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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>

<pb facs="00059474_0001"/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Volume 79 Number 108<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
January 22, 2004<lb/>
Discovery Channel to<lb/>
feature ECU professor<lb/>
?j-r<lb/>
Professor David Long, Ph.D examines historical research In<lb/>
his office in Brewster.<lb/>
Program reveals Long's<lb/>
alternate theory on<lb/>
Lincoln's assassination<lb/>
NICK HENNE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Historian David E. Long,<lb/>
associate professor in the his-<lb/>
tory department, will appear<lb/>
on the Discovery Channel to<lb/>
discuss his views about the<lb/>
events surrounding the assas-<lb/>
sination of President Abraham<lb/>
Lincoln.<lb/>
Long, who has done exten-<lb/>
sive research on Lincoln and the<lb/>
Civil War, said Lincoln was a<lb/>
ruthless leader deter-<lb/>
mined to end slavery and<lb/>
keep the nation together.<lb/>
"This is a guy who waged<lb/>
war like maybe nobody else<lb/>
in history and would never<lb/>
consent to any kind of com-<lb/>
promise short of unconditional<lb/>
surrender and total return to the<lb/>
Union said Long.<lb/>
With a new theory of<lb/>
Lincoln's assassination, and<lb/>
a book to be released this<lb/>
summer, Long was chosen<lb/>
to be featured on Discovery<lb/>
Channel's "Unsolved His-<lb/>
tory The program takes<lb/>
another look at controversial<lb/>
history and analyzes it with<lb/>
modern technology and<lb/>
knowledge.<lb/>
ffc Information<lb/>
Program airs:<lb/>
Feb. 4 at 9 p.m.<lb/>
Feb. 5 at noon<lb/>
Feb. 7 at 5 p.m.<lb/>
"I'm the first historian that<lb/>
is willing to come out and say<lb/>
that I think the evidence is<lb/>
strong enough to justify that<lb/>
Lincoln  probably did sanc-<lb/>
tion the killing of (Confeder-<lb/>
ate President Jefferson Davis<lb/>
Long said.<lb/>
Long's argument rests on<lb/>
papers found on the body of<lb/>
a killed officer close to Lincoln<lb/>
in Richmond.<lb/>
The papers contained plans<lb/>
to assassinate Davis. Outraged<lb/>
confederate soldiers organized<lb/>
to assassinate Lincoln.<lb/>
I .ong's theory states if Li ncoln<lb/>
did plot for the assassination<lb/>
of Jefferson Davis, then he<lb/>
guaranteed his own assassina-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
As part of the television<lb/>
program, handwriting experts<lb/>
will analyze the documents for<lb/>
authenticity, Long said.<lb/>
The presentation on<lb/>
the Discovery Channel will<lb/>
give students a more in depth<lb/>
look on the Civil War and its<lb/>
see LINCOLN page A2<lb/>
Survey shows increase<lb/>
in cocaine use at ECU<lb/>
May's results expected<lb/>
to follow trend<lb/>
HOLLY ONEAL<lb/>
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
Bob Morphet noticed in 2001<lb/>
more students were seeking help<lb/>
for cocaine addiction.<lb/>
Since then, the Substance<lb/>
Abuse Counselor said the problem<lb/>
continues to worsen each year.<lb/>
"Anecdotally, cocaine use has<lb/>
become more prevalent here and<lb/>
nationwide said Morphet.<lb/>
"Now, the research has<lb/>
caught up with what's on the<lb/>
streets<lb/>
According to ECU's Core<lb/>
Alcohol and Drug Survey, which<lb/>
is given to a sample that reflects<lb/>
the university's enrollment, 8.6<lb/>
percent of those surveyed in 2001<lb/>
admitted to using cocaine at least<lb/>
once in their lives. In 2002, that<lb/>
percentage was 9.1.<lb/>
ECU does not show a greater<lb/>
. increase than other schools,<lb/>
which Morphet said is both a<lb/>
good and bad thing.<lb/>
Morphet said he predicts<lb/>
2()04's survey results in March to<lb/>
show even more students trying<lb/>
cocaine.<lb/>
Consistent users who report<lb/>
using cocaine once a month or<lb/>
more than three times a week<lb/>
comprise a small portion of the<lb/>
university - around 2 percent.<lb/>
However, this is the group that<lb/>
suffers the consequences of<lb/>
addiction.<lb/>
"Cocaine is incredibly addic-<lb/>
tive. It's more psychologically<lb/>
addictive than other drugs<lb/>
Morphet said.<lb/>
The National Institute on<lb/>
Drug Abuse says when cocaine<lb/>
is administered - college students<lb/>
most often snort cocaine - it works<lb/>
deep within the brain to produce<lb/>
a build-up of the neurotransmit-<lb/>
ter dopamine. Dopamine then<lb/>
collects in a pleasure-producing<lb/>
area, creating the user's high.<lb/>
The euphoric, slightly restless<lb/>
state cocaine produces is one of its<lb/>
see COCAINE page A2<lb/>
rt Did You Know<lb/>
The short-term effects of<lb/>
cocaine use are Increased<lb/>
energy, decreased appetite,<lb/>
mejiteljiLertriess, Increased<lb/>
heart rate and blood pres-<lb/>
sure, increased temperature,<lb/>
constricted blood vessels<lb/>
and dilated pupils.<lb/>
The long-term effects of<lb/>
cocaine use are addiction.<lb/>
depression, cardiac problems.<lb/>
higher Instance of stroke,<lb/>
restlessness, paranoia and<lb/>
auditory hallucinations.<lb/>
Web site offers piece of home for soldiers in Iraq<lb/>
Students send food,<lb/>
basic necessities<lb/>
ERIN RICKERT<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
Many American troops fight-<lb/>
ing for our country in Iraq have<lb/>
loved ones sending care pack-<lb/>
ages. For others, pieces from<lb/>
home come on rare occasion,<lb/>
if at all.<lb/>
One father and son team has<lb/>
created a Web site that's mission<lb/>
is to ensure these soldiers are not<lb/>
forgotten.<lb/>
The site, www.AnySoldier.US,<lb/>
was started four months ago<lb/>
by Sgt. Brian Horn, an Army<lb/>
Infantry Soldier with the 17.1rd<lb/>
Airborne Brigade in the Kirkuk<lb/>
area of Iraq.<lb/>
It Is designed to give Ameri-<lb/>
cans the opportunity to support<lb/>
troops through care packages,<lb/>
namely for soldiers who do not<lb/>
receive mail.<lb/>
Marty Horn, retired Army<lb/>
MP and Brian's father helps<lb/>
maintain the site.<lb/>
"You have no idea the impact<lb/>
of being thousands of miles<lb/>
from home in a dangerous place<lb/>
where people want you dead<lb/>
said Marty.<lb/>
"Getting a surprise package<lb/>
or note from someone you don't<lb/>
Junior Janie Askew creates a care package for troops.<lb/>
even know is something<lb/>
Care packages should include<lb/>
non-perishable food and per-<lb/>
sonal hygiene items.<lb/>
Marty said individuals<lb/>
should also consider including<lb/>
something that gives the pack-<lb/>
age a more personal touch.<lb/>
"I'm told soldlen open-<lb/>
ing packages) is something to<lb/>
watch Marty said.<lb/>
"As my son Brian has<lb/>
told me, he has seen several<lb/>
soldiers crv<lb/>
Mike Daniska, ECU gradu-<lb/>
ate student in the MPA depart-<lb/>
ment, heard about the site on a<lb/>
newscast and thought it would<lb/>
be a good way to support the<lb/>
troops.<lb/>
"We Mike and his fiancel<lb/>
spent about $40 on both<lb/>
packages said Daniska.<lb/>
"We included things like soap,<lb/>
shampoo, energy bars, tooth-<lb/>
see IRAQ page A3<lb/>
IWhatToSend<lb/>
Food Items:<lb/>
Breakfast-type foods and drinks<lb/>
are the most needed<lb/>
Instant and regular coffee<lb/>
Coffee makers<lb/>
Hot plates<lb/>
Hot chocolate packets<lb/>
Campbell's chunky soups<lb/>
Canned tuna<lb/>
Canned Chef Boyardee<lb/>
Canned fruit<lb/>
Beef Jerky<lb/>
Canned nuts.<lb/>
Canned chips<lb/>
Cereal bars<lb/>
Granola bars<lb/>
Pre-sweetened powdered drinks<lb/>
u'l Debbie snacks<lb/>
Snack cakes<lb/>
Packs of candy<lb/>
Gum, trail mix<lb/>
Personal Hygiene Items:<lb/>
Antibacterial wipes<lb/>
Small tubes of toothpaste and<lb/>
toothbrushes<lb/>
Deodorant<lb/>
Soap<lb/>
Shampoo<lb/>
Eye drops (put in a plastic bag)<lb/>
Small containers of Tylenol, Motrin<lb/>
Band-aids, cough lozenges, small<lb/>
packs of Kleenex, shower-to-<lb/>
shower powder<lb/>
Rip flops<lb/>
Athletes' foot creme, foot powder-<lb/>
no aerosol bottles<lb/>
Paper, pens, envelopes<lb/>
Combs, lip balm, q-rjps, nail<lb/>
clippers<lb/>
Feminine hygiene products<lb/>
If your package is intended for a<lb/>
woman, be sure to address the<lb/>
package, "Ann: Any Female<lb/>
Soldier.<lb/>
Famed author<lb/>
begins Writers<lb/>
Reading Series<lb/>
Terry Davis shares<lb/>
work, knowledge<lb/>
JOSH SLONE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Best-selling author Terry<lb/>
Davis, who wrote "Alabama<lb/>
Crimson Tide "Vision Quest'<lb/>
and "If Rock and Roll Were a<lb/>
Machine will visit ECU on<lb/>
Monday, Jan. 26 as the semes-<lb/>
ter's first speaker in the Writers<lb/>
Reading Series.<lb/>
His novel, "Vision Quest"<lb/>
has been compared to J.D.<lb/>
Salinger's "The Catcher in<lb/>
the Rye The books are both<lb/>
coming-of-age stories.<lb/>
Resa Bizzaro, English pro-<lb/>
fessor and co-director of the<lb/>
Writers Reading Series, said<lb/>
some may be familiar with<lb/>
Davis from the movie version<lb/>
of "Vision Quest"<lb/>
"For students, the readingl<lb/>
gives them an opportunity<lb/>
to meet with a contemporary<lb/>
author said Bizzaro.<lb/>
Davis has a considerable<lb/>
amount of practical knowledge<lb/>
for young writers, Bizzaro said.<lb/>
Including how to publish.<lb/>
see DAVIS page A4<lb/>
Poverty Awareness<lb/>
throughout January<lb/>
-O The poverty rale lor families with children under the age of 18 dropped from 25.3 to 21.6 percent from 1989 through 1999.<lb/>
? o Since 2000. the number of Americans living in poverty has grown by 3 million.<lb/>
FYI<lb/>
Forecast tec required<lb/>
Sunny<lb/>
High of 55<lb/>
READING<lb/>
Vteft wwwtheeastcaroltariconi to read<lb/>
more about the Minnesota man charged<lb/>
with aUng H Qaeda tor over Itee years.<lb/>
Several rxnstrudton projects continue<lb/>
around campus, with completion<lb/>
expected this year (or many.<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Ifs award season TEC takes a look Into<lb/>
the nominees tor the "Golden Globes<lb/>
set to air mfs Sunday.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are on a winning streak<lb/>
They are gong Ms toe weekend looking<lb/>
tor their eighth win<lb/>
page B4 The last day to apply tor May<lb/>
rYi?r? graduation Is Frtdav For more<lb/>
graduation Is Friday. For more<lb/>
Information visit wwwecuedu<lb/>
commencement.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059474_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE A2<lb/>
Stec<lb/>
NEWS<lb/>
ERIN RICKERT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
HOLLY O'NEAL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinlan.com<lb/>
252.328.6366<lb/>
1-22-04<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Deadline<lb/>
The last day to apply for May graduation is Friday For more information<lb/>
visit www ecu educommencement<lb/>
Pediatric Medicine Presentation<lb/>
Loretta Kopelman, MD. will speak on "Current Guidelines and<lb/>
Controversies in Pediatric Research' on Friday from 12.30 p.m. - 1:30<lb/>
p.m. in 2E92 Brody<lb/>
Career Readiness Workshop: Interviewing<lb/>
Career Services will offer a workshop on how to have a successful<lb/>
interview Tuesday, Jan 27 from 12:30 p.m. -115 p.m in 1014 Bate<lb/>
Faculty Senate Meeting<lb/>
The Faculty Senate will meet Tuesday. Jan 27 al 2:10 p.m in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Great Room<lb/>
Medical Time Management Workshop<lb/>
The Brody School of Medicine will offer a time management workshop<lb/>
for faculty in health science institutions Tuesday, Jan 27 from 1230 p.m<lb/>
- 4:15 p.m in 2W40 Brody. Contact the Office of Academic and Faculty<lb/>
Development at 744-3420 for registration.<lb/>
Hormone Replacement Therapy Discussion<lb/>
Phi Kappa Phi will sponsor a panel discussion on Hormone Replacement<lb/>
Therapy Jan 27 at 6 p.m in the Willis Building Janice Busher, MD. and<lb/>
Marcie Parker. PharmD, RPx and MBA, are scheduled tn participate<lb/>
Information Technology Seminar<lb/>
Phillip Emer. a senior member of the technical staff in MCNC's Advanced<lb/>
Technologies Group and the chief architect of the NC Bogrid, will speak<lb/>
on North Carolina's initiatives to use grid computing in research,<lb/>
education and business on Wednesday. Jan. 28 from 2 pm. - 3 p.m in<lb/>
221 Mendenhall<lb/>
Career Readiness Workshop: Job Search<lb/>
Career Services offers a workshop on searching all types of opportunities<lb/>
such as part-time employment, internships and permanent positions.<lb/>
Workshop will be Thursday. Jan 29 from 12 30 p.m - 1:15 p.m in 1014<lb/>
1980s Lecturer<lb/>
The Student Union Spectrum Committee presents 1980s rock music<lb/>
lecturer Barry Drake Thursday, Jan 29 from 7:30 p.m. - 9 p.m. in Hendrix<lb/>
Theater<lb/>
Graduate Test Prep Courses<lb/>
The College of Business (Office of Professional Programs) will offer review<lb/>
courses for the GMAT, GRE and SAT exams this spring<lb/>
For more information or to register please call 328-6377.<lb/>
GMAT courses will be on Tuesdays and Thursdays, Feb. 5<lb/>
- March 4, from 630 p.m. ? 9 p.m Cost is $195 due by Jan. 29.<lb/>
GRE courses will be on Mondays and Wednesdays, Feb. 4<lb/>
- March 3. from 630 pm -9 pm Cost is $195 due by Jan 28<lb/>
SAT courses will be on Saturdays. Feb 21 - March 20, from 9 a.m. - noon<lb/>
Cost is $125 due by Feb. 13.<lb/>
Childhood Chronic Illness Presentation<lb/>
Julie Baines. MD. will speak on "The Best Time of Their Uves Camping<lb/>
for Children with Chronic Illness" Friday, Jan 30 from 1230 pm - 1:30<lb/>
p m in 2E92 Brody<lb/>
Language Arts Conference<lb/>
The College of Education will sponsor the Mary Lois Staton Reading<lb/>
Language Arts Conference Friday. Feb 13 from 8 a.m. - 4 pm in the<lb/>
Greenville Hilton The conference will feature newspaper columnist and<lb/>
author Susie Wilde, children s author Pansie Hart Flood and 25 sessions<lb/>
on literacy issues Contact Susan Ranson at 328-6830 for registration<lb/>
LatinoHispanic Education Conference<lb/>
The College of Education and the North Carolina Center for International<lb/>
Understanding hosts the first LatinoHispanic Education conference on<lb/>
Thursday, Feb 26 at 8:30 am in the Greenville Hilton Contact the Division<lb/>
of Continuing Studies at 1 -800-767-9111 for registration<lb/>
Computer Virus<lb/>
ECU Information Technology Security reports a new form of malicious<lb/>
software named "Beagle" spreading quickly throughout the campus<lb/>
computer network. The virus represents a threat to personal data More<lb/>
details, including what actions to take, are available at the top of the "Latest<lb/>
Virus Threats" list Web site at http:www.sarc com<lb/>
Volunteers Needed<lb/>
The Literacy Volunteers of Pitt County need individuals to tutor English as<lb/>
a second language to adult immigrants Knowledge of a second language<lb/>
is not necessary Sessions will be Friday, Feb 6 from 630 p m - 930 p.m<lb/>
continuing to Saturday, Feb 7 from 9 a.m. - 4 p.m at 504-A Dexter St<lb/>
Contact Sharon Schlichting at 353-6578 for more information<lb/>
Paper Person<lb/>
The person featured at the top of today's paper is Amanda Barefoot,<lb/>
sophmore elementary education major<lb/>
News Briefs<lb/>
Local<lb/>
N.C. Judges reverse ruling<lb/>
on pre-need caskets<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) - North Carolina<lb/>
officials again have told cemeteries<lb/>
to refrain from certain sales of final<lb/>
resting places.<lb/>
A cemetery can't sell "pre-need"<lb/>
caskets unless they are also duly<lb/>
licensed by the state as a funeral<lb/>
director, the state Court of Appeals<lb/>
said Tuesday, reversing a lower<lb/>
court ruling<lb/>
Selling caskets on the installment<lb/>
plan before death has been a<lb/>
common practice in the mortuary<lb/>
field, but anyone who does must file<lb/>
paperwork with the state Board of<lb/>
Mortuary Science.<lb/>
The board's regulation seeks to<lb/>
ensure that prepayments are placed<lb/>
in trust so there's money to buy the<lb/>
casket at the time of death, even if the<lb/>
company has gone out of business<lb/>
Former prosecutor pleads no<lb/>
contest to assault, BSE<lb/>
LENOIR (AP) - A former prosecutor<lb/>
has been given a suspended 45-day<lb/>
sentence with two years of supervised<lb/>
probation in a plea agreement<lb/>
stemming from an alleged assault<lb/>
on a former girlfriend.<lb/>
David Flaherty, former district<lb/>
attorney for Burke, Caldwell and<lb/>
Catawba counties, pleaded no<lb/>
contest on Tuesday to charges of<lb/>
breaking and entering and simple<lb/>
assault.<lb/>
The plea agreement relates to<lb/>
charges stemming from a January<lb/>
2003 incident in which Flaherty<lb/>
was accused of assaulting his<lb/>
ex-nanny and former girlfriend, Paula<lb/>
Fay Harlfinger, at her apartment in<lb/>
Lenoir.<lb/>
A third charge of resisting, obstructing<lb/>
and delaying arrest was dismissed<lb/>
in the agreement, said officials<lb/>
with the Caldwell County Clerk of<lb/>
Courts Office.<lb/>
National<lb/>
Former ECU professor charged<lb/>
with killing wife,<lb/>
attempting cover-up<lb/>
HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP, N J. (AP) - A<lb/>
former professor at ECU pleaded not<lb/>
guilty Tuesday to a charge that he<lb/>
murdered his wife when he pulled<lb/>
her from her car and smashed her<lb/>
head into garage floor of their million-<lb/>
dollar home.<lb/>
Jonathan Nyce then tried to make her<lb/>
death look like an accident by putting<lb/>
her body In their SUV and sending<lb/>
it over a snowy embankment into a<lb/>
creek, authorities said.<lb/>
Investigators are looking into whether<lb/>
Nyce lashed out at his wife, Michelle,<lb/>
because he believed she was having<lb/>
an extramarital affair<lb/>
"That's one of the scenarios along with<lb/>
others that we are investigating0 said<lb/>
Police Chief Michael Chlpowsky.<lb/>
The warrant issued for Nyce's arrest<lb/>
said he pulled his wife forcefully from<lb/>
a Toyota Land Cruiser on Thursday<lb/>
night and threw her face forward to<lb/>
