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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>

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www.theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Volume 81 Number 55<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
March 7, 2006<lb/>
Conaway<lb/>
visits ECU<lb/>
Artist famous for mittens<lb/>
and more<lb/>
CLAIRE MURPHY<lb/>
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
Contemporary artist and<lb/>
performer Pate Conaway gave a<lb/>
presentation in the Jenkins Art<lb/>
building Wednesday, March 1.<lb/>
Conaway is an interdisciplin-<lb/>
ary artist from Chicago, 111 who<lb/>
sees the process of making art as<lb/>
a visual performance before the<lb/>
finished product.<lb/>
He spent five weeks in the<lb/>
Museum of Contemporary Art<lb/>
in Chicago knitting a pair of<lb/>
9-foot-long mittens while being<lb/>
watched by visitors. People were<lb/>
fascinated with his abilities<lb/>
and sat and talked with him<lb/>
while he was performing.<lb/>
He is also known for his 35-foot<lb/>
scarf and 6-foot-tall baby hat.<lb/>
When he is in a situation<lb/>
where making things isn't the<lb/>
easiest task, he finds inspiration.<lb/>
"Some of my best work<lb/>
is done on the road, in the car, in<lb/>
hotel rooms said Conaway.<lb/>
According to Conaway, a<lb/>
good way to practice art is to keep<lb/>
a journal. He also believes that<lb/>
visual art inspires perfor-<lb/>
mance art, hence his par-<lb/>
ticipation in the two fields<lb/>
of art.<lb/>
Conaway has a very unique<lb/>
and almost creepy style<lb/>
to his art, which can be admired<lb/>
and appreciated by anyone.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
For students who were not quite sure which direction to take in terms of their education or overall future, the majors fair provided outlets to inform them of their options.<lb/>
Advising Center holds majors fair<lb/>
Advising Center makes<lb/>
exploring majors a breeze<lb/>
CLAYTON BAUMAN<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The Advising Center recently<lb/>
held a majors fair at the Bate<lb/>
building on campus.<lb/>
The fair, which represented 120<lb/>
different majors at ECU, invited stu-<lb/>
dents to come out and shop around<lb/>
for a major they find interesting.<lb/>
Paula Kennedy-Dudley, direc-<lb/>
tor of Adult and Commuter Stu-<lb/>
dent Services, was in charge of<lb/>
the event this year.<lb/>
"It's a chance for them to<lb/>
come out and talk to the depart-<lb/>
ments and find information<lb/>
said Dudley.<lb/>
"And there is also information for<lb/>
not just the academic departments<lb/>
but other departments like Student<lb/>
Professional Development<lb/>
The fair is intended to help<lb/>
students who haven't had an<lb/>
opportunity to explore their<lb/>
major options.<lb/>
"It's to help students who are<lb/>
here and maybe haven't really<lb/>
had a chance to really explore a<lb/>
lot of different majors, because<lb/>
often times students come in and<lb/>
they declare a major immediately,<lb/>
and sometimes that's not a good<lb/>
fit for them Dudley said.<lb/>
The fair focuses on dealing with<lb/>
any questions students might have<lb/>
about their respective majors, what<lb/>
jobs they can possibly get with their<lb/>
career path, as well as other useful<lb/>
pieces of information.<lb/>
"It's really about the indi-<lb/>
vidual student who walks up and<lb/>
has no clue about what they are<lb/>
majoring in, and all of a sudden<lb/>
there are people there who can<lb/>
answer their questions said<lb/>
Shelly Meyers, director for the<lb/>
Academic Enrichment Center.<lb/>
Meyers was in charge of the<lb/>
previous year's majors fair.<lb/>
The majors fair helps not<lb/>
only students, but advisers as<lb/>
well. When a student is confused<lb/>
about what they want to do, it<lb/>
makes the adviser's job harder<lb/>
trying to figure out where they<lb/>
want to position the student<lb/>
major-wise. The fair eliminates<lb/>
the confusion and sets both sides<lb/>
on the right course.<lb/>
see FAIR page A3<lb/>
China's currency<lb/>
manipulation<lb/>
The yuan versus the dollar<lb/>
LEE SCHWARZ<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The revised constitution, which is still undergoing final readings, is expected to go into effect May 1,<lb/>
Code of conduct sees revision<lb/>
Judicial board adopts<lb/>
new rules<lb/>
KIMBERLY BELLAMY<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Revisions to the constitu-<lb/>
tion and the code of conduct for<lb/>
the judicial board were major<lb/>
topics of discussion at the SGA<lb/>
meeting on Monday at 5 p.m.<lb/>
Ben Wyche, speaker of the<lb/>
senate, met with Dr. Garrie<lb/>
Moore, vice chancellor of stu-<lb/>
dent life, for approval of the<lb/>
revisions that have been made<lb/>
thus far to the constitution.<lb/>
Dr. Moore's approval is part<lb/>
of one of the final steps to the<lb/>
ratification of the constitution.<lb/>
Dr. Moore gave an agenda<lb/>
of five points that he would<lb/>
like to include in the consti-<lb/>
tution according to Wyche.<lb/>
The agenda consisted of stu-<lb/>
dents with positions on the<lb/>
senate to maintain a 2.5 GPA, the<lb/>
student senate being referred to as<lb/>
student congress, a $100 stipend<lb/>
increase to all paid positions<lb/>
in SGA, the shipmates program<lb/>
being moved from the constitu-<lb/>
tion to the statues and enforcing<lb/>
that amendments must be passed<lb/>
by two-thirds of the student body.<lb/>
If everything goes as planned,<lb/>
the new constitution will take<lb/>
effect May 1. The upcom-<lb/>
ing SGA elections will be ran<lb/>
under the August 2005 rules.<lb/>
The code of conduct docu-<lb/>
ment for the judicial board is<lb/>
also undergoing revision. The<lb/>
first reading of the document<lb/>
was by Brian James Mitchell,<lb/>
attorney general of the judicial<lb/>
board, at the meeting on Monday.<lb/>
Some of the major argu-<lb/>
ments brought up about the<lb/>
document is the student's right<lb/>
to have an attorney present<lb/>
if the student stood charges<lb/>
that could probably lead to<lb/>
them being expel or suspended<lb/>
and the definition of hazing.<lb/>
The code of conduct states the<lb/>
students' rights and responsibili-<lb/>
ties when it comes to topics such<lb/>
as cheating, stealing and lying. It<lb/>
also states the university's respon-<lb/>
sibilities, jurisdiction, definition<lb/>
see SGA page A3<lb/>
s The U.S. Department of the<lb/>
S Treasury is ready to label China<lb/>
t as a currency manipulator. Cur-<lb/>
i!3 rency manipulation occurs when<lb/>
&amp;a country purposely values its<lb/>
 currency in a way befitting its<lb/>
 own trade. In China's case, they<lb/>
devalue their currency by pegging<lb/>
it to the dollar, thereby ensuring<lb/>
that the yuan, China's currency,<lb/>
will stay weaker than the dollar.<lb/>
China does this by purchasing<lb/>
massive amounts of U.S. dollars.<lb/>
In fact, 31 percent of China's<lb/>
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)<lb/>
was U.S. dollars purchased for the<lb/>
purpose of devaluing the yuan.<lb/>
The reason that China wants to<lb/>
make its currency weaker than<lb/>
the U.S. dollar is to encourage<lb/>
foreign direct investment (FDI)<lb/>
and to make Chinese products<lb/>
more affordable in the U.S. The<lb/>
affordability of Chinese goods<lb/>
is very clear considering the 1202<lb/>
billion trade surplus China had<lb/>
last year at the expense of the U.S.<lb/>
Recently the U.S. Depart-<lb/>
ment of the Treasury has uncov-<lb/>
ered new evidence of this cur-<lb/>
rency manipulation at the<lb/>
behest of Congress.<lb/>
"The deliberate undervalu-<lb/>
ation of the yuan should be<lb/>
found to be in violation of well-<lb/>
established trade norms; trading<lb/>
practices utilized by the Chinese<lb/>
government have seriously dam-<lb/>
aged the U.S. manufacturing<lb/>
industry. The finding by the<lb/>
Treasury Department that China<lb/>
is not in violation of international<lb/>
law regarding currency manipu-<lb/>
lation is very disturbing. Given<lb/>
the gravity of the charges which<lb/>
have been made against China,<lb/>
it is pertinent that Treasury Sec-<lb/>
retary Snow provide additional<lb/>
information to the U.S. Con-<lb/>
gress to facilitate a full discussion<lb/>
of the Treasury Department's find-<lb/>
ings regarding China and its cur-<lb/>
rency valuation practices said U.S.<lb/>
Representative Rick Boucher<lb/>
of Virginia two years ago.<lb/>
Boucher's statement and pres-<lb/>
sure from Congress led to the<lb/>
new investigation, which indeed<lb/>
proved Boucher correct. Now<lb/>
that China has been caught the<lb/>
question is what to do about it.<lb/>
China has nearly a billion and<lb/>
a half people and represents the<lb/>
single largest economic market<lb/>
in the world, so cutting economic<lb/>
ties with China is not an option.<lb/>
U.S. law indicates that the U.S.<lb/>
Department of the Treasury must<lb/>
speak to the offending nation and<lb/>
see what can be done to end the<lb/>
manipulation. China probably<lb/>
weakens its currency in hopes<lb/>
of increasing exports to build<lb/>
an economy that will hopefully<lb/>
take its massive population out<lb/>
of poverty. However, the way they<lb/>
are going about it is not ethical.<lb/>
John Kania, IPC's director of<lb/>
government relations, said, "Chi-<lb/>
na's currency actions are direct<lb/>
violations of their commitments<lb/>
under the World Trade Organiza-<lb/>
tion (WTO) and the International<lb/>
Monetary Fund (IMF). IPC's sup-<lb/>
port for the Section 301 trade<lb/>
case is consistent with IPC's trade<lb/>
policy to advocate strict enforce-<lb/>
ment of our trading partners'<lb/>
commitments under the WTO<lb/>
This tough statement<lb/>
from Kania has not made<lb/>
much of an impact and Con-<lb/>
gress has particularly noticed<lb/>
this in the heart of automo-<lb/>
bile manufacturing, Michigan.<lb/>
Republican Representa-<lb/>
tive Dave Camp said the U.S.<lb/>
"cannot continue to look the<lb/>
other way when foreign coun-<lb/>
tries illegally subsidize their own<lb/>
companies and throw up road-<lb/>
blocks to our products. Given<lb/>
the level of competition within<lb/>
the global economy, weak trade<lb/>
enforcement is economic suicide<lb/>
The Bush administra-<lb/>
tion needs to take a harder<lb/>
stance against these flagrant<lb/>
trade fouls.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Zoo programs fighting critics<lb/>
(KRT)  Jenny and Keke,<lb/>
two 30-somethlng females, share<lb/>
a two-bedroom house with a<lb/>
5,000-square-foot yard and a<lb/>
small pool. The digs were consid-<lb/>
ered spacious, even elegant, when<lb/>
they opened in 1959. But today,<lb/>
the elephant house at the Dallas<lb/>
Zoo appears cramped and barren.<lb/>
Officials hope to build a bigger,<lb/>
more attractive one soon. They'll<lb/>
have to if they want to retain<lb/>
accreditation by the American<lb/>
Zoo and Aquarium Association<lb/>
-not to mention Jenny and Keke. K<lb/>
The growing recognition 5<lb/>
that these large, majestic and<lb/>
intelligent animals require more<lb/>
space and improved living condi-<lb/>
tions led to new zoo standards<lb/>
that take effect in May. The new<lb/>
rules, which govern everything<lb/>
from yard, stall and herd sizes<lb/>
to exercise regimens, are forcing<lb/>
zoos across the nation to decide<lb/>
Criminalizing abortion will have<lb/>
disastrous consequences<lb/>
Better living conditions will allow these animals to live better lives.<lb/>
whether to expand or close their<lb/>
elephant exhibits.<lb/>
"Keke may be the last elephant<lb/>
the Dallas Zoo receives unless we<lb/>
move ahead as a community to<lb/>
build a new elephant habitat said<lb/>
Chuck Siegel, the zoo's deputy<lb/>
director for animal management.<lb/>
About half of the accredited<lb/>
zoos that house elephants are<lb/>
committed to costly expan-<lb/>
sions. But zoos in San Francisco,<lb/>
see ELEPHANTS page A3<lb/>
(KRT)  South Dakota just<lb/>
took a huge step backward. The<lb/>
state's new criminal abortion bill<lb/>
is patterned on laws first passed<lb/>
in the 1860s and 1870s - laws that<lb/>
produced a public health disaster.<lb/>
Let's be clear: making abortion<lb/>
illegal, except when a woman's<lb/>
life is threatened, does not protect<lb/>
women or their lives.<lb/>
And now, with a Supreme<lb/>
Court remade by a president who<lb/>
is dedicated to overturning Roe v.<lb/>
Wade, it is a good time to look at<lb/>
the century-long history of illegal<lb/>
abortion in the United States.<lb/>
The earlier laws never stopped<lb/>
abortion, but they did make it more<lb/>
dangerous. As police and prosecu-<lb/>
tors stepped up their enforcement<lb/>
in the 1940s and 1950s, they<lb/>
pushed good, safe abortion pro-<lb/>
viders out of practice. As a result,<lb/>
abortion got more deadly. Many<lb/>
women who went to illegal abor-<lb/>
tionists were blindfolded and had<lb/>
abortions in secret places. Many<lb/>
survived, but some died and many<lb/>
more were seriously injured.<lb/>
In the years immediately before<lb/>
Roe v. Wade, hospitals around the<lb/>
country had separate septic abor-<lb/>
tion wards for women bleeding,<lb/>
injured and infected due to illegal<lb/>
abortions. Many of these patients<lb/>
had tried to abort by themselves.<lb/>
Chicago's Cook County Hospi-<lb/>
tal housed almost 5,000 women per<lb/>
year in its septic abortion wards.<lb/>
Deaths due to illegal abortion<lb/>
approached 50 percent of the<lb/>
nation's total maternal mortality,<lb/>
according to a U.S. Department<lb/>
of Labor study entitled, "Maternal<lb/>
Mortality in Fifteen States<lb/>
In countries where abortion<lb/>
is illegal today, 25 percent to 50<lb/>
percent of all maternal mortality<lb/>
is due to illegal abortion.<lb/>
Those deaths are preventable.<lb/>
Abortions performed by skilled<lb/>
practitioners in sterile environ-<lb/>
ments are extremely safe. After<lb/>
abortion was legalized in the United<lb/>
States, maternal mortality fell dra-<lb/>
matically. Hospital abortion wards<lb/>
closed because they were empty.<lb/>
Criminalization of abortion<lb/>
across the country could double<lb/>
maternal mortality, according to a<lb/>
1973 article in the American Jour-<lb/>
see ABORTION page A3<lb/>
INSIDE I News: A2 I Classifieds: A101 Opinion: A4 I Student Life: A5 I Sports: A8<lb/>
<pb facs="00059404_0003"/><lb/>
X<lb/>
3-07-1<lb/>
Page A2 news@theeastcarollnlan.com 252.328.6366<lb/>
RACHEL KING News Editor CLAIRE MURPHY Assistant News Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY March 7, 2006<lb/>
Announcements:<lb/>
The Black Watch<lb/>
and the Band of the<lb/>
Welsh Guards<lb/>
In Wright Auditorium at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday, March 9, armed with<lb/>
bagpipes, dance shoes and<lb/>
drums, the storied Black Watch<lb/>
and the Band of the Welsh Guards<lb/>
will present a stirring evening<lb/>
of military music, pomp and<lb/>
pageantry.<lb/>
Purchase Masterpiece<lb/>
Subscriptions by Sept. 28 for best<lb/>
options. Masterpiece subscription<lb/>
(all events): $216 for public, $198<lb/>
for ECU facultystaff, $108 for<lb/>
youth and $72 for ECU students.<lb/>
Advance individual tickets, if<lb/>
available, may be purchased<lb/>
beginning Dec. 2 for $39 public,<lb/>
$37 ECU facultystaff, $19 youth<lb/>
- and $10 ECU student All tickets at<lb/>
the door are $39. Group discounts<lb/>
are available.<lb/>
Contact the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
at 328-4788,1-800-ECU-ARTS or<lb/>
ecuarts.com.<lb/>
Lance Armstrong's<lb/>
Physiological<lb/>
Maturation: Sport<lb/>
Reflects Life<lb/>
In Brody School of Medicine<lb/>
