<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>

<pb facs="00059480_0001"/>
2-04-04<lb/>
Volume 79 Number 113<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
February 5, 2004<lb/>
ECU researchers file lawsuit against company<lb/>
SpeechEasy creators designed a device to help stuttering.<lb/>
Anti-stuttering device<lb/>
copyright in question<lb/>
ERIN RICKERT<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
ECU researchers Andrew<lb/>
Stuart, Ph.D, and Joseph Kalin-<lb/>
owski, I'h.D, filed a copyright<lb/>
infringement lawsuit against<lb/>
Janus Development (iroup,<lb/>
Inc. claiming the company sold<lb/>
their copyrighted "SpeechEasy"<lb/>
device without permission<lb/>
g or payment.<lb/>
? Stuart and Kalinowski spent<lb/>
S more than 12 years getting their<lb/>
anti-stuttering device to a<lb/>
marketable point.<lb/>
The team's research<lb/>
eventually led to a patent,<lb/>
and in accordance with ECU<lb/>
policy, was assigned to the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
The two researchers put the<lb/>
anti-stuttering device on the<lb/>
market in 2001 after ECU<lb/>
granted a license to Janus.<lb/>
Stuart and Kalinowski<lb/>
were concerned that those<lb/>
marketing the device weren't<lb/>
properly trained, so the research-<lb/>
ers helped Janus train the<lb/>
individuals that would be fit-<lb/>
ting the device.<lb/>
Stuart said they later found<lb/>
Janus was providing workshops<lb/>
all over the U.S. using the<lb/>
researchers' material, but the<lb/>
company had taken out all<lb/>
reference to them.<lb/>
Stuart said between May and<lb/>
July of 2003, the two parties tried<lb/>
to negotiate the issue of copy-<lb/>
right but could not come to an<lb/>
agreement; therefore they were<lb/>
forced to file a complaint in<lb/>
the U.S. District Court against<lb/>
Janus.<lb/>
"It came to what we felt was<lb/>
a violation of copyright and<lb/>
our intellectual property said<lb/>
Stuart.<lb/>
"It is unfortunate that<lb/>
we are left in this situation.<lb/>
These people IJanus Devel-<lb/>
opment (iroup, Inc. have<lb/>
taken the fruits of our labor<lb/>
and been rewarded quite<lb/>
handsomely. Someone must be<lb/>
held accountable<lb/>
Don I'arrott, chairman of<lb/>
the Janus board of directors<lb/>
and mayor of Greenville,<lb/>
said attorneys were han-<lb/>
dling the situation and he<lb/>
had been advised not to<lb/>
discuss the matter.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Balancing school work with extracurricular activities<lb/>
The walkway between Joyner Library and Joyner East is a stage for many student performances such as unicycling.<lb/>
North Carolina Republican primary approaches<lb/>
Seven candidates<lb/>
to fight for Gov.<lb/>
Easley's post<lb/>
HOLLY O'NEAL<lb/>
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
pip. ??. A went<lb/>
5J ir jv'iru"nK a?ainst<lb/>
7004us,n5,tT??'<lb/>
?? ??- Sk m rary districting<lb/>
by the North Carolina Supreme<lb/>
Court may push back the date<lb/>
of the Republican primary,<lb/>
but candidates have already<lb/>
begun campaigning.<lb/>
So far, seven Republi-<lb/>
can hopefuls entered bids<lb/>
to run against Democratic<lb/>
incumbent Governor Mike<lb/>
Easley. Mere's a quick synopsis<lb/>
of the current contenders:<lb/>
- State Sen. Patrick Bal-<lb/>
lantine is the current Senate<lb/>
Republican leader and a practic-<lb/>
i ng attorney. He endorses tax cuts,<lb/>
modernized Medicare and<lb/>
support for community colleges<lb/>
and universities.<lb/>
- Dan Barrett is touted as<lb/>
a political outsider for the<lb/>
people, with a background in<lb/>
local government as county<lb/>
commissioner and experience as<lb/>
a hospital official. Mis focus is<lb/>
running the state government<lb/>
more efficiently to redirect<lb/>
finances to essential services,<lb/>
such as affordable health care.<lb/>
- Bill Cobey is chairman<lb/>
of the Republican Party and<lb/>
see ELECTION page A9<lb/>
ft Election<lb/>
visit www.ncgop.org tor links to each<lb/>
Republican candidate's Web site and<lb/>
Information about how to be a cam-<lb/>
paign volunteer.<lb/>
Gov. Easley's Web site Is www.govemor.<lb/>
state.nc.us.<lb/>
Laupus library receives $370,000 in rare books<lb/>
Ruth Moskop looks through a rare book.<lb/>
Black History Awareness<lb/>
Collection dates back<lb/>
to 15th century<lb/>
ADRIANNA DRAKE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The William E. I.aupus Health<lb/>
Sciences Library is now the proud<lb/>
owner of rare books and journals<lb/>
appraised at almost $370,000.<lb/>
Dr. Karel B. Absolon, a pio-<lb/>
neer in the medical field who<lb/>
has published more than 500<lb/>
articles and 20 books, donated<lb/>
the history of medicine col-<lb/>
lection to the library as a gift.<lb/>
The collection is made up of<lb/>
almost 2,300 books, journals and<lb/>
prints in US boxes. Dr. Dorothy<lb/>
Spencer, director of I.aupus<lb/>
library, said the collection is<lb/>
extensive and dates back to the<lb/>
15th century.<lb/>
The books were given to<lb/>
I.aupus Library officially in 2001,<lb/>
but arrival was delayed because of<lb/>
space issues at the library.<lb/>
Many of the newer books<lb/>
are still boxed in banker's boxes<lb/>
while the older and more rare<lb/>
books and folios (larger books)<lb/>
are being held in controlled envi-<lb/>
ronments. The library's interim<lb/>
plan is to shelve the books tem-<lb/>
porarily until the new library is<lb/>
complete in 2006.<lb/>
The collection will be housed<lb/>
in what used to be a conference<lb/>
room, but the room will be<lb/>
redecorated to accentuate the<lb/>
age of the books.<lb/>
The current table and chairs<lb/>
will be replaced with a table<lb/>
from the 17th century and two<lb/>
side chairs believed to be from<lb/>
the 18th century.<lb/>
Because of the frailty of the<lb/>
books, they were each placed<lb/>
see BOOKS page A2<lb/>
Atkins attacks:<lb/>
options at every<lb/>
dining location<lb/>
Tenika Smith, junior chemistry and mathematics<lb/>
major, eats an Atkins-friendly diet on campus.<lb/>
Dieters find foods to fit their needs<lb/>
KRISTIN DAY<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
ECU students and faculty arc jumping on the<lb/>
Atkins diet bandwagon to lose weight fast.<lb/>
As the trend continues, people hear more<lb/>
success stories supporting the plan.<lb/>
"I met a guy the other day who started it for<lb/>
his New Year's resolution and has already lost<lb/>
21 pounds said Dan Scheaffer, junior business<lb/>
management major.<lb/>
Many students and faculty started the diet and<lb/>
have turned to university dining services for food<lb/>
options on campus.<lb/>
Associate Food Service Director Scott Lamond<lb/>
said F.CU first introduced lowcarb products about<lb/>
a year ago.<lb/>
"We started on campus at the juice bar in the<lb/>
Rec Center said Lamond.<lb/>
"We were getting a lot of new requests. Not<lb/>
power bars and protein bars, but actually low<lb/>
carb bars<lb/>
Since the bars sold well, they moved to other<lb/>
retail stores on campus. Now they can be found,<lb/>
along with low carb shakes, in places such as the<lb/>
The Spot, The Galley and Wright Place.<lb/>
Bill Kazda, location manager for Wright Place,<lb/>
said they received bars and shakes a short time ago,<lb/>
but faculty and students requested nuts, so they<lb/>
stocked almonds and cashews.<lb/>
"We try to offer enough of a variety of stuff<lb/>
to have available for Atkins, vegetarian or any<lb/>
other diet said Kazda.<lb/>
Nutrition Director Robin High said the dining<lb/>
halls and retail stores on campus have always<lb/>
had low carb choices, even before Atkins became<lb/>
popular.<lb/>
"For those who have chosen to try the low<lb/>
carb diets, we always offer tuna salads, chicken<lb/>
salads, lean meats of your choice at our deli<lb/>
area, hamburgers and other meat entrees said<lb/>
High.<lb/>
Specific low carbohydrate meals are hard to<lb/>
find on campus, but as vendors begin to offer<lb/>
more options to the dining services, students may<lb/>
start to see more of a variety.<lb/>
Lamond said when ECU first started provid-<lb/>
ing Atkins-friendly bars and shakes, the choices<lb/>
were limited, but new products are introduced all<lb/>
the time.<lb/>
"With low carbs, there was a very small variety<lb/>
at first, but it's getting a lot better every week<lb/>
Lamond said.<lb/>
Dining Services won't have any promotions<lb/>
see ATKINS page A10<lb/>
throughout February<lb/>
TH<lb/>
April 9, 1816 The African Methodist Episcopal Church was organized, becoming the first black denomination in<lb/>
-? thcl.S<lb/>
?0<lb/>
Aug. 21-22, 1831 Nat Turner slmt revolt occurred in Virginia<lb/>
Forecast TEC REQUIRED<lb/>
Partly Cloudy READING<lb/>
High ot 48<lb/>
Online<lb/>
News<lb/>
Visit www.theeastcarollnlan.com to<lb/>
view updates about the Carte Bructa<lb/>
kidnapping case<lb/>
page A2<lb/>
Students on campuses across the US<lb/>
can now rate their professors leaching<lb/>
and grading online<lb/>
Features<lb/>
page A5<lb/>
The Grammy Awards will air this<lb/>
Sunday, check out Die nominees and<lb/>
their categories.<lb/>
SpOltS page A8<lb/>
Marquette has been Invited to om the Big<lb/>
East Conference However, they haven't<lb/>
decided whether theyll accept the offer.<lb/>
Don't forget to attend the<lb/>
discussion on HtV and ACS on<lb/>
Monday at 6 pm In Ledonla<lb/>
Wright Cultural Center.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE A?<lb/>
tec<lb/>
NEWS<lb/>
ERIN RICKERT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
HOLLY O'NEAL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
news? theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
252.328.6366<lb/>
2-05-04<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Job Fair Workshop<lb/>
Career Services presents a workshop to inform students how to get<lb/>
the most out of a job fair today Irom 1230 pm. -1:30 p.m. in 1003 Bale<lb/>
HIVAIDS Discussion<lb/>
Wellness Education and the Ledonia Wright Cultural Center will host<lb/>
a Dailogue on Diversity on HIVAIDS in the African-American<lb/>
community on Monday at 6 p m in LWCC<lb/>
Resume Blitz<lb/>
Career Services offers a Resume Blitz for students to have their resumes<lb/>
critiqued Monday from 11 am -1 p.m. and Tuesday. Feb 10 from 2 p.m.<lb/>
- 4 pm. Both sessions will be in Bate Lobby<lb/>
Career Readiness Workshop: Interviewing<lb/>
Career Services offers a workshop on how to prepare for an interview<lb/>
Monday from 2:30 pm. - 330 pm. in 1012 Bate<lb/>
Women In Academic Medicine Seminar<lb/>
The Office of Academic and Faculty Development presents a seminar<lb/>
on women in academic medicine Tuesday from 830 am - 415 p.m. at<lb/>
the Ironwood Golf and Country Club. Call 744-3420 for more<lb/>
information<lb/>
Construction and Industrial Career Fair<lb/>
There will be a Construction Management and Industrial Technology<lb/>
Career Fair Wednesday from 10 am. - 2 pm on the first floor of the<lb/>
Science and Technology Building.<lb/>
Nursing and Allied Health Career Fair<lb/>
There will be a Nursing and Allied Health Career Fair Thursday. Feb. 12<lb/>
from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. in the Carol Belk Building.<lb/>
Deans and Issues Forum<lb/>
The ECU chapter of Omicron Delta Kappa will host the Deans and<lb/>
Issues Forum on Thursday. Feb. 12, at 7 pm. in 244 Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Garrie Moore, vice chancellor lor Student Life, will moderate<lb/>
open discussion on diversity, campus safety, transportation, parking,<lb/>
expansion, faculty Involvement and student organizations<lb/>
Science and Chemistry Career Fair<lb/>
There will be a science and chemistry career fair Friday. Feb 13 Irom<lb/>
10 a m - 2 p.m on the third floor of the Science and Technology<lb/>
Building<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 am - 4 pm at the<lb/>
Greenville Hilton The conference will feature newspaper columnist and<lb/>
author Susie Wilde, childrens author Pansie Hart Flood and 25 sessions<lb/>
on literacy issues Contact Susan Ranson at 328-6830 for registration<lb/>
Book Drive<lb/>
The ECU NC Teaching Fellows Program will sponsor a book drive on<lb/>
Saturday, Feb 14 at Greenville Nissan and Greenville K-Mart Books and<lb/>
donations will be distributed to area schools affected by Hurricane Isabel<lb/>
All contributors (books or cash) will receive a chance to win a dinner<lb/>
for two at one of several participating Greenville restaurants<lb/>
Books may be dropped off at the book dnve or sentdelivered prior to<lb/>
the Teaching Fellows office in 204 Spellman Contact Mary Beth Corbin<lb/>
at 328-4126 for more information.<lb/>
Negro Spiritual Presentation<lb/>
The Ledonia Wright Cultural Center will sponsor "The History of the<lb/>
Negro Spiritual' presented by Dorthea Taylor, soprano, and Louise Toppin.<lb/>
piano, on Sunday. Feb 15 at 5 pm at Sycamore Hill Missionary Baptist<lb/>
Church on Hooker Road<lb/>
Criminal Justice Applications<lb/>
The deadline for students to apply for admission into the criminal justice<lb/>
program is Monday, Feb 16 Applications are available outside 104-B<lb/>
Ragsdale Contact Virginia Parker at 328-4192 for more information<lb/>
LatinoHispanic Education Conference<lb/>
The College of Education and the NC Center for International<lb/>
Understanding hosts the first LatinoHispanic Education Conference on<lb/>
Thursday, Feb. 26 at 8:30 am at the Greenville Hilton. Contact the Division<lb/>
of Continuing Studies at 1-800-767-9111 for registration<lb/>
Drop Deadline Extension<lb/>
The last day for undergraduate students to drop term-length courses<lb/>
or withdraw Irom school without grades has been extended to<lb/>
Wednesday. Feb 25 Block courses may be dropped only during the first<lb/>
40 percent of their regularly scheduled class meetings<lb/>
Paper Person<lb/>
The person featured at the top of today's paper is Daniela Jones, sophmore<lb/>
psychology major<lb/>
News Briefs<lb/>
Local<lb/>
More deputies quit in<lb/>
missing property scandal<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL. NC (AP) - An on-<lb/>
campus salad bar appears to have<lb/>
been the source for a family of<lb/>
viruses that sent about 300 UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill students to the doctor<lb/>
last month, Orange County health<lb/>
officials say<lb/>
Officials last week said lab specimens<lb/>
tested positive for norovirus, a number<lb/>
of highly contagious viruses that<lb/>
cause nausea and vomiting<lb/>
The Orange County Health<lb/>
Department said Monday it managed<lb/>
to narrow the norovirus source to<lb/>
the salad bar at Lenoir Hall, the<lb/>
main cafeteria at UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
Student surveys found that those who<lb/>
ate in the dining hall, particularly at the<lb/>
salad bar. were more likely to be<lb/>
exposed to the norovirus or get sick,<lb/>
health officials said.<lb/>
Officials were unable to determine<lb/>
if any one particular item at the<lb/>
salad bar made students sick, said<lb/>
Donna King, a health department<lb/>
spokeswoman They also couldn't<lb/>
determine how the contamination<lb/>
occurred<lb/>
The health department has reviewed<lb/>
"all procedures used by UNC dining<lb/>
services and found no procedural<lb/>
problems with sanitation and<lb/>
food-handling processes said<lb/>
officials.<lb/>
Mother pleads guilty In<lb/>
daughter's drowning death<lb/>
GREENSBORO (AP) - A woman who<lb/>
twice tried to kill herself has pleaded<lb/>
guilty to killing her daughter whose<lb/>
drowning death originally was ruled<lb/>
an accident<lb/>
Trianice Lynn Akins pleacoU guilty<lb/>
Monday in Guilford County Superior<lb/>
Court, two years to the day after her<lb/>
daughter's death, to second-degree<lb/>
murder In the death of 8-month-<lb/>
old Milalia. She was sentenced<lb/>
to between nine years and 11<lb/>
years and seven months in prison,<lb/>
where she will receive psychiatric<lb/>
treatment<lb/>
Akins confessed to holding Milalia<lb/>
underwater in a bathtub.<lb/>
Akins confession came after she had<lb/>
walked onto Interstate 75 in Atlanta<lb/>
and stepped in front of an oncoming<lb/>
18-wheeler<lb/>
She survived the June 2002 incident,<lb/>
fracturing her skull and a leg. In a<lb/>
hospital's psychiatric unit, Akins<lb/>
finally confessed her secret, saying<lb/>
she heard voices telling her to kill<lb/>
the baby.<lb/>
National<lb/>
Teen charged with first-degree<lb/>
murder in killing of classmate in<lb/>
Miami school<lb/>
PALMETTO BAY. Fla. (AP) - A<lb/>
14-year-old boy is charged with<lb/>
murder in the slaying of a classmate,<lb/>
a musician and baseball player who<lb/>
was found bleeding to death in a<lb/>
school bathroom.<lb/>
The two boys "knew each other<lb/>
very well said Chief Pete Cuccaro<lb/>
