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<pb facs="00059504_0001"/>
4-06-04<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
idents!<lb/>
's filly<lb/>
udying<lb/>
access<lb/>
yen,?<lb/>
I Plus<lb/>
Volume 79 Number 134<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
April 7, 2004<lb/>
Supplying life to NC<lb/>
Guards are the newest security measure in<lb/>
ECU residence halls.<lb/>
Students react<lb/>
negatively to<lb/>
dorm security<lb/>
New measures clash against<lb/>
students' sense of privacy<lb/>
KEITH S. BYERS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Responding to needs for more security in<lb/>
the wake of recent violent crimes, ECU added<lb/>
security guards in the dorms, modified the doors<lb/>
and increased police patrols. However, students say<lb/>
the new heightened security, especially the guards,<lb/>
has hurt rather than helped.<lb/>
ECU Housing Services and ECU Police Depart-<lb/>
ment have taken steps as a result of two rapes early<lb/>
this year and an unclaimed handgun found by a<lb/>
student in Tyler I tail's bathroom last month. On top<lb/>
of that, a student was burglarized at his apartment<lb/>
at Kinggold lowers on Cotanche Street last week.<lb/>
ECU police say the rape incidents are still under<lb/>
investigation, and there are no new leads.<lb/>
Still, the added security has left students feel-<lb/>
ing violated.<lb/>
"Just whenever you come in the residence<lb/>
hall, the person guard is waiting at the door<lb/>
said Angelo Boyce, a sophomore middle grades<lb/>
education major and Aycock Hall resident.<lb/>
"I feel like my privacy is being invaded<lb/>
Boyce said.<lb/>
He complained about the rule mandating a male<lb/>
resident be escorted when visiting female students<lb/>
between the hours of 2 a.m. - 2 p.m.<lb/>
The penalty for violating this rule could result<lb/>
in a campus appearance ticket, according to<lb/>
Boyce. This would be considered a housing viola-<lb/>
tion, and ECU Housing would handle thedlsclplin-<lb/>
ary action.<lb/>
Other students say they even feel forced out of<lb/>
their rooms at night because of the guards.<lb/>
see SECURITY page A2<lb/>
Michael Barrar, freshman criminal justice major, donates blood at the ROTC<lb/>
sponsored blood drive in Mendenhall. The drive will continue today from noon until<lb/>
5 p.m. in MSC to help replenish low blood supplies.<lb/>
David Conner, junior construction<lb/>
management major and ROTC cadet,<lb/>
reads material about his donation.<lb/>
Kristin Brlley, freshman elementary<lb/>
education major, is prepped for her<lb/>
blood donation.<lb/>
J<lb/>
Fulbright allows<lb/>
students, faculty<lb/>
overseas study<lb/>
Teaching, research, educational<lb/>
scholarships provide new cross-<lb/>
cultural view on way of life<lb/>
NICK HENNE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
China. Japan. Russia. Nigeria. Italy.<lb/>
Oversees educational opportunities in countries<lb/>
like these are available for ECU students and faculty<lb/>
through the I'ulbright scholarship program.<lb/>
Charles Lyons, director of international affairs,<lb/>
said Fulbright offers two programs -the senior pro-<lb/>
gram, which is for the exchange of scholars, and the<lb/>
junior program, for the exchange of students.<lb/>
The majority of the people in the senior<lb/>
fulbright program are professors and various<lb/>
other professionals including lawyers, architects<lb/>
and museum employees. The applicant<lb/>
applies directly to Washington, U.C. at the<lb/>
Council for the International Exchange of<lb/>
Scholars.<lb/>
The Junior fulbright program, open to stu-<lb/>
dents who have completed their undergraduate<lb/>
degrees, must be accepted through the university<lb/>
fulbright committee before the application is<lb/>
sent to Institute of International Education in<lb/>
New York City for approval.<lb/>
Lyons said a major part of the application<lb/>
process is organizing and presenting a plan for a<lb/>
research project for what they will do while<lb/>
overseas.<lb/>
"You have to convince the committee on<lb/>
this campus, and then you have to convince<lb/>
the selection committee of New York that what<lb/>
you're proposing is valuable, it is doable, and<lb/>
you have the particular skills to see it through<lb/>
Lyons said.<lb/>
He said while an applicant's GPA is con-<lb/>
sidered in the selection process, other factors<lb/>
like extracurricular activities, other study<lb/>
abroad experience and whether they speak the<lb/>
language of the country they are<lb/>
visiting are important<lb/>
"Most of the students going overseas are<lb/>
affiliated with a college or university overseas, but<lb/>
there are some programs where the students<lb/>
can do a multi-country comparative study<lb/>
Lyons said.<lb/>
The first step of the application process involves<lb/>
talking to David Harrison, professor in the school of<lb/>
social work and chair of the ECU I'ulbright<lb/>
Committee. Students should also review the<lb/>
see FULBRIGHT page A3<lb/>
Special Education department<lb/>
receives $1 million donation<lb/>
ECU gets new engineering program<lb/>
Grant will help fund<lb/>
technology lab<lb/>
MICHAEL JACOBS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Technological assistance<lb/>
for children with special<lb/>
educational needs is closer<lb/>
to reality now that the<lb/>
Special Education depart-<lb/>
ment of the College of<lb/>
Education received a<lb/>
$1 million donation for<lb/>
the enhancement of the<lb/>
Assistive Technology Lab.<lb/>
"Our goal is to also<lb/>
expand the lab eventually to<lb/>
make it more prominent and<lb/>
accessible for students said<lb/>
Yokima Cureton, director<lb/>
of communications for the<lb/>
College of Education.<lb/>
The College of Education,<lb/>
led by Dean Marilyn Sheerer,<lb/>
will benefit from this grant<lb/>
because the students will<lb/>
have access to the latest<lb/>
assistive technologies and<lb/>
training for children with<lb/>
exceptional needs.<lb/>
Irene Howell, founder of<lb/>
the Howell Centers for the<lb/>
developmentally challenged,<lb/>
made the donation.<lb/>
Howell began her work<lb/>
with the mentally retarded<lb/>
in the late 1950s when she<lb/>
started taking developmen-<lb/>
tally challenged residents<lb/>
from state centers to live and<lb/>
work in her day care<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Sheerer<lb/>
"We are extremely delighted<lb/>
about this wonderful dona-<lb/>
tion from Mrs. Howell<lb/>
Cureton said.<lb/>
"She truly understands<lb/>
the importance of preparing<lb/>
well-trained special educa-<lb/>
tors for our classrooms and<lb/>
what that means for student<lb/>
achievement<lb/>
Using technology to ben-<lb/>
efit children with special<lb/>
needs is vital to the focus of<lb/>
special education.<lb/>
"The money will be<lb/>
used to train high quality<lb/>
see DONATE page A2<lb/>
Four-year program will<lb/>
see students fall 2004<lb/>
KRISTIN DAY<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
ECU createdaprogramforstu-<lb/>
denls pursuing a Bachelor of Sci-<lb/>
ence degree in engineering that<lb/>
differs from any other in the<lb/>
UNC-system.<lb/>
Ralph Rogers, dean of<lb/>
the College of Technology<lb/>
and Computer Science, said<lb/>
ECU's program is different<lb/>
from other schools because it<lb/>
concentrates on systems<lb/>
engineering.<lb/>
Instead of focusing on<lb/>
one discipline, systems engi-<lb/>
neers, or "team leaders will<lb/>
integrate each field. Stu-<lb/>
dents in the program get a<lb/>
broader view of engineering<lb/>
and are able to solve problems<lb/>
using that knowledge.<lb/>
The program will use<lb/>
a learning process called<lb/>
a "cohort system" that many<lb/>
other schools do not follow.<lb/>
This means students will work<lb/>
closely with their faculty<lb/>
and classmates.<lb/>
The engineering curriculum<lb/>
is part of the program Integrated<lb/>
Collaborative Engineering<lb/>
Educational Environment, or<lb/>
ICE3.<lb/>
It is designed to make<lb/>
engineering more exciting<lb/>
and attractive.<lb/>
Rogers said the program<lb/>
allows students to work with<lb/>
engineering their first year,<lb/>
instead of waiting until they<lb/>
are juniors.<lb/>
1CF.3 incorporates ECU<lb/>
Engineering Inc a business<lb/>
run by students. Employees<lb/>
will work with real projects<lb/>
from businesses and orga-<lb/>
nizations so students can<lb/>
gain experience.<lb/>
Rogers said a B.S. in engineer-<lb/>
ing should be sufficient to enter<lb/>
the job market.<lb/>
"There's a tremendous<lb/>
demand, I know, in certain<lb/>
areas for systems engineers<lb/>
said Rogers.<lb/>
lie said systems engineer-<lb/>
ing isn't a program you can<lb/>
decide to join junior year.<lb/>
A B.S. in engineering takes<lb/>
four years to complete and<lb/>
is designed for freshmen or<lb/>
students transferring from a com-<lb/>
munity college.<lb/>
Students planning to enter<lb/>
the program must have an SAT<lb/>
score of 1100 or higher and<lb/>
have completed at least a second<lb/>
year of high school algebra<lb/>
with a B or better.<lb/>
They must also have a<lb/>
laptop computer capable<lb/>
of running engineering<lb/>
analysis software.<lb/>
Rogers said the program<lb/>
would attract students who<lb/>
would otherwise not attend<lb/>
ECU. The university will hire-<lb/>
faculty and make classrooms<lb/>
available to students who plan<lb/>
to attend the new engineer-<lb/>
ing program and will begin<lb/>
accepting students for the<lb/>
fall 2004 semester.<lb/>
Rogers said the ECU<lb/>
community has given a tre-<lb/>
ECU's new systems engineering program will allow students and<lb/>
