed very happy and<lb/>
thankful about the opportunity.<lb/>
"I really appreciate the<lb/>
opportunity to have been given<lb/>
this scholarship, as well as the<lb/>
recognition Ficzko said.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
B66r from page A1<lb/>
have all shown interest in book-<lb/>
ing Max.<lb/>
Many have questioned Max's<lb/>
honesty in recounting these sto-<lb/>
ries and wonder, because they are<lb/>
so outrageous, if some are even<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
Honesty, though, is some-<lb/>
thing, if not the only thing,<lb/>
Max takes seriously. He said<lb/>
his stories embody the truth,<lb/>
and on his Web site, he coun-<lb/>
ters the idea, questioning how<lb/>
he could even make up stories<lb/>
such as some of those he<lb/>
experiences. He added there<lb/>
are legitimate eyewitnesses in<lb/>
the form of bystanders, friends<lb/>
and in some cases, victims.<lb/>
He does confess, however,<lb/>
that he writes according to<lb/>
memory and the help of a<lb/>
tape recorder, which he uses<lb/>
liberally when he goes out.<lb/>
Max claims that he is not<lb/>
very surprised at the success of<lb/>
the book or recognition he is<lb/>
receiving. He stated simply that<lb/>
the stories are funny, and thus,<lb/>
people want to read them.<lb/>
Aside from managing his<lb/>
Web site full-time and touring<lb/>
the country for bogk signings,<lb/>
Max also has deals set up with<lb/>
Hollywood in the form of TV and<lb/>
film projects, though nothing<lb/>
has been finalized.<lb/>
The information for this arti-<lb/>
cle came from Tucker Max himself<lb/>
as well as from TuckerMax.com.<lb/>
To access more information<lb/>
on Max or to read some of his<lb/>
ridiculous tales, students should<lb/>
visit ihopetheyservebeerinhell.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
!<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059401_0004"/><lb/>
PAGE A4<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  NEWS<lb/>
2-28-06<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
from page A2<lb/>
boys in her program drop over<lb/>
the years.<lb/>
Out of the 11,000 alumni<lb/>
of the 43-year old organization<lb/>
55 percent are male and 45<lb/>
percent are female, she said. But<lb/>
among students currently in<lb/>
the program, about 60 percent<lb/>
are female and 40 percent male.<lb/>
She said about 60 percent of the<lb/>
youths are African-American.<lb/>
She said there are many rea-<lb/>
sons for this, explaining that<lb/>
studies show African-American<lb/>
boys are less likely than girls<lb/>
to graduate from high school<lb/>
ajid that few are picked to take<lb/>
demanding classes in elementary<lb/>
school that give them an early<lb/>
head start on college.<lb/>
. "If you're falling behind by<lb/>
Grade 3 or 4 in reading, it's dif-<lb/>
ficult to even get into a program<lb/>
like ours Timmons said.<lb/>
She said educators spent a lot<lb/>
of time in the 1970s and 1980s<lb/>
helping girls catch up. It might<lb/>
be time now to make sure boys<lb/>
aren't falling behind.<lb/>
"It's a problem that people<lb/>
have ignored Timmons said.<lb/>
Catching, the Rutgers<lb/>
doctoral student, said African-<lb/>
American men who succeed in col-<lb/>
lege share many characteristics.<lb/>
"Some of the key things<lb/>
have been mentors at all levels<lb/>
of their life, mentors in their<lb/>
community, parental support<lb/>
and sensitivity on behalf of<lb/>
educators Catching said.<lb/>
"Those mentors help you<lb/>
get through those roadblocks<lb/>
He said mentors helped him<lb/>
graduate from Montclair<lb/>
State University in 1999.<lb/>
Jenkins, of Operation Link-<lb/>
up, added that it takes more effort<lb/>
to convince boys to go to college<lb/>
than girls. Unlike girls, Jenkins<lb/>
said, boys need more convinc-<lb/>
ing to see the value of college.<lb/>
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food or gifts? Hit on the hiring<lb/>
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Job-seekers will do almost<lb/>
anything to stand out among<lb/>
the competition. There is no<lb/>
length a candidate won't go to<lb/>
and no line someone won't cross<lb/>
in order to get a job.<lb/>
Hiring managers nationwide<lb/>
shared the most unconventional<lb/>
methods job-seekers used to grab<lb/>
their attention in CareerBuilder.<lb/>
corn's latest survey "How to Get<lb/>
in the Front Door<lb/>
While some candidates'<lb/>
efforts were impressive - like<lb/>
giving PowerPoint presentations,<lb/>
distributing portfolios on CD<lb/>
and working for a day to dem-<lb/>
onstrate talents - others' were<lb/>
complete turn-offs.<lb/>
One candidate called inces-<lb/>
santly for weeks before and after<lb/>
the position was filled. Another<lb/>
clueless candidate asked for<lb/>
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If you think that's weird,<lb/>
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things job-seekers did to get<lb/>
noticed:<lb/>
 Wore a tuxedo.<lb/>
 Used a celebrity official<lb/>
fan site as one of their portfolio<lb/>
accomplishments.<lb/>
 Brought a baby gift to the<lb/>
interviewer who was pregnant.<lb/>
 Sat next to the hiring man-<lb/>
ager in a church pew.<lb/>
 Left Yankee tickets for the<lb/>
interviewer.<lb/>
 Sent a nude photo of him-<lb/>
self to the hiring manager.<lb/>
 Tried to do a stand-up<lb/>
comedy routine.<lb/>
 Waited for the hiring man-<lb/>
ager at his car.<lb/>
 Came dressed as a cat.<lb/>
 Said they "smiled on com-<lb/>
mand<lb/>
Multiple people are vying for<lb/>
the same open positions in most<lb/>
situations. Trying something<lb/>
out of the ordinary to market<lb/>
your skills and accomplishments<lb/>
can give you an edge over other<lb/>
applicants. The key to executing<lb/>
effectively and making yourself<lb/>
memorable for the right reasons<lb/>
is coupling creativity with pro-<lb/>
fessionalism and persistence.<lb/>
Attention ECU Students<lb/>
Want to be a part of the<lb/>
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Its popularity stems from its big-time entertainment, hosting such<lb/>
"World's Largest and Longest Keg acts as Bob Marley's Wailers, Tone<lb/>
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Donna has been playing the hottest behind the Sandpiper Beacon during<lb/>
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Sandpiper has been host to is a Spring Break sponsor giving<lb/>
other well-known DJ's including away swiinwear and the Corona<lb/>
DJ Skribble. The Sandpiper-Beacon Beach Volleyball Tournament is<lb/>
brings the party to you - no driving, scheduled to take place behind the<lb/>
just walk up to your room from the bar. Sandpiper this year. There will be<lb/>
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Robin as special guests at an Visit www.sandpiperbeacon.com<lb/>
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WZMB91.3FM<lb/>
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Th East Carolinian<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
The Rebel<lb/>
EDITOR<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 2006 AT 5 P.M.<lb/>
For information, call the Media Board office at 328-9236.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059401_0005"/><lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
IMENT<lb/>
iORS<lb/>
otors<lb/>
Promotion<lb/>
Lflhi<lb/>
no<lb/>
IMS<lb/>
srketlng<lb/>
rations<lb/>
I N t<lb/>
WAYS!<lb/>
OT<lb/>
USA's<lb/>
Spring<lb/>
more of<lb/>
ikini and<lb/>
i contests<lb/>
short on<lb/>
ting such<lb/>
srs, Tone<lb/>
ntatively<lb/>
fae Black<lb/>
he beach<lb/>
in during<lb/>
ightclubs<lb/>
ir giving<lb/>
Corona<lb/>
ment is<lb/>
hind the<lb/>
will be<lb/>
I night at<lb/>
break.<lb/>
con.com<lb/>
ng Break<lb/>
n Beach<lb/>
ma City<lb/>
resort at<lb/>
'S<lb/>
C)<lb/>
rl.<lb/>
Page A5<lb/>
edltor@theeastcarollnlan.com 252.328.9238<lb/>
JENNIFER L HOBBS Editor In Chief<lb/>
TUESDAY February 28, 2006<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
World catching<lb/>
up in men's ice<lb/>
hockey<lb/>
Four years make one heck of a difference. That<lb/>
difference burned as brightly as the Olympic torch<lb/>
in this year's Olympics in Torino, Italy, particularly<lb/>
in men's ice hockey.<lb/>
And yes, it is Torino, not Turin. Though Turin isn't<lb/>
technically incorrect and it is spelled Turin in<lb/>
English, in Italy it is Torino.<lb/>
But I digress. The real point of the story here is<lb/>
that the rest of the world is finally catching up<lb/>
again with Canada and, to a lesser extent the US.<lb/>
For years the Russians dominated Olympic<lb/>
hockey - champions in 1964, 1968, 1972<lb/>
and 1976 before the "Miracle" 1980 U.S. team<lb/>
dethroned the almighty reds. Past that, we have<lb/>
seen teams such as Canada, the United States,<lb/>
Sweden, Finland and the Czech Republic do well<lb/>
in the tournament<lb/>
And now even more teams are stepping up and<lb/>
planting parity in international hockey.<lb/>
Look at what happened in the field in this year's<lb/>
Olympics. Canada, the United States, Russia<lb/>
and the Czech Republic were supposed to<lb/>
dominate, with Canada's slew of scoring fire-<lb/>
power overwhelming everyone else. However,<lb/>
Canada (although they did play well and were<lb/>
unfortunate to run into two amazing goal tending<lb/>
performances) and the United States barely made<lb/>
it into the second round while the Russians and<lb/>
Czechs had decent performances as the Czechs<lb/>
beat out Russia for bronze.<lb/>
On the rise, though, were the Swiss and Finns,<lb/>
who both shut Canada out 2-0, an unthinkable feat<lb/>
before these Olympics began. Switzerland was<lb/>
one of the most surprising teams in the tourney,<lb/>
if not the most surprising, and had quality wins<lb/>
against Canada and the Czechs. Finland went<lb/>
unbeaten all the way to the championship game<lb/>
against the Swedes, and Slovakia put up an excel-<lb/>
lent performance in the first round, finishing 4-0-1.<lb/>
It's not to go as far as saying Canada is being<lb/>
usurped as the hockey powerhouse of the world,<lb/>
because that hasn't changed. But there are many<lb/>
more teams who can give them a run for their<lb/>
money. More importantly, there are now more<lb/>
countries building bettertalent pools for the future.<lb/>
After watching many of these games, particularly<lb/>
those with Sweden, Finland and the Swiss, it was<lb/>
plain to see that the world is going to see better and<lb/>
better hockey through the coming years in inter-<lb/>
national competition, and especially the Olympics.<lb/>
Our Staff<lb/>
Jennifer L Hobbs<lb/>
Editor In Chief<lb/>
Rachel King Claire Murphy<lb/>
News Editor Asst News Editor<lb/>
Carolyn Scandura<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Kristin Murnane<lb/>
Asst. Features Editor<lb/>
Tony Zoppo Sports EditorBrandon Hughes Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Sarah Bell Head Copy EditorApril Barnes Asst. Copy Editor<lb/>
Herb Sneed Photo EditorRachael Lotter Asst Photo Editor<lb/>
Alexander Marclnlak Dustin Jones Web Editor Asst. Web Editor<lb/>
Edward McKim Production Manager<lb/>
Newsroom252.328.9238<lb/>
Fax252.328.9143<lb/>
Advertising252.328.9245<lb/>
Seiving ECU since 1925, 7EC prints 9,000 cxpies every<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday during the regular<lb/>
academic year and 5,000 on Wednesdays during the<lb/>
summer "Our view" is Ihe opinion of the editorial board<lb/>
and Is written by editorial board members. TEC welcomes<lb/>
letters to the editor which are limited to 250 words (which<lb/>
may be edited for decency or brevity). We reserve the<lb/>
right to edit or reject letters and all letters must be signed<lb/>
and include a telephone number, batters may be sent<lb/>
via email to edrtor@theeastcarollnian.com or to The East<lb/>