the ground. Nyce told police her head<lb/>
hit the ground so hard it made 'a thud<lb/>
that made me sick"<lb/>
Fire at elderly care center kills<lb/>
three, Injures at least 12<lb/>
MARYVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Firefighters<lb/>
struggled in bitter cold to put out a fire<lb/>
that killed three people at a retirement<lb/>
home and injured at least 12 others.<lb/>
The cause of the Tuesday night blaze<lb/>
at Home Away from Home Inc. had<lb/>
not been determined, Blount County<lb/>
Sheriff Jim Berrong said.<lb/>
The facility is a tor-profit center that<lb/>
offers assisted and unassisted living<lb/>
with a maximum resident occupancy<lb/>
of 20.<lb/>
One of the residents died after being<lb/>
trapped in the building, sheriff's<lb/>
spokeswoman Marian O'Briant<lb/>
said early Wednesday. Some of<lb/>
the injured were treated for smoke<lb/>
inhalation and burns, and one victim<lb/>
suffered a hip fracture Three were<lb/>
in critical condition at Vanderbill<lb/>
University Medical Center Wednesday<lb/>
morning.<lb/>
World<lb/>
Pakistan has sent nuclear<lb/>
investigative teams to<lb/>
Libya, Iran<lb/>
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP)<lb/>
- Pakistan's questioning of some of<lb/>
its top nuclear scientists came after<lb/>
the country sent its own investigative<lb/>
teams to Iran and Libya in recent<lb/>
months, a senior Pakistani official<lb/>
told The Associated Press.<lb/>
The official would not give details<lb/>
about the exact timing of the trips<lb/>
or say what was discovered, but the<lb/>
disclosure indicates the seriousness<lb/>
with which the government is taking<lb/>
allegations of nuclear proliferation.<lb/>
"Yes, we sent our own<lb/>
teams to Iran and Libya and<lb/>
the debriefings began after<lb/>
that said the official, speaking<lb/>
on condition of anonymity<lb/>
He said the interrogations sprung<lb/>
from information learned on the trips,<lb/>
as well as evidence handed to<lb/>
Pakistan by the International Atomic<lb/>
Energy Agency.<lb/>
Pakistan is under U.S.<lb/>
pressure to curb the spread of<lb/>
technology that can be used to<lb/>
produce atomic weapons. The<lb/>
government denies it authorized the<lb/>
sale of any such technology but says<lb/>
scientists may have done so acting<lb/>
on their own.<lb/>
Straw Urges U.N. on Iraq<lb/>
Election Dispute<lb/>
DAVOS, Switzerland (AP)-British<lb/>
Foreign Secretary Jack Straw urged<lb/>
the United Nations to return to Iraq to<lb/>
help resolve a dispute over elections<lb/>
as global power brokers opened an<lb/>
annual meeting in this snowy Alpine<lb/>
resort Wednesday.<lb/>
Construction completion dates set Lincoln<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
Additional projects<lb/>
include Harrington,<lb/>
Allied Health, dorms<lb/>
ADRIANNA DRAKE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Old and new construction<lb/>
projects are underway around<lb/>
campus at the beginning of the<lb/>
spring semester.<lb/>
Flanagan Building<lb/>
The Flanagan Building, which<lb/>
is entirely gutted at this point, is<lb/>
scheduled for completion in late<lb/>
December.<lb/>
"It llanagan was an obsolete<lb/>
chemistry building  it is being<lb/>
reprogrammed said George Har-<lb/>
rell, senior associate vice chan-<lb/>
cellor of campus operations and<lb/>
adjunct associate professor.<lb/>
The building will receive new<lb/>
labs, offices and classrooms and<lb/>
will cost the university $13.8<lb/>
million.<lb/>
After the renovations in Fla-<lb/>
nagan are complete, most offices<lb/>
in the Old Cafeteria Complex<lb/>
will move in. The offices will be<lb/>
housed in Flanagan temporarily<lb/>
until renovations at theOldCaf-<lb/>
Construction crews work on Rivers Building addition.<lb/>
eteria Complex are completed.<lb/>
Rivers Building<lb/>
The addition to Rivers will<lb/>
be done by early summer of this<lb/>
year and will cost almost J12<lb/>
million.<lb/>
Harrington Field<lb/>
Construction crews will also<lb/>
be moving away from central<lb/>
campus to Harrington Field in<lb/>
late spring.<lb/>
While baseball games will<lb/>
remain at home and construction<lb/>
will begin on the outer perlm-<lb/>
see DINING page A3<lb/>
New dining hall will be<lb/>
complete October 2004.<lb/>
significance in our history,<lb/>
Long said.<lb/>
"Students will be educated<lb/>
on who this president was and<lb/>
what this event in American<lb/>
history meant Long said.<lb/>
Gerry Prokopowlcz, assis-<lb/>
tant professor of history, said<lb/>
Long is an eminent scholar<lb/>
of Abraham Lincoln and stu-<lb/>
dents will benefit from seel<lb/>
the program.<lb/>
"I think it brings histor<lb/>
alive when you can see the<lb/>
people who are writing it,<lb/>
and they are real people, not<lb/>
someone you know only from<lb/>
a back of the book photo, but<lb/>
someone you can see walking<lb/>
around on campus said Pro-<lb/>
kopowlcz.<lb/>
Piokopowicz said history<lb/>
is a set of arguments and<lb/>
people too easily believe the<lb/>
reading of one historian.<lb/>
"There are basic facts that<lb/>
you start from, but the inter-<lb/>
pretations of those facts are<lb/>
always debatable Prokopo-<lb/>
wicz said.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Cocaine<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
appeals to college students, Mor-<lb/>
phet said. Being able to stay awake<lb/>
and party all night is difficult to<lb/>
refuse, especially if a solution to<lb/>
sleep is available.<lb/>
"I've heard cocaine called 'the<lb/>
rich man's drug said Seth Van<lb/>
Patten, junior cultural anthropol-<lb/>
ogy major.<lb/>
"It seems like ECU has more<lb/>
rich kids now. hat wealth gives<lb/>
them the opportunity to get their<lb/>
hands on it<lb/>
Hut a one-night stand with<lb/>
cocaine is risky.<lb/>
"It's very difficult to experi-<lb/>
ment with cocaine without<lb/>
becoming addicted said Mary<lb/>
Louise Antieau, director of<lb/>
student conflict resolution.<lb/>
"There's never as good a high<lb/>
as the first time, so why try to<lb/>
replicate it? Sometimes, when<lb/>
college students are exposed to<lb/>
cocaine in social settings, they<lb/>
think it's cool to experiment with<lb/>
it, but they don't understand the<lb/>
addictive power of the drug<lb/>
Antieau said cocaine at ECU<lb/>
comes from two different sources:<lb/>
drug dealers who target students<lb/>
and students who bring their<lb/>
habits with them from home and<lb/>
connect with area dealers.<lb/>
The trend of increased<lb/>
regular cocaine use is "worrisome"<lb/>
to Antieau for safety reasons.<lb/>
"With any illicit drug, you<lb/>
don't know how it was made,<lb/>
under what conditions and what<lb/>
the purity of the dose is Antieau<lb/>
said.<lb/>
For cocaine use, possession<lb/>
and intent to sell, ECU'S policy is<lb/>
strict: in addition to state penal-<lb/>
ties, possession of a Schedule II<lb/>
drug like cocaine brings a sus-<lb/>
pension for at least one semester.<lb/>
Upon recnrollmcnt, a student<lb/>
must provide a clean urine sample<lb/>
within 30 days.<lb/>
Individuals charged with<lb/>
possession with intent to sell or<lb/>
traffic are expel led from the entire<lb/>
UNC-system.<lb/>
Sgt. Curtis Hayes of the ECU<lb/>
Police Department said arrests for<lb/>
cocaine violations rose from two<lb/>
to seven from 2002 - 2003.<lb/>
Hayes said his department has<lb/>
been pursuing drug violations<lb/>
more aggressively.<lb/>
"Our officers have had more<lb/>
training In detection of drug<lb/>
related crimes Hayes said.<lb/>
Violence related to drug use and<lb/>
sales is also a concern, since the<lb/>
drug increases aggressiveness.<lb/>
The rise of cocaine use<lb/>
among college students mir-<lb/>
rors that of ecstasy, which<lb/>
grew in popularity until 1997.<lb/>
Use of ecstasy decreased after the<lb/>
media changed the college-aged<lb/>
perception of the drug by airing<lb/>
programs on its negative conse-<lb/>
quences.<lb/>
Morphet said while marijuana<lb/>
and alcohol use stay consistent<lb/>
among college students, harder<lb/>
drugs tend to experience periods<lb/>
of "ebb and flow<lb/>
Though numerous academic-<lb/>
reports show an individual has<lb/>
a higher likelihood to try cocaine<lb/>
if they use marijuana andor<lb/>
alcohol, no correlation between<lb/>
the drugs was seen in the research<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeas tcarolinian. com.<lb/>
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1 22-04<lb/>
'<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? NEWS<lb/>
PAGE A3<lb/>
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Weird News<lb/>
Students sue over kissing video<lb/>
SHANGHAI (AP) ? A Shang-<lb/>
hainese couple has sued their<lb/>
former high school over images<lb/>
of them kissing in a video on<lb/>
"irregular behaviour saying<lb/>
they were mocked by other stu-<lb/>
dents because of it, a newspaper<lb/>
reported Tuesday.<lb/>
Wei Gang and his girl-<lb/>
friend, who wasn't named, have<lb/>
demanded the equivalent of<lb/>
about $800 Cdn in compensa-<lb/>
tion for mental anguish and<lb/>
a public apology from Fuxing<lb/>
high school, where they gradu-<lb/>
ated last year, the Shanghai<lb/>
Daily reported. The couple were<lb/>
taunted and insulted after the<lb/>
school video showing their kiss<lb/>
was shown to other students on<lb/>
April 7, the report quoted Wei as<lb/>
saying, "Some students in lower<lb/>
grades would point at us outside<lb/>
our classroom said Wei.<lb/>
The paper quoted the couple's<lb/>
lawyer, Si Weijiang, as saying the<lb/>
video infringed on the couple's<lb/>
right to privacy.<lb/>
Goofy state slogan nixed<lb/>
PITTSBURGH (AP) ? Of the<lb/>
20,000 or so sayings submitted<lb/>
for consideration as Pennsyl-<lb/>
vania's official tourism slogan,<lb/>
some were easily eliminated, like<lb/>
"Pennsylvania: We're old. We're<lb/>
cranky. Heal with it<lb/>
But 18 entries are still in the<lb/>
running to be picked as one of<lb/>
the five finalists by the Penn-<lb/>
sylvania Tourism Office in early<lb/>
2004. After that happens, the<lb/>
public can vote for the winner<lb/>
on the tourism office's website<lb/>
at www.visitpa.com.<lb/>
Flagpole, jail cells and commodes<lb/>
tor sale at courthouse auction<lb/>
I.IU.INGTON (AP) ? Every-<lb/>
thing was for sale at the old<lb/>
llarnett County courthouse,<lb/>
including the jail cells, flagpole<lb/>
and commodes.<lb/>
Cheryl Wtnegardner bought<lb/>
two cells, thinking they might<lb/>
be good pens for some of her<lb/>
hogs. Her husband wasn't as<lb/>
positive.<lb/>
"He said, 'You ain't going<lb/>
to buy a jail cell " said Win-<lb/>
egardner, who lives outside Lil-<lb/>
Ungton.<lb/>
"Well, I got two. Pretty-<lb/>
cool<lb/>
Winegardner paid $66 for<lb/>
the primitive steel cells, cov-<lb/>
ered in peeling gray paint and<lb/>
the scratching of countless<lb/>
inmates. She said her husband<lb/>
would use a cutting torch to get<lb/>
them out of the building.<lb/>
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unit with a friend in your own furnished condominium at Ringgold Towers.<lb/>
Located Next to ECU Recreation Center<lb/>
Corner of 7th and Cotanche Street<lb/>
635 Cotanche Street No. 900<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
Office Hours: Mon-Frl 9am-5pm<lb/>
12521752-2865<lb/>
HI6H SPEED INTERNET NOW AVAILABLE!<lb/>
eters. Once the home season<lb/>
closes for the Pirates, expan-<lb/>
sion of the stadium will begin.<lb/>
The Harrington Field project,<lb/>
which will cost around $7<lb/>
million, is set to be completed<lb/>
with the start of the next baseball<lb/>
season.<lb/>
To accommodate construction<lb/>
workers, this season's home games<lb/>
will end early this year and will<lb/>
have a delayed start next year.<lb/>
Harrell said the new stadium<lb/>
will give ECU the opportunity to<lb/>
host tournaments.<lb/>
West End Dining Hall<lb/>
One of the projects with the<lb/>
most noticeable changes to date<lb/>
is the West End Dining Hall.<lb/>
The new dining hall, which<lb/>
should be complete by October<lb/>
of this year, will replace the<lb/>
smaller, primary dining facility<lb/>
in Mendenhall.<lb/>
Once the13.5 million dining<lb/>
hall is complete, it will have a beau-<lb/>
tifully designed structure of glass<lb/>
and tiers.<lb/>
Allied Health and Nursing<lb/>
Health Sciences Library<lb/>
The two-year construction<lb/>
plan for the Allied Health and<lb/>
the Nursing and Health Sci-<lb/>
ences Library is set to begin on<lb/>
Friday after the groundbreak-<lb/>
ing during Founders Week.<lb/>
The $46 million building will<lb/>
be 280,000 square feet, which<lb/>
is slightly larger than the Sci-<lb/>
ence and Technology Build-<lb/>
ing that opened last semester.<lb/>
"The main academic campus<lb/>
needs to expand  by build-<lb/>
ing a new building for nursing<lb/>
and allied health, that allows us<lb/>
to move these colleges off<lb/>
the main academic campus<lb/>
and reuse those buildings for<lb/>
expansion said Harrell.<lb/>
College Hill Suites<lb/>
Another project in the works for<lb/>
ECU is a new residence hall that<lb/>
will be located on College Hill.<lb/>
College Hill Suites will be<lb/>
beside Todd Dining Hall and<lb/>
will help contain the growth of<lb/>
ECU'S population.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news?theeas tcarolinian. com.<lb/>
Mad cow disease is a public health concern for many countries.<lb/>
Japan blocks U.S. beef<lb/>
Iraq<lb/>
from page M<lb/>
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w Student ID<lb/>
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paste and Pop Tarts<lb/>
Daniska also took Mar-<lb/>
ty's advice and included a<lb/>
note in each package and both he<lb/>
and his fiance are anxious<lb/>
to see if someone will write<lb/>
back.<lb/>
"To be honest, I feel indebted<lb/>
,tp .these, troops and I thinX<lb/>
that we owe it to them to help<lb/>
Daniska said.<lb/>
Care packages should not<lb/>
be sent through registered<lb/>
or insured mail. Regular or<lb/>
Priority service is recommended.<lb/>
Items should be put in an easy<lb/>
to handle box under 10 pounds<lb/>
and wrapped tightly with tape<lb/>
not string.<lb/>
"ISoldiers) are the only<lb/>
ones between us and the<lb/>
loss of all the freedoms we<lb/>
know Marty said.<lb/>
"We may be against this<lb/>
particular war or not, no matter.<lb/>
These soldiers pay the price<lb/>
for us<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
TOKYO (AP) ? The Japanese<lb/>
government has ordered meat<lb/>
wholesalers not to sell more<lb/>
than 800 tons of American<lb/>
T-bone steaks and other beef<lb/>
products considered at risk of<lb/>
carrying mad cow disease, health<lb/>
officials said Wednesday.<lb/>
The order, issued Tuesday,<lb/>
affects 862 tons of already-<lb/>
imported beef considered<lb/>
to be the riskiest in cows<lb/>
infected with bovine spongi-<lb/>
form encephalopathy - steaks,<lb/>
soup stocks and other products<lb/>
made of bone parts, calf brains<lb/>
and other parts.<lb/>
The ministry also ordered<lb/>
supermarkets and restaurants<lb/>
not to sell American beef<lb/>
products containing cow<lb/>
backbones. Officials say cow<lb/>
backbones and their extracts<lb/>
could contain proteins called<lb/>
prions that are linked to the<lb/>
brain-wasting illness.<lb/>
T-bone steaks were included<lb/>
because they are cut from the<lb/>
area where a cow's vertebrae<lb/>
meet its ribs - a point that can<lb/>
contain spinal tissue and is<lb/>
considered risky.<lb/>
Mad cow disease is a public<lb/>
health concern because scientists<lb/>
believe humans who eat brain<lb/>
or spinal matter from an infected<lb/>
cow can develop a variant known<lb/>
as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.<lb/>
The incurable disease caused<lb/>
at least 143 deaths in Britain<lb/>
during a 1980s outbreak there.<lb/>
Japan's move covers prod-<lb/>
ucts imported from the United<lb/>
States between Jan. 1, 2003,<lb/>
and Dec. 24, 2003, when Tokyo<lb/>
banned all American beef<lb/>
imports in response to the dis-<lb/>
covery in Washington state of the<lb/>
first confirmed U.S. case of mad<lb/>
cow disease. That cow was<lb/>
imported from Canada.<lb/>
American officials have not<lb/>
detected a second case of the<lb/>
disease, but have yet to track<lb/>
down all the cattle from the<lb/>
infected cow's herd. The U.S.<lb/>
government, however, insists<lb/>
that American beef products are<lb/>
safe and is urging Japan to lift<lb/>
its ban.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059474_0004"/><lb/>
PAGE A4<lb/>
tec<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Editor-in-chief<lb/>
Michelle A. McLeod<lb/>
editor? theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
252.328.6366<lb/>
1-21-04<lb/>
Erin Rickert<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Amanda Ungerfelt<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Ryan Downey<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Meghann Roark<lb/>
Head Copy Editor<lb/>
Tanesha Sistrunk<lb/>
Photo Editor<lb/>
Holly O'Neal<lb/>
AssL News Editor<lb/>
John Bream<lb/>
AssL Features Editor<lb/>
Tony Zoppo<lb/>
Asst Sports Editor<lb/>
Mike Mashburn<lb/>
Web Editor<lb/>
Daniel Roy<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Newsroom252.328.6366<lb/>
Fax252.328.6558<lb/>
Advertising252.328.2000<lb/>
Serving ECU since 1925. The East Carolinian prints 9.000 copies every<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday during the regular academic year<lb/>
and 5,000 on Wednesdays during the summer "Our View' is the opin-<lb/>
ion of the editorial board and is written by editorial board members.<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters to the editor which are limited to<lb/>
250 words (which may be edited for decency or brevity). We reserve the<lb/>
right to edit or reject letters and all letters must be signed and include<lb/>
a telephone number. Letters may be sent via e-mail to editor@theeast<lb/>