Auditorium at 7 p.m Thursday,<lb/>
March 23, Edward F. Coyle, a<lb/>
physiologist who has studied world<lb/>
renown cyclist Lance Armstrong,<lb/>
will visit ECU and discuss how the<lb/>
cyclist's physiology and optimal<lb/>
training contributed to seven<lb/>
consecutive wins at the Tour de<lb/>
France.<lb/>
The lecture is free, but donation<lb/>
opportunities for cancer research<lb/>
will be available. All proceeds will<lb/>
go to the Leo W. Jenkins Cancer<lb/>
Center in Greenville. The lecture<lb/>
is sponsored by the Department<lb/>
of Exercise and Sport Science<lb/>
and the Walker Center in the<lb/>
College of Health and Human<lb/>
Performance and the Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins Cancer Center in the<lb/>
Brody School of Medicine and<lb/>
the University Health Systems of<lb/>
Eastern Carolina.<lb/>
Russian National<lb/>
Theatre, 'La<lb/>
Bayadere'<lb/>
This ensemble of 50 principal<lb/>
dancers focuses on upholding<lb/>
the grand national tradition of<lb/>
the major Russian ballet works.<lb/>
Last seen in the U.S. in 1999,<lb/>
their triumphant return will feature<lb/>
Petipa's La Bayadere.<lb/>
Advance individual tickets, if<lb/>
available, may be purchased<lb/>
beginning Dec. 2 for $39 public,<lb/>
$37 ECU facultystaff, $19 youth<lb/>
and $10 ECU students. All tickets<lb/>
at the door are $39. Group<lb/>
discounts are available for groups<lb/>
of 15 or more.<lb/>
Contact the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
at 328-4788,1-800-ECU-ARTS or<lb/>
ecuarls.com.<lb/>
ECU Youth Arts<lb/>
Festival 2006<lb/>
Saturday, April 1, from 10 a.m.<lb/>
to 4 p.m. on the campus mall,<lb/>
ECU'S Youth Arts Festival will<lb/>
feature more than 100 visual and<lb/>
performing artists who will share<lb/>
their creative talents with area<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Children will have the opportunity<lb/>
to create art and visit with artists<lb/>
who will demonstrate activities<lb/>
such as wheel thrown ceramics,<lb/>
traditional watercolor painting,<lb/>
weaving, felting, paper-making,<lb/>
printmaking, portraiture and other<lb/>
visual art media. Featured visual<lb/>
artists will come from around<lb/>
North Carolina and surrounding<lb/>
states, as well as ECU'S School<lb/>
of Art and Design<lb/>
For more information, contact<lb/>
Dindy Reich at reichd@ecu.edu<lb/>
or 328-5749 or Richard Tichich at<lb/>
tichichr@ecu.edu or 328-5481.<lb/>
B.J. Ward in Stand<lb/>
Up Opera<lb/>
On Saturday, April 8 at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Purchase Masterpiece<lb/>
Subscriptions by Sept 28 for best<lb/>
options. Masterpiece subscription<lb/>
(all events): $216 for public, $198<lb/>
for ECU facultystaff, $108 for<lb/>
youth and $72 for ECU Students.<lb/>
Crown Subscription (choice of<lb/>
six events): $162 for public, $150<lb/>
for ECU facultystaff, $84 for<lb/>
youth and $48 for ECU students.<lb/>
Advance individual tickets, if<lb/>
available, may be purchased<lb/>
beginning Dec. 2 for $24 public,<lb/>
$22 ECU facultystaff, $12 youth<lb/>
and $10 ECU student. All tickets at<lb/>
the door are $24. Group discounts<lb/>
are available for groups of 15 or<lb/>
more.<lb/>
Ticket required: Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, 252-328-4788,1-800-ECU-<lb/>
ARTS, ecuarts.com<lb/>
News Briefs<lb/>
State<lb/>
Church Music<lb/>
WILSON, N.C. (AP) - Paul Hollifleld,<lb/>
former worship pastor at Farmington<lb/>
Heights Church of God, has watched<lb/>
people's musical tastes spill over into<lb/>
church worship services.<lb/>
If society is in the middle of a hip-<lb/>
hop or soft rock craze, some church<lb/>
music styles are following those<lb/>
same trends. But some churches<lb/>
are holding fast to traditional music<lb/>
that has been sung for a century<lb/>
or more.<lb/>
What's important, Hollifleld says,<lb/>
is that people keep their focus on<lb/>
worship, the reason for singing, and<lb/>
not so much the style of music being<lb/>
sung.<lb/>
"If you can worship with only one<lb/>
style of music, it's the music you're<lb/>
worshipping, not the God of the<lb/>
music said Hollifleld, who has a<lb/>
master's degree in church music.<lb/>
The whole purpose of singing is to<lb/>
focus on God<lb/>
Church music is starting to change<lb/>
in some Wilson churches that have<lb/>
continued to sing congregational<lb/>
songs from hymnals. Other churches<lb/>
are trying to keep their music current<lb/>
with some of the newest praise and<lb/>
worship songs available.<lb/>
"Jackson Chapel was not a church<lb/>
that ever had drums Canady said.<lb/>
That took some time for the majority<lb/>
of people to get used to. Now, we're<lb/>
doing a wide range of music. We try<lb/>
to diversify our music so we have<lb/>
something for our seniors and young<lb/>
adults<lb/>
"Our music repertoire has changed<lb/>
because we want to attract younger<lb/>
people and adults Bell said. "We<lb/>
have the contemporary, we have the<lb/>
traditional and sometimes we have<lb/>
reggae. What St. John gives is a<lb/>
variety. We are creative but we have<lb/>
a balance<lb/>
More contemporary praise and<lb/>
worship music has been added to<lb/>
the church's more traditional style<lb/>
of congregational music. Traditional<lb/>
gospel and spirituals remain a part<lb/>
of the church's music.<lb/>
"We're trying to find new ways to tell<lb/>
the same story we have for years<lb/>
and years Tatum said. "It's a more<lb/>
informal atmosphere. The thing that's<lb/>
different from our service and other<lb/>
contemporary services in town is<lb/>
we're acoustical. We chose some<lb/>
music that has some depth to it<lb/>
Tourney town<lb/>
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Talk about<lb/>
your March Madness.<lb/>
Over the course of three weekends,<lb/>
this city that loves college basketball<lb/>
will host back-to-back-to-back<lb/>
postseason tournaments, inviting<lb/>
more than a quarter of a million<lb/>
fans to Greensboro Coliseum for<lb/>
28 games, a pair of conference<lb/>
championships and the first few miles<lb/>
of the road to the Final Four.<lb/>
"We all love it and we'll surely be<lb/>
working on adrenaline coliseum<lb/>
director Matt Brown said.<lb/>
It started this week with the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference women's<lb/>
tournament - in Game No. 1, Sharnee<lb/>
Zoll scored 18 points to lead Virginia<lb/>
past Boston College 57-54. The ACC<lb/>
men's tournament is next week,<lb/>
followed March 16-18 by first- and<lb/>
second-round games of the men's<lb/>
NCAA tournament<lb/>
It's the first time any arena has hosted<lb/>
a women's conference tournament,<lb/>
then a men's conference tournament<lb/>
and then the opening rounds of the<lb/>
NCAAs in the same year, said ACC<lb/>
spokeswoman Amy Yakola.<lb/>
Allen Purser, the interim president<lb/>
of the Greensboro Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce, said the successive<lb/>
tournaments are projected to pump<lb/>
about $40 million into the local<lb/>
economy. Along with ticket sales, out-<lb/>
of-town fans will also be in the market<lb/>
for hotel rooms, dinner reservations<lb/>
and rental cars.<lb/>
"It adds excitement and a buzz to<lb/>
the community and it might actually<lb/>
generate more business Purser said,<lb/>
before adding, "I have a feeling the TV<lb/>
will be on a bunch in the Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce break room<lb/>
National<lb/>
Buffett says Berkshire gain beat<lb/>
S&amp;P 500 for the year<lb/>
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Billionaire<lb/>
investor Warren Buffett said Saturday<lb/>
in his annual letter to shareholders<lb/>
of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. that his<lb/>
holding company's net worth grew by<lb/>
$5.6 billion in 2005, which he dubbed<lb/>
"a decent year<lb/>
That increased the book value, assets<lb/>
minus liabilities, of both classes of<lb/>
Berkshire stock 6.4 percent, beating the<lb/>
S&amp;P gain of 4.9 percent for the year.<lb/>
Berkshire rebounded from the<lb/>
hurricane losses of the third quarter<lb/>
by reporting net earnings of $5.13<lb/>
billion for the fourth quarter on revenue<lb/>
of $25.37 billion. That compares with<lb/>
revenue of $20.53 billion and net<lb/>
earnings of $586 million in the third<lb/>
quarter. The fourth-quarter figures<lb/>
were more than 50 percent higher<lb/>
than the same quarter a year ago,<lb/>
when Berkshire reported $3.34 billion<lb/>
in net earnings.<lb/>
Berkshire estimated its losses to<lb/>
hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Wilma<lb/>
at $3.4 billion. Still, Buffett said, the<lb/>
insurance portion of Berkshire did well<lb/>
as whole.<lb/>
Buffett, whose insurance holdings<lb/>
include auto insurer Geico, commended<lb/>
that company's CEO, Tony Nicely, for<lb/>
gaining market share and posting<lb/>
"commendable profits<lb/>
"If you have a new son or grandson<lb/>
in 2006, name him Tony Buffett<lb/>
advised.<lb/>
For 2005, Berkshire reported net<lb/>
earnings per share of $5,258 on<lb/>
total revenue of $81.67 billion. That<lb/>
compares with year-earlier figures<lb/>
of $74.38 billion in revenue and<lb/>
net earnings per share of $4,753.<lb/>
Buffett is known around the world as<lb/>
the man who built a 1956 partnership<lb/>
of four relatives and three ciose friends<lb/>
into a holding company with total assets<lb/>
of $198.3 billion at the end of 2005.<lb/>
Bertehire owns furniture, carpet jewelry<lb/>
and candy companies, restaurants,<lb/>
natural gas and corporate jet firms.<lb/>
Snow moves Into Northern Rockies;<lb/>
West gets a break from rain<lb/>
(AP) - Idaho and Montana were bracing<lb/>
for significant snowfall, while the wet<lb/>
West Coast was expected to have a<lb/>
day to dry out<lb/>
The West Coast was expected to have<lb/>
dry weather for most of Saturday, but a<lb/>
Pacific system was expected to begin<lb/>
moving in along the Northwest coast<lb/>
late Saturday night Rain was forecast<lb/>
to begin along the northern California<lb/>
and Oregon border before spreading<lb/>
throughout the Northwest and central<lb/>
California on Sunday.<lb/>
In the Northeast, snow showers<lb/>
were expected to linger over the<lb/>
Adirondack Mountains. Conditions<lb/>
were favorable for lake effect<lb/>
snow in western New England.<lb/>
Temperatures should be fairly<lb/>
mild with the lowest highs in the<lb/>
20s and 30s spreading from the<lb/>
Intermountain West to the Northeast<lb/>
Warmer temperatures are expected<lb/>
in the South where highs will rise<lb/>
into the 60s and 70s in the Southern<lb/>
Rains and Southeast Temperatures<lb/>
should rise into the 80s in some<lb/>
parts of southern Florida and Texas.<lb/>
Temperatures in the Lower 48 states<lb/>
Friday ranged from a low of minus-14<lb/>
degrees at Raco, Mich, to a high of 87<lb/>
degrees at McAllen, Texas.<lb/>
International<lb/>
Talabanl says he has assurances<lb/>
U.S. forces to stay as long as<lb/>
needed<lb/>
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - President Jalal<lb/>
Talabanl on Saturday underscored<lb/>
the need for a unity government in<lb/>
Iraq after a spasm of sectarian killing<lb/>
and said he had been assured U.S.<lb/>
forces would remain in the country<lb/>
as long as needed; "no matter what<lb/>
the period<lb/>
His comments came after a bomb<lb/>
exploded at a minibus terminal during<lb/>
morning rush hour in a southeastern<lb/>
Baghdad suburb, killing seven people<lb/>
and wounding 25, one of a string<lb/>
of explosions in the capital and<lb/>
elsewhere.<lb/>
Abizaid said he was "very, very<lb/>
pleased with the reaction of the<lb/>
Iraqi armed forces' during the crisis<lb/>
unleashed by the Feb. 22 bombing<lb/>
of a sacred Shiite shrine in Samarra<lb/>
and reprisal attacks against Sunni<lb/>
Muslims that pushed Iraq to the brink<lb/>
of civil war.<lb/>
"We should understand that the<lb/>
terrorists are trying to create problems<lb/>
among trie Iraqi people that can<lb/>
lead to difficulties between various<lb/>
groups he said after a separate<lb/>
meeting with Prime Minister Ibrahim<lb/>
al-Jaafari. "We should not fall into their<lb/>
trap. We are stronger than they are.<lb/>
We will ultimately prevail<lb/>
The surge of attacks, which have<lb/>
killed at least 500 people since<lb/>
last week, has tangled negotiations<lb/>
to form a new government after<lb/>
December parliamentary elections<lb/>
and threatened American hopes of<lb/>
starting a troop pullout this summer.<lb/>
Talabani said Abizaid assured him<lb/>
that U.S. forces "are ready to stay as<lb/>
long as we ask them, no matter what<lb/>
the period is"<lb/>
He said the U.S. commander also<lb/>
stressed that "a strong national unity<lb/>
government made up of all blocs in<lb/>
parliament will help in stabilizing Iraq<lb/>
and bringing peace<lb/>
However, Talabani said his Kurdish<lb/>
followers and their allies will fight<lb/>
against a second term for al-Jaafari.<lb/>
In Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of<lb/>
the capital, a bomb exploded in a<lb/>
busy commercial area near a shop<lb/>
that repairs radios and tape players,<lb/>
killing a young girl and injuring eight<lb/>
other people, police said.<lb/>
In the south, a Shiite lawmaker was<lb/>
seriously wounded when gunmen in<lb/>
two speeding cars fired on his vehicle<lb/>
near Basra, Iraq's second-largest city.<lb/>
An aide for Qasim Attiyah al-Jbouri<lb/>
was killed and two bodyguards<lb/>
injured, police Capt Mushtaq Kadhim<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Bush shows solidarity with<lb/>
Musharraf on security-tense<lb/>
Pakistan visit<lb/>
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - President<lb/>
Bush and Pakistani President Pervez<lb/>
Musharraf recommitted their nations<lb/>
Saturday to the difficult task of hunting<lb/>
down terrorists still hiding here and<lb/>
across the globe. Before departing<lb/>
for home, Bush praised Musharraf<lb/>
as a "man of courage and vision"<lb/>
Bush made his first visit to<lb/>
Pakistan despite terrorist dangers<lb/>
that demanded extraordinary<lb/>
DUI dispute leads to problems<lb/>
(AP)  A dispute about who<lb/>
Is responsible for informing<lb/>
police of DUI license suspension<lb/>
hearings has led to more cases<lb/>
being dismissed and drivers get-<lb/>
ting back on the road faster.<lb/>
In South Carolina, licenses<lb/>
are suspended automatically<lb/>
for 90 days when a suspected<lb/>
drunken driver refuses to take a<lb/>
blood-alcohol test. People with a<lb/>
blood-alcohol level of at least .15<lb/>
percent, nearly twice the state's<lb/>
.08 standard for drunk driving,<lb/>
also face immediate 30 day sus-<lb/>
pensions.<lb/>
But drivers can appeal those<lb/>
automatic suspensions and get<lb/>
licenses back until their DUI<lb/>
charges are heard by a court.<lb/>
For years, the stat,e Department<lb/>
of Motor Vehicles handled the<lb/>
appeals. But since a new law took<lb/>
effect Jan. 1, the South Carolina<lb/>
Administrative Law Court has<lb/>
been in charge of those hearings<lb/>
and oversees the hearing officers<lb/>
that handles those cases.<lb/>
Since then, 70 percent of the<lb/>
602 cases that went to adminis-<lb/>
trative hearings were dismissed.<lb/>
That's up from 60 percent in<lb/>
all of 2005. Most of this year's<lb/>
dismissals came because the<lb/>
Administrative Law Court has<lb/>
not notified police of pending<lb/>
hearings and officers not show-<lb/>
ing up to make the case for a<lb/>
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license suspension.<lb/>
DMV officials say they're<lb/>
appealing about 200 of the 421<lb/>
dismissed cases and haven't rein-<lb/>
stated those licenses.<lb/>
"We have additional cases<lb/>