Carolinian, SelfHelp Building, Greenville, NC 27858-<lb/>
4353. Call 252-328-9238 for more information. One<lb/>
copy of TEC is free, each additional copy is $1.<lb/>
Pirate Rant<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
Just another Academy Awards predictions piece<lb/>
A bad year in film equals<lb/>
a bad awards show<lb/>
GARY MCCABE<lb/>
BITTER BOULEVARD<lb/>
The 78th annual Academy<lb/>
Awards (or as I call them, "the<lb/>
Oscars") are less than a week<lb/>
away and for some reason, I<lb/>
couldn't care less. Maybe it's<lb/>
because I'm still fuming because<lb/>
Bill Murray didn't win Best Actor<lb/>
for Lost in Translation or that Paul<lb/>
Giamatti wasn't even nominated<lb/>
for Sideways.<lb/>
Maybe it's because the award<lb/>
winners as of late have been<lb/>
about as predictable as a Ramones<lb/>
song and almost as grating to my<lb/>
senses. More than likely, though,<lb/>
it's because the films this year<lb/>
as a whole have been dreadful.<lb/>
From top to bottom - Brokeback<lb/>
to Red Eye - I've been very disap-<lb/>
pointed with almost every film<lb/>
I've seen this year.<lb/>
With that out of the way, the<lb/>
Academy Awards will air live on<lb/>
Sunday whether I like it or not.<lb/>
So as a service to you, the reader,<lb/>
I'd like use this space to share<lb/>
my feelings on each of the major<lb/>
award categories and tell you who<lb/>
will win, who should win and<lb/>
basically, anything else I feel like<lb/>
writing. For the record, I've seen<lb/>
almost every film in contention<lb/>
for the major awards so this is<lb/>
more than mere speculation.<lb/>
Best Picture<lb/>
This award should be called<lb/>
"Best Picture by Default" because<lb/>
it if were any other year, none of<lb/>
these films would have a chance<lb/>
of winning Best Picture. Clearly,<lb/>
Brokeback Mountain is the favorite<lb/>
to win this award, and generally,<lb/>
I'd agree. Even when you strip<lb/>
Brokeback of the hype, the contro-<lb/>
versy and the jokes, it's a beautiful<lb/>
movie. The only problem with it<lb/>
is, had it been the story of a man<lb/>
and a woman and not two men,<lb/>
it would have just been another<lb/>
average love story and would<lb/>
have no chance at winning Best<lb/>
Picture. The film, in essence, is<lb/>
just a novelty act. Not that there's<lb/>
anything wrong with that.<lb/>
The only legitimate compe-<lb/>
tition Brokeback has is in Crash,<lb/>
which is basically a series of<lb/>
intertwining events that reveal<lb/>
just how entrenched racism is in<lb/>
American society. I liked the mes-<lb/>
sage of Crash. I liked the concept<lb/>
of Crash. But it's so contrived and<lb/>
so condescending that I can't<lb/>
believe it didn't go straight-to-<lb/>
video. The remaining three films<lb/>
Capote, Munich and Good Night,<lb/>
and Good Luck) are enjoyable but<lb/>
all three could easily have been<lb/>
replaced by Walk the Line, King<lb/>
Kong or Broken Flowers.<lb/>
Best Actor<lb/>
Jamie Foxx's portrayal of Ray<lb/>
Charles in last year's Ray was<lb/>
vastly overrated. He didn't por-<lb/>
tray Ray Charles - he did a cari-<lb/>
cature of the man - and what's<lb/>
worse, he didn't even do his own<lb/>
singing. Joaquin Phoenix, on<lb/>
the other hand, became Johnny<lb/>
Cash in this year's Walk the Line.<lb/>
For such a larger-than-life role,<lb/>
Phoenix attacked it with a bril-<lb/>
liant, low-key performance, even<lb/>
nailing Cash's baritone perfectly.<lb/>
With Ray, all I could think was,<lb/>
"Oh, that's Bunz from Booty Call<lb/>
playing Ray Charles Not with<lb/>
Walk the Line.<lb/>
The award for Best Actor will<lb/>
inevitably go to Phillip Seymour<lb/>
Hoffman for his portrayal of<lb/>
writer Truman Capote. Don't get<lb/>
me wrong, Hoffman was great,<lb/>
but there wasn't much for him<lb/>
to do other than squeak like<lb/>
a Muppet Baby and cry like a<lb/>
regular baby.<lb/>
Best Actress<lb/>
Much like Julia Roberts did<lb/>
for Erin Brockovich, Reese Wither-<lb/>
spoon should be all set to receive<lb/>
the "Thanks for all that money<lb/>
you made us" Award in the form<lb/>
of a Best Actress Award. I'm not<lb/>
saying it isn't well deserved<lb/>
- Witherspoon was so beautiful<lb/>
and captivating as June Carter<lb/>
Cash and gave Walk the Line<lb/>
genuine heart - but I'm not even<lb/>
sure if the role was large enough<lb/>
to be considered a lead role.<lb/>
The nod should go to Charlize<lb/>
Theron for North Country instead,<lb/>
although most pundits say that<lb/>
she's basically out of the running<lb/>
because she won two years ago<lb/>
for Monster.<lb/>
To be fair, I haven't seen<lb/>
Transamerica so I haven't seen<lb/>
Felicity Huffman as a tortured<lb/>
man who wishes to become a<lb/>
woman. I hear she's good, but I<lb/>
just think convincingly playing a<lb/>
man doesn't automatically mean<lb/>
you're a great actress - it probably<lb/>
just means you're ugly. I'll let you<lb/>
know when I actually see the<lb/>
film, though.<lb/>
Best Supporting Actor<lb/>
Paul Giamatti was robbed<lb/>
when he wasn't nominated for<lb/>
Best Actor in 2004 for his role in<lb/>
American Splendor. Ditto for 2005<lb/>
when he was slighted for his role<lb/>
in Sideways. The last thing I want<lb/>
to see, though, is him winning<lb/>
Best Supporting Actor as some<lb/>
sort of conciliatory gesture by<lb/>
the Academy. He's a much better<lb/>
actor than that.<lb/>
Rather, Jake Gyllenhaal<lb/>
should take the statue because<lb/>
of the five nominees, he gave the<lb/>
best performance - even though<lb/>
it was much larger than a sup-<lb/>
porting role. I'm not sure why<lb/>
Heath Ledger is up for Best Actor<lb/>
and Gyllenhaal Best Supporting<lb/>
Actor - Ledger basically did his<lb/>
best Clint Eastwood impression<lb/>
while Gyllenhaal ran the gambit<lb/>
of emotions and carried the film<lb/>
on his, err, broke back.<lb/>
Best Director<lb/>
This is the easiest of the major<lb/>
awards to predict. Lightning<lb/>
won't strike twice for Steven<lb/>
Spielberg. Sure, Munich may be<lb/>
another film about Jews, but it's<lb/>
no Schindler's List. George Cloo-<lb/>
ney directed Good Night, and Good<lb/>
Luck, which was less a movie<lb/>
than it was a documentary. Paul<lb/>
Haggis directed Crash. I've said<lb/>
enough about that film. Bennett<lb/>
Miller directed Capote and made<lb/>
an entertaining film, but it felt<lb/>
like every other biopic. Anybody<lb/>
could have made that movie.<lb/>
So by the process of elimina-<lb/>
tion, the Best Director will go<lb/>
to Ang Lee because nobody can<lb/>
depict the rugged, mountain<lb/>
life in Wyoming better than <lb/>
an Asian man whose prior work<lb/>
includes The Hulk. Maybe this<lb/>
show won't be so predictable.<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
(KRT)  More than four years<lb/>
after the first terrorist suspects<lb/>
arrived at Guantanamo Bay,<lb/>
Cuba, there is still no answer<lb/>
to the question of how long<lb/>
the camp will remain open and<lb/>
under what circumstances.<lb/>
Around the globe, the camp<lb/>
remains a lightning rod for those<lb/>
who complain about America's<lb/>
disregard for civil liberties. In<lb/>
this country, a number of court<lb/>
cases challenge the treatment<lb/>
of the Guantanamo' inmates<lb/>
and their legal status. In Guan-<lb/>
tanamo, the detainees remain<lb/>
human guinea pigs in an experi-<lb/>
ment testing whether this nation<lb/>
can wage an effective battle<lb/>
against enemies who fly no flag<lb/>
except that of destruction. Given<lb/>
all this, how can we remain true<lb/>
to our fundamental principles of<lb/>
justice. When should this experi-<lb/>
ment be declared over?<lb/>
Even Prime Minister Tony<lb/>
Blair of Britain, a staunch admin-<lb/>
istration supporter, conceded<lb/>
recently that the camp was an<lb/>
"anomaly" - a departure from<lb/>
normal standards.<lb/>
He was reacting to a recent<lb/>
U.N. report condemning the<lb/>
detention center, adding to the<lb/>
growing consensus in the inter-<lb/>
national community that the<lb/>
Guantanamo camp must be<lb/>
closed. Secretary-General Kofi<lb/>
Annan said the camp would have<lb/>
to be closed "sooner or later but<lb/>
he stopped short of endorsing<lb/>
the demand for an immediate<lb/>
shutdown. He also reaffirmed the<lb/>
basic point that prisoners cannot<lb/>
be held in perpetuity without<lb/>
being either released or charged<lb/>
and prosecuted.<lb/>
Yet the report must be judged<lb/>
incomplete because it failed to<lb/>
say exactly what should happen<lb/>
to the inmates, particularly<lb/>
those deemed to be a continu-<lb/>
ing threat. That's taking the<lb/>
easy route. If the United Nations<lb/>
disapproves of the conditions at<lb/>
Guantanamo, it has an obliga-<lb/>
tion to do something besides<lb/>
complain about it, perhaps even<lb/>
undertake to deal realistically<lb/>
with the detainees and the prob-<lb/>
lems they pose. But no plan to<lb/>
shut down Guantanamo should<lb/>
be considered unless there are<lb/>
provisions to identify diehard<lb/>
terrorists and ensure that they<lb/>
will not be set free to commit<lb/>
new acts of destruction.<lb/>
The camp was created in the<lb/>
immediate aftermath of 911,<lb/>
when the Bush administration<lb/>
was trying to define rules for a new<lb/>
kind of war. It was designed to be<lb/>
a place where the administration<lb/>
could treat detainees as it wanted,<lb/>
without interference from either<lb/>
courts or foreign governments.<lb/>
The U.S. Supreme Court, to its<lb/>
credit, rejected the argument that<lb/>
Guantanamo existed in some sort<lb/>
of extra-legal universe, beyond the<lb/>
reach of the law.<lb/>
For a while, Guantanamo was<lb/>
useful as a short-term solution to a<lb/>
problem of enormous complexity -<lb/>
how to deal with hundreds of state-<lb/>
less alleged terrorists from countries<lb/>
that can't be trusted to keep the<lb/>
guilty ones locked up. (Earlier this<lb/>
month, 23 convicted al-Qaida pris-<lb/>
oners managed to escape from a jail<lb/>
in Yemen. They remain at large.)<lb/>
But as the months have<lb/>
stretched intoyearsandthe stopgap<lb/>
plan turns into a long-term propo-<lb/>
sition, it becomes more untenable.<lb/>
The camp can't continue forever,<lb/>
but the administration seems<lb/>
content to leave this problem<lb/>
on the White House doorstep to<lb/>
await the next chief executive.<lb/>
Congress, for its part, has<lb/>
played a less than helpful role.<lb/>
Its main effort was to pass a law<lb/>
that severely restricts the access<lb/>
of inmates to the U.S. judicial<lb/>
system. That has only added to<lb/>
questions about the status and<lb/>
treatment of the detainees. But<lb/>
erecting a firewall between Guan-<lb/>
tanamo and the courts would<lb/>
only add to the legal isolation of<lb/>
the inmates without resolving<lb/>
the fundamental issues.<lb/>
Instead, Congress should<lb/>
hold hearings and push the<lb/>
administration to say where it<lb/>
is going with this Island prison.<lb/>
At the same time, Congress can<lb/>
help the architects of the battle<lb/>
against terror to design a deten-<lb/>
tion policy that can withstand<lb/>
legal scrutiny and win interna-<lb/>
tional support.<lb/>
From here forward, I will always carry a<lb/>
single bullet in my chest pocket in honor<lb/>
of the greatest man who ever lived!<lb/>
There is more than one dude with a<lb/>
mohawk  and I did not ask you out.<lb/>
I would like to commend the ECU Police<lb/>
Department for their excellent job of keep-<lb/>
ing ECU safe from illegally parked cars.<lb/>
One day we will possibly figure out how to<lb/>
keep students from being routinely robbed,<lb/>
but for now, all focus must be on keeping<lb/>
those haphazardly parked cars from endan-<lb/>
gering students.<lb/>
Next time you want to flatter yourself,<lb/>
find something a little more positive. At<lb/>
least your good at one thing - making me<lb/>