of the Miami-Dade Schools Police<lb/>
Department. He refused to elaborate<lb/>
on their relationship<lb/>
Jaime Rodrigo Gough, 14. was<lb/>
found early Tuesday at Southwood<lb/>
Middle School, a magnet school<lb/>
specializing in visual and performing<lb/>
arts, authorities said.<lb/>
Police would not comment on the<lb/>
boy's wounds. The Miami Herald said<lb/>
his throat apparently was cut.<lb/>
Michael Hernandez was charged<lb/>
with first-degree murder late Tuesday,<lb/>
police said. There was no immediate<lb/>
word on a court appearance.<lb/>
Bush faces dilemmas in new<lb/>
Iraq intelligence panel<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush's<lb/>
decision to appoint a commission<lb/>
on Iraq intelligence was intended to<lb/>
take pressure off a potentially<lb/>
explosive political issue. But setting<lb/>
up the commission offers its own<lb/>
dangers<lb/>
If the commission is truly independent,<lb/>
as the president has promised, it<lb/>
could examine not only the work of<lb/>
intelligence agencies, but also how the<lb/>
administration handled intelligence.<lb/>
It could make demands for access<lb/>
to Bush's secret intelligence briefings,<lb/>
as has the congressionally created<lb/>
commission investigating the Sept.<lb/>
11,2001, attacks.<lb/>
But if the commission members are<lb/>
seen as too close to Bush, the panel's<lb/>
credibility could be questioned<lb/>
Democratic leaders have already<lb/>
expressed doubts that a commission<lb/>
appointed entirely by the president<lb/>
can be impartial<lb/>
Bush may formally announce the<lb/>
investigation as early as Wednesday.<lb/>
The White House already has begun<lb/>
defending it.<lb/>
World<lb/>
Bird flu death toll rises to<lb/>
15; China sets up new flu<lb/>
headquarters<lb/>
BANGKOK. Thailand (AP) - Asia's<lb/>
human death toll from bird flu rose lo<lb/>
15 Wednesday while China addressed<lb/>
its broadening zone of infected poultry<lb/>
with a new bird flu headquarters and<lb/>
Singaporeans turned in pet chickens<lb/>
for slaughter.<lb/>
Health experts say the wide range<lb/>
of the bird flu striking Asia's poultry<lb/>
boosts chances that the virus<lb/>
could mutate into a global menace<lb/>
for people, but say the disease is<lb/>
"nowhere close" lo being declared<lb/>
a pandemic<lb/>
Most human cases have been traced<lb/>
directly to contact with sick birds,<lb/>
and although human-to-human<lb/>
transmission has not been ruled out<lb/>
in the case of one Vietnamese family,<lb/>
the experts say there is no sign of<lb/>
a new strain that can easily Infect<lb/>
many people<lb/>
Serbia-Montenegro's marks<lb/>
first birthday In limbo<lb/>
BELGRADE. Serbia-Montenegro (AP)<lb/>
- The creation of Serbia-Montenegro<lb/>
was meant to stop the final dissolution<lb/>
of Yugoslavia by keeping its last two<lb/>
republics together But a year after<lb/>
its birth, the successor state to the<lb/>
Balkan federation appears a limited<lb/>
success<lb/>
There were high hopes when Serbia-<lb/>
Montenegro was created Feb. 4,2003<lb/>
under an EU-negotiated deal that<lb/>
created a country with two nearly<lb/>
sovereign republics loosely linked<lb/>
by a small, central administration.<lb/>
The deal aimed to defuse a strong<lb/>
pro-independence movement in<lb/>
Montenegro and an emerging one<lb/>
in Serbia. Back then, the republics'<lb/>
leaders grudgingly pledged to<lb/>
rebuild joint institutions, a common<lb/>
market and run defense and foreign<lb/>
affairs together.<lb/>
One year on. however, the republics<lb/>
cooperate very little, and separatists<lb/>
in both republics eagerly await 2006,<lb/>
when the EU-brokered deal allows for<lb/>
independence referendums.<lb/>
While defense and foreign affairs are<lb/>
mostly run jointly, a common market<lb/>
remains an elusive goal - the republics<lb/>
have failed to fully harmonize taxes<lb/>
and customs rates for dozens of key<lb/>
agriculture products.<lb/>
Books<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
in bankers' boxes, wrapped<lb/>
in white paper with the<lb/>
spine down to avoid damage<lb/>
on the trip from Maryland.<lb/>
The collection includes books that<lb/>
discuss the discovery of Anthrax,<lb/>
the first heart surgery and a gnat<lb/>
deal on Military medicine.<lb/>
There is also one written by<lb/>
I'aracelsus in 1566 In a mixture<lb/>
of German and Latin and talks<lb/>
about the relationship between<lb/>
environmental settings and<lb/>
certain diseases. I'aracelsus is<lb/>
Sometimes referred to as "the<lb/>
father of modern medicine<lb/>
"He I'aracelsusl believed that<lb/>
diseases came from elsewhere <lb/>
that they were external. That was<lb/>
a big deal in the 16th century<lb/>
said Ruth Moskop, I'h.P, curator<lb/>
of I listory Collections.<lb/>
Another rare piece of the col-<lb/>
lection is a large folio by Ashley<lb/>
Cooper, one of the well-known<lb/>
authors of medicine in the early<lb/>
19th century. The book talks<lb/>
about the condition of hernia<lb/>
surgery, new in its time.<lb/>
Spencer said what really sticks<lb/>
out arc the magnificent illustra-<lb/>
tions made from natural dyes in<lb/>
multiple layers.<lb/>
She also said details like those<lb/>
in the folio are uncommon for<lb/>
that era.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Information<lb/>
Dr. Karel B. Absolon donated<lb/>
the new History of Medicine<lb/>
collection to Laupus Library,<lb/>
but books will not be avail-<lb/>
able for student viewing until<lb/>
Founders Week.<lb/>
Report news students need to know, tec<lb/>
Accepting applications for SWFF WRTERS ABB<lb/>
Learn Investigative reporting skills I ?<lb/>
Must have at least a 20 fiPA HMi<lb/>
Apply at our oftm located on the 2nd Boor ot the Student PubHcaBons Building, or cal 328-6366<lb/>
You drank.<lb/>
You danced.<lb/>
You had sett)<lb/>
fWSSinj<lb/>
Sor"<lb/>
e-Hiinj ?<lb/>
Free Pregnancy Tests<lb/>
Call Carolina Pregnancy Center<lb/>
lMXWJ-HEU' or 757-0003<lb/>
845 Johns Hopkini IV Suite II<lb/>
(arms (cum Stanton Sq.)<lb/>
KwwfHoliiuprtgiuitcyctattr.orfi<lb/>
Mark A. Ward<lb/>
Attorney at Law<lb/>
Board Certified Specialist In State Criminal Law<lb/>
15 Years Experience In Criminal Defense<lb/>
rm ? Traffic Offenses<lb/>
? ? ABC Violations<lb/>
? Misdemeanors<lb/>
? Drug Offenses<lb/>
? DMV Hearings<lb/>
? State &amp; Federal Courts<lb/>
l'S visa<lb/>
252.752.7529 ? www.mark-ward.com ? mward? mark-ward.com<lb/>
GORDON'S<lb/>
for<lb/>
Snowboarding<lb/>
Never Summerly<lb/>
686<lb/>
Cold As Ice<lb/>
Quicksilver<lb/>
Roxy<lb/>
BurtonBonfire<lb/>
K-2North Face<lb/>
ColumbiaSalomon<lb/>
GORDON'S<lb/>
golf, ski, &amp; snowboarding<lb/>
207 E. Arlington Blvd. ? 756-1003<lb/>
Monday-Satuday<lb/>
9arri-7pm<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
lpni-5pm<lb/>
$5.00 OFF<lb/>
wStudent ID<lb/>
$35 lounge &amp; Lahret<lb/>
$30 Navel &amp; Eyebrow<lb/>
Garry's Accepts:<lb/>
Tattoo Studios<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
429 Evans Street<lb/>
252-758-SKIN<lb/>
Original Location<lb/>
4685 Hwy-13<lb/>
252-756-0600<lb/>
M-F 1-9pm - Sal 12-10pm<lb/>
et tan without the sand!<lb/>
eat Books at<lb/>
reat Prices!<lb/>
Friends oj Sheppard Memorial Library<lb/>
USED BOOK SALE<lb/>
Friday, Feb. 6, g a.m 8 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, Feb J, g a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, Feb 8, l-4p.m, <lb/>
Bag day- $5 per paper grocery bagof books<lb/>
Willis Building, First &amp; Reade Streets.<lb/>
Spring Break is 2 months away!<lb/>
Unlimited Tanning for s25<lb/>
Home of the<lb/>
Guaranteed Tan in<lb/>
9 Minutes or Less<lb/>
Try the Sun Capsule<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0003"/><lb/>
2 05 04<lb/>
THL EAST CAROLINIAN ? NEWS<lb/>
PAGE A3<lb/>
SHAKE THE CHILL WITH SOME HOT<lb/>
FUN FROM ECU RECREATIONS"<lb/>
Spring Leagues now forming<lb/>
Thursday Night League (max 4 person teams)<lb/>
Registration Feb. 3rd at 6 p. in the Bowling Alley<lb/>
League play begins Feb. 5th at 7 p.<lb/>
TALK IS CHEAP!<lb/>
LET YOUR SKILLS DD THE TALKING<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
lonWed. 9 a.m-11:30 p.m.<lb/>
Thur. 9 a.m-12:30 a.m.<lb/>
Fri 1 p.ml :30 a.m.<lb/>
Sat 12noon-1:30 a.m.<lb/>
Sat. 1 p.m-11:30 p.m.<lb/>
.500 Change Games<lb/>
Sunday 1-6 (plus .50t shoe rental)<lb/>
Dollar Daze<lb/>
Monday, Wednesday, Friday 1-6<lb/>
(plus .50C shoe rental)<lb/>
Rating professors is online trend<lb/>
Reliability of Web<lb/>
sites questionable<lb/>
LUKE SPENCER<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
O<lb/>
Stats<lb/>
RateMyProlessor.com<lb/>
Ratings: 1,503,714<lb/>
Professors: 312,452<lb/>
Schools: 3,720<lb/>
As ECU expands and more<lb/>
professors are hired each year,<lb/>
many students worry about<lb/>
taking a class with an unknown<lb/>
professor.<lb/>
However, a few Web sites<lb/>
have developed to allow students<lb/>
to view other students' opinions<lb/>
of professors.<lb/>
Sites such as<lb/>
Katemyprofessors.com,<lb/>
Rateaprof.comand I'ickaprof.com<lb/>
allow students to post ratings of<lb/>
professors they've had based<lb/>
on easiness, helpfulness, clar-<lb/>
ity, appearance and additional<lb/>
comments.<lb/>
At Rutemyprofessors.com,<lb/>
1,014 ECU professors are posted<lb/>
at least once out of 1,386 total<lb/>
faculty members - almost 75<lb/>
percent ol the total.<lb/>
Many students openly<lb/>
embrace the sites as a great way<lb/>
to learn about professors' teach-<lb/>
ing and grading styles.<lb/>
"It's a good idea because the<lb/>
size of ECU prevents you from<lb/>
getting to know much about pro-<lb/>
fessors, especially when it comes<lb/>
Students get a chance to judge their professors outside the<lb/>
classroom with the anonymity the Internet provides.<lb/>
to general education classes<lb/>
said Joe l.ytle, sophomore clas-<lb/>
sical civilization major.<lb/>
Of course, participation in<lb/>
these ratings is completely vol-<lb/>
untary and therefore isn't in any<lb/>
way a scientific survey ol student<lb/>
opinion. Both students and fac-<lb/>
ulty are mindful of this and warn<lb/>
others to be as well.<lb/>
"These sites can be helpful<lb/>
to students if they want basic<lb/>
information about professors,<lb/>
but that's only if students<lb/>
fill out their comments in an<lb/>
honest and truthful way said<lb/>
Dorothy Clayton, I'h.D, coordi-<lb/>
nator of the Center for Faculty<lb/>
Development.<lb/>
" nmnients on things, such<lb/>
as appearance, however, are<lb/>
really unnecessary and can be a<lb/>
distraction to the good such sites<lb/>
could perform<lb/>
Clayton said at the end<lb/>
of each semester students are<lb/>
given the opportunity to com-<lb/>
plete the Student Opinion on<lb/>
Instruction Survey in order to<lb/>
give the departments feedback<lb/>
on their professors and classes.<lb/>
I he surveys are carefully stud-<lb/>
see RATE page A10<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0004"/><lb/>
PAGEA4<lb/>
THF EAST CAROLINIAN ? NEWS<lb/>
2-05-04<lb/>
Weird News<lb/>
Man takes a software approach<lb/>
to naming his son - version 2.0<lb/>
HOLLAND Mich (AP) - Tacking Jr<lb/>
or II onto a boy's name is too common,<lb/>
a new father decided, so the<lb/>
self-described engineering geek<lb/>
took a software approach to naming<lb/>
his newborn son<lb/>
Jon Blake Cusack talked his wife.<lb/>
Jamie, into naming their son Jon<lb/>
Blake Cusack 20<lb/>
Version 2.0 was born Tuesday<lb/>
at Holland Community Hospital,<lb/>
and the proud parents took him<lb/>
home Friday<lb/>
"I wanted to find something different<lb/>
to name him besides Jon Blake<lb/>
Cusack. who is self-employed<lb/>
with Westshore Design and Cusack<lb/>
Music, told the Holland Sentinel<lb/>
He said he had the idea for a<lb/>
few months, and spent the better<lb/>
part of that time persuading his<lb/>
wife lo go along<lb/>
There's nothing fishy about the<lb/>
tale of Dory<lb/>
EAGAN, Minn (AP) -Teacher Linda<lb/>
Krienke said a fire broke out<lb/>
on a desktop in her classroom<lb/>
around 1 am Saturday, causing<lb/>
enough smoke to set off<lb/>
the alarm at Trinity Lone Oak<lb/>
Lutheran School. But when<lb/>
firefighters arrived, they found<lb/>
only glowing embers on the desk<lb/>
The heat had caused a fish bowl<lb/>
on the desk to explode, and the<lb/>
water put out the fire, Krienke<lb/>
said One of the firefighters spotted<lb/>
the fish, Dory, alive on the floor<lb/>
and hollered for a glass of water<lb/>
"She's a Beta, so they're used<lb/>
to breathing air said Krienke They're<lb/>
a Chinese fish and if they re in<lb/>
China they just live in puddles If<lb/>
one dries up. they flop to the next<lb/>
one"<lb/>
Camel roams Sweden road<lb/>
during snowstorm<lb/>
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - It<lb/>
look some convincing before police<lb/>
would respond lo reports of a camel<lb/>
on a southern Sweden road in the<lb/>
middle of a snowstorm.<lb/>
"We were somewhat doubtful<lb/>
at first said police spokesman<lb/>
Sten-Ove Fransson in Skoevde,<lb/>
162 miles south of Stockholm,<lb/>
of Friday's incident "But then<lb/>
more people called, so we were<lb/>
finally convinced that there really<lb/>
was a camel gone astray on<lb/>
the road"<lb/>
Before police arrived, friends of<lb/>
the camels owner came and led it<lb/>
back to a stable, where it has been<lb/>
kept while awaiting a home in a<lb/>
new bam.<lb/>
Owner Anneli Arvidsson said in<lb/>
a telephone interview that the<lb/>
22-year-old Siberian camel. Emat,<lb/>
might have wandered off because<lb/>
of the absence of his usual<lb/>
companion, a horse<lb/>
"On Friday, the horse had been<lb/>
taken inside the stable and the<lb/>
camel was left alone in the pasture,<lb/>
which probably made him feel<lb/>
lonely she said<lb/>
"Go before you go<lb/>
MINNEAPOLIS !AP) - That's the<lb/>
slogan under consideration for a new<lb/>
campaign in Minneapolis to combat<lb/>
public urination.<lb/>
The bar businesc is thriving in the<lb/>
city's Warehouse Distnct. and many<lb/>
patrons are apparently leaving with<lb/>
a full bladder<lb/>
The Downtown Minneapolis<lb/>
Neighborhood Association plans to<lb/>
spend $10,000 in an effort to convince<lb/>
patrons lo use the bar restrooms<lb/>
before they call it a night.<lb/>
It's tke season to<lb/>
skow your (ove<lb/>
Come to<lb/>
Sastbroolt<lb/>
Village Greert<lb/>
tyartments<lb/>
fot<lb/>
out<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
CAMPUS DINING<lb/>
Sweets for your<lb/>
Sweetheart -<lb/>
Valentine U Day Gift<lb/>
Idea at Pirate<lb/>
Market<lb/>
Use your<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
Bucks &amp;<lb/>
Save 7<lb/>
Valentine's<lb/>
Gift Items Also<lb/>
Available At:<lb/>
The Spot, Croatan, &amp;<lb/>
The Wright Place<lb/>
"Skam If our Heart" Blood Drive<lb/>
on Friday, February Gtk from 12 til 5l<lb/>
Save a (ire and enjoij rood, rW &amp; free stuff<lb/>
One Day Only 12 Deposit Oral<lb/>
Don't miss your chance to save ffll<lb/>
Pag onkj l deposit for 1- &amp; 3-bedrooms<lb/>
during the Mood drive &amp; move m whenever you choose<lb/>
this Spring or Summer 200411<lb/>
Jj O-ftStOrOOfe Lr. (OffGr??BlHlB1WTui?Iw2l?Wl(X?iSt.l<lb/>
?pre 752-5100 SmoiL etvq@nowoiL?et<lb/>
Visit us at www.eastbrooWiagegreen.c0tn.<lb/>
TEC is now hiring staff writers. Apply at our office located<lb/>
on the 2nd floor of the Student Publications Building.<lb/>
? Experience required<lb/>
?Must have a 2.0GPA<lb/>
University Suites Apartments<lb/>
Why Settle for limited patio space when you can<lb/>
have spacious Indoor and outdoor living!<lb/>
SUP m<lb/>
J; :l I .<lb/>
<lb/>
n? KnV,WM<lb/>
AROVt<lb/>
ft<lb/>
CLOStI<lb/>
i<lb/>
FLLX RUOM<lb/>
Ull 10 ?<lb/>
(<lb/>
liAU'JM<lb/>
OPENTommw<lb/>
?ii<lb/>
BEDBflQMJ<lb/>
First Floor<lb/>
Plan<lb/>
Second Floor Plan<lb/>
Third Floor Plan<lb/>
Now leasing for fall 2004!<lb/>
? Townhome Style-No one above or below you ? 3 bedroombath<lb/>
? Maximum Privacy-Only one bedroom per floor!<lb/>
? Parking at your front door ? Extra large brick patio<lb/>
? FREE Tanning, Pool, Clubhouse<lb/>
? Close to campus ? Unlike anything else!<lb/>
Stop by today and see how<lb/>
University Suites offers you more!<lb/>
University Suites<lb/>
www.universitysuites.net ? 551-3800<lb/>
Charles Blvd<lb/>
Evans Street<lb/>
Located at the corner of Arlington Blvd. and Evans Street - behind the Amoco Gas Station<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0005"/><lb/>
PAGE A5<lb/>
2-05-04<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Editor-in-chief<lb/>
Michelle A. McLeod<lb/>
edltor@theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
252.328.6366<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/>
Asst. News Editor<lb/>
John Bream<lb/>
Asst. 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/>
777e 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 77ie 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/>
And he's right<lb/>
- 'It's time"<lb/>