that are being reviewed, and we<lb/>
will probably file more (appeals)<lb/>
DMV spokeswoman Beth Parks<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"It's a mess Marvin Kit-<lb/>
trell, the administrative court's<lb/>
chief judge, said. He said his<lb/>
staff would start notifying police<lb/>
officers immediately and that he<lb/>
is pushing proposed legislation<lb/>
that would more clearly give his<lb/>
office that responsibility.<lb/>
The "mess" developed as Kit-<lb/>
trell's court and DMV disagreed<lb/>
about who was responsible for<lb/>
notifying police of upcoming<lb/>
hearings.<lb/>
Parks said when the Adminis-<lb/>
trative Law Court took responsi-<lb/>
bility for the suspension appeals,<lb/>
it also became responsible for<lb/>
notifying police.<lb/>
"We're relying on the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Motor Vehicles to notify<lb/>
us said Col. Russell Roark, head<lb/>
of the state Highway Patrol. "If<lb/>
the DMV notifies us of a hear-<lb/>
ing, we will try, to the best of our<lb/>
ability, to make sure our trooper<lb/>
is at the hearing<lb/>
Roark says his division had<lb/>
been working with the DMV to<lb/>
$180<lb/>
Per<lb/>
Month<lb/>
This cminmi sjonri lor<lb/>
develop a "cleaner" notification<lb/>
process involving sending hear-<lb/>
ing notices to officers by e-mail<lb/>
instead of by fax.<lb/>
Kittrell hopes a bill up for<lb/>
debate this week in the House<lb/>
will clarify the roles.<lb/>
The House legislation and a<lb/>
similar bill in the Senate make it<lb/>
clear that arresting police officers<lb/>
or officers operating blood-alco-<lb/>
hol test machines are parties in<lb/>
the case, not just witnesses. That<lb/>
change would require that they<lb/>
be notified.<lb/>
That bill's sponsor, Rep. Greg<lb/>
Delleney, R-Chester, blames the<lb/>
DMV for the problem<lb/>
"They're deliberately pick-<lb/>
ing a fight Delleney said. "Had<lb/>
there not been a problem to<lb/>
begin with, the administrative<lb/>
hearing officers would still be<lb/>
with them<lb/>
But the agency's department<lb/>
managers treated the officers<lb/>
"like stepchildren" and some<lb/>
cases left them locked out of<lb/>
offices.<lb/>
Parks said DMV had arguing<lb/>
since 2004 to move the hearing<lb/>
officers elsewhere because their<lb/>
work "really wasn't part of our<lb/>
mission<lb/>
Kittrell said he didn't want<lb/>
the hearing officers because he<lb/>
"had enough on my plate at that<lb/>
time<lb/>
security to bolster Musharraf,<lb/>
who straddles a delicate political<lb/>
divide in this impoverished<lb/>
but growing Islamic nation.<lb/>
The U.S. led wars in Iraq and<lb/>
Afghanistan are unpopular here,<lb/>
and Pakistan's strong anti-American<lb/>
sentiment was reflected in the<lb/>
thousands who demonstrated across<lb/>
the country against Bush's visit. While<lb/>
there are suspicions that al-Qaida<lb/>
and Taliban operatives maintain<lb/>
some degree of safe sanctuary<lb/>
inside Pakistan, Musharraf has<lb/>
defied criticism he is too cozy with<lb/>
Washington to be a strong U.S.<lb/>
partner in the anti-terrorism campaign.<lb/>
Musharraf seized power in a 1999<lb/>
bloodless coup. Instead of giving<lb/>
up his military uniform in 2004 as<lb/>
promised, he changed the constitution<lb/>
so he could hold both his army<lb/>
post and the presidency until 2007.<lb/>
"I believe democracy is Pakistan's<lb/>
future Bush said at an outdoor<lb/>
news conference with Musharraf<lb/>
at the marble presidential palace.<lb/>
Pakistan's law enforcement agencies<lb/>
have arrested more than 700 suspected<lb/>
militants in the past four years.<lb/>
American and green-and-white<lb/>
Pakistani flags were hoisted in honor<lb/>
of Bush's visit. Streets in the capital<lb/>
were mostly empty, except for armed<lb/>
security officers standing guard.<lb/>
Layers of security, including three<lb/>
helicopters that circled overhead,<lb/>
shadowed Bush's motorcade<lb/>
Saturday as it ferried him from the<lb/>
fortified U.S. Embassy compound to<lb/>
the presidential palace in the heart<lb/>
of the city's government district.<lb/>
Bush was escorted down a red<lb/>
carpet behind raised swords gripped<lb/>
by Pakistani troops in dark green<lb/>
uniforms.<lb/>
The visit followed a three-day trip to<lb/>
India, where Bush sealed a civilian<lb/>
nuclear deal. Pakistan has asked<lb/>
for the same arrangement, but Bush<lb/>
made clear that was unlikely, using<lb/>
diplomatic language about the<lb/>
two countries' "different needs and<lb/>
different histories<lb/>
Just two years ago Pakistan's leading<lb/>
nuclear scientist, A.Q. Khan, was<lb/>
exposed as the chief of a lucrative<lb/>
black market in weapons technology<lb/>
that had supplied Iran, Libya and<lb/>
North Korea.<lb/>
Pakistan's government denied<lb/>
any knowledge of his proliferation<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
Bush has expressed no objections<lb/>
to plans by India and Pakistan to<lb/>
build a pipeline to bring much-<lb/>
needed natural gas supplies from<lb/>
Iran, a project that had brought<lb/>
U.S. disapproval. Washington<lb/>
opposes investments that benefit<lb/>
Iran, which it suspects of trying<lb/>
to build nuclear weapons<lb/>
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3-07-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  NEWS<lb/>
PAGE A3<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
of academic integrity and many<lb/>
other definitions and rules.<lb/>
The document consists<lb/>
of 27 pages filled with guide-<lb/>
lines for students to follow<lb/>
and how to handle situations<lb/>
in which the student did not<lb/>
abide by the code of conduct.<lb/>
The document will go<lb/>
through two student input ses-<lb/>
sions, one joint judicial board<lb/>
meeting and then a senate<lb/>
approval, according to Mitchell.<lb/>
"This process is critical to get-<lb/>
ting students to shape the stan-<lb/>
dards by which they're being held<lb/>
accountable for Mitchell said.<lb/>
The judicial board is also<lb/>
accepting applications to be apart<lb/>
of the organization. The board is<lb/>
one of only 16 in the nation that<lb/>
is completely student run and has<lb/>
the power to expel and suspend,<lb/>
according to Mitchell.<lb/>
The judicial board hears cases<lb/>
about any violations to the code<lb/>
of conduct, decides if the student<lb/>
is responsible and if so, gives the<lb/>
student to consequences that are<lb/>
outlined in the code of conduct<lb/>
document<lb/>
Students who are interested in<lb/>
applying must have a cumulative<lb/>
2.5 GPA, be in good standing with<lb/>
the university, have good decision<lb/>
skills and be able to express fair-<lb/>
ness in the judicial process.<lb/>
Applications are available<lb/>
at the Mendenhall information<lb/>
desk or at ecu.educs-studun-<lb/>
tlifesgaJudicial-Branch.cfm.<lb/>
The deadline to turn in applica-<lb/>
tions is March 17.<lb/>
Students are also reminded<lb/>
that Diversity week is quickly<lb/>
approaching. It will be from<lb/>
March 20-25.<lb/>
There are numerous events<lb/>
that will take place during that<lb/>
week. Some to the events include<lb/>
International Food Day, Religion<lb/>
Forum, Poetry Slam, Mix it Up<lb/>
Dance Explosion, Heena Hand<lb/>
Art and Women in Leadership<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
There will be many more<lb/>
events that will take place during<lb/>
this week. Check the student<lb/>
announcements for more events<lb/>
and specific times and locations<lb/>
Elephants<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
Detroit and a handful of other<lb/>
cities have decided to slam shut<lb/>
the elephant barn door. And<lb/>
as many as 15 more zoos are<lb/>
likely to close their elephant<lb/>
exhibits in the next few years,<lb/>
one expert predicts.<lb/>
But some animal rights<lb/>
activists say that even the<lb/>
better guidelines aren't good<lb/>
enough, that it's cruel to keep<lb/>
any elephant in captivity.<lb/>
They've pushed the debate<lb/>
into public in some cities by<lb/>
staging emotionally charged<lb/>
protests and bombarding politi-<lb/>
cians and newspapers with letters.<lb/>
In December, a dozen people<lb/>
picketed the Fort Worth Zoo<lb/>
to protest its breeding pro-<lb/>
gram, with some demonstrators<lb/>
wearing elephant noses and<lb/>
carrying signs that read, "A life<lb/>
in captivity is no life at all<lb/>
The zoo - which already exceeds<lb/>
the new standards - boasts one of<lb/>
the largest herds in the country:<lb/>
seven elephants, including a<lb/>
young bull on loan from a circus<lb/>
for breeding.<lb/>
Michael Fouraker, the zoo's<lb/>
executive director and head of<lb/>
the International Elephant Foun-<lb/>
dation, vowed not to be cowed by<lb/>
the activists.<lb/>
"We are not reactive to this<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
"We've been pushing ele-<lb/>
phant conservation and our<lb/>
commitment to elephants long<lb/>
before this became an issue<lb/>
We've just stuck by our guns<lb/>
So far, activists have not tar-<lb/>
geted the Dallas Zoo, which is<lb/>
considering expansion pending a<lb/>
public commitment for millions<lb/>
of dollars for the elephant house<lb/>
and other large mammal exhibits.<lb/>
Specific plans for the pro-<lb/>
posed Dallas exhibit are on hold,<lb/>
with zoo director Rich Buickerood<lb/>
leaving his post this summer; a<lb/>
new executive may have different<lb/>
ideas. But the idea is to create a<lb/>
new elephant house on as much<lb/>
as 3 acres next to the Wilds of<lb/>
Africa exhibit. The space, cur-<lb/>
rently used for maintenance<lb/>
equipment and classrooms,<lb/>
offers a more natural terrain.<lb/>
The potential cost: $5 mil-<lb/>
lion to $7 million.<lb/>
Money for zoo renovations<lb/>
is expected to be included in<lb/>
bond proposals that could come<lb/>
before voters in November, said<lb/>
Paul Dyer, Dallas director of<lb/>
parks and recreation. The City<lb/>
Council is debating what to<lb/>
include and how much to ask for,<lb/>
but Dyer said he hopes for at least<lb/>
$19 million for zoo renovations.<lb/>
Buickerood predicts the bond<lb/>
proposal will pass.<lb/>
"The only issue for usiswhenare<lb/>
we going to be able to move them<lb/>
out of an exhibit that we don't like<lb/>
to an exhibit we do like he said.<lb/>
"We've housed elephants<lb/>
here 80 years or more, and we<lb/>
want to continue to do it<lb/>
of these events.<lb/>
If you are interested in volun-<lb/>
teering your time for any of these<lb/>
events, contact Nadia Payne at<lb/>
njpOlllCSecu.edu.<lb/>
The State of the University<lb/>
Address will be Tuesday, March<lb/>
7 at 5 p.m. It will be held in<lb/>
Mendenhall room 244. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served after the<lb/>
event, and students are urged<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
All organizations that regis-<lb/>
tered by Feb. 28 need to attend<lb/>
the annual funding workshop for<lb/>
the opportunity to receive fund-<lb/>
ing for their organization.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
AbOrtiOII from page A1<lb/>
nal of Public Health. If abortion<lb/>
becomes illegal again (or so hard<lb/>
to get that it is essentially ille-<lb/>
gal), abortion-related injuries and<lb/>
deaths are likely to be especially<lb/>
high among poor women, African-<lb/>
American and Latina women who<lb/>
can't afford to travel to pro-choice<lb/>
states. As a result, many of them<lb/>
might try self-induced abortions.<lb/>
How will new criminal abor-<lb/>
tion laws be enforced?<lb/>
In the past, prosecutors<lb/>
focused on those who performed<lb/>
abortions, though women were<lb/>
arrested and punished too. Police<lb/>
and medical staff interrogated<lb/>
women suspected of having abor-<lb/>
tions. Suspects included women<lb/>
in the midst of a miscarriage.<lb/>
If abortion is made illegal, medi-<lb/>
cal personnel could again be coerced<lb/>
into collecting information from<lb/>
patients under the threat of losing<lb/>
their medical licenses.<lb/>
Police could again raid clinics<lb/>
and patients could be captured<lb/>
and forced to endure coercive<lb/>
gynecological examinations as<lb/>
police search for evidence.<lb/>
Women, who seek medical<lb/>
care after an abortion could<lb/>
be questioned, arrested and<lb/>
required to testify in court.<lb/>
Fair from page A1<lb/>
Each booth at the fair is repre-<lb/>
sented differently. Someof the booths<lb/>
are represented by advisers, others<lb/>
faculty and graduates themselves.<lb/>
"I had some ideas and went<lb/>
and looked at several further<lb/>
and it helped me out a lot said<lb/>
Trey Mayfield, a freshman who<lb/>
is currently an undecided major.<lb/>
Many students have an idea<lb/>
of what they want to do, they<lb/>
just need a little encouragement.<lb/>
"They had been lean-<lb/>
ing this way and this was the<lb/>
opportunity to come by and<lb/>
see and talk to somebody from<lb/>
the department and help them<lb/>
make up their minds said Ron<lb/>
Sessoms, member of the construc-<lb/>
tion management department.<lb/>
This was the second major<lb/>
fair the advising center has held.<lb/>
Fitness enthusiasts<lb/>
can now download<lb/>
motivating words<lb/>
Technology now allows fitness buffs to hear many types of broadcasts.<lb/>
www.SandpiperBeacon.com<lb/>
17403 Front Beach Rd. Panama City leach, Fl 32413<lb/>
SPRING BREAK HOT SPOT<lb/>
Panama City Beach has been a along with Classmates USA's<lb/>
Spring Break hot spot for as long as calendar model search. Spring<lb/>
most Spring Breakers can remember. Breakers can expect plenty more of<lb/>
The Sandpiper-Beacon Beach the same this year with bikini and<lb/>
Resort has been at the forefront of wet t-shirtwet jockey shorts contests<lb/>
Spring Break activities in Panama daily and nightly.<lb/>
City Beach since 1990. The Sandpiper is never short on<lb/>
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/>
Party" and on-site resort bar, giving Loc and other major acts. Tentatively<lb/>
Spring Breakers plenty to do without scheduled for this year are the Black<lb/>
ever leaving the resort. DJ Big Eyed Peas performing on the beach<lb/>
Donna has been playing the hottest behind the Sandpiper Beacon during<lb/>
dance mixes since 1995 and the Jay Leno's show. Metro Nightclubs<lb/>
Sandpiper has been host to is a Spring Break sponsor giving<lb/>
other well-known DJ's including away swimwear 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/>
MTV's The Real World was al entertainment all day and all night at<lb/>
the Sandpiper in 2005 with MJ and the hotel throughout spring break.<lb/>
Robin as special guests at an Visit www.sandpiperbeacon.com<lb/>
AxeStuff Magazine Beach Party, to see what's on tap for Spring Break<lb/>
They sponsored a model search, keg 2006 at the Sandpiper Beacon Beach<lb/>
party, free beer and a swimsuit Resort in beautiful Panama City<lb/>
competition. Alloy Marketing has Beach, Florida or call the resort at<lb/>
also brought in model searches, 800-488-8828.<lb/>
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(KRT)  Personal trainer<lb/>
Mike Causadias runs nonstop,<lb/>
working with clients across<lb/>
southern Florida.<lb/>
But Causadias recently<lb/>
learned how to extend his reach.<lb/>
Now, fitness buffs all over the<lb/>
country, and the world, can work<lb/>
out with him.<lb/>
They just download his<lb/>
weekly podcast - an energetic<lb/>
mix of strength-building exer-<lb/>
cises and workout tips - on<lb/>
WhatIWantPodcasting.com.<lb/>
Count his fitness-focused<lb/>
podcast among hundreds avail-<lb/>
able to anyone looking for free<lb/>
advice and a little motivation.<lb/>
It's the latest twist in the growing<lb/>
world of podcasting, which has<lb/>
mushroomed with the soaring<lb/>