laugh!<lb/>
From this point on, each time I have to wait<lb/>
10 minutes for this computer lab computer<lb/>
to work, I am going to resort to vandalism.<lb/>
It has been like this all year. Lab assistants<lb/>
say they have put work orders in to fix the<lb/>
problem, but nothing has been done.<lb/>
You can turn right on red! You, however,<lb/>
cannot - I repeat - cannot go straight<lb/>
in a right turn only lane! Am I the only<lb/>
person who had to take Driver's Ed to get<lb/>
a license?<lb/>
If you're in too much pain to sit in class and<lb/>
not moan and groan in my ear then don't<lb/>
come or, better yet, take online classes so I<lb/>
don't have to hear it because I'm not going<lb/>
to ask you if you're OK!<lb/>
To the guy who said that the police are<lb/>
giving drinking tickets downtown to<lb/>
protect the students  you're an idiot.<lb/>
How is me drinking a beer putting me in<lb/>
danger of getting shot walking home from<lb/>
downtown?<lb/>
I watched the lady at Wright Place make<lb/>
my bacon, egg and cheese sandwich right<lb/>
in front of me; yet, when I get my food it's<lb/>
sausage and egg! It's not April fools yet. Is<lb/>
she a magician? I just want to know how<lb/>
that happened because I haven't stopped<lb/>
thinking about it all morning.<lb/>
To every guy on the Gold bus leaving from<lb/>
College Hill Monday morning, I hope you<lb/>
were comfy sitting down while I stood.<lb/>
I'm a 5-foot-2-inch girl. Do you know how<lb/>
hard it is to hold on to the bar on the top<lb/>
of the bus so I don't fall on you? Probably<lb/>
not. You guys need to learn some man-<lb/>
ners fast!<lb/>
I wish people who whine about N.C. would<lb/>
go back to where they came from. It's<lb/>
beautiful here.<lb/>
I thought if you were loud after quiet hours<lb/>
you were supposed to be written up. So why<lb/>
aren't the drunk people who come to my<lb/>
building loud as hell being written up?<lb/>
Attention girls in Garrett Hall, I just have<lb/>
one piece of advice for you - grow up! You<lb/>
are not in high school anymore, so don't<lb/>
act like it.<lb/>
What are sleep pants?<lb/>
To the person who quoted the "Fresh<lb/>
Prince of Bel Air" theme song in the rant,<lb/>
thanks! You made my day that much more<lb/>
enjoyable.<lb/>
To all ECU ebayers, beware of Neasonl7.<lb/>
He is a bad ebayer. This guy will screw<lb/>
you mega hard on ebay if you buy or sell<lb/>
to him.<lb/>
I think there needs to be a superhero run-<lb/>
ning around the streets of Greenville to try<lb/>
to clean up the scum that's taking over our<lb/>
town with crime. If no one's going to do it,<lb/>
then I guess look for my sign.<lb/>
To the girls who attend the SRC with their<lb/>
hair down, all their make-up on and their<lb/>
extremely short shorts, please stop. I've had<lb/>
about all I can stomach!<lb/>
I like the biscuits in the Wright Place.<lb/>
I am addicted to checking my e-mail and<lb/>
no one ever e-mails me.<lb/>
What's up with the dance routines in<lb/>
Wright Plaza? What's the point in it? Who<lb/>
said you could do it? I want to know. When<lb/>
I dance in the parking lot, people look at<lb/>
me like I'm strange. Something is unfair<lb/>
about that.<lb/>
Are you kidding me? My roommate put on<lb/>
her AIM profile a picture of a detective and<lb/>
"put this in your profile if you live with<lb/>
someone sketchy What is this, middle<lb/>
school?<lb/>
Editor's Nott: The Pirate Rant is an anonymous way for students and staff in the<lb/>
E(XUiimmumtyhnokeueuofnniom.SurmissumsLanbesuivnittedanirn7n,Hih<lb/>
online at www.theeastcarolinlan.com. or e-matied to edttorWheeastcanrlmian<lb/>
com. The editor reserves the right to edit opinions for content and brevity<lb/>
<pb facs="00059401_0006"/><lb/>
Student Llf<lb/>
Page A6 features@theeastcarollnian.com 252.328.6366 CAROLYN SCANDURA Features Editor KRISTIN MURNANE Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY February 28, 2006<lb/>
Names in the News:<lb/>
Aussie, Aussie, Aussie<lb/>
Fellow Aussie titans Russell Crowe<lb/>
and Nicole Kidman, who were slated<lb/>
to star in the now-defunct Eucalyptus,<lb/>
will finally engage each other in<lb/>
a thespian pas de deux in a yet-<lb/>
to-be-titled film helmed by fellow<lb/>
countryman and cinematic giant<lb/>
Baz Luhrmann, whose prodigious<lb/>
baton inspired Kidman's lovely turn<lb/>
in Moulin Rouge<lb/>
Baz's work will be a film of epic<lb/>
proportions, a sweeping Lawrence ol<lb/>
Arabia-esque historical saga that will<lb/>
reveal the very essence of Australia.<lb/>
"We have some of the most<lb/>
extraordinary landscape on the<lb/>
planet and we want to get two of<lb/>
the most extraordinary actors in<lb/>
the world and put them  in that<lb/>
landscape said Baz to Aussie paper<lb/>
the Australian.<lb/>
Production begins in August.<lb/>
Pescl's free pass<lb/>
Authorities have decided not to file<lb/>
charges against actor Joe Pesci for<lb/>
allegedly socking an amateur photo in<lb/>
a shopping center parking lot In Boca<lb/>
Raton, Fla Juan Carlos Montenegro,<lb/>
24, a Broward Community College<lb/>
student, claims Pesci gave him a<lb/>
fat lip when he tried to snap his<lb/>
screen idol's pic. Cops say they can't<lb/>
determine who started the brouhaha.<lb/>
Pesci's attorney could not be reached<lb/>
for comment.<lb/>
An Idol pose<lb/>
Seems "American Idol" contestant<lb/>
Becky O'Donohue's past media<lb/>
exposure isn't limited to "Fear Factor<lb/>
Man's best friend, Maxim Is carrying<lb/>
erotic photos of Becky and her "Fear"<lb/>
costar, fellow athlete, model and<lb/>
vocalist sis Jessie. The PG-13-rated<lb/>
online photos (maximonline.com) are<lb/>
in the venerable tradition of Sports<lb/>
lllustrated's swimwear issue, with<lb/>
costumery ranging from tight cut-off<lb/>
Ts and unbuttoned baseball jerseys<lb/>
to bikinis. One sauna-like scene<lb/>
shows the two sporting only towels.<lb/>
Taken two years ago, the pics are<lb/>
tastefully touted on Maxim's site with,<lb/>
"Jessie and Becky bared their pipes<lb/>
for us long before Simon Cowell had<lb/>
a crack at them<lb/>
The Jackson case<lb/>
In a world without meaning or hope,<lb/>
some people desperately cling<lb/>
on to memories of past heroes<lb/>
such as Elvis and John Lennon. For<lb/>
federal officials, it means to hold<lb/>
on to Janet Jackson. The Federal<lb/>
Communications Commission is<lb/>
expected to stand by its Nipplegate<lb/>
ruling and go forward with its decision<lb/>
to fine 20 TV stations some $550,000<lb/>
for violating indecency rules during<lb/>
the 2004 Super Bowl halftime show.<lb/>
Tomkat still on<lb/>
Months have passed since Tom<lb/>
Cruise and Katie Holmes decided<lb/>
to wed. Will they make it to the altar?<lb/>
Or are post-Valentine's Day rumors<lb/>
of trouble in their little fantasy island<lb/>
of a world actually true? Never fear,<lb/>
People reports the pair made a<lb/>
big show of togetherness during a<lb/>
three-day visit to Australia. The happy<lb/>
couple's first child and Tom's latest<lb/>
creative baby, Mission Impossible III,<lb/>
are both due in May.<lb/>
From ECU to WWE: Linda McMahon<lb/>
We talk to Linda<lb/>
McMahon, CEO of World<lb/>
Wrestling Entertainment<lb/>
KRISTIN MURNANE<lb/>
ASSISTANT FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
Professional wrestling is on<lb/>
television nearly every night<lb/>
of the week, not to mention<lb/>
that it's been popular with<lb/>
both men and women of all<lb/>
ages for decades. Programs like<lb/>
Smackdown, RAW and Pay-Per-<lb/>
View shows SummerSlam, Royal<lb/>
Rumble and WrestleManla draw<lb/>
millions of viewers. For this, we<lb/>
have World Wrestling Entertain-<lb/>
ment and its leaders. Chairman<lb/>
Vince McMahon and CEO Linda<lb/>
McMahon, to thank.<lb/>
Without the leadership of<lb/>
these people, among others, the<lb/>
WWE would not be the interna-<lb/>
tional entertainment sensation<lb/>
that it is today. But did any of<lb/>
you know that the McMahons<lb/>
are ECU alumni? We had the<lb/>
chance to talk with Linda McMa-<lb/>
hon about everything from her<lb/>
time as a Pirate to her time in<lb/>
the ring.<lb/>
TEC: You're originally from the<lb/>
eastern North Carolina area;<lb/>
can you describe for us some<lb/>
of your childhood memories?<lb/>
McMahon: I'm from New Bern,<lb/>
N.C which is about 42 miles, I<lb/>
think, from Greenville. Boy, it<lb/>
was a great place to grow up. I<lb/>
grew up very close to the Neuse<lb/>
River so a lot of my childhood<lb/>
was spent swimming, water<lb/>
skiing, learning how to slalom<lb/>
ski on one ski, do jumps  all of<lb/>
that stuff. It was incredibly fun.<lb/>
I went to high school at New<lb/>
Bern High. I absolutely enjoyed<lb/>
all of my time in high school. It<lb/>
was just a wonderful time in my<lb/>
life. It was great growing up in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina. I met<lb/>
my husband Vince in New Bern,<lb/>
in church if you can believe<lb/>
that. We were married early and<lb/>
I actually started at ECU after<lb/>
we were married. So that was<lb/>
certainly a challenge.<lb/>
TEC: What can you tell us about<lb/>
your experience at ECU? Do you<lb/>
still have that Pirate Pride?<lb/>
McMahon: laughs Absolutely,<lb/>
I can remember sitting in the<lb/>
stands and cheering for the foot-<lb/>
ball team. I can't remember, but<lb/>
I think my senior year we had a<lb/>
really good season and then we<lb/>
watched them subsequently in<lb/>
bowl games. So that was a lot of<lb/>
fun. We were involved with all of<lb/>
the sports teams, and you know,<lb/>
just yelling and screaming your<lb/>
lungs out for your team to win.<lb/>
So it was all fond memories of<lb/>
being at ECU. We lived in a small<lb/>
apartment; I think it was on Elm<lb/>
Street. So we walked to class and<lb/>
I just remember the beautiful<lb/>
trees that lined the streets. At<lb/>
that time it was just a nice, sleepy<lb/>
little college town.<lb/>
TEC: When you married Mr.<lb/>
McMahon, were there any incli-<lb/>
nations that the WWE would<lb/>
grow into the global business<lb/>
that it is today?<lb/>
McMahon: There was no WWE<lb/>
at that time; my husband's<lb/>
father's company was the World<lb/>
Wide Wrestling Federation.<lb/>
TEC: That's right, the WWWF.<lb/>
McMahon: I think so. I really<lb/>
didn't know very much about<lb/>
professional wrestling, so 1 had<lb/>
no visions at all.<lb/>
TEC: Wrestling is viewed as<lb/>
a male-dominated sport.<lb/>
What does it feel like run-<lb/>
ning such a large company<lb/>
where women are viewed as<lb/>
part of the minority? What<lb/>
advice do you have for young<lb/>
women in the business world?<lb/>
McMahon: Don't have any<lb/>
fear. I think there are a lot of<lb/>
advantages sometimes to being .<lb/>
a female in a heavily dominated<lb/>
male environment because I<lb/>
think while you may run into<lb/>
glass ceilings and things like<lb/>
Linda McMahon, a talented and powerful ECU alumni.<lb/>
that, there's a great opportunity<lb/>
for young women today with<lb/>
passion and pride. You have to<lb/>
seize the opportunity, and you<lb/>
also have to make your way. It's<lb/>
not about resting on your morals<lb/>
or it's not about sitting back and<lb/>
saying "well that's never going<lb/>
to happen because I'm a female<lb/>
You have to go for It.<lb/>
TEC: Can you take us through<lb/>
a typical day in the life of Linda<lb/>
McMahon?<lb/>
McMahon: Well, I don't know<lb/>
see MCMAHON page A7<lb/>
Professor committed to learning<lb/>
Students work hard to get to graduation, and preparation is essential to make sure the day goes well.<lb/>
Planning steps toward graduation<lb/>
Dontforget the little things<lb/>
that make a difference<lb/>
SARAH CAMPBELL<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Family Fare Series:<lb/>
"My Hero  Reaching for the Stars<lb/>