for students<lb/>
to don their<lb/>
purple and<lb/>
gold and sup-<lb/>
port our bas-<lb/>
ketball team<lb/>
every minute<lb/>
of every play<lb/>
at every<lb/>
game.<lb/>
We're proud of the ECU men's team lor the effort<lb/>
they continue to display on the court every play<lb/>
of every game.<lb/>
Regardless of the score of the game, the<lb/>
talent level of the team we're playing against<lb/>
and whether or not there are a lot of fans in<lb/>
attendance, the guys nlay with a tremendous<lb/>
amount of heart and pride.<lb/>
In a college-hoop crazy state, ECU has to<lb/>
compete against the other major schools to<lb/>
get good players.<lb/>
Kudos to Head Coach Bill Herrion for getting<lb/>
the most out of his players every game and for<lb/>
always having a solid game plan that usually<lb/>
gives us a chance to win.<lb/>
Regardless of our winloss record, we're certain<lb/>
we have the right man at the helm.<lb/>
ECU made a tremendous jump from the Colo-<lb/>
nial Athletic Association into one of the toughest<lb/>
basketball conferences in the nation.<lb/>
We respect that our team has been competi-<lb/>
tive in games, especially at Minges Coliseum,<lb/>
and makes every basketball game an exciting<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
What's indeed sad is the lack of fans at home<lb/>
basketball games. At a school of 22,000 stt<lb/>
dents, we only average about 5,000 fans per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The only time games sell out or are even<lb/>
remotely full is when students flock to the<lb/>
games to see the other teams play.<lb/>
As Pirates, we should support all of our sports<lb/>
teams - not just football. What's even more<lb/>
embarrassing is the complete lack of atte<lb/>
dance at women's basketball games - ai ??<lb/>
they're the best sports story ECU has seen<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
While we know that ECU is not the caliber of<lb/>
basketball school as Carolina, Duke or Wake<lb/>
Forest, our players deserve admiration for what<lb/>
they do night in and night out.<lb/>
As Herrion said earlier this year, "It's time<lb/>
And he's right - "It's time" for students to don<lb/>
their purple and gold and support our basket-<lb/>
ball team every minute of every play at every<lb/>
game.<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@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Tjgfog fey<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
ECU officials should consider<lb/>
students safety, well-being<lb/>
Administration decides hmmh<lb/>
to hold classes despite<lb/>
ice, snow<lb/>
MIKE MASHBURN<lb/>
WEB EDITOR<lb/>
I'm disappointed in the<lb/>
administration at ECU, and that's<lb/>
to say I hi' least.<lb/>
After Sunday's snowstorm<lb/>
mixed with Ice thai left roads<lb/>
completely covered, ECU officials<lb/>
planned Sunday night to resume<lb/>
classes at 11 a.m. Monday morn-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Wow, was I surprised, espe-<lb/>
cially since i Ireeni ille Boulevard<lb/>
was coated with an inch of ice.<lb/>
All other area roads - especially<lb/>
Fifth Street - win- yjlid .sheets<lb/>
of fee.<lb/>
Only alter checking the<lb/>
Web site Monday morning at<lb/>
7:50a.m. did I, along with many<lb/>
other students, see that officials<lb/>
had finally given in and closed<lb/>
ECU for the day.<lb/>
Mow could they even expect<lb/>
to hold classes on Monday?<lb/>
The solid Ice covering the roads<lb/>
wasn't going to magically disap-<lb/>
pear overnight, forecasters pre-<lb/>
dicted temperatures well below<lb/>
freezing, along with more snow<lb/>
and Ice,<lb/>
The dec ision to close ECU<lb/>
should have been made on<lb/>
Sunday, instead of Monday<lb/>
morning.<lb/>
( ommuters and other stu-<lb/>
dents who had traveled out of<lb/>
town for the weekend were forced<lb/>
back to ECU in very hazard-<lb/>
ous conditions on Sunday to<lb/>
'attend' class Monday, only to<lb/>
find out on Monday morning<lb/>
it was closed.<lb/>
first hand, 1 saw four people<lb/>
fall down on campus  which<lb/>
wasn't surprising since several<lb/>
walkway areas around campus<lb/>
had little to no salt or sand.<lb/>
In the administration's<lb/>
defense, some areas were well-<lb/>
coatcd, but these were mostly<lb/>
areas surrounding the Which-<lb/>
ard complex, which happens<lb/>
to he administrative offices. I<lb/>
strongly douht this was coin-<lb/>
cidental.<lb/>
ECU's official alert Weh<lb/>
site asked students to  use<lb/>
caution when on campus To<lb/>
the administration: a word of<lb/>
thanks for your "overwhelm-<lb/>
ing" concern about the safety<lb/>
of ECU'S faculty, staff and stu-<lb/>
dents. A word of caution-along<lb/>
with common sense, should<lb/>
he passed along to officials<lb/>
making decisions that subject<lb/>
us to those conditions faced<lb/>
last Tuesday.<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
Janet's got nothing on Budweiser<lb/>
Oops! Did I say "genital"? I<lb/>
mean) general! Hey - it was a<lb/>
completely unscripted, unfore-<lb/>
seen vocabulary malfunction.<lb/>
Don't sh the l C n me!<lb/>
But now that we are talking<lb/>
about body pans, how 'bout that<lb/>
Super Bowl?<lb/>
Janet's peekaboob may be<lb/>
getting all the attention (and<lb/>
how do you think her other boob<lb/>
(eels?), but actually it was just<lb/>
one brief entry in the eve-<lb/>
ning's gala salute to Sexual<lb/>
Humiliation.<lb/>
Shaken, shattered and shaved<lb/>
- that's howbs served up all-<lb/>
Vmerli an manhood on Sunday.<lb/>
And mini) ol the credit must<lb/>
go to Budweiser, which seems<lb/>
mi ;1( -handedly lo have invented<lb/>
the new marketing strategy<lb/>
"Buy our beer and something<lb/>
terrible will happen to your<lb/>
whoozil<lb/>
In one ad. tor instance, Man<lb/>
No. I has Ins dog fetch a Bud<lb/>
light, then asi ! bis friend, "What<lb/>
can your dog do?" Whereupon<lb/>
Man No. 2's dog chomps Into<lb/>
Man No. I's privates, causing<lb/>
him to relinquish his beer and,<lb/>
presumably, any hopes ol having<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Makes me scared to get any-<lb/>
where near a Bud, arid I don't even<lb/>
have a you-know -what.<lb/>
Working thai emasculation<lb/>
magic for all it's worth, another<lb/>
Bud ad leal in eseclric the Enter-<lb/>
tainer sauntering Into what looks<lb/>
like a massage parlor only to learn,<lb/>
too late, he is In tor a bikini wax.<lb/>
Oohl Painful and girly. Two<lb/>
points!<lb/>
As for the ad where the car-<lb/>
riage horse pulling a romantic<lb/>
couple cuts more cheese than<lb/>
Kraft, what can I say?<lb/>
Sure, it reinforces the<lb/>
crucial pass-some-gaspop-a-<lb/>
Bud connection, but it deliv-<lb/>
ered no real crippling sexual<lb/>
consequences. How did CBS let<lb/>
it slip in?<lb/>
Perhaps next year the horse<lb/>
can mistake part of the man for<lb/>
a carrot.<lb/>
fortunately, the ad in which<lb/>
a monkey puts the moves on a<lb/>
major babe makes up for any<lb/>
dip in Bud's deviancy level<lb/>
by suggesting that a guy who<lb/>
leaves his girlfriend on the<lb/>
couch may face serious compe-<lb/>
tition from a primate. Message:<lb/>
Drink Bud - lose out to a<lb/>
monkey.<lb/>
These ads were interspersed<lb/>
with about a million more for<lb/>
ED drugs (not to be confused<lb/>
with LED drugs, which make<lb/>
your penis light up). One even<lb/>
warned viewers to call the<lb/>
doctor if their erection lasted<lb/>
more than lour hours.<lb/>
And then, of course, there<lb/>
was the halftime show, which<lb/>
featured so much bumping<lb/>
and grabbing, most men were<lb/>
left wondering, "Am I the<lb/>
only one without a four-hour<lb/>
erection?<lb/>
It's enough to make a<lb/>
guy grab a beer. Or a Levltra.<lb/>
Or never mind.<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
Fixing the Patriot Act<lb/>
It is ironic that the USA Patriot<lb/>
Act, enacted just sis weeks after<lb/>
the terrorist attacks ol Sept. II,<lb/>
2001, contains some provisions<lb/>
that seem to abridge certain con-<lb/>
stitutional rights.<lb/>
These flaws either were<lb/>
ignored or trivialized when the<lb/>
measure was enacted, and the<lb/>
need to correct them remains<lb/>
a matter of great importance.<lb/>
Instead, as he said In his Slate ol<lb/>
the Union address, President Bush<lb/>
wants Congress to renew the at i as<lb/>
is rather than permit several ol its<lb/>
provisions to "sunset" at the end<lb/>
of next year.<lb/>
There's no good reason to<lb/>
make a decision on sunsets quite<lb/>
yet; Congress would do better<lb/>
to reassess the act in an open<lb/>
debate sometime in early 2005.<lb/>
Meantime, several of the flaws<lb/>
contained in the original mea-<lb/>
sure do deserve the prompt atten-<lb/>
tion of Congress, beginning with<lb/>
the House Judiciary Committee<lb/>
and its chairman, Kcp. F. James<lb/>
Sensenbrenner jr K-U'is,<lb/>
A worthy reform bill called<lb/>
the Security and Freedom<lb/>
Ensured Act would rein in the<lb/>
federal government's Immense<lb/>
power under the Patriot Act but<lb/>
wouldn't undermine the effec-<lb/>
tiveness of law enforcement. The<lb/>
SAFE hill has united activists on<lb/>
the political left and right: Sena<lb/>
tors such asRuSS Fcingold, l)-Wis<lb/>
Edward Kennedy, D-Mass John<lb/>
Sununu, R-N.ll and Larry Craig,<lb/>
K-Idaho and organizations such<lb/>
as the American Conservative<lb/>
Union and the American Civil<lb/>
liberties Union.<lb/>
Perhaps the most odious<lb/>
feature of the USA Patriot Act is<lb/>
Section 215. It allows the FBI to<lb/>
order any person or organization<lb/>
to surrender "any tangible thing"<lb/>
- including library, medical and<lb/>
financial records - so long as the<lb/>
agency certified that the order was<lb/>
part of an investigation against<lb/>
terrorism or secret intelligence<lb/>
activities. The FBI is not required<lb/>
to supply any reason for believing<lb/>
t hat the target ol the investigation<lb/>
is a criminal.<lb/>
The SAFE bill would not repeal<lb/>
Section 21S, but it would require<lb/>
the government to show "specific<lb/>
and articulable facts giving reason<lb/>
to believe" that the target of the<lb/>
search is a suspected terrorist or<lb/>
a spy.<lb/>
The change 'woW-iTm<lb/>
cripple the fight against terror-<lb/>
ism; instead, it would require<lb/>
the FBI to focus its attention on<lb/>
criminal suspects, not law-abid-<lb/>
ing citizens.<lb/>
The SAFE bill does not chal-<lb/>
lenge these changes. Rather,<lb/>
it addresses blatant flaws that<lb/>
resulted from thehastydraftingof<lb/>
the Patriot Act and that probably<lb/>
would have been deleted had the<lb/>
measure been fully scrutinized<lb/>
by Congress. Now, more than<lb/>
two years later, it's long past time<lb/>
to repair this law.<lb/>
"If you listen to all my records, you know I<lb/>
always take time out to give thanks.<lb/>
In this business you're always going to have<lb/>
to engage in a lot of things you might not<lb/>
want to, but it never takes away from my<lb/>
spirituality. No matter what happens, that will<lb/>
always be there<lb/>
Missy Elliot<lb/>
SingerRapperProducer<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0006"/><lb/>
PAGt A6<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? NEWS<lb/>
2-05-04<lb/>
'Penates ftove<lb/>
APARTMENT COMMUNITY<lb/>
Kb01<lb/>
nt<lb/>
Mfi<lb/>
let?et in<lb/>
c'ud<lb/>
edf<lb/>
4 Be<lb/>
dfo0<lb/>
Oos<lb/>
G<lb/>
. nPOOS<lb/>
Vtv<lb/>
M2&amp;<lb/>
V<lb/>
X?<lb/>
otfs<lb/>
Sa<lb/>
17(1 OIL<lb/>
'all<lb/>
r 'Wall<lb/>
NtfVtfv<lb/>
bo<lb/>
State-of-the-art<lb/>
Fitness Center<lb/>
Individual Lease<lb/>
Program<lb/>
Utilities Included!<lb/>
($160 Allowance Per Month)<lb/>
cated-<lb/>
annj<lb/>
n?B<lb/>
ecs<lb/>
OPEN HOUSE<lb/>
February 7,11 a.m4 p.m<lb/>
Office Hours<lb/>
M-F 8:30 a.m7 p.m<lb/>
Sat. 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.<lb/>
252.752.9995<lb/>
On ECU Bus Route<lb/>
3305 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Sunday 12am 5p.m. www.piratescoveapartments.com<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0007"/><lb/>
PAGE M<lb/>
7<lb/>
2 05 04<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
TO PUCE 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/>
5c 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/>
FORRElll<lb/>
pinebrook apt. 758-4015- 1&amp;2 BR<lb/>
apts, dishwasher, CD, central air<lb/>
&amp; heat, pool, ECU bus line, 9 or 12<lb/>
month leases. Pets allowed. Rent<lb/>
includes water, sewer, &amp; cable.<lb/>
2 BD 2 BA Wyndham Circle Duplex.<lb/>
Available NOW! Large backyard,<lb/>
good parking, close to ECU, J595.00<lb/>
mo fresh paint. Call 321-4802.<lb/>
For rent- 2 bedroom, 1 bath, brick<lb/>
duplex, Stancill Drive. Walking<lb/>
distance to ECU, central air. J525<lb/>
month. Pets OK wfee. Call 353-2717<lb/>
or 353-2713.<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/>
Apartments for rent: 1, 2 &amp; 3<lb/>
bedrooms, Beech Street Villas,<lb/>
Cypress Gardens, Cotanche Street,<lb/>
Gladiolus, asmine, 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/>
Duplexes for rent: 2 St 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/>
Pinebrook Apt. 758-4015- 1 &amp; 2<lb/>
BR apts, dishwaslter, GD, central<lb/>
air St heat, pool, ECU bus line, 9 or<lb/>
12 month leases. Pets allowed. Rent<lb/>
ln IiicIps water, sewer, &amp; cable.<lb/>
Sublease Available NOW! 2 bedroom<lb/>
1 bath in Wyndham Court. End unit<lb/>
with private deck. Pets allowed.<lb/>
J405.00 per month. Contact Bear<lb/>
Robinson (252)258-5526.<lb/>
$475 Large 1 BR apt. with fireplace,<lb/>
24-hour workout facilities,<lb/>
cable, quiet neighborhood.<lb/>
No undergraduates. Renting<lb/>
immediately. (252)258-6622. ?<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/>
1 Spring Break Vacations! Cancun,<lb/>
lamaica, Acapulco, Bahamas, St<lb/>
Florida. Best Parties, Best Hotels, Best<lb/>
Prices! Group Discounts, Organizers<lb/>
Travel Freel Space is limited! Book<lb/>
Now &amp; Save! 1-800-234-7007.<lb/>
www.endlesssummertours.com<lb/>
For rent- 2 bedroom, 1 bath, brick<lb/>
duplex, Stancill Drive. Walking<lb/>
distance to ECU. Central air. $525<lb/>
month. Pets OK wfee. Call 353-2717<lb/>
or 353-2713.<lb/>
Sublease for one bedroom in Pirate's<lb/>
Cove. Rent for 300 instead of 360.<lb/>
Call immediately 252-312-5859.<lb/>
Female only.<lb/>
flOOfTlfTIM UJflflTEo<lb/>
Two Female Roommates wanted to<lb/>
share a 4 bedroom 3 bath townhouse<lb/>
at Sterling for fall '04. 'Almost<lb/>
furnished Call for more details<lb/>
(910)520-5964 or (252)412-4998.<lb/>
Female Roommate needed to sub-<lb/>
lease apt. @ Pirate's Cove for 300<lb/>
a month. All utilities included. Call<lb/>
Kristen (252)551 -3849 or Melanie at<lb/>
(919)818-3403.<lb/>
fOft SALE<lb/>
1983 Knox 14' x 60' Singlewide<lb/>
Trailer. Partially furnished, plywood<lb/>
floors, plus more. Asking 8,500. Call<lb/>
927-2576 or 923-0075 for more<lb/>
info.<lb/>
help mm<lb/>
Help wanted for stock and sales.<lb/>
Heavy Lifting Required. Apply at<lb/>
the Youth Shop Boutique, Arlington<lb/>
Village, Greenville 756-2855.<lb/>
The Greenville Recreation St Parks<lb/>
Department is recruiting part-time<lb/>
youth soccer toadies for the indoor<lb/>
soccer program. Applicants must<lb/>
possess a good knowledge of soccer<lb/>
skills and have the ability and patience<lb/>
to work with youth. Applicants must<lb/>
be able to coach young people<lb/>
ages 3-18 in soccer fundamentals.<lb/>
Hours are from 3:30 pm to 9 pm,<lb/>
Monday-Friday with some weekend<lb/>
coaching. Flexible hours according<lb/>
to class schedules. This program<lb/>
will run from March 8 to mid May.<lb/>
Salary start at $6.25 per hour. Apply<lb/>
at the City of Greenville, Human<lb/>
Resources Department, 201 Martin<lb/>
L. King Dr. For more information,<lb/>
please contact the Athletic Office at<lb/>
329-4550, Monday through Friday,<lb/>
10 am until 7 pm.<lb/>
Up to $500Wk processing mail. Get<lb/>
paid for each piece. Create your own<lb/>
schedule. (626)821-4061.<lb/>
Work Hard! Play Hard! Change<lb/>
Lives! Girls resident camp looking<lb/>
lor counselors, lifeguards,<lb/>
wranglers, boating staff, crafts,<lb/>
nature, unit leaders, business<lb/>
manager, and health supervisor.<lb/>
$200 $350week! May 22-August<lb/>
1. Free Housing! 1-800-672-2148<lb/>
x 410 or keyauwee@aol.com.<lb/>
www.tarheeltriad.org for an online<lb/>
application.<lb/>
BARTENDER TRAINEES needed $250<lb/>
a day potential, local positions call<lb/>
1-800 293-3985 ext. 306.<lb/>
Bartender Trainees needed $250<lb/>
a day potential, local positions 1-<lb/>
800-293-3985 ext. 306<lb/>
Office Assistant: Part-timeSummer<lb/>
Full-time. Answering telephones,<lb/>
filing and customer service.<lb/>
Apply at Wainright Property<lb/>
Management 3481 -A South Evans<lb/>
Street Greenville. 756-6209<lb/>
Are you looking for the experience<lb/>
of a lifetime? Horizon Camps<lb/>