sales of MP3 players.<lb/>
Sure, you can get fitness tips<lb/>
from magazines, books and TV.<lb/>
But podcasts are mobile, avail-<lb/>
able any time and usually free.<lb/>
At her Sunrise, Fla home<lb/>
and nearby parks, Tracy Gittens,<lb/>
24, and twin sister, Nadiah,<lb/>
listen to Causadias to get them<lb/>
moving.<lb/>
"People need someone to<lb/>
help motivate them and here<lb/>
he is says Tracy, a clothing<lb/>
designer. "Anytime you want to<lb/>
listen, he's right there<lb/>
That's exactly what Causa-<lb/>
dias had in mind.<lb/>
"A lot of people don't find it<lb/>
convenient to get to a gym says<lb/>
Causadias, 28, who started his<lb/>
podcast two months ago. "I've<lb/>
made it simple. People can do<lb/>
these exercises at the park, in the<lb/>
kitchen, wherever. People can get<lb/>
out of bed and do this<lb/>
Causadias' podcasts dem-<lb/>
onstrate everything from<lb/>
tummy tightening to building<lb/>
up your lower body. But that's<lb/>
just one option. A run through<lb/>
podcast directories shows<lb/>
myriad offerings.<lb/>
Physical therapists give tips<lb/>
on injury prevention. Personal<lb/>
trainers help you build bigger<lb/>
biceps. Veteran runners tell you<lb/>
how to train.<lb/>
Motivational podcasts<lb/>
are among the choices; ditto,<lb/>
weight loss. Sometimes there's a<lb/>
single speaker. Others feature<lb/>
two or three people, chatting<lb/>
like radio DJs. A few. including<lb/>
Causadias ipclude video so you<lb/>
can see the podcaster in action,<lb/>
ifyou have a portable player with<lb/>
video capability.<lb/>
Some hosts post podcasts<lb/>
regularly, say, once a week.<lb/>
Others, only when the host gets<lb/>
around to it. Some podcasters<lb/>
are polished; others stumble<lb/>
and stammer.<lb/>
But listeners don't appear to<lb/>
care. Some are even drawn to the<lb/>
non-intimidating, unpolished<lb/>
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nary people share their know-<lb/>
how among friends.<lb/>
"It's almost like you're eaves-<lb/>
dropping on someone's conver-<lb/>
sation says Doug Kelsey, an<lb/>
Austin, Texas, physical therapist<lb/>
who does a podcast and listens<lb/>
to others. "It feels more authen-<lb/>
tic. Not so corporate. People are<lb/>
hungry for that<lb/>
You can listen to a podcast<lb/>
on your computer or on the go<lb/>
with your iPod or other MP3<lb/>
player. When you subscribe to a<lb/>
podcast, it's automatically down-<lb/>
loaded to your computer. Then<lb/>
you transfer the podcast to your<lb/>
MP3 player.<lb/>
Why people plug into pod-<lb/>
casts varies as much as the advice<lb/>
spilling from the ear buds.<lb/>
Miami attorney Amy Agnoli,<lb/>
47, a Causadias' client in the<lb/>
flesh, travels extensively. So<lb/>
she downloads his podcasts to<lb/>
take with her.<lb/>
"This way I can keep up with<lb/>
my training she says.<lb/>
In contrast, Justin Kavana-<lb/>
ugh, 20, isn't looking for fitness<lb/>
tips when he listens to strengthra-<lb/>
dio.com. He runs a Miami sports<lb/>
performance company and is<lb/>
already in good shape.<lb/>
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i<lb/>
<pb facs="00059404_0005"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page A4<lb/>
editor@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.9238<lb/>
JENNIFER L HOBBS Editor in Chief<lb/>
TUESDAY March 7, 2006<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
Pets need to be taken<lb/>
care of, please start<lb/>
Spring is just around the corner, and when<lb/>
it makes its grand entrance, students every-<lb/>
where will start filing out of their apartments<lb/>
to wash cars, grill out and, apparently, run<lb/>
from large dogs.<lb/>
I love dogs. I've owned dogs all my life. They<lb/>
make great companions and, in some cases,<lb/>
provide excellent protection. There is no<lb/>
greater feeling than arriving home from school<lb/>
or work after a long day and being greeted<lb/>
at the door by enthusiastic little Fido - those<lb/>
perked ears, that wagging tail and that sweet<lb/>
little "play with me" whine are irresistible.<lb/>
At the same time, there is no feeling worse<lb/>
than being chased by your neighbor's slightly<lb/>
irritated rottweiler. Owning a dog is a privi-<lb/>
lege, and with privilege comes responsibility.<lb/>
People who live in apartment complexes<lb/>
should consider themselves fortunate<lb/>
allowed to own dogs, especially large<lb/>
and that privilege should not be abused.<lb/>
Apartment living is unique. Neighbors share<lb/>
not only walls, but also parking lots.<lb/>
KATRINA COULD BREACH.<lb/>
RESCUE TEAMS NEEDED! NO<lb/>
WSASTtRTVOISANOSArWSK!<lb/>
'DOME WILL 0E OVERWHELMED!<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
lbse Is Yale University the American Taliban?<lb/>
Dogs need to be walked. They do not,<lb/>
however, need to be free to roam around a<lb/>
parking lot full of people - people the dog<lb/>
doesn't know, by the way. Leashes are readily<lb/>
available at any pet store, and they're cheap.<lb/>
Every dog owner should have one and use<lb/>
it. Dog owners may be comfortable with and<lb/>
trusting of their pets, but whether we like to<lb/>
admit it or not, they are still animals with<lb/>
animal instincts. Even the most obedient pet<lb/>
can have a stubborn streak from time to time.<lb/>
Even the best-behaved dog can be tempted<lb/>
to chase after the tiny girl walking her dog,<lb/>
which just happens to be on a leash. If the<lb/>
threat of not being able to control your animal<lb/>
isn't enough incentive to keep it on a leash,<lb/>
just think of the dog's safety. That same dog<lb/>
that's tempted to run after another dog in the<lb/>
parking lot could run out in front of a car.<lb/>
I say none of this to anger people, only to<lb/>
make people realize that pets are amazing<lb/>
things. They provide their owners with love,<lb/>
protection and devotion. We owe it to our<lb/>
pets to care for them as well.<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 Loner Asst Photo Editor<lb/>
Alexander Marciniak 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/>
Sometimes the best<lb/>
universities make the<lb/>
worst mistakes<lb/>
GARY MCCABE<lb/>
BITTER BOULEVARD<lb/>
Sometimes I regret coming<lb/>
to ECU. More than once I've<lb/>
thought to myself how much<lb/>
better my life could be had I been<lb/>
good enough for an Ivy League<lb/>
university. Just think about it.<lb/>
Think about the cache that would<lb/>
come had I graduated from Yale<lb/>
University. At the moment, I'm<lb/>
terrified about what's waiting for<lb/>
me after graduation and whether<lb/>
I'll be able to find a job that will<lb/>
bring some level of happiness<lb/>
and enough money to survive.<lb/>
Not if I graduated from Yale. Not<lb/>
only would my shoe be in the<lb/>
door at any magazine or news-<lb/>
paper 1 wanted to work for, the<lb/>
guy on the other end would be<lb/>
frothing at the mouth to shine<lb/>
them for me - all because I'd be<lb/>
a Yale man, not an ECU Pirate. Of<lb/>
course, I could never have gone to<lb/>
Yale -1 haven't oppressed nearly<lb/>
enough women to meet their<lb/>
new standards of admission. That<lb/>
and I hate Osama bin Laden.<lb/>
That's not the case for Sayed Rah-<lb/>
matullah Hashemi, though. He<lb/>
hates women and loves Osama<lb/>
bin Laden, although I guess those<lb/>
would have to be prerequisites<lb/>
for a Taliban ambassador, which<lb/>
Hashemi was until the Islamo-<lb/>
fascist regime was destroyed by<lb/>
the United States in late 2001.<lb/>
If you asked me a week ago where<lb/>
the mouthpiece of the Taliban<lb/>
was at that very moment, I can't<lb/>
be certain but I probably would<lb/>
have said something to the effect<lb/>
of, "face down in a three-foot<lb/>
wide cage off the coast of Cuba<lb/>
 where he belongs It would<lb/>
have taken me approximately<lb/>
230,431 guesses before I came<lb/>
up with the correct answer,<lb/>
which is "studying at Yale Uni-<lb/>
versity Great - not only is this<lb/>
piece of garbage walking free (on<lb/>
U.S. soil no less), he's attend-<lb/>
ing a better college than I am.<lb/>
You don't have to sift through<lb/>
many of my past articles to<lb/>
figure out where I am on the<lb/>
political spectrum - after<lb/>
all, I went so far as to call for<lb/>
bloody revolution should the<lb/>
New Orleans police officers that<lb/>
brutally attacked a 64-year-old<lb/>
schoolteacher not face charges<lb/>
(lucky for everyone, they did).<lb/>
But even I can't stomach the fact<lb/>
that Yale would admit someone<lb/>
like Hashemi, who one intelli-<lb/>
gence report indicates he attended<lb/>
an Al-Qaeda terrorist training<lb/>
camp. Not only that, the man has<lb/>
a fourth grade formal education.<lb/>
He's never even taken the SATs!<lb/>
It's especially upsetting given the<lb/>
fact that Yale has barred ROTC<lb/>
programs and military recruit-<lb/>
ers from campus. Yale hates the<lb/>
American military for its "don't<lb/>
ask, don't tell" program, yet<lb/>
they give their seal of approval<lb/>
to a guy affiliated with a group<lb/>
that murdered homosexuals.<lb/>
This lapse in judgment from Yale<lb/>
is inexcusable. Since the story<lb/>
broke last week, the university<lb/>
has yet to officially release a state-<lb/>
ment to the public. What's the<lb/>
holdup? Could it be that, even<lb/>
with the greatest minds in the<lb/>
country at their disposal, they<lb/>
cannot come up with a reasonable<lb/>
explanation? And what would<lb/>
such an explanation look like?<lb/>
Probably something like this,<lb/>
"Sayed Rahmatullah Hashemi is<lb/>
a worldly, Intelligent individual<lb/>
with a wealth of unique experi-<lb/>
ences to share with the student<lb/>
body at  blah blah blah<lb/>
Had they not committed sui-<lb/>
cide, would Yale have admitted<lb/>
General Rommel or Joseph Goe-<lb/>
bbels after World War II ended?<lb/>
Would there have been room on<lb/>
the roster for Pol Pot or Chairman<lb/>
Mao? Personally, I think Adolph<lb/>
Hitler would have flourished at<lb/>
Yale's School of Fine Arts. But<lb/>
as ludicrous as that may sound,<lb/>
I don't see much of a difference<lb/>
between those I just mentioned<lb/>
and Hashemi. If Yale would take<lb/>
him, I think Joseph Stalin would<lb/>
have been a lock, although I<lb/>
picture him as a Harvard man<lb/>
myself.<lb/>
However, let's not put the<lb/>
entire blame on the elitist shoul-<lb/>
ders of the powers-that-be at Yale<lb/>
because there's an even greater<lb/>
issue at hand. Most of the hijack-<lb/>
ers that crashed the commercial<lb/>
planes on 911 were in America<lb/>
on student visas. After the attacks<lb/>
that day, the State Department<lb/>
supposedly cracked down on<lb/>
handing out student visas, but<lb/>
somehow, the most vocal and<lb/>
prominent member of the Tal-<lb/>
iban - who still denounces the<lb/>
United States and praised Osama<lb/>
bin Laden in the past - got one<lb/>
with relative ease. Cat Stevens<lb/>
can't get off a plane in New York,<lb/>
but the State Department doesn't<lb/>
bat an eye when they see Sayed<lb/>
Rahmatullah Hashemi on a stu-<lb/>
dent visa application. And Cat's<lb/>
British - not a true Arab - and<lb/>
honestly, anyone who can write<lb/>
a song as beautiful as "Father and<lb/>
Son" can't really be a threat to<lb/>
my existence.<lb/>
However, it begs the question,<lb/>
who else has slipped through<lb/>
the cracks so to speak due to the<lb/>
incompetence of our bloated<lb/>
bureaucracy? We've seen what 19<lb/>
of them can do; it wouldn't take<lb/>
many to end the lives of thou-<lb/>
sands of more Americans.<lb/>
The solution is clear but will<lb/>
never happen. Yale needs to cut<lb/>
the holier-than-thou, liberal<lb/>
attitude and understand that this<lb/>
is ridiculous. The pedestal that<lb/>
both the students and admin-<lb/>
istration rest on is so high that<lb/>
they're out of touch with the<lb/>
rest of the United States. Maybe<lb/>
Hashemi is a decent guy once<lb/>
you get past the anti-Semitism,<lb/>
anti-Americanism, anti-women,<lb/>
homophobic - eh, what am I<lb/>
thinking?<lb/>
As far as I'm concerned, there's<lb/>
a cage in Guantanamo with his<lb/>
name on it. The last Arab radical<lb/>
America trained and educated<lb/>
wound up screwing us in 2001.<lb/>
Yale and the United States need<lb/>
to get with the program and study<lb/>
the past before putting the rubber<lb/>
stamp on a piece of paper. The<lb/>
only upside to this debacle that I<lb/>
can see is that for once, I'm glad<lb/>
that I'm not a Yale Bulldog.<lb/>
Go Pirates!<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
Serving ECU since 1925,7FC prints 9,000 copies every<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday during the regular<lb/>
academic year and 5,000 on Wednesdays during the<lb/>
summer "Our View" is the opinion of the editorial board<lb/>
and is written by editorial board members TEC welcomes<lb/>
letters to the editor which are limited to 250 words (yvhich<lb/>
may be edited for decency or brevity). We reserve the<lb/>
right to edit or reject letters and all letters must be signed<lb/>
and include a telephone number Letters may be sent<lb/>
via e-mail to editorfatheeastcaroliniancom or to The East<lb/>
Carolinian, SerfHelp 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/>
Dear Editor,<lb/>
A coalition of community<lb/>
leaders proposed a county ordi-<lb/>
nance to remove the Confederate<lb/>
Monument located at the Pitt<lb/>
County Court House. The Local<lb/>
NAACP is not part of the coali-<lb/>
tion and has not as yet taken<lb/>
a public position on the issue.<lb/>
The group supporting removal<lb/>
includes intelligent and well edu-<lb/>
cated Individuals who conducted<lb/>
a substantial amount of research<lb/>
before proposing the ordinance.<lb/>
The succession of the states<lb/>
that formed the Confederate<lb/>
States of America was a criminal<lb/>
act of treason violating Article<lb/>
III, Section 3 of the U.S. Consti-<lb/>
tution. President Johnson issued<lb/>
Presidential Pardons in 1868,<lb/>
thus demonstrating that Con-<lb/>
federate soldiers were, in fact,<lb/>
criminals as a matter of law.<lb/>
The Confederate Constitu-<lb/>
tion required all states to honor<lb/>
the institution of enslavement of<lb/>
black people and required any new<lb/>
state or territory admitted Into the<lb/>
Confederacy to honor slavery of<lb/>
blacks. Confederate Vice Presi-<lb/>
dent Andrew Stephens stated that<lb/>
the Confederacy was founded<lb/>
upon the slavery of "negroes<lb/>
and that It stood upon the fun-<lb/>
dament truth that the "negro"<lb/>
is inferior to the white man.<lb/>
Confederate soldiers fought<lb/>
to keep blacks in slavery forever<lb/>
and everywhere. A monument<lb/>
to people who fought to estab-<lb/>
lish this principle has no place<lb/>
at a public court house. Human<lb/>
decency requires its removal. It<lb/>
is offensive to blacks and white<lb/>
Union soldiers' ancestors.<lb/>
Some 55,000 blacks are<lb/>
recorded to have served as Con-<lb/>
federate soldiers. Close analysis<lb/>
shows that most of these entered<lb/>
as slaves who were forced by their<lb/>
masters. Most of them ultimately<lb/>
joined the Union to take their<lb/>
freedom by rising up against<lb/>
their Confederate captors.<lb/>
The problems of poverty,<lb/>
crime and other negative pathol-<lb/>
ogies in the black community<lb/>
can be directly traced to being<lb/>
freed from slavery without land,<lb/>
money or reparations and forced<lb/>
into Jim Crow segregation until<lb/>
the civil rights act of 1964.<lb/>
Blacks continue to suffer racial<lb/>
discrimination that has taken on<lb/>
many subtle forms.<lb/>
The monument is a rally<lb/>
point for racists who permeate<lb/>
every level of American society.<lb/>
The removal of the monument<lb/>