carolinian.com or to The East Carolinian, Student Publications Building,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858-4353. Call 252-328-6366 for more information.<lb/>
One copy of The East Carolinian is free, each additional copy is $1.<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
One thing's<lb/>
for sure - if<lb/>
Kerry gets the<lb/>
nod, he can<lb/>
tell President<lb/>
Bush what it<lb/>
feels like to<lb/>
suit up in a<lb/>
military uni-<lb/>
form when it<lb/>
counts and<lb/>
not just look<lb/>
good on TV.<lb/>
WO-CflMPUS<lb/>
Digging Dean<lb/>
Generation Dean<lb/>
Something funny happened on the way to New<lb/>
Hampshire. John Kerry rose from the middle of<lb/>
the pack to the front of it. The New Hampshire<lb/>
Primaries will be a second chance to see what<lb/>
the public thinks about the race.<lb/>
What looked like a sure thing for Howard<lb/>
Dean only a month ago has been turned on<lb/>
its side.<lb/>
Republicans did their best to downplay what<lb/>
happened in Iowa this Monday, but they've<lb/>
got to be surprised and a little confused about<lb/>
the events that led to the assumption of John<lb/>
Kerry back to the Democratic party's primary<lb/>
spotlight.<lb/>
Kerry stole the spotlight from firebrand Howard<lb/>
Dean, whose penchant for straight talk earned<lb/>
him many supporters. As it turns out, his<lb/>
straightforward style may have turned off<lb/>
mainstream voters, at least in Iowa.<lb/>
In one night, John Kerry went from<lb/>
being an "also ran" to being the man<lb/>
everybody was talking about. One<lb/>
conservative publication ran a story on Dean<lb/>
saying. "Please nominate this man" Apparently<lb/>
that's what the administration expected to deal<lb/>
with.<lb/>
It would be hard to paint Kerry as a liberal<lb/>
antimilitary candidate. Kerry doesn't have a<lb/>
penchant for saying things that get people riled<lb/>
up and excited, but then again, he doesn't say<lb/>
anything that makes people angry.<lb/>
Kerry can be coached into being a more inter-<lb/>
esting speaker, and at least the voters don't see<lb/>
him as too arrogant or dull by the voters.<lb/>
To say that one candidate has an advantage<lb/>
because of one primary would be more than<lb/>
jumping to a conclusion.<lb/>
Things may swing toward Wesley Clark, who<lb/>
declined to run in Iowa or even John Edwards,<lb/>
who finished second in Iowa<lb/>
One thing's for sure - if Kerry gets the nod, he<lb/>
can tell President Bush what it feels like to suit<lb/>
up in a military uniform when it counts and not<lb/>
just look good on TV.<lb/>
The purpose of TEC's opinion pages is to invoke<lb/>
conversation in ECU'S community. To respond to an<lb/>
opinion on this page, please send your letter, with your contact<lb/>
information for verification, to editor@theeastcaralinian.com.<lb/>
(KRT)?Behold! A new gen-<lb/>
eration of Democrats! Such was<lb/>
the case in 1992 when Bill Clin-<lb/>
ton went to the White House.<lb/>
A ill if Howard Dean has his<lb/>
way next year, the Democratic<lb/>
Tarty will enter a new phase of<lb/>
existence.<lb/>
the New Democrats of the<lb/>
Clinton Bra were obsessed with<lb/>
all-around liberalism disguised<lb/>
as pure public opinion-con-<lb/>
sciousness. Howard Dean is a<lb/>
radical social liberal who totes<lb/>
hhnsell as a mild fiscal conser-<lb/>
vative, making him an attrac-<lb/>
tive package for young people<lb/>
in search ot something more<lb/>
solid than an Arkansas accent,<lb/>
a stai ned dress and a West Wing<lb/>
full of pollsters.<lb/>
When I met Dr. Dean in<lb/>
Detroit just prior to a Demo-<lb/>
cratic debate a few months back,<lb/>
he seemed to have a hidden<lb/>
charm behind his customarily<lb/>
grave expressions. I happened<lb/>
to have humped into the former<lb/>
Vermont governor while walk-<lb/>
ing to a protest of the Demo-<lb/>
cratic candidates, and I took<lb/>
advantage of the circumstances<lb/>
to procure his signature. I will<lb/>
affirm from this experience that<lb/>
Dean exudes a certain presence<lb/>
that some, particularly young<lb/>
people, might call presidential.<lb/>
I hat isn't to say that a Dean<lb/>
presidency would be a good<lb/>
thing. He has the capacity, and<lb/>
t he potential, to do great damage<lb/>
to the American experiment.<lb/>
But Dr. Dean is doing almost<lb/>
everything correctly when it<lb/>
comes to political tactics, and<lb/>
young leftists are catching on.<lb/>
Dean's campaign bills his<lb/>
young supporters as "Genera-<lb/>
tion Dean Generation Dean<lb/>
is a well-organized network<lb/>
because the Dean Campaign<lb/>
has recognized perhaps better<lb/>
than any other campaign In<lb/>
history the potentials of next<lb/>
generation technology. The<lb/>
Dean campaign has a classy<lb/>
Web site that gets almost as<lb/>
many hits as Whitellouse.gov,<lb/>
it uses MectUp.com for neigh-<lb/>
bors to organize local campaign<lb/>
eflorts, and supporters spend<lb/>
time blogging at hundreds<lb/>
of pro-Dean websites. Dean's<lb/>
youthful campaign focus has<lb/>
largely resulted in the creation<lb/>
of a tightly-knit community of<lb/>
young leftists and nearly 1,000<lb/>
unofficial pro-Dean neighbor-<lb/>
hood, campus, and special inter-<lb/>
est booster clubs.<lb/>
As one Dean staffer told<lb/>
The New York Times in refer-<lb/>
ence to Dean's exploitation of<lb/>
the Internet, "It's like church,<lb/>
the central place where people<lb/>
go to get inspired<lb/>
For young left-leaning<lb/>
Americans, the Dean campaign<lb/>
is inspirational. Unlike Bush's<lb/>
conventionally grueling effort<lb/>
to recruit young people through<lb/>
College Republicans chapters<lb/>
on college campuses to join<lb/>
the "GOP Team Leader" e-mail<lb/>
list and go to an occasional on-<lb/>
campus meeting, Generation<lb/>
Dean offers bold opportunities<lb/>
for young people to be creative,<lb/>
use their skills and ideas inno-<lb/>
vatively, take a lead and impact<lb/>
the future.<lb/>
Fortunately, Generation<lb/>
Dean doesn't own a monopoly<lb/>
on the politics of this genera-<lb/>
tion. As surely as the current<lb/>
generation is divided along<lb/>
moral and cultural lines, it<lb/>
is divided politically. Gen-<lb/>
eration Dean must coexist with<lb/>
Generation 911 those who<lb/>
understand that in changing<lb/>
times, America must cling to<lb/>
traditional values and main-<lb/>
tain our position as leader of<lb/>
the free world a generation<lb/>
represented, though ineptly at<lb/>
times, by President Bush.<lb/>
Generation Dean is a small<lb/>
minority among young people.<lb/>
But unlike many other young<lb/>
people today, Generation Dean<lb/>
is filled with idealists who<lb/>
are motivated to change the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
And that's what makes<lb/>
Generation Dean dangerous.<lb/>
They're young, and they'll be<lb/>
spending the next half-cen-<lb/>
tury advocating with passion an<lb/>
America where moral duties and<lb/>
national honor are outmoded<lb/>
relics of antiquity. Howard<lb/>
Dean's new manifesto entitled<lb/>
"Bill of Rights for a New Genera-<lb/>
tion of Americans" is symbolic<lb/>
of a prevalent attitude on the<lb/>
left, and of a growing attitude<lb/>
among the next generation,<lb/>
that rights can be created and<lb/>
disposed of at will.<lb/>
Thank (iod that among the<lb/>
actual rights we still enjoy is the<lb/>
right to vote against Howard<lb/>
Dean in 2004.<lb/>
(KRT)?One Fourth of July in<lb/>
Vermont, shortly after my father<lb/>
was diagnosed with cancer, a<lb/>
surprise visitor showed up at my<lb/>
family's back door. As the visitor<lb/>
entered our kitchen he i ntroduced<lb/>
himself with a friendly, "Hello, I'm<lb/>
Howard Dean<lb/>
As it turned out, former Gov.<lb/>
Dean and my father were already<lb/>
casually acquainted, and when he<lb/>
heard of my father's illness earlier<lb/>
that day, the concerned governor, a<lb/>
doctor, decided to make a friendly<lb/>
house call.<lb/>
While a surprise drop-in from<lb/>
the future Democratic presiden-<lb/>
tial front-runner may seem like<lb/>
an extraordinary encounter,<lb/>
such visits weren't so unusual in<lb/>
Vermont. When you're the gov-<lb/>
ernor of such a small state, these<lb/>
personal connections with regular<lb/>
folks are common.<lb/>
Of all the major contenders<lb/>
in the Democratic primary race,<lb/>
Howard Dean is easily the most<lb/>
closely connected to ordinary<lb/>
people. As a practicing physician<lb/>
right up to the very moment he<lb/>
took office as governor, he spent<lb/>
an entire career honing the fine<lb/>
art of personal connection.<lb/>
His immense popularity in<lb/>
a state where face-to-face, door-<lb/>
to-door politics is practiced, was<lb/>
due in no small part to his easy<lb/>
accessibility.<lb/>
A natural extension of Dean's<lb/>
connection to everyday Ameri-<lb/>
cans is his being in touch with<lb/>
the younger crowd. With a strong<lb/>
youth-targeted message, Dean<lb/>
consciously invokes the memory of<lb/>
John F. Kennedy in his determina-<lb/>
tion to get young people involved<lb/>
in politics.<lb/>
Often described as socially<lb/>
liberal and fiscally conservative,<lb/>
Howard Dean seems a perfect<lb/>
match for America's young voters,<lb/>
who In recent years have tended<lb/>
to describe themselves the same<lb/>
way.<lb/>
He has given a prominent voice<lb/>
to the concerns of young people by<lb/>
assertively addressing issues impor-<lb/>
tant to them, ranging from equal<lb/>
rights to the environment.<lb/>
Passionate about education, he<lb/>
has proposed progressive policies<lb/>
including the "College Commit-<lb/>
ment" plan, which would guaran-<lb/>
tee up to $10,000 annually through<lb/>
loans and grants to any student<lb/>
seeking a college education.<lb/>
His plan to expand Medicaid<lb/>
and the State Children's Health<lb/>
Insurance Program promises<lb/>
access to quality health care for<lb/>
anyone up to the age of 25.<lb/>
Through early opposition to<lb/>
the war in Iraq, he has galvanized<lb/>
an entire anti-war movement with<lb/>
a solid core of young activists.<lb/>
Young people are typically<lb/>
viewed as the most apathetic<lb/>
group when it comes to politics,<lb/>
but many experts believe that the<lb/>
swing vote In the 2004 election<lb/>
will be that of young voters.<lb/>
Nearly 60 percent of young<lb/>
voters say they will definitely vote<lb/>
in the next election while another<lb/>
27 percent say maybe they will,<lb/>
according to a study conducted by<lb/>
the Harvard Institute of Politics.<lb/>
In 2000, a mere 36 percent of<lb/>
18- to 24-year-olds voted in the<lb/>
presidential election.<lb/>
This dramatic increase in<lb/>
possible voters can be attributed<lb/>
largely to Dean's campaign.<lb/>
The youth-based branch of<lb/>
the Dean campaign, known as<lb/>
"Generation Dean reports that<lb/>
one-quarter of financial contri-<lb/>
butions to the campaign have<lb/>
come from 18- to 30-year-olds.<lb/>
With 700 youth-based groups<lb/>
nationally. Dean boasts the largest<lb/>
youth-driven grassroots campaign<lb/>
of any presidential contender in<lb/>
recent memory.<lb/>
While most of Dean's Demo-<lb/>
cratic opponents have done little<lb/>
to inspire young voters from inside<lb/>
the Beltway, President Bush seems<lb/>
to have forgotten us altogether.<lb/>
As was demonstrated in the<lb/>
2002 midterm elections, Republi-<lb/>
cans have traditionally benefited<lb/>
from low voter turnout. For this<lb/>
reason, there Is little motivation<lb/>
on their part to mobilize the<lb/>
young vote.<lb/>
With so much at stake in<lb/>
November 2004, Dean's ability to<lb/>
inspire young voters is crucial not<lb/>
only to his campaign, but to the<lb/>
future of the nation. More than<lb/>
any other candidate, he under-<lb/>
stands that winning this country<lb/>
back means winning back the<lb/>
trust of young Americans.<lb/>
With our own future in our<lb/>
hands, young Americans need to<lb/>
rally behind a candidate who has<lb/>
always stood up for them.<lb/>
Dean best sums up his belief<lb/>
in the value of the young Ameri-<lb/>
can voter in the words of his sig-<lb/>
nature campaign rally sign-off:<lb/>
"You have the power<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
Are high-carb diets responsible for obesity problem?<lb/>
(KRT)?ALEXANDRIA, Va. <lb/>
Renowned chef lulla Chikb once<lb/>
said she would rather have one<lb/>
spoonful ot a dish made with real<lb/>
cream, cheese and butter than a<lb/>
whole plateful of a concoction<lb/>
made with skim milk, low-fat<lb/>
cheese and margarine.<lb/>
I ler statement also captures the<lb/>
theory behind the famous Atkins<lb/>
Diet, freeing dieters to enjoy foods<lb/>
that contain fats as long as they are<lb/>
high In protein and low in carbo-<lb/>
hydrates, that means dieters can<lb/>
enjoy steak or lamb chops, but<lb/>
they must avoid bread, muffins,<lb/>
potatoes and sugary desserts If<lb/>
they want to lose weight.<lb/>
Julia captured the key principle<lb/>
ot the diet, recognizing that when<lb/>
people are satiated, they eat less. A<lb/>
slice of a rib roast, served with a<lb/>
side of cauliflower in a cheddar<lb/>
sauce, makes a delicious meal<lb/>
that's also less likely to send you<lb/>
back to the refrigerator.<lb/>
But instead of giving our-<lb/>
selves permission to eat Julia's<lb/>
meal, we dive into a gargantuan<lb/>
plate of pasta, thinking that<lb/>
we're eating right because it's<lb/>
low in faf. There must be some<lb/>
reason that our nation, which<lb/>
is obsessed with low-fat foods,<lb/>
is getting fatter and fatter, with<lb/>
one in five obese. Are we being<lb/>
fed low-fat lies?<lb/>
Atkins argued that pasta<lb/>
and other carbohydrates set off<lb/>
a chain reaction of cravings<lb/>
that result in excess calorie<lb/>
consumption.<lb/>
Here's why: Carbohydrates<lb/>
contain sugars in various forms.<lb/>
Sugar is digested Into glucose to<lb/>
turn the food into fuel, which<lb/>
is quickly released into the<lb/>
bloodstream to be either burned<lb/>
or stored. Glucose in the blood-<lb/>
stream triggers the production<lb/>
of insulin, whose basic job is to<lb/>
store fat.<lb/>
A high-carbohydrate, high-<lb/>
sugar meal triggers a rush of<lb/>
Insulin, but once the glucose<lb/>
is burned or stored, the blood-<lb/>
sugar level plummets, and we're<lb/>
suddenly hungry again?for<lb/>
more carbohydrates. We over-eat<lb/>
because our blood sugar is jump-<lb/>
ing up and down. Today, the aver-<lb/>
age American gets one-third of his<lb/>
calories from sugar and even more<lb/>
from other carbohydrates.<lb/>
Protein and fat don't trigger<lb/>
the insulin rush. The cravings are<lb/>
dissipated, and we don't need to<lb/>
eat as much.<lb/>
It only takes a look at sitcoms<lb/>
from before the '70s to see what<lb/>
we have done to ourselves. Jackie<lb/>
Gleason and Fred Mertz (from "I<lb/>
Love Lucy") were notably obese,<lb/>
but virtually all of the other actors<lb/>
are thin. And they knew nothing<lb/>
of low-fat, skim foods.<lb/>
Dr. Atkins' Diet Revolution<lb/>
has sold more than 10 million<lb/>
copies, so clearly it is touching a<lb/>
nerve. Several recent studies also<lb/>
have shown that test subjects on<lb/>
the diet lost 13 pounds compared<lb/>
to 4 pounds for those on a low-<lb/>
fat diet.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059474_0005"/><lb/>
1-22-04<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? NEWS<lb/>
PAGE A5<lb/>
Davis<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
author said Bizzaro.<lb/>
Davis has a considerable<lb/>
amount of practical knowl-<lb/>
edge for young writers, Bizzaro<lb/>
said, including how to publish,<lb/>
market and deal with agents.<lb/>
Davis is the first speaker<lb/>
of the semester for the Writers<lb/>
Reading Series, with authors<lb/>
Theresa Williams and F.thelbert<lb/>
Miller scheduled to participate<lb/>
in coming months.<lb/>
His first lecture will begin<lb/>
at 3 p.m. in Mendenhall, Great<lb/>
Room 1 and 2.<lb/>
His second lecture will begin<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in the Greenville<lb/>
Museum of Art at 802 Evans<lb/>
St. Davis will be available after<lb/>
his lectures and readings for<lb/>
book signing. The event is free<lb/>
and open to the public.<lb/>
The Writers Reading Series<lb/>
is presented by the Depart-<lb/>
ment of English and is partially<lb/>
supported by the Northarolina<lb/>
Arts Council.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Record industry files Uohn Doe'<lb/>
suits against music downloaders<lb/>
Ohio close to passing gay marriage ban<lb/>
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)<lb/>
? After seven years of debate,<lb/>
lawmakers moved closer<lb/>
Wednesday to pass-<lb/>
ing a law that would<lb/>
bar Ohio from recognizing<lb/>
same-sex marriages and keep<lb/>
some state employees from get-<lb/>
ting benefits for their domestic-<lb/>
partners.<lb/>
A Senate commitee<lb/>
approved the measure Wednes-<lb/>
day morning, and it was likely<lb/>
to go before the full Senate as<lb/>
early as Wednesday afternoon.<lb/>
I fa version that passed the I louse<lb/>
last month is not amended, the<lb/>
legislation would go to Gov.<lb/>
Bob Taft, who has indicated he<lb/>
supports it.<lb/>
The bill, considered one<lb/>
of the most far-reaching in<lb/>
the nation, puts into law that<lb/>
same-sex marriages would be<lb/>
"against the strong public policy<lb/>
of the state<lb/>
That language<lb/>
is necessary because of a 1934<lb/>
U.S. Supreme Court ruling that<lb/>
requires states to recognize<lb/>
marriages from other states in<lb/>
most circumstances.<lb/>
Ohio may be only the<lb/>
second stale, besides Nebraska,<lb/>
that would prohibit benefits for<lb/>
stateemployees'unmarried part-<lb/>
ners, said lawyer Michael Adams<lb/>
of Lambda Legal Defense.<lb/>
The Legislature has struggled<lb/>
with the issue since then-Rep.<lb/>
Jay Hot linger introduced a bill<lb/>
in the House seven years ago.<lb/>