consists of 3 outstanding co-ed<lb/>
summer amps located in NY, PA,<lb/>
and WV. We are seeking amazing<lb/>
staff to work with incredible kids.<lb/>
Contact us.www.horizoncamps.c<lb/>
omor 1-800-544-5448.<lb/>
Summer ob in the Outer Banks!<lb/>
Steamers Shellfish to Go seeking<lb/>
full-time employees from early<lb/>
May until end of August. ob<lb/>
includes food prep, expediting,<lb/>
steaming, andor cashiering.<lb/>
Housing available. Contact Matt<lb/>
at 916-7345.<lb/>
Food Delivery Drivers wanted<lb/>
for Restaurant Runners.<lb/>
Part-time positions (6-12<lb/>
hr Including tips). Perfect<lb/>
for college student Some<lb/>
Lunch Time (1 la lip) M F<lb/>
availability required. 2<lb/>
way radios allow you to be<lb/>
anywhere in Greenville when<lb/>
not on a delivery. Reliable<lb/>
transportation a must and<lb/>
knowledge of Greenville<lb/>
streets advantageous. Call<lb/>
756-5527 or check out our<lb/>
website @ www.restaurantr<lb/>
unners.com. Sorry no Dorm<lb/>
Students.<lb/>
UlftEH<lb/>
Full Time Students Stop wasting<lb/>
your Time and Talents on PT obs<lb/>
with bad hrs. St 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 &amp;<lb/>
stay a student! FT students get over<lb/>
$800mo in Education Benefits St<lb/>
PAY for more info, call 252-916-<lb/>
9073 or visit www.l-800-GO-<lb/>
GAURD.com<lb/>
1 Spring Break Vacations!<lb/>
Cancun, amaita Acapulco,<lb/>
Bahamas, St Florida. Best parties,<lb/>
Best Hotels, Best Prices! Group<lb/>
Discounts, Organizers Travel Free!<lb/>
Space is limited! Book Now St Save!<lb/>
1-800-234-7007. www.endlesssu<lb/>
mmertours.com<lb/>
Come join us for the February<lb/>
14 contra dance! Live, old-time<lb/>
music by a string band. Potluck<lb/>
dinner, 6 p.m concert 7 p.m<lb/>
lesson: 7:30 p.m dance: 8:00<lb/>
p.m 10:30 p.m. Band: Bill h<lb/>
libby Hicks; caller: Chris Mtihr.<lb/>
No experience needed; we'll teach<lb/>
you as we go along! Come alone<lb/>
or bring a friend! $3 (students) $5<lb/>
(FASG members) $8 (general).<lb/>
Cosponsors: ECU Folk and Country<lb/>
Dancers (752-7350) and Folk Arts<lb/>
Society of Greenville (795-4980).<lb/>
An alcohol and smoke-free<lb/>
event, www.geocities.comecufo<lb/>
Ikandcountrydancers Location:<lb/>
Willis Bldg 1st St Reade sts<lb/>
downtow.n.<lb/>
Give yourself Egypt St The Nile in<lb/>
summer '04. You deserve it. ECU<lb/>
college credit, inexpensive group<lb/>
rates, funding help available. Giza<lb/>
and Sakkara pyramids. Sphinx, Luxor,<lb/>
Valley of the Kings, Menphis, King<lb/>
Tut, Abu Simbel, Alexandria. Contact:<lb/>
mercerc@mail.ecu.edu or 328-4310.<lb/>
Come join us for the February 14 contra<lb/>
dance! Live, old-time music by a string<lb/>
band. Potluck dinner, 6 pm; concert<lb/>
7pm; lesson 7:30 pm; dance: 8 pm-<lb/>
10:30 pm. Band: Bill St Libby Hicks;<lb/>
Caller: Chris Mohr. No experience<lb/>
needed; we'll teach you as we go<lb/>
along! Come alone or bring a friend!<lb/>
$3 (students) $5 (FASG members)<lb/>
$8 (general). Co-sponsors: ECU Folk<lb/>
and Country Dancers (752-7350) and<lb/>
Fold Arts Society of Greenville (795-<lb/>
4980). An alcohol and smoke-free<lb/>
event.www.geocities.comecufolkand<lb/>
countrydancers Location: Willis Bldg<lb/>
1st St Reade sts downtown.<lb/>
LEARN TO SKYDIVE<lb/>
Carolina Sky Sports<lb/>
1-800-SKYDIVE<lb/>
www.carolinaskysports.com<lb/>
Get<lb/>
caught<lb/>
reading.<lb/>
X<lb/>
Jv Mm ?' "L, J?A<lb/>
ART.<lb/>
ASK FOR<lb/>
MORE.<lb/>
-csmrz-<lb/>
For mart- Information ahoui ttw<lb/>
Importanoi -if artH tduatttoQ, pinnae contact<lb/>
www.AmftricansForTheArts.org.<lb/>
AMERICANS<lb/>
ARTS<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
TRANSIT<lb/>
Currently hiring bus drivers<lb/>
Extremely flexible work hours. Apply at<lb/>
vAvwiransiteciLefJu Questions? contact<lb/>
any Transit Manager at 328-4724.<lb/>
<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
? oi r maintenance response<lb/>
?oi unreiurncd phone call<lb/>
? of nois) neighbors<lb/>
? of crawl) critters<lb/>
? o high utility hills<lb/>
? of ECU parking havsles<lb/>
? oi ungrateful landlords<lb/>
? oi unanswered questions<lb/>
? of high rents<lb/>
?oi grump) personnel<lb/>
? of uniuiiillui promises<lb/>
? of units ih;ii were nut cleaned<lb/>
? oi walls that were nevet painted<lb/>
? ul appliances thai don't work<lb/>
Wyndham Court &amp;<lb/>
Kastgate Village Apts.<lb/>
3200 F Moselev Dr.<lb/>
561-RENT or 531-9011<lb/>
w H'H, pinnae Improper I <lb/>
manage n ifnt.com<lb/>
mom imi ii Mt,iiin HI SECURITY<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
BREfiK<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.SprlngBrtakTrav?l.com<lb/>
1-800-678-6386<lb/>
nmnssMSM<lb/>
Join Amtito'i ft I Student Tour Operator<lb/>
CANCUN<lb/>
ACAPULCO<lb/>
JAMAICA<lb/>
BAHAMAS<lb/>
FLORIDA<lb/>
3?<lb/>
Call for qroup discount<lb/>
1-800-648-4849 www.ststrowel.rom<lb/>
te<lb/>
Crossword<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Fonddu,WI<lb/>
4 Hold<lb/>
accountable<lb/>
9 Fireplace<lb/>
fragment<lb/>
14 Simpson judge<lb/>
15 Gutters'location<lb/>
16 Vex<lb/>
17 Chaney of film<lb/>
18 Lawn makeup<lb/>
19 Man and Capri<lb/>
20 -Romeo<lb/>
(Italian car)<lb/>
22 Free from illusion<lb/>
24 Scale<lb/>
26 Wrinkles or<lb/>
dialogue<lb/>
27 Gold layer<lb/>
29 Consumed<lb/>
30 Town on the<lb/>
Firth of Lorn<lb/>
34 Ostrich relative<lb/>
36 Showy flower<lb/>
38 Sacred<lb/>
39 Orange liqueur<lb/>
41 With ice cream<lb/>
43 Hastened<lb/>
44 Atomic cores<lb/>
46 Night flyer<lb/>
47 Approximately<lb/>
48 Secret agent<lb/>
49 Sturdy cart<lb/>
51 Nehi and Pepsi<lb/>
53 Locations<lb/>
56 Golden State<lb/>
capital<lb/>
61 Sketched<lb/>
62 Customary<lb/>
63 Link<lb/>
65 Exist<lb/>
66 Earn<lb/>
67 Dancing Fred's<lb/>
sister<lb/>
68 Orange seed<lb/>
69 Field of films<lb/>
70 Concise<lb/>
71 Tennis match<lb/>
unit<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Pale purple<lb/>
2 Bikini, for one<lb/>
3 Sets up<lb/>
4 Plead<lb/>
5 Cooking fat<lb/>
6 Be of use to<lb/>
1?1Ijj61e110II121?<lb/>
14r<lb/>
17L<lb/>
20V?23<lb/>
2411"<lb/>
27?-? 1291313233<lb/>
34363637?<lb/>
39401"42<lb/>
4314i4546<lb/>
47??50<lb/>
??I15455<lb/>
56575959CO161<lb/>
62i636416b<lb/>
661766<lb/>
6876171<lb/>
? 2001 Tribune Media Services. Inc<lb/>
All rights reserved.<lb/>
7 Handel work<lb/>
8 Necessary<lb/>
9 Long narrative<lb/>
poems<lb/>
10 Fit together<lb/>
11 Bartok or Lugosi<lb/>
12 Level<lb/>
13 Relax<lb/>
21 Pierre's friend<lb/>
23 Heckled<lb/>
25 Bipartisan<lb/>
coalition<lb/>
28 Window over a<lb/>
door<lb/>
30 Unit of resistance<lb/>
31 Pitfalls<lb/>
32 Star of<lb/>
?fvTA'S'H"<lb/>
33 Russian refusal<lb/>
34 Sound reflection<lb/>
35 First president of<lb/>
the Sierra Club<lb/>
37 Government<lb/>
overthrow<lb/>
40 Fuss<lb/>
42 Broadcasts<lb/>
45 Powerful poison<lb/>
Solutions<lb/>
13919h3.1A11V9<lb/>
d1d113GV'1H1n<lb/>
3aVNd1i1Vn9ii<lb/>
MIH?iN3wVH:)Vs<lb/>
S)1sBJsV(J01<lb/>
AVHaAds09H0<lb/>
1Va i310nNa1H<lb/>
3a0mv1?V0 Vbjn3<lb/>
A10Ha1HOb?IN1<lb/>
NVii0ii?1i0<lb/>
? saN1?lAII)<lb/>
iNVH0N19iaSJvl1V<lb/>
s3'S1S9Vu0N01<lb/>
3A33ds3AVd01I<lb/>
H3Hfi'?3INV1f!0Vl<lb/>
50 Help<lb/>
51 Smacking of the<lb/>
sea<lb/>
52 Guide<lb/>
54 Uncanny<lb/>
55 Used a broom<lb/>
56 Arithmetic<lb/>
problems<lb/>
57 Cruising<lb/>
58 Ringlet<lb/>
59 North American<lb/>
marsh bird<lb/>
60 Lubricates<lb/>
64 Bom in Nancy<lb/>
"Wow, that's pretty sad. I heard he was<lb/>
typecast after all those commercials<lb/>
Now he's Pop 'N' Not-So Fresh<lb/>
c,ef To<lb/>
"THE -<lb/>
1&amp;XIC?ocC<lb/>
HC fULU!<lb/>
?xc Vou UP<lb/>
?ZrJ 0 mi0.<lb/>
 A<lb/>
Qxb<lb/>
?"d.<lb/>
sWW sw 11 i4w l jW I I In i<lb/>
1<lb/>
T'fl REAui<lb/>
I OOKXOGi<lb/>
FoQuoARd<lb/>
To rHB 1AJ.L<lb/>
To MIGHT<lb/>
C-VA 5ooJ,<lb/>
M LOVE.<lb/>
PAMM.Vou LooKiAjq<lb/>
SHARP HOMtV<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0008"/><lb/>
PAGEA8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? NEWS<lb/>
2-05-04<lb/>
A way of saying<lb/>
"Be Mine55 on this<lb/>
Valentine's Day that's cheaper than a tattoo.<lb/>
COMPLETE THIS FORM<lb/>
AND BRING ITTO<lb/>
THE MENDENHALL<lb/>
STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
INFORMATION DESK<lb/>
OR THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN OFFICE<lb/>
BEFORE FEBRUARY 10<lb/>
AT 5 P.M.<lb/>
COMPLETE THIS FORM AND BRING IT TO OUR OFFICE OR DROP IT WITH YOUR PAYMENT<lb/>
IN OUR BOX AT THE INFORMATION DESK IN MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER. LOVE LINES<lb/>
WILL RUN IN THE FEBRUARY 12 EDITION OF THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
DUtt<lb/>
Address<lb/>
$3 for 25<lb/>
words or<lb/>
fewer<lb/>
5t each<lb/>
for each<lb/>
word over<lb/>
25<lb/>
All ads<lb/>
Messages may be rejectededited on basis of decency. Only first names or initials<lb/>
prepaid may be used. The paper reserves the right to edit or omit any ad which is deemed<lb/>
objectionable, inappropriate, obscene or misleading.<lb/>
O N 1 ? FIRST N?Mfi 0R INITIAL5 MAY M IS II). NO LAST NAMES.<lb/>
12345ii<lb/>
7K9101112<lb/>
131415161718<lb/>
n2Q,21U234<lb/>
26271 282930<lb/>
DEADLINE<lb/>
FEB. 10 @ 5<lb/>
THE DEADLINE IS FEB. 10 AT 5 PM ? DON'T MISS IT!<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0009"/><lb/>
2-05-04<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? NEWS<lb/>
PAGE A9<lb/>
British intelligence experts had doubts about Iraq<lb/>
onnection<lb/>
UAL<lb/>
New shipment of J. CREW<lb/>
has arrived<lb/>
J. GREW winter coats 50 off<lb/>
(our regular price is 12 off catalog price)<lb/>
Large selection J. CREW 30 off<lb/>
210 E. 5th St. 758-8612 M-S 10-6<lb/>
catalogconnffigeeksnet.com Sun. 1-5<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizza Since 1991<lb/>
H19<lb/>
 JsTRm <lb/>
PIZZERIA<lb/>
GUICNVIIIC NC SPECIALS<lb/>
Moh$1.00 Domestic Bottles<lb/>
Tues WedMug Nile $1.00 Domestic Bottles<lb/>
$2.00 Import Bottles $1.50 House Highballs<lb/>
rin ii$2.00 Import Bottles<lb/>
Mteb Xowstrviiio-<lb/>
1j$' Late Nite Breakfast ; TMifcl Tuc-Sal lam-l.uii<lb/>
( mm i (it .Mil &amp; Col,mi hi-<lb/>
<lb/>
LONDON (AP) ? Inter-<lb/>
rupted by shouts and heckles,<lb/>
Prime Minister Tony Blair<lb/>
on Wednesday defended his<lb/>
decision to launch an inquiry<lb/>
into prewar intelligence on Iraq<lb/>
but not to examine whether the<lb/>
war was justified.<lb/>
"That is a question for the<lb/>
government first, then for<lb/>
parliament and finally for the<lb/>
people to decide. There will<lb/>
carry on being a debate about<lb/>
whether the war was justified<lb/>
or not. That is democracy.<lb/>
We don't need a committee to<lb/>
tell us that<lb/>
Blair spoke at the opening<lb/>
of a parliamentary debate on<lb/>
the reasons for war in Iraq and<lb/>
the conclusions of an investiga-<lb/>
tion by Lord Hutton into the<lb/>
death of a government weapons<lb/>
scientist.<lb/>
Shouts from anti-war<lb/>
demonstrators in the public<lb/>
gallery drowned out the prime<lb/>
minister five times during his<lb/>
statement, forcing the speaker to<lb/>
clear the gallery and adjourn the<lb/>
proceedings for 10 minutes.<lb/>
"Murderer shouted one<lb/>
protester. "Whitewash yelled<lb/>
another.<lb/>
"I somehow teel we're not<lb/>
being entirely persuasive in<lb/>
certain quarters Blair quipped<lb/>
after one of the interrup-<lb/>
tions, drawing a laugh from<lb/>
legislators.<lb/>
Before the break, Blair<lb/>
defended Hutton's report,<lb/>
which cleared his government<lb/>
of allegations that it "sexed<lb/>
up" an intelligence dossier to<lb/>
justify war and mistreated<lb/>
adviser David Kelly before his<lb/>
July suicide.<lb/>
Hutton found that the British<lb/>
Broadcasting Corp. had wrongly<lb/>
reporteil that Blair's office<lb/>
overrode objections from intel-<lb/>
ligence officials to claim that<lb/>
Iraq could deploy biological<lb/>
and chemical weapons within<lb/>
45 minutes, and that the<lb/>
BBC reporter was also wrong in<lb/>
saying I he govern merit "probably<lb/>
knew" that claim was wrong.<lb/>
"Not a single shred of<lb/>
evidence was presented to<lb/>
his inquiry that would have<lb/>
justified an alternative finding<lb/>
Blair said.<lb/>
The prime minister had to<lb/>
ask one lawmaker to repeat a<lb/>
Prime Minister Tony Blair's decisions are under criticism.<lb/>
question about the report after<lb/>
the hecklers drowned him out.<lb/>
Hutton's report has been<lb/>
met with skepticism by some<lb/>
Britons and many of Blair's<lb/>
political opponents, who have<lb/>
derided it as a "whitewash" that<lb/>
was too easy on the government<lb/>
and too harsh on the BBC.<lb/>
Pressing that theme, sev-<lb/>
eral protesters splashed white<lb/>
paint on the gates of Down-<lb/>
ing Street, home to the prime<lb/>
minister's official residence.<lb/>
Police said five people were<lb/>
arrested.<lb/>
Election<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
serves in the local govern-<lb/>
ment since the 1980s. He urges<lb/>
the government to better hind<lb/>
schools and opposes illegal<lb/>
immigration.<lb/>
- Timothy Cook is a research<lb/>
scientist who focuses on<lb/>
agriculture, textile and high-<lb/>
tech job industries, reduced<lb/>
taxes and ensured payment of<lb/>
child support.<lb/>
- Candidate George Little<lb/>
has been involved in Republican<lb/>
politics since the 1970s,<lb/>
including serving in the<lb/>
governor's Cabinet as secre-<lb/>
tary of Natural and Economic-<lb/>
Resources and Vice Chair-<lb/>
man of the N.C Board of<lb/>
Economic Development,<lb/>
little is against restrictions on<lb/>
businesses and supports<lb/>
community colleges as a<lb/>
way to improve the state's<lb/>
economy.<lb/>
- Fern Shubert is vying to<lb/>
be North (arolina's first woman<lb/>
governor. She served in the<lb/>
N.C House of Representa-<lb/>
tives working on education<lb/>
committees, and is a CPA.<lb/>
Shubert endorses DMV<lb/>
reform for tighter control on<lb/>
illegal immigration and state<lb/>
employee pension funds, and she<lb/>
is against unnecessary portfolio<lb/>
requirements in schools.<lb/>
- Former mavorol Charlotte,<lb/>
Richard V'inroot, lost to Easley<lb/>
in the 2000 election for<lb/>
governor. I le proposes tax-free<lb/>
manufacturing, emphasizes<lb/>
charter education and higher sal-<lb/>
aries for teachers and is against a<lb/>
North Carolina lottery.<lb/>
A January survey by<lb/>
McLaughlin and Associates<lb/>
shows V'inroot the leading<lb/>
choice among voters in the<lb/>
upcoming Republican primary.<lb/>
According to the Associated<lb/>
Press, the Republican primary<lb/>
is scheduled for May 9, but<lb/>
could be delayed if a district-<lb/>
ing plan is not approved by<lb/>
the deadline for candidates<lb/>
to enter the election. Patrick<lb/>
Ballantine, Bill Cobey and<lb/>
Ferrell Blount are among those<lb/>
working to block the new<lb/>
districts.<lb/>
North Carolinians elect<lb/>
a governor every four years.<lb/>
Until 1992, a governor could<lb/>
serve only one term, hut an<lb/>
amendment to the state<lb/>
constitution increased that limit<lb/>
to two.<lb/>
Volunteers are always<lb/>
needed for each candidate's<lb/>
campaign and campus politi-<lb/>
cal groups offer chances for<lb/>
students to become involved.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeaitcarolinian.com.<lb/>
RINGGOID TOWERS<lb/>
Great Location<lb/>
NOW Leasing: Pick from six different floor plans. Live alone or share a<lb/>
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-Fri 9anv5pm<lb/>
(252)752-2865<lb/>
HISH SPEED INTERNET MOW AWAIUB1E!<lb/>
Get caught reading.<lb/>
;R I TMI'Arf rb?"n,an<lb/>
tec.<lb/>
5?.<lb/>
t O'Cools<lb/>
Madness!<lb/>
mm of BARGAINS!<lb/>
Let the Dowdy Student Store help you stay warm this winter!<lb/>
Np'u<lb/>
Full Contact Tes<lb/>
Every Tuesday <lb/>
355-2946 Open 7 Days a Week at 11:00 A.M.<lb/>
605 Greenville filvd ? Behind Logan's Poadhouse<lb/>
lent Stf refc<lb/>
Wright Building - 328 - 6731<lb/>
Mon. - Thunw: 7:30 am - 7 pm<lb/>
Fri 7:30 am - 3 pm ? Sat 11 am - 3 pm<lb/>
www.ttudentstores.ecu.edu<lb/>
Brown &amp; Brown<lb/>
ATTORNEYS AT LAW<lb/>
Tmm,Equality,Justice<lb/>
?Speeding Tickets<lb/>
?Driving While Impaired<lb/>
Under Age Possession<lb/>
?Possession of DrugsParaphenalia<lb/>
?Drinking in Public<lb/>
?Felonies and Misdemeanors<lb/>
Free Consultation<lb/>
3493c south Evans St. Phone 752-0952 752-0753<lb/>
Bedford Commons, Grecnviiie www.brownandbrownattorneys.com<lb/>
10:00am - 9:00pm<lb/>
y Thrv Friday<lb/>
B MOam - 9:00pm<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0010"/><lb/>
PA6EA10<lb/>
IHE EAST CAROLINIAN ? NEWS<lb/>
Ratings for Spanish-language<lb/>
station high in North Carolina<lb/>
RALEIGH, NC(AP) ? forget<lb/>
ABC, NBC and CBS. Hie big<lb/>
ratings winner these days in<lb/>
the heart of North Carolina is<lb/>
WUVl -TV, .1 six-month-old<lb/>
Spanish-language station.<lb/>
The channel, owned and<lb/>
operated by l.os Angeles-based<lb/>
Univision, posted prime-time<lb/>
ratings during November's<lb/>