in Pitt County is an opportunity<lb/>
for Pitt County to repudiate its<lb/>
offenses against the black com-<lb/>
munity and open the door to<lb/>
progress. We respect the right of<lb/>
others to honor their Confeder-<lb/>
ate heros, but it should be done<lb/>
somewhere other than the public<lb/>
court house. At the court house it<lb/>
makes an unacceptable political<lb/>
statement and endorses the racist<lb/>
ideas for which the Confederate<lb/>
Constitution stood.<lb/>
Rev. Ozie Lee Hall, Jr.<lb/>
Coalition for Removal<lb/>
of Confederate Monument<lb/>
Pirate Rant<lb/>
To the guy in the red car with the system and the dubs,<lb/>
stop driving slowly up the hill with your music blaring!<lb/>
Shouldn't you have graduated by now or something?<lb/>
If you found a blue and grey Audlovox camera phone at<lb/>
The Element last Friday, please turn it in to Mendenhall<lb/>
lost and found this week. My spring break and I will<lb/>
greatly appreciate it.<lb/>
Yeah, 1 mean I am not about to voluntarily root for or<lb/>
contribute to global warming, but right now I like the<lb/>
effects.<lb/>
Just so everyone knows, especially those of you who are<lb/>
Ignorant, the civil war was not, I repeat not, about slav-<lb/>
ery. Meaning that the statue outside of the courthouse<lb/>
is a part of the South's history, if you don't like It, move<lb/>
to the North.<lb/>
Rock for Relay was freaking awesome!<lb/>
OK  so Monday I was in West End Dining Hall and I<lb/>
see these two girls come in together dressed exactly alike<lb/>
- navy sweater and yellow polo. Now I have to admit that<lb/>
I, too, dressed like my best friend, but that was in the first<lb/>
grade. News flash, girls, we are in college now; It's not cool<lb/>
to dress like your best friend!<lb/>
To whomever said "snirtle" the other day -<lb/>
I'm still laughing days later.<lb/>
thank you!<lb/>
To whomever said anyone could look good with makeup<lb/>
on, clearly you're not seeing some of the people I see in<lb/>
this world.<lb/>
I'm sorry but don't expect your girlfriend of two years to<lb/>
be OK with "just being friends" 24 hours after you dump<lb/>
her, then proceed to tell her about a girl you saw at a<lb/>
party dancing on a table. You really aren't that amazing<lb/>
to begin with.<lb/>
Lying is bad; that's all there is to it. If you don't have the<lb/>
guts to tell the truth about what you're doing, then you're<lb/>
not mature enough to be doing it.<lb/>
I tried calling SafeRlde for 20 minutes, no answer<lb/>
did the reasonable thing and drove home drunk.<lb/>
sol<lb/>
You may obsess about working out and having the perfect<lb/>
body, but you're still an ugly person on the Inside.<lb/>
You think all these Pirate Rants are about you. What are<lb/>
you? An egomaniac?<lb/>
Why do teachers of online classes make you have group<lb/>
projects? I mean, if the members of my group aren't even<lb/>
In the USA, how am I supposed to meet with them?<lb/>
I think I'm going to start my day with an eight ball and<lb/>
a shot of whiskey.<lb/>
My friend is mad because her roommate wrote a Pirate<lb/>
Rant about her. It's funny though, because we all know<lb/>
It's true and anyone of us would have said the same. Now<lb/>
we're all just wondering when she'll realize that and why<lb/>
she can't see it herself.<lb/>
I heart ECU! Like whoa<lb/>
1 signed up for a treadmill - you did not. Therefore,<lb/>
get off and don't tell me that you "only have five more<lb/>
minutes<lb/>
I think it is complete crap that high school can now have<lb/>
Facebook.<lb/>
To my roommate, you haven't washed your bed sheets<lb/>
since you came here in August. And sadly enough, I had<lb/>
to wash them for you while you went home for a weekend<lb/>
(you don't know that). So here's some advice - please wash<lb/>
your sheets; it's really starting to smell!<lb/>
I love being Greek! And if the 94 percent of you who aren't<lb/>
Greek gave it a try, you would love it, too.<lb/>
How about changing the name to Pirate Rants and Raves?<lb/>
Positive comments are nice to hear, too.<lb/>
Carolina beat Duke! WHOOO HOOO!<lb/>
1 hate it when people wear sunglasses at night! What<lb/>
sense does it make to have sunglasses on when there Is<lb/>
no freakin' sun? People really annoy me when they wear<lb/>
them to the club!<lb/>
It'd be great if boys on the second floor of Tyler would grow<lb/>
up. Maybe If you were secure with your own sexuality,<lb/>
you wouldn't have a problem.<lb/>
Thanks to all of the grounds keepers for keeping the<lb/>
campus so clean and green.<lb/>
What's up with the pink posters up all over campus<lb/>
"from God"? Don't get me wrong, I'm not anti-God or<lb/>
Jesus or anything. Just uh, yeah. They freak me out, OK?<lb/>
And what about Buddha? I'd rather get a message from<lb/>
him anyway.<lb/>
1 think that the Rec Center should have those sanitary<lb/>
wipes that come out of those big plastic containers rather<lb/>
than a towel and some disinfectant spray. All we are doing<lb/>
is re-wiping everyone's sweat back onto the machines.<lb/>
Isn't It amazing how the two little words "1 do" can take<lb/>
you from the "Princess of Pop" to the "Queen of the<lb/>
Trailer Park"?<lb/>
1 am so tired of hearing we pay the teachers and other<lb/>
faculty members with our tuition. Half of you get finan-<lb/>
cial aid anyway.<lb/>
Even if they ever do fix the fountain and get it working,<lb/>
I think that it is ugly anyway and they should just knock<lb/>
it down and turn It into an area for more parking.<lb/>
The voice answering service for ECU'S Health Center is so<lb/>
depressing. The woman speaking sounds as If she com-<lb/>
pletely hates her job for those of you calling to make an<lb/>
appointment who would prefer not to listen to her ramble<lb/>
on about office hours, just press two and it will connect<lb/>
you with the appointment office.<lb/>
It's funny how something as small as renaming a street<lb/>
brings out people's racist tendencies! And these are the<lb/>
same people who say we don't need Black History Month<lb/>
anymore! Wow!<lb/>
Editor's Note: The Pirate Kant is an anonymous way for students and staff in the<lb/>
ECUajrnmunltytomlatheiropirnons .Submissions can be siumted anonymously<lb/>
online at www.theeaskamltnian.com, or e-mailed to editarWheeastcamltnian.<lb/>
com. The editor reserves the right to edit opinions for content and brevity.<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059404_0006"/><lb/>
ch 7, 2006<lb/>
ii and the dubs,<lb/>
 music blaring!<lb/>
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to Mendenhall<lb/>
reak and 1 will<lb/>
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now I like the<lb/>
of you who are<lb/>
not, about slav-<lb/>
the courthouse<lb/>
l't like it, move<lb/>
ling Hall and I<lb/>
ed exactly alike<lb/>
re to admit that<lb/>
was in the first<lb/>
ow; it's not cool<lb/>
y - thank you!<lb/>
d with makeup<lb/>
people I see in<lb/>
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after you dump<lb/>
rl you saw at a<lb/>
t that amazing<lb/>
don't have the<lb/>
ng, then you're<lb/>
 answer so I<lb/>
drunk.<lb/>
'ing the perfect<lb/>
le inside.<lb/>
you. What are<lb/>
ou have group<lb/>
up aren't even<lb/>
ith them?<lb/>
eight ball and<lb/>
wrote a Pirate<lb/>
se we all know<lb/>
the same. Now<lb/>
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ot. Therefore,<lb/>
lave five more<lb/>
I can now have<lb/>
aur bed sheets<lb/>
enough, I had<lb/>
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:e - please wash<lb/>
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nts and Raves?<lb/>
t night! What<lb/>
when there is<lb/>
then they wear<lb/>
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over campus<lb/>
)t anti-God or<lb/>
k me out, OK?<lb/>
message from<lb/>
those sanitary<lb/>
itainers rather<lb/>
II we are doing<lb/>
e machines.<lb/>
1 do" can take<lb/>
Queen of the<lb/>
lers and other<lb/>
you get finan-<lb/>
;et It working,<lb/>
uld just knock<lb/>
larking.<lb/>
th Center is so<lb/>
as If she com-<lb/>
ng to make an<lb/>
i to her ramble<lb/>
t will connect<lb/>
iming a street<lb/>
these are the<lb/>
llstory Month<lb/>
w W<lb/>
Page A5 features@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 CAROLYN SCANDURA Features Editor KRISTIN MURNANE Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY March 7, 2006<lb/>
tnts and staff in the<lb/>
mitted anonymously<lb/>
Vtheeosttamlinlan.<lb/>
MM and brevity.<lb/>
Names in the News:<lb/>
Sick bay report<lb/>
Sheryl Crow is in good spirits after<lb/>
a Feb. 22 lumpectomy to remove<lb/>
malignant spots in her breasts and<lb/>
is preparing to undergo radiation<lb/>
treatment. Just three weeks ago she<lb/>
split from the world's most famous<lb/>
cancer survivor, Lance Armstrong.<lb/>
A bustln' suit<lb/>
Hip-hop artist Busta Rhymes (Trevor<lb/>
Smith) is being sued by an ardent<lb/>
autograph-seeking fan who says<lb/>
Busta and bodyguard Troy Green<lb/>
busted all over his face, back and<lb/>
neck six months ago "for no rhyme or<lb/>
reason Filed in Manhattan Supreme<lb/>
Court, Melvin Smith's civil suit, which<lb/>
says the fracas has left him unable<lb/>
to fulfill his professional duties as a<lb/>
handyman, seeks an unspecified<lb/>
amount of money. Meanwhile, police<lb/>
are still investigating a Feb. 5 incident<lb/>
during which another bodyguard,<lb/>
Israel Ramirez, was gunned down on<lb/>
the set of Busta's video shoot.<lb/>
Reese's payday<lb/>
Julia Roberts Is no more. Seductively<lb/>
articulate Walk the Line star Reese<lb/>
Witherspoon has surpassed the<lb/>
smile as the highest-paid actress of<lb/>
all time, having signed to star in the<lb/>
horror flick Our Family Trouble for<lb/>
$29 million. Julia got a pathetic $24<lb/>
million for Mona Lisa Smile. Not to<lb/>
advocate anything as jejune as pay-<lb/>
grade equality, but Reese's piece is<lb/>
still a far cry from what the boys make,<lb/>
Tom Cruise was paid $75 million for<lb/>
Mission: Impossible II.<lb/>
A splash at Sundance<lb/>
Two films examining immigrant life<lb/>
in America, the Latino teen drama<lb/>
Quinceanera and the Sudanese<lb/>
refugee documentary God Grew<lb/>
Tired of Us, won top honors at the<lb/>
Sundance Rim Festival. Quinceanera<lb/>
is written and directed by Wash<lb/>
Westmoreland and Richard Glatzer.<lb/>
Starring Emily Rios in a striking film<lb/>
debut as a girl ostracized by her<lb/>
family after she becomes pregnant<lb/>
shortly before her 15th birthday,<lb/>
Quinceanera offers a culture-clash<lb/>
portrait of Los Angeles' Echo<lb/>
Park area, traditionally a Hispanic<lb/>
neighborhood that has become a<lb/>
trendy enclave. Christopher Quinn's<lb/>
God Grew Tired of Us, which follows<lb/>
three Sudanese boys adjusting to life<lb/>
in the United States after the bloody<lb/>
civil war in their homeland, received<lb/>
both the jury prize and audience<lb/>
award for U.S. documentaries.<lb/>
Surprise attack<lb/>
Filmmaker Steven Spielberg stated<lb/>
that while he knew he was going to<lb/>
"receive a volley from the right about<lb/>
his film Munich, he was surprised<lb/>
that we received a much smaller, but<lb/>
no less painful, volley from the left. It<lb/>
made me feel a little more aware of<lb/>
the dogma and the Luddite position<lb/>
people take any time the Middle<lb/>
East is up for discussion Munich is<lb/>
the story of what happened after 11<lb/>
Israeli athletes were murdered at the<lb/>
1972 Olympics.<lb/>
Calling It quits<lb/>
Nobel Prize winner Gabriel Garcia<lb/>
Marquez says he has stopped<lb/>
writing. "The year 2005 was the<lb/>
first In my life when I did not write a<lb/>
single line the 78-year-old author<lb/>
was quoted as saying in Sunday's<lb/>
La Vanguardia, a daily published in<lb/>
Barcelona, Spain. Garcia Marquez is<lb/>
best known for One Hundred Years<lb/>
of Solitude and Love in the Time of<lb/>
Cholera. His latest novel, Memories<lb/>
of My Melancholy Whores, came out<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
Local Concerts:<lb/>
The Take Action Tour featuring<lb/>
Matchbook Romance, The Early<lb/>
November, Silverstein, Paramore and<lb/>
Amber Pacific will come to Myrtle<lb/>
Beach, S.C. Tuesday, March 7.<lb/>
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah will be<lb/>
at the Cat's Cradle In Carrboro, N.C.<lb/>
Thursday, March 9.<lb/>
Jerry Seinfeld will be performing<lb/>
at the Progress Energy Center for<lb/>
Performing Arts in Raleigh Friday,<lb/>
March 10.<lb/>
Circa Survive, Saves the Day and<lb/>
Moneen will be performing at the<lb/>
House of Blues in Myrtle Beach, S.C.<lb/>
Saturday, March 25.<lb/>
R. Kelly will be performing at Memorial<lb/>
Auditorium in Raleigh Tuesday, March<lb/>
28.<lb/>
Ben Folds will be performing at<lb/>
Memorial Auditorium in Raleigh<lb/>
Thursday, March 30.<lb/>
Martina McBride will be at the RBC<lb/>
Center in Raleigh Sunday, April 2.<lb/>
Kid Rock will be performing at the<lb/>
RBC Center in Raleigh Friday, April<lb/>
7.<lb/>
Michael Buble will be performing<lb/>
at Memorial Auditorium In Raleigh<lb/>
Wednesday, April 12.<lb/>
Bluegrass Band takes over ECU<lb/>
This Jarvis Street<lb/>
group has become<lb/>
Greenville's next craze<lb/>
SHANNON DAVIS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
ECU is full of many hidden<lb/>
treasures; among them is The<lb/>
Jarvis Street Bluegrass Band.<lb/>
Their music encourages listen-<lb/>
ers to let loose and boogie with<lb/>
friends. One of the found-<lb/>
ing fathers of the group is<lb/>
Mark Romano, who I inter-<lb/>
viewed to get a better idea of<lb/>
what this band is all about.<lb/>
TEC: What are the names of<lb/>
your fellow band members and<lb/>
what instruments do they play?<lb/>
Romano: Jesse laquinto does<lb/>
vocals and plays the mandolin,<lb/>
Charlie McCanless plays the<lb/>
bass, Chad Cowan does vocals<lb/>
and plays the guitar and I play<lb/>
the banjo and vocals. We also<lb/>
have guest instrumentalists<lb/>
join us for different shows.<lb/>
TEC: How often do you guys<lb/>
practice?<lb/>
Romano: Every day, every<lb/>
chance we get. It is our lives.<lb/>
TEC: What inspired you guys<lb/>
to play bluegrass music?<lb/>
Romano: Jesse and 1 had Eng-<lb/>
lish together freshman year and<lb/>
we had to write a paper about<lb/>
something on North Carolina.<lb/>
Jesse and 1 both wanted to<lb/>
write about music and blue-<lb/>
n<lb/>
More Info<lb/>
The Jarvis Street Bluegrass Band:<lb/>
Jesse laquinto - Vocals, mandolin<lb/>
Mark Romano - Banjo, vocals<lb/>
Charlie McCanless - Bass<lb/>
Chad Cowan - Guitar and vocals<lb/>
A relatively new band who has<lb/>
taken ECU by a storm, performing<lb/>
bluegrass music and acquiring a<lb/>
steady following of listeners<lb/>
The group will be playing at Happy's<lb/>
Wednesday, March 8.<lb/>
For more Information about the<lb/>
band and Its members go to<lb/>
purevolume.comECUbluegrass.<lb/>
grass originated fh western North<lb/>
Carolina, so we both wrote a<lb/>
paper on it. Then we became<lb/>
friends and started jamming. We<lb/>
started playing bluegrass because<lb/>
none of us had really played<lb/>
that style" of music, but we had<lb/>
Jesse's dad's 50-year-old banjo<lb/>
and a mandolin, so we started<lb/>
messing around with those.<lb/>
TEC: How did you add the other<lb/>
members of the band and how<lb/>
long has your band been together<lb/>
officially?<lb/>
Romano: In August we all got<lb/>
back together and decided to<lb/>
get serious about playing music.<lb/>
Our good friend Stephen played<lb/>
The Jarvis Street Bluegrass Band: Jesse laquinto, Mark Romano, Charlie McCanless and Chad Cowan.<lb/>
with us for a while, but he's got<lb/>
a really busy schedule being a<lb/>
music major so he hasn't played<lb/>
with us in a month or so because<lb/>