faculty to work closely to solve problems.<lb/>
mendous amount of support<lb/>
that enabled the program's short-<lb/>
term development.<lb/>
He said he believes the<lb/>
new program is unique and<lb/>
accommodating to engineer-<lb/>
ing students who want to<lb/>
learn all the different areas of<lb/>
the field.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
Sexual Assualt Awareness<lb/>
throughout April<lb/>
(i Women are 10 times more likely than men to be victims of sexual assault.<lb/>
? A study among college-aged women showed one out of every five reported being forced to have sexual intercourse.<lb/>
Forecast tec required<lb/>
Part Cloudy READING<lb/>
High of 78<lb/>
Online<lb/>
News<lb/>
Wsft wvvwJteeastcamlntaricom to read<lb/>
about the US. Marines that were kHted<lb/>
In a flrefloht in Faftijah.<lb/>
pageA2<lb/>
SoW rover has finished Its tour of duty<lb/>
on Mars after 90 days, but It continues<lb/>
to roll over the red planet<lb/>
Features<lb/>
pageA5<lb/>
Getting a date doesn't have to be<lb/>
disasterous. A confident approach<lb/>
could mean a lasting Impression.<lb/>
SpOrtS page A8<lb/>
ECU'S basebal team hopes for a win<lb/>
as they take on the Duke Bluedevlls<lb/>
tonight at 7 pm<lb/>
Physical Therapy students<lb/>
wHI provide cheap massages<lb/>
tonight from 5 pm. - 9 pm<lb/>
on the first floor of the Betk<lb/>
Bating,<lb/>
? - ;iJ(iyiv?f1 :<lb/>
<pb facs="00059504_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE A?<lb/>
4704<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/>
Announcements<lb/>
Summer and Fall Registration<lb/>
Registration tor summer sessions and fall 2004 semester is<lb/>
currently open.<lb/>
Integration Lecture<lb/>
In celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Brown v. the Board of<lb/>
Education decision. The College of Education features William AC Polk<lb/>
speaking about his role in the integration process at the McKeesport<lb/>
Area School District in Pennsylvania. The lecture will be today at 6 p.m.<lb/>
in 129 Speight<lb/>
Peace Workshop<lb/>
Learn how to resolve conflicts peacefully and respectfully at the SENIOR'S<lb/>
Elite workshop today from 4 p m. - 6 p.m in 244 MSC<lb/>
PT Massage Clinic<lb/>
Students in the Physical Therapy Program will provide massages tonight<lb/>
from 5 p m. - 9 p.m. on the first floor of the Belk Building The cost is $5 for<lb/>
10 minutes, $10 for 20 minutes and $15 for 30 minutes Patients receive<lb/>
$1 off with an ECU student or faculty ID No appointment is necessary<lb/>
State Holiday<lb/>
Classes will not be held Friday and Saturday, April 9-10.<lb/>
Business Ownership Workshop<lb/>
Learn how to get started in business at an introduction to business<lb/>
ownership workshop Wednesday, April 14 from 5:30 pm. - 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
the Willis Building Auditorium<lb/>
Deadline<lb/>
Wednesday. April 14 is the last day for graduate students to drop courses<lb/>
without grades<lb/>
Technology and Teaching Conference<lb/>
The College of Education will co-sponsor the Southeastern Regional<lb/>
Technology and Teaching Conference at the Greenville Hilton Wednesday<lb/>
April 14 - Friday Apnl 16 Contact Diane D Kester at 328-6621 for more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Adviser's Appreciation Reception<lb/>
A reception honoring student advisors will take place Thursday. April 15<lb/>
from 4 p.m - 6 p.m in Mendenhall Great Room 3 Students can nominate<lb/>
any adviser at ECU<lb/>
Job Searching Workshop<lb/>
The Office of Student Professional Development offers a wofkshop on tools<lb/>
students can use in their job searches. The workshop will be Thursday.<lb/>
April 15 from 5 pm - 6 p.m in 1014 Bate<lb/>
Deadline<lb/>
Thursday, April 15 is the last day to submit thesis to the graduate school<lb/>
for completion of a degree in the current term.<lb/>
Social Justice Institute<lb/>
NPR broadcaster and author Juan Williams will speak in recognition of the<lb/>
50th anniversary of the Brown v Board of Education decision Thursday.<lb/>
Apnl 15 from 7 pm - 8 pm in the Mendenhall Great Room Tickets are<lb/>
required but free at the Central Ticket Office in MSC.<lb/>
Integration Discussion<lb/>
In celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Brown v the Board of<lb/>
Education decision, historian David Dennard. Ph D. political analyst Tinsley<lb/>
Yarborough, Ph D and attorney Robert White will discuss the historical,<lb/>
political and legal landscapes of the state before and after the decision<lb/>
The discussion will be Tuesday, April 20 at 3 p.m in 221 Mendenhall<lb/>
Oratorical Exhibition<lb/>
The School of Communication sponsors an oratorical exhibition Thursday,<lb/>
Apnl 22 at 6:30 pm in Wright Auditorium, featuring the best speakers in<lb/>
COMM 2410 and 2420<lb/>
Co-ops and Internships Workshop<lb/>
The Office of Student Professional Development offers a workshop<lb/>
Thursday. April 22 from 2 pm - 3 p.m in 1012 Bate to assist students<lb/>
looking tor co-op and internship opportunities<lb/>
Education Graduate Fair<lb/>
The College of Education will hold a graduate programs fair Saturday,<lb/>
Apnl 24 from 9 am - noon at the Speight Building Information will be<lb/>
available for students who wish to pursue a graduate degree for work<lb/>
in educational settings or obtain alternative licensure Registration and<lb/>
reception begin at845 a.m.<lb/>
Commencement Registration<lb/>
Degree candidates who wish to participate in the May 8 ceremony must<lb/>
make a reservation through Onestop<lb/>
News Briefs<lb/>
Local<lb/>
Workers in danger of losing jobs<lb/>
at Bank of America<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) - Bank of America<lb/>
Corp now the No. 3 bank in the<lb/>
country, will cut 12.500 jobs - or nearly<lb/>
7 percent of its 180,000-employee<lb/>
work force - over the next two years<lb/>
The Charlotte-based financial giant<lb/>
completed its merger FleetBoston<lb/>
Financial Corp last week and<lb/>
said Monday it will cut nearly 7<lb/>
percent of its work force from North<lb/>
Carolina to New England to California<lb/>
The $47 billion deal became official<lb/>
last week<lb/>
Bank of America chief executive Ken<lb/>
Lewis has said he wants to achieve<lb/>
about $16 billion in cost savings by<lb/>
the end of 2005 The merging banks<lb/>
have relatively few overlapping<lb/>
branches that can be closed,<lb/>
which is a major source of savings in<lb/>
many bank mergers.<lb/>
Another defendant in Phipps<lb/>
case pleads guilty<lb/>
GREENVILLE (AP) - Another player<lb/>
in the Meg Scott Phipps campaign<lb/>
corruption case has pleaded guilty in<lb/>
federal court. This time a Rocky Mount<lb/>
businessman who lied about what<lb/>
he and the former state agriculture<lb/>
commissioner knew about the case<lb/>
Norman Y Chambliss III pleaded<lb/>
guilty Monday in the U.S.<lb/>
District Court in Greenville to one<lb/>
count of obstruction of justice Judge<lb/>
Malcolm Howard tentatively set his<lb/>
sentencing for July 6.<lb/>
The maximum penalty for the felony<lb/>
is 10 years in prison and a $250,000<lb/>
fine, although a lesser sentence<lb/>
is likely Senior Assistant US<lb/>
Attorney Dennis Duffy hinted that<lb/>
Chambliss could receive leniency<lb/>
if he cooperated with federal<lb/>
authorities In the ongoing<lb/>
investigation related to extorting<lb/>
payments from carnival operators<lb/>
interested in working the<lb/>
North Carolina State Fair<lb/>
National<lb/>
New York City mayor says<lb/>
Statue of Liberty should reopen,<lb/>
'cant let terrorists win<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) - Mayor Michael<lb/>
Bloomberg, who donated his own<lb/>
money to the effort to reopen the<lb/>
Statue of Liberty, blasted the federal<lb/>
government's decision to close the<lb/>
icon after the 2001 terror attacks<lb/>
and its plans not to immediately<lb/>
reopen it.<lb/>
"You can't let the terrorists win the<lb/>
mayor said Monday<lb/>
Last week during a news conference<lb/>
at the base of the statue. Secretary<lb/>
of the Interior Gale Norton said<lb/>
that an observation area in the<lb/>
statue's pedestal would be<lb/>
reopened in July but that the crown,<lb/>
reached via narrow and winding<lb/>
stairs, would remain closed because it<lb/>
cannot accommodate large numbers<lb/>
of people and does not meet local<lb/>
fire, building or safety codes<lb/>
Bui Bloomberg said the 118-year-<lb/>
old statue should be reopened,<lb/>
even if every tourist who visits it<lb/>
has to be escorted inside by a police<lb/>
officer He contributed $100,000 to<lb/>
the effort.<lb/>
Blackout showed need for<lb/>
grid rules, but they're mired in<lb/>
Congress<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) - A seven -<lb/>
month investigation into the nation's<lb/>
worst blackout is putting new<lb/>
pressure on Congress to boost the<lb/>
reliability of power grids - but<lb/>
legislation addressing the problem<lb/>
remains in limbo.<lb/>
On Monday, nearly eight months<lb/>
after all or parts of eight states and<lb/>
sections of Canada went dark, a<lb/>
U.SCanadlan task force<lb/>
called for urgent approval of<lb/>
mandatory reliability rules to<lb/>
govern the electric transmission<lb/>
industry.<lb/>
The task force said in a 228- page<lb/>
report that the Ohio power company<lb/>
and others whose failures led to<lb/>
the blackout largely ignored many<lb/>
of the voluntary rules, managed by<lb/>
a private, industry-sponsored group<lb/>
World<lb/>
American death toll climbs<lb/>
as US. and Iraqi forces<lb/>
surround Fallujah<lb/>
FALLUJAH, Iraq (AP) - U.S. troops<lb/>
battled Iraqi guerrillas Tuesday<lb/>