sweeps period that rivaled and<lb/>
even outdistanced some Eng-<lb/>
lish-language network affiliates<lb/>
among adult men.<lb/>
North Carolina' Hispanic<lb/>
population grew more than<lb/>
fivefold in the 1990s - the<lb/>
highest rate of any state in the<lb/>
nation - and Hispanic leader)<lb/>
say the latest ratings prove the<lb/>
tremendous buying power m tin-<lb/>
community,<lb/>
"(Advertiser have a ripe<lb/>
opportunity here s.iiil lose Isasi,<lb/>
president of Que Pasa ("What's<lb/>
Happening "), which owns Span-<lb/>
ish-language radio stations in the<lb/>
Research I riangle and Piedmont<lb/>
Iriad areas.<lb/>
"We've spent close to hall<lb/>
a million dollars in the past<lb/>
tour years doing qualitative and<lb/>
quantitative research to under<lb/>
stand our market, and there<lb/>
are billions of dollars in buying<lb/>
power out there Billions isasi<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Fayetteville-based WUV i<lb/>
strong numbers are partly attrib-<lb/>
utable to a lack of viewer choice.<lb/>
It is the only Spanish-language<lb/>
television station in the state,<lb/>
while dozens ol network affiliates<lb/>
and cable channels fragment the<lb/>
English-language lewershlp.<lb/>
Hut thei also reflect the<lb/>
growing influence ol the state's<lb/>
burgeoning Hispanic popula-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
In Miami, where llispanics<lb/>
make up more than 40 percent of<lb/>
the local TV market and several<lb/>
Spanish-language stations are on<lb/>
the air, the relemundo affiliate's<lb/>
local newscast is the highest-<lb/>
rated news show - period.<lb/>
" llie local news here beats<lb/>
out even the local NBC news<lb/>
said I llane Sous.i, a spokeswoman<lb/>
for Miami-based lelemundo.<lb/>
"it's the number one-rated news<lb/>
slum. English 01 Spanish<lb/>
Telenuindol ommuntcations<lb/>
Croup Inc. trails only Univision<lb/>
among Spanish-language pro-<lb/>
grammers in the United States.<lb/>
I he broadcaster was acquired in<lb/>
2002 by NBC, but has not yet set<lb/>
up shop in North Carolina.<lb/>
Spring Break in Panama City Beach, Florida!<lb/>
SANPP1PER<lb/>
UEACOf<lb/>
II?? ?'  I ill" 'in '?<lb/>
World s Longest Keg Pnrty<lb/>
live Band f. DJ ? Wit r shirt<lb/>
II.imI Body '? Vinin twimwe.ir ContCStl<lb/>
, l.rl 1 (.nil Briuli Ih.iiM'I" ? V l?"i (HiMi.1,1 Si<lb/>
?,?li l.i Mm I Ytail lentils ? l?ry ? I' ? ???' <lb/>
H?r i.olMinnl Mm lull ? Vi,lli-yli?M ? lUIWI "i  I' "?v'<lb/>
? Book Eahiv Worn D Famous<lb/>
SAVE$$$ TiKIBaR!<lb/>
800.488.8828 ? www.sandpipcrbcacon.com<lb/>
Atkins<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
? 1 <lb/>
for Atkins any time soon. The<lb/>
reason is the diet is not well bal-<lb/>
anced. High and 1 amond advo-<lb/>
cate a diet with variety, balance<lb/>
and moderation, like the All<lb/>
Foods Fit program.<lb/>
"When we do our menu plan-<lb/>
ning, we back our own program<lb/>
 we do design our menus where<lb/>
every day, every meal period,<lb/>
there are healthy options avail-<lb/>
able l.amond said.<lb/>
The AFF items include foods<lb/>
that are low in calories, fat and<lb/>
sodium and have been taste-<lb/>
tested by students.<lb/>
High said diets like Atkins<lb/>
sometimes leave the dieter<lb/>
deprived of certain things their<lb/>
body needs.<lb/>
"Sometimes with the Atkins<lb/>
diet, or any low carbohydrate<lb/>
diet, there may be factors<lb/>
involved such as vitamins and<lb/>
minerals and liber that may be<lb/>
restricted in that type of diet<lb/>
High said<lb/>
High also warns that quick<lb/>
weight loss may be due to the<lb/>
body using water reserves, and<lb/>
that once the person returns to<lb/>
normal eating habits, the weight<lb/>
will return as well.<lb/>
Campus Dining Services are<lb/>
always looking tor new ideas and<lb/>
listen to every request.<lb/>
I amond said many students<lb/>
have requested healthier items<lb/>
including soymilk. For the past<lb/>
two years, soymilk has been used<lb/>
in the froen yogurt at dining<lb/>
halls, and is now available upon<lb/>
request.<lb/>
Dining services will intro-<lb/>
duce a Nutrition Nook where all<lb/>
health food will be organized<lb/>
into one section in the retail<lb/>
shops lor those on Atkins, there<lb/>
will be more choices including<lb/>
truit cups with yogurt made from<lb/>
soymilk available.<lb/>
To eat healthier on campus,<lb/>
you should look lor the All-<lb/>
sticker, hut avoid starches if fol-<lb/>
lowing a low carbohydrate diet.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcorolinian.com.<lb/>
O<lb/>
Low Carb<lb/>
Low Carbohydrate options at<lb/>
campus retail stores<lb/>
Grams ol Carbohydrates per<lb/>
serving:<lb/>
Ultimate Low Carb 2 - 3 grams<lb/>
Advant Edge Carb Control<lb/>
Shake - 2 grams<lb/>
Advant Edge Carb Control<lb/>
Nutrition Bar Blueberry - 4<lb/>
grams. Chocolate Chip- 3<lb/>
grams<lb/>
Cashews - 8 grams<lb/>
Almonds - 7 grams<lb/>
?. ??- <lb/>
? rk.<lb/>
 V.<lb/>
<lb/>
THAT'S WHAT FALLING ASLEEP IS FOR<lb/>
x<lb/>
Saving you cashor Spring Break, that's what we're for.<lb/>
Rate<lb/>
from page A3<lb/>
led by department beads and the<lb/>
professors themselves<lb/>
Clayton said by honestly and<lb/>
thoughtfully filling out tbeSOIS.<lb/>
students could make a positive<lb/>
difference in their education.<lb/>
Some schools, such as<lb/>
Kansas State University,<lb/>
are alarmed at negative<lb/>
comments and overloads<lb/>
As many students all try to get<lb/>
the same professor, the uni-<lb/>
Verslty look a more proactive<lb/>
approach to these problems by<lb/>
banning professor-rating sites<lb/>
all together<lb/>
The sites themselves, how-<lb/>
ever, have not experienced<lb/>
restriction or lack of use.<lb/>
This writer can he reached at<lb/>
news&amp;theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Unlimited Incoming Calls<lb/>
? 1000 Local Anytime Minutes for just S39.95mo<lb/>
? Includes Nationwide Long Distance<lb/>
? Free Roadside Assistance for 1 month<lb/>
AsV about<lb/>
7pm Nights &amp; Weekends<lb/>
 US. Cellular<lb/>
1-888-BUY-USCC ? GETUSC.COM<lb/>
' I mxm tree trial avastvw to new Ro??teea??w?<lb/>
out Often may expat it you cltanga your catng pun Free<lb/>
only Fast montn in S? 95 a mom tnercitter Must call to cancel Otner restncMns apply Aiume promotion anriaUe on plant $40 and iwfier wrtri ayeai customs aarnx agw<lb/>
incoming cans apply only lo calls received Mute witrnn your local caning area. Roaming cnaraes. tees, surcharges and taxes nun apply, tndudmg a Federal and Oitiei Regulatory i ee 0<lb/>
to an early termmjtion let Activation fee n S30 See Hap In details Knifed time oner 02004 US Cetuhr Corporation<lb/>
WHOM I Homer a iMponaMfctaJtajia.<lb/>
?.ih<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0011"/><lb/>
04<lb/>
PAGEB1<lb/>
:??<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
DM<lb/>
(w M sates<lb/>
tec<lb/>
205 04<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
AMANDA UNGERFELT<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
JOHN BREAM<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
252.328.6366<lb/>
Did You Know?<lb/>
- Actress Jennifer Jason Lee (1958) and actor Christopher Guesl (1948)<lb/>
both call today their birthday<lb/>
- Today is Weatherman s Day.<lb/>
- This month is International Expect Success Month<lb/>
- On this day in 1981, the largest Jell-0 ever made (9,246 gallons ol<lb/>
watermelon-flavor) was displayed in Brisbane.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Films<lb/>
The Student Union Films Committee presents In America today at 9:30<lb/>
p.m Friday at 7 p.m and midnight, Saturday at 9:30 p.m. and Sunday<lb/>
at 7 p.m Love Actually is showing today at 7 p.m Friday at 9:30 p.m<lb/>
Saturday at 7 p.m. and midnight and Sunday at 3 p.m All movies are<lb/>
free with a student ID and are located in the Hendrix Theatre For more<lb/>
information call 328-4700<lb/>
Percussion Ensemble<lb/>
The School of Music presents a Percussion Ensemble directed by<lb/>
Jonathan Wacker today at 8 p.m. in the A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall. This<lb/>
event is free<lb/>
African Storyteller<lb/>
Shindana Cooper, an African Storyteller, will give a presentation on<lb/>
Friday, Feb. 6 at 7 p.m in the MSC Great Room.<lb/>
Jazz Concert<lb/>
The School of Music presents the ECU Jazz Ensemble A and the ECU<lb/>
Wind Ensemble in Concert directed by Carroll V Dashiell Jr and Scott<lb/>
Carter on Friday, Feb. 6 at 8 p.m in Wright Auditorium This event is free<lb/>
Hip-Hop Festival<lb/>
The Student Union presents The Five Elements (Hip-Hop Festival)<lb/>
featuring a DJ, emcee, Drop Heavy and graffiti art on Saturday, Feb 7<lb/>
from 9 p.m. - 11 p.m. in the Pirate Underground.<lb/>
Band Concert<lb/>
The School of Music presents an All-District Band Concert directed by<lb/>
Scott Carter on Saturday, Feb. 7 at 7 p.m. in the Wright Auditorium. This<lb/>
event is free.<lb/>
Percussion Performance<lb/>
The School of Music presents the ECU Percussion Players directed by<lb/>
John Neal on Tuesday, Feb. 10 at 8 p.m. in the A J. Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
This event is free.<lb/>
Greenville LIVE:<lb/>
A.J. McMurphy's<lb/>
1914 Timbury Drive<lb/>
355-7956<lb/>
Saturday, Feb. 7,9 p.m.<lb/>
Victor Hudson<lb/>
Chefs 505<lb/>
505 Red Banks Road<lb/>
355-7505<lb/>
Wednesday. Feb 11,7:30 pm<lb/>
ECU jazz faculty and students<lb/>
Christy's Euro Pub<lb/>
301 S Jarvis St 758-2774<lb/>
Tuesday, Feb. 10,10 p.m.<lb/>
Open mic night<lb/>
City Hotel and Bistro<lb/>
203 S.W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
355-8300<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb 11.7 p.m<lb/>
Coastline Band<lb/>
Corrigan's<lb/>
122 E. Fifth St. 758-3114<lb/>
Friday. Feb. 6,10 p.m.<lb/>
Live music<lb/>
Saturday, Feb 7.10 p.m.<lb/>
Live music<lb/>
Courtyard Tavern<lb/>
703 S.E. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
321-0202<lb/>
Sunday Feb 8,7 p.m<lb/>
Two Fingers<lb/>
El Ranchito<lb/>
315 E 10th St<lb/>
561-7336<lb/>
Thursday. Feb. 5,7 p.m.<lb/>
Mariachi Band<lb/>
Ham's<lb/>
701 Evans St. 830-2739<lb/>
Thursday, Feb. 5.10 pm<lb/>
Karaoke<lb/>
Saturday. Feb 7.10p.m.<lb/>
Live music<lb/>
Sunday, Feb. 8,10 p.m.<lb/>
Open mic night<lb/>
Mesh Cafe<lb/>
1011-A Red Banks Road<lb/>
321-MESH<lb/>
Thursday, Feb 5.9 p.m.<lb/>
The Johnny Dollar Band<lb/>
Friday, Feb 6.9 p.m<lb/>
Comedy<lb/>
Saturday. Feb. 7. 9 p.m<lb/>
Deejay<lb/>
Peasants<lb/>
110 E. Fourth St.<lb/>
752-5855<lb/>
Thursday, Feb. 5, 9 p.m.<lb/>
The Kickass<lb/>
Friday, Feb. 6,9 p.m.<lb/>
Blue Dogs<lb/>
Saturday. Feb. 7.9 p.m<lb/>
Booglehawg<lb/>
Player's Choice<lb/>
Community Square,<lb/>
Memorial Drive<lb/>
355-4149<lb/>
Thursday. Feb. 5,10 p.m.<lb/>
Karaoke<lb/>
Saturday. Feb 7,10 p.m.<lb/>
Live Music<lb/>
Players Retreat<lb/>
1631 Pactolus Road<lb/>
758-6856<lb/>
Thursday, Feb. 5,7 p.m.<lb/>
Karaoke<lb/>
Saturday, Feb 7.9 p.m.<lb/>
Live Music<lb/>
Professor O'Cools<lb/>
605 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
355-2946<lb/>
Saturday. Feb 7, 9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Karaoke<lb/>
Wimple's Steam Bar<lb/>
206 Main St Winterville<lb/>
355-4220<lb/>
Friday, Feb 6,7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Live Music<lb/>
Saturday Feb 7,7:30 p.m<lb/>
Live Music<lb/>
nd the Grainif,<lb/>
At - uces t?<lb/>
Rockers, rappers<lb/>
dominate nominations<lb/>
MICAH MASSEI<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
the awards race is on, and<lb/>
those in the music industry are<lb/>
eagerly awaiting their award show<lb/>
counterpart - the 46th Annual<lb/>
Grammy Awards, which airs live<lb/>
on CBS, Sunday. Feb. N at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Each year, Grammy Awards<lb/>
are awarded to winners who<lb/>
make up more than 1(14 dif-<lb/>
ferent categories and 520 total<lb/>
nominations.<lb/>
Album of the Vear<lb/>
Nominees: Outkast<lb/>
- SpeakerboxxxThe Love Below,<lb/>
Missy Elliott - Under Construc-<lb/>
tion, Evanescence- Fatten, lustin<lb/>
Timberlake- Justified, The white<lb/>
Stripes - Elephant<lb/>
Who Should Win: Outkast.<lb/>
In an era where very few musi-<lb/>
cal acts (he it rock, rap, country,<lb/>
etc. are creating music that<lb/>
transcends the times and influ-<lb/>
ences the musical aspirations<lb/>
of a generation, Outkast joins<lb/>
the likes of Radiohead and the<lb/>
Strokes as being one of the few<lb/>
luture "hall-ot-fame" bands to<lb/>
make an indelible musical mark<lb/>
on the 21st century.<lb/>
SpeakerboxxxThe Love Below<lb/>
is a remarkable album - not just<lb/>
tor it's daring artistic leaps and<lb/>
original presentation - but it<lb/>
excels even higher with songs<lb/>
and arrangements that push<lb/>
the boundaries of not just nip-<lb/>
hop but also the music world in<lb/>
general.<lb/>
Who Shouldn't Win: Quite<lb/>
honestly, every nominee in this<lb/>
category is deserving (yes, that<lb/>
includes Justin Ttmberlakc's<lb/>
Justified, whk b is the closest any<lb/>
artist has ever gotten in reaching<lb/>
the creative brilliance of Michael<lb/>
Jackson's classic 1979 Off The<lb/>
Wall album).<lb/>
Who Will Win: Unless your<lb/>
Lauryn Hill - be it solo or with<lb/>
The Fugees - the Grammy Awards<lb/>
rarely honor raphip-hop acts<lb/>
outside ol tlieir respective cat-<lb/>
egories. However, look for this<lb/>
year's ceremony to be "the year<lb/>
of the Outkast" as Andre 3000<lb/>
and BigBoi walkaway winners of<lb/>
the Album of the Year award.<lb/>
Record of the Vear<lb/>
Nominees: Beyoncc- "Crazy<lb/>
in Love Black Eyed Peas<lb/>
- "Where Is the Love Coldplay<lb/>
- "Clocks Eminem - "Lose Your-<lb/>
self Outkast - "Hey Yal"<lb/>
Who Should Win: Outkast<lb/>
(again). If James Brown were<lb/>
scribbling down lyrics while<lb/>
listening to Pink Floyd during<lb/>
his daily walk across the moon,<lb/>
he'd still fall a few steps short<lb/>
of matching the mad-genius of<lb/>
Outkast's "Hey Ya<lb/>
Who Shouldn't Win: The<lb/>
Black Eyed Peas' "Where Is the<lb/>
Love Sadly, radio, MTV, and<lb/>
Grammy voters waited until the<lb/>
Black Eyed Peas made a "soft"<lb/>
song - that falls way short of what<lb/>
these guys are capable of - to get<lb/>
the long-awaited attention they<lb/>
truly deserve.<lb/>
Who Will Win: "Crazy in Love"<lb/>
and "Hey Ya will duke it out for<lb/>
the coveted award. Unless Outkast<lb/>
begins to sweep the awards cer-<lb/>
emony early on, expect Beyonce's<lb/>
ever-catchy dance-smash narrowly<lb/>
edging out Outkast's party-jam of<lb/>
the century.<lb/>
Song of the Vear<lb/>
Nominees: Eminem - "Lose<lb/>
Yourself Christina Aguilera<lb/>
- "Beautiful Avril Lavigne<lb/>
- "I'm With You Luther Van-<lb/>
dross- "Dance With My Father<lb/>
Warren Zevon - "Keep Me In<lb/>
Your Heart"<lb/>
Who Should Win: Warren<lb/>
Zevon. With both extraordinary<lb/>
grace and patience, the late<lb/>
singersongwriter recorded one<lb/>
of the most beautiful, introspec-<lb/>
tive songs of the year  all while<lb/>
staring cancer dead-in-the-eye.<lb/>
Who Shouldn't Win: Avril<lb/>
l.avigne's "I'm With You" is<lb/>
respectable, Eminem's "Lose<lb/>
Yourself" (though overrated) is<lb/>
worthy, and Lutherwell, there<lb/>
will never be a day where a Luther<lb/>
Vandross song doesn't hit the mark,<lb/>
see GRAMMY page A7<lb/>
BEYONCE KNOWLES<lb/>
Exploring five elements of hip-hop<lb/>
Event to feature many<lb/>
aspects of culture<lb/>
RYAN JOHNSON<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
It's hard to pinpoint the<lb/>
exact date it all started. Some<lb/>
say it started with the commer-<lb/>
cial success of the Sugar Hill<lb/>
dang record "Rappers Delight<lb/>
Othenl say hip-hop truly arrived<lb/>
with "The Message a cultural<lb/>
wake up call to life in the hood<lb/>
by Grandmaster flash and the<lb/>
Furious five. One thing is for<lb/>
sure, hip-hop all started in the<lb/>
"Boogie Down" Bronx and it<lb/>
has grown into a billion dollar<lb/>
industry today.<lb/>
But what is the true essence<lb/>
ot the hip-hop culture? You can<lb/>
witness the origin and essence ol<lb/>
the genre first hand without the<lb/>
glitz and glamour on Feb. 7.<lb/>
the live Elements Hip-Hop<lb/>
festival is on Saturday, Feb. 7 from<lb/>
'? p.m. - 11 p.m. in Mendenball<lb/>
Student Center. This festival will<lb/>
be an appreciation of the true<lb/>
roots of the hip-hop culture<lb/>
incorporating the live elements<lb/>
of hip-hop: B-boying, DJs, graf-<lb/>
fiti art, emceeing and knowledge<lb/>
The event will feature campus<lb/>
b-boy group, Drop Heavy. There<lb/>
will also be b-boy crews from as<lb/>
far west asalilomia and as far<lb/>
north as New York City to take<lb/>
part in the festivities. For those<lb/>
unfamiliar with what exactly a<lb/>
b-boy is, think ot a club where<lb/>
people meet up and break-dance.<lb/>
The backbone of the whole<lb/>
genre is the DJ. The DJ, in actu-<lb/>
ality. Is quite different from what<lb/>