will be performed at Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Saturday, March 4 at 2 p.m. You'll meet<lb/>
Crispus Attucks, George Washington<lb/>
Carver, Caroline Anderson and<lb/>
Romana Acosta Banuelos, to name a<lb/>
few, in this engaging production. Riled<lb/>
with music, audience participation,<lb/>
humor and history, the show will<lb/>
Inspire youth to hold on to their hopes<lb/>
and dreams and keep reaching<lb/>
for success. For tickets and more<lb/>
information call the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office at 252-328-4788, toll free at 1-<lb/>
800-ECU-ARTS or visit ecuarts.com.<lb/>
Local Concerts:<lb/>
, Carbon Leaf will be performing at<lb/>
; ECU Saturday, March 4.<lb/>
The Take Action Tour featuring<lb/>
Matchbook Romance, The Early<lb/>
November, Sirverstein, Paramore and<lb/>
Amber Pacific will come to Myrtle<lb/>
Beach, SC. 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/>
Jerry Seinfeld will be performing at the<lb/>
Progress Energy Center for Performing<lb/>
Arts in Raleigh Friday, March 10.<lb/>
Circa Survive, Saves the Day and<lb/>
Moneen will be performing at the<lb/>
House of Blues in Myrtle Beach, SC.<lb/>
Saturday, March 25.<lb/>
Martina McBride will be at the RBC<lb/>
Center in Raleigh Sunday, April 2.<lb/>
Michael Buble will be performing<lb/>
at Memorial Auditorium in Raleigh<lb/>
Wednesday, April 12.<lb/>
In a few short months, many<lb/>
seniors will be preparing to<lb/>
take the final step in their col-<lb/>
lege careers - graduation. Pre-<lb/>
paring for graduation can be<lb/>
a grueling experience, espe-<lb/>
cially if you aren't sure what you<lb/>
need to do and when to do it.<lb/>
Well, have no fear. I'm here<lb/>
to offer you some tips that will<lb/>
make preparing not only bear-<lb/>
able, but maybe even enjoyable.<lb/>
The most important thing<lb/>
that you will need to do is be sure<lb/>
all of your graduation paper work<lb/>
is done. Stop by your advisor's<lb/>
office or the graduation office<lb/>
and ask if there is anything else<lb/>
you need to do before the big<lb/>
day. Also don't forget that you<lb/>
have to register on OneStop for<lb/>
graduation, which lets the people<lb/>
in charge know whether you will<lb/>
be attending your departmental<lb/>
graduation, the large ceremony<lb/>
or both. This is often overlooked<lb/>
by students, but is a vital part of<lb/>
the graduation process.<lb/>
No one wants to walk across<lb/>
the stage naked, so be sure to<lb/>
pick up your cap and gown. The<lb/>
cost is covered through student<lb/>
tuition, and you can pick it up<lb/>
at the Dowdy Student Store<lb/>
upon completing the Dowdy<lb/>
Student Store Commencement<lb/>
Appeal Form. This form is avail-<lb/>
able in the store or online at<lb/>
ecu.edustudentstores.<lb/>
When preparing an outfit to<lb/>
wear underneath your cap and<lb/>
gown, there are a few things to<lb/>
take into consideration. Since<lb/>
temperatures in May will be rather<lb/>
warm, students should wear light<lb/>
clothing underneath their gowns.<lb/>
Women may want to con-<lb/>
sider wearing short sleeves and<lb/>
bringing along a sweater to wear<lb/>
after the ceremony, as the spring<lb/>
temperatures can prove to be a bit<lb/>
chilly. Also, make sure you don't<lb/>
wear a skirt or dress that exceeds<lb/>
the length of your gown. Finally,<lb/>
wearing shoes with straps may<lb/>
be a better choice than back-<lb/>
less shoes considering the fact<lb/>
that you will be walking across<lb/>
a stage in front of hundreds of<lb/>
people. You don't want to risk<lb/>
losing a shoe or falling down.<lb/>
There aren't very many<lb/>
choices for men when it comes<lb/>
to choosing something to wear<lb/>
underneath your gown; how-<lb/>
ever, remembering to wear dark<lb/>
pants so that you don't stand out<lb/>
will be a wise choice. Also, wear-<lb/>
ing a short-sleeved shirt rather<lb/>
than longer sleeves may keep<lb/>
you cooler.<lb/>
After figuring out your ward-<lb/>
robe, the next thing to focus<lb/>
on is sending out graduation<lb/>
announcements and invitations.<lb/>
The Dowdy Student Stores offers<lb/>
students pre-printed graduation<lb/>
cards, coordinating envelopes<lb/>
and inserts, on which you can<lb/>
handwrite your name and degree.<lb/>
Also, custom printed announce-<lb/>
ments are available to order<lb/>
online form Jostens.com, but<lb/>
keep in mind that it may take up<lb/>
to two weeks (or more) for orders<lb/>
to arrive.<lb/>
Announcements may<lb/>
be sent out either before or<lb/>
after your ceremony since<lb/>
see GRAD page A7<lb/>
Who is Who at ECU?<lb/>
SHANNON DAVIS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
To the surprise of many stu-<lb/>
dents, instructors do not live in<lb/>
their classrooms. Faculty and<lb/>
staff have an array of responsi-<lb/>
bilities on and off campus. ECU<lb/>
is privileged to have Janie Jones<lb/>
Sowers, M.S LMFT on staff at<lb/>
the Child Development and<lb/>
Family Relations department. Her<lb/>
enthusiasm and fervor for educa-<lb/>
tion is commendable.<lb/>
TEC: How did you come to find<lb/>
that you wanted to work at ECU?<lb/>
Sowers: I grew up 21 miles from<lb/>
Greenville in Washington, N.C.<lb/>
I became involved with ECU<lb/>
when I came back for my second<lb/>
master's degree. My first degree<lb/>
is in counseling; my second is in<lb/>
marriage and family.<lb/>
TEC: What is involved in your<lb/>
occupation?<lb/>
Sowers: 1 am a visiting instructor<lb/>
at ECU and a clinic coordinator<lb/>
for the Family and Therapy Clinic.<lb/>
TEC: What do you like most<lb/>
about your job?<lb/>
Sowers: I use a systematic<lb/>
approach when working with<lb/>
individuals, couples and fami-<lb/>
lies. I enjoy helping people via<lb/>
therapy and being in the class-<lb/>
room helping students discover<lb/>
their passions.<lb/>
TEC: What is the most important<lb/>
part of your life?<lb/>
Sowers: I am a social creature. I<lb/>
love laughter. I love music, the-<lb/>
atre, comedies and being with<lb/>
people who are significant in my<lb/>
life. My faith is equally impor-<lb/>
tant to me as well.<lb/>
TEC: What are your passions?<lb/>
Sowers: To help people under-<lb/>
stand their potential. The highest<lb/>
regard given to someone is that<lb/>
they made a difference. I also<lb/>
like to travel. I have done a good<lb/>
number of mission trips around<lb/>
the world. I have been to the Phil-<lb/>
ippines twice, Mexico four times,<lb/>
New York City after September 11,<lb/>
Washington D.C San Antonio<lb/>
JANIE JONES SOWERS<lb/>
and the Navaho Reservation Four<lb/>
Corners outside of Montezuma,<lb/>
Utah. I will be going to Chicago<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
TEC: How do you see your role<lb/>
as an educator?<lb/>
Sowers: Motivating and tap-<lb/>
ping into passions. I see myself<lb/>
facilitating learning.<lb/>
TEC: How do you maintain bal-<lb/>
ance?<lb/>
Sowers: 1 know my limits and<lb/>
prioritize. I have also learned<lb/>
the importance of relationships<lb/>
and those who are significant. As<lb/>
a Christian, I am influenced by<lb/>
my faith, which has a large role<lb/>
in my life.<lb/>
TEC: At what age did you real-<lb/>
ize you wanted to become an<lb/>
educator?<lb/>
Sowers: It is such an honor to<lb/>
know I was considered in that<lb/>
light. I would say in my 20s.<lb/>
TEC: What interests you the<lb/>
most about child development?<lb/>
Sowers: The role I see a child<lb/>
play in a family context. I under-<lb/>
stand that every person is some-<lb/>
body's son, daughter, brother,<lb/>
see PROFESSOR page A7<lb/>
School of Art and Design Undergraduate Exhibition at Gray Gallery<lb/>
Students display talent<lb/>
and receive awards<lb/>
SHANNON DAVIS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Coordinators in the School of<lb/>
Art and Design chose the excep-<lb/>
tional works submitted from<lb/>
more than 650 undergraduate<lb/>
students to be displayed in the<lb/>
art gallery for an opportunity to<lb/>
win a variety of awards. Curator<lb/>
Gail Brown selected the award<lb/>
winning pieces and announced<lb/>
the winners at an award cer-<lb/>
emony Friday, Feb. 17. Among the<lb/>
winners was senior Melissa Van<lb/>
Sandt, a sculpture major.<lb/>
TEC: What award did you win?<lb/>
Van Sandt: I won the Sculpture<lb/>
Merit Awafd<lb/>
TEC: How long did it take you to<lb/>
create the sculpture?<lb/>
Van Sandt: There are two parts<lb/>
to it. The first part, which is the<lb/>
cast, took one week; the second<lb/>
part is the steel and that only<lb/>
took two days.<lb/>
TEC: Where did you get the<lb/>
inspiration to make it?<lb/>
Van Sandt: It is based on organic<lb/>
form called "Native Fabrication<lb/>
Organic forms such as plant life,<lb/>
shell forms and organic features<lb/>
that were prominent when I<lb/>
was growing up inspire all of<lb/>
my work.<lb/>
TEC: What influenced you to<lb/>
become a sculpture major?<lb/>
Van Sandt: I like to work with<lb/>
tools. It is a three dimensional<lb/>
world and I like to work in three-<lb/>
dimensional.<lb/>
Another talented artist<lb/>
who won an award was senior<lb/>
Debora Gomez, a painting and<lb/>
drawing major.<lb/>
TEC: What award did you win?<lb/>
Gomez: I won Excellence in<lb/>
Painting.<lb/>
TEC: What is the piece about?<lb/>
Gomez: It is a photo of my<lb/>
mother and me when I was little.<lb/>
She is bathing me in the sink.<lb/>
TEC: What inspires you most?<lb/>
Gomez: My past, family or what<lb/>
ever is currently going on with<lb/>
me. I like to do a lot of personal<lb/>
pieces.<lb/>
2-28-06<lb/>
Spacioi<lb/>
Free W<lb/>
Centra<lb/>
 'Washei<lb/>
'Dishwi<lb/>
Ceiling<lb/>
Each I<lb/>
Pets AJ<lb/>
Energ<lb/>
I<lb/>
w<lb/>
To s<lb/>
see EXHIBITION page A7 The ar,work above received the Sculpture Merit Award at the School of Art and Design Exhibition<lb/>
<pb facs="00059401_0007"/><lb/>
2-28-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  FEATURES<lb/>
PAGE A7<lb/>
PO Box 873  108 Brownlea Drive Suite A  Greenville, NC27835-0873<lb/>
phone (252) 758-1921 Ext. 60  fax (252) 757-7722<lb/>
Office Hours: Mon-Fri 9am-5pm, Sat 3y Appointment Only<lb/>
Apartments S Rental Houses<lb/>
It's Bak!<lb/>
WZMB will be hosting another Speed Dating round!<lb/>
March 9, 2006<lb/>
Mendenhall<lb/>
Great Room 1<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
To sign up call 328.4751 or just stop by the station in the<lb/>
basement of Mendenhall.<lb/>
 Refreshments will be served!<lb/>
11<lb/>
iPod nano (2GB)<lb/>
CONNECT<lb/>
to our DiningStyles survey<lb/>
tell us how Dining Services meets<lb/>
your needs and enter to<lb/>
an iPod" nano or an iTunes' gift card<lb/>
$50 iTunes gift card $25 iTunes gift card<lb/>
<lb/>
Tell us what you think. <lb/>
Enter to win an iPod nano<lb/>
or iTunes gift card!<lb/>
When: Now!<lb/>
Connect here: www.ecu.edudining<lb/>
MCMahOD from page A6<lb/>
if there is such a thing as a typical<lb/>
day. laughs I'm up early about<lb/>
6:15,1 take ca"re of the dog, then<lb/>
go to the gym. After that I make<lb/>
breakfast for Vince and myself,<lb/>
then I come into the office and<lb/>
then have a full day here. One<lb/>
afternoon I'll go into the city and<lb/>
play with my little grandson. So<lb/>
that's a very happy afternoon.<lb/>
There's always a lot of meetings.<lb/>
I meet with analysts, investment<lb/>
bankers and I have internal busi-<lb/>
ness meetings here. We're going<lb/>
into our last quarter of our fiscal<lb/>
year, so there are a lot of financial<lb/>
meetings going on. It's a full day,<lb/>
a full week, and this entertain-<lb/>
ment business is sometimes just<lb/>
247 and you can't count on<lb/>
having the weekends off. This<lb/>
is something we truly love; it's<lb/>
a passion for us and so it doesn't<lb/>
really feel like a job.<lb/>
TEC: Do you enjoy not only<lb/>
working behind the scenes, but<lb/>
also being in front of the camera<lb/>