on the edges of Fallujah, which<lb/>
hundreds of Marines and Iraqi<lb/>
troops have surrounded in a major<lb/>
operation to pacify one of Iraq's most<lb/>
violent cities. The military reported<lb/>
four Marines killed in the area<lb/>
The Americans were killed by<lb/>
hostile fire Monday, bringing the<lb/>
number of Marines killed that<lb/>
day fo five. The military did not<lb/>
give details on the deaths, saying<lb/>
only that they took place in<lb/>
Anbar province, where Fallujah<lb/>
is located.<lb/>
In northern Baghdad's Khazimiya<lb/>
district, three U.S. soldiers<lb/>
were killed, all members of the<lb/>
1st Armored Division.<lb/>
One was killed Monday when<lb/>
his convoy was attacked with<lb/>
small arms and rocket-propelled<lb/>
grenade fire.<lb/>
A second soldier died later the<lb/>
same day when his vehicle was<lb/>
struck by a rocket-propelled<lb/>
grenade. The third died after<lb/>
a grenade hit his Bradley vehicle<lb/>
Tuesday. Their names were<lb/>
not released.<lb/>
China tells Hong Kong ft<lb/>
needs Beijing's approval for<lb/>
any political changes<lb/>
BEIJING (AP) - China made a<lb/>
major ruling Tuesday on how Hong<lb/>
Kong chooses its leaders, saying<lb/>
the territory must submit proposed<lb/>
political reforms to Beijing for<lb/>
approval Hong Kong activists<lb/>
immediately decried the decision.<lb/>
The Chinese government's National<lb/>
People's Congress issued the ruling<lb/>
in an interpretation of the Basic Law,<lb/>
Hong Kong's mini-constitution.<lb/>
"The right to amend the law belongs<lb/>
to the National People's Congress<lb/>
said Qiao Xiaoyang, deputy secretary-<lb/>
general of the NPC's Standing<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
ECU student selected for elite youth summit<lb/>
Paper Person<lb/>
The student featured at the top of today s paper is Cynthia Coward, senior<lb/>
marketing maior<lb/>
Edwards sends three<lb/>
NC students to first<lb/>
leadership conference<lb/>
PETER KALAJIAN<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
An ECU student has<lb/>
been chosen by Sen. John<lb/>
Edwards (D-NC) as one of three<lb/>
North Carolina youths and<lb/>
will attend the first ever<lb/>
Democratic Youth leadership<lb/>
Conference in Washington<lb/>
this April.<lb/>
Kelly Sanders, senior social<lb/>
work major and an intern in<lb/>
Edwards' Greenville office,<lb/>
along with students from N.C.<lb/>
AST and Davidson Col-<lb/>
lege will participate in lec-<lb/>
tures and presentations on<lb/>
the economy, education,<lb/>
globalization and the environ-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
According to a press release<lb/>
from Edwards' office, a key-<lb/>
note address will be followed<lb/>
by a town hall meeting<lb/>
moderated by MTV correspon-<lb/>
dent Gideon Yago featuring<lb/>
panelists Anna Greenberg,<lb/>
a democratic pollster, record-<lb/>
ing industry mogul Russell<lb/>
Simmons, 24-year-old Tal-<lb/>
lahassee city commissioner<lb/>
Andrew i,ilium and U.S.<lb/>
Representative Linda Sanchez.<lb/>
"Working in the senator's<lb/>
office has been a great expe-<lb/>
rience said Sanders, who<lb/>
was chosen out of a pool of<lb/>
300 possible candidates to<lb/>
attend the summit.<lb/>
"I've learned a lot about<lb/>
both the senatorial side of his<lb/>
job and the campaign side.<lb/>
I volunteered for his campaign<lb/>
in South Carolina, where<lb/>
he won, and that made me<lb/>
more interested in politics<lb/>
The summit will primar-<lb/>
ily address issues concerning<lb/>
18-30 year-olds.<lb/>
"They will be address-<lb/>
ing issues for people our age,<lb/>
and since it's the first of its<lb/>
kind, I'm not really sure<lb/>
what to expect Sanders said.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
SeClirity frompage<lb/>
Recently, the back door<lb/>
of Scott Hall has been<lb/>
"pinned or had its keyhole<lb/>
blocked to deny entry. One<lb/>
resident of Scotl made a sign<lb/>
urging other students to "rebel"<lb/>
and to "prop open the doors<lb/>
according to Sean Bowen,<lb/>
sophomore communication<lb/>
student and Scott Hall resident.<lb/>
"It's a real inconvenience,<lb/>
especially when loading and<lb/>
unloading said Howen.<lb/>
One door at Scott Hall<lb/>
was forced open with an<lb/>
unknown object resulting in<lb/>
$300 worth ol damage, said<lb/>
Troy Arrington, residence<lb/>
coordinator of Scott Hall.<lb/>
Arrington said the decision to<lb/>
pin the doors came from a joint<lb/>
committee comprised of campus<lb/>
security, upper-level campus<lb/>
administration and Campus<lb/>
living, led by the chancellor.<lb/>
A1<lb/>
He said security guards are now<lb/>
on duty from 9 p.m. - 5 a.m.<lb/>
every night.<lb/>
"We in Campus Living<lb/>
are always looking for ways<lb/>
to make the halls safer and<lb/>
more secure said Arrington.<lb/>
"We are always evaluat-<lb/>
ing and looking to imple-<lb/>
ment measures that will keep<lb/>
our students safe<lb/>
The new security guards<lb/>
hired by ECU came through<lb/>
a firm called Security Ser-<lb/>
vices of America, said Wax<lb/>
Miller, assistant vice chancel-<lb/>
lor for Student Experiences.<lb/>
Miller would not comment<lb/>
on how much the new guards<lb/>
arc costing the university.<lb/>
She said she heard of inci-<lb/>
dents where security guards<lb/>
may have overstepped their<lb/>
authority.<lb/>
Rebecca Sutton, freshman<lb/>
undecided major and resident<lb/>
of Belk Hall, said she had the<lb/>
volume up on her computer<lb/>
speakers and watched a guard<lb/>
walk by her window and put<lb/>
his car up to it.<lb/>
"Their Isecurity guards'l<lb/>
role is not to take over the<lb/>
ECU police role in any way<lb/>
said Mil In<lb/>
"If they see something, they<lb/>
are supposed to contact the R A on<lb/>
duty, who can then determine if<lb/>
someone else needs to be called.<lb/>
This firm is working in tandem<lb/>
with the ECU police<lb/>
She said last week she notified<lb/>
the colonel in charge of the secu-<lb/>
rity guards about the problem.<lb/>
The security guards can be<lb/>
distinguished from ECU police<lb/>
officers by their light blue shirts<lb/>
and dark pants; they also carry no<lb/>
badges or guns, Miller said.<lb/>
"We have to weigh safety<lb/>
or inconvenience to the stu-<lb/>
dents, and we chose safety<lb/>
Miller said.<lb/>
"We are trying with Aycock<lb/>
and Jones Halls  a lot of stu-<lb/>
dents park behind the halls, and<lb/>
you have people going all the way<lb/>
around to get in. What we are<lb/>
trying to do is get some cameras<lb/>
between now and the next several<lb/>
weeks Miller said.<lb/>
She said after the cameras are<lb/>
installed, they would consider<lb/>
unpinning the doors.<lb/>
Miller said the main reason<lb/>
for pinning the doors is so secu-<lb/>
rity can identify who is coming<lb/>
in the front door. She said the<lb/>
security guards are watching<lb/>
for "tailgaters" who may try to<lb/>
gain entry without using their<lb/>
own key.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
Donate<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
special educators said Tara Jeffs,<lb/>
Ph.D director of the Assistive<lb/>
Technology Lab.<lb/>
"The more high qual-<lb/>
ity speii.il educators we have<lb/>
in Hie classroom, the mure<lb/>
confident we are that the<lb/>
achievement levels of these chil-<lb/>
dren will rise<lb/>
I fie lab is used to train<lb/>
special education students.<lb/>
It has an array of assis-<lb/>
tive technologies, including<lb/>
text-to-speech readers to assist<lb/>
individuals with difficul-<lb/>
ties reading text, voice<lb/>
recognition to assist in writ-<lb/>
ing and alternative micro-<lb/>
phone to reduce carpal tunnel<lb/>
syndrome or repetitive motion<lb/>
pain.<lb/>
"Because there will be<lb/>
students that have learning<lb/>
difficulties in the classroom,<lb/>
it is vital that luture teach-<lb/>
ers become as educated in<lb/>
the field as possible said<lb/>
Morgan Jones, sopho-<lb/>
more elementary<lb/>
education major<lb/>
"With this grant, teachers<lb/>
will he more capable to handle<lb/>
a variety of students because<lb/>
they base been better<lb/>
educated<lb/>
The College of Education<lb/>
has received close to $5 mil-<lb/>
lion in grants and donations<lb/>
specifically for special<lb/>
education during the past three<lb/>
years.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeas tcarolinian. com.<lb/>
The ECU Student Media Board invites<lb/>
applications for the position of<lb/>
GENERAL MANAGER,<lb/>
WZMB91.3FM<lb/>
GENERAL MANAGER,<lb/>
Expressions<lb/>
EDITOR,<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
EDITOR,<lb/>
The Rebel<lb/>
for the 2004-05 academic year.<lb/>
Applications are available in the Media Board office.<lb/>
The deadline for submitting an application is<lb/>
THURSDAY. APRIL 8 AT 4 P.M.<lb/>
For information, call the Media Board office at 328-6009.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059504_0003"/><lb/>
4704<lb/>
THL LAST CAROLINIAN ? NEWS<lb/>
PAGL A3<lb/>
Spirit rover completes primary Mars<lb/>
mission while Opportunity continues<lb/>
PASADENA, Calif. (Al)<lb/>
? NASA's Spirit rover has<lb/>
finished its primary mission<lb/>
to Mars yet continues to roll<lb/>
along, moving toward a cluster<lb/>
of hills that could yield<lb/>
evidence of the planet's wet<lb/>
past.<lb/>
By Monday, Spirit's 90th lull<lb/>
day on Mars, the unmanned<lb/>
robot and its twin, Opportu-<lb/>
nity, had accomplished nearlv<lb/>
all of the tasks before NASA<lb/>
would consider their joint mis-<lb/>
sion a full success.<lb/>
"Spirit has completed its<lb/>
part of the bargain and Oppor-<lb/>
tunity doesn't have much<lb/>
left to do said Mark Adler,<lb/>