you may know DJs as now. A true<lb/>
Hip Hop DJ is more of a "turnta-<lb/>
1)1 ist" who specia I i es in creat i ng<lb/>
break-beats, mixing, scratching<lb/>
and cutting records. The verb<lb/>
"rapping" was started by DJs at<lb/>
house parties when they would<lb/>
rap over break-beats about what<lb/>
makes them the best DJ.<lb/>
Graffiti art, the written word<lb/>
of Hip Hop, is another element<lb/>
that will be explored at the fes-<lb/>
tival. Graffiti is the ability of an<lb/>
artist to draft pictures expressing<lb/>
themselves through painting.<lb/>
Manygrafliti murals take days to<lb/>
complete and are works of art.<lb/>
Emceeing is the spoken word<lb/>
ol hip-hop, providing messages<lb/>
to the listeners. A lot of times<lb/>
the realities of African American<lb/>
culture are told to the listener to<lb/>
give them a better understanding<lb/>
ot where the emcee "is coming<lb/>
from The emcee keeps us up to<lb/>
date on the current slang, fash-<lb/>
ions and trends in the hip-hop<lb/>
culture. Some purists say that<lb/>
commercialism has deteriorated<lb/>
the genre to some extent, how-<lb/>
ever, it is undeniable thai it has<lb/>
helped the genre grow to what we<lb/>
know it today.<lb/>
the final element of hip-hop<lb/>
is knowledge. The knowledge of<lb/>
the entire culture of hip-hop is<lb/>
important to those young and<lb/>
old. It is necessary to know the<lb/>
history and the essential ele-<lb/>
Drop Heavy, an on-campus b-boy club, will attend the event.<lb/>
merits of where and how this art<lb/>
form came about. The good and<lb/>
the bad. the real and the lake; we<lb/>
must all base this understanding<lb/>
so this culture will never die.<lb/>
Hip-hop has brought so many<lb/>
people together from all facets<lb/>
of life, races, countries, colors<lb/>
and creed under one universal<lb/>
umbrella. Show your support<lb/>
and give thanks to the music,<lb/>
art and dance that we all love<lb/>
so much.<lb/>
This writer con be contacted at<lb/>
leatures@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
O<lb/>
Event Info<lb/>
The Five Elements<lb/>
Hip-Hop Festival<lb/>
Saturday, Feb. 7<lb/>
from 9 p.m, -11 p.m.<lb/>
Pirate Underground<lb/>
Free lor students<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0012"/><lb/>
PAGE B2<lb/>
111 LAST CAROLINIAN ? ILAIIHS<lb/>
20504<lb/>
2 Ob 04<lb/>
Quick Picks: Album Review<lb/>
Cure's B-Side box gets<lb/>
grade A from true fans<lb/>
JENNIFER BOWLES<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
With a prolific career span<lb/>
Ding over 25 years, I helire<lb/>
certainly produced a huge cata-<lb/>
log of albums and pop hits, not<lb/>
to mention rarities and B-Sides<lb/>
Frontman Robert Smith, tin-<lb/>
only member ot the group who<lb/>
has been around the whole time,<lb/>
reviewed more than 4,00(1 tapes<lb/>
to procure urn the Dots: B-Sldes<lb/>
 H.irities. l?7X-2t)0l (Tht 11<lb/>
turn Years).<lb/>
Smith's signature sloppy,<lb/>
red lipstick and mail-sc ientisl<lb/>
hair may scare away the average<lb/>
listener, but fans know that<lb/>
there's more to The Cur than<lb/>
the lead singer's gothic fashion<lb/>
sense.<lb/>
The Cure is one ol the bed<lb/>
ever Brit-I'op bands, mostly<lb/>
known tor their ethereal lyrics<lb/>
and wind-swept melodies.<lb/>
Join the l)ot features 71<lb/>
chronologically arranged obscu-<lb/>
rities, revealing that some of I he<lb/>
Cure's best work was hidden on<lb/>
the backs of hit singles<lb/>
At a cost of around J55,<lb/>
which isn't bad by box set<lb/>
standards, loin the I toCJ is a most ly<lb/>
satisfying journey through four<lb/>
disks and over four hours ol<lb/>
music. Unfortunately, fans of<lb/>
quick and painless modern pop<lb/>
hits will find it a long, strange<lb/>
trip.<lb/>
Disk One begins with "10 IS<lb/>
Saturday Night probably the<lb/>
most well known of The Cure's<lb/>
B-Sides, and continues through<lb/>
21 Iraiks of what Smith calls<lb/>
"trilles and oddities" from tin-<lb/>
band's early das.<lb/>
I he highlight of Disk<lb/>
luo is the ultra-rare, ultra-<lb/>
beautiful "To the Sky pres iousK<lb/>
released only on a 1989 fiction<lb/>
Records sampler. I lie threelire<lb/>
versions ol I he Doors "Hello, I<lb/>
Love You" In-come monoto-<lb/>
nous<lb/>
Disk I hree is the strongest ol<lb/>
the set. featuring IS songs from<lb/>
the 1992-I996era. Vmongthem<lb/>
are mm le songs like "Burn" Irom<lb/>
Thei mi and "Dredd Song" From<lb/>
the Imixe I'letU soundtrack, and<lb/>
covers ol Mini Hendrix's "Purple<lb/>
Haze" (one very good live ver-<lb/>
sion, one not so good studio ver-<lb/>
sion) and Das id Bowie's 'Young<lb/>
Americans<lb/>
I he fourth disk sutlers Irom<lb/>
tar too much techno remising.<lb/>
However, i (a ei ol i tope he<lb/>
Modes "World In My Eyes"<lb/>
quickly redeems It, and the disk<lb/>
ends with an Interesting Earl<lb/>
Slick drum and bass remix ol<lb/>
" I'he lores!<lb/>
A 76-page booklet, filled<lb/>
with insightful anecdotes,<lb/>
track-by-track commentary and<lb/>
never before seen photos, rounds<lb/>
uii tins antholog) I ven with<lb/>
its boring moments, this collec-<lb/>
tion is far better than most ol its<lb/>
overproduced i ounterparts.<lb/>
"When I was growing up,<lb/>
there were two types ol artists<lb/>
Smith told Rolling Stow<lb/>
" I he ones that cared enough<lb/>
to put something good on the B-<lb/>
Sidcwereinstantlymorcrespected.<lb/>
I hen I here were the ones<lb/>
that put a icwer on the ll-Side.<lb/>
or slapped something together<lb/>
that was filler. Even at a<lb/>
Em&amp;$.<lb/>
Artist: The Cure<lb/>
Title: Join the Dots: B-Sides<lb/>
&amp; Rarities, 1978-2001<lb/>
(The Fiction Years)<lb/>
Release Date: Jan. 27,2004<lb/>
young age we saw through<lb/>
that cynicism<lb/>
The Bottom Line: Only<lb/>
line music losers are entertained<lb/>
h box Sets, B-sidesand rarities. If<lb/>
you're a fan of The Cure, thiscol-<lb/>
lei tion is the remedy for today's<lb/>
ailing pop charts.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
leatures@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
BILLIARDS &amp; SPORTS BAR<lb/>
3101 E. 10th St. ? Greenville, NC<lb/>
Located in Rivergate Shopping Center<lb/>
(Across from Hastings Ford)<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Ladies Night<lb/>
Coyote Ugly Contest<lb/>
Cash Prize<lb/>
$1.50 Domestics<lb/>
FREE Pool for Ladies<lb/>
DJ@ 10pm<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
College Night<lb/>
12 Price Pitchers<lb/>
$2 Imports<lb/>
$2 Pool with College ID<lb/>
Karaoke @10pm<lb/>
Quick Picks: Film Review<lb/>
(KRT) ? Rarely do you<lb/>
encounter a movie without a<lb/>
shred of originality. YouGotServed<lb/>
is such a cinematic vacuum.<lb/>
Welcome to the world of<lb/>
competitive dancing. Teen<lb/>
poster hoys Omari Grandberry<lb/>
(also known as Omarion) and<lb/>
Marques "Batman" Houston ot<lb/>
the KMi singing groups B2K and<lb/>
IMX, respectively, star as David<lb/>
and Elgin, the leaders of a street<lb/>
dance troupe. They take on all<lb/>
comers in an oversied boxing<lb/>
ring in a warehouse owned l<lb/>
neighborhood sage Mr. Had<lb/>
(Steve Harvey).<lb/>
This entirely derivative film<lb/>
swipes pieces from a raft ol<lb/>
movies, Including BreaktnKrush<lb/>
Groove, DrumUnt and S Mile.<lb/>
I he plot - and there really<lb/>
Isn't enough resolves around<lb/>
a rili between the dancers that<lb/>
occurs when Das id starts paving<lb/>
too much attention to Elgin's<lb/>
little sister I iyah (Jennifer free-<lb/>
man). Will the guys patch up<lb/>
their differences In time lor the<lb/>
hig dance contest Huh'<lb/>
rheothei U2k.is fill out the<lb/>
i asl. M I V personalities I .1 I ,1<lb/>
and w.ule Robson havecameot.<lb/>
Hut the aitmg is laughably had<lb/>
and you can see every plot twist<lb/>
1 niDing<lb/>
The real stars of the film,<lb/>
choreographers Dave Scott and<lb/>
Shane Sparks, are never seen.<lb/>
But they arranged the fantastic<lb/>
dance routines that are 1 he only-<lb/>
reason to huy a ticket to You dot<lb/>
Served,<lb/>
The dam e-ol Is in hide a<lb/>
curiously high percentage ol<lb/>
break-dancing moves, as the<lb/>
crews execute a variety ol eve<lb/>
- and limb-popping head spins<lb/>
and freeze poses. That tits in<lb/>
with the oddly retro mood ol<lb/>
the film.<lb/>
Apparently You Got Served<lb/>
was as painful to make as it is to<lb/>
watch. B2K broke up shortly after.<lb/>
Feat<lb/>
mil<lb/>
po<lb/>
AVAILABLE FOR PARTIES<lb/>
LADIES FREE CALL757-?300<lb/>
1 Except for Special occasions. Emerald City is a private club for members and invited guests.<lb/>
Join ow tern!<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now hiring<lb/>
No experience needed -<lb/>
we will TRAIN you<lb/>
- Learn professional-writing skills -<lb/>
necessary in any field<lb/>
Boost your resume - set yourself<lb/>
apart for the competition<lb/>
Develop networking skills -<lb/>
make strong contacts for your future<lb/>
For more information, or to apply come by<lb/>
our office located on the second floor of<lb/>
the Student Publications Building (above<lb/>
the cashiers office), or call 328-6366.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is hiring<lb/>
for the following positions:<lb/>
Staff Writers<lb/>
Copy Editors<lb/>
Photographers<lb/>
Layout Designer<lb/>
THE FIVE ELEMENTS OF HIP HOP:<lb/>
A HIP HOP FESTIVAL<lb/>
FEATURING A 01<lb/>
M C<lb/>
0R0PHEAVY<lb/>
AND GRAFFITI ART<lb/>
SATURDAY FEBRUARY 7TH. 2004<lb/>
9PM TO 11 I'M<lb/>
AT THE PIRATE UNDERGROUND<lb/>
www. ecu.edustudeiit u n in n<lb/>
252-412-3152<lb/>
conceilyeeks ??? hot run i I.( om<lb/>
THE<lb/>
Rl<lb/>
Dl<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
8 PI<lb/>
TIC<lb/>
GE<lb/>
EC<lb/>
CAL<lb/>
OR<lb/>
wwi<lb/>
CA1<lb/>
FOF<lb/>
A FA<lb/>
CHA<lb/>
EXUt<lb/>
UMDfrRQPOCJIWi<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0013"/><lb/>
2 05 04<lb/>
2 Ob 04<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? I EATURES<lb/>
PAGE B3<lb/>
J<lb/>
ST<lb/>
guests.<lb/>
Myrtle Beach, SC<lb/>
Students Welcome<lb/>
Sandcatle<lb/>
Oceanfront Resorts<lb/>
Books,<lb/>
Homework or<lb/>
ClassesGuaranteed!<lb/>
Grammy<lb/>
from page A5<lb/>
Sandcastle<lb/>
RESORTS<lb/>
1-866-857-4061<lb/>
TOLL FREE<lb/>
Features indoor outdoor swim-<lb/>
ming pools, lazy river, hot tubs,<lb/>
poolside eabana bar and much<lb/>
more.<lb/>
NEARLY EVERYTHING!<lb/>
Call or visit us on the web at<lb/>
w ww.sandcastleresorts.com<lb/>
so thai leave's Ihristlna guileras<lb/>
pitiful, unconvincing "Beautiful"<lb/>
as being the sole mishap ol the<lb/>
bunch,<lb/>
Who Will Win: With<lb/>
Eminem being the only nomi-<lb/>
nee of the group to also have<lb/>
his song nominated In the<lb/>
Record of the Veai category,<lb/>
"Lose Yourself is your besl bei<lb/>
for Song of tin' Year, however,<lb/>
Zevon's recent passing could<lb/>
Influence voters otherwise.<lb/>
Best New Artist<lb/>
Nominees: Evanescence,<lb/>
50 Cent, Fountains oi Way or.<lb/>
Heather lleadley, Sean Paul<lb/>
Who Should Win: 50<lb/>
Cent. In one year, SO Cent<lb/>
has had the type ol sun ess<lb/>
that some artists spend decades<lb/>
trying to achieve.<lb/>
If this category awards the<lb/>
artists that (iranimy voters feel<lb/>
have the besl shot at a long, juc-<lb/>
i essful career, they need look no<lb/>
further than SO Cent.<lb/>
Who Shouldn't Win:<lb/>
Fountains of Wayne. Not<lb/>
because these alt-rockers from<lb/>
New York lack talent or ability,<lb/>
hut because they are far from<lb/>
being deemed "new .mists<lb/>
Every hit as permanent<lb/>
as the road construction In<lb/>
Greenville, Grammy voters<lb/>
always seem to categorize "new<lb/>
artists" bj what's "new" to<lb/>
them.<lb/>
I ountalns of Wayne has<lb/>
been around lor nearly a<lb/>
decade now. but a brief venture<lb/>
inside the mainstream top 40<lb/>
with "Stacy's Mom" appar-<lb/>
ently taught the eye of Grammy<lb/>
voters.<lb/>
Who Will Win: In any<lb/>
other year, 50 Cent would<lb/>
gladly accept the Best<lb/>
New Artist Grammy<lb/>
Award, however, this just<lb/>
happens to be "the year<lb/>
of the Outkasts" and (jramim<lb/>
voters will have patted<lb/>
themselves on the back too many<lb/>
limes for awarding Oulkast to<lb/>
also include "other" notable rap<lb/>
hip-hop artists.<lb/>
Ileadley's a long shot, and<lb/>
Sean Paul should he happy he<lb/>
actually received a nomina-<lb/>
tion in the first place. Best Bet:<lb/>
Evanescence.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Cinema Scene<lb/>
Student Union Rims<lb/>
Free with a student ID.<lb/>
Love Actually - starring Hugh<lb/>
Grant, Keira Knightley, Liam<lb/>
Neeson and Colin Firth The story<lb/>
of 10 couples and their romantic,<lb/>
hilarious adventures in London.<lb/>
Rated: R.<lb/>
In America - starring Samantha<lb/>
Morton. Paddy Considine and<lb/>
Sarah Bolger An aspiring Irish actor<lb/>
moves his wife and two young<lb/>
daughters lo New York to pursue<lb/>
his dreams There, his children<lb/>
also develop a friendship with<lb/>
an intense artist who lives in the<lb/>
apartment nexl door Rated: PG-13.<lb/>
Carmike 12<lb/>
Along Came Polly - starring Ben<lb/>
Stiller, Jennifer Aniston and Phillip<lb/>
Seymour Hoffman. A newly wedded<lb/>
husband (Stiller) is cheated on by<lb/>
his wife during their Honeymoon<lb/>
Soon after, he becomes involved<lb/>
in another relationship with a<lb/>
free-spirited woman named Polly<lb/>
(Aniston). Rated: PG-13.<lb/>
Barbershop 2 - starring Ice Cube.<lb/>
Cedric the Entertainer and Queen<lb/>
Latifah Sequel to this fall's runaway<lb/>
hit - spend another day with the<lb/>
crew of Calvin's barbershop in the<lb/>
South Side of Chicago. Rated: R<lb/>
The Big Bounce - starring Owen<lb/>
Wilson Morgan Freeman and<lb/>
Charlie Sheen. A mysterious drifter<lb/>
gets mixed up with a dangerous<lb/>
young woman and a powerful local<lb/>
businessman, neither of whom he<lb/>
can trust. Rated: PG-13<lb/>
The Butterfly Effect - starring<lb/>
Ashton Kutcher. Amy Smart and<lb/>
Melora Walters. A young man with<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 soon finds that with every<lb/>
trip back in time, it alters his future,<lb/>
leading him tc keep traveling<lb/>
back to repair the damage, with<lb/>
disastrous results Rated: R<lb/>
Catch That Kid - starnng Kristen<lb/>
Stewart. Corbin Bleu and Max<lb/>
Theiriot. A youngster who, with the<lb/>
help of two friends, robs the state-<lb/>
of the-art bank where her mother<lb/>
works to acquire the cash needed<lb/>
for a costly operation to save her<lb/>
ailing father Rated: PG.<lb/>
Cheaper By the Dozen - starring<lb/>
Steve Martin, Bonnie Hunt and<lb/>
Tom Welling. Story of a family of 12<lb/>
children's move to Chicago and<lb/>
their often humorous adjustments<lb/>
to big city life Rated: PG.<lb/>
Cold Mountain - starring Jude Law.<lb/>
Nicole Kidman and Rene Zellweger.<lb/>
Story of the long journey home of<lb/>
a wounded Civil War soldier who<lb/>
journeys home to North Carolina to<lb/>
be reunited with his wife. Rated: R.<lb/>
Miracle - starring Kurt Russell.<lb/>
Patricia Clarkson and Noah<lb/>
Emmerich. The amazing story of<lb/>
the 1980 U. S Olympic hockey<lb/>
team, which stunned the heavily<lb/>
favored Soviet squad in the<lb/>
semifinals to advance to the<lb/>
championship game, inspiring the<lb/>
famous question: "Do you believe<lb/>
in miracles?" Rated: PG.<lb/>
My Baby's Daddy - starring Eddie<lb/>
Griffith. Anthony Anderson and<lb/>
Method Man Three bachelors<lb/>
from Ihe hood endure the trials of<lb/>
brotherhood and pregnancy when<lb/>
their girlfriends become pregnant at<lb/>
the same time Rated: PG-13.<lb/>
The Perfect Score - starring<lb/>
Scarlett Johanson, Chris Evans<lb/>
and Darius Miles Five desperate<lb/>
high school students break into the<lb/>
Princeton Testing Center in order to<lb/>
steal the answers to the SAT. Rated:<lb/>
PG-13<lb/>
Torque - starring Ice Cube<lb/>
and Martin Henderson. Veteran<lb/>
motorcycle racer Cary Ford<lb/>
(Henderson) is framed for the<lb/>
murder of the gang's leader and<lb/>
it is up to his gang, the Machine,<lb/>
to help him elude the FBI Rated:<lb/>
PG-13.<lb/>
Win A Date With Tad Hamilton<lb/>
- starring Kate Bosworth. Josh<lb/>
Duhamel 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/>
You Got Served - starring Marques<lb/>
Houston, Omarion, J-Boog and<lb/>
Fizz The social subculture of street<lb/>
dancing is explored through a<lb/>
pair of friends, David (Omarion)<lb/>
and Elgin (Houston), who want to<lb/>
open their own hip-hop dance and<lb/>
recording studio, but in order to<lb/>
do that, they must first win a street<lb/>
dance competition against<lb/>
another group of street dancers to<lb/>
prove that they have talent.<lb/>
Rated: PG-13.<lb/>
THE ECU STUDENT UNION PRESENTS:<lb/>
RUSSELL SIMMONS<lb/>
?ENr(<lb/>
ON BROADWAY<lb/>
DEF POETRY JAM<lb/>
MONDAY MARCH 8, 2004<lb/>
8 PM WRIGHT AUDITORIUM EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
TICKETS ON SALE FEB. 9<lb/>