Similar bills have been<lb/>
introduced in each legisla-<lb/>
tive session since then, but<lb/>
former Senate President Richard<lb/>
Finan, a Republican, blocked its<lb/>
passage. He said state law already<lb/>
took care of the matter.<lb/>
After Finan left the Senate<lb/>
in 2003 because of term limits,<lb/>
Republican Rep. Bill Seitz<lb/>
sponsored the current bill<lb/>
and told the committee that a<lb/>
ruling in Massachusetts that<lb/>
declared the state's gay mar-<lb/>
riage ban unconstitutional<lb/>
could affect Ohio.<lb/>
"My concern is the cost<lb/>
of the courts rewriting statutes in<lb/>
ways we did not intend Seitz<lb/>
told the committee.<lb/>
Although the bill would<lb/>
prohibit unmarried partners of<lb/>
state employees from receiving<lb/>
benefits received by married<lb/>
partners, it would allow excep-<lb/>
tions, including employees who<lb/>
gain such rights in negotiating<lb/>
under collective bargaining,<lb/>
he said. It would not apply<lb/>
to local governments or private<lb/>
companies.<lb/>
Adams, of Lambda Legal<lb/>
Defense, said the legislation<lb/>
is not needed and places bur-<lb/>
dens on the partners of gays<lb/>
that are not found in other<lb/>
states that have banned same-<lb/>
sex marriages.<lb/>
"There is no evidence that<lb/>
any couples besides man-<lb/>
woman couples are trying to<lb/>
get married. It seems to be<lb/>
unnecessary Adams said.<lb/>
Seitz denied that the bill<lb/>
targets gays and lesbians.<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ? The<lb/>
recording industry on Wednes-<lb/>
day sued 532 computer users it<lb/>
said were illegally distributing<lb/>
songs over the Internet, the first<lb/>
lawsuits since a federal appeals<lb/>
court blocked the use of special<lb/>
copyright subpoenas to identify<lb/>
those being targeted.<lb/>
The action represents the<lb/>
largest number of lawsuits filed<lb/>
at one time since the trade group<lb/>
for the largest music labels, the<lb/>
Recording Industry Association<lb/>
of America, launched its con-<lb/>
troversial legal campaign last<lb/>
summer to cripple Internet<lb/>
music piracy.<lb/>
Citing Internet addresses,<lb/>
music lawyers filed the newest<lb/>
cases against "John Doe" defen-<lb/>
dants and expected to work<lb/>
through the courts to learn their<lb/>
names and where they live.<lb/>
The recording association<lb/>
said each person was illegally<lb/>
distributing an average of more<lb/>
than 800 songs online. F.ach<lb/>
defendant faces potential civil<lb/>
penalties or settlements that<lb/>
could cost them thousands of<lb/>
dollars.<lb/>
The resumed legal campaign<lb/>
was intended to discourage<lb/>
music fans emboldened by last<lb/>
month's U.S. appeals decision,<lb/>
which dramatically increased the<lb/>
cost and effort to track computer<lb/>
users swapping songs online and<lb/>
sue them<lb/>
The RIAA is continuing to crack down on music downloaders.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059474_0006"/><lb/>
FVY3I At,<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? NEWS<lb/>
1-22-04<lb/>
Bush says there are 'troubled<lb/>
times' in parts of the country<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) ?<lb/>
President Bush, drawing from<lb/>
his State of the Union speech,<lb/>
said Wednesday that America's<lb/>
economy is strong but "there<lb/>
are still troubled times" in some<lb/>
parts of the country. Demo-<lb/>
crats said Bush's election-year<lb/>
address underscored how paltry<lb/>
his achievements have been.<lb/>
The morning after he<lb/>
addressed a national television<lb/>
audience and a joint session of<lb/>
Congress, Bush flew to Toledo,<lb/>
Ohio to begin a two day swing<lb/>
that also will take him to Arizona<lb/>
and New Mexico to highlight his<lb/>
job training and counterterror-<lb/>
ism proposals.<lb/>
Ohio has been hard hit by<lb/>
manufacturing job losses and<lb/>
its unemployment rate has<lb/>
jumped from .i.9 percent to S.7<lb/>
percent since Bush took office.<lb/>
"I here's no doubt that things<lb/>
are getting better the presi-<lb/>
dent said. 'Some people could<lb/>
conceivably be are being left<lb/>
behind" because they lack the<lb/>
skills to cope with changing<lb/>
technology, he said.<lb/>
But overall, he said, "this<lb/>
economy is strong  I fully<lb/>
recognize that in Ohio there are<lb/>
still troubled times He also said<lb/>
that after two wars, "We're now<lb/>
marching toward peace<lb/>
Bush spoke at Owens<lb/>
Community College to high-<lb/>
light his S250 million proposal<lb/>
for new job-training grants<lb/>
channeled through community<lb/>
colleges.<lb/>
Democratic presidential can-<lb/>
didate John Kerry, campaigning<lb/>
in New Hampshire, said Bush<lb/>
failed to deliver on a promise to<lb/>
create 250,000 jobs last month<lb/>
when only 1,000 new jobs were<lb/>
recorded. "Americans should be<lb/>
able to trust that what the presi-<lb/>
dent tells them is true he said.<lb/>
"After four years in office,<lb/>
this president still doesn't under-<lb/>
stand what's happening in living<lb/>
rooms across this country Kerry<lb/>
said after watching the State of<lb/>
the Union speech<lb/>
Bush began a two-day,<lb/>
three-state swing in Ohio, with<lb/>
its 20 electoral votes a linchpin<lb/>
of Bush's 2000 victory but one<lb/>
he won by only 3.5 percentage<lb/>
points. Wednesday marked his<lb/>
14th trip to the state.<lb/>
Later Wednesday, he was<lb/>
heading to Arizona, with<lb/>
10 electoral votes, which he<lb/>
also won narrowly in 2000.<lb/>
Thursday, he was off to New<lb/>
Mexico, which went to Democrat<lb/>
Al Gore in 2000 by 366 votes.<lb/>
Bush's aides maintained their<lb/>
usual insistence they were not<lb/>
worried about re-election.<lb/>
Biotech insects could fight disease<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)<lb/>
? Some high-tech insect<lb/>
experiments soon may be<lb/>
flitting out of the laboratory:<lb/>
Mosquitoes genetically modified<lb/>
to eliminate malaria. Silk-<lb/>
worms engineered to produce<lb/>
bulletproof vests. Bollworm<lb/>
moths designed to self-destruct<lb/>
before they can wipe out cotton<lb/>
crops.<lb/>
Genetically engineered<lb/>
insects hold the promise of<lb/>
benefiting millions, eradicat-<lb/>
ing diseases and plagues that<lb/>
cause famine in the developing<lb/>
world.<lb/>
But despite such good<lb/>
intentions, many scientists<lb/>
are alarmed that few safeguards<lb/>
exist to keep unintended<lb/>
consequences from harming<lb/>
humans or the environment.<lb/>
Fast-producing insects<lb/>
anchor food chains around the<lb/>
globe. Yet the impact that geneti-<lb/>
cally engineered bugs could have<lb/>
on ecosystems is only now being<lb/>
explored, even as researchers<lb/>
push to release biotech insect<lb/>
experiments into the wild.<lb/>
Such questions could be<lb/>
vitally important, particularly<lb/>
since many researchers are<lb/>
engineering insects designed<lb/>
to change the genetic makeup<lb/>
of their very species.<lb/>
Unlike with biotech crops<lb/>
or livestock, which are at least<lb/>
designed to be controlled, the<lb/>
goal of much of this insect<lb/>
research is to Introduce geneti-<lb/>
cally engineered traits into<lb/>
natural insect populations<lb/>
for example, rendering tsetse<lb/>
flies incapable of carrying deadly<lb/>
sleeping sickness, a disease that<lb/>
afflicts millions in Africa.<lb/>
No biotech insect experiment<lb/>
has been conducted outside a<lb/>
laboratory yet, but a few projects<lb/>
are getting close a prospect that<lb/>
prompted the Pew Initiative on<lb/>
Food and Biotechnology, in<lb/>
a report being released Thursday,<lb/>
to call on the federal government<lb/>
to adopt strict regulations.<lb/>
"Usually, biotechnology<lb/>
seems to move more quickly<lb/>
than the regulations said<lb/>
Michael Fernandez, Pew's<lb/>
science director. "But in this case,<lb/>
we have the time<lb/>
No U.S. law specifically<lb/>
addresses biotech bugs. The U.S.<lb/>
Department of Agriculture's<lb/>
written policy on engineered<lb/>
insects asserts regulatory author-<lb/>
ity only over "plant pests<lb/>
requiring that any outdoor exper-<lb/>
iment get prior federal approval.<lb/>
Bob Rose, a USDA scientist,<lb/>
said federal agencies can and<lb/>
probably will assert authority<lb/>
over many of these projects with<lb/>
some creative categorizing. For<lb/>
instance, Rose said the USDA<lb/>
has authority to regulate insects<lb/>
that cause disease in animals.<lb/>
Mosquitoes are livestock pests<lb/>
and Rose said genetically engi-<lb/>
neered malaria fighters could be<lb/>
brought under USDA's authority<lb/>
in that way.<lb/>
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Covered Parking.<lb/>
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Eastgate Vtttage<lb/>
2 Bedroom And 1 Bath Apartment.<lb/>
Fully Equipped Kitchens.<lb/>
Washer &amp; Dryer Hookups.<lb/>
Central Air &amp; Heat.<lb/>
On ECU Bus Route.<lb/>
24 Hour Emergency Maintenance.<lb/>
Pets OK With Deposit. ?.<lb/>
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5 Blocks From ECU.<lb/>
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Pets OK With Deposit.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059474_0007"/><lb/>
PAGE B1<lb/>
11?.?!(?????. 1-22-04<lb/>
tec<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
AMANDA LINGERFELT<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
JOHN BREAM<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
252.328.6366<lb/>
Did You Know?<lb/>
- Singer Steve Perry (1949). actress Diane Lane (1963) and DJ Jazzy Jeff<lb/>
Townes (1965) all call today their birthday.<lb/>
- Today is Answer Your Cats Question Day and Celebration of Life Day<lb/>
- On this day in 1973, the Supreme Court legalized most abortions in the<lb/>
landmark case of Roe vs. Wade<lb/>
- On this day in 1964, the world's largest cheese (15,723 kg) was<lb/>
manufactured in Wisconsin.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Films<lb/>
The Student Union Films Committee presents Lost In Translation tonight<lb/>
at 9:30 p.m Friday at 7 p.m. and midnight. Saturday at 9:30 p.m. and<lb/>
Sunday at 7 p.m. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is showing tonight at 7<lb/>
p.m Friday at 9:30 p.m Saturday at 7 p.m. and midnight and Sunday at<lb/>
3 p.m Movies are free with ECU ID. For more information call 328-4700.<lb/>
Polar Bear 2004<lb/>
Partners in Campus Life present Polar Bear 2004 today from 7 p.m. - 9<lb/>
p.m. at the SRC Outdoor Pool This annual ECU tradition is a cool way<lb/>
to "splash" into the New Year For those who are courageous enough to<lb/>
venture into the "Polar Bear" plunge bring your ECU ID to register for the<lb/>
event. And for those who just want to watch, you're welcome to come<lb/>
join in the fun too. The event features free refreshments and prizes.<lb/>
Contra Dance<lb/>
The ECU Folk &amp; Country Dancers are sponsoring a Contra Dance<lb/>
on Saturday, Jan. 24 from 7:30 p m. -10:30 p.m. in the Willis Building.<lb/>
Admission for students is $3. For more information visit http:<lb/>
222.geocities.comecufolkandcounlrydancerscontradances.<lb/>
Pirate Underground Concert<lb/>
The Student Union Popular Entertainment Committee presents music by<lb/>
Squeezetoy on Saturday, Jan 24 from 9 p.m. -11 p.m in the Mendenhall<lb/>
Pirate Underground. This event is free.<lb/>
Writers Reading Series<lb/>
The Department of English presents author Terry Davis as part of the<lb/>
Writers Reading Series on Monday. Jan 26 at 3 p.m. in Mendenhall Great<lb/>
Rooms 1 &amp; 2 and at 7 p.m. in the Greenville Museum of Art. Davis is the<lb/>
author of Vision Quest. Presenting Chris Crutcher, Houston Comets,<lb/>
Mysterious Ways. If Rock and Roll Were a Machine and Alabama<lb/>
Crimson Tide.<lb/>
Greenville: LIVE<lb/>
A.J. McMurphy's<lb/>
1914 Timbury Drive<lb/>
355-7956<lb/>
Saturday, Jan. 24,9 p.m.<lb/>
Don Cox<lb/>
Chef 8 505<lb/>
505 Red Banks Road<lb/>
355-7505<lb/>
Wednesday. Jan, 28,7:30 p.m.<lb/>
ECU jazz faculty and students<lb/>
Christy's Euro Pub<lb/>
301 S. Jarvis St.<lb/>
758-2774<lb/>
Tuesday. Jan. 27,10 p.m<lb/>
Open mic night<lb/>
City Hotel and Bistro<lb/>
203 S.W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
355-8300<lb/>
Wednesday, Jan 27,7 p.m<lb/>
Steve Hardy's Beach Party<lb/>
Corrtgan's<lb/>
122 E. Fifth St<lb/>
758-3114<lb/>
Friday, Jan. 23.10 p.m.<lb/>
Live music<lb/>
Saturday, Jan. 24,10 p.m.<lb/>
Live music<lb/>
Courtyard Tavern<lb/>
703 S.E. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
321-0202<lb/>
Sunday, Jan. 25,7 p.m.<lb/>
Barrelhouse<lb/>
El Ranchito<lb/>
315 E. 10th St.<lb/>
561-7336<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 22,7 p.m.<lb/>
Mariachi Band<lb/>
Emerald City Billiards<lb/>
3101-7 E. 10th St.<lb/>
757-0300<lb/>
Wednesday, Jan 28.10 p.m.<lb/>
Live music<lb/>
Friday, Jan. 23,10 p.m.<lb/>
Live music<lb/>
Saturday, Jan 24,10 p.m<lb/>
Live music<lb/>
Ham's<lb/>
701 Evans St.<lb/>
830-2739<lb/>
Thursday, Jan 22,10 p.m.<lb/>
Karaoke<lb/>
Sunday, Jan. 25,10 p.m.<lb/>
Open mic night<lb/>
Logan's Roadhouse<lb/>
603 S.W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
439-4313<lb/>
Wednesday, Jan. 28,8 p.m.<lb/>
Chris Acrey<lb/>
Mesh Cafe<lb/>
1011-A Red Banks Road<lb/>
321-MESH<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 22,9 p.m.<lb/>
Coastline Band<lb/>
Friday, Jan 23,9 p.m.<lb/>
Comedy<lb/>
Saturday, Jan. 24,9 p.m.<lb/>
Deejay<lb/>
Peasants<lb/>
110 E. Fourth St.<lb/>
752-5855<lb/>
Thursday, Jan 22,9 p.m.<lb/>
The Big Keel Experience<lb/>
Friday. Jan 23,9 p.m.<lb/>
Tishimingo<lb/>
Saturday, Jan. 24.9 p.m.<lb/>
Barefoot Manner<lb/>
Tuesday, Jan 27,9 p.m<lb/>
Capt. Easy<lb/>
Wednesday, Jan 28,9 p.m.<lb/>
Live Music<lb/>
Player's Choice<lb/>
Community Square, Memorial<lb/>
Drive<lb/>
355-4149<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 22,10 p.m.<lb/>
Karaoke<lb/>
Saturday, Jan. 24,10 p.m.<lb/>
Filth Wheel<lb/>
Players Retreat<lb/>
1631 Pactolus Road<lb/>
758-6856<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 22,7 p.m.<lb/>
Karaoke<lb/>
Saturday, Jan. 24.9 p.m<lb/>
Night Owls<lb/>
Professor O'Cools<lb/>
605 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
355-2946<lb/>
Saturday, Jan. 24,9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Karaoke<lb/>
Wimpie's Steam Bar<lb/>
206 Main St Wlnterville<lb/>
355-4220<lb/>
Friday, Jan 23,7:30 pm.<lb/>
Live Music<lb/>
Saturday, Jan 24, 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Live Music<lb/>
Winners from<lb/>
around the globe<lb/>
A look at the nominees<lb/>
for the 2004 Golden<lb/>
Globe Awards Show<lb/>
MICAH MASSEI<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
Ahhhh, the Golden Globes<lb/>
- for those in the entertain-<lb/>
ment industry, this award<lb/>
show is the greatest indicator of<lb/>
what's to come for Hollywood's<lb/>
finest.<lb/>
Every year, the Hollywood<lb/>
Foreign Press honors those in<lb/>
both film and television and<lb/>
generally sets the precedent for<lb/>
who will - and won't - be nomi-<lb/>
nated come Oscar time. Below<lb/>
is a breakdown of some of the<lb/>
nominees and an analysis of who<lb/>
should win, who shouldn't win,<lb/>
and who ultimately, will win.<lb/>
Best Picture (Drama)<lb/>
Nominees: iold Mountain,<lb/>
?! The Lord of the Rints: The<lb/>
Return of the King, Master and<lb/>
l.ommander: The Far Side of<lb/>
?y. . the World, Mystic River and<lb/>
ttkSeahiscuit.<lb/>
WhoShouldWin:My.snV<lb/>
River. Clint Kastwood's<lb/>
? dark, tragic tale of the<lb/>
b loss of innocence amongst<lb/>
JjPtliuv adolescents and the<lb/>
harrowing future destiny that<lb/>
awaits them is flat-out the<lb/>
most well-acted, best written,<lb/>
most important film of the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Who Shouldn't Win: Cold<lb/>
Mountain. This is the type of film<lb/>
that screams, "awards, awards,<lb/>
awards - which wouldn't be<lb/>
a problem if it were a worthy<lb/>
effort.<lb/>
Who Will Win: Much like<lb/>
last year, there is no powerhouse<lb/>
favorite expected to sweep<lb/>
the ceremony this year, making<lb/>
each category winner harder<lb/>
to predict. All of the nominees<lb/>
(except for maybe Seabiscuit)<lb/>
have a pretty good chance at<lb/>
taking home the top prize, but<lb/>
expect a tight race between Cold<lb/>
Mountain and Lord of the Rings<lb/>
with Lord of the Rings winning It<lb/>
in a close one.<lb/>
Best Picture (Comedy)<lb/>
Nominees: liend It Like Heck-<lb/>
ham, Hijf Fish, Finding Nemo, Lost<lb/>
in Danslation and Love Actually.<lb/>
Who Should Win: This is<lb/>
an odd one. Lost in Translation<lb/>
is easily the best film of the<lb/>
group, but if Lost in Translation<lb/>
is a comedy, then Pirates of the<lb/>
Caribbean was a scary, horror<lb/>
film. Much is the same with Big<lb/>
Fish, which did have laughs, but<lb/>
is ultimately a tearjerker hiding<lb/>
behind a smile. The best film of<lb/>
tile category: Lost in Translation.<lb/>
The funniest film of the category:<lb/>
Finding Nemo.<lb/>
Who Shouldn't Win: Bend<lb/>
It Like Keckham. It you find a<lb/>
coming-of-age story regarding<lb/>
a young Indian soccer player's<lb/>
unconvincing struggle with<lb/>
"the ways of love" while also<lb/>
enduring pointless cross-culture<lb/>
gags from the friends and family<lb/>
around her, the funniest film<lb/>
of the year  you're a comic<lb/>
genius.<lb/>
Who Will Win: lost in Trans-<lb/>
lation by default.<lb/>
Best Actor (Drama)<lb/>
Nominees: Russell Crowe,<lb/>
Tom Cruise, Ben Kingsley, Jude<lb/>
Law and Sean Penn.<lb/>
Who Should Win: Sean<lb/>
Penn for his devastating,<lb/>
brilliant performance as<lb/>
Jimmy, the grief-stricken lather<lb/>
who seeks vengeance for the<lb/>
murderers of his daughter in<lb/>
Mystic River.<lb/>
Who Shouldn't Win: Tom<lb/>
Cruise for The Last Samurai.<lb/>
Critics were mixed with his<lb/>
performance and based on the<lb/>
recent poor box office results <lb/>
audiences were as well.<lb/>