of that and he also broke his foot.<lb/>
Chad moved down here with<lb/>
30 cents in his pocket and just<lb/>
wanted to play music; he's a<lb/>
friend of Jesse's from Elmira, NY.<lb/>
We've been a band "officially"<lb/>
since August.<lb/>
TEC: Does your band have a<lb/>
steady following?<lb/>
Romano: We have a tight group<lb/>
of friends that make it to every<lb/>
show, which we are grateful for,<lb/>
and the audience gets bigger<lb/>
every time we play, but it really<lb/>
depends on where we play.<lb/>
TEC: Where has your band<lb/>
performed?<lb/>
Romano: Phi Tau, Happy's and<lb/>
mostly house parties. We're just<lb/>
now starting to play downtown.<lb/>
Happy's is our first "real gig<lb/>
TEC: Do you guys have any<lb/>
plans for the future with your<lb/>
band?<lb/>
Romano: Yeah, there are many<lb/>
bluegrass festivals in North<lb/>
Carolina, which presents a nice<lb/>
see BLUEGRASS page A6<lb/>
Black Watch and the Band of Welsh Guards<lb/>
0<lb/>
More Info<lb/>
Black Watch and the Band of Welsh Guards performers dressed.<lb/>
Upcoming Performances In the<lb/>
S. Rudolph Performing Arts Series<lb/>
Petipas La Bayadere: The exotic<lb/>
tale of a temple dancer in India;<lb/>
performed by the Russian Nation Ballet<lb/>
Friday, March 24 at 8 p.m. In Wright<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
Stand-Up Opera: The comedlc 1<lb/>
styling of B.J. Ward<lb/>
Saturday, April 8 at 8 p.m. In Wright J<lb/>
Auditorium I<lb/>
c<lb/>
8<lb/>
Something new at Wright<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
SARAH CAMPBELL<lb/>
STAFF WRITER <lb/>
If you are looking for a way<lb/>
to quench your thirst for a new<lb/>
source of entertainment, look no<lb/>
further than Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
For 43 years the S. Rudolph Alex-<lb/>
ander Performing Arts Series has<lb/>
offered students and staff the<lb/>
opportunity to attend a variety<lb/>
of performances. Symphony<lb/>
orchestras, operas, jazz, classical<lb/>
ballet, modern dance, folk musi-<lb/>
cians and Broadway hits are just<lb/>
a few of the exciting entertaining<lb/>
performances which have been<lb/>
presented throughout the years.<lb/>
This year, of course, is no<lb/>
different. Dancing and playing<lb/>
their way into Wright Audito-<lb/>
rium March 9 at 8 p.m. The Pipes,<lb/>
Drums and Highland Dancers of<lb/>
First Battalion: The Black Watch<lb/>
and the Band of Welsh Guards<lb/>
are sure to offer a distinctive<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
The Black Watch is the most<lb/>
prestigious of all the Highland<lb/>
regiments of the British Army,<lb/>
tracing back to 1624. Being the<lb/>
first kilted regiment, as well as<lb/>
the first to use the bagpipe in the<lb/>
tradition of playing the troops<lb/>
into battle, is the Black Watch's<lb/>
claim to fame.<lb/>
Members of the Black Watch<lb/>
are the only people permitted to<lb/>
carry arms in the Highlands. The<lb/>
right to bear arms is associated<lb/>
with status and standing, thus<lb/>
drawing many Highlanders to<lb/>
join the Black Watch.<lb/>
In the contemporary Brit-<lb/>
ish army the Black Watch is a<lb/>
machine gun platoon, which still<lb/>
see WATCH page A6<lb/>
Superman or Political Science Man?<lb/>
Charles Owens, junior political science major, proves that many<lb/>
students can have their hands in fulfilling activities all over campus.<lb/>
Who is who at ECU?<lb/>
SHANNON DAVIS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
There are many hard work-<lb/>
ing students at ECU who to go<lb/>
to school, have one or more jobs<lb/>
and are involved with on-campus<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
These individuals add to the<lb/>
strength and leadership at ECU<lb/>
and have mastered the most<lb/>
important factor for college <lb/>
time management. Charles Ryan<lb/>
Owens is an assiduous under-<lb/>
graduate who seems to have super<lb/>
human powers.<lb/>
TEC: Where are you from?<lb/>
Owens: I was born and raised in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
TEC: What is your major?<lb/>
Owens: I am majoring in politi-<lb/>
cal science with a minor in secu-<lb/>
rity studies.<lb/>
rjEC: What do you want to do<lb/>
for a living?<lb/>
Owens: I want to work for a law<lb/>
firm dealing with civil law, cor-<lb/>
porate law or government law.<lb/>
TEC: What is your current stu-<lb/>
dent classification at ECU?<lb/>
Owens: I am a junior as of this<lb/>
semester, even though this is my<lb/>
second year. I plan to graduate<lb/>
in three years instead of four<lb/>
because it will help me get into<lb/>
law school. It is also a practical<lb/>
path for me since I am paying<lb/>
my way through school; I will<lb/>
save money.<lb/>
TEC: What activities are you<lb/>
involved with on campus?<lb/>
Owens: 1 am a co-chair on<lb/>
the Appropriations Committee<lb/>
for Student Government Asso-<lb/>
ciation, College Democrats, Omi-<lb/>
cron Delta Kappa (ODK), which<lb/>
is a leadership fraternity and Phi<lb/>
Alpha Theta, which is a political<lb/>
science honors fraternity.<lb/>
TEC: Do you have a job?<lb/>
Owens: I work at Starbucks and<lb/>
Logan's Roadhouse.<lb/>
TEC: What do you want to do<lb/>
after you graduate from ECU?<lb/>
Owens: I want to go to law<lb/>
school at Duke.<lb/>
TEC: Is it very difficult to balance<lb/>
school, your jobs and all of your<lb/>
activities?<lb/>
Owens: Kind of, not always, but<lb/>
at some points it is overwhelming.<lb/>
TEC: What do you like to do<lb/>
for fun?<lb/>
Owens: I play the guitar and<lb/>
racquetball.<lb/>
TEC: What is your favorite part<lb/>
about ECU?<lb/>
Owens: The people are so cool<lb/>
here. They are entertaining, fun<lb/>
and down to earth.<lb/>
Charles Ryan Owens balances<lb/>
a full course load, two jobs and<lb/>
many time consuming activities.<lb/>
He is a committed, energetic stu-<lb/>
dent who exemplifies the hard<lb/>
work and dedication needed to<lb/>
succeed. There are students all<lb/>
over campus doing great things<lb/>
and Ryan is one of them.<lb/>
This writer con be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
No matter what, always talk to a physician before taking medications.<lb/>
Allergy season tips<lb/>
What medicines work?<lb/>
AARON BORREGO<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Well kids, it is that time<lb/>
of year again - allergy season.<lb/>
As the impending incarna-<lb/>
tion of the swallowing plague<lb/>
graces our presence, so too<lb/>
does the need to find relief in<lb/>
the form of medical wonders.<lb/>
In order to properly accom-<lb/>
plish this, I asked a nurse of<lb/>
about 25 years experience what<lb/>
she thought about the currently<lb/>
offered medicines on the market.<lb/>
This nurse is Rosie Borrego, my<lb/>
mother.<lb/>
When asked about which<lb/>
medicines she believed worked<lb/>
the best, Borrego said, "Clari-<lb/>
tin, Singular and Allegra<lb/>
She further went on to say,<lb/>
"These are great drugs with<lb/>
minimal or no side effects<lb/>
All of these medications seem<lb/>
to come with some notice to<lb/>
be careful while taking them.<lb/>
Something that users typically<lb/>
forget or ignore is the fact that<lb/>
many of these allergy medica-<lb/>
tions raise your blood pressure<lb/>
levels and, therefore, could cause<lb/>
hypertension.<lb/>
Claritin is one of my personal<lb/>
favorites because it works very<lb/>
well to eradicate my symptoms, at<lb/>
least once it is in the bloodstream.<lb/>
This drug used to be a prescrip-<lb/>
tion-only drug, but now can be<lb/>
found in over the counter form.<lb/>
Allegra and Singular are very<lb/>
widely used medications and<lb/>
have worked wonders for yours<lb/>
truly. The aforementioned Singu-<lb/>
see ALLERGY page A6<lb/>
<pb facs="00059404_0007"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
PAGE A6<lb/>
THE EAST CAROUNIAN  FEATURES<lb/>
3-07-06<lb/>
3-0<lb/>
ON 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/>
Looking for your futureP<lb/>
Manage the big picture<lb/>
ajtfijdj<lb/>
Sujpiy C;hairi IMIJsijiiiajeraerfit<lb/>
Start on the career path to high level management<lb/>
Positions in any company, any industry<lb/>
Above 90o placement rate since the beginning of the program<lb/>
OSCM graduates begin their careers as buyersplanners,<lb/>
purchasing specialists, sourcing analysts, or in the areas of<lb/>
operations and quality. After gaining experience, they move<lb/>
into management positions, responsible for buyingsourcing<lb/>
and managing millions of dollars.<lb/>
College of Business<lb/>
Department of Decision Sciences<lb/>
Bate 34)0 - 252328-6893 omgti3ecu.edu<lb/>
Career info: wwuj.business.ecu.edudsciomcareers.cfm<lb/>
Job postings: core.ecu.edudsciwestdjoblistingsjobbank.mht<lb/>
BlliegraSS from page5<lb/>
opportunity to play outside of<lb/>
Greenville. We want to go as far<lb/>
as we can, but we know it takes<lb/>
time, so right now we're focusing<lb/>
on playing in town, at least for<lb/>
this semester.<lb/>
The Jarvis Street Bluegrass<lb/>
Band has gained supporters<lb/>
throughout Greenville.<lb/>
The band's passion for their<lb/>
genre of music is evident as they<lb/>
entertain many people at their<lb/>
weekly performances.<lb/>
The group has an upcoming<lb/>
show Wednesday, March 8 at<lb/>
Happy's Pool Hall. To learn more<lb/>
about the band go to purevolume.<lb/>
comECUbluegrass.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Watch<lb/>
from page A5<lb/>
takes pride in their talent to play<lb/>
pipes and drums while serving<lb/>
their country. Equal amounts of<lb/>
pride are placed on their respon-<lb/>
sibilities as machine gunners as<lb/>
is their role as pipersdrummers.<lb/>
When formed in 1915, The Band<lb/>
of Welsh Guards was initially<lb/>
a group of 44 musicians and a<lb/>
warrant officer who served as the<lb/>
bandmaster. In 1916 the City of<lb/>
Cardiff enabled the band to carry<lb/>
out the first Kings Guard Mount-<lb/>
ing on St. David's Day when they<lb/>
gave the group their first set of<lb/>
instruments.<lb/>
Permanently based in London,<lb/>
The Band of Welsh Guards regu-<lb/>
larly performs at various state and<lb/>
ceremonial occasions, including<lb/>
the changing of the guards at<lb/>
Buckingham Palace. During their<lb/>
tour, they have traveled around<lb/>
the world to a number of coun-<lb/>
tries including Belgium, Egypt,<lb/>
Spain, America and Canada.<lb/>
When these two amazing<lb/>
groups of talent join forces, every-<lb/>
one is sure to be in for a unique<lb/>
night of entertainment.<lb/>
Tickets are now on sale for<lb/>
this exciting night of entertain-<lb/>
ment. You can get yours from the<lb/>
Personal Trainer<lb/>
Rowing<lb/>
Lift light- or medium-<lb/>
weight dumbbells with<lb/>
these rowing motions to<lb/>
strengthen the muscles<lb/>
of the upper back.<lb/>
difficult<lb/>
Only one<lb/>
weight<lb/>
Bend J 1<lb/>
knees <lb/>
slightly m m<lb/>
Lift dumbbells to bottom<lb/>
of ribs, pause, then lower<lb/>
Easiest<lb/>
Back almost<lb/>
parallel to<lb/>
floor<lb/>
Most difficult<lb/>
Same position as above<lb/>
After<lb/>
half of <lb/>
repetitions, switch weight<lb/>
to other hand; do second<lb/>
set on other leg<lb/>
Lift weight, hold<lb/>
to chest as you<lb/>
straighten, then lift<lb/>
it overhead;<lb/>
reverse the steps<lb/>
j to lower weight<lb/>
Source. Personal trainer<lb/>
Carter Hays In Men 5 Health<lb/>
Benefits<lb/>
Builds muscles that<lb/>
support upper body<lb/>
during a long<lb/>
run<lb/>
Repetitions Do two sets of:<lb/>
 8 to 12 reps to improve strength<lb/>
 12 to 20 repetitions to increase<lb/>
endurance<lb/>
Graphic: Helen Lee McComas, Paul Trap<lb/>
Lower back<lb/>
"Glute<lb/>
Gluteus maximus<lb/>
Hamstrings<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center or<lb/>
by calling 1-800-ECU-ARTS.<lb/>
The cost of the performance<lb/>
is $10 for students, $19 for<lb/>
youth, $37 for faculty and<lb/>
staff, and $39 for the public.<lb/>
For more information about<lb/>
the pipes, drums and Highland<lb/>
Dancers of First Battalion: The<lb/>
Black Watch and the Band of<lb/>
Welsh Guards as well as other<lb/>
upcoming performances at ECU<lb/>
please visit ecuarts.com.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Allergy from page5<lb/>
lar and Allegra are found in the<lb/>
prescription form only. Therefore,<lb/>
you need to see a physician for<lb/>
these medications, dbn't just<lb/>
steal them from your roommate.<lb/>
"Since many of these drugs can<lb/>
either cause complications or cost<lb/>
quite a bit of money, everyone<lb/>
should consult a doctor before<lb/>
making any decisions Borrego<lb/>
said.<lb/>
When you go to the doctor's<lb/>
office you do just more than pay<lb/>
for their service to tell you what<lb/>
you already knew about, you go<lb/>
there also to have your physician<lb/>
directly point out which par-<lb/>
ticular ailment is bothering you.<lb/>
Also, another thing to watch<lb/>
out for are dreaded drug inter-<lb/>
actions with other substances.<lb/>
People, don't imbibe an incred-<lb/>
ible amount of alcohol and take<lb/>
these medicines. Call it like you<lb/>
see it, it's drug abuse which could<lb/>
damage organs such as your liver<lb/>
and kidneys permanently.<lb/>
1 know the wave of sickness<lb/>
that seems to accompany the<lb/>
change of season can be a bit over-<lb/>
whelming with classes and all, but<lb/>
try to take care of yourselves.<lb/>
Exercise, drink lots of water<lb/>
and take some vitamin C to help<lb/>
alleviate some of the strain on<lb/>
your body's immune system. Have<lb/>
a healthy season ladies and gents.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
feotures@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Recognition for<lb/>
Outstanding<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/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059404_0008"/><lb/>
3-07-06<lb/>
3-07-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  FEATURES<lb/>
PAGE A7<lb/>
lay, March 8 at<lb/>
ill. To learn more<lb/>
50 to purevolume.<lb/>
rass.<lb/>
be contacted at<lb/>
stcarolinian.com.<lb/>
cet Office in<lb/>
udent Center or<lb/>
SOO-ECU-ARTS.<lb/>
le performance<lb/>
idents, $19 for<lb/>
r faculty and<lb/>
for the public,<lb/>
formation about<lb/>
is and Highland<lb/>
t Battalion: The<lb/>
rid the Band of<lb/>
as well as other<lb/>
irmances at ECU<lb/>
irts.com.<lb/>
be contacted at<lb/>
itcarolinian.com.<lb/>
npage A5<lb/>
are found in the<lb/>
n only. Therefore,<lb/>
a physician for<lb/>
ons, don't just<lb/>
your roommate.<lb/>
f these drugs can<lb/>
plications or cost<lb/>
loney, everyone<lb/>
a doctor before<lb/>
:isions Borrego<lb/>
q to the doctor's<lb/>
;t more than pay<lb/>
to tell you what<lb/>
w about, you go<lb/>
e your physician<lb/>
out which par-<lb/>
s bothering you.<lb/>
r thing to watch<lb/>
ided drug inter-<lb/>
her substances,<lb/>
ibibe an incred-<lb/>
ilcohol and take<lb/>
Call it like you<lb/>
use which could<lb/>
uch as your liver<lb/>
nanently.<lb/>
vave of sickness<lb/>
iccompany the<lb/>
can be a bit over-<lb/>
lasses and all, but<lb/>
f yourselves,<lb/>
nk lots of water<lb/>
tamin C to help<lb/>
if the strain on<lb/>
me system. Have<lb/>
ladies and gents.<lb/>
ie contacted at<lb/>
tcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Wherekvill you be<lb/>
Get Started. Get Ahead. Live.<lb/>
Summer School 2006<lb/>
Calling ALL<lb/>
Student Leaders!<lb/>
Election Applications are now being<lb/>
V accepted for all Executive Offices and Congress<lb/>
President, Vice President,<lb/>
Treasurer, Secretary<lb/>
and members of Congress<lb/>
Apply<lb/>
Now!<lb/>
Applications will be available<lb/>
March 6-7 from 8am to 5pm<lb/>
SGA Office - 255 Mendenhall<lb/>
Applications are due March 7th<lb/>
<pb facs="00059404_0009"/><lb/>
I I<lb/>
 I<lb/>