and in front of a live audience?<lb/>
Do you prefer to be on television<lb/>
or work behind the scenes?<lb/>
McMahon: Oh definitely off<lb/>
camera, laughs I'm not leaving<lb/>
my day job. I've seen my job on<lb/>
TV and I think I should stick to<lb/>
my day job.<lb/>
TEC: You've taken some bumps<lb/>
in the ring before. Does it really<lb/>
hurt as bad as it seems on TV?<lb/>
McMahon: Sometimes. In fact,<lb/>
there was one scenario where<lb/>
Stephanie and I were feuding and<lb/>
she actually slapped me in the<lb/>
ring and it was a good hard slap,<lb/>
knocked me down. She swears<lb/>
she didn't, laughs but it clearly<lb/>
hurt. So yes, those bumps in the<lb/>
ring do hurt. I've got the greatest<lb/>
respect for our superstars who are<lb/>
in there night after night with<lb/>
the bumps that they take.<lb/>
They have to be great athletes to<lb/>
do what they do. They have to<lb/>
train hard. But just to run and<lb/>
bounce off those ring ropes, you<lb/>
have no idea how it feels and if<lb/>
you try it one time, you'll see<lb/>
that the ropes will bruise your<lb/>
sides, they'll bruise your ribs, but<lb/>
they make it look easy. I have the<lb/>
utmost respect for them. They<lb/>
are marvelous performers and<lb/>
athletes.<lb/>
GraQ from page A6<lb/>
they are not meant to be<lb/>
invitations, just an announce-<lb/>
ment of your accomplishment.<lb/>
Don't be shy about sending them<lb/>
out in fear that people will think<lb/>
you are only trying to receive<lb/>
gifts; you can write a note at the<lb/>
bottom requesting no gifts if<lb/>
you so choose.<lb/>
Although announcements<lb/>
can be sent out whenever you<lb/>
wish, invitations will need to<lb/>
be sent two weeks to a month<lb/>
in advance to ensure that<lb/>
everyone that you wish to attend<lb/>
will have ample time to plan<lb/>
their schedule around the event.<lb/>
You want all of your loved ones<lb/>
to be there to share your achieve-<lb/>
ments, so be sure that you have<lb/>
your announcements sent in a<lb/>
timely manner.<lb/>
After the thrill of graduation<lb/>
has begun to diminish, you will<lb/>
need to begin sending thank<lb/>
you notes to everyone who gave<lb/>
you graduation gifts. Thank you<lb/>
notes are a polite way to show<lb/>
your appreciation not only for<lb/>
the gift they gave you, but also<lb/>
for the support they have offered<lb/>
you throughout the years.<lb/>
You can find out more about<lb/>
graduation supplies at ecu.edu<lb/>
studentstores.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
PrOfeSSOr from page A6<lb/>
sister, cousin or niece.<lb/>
TEC: What other courses do you<lb/>
currently instruct?<lb/>
Sowers: Culturally Diversity<lb/>
and Family Relations, Family<lb/>
and Community Services<lb/>
Internships and Profession<lb/>
Seminar for Family and<lb/>
Community Services.<lb/>
This licensed family therapist<lb/>
enjoys helping people and life.<lb/>
The academia at ECU is growing<lb/>
tremendously and will continue<lb/>
to grow because of multi-faceted<lb/>
instructors like Sowers who pro-<lb/>
vide an interactive and instruc-<lb/>
tional atmosphere for students.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
TEC: Is there anything else that<lb/>
you'd like to say to the ECU com-<lb/>
munity?<lb/>
McMahon: Yes. Go Pirates!<lb/>
McMahon and the WWE also<lb/>
have a variety of community rela-<lb/>
tions programs including the Get<lb/>
R.E.A.L. program, Smackdown<lb/>
Your Vote Circle of Champions,<lb/>
as well as Military Outreach.<lb/>
Get R.E.A.L. encourages suc-<lb/>
cess in children in junior and<lb/>
senior high school through<lb/>
respect, education, achievement<lb/>
and leadership. WWE superstars<lb/>
will travel to libraries around<lb/>
the world encouraging students<lb/>
to read more. In 2005, superstar<lb/>
Rey Mysterio was a spokesperson<lb/>
for Teen Read Week. To read<lb/>
more about this and other pro-<lb/>
grams, log on to vote.wwe.com,<lb/>
or corporate.wwe.comcommu-<lb/>
nityoverview.<lb/>
To read the complete inter-<lb/>
view, including the WWE's stand<lb/>
on steroids, log on to theeastcaro-<lb/>
linian.com.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
EXhibitiOII from page A6<lb/>
TEC: Did you anticipate winning<lb/>
any of the awards?<lb/>
Gomez: Not at all. It was the first<lb/>
time I've submitted anything so<lb/>
I didn't think I'd win. It is awe-<lb/>
some that I did though.<lb/>
ECU features the largest<lb/>
studio art program in North<lb/>
Carolina. The concentrations<lb/>
represented in the exhibition<lb/>
include art foundation, ceram-<lb/>
ics, graphic design, illustration,<lb/>
interactive media, metals, paint-<lb/>
ing, photography, printmaking,<lb/>
sculpture, textile design, video<lb/>
and wood design.<lb/>
The annual ECU School of Art<lb/>
and Design Undergraduate Exhi-<lb/>
bition at the Wellington B. Gray<lb/>
Gallery is from Feb. 17 - April 1.<lb/>
The gallery and auditorium are<lb/>
located in the Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Center at Fifth and Jarvis Streets.<lb/>
The gallery hours are Mon. - Fri.<lb/>
from 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. and Sat. 10<lb/>
a.m. - 2 p.m.<lb/>
For more information, log on<lb/>
to the School of Art and Design<lb/>
Web site at ecu.edusoad. Go out<lb/>
and enjoy all of the hard work<lb/>
these students have put into<lb/>
their work.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcaroiinian.com.<lb/>
GO<lb/>
Majors Fair<lb/>
March 1<lb/>
10:30-1:30 PM<lb/>
1st Floor, Bate Building<lb/>
Take another Step towards your career<lb/>
decision. There are over 120 majors at ECU.<lb/>
Attend the fair to learn more about them.<lb/>
March is Majors Month!<lb/>
If you arc tint<lb/>
select .1 major<lb/>
this March.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059401_0008"/><lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
Page A8 sports@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 TONY ZOPPO Sports Editor BRANDON HUGHES Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY February 28, 2006<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
ECU swimming claims second<lb/>
In C-USA championships<lb/>
ECU finished in second place<lb/>
at both the 2006 Conference USA<lb/>
Men's Invitational and Women's<lb/>
Championships held at Houston's<lb/>
Campus Recreation &amp; Wellness<lb/>
Center Natatorium over the past<lb/>
four days. SMU took home its first<lb/>
C-USA Women's Swimming and<lb/>
Diving title and Men's Invitational<lb/>
crown in the program's Inaugural<lb/>
year in the league. For the women,<lb/>
ECU followed In second (587),<lb/>
while the Houston Cougars were<lb/>
only two points behind the Pirates.<lb/>
Rice followed in fourth with 540.5<lb/>
points, while Tulane (402.5) and<lb/>
Marshall (249) rounded out the<lb/>
women's teams. On the men's<lb/>
side, ECU finished second (781),<lb/>
while the University of Hawaii (583)<lb/>
came in third. The women's team<lb/>
began the day in fourth place and<lb/>
trailed Houston entering the final<lb/>
race of the day, 400-yard freestyle<lb/>
relay. ECU finished the race in third<lb/>
place (3:25.42) ahead of Houston<lb/>
(3:27.00) and added 32 points to its<lb/>
total. UH's mark gave the squad 28<lb/>
and pushed the team behind ECU.<lb/>
Junior Kate Gordon, a member of<lb/>
the 400 free relay team, helped the<lb/>
Pirates bolster their point total with a<lb/>
second place finish In the 200-yard<lb/>
butterfly (2:02.98), just ahead of<lb/>
teammate Holly Williams (2:03.34),<lb/>
who placed third. Rebecca Perry,<lb/>
Adrienne Williams and Courtney<lb/>
Felker joined Gordon on the 400<lb/>
free relay team. ECU stood second<lb/>
after three days and was able to<lb/>
hold onto its second place standing<lb/>
earning three third place finishes<lb/>
on the final day of competition.<lb/>
Sophomore Greg Neville placed<lb/>
third in the 200-yard backstroke<lb/>
with a time of 1:56.31. Sophomore<lb/>
Peter Bradyhouse earned a medal<lb/>
in the platform dive with a third<lb/>
place finish, earning a total score<lb/>
of 129.95. The team of Chrsltoph<lb/>
Lubenau, Bryan Yasinsac, Josh<lb/>
Curnutte and Charlie McCanless<lb/>
placed third in the 400-yard freestyle<lb/>
relay with a time of 3:04.36.<lb/>
Jake Smith Named C-USA<lb/>
Hitter of the Week<lb/>
ECU senior catcher Jake Smith<lb/>
was named Conference USA Hltter-<lb/>
of-the-Week by league officials<lb/>
on Monday. The announcement<lb/>
marks ECU'S first player of the<lb/>
week winner this season and the<lb/>
first Pirate to be named hitter of the<lb/>
week since Ryan Jones earned the<lb/>
recognition May 3, 2004. Smith, a<lb/>
Greensboro native, led the Pirates<lb/>
to three victories last week, batting<lb/>
8-for-18 (.444) with two doubles, a<lb/>
home run and 10 RBI. He hit safely<lb/>
in each game and drove in all of<lb/>
his 10 runs during ECU'S three<lb/>
wins. Smith opened the week by<lb/>
going 3-for-6 against Duke with two<lb/>
doubles, a career-high five RBI and<lb/>
three runs scored. He also went<lb/>
5-for-12 during the Keith LeClair<lb/>
Classic, hitting his second homer of<lb/>
the season while collecting four RBI<lb/>
in a 3-for-5 performance against<lb/>
UNC Wilmington. On the year, Smith<lb/>
is second on the team with a .375<lb/>
average while he leads the club in<lb/>
most offensive categories including<lb/>
homers (2), RBI (14), doubles (3),<lb/>
hits (15), total bases (24) and<lb/>
slugging percentage (.600). In<lb/>
addition to his early success at<lb/>
the plate, Smith has caught eight<lb/>
attempted basestealers through<lb/>
the Pirates' first 10 games. ECU (7-<lb/>
3) is hosting Duke Tuesday, Feb. 28<lb/>
at 4 p.m. before Stony Brook comes<lb/>
to Greenville for a weekend series,<lb/>
March 3-5.<lb/>
Lady Pirates earn No. 8 seed In<lb/>
Conference USA tournament<lb/>
After earning its first-ever<lb/>
conference championship in<lb/>
women's basketball on Friday,<lb/>
regular season champion Tulsa<lb/>
will be the No. 1 seed in this<lb/>
week's C-USA Women's Basketball<lb/>
Championship, March 2-5 at SMU's<lb/>
Moody Coliseum in Dallas, Texas.<lb/>
The Golden Hurricane posted its<lb/>
11th home win and 13th conference<lb/>
victory, breaking the school's single-<lb/>
season record, following a win over<lb/>
UTEP earlier today. As the No. 1<lb/>
seed, Tulsa will have a first round<lb/>
bye at the 2006 C-USA Women's<lb/>
Basketball Championship. Other<lb/>
teams receiving first round byes<lb/>
include No. 2 Rice, No. 3 SMU and<lb/>
No. 4 Southern Miss. Thursday's first<lb/>
round match-ups Include: No. 8 East<lb/>
Carolina vs. No. 9 UAB at 1 p.m<lb/>
No. 5 Marshall vs. No. 12 Memphis<lb/>
at 3:30 p.m No. 7 Houston vs.<lb/>
No. 10 UTEP at 6 p.m and No. 6<lb/>
Tulane vs. No. 11 UCF at 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
In Friday's quarterfinal round, No. 1<lb/>
Tulsa will take on the winner of the<lb/>
ECUUAB game at 1 p.m. and No. 4<lb/>
Southern Miss will face the winner<lb/>
of the MarshallMemphis match-up<lb/>
beginning at 3:30 p.m. No. 2 Rice,<lb/>
winners of seven In a row, will take<lb/>
on the winner of the HoustonUTEP<lb/>
game at 6 p.m while No. 3 seed<lb/>
SMU will close out Friday night<lb/>
with the winner of the TulaneUCF <lb/>
contest at 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
Diamond Bucs take two<lb/>
in Keith LeClair Classic<lb/>
Jake Smith was in the zone this past week for the Pirates, collecting 10 RBI on eight hits, including a career high five RBI against Duke last Tuesday.<lb/>
Kennedy leads Hokies<lb/>
past Pirates in finale<lb/>
BRENT WYNNE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Virginia Tech starter Ryan<lb/>
Kennedy stymied the Pirate<lb/>
offense for seven innings and<lb/>
Jose Cueto delivered a two-<lb/>
run home run in the fourth,<lb/>
as the Hokies ended the Keith<lb/>
LeClair Classic with a 5-1 win<lb/>