Who Will Win: After three<lb/>
see GLOBE page B3<lb/>
0<lb/>
And The Nominees Are<lb/>
SILVERSTONE<lb/>
Best Picture (Drama)<lb/>
Cold Mountain<lb/>
The Lord of the Rings: The<lb/>
Return of the King<lb/>
Master and Commander:<lb/>
The Far Side of the World<lb/>
Mystic River<lb/>
Seabiscuit<lb/>
Best Picture (Comedy)<lb/>
Bend It Like Beckham<lb/>
Big Fish<lb/>
Finding Nemo<lb/>
Lost in Translation<lb/>
Love Actually<lb/>
RusseCrowe Master<lb/>
and Commander)<lb/>
Tom Cruise(ThechtfSamurai)<lb/>
Ben Kingsley (House of Shed and Fog)<lb/>
Jude Law Cold Mountmq)<lb/>
Sean Penn (Mystic Rivt<lb/>
Best Actress IMMy)<lb/>
Jamie Lee Curttoffeay Friday)<lb/>
Scarlett Jojrtlnsson (Lost in<lb/>
translation)<lb/>
DianeiflSaton (Something's Gotta<lb/>
Give)<lb/>
Dttne Lane (Under the Tuscan Sun)<lb/>
Helen Mirren (Calendar Girls)<lb/>
THE WEST WING'<lb/>
Michael Chtjdwfrhe Sheild")<lb/>
Anthony LapaplfaTWithout A Trace")<lb/>
WljfffiPeterson ("CSI")<lb/>
MadjrfBheen ("The West Wing")<lb/>
sr Sutherland ("24")<lb/>
i (Comedy)<lb/>
Bonnie HunPRUfe With Bonnie")<lb/>
Reba McEfflhaj'Reba)<lb/>
Debra Messing ("wfc&amp;Grace")<lb/>
Sarah Jessica Parker CHec and<lb/>
the City")<lb/>
Betty Schram ("Monk")<lb/>
Alicia Sllverstone ("Miss Match")<lb/>
Best Television Show lOramal<lb/>
"24"<lb/>
"CSI"<lb/>
"NipTuck"<lb/>
"Six Feet Under'<lb/>
"The West Wing"<lb/>
Best Television Show (Comedy)<lb/>
"Arrested Development"<lb/>
"Monk"<lb/>
"The Office"<lb/>
"Sex in the City"<lb/>
"Will &amp; Grace"<lb/>
-<lb/>
A <lb/>
'ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
?MMHIMMnMnMH<lb/>
'LORD OF THE RINGS'<lb/>
Quick Picks: Film Review Quick Pick: Album Review<lb/>
'Big Fish'<lb/>
reels in<lb/>
audiences<lb/>
LAUREN MASON<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
With the<lb/>
usual flourish of<lb/>
Tim Burton, Big<lb/>
Fish presents the<lb/>
life of Kdward<lb/>
Bloom and the<lb/>
stories he shared with his son<lb/>
throughout the years. In the<lb/>
true fashion of southern story-<lb/>
tellers, Albert linney portrays a<lb/>
man who has lived a full life and<lb/>
shares his stories one more time<lb/>
with his somewhat dubious son,<lb/>
Will (Crudup).<lb/>
In this film, it's hard to tell<lb/>
which stories are real, which<lb/>
stories are enhanced and which<lb/>
stories are completely fabricated.<lb/>
These "tall tales" eventually<lb/>
drive apart the lather and ion,<lb/>
but after a few years his father's<lb/>
impending death brings the two<lb/>
back together and gives Will the<lb/>
opportunity to figure out who his<lb/>
lather really is.<lb/>
With the help of his mother,<lb/>
Sandra (I.ange) and wife, Jose-<lb/>
phine ((:otillard), Will discovers<lb/>
the truth about his father's past<lb/>
and learns to appreciate the sto-<lb/>
ries tor what they are. Together,<lb/>
they create his lather's last story<lb/>
and recognize the importance ol<lb/>
his past - no matter how unbe-<lb/>
lievable it may seem.<lb/>
The true characters in this<lb/>
film are found woven Into these<lb/>
fascinating stories, interacting<lb/>
with Iwan McGregor as the<lb/>
younger Kdward. Danny Devito<lb/>
appears as a worker in the circus<lb/>
where Bloom first spots young<lb/>
0<lb/>
Film Info<lb/>
Film: Big Fish<lb/>
Cast: Albert Finney. Billy<lb/>
Crudup, Jessica Lange, Ewan<lb/>
McGregor, Danny Devito, and<lb/>
Alison Lohman<lb/>
Release Date: Jan. 9,2004<lb/>
Sandra (l.ohman).<lb/>
Other familiar faces show up<lb/>
such as Steve Busceini, who plays<lb/>
the famed poet Norther Winslow,<lb/>
and Matthew McGrory shows off<lb/>
some cinematic magic as Karl, a<lb/>
giant who comes to their small<lb/>
town.<lb/>
Much in the likeness of For-<lb/>
rest dump, Hig Fish follows the<lb/>
young man's life from childhood<lb/>
encounters with the town witch,<lb/>
Ihrough Vietnam and then on his<lb/>
adventures as a traveling sales-<lb/>
man. The common tie, however,<lb/>
is the notorious fish that can<lb/>
never be caught and the man's<lb/>
love for water. Although the<lb/>
stories may seem disjointed and<lb/>
the movie jumps back and forth<lb/>
from flashbacks to the present,<lb/>
see FILM page B2<lb/>
Phantom Planet<lb/>
returns with new band<lb/>
member, new sound<lb/>
AMANDA LINGERFELT<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
To the excitement of indie-<lb/>
alt rock fans everywhere, Phan-<lb/>
tom planet is back. On their<lb/>
latest effort, the band - who is<lb/>
more likely known for their pop<lb/>
rock hits like "Somebody's Baby"<lb/>
from the Not Another Teen Movie<lb/>
Soundtrack and "California the<lb/>
theme song for the much-hyped<lb/>
show "The O.C - proves they<lb/>
are rockers at last.<lb/>
Phantom Planet's first two<lb/>
efforts, Phantom Planet Is Missing<lb/>
and The (luest, were decidedly<lb/>
albums filled with well-written<lb/>
pop songs with a harder, rock<lb/>
edge. Their new CD, the self-<lb/>
titled Phantom Planet, promises<lb/>
to shatter all expectations placed<lb/>
on the band and proves that this<lb/>
band knows no musical limits.<lb/>
At first, listeners may wonder<lb/>
if they're hearing a more garage-<lb/>
type sounding band like The<lb/>
Strokes. The muffled singing,<lb/>
loud instruments and the under-<lb/>
produced sound make this an<lb/>
obvious comparison. However,<lb/>
unlike Strokes' Julian Casablan-<lb/>
cas, Phantom Planet's Alex Gre-<lb/>
cnwald can actually sing, making<lb/>
it possible to understand every<lb/>
contrived, yet somehow catchy,<lb/>
lyric.<lb/>
The first single off t he album,<lb/>
"Big Brat does no justice to the<lb/>
rest of the CD. Being one of the<lb/>
hardest hitting songs oft the<lb/>
album, it has the potential to<lb/>
scare away fans so much that they<lb/>
don't even pick up the album.<lb/>
It's not until the listener gets<lb/>
fCalKf$&amp;V<lb/>
?m IfltygpFBX<lb/>
fektii? ?"I<lb/>
) Album Info<lb/>
Album: Phantom Planet<lb/>
Artist: Phantom Planet<lb/>
Release Date: Jan. 6,2004<lb/>
to the fourth track, the softer but<lb/>
fun "1st Things 1st that the<lb/>
skillful song writing and musi-<lb/>
cal genius returns. It's almost .is<lb/>
if the album should start here and<lb/>
then develop into the "Strokes-<lb/>
like" sound of other cuts like<lb/>
"The Happy Knding" and "Badd<lb/>
Business<lb/>
Overall, the record takes some<lb/>
getting used to - this is not the<lb/>
Phantom Planet of old. Die-hard<lb/>
fans of the previous albums will<lb/>
initially dislike the band's new<lb/>
direction, but it's important to<lb/>
understand that not even the<lb/>
band is the same as it was on<lb/>
the first two albums. Before<lb/>
production of the album, found-<lb/>
ing member Jason Schwartman<lb/>
(you may remember him from<lb/>
the movie Rushmore) decided to<lb/>
leave the band. Phantom Planet<lb/>
was forced to reexamine itself<lb/>
and the result is an album lull<lb/>
of edgier rock songs with more<lb/>
emphasis on guitar and drums<lb/>
see ALBUM page B2<lb/>
<pb facs="00059474_0008"/><lb/>
PAGE B2<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? FEATURES<lb/>
1 -22-04<lb/>
Cinema Scene<lb/>
STUDENT UNION FILMS<lb/>
Free with a student ID<lb/>
The Texas Chalnsaw Massacre<lb/>
- stamng Jessica Biel. Jonathan<lb/>
Tucker and Eric Balfour A retelling<lb/>
of the 1973 event based on<lb/>
five Texas teenagers who were<lb/>
stranded at a slaughterhouse<lb/>
where they are hunted down and<lb/>
killed by a deranged killer named<lb/>
Leatherface Rated: R<lb/>
Showing today at 7 p.m Friday at<lb/>
9:30 p.m Saturday at 7 p.m. and<lb/>
midnight and Sunday at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Film<lb/>
from page B1<lb/>
Album<lb/>
from page B1<lb/>
Lost In Translation - starring Bill<lb/>
Murray and Scartlett Johansson<lb/>
A middle-aged, washed-up<lb/>
actor travels to Tokyo to film a<lb/>
commercial and meets a woman<lb/>
with whom he shares are wild,<lb/>
unpredictable weekend Rated: R<lb/>
Showing today at 9:30 p.m Friday<lb/>
at 7 p.m. and midnight, Saturday at<lb/>
9:30 p.m. and Sunday at 7 p.m.<lb/>
Along Came R:lly<lb/>
Along Came Polly - starring Ben<lb/>
Stiller. Jennifer Anislon and Phillip<lb/>
Seymour Hoffman A newly wedded<lb/>
husband (Stiller) is cheated on by<lb/>
J his wife during' (heirHoneymoon '<lb/>
Soon after, he becomes involved<lb/>
in another relationship with a<lb/>
free-spirited woman named Polly<lb/>
(Aniston) Rated: PG-13<lb/>
Big Fish - starring Ewan McGregor.<lb/>
Albert Finney and Billy Crudup<lb/>
Edward Bloom (Rnney) loves to<lb/>
tell stories about himself as<lb/>
a young man (McGregor), and<lb/>
although his stones charm most<lb/>
are often tall tales, and they<lb/>
dont impress his estranged son<lb/>
(Crudup) When father and son are<lb/>
reunited, the son must learn how to<lb/>
separate fact from fiction to<lb/>
save their relationship Rated: PG-<lb/>
13<lb/>
Calendar Girls - starnng Annette<lb/>
Crosby, Phillip Glenister and Celia<lb/>
Imne The true slory of 11 women<lb/>
aged 45-60 who posed nude for<lb/>
a calendar for the Women's Institute<lb/>
to raise funds for cancer research<lb/>
Rated: PG-13<lb/>
The Butterfly Effect - starring<lb/>
Ashton Kutcher. Amy Smart and<lb/>
Melora Walters A young man wilh<lb/>
a dark and troubled past discovers<lb/>
that he has the ability to travel back<lb/>
in time and occupy his childhood<lb/>
body He scon finds that with even<lb/>
trip back in time, it alters his future,<lb/>
leading him to keep traveling back<lb/>
to repair the damage, resulting in<lb/>
disaster Rated: R.<lb/>
Chasing Liberty - starring Mandy<lb/>
Moore, Matthew Goode and Jeremy<lb/>
Piven While on a diplomatic trip<lb/>
to Europe with her parents, Anna<lb/>
Foster (Moore) secures a night<lb/>
away from her parents, but when<lb/>
her lather decides to change his<lb/>
mind, Foster takes matters into her<lb/>
own hands Rated: PG-13<lb/>
Cheaper By the Dozen - starring<lb/>
Steve Martin, Bonnie Hunt and Tom<lb/>
Welling Story ol a family with 12<lb/>
children moving to Chicago and<lb/>
their often humorous adjustments<lb/>
to big city life Rated: PG.<lb/>
Cold Mountain - starring Jude<lb/>
Law. Nicole Kidman and Rene<lb/>
Zellwgertory ol the long journey<lb/>
home of a wounded Civil War<lb/>
soldier, who returns home to North<lb/>
Carolina to be reunited with his wife.<lb/>
Rated R<lb/>
Lord of the Rings: Return ol the<lb/>
King - starring Elijah Wood, Sean<lb/>
Asten and Ian McKellan This is<lb/>
the completion of what has been<lb/>
dubbed "the greatest trilogy of our<lb/>
generation" Rated: PG-13<lb/>
Mona Lisa Smile - starring Julia<lb/>
Roberts. Kirslen Dunst and Julia<lb/>
Stiles A woman graduate of UCLA<lb/>
in 1953 is hired to teach art at<lb/>
Wellesley College and inspires<lb/>
her students to leap above the<lb/>
expectations of female conformity<lb/>
of the times Rated: PG-13.<lb/>
Something's Gotta Give - starring<lb/>
Jack Nicholson, Diane Keaton and<lb/>
Keanu Reeves Harry (Nicholson)<lb/>
is an older man with a libido much<lb/>
younger than his years However,<lb/>
while courting his newest girlfriend<lb/>
he falls in love with her mother<lb/>
(Keaton) Rated: PG-13.<lb/>
Paycheck - starring Ben Affleck,<lb/>
Uma Thurman and Aaron Eckhart.<lb/>
An electrical engineer who has<lb/>
been working on a top-secret<lb/>
project awakens one day and finds<lb/>
that the government has erased<lb/>
his memory ol the assignment A<lb/>
battle with the bureacracy to collect<lb/>
his paycheck then ensues Rated:<lb/>
PG-13.<lb/>
My Baby's Daddy - starring Eddie<lb/>
Griffith. Anthony Anderson and<lb/>
Method Man. Three bachelors from<lb/>
the hood endure the trials and<lb/>
tribulations of brotherhood and<lb/>
pregnancy when their girlfriends<lb/>
become pregnant at the same time<lb/>
Rated: PG-13.<lb/>
Teacher's Pet - voices of Nathan<lb/>
Lane, Shaun Fleming and Kelsey<lb/>
Grammar. Spot realizes that a<lb/>
scientist has the potential to let him<lb/>
realize his dream of becoming a<lb/>
young boy Rated: PG.<lb/>
Torque - starring Ice Cube<lb/>
and Martin Henderson. Veteran<lb/>
motorcycte racer Cary Ford<lb/>
(Henderson) is framed for the<lb/>
murder of the gang's leader and it is<lb/>
up to his gang, the Machine to help<lb/>
him elude the FBI. Rated: PG-13.<lb/>
Win A Date With Tad Hamilton<lb/>
- starring Kate Bosworth, Josh<lb/>
Ouhamel and Topher Grace A<lb/>
small-town girl from West Virginia<lb/>
wins a contest to meet her big<lb/>
screen idol Tad Hamilton Rated:<lb/>
PG-13<lb/>
Burton brings it all together with<lb/>
an ending that is emotional and<lb/>
moving.<lb/>
Based on the lxxk by Daniel<lb/>
Wallace, this movie captures the<lb/>
essence of southern storytelling<lb/>
and creates vivid moments that<lb/>
inspire the imagination. The<lb/>
scene where "time stops the<lb/>
field of daffodils, the idyllic town<lb/>
of Spectre and the thunderstorm<lb/>
that left a red Buick in a tree are<lb/>
all beautifully created on screen<lb/>
in a way that entertains and<lb/>
pleases the eye.<lb/>
Some viewers may find that<lb/>
the movie drags or is difficult<lb/>
to get into, hut those with an<lb/>
open mind and creative spirit<lb/>
will appreciate Burton's cin-<lb/>
ematic art. It is not an action-<lb/>
packed film, but it is created in<lb/>
a way that tells a man's life story<lb/>
and portrays loveable, realistic<lb/>
characters.<lb/>
Already recognized for these<lb/>
qualities, Big Fish is up for four<lb/>
Golden Globe awards this week,<lb/>
including Best Picture, Best Sup-<lb/>
porting Actor for Albert Finney,<lb/>
Best Score and Best Original<lb/>
Song.<lb/>
The Bottom Line: With<lb/>
great acting, awesome visual<lb/>
effects, and a heart-felt story, Big<lb/>
Fish is a great but atypical movie.<lb/>
Don't go if you can't appreciate<lb/>
complex storylines or a little<lb/>
imagination, but if you're open<lb/>
to a unique movie experience Mix<lb/>
Fish is sure to make a splash.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
teatures@theeaitcarolinian.com.<lb/>
and less emphasis on lyrics and<lb/>
harmony.<lb/>
The reformed Phantom Planet<lb/>
is on the path to reinventing<lb/>
themselves - but they still have<lb/>
some work and compromising to<lb/>
do before they can achieve chart-<lb/>
topping status.<lb/>
The Bottom Line: Fans<lb/>
of the band's first two albums,<lb/>
or even just "The O.C theme<lb/>
song, will no doubt be disap-<lb/>
pointed with this album. How-<lb/>
ever, true fans of the band and<lb/>
the Southern California sound<lb/>
will definitely appreciate this<lb/>
album as an indicator of a new<lb/>
direction and hopefully, many<lb/>
more albums to come.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
TEC is now hiring staff writers. Apply at our office located<lb/>
on the end floor of the Student Publications Building.<lb/>
? Experience required<lb/>
? Must have a ?.o GPA<lb/>
BrUdA F71ZE7Vnfi- F7Ef<lb/>
For each paid participant bring a friend at no<lb/>
additional cost for the month of February.<lb/>
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Get<lb/>
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reading.<lb/>
n<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059474_0009"/><lb/>
1 22-04<lb/>
w page B1<lb/>
on lyrics and<lb/>
lantom Planet<lb/>
i reinventing<lb/>
hey still have<lb/>
promising to<lb/>
achieve chart-<lb/>
Line: Fans<lb/>
two albums,<lb/>
O.C theme<lb/>
ibt be (Iisap<lb/>
album. How<lb/>
:he band and<lb/>
fornia sound<lb/>
predate this<lb/>
jtor of a new<lb/>
iefully, many<lb/>
me,<lb/>
contacted at<lb/>
rolinian.com.<lb/>
ited<lb/>
1-22-04<lb/>
THE EASI CAROLINIAN ? FEATURES<lb/>
PAGEB3<lb/>
Ef<lb/>
no<lb/>
it<lb/>
fig.<lb/>
-?<lb/>
H<lb/>
Pay a Little. Leave with a Lot.<lb/>
Globe<lb/>
from page B1<lb/>
xmi<lb/>
for men and women<lb/>
30 OFF!<lb/>
Our Price is Already 50 OFF<lb/>
The Catalog Price EVERYDAY!<lb/>
atalog 210<lb/>
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previous nods, expect Sean<lb/>
Penn to finally win one for his<lb/>
unforgettable turn in Mystic<lb/>
Wot.<lb/>
Best Actress (Comedy)<lb/>
Nominees: Jamie Lee Curtis,<lb/>
Scarlett Johansson, Diane<lb/>
Keaton, Diane Lane and Helen<lb/>
Mirren.<lb/>
Who Should Win: Diane<lb/>
Keaton. The last time Keaton<lb/>
received such critical acclaim<lb/>
for a film performance was<lb/>
1977's Annie Hall - and that<lb/>
won her an Oscar. Her delicate,<lb/>
witty performance in Something's<lb/>
Gotta Gtve is worth a trip to the<lb/>
podium.<lb/>
Who Shouldn't Win: Jamie<lb/>
Lee Curtis. Trying to understand<lb/>
her nomination for Freaky Friday<lb/>
is like trying to understand the<lb/>
reason for wisdom teeth <lb/>
painfully it exists and you are<lb/>
not sure why.<lb/>
Who Will Win: Johansson<lb/>
is also nominated in the lead<lb/>
actressdrama category, which<lb/>
- based on history - actually<lb/>
limits her chances at winning.<lb/>
Expect Keaton to take the top<lb/>
prize, but Jamie Lee Curtis could<lb/>
pull an upset.<lb/>
Best Television Show<lb/>
(Drama)<lb/>
Nominees: "24 "CSI<lb/>
"NipTuck "Six Feet Under"<lb/>
and "The West Wing<lb/>
Who Should Win: "24" is<lb/>
the one show of the group that<lb/>
actually deserves a Best Televi-<lb/>
sion Show nomination and<lb/>
consistently builds upon a great<lb/>
premise.<lb/>
Who Shouldn't Win: The<lb/>
'Citizen Kane of prime-time<lb/>
melodrama "NipTuck" was<lb/>
heavily bashed by television<lb/>
critics when it premiered on FX<lb/>
earlier this year, however, high<lb/>
ratings surprisingly secured it a<lb/>
nomination.<lb/>
Who Will Win: Based on<lb/>
the Golden Cilobe norm expect<lb/>
"CSI" and "The West Wing"<lb/>
to duke it out with "24" acting<lb/>
as a strong dark horse contender.<lb/>
If "NipTuck" wins, then pre-<lb/>
dicting the winner in every<lb/>
other category becomes a<lb/>
toss-up. Best Bet: "The West<lb/>
Wing<lb/>
Best Television Show<lb/>
(Comedy)<lb/>
Nominees: "Arrested Devel-<lb/>
opment "Monk "The Office<lb/>
"Sex in the City" and "Will fc<lb/>
(irace<lb/>
Who Should Win: "Monk<lb/>
Tony Shaloub's nervous, obses-<lb/>