b L- U lt.<lb/>
3-C<lb/>
Page A8 sports@theeastcarolinlan.com 252.328.6366 TONY Z0PP0 Sports Editor BRANDON HUGHES Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
TUESDAY March 7, 2006<lb/>
Briefs<lb/>
Steroid doctor pleads<lb/>
guilty<lb/>
A doctor accused of writing<lb/>
Illegal steroid prescriptions to some<lb/>
members of the Carolina Panthers<lb/>
pleaded guilty Monday to one federal<lb/>
conspiracy charge as part of a plea<lb/>
agreement. Alternative medicine<lb/>
physician James Shorn, 59, pleaded<lb/>
guilty in federal court to one count<lb/>
of conspiracy to distribute anabolic<lb/>
steroids and human growth hormone.<lb/>
In exchange, prosecutors agreed<lb/>
to drop 42 similar counts against<lb/>
the doctor who used to practice in<lb/>
West Columbia. Prosecutors have<lb/>
said current and former members of<lb/>
the Carolina Panthers were some of<lb/>
Shortfs patients. After Monday's guilty<lb/>
plea, they would not say if he treated<lb/>
players from any other NFL teams. U.S.<lb/>
Attorney Reginald Uoyd said Shorn<lb/>
will Jlkely be sentenced In several<lb/>
months. Shortt faces up to five years<lb/>
in prison, two years of supervised<lb/>
release and a $250,000 fine. A report<lb/>
last spring from the CBS program<lb/>
60 Minutes Wednesday identified<lb/>
Panthers' center Jeff Mitchell, tackle<lb/>
Todd Steussie and punter Todd<lb/>
Sauerbrun as having filled steroid<lb/>
prescriptions written by Shortt Shorn,<lb/>
who told the judge he now lives in<lb/>
California, remains free on bond.<lb/>
Tillman death to be<lb/>
Investigated<lb/>
The Defense Department will<lb/>
investigate allegations of an Army<lb/>
coverup in the shooting death in<lb/>
Afghanistan of Cpl. Pat Tillman, in<lb/>
addition to a criminal investigation<lb/>
into the 2004 killing of the former NFL<lb/>
star, the department said Monday.<lb/>
Gary Comerford, spokesman for the<lb/>
Defense Department's inspector<lb/>
general, said his office's review of<lb/>
three previous Army investigations<lb/>
of Tillman's death - none of which<lb/>
was a criminal probe - "found things<lb/>
that should have been looked at<lb/>
The spokesman would not elaborate.<lb/>
Other officials said the inspector<lb/>
general concluded that the earlier<lb/>
Army investigations had produced<lb/>
enough evidence to merit probing<lb/>
possible charges of negligent<lb/>
homicide. The officials would discuss<lb/>
the matter only on condition of<lb/>
anonymity because the probe has<lb/>
not yet begun. Army investigations<lb/>
concluded that he was mistaken<lb/>
for the enemy and gunned down by<lb/>
his own men. The Army has publicly<lb/>
acknowledged that it erred by not<lb/>
telling the family earlier that Tillman<lb/>
was killed by fellow soldiers. Three<lb/>
other U.S. soldiers were wounded<lb/>
in the gunfight, which occurred April<lb/>
22,2004, near the Pakistan border. It<lb/>
was not clear Monday whether the<lb/>
circumstances of those woundlngs<lb/>
would be included in the Army<lb/>
criminal investigation.<lb/>
Pirates break out the broom<lb/>
with sweep over Stony Brook<lb/>
The Pirates scored a three-game sweep at Clark-LeClair Stadium over visiting Stony Brook, winning Sunday's series finale in the bottom<lb/>
Diamond Bucs have a<lb/>
five-game winning streak<lb/>
BRENT WYNNE<lb/>
SENIOR STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Drew Schieber's RBI double<lb/>
and Dale Mollenhauer's bases-<lb/>
loaded walk in the bottom of<lb/>
the 11th capped a two run, last<lb/>
inning rally as the Pirates won<lb/>
4-3 and completed the sweep of<lb/>
Stony Brook Sunday afternoon at<lb/>
Clark-LeClair Stadium.<lb/>
After walking all over the<lb/>
Seawolves during games one and<lb/>
two, when the Diamond Bucs<lb/>
did not allow a run en route to<lb/>
12-0 and 4-0 wins, ECU needed<lb/>
extra innings and some heroics to<lb/>
dispose of the feisty Seawolves in<lb/>
game three.<lb/>
Trailing 3-2 heading to the<lb/>
bottom of the 11th, the Pirates<lb/>
got a gift from Brook shortstop<lb/>
Andres Perez as his throw to first<lb/>
on a Ryan Wood ground ball<lb/>
was errant and sailed into the<lb/>
Seawolf dugout, allowing Wood<lb/>
to advance second to begin the<lb/>
inning. Head Coach Matt Senk,<lb/>
in a fit of rage, yanked Perez<lb/>
from the game, as he knew the<lb/>
error would prove to be costly.<lb/>
And it was.<lb/>
Jake Dean's sacrifice bunt<lb/>
moved Wood to third, where he<lb/>
then scored on Schieber's RBI<lb/>
double to right to tie the game<lb/>
at three. Schieber picked the<lb/>
of the 11th inning.<lb/>
perfect time to get his first hit of<lb/>
the game, as he was 0-for-4 with<lb/>
three strikeouts in four previous<lb/>
plate appearances.<lb/>
Harrison Eldridge was inten-<lb/>
tionally walked to put the double<lb/>
play in order, but Pirate Head<lb/>
Coach Billy Godwin stayed<lb/>
see BASEBALL page A12<lb/>
ECU softball wins Pirate Clash<lb/>
L<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
In<lb/>
Ta<lb/>
cl<lb/>
Ju<lb/>
Ta<lb/>
cc<lb/>
4C<lb/>
Sa<lb/>
25<lb/>
di<lb/>
Hoi<lb/>
Fric<lb/>
Umrti<lb/>
Spfin<lb/>
Ail-league team members<lb/>
announced<lb/>
A pair of senior Ail-Americans<lb/>
and a star rookie helped their<lb/>
teams finish atop the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference. Now they're headlining<lb/>
the all-league team. Duke's J.J.<lb/>
Redick and Shelden Williams, and<lb/>
North Carolina's Tyler Hansbrough<lb/>
were unanimous selections to the All-<lb/>
ACC team released Monday by The<lb/>
Associated Press. Redick, Williams<lb/>
and Hansbrough were first-team<lb/>
picks on all 108 votes by meters<lb/>
of the Atlantic Coast SportsJBBia<lb/>
Association. They were joinecrWihe<lb/>
first team by Boston College'sXraig<lb/>
Smith and Virginia's Sean Singletary.<lb/>
Hansbrough is the first freshman in<lb/>
league history to earn unanimous<lb/>
first-team honors and is one of a<lb/>
league-high three all-conference<lb/>
picks for the Tar Heels, who had<lb/>
senior David Noel on the second<lb/>
team and junior Reyshawn Terry on<lb/>
the third team. Redick led the league<lb/>
with nearly 28 points per game and<lb/>
passed Wake Forest's Dickie Hemric<lb/>
to become the conference's career<lb/>
scoring leader.<lb/>
Charlotte new home of<lb/>
NASCAR H0F<lb/>
NASCAR's first Hall of Fame will<lb/>
be built in downtown Charlotte, within<lb/>
miles of the garages and sprawling<lb/>
mansions that make the region an<lb/>
epicenter of the sport.<lb/>
The selection of Charlotte for the<lb/>
site of the $107.5 million hall ended<lb/>
a yearlong race featuring four other<lb/>
cities. The hall is expected to lure<lb/>
hundreds of thousands of NASCAR<lb/>
fans annually, and officials hope it will<lb/>
open in 2009. The remaining finalists<lb/>
were Daytona Beach, Fla and Atlanta.<lb/>
Richmond, Va, and Kansas City,<lb/>
Kan were eliminated earlier. Sports<lb/>
marketing experts have described<lb/>
the hall as a once-in-a-generation<lb/>
opportunity to spur tourism among<lb/>
NASCAR's famously loyal fan base.<lb/>
Charlotte's proximity to the heart<lb/>
of the sport was cited repeatedly by<lb/>
supporters. Lowe's Motor Speedway<lb/>
in suburban Concord is home to the<lb/>
longest race on the Nextel Cup circuit<lb/>
the Memorial Day weekend Coca-Cola<lb/>
600, and has long hosted NASCAR's<lb/>
annual all-star race.<lb/>
Jessup named<lb/>
tournament MVP<lb/>
DAVID WASKIEWICZ<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Tension was beginning to<lb/>
mount on the ECU softball team,<lb/>
to say the least. After starting the<lb/>
season with eight straight wins,<lb/>
including five shutouts, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates had lost the last four out<lb/>
of six heading into last weekend.<lb/>
To make matters worse, the losses<lb/>
have all been by only one run.<lb/>
"Whenever you drop a one-<lb/>
point ball game you know that<lb/>
you are within winning it, so<lb/>
that is where most of our ten-<lb/>
sion has come from, but on the<lb/>
flip side we have won a lot of<lb/>
one run ballgames said coach<lb/>
Tracey Kee.<lb/>
"1 think that it is making us a<lb/>
tougher team, but it also gets to<lb/>
you mentally after a while<lb/>
Friday the Lady Pirates had a<lb/>
chance to take out their tension<lb/>
and frustration as they hosted<lb/>
the Hampton Inn Pirate Clash.<lb/>
Coming off of a loss to the College<lb/>
of Charleston the weekend before,<lb/>
it was imperative to get back to<lb/>
winning as they faced their first<lb/>
opponent of the clash, Delaware.<lb/>
After holding Delaware score-<lb/>
less through the first four innings<lb/>
of day, the Lady Pirates found<lb/>
themselves up 1-0. Unfortu-<lb/>
nately, the score did not stay<lb/>
that way, as Delaware was able to<lb/>
score six unanswered runs within<lb/>
the last three innings of play to<lb/>
win 6-1. -g<lb/>
"We came out flat Kee said 5<lb/>
after the game.<lb/>
"We just didn't execute and <lb/>
Delawarewasabletojustpoundus o<lb/>
 3<lb/>
see SOFTBALL page A9<lb/>
Senior Krista Jessup hit .549 with thre RBI and four runs to claim MVP honors<lb/>
Lady Pirates reach second round<lb/>
ECU fails to Tulsa in C-USA tournament<lb/>
JOSH FERNANDEZ<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
For the Lady Pirates, 2006 seemed to not be their<lb/>
year. Challenged by tough conference play, losing<lb/>
by the thinnest of margins and what sometimes<lb/>
appeared to just be plain bad luck, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
couldn't gain momentum to build up much-needed<lb/>
consecutive wins.<lb/>
However, for a team that rebounded from a<lb/>
10-18 2004-05 season with half its roster being<lb/>
freshmen (three of whom started), a 17-12, 8-8<lb/>
record appears to be a sign of things to come in<lb/>
future campaigns.<lb/>
ECU found itself facing UAB (14-14, 7-9) in<lb/>
the first round of the Conference USA Tourna-<lb/>
ment, which kicked-off March 2. This was their<lb/>
third meeting of the season; their last was a triple<lb/>
overtime stunner that saw the Blazers come out<lb/>
on top, 96-94. This one, however, was not like the<lb/>
Feb. 12 game in any way except that it also came<lb/>
down to the wire.<lb/>
It started off just like how it ended, neck and<lb/>
neck with defense as the name of the game. Both<lb/>
teams struggled to convert field goals in the first<lb/>
half, as each made only a third of their attempted<lb/>
shots. The Blazers were l-for-8 from three-point<lb/>
range in the first 20 minutes. Entering the half,<lb/>
UAB was up 26-24.<lb/>
However, UAB found itself in a second-half<lb/>
scoring drought that lasted over six minutes. ECU<lb/>
capitalized by going on an 11-0 run, to which the<lb/>
Blazers responded by chipping away at the Lady<lb/>
Pirates' lead over the course of the next 10-plus<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
With just under a minute and a half remaining<lb/>
in the game, all-freshman, second-team all-con<lb/>
ference and C-USA Freshman of the Year winner<lb/>
Jasmine Young drove in for a layup, one that would<lb/>
prove critical to the Lady Pirates as it put them up<lb/>
47-46.<lb/>
Neither team could find the bottom of the net<lb/>
again as the Lady Pirates moved on to the quarter-<lb/>
finals, winning by one.<lb/>
"I knew it was going to be a tough 40 minutes<lb/>
said coach Sharon Baldwin-Tener in an interview<lb/>
with ECU Sports Information.<lb/>
"Both teams played really well, but I was proud<lb/>
that we came obt with a win on the defensive<lb/>
end<lb/>
The win over UAB moved the Lady Pirates on<lb/>
to play top-seeded Tulsa (24-5, 13-3), the team who<lb/>
would move on to defeat Rice in the championship<lb/>
game to win the C-USA championship. Led by<lb/>
C-USA Player of the Year, Defensive Player of the<lb/>
Year and All-America candidate Jillian Roberts, the<lb/>
Golden Hurricane proved to be a formidable foe.<lb/>
The game was close for most of the first half.<lb/>
ECU held one insignificant lead in the first minute<lb/>
of the match, but Tulsa took over and never gave<lb/>
up their lead for the rest of the game.<lb/>
Early in the second half, second-team all-confer-<lb/>
ence center Cherie Mills nailed a jumper to put the<lb/>
Lady Pirates within three at 38-35.<lb/>
However, by the 16-minute mark, Tulsa did the<lb/>
damage that would prove to be too much for ECU<lb/>
to recover from. A 9-0 run that put the Golden<lb/>
Hurricanes up 47-35 was the climax of the game<lb/>
that put victory just about out of the Lady Pirates'<lb/>
reach.<lb/>
The Pirates couldn't get within eight of Tulsa's<lb/>
lead for the rest of the game as they lost, 77-60.<lb/>
see BASKETBALL page A12<lb/>
Jasmine Young was named C-USA Freshman of theYearmineason<lb/>
<pb facs="00059404_0010"/><lb/>
3-07-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  SPORTS<lb/>
PAGE A9<lb/>
rch 7, 2006<lb/>
It's Back!<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! til<lb/>
is first hit of<lb/>
0-for-4 with<lb/>
aur previous<lb/>
e was inten-<lb/>
it the double<lb/>
Pirate Head<lb/>
vin stayed<lb/>
.L page A12<lb/>
1<lb/>
svmm BREAK<lb/>
WHCE BREAK<lb/>
Inventory Reduction Sale NOW through FRIDAY!<lb/>
Take AN E&amp;TRA BO OFF already reduced racks of<lb/>
clearance apparel! Selection of Soffe shorts, now<lb/>
just $1! Girl-cut Football Jerseys, now just $12!<lb/>
Take AN EXTRA 502 OFF already reduced clearance 'ggjj<lb/>
computer accessories including iPod4<lb/>
4Generation accessories, covers &amp; cases.<lb/>
Sale tradebooks discounted 781!<lb/>
25 Cliff Notesand 99 paperback<lb/>
dictionaries!<lb/>
HS<lb/>
Ronald E. Dowdy<lb/>
Hours: Monday- Thursday: 7:30 a.m. - 7 p.m.<lb/>
Friday: 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.<lb/>
United quantities Store will be closed March 11 - 19 for Inventory during<lb/>
Spring Break Prior purchases excluded; no other coupons apply.<lb/>
Wrisht Building  252-328-6731  1-877-499-TEXT  www.studentstores.ecu.edu<lb/>
:<lb/>
Student Stores I<lb/>
d<lb/>
Baseball testing global market<lb/>
Atlanta Braves' third baseman Chipper Jones hits a two-run homer for Team USA<lb/>
(KRT)  It's a tournament nobody wanted<lb/>
being played at a time no one likes before fans<lb/>
who don't care.<lb/>
That, in a nutshell, is the way the inaugural<lb/>
World Baseball Classic has been received in some<lb/>
places. Such as George Steinbrenner's office, for<lb/>
example.<lb/>
For commissioner Bud Selig, however, the tour-<lb/>
nament is the greatest innovation baseball has seen<lb/>
since the curveball.<lb/>
"This is going to be the most important inter-<lb/>
national baseball event ever staged a breathless<lb/>
Selig pronounced.<lb/>
The truth, of course, lies somewhere in between.<lb/>
Although the 16-team tournament, which opened<lb/>
Friday in Tokyo and hits full stride Tuesday in<lb/>
Arizona, Florida and Puerto Rico, seemingly has<lb/>
been slow to catch on, organizers hope interest<lb/>
will grow as the March 20 title game in San Diego<lb/>
nears.<lb/>
see WORLD BASEBALL page A12<lb/>
Softball<lb/>
from page A8<lb/>
Freshman pitcher Brooke Swann was credited<lb/>
with the loss, allowing five runs on six hits over<lb/>
the final two innings.<lb/>
The loss against Delaware was not only the first<lb/>
loss by the Lady Pirates this season by more than<lb/>
one run, but it was also the spark the ECU Softball<lb/>
team needed to get back to their winning ways.<lb/>
Throughout the next three games of the week-<lb/>
end, ECU out-scored their opponents 22-1 as they<lb/>
rolled through Liberty 5-0, Binghamton 15-0 and<lb/>
Fairfield 2-1.<lb/>
"The team has finally just opened up their bats<lb/>
and started swinging them Kee said.<lb/>
"We were playing very tense, even from the<lb/>