manager of the $820 million<lb/>
double mission.<lb/>
The tasks included a require-<lb/>
ment that one of the rovers travel<lb/>
at least 1,980 feet - a mark Spirit<lb/>
surpassed on Saturday.<lb/>
Between the two of them,<lb/>
the rovers also had to take<lb/>
stereo and color panoramas of<lb/>
their surroundings, drive to at<lb/>
least eight different locations<lb/>
and operate simultaneously for<lb/>
a minimum of 30 days.<lb/>
NASA assumed technical and<lb/>
other problems would ground<lb/>
the rovers fully one-third of the<lb/>
time they operated on Mars.<lb/>
Despite computer memory<lb/>
problems that left Spirit side-<lb/>
lined for 2 12 weeks, it still<lb/>
spent more days at work than<lb/>
expected, Adler said.<lb/>
Kor Opportunity, it still<lb/>
must function for another<lb/>
20 martian days - which are<lb/>
nearly 40 minutes longer than<lb/>
Karth days - before it meets<lb/>
all of its targets, Adler said.<lb/>
"It's better than we could<lb/>
have possibly imagined he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Spirit landed Jan. 3 in Gusev<lb/>
Crater, a 90-mile-diameter<lb/>
depression scientists believed<lb/>
once contained a lake. Spirit<lb/>
has found traces of limited<lb/>
past water activity in rocks it<lb/>
has examined, but none of the<lb/>
lake deposits scientists hoped it<lb/>
GflVF RIGHT<lb/>
HHUIVH1H<lb/>
UJtllllfSDflU<lb/>
?j<lb/>
PJ5PJ? JH.BpaBj<lb/>
Spirit has completed it's tasks after 90 days on Mars.<lb/>
would uncover.<lb/>
Spirit is now several days<lb/>
into a trek toward a cluster of<lb/>
hills that may contain geo-<lb/>
logical evidence of a more<lb/>
substantially wet environment,<lb/>
possibly including layered rocks<lb/>
formed In standing water.<lb/>
Opportunity has found<lb/>
such rocks at its landing site,<lb/>
halfway around the now<lb/>
frozen and dry planet, since it<lb/>
landed Jan. 24. Scientists<lb/>
believe a salty sea or swamp<lb/>
once covered that site, called<lb/>
Meridiani I'lanum.<lb/>
NASA has extended the joint<lb/>
mission through September.<lb/>
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 ri??r cam, IMS 'hgr, $10 .ffi.tfd ?)l?tr I? m0<lb/>
jSIOfl<lb/>
U.S. opens defense in abortion procedure case<lb/>
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) ? The<lb/>
U.S. government began defend-<lb/>
ing a federal ban on a certain<lb/>
type of abortion, by calling<lb/>
doctors who testified that the<lb/>
procedure has not been studied<lb/>
enough to determine whether it<lb/>
is safe or medically justified.<lb/>
Or. Watson A. Bowes, pro-<lb/>
fessor emeritus of obstetrics<lb/>
and gynecology at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of North Carolina School<lb/>
of Medicine, testified Monday<lb/>
that he knew of no instance<lb/>
where the banned procedure<lb/>
- known as "intact dilation and<lb/>
extraction or D&amp;X - has been<lb/>
needed to protect the health of<lb/>
the mother.<lb/>
He also said he knew of no<lb/>
studies proving that the proce-<lb/>
dure would be more dangerous<lb/>
than any comparable tech-<lb/>
nique.<lb/>
"I don't think we know the<lb/>
relative risks of these proce-<lb/>
dures Bowes said.<lb/>
The Partial-Birth Abortion<lb/>
Ban Act, signed by President<lb/>
Bush in November, has not<lb/>
been enforced because judges<lb/>
in Lincoln, New York and<lb/>
San Francisco agreed to hear<lb/>
evidence in three simultaneous,<lb/>
non-jury trials on whether the<lb/>
ban violates the OS. Constitu-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The Bush administration<lb/>
has argued that the procedure,<lb/>
referred to by opponents as<lb/>
"partial-birth" abortion, is<lb/>
"inhumane and gruesome" and<lb/>
causes the fetus to suffer pain.<lb/>
( oiulucting a study of<lb/>
D&amp;X surgery would be dif-<lb/>
ficult because of the relatively<lb/>
small number of people<lb/>
who have them done, but<lb/>
it would not be impossible,<lb/>
Bowes said.<lb/>
During a 1&amp;X, a fetus is par-<lb/>
tially removed from the womb<lb/>
and its skull is punctured. It<lb/>
is generally performed in the<lb/>
second trimester. Abortion rights<lb/>
advocates argue the procedure is<lb/>
sometimes safest for women.<lb/>
Dr. George Mazariegos, a<lb/>
pediatric surgeon at Children's<lb/>
Hospital in Pittsburgh, told<lb/>
the court Monday that new<lb/>
clinical procedures need to<lb/>
be properly documented to<lb/>
determine their ratio-<lb/>
nale and whether<lb/>
they are safe.<lb/>
Under cross-examination,<lb/>
plaintiffs' attorney Nan Strauss<lb/>
asked Mazariegos if outlaw-<lb/>
ing a new procedure would<lb/>
allow for such further study.<lb/>
"No Mazariegos said.<lb/>
In San Francisco, a doctor<lb/>
testifying for the plaintiffs said<lb/>
the banned procedure is often<lb/>
performed and is safe.<lb/>
Students, it says here:<lb/>
I Two ways to always have money<lb/>
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i BEAR $' ROCK<lb/>
 CAFE<lb/>
Expires May 31, 2004<lb/>
Fulbrlght<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
Fulbrlght Web site, Lyons said.<lb/>
"If you're thinking<lb/>
ot a Fulbrlght, the best<lb/>
time to start and think of<lb/>
it is in the spring semester of<lb/>
your junior year  don't wait<lb/>
until the senior year Lyons<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Applications are due by Sept.<lb/>
15, and the final applications are<lb/>
due in New York City by Oct. 15.<lb/>
(Catherine Mill, senior<lb/>
English and Russian studies<lb/>
major, is applying for a<lb/>
Fulbrlght scholarship next<lb/>
year at a university In Saratov,<lb/>
Russia.<lb/>
Hill is doing a project on the<lb/>
novel, What Was To He Done? by<lb/>
Nikolai Chcrnyshevsky, a native<lb/>
of Saratov.<lb/>
For her project, Hill will<lb/>
research the circumstances<lb/>
and critical response of the<lb/>
novel. She will focus on how<lb/>
literary critics have changed their<lb/>
opinions about the work over<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Hill said any student inter-<lb/>
ested in doing a Fulbright<lb/>
should go to the Fulbright<lb/>
Web site to learn more about<lb/>
the application process<lb/>
and the country they are planning<lb/>
to visit.<lb/>
Mill, who studied abroad<lb/>
in Saratov, said living in<lb/>
different countries expands<lb/>
a person's view of everyday<lb/>
life.<lb/>
"You're in a country,<lb/>
and you're learning about<lb/>
their culture, but you're also<lb/>
learningalxKityourculturc, because<lb/>
you start to sec how another culture<lb/>
is different from your own said<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
"People are always asking<lb/>
you many questions about your<lb/>
own way of life<lb/>
"The whole idea behind<lb/>
the Fulbright program  is<lb/>
to spread peace and mutual<lb/>
understanding among<lb/>
people of the Karth Lyons<lb/>
said.<lb/>
President George Bush signed a partial birth abortion ban<lb/>
The program was started<lb/>
after World War II by people<lb/>
trying to promote under-<lb/>
standing among countries,<lb/>
Lyons said.<lb/>
Harrison said he agrees<lb/>
lulbrigbts help the spread<lb/>
and understanding of different<lb/>
cultures,<lb/>
"The most common<lb/>
thing is students and faculty<lb/>
I ullbrighters living deeply<lb/>
in the culture  they<lb/>
come back, and most of the things<lb/>
they do are affected  it rubs off<lb/>
into their relationships with their<lb/>
jobs, colleagues, students<lb/>
and communities said<lb/>
Harrison.<lb/>
Andy Reiss, senior program<lb/>
officer who spoke to ECU fac-<lb/>
ulty members in a Fulbright<lb/>
faculty workshop, informed<lb/>
the faculty of all the differ-<lb/>
ent Fulbright opportunities<lb/>
olfered to fa ulty mem-<lb/>
bers and how Fulbrights are<lb/>
beneficial to any person In any<lb/>
 More Info<lb/>
The Fulbrlght program was<lb/>
founded in 1945 by J. William<lb/>
Fulbright and other people<lb/>
right after WWII to promote<lb/>
understanding among nations.<lb/>
For more information, visit the<lb/>
Fulbright scholarship Web site<lb/>
at www.cies.org.<lb/>
profession.<lb/>
"When you get out of<lb/>
your comfort one and teach<lb/>
with other people who share<lb/>
different cultural values<lb/>
and educate differently <lb/>
you're going to learn a great<lb/>
deal said Reiss.<lb/>
This writer can he contacted at<lb/>
news? theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
I<lb/>
II<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Located Next to ECU Recreation Center<lb/>
Corner of 7th and Cotanche Street<lb/>
635 Cotanche Street No. 900<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858<lb/>
Office Hours: Mon Frl 9am-5pm<lb/>
(252)752-2865<lb/>
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i e<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059504_0004"/><lb/>
PAUtAI<lb/>
tec<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Michelle A. McLeod<lb/>
Editor-in-chief<lb/>
editor@theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
252,328.6366<lb/>
4-MJ4<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/>
Newsroom<lb/>
Fax<lb/>
Advertising<lb/>
Holly O'Neal<lb/>
assl News Editor<lb/>
John Bream<lb/>
Assl Features Editor<lb/>
Tony Zoppo<lb/>
Asst Sports Editor<lb/>
Daniel Roy<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Amanda Vanness<lb/>
Asst Photo Editor<lb/>
252.328.6366<lb/>
252.328.6558<lb/>
252.328.2000<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
He is prob-<lb/>
ably laugh-<lb/>
ing his way<lb/>
to the bank,<lb/>
because<lb/>
eventually<lb/>
the craze<lb/>
over him will<lb/>
fade away<lb/>
- but until<lb/>
then, he's<lb/>
making<lb/>
more than<lb/>
enough<lb/>
noney to pay<lb/>
By now, everybody unlucky enough to<lb/>