over ECU Sunday afternoon at<lb/>
Clark-LeClair stadium.<lb/>
In his seven innings of work,<lb/>
Kennedy surrendered just one run<lb/>
off of six hits while walking one<lb/>
and striking out four. The south-<lb/>
paw hurler recorded all 21 outs on<lb/>
the infield, including 15 ground-<lb/>
outs, four strikeouts, an infield<lb/>
foul out and an infield pop out.<lb/>
Hokie relievers Adam Redd<lb/>
and Nicky Bowers kept the Pirates<lb/>
at bay the last two innings, each<lb/>
pitching a scoreless inning to<lb/>
close the deal.<lb/>
As a team, ECU managed only<lb/>
eight hits on the day, none of<lb/>
which went for extra bases.<lb/>
"We just didn't string any-<lb/>
thing together offensively said<lb/>
Head Coach Billy Godwin.<lb/>
"There was no consistency,<lb/>
but I tip my hat to Virginia Tech.<lb/>
They played well<lb/>
Pirate starter Shane Matthews<lb/>
mirrored Kennedy's performance<lb/>
through the first three innings,<lb/>
but in the fourth he made his first<lb/>
mistake of the game to Cueto.<lb/>
Allowing only one hit going<lb/>
into the frame, Matthews gave up<lb/>
a one out single to Sean O'Brien,<lb/>
who then scored on Cueto's<lb/>
round tripper to left, giving the<lb/>
Hokies a 2-0 lead.<lb/>
Tech left-fielder Sheldon<lb/>
Adams was hit by Matthews to<lb/>
begin the sixth. After recording<lb/>
an out on a sacrifice bunt, Mat-<lb/>
thews was lifted for senior Scott<lb/>
Andrews. Adams moved to third<lb/>
on an O'Brien single and then<lb/>
scored when designated hitter<lb/>
Billy Marn singled to right, push-<lb/>
ing the lead to 3-0.<lb/>
Matthews took his first loss<lb/>
of the season, going 5.1 innings.<lb/>
He gave up three runs off of three<lb/>
hits and a walk, while striking<lb/>
out four.<lb/>
ECU scored their only run of<lb/>
the game in the sixth. Jay Mattox<lb/>
walked with one out and moved<lb/>
to second on Jake Smith's single.<lb/>
Adam Witter then followed with<lb/>
a single to load the bases. Ste-<lb/>
phen Batts hit into what looked<lb/>
to be a sure-fire double play, but<lb/>
after Hokie shortstop Warren<lb/>
Schaeffer's throw pulled first<lb/>
baseman O'Brien off the bag,<lb/>
Mattox scooted home to cut<lb/>
Tech's lead to 3-1.<lb/>
The Hokies added two more<lb/>
insurance runs in the ninth<lb/>
see CLASSIC page MO<lb/>
A night to forget, Pirates drop home finale 66-53<lb/>
Tulane bests ECU on<lb/>
Senior Night<lb/>
ERIC QILMORE<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Senior Night is supposed to be<lb/>
an easy win, rewarding four-year<lb/>
players with a culmination of<lb/>
their efforts. However, Saturday<lb/>
night, Tulane had alternate plans.<lb/>
The Green Wave used a torrid<lb/>
shooting touch and stifling<lb/>
defense to defeat ECU 66-53 in<lb/>
front of 5,310 fans. Tulane sank 52<lb/>
percent (24-of-46) from the field<lb/>
while the Pirates struggled to find<lb/>
the basket throughout the game.<lb/>
"I'm proud of our guys and<lb/>
the way they performed tonight,<lb/>
especially in the second-half<lb/>
said first-year Tulane coach Dave<lb/>
Dickerson.<lb/>
"We did the things we needed<lb/>
to do to win the game. We knew<lb/>
that ECU would take a lot of threes,<lb/>
so we felt like our three-point<lb/>
defense needed to be tremendous<lb/>
And it was. ECU missed<lb/>
all 11 shots from behind the<lb/>
arc in the second-half, shoot-<lb/>
ing just 4-for-22 total.<lb/>
"It really came down to shoot-<lb/>
ing the basketball said ECU<lb/>
coach Ricky Stokes.<lb/>
"We did not shoot the ball very<lb/>
well and they did. I thought that<lb/>
was the difference in the game<lb/>
Senior forward Corey Rouse<lb/>
led ECU (8-18, 2-11 Conference<lb/>
USA) with a game-high 17 points<lb/>
and 11 rebounds to earn his 15th<lb/>
double of the season. In his finale<lb/>
inside Minges Coliseum, Rouse<lb/>
struggled with his shooting touch,<lb/>
going 6-of-15 from the field and<lb/>
5-of-ll at the charity stripe.<lb/>
Sophomores Jeremy Ingram<lb/>
and Jonathan Hart each added<lb/>
nine points. Ingram, despite play-<lb/>
ing through a meniscus tear in his<lb/>
right knee, tallied all of his points<lb/>
on threes in the first half.<lb/>
Like Rouse, junior guard<lb/>
Courtney Captain and freshman<lb/>
guard Sam Hlnnant both struggled<lb/>
with their shots. Captain was 1-<lb/>
of-9 from the field while scoring<lb/>
six points. The junior's lone field<lb/>
goal was a three-pointer, marking<lb/>
the 25th time in 26 games that the<lb/>
Captain has connected on a trey.<lb/>
Hlnnant had shooting woes as well,<lb/>
missing all five shots from beyond<lb/>
the arc en route to l-of-7 shooting.<lb/>
The freshman's four points was<lb/>
his lowest output since Dec. 3.<lb/>
Tulane forward David Gomez<lb/>
led the Green Wave (10-15, 5-<lb/>
7) with 15 points, while senior<lb/>
center Quincy Davis had 13.<lb/>
Freshman point guard Ryan<lb/>
Williams chipped in 11 while<lb/>
freshman forward Daniel Puckett<lb/>
notched seven points and added<lb/>
six rebounds.<lb/>
With the score knotted at 41,<lb/>
Tulane edged out a decisive 16-3<lb/>
run over an eight-minute, 38-<lb/>
second span. During the spurt,<lb/>
ECU managed only one field goal,<lb/>
while Tulane sharp shooter Chris<lb/>
Moore sniped In two threes. The<lb/>
Pirates made only four field goals<lb/>
over the last 13 minutes and 26<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
"We're disappointed we weren't<lb/>
see FINALE page A10 Tulane ruined senior night for ECU as they beat the "Pirates 66-53.<lb/>
Longevity lacking in head coaches' demanding realm<lb/>
Cowher has been with the Steelers for 14 years.<lb/>
(KRT)The fraternity is like noother.<lb/>
It is one of the rarest in the world<lb/>
and also one of the most visible in the<lb/>
world, with a network all its own. There<lb/>
are only 32 members.<lb/>
Long-established members suggest<lb/>
savoring the brotherhood as if it were<lb/>
a rare wine, one that has but a sliver of<lb/>
time for enjoyment. Because that's what<lb/>
coaching a team in the NFL has become.<lb/>
Five years ago, 32 head coaches came<lb/>
to the NFL Scouting Combine during<lb/>
their most relaxing time of the year<lb/>
and evaluated 2001's draft prospects.<lb/>
Today, only seven of those 32 hold<lb/>
the same job.<lb/>
Bill Cowher, the league's longest-<lb/>
tenured coach, landed in Pittsburgh in<lb/>
1992. Since, the New York Jets and the<lb/>
Washington Redskins each have hired<lb/>
six coaches. Oakland has had five.<lb/>
"When I was here four years ago (as<lb/>
an assistant coach), I remember sitting<lb/>
in the dome by myself looking around.<lb/>
Didn't really know anybody new St.<lb/>
Louis Rams Coach Scott Linehan said<lb/>
from the RCA Dome, where this year's<lb/>
NFL prospects went through their first<lb/>
sets of job interviews.<lb/>
"My challenge then was figuring<lb/>
out what I was going to do with the<lb/>
Minnesota Vikings' offense  Now,<lb/>
every decision, somebody says, 'What's<lb/>
Coach want?' It comes across my desk<lb/>
Linehan is part of the largest class<lb/>
of first-time NFL head coaches in<lb/>
recent memory. Nearly one-third of the<lb/>
league's teams take new coaches into<lb/>
the 2006 season.<lb/>
Beginning with the draft process,<lb/>
10 teams introduce new head coaches;<lb/>
seven of the 10 are first-timers.<lb/>
Some are West Coast-offense aficio-<lb/>
nados, others defensive specialists. One<lb/>
comes out of the Bill Belichick lineage,<lb/>
another from Tony Dungy's tenure at<lb/>
Tampa Bay.<lb/>
Those are some of their specialties<lb/>
and differences. They have one thing in<lb/>
common. Job security is tenuous. They<lb/>
have it now. It won't always be so.<lb/>
History suggests in another five<lb/>
years, by the 2011 combine, more than<lb/>
half of them will be doing something<lb/>
else. That leaves little time for turning<lb/>
blueprints into reality.<lb/>
And this: "There's no handbook for<lb/>
the head coaching job second-year<lb/>
Browns Coach Romeo Crennel said.<lb/>
"People can tell you a little bit about it,<lb/>
but there's no handbook. When it hap-<lb/>
pens, it happens. You have to under-<lb/>
stand and deal with the things you have<lb/>
to deal with and be better prepared the<lb/>
second time or the second year assum-<lb/>
ing you get a second year<lb/>
Year one is a blur. By the time<lb/>
first-year coaches have their staffs<lb/>
in place, the combine is here. Just<lb/>
about the time they wish there were<lb/>
more player evaluations to make,<lb/>
the draft comes. By then, off-<lb/>
season workouts are in full-force.<lb/>
Next come mini-camps, passing<lb/>
camps, veteran campsand, finally,<lb/>
training camp.<lb/>
"Got to get a lot done in a very short<lb/>
period of time new Detroit Coach Rod<lb/>
Marinelli said.<lb/>
Being in the fraternity means never-<lb/>
ending video clips on the NFL Network.<lb/>
Traveling in obscurity is over. Walking<lb/>
from the media room to the dome<lb/>
here means dealing with the cadre of<lb/>
autograph seekers and souvenir<lb/>
hounds.<lb/>
Soon, days of going to and from prac-<lb/>
tice without a camera running are over.<lb/>
see LONGEVITY page A9<lb/>
<pb facs="00059401_0009"/><lb/>
2-28-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROUNIAN  SPORTS<lb/>
PAGE A9<lb/>
Longevity from page 48<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
&amp; Service<lb/>
Please nominate your choices online today at<lb/>
www.ecu.edustudentlifeuniversityunionsrols<lb/>
For more information please call 328-4796<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Activities Center<lb/>
Everybody knows their name.<lb/>
Everybody wants to know what<lb/>
they think. Even their own<lb/>
people. Especially their own<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Progress Is expected, espe-<lb/>
cially considering their million-<lb/>
dollar contracts.<lb/>
"I can't get you a specific<lb/>
example, but it's seeing the<lb/>
things you're trying to get done<lb/>
actually take place however that<lb/>
manifests itself said new Jets<lb/>
Coach Eric Mangini, a Belich-<lb/>
ick disciple and at 35 the NFL's<lb/>
youngest head coach. "I've seen<lb/>
it enough times to know what it<lb/>
should look like. It's got to look<lb/>
the way I expect it to look, and<lb/>
as long as we're moving in that<lb/>
direction, then I'll be happy<lb/>
Three of this year's changed<lb/>
coaching slots, Oakland's Art<lb/>
Shell, Kansas City's Herman<lb/>
Edwards and Buffalo's, Dick<lb/>
Jauron have been here at least<lb/>
once before.<lb/>
For the seven newcomers,<lb/>
Linehan, Marinelli, Mangini,<lb/>
Mike McCarthy (Green Bay),<lb/>
Brad Childress (Minnesota),<lb/>
Gary Kubiak (Houston) and Sean<lb/>
Payton (New Orleans), this is all<lb/>
new. They're navigating a learn-<lb/>
ing curve.<lb/>
"Without a doubt second-<lb/>
year 49ers Coach Mike Nolan said.<lb/>
"But I'm hopeful to think<lb/>
there's a learning curve for<lb/>
second, third, fourth, fifth,<lb/>
sixth, all the way down the line.<lb/>
That's what keeps you energized.<lb/>
I never believe that you ever have<lb/>
it all down because it just keeps<lb/>
turning<lb/>
For the seven new faces, the<lb/>
primary difference between their<lb/>
lives now and their lives here<lb/>
last year is the sheer volume of<lb/>
responsibility. Priority lists have<lb/>
become imperative.<lb/>
While running San Francis-<lb/>
co's offense for Nolan a year ago,<lb/>
for instance, McCarthy watched<lb/>
every college snap taken by the<lb/>
draft's top two quarterbacks,<lb/>
Alex Smith and Aaron Rodgers.<lb/>
Now in charge of Green Bay's<lb/>
team, McCarthy doesn't have<lb/>
the time to devote that much<lb/>
attention on one position; he<lb/>
assigned such tasks to his first<lb/>
group of assistants.<lb/>
Likewise, all position coaches<lb/>
and coordinators comprehend<lb/>
the salary cap and can identify<lb/>