first game of the season all the way up to now.<lb/>
It was nice to finally see the team loosen up and<lb/>
trust their skills<lb/>
The three wins on the weekend were enough<lb/>
to earn the Lady Pirates a spot in the Pirate Clash<lb/>
championship game to face Longwood.<lb/>
ECU was able to jump out to an early lead in the<lb/>
game as senior Krista Jessup led off with a double<lb/>
and was later able to score when Longwood pitcher<lb/>
Rachel Mills bobbled a ground ball hit by sopho-<lb/>
more Beth Nolan. The Lady Pirates were then able<lb/>
to score four more runs, holding Longwood to just<lb/>
x QUIKSILVER BILLABONG VOLCOM<lb/>
one as they took the championship game 5-1.<lb/>
Junior Keli Harrell pitched an outstanding<lb/>
game as she picked up her seventh win of the<lb/>
season. Harrell allowed six hits while striking out<lb/>
10 in her fifth complete outing of the season.<lb/>
After the game, Jessup was named tournament<lb/>
MVP for her performance on the weekend. She<lb/>
compiled a .549 batting average while collecting<lb/>
three RBI and four runs.<lb/>
On Wednesday the Lady Pirates have to turn i<lb/>
their attention to in-state rival North Carolina as<lb/>
they come to ECU for a 4 p.m. game. The Lady Tar<lb/>
heels, who are currently ranked 25 in the country,<lb/>
will be a challenge as well as a great tune-up for<lb/>
ECU as they enter their conference schedule next<lb/>
weekend against Houston.<lb/>
"Any time you play an in-state rival, both teams<lb/>
tend to elevate their game Kee said.<lb/>
"I think it is a great game for us, right before we <lb/>
are about to head into our first conference series,<lb/>
at Houston. If we can gear up for Chapel Hill then ,<lb/>
it will be something that we can hopefully carry<lb/>
over into the weekend<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeaitcarolinian.com.<lb/>
EZEKIEL FOX LOST<lb/>
Jm<lb/>
r ml<lb/>
'.<lb/>
Ready for Spring Break?<lb/>
Fusion Is!<lb/>
All new Board Shorts, Swimsuits, Flip Flops<lb/>
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m La Promenade Shopping Center 321-4884<lb/>
CIRCA ' INDEPENDENT . DC ELEMENT -t HURLI<lb/>
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PAHYELO 5TEH DRUM BAND T BO<lb/>
PApHOTO SOUVENIRS- WAX Hh <lb/>
Cozy One fie Two BedroomOne Hath Units<lb/>
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WasherDryer Connections<lb/>
1st Floor Patio with Fence<lb/>
2nd Floor Kront or Back Balcony<lb/>
Pets Allowed with Fee<lb/>
Energy Efficient<lb/>
On ECU Bus Route<lb/>
OCAMESSPRINCBREAK<lb/>
fast Carolina University seeks lo comply rullv with the Americans with Disabilities Act ADA)<lb/>
Students requesting accommodations hosed on o disability must be registered with the<lb/>
Sponsored by<lb/>
University Unions<lb/>
Division of Student Life<lb/>
Denaimsent (or Disability Support Services located In Slay 138.2S2 737 lOIOIvotccTTV) Aramark<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059404_0011"/><lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
3-07-0<lb/>
: PAGE A10<lb/>
The East Carolinian, Self Help Building<lb/>
Phone (252) 328-9238 Fax (252) 328-9143<lb/>
THURSDAY March 2,2006<lb/>
11<lb/>
J:<lb/>
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Houses and duplexes of all<lb/>
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Now accepting applications for<lb/>
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" 355-5923. Visit our website at www.<lb/>
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jvValk to ECU, Pre-leasing For May,<lb/>
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Walk to Campus! 1 block from<lb/>
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until July! Move in anytime. Pet<lb/>
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Walk to Campus! 6, 5, 4, 3 &amp; 2<lb/>
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Several units available June 1st and<lb/>
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Call 752-1000, ask for Murrell.<lb/>
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FOR SALE<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
The Buccaneer is back! The ECU<lb/>
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Mobile waitstaff wanted for<lb/>
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Male roommate needed for sublease GreenvJIe. Fjf ctiop &amp; Parkst<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/>
Campus Towers in Greenville, NC<lb/>
seeks a general manager or leasing<lb/>
manager to provide leadership in the<lb/>
development and implementations<lb/>
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Lifeguard needed: Summer guards<lb/>
wanted for local community<lb/>
pool. Great Pay! Will Pay for<lb/>
CPR recertification. Please call<lb/>
Tiffany @ 336-407-8059 or email<lb/>
tdh0614@ecu.edu<lb/>
Bartenders wanted! Up to $250<lb/>
day. No experience necessary.<lb/>
Training provided. Call (800) 965-<lb/>
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Financial Coordinator Position:<lb/>
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GREEK PERSONALS<lb/>
Congratulations Xi Delta for winning<lb/>
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The sisters of Alpha Delta Pi would<lb/>
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fun socials! Can't wait to do it again<lb/>
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To the Phi Kappa Psi Gentlemen:<lb/>
The ladies from Gamma Chi Epsilon<lb/>
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The sisters of Alpha Delta Pi would<lb/>
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planning! We love you!<lb/>
Thanks Delta Sig for the great Social!<lb/>
We had a great time and can't wait<lb/>
to do it again! - Kappa Delta<lb/>
Congratulations Chi Phi for winning<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059404_0012"/><lb/>
:h 2, 2006<lb/>
imy.smith@us.<lb/>
(ERE FOI<lb/>
PARENT<lb/>
IUALLV<lb/>
THERE?<lb/>
3-07-06<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  SPORTS<lb/>
PAGE A11<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059404_0013"/><lb/>
PAGE A12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN  SPORTS<lb/>
3-07-06<lb/>
Baseball from page A8<lb/>
aggressive and called for a<lb/>
double steal that was successful<lb/>
In moving Schieber to third and<lb/>
Eldridge to second. The Wolves<lb/>
were then forced to issue another<lb/>
Intentional pass, this one to<lb/>
Ryan Tousley, thus loading the<lb/>
bases with one out and the win-<lb/>
ning run at third. Jay Mattox<lb/>
then swung at the first pitch he<lb/>
saw and hit it right back to the<lb/>
pitcher, who came home to get<lb/>
the lead runner Schieber and the<lb/>
second out of the inning.<lb/>
Senior reliever Nick Abel, who<lb/>
began the inning as the pitcher,<lb/>
then walked Mollenhauer on four<lb/>
consecutive pitches, allowing<lb/>
Eldridge to score from third to end<lb/>
the game and the series in heart-<lb/>
breaking fashion for Stony Brook.<lb/>
"We have a way to make it<lb/>
interesting said Godwin. "I was<lb/>
really proud of our players for the<lb/>
way they came back, especially<lb/>
there in the 11th. We showed<lb/>
some character and came up with<lb/>
some big hits.<lb/>
"Wins like this help your<lb/>
character. It makes us believe that<lb/>
when we're down, we can come<lb/>
back and beat anybody<lb/>
The two teams battled to<lb/>
a two all tie In regulation and<lb/>
carried that score into the top<lb/>
of the 11th. That's when Stony<lb/>
Brook took their third lead of<lb/>
the contest. After Kyle Traylor<lb/>
singled up the middle to begin<lb/>
the inning, he then moved up<lb/>
to second with one out when<lb/>
Michael Tansey laid down a bunt<lb/>
that also went for a single. With<lb/>
one out, Godwin opted to relieve<lb/>
Kevin Rhodes, who pitched<lb/>
1.1 innings, in favor of Carter<lb/>
Harrell.<lb/>
Harrell immediately gave up<lb/>
an infield single to Chris Sipp<lb/>
to load the bases. Senior catcher<lb/>
Jon Pasieka took a sign from<lb/>
Brook Head Coach Matt Senk and<lb/>
then delivered a perfect safety<lb/>
squeeze, allowing Traylor to score<lb/>
from third and give the Wolves<lb/>
a 3-2 advantage. Harrell escaped<lb/>
the inning without any further<lb/>
damage.<lb/>
A trend that saw the Pirates<lb/>
match Stony Brook run for run<lb/>
once in the fourth and again<lb/>
in the eighth ended in the 11th<lb/>
when the Diamond Bucs trumped<lb/>
the Wolves' one run with two of<lb/>
their own to sweep the series.<lb/>
"The first sweep of the year<lb/>
Is awful nice Godwin said.<lb/>
"Hopefully, this will get rid of the<lb/>
Sunday jinx that we had early in<lb/>
the year. I'm just really proud of<lb/>
the club and the way they played<lb/>
Despite his best outing, red-<lb/>
shirt sophomore Shane Mathews<lb/>
got a no decision for the Pirates.<lb/>
He was brilliant for six innings,<lb/>
recording a career high nine<lb/>
strikeouts while giving up just five<lb/>
hits and one unearned run. Har-<lb/>
rell got the win for the Bucs, and<lb/>
Improved to 2-0 on the season.<lb/>
Mollenhauer led ECU at the<lb/>
plate with two hits and a RBI.<lb/>
Schieber and pinch hitter Adam<lb/>
Hodges also chipped in a RBI each.<lb/>
Conference USA Hitter of<lb/>
the Week Jake Smith put on an<lb/>
offensive clinic during game two,<lb/>
as he went 3-for-4 with two home<lb/>
runs and four RBI as the Pirates<lb/>
defeated Stony Brook 4-0.<lb/>
Not to be outdone by Smith,<lb/>
redshirt sophomore Dustin Sasser<lb/>
and Harrell pitched an almost<lb/>
flawless game, as the two com-<lb/>
bined for a three hit shutout of<lb/>
the Wolves.<lb/>
"In this game, it's hard to shut<lb/>
out anybody said Godwin.<lb/>
"So many things happen with<lb/>
an aluminum bat. You have to<lb/>
give credit where credit is due,<lb/>
our pitchers and defense. I think<lb/>
we've really played well<lb/>
Sasser was brilliant for seven<lb/>
innings, allowing only three hits<lb/>
and a walk while striking out<lb/>
three. The redshirt sophomore<lb/>
Improved to 3-1 on the season<lb/>
with a staggering 1.09 ERA.<lb/>
"When he got behind, he<lb/>
seemed to do a really good job of<lb/>
making quality pitches Godwin<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"I think that this was the<lb/>
thing, if he found himself in a<lb/>
little bit of a jam, he was able<lb/>
to not just throw it down the<lb/>
middle but spot his fastball and<lb/>
his changeup<lb/>
One thing is for sure; no one<lb/>
Is going to shut out Smith the<lb/>
way he is swinging the bat lately.<lb/>
Coming off of the C-USA award,<lb/>
Smith has all but locked up a<lb/>
second straight week relishing<lb/>
that honor, as the senior catcher<lb/>
batted .500 in four games this<lb/>
past week. Smith was 7-for-14<lb/>
with three homers, including a<lb/>
grand slam against Duke, 11 RBI<lb/>
and four runs scored. It's going to<lb/>
be very hard for the conference<lb/>
to find another hitter as hot as<lb/>
Smith right now.<lb/>
Smith now leads the Pirates in<lb/>
average (.407), hits (22), doubles<lb/>
(4), homers (5), RBI (25), total<lb/>
bases (41), slugging percentage<lb/>
(.759) and on-base percentage<lb/>
(.435).<lb/>
"It's a lot of fun to watch Jake<lb/>
Smith when he's on your team in<lb/>
the dugout, I can tell you that<lb/>
WONd Baseball from page A9<lb/>
said Godwin.<lb/>
"It wouldn't be a whole lot of<lb/>
fun to be in the other dugout<lb/>
In game one, sophomore<lb/>
hurler T.J. Hose was strong for six<lb/>
innings and Dale Mollenhauer<lb/>
was 2-for-4 with a game high four<lb/>
RBI as the Pirates dismantled the<lb/>
Seawolves 12-0.<lb/>
Hose improved to 3-0 on the<lb/>
young season.<lb/>
The Pirates (11-3) return to<lb/>
action Wednesday when they<lb/>
host N.C. A&amp;T. The last time<lb/>
the Aggies and the Diamond<lb/>
Bucs hooked up in Clark-LeClair<lb/>
stadium, A&amp;T made nine errors<lb/>
leading to a 16-5 loss to ECU.<lb/>
This will hopefully be a con-<lb/>
fidence booster for the Pirates as<lb/>
they hit the road this weekend<lb/>
for their first road series of the<lb/>
season when they take on mighty<lb/>
Cal. State Fullerton.<lb/>
It will be one of the most<lb/>
important series in ECU baseball<lb/>
history.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports&amp;theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
More than 3,500 media cre-<lb/>
dentials have been issued, more<lb/>
than were issued for the World<lb/>
Series. And baseball officials<lb/>
ambitiously predicted that ticket<lb/>
sales could top 800,000, chal-<lb/>
lenging last month's Winter<lb/>
Olympics. Yet just 21,000 showed<lb/>
up for WBC's first two games in<lb/>
Tokyo despite the fact Japan was<lb/>
playing in the nightcap.<lb/>
"I think the tournament will<lb/>
do very well when we get to our<lb/>
finals, when you start to develop<lb/>
storylines throughout the tour-<lb/>
nament Paul Archey, baseball's<lb/>
vice president for international<lb/>
operations, said.<lb/>
Where it will do very well is<lb/>
the question. The Classic already<lb/>
has generated excitement in<lb/>
Venezuela and Dominican<lb/>
Republic, the two countries that<lb/>
are expected to challenge the<lb/>
United States for the title, and in<lb/>
Puerto Rico, which will play host<lb/>
to two rounds of pool play.<lb/>
"A small country like the<lb/>
Dominican and like Venezuela<lb/>
and like Puerto Rico, they always<lb/>
want to beat the States, and they<lb/>
want to show how good they<lb/>
are said the Chicago Cubs'<lb/>
Aramis Ramirez, who was named<lb/>
to the Dominican's provisional<lb/>
roster before pulling out with<lb/>
an injury.<lb/>
"I think it will be best for<lb/>
our fans, because, you know,<lb/>
now they are going to see all of<lb/>
the players playing together on<lb/>
one team added Dominican<lb/>
shortstop Miguel Tejada of the<lb/>
Baltimore Orioles.<lb/>
As a result, TV ratings in<lb/>
the baseball-playing countries<lb/>
of Latin America are expected<lb/>
to be high, as they were during<lb/>
the past two World Series. But<lb/>
the tournament's success ulti-<lb/>
mately will be measured by<lb/>
how it's received in places such<lb/>
as China, South Africa and the<lb/>
Netherlands, where baseball<lb/>
remains little more than a<lb/>
curiosity.<lb/>
"This tournament will be<lb/>
broadcast to well over 200 coun-<lb/>
tries Archey said. "The primary<lb/>
objective of doing this tourna-<lb/>
ment is to give us a platform to<lb/>
promote this game globally. And,<lb/>
certainly, it will do that<lb/>
The lesson of the NBA's<lb/>
inroads into China has not been<lb/>
lost on baseball's executives. A<lb/>
decade ago, pro basketball was<lb/>
ignored in the world's most<lb/>
populated country. But then<lb/>
Yao Ming joined the Houston<lb/>
Rockets, and now NBA games<lb/>
are carried live on as many as 24<lb/>
Chinese TV networks, and<lb/>
Michael Jordan is more recog-<lb/>
nizable than revolutionary hero<lb/>
Zhou Enlai.<lb/>
Basketball<lb/>
from page A8<lb/>
Tulsa, as a team, was on-point<lb/>
from the field, converting 59<lb/>
percent of its shots, along with 75<lb/>
percent of its free throws. Com-<lb/>
paratively, the Lady Pirates shot<lb/>
<lb/>
36 percent from the field and com-<lb/>
pletely fell off from their 9-for-10<lb/>
first half free throw performance<lb/>
to only 2-for-9 in the second half.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will see all<lb/>
but three players return for next<lb/>
season, including C-USA stand-<lb/>
outs Young and Mills. In fact,<lb/>
two-thirds of the roster will be<lb/>
returning for the next few seasons<lb/>
ML<lb/>
- ones that, in all likelihood, will<lb/>
only improve.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
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