tune into Fox knows William Hung. Hung,<lb/>
if the name doesn't ring a bell, is the Cal-<lb/>
Berkley engineering student who took<lb/>
what anybody who enjoys music would<lb/>
call a disastrous performance on American<lb/>
Idol and turned it into what he has already<lb/>
admitted is more than his 15 minutes<lb/>
of fame.<lb/>
If the guy showed up at a karaoke<lb/>
bar, most patrons would order another<lb/>
drink to drown themselves rather than listen<lb/>
to him.<lb/>
The funny thing though is that Hung has signed<lb/>
a record deal and has an album debuting this<lb/>
week. He will even have a video. What does<lb/>
this mean for America?<lb/>
Well, nothing really.<lb/>
While some would call Hung's fame the end<lb/>
of sanity, we see it as the latest in the line of<lb/>
unintelligible tripe that gets forced down our<lb/>
or his college tnroats by marketers and the torrent of pop<lb/>
culture.<lb/>
tuition.<lb/>
In 10 years, we will see the Olsen twins danc-<lb/>
ing and singing "She Bangs" off key and hear<lb/>
commentary from the guy who played Screech<lb/>
on Saved by the Bell.<lb/>
Hung may not sing or dance well, but the eye-<lb/>
sore will be paid well.<lb/>
It's interesting, though. Hung could not possibly<lb/>
take himself seriously.<lb/>
He is probably laughing his way to the bank,<lb/>
because eventually the craze over him will<lb/>
fade away - but until then, he's making<lb/>
more than enough money to pay for his<lb/>
college tuition.<lb/>
Good luck, Hung. Just make sure you do<lb/>
something with your life when you're done<lb/>
looking stupid.<lb/>
The goal of the TEC Opinion page is to evoke discussion as well as<lb/>
action on topics pertinent to the ECU community.<lb/>
We encourage a response from our readers If you have an opinion<lb/>
In reaction to one of our columns or perhaps in regard to the overall<lb/>
presentation of TEC, please express your view In one of four ways:<lb/>
direct a letter or fax to the editor, email a response to the editor or<lb/>
simply phone in a response<lb/>
The 20,000 ECU students read our paper on a regular basis. There's<lb/>
no better way to express your opinion than to take the time to sit and<lb/>
react to a situation affecting the students of this university through<lb/>
our Opinion page.<lb/>
To be printed, the letter must be signed and contain a phone number<lb/>
for verification.<lb/>
Letters will appear as space permits. The editor reserves the right to<lb/>
edit letters for clarity and length<lb/>
WaiPIKAQ<lb/>
UMvite,8n-<lb/>
AND AW<lb/>
-ncCIA<lb/>
NTEL<lb/>
f<lb/>
SAW TW CUB<lb/>
VJOUDVCLP<lb/>
CKFJTEN?Aav<lb/>
EFTOSoF<lb/>
5EPT.11<lb/>
LEARNEP1MAT vo ANYTHING,<lb/>
VWrtGSN CLA&amp;Ee<lb/>
TO (DW WITH<lb/>
?nc5BPnn<lb/>
COMMON?<lb/>
BKAU5E.<lb/>
I<lb/>
HBTCflW<lb/>
Ipctfr<lb/>
UKE RAVING<lb/>
GAME<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
U.S. Marines surround Iraqi city<lb/>
Serving ECU since 1925, The East Carolinian prints 9,000 copies every<lb/>
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday during the regular academic year<lb/>
and 5,000 on Wednesdays during the summer. "Our View" is the opin-<lb/>
ion of the editorial board and is written by editorial board members.<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters to the editor which are limited to<lb/>
250 words (which may be edited for decency or brevity). We reserve the<lb/>
right to edit or reject letters and all letters must be signed and include<lb/>
a telephone number. Letters may be sent via e-mail to editor@theeast<lb/>
carolinian.com or to The East Carolinian, Student Publications Building,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27858-4353. Call 252-328-6366 for more information<lb/>
One copy of The East Carolinian is free, each additional copy is $1.<lb/>
Operation Vigilant<lb/>
Resolve'marks<lb/>
escalation of hostilities<lb/>
PETER KALAJIAN<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The U.S. military announced<lb/>
yesterday a new operation in Iraq<lb/>
focused on removing resistance<lb/>
within the Sunni city of Fal-<lb/>
lujah.<lb/>
Dubbed "Vigilant Resolve<lb/>
the mission is in response to the<lb/>
death of eight U.S. soldiers and<lb/>
the public torture and display<lb/>
of two American civilian work-<lb/>
ers in and around the historical<lb/>
resistance city 35 miles west of<lb/>
Baghdad.<lb/>
When the Bush admin-<lb/>
istration began its P.R. cam-<lb/>
paign concerning the War<lb/>
in Iraq - which consisted<lb/>
mostly of false intelligence<lb/>
about weapons of mass<lb/>
destruction and shoot-first-<lb/>
ask-quest ions-later political<lb/>
maneuvering - they failed<lb/>
to effectively consider the<lb/>
American exit plan after the<lb/>
"evil dictator" had been<lb/>
removed.<lb/>
Historically, nation building<lb/>
has been a decades long process<lb/>
which involves permanently<lb/>
stationing troops in the area<lb/>
in question and committing<lb/>
to a long, slow restructuring<lb/>
process.<lb/>
In Japan and Germany,<lb/>
two nations whose modern<lb/>
incarnations are a direct<lb/>
result of American influence<lb/>
after WWII, the United<lb/>
States still maintains a strong<lb/>
military and political pres-<lb/>
ence, and that's SO years<lb/>
after the fact. Does President<lb/>
Bush plan on keeping the U.S.<lb/>
military active in Iraq until<lb/>
20S3?<lb/>
The President knows as well<lb/>
as anyone that Germany and<lb/>
Japan are not Iraq and Afghani-<lb/>
stan, and the armed resistance<lb/>
which has been a major<lb/>
problem for ground forces in<lb/>
Iraq will only worsen as time-<lb/>
goes on.<lb/>
By the time the Unites<lb/>
States was founded, Iraq had<lb/>
already seen thousands of<lb/>
years of social development<lb/>
and political upheaval, so<lb/>
this idea of foreign occupa-<lb/>
tion and armed resistance is<lb/>
nothing new.<lb/>
Another more serious prob-<lb/>
lem is beginning to become<lb/>
apparent. Who is the enemy<lb/>
With 1,200 U.S. Marines<lb/>
now surrounding the city of<lb/>
Fallujah, blocking it off with<lb/>
a series of huge earthen dams<lb/>
and no doubt preparing to com-<lb/>
mence house-to-house searches<lb/>
for the "enemy who exactly<lb/>
Letter to the Editor<lb/>
Dear Editor,<lb/>
I wasn't able to give my<lb/>
two cents about the proposal<lb/>
made at Monday's SUA meet-<lb/>
ing regarding the removal<lb/>
of Student Union from<lb/>
homecoming activities.<lb/>
I was busy with our Kevin<lb/>
Smith program (which lasted<lb/>
for five hours and captivated an<lb/>
audience of 1,400 - mostly ECU<lb/>
students).<lb/>
When I read the proposal, my<lb/>
first reaction was to laugh. If you<lb/>
are going to make a proposal,<lb/>
please try to include at least<lb/>
one factual statement. First of<lb/>
all, Student<lb/>
Union has been participat-<lb/>
ing in homecoming for seven<lb/>
years, and we have won the<lb/>
last four - not three - spirit<lb/>
cups.<lb/>
When we first started com-<lb/>
peting, we didn't win anything,<lb/>
but we had the determina-<lb/>
tion to keep on trying, and<lb/>
eventually we found what it<lb/>
takes to win.<lb/>
This winning streak should<lb/>
not make organizations sick of<lb/>
losing, but fuel them to try even<lb/>
harder and step up their level of<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
Directly quoting S(iA Sena-<lb/>
tor Michael lust, "It is not fair<lb/>
that the Student Union sponsors,<lb/>
judges and competes in all home-<lb/>
coming competitions<lb/>
I'm sorry that you are not<lb/>
aware of the responsibilities of<lb/>
your own organization. SGA is<lb/>
responsible for sponsors, judges<lb/>
and anything homecoming-<lb/>
related, not Student Union.<lb/>
We simply compete on the<lb/>
same grounds as any other stu-<lb/>
dent organization.<lb/>
Student Union has never used<lb/>
student fees to pay for homecom-<lb/>
ing. We use our winnings from<lb/>
the previous year to fund our<lb/>
expenses.<lb/>
We bank on winning,<lb/>
and recently this strategy has<lb/>
worked. Our "budget" has<lb/>
nothing to do with home-<lb/>
coming. Our budget is for the<lb/>
students - that's how it always<lb/>
has been and will be.<lb/>
Throughout the year, Stu-<lb/>
dent Union members work<lb/>
endlessly to bring quality pro-<lb/>
grams to the students.<lb/>
This level of programming<lb/>
and hard work continues<lb/>
throughout homecoming.<lb/>
For this reason, I think it is<lb/>
amazing and a true test of our<lb/>
teamwork and dedication that<lb/>
we are as successful as we are in<lb/>
homecoming competitions.<lb/>
It is my understanding<lb/>
that in writing a proposal, you<lb/>
include factual statements that<lb/>
have supporting evidence.<lb/>
It is apparent that this pro-<lb/>
posal is completely inaccurate.<lb/>
Thank you for recognizing our<lb/>
success<lb/>
However, there is absolutely<lb/>
no reason Student Union's eli-<lb/>
gibility should be revoked. Be-<lb/>
fore Student Union began<lb/>
winning, the<lb/>
Ambassadors had a win-<lb/>
ning streak as well and<lb/>
their eligibility was never<lb/>
questioned.<lb/>
Instead of trying to dis-<lb/>
qualify Student Union from<lb/>
competing in homecoming,<lb/>
my advice to you is to put your<lb/>
focus into winning instead ot<lb/>
finding fault in other people's<lb/>
success.<lb/>
Lisa Crouse<lb/>
Student Union President<lb/>
arc we looking for?<lb/>
During Vietnam, the line<lb/>
hit ween enemy combatant<lb/>
and innocent civilian was<lb/>
often blurred. As a result,<lb/>
that nation is still recovering<lb/>
from a decade of American<lb/>
occupation. Is every Iraqi<lb/>
opposed to American forces who<lb/>
decide to throw a rock or shout<lb/>
some obscenities a legitimate<lb/>