sive, yet hilarious detective<lb/>
is the funniest thing on televi-<lb/>
sion, and though his sole per-<lb/>
formance has been rewarded,<lb/>
it's time for this hysterical<lb/>
masterwork to be honored as a<lb/>
whole.<lb/>
Who Shouldn't Win: "Sex<lb/>
in the City It's surprising that<lb/>
both "Sex in the City"<lb/>
and "Friends" are enjoying<lb/>
their final TV run, and yet,<lb/>
"Sex in the City" gets a nomi-<lb/>
nation and "Friends" gets the<lb/>
shaft. Another unusual twist<lb/>
(that's not so surprising)<lb/>
is that "Sex in the City" went<lb/>
from "funny" to "hype"<lb/>
after its first season, and "Friends"<lb/>
can still generate laughs.<lb/>
Who Will Win: In a<lb/>
shocking upset, the little-seen<lb/>
(yet critically lauded) "Arrested<lb/>
Development" will capture<lb/>
the Golden Globe, to the dis-<lb/>
may of every "Sex in the City"<lb/>
fan.<lb/>
Best Actor (Drama)<lb/>
Nominees: Michael Chik-<lb/>
lis, Anthony l.apaglia, William<lb/>
Peterson, Martin Sheen and<lb/>
Kiefer Sutherland.<lb/>
Who Should Win: Michael<lb/>
Chiklis for "The Shield<lb/>
It's still baffling to watch<lb/>
the tough, streetwise - and<lb/>
amazingly fit - Chiklis on<lb/>
FX's "The Shield when not<lb/>
too long ago he was the goofy,<lb/>
flabby police commissioner<lb/>
on ABC's "The Commish<lb/>
The excellent improvements<lb/>
he has made physically<lb/>
equal the astonishing<lb/>
advances he has made as an<lb/>
actor.<lb/>
Who Shouldn't Win: Quite<lb/>
honestly, every nominee in<lb/>
this category is deserving,<lb/>
but the weakest of these<lb/>
strong nominees would be<lb/>
Peterson's turn in "CSI<lb/>
Who Will Win: Odds<lb/>
are. The Golden Globes will<lb/>
continue their recent tradi-<lb/>
tion of rotating the award-<lb/>
winner between Chiklis<lb/>
and Sutherland, but Martin<lb/>
Sheen - whose underrated<lb/>
performance in "The West<lb/>
Wing" has never been recog-<lb/>
nized - has a favorable chance<lb/>
at snagging the prize  if, per-<lb/>
haps, the Hollywood Foreign<lb/>
Press has grown tired of the<lb/>
cycle.<lb/>
Best Actress (Comedy)<lb/>
Nominees: Bonnie Hunt,<lb/>
Reba McEntire, Debra Mess-<lb/>
ing, Sarah Jessica Parker, Betty<lb/>
Schram and Alicia Silverstone.<lb/>
Who Should Win: Bonnie<lb/>
Hunt. Like "Home Improve-<lb/>
ment's" Patricia Richardson<lb/>
or "Everybody Love's Raymond's"<lb/>
Patricia Heaton, Hunt some-<lb/>
how elevates the "typical TV<lb/>
mom" persona to new heights,<lb/>
finding just the right note<lb/>
for every little detail in her<lb/>
performance. It looks so easy<lb/>
to do, because Hunt does it so<lb/>
well.<lb/>
Who Shouldn't Win: Alicia<lb/>
Silverstone's annoying "Clue-<lb/>
less knock-off" performance <lb/>
Reba McEntire's dreadful hill-<lb/>
billy housewife  Debra Mess-<lb/>
ing's worn-out turn on "Will<lb/>
fir Grace"  hmnimm, tough<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
Who Will Win: Alicia Sil-<lb/>
verstone. She hasn't had a hit<lb/>
since her "glory days" with 1995's<lb/>
Clueless. After a disappointing<lb/>
film career, she will be awarded<lb/>
a Golden Globe for her first<lb/>
venture into prime-time televi-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Join out tern!<lb/>
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Advertising Representatives<lb/>
Positions available for Spring and Summer<lb/>
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tion to your resume?<lb/>
If you answered yes to<lb/>
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we want to talk to you.<lb/>
Apply in our office on<lb/>
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or call 328-2000 for<lb/>
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I ? 'HI FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
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Application Fee:<lb/>
-Required<lb/>
Security Deposit:<lb/>
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Pets accepted with<lb/>
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Unit Sizes:<lb/>
2 bedroom 1 12 bath townhouse<lb/>
approx. 1050 square feet<lb/>
3 bedroom 112 bath townhouse<lb/>
approx. 1350 square feet<lb/>
3 bedroom 1 12 townhouse<lb/>
Individual bedroom lease<lb/>
Swimming Pool ? Fitness Equipment ? Tennis Courts<lb/>
? Private Patios ? Walk-in Closets ? WasherDryer<lb/>
Connections ? On-site Management<lb/>
24 hour Emergency Maintenance ? Dishwasher ?<lb/>
Self-Cleaning Oven ? Frost Free Refrigerator ? Central<lb/>
HeatAir Conditioning ? B-Ball Court<lb/>
Billiards Table ? Ceiling Fans ? 24 hour On-Site Laundry<lb/>
Facilities ? Clubhouse ? FREE Broadband High Speed<lb/>
Wireless Internet ? Basic Cable, Water &amp; Sewer<lb/>
Additional Security Lighting &amp; Exterior Doors Have<lb/>
Deadbolts ? ECU Bus Service Available<lb/>
?Convenient to several shopping plazas,restaurants and<lb/>
entertainment<lb/>
252-752-0277 ? 1806 E 1st St. ? Located 4 blocks from ECU campus ? www.wilsonacres.com<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059474_0010"/><lb/>
PA6EB4<lb/>
tec<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
RYAN DOWNEY<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
TONY ZOPPO<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
252.328.6366<lb/>
1 22 04<lb/>
Pirates looking for first C-USA victory<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Rockets Griffin convicted<lb/>
Former Houston Rockets forward Eddie Griffin was convicted of<lb/>
marijuana possession Harris County Criminal Court-at-law Judge Larry<lb/>
Standley said he would sentence Griffin on Feb 13 Standley convicted<lb/>
Griffin of the misdemeanor after a daylong bench trial Griffin, who<lb/>
signed with the New Jersey Nets following his release from the Rockets,<lb/>
also is scheduled next month to answer a felony charge of aggravated<lb/>
assault with a deadly weapon based on an alleged fight with a woman<lb/>
in October. Griffin was arrested in April on the marijuana charge.<lb/>
American soccer players going overseas<lb/>
American forwards Brian McBride and Clint Mathis are headed to<lb/>
Europe. McBride signed with Fulham of England's Premier League, which<lb/>
obtained him from Major League Soccer for a transfer fee of more than<lb/>
$1 million Mathis. whose MLS contract had expired, agreed to a deal<lb/>
with Hannover 96 of the German Bundesliga McBride, a seven-time MLS<lb/>
All-Star and the career scoring leader of the Columbus Crew with 50<lb/>
goals, also had been sought by Blackburn He played on loan for Everton<lb/>
of the Premier League a year ago and scored four goals in eight games<lb/>
Banned long Jumper to return to action<lb/>
Long jumper Maurren Higa Maggi's two-year ban was overturned by<lb/>
a court that said she might have failed a drug test because doctors<lb/>
applied a pharmaceutical cream after she was cut during a hair removal<lb/>
process Maggi tested positive in June after winning the Brazil Grand<lb/>
Prix The Superior Sports Tribunal delivered the verdict Monday night.<lb/>
If track and field's world governing body, the IAAF, upholds the court<lb/>
ruling, Maggi will be able to compete for Brazil at the Athens Olympics in<lb/>
August<lb/>
Adams takes back title as Titans team president<lb/>
Tennessee Titans owner Bud Adams did not renew Jeff Diamond's<lb/>
contract as team president Tuesday to take the job back for himself<lb/>
Diamond was hired in July 1999 as the only person other than Adams to<lb/>
hold the title of president in the franchises history The Titans went 56-24<lb/>
in that stretch with one AFC championship and also reached the playoffs<lb/>
four of those five seasons But Adams, who turned 81 on Jan. 3. said<lb/>
in a statement that he needs to be more directly involved in managing<lb/>
the team and the company that oversees The Coliseum, Tennessee's<lb/>
home stadium The Titans finished this season 12-4 but lost to the New<lb/>
England Patriots 17-14 in the divisional round of the playoffs The Titans<lb/>
are approximately $16 million over the salary cap for the 2004 season<lb/>
and face some tough decisions on players such as defensive end Jevon<lb/>
Kearse, running back Eddie George and offensive tackles Brad Hopkins<lb/>
and Fred Miller<lb/>
Eagles name Mornhinweg assistant head coach<lb/>
Former Detroit Lions head coach Marty Mornhinweg was promoted<lb/>
Tuesday to assistant head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles.The 41 -year-<lb/>
old Mornhinweg served as a senior assistant this season with the Eagles<lb/>
after spending two years as head coach of the Lions. Mornhinweg was San<lb/>
Francisco's offensive coordinator from 1997-2000, and was on the staff with<lb/>
Retd as an offensive assistant in Green Bay from 1995-1996 The Eagles<lb/>
also gave special teams coach John Harbaugh a three-year extension<lb/>
Harbaugh has been Philadelphias special teams coach since 1998<lb/>
CSU star ignoring NCAA<lb/>
Two-sport star Jeremy Bloom intends to play football next fall  and<lb/>
accept skiing endorsements in defiance of the NCAA Bloom said<lb/>
his decision Monday is intended to force the NCAA's hand, requiring<lb/>
the organization to either change its position or prevent him from<lb/>
playing football The NCAA has ruled that Bloom cannot accept skiing<lb/>
endorsements and also play football Bloom maintains such money<lb/>
is necessary to fund his freestyle ski career For the last two seasons,<lb/>
Bloom has been a wide receiver and kick returner at the University<lb/>
of Colorado while also competing in moguls skiing on ihe World Cup<lb/>
circuit - at his own expense<lb/>
NBA pulls sweatshirts from Myanmar<lb/>
The NBA removed sweatshirts imported from Myanmar from its store in<lb/>
Manhattan after a labor rights group accused the league of violating a<lb/>
federal law against selling goods made in the country The sweatshirts<lb/>
bearing the "I Love This Game' slogan, selling for $60. were removed<lb/>
from the NBA Store on Tuesday after a protest was lodged by the<lb/>
National Labor Committee, an anti-sweatshop organization funded in<lb/>
part by labor unions The groups director, Charles Kernaghan. said he<lb/>
was shocked to see the merchandise from Myanmar. formerly called<lb/>
Burma President Bush signed the Burmese Freedom and Democracy<lb/>
Act in July, banning imports from the country, which has a poor human<lb/>
rights record, including the jailing of Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San<lb/>
Suu Kyi, who is currently under house arrest NBA licensees must sign a<lb/>
code of conduct that requires factories "meet NBA standards regarding<lb/>
working conditions league spokesman Matt Bourne said. Kernaghan<lb/>
said workers in Myanmar are paid as little as 7 cents an hour, and they<lb/>
risk imprisonment if they question factory conditions<lb/>
Ankle still bothering James<lb/>
LeBron James participated in a shootaround Wednesday despite a<lb/>
sprained right ankle, but coach Paul Silas said the Cleveland Cavaliers<lb/>
rookie isnt ready to play James, who sat out Tuesdays win over Seattle,<lb/>
was favoring his right ankle Wednesday Cleveland's leading scorer has<lb/>
not run on the ankle since injuring it in a game at Utah on Jan 17 James<lb/>
was not available for comment Before Tuesday s game. James said he<lb/>
was going to be cautious with the injury and not come back until it was<lb/>
100 percent James rolled his ankle when he stepped on the foot of Utah<lb/>
forward Andrei Kirilenko late in regulation but the Cavs won in overtime<lb/>
without him and Zydrunas llgauskas. who was ejected for fighting<lb/>
Orosco retires 25 years after reaching majors<lb/>
Jesse Orosco decided to retire, telling the Arizona Diamondbacks on<lb/>
Wednesday that he is ending a career that began in 1978 with the New<lb/>
York Mets Orosco, who turns 47 on April 21, holds the maior league<lb/>
record of 1,252 pitching appearances - all but four in relief He agreed<lb/>
in November to a minor league contract with Arizona that called for an<lb/>
$800,000 salary if he was added to the 40-man roster Orosco was 87-<lb/>
80 with 144 saves and a carter ERA of 316 with nine teams He went 2-2<lb/>
with two saves and a 768 ERA in 65 games<lb/>
ECU travels to<lb/>
Saint Louis<lb/>
TRENT WYNNE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Coming off another close<lb/>
conference loss to Houston this<lb/>
past weekend, the ECU men's bas-<lb/>
ketball team travels to St. Louis<lb/>
on Saturday searching for their<lb/>
first league win. A win, Coach<lb/>
Hill llerrion adds, that will not<lb/>
be easy.<lb/>
"They ate very well coached<lb/>
basketball team and really disci-<lb/>
plined.<lb/>
? They run a very good motion<lb/>
offense and they also lead the<lb/>
league in team defense said<lb/>
llerrion.<lb/>
"It is just always a tough place-<lb/>
to play<lb/>
Trie Billikens (10-S, 3-1) have<lb/>
won six out of their last seven and<lb/>
have been in ballgamcs late with<lb/>
some of the nation's premiere<lb/>
programs. Their most impres-<lb/>
sive loss came at the hands of<lb/>
the Arizona Wildcats 68-67.<lb/>
Preparation for St. Louis and<lb/>
the rest of the Pirate schedule<lb/>
takes on a totally different<lb/>
meaning since the loss of senior<lb/>
forward Gabriel Mikulas.<lb/>
"Without Cane, the one thing<lb/>
we miss is a post game inside<lb/>
Herrion said.<lb/>
"So we kind of now are<lb/>
spreading the floor a little bit,<lb/>
trying to get quicker and shoot a<lb/>
little more from the perimeter<lb/>
Down the stretch of the<lb/>
Houston game, the Pirates missed<lb/>
some costly free throws, the spe-<lb/>
cialty of the Argentine.<lb/>
"We really missed Cabe the<lb/>
last 6-7 minutes of the Houston<lb/>
game because we could have<lb/>
went inside and maybe have got<lb/>
a bucket or got fouled and made<lb/>
free throws llerrion said.<lb/>
Although his team has suf-<lb/>
fered some heartbreakers in 2<lb/>
league play so far, Coach 1 lerrion <lb/>
believes that better things are in g<lb/>
store as the season progresses. ?<lb/>
"1 have been pleased with ?<lb/>
how we have played in 3 out of<lb/>
4 league games. We just have<lb/>
to whether the storm and (here<lb/>
are games in February that<lb/>
we can win<lb/>
The Pirates season started off with a lot of promise. Due to injuries and losses both at home<lb/>
and one the road the early momentum has evaporated. The Pirates hope to turn it round.<lb/>
Lady Pirates striving for eighth straight win<lb/>
Women to take on<lb/>
Charlotte Sunday<lb/>
ERIC GILMORE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The women's basketball<lb/>
team will take on instate rival<lb/>
and conference foe Charlotte<lb/>
this Sunday.<lb/>
The ECU women (13-4,<lb/>
4-0) are looking to build on their<lb/>
current seven game winning<lb/>
streak including a two straight<lb/>
road conference wins. Charlotte<lb/>
(11-6, 4-0) is tied with ECU and<lb/>
number 17 ranked OePaul among<lb/>
the conference standings. All<lb/>
teams sit at 4-0 with number<lb/>
25 ranked Houston trailing by a<lb/>
single game.<lb/>
Courtney Willis is the linch-<lb/>
pin of the l.ady Pirate offense<lb/>
nearly averaging a double-double<lb/>
at 17.8 points per game and 9.8<lb/>
rebounds. Ihe senior forward<lb/>
center has recorded ten double-<lb/>
doubles on the season. Jennifer<lb/>
Jackson has also helped contrib-<lb/>
ute scoring as she is averaging<lb/>
13.5 and has scored in double<lb/>
ligurcs in all but three games.<lb/>
The l.ady Pirates are also<lb/>
winning the battle of the<lb/>
boards. The l.ady Pirates have<lb/>
out-rebounded I heir opponents<lb/>
by a combined total (it 143<lb/>
through 17 games. Ihe women<lb/>
are averaging 8.4 more rebounds<lb/>
than their opponents despite<lb/>
often being undersized.<lb/>
Coach Sharon Baldwin-<lb/>
Tener has seen the emergence<lb/>
of two freshman guards, Keisha<lb/>
Anthony and lamckia Powell.<lb/>
Anthony posted a lareer high of<lb/>
20 piiiiits<lb/>
this past weekend in a<lb/>
game against Tulane. Antlmm<lb/>
lias come on strong during<lb/>
conference play averaging 14.8<lb/>
?<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are on a seven game winning streak.<lb/>
points in her last four games<lb/>
despite coming off<lb/>
the bench. The freshman<lb/>
guard helped to ignite runs<lb/>
against UAH and Tulane and<lb/>
helped to seal off a win at home<lb/>
against South Florida.<lb/>
Tamekia Powell has been<lb/>
starting at point guard since<lb/>
conference play started. The<lb/>
freshman guard has quietly<lb/>
led the team and helped their<lb/>
turnover trend to go in a<lb/>
downward spiral as the Lady<lb/>
Pirates are only averaging 19.7<lb/>
per contest. Baldwin-Tener has<lb/>
confidence in Powell.<lb/>
ECU has rotated in many<lb/>
guards this year. Alisha Bishop<lb/>
and Keshia Anthony are<lb/>
All Lady Pirates home games will<lb/>
be broadcast by your campus<lb/>
radio station WZMB 91.3.<lb/>
averaging 6.9 and 6.7 points<lb/>
respectively. The depth of<lb/>
the guard position has been<lb/>
something new for ECU.<lb/>
"Last year we only rotated<lb/>
six players, this year we have<lb/>
much more depth said<lb/>
Baldwin-Tener.<lb/>
Charlotte will be no easy task<lb/>
for the over achieving Pirates.<lb/>
The 49ers resume boasts wins<lb/>
over the exact same conference<lb/>
teams that ECU has beaten.<lb/>
The majority of the Charlotte<lb/>
schedule was against Colonial<lb/>
Athletic teams. The Lady 49ers<lb/>
went 2-3 against the ex-confer-<lb/>
ence of the l.ady Pirates. The<lb/>
Lady 49ers finished first in the<lb/>
conference last year under third<lb/>
year head coach Katie Meier. The<lb/>
team finished 12-2 in conference<lb/>
and will look to make a return<lb/>
trip to the NCAA tournament.<lb/>
Charlotte returns four starters<lb/>
from that squad including star<lb/>
guard Peaches Harris. She will<lb/>
most likely be matched up with<lb/>
Viola Cooper who has done well<lb/>
in stopping explosive scorers.<lb/>