GET THEM WHILE THEY LAST!<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS $5.00<lb/>
CALL 1 -800-ECU-ARTS TO<lb/>
ORDER YOUR TICKETS<lb/>
www.ecuarts.com<lb/>
CALL 252-328-4788<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION<lb/>
A FAST-PACED, HIGHLY<lb/>
CHARGED EVENING.<lb/>
TIME MAGAZINE<lb/>
EXUBERANT, POWERFUL AND ELECTRIC.<lb/>
THE NEW YORK TIMES<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0014"/><lb/>
PAGL B4<lb/>
2 05 04<lb/>
Pirates to host Charlotte 49ers<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
RYAN DOWNEY<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
TONY ZOPPO<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
252.328.6366<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Pirate baseball set for intra-squad games<lb/>
The ECU baseball team will make It a full weekend of Pirate Athletics<lb/>
beginning Friday afternoon at 3 p m ECU will play three intrasquad games<lb/>
this weekend in conjunction with a full slate of Pirate basketball The<lb/>
Diamond Pirates will begin play Saturday afternoon at 11 am - two hours<lb/>
before the Lady Pirate basketball team takes on Marquette ECU will wrap<lb/>
up intrasquad play Sunday at 2 p.m. ECU returns 15 lettermen including<lb/>
2004 Conference USA Preseason Player of the Year Darryl Lawhorn ECU<lb/>
opens up its season in two weeks when the Pirates host UNC Asheville<lb/>
on Feb 13 in the first game of a 12-game homestand<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Patriots celebrate win with fans<lb/>
The New England Patriots held high their second Super Bowl trophy in three<lb/>
seasons before a raucous downtown crowd, celebrating a championship<lb/>
that was as thrilling as the first one Before a shoulder-to-shoulder crowd<lb/>
in City Hall Plaza, Super Bowl MVP Tom Brady stood with team owner<lb/>
Robert Kraft, coach Bill Belichick and dozens of teammates amid a hail of<lb/>
red. white and blue confetti Brady and Kraft hoisted the twin Super Bowl<lb/>
trophies as they led a parade to City Hall before hundreds of thousands<lb/>
of fans Kraft and Belichick praised the players work ethic that led to a<lb/>
season-ending streak of 15 straight wins and Sunday's 32-29 victory over<lb/>
the Carolina Panthers.<lb/>
Marino quits new job<lb/>
Dan Marino resigned as senior vice president of the Miami Dolphins, only<lb/>
three weeks after accepting a )Ob that brought him back to the team he<lb/>
quarterbacked for 17 seasons As recently as Sunday, Marino denied reports<lb/>
saying he was having second thoughts about assuming control of the<lb/>
Dolphins football operations But at 245 pm, he made an unannounced<lb/>
visit to owner Wayne Huizenga's office and quit, spurning attempts the<lb/>
owner made to change his mind Huizenga said the Dolphins will begin<lb/>
searching for a new executive with an extensive football background to<lb/>
join Miami's management team and oversee football operations It has not<lb/>
been determined if that person would have the same title Marino was given<lb/>
in his short stint as an executive<lb/>
Gibbs forming staff<lb/>
Washington Redskins coach Joe Gibbs will have two assistant head<lb/>
coaches, plus separate offensive and defensive coordinators, when he<lb/>
returns to the sidelines after an 11 -year retirement Nearly all of the names<lb/>
have been public knowledge for weeks, but some of the titles were surprises<lb/>
when the Redskins announced Gibbs veteran-laden staff Former Buffalo<lb/>
coach Gregg Williams was listed as "assistant head coach defense while<lb/>
Greg Blache is defensive coordinator and defensive line coach Blache<lb/>
spent the last five seasons as Chicago's defensive coordinator.<lb/>
De La Hoya to fight again<lb/>
Oscar De La Hoya said he will return to the ring June 5 for the first time since<lb/>
losing his 154 pound title to Shane Mosley last September in Las Vegas In<lb/>
a statement released by his promotion company. Golden Boy Promotions.<lb/>
De La Hoya said he has not decided on an opponent yet for the fight<lb/>
NHL All-Star Shuffle<lb/>
Bnan Rafalski will replace fellow New Jersey Devils defenseman Scott<lb/>
Stevens on the Eastern Conference All-Star team Voted in by fans as<lb/>
a starter. Stevens has missed the past 12 games due to a concussion,<lb/>
Rafalski will make his All-Star game debut Sunday in Minnesota He was<lb/>
named to the North Amencan All-Star team in 2002 but missed the game<lb/>
because of a knee miury Also, the NHL named Vancouver Canucks forward<lb/>
Markus Naslund and Devils defenseman Scott Niedermayer captains for<lb/>
the All-Star game<lb/>
USA Women's soccer wins<lb/>
The United States beat Canada to win the Four Nations women's soccer<lb/>
tournament a tuneup for the Athens Olympics China placed second after<lb/>
rallying to tie with Sweden which finished third Canada was fourth in<lb/>
the round-robin tournament The Americans were without Mia Hamm<lb/>
and Brandi Chastain They are expected to return for Olympic qualifying<lb/>
beginning Feb 25 in Costa Rica<lb/>
Runners complete unorthodox race<lb/>
Rudolf Reifberger and Andrea Mayr won the men's and women s divisions<lb/>
in the annual race up the 86 flights of the Empire State Building Reitberger<lb/>
and Mayr are friends from Julbach, Austria, and tram together for the Empire<lb/>
State Building Run-Up Reitberger covered the 1.576 steps in 10 minutes,<lb/>
37 seconds Mayr set the women's course record at 12:08. breaking the<lb/>
previous mark of 12:19 set in 1996 by Amencan Belinda Soszyn Finishing<lb/>
second and third among the men were Ran and Dan Alterman, identical<lb/>
twins from Israel A total of 117 men and women from 11 countries took<lb/>
part in the trek organized by New York Road Runners<lb/>
Former Giants coach Fassel joins Ravens staff<lb/>
Former New York Giants coach Jim Fassel joined the coaching staff of<lb/>
the Baltimore Ravens on Wednesday Fassel's title was not immediately<lb/>
disclosed, but it is believed he will serve an advisory role and be an assistant<lb/>
head coach to Brian Billick Fassel was to be introduced at an afternoon<lb/>
news conference The move unites the head coaches for the 2001 Super<lb/>
Bowl, when Billicks Ravens beat Fassel's Giants 34-7 Fassel was fired<lb/>
following the Giants 4-12 season, which ended with an eight-game losing<lb/>
streak Fassel hopes his pb with the Ravens will keep him busy until he<lb/>
receives an offer to be a head coach Until that time, he will work to improve<lb/>
an offense that finished last in the NFL in passing in 2003 The Ravens<lb/>
expect Fassel to assist offensive coordinator Matt Cavanaugh and aid the<lb/>
progression of the team s two young quarterbacks. Kyle Boiler and Anthony<lb/>
Wnght Fassel is still under contract with the Giants, so New York will pay<lb/>
the balance of the $2 7 million remaining for his final year ? minus what<lb/>
he will receive from the Ravens<lb/>
Team hopes to build<lb/>
on big conference win<lb/>
TRENT WYNNE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
I be Pirates looked dead and<lb/>
tar from any chance at the Con-<lb/>
ference USA tournament heading<lb/>
into Tuesday night's contest with<lb/>
South Florida. The Pirates came<lb/>
in with an (1-7 record in the<lb/>
conference and the road monkey,<lb/>
which has been on their back<lb/>
ever since joining C-USA.<lb/>
A huge,19-point performance<lb/>
trom frank Robinson, however,<lb/>
led the I'irates to a 59-57 victory<lb/>
over the Bulls and helped them<lb/>
notch their first ever conference<lb/>
road victory.<lb/>
"Frank can really shoot the<lb/>
hall and he's one of the hardest<lb/>
workers in this program said<lb/>
Head Coach Bill llcrrion on the<lb/>
freshman's efforts.<lb/>
Since the conference tour-<lb/>
nament contains 12 teams, the<lb/>
I'irates would lie the last team in<lb/>
if the season were to end today.<lb/>
South Florida and Tulane still<lb/>
have yet to record a conference<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
"That's our first win, and like<lb/>
A Basketball<lb/>
VISITORS: ECU 9-9,1-7 C-USA<lb/>
I told our kids, right now today,<lb/>
we're in the C-USA tournament<lb/>
Hen inn said.<lb/>
Now every ballgame becomes<lb/>
that much more key in the<lb/>
I'irates run for the tourney. This<lb/>
weekend ECU hosts Charlotte<lb/>
(13-5, 5-2) in a game that now<lb/>
has serious implications on the<lb/>
Pirates' chances. A win would<lb/>
put the Pirates two games up on<lb/>
the teams left out ol the tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
In their first meeting, the<lb/>
49ers beat the Pirates 81-65, a<lb/>
game in which the I'irates were<lb/>
still sporting a healthy Gabriel<lb/>
Mikulas.<lb/>
 harlotte has also beaten the<lb/>
likes of Syracuse, Marquette, and<lb/>
Cincinnati already this season.<lb/>
ECU'S main delensive focus<lb/>
may be centered around perim-<lb/>
eter defense due to Charlotte's<lb/>
trigger happy guard Brendan<lb/>
Plavich.<lb/>
UAB and Memphis shut down<lb/>
Plavich's ability to shoot the Iri-<lb/>
fecta, holding him to just five<lb/>
combined points in Charlotte's<lb/>
only two conference defeats.<lb/>
The 49ers only scored 62 <lb/>
points against the Blazers and "t<lb/>
69 against the Tigers, way below <lb/>
see PIRATE page 85<lb/>
The Pirates will be looking for their second C-USA victory.<lb/>
HOME TEAM: USF 6-11,0-6 C-USA<lb/>
Player NameFG-FGAFT-FTAReb PtsAM<lb/>
31 WILEY, Derrick4-135-71114238<lb/>
33 BING. Erroyl2-56-141010038<lb/>
25 BADIANE Moussa2-62-256019<lb/>
05 ROBINSON. Frank7-102-3119033<lb/>
34 COOK. Mike3-121-257333<lb/>
01 RIVERS. Belton0-00-00005<lb/>
10McNEILJaphel0-20-00029<lb/>
13 MACKAY. Luke0-20-00008<lb/>
55 GRINDLEY. Garth31-243017<lb/>
NumberName<lb/>
FG-FGA FT-FTA TOT Pts. A MIN<lb/>
02 GRAHAM. Brian0-00-010123<lb/>
21 LEATHER, Terrence4-101-41110236<lb/>
20 MORRIS, Gerrick3-66-7612038<lb/>
03 SWIFT, Brian7-130-0220740<lb/>
12 MOSLEY. Bradley6-171-3515740<lb/>
04 BRIGMAN. Brandon0-10-070012<lb/>
33 DIARRA, Konimba0-10-040111<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
20-48 8-14 37 57 17 200<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
19-53 17-30 36 59 7 200<lb/>
TOTAL FG 1st Halt 9-32 28.1 2nd Half 10-21 476 Game: 358 DEADB<lb/>
3-PI.FG 1st Half 2-7 28,6 2nd Half 2-6 33.3 Game: 30.8 REBS<lb/>
F Throw 1st Half.5-8 625 2nd Half: 12-22 54,5 Game: 567 5<lb/>
TOTAL FG 1st Half 8-21381 2nd Half, 12-27 44.4 Game: 41.7 DEADB<lb/>
3 Pi. FG 1st Half: 3-1127.3 2nd Half: 6-16 37.5 Game: 33.3 REBS<lb/>
F Throw 1st Halt: 2-6 33.3 2nd Half: 6-8 75.0 Game: 57.1 3<lb/>
ECU women will take to the road<lb/>
Lady Pirates will try to<lb/>
rebound from losses<lb/>
ERIC GILMORE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
I he women's basketball team<lb/>
will take on conference foe Saint<lb/>
l.ouis Friday night and Memphis<lb/>
two days later. The weekend will<lb/>
provide winnable games for Ihe<lb/>
l.ady I'irates .is thev try to grab<lb/>
two conference victories on the<lb/>
road.<lb/>
the women (14-6, 5-2) are<lb/>
looking to rebound trom their<lb/>
current two- game skid. Despite<lb/>
the losses, the women are off to<lb/>
their best start since the 1985-<lb/>
1986 season when thev started<lb/>
15-5.<lb/>
Ihe l.ady Pirates desperately<lb/>
need to pick up a win ovei Saint<lb/>
l.ouis (7-14, 1-7) after dropping<lb/>
iiiln ,i lii' lor fifth place m the<lb/>
conference. The Billikens have<lb/>
dropped 12 of their last 13<lb/>
games and are trying to claw<lb/>
their way out of the Conference<lb/>
USA cellar.<lb/>
Memphis (15-6, 5-3) is just<lb/>
a half game behind the l.ady<lb/>
I'irates in the conference stand-<lb/>
ings. The lady I Igers are one of<lb/>
sewn conference teams to have<lb/>
gained 14 or more wins (his<lb/>
season. C-usa Is the only confer-<lb/>
ence in the nation to boast that<lb/>
accolade. C-USA has three ranked<lb/>
teams in No. 15 DePaul, No. 19<lb/>
If 11 and No. 23 Houston.<lb/>
ECU will need a big perfor-<lb/>
mance fromourtney Willis who<lb/>
is averaging 18.3 points per game<lb/>
and 9.4 rebounds. Ihe standout<lb/>
trom layetteville, N'l! is currently<lb/>
tilth in the league in scoring.<lb/>
Willis has scored in double<lb/>
ligures in ever) game this season<lb/>
pushing her consecutive streak<lb/>
to 20. With 1,220 points, the<lb/>
senior forwardcenter needs just<lb/>
nine points to move into eighth<lb/>
?ill time on Ihe career sioring<lb/>
list to pass former Pirate great<lb/>
Justine Allpress.<lb/>
Jennifer Jackson is<lb/>
beginning to be the player that<lb/>
she was last season. Xhe junior<lb/>
recorded a double-double against<lb/>
Marquette when she had 18<lb/>
points and grabbed 12 rebounds.<lb/>
However, Jackson shot just 30<lb/>
percent from the field and just<lb/>
four of 18 Irom behind the arc-<lb/>
over the weekend.<lb/>
Senior guard Alisha Bishop<lb/>
notched 13 points against<lb/>
DePaul and will look to con-<lb/>
tinue her momentum. Freshman<lb/>
guard Keisha Anthony has trailed<lb/>
off the past couple ot games, but<lb/>
is still averaging double figures<lb/>
at 10.7 points in conference<lb/>
play, tiuard Viola Cooper is lifth<lb/>
in the league in turnover ratio<lb/>
averaging 1.71 assists per<lb/>
turnover.<lb/>
Saint l.ouis will be no easy<lb/>
match for the struggling l.ady<lb/>
Pirates. Senior forward Angie<lb/>
Lewis will lead the Billikens.<lb/>
Lewis leads Saint Louis in<lb/>
scoring at 17.3 points per game.<lb/>
Senior Kristi 1 loiloway is the only<lb/>
other Bllliken averaging double<lb/>
ligures at 11.1 points.<lb/>
Ihe Billikens could cause<lb/>
match-up problems for the<lb/>
Undersized Lady Pirates.<lb/>
Saint l.ouis lias seven players<lb/>
listed at six feet or above. The<lb/>
majority of the storing conns<lb/>
Irom the paint, but the Billikens<lb/>
lead the league in three-point<lb/>
percentage at nearly 41 percent.<lb/>
The l.ady I'irates will have<lb/>
more of a challenge at the<lb/>
Pyramid in Memphis. Memphis<lb/>
currently has the longest win-<lb/>
ning streak in the conference<lb/>
al tour straight games. The lady<lb/>
Tigers have lost three conference<lb/>
games by a combined seven<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Victoria! Crawford who is tied<lb/>
lor eighth in the conference in<lb/>
storing averaging 16.4 points,<lb/>
will lead Memphis, lenniter<lb/>
Sullivan complements Crawford<lb/>
in averaging 13.1 points per<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will be looking to start a new win streak<lb/>
against two Conference USA foes this Friday and Sunday.<lb/>
contest. Forward Raven Rodg-<lb/>
ers is coming off a 13 point, 14<lb/>
rebound effort in a recent win<lb/>
against Southern Mississippi.<lb/>
C-USA TV will televise the<lb/>
match-up on Sunday after-<lb/>
noon against Memphis with<lb/>
Amy Prichard and Don Russell<lb/>
providing the commentary. Alter<lb/>
the weekend, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
will gear up for a home stand<lb/>
against nationally ranked 1(1!<lb/>
and Houston.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
iporti@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
ECU track looks to build on momentum<lb/>
Teams will square off<lb/>
against multiple teams<lb/>
BLAKE MELVIN<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
I In men's Hack team will<lb/>
look to i hum out another suc-<lb/>
cessful showing this weekend in<lb/>
Lincoln, Neb<lb/>
The men responded<lb/>
well to the competition at<lb/>
the Gator Inivltattonal last<lb/>
weekend and hope to keep<lb/>
things rolling.oach Bill<lb/>
( arson will take 12 guys with<lb/>
him to take on a large Meld<lb/>
Senior Ricardo Bell trom<lb/>
Havelock, , will be look-<lb/>
ing to improve on his time<lb/>
in the 8(10. He finished<lb/>
seventh at the Gator Invita-<lb/>
tional.<lb/>
"We're hoping to improve on<lb/>
Out times and get sharper said<lb/>
Distance Coach Len Klepack.<lb/>
The women will compete<lb/>
against 15 teams this week-<lb/>
end, the majority of them<lb/>
hailing trom Northarolina. the<lb/>
(lassie provides competition<lb/>
from the ACC, SEC, Conference<lb/>
USA and also some mid majors<lb/>
like Appalachian State and<lb/>
Davidson, learns trom the ACC<lb/>
include the lai Heels, Duke and<lb/>
N.C. State.Georgia will represent<lb/>
the SK and South Florida will<lb/>
come from (USA.<lb/>
"It's still tough to tell who<lb/>
will be our top performers this<lb/>
Weekend as we are still going<lb/>
through a training process but<lb/>
we base a number of ladies<lb/>
performing strong said Head<lb/>
( oath Matt Munson.<lb/>
Munson said<lb/>
sophomore Jessica Collins is on<lb/>
the verge of a major breakthrough<lb/>
atter Finishing fourth this past<lb/>
weekend, while junior Tammie<lb/>
Mentel has not finished below<lb/>
the top four this year. Munson<lb/>
has also been pleased with<lb/>