target? Do they have to be<lb/>
armed? Are those citizens who<lb/>
are sympathetic to resistance<lb/>
forces, but personally unwilling<lb/>
to raise arms against the U.S<lb/>
fair game?<lb/>
Public support and<lb/>
cooperation are all a person<lb/>
needs to elude even the most<lb/>
sophisticated military searches.<lb/>
Osama bin Laden has<lb/>
been moving house to house<lb/>
within one region of Paki-<lb/>
stan for years with one of the<lb/>
largest manhunts, military<lb/>
or otherwise, close on his heels.<lb/>
If the people - those teeming<lb/>
massesof Iraqi citizenry-refuse to<lb/>
cooperate with American forces<lb/>
and bitterness continues<lb/>
to grow within the Iraqi<lb/>
population about the pres-<lb/>
ence of an occupying<lb/>
army on Muslim soil, the United<lb/>
States will tuck tail and run.<lb/>
Just like we did during the<lb/>
first Ciulf War, just like we did<lb/>
in Somalia, just like we did in<lb/>
Vietnam.<lb/>
The political war drums of a<lb/>
calculated invasion always grow<lb/>
fainter as the American death<lb/>
toll rises.<lb/>
No presidential admin-<lb/>
istration can afford an<lb/>
unpopular war with no end ii<lb/>
sight.<lb/>
Lyndon Johnson learned tha<lb/>
in 1968, and it cost him a secon.<lb/>
term in office.<lb/>
And if Bush thinks that Ira.<lb/>
will be prepared to enter into th<lb/>
democratic Utopia which he ha<lb/>
envisioned for them by June 3(<lb/>
he is sorely mistaken.<lb/>
The constant attacks agalns<lb/>
American troops will continue<lb/>
frustrationaboutlraqand Afghan<lb/>
istan in the United States wil<lb/>
blossom, and the administratioi<lb/>
will see the writing on the wall<lb/>
Politics is about sur<lb/>
vival, and although he car<lb/>
never seem to remembe<lb/>
the name of the Australiai<lb/>
prime minister or how th<lb/>
hell he ever got into Harvard<lb/>
Bush is smart enough t<lb/>
know that empty deadline<lb/>
and news reports about dea'<lb/>
American civilians hung fron<lb/>
the bottoms of bridges do not<lb/>
re-election make.<lb/>
For me, the first Americai<lb/>
military loss in Iraq was also th<lb/>
first nail in his administration'<lb/>
casket.<lb/>
Perhaps after he i<lb/>
voted out of office ii<lb/>
November, Bush will finally se<lb/>
the error of his ways.<lb/>
Arrogance and econotnl<lb/>
intimidation should never b<lb/>
used as diplomatic weapons, anc<lb/>
unfortunately, it is the Americai<lb/>
people who shall reap the whirl<lb/>
wind of these policies.<lb/>
Maybe next November wil<lb/>
see some change in our nations<lb/>
leadership  hopefully for th<lb/>
better.<lb/>
I've always said it's the ultimate place to<lb/>
play baseball. It's the sports capital of the<lb/>
world. It doesn't get any better than that.<lb/>
Jason Giambi<lb/>
on playing in Yankee Stadium<lb/>
<pb facs="00059504_0005"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
Use of profanity is<lb/>
features becoming popular,<lb/>
less controversial<lb/>
AMANDA UNGERFEU<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
JOHN BREAM<lb/>
Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
252.328.6366<lb/>
Did You Know?<lb/>
- Rim director Francis Ford Coppola (1939), martial arts actor Jackie Chan<lb/>
(1954) and former MTV VJ Bill Bellamy (1968) all call today their<lb/>
birthday.<lb/>
- This month is Couple Appreciation Month.<lb/>
-Today is No Housework Day and Para-Professional Day.<lb/>
-On this day in 1948. the World Health Organization was founded<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Freestyle Competition<lb/>
The Student Union Popular Entertainment Committee is sponsoring<lb/>
a freestyle competition featuring a DJ competition and an MC<lb/>
competition from 5 p.m. - 8 p.m. today on the Mendenhall Brickyard. This<lb/>
event is free.<lb/>
Bingo<lb/>
The Student Union Spectrum Committee presents Bingo at 7:30 p.m. today<lb/>
in the Mendenhall Multi-Purpose Room. This event is free.<lb/>
Films<lb/>
The Student Union Films Committee will not be showing any films<lb/>
this week.<lb/>
Percussion Players<lb/>
The School of Music presents ECU Percussion Players directed<lb/>
by John Neal at 8 p m. today in the A. J. Fletcher Recital Hall. This event<lb/>
is free<lb/>
Symphony Orchestra<lb/>
The School of Music presents the ECU Symphony Orchestra<lb/>
conducted by Hisao Watanabe at 8 p.m. on Thursday, April 8 in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium. This event is free.<lb/>
Game Night Tournament<lb/>
The Student Union is sponsoring a game night tournament from 11 p.m.<lb/>
- 3 am on Thursday, April 8 in the Mendenhall Student Center. This<lb/>
event is free.<lb/>
Potiuck Dinner and Dance<lb/>
The ECU Folk and Country Dancers are sponsoring a potiuck dinner,<lb/>
concert and dance on Saturday, April 10 at the Willis Building on First<lb/>
and Reade Streets Dinner is at 6 p.m the concert begins at 7 p.m. and a<lb/>
contra dance begins at 8 p.m Tickets are $3 for students.<lb/>
Relay For Life<lb/>
The Pitt County Relay for Life recently kicked off this year's effort by<lb/>
celebrating the Relays 10-year anniversary. The 2004 Relay for Life<lb/>
will be held on Friday, April 30 and Saturday, May 1 at the Pitt County<lb/>
Fairgrounds. Relay is now seeking volunteers who are interested in helping<lb/>
form teams and join in the fight against cancer. If you are interested in<lb/>
volunteering, forming a team, or donating time or money, please contact<lb/>
Alis Irwin at 317-5803.<lb/>
Top Fives<lb/>
Top five singles<lb/>
1. "Toxic Britney Spears<lb/>
2. "Yeah Usher featuring Lil Jon &amp; Ludacris<lb/>
3. "My Immortal Evanescence<lb/>
4 "This Love Maroon 5<lb/>
5. "With You Jessica Simpson<lb/>
Top five albums<lb/>
1. Usher, Confessions<lb/>
2 Various Artists, Now 15<lb/>
3. Guns n' Roses, Greatest Hits<lb/>
4 Carl Thomas, Let's Talk About It<lb/>
5 Norah Jones, Feels Like Home<lb/>
Top five movies<lb/>
1 Hellboy<lb/>
2 Walking Tall<lb/>
3 Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed<lb/>
4 Home on the Range<lb/>
5 The Prince &amp; Me<lb/>
Top five DVDs<lb/>
1 Mona Lisa Smile<lb/>
2 School of Rock<lb/>
3 Dr. Seuss' The Cat in the Hat<lb/>
4. Cold Creek Manor<lb/>
5 The Missing<lb/>
Top five books<lb/>
Against<lb/>
A II toMtall<lb/>
i VII .in lmx<lb/>
Enemies<lb/>
Kidurd.VCbirkc<lb/>
1 Against All Enemies: America's Inside War on<lb/>
Terror, Richard A Clark<lb/>
2 Angels &amp; Demons, Dan Brown<lb/>
3 The Da Vinci Code. Dan Brown<lb/>
4 The South Beach Diet, Aithur Rodale<lb/>
5 The Ultimate Weight Solution Food Guide, Phillip<lb/>
McGraw<lb/>
Top five TV shows<lb/>
1. "American Idol" - Tuesday (FOX)<lb/>
2. "Apprentice" (NBC)<lb/>
3. "C.S.I. Miami" (CBS)<lb/>
4. "American Idol" - Wednesday (FOX)<lb/>
5 Everybody Loves Raymond (CBS)<lb/>
Curse words have<lb/>
become prevalent<lb/>
part of society<lb/>
JESSICA CHESON<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Swearing has become<lb/>
something we are learning to<lb/>
he more and more desensitized<lb/>
to hearing and using.<lb/>
The "A-word" and the "B-<lb/>
word" are all over television.<lb/>
Even on reality shows, mainly<lb/>
"The Osbournes the use of<lb/>
profanity is put right in front<lb/>
of our faces. There used to be<lb/>
strict rules and regulations of<lb/>
what can and cannot be said<lb/>
on TV and in movies, but<lb/>
the restrictions have gotten<lb/>
looser.<lb/>
There Is censoriship of foul<lb/>
language, but what was said can<lb/>
easily still be determined. View-<lb/>
ers - especially children - pick<lb/>
up foul language and think since<lb/>
it's all over television, it must not<lb/>
be loo bad.<lb/>
"I believe in freedom of<lb/>
speech, but 1 don't agree with<lb/>
the abundance of cussing on<lb/>
TV, especially with all the chil-<lb/>
dren who are watching said<lb/>
Katie Carr, freshman elementary<lb/>
education major<lb/>
Uono, Diane Keaton<lb/>
Courtney love and Nicole<lb/>
Kic hie arc just a few examples<lb/>
of celebrities who have let a few<lb/>
curse words slip at prestigious<lb/>
award shows or on late night<lb/>
TV.<lb/>
Kvcn though these famous<lb/>
people have said some "bad<lb/>
words" In front of America,<lb/>
many viewers think no differ-<lb/>
ently of them. In fact, to some<lb/>
this slip up Shows a human<lb/>
side of them that viewers<lb/>
like to see.<lb/>
In the 1950s and 1960s,<lb/>
television shows were incred-<lb/>
ibly ,ifo(lest compared to<lb/>
shows now. The Cleavers from<lb/>
"Leave if to Beaver" were the<lb/>
ideal American family who<lb/>
became loved and accepted<lb/>
by America. "The Osbournes"<lb/>
is an extreme example of a<lb/>
family television show that<lb/>
portrays more than the<lb/>
average family. It makes<lb/>
an impression on its audi-<lb/>
ence, just as the Cleavers<lb/>
did years ago.<lb/>
Television Is not the only<lb/>
media letting loose. Morning<lb/>
shows on the radio are also<lb/>
pushing the boundaries in topics<lb/>
and casual banter.<lb/>
The profanity that surrounds<lb/>
us effects our vocabulary more<lb/>
than any other input.<lb/>
Teenagers hear the words<lb/>
from their friends, pushing the<lb/>
likeliness that they will use<lb/>
them, too.<lb/>
Children olten repeat what<lb/>
they hear from television, other<lb/>
kids at school and even parents.<lb/>
This display of profanity is a<lb/>
direct model of what is deter-<lb/>
mined as socially acceptable for<lb/>
the child.<lb/>
"With the rate at which<lb/>
society is allowing cussing,<lb/>
who knows what we can expect<lb/>
for our children's generation<lb/>
I think there is a line, and<lb/>
society is definitely crossing<lb/>
it said McKenie Bais-<lb/>
den, freshman pre-heaith<lb/>
major.<lb/>