The instate rivalry is always<lb/>
important to recruiting and<lb/>
bragging rights. The-rivalry will<lb/>
most likely be discontinued when<lb/>
Charlotte moves to the Atlantic<lb/>
10 conference in 2005-2006. The<lb/>
Lady 49ers would love to take the<lb/>
24th meeting between the two<lb/>
North Carolina teams. Charlotte<lb/>
holds a decisive advantage post-<lb/>
ing an 18-6 series lead. Seahawks<lb/>
would like to take the 43rd game<lb/>
see LADY PIRATES page B5<lb/>
Pirate swimmers host last home meet this season<lb/>
Men, women to<lb/>
face UMBC<lb/>
TONY ZOPPO<lb/>
ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
The ECU nien and women's<lb/>
swim team will square off with<lb/>
the University of Maryland Bal-<lb/>
timore Country this Saturday at<lb/>
Minges Pool. Ihe meet will mark<lb/>
the Pirates last home matchup<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
UMBC is the second ol lour<lb/>
very tough opponents on LCD's<lb/>
schedule this spring before the<lb/>
Pirates make their way to Hous-<lb/>
ton, Texas for the Conference<lb/>
USA tournament. The UMBC<lb/>
men have amassed seven wins<lb/>
with just one loss so far this<lb/>
season while the women are<lb/>
undefeated at 8-0. Both teams<lb/>
are fresh off convincing victo-<lb/>
ries against William and Mary<lb/>
and George Washington.<lb/>
I he men defeated William<lb/>
and Mary by a count of 136-92<lb/>
while the women won 138-100.<lb/>
Ihe men claimed victory over<lb/>
CiW by a score of 135-90 while<lb/>
the women posted a 131-102<lb/>
mark. I he men placed first indi-<lb/>
vidually in all 13 events. Carlos<lb/>
Canepa and Jakub Sroczynski<lb/>
see SWIMMERS page 85 The Pirates will close out their home schedule this weekend.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059474_0011"/><lb/>
tory<lb/>
I<lb/>
)oth at home<lb/>
i it round.<lb/>
:win<lb/>
tes<lb/>
ome games will<lb/>
our campus<lb/>
m 91.3.<lb/>
id 6.7 points<lb/>
lie depth of<lb/>
Ion has been<lb/>
r ECU.<lb/>
? only rotated<lb/>
year we have<lb/>
lepth said<lb/>
be no easy task<lb/>
eving Pirates,<lb/>
e boasts wins<lb/>
me conference<lb/>
i has beaten,<lb/>
the Charlotte<lb/>
dnst Colonial<lb/>
he Lady 49ers<lb/>
the ex-confer-<lb/>
 Pirates. The<lb/>
ed first in the<lb/>
ar under third<lb/>
atie Meier. The<lb/>
! in conference<lb/>
make a return<lb/>
I tournament.<lb/>
 four starters<lb/>
including star<lb/>
irris. She will<lb/>
tched up with<lb/>
has done well<lb/>
iive scorers,<lb/>
'airy Is always<lb/>
cruiting and<lb/>
he-rivalry will<lb/>
jntinuedwhen<lb/>
o the Atlantic<lb/>
DOS-2006. The<lb/>
ove to take the<lb/>
ween the two<lb/>
ims. Charlotte<lb/>
ivantage post-<lb/>
ead. Seahawks<lb/>
the 43rd game<lb/>
iTES page 85<lb/>
lason<lb/>
ils weekend.<lb/>
PAGE B5<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? SPORTS<lb/>
-22 04<lb/>
I<lb/>
Spring Break in Panama City Beach, Florida!<lb/>
SANDPIPER<lb/>
MEET THE SISTERS<lb/>
OF ALPHA PHI P<lb/>
X Jtt<lb/>
January 28th and 29th<lb/>
6:00pm - 8:00pm<lb/>
For a ride or more information, call 758-5304<lb/>
APHIECU@yahoo.com<lb/>
950 East 10th Street<lb/>
Maniacs show up in large numbers<lb/>
School spirit<lb/>
strengthens home<lb/>
court advantage<lb/>
ROBERT LEONARD<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Biliville, North Carolina.<lb/>
Can't find it on a map can you?<lb/>
But we as students all know where<lb/>
Hillville is. Confused?<lb/>
Biliville is the name given<lb/>
to the "campsite" around the<lb/>
ticket office where memhers<lb/>
of the group known as the<lb/>
Minges Maniacs hung out,<lb/>
exchanged stories and ate<lb/>
pizza for the chance to be first<lb/>
in line for student tickets to last<lb/>
week's basketball game with<lb/>
Louisville that was shown on<lb/>
ESPN2.<lb/>
The festivities started around<lb/>
8 p.m. and Minges Maniacs<lb/>
president Jonathon Medlord<lb/>
set up his blue tent beside the<lb/>
ticket window and brought his<lb/>
big purple sign that read 'Till I -<lb/>
VII.I.K<lb/>
"We're trying to stir up aware-<lb/>
ness about the Minges Maniacs<lb/>
said Medford.<lb/>
"We want people to see where<lb/>
ECU basketball is heading<lb/>
Soon, other Maniacs joined<lb/>
him. Two area TV stations were<lb/>
in attendance, one did their<lb/>
entire sports report in front of<lb/>
the screaming fans.<lb/>
Head Coach Bill llerrion<lb/>
delivered the students pizza and<lb/>
talked about the game with Lou-<lb/>
isville and answered some ques-<lb/>
tions the students had.<lb/>
ECU fell to Louisville last Thursday in Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
llerrion thanked the students<lb/>
for their support and talked bas-<lb/>
ketball for over 20 minutes with<lb/>
the campuses biggest fans.<lb/>
"We can beat anyone in this<lb/>
buildingsaid llerrion. "Thereis<lb/>
no question the Maniacs help us,<lb/>
and we need the help<lb/>
The Maniacs showed up<lb/>
Thursday night ready to see some<lb/>
basketball and heckle everyone<lb/>
not in purple in gold.<lb/>
Rick I'itino entered Minges<lb/>
welcomed by a sea of boos,<lb/>
which obviously distracted him<lb/>
as he tripped over the cheerlead-<lb/>
ers' mat.<lb/>
I'd like to say that ECU won,<lb/>
but that was not the case. The<lb/>
Maniacs heckled the Cardinals,<lb/>
especially their star and preseason<lb/>
Conference USA player of the year<lb/>
Francisco Garcia,<lb/>
Clutch free throws by Lou-<lb/>
isville lead them to a 10-point<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
The Pirates, spurred on by the<lb/>
fans, played well against the heav-<lb/>
ily favored Cardinals The Cardi-<lb/>
nals have been killing teams left<lb/>
and right.<lb/>
let's not forget that the Cardi-<lb/>
nals have beaten not one, but two<lb/>
number one teams this year.<lb/>
Despite the loss, the Maniacs<lb/>
were there, and Louisville felt<lb/>
their effect. Garcia was held to a<lb/>
season low 12 points and eventu-<lb/>
ally fouled out.<lb/>
The home court advantage<lb/>
was felt, and thanks to the Mani-<lb/>
acs, ECU basketball is going in the<lb/>
right direction.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcaolinian.com.<lb/>
Swimmers<lb/>
won two events each; Canepa<lb/>
taking the 500 and 1000 free-<lb/>
style and Sroczynski coming out<lb/>
on top in the 200 freestyle and<lb/>
200 backstroke.<lb/>
The women finished first<lb/>
individually in eight of their 13<lb/>
events with Jessica Prosen leading<lb/>
the way in the 1000 freestyle and<lb/>
200 butterfly.<lb/>
ECU is hungry to avenge<lb/>
from page B4<lb/>
their losses at Virginia Tech<lb/>
this past weekend and hopes to<lb/>
notch their first win of the spring<lb/>
semester. The Hokies defeated the<lb/>
Pirates 148-88 on the men's side<lb/>
while the Lady Pirates fell in<lb/>
151-86 defeat. Despite the loss,<lb/>
Head Coach Rick Kobe thought<lb/>
the team swam well.<lb/>
"We competed very hard and<lb/>
had some real solid swims said<lb/>
ECU head coach Rick Kobe.<lb/>
"Virginia Tech is a strong<lb/>
team, probably the toughest team<lb/>
on our schedule. We're going to<lb/>
rally the troops and get ready for<lb/>
our home meet Saturday<lb/>
Both the men and women<lb/>
fell to 5-2 on the year with the<lb/>
loss. The meet against UMBC will<lb/>
begin at 1 p.m. at Minges Pool<lb/>
on Saturday.<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
between the two teams. The<lb/>
Lady Pirates hold a 25-17 record<lb/>
over UNCW and have taken two<lb/>
straight.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates enjoy<lb/>
playing at home posting an<lb/>
8-1 record at Williams Arena<lb/>
from page B4<lb/>
at Minges Coliseum. The Lady<lb/>
Pirates are averaging 810 fans<lb/>
per game and expect that<lb/>
figure to skyrocket due to the<lb/>
success of the program. Baldwin-<lb/>
Tener believes the crowd makes<lb/>
a large difference for her Lady<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
"It's always nice to play dn<lb/>
your home court in front of your<lb/>
fans Baldwin-Tener said.<lb/>
This writer con be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcaolinian. com<lb/>
Brown &amp; Brown<lb/>
ATTORNEYS AT LAW<lb/>
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Free Consultation<lb/>
3493c south Evans st. Phone 752-0952 752-0753<lb/>
Bedford Commons, Greenville www.brownandbrownattorneys.coin<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00059474_0012"/><lb/>
?22 04<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? SPORTS<lb/>
PAGE B6<lb/>
Track and field gears up for Virginia Tech Invitational<lb/>
BflENT WYNNE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
I he Pirate track and field<lb/>
teams head up to Va. Friday to<lb/>
compete in the Virginia Tech<lb/>
Invitational. The meet marks the<lb/>
beginning of the indoor season<lb/>
for the men and the third such<lb/>
competition for the women.<lb/>
Ihe Lady Pirates are<lb/>
coming off a very successful<lb/>
meet last Friday and Saturday<lb/>
held in Chapel Hill. Tammie<lb/>
Mentel broke her own school<lb/>
record by recording a successful<lb/>
pole vault of 11-11.7$, besting<lb/>
her 11-6 vault accomplished in<lb/>
December. Other exceptional<lb/>
performances were turned in by<lb/>
Colleen McGinn, who finished<lb/>
fourth in the high jump; Jessica<lb/>
Collins, who placed sixth in the<lb/>
3000 meters, and the distance<lb/>
medley relay team which fin-<lb/>
ished third.<lb/>
The Tar Heel Fast Times<lb/>
Indoor Invitational was<lb/>
composed of 16 teams from<lb/>
up and down the eastern<lb/>
seaboard including Duke, UNC,<lb/>
and N.C. State.<lb/>
Pirates picked fifth in preseason<lb/>
Conference-USA baseball poll<lb/>
ECU has been picked to finish<lb/>
fifth in the 2004 Conference<lb/>
USA Preseason Baseball Coaches<lb/>
Poll and junior outfielder Darryl<lb/>
I awhorn has been named the<lb/>
Preseason C-USA Player of the<lb/>
Year, released Tuesday by the<lb/>
league office.<lb/>
1 awhorn led ECU to its fifth<lb/>
consecutive NCAA appearance<lb/>
last season while pacing the<lb/>
team in batting (.332), doubles<lb/>
(IS), home runs (14) and RBI<lb/>
(49), and is the lone Pirate on the<lb/>
preseason team. F.CU finished<lb/>
fifth in the 2003 regular season<lb/>
and represented the conference<lb/>
in the NCAA Tournament at the<lb/>
Atlanta Regional.<lb/>
(Dming off of its sixth con-<lb/>
secutive NCAA appearance and<lb/>
armed with 17 returning letter-<lb/>
men, lulane has been selected<lb/>
as the preseason favorite in<lb/>
the 2004 C-USA baseball poll,<lb/>
chosen by the league's 12 head<lb/>
coaches, l.awhorn, who has hit<lb/>
33 home runs in his first two col-<lb/>
legiate seasons, is the Preseason<lb/>
C-USA Player of the Year. Clay-<lb/>
ton Jerome of TCU, who was<lb/>
named C-USA Pitcher of the Year<lb/>
last season, was selected to repeat<lb/>
that honor this spring.<lb/>
Defending regular season<lb/>
and tournament champion<lb/>
Southern Miss was chosen to<lb/>
finish second. After setting a<lb/>
C-USA record for conference<lb/>
wins (23) and a school record<lb/>
for overall victories (47), the<lb/>
Golden F.agles welcome back 17<lb/>
letterwinners.<lb/>
I louston, coming off its third<lb/>
trip to the NCAA Super Region-<lb/>
al in the last four years, was<lb/>
picked to finish third during the<lb/>
upcoming campaign. USF was<lb/>
picked to finish fourth, while<lb/>
F.ast Carolina was tabbed fifth.<lb/>
TCU was chosen sixth,<lb/>
Louisville seventh and Charlotte<lb/>
eighth in the poll. TCU welcomes<lb/>
new head coachjim Schlossnaglc,<lb/>
a former Tulane assistant who led<lb/>
UNLV to the NCAA Tournament<lb/>
last year in just his second season<lb/>
in the desert. Rounding out the<lb/>
preseason poll are Cincinnati,<lb/>
Memphis, I All and Saint Louis.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Preseason<lb/>
PREDICTED ORDER OF FINISH<lb/>
1. Tulane 17)<lb/>
2. Southern Miss (3)<lb/>
3. Houston 12)<lb/>
4. USF<lb/>
5. ECU<lb/>
6. TCU<lb/>
7. Louisville<lb/>
8. Charlotte<lb/>
9. Cincinnati<lb/>
10. Memphis<lb/>
11. UAB<lb/>
12. Saint Louis<lb/>
?<lb/>
All-Conference Team<lb/>
P J.R. CrowelSo.Tulane<lb/>
P Clayton JeromeSr.TCU<lb/>
P Garrett MockJr.Houston<lb/>
RP Austin TubbSr.Southern Miss<lb/>
C Devln IvanyJr.USF<lb/>
IF Jed BalsleyJr.USF<lb/>
IF Jarrett HotfpaulrJr.Southern Miss<lb/>
IF Myron LeslieSr.USF<lb/>
IF Tommy ManzellaJr.Tulane<lb/>
OF Brian BogusevlcSo.Tulane<lb/>
OF Mark JurlchSr.Louisville<lb/>
OF Darryl LawhornJr.ECU<lb/>
OH Brad WlllcuttJr.Southern Miss<lb/>
PLAYER OF THE YEAR<lb/>
Darryl Lawhorn, ECU Uunlor, OutflelrJerl<lb/>
PITCHER OF THE YEAR<lb/>
Clayton Jerome, TCU (Senior, Righthander!<lb/>
Area Pirate baseball fans get<lb/>
chance to meet, greet team<lb/>
I i I baseball fans will<lb/>
gel their tirst chance to meet<lb/>
the 2004 Pirates up close and<lb/>
personal on Saturday, Jan. 24,<lb/>
as ECU hosts its fourth annual<lb/>
"Meet the Pirates" function.<lb/>
Scheduled to start at 4 p.m.<lb/>
at Ihe Murphy Center's Harvey<lb/>
Banquet Hall, "Meet the Pirates"<lb/>
offers fans a chance to get<lb/>
autographs and photos of the<lb/>
ECU baseball team and<lb/>
second-year head coach<lb/>
Randy Mazey as well as enjoy<lb/>
a casual dinner, catered by<lb/>
Outback Steakhouse, with<lb/>
the Pirate coaches and players.<lb/>
A limited number of tickets<lb/>
are available at $7 per person<lb/>
($3 for children 12 and under)<lb/>
and advance reservations are<lb/>
required.<lb/>
The women head into<lb/>
Friday's meet with a couple of<lb/>
events under their collective<lb/>
belt, which should prove to<lb/>
be an advantage. The men,<lb/>
however, will compete for the<lb/>
first time this indoor season,<lb/>
something that head coach<lb/>
Bill Carson is not sure if his<lb/>
team is ready for.<lb/>
"We came back from<lb/>
Christmas break out of shape<lb/>
said Carson.<lb/>
"Right now we need a lot of<lb/>
training and fitness<lb/>
Even though the men's squad<lb/>
may not be in mid-season form<lb/>
just yet, Carson still expects<lb/>
his team to perform well in<lb/>
some events.<lb/>
"I expect to do well in the 4<lb/>
x 400 meter relay, the 400 meter,<lb/>
and the 200 meter races Carson<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The team currently has some<lb/>
eligibility Issues that coach<lb/>
Carson hopes to have sorted out<lb/>
by Friday so that his men can be<lb/>
at full strength.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports&amp;theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
Doctors try to trace disease that<lb/>
killed Berkeley basketball player<lb/>
BF.RKFI.F.Y,Calif.?Tin dis-<lb/>
ease that killed University of<lb/>
California Berkeley basketball<lb/>
player Alisa Lewis on Monday<lb/>
probably is not a risk to those<lb/>
who had contact with her, but<lb/>
university health officials who<lb/>
don't know where or how she<lb/>
was exposed, aren't taking any<lb/>
chances.<lb/>
As a precautionary mea-<lb/>
sure, the antibiotic Cipro has<lb/>
been given to her boyfriend,<lb/>
teammates, coaches, room-<lb/>
mates, family even players on<lb/>
the Stanford squad, which Cal<lb/>
played Friday.<lb/>
"She didn't play, but she<lb/>
shook hands with them after<lb/>
the game said Dr. Peter Diet-<lb/>
rich, medical director of Uni-<lb/>
versity Health Services.<lb/>
"It seemed like the pru-<lb/>
dent thing to do<lb/>
That players may have teen<lb/>
sweaty after the game contrib-<lb/>
uted to the decision.<lb/>
Lewis, a 20-ycar-old reserve<lb/>
forward, felt fine during the<lb/>
game. But over the weekend<lb/>
she experienced the sudden<lb/>
onset of what Dietrich called<lb/>
"classic symptoms of bacterial<lb/>
meningitis" headache, skin<lb/>
rash, high fever, stiff neck and<lb/>
vomiting.<lb/>
Her boyfriend took her<lb/>
to Kaiser Medical Center in<lb/>
Oakland, Calif early Monday<lb/>
morning. She died a few hours<lb/>
later.<lb/>
About five percent of the<lb/>
general population carries the<lb/>
bacterium without showing<lb/>
symptoms and will never get<lb/>
sick, said infectious diseases<lb/>
expert Dr. Arthur Reingold,<lb/>
chairman of epidemiology at<lb/>
University of California Berke-<lb/>
ley's School of Public Health.<lb/>
But the carriers can spread it<lb/>
to others, usually by sneezing,<lb/>
coughing, kissing, or sharing<lb/>
cups and eating utensils.<lb/>
Both doctors said the<lb/>
public has little to fear. "This<lb/>
bacterium can't last outside the<lb/>
body longer than two minutes<lb/>
Reingold said. "It doesn't get<lb/>
spread by casual contact.<lb/>
"Only a tiny fraction of<lb/>
those who are exposed ever<lb/>
get sick he said. "Most of us<lb/>
are have antibodies that protect<lb/>
us. But if you're that rare indi-<lb/>
vidual who doesn't have those<lb/>
antibodies, as this young lady<lb/>
apparently didn't, you're defi-<lb/>
nitely at risk<lb/>
Dietrich said he wished<lb/>
"we had a test to determine<lb/>
who has the antibodies and<lb/>
who doesn't, but we don't<lb/>
Dietrich. "There's so much we<lb/>
don't know about why some<lb/>
people who are exposed get<lb/>
sick and others don't<lb/>
"Unfortunately, 10 percent<lb/>
of meningitis cases are fatal<lb/>
even under the best of circum-<lb/>
stances Reingold said. "The<lb/>
disease progresses so rapidly,<lb/>
by the time the doctor can start<lb/>
treatment it's already done its<lb/>
damage<lb/>
University health officials<lb/>
arc tracing Lewis' recent con-<lb/>
tacts to determine how she-<lb/>
caught the disease and whom<lb/>
she might have exposed. But at<lb/>
this early stage they're operat-<lb/>
ing largely on guesswork. Diet-<lb/>
rich cautioned that they may<lb/>
never know for sure.<lb/>
"We can't even determine<lb/>
the definite cause of her illness<lb/>
and death, not until we get the<lb/>
cultures back he said. "But<lb/>
we're presumptively treating it<lb/>
as a case of bacterial meningi-<lb/>
tis because she presented all the<lb/>
classic symptoms<lb/>
He said those who have<lb/>
been given Cipro probably<lb/>