restricted and unrestricted free<lb/>
agents. Head coaches have to see<lb/>
the bigger picture. Some are asked<lb/>
to have a hand in painting it.<lb/>
Oh, and this is all while<lb/>
infusing their personality, and<lb/>
their systems into the franchise.<lb/>
A closed-door style would be a<lb/>
challenge; too many people need<lb/>
answers to too many questions.<lb/>
All 10 just want to see prog-<lb/>
ress. , <lb/>
Only two of the 10 new '<lb/>
coaches inherit a team with a<lb/>
winning record. Childress is<lb/>
one.<lb/>
That's not to say he walked<lb/>
into the best situation. The<lb/>
Vikings fired Mike Tice after 9-7, <lb/>
didn't get them to the playoffs,<lb/>
a result that followed the "Love<lb/>
Boat" sex-capade in which four<lb/>
Vikings players, including quar-<lb/>
terback Daunte Cutpepper, were<lb/>
charged with indecent, lewd<lb/>
andor lascivious behavior.<lb/>
Management styles per- .<lb/>
sonal methods to extend coach-<lb/>
ing lives differ dramatically.<lb/>
Mangini already has built into<lb/>
his Jets operation the same regi<lb/>
mented and tight-lipped customs ,<lb/>
he learned to appreciate (and<lb/>
embrace) under Belichick.<lb/>
When a reporter suggested,<lb/>
to him here that it was believed .<lb/>
the Jets, who are coping with<lb/>
quarterback Chad Pennington's<lb/>
shoulder injury, favored Van- .<lb/>
derbilt quarterback Jay Cutler, <lb/>
Mangini's eyes narrowed.<lb/>
"Who's been talking about<lb/>
that?" he softly demanded. <lb/>
"The Internet was the<lb/>
reply.<lb/>
see LONGEVITY page MO<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
SCHOOL OF LAW<lb/>
Opening in Greensboro - August 2006<lb/>
Now accepting applications for the charter class.<lb/>
Web site:<lb/>
law.elon.edu<lb/>
for complete information and online application<lb/>
Toll free: (888) ELON-LAW  E-mail: law@elon.edu<lb/>
CREATING A NATIONAL MODEL OF ENGAGED<lb/>
LEARNING IN LEGAL EDUCATION<lb/>
 Emphases on total student development, exceptional legal<lb/>
knowledge and skills, leadership and civic involvement, and<lb/>
international study<lb/>
 Learning experiences in the area's leading law firms, federal<lb/>
and state courts, businesses, government agencies and<lb/>
nonprofit organizations<lb/>
 Home of the North Carolina Business Court, which handles<lb/>
business litigation in the school's courtroom and facilities<lb/>
 Partner with the American Judicature Society's Institute<lb/>
of Forensic Science and Public Policy, a new national<lb/>
organization located near the law school<lb/>
<pb facs="00059401_0010"/><lb/>
PAGE A10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROUNIAN  SPORTS<lb/>
2-28-06<lb/>
CldSSIC from page A8<lb/>
before Bowers came on in the<lb/>
bottom of the inning to slam the<lb/>
door for good.<lb/>
The Pirates fell to 1-3 on<lb/>
the season in games played on<lb/>
Sundays.<lb/>
"All our three losses have'<lb/>
come on Sundays. Maybe we'll<lb/>
just skip Sunday and start playing<lb/>
on Mondays Godwin quipped.<lb/>
Cueto, O'Brien and Parks<lb/>
paced Tech with two hits each,<lb/>
while Batts was the only Pirate<lb/>
to record a multi-hit day. He also<lb/>
drove in ECU'S only run.<lb/>
GAME TWO<lb/>
In front of the second larg-<lb/>
est crowd in school history, the<lb/>
Pirates defeated UNC-Wilm-<lb/>
ington 11-2. As 4,141 people<lb/>
watched, ECU dismantled their<lb/>
bitter instate rivals with a mix-<lb/>
ture of timely hitting and a daz-<lb/>
zling pitching performance from<lb/>
four Pirate hurlers.<lb/>
Dustin Sasser pitched 5.2<lb/>
innings of eight hit ball, giving<lb/>
up just two runs with three walks<lb/>
and one strikeout. The red shirt<lb/>
sophomore improved to 2-1 on<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
"1 didn't think he (Sasser) was<lb/>
as sharp today as he has been<lb/>
Godwin said.<lb/>
"But he's going to compete<lb/>
and give you everything he's got.<lb/>
What a great job he did keeping<lb/>
us in the game<lb/>
Pirate relievers Chris Powell<lb/>
(0.1 innings pitched), Jason<lb/>
Neitz (2 IP) and Kevin Rhodes<lb/>
(1 IP) combined to shutout the<lb/>
Seahawks the rest of the game.<lb/>
Jake Smith, who was a triple<lb/>
short of the cycle, going 3-for-5<lb/>
with four RBI and a run scored,<lb/>
led the Diamond Bucs on offense.<lb/>
For the season, Smith is batting<lb/>
.375 with two homers and 14<lb/>
RBI.<lb/>
Dale Mollenhauer added two<lb/>
hits and three RBI, while Harri-<lb/>
son Eldridge and Jake Dean also<lb/>
had two hits.<lb/>
Wilmington took an early<lb/>
1-0 lead after Steve Halford, who<lb/>
reached via a single, scored on a<lb/>
wild pitch from Sasser.<lb/>
ECU responded quickly with<lb/>
two runs in the bottom of the<lb/>
inning to take the lead. After<lb/>
Dean's RBI single scored Batts<lb/>
to tie the game at 1-1, Seahawk<lb/>
starter Allen Flood returned the<lb/>
favor given by Sasser, delivering<lb/>
two consecutive wild pitches,<lb/>
allowing Ryan Tousley to score<lb/>
for a 2-1 Buc lead.<lb/>
Mollenhauer's two-RBI triple<lb/>
and Jake Smith's chopper single<lb/>
up the middle in the fourth<lb/>
extended the Pirate lead to 5-1.<lb/>
The Seahawks closed to within<lb/>
three in the sixth when Hargrave<lb/>
singled home Barefoot, cutting<lb/>
the Pirate advantage to 5-2.<lb/>
Smith's solo blast in the sev-<lb/>
enth seemed to spark the ECU<lb/>
offense, as the Pirates blew the<lb/>
game open in the eighth with<lb/>
five runs.<lb/>
The Bucs loaded the bases<lb/>
in the inning with two singles<lb/>
and an error by the Seahawks.<lb/>
Mollenhauer's RBI single, fol-<lb/>
lowed by a Mattox's RBI walk<lb/>
boosted the lead to 8-2. Smith<lb/>
delivered yet another timely hit,<lb/>
this one a two-RBI single that<lb/>
scored Mollenhauer and Eldridge<lb/>
for a 10-2 lead. A pitch hit Jamie<lb/>
Ray later in the inning with the<lb/>
bases loaded to close the scoring<lb/>
at 11-2.<lb/>
GAME ONE<lb/>
With old skipper Keith LeClair<lb/>
in attendance, Smith delivered a<lb/>
sacrifice fly with the bases loaded<lb/>
in the bottom of the ninth to<lb/>
break a 3-3 tie, giving the Pirates<lb/>
a 4-3 walk off victory against<lb/>
Penn State in the nightcap of day<lb/>
one at the Keith LeClair Classic<lb/>
Friday night.<lb/>
After a walk by Drew Schieber<lb/>
and consecutive singles from Mol-<lb/>
lenhauer and Jay Mattox loaded<lb/>
the bases, Smith sent his sacrifice<lb/>
just deep enough into left field,<lb/>
allowing Schieber to beat the<lb/>
throw from Nittany Lion Lance<lb/>
Thompson to the plate, sending<lb/>
the crowd of 3,814 into a frenzy.<lb/>
"For the people in the stands,<lb/>
it had to be a good game to<lb/>
watch Godwin said.<lb/>
"Fortunately we seem to be<lb/>
coming out on the good end of it<lb/>
Penn State threatened to take<lb/>
a 4-3 lead in the eighth, load-<lb/>
ing the bases with just one out.<lb/>
Scott Gummo, who homered<lb/>
earlier in the contest, lifted a<lb/>
fly ball to right that appeared<lb/>
deep enough to score Matt<lb/>
Cavagnaro from third. But when<lb/>
Eldridge corralled it in, he also<lb/>
made a perfect throw to the<lb/>
plate, gunning down Cavagnaro<lb/>
and keeping the game knotted<lb/>
at three all.<lb/>
ECU starter T.J. Hose was<lb/>
solid again as he pitched seven<lb/>
innings, allowing three runs off<lb/>
of six hits and a walk while strik-<lb/>
ing out nine.<lb/>
"T.J. had another great<lb/>
outing Godwin said.<lb/>
"He was two pitches away<lb/>
from a stellar performance. If we<lb/>
keep getting those kind of out-<lb/>
ings from T.J. Hose, life is going<lb/>
to be good for ECU Friday<lb/>
ECU took a 1-0 lead in<lb/>
the first when with runners<lb/>
at the corners, Godwin decided<lb/>
to double steal Witter to<lb/>
second and Mattox home. The<lb/>
play worked as Mattox scooted<lb/>
home safely for the first run of<lb/>
the contest.<lb/>
The Pirates struck again in<lb/>
the second inning when Batts<lb/>
scored on a groundout from<lb/>
Schieber for a 2-0 lead.<lb/>
Gummo's homer in the<lb/>
fourth cut the Diamond Bucs'<lb/>
lead in half, 2-1. Matt Lewis's RBI<lb/>
double, followed by an RBI single<lb/>
from Gummo in the sixth gave<lb/>
the Nittany Lions their first lead<lb/>
of the ballgame at 3-2.<lb/>
The Pirates tied the con-<lb/>
test up at three in the seventh<lb/>
when freshman Brandon Hen-<lb/>
derson scored on a throwing<lb/>
error from Penn State short-<lb/>
stop Scott Gafney on a Mattox<lb/>
ground ball. That set the stage for<lb/>
Smith's ninth inning heroics.<lb/>
ECU returns to action Tues-<lb/>
day as they battle Duke for the<lb/>
second time this season. The<lb/>
Pirates embarrassed the Blue<lb/>
Devils last week, dealing them a<lb/>
19-5 loss. Game time is 4 p.m. at<lb/>
Clark-LeClair Stadium.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
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Finale<lb/>
from page A8<lb/>
able to send our seniors out with a<lb/>
win Stokes said.<lb/>
"Give Tulane a lot of credit;<lb/>
they played extremely hard<lb/>
The three seniors, Mike Castro,<lb/>
Will O'Neil and Rouse all received<lb/>
framed pictures during a pre-<lb/>
game ceremony honoring their<lb/>
contributions to the program.<lb/>
All three started, but Castro and<lb/>
O'Neil were pulled out after just<lb/>
26 seconds.<lb/>
"It's sunk in, but it'll probably<lb/>
sink in some more later on said<lb/>
Rouse, who is currently leading the<lb/>
conference in rebounding, about<lb/>
his final home game.<lb/>
"When I was walking off<lb/>
the court at the end when<lb/>
the coaches took me out, I<lb/>
just realized that it was over<lb/>
The loss was a bitter end to a<lb/>
5-8 home schedule against Divi-<lb/>
sion I opponents in Stokes' first<lb/>
year. The Pirates' fans suffered<lb/>
through a disappointing 2-3<lb/>
record against N.C. opponents and<lb/>
also two overtime C-USA losses.<lb/>
The Tulane loss leaves the<lb/>
Pirates a half game behind<lb/>
Southern Miss for 11th in the<lb/>
C-USA standings. If Southern<lb/>
Miss loses to Tulane Wednes-<lb/>
day, then ECU'S Saturday<lb/>
season finale against the<lb/>
Golden Eagles in Hattiesburg,<lb/>
Miss, would leave the victor with<lb/>
11th place.<lb/>
"Anything can happen Rouse<lb/>
said about his team's chances<lb/>
in the conference tournament.<lb/>
"Any team can beat anyone on<lb/>
any given night. We're just going<lb/>
to go out and play whatever team is<lb/>
next from here on out. It'stheend<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports&amp;theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
LOIigeVity from page 9<lb/>
"Oh<lb/>
In New York, and as in Miami,<lb/>
where Nick Saban practices<lb/>
habits learned from Belichick<lb/>
from their days with the Browns,<lb/>
Jets assistants are forbidden<lb/>
from talking to the media.<lb/>
In Detroit, Marinelli, Tampa<lb/>
Bay's former defensive line<lb/>
coach, preaches high-energy<lb/>
habits to players and coaches.<lb/>
He believes one of his chief<lb/>
challenges will be to get the<lb/>
Lions to practice at the fast pace<lb/>
he saw in Tampa.<lb/>
"Each day there's something<lb/>
that pops up that's kind of neat<lb/>
he said. "Problems you can<lb/>
attack with energy sometimes.<lb/>
And you just chip away and<lb/>
learn. That's the fun part, the<lb/>
unexpected.<lb/>
Maybe there's a reason<lb/>
there's no handbook for this. In<lb/>
the Indiana Convention Center,<lb/>
Chicago Coach Lovie Smith<lb/>
thought about it. He has but<lb/>
two years' experience as a head<lb/>
coach, but already he's the dean<lb/>
of his division, the NFC North.<lb/>
He'd like to keep the post.<lb/>
"We're division champs right<lb/>
now and we want to stay that way<lb/>
Brotherhood only goes so<lb/>
far, and further fraternity initia-<lb/>
tion is not far off.<lb/>
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29 Ca<lb/>
30 Pic<lb/>
34Tov<lb/>
35 Litt<lb/>
36 Aus<lb/>
37 Mo<lb/>
39Sc<lb/>
40 Na<lb/>
41 Fal<lb/>