College students are the best<lb/>
example of how we can let our<lb/>
tongues slip a little too often. At<lb/>
tootball games, downtown on a<lb/>
weekend and around campus you<lb/>
get an earful of curse words.<lb/>
In an atmosphere<lb/>
where free speech is<lb/>
encouraged, it's hard to think<lb/>
twice about the words that Stream<lb/>
out of our mouths.<lb/>
foul language is a habit<lb/>
- some might say a had one - and<lb/>
it doesn't go away without effort.<lb/>
Regardless of societal changes, the<lb/>
way we speak is a direct reflection<lb/>
of our education and self-repre-<lb/>
As students who someday<lb/>
desire to be professionals, We<lb/>
should avoid the .Heavy usage ol<lb/>
profanity because it offends some<lb/>
people.<lb/>
"Damn" and "hell"<lb/>
are probably the most two<lb/>
common curse words. They are<lb/>
The use of profanity in the media has gained more acceptance<lb/>
in recent generations, but still offends many.<lb/>
probably the least offensive and<lb/>
most expressive. Using these<lb/>
words can help make a point<lb/>
clearer or stronger.<lb/>
When "damn" was used in<lb/>
dime with the Wind in iy.s2,<lb/>
it was very controversial, and<lb/>
the producers were heavily<lb/>
fined.<lb/>
Movies and television; hav?<lb/>
almost caught up to how people<lb/>
really speak and act.<lb/>
Adults should be mature<lb/>
enough to deal with profanity,<lb/>
whether heard or spoken.<lb/>
"Swearing Is becom-<lb/>
ing almost accepted in most<lb/>
every facet of life outside<lb/>
some families' homes. You<lb/>
hear it ia music, lakes <lb/>
even small forms of swearing<lb/>
; are showing up in some class-<lb/>
rooms of middle, high school<lb/>
and college said Jackson<lb/>
Kavanagh, junior physical<lb/>
education major.<lb/>
"Before you know it, swear-<lb/>
ing might ihow up in elementary<lb/>
schools, but let's hope not<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
A good, confident approach makes a great first impression.<lb/>
Don't stay lonely,<lb/>
ask someone out<lb/>
Using proper approach<lb/>
will land you a date<lb/>
TOMEKASTEELE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Asking someone about a date<lb/>
is one of the hardest things to<lb/>
do. You can get nervous, your<lb/>
hands get clammy and you break<lb/>
out into a sweat - just to chicken<lb/>
out when that special someone<lb/>
comes near. It takes courage,<lb/>
but everyone should know a<lb/>
few do's and don'ts when it<lb/>
comes to asking someone out for<lb/>
a date.<lb/>
You can meet a potential<lb/>
date almost anywhere. Classes<lb/>
and on campus are perfect places<lb/>
to meet someone. Places that<lb/>
aren't so great to find a date arc-<lb/>
parties and at the club. It's too<lb/>
noisy to strike up a conversation<lb/>
and get someone's number.<lb/>
At parties, there is most likely<lb/>
alcohol and it does influence<lb/>
the senses strongly. Don't ask<lb/>
someone if you are impaired or<lb/>
if they are drunk as well. You can<lb/>
end up with a wrong number, or<lb/>
worse, with a date you hate once<lb/>
you are sober.<lb/>
Meeting or scoping out the<lb/>
person you may want to ask on<lb/>
a date is the easy part. The hard<lb/>
part is actually building up the<lb/>
nerve to ask him or her out.<lb/>
It's sad, and sometimes a bad<lb/>
thing, but first impressions are<lb/>
everything. A person can make<lb/>
a judgment in mere seconds,<lb/>
so the approach is critical.<lb/>
"I don't ask people out. I<lb/>
let them come to me. That is<lb/>
a sign that they really want to<lb/>
get to know me said Emily<lb/>
Carter, sophomore communica-<lb/>
tion major.<lb/>
Prepare before asking the<lb/>
person. Make sure to look pre-<lb/>
sentable. What is seen on the<lb/>
first meeting tends to make a<lb/>
lasting impact. Take time to<lb/>
make sure there's no food caught in<lb/>
between your teeth and you have<lb/>
fresh breath.<lb/>
Males should, at the very least,<lb/>
smell good. Women absolutely<lb/>
love a guy in cologne. Women<lb/>
should do the same.<lb/>
How you dress is also impor-<lb/>
tant. You don't have to go as far<lb/>
as a three-piece suit or a prom<lb/>
dress, but plan to look nice the<lb/>
day of asking a person - it can<lb/>
only help.<lb/>
Never IM, call, text message,<lb/>
email or offer the dale through<lb/>
a mutual triend. It shows that<lb/>
you have no guts and makes<lb/>
you look either ashamed or<lb/>
embarrassed. Such approaches<lb/>
are too impersonal. You don't<lb/>
want to be left guessing what he<lb/>
or she is thinking on the other end<lb/>
of the phone.<lb/>
Never ask a person out in<lb/>
public - their friends or other<lb/>
bystanders may be around and<lb/>
could cause a scene. You don't<lb/>
want to be laughed at or walked<lb/>
away from in public. Find<lb/>
a time to ask the person out in<lb/>
private. That way, if they reject<lb/>
you, at least the whole town<lb/>
won't be there.<lb/>
Have something in mind<lb/>
to say when approaching the<lb/>
special person. It is probably a<lb/>
good idea to find out whether<lb/>
they have a significant other<lb/>
before asking them out. Don't<lb/>
 go asking everyone, though, if<lb/>
that special someone is taken.<lb/>
Keep it low key when getting<lb/>
information about them. This<lb/>
campus is a small place, as well<lb/>
as Greenville, so word travels<lb/>
fast. You don't want a potential<lb/>
date to find out prematurely<lb/>
and think they have a stalker on<lb/>
their hands.<lb/>
Pick-up lines are a defi-<lb/>
nite no-no and many of them<lb/>
have been overused, which<lb/>
makes them well-known. They<lb/>
sound unintelligent in every<lb/>
way. If you absolutely have<lb/>
nothing to say and must use a<lb/>
pick-up line, at least use some-<lb/>
thing original.<lb/>
"To ask a person out, you<lb/>
just throw the miggity miggity<lb/>
mack on them, then bam, you<lb/>
have a date said Justin Gulliver,<lb/>
sophomore communication<lb/>
major.<lb/>
Being you is the safest route-<lb/>
to go when approaching someone<lb/>
to ask them for a date. Using pick-<lb/>
tip lines may make the person feel<lb/>
you are a player, and remember,<lb/>
first impressions can determine<lb/>
a yes or a no.<lb/>
It may be easy to begin a<lb/>
conversation by asking them<lb/>
a question like, "Do you know<lb/>
what time it is?" You can then<lb/>
easily strike up a conversation.<lb/>
Another ice-breaker is giving the<lb/>
person a compliment on what he<lb/>
or she is wearing.<lb/>
Simply saying "Hi" is the<lb/>
most effortless way to getting<lb/>
that special person's attention<lb/>
for the moment.<lb/>
Perhaps the easiest method<lb/>
is being honest. Walk up to<lb/>
them, say hello, then proceed<lb/>
to tell them that they seem<lb/>
cool and you want to get to<lb/>
know them better. This way is<lb/>
What Is the best<lb/>
pick-up line<lb/>
you've heard?<lb/>
KATE ADAMS<lb/>
SENIOR GERMAN MAJOR<lb/>
"If I get knocked out, would you<lb/>
give me CPR?"<lb/>
see OUT page A6<lb/>
CHRIS MORGAN<lb/>
SOPHOMORE MUSIC<lb/>
MAJOR<lb/>
"If you were a parking ticket,<lb/>
you'd have fine' written all<lb/>
over you<lb/>
JESSICA NASH<lb/>
FRESHMAN MUSIC MAJOR<lb/>
'If I had created the alphabet,<lb/>
I would have put 'U' and T<lb/>
together<lb/>
<pb facs="00059504_0006"/><lb/>
PAGt A6<lb/>
THL HAST CAROLINIAN ? FLATURES<lb/>
4-7-04<lb/>
JL<lb/>
AMANDA UNGERFELT<lb/>
FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
fttattrtttrtttr<lb/>
I had really got my hopes up when I heard the theme for<lb/>
tonight was Elton lohn. hut many of the contestants made<lb/>
my hopes drop. John Stevens' performance of "Crocodile<lb/>
Rock" was exceptionally bad, along with Camille Velasco's<lb/>
performance of "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road George Huff<lb/>
took a relatively unknown song ("Take Me to the Pilot") and<lb/>
made it unforgettable. Hands down, it was the best perfor-<lb/>
mance last night. Tonight, it will be a close one between<lb/>
Velasco and Stevens. Expect America to vote Stevens off.<lb/>
tiftftftftlz<lb/>
JOHN BREAM<lb/>
ASSISTANT FEATURES EDITOR<lb/>
The final nine gave us a little bit of everything tonight<lb/>
- the great, the average and the really ugly. As usual, Fantasia<lb/>
Hanino and George Huff were amazing, as well as Jennifer<lb/>
Hudson. Joan Stevens and Camile Velsato showed why they<lb/>
belong in the bottom three again this week, but you never<lb/>
know with America's voting (Amy Adams voted off the show<lb/>
last week and Jon Stevens not in the bottom three? (lorae on!).<lb/>
If America has any eye for talent this week, Velasco gets her<lb/>
well-deserved, long overdue plane ticket home for a dreadtul<lb/>
performance of "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road<lb/>
M.CHELLEMOEOD ftfrfrfrft tititilX<lb/>
EDITOR IN CHIEF<lb/>
Last week threw me for a loop ? for those of you who<lb/>
aren't avid "Idol" watchers, Amy Adams, one of this season's<lb/>
best contestants, was voted out of the competition ? so, I<lb/>
feel like I'm out of my element. However, since I can't control<lb/>
America's votes, the only thing I can do is vote off the worst<lb/>
singer of the week, lo me, this weeks Elton John renditions<lb/>
didn't showcase the contestants' best talent. But the worst ot<lb/>
the worst was Camille Velasco, again, and I think this week<lb/>
is her last.<lb/>
? Number of accurate predictions<lb/>
Out<lb/>
from page A5<lb/>
honest and straight to the point,<lb/>
but also puts the asker up for a<lb/>
blunt rejection.<lb/>
Once the question has been<lb/>
asked, always go with the recip-<lb/>
ient's first answer. If the person<lb/>
says no, don't ask Ihem again<lb/>
right then. Give it some time<lb/>
and if you really like them, try<lb/>