freshman Jessica Georglo<lb/>
in throws, who has reached<lb/>
a new personal best each time<lb/>
out. Munson also believes<lb/>
senior and school record holder<lb/>
in the high ump oleen McGinn<lb/>
will be the leader in C-USA aftei<lb/>
this weekend,<lb/>
"We have a good, young<lb/>
team but we have red shirted<lb/>
some kids to bring them along<lb/>
and we expect to make a run<lb/>
for the conference title in a lew<lb/>
years Munson said.<lb/>
This miter can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeaitcarolinian.com.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0015"/><lb/>
PAGE B5<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? SPORTS<lb/>
2-05-04<lb/>
Duke stays ahead in TEC rankings Pirate<lb/>
from page B4<lb/>
The Seahawks are the Pirates' last opponents this season<lb/>
ECU swimmers will<lb/>
travel to Wilmington<lb/>
Pirates hungry for<lb/>
second straight win<lb/>
TONY ZOPPO<lb/>
ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
The men's and women's<lb/>
swimm ing and diving teams will<lb/>
go to Wilmington this upcoming<lb/>
Saturday, looking for their second<lb/>
straight win.<lb/>
After the victory over William<lb/>
and Mary last weekend, both the<lb/>
men and women improved on<lb/>
the season - the men to 5-3 and<lb/>
the women to 6-2.<lb/>
UNCW will also be coming<lb/>
off wins against Davidson,<lb/>
William and Mary and Old<lb/>
Dominion. The Seahawk men<lb/>
are undefeated in the Colonial<lb/>
Athletic Association (4-0) and<lb/>
are 5-3 overall while the women<lb/>
have posted a 4-6 record overall<lb/>
and 2-2 in the CAA.<lb/>
Leading (he way for the men<lb/>
will be sophomore Ben Pulskamp,<lb/>
who paced the men against their<lb/>
CAA foes last week by winning<lb/>
the 100 and 200 butterfly and<lb/>
the 200 backstroke. The women<lb/>
will look to Kebeka league to<lb/>
swim well again as she took the<lb/>
50 free and 100 butterfly in their<lb/>
last contest.<lb/>
The meet will be held in<lb/>
Wilmington, this Saturday, Feb.<lb/>
7th, at 2 p.m. It will mark the<lb/>
last meet of the year for both<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
iports@theeostcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Blue Devils could be<lb/>
tested at UNC tonight<lb/>
BRANDON HUGHES<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
I The Duke Blue Devils and<lb/>
 Stanford Cardinal maintained<lb/>
U. their No. 1 and No. 2 rankings<lb/>
 for the second consecutive week.<lb/>
K Both teams pulled out wins on<lb/>
upset Saturday, a day that saw<lb/>
eight nationally rankeil teams<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
Duke is clearly the best team<lb/>
in the ACC and has a huge<lb/>
match-up with UNC tonight,<lb/>
arguably the best rivalry in col-<lb/>
lege basketball. The Cardinal did<lb/>
pick up one first-place vote and is<lb/>
ready to claim the top spot if the<lb/>
Blue Devils falter in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Stanford will have their toughest<lb/>
game left on the schedule Feb. 7,<lb/>
against Arizona, a team that fell<lb/>
out ol the TEC Top 10 after losing<lb/>
to Washington.<lb/>
St. Joseph's Is on a mission<lb/>
to become the first team to go<lb/>
undefeated in the regular season<lb/>
since 1991. The Hawks move up<lb/>
into the No. 3 slot after key wins<lb/>
over Temple and Villanova. Only<lb/>
Dayton and Temple seem to pose<lb/>
a threat to the Hawks before the<lb/>
NCAA tournament.<lb/>
Pittsburgh picked up their<lb/>
20th win over Boston College<lb/>
but the Panthers have one of<lb/>
the toughest schedules remain-<lb/>
ing in the Top 10 with the likes<lb/>
of Connecticut, Syracuse and<lb/>
Providence rapidly approaching<lb/>
on the calendar.<lb/>
The Mississippi State Bulldogs<lb/>
keep surprising everyone as they<lb/>
jumped up three spots to the No.<lb/>
5 position. They are led by Law-<lb/>
rence Roberts and Tim my Bowers<lb/>
who are both averaging over 15<lb/>
points per game.<lb/>
UCONN also leaplrogs up<lb/>
three slots and is ranked No.<lb/>
6 this week. The Huskies abso-<lb/>
lutely embarrassed No. 22 Syra-<lb/>
cuse 84-56 on Monday. Center<lb/>
Kmeka Okalor had All-American<lb/>
numbers once again, scoring 25<lb/>
points with II rebounds and four<lb/>
blocks.<lb/>
No. 7 Louisville was perhaps<lb/>
the nation's hottest team, win-<lb/>
ning 16 straight before being<lb/>
upset by Marquette 77-70 last<lb/>
week. The loss dropped the Car-<lb/>
dinals four spots but Fransisco<lb/>
Garcia might be able to persuade<lb/>
All-American voters with a good<lb/>
performance down the stretch;<lb/>
seven of their final nine games<lb/>
will be nationally televised.<lb/>
Conaga hangs in the Top<lb/>
10 once again at No. H after easy<lb/>
wins over San Diego and Santa<lb/>
Clara. The Bulldogs should have<lb/>
no problem winning out with<lb/>
the rest of the WCC vastly over-<lb/>
matched. Cionaga's only two<lb/>
losses this season have been to<lb/>
St. Joe's and to Stanford.<lb/>
Kentucky is ranked No. 9<lb/>
this week alter falling to a very<lb/>
talented Vanderbilt squad on<lb/>
the road. The Wildcats redeemed<lb/>
themselves with a three-point<lb/>
win on the road over No. 21 Flor-<lb/>
ida on Tuesday, but it doesn't get<lb/>
any easier for head coach Tubby<lb/>
Smith, 1 he Gators will be waiting<lb/>
in the regular season finale and<lb/>
upstart No. 24 South Carolina<lb/>
(18-3) will play Kentucky twice.<lb/>
Oklahoma State cracks the<lb/>
11lop 10 this week and will<lb/>
round out the rankings with an<lb/>
impressive 16-2 record. The Cow-<lb/>
boys revenged an earlier loss to<lb/>
No. 14 Texas lech and are 3-1<lb/>
against ranked opponents this<lb/>
season. The only real blemish<lb/>
on their season was an early loss<lb/>
to BY II where senior center Rafael<lb/>
Araujo pounded the Cowboys for<lb/>
32 points and 11 rebounds.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
IpTop Ten<lb/>
Rank TeamRec.PtsLW<lb/>
1Duke (5)18-11191<lb/>
2Stanford (1)18-01152<lb/>
3St Josephs19-01064<lb/>
4Pittsburgh20-11025<lb/>
5Miss. St.18-1948<lb/>
6Connecticut18-3889<lb/>
7Louisville16-2873<lb/>
8Gonzaga17-27710<lb/>
9Kentucky15-3736<lb/>
10Oklahoma St16-262NR<lb/>
Ws<lb/>
'TERUNG<lb/>
U niversity Manor<lb/>
M<lb/>
f<lb/>
Good Times! More Chances to Win! Bsm<lb/>
More Friends! More Fun. More For . nformaton Ca<lb/>
tt&amp;Z&amp;Z&amp;-r 758-5551<lb/>
$10U ram y E? 9:30.5:30 Mon Frj 1Q-5 Sat<lb/>
Application Fee:<lb/>
-Required<lb/>
Security Deposit:<lb/>
-Required<lb/>
Pets accepted with<lb/>
non-refundable fee.<lb/>
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 112 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/>
their average of HO points per on<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
Another key ingredient for<lb/>
the Pirates to get the win this<lb/>
weekend comes with fan support<lb/>
ECU'S recent rut may look bad<lb/>
statistically to the fans, but the<lb/>
Pirates have been in almost every<lb/>
conference game this season with<lb/>
a chance to win.<lb/>
"I don't think we're playing<lb/>
that bad, I really don't Herrion<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We're getting a great effort,<lb/>
and athletically I think we match<lb/>
up with teams right now<lb/>
"We're a small basketball<lb/>
team, but these kids play with<lb/>
a lot of heart Herrion said.<lb/>
"We're tough. We scrap. Don't<lb/>
ever discount the effort of these<lb/>
kids. I don't think I can get any<lb/>
more out of these kids as far as<lb/>
their effort<lb/>
A tough perimeter defense,<lb/>
a tough crowd, and a mentally<lb/>
tough Pirate basketball team<lb/>
could possibly spell win again<lb/>
for ECU.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcaroiinian.com.<lb/>
Bobby Knight<lb/>
in hot water<lb/>
with officials<lb/>
(KRT) LUBBOCK, Texas-<lb/>
Texas Tech chancellor Or. David<lb/>
K. Smith lives a charmed life. For<lb/>
at the end of business on Tuesday,<lb/>
be hadn't lost his job. He hadn't<lb/>
been suspended. Heck, he hadn't<lb/>
been fined or reprimanded in any<lb/>
manner whatsoever despite risk-<lb/>
ing his career a day earlier at a<lb/>
local grocer's salad bar.<lb/>
That was when he dared<lb/>
tell lied Raiders men's basket-<lb/>
ball coach Bob Knight that he<lb/>
thought Knight was doing an<lb/>
especially good job off the court<lb/>
this season managing bis legend-<lb/>
ary fiery temper.<lb/>
Knight took exception to what<lb/>
the compliment Implied, that he<lb/>
had been, in fact, some sort of<lb/>
hothead during his short time<lb/>
in Lubbock. After all, although<lb/>
Knight played himself in the<lb/>
movie "Anger Management<lb/>
the film was fiction. So Knight<lb/>
shouted down the chancellor,<lb/>
dogging him out of the grocery,<lb/>
snapping at him all the way into<lb/>
the parking lot, witnesses said.<lb/>
The university had a crisis on<lb/>
its hands: What to do about the<lb/>
chancellor?<lb/>
After all, since Knight fell on<lb/>
this campus, the chancellor, or<lb/>
the president, or the Hoard of<lb/>
Regents, or other administra-<lb/>
tors, or the faculty haven't run<lb/>
this supposed institution of<lb/>
higher learning. They're AWOL.<lb/>
They've abdicated their responsi-<lb/>
bilities. They've been absolutely<lb/>
emasculated.<lb/>
Texas Tech has become one<lb/>
of the poster schools for what's<lb/>
wrong in big-time college athlet-<lb/>
ics. It is the perfect example of<lb/>
an academic institution that has<lb/>
turned itself over to the folks in<lb/>
the gymnasium.<lb/>
The Big Man on Campus<lb/>
in Lubbock is not in the office<lb/>
ostensibly entrusted with con-<lb/>
trol. Knight is the one running<lb/>
things here. He's been doing it<lb/>
since the moment he offi-<lb/>
cially arrived here and was feted<lb/>
with a welcoming party that<lb/>
resembled a revival. Everybody<lb/>
else associated with this school is<lb/>
just genuflecting in his presence,<lb/>
or staying the heck out of his way.<lb/>
I le's the only one on campus with<lb/>
any chutpah.<lb/>
To be sure, just a few weeks<lb/>
ago Knight, consented to a<lb/>
nationally televised taped inter-<lb/>
view on ESPN before his Red<lb/>
Raiders played Iowa, coached bv<lb/>
his former star Steve Alford, in<lb/>
Dallas. Knight cursed repeatedly<lb/>
and with great purpose through-<lb/>
out the interview. The so-called<lb/>
bosses at Texas Tech just got<lb/>
Knight to say he wouldn't use<lb/>
such language again in public. He<lb/>
apologized in part by pretending<lb/>
to curse some more.<lb/>
"S<lb/>
RIGGAN<lb/>
SHOE REPAI<lb/>
3'93-A Bast totnSt<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
758-0204<lb/>
Owner &amp; Operator over 30 Years<lb/>
SImm; Repair At Its Very Best<lb/>
Uw Cost - High Qnality<lb/>
We Repair Men's. Women's St<lb/>
Children's Shoes, Cowboj Boots<lb/>
Work Shoes. Rnckporl Soles.<lb/>
OPKN MonFri.<lb/>
7:30 AM- 6:00 PM,<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
9:00 AM- 1:00 PM<lb/>
<pb facs="00059480_0016"/><lb/>
205 04<lb/>
I HE LAST CAROLINIAN ? SPORFS<lb/>
PAGE B6<lb/>
Take Out<lb/>
758-2774<lb/>
301 9? rvti <lb/>
VV?Jr!<lb/>
1 I1?r<lb/>
Nightly Dinner Specials 4.95<lb/>
Monday - Homemade Meatloaf<lb/>
Tuesday - Country Fried Chicken<lb/>
Wednesday - Spaghetti and Meatballs<lb/>
Thursday - Greek or Caesar Salad WChix<lb/>
Friday - Fish and Chips<lb/>
Saturday - Meat or 5 Cheese lasagnia<lb/>
Sunday - Fried Shrimp Plate<lb/>
Pally Prink Specials<lb/>
Monday - M.75 Pomestic Pottles<lb/>
Tuesday - '2 Imports<lb/>
Wednesday - M Mug Pud Lt 44 Pitchers<lb/>
Thursday - n House Hi-balls 3 Wine<lb/>
?2.50 Import of the day<lb/>
Friday -Margarita ? 2.50 Import of the day<lb/>
Saturday - 3 Llts 6- 2.50 import of the Pay<lb/>
Sunday - 2.50 Pint Guinness. Pass.<lb/>
Newcastle, flack and Tan<lb/>
Get<lb/>
caught<lb/>
reading.<lb/>
All Apartments arc within walking distance from ECU campus, energy efficient, pets welcome<lb/>
Spacious Secluded Two Bedroom UnitsOne Bath<lb/>
Free Water &amp; Sewer ? Central Heat &amp; Air<lb/>
Insulated Windows &amp; Doors ? Dishwasher ? Ceiling fan<lb/>
CAT5 Phone Lines ? Refrigerator ? Stove ? Mini Blinds<lb/>
Deadbolt Locks ? Bike Racks ? 1st Floor Patio<lb/>
2nd Floor Balcony ? Pre-Wired for Surround Sound<lb/>
Pre-Wired for Security<lb/>
Ashton Woods<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
Pitt Property Management' 108 Brownlea Dr, Suite A Greenville, NC 27858 252.758.1921 ext. 30<lb/>
TEC is now hiring staff writers. Apply at our office located<lb/>
on the 2nd floor of the Student Publications Building.<lb/>
? Experience required<lb/>
? Must have a 2.0 GPA<lb/>
' I'M<lb/>
G<lb/>
H5<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
iSl<lb/>
MR<lb/>
"AND IT'S<lb/>
GOOOOD<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
PITCHERS OF DRAFT!<lb/>
$3.99 BUFFALO WINGS!<lb/>
GAMES &amp; PRIZES!<lb/>
SUNDAY, FEB. Is.<lb/>
GO<lb/>
PANTHERS!<lb/>
WATCH IT<lb/>
HERE IN<lb/>
1 ?iimttiiifciiwiii b HDTV!<lb/>
START YOUR MONDAY FIESTA EARLY!<lb/>
FIESTA HERE ON SUPERBOWL SUNDAY!<lb/>
WATCH THE PASSES. MAKE SOME PASSES. SAVE YOUR PESOS!<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE 757-1666 CALL756-5527 FOR DELIVERY<lb/>
Marquette mum on Big East<lb/>
(KRT) MI1.KWAUKKK ? Mar-<lb/>
quette University athletic direc-<lb/>
tor Bill Cords confirmed Monday<lb/>
that the school had the option of<lb/>
leaving Conference USA for the<lb/>
Big East without paying an exit<lb/>
fee. but wouldn't say whether it<lb/>
will do so.<lb/>
According to Cords, C-USA<lb/>
has offered the eight schools that<lb/>
are leaving the choice of doing so<lb/>
without penalty.<lb/>
In exchange, they'd need<lb/>
to agree to play an unspecified<lb/>
number of games in both foot-<lb/>
ball and basketball each season<lb/>
against C-USA teams once they<lb/>
join their new leagues.<lb/>
Cincinnati, Del'aul, Lou-<lb/>
isville and South Florida will<lb/>
join Marquette in the Big East<lb/>
after next season, and Charlotte<lb/>
and Saint l.ouis will leave for<lb/>
the Atlantic 10. Texas Christian<lb/>
recently agreed to join the Moun-<lb/>
tain West Conference.<lb/>
"I think we've pretty much<lb/>
made up our mind but I'm not<lb/>
really talking about it right now<lb/>
said Cords.<lb/>
"There's still some stuff<lb/>
going around about shares and<lb/>
units and who keeps what. So<lb/>
until that gets resolved 1 would<lb/>
be premature in saying anything.<lb/>
But I think we've got a pretty<lb/>
good idea about what we want<lb/>
to do<lb/>
Marquette, which like Del'aul<lb/>
doesn't field a football team, can<lb/>
offer only non-conference bas-<lb/>
ketball games in a potential deal.<lb/>
Making things even r: ore diffi-<lb/>
Marquette's Coach Tom Creen gives instructions to his team<lb/>
during the first half of their game at the Bradley Center.<lb/>
cult will be that the Big Fast is<lb/>
expected to settle on either a 16-<lb/>
or IH-game league schedule.<lb/>
Marquette's need to play 16<lb/>
home games a season to gener-<lb/>
ate revenue, Coach Tom Cre.m's<lb/>
desire to play more high-pro-<lb/>
file opponents and the annual<lb/>
rivalry game with Wisconsin<lb/>
are also (actors. When it's all<lb/>
said and done, the Golden Kagles<lb/>
will probably be able to play only<lb/>
one or two road games per year<lb/>
.iaiiist non-conterence oppo-<lb/>
nents once they join the Big<lb/>
bast.<lb/>
BRASSWOOD AND<lb/>
WHITEBRIDGE<lb/>
APARTMENTS<lb/>
FREE HIGH SPEED WIRELESS INTERNET SERVICE<lb/>
QUIET ? PROMPT MAINTENANCE ? SMALL PET WITH FEE<lb/>
FREE TV, VCR OR DVD PLAYER WITH EVERY NEW LEASE<lb/>
GREAT VALUE &amp; GREAT SERVICE<lb/>
LAW ENFORCEMENT DISCOUNTS<lb/>
PHONE: 355-4499 ? www.brasswood.com ? brasswoodiftearthlink.net<lb/>
Offering Apartments &amp;<lb/>
Houses, Plus Duplex<lb/>
Communities Convenient<lb/>
To ECU, Pitt Community<lb/>
College &amp; The Medical<lb/>
District.<lb/>
Hi ml foul (reek<lb/>
3 Bedroom And 2.5 Bath Duplexes.<lb/>
Country Club Living Without The Price.<lb/>
On Bradford Creek Golf Course.<lb/>
Approximately 1,350 Sq.ft.<lb/>
Covered Parking.<lb/>
Fully Equipped Kitchens.<lb/>
Washer k Dryer.<lb/>
Pets OK With Deposit.<lb/>
Affordability<lb/>
Convenience<lb/>
Location<lb/>
Itiu lunik<lb/>
3 Bedroom And 3 Bath House.<lb/>
Kitchen Appliances.<lb/>
Dishwasher.<lb/>
Washer &amp; Dryer.<lb/>
Central Air fit Heat.<lb/>
Covered Parking.<lb/>
No Pets Allowed.<lb/>
Eastgate Village<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/>
 i iitllmm Court<lb/>
2 Bedroom And 1 Bath Apartment.<lb/>
5 Blocks From ECU.<lb/>
Energy Efficient.<lb/>
Kitchen Appliances.<lb/>
Washer &amp; Dryer Hookups.<lb/>
Central Air&amp; Heat.<lb/>
On ECU Bus Route.<lb/>
Pets OK With Deposit.<lb/>
I m . jg4 jjiial<lb/>
<lb/>
?mk II<lb/>
561 -RENT www.pinnaclcpropcrtymanagenient.coni<lb/>
3200-F Mostley Drive ? Greenville, NC<lb/>
Professionally managed by Pinnacle Property Management
</div></body></text></TEI>