42 Abi<lb/>
ma<lb/>
43 Ho<lb/>
44 Bal<lb/>
rep<lb/>
47Thi<lb/>
anc<lb/>
49 Set<lb/>
rao<lb/>
54Pu1<lb/>
55 Dis<lb/>
56 Imr<lb/>
58 Pre<lb/>
59 Lar<lb/>
60Sh<lb/>
we.<lb/>
61 Lyr<lb/>
62 De<lb/>
63 0a<lb/>
tho<lb/>
con<lb/>
64Sh<lb/>
65 Art<lb/>
DO<lb/>
1 Civ<lb/>
2 Wa<lb/>
3 Ma<lb/>
4 Act<lb/>
5 Mo<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059401_0011"/><lb/>
2-28-06<lb/>
I in Stock<lb/>
ies<lb/>
ries<lb/>
i. Servers<lb/>
ips<lb/>
es<lb/>
M<lb/>
reat Rates<lb/>
ocattons<lb/>
ISS<lb/>
ere<lb/>
ith<lb/>
ody<lb/>
trap!<lb/>
vailable<lb/>
I<lb/>
Page A11<lb/>
TUESDAY February 28, 2006<lb/>
Crossword<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Archibald of the<lb/>
NBA<lb/>
5 H.S. subj.<lb/>
8 West Indies<lb/>
music<lb/>
14 Author Haley<lb/>
15 Old sailor<lb/>
16 What squirrels<lb/>
squirrel<lb/>
17 First-class<lb/>
18 Physicians'org.<lb/>
19 Vbungpigs<lb/>
20 Singing group<lb/>
22 Holler<lb/>
23 Dancing<lb/>
companion<lb/>
24 Former<lb/>
27 Spoke with<lb/>
drawn-out vowels<lb/>
29 Can to a Brit<lb/>
30 Picture puzzle<lb/>
34 Towel word<lb/>
35 Litter's littlest<lb/>
36 Australian birds<lb/>
37 Molts<lb/>
39 Scent<lb/>
40 Nail trimmer<lb/>
41 Falsehood<lb/>
42 Abrasive<lb/>
material<lb/>
43 Hospital wing<lb/>
44 Baltic Sea<lb/>
republic<lb/>
47 Think seriously<lb/>
and calmly<lb/>
49 Series of boat<lb/>
races<lb/>
54 Puts in order<lb/>
55 Distress calls<lb/>
56 Immediately!<lb/>
58 Prevent<lb/>
59 Landed<lb/>
60 Short, swordlike<lb/>
weapon<lb/>
61 Lyrical poem<lb/>
62 Departed<lb/>
63 Occupy one's<lb/>
thoughts<lb/>
completely<lb/>
64 Shell propeller<lb/>
65 Art print: abbr.<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Civil rights org.<lb/>
2 Waikiki greeting<lb/>
3 Male voice<lb/>
4 Act vigorously<lb/>
5 More trite<lb/>
123'1'6'1'910111213<lb/>
14:I<lb/>
17<lb/>
2021122<lb/>
23"2526<lb/>
aaai"2629<lb/>
30313233'35<lb/>
36373839<lb/>
4041'<lb/>
43444546<lb/>
47484950515253<lb/>
5455<lb/>
565758159<lb/>
606162<lb/>
636465<lb/>
O20C All rigTrlb hts reunah servetadla d.Sarvlces. Inc.22B06<lb/>
6 Shutterbug's<lb/>
instrument<lb/>
7 Writer Levin<lb/>
8 Reckless quality<lb/>
9 Resounded<lb/>
10 Leave home<lb/>
11 Feeling of<lb/>
thankfulness<lb/>
12 Social insect<lb/>
13 Double curve<lb/>
21 Common<lb/>
conjunctions<lb/>
22 Firm<lb/>
25 One under legal<lb/>
age<lb/>
26 Item inserted in a<lb/>
written record<lb/>
28 Sajak's spin<lb/>
30 Pass on (to)<lb/>
31 Sociologist<lb/>
Durkheim<lb/>
32 Big, deep-voiced<lb/>
croakers<lb/>
33 Exploit<lb/>
35 CD-<lb/>
37 Oilskin raincoats<lb/>
38 Clues<lb/>
42 Uneasy<lb/>
Solutions<lb/>
IdON31MV0ss3sa0<lb/>
3NO03a0y399Va<lb/>
111vVa30NOXV<lb/>
SAVaAVIN8MNVy<lb/>
V1IVO3yiO31d3y<lb/>
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44 Dealers in stolen 52 Binding<lb/>
property<lb/>
45 Spanish fleet<lb/>
46 Closer<lb/>
48 Actress Jessica<lb/>
50 Familiar saying<lb/>
51 Claw<lb/>
53 Rayed flower<lb/>
56 Fuss<lb/>
57 Hunter of<lb/>
Hollywood<lb/>
58 Ghostly<lb/>
comment<lb/>
wWWw wPia<lb/>
MS I<lb/>
VfifoHE To GooDlft STWfc<lb/>
am&amp;MrYouofFWlTHJk<lb/>
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RAISED IN nFfctfRfWK<lb/>
FoRcE FED MHoTiCt<lb/>
AND THEN CrteoNDuPfbR<lb/>
BT LpoK M You. LIKE<lb/>
YouRtAUYCtott<lb/>
AsLNOrsYouG.ETTo<lb/>
SUHirMMwAWfr<lb/>
A College Girl Named Joe<lb/>
by Aaron Warner<lb/>
ICAHTBEUEVEANVONE<lb/>
WOUlPTRtWErOTTO<lb/>
MHKfMfffHATE'S<lb/>
R0O. WE'RE tVLGIOS<lb/>
UVW&amp; TOGETHER. 1<lb/>
SURE WE HAVE<lb/>
LOTSm<lb/>
crjrimoH.<lb/>
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OffEy THEY SOW,<lb/>
WHO COULP POSSIH-Y<lb/>
KSOSOW?<lb/>
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MY UK&amp;.<lb/>
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cuocoune<lb/>
OH IMS<lb/>
 ufttD&amp;if<lb/>
&amp;QAK RTTeftft)Kr<lb/>
.Tnfirtp)teftuttgr<lb/>
Calling ALL<lb/>
Student Leaders!<lb/>
Interested in becoming a part of<lb/>
Student Government for 2006-2007?<lb/>
Election Applications are now being<lb/>
accepted for all Executive Offices and Congress<lb/>
President, Vice President,<lb/>
Treasurer, Secretary<lb/>
and members of Congress<lb/>
Applications will be available<lb/>
March 6-7 from 8am to 5pm<lb/>
SGA Office - 255 Mendenhall<lb/>
Applications are dae March 7th<lb/>
thru<lb/>
n<lb/>
t.<lb/>
Mtion!<lb/>
Come network with employers from the health care industry,<lb/>
so you can make the best choice!<lb/>
Health Career Fair<lb/>
Thursday, March 2,2006<lb/>
10:00 am  3:00 p.m. .<lb/>
linges Coliseum<lb/>
g f  fy Io 1   <lb/>
Student parking at Minges Gold Lot and catch the career shuttle to Belk<lb/>
<pb facs="00059401_0012"/><lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
Page A12<lb/>
The East Carolinian, Self Help Building . Phone (252) 328-9238 Fax (252) 328-9143 TUESDAY February 28, 2006<lb/>
4<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
Riverwalk homes! Pre-leasing for<lb/>
August 2006 Rent $895 per month.<lb/>
Three Bedrooms, three baths, on<lb/>
ECU bus route. Call CP Management<lb/>
714-2199 or 756-8690<lb/>
Brand new 2 &amp; 3 bedroom<lb/>
townhouses for rent. 1.5 to 2.5<lb/>
baths. Dudley's Grant off Firetower<lb/>
Rd. All appliances. WasherDryer<lb/>
hook-ups $745-845 per month. Call<lb/>
341-0223 for more information.<lb/>
Find your place for the fall<lb/>
semester early and save! Early<lb/>
bird discount of50 off normal<lb/>
monthly rent for preleasing.<lb/>
3 units available for 8106<lb/>
move-in dates and 1 for 6106.<lb/>
All units are 3 bedroom, 2 bath<lb/>
and include WasherDryer.<lb/>
They have Vaulted ceilings,<lb/>
1200 sq. ft. and are beautifully<lb/>
painted. Call 252-327-4433<lb/>
View at carollnahomesecu.<lb/>
Now accepting applications for<lb/>
summer and fall at Captains<lb/>
Quarters, University Terrace,<lb/>
Tower Village, The Trellis. Call<lb/>
Hearthside Rentals 355-2112 or<lb/>
355-5923. Visit our website at www.<lb/>
hearthsidemanagement.com<lb/>
For Rent: Very nice 4 br, 2.5 bath<lb/>
house with 2 zone, central heatair;<lb/>
off street parking; close proximity to<lb/>
ECU campus. Completely renovated.<lb/>
25 rent discount for prompt pay.<lb/>
Call 752-1000, ask for Murrell.<lb/>
Walk to Campus! 1 block from<lb/>
campus. 2 bedroom apartments<lb/>
with hard wood floors and central<lb/>
heatair. Washer, dryer, dishwasher,<lb/>
high-speed internet, basic cable,<lb/>
water &amp; sewer all included. Available<lb/>
AprilMay 1st. Call Mike 439-0285.<lb/>
Sublease: One Bedroom Apartment.<lb/>
Rent is $380. Can move-in right<lb/>
away. 15 minute walk to school.<lb/>
Pet friendly. Call me for more<lb/>
information (352) 283-2407<lb/>
For Rent 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Brick<lb/>
Duplex Central Air, Stancil Dr.<lb/>
Walking Distance to ECU $540<lb/>
month Pets ok w fee. Call 353-<lb/>
2717.<lb/>
Pre leasing for fall semester<lb/>
(August move-In datesl)<lb/>
Houses and duplexes of all<lb/>
<lb/>
JeJlts.<lb/>
Hkv<lb/>
Br<lb/>
m afl<lb/>
<lb/>
Fimntt Up: UndKapint with xiter-<lb/>
retaMnf pUati Mpi protect<lb/>
your horn from wildfire. Find gMwr<lb/>
wtful tipi It nrowtMOti.<lb/>
m mmlira tiniiihir<lb/>
sizes available all within a<lb/>
few blocks from campus I<lb/>
View at carollnahomesecu.<lb/>
com Call 252-327-4433 for an<lb/>
appointment.<lb/>
One two Brs. on-site management<lb/>
maintenance Central heat air 6,9,12<lb/>
month leases Water Cable included<lb/>
ECU bus Wireless Internet pets<lb/>
dishwasher disposals pool laundry<lb/>
(252) 758-4015<lb/>
Walk to Campus! 6, 5, 4, 3 &amp; 2<lb/>
bedroom houses all 1-2 blocks<lb/>
from campus. Central HeatAir.<lb/>
Large bedrooms. Washer, dryer,<lb/>
high-speed internet bask cable and<lb/>
alarm system all included in rent.<lb/>
Several units available June 1st and<lb/>
August 1st. Call Mike 439-0285.<lb/>
University Court Apartments Newly<lb/>
renovated 1 BR Student Apts. 5<lb/>
blocks from ECU campus $365mo.<lb/>
rent water included call 752-6425<lb/>
Two Bedroom - One Bath - Pets ok<lb/>
- Large backyard. WasherDryer<lb/>
hookup - hardwood floors - jarvis<lb/>
Street $550 - monthly. Call 255-<lb/>
1731 or 531-7489<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
The Buccaneer is back! The ECU<lb/>
yearbook has returned so make sure<lb/>
to reserve your copy. Order online at<lb/>
www.yearbookupdatesecu or call<lb/>
1-888-298-3323 Hurry! Deadline<lb/>
to order is 5pm 4-24-06<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
Tiara Too Jewelry Colonial Mall Part-<lb/>
time Retail Sales Associate Available<lb/>
year round! Day and Night hours<lb/>
Apply in Person<lb/>
Bartenders wanted! Up to $250<lb/>
day. No experience necessary.<lb/>
Training provided. Call (800) 965-<lb/>
6520. ext. 202<lb/>
Greenville Recreation &amp; Parks<lb/>
Department is recruiting Soccer<lb/>
Referees for our upcoming spring<lb/>
Futures Stars Soccer League. Referees<lb/>
must be able to work Saturday<lb/>
mornings and some weeknights.<lb/>
A training clinic will be held on<lb/>
Wednesday, March 8 at 7:30 pm<lb/>
at H. Boyd Lee Park. For additional<lb/>
information about becoming a<lb/>
Soccer Referee or directions to<lb/>
the training clinic, please contact<lb/>
the Athletic Office at 329-4550,<lb/>
Monday-Friday 10 am - 7 pm.<lb/>
Wanted: Student to help three<lb/>
kids ages 14, 13, and 9 with<lb/>
homework. Must have CPA of<lb/>
3.4 or better and be strong<lb/>
In math and science. Must be<lb/>
non-smoker, flexible hours,<lb/>
transportation, available to<lb/>
work afternoons, nights, and<lb/>
some weekends. Call 252-917-<lb/>
6787 for interview.<lb/>
Women Needed For Exercise Study<lb/>
We are looking for sedentary,<lb/>
overweight women to participate<lb/>
in a research study. Compensation<lb/>
up to $100. For more info e-mail<lb/>
Emily at eaj1230@mail.ecu.edu<lb/>
Food Delivery Drivers wanted<lb/>
for Restaurant Runners. Part-time<lb/>
positions 100-150week. Perfect<lb/>
for college student Some Lunch<lb/>
Time (11a-2p) M-F and weekend<lb/>
availability required. 2-way radios<lb/>
allow you to be anywhere in<lb/>
Greenville when not on a delivery.<lb/>
Reliable transportation a must.<lb/>
Call 551-3279 between 2-5 only.<lb/>
Sorry Greenville residents and year<lb/>
around dorm residents only.<lb/>
GREEK PERSONALS<lb/>
Way to go Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
basketball team! Good luck in the<lb/>
championship!<lb/>
Alpha Phi would like to thank all of<lb/>
the fraternities that participated in<lb/>
Heart Throb Congratulations to our<lb/>
Heart Throb 2006-Chi Phi!<lb/>
OTHER<lb/>
The Greenville Greens, an affiliate of<lb/>
the NC Green Party, meets monthly<lb/>
on the first Thursday of each month.<lb/>
Next meeting is Thursday, March 2,<lb/>
at 7pm, Sheppard Memorial Library,<lb/>
Room B. A true progressive voice<lb/>
in NC politics! Contact us at ncgp.<lb/>
gvillelocal@yahoo.com<lb/>
Retreatmyrtlebeach.com Spring<lb/>
BreakGrad Week 1-800-645-3618<lb/>
We Have What You're Looking For!<lb/>
$100 Per Person &amp; Up!<lb/>
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h taking (or PACKAGE: HANDLERS to load vim<lb/>
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SAM W (KVhuuriuiHofl assistance available attt!<lb/>
V) days Future career opportuniiict in management<lb/>
possible Apptscatiofli can be filled out at 24)0 Umted<lb/>
Drive inear (he aquatic tenter Greenville<lb/>
Free CALL ME Minutes<lb/>
(on TalkTracker plans $40 and higher)<lb/>
Plus, ask about:<lb/>
 Send 250 Text Messages for $5.95 per month<lb/>
 Unlimited incoming Nights and Weekends for $7<lb/>
No contract. No credit check. No charge for incoming calls.<lb/>
Live Smart Talk Smarter.<lb/>
MOBS<lb/>
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(for just .<lb/>
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GETUSC.COM<lb/>
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