don't need it because their<lb/>
exposure was minimal: "Their<lb/>
actual risk of exposure was<lb/>
quite low, but we want to err<lb/>
on the side of caution. When<lb/>
you're not sure, it's wise to use<lb/>
a worst-case scenario.<lb/>
"This is definitely not cause<lb/>
for a general health panic said<lb/>
Dietrich.<lb/>
Mark A. Ward<lb/>
Attorney at Law<lb/>
Board Certified Specialist In Suite Criminal Law<lb/>
15 Years Experience In Criminal Defense<lb/>
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252.752.7529 ? www.mark-ward.com ? mwarcK" mark-ward.com<lb/>
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Purchase Five 16 or 20 oz Lattes or Cappuccinos, receive a 16<lb/>
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Faculty ID must be shown with this coupon. Expires 2-29-04<lb/>
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Office of Professional Programs<lb/>
f?1 252-328-6377<lb/>
HURRY, Registration deadline 12804<lb/>
2004 Housing Guide<lb/>
Am you Looking<lb/>
to liver<lb/>
Watch for our 2004 Housing Guide<lb/>
Inserted In the Thursday, February t<lb/>
12th Edition of The East Carolinian.<lb/>
This Is an excellent opportunity to advertise your apartment<lb/>
complex specials, and amenities.<lb/>
Reserve ad space by calling 328-2000 for our advertising<lb/>
department or by contacting your advertising representative.<lb/>
The ad deadline is Monday, February 2,2004.<lb/>
353-4900<lb/>
Buy one get one<lb/>
FREE PIZZA<lb/>
of equal or lesser value<lb/>
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Teartu Sanwi'chas!<lb/>
?elicieus Soups!<lb/>
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Phon. - 317-8787<lb/>
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Mon-Thurj 6.30am 9pm<lb/>
FriS? 6:30am-10pm<lb/>
Sund?y 7:30am-9pm<lb/>
free Sal 11 Save 31.00<lb/>
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With purrhasr of<lb/>
any &amp;prt"so Dunk. SJ$C'<lb/>
I.C. Drink, or (? ; '<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00059474_0013"/><lb/>
PAGE B6<lb/>
PAGE B7<lb/>
1-22-04<lb/>
M TH EAST CAROL)<lb/>
Itec<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
TO PLACE AN AD<lb/>
Come by The East Carolinian office<lb/>
on the second floor of the Student Publications Building<lb/>
(above the cashiers office)<lb/>
Monday - Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.<lb/>
RATES<lb/>
Students (w valid ID) $2 for 25 words or fewer<lb/>
Non-students $4 for 25 words or fewer<lb/>
5E per word over 25<lb/>
All classified ads must be prepaid.<lb/>
DEADUNES<lb/>
Thursday at 4 p.m. for the next Tuesday's paper<lb/>
Friday at 4 p.m. for the next Wednesday's paper<lb/>
Monday at 4 p.m. for the next Thursday's paper<lb/>
FOflREllT<lb/>
for rent- 2 bedroom 1 bath brick<lb/>
duplex, Stancill Drive. Walking<lb/>
distance to ECU. $540month.<lb/>
Pets OK wfee. Call 353-2717 or<lb/>
353-2713.<lb/>
2 BD, 2 BA Wyndham Circle Duplex.<lb/>
Available une 1st and Aug. 1st,<lb/>
$625.00 mo newly decorated,<lb/>
cathedral ceilings, nice landlordl<lb/>
321-4802<lb/>
3 Bedroom 1 bath house, walking<lb/>
distance to ECU, pet friendly person,<lb/>
275 rent plus 12 bills, J275 deposit,<lb/>
for details call 341-4107.<lb/>
3 BR 2 BA all appliances, fenced<lb/>
backyard, large bonus room, utility<lb/>
shed, three blocks behind ECU<lb/>
football stadium. J900.00mo. Call<lb/>
756-8137 or 412-1696.<lb/>
Duplexes for rent: 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms,<lb/>
2nd Street, Lewis Street and College<lb/>
Towne Row. Close to ECU. Pet<lb/>
with fee at some units. For more<lb/>
information contact Wainright<lb/>
Property Management 756-6209.<lb/>
34 BR house, walk to ECU, pets<lb/>
negotiable. J750.00mo. Available<lb/>
Immediately. 341-9947 or 355-<lb/>
7939.<lb/>
Chocowinity Indoor Flea Market.<lb/>
New, used, vintage merchandise.<lb/>
Furniture, tools, antiques, vintage<lb/>
Nintendo games and more. Highway<lb/>
33 in Chocowinity, 16 miles from<lb/>
Greenville 946-7160 for info.<lb/>
2 BD 2 BA Wyndham Circle Duplex.<lb/>
Available NOW! Large backyard.<lb/>
good parking, close to ECU, $595.00<lb/>
mo fresh paint. Call 321-4802.<lb/>
Room for rent: College Hills<lb/>
subdivision. Nice neighborhood<lb/>
near campus. Great place for a<lb/>
responsible, mature renter. Contact<lb/>
William at 830-1881.<lb/>
Pinebrook Apt. 758-4015- 1 &amp; 2<lb/>
BR apts, dishwasher, GD, central<lb/>
air h heat, pool, ECU bus line, 9 or<lb/>
12 month leases. Pets allowed. Rent<lb/>
includes water, sewer, &amp; cable.<lb/>
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE for rent on Elm<lb/>
St. Ample parking, 4 BD, 2 bath,<lb/>
hardwood floors, walking distance<lb/>
to ECU. Available now, must seel<lb/>
$950.00 month. 321-4802<lb/>
For rent: Upscale 3 BR3 Bath Near<lb/>
campus, only if you like the BEST! Call<lb/>
252-341-4700<lb/>
Behind Miami Subs: 2 bedrooms, 1.5<lb/>
Baths Townhouses. Newly renovated,<lb/>
WD hookups, walk to ECU, includes<lb/>
2 parking spaces, $S25month <lb/>
Deposit. Don't miss outl Call 252-<lb/>
341-2104.<lb/>
Looking for somebody to sublease<lb/>
one bedroom apartment in Eastgate<lb/>
available first of Feb. lease runs until<lb/>
July 31st. Please contact Barrett at<lb/>
919-656-7444<lb/>
Room for rent 2 blocks from campus-<lb/>
just graduated. Great house with<lb/>
frontback porch, washerdryer,<lb/>
heatAC. For interview call 919-<lb/>
349-8321.<lb/>
Apartments for rent: 1, 2 fit 3<lb/>
bedrooms. Beech Street Villas,<lb/>
Cypress Gardens, Cotanche Street,<lb/>
Gladiolus, jasmine. Peony, Woodcliff,<lb/>
Forest Acres, Wesley Commons, Park<lb/>
Village. All units close to ECU. Water<lb/>
and sewer included with some<lb/>
units. For more information contact<lb/>
Wainright Property Management<lb/>
756-6209.<lb/>
Room for sublease in Pirates' Cove.<lb/>
Female wanted. (252) 328-3058<lb/>
pinebrook apt. 75?-4015- 1&amp;2 BR<lb/>
apts, dishwasher, GD, central air<lb/>
&amp; heat, pool, ECU bus line, 9 or 12<lb/>
month leases. Pets allowed. Rent<lb/>
includes water, sewer, ft cable.<lb/>
Dental Practice seeking reliable<lb/>
hardworking individual to perform<lb/>
general office duties and errands.<lb/>
Fill out applications at Dr. Michels<lb/>
and Gauquie 800 WH Smith Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville by an. 28th.<lb/>
Townhouses for rent: Cannon and<lb/>
Cedar Court- 2 bedrooms, 1 12<lb/>
bath. Free basic cable with some<lb/>
units. Close to ECU. For more<lb/>
information contact Wainright<lb/>
Property Management 756-6209.<lb/>
Spacious Apartment above Buffalo<lb/>
Wild Wings. 2 roommates needed<lb/>
only $300 a month plus utilities. For<lb/>
info call (910)232-5469.<lb/>
House for rent: 204 13th Street- 3 BR,<lb/>
2 BA close to ECU. Short term lease<lb/>
available. Small pet allowed with<lb/>
fee. For more information contact<lb/>
Wainright Property Management<lb/>
756-6209.<lb/>
Staying in Greenville this summer?<lb/>
Two females needed to sublease two<lb/>
bedrooms in Pirates Cove for May,<lb/>
June, and July. Rent is $360month<lb/>
and includes all utilities, private<lb/>
bedroom and bathroom, two pools,<lb/>
volleyball and basketball courts,<lb/>
computer labs and more. Call 252-<lb/>
758-9153 or 252-830-1633!<lb/>
Responsible Roommate for 2 BRBA<lb/>
home w indoor dog. Approx. 20<lb/>
minutes from ECU. Call Paul @ 252-<lb/>
341-6998<lb/>
Wanted (2) Roommates to share all<lb/>
inclusive property. Quiet culdesac-<lb/>
3 bedrooms- 2 12 baths fully<lb/>
furnished- entertainment center-<lb/>
Sony computer w scanner &amp;<lb/>
printer- DSL- Great Location- (1)<lb/>
month deposit- (6) month lease-<lb/>
Check this out! H 355-4112- Cell<lb/>
341-4112- leave messagel<lb/>
Med student seeks roommate to<lb/>
share well maintained 3 bedroom<lb/>
2 full-bath house. $375 12 bills.<lb/>
4 miles from hospital, large yard,<lb/>
full appliances, high speed wireless<lb/>
internet. Call Pete 327-3835 or email<lb/>
rpt1009@mail.ecu.edu<lb/>
Roommate wanted two bedroom,<lb/>
two bath, washer &amp; dryer, huge<lb/>
private backyard, great location, one<lb/>
minute from campus. $300month t<lb/>
utilities. Contact (252) 327-2814<lb/>
printer &amp; scanner $200. 1<lb/>
queen sized water bed w heater<lb/>
$150.00. Call DaveSue 355-4387<lb/>
or 412-3242.<lb/>
Chocowinity indoor Flea Market.<lb/>
New, used, vintage merchandise.<lb/>
Furniture, tools, antiques, vintage<lb/>
Nintendo games and more.<lb/>
Highway 33 in Chocowinity, 16<lb/>
miles from Greenville 946-7160<lb/>
for info.<lb/>
Whirlpool Washer and Dryer $150<lb/>
(price negotiable) selling ASAP<lb/>
more details call 695-0474.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
1 Computer w windows 98, w<lb/>
WIIMED<lb/>
accountant, cost (Tarboro, NC)<lb/>
wanted by multinational textile<lb/>
manufacturer with headquarters<lb/>
in China to analyze production<lb/>
and related costs and regularly<lb/>
report to head office. Must be<lb/>
fluent in Mandarin. Send resume<lb/>
to Shelby Thompson, HR Director,<lb/>
HG (USA) Corp dba Glenoit<lb/>
Fabrics (HG) Corp. 3001 N. Main<lb/>
Street, Tarboro, NC 27886 or fax<lb/>
to 252-641-6019.<lb/>
Full time Studentsl 11 Stop wasting<lb/>
your Time and Talents on PT jobs<lb/>
with bad Hrs. &amp; Pay LOOK For<lb/>
1 weekend a month the National<lb/>
Guard wants you to go to college,<lb/>
FREE TUITION Learn a job skill<lb/>
fn stay a studentl! FT students<lb/>
get over $800MO in education<lb/>
benefits &amp; PAY. For more info, call<lb/>
252-752-1991 or visit www.1-<lb/>
800-GO-GUARD.com<lb/>
do you need a good job? The<lb/>
ECU Teletund is hiring students<lb/>
to contact alumni and parents<lb/>
for teh ECU Annual Fund. $6.25<lb/>
hour plus cash bonuses. Make<lb/>
your own schedule. If interested,<lb/>
visit our website at www.ecu.edu<lb/>
telefund and click on JOBS.<lb/>
Bartender Trainees needed $250<lb/>
a day potential, local positions<lb/>
1-800-293-3985 ext. 306<lb/>
Full Time Studentsll I Stop wasting<lb/>
your time and talents on PT jobs<lb/>
with bad hrs &amp; payl! LOOK For<lb/>
1 weekend a month the National<lb/>
Guard wants you to go to college,<lb/>
FREE TUITION! Learn a job skill<lb/>
&amp; stay a student FT Students<lb/>
get over $800mo in education<lb/>
benefits &amp; pay. For more info<lb/>
CALL 252-916-9073 or visit 1-<lb/>
800-GO-GAURD.com<lb/>
BARTENDER TRAINEES needed<lb/>
$250 a day potential, local<lb/>
positions call 1-800-293-3985<lb/>
ext. 306.<lb/>
Dental Practice seeking reliable<lb/>
hardworking individual to<lb/>
perform general office duties<lb/>
and errands. Fill out application<lb/>
at Dr. Michels and Gauquie, 800<lb/>
WH Smith Blvd. Greenville by<lb/>
Jan. 28th<lb/>
Part-time Delivery help. Clean<lb/>
cut, reliable. Apply in person at<lb/>
Bedrooms and Sofas Plus. 606 E.<lb/>
Arlington Blvd. (next to Cubbies)<lb/>
No phone calls please.<lb/>
CflHH PEflSOflflLS<lb/>
The sisters of Alpha Delta Pi would<lb/>
like to thank The Brothers of Sigma<lb/>
Phi Epsilon for the great social last<lb/>
Thursday!<lb/>
We would like to thank The Brothers<lb/>
of Theta Chi for a wonderful social last<lb/>
Saturday. Love, The Sisters of Alpha<lb/>
Delta Pi!<lb/>
ADPI'S "Heart to Heart Social" Spring<lb/>
Recruitment Feburary 5th,4:00-7:00@<lb/>
ADPi House. Call for a ride: 758-5447.<lb/>
one<lb/>
Panama City Beach, FL Spring<lb/>
Break" Book early and save $$!<lb/>
World's longest Keg Party- Free bar<lb/>
all week! Live band &amp; DJ, Wet T-shirt,<lb/>
Hard Body &amp; Venus Swimwear contest.<lb/>
Suites up to 12 people, 3 pools, huge<lb/>
beachfront hot-tub, lazy river, water<lb/>
slide, jet skis, parasail. Sandpiper-<lb/>
Beacon Beach Resort. 800-488-8828<lb/>
www.sandpiperbeacon.com<lb/>
Cheap Textbooks-<lb/>
www.StudentMarket.com compares<lb/>
new and used textbook prices among<lb/>
several competing online bookstores.<lb/>
Visit www.StudentMarket.com today to<lb/>
find the best textbook prices.<lb/>
Panama City Beach, FL "Spring<lb/>
Break" World Famous Tiki Bar!<lb/>
Book early and save $$$. Sandpiper<lb/>
Beacon Beach Resort 800-488-8828<lb/>
www.sandpiperbeacon.com "The Fun<lb/>
Place"<lb/>
Dapper<lb/>
Dan's<lb/>
Retro and Vintage Clolhiti<lb/>
dmailc Silver<lb/>
We have<lb/>
moved to<lb/>
SOI Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
752-1750<lb/>
BarmagEi<lb/>
Join America's 1 Stvtfent Tour Operator<lb/>
amain<lb/>
ACAPUU0<lb/>
BAHAMAS<lb/>
H0R1DA<lb/>
Sell Trips, orri Cosh,<lb/>
Call Hi roap dhcwmtt (Unr '<lb/>
1-800-643-4849 www.5tstravcl.cam<lb/>
Come join us for the lanuary 23<lb/>
contra dancel Live, old-time music<lb/>
by a string band. No experience<lb/>
needed; we'll teach you as we go<lb/>
along! Come alone or bring a friend!<lb/>
- Lesson: 7:30pm Dance: 8.00pm-10:<lb/>
30pm Admission: $3 (students) $5<lb/>
(FASG members) $8 (general). Co-<lb/>
sponsors: ECU Folk and Country<lb/>
Dancers (752-7350) and Folk Arts<lb/>
Society of Greenville (795-4980).<lb/>
An alcohol and smoke-free event.<lb/>
www.geocities.comecufolkandcou<lb/>
ntrydancers Location Willis Bldg<lb/>
1st &amp; Reade St downtown<lb/>
Give yourself Egypt &amp; the Nile in<lb/>
Summer '04. You deserve it. ECU<lb/>
6 s.h. college credit, inexpensive<lb/>
group rates, funding help available.<lb/>
Giza and Sakkara pyramids, Sphinx,<lb/>
Luxor, Valley of the Kings, Menphis,<lb/>
King Tut, Abu Simbel, Alexandria.<lb/>
Contact: mercerc@mail.ecu.edu or<lb/>
328-4310<lb/>
LEARN TO SKYDIVE<lb/>
Carolina Sky Sports<lb/>
1-800-SKYDIVE<lb/>
www.carolinaskysports.com<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
BREAK<lb/>
BAHAMAS<lb/>
CRUISE<lb/>
$279!<lb/>
5 Days, Meals. Parties. Taxes<lb/>
Party With Real World Celebrities!<lb/>
Panama City $179<lb/>
Daytona $159, Cancun $499<lb/>
Ethics Award Winning Company!<lb/>
www.SprlngBr?akTrav?l.om<lb/>
1-800-678-6386<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
? of rxxr maintenance response<lb/>
? of unrclumed phone calls<lb/>
? of noisv neighbors<lb/>
? of crawl) eritters<lb/>
? of high utility bills<lb/>
? of ECU parkins: hassles<lb/>
? of ungralefiil landlords<lb/>
? of unanswered questions<lb/>
? of high renls<lb/>
? of grumpy personnel<lb/>
? of unfulfilled promises<lb/>
? of unils that were not cleaned<lb/>
? of walls that were never painted<lb/>
? of appliances ihal don'l work<lb/>
Wyndham Court &amp;<lb/>
Kastgate Village Apts.<lb/>
3200F Mos.li Dr.<lb/>
561-RENT or 531-9011<lb/>
www. pinnacle property<lb/>
niauniimiit.iimi<lb/>
MONITORED NIGHTLY BY SE'I RITV<lb/>
Crossword<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Taxis<lb/>
5 Of digestion<lb/>
11 Paulo<lb/>
14 Oodles<lb/>
15 Add to the beauty<lb/>
of<lb/>
16 Cowboy's<lb/>
nickname<lb/>
17 "My Cousin Vhny"<lb/>
Oscar winner<lb/>
19 Black gold<lb/>
20 Etchers<lb/>
21 Capital on the<lb/>
Red River<lb/>
23 Vega's<lb/>
constellation<lb/>
24 Practice<lb/>
25 Experts, briefly<lb/>
29 Group of three<lb/>
31 MartinWinger<lb/>
movie<lb/>
35 Lofty poem<lb/>
38 Province on Lake<lb/>
Erie<lb/>
39 More luxurious<lb/>
41 Absolutely!<lb/>
42 Like some tires<lb/>
44" Cane"<lb/>
45 Toy on a string<lb/>
46 Place position<lb/>
49 Thwack<lb/>
53 In a vertical line<lb/>
54 Perfume sprayers<lb/>
59 Meat cut<lb/>
60 Real go-getter<lb/>
62 Had lunch<lb/>
63 Reluctant<lb/>
64 Fastidious<lb/>
65 Ballplayer<lb/>
Williams<lb/>
66 Former Egyptian<lb/>
leader<lb/>
67 Ms. Fitzgerald<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Arrived<lb/>
2 Dershowitz or<lb/>
Greenspan<lb/>
3 1976-80<lb/>
Wimbledon<lb/>
winner<lb/>
4 Be up and about<lb/>
5 Logger's tool<lb/>
6 Join in<lb/>
7 Proportionately<lb/>
8 Allen and<lb/>
12341I'6891022III1213<lb/>
14516<lb/>
116N19<lb/>
20262728<lb/>
233536R<lb/>
25293040<lb/>
3'323334<lb/>
.ill44I39<lb/>
4'?4B4243515?<lb/>
45 5556575fl<lb/>
464950<lb/>
5354<lb/>
39606'1<lb/>
626364<lb/>
65r67<lb/>
? 2000 Tribune Media Services, Inc<lb/>
All rights reserved<lb/>
Robbins<lb/>
9 Stolen diamonds<lb/>
10 City ol northern<lb/>
Mexico<lb/>
11 Rock<lb/>
12 Vowels<lb/>
13 Eurasian<lb/>
primrose<lb/>
18 Actor Mineo<lb/>
22 In addition<lb/>
24 Spine datum<lb/>
25 Stratagem<lb/>
26 Clair or Coty<lb/>
27 Trigger's lunch<lb/>
28 Health haven<lb/>
30 Tears<lb/>
32 "Dr Quinn,<lb/>
Medicine<lb/>
Woman" co-star<lb/>
33 Evil spirit<lb/>
34 Throw in one's<lb/>
cards<lb/>
35 Neighbor of<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
36 Withhold<lb/>
37 Therefore<lb/>
40 Crafty<lb/>
Solutions<lb/>
V11111"1ssVNc-1<lb/>
1V3N1sHAV11V<lb/>
b3AVdBu30VdB1u<lb/>
sd'i71w0:?Nn1d<lb/>
1VMSljdN003s<lb/>
0A0? ?aN0I<lb/>
9N11V1S Id13sS1A<lb/>
u3Hsni?Iu1N0<lb/>
3a0H11V di0dVd1<lb/>
(V1rJl IS0ild<lb/>
dn1Nn? vHA1<lb/>
I0NV?dA1ti0N3<lb/>
Ii0idn0iVs1uVn<lb/>
XdiH0idN31i01V<lb/>
0Vs3 11id1sBV0<lb/>
43 Promotes<lb/>
44 Family member<lb/>
46 Jack of no-fat fame<lb/>
47 Select few<lb/>
48 To the third power<lb/>
50 Of less quality<lb/>
51 "Forever<lb/>
52 Bond<lb/>
54 Gets older<lb/>
55 Billy or Frank<lb/>
56 Mr. Knievel<lb/>
57 Kind of estate?<lb/>
58 Madrid mile.<lb/>
61 Ms. Gardner<lb/>
uS?i ?rA i Willmn rpjrdk'<lb/>
"tears of a down"<lb/>
tWWtl8 ?<lb/>
fyftftmWNT<lb/>
RMPlttirTHMiiiof<lb/>
1b Roil W TOW<lb/>
AlP fflStt SOME<lb/>
010 oTTA0S OttS<lb/>
omit<lb/>
CAPTAIN RlBMAN ?- Grocers: To Serve &amp; Protect by John Sprengelmeyer &amp; Rich Davis<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059474_0014"/><lb/>
AGEB8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? SPORTS<lb/>
1-22-04<lb/>
DONT MISS IT!<lb/>
Partners In Campos Life<lb/>
We Relish Students<lb/>
Free Prizes<lb/>
Free Food<lb/>
Free T-Shirts<lb/>
The Event Starts at 7:00pm<lb/>
at the SRC Outdoor Pool<lb/>
"Prizes Will Only Be Awarded to ECU Students With A Valid OneCard<lb/>
T-Shirts Are Only For Those Who Jump<lb/>
Individuals with disabilities, requesting accommodations under the Americans with Disabilities Act fADAJ.<lb/>
should contact the Department for Disability Support Services at T252J 328-6799 fUJ or T252J 328-0899 fTTYJ.
</div></body></text></TEI>