again later.<lb/>
Don't he afraid ot rejection<lb/>
If they say no, that doesn't<lb/>
mean something's wrong with<lb/>
you. Dust yourself off and keep<lb/>
looking.<lb/>
II sou take all the right steps<lb/>
anil your kpecial someone agrees<lb/>
on a date, get their phone number<lb/>
right then. Ask them about a<lb/>
good time to call and call that<lb/>
day so that they do not forget.<lb/>
On the first date, great<lb/>
places to go are the bookstore,<lb/>
the museum, the park, out to<lb/>
dinner or bowling. Never take a<lb/>
first date to a movie - you can't<lb/>
' talk and get to know each other<lb/>
in that setting. Stay confident<lb/>
and be yourself - that way you<lb/>
can't go wrong.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeaitcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Date options abound<lb/>
for students in town<lb/>
Local places, activities<lb/>
to share with your<lb/>
significant other<lb/>
LAURA PEKAREK<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Sometime Greenville can<lb/>
only offer so much for students<lb/>
in relationships. Dinner and a<lb/>
movie can get repetitive, not<lb/>
to mention expensive after a<lb/>
while.<lb/>
However, couples can go out<lb/>
and do plenty of other things that<lb/>
are different from the norm.<lb/>
If you are low on cash, ECU has<lb/>
plenty of on-campus entertain-<lb/>
ment events, from arts to sports<lb/>
which are a good way to save<lb/>
and still be involved.<lb/>
The School of Music is con-<lb/>
stantly having concerts. Hen-<lb/>
drix Theater always plays newly<lb/>
released movies as well which are<lb/>
flte tor students.<lb/>
faking advantage of the<lb/>
Student Recreation Center, cou-<lb/>
ples should work out together. It's<lb/>
always good to have a chance to<lb/>
exercise with someone.<lb/>
Even checking out the<lb/>
library and studying is a great<lb/>
way to spend time together<lb/>
and maybe grab a study buddy.<lb/>
If you and your signifi-<lb/>
cant other want to head off<lb/>
campus, the Greenville-Pitt<lb/>
County area has a lot to offer.<lb/>
It is home to 28 parks, 36<lb/>
tennis courts, six private and<lb/>
one public golf course and five<lb/>
health clubs.<lb/>
These facilities are a<lb/>
great way to get a change<lb/>
of scenery and are com-<lb/>
monly used by couples<lb/>
for recreation and relaxation.<lb/>
It that isn't enough, the<lb/>
Greenville Convention Center<lb/>
on Greenville Boulevard<lb/>
has tons of extra ideas for<lb/>
places and events happening in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
If you're into jaz a festi-<lb/>
val sponsored by the Center is<lb/>
coming up at the end of this<lb/>
month.<lb/>
"My boyfriend and I<lb/>
enjoy getting off campus<lb/>
and going to the park said<lb/>
Emily Enochs, freshman<lb/>
political science major.<lb/>
"We take our duck and let<lb/>
Students havo a variety of options for places to go on a date,<lb/>
ranging from a home-cooked meal to a trip to the beach.<lb/>
him run around. It's really<lb/>
relaxing to just have a day to do<lb/>
nothing<lb/>
The mall is a pleasant<lb/>
place to resort to when looking<lb/>
for alone time. Most couples<lb/>
like to take their partner to<lb/>
places where they shop.<lb/>
The bowling alley even offers<lb/>
an inexpensive way to play a<lb/>
couple friendly games of com-<lb/>
petition.<lb/>
If you gel tired of campus<lb/>
food or just fast lood in general,<lb/>
moking a well-balanced meal<lb/>
with a boyfriend or girlfriend<lb/>
can be a delicious change.<lb/>
"Sometimes, instead of going<lb/>
out and spending money, I liketo<lb/>
cook for my boyfriend at a friend's<lb/>
apartment said Shemelia l.ynth,<lb/>
a freshman nursing major.<lb/>
'Eating real food is a nice<lb/>
change from going to Todd<lb/>
Dining Hall<lb/>
Downtown Greenville is an<lb/>
awesome place to take a partner<lb/>
for a fun night offering many<lb/>
spots couples can go dance<lb/>
the night away.<lb/>
If that's not what you're<lb/>
looking for, you can go to<lb/>
places and participate in<lb/>
karaoke or a game of pool.<lb/>
Live entertainment offers<lb/>
an exhilarating time for<lb/>
couples, as well.<lb/>
"When my boyfriend comes<lb/>
down to visit, we usually go<lb/>
downtown said Danielle Vacca,<lb/>
freshman secondary education<lb/>
major.<lb/>
"Where he goes to school,<lb/>
they don't have a downtown<lb/>
like ours, so we usually go to<lb/>
one of the clubs and have a great<lb/>
lime<lb/>
Even taking a weekend trip is<lb/>
a nice getaway. Atlantic Beach is<lb/>
only a drive from ECU.<lb/>
Freshman business major<lb/>
Sean Gregory loves the beach.<lb/>
"I've taken a couple of trips<lb/>
down to Atlantic Beach said<lb/>
Gregory.<lb/>
"My girlfriend and I go.<lb/>
I've been teaching her how to<lb/>
surf. We like to get away from<lb/>
Greenville for the day<lb/>
As long as you use your<lb/>
imagination and don't focus<lb/>
too much on money, you'll<lb/>
be sure to base fun with your<lb/>
significant other no matter what<lb/>
you do.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Our Patios Are Great For Grilling!<lb/>
New Student Community<lb/>
Now leasing for fall 2004!<lb/>
? Open House - April 3rd 1-5pm<lb/>
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Why Settle for limited patio space whop you can<lb/>
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r <lb/>
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No one above or below you <lb/>
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? FREE Tanning, Pool, Clubhouse<lb/>
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University Suites<lb/>
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Located at the corner of Arlington Blvd and Evans St - behind thp Amoco Gxs Station www.universitysuites.net<lb/>
<pb facs="00059504_0007"/><lb/>
4-7-04<lb/>
id<lb/>
PAGEA7<lb/>
in a date,<lb/>
each.<lb/>
?nt offers<lb/>
ime for<lb/>
?nd comes<lb/>
sually go<lb/>
elle Vacca,<lb/>
education<lb/>
:o school,<lb/>
nwntown<lb/>
illy go to<lb/>
ave a great<lb/>
end trip is<lb/>
Ic Beach is<lb/>
?ss major<lb/>
?beach.<lb/>
Ic of trips<lb/>
ich said<lb/>
md I go.<lb/>
?r how to<lb/>
way from<lb/>
use your<lb/>
n't focus<lb/>
?y, you'll<lb/>
with your<lb/>
atter what<lb/>
ifocted of<lb/>
nian.com.<lb/>
s<lb/>
I<lb/>
4 7 04<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
RYAN DOWNEY<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
TONY Z0PP0<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
252.328.6366<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Tar River Canoe Trip<lb/>
The Adventure program is organizing a jaunt down the Tar River for April<lb/>
16. Students must register by Thursday, April 9. The pre-trip meeting is<lb/>
April 13.<lb/>
Board &amp; Boat Surfing<lb/>
The Adventure program will head to Masonboro Island for a fun time of<lb/>
board and boat surfing April 17-18. Participants must register by Thursday,<lb/>
April 9. A pre-trip meeting is April 13.<lb/>
Rock Climbing<lb/>
Students will be given a chance to put their rock climbing skills to the<lb/>
test when the Adventure program wili head to Pilot Mountain April 18.<lb/>
Participants must register by Thursday April 9. A pre-trip meeting is April<lb/>
13. Harnesses and gear will be provided.<lb/>
For more information on any of the above programs, call 328-6387.<lb/>
Sports Briefs<lb/>
Drexler leads new Basketball Hall class<lb/>
Former Rockets and Blazers star Clyde Drexler has been selected<lb/>
for the basketball Hall of Fame. Drexler was one of six former players,<lb/>
coaches and team executives announced Monday as the newest<lb/>
members of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield,<lb/>
Mass. Joining him are Lynette Woodafd, an Olympic gold medalist<lb/>
and first female Harlem Globetrotter; coach Bill Sharman, already in the<lb/>
Hall as a player; the late Maurice Stokes, the 1956 NBA Rookie of the<lb/>
Year: Jerry Colangelo. chairman of the Phoenix Suns and Drazen<lb/>
Dalipagic, an international star for Yugoslavia. Drexler. who in 1997 was<lb/>
selected as one of the NBAs 50 greatest players, was humbled to be<lb/>
a new member. In college, he played in two Final Fours. In his 15-year<lb/>
NBA career. Drexler led the Portland Trail Blazers to the NBA Finals in<lb/>
1990 and 1992. and won a championship with Houston in 1995 He is<lb/>
one of three players in league history to accumulate 20,000 points, 6,000<lb/>
rebounds and 6,000 assists.<lb/>
Clarett runs slow 40 during workout<lb/>
Maurice Clarett ran, jumped, lifted weights and caught footballs for pro<lb/>
scouts on Monday By and large, they came away impressed. Clarett had<lb/>
declined to work out at the NFL combine in February, so this was the first<lb/>
time scouts had seen the 20-year-old who could force his way into the<lb/>
draft later this month depending on the decision of an appeals court.<lb/>
Clarett weighed 230 pounds, exactly his playing weight when he last took<lb/>
the field for the Buckeyes 15 months ago. He had times of 4.66,4.63 and<lb/>
4.67 seconds in his three 40-yard dashes, a standing long jump of 9 feet,<lb/>
5 inches and a vertical jump of 36.5 inches. He lifted 225 pounds 19 times<lb/>
Almost every NFL team sent a scout. Clarett was joined in some of the drills<lb/>
by cornerbackwide receiver Chris Gamble and wide receiver Drew Carter,<lb/>
teammates on Ohio States 2002 national championship team<lb/>
Mirer signs one-year deal with Detroit<lb/>
Unrestricted free-agent quarterback Rick Mirer signed a one-year contract<lb/>
with the Detroit Lions on Monday. Financial terms of the deal were not<lb/>
disclosed. Mirer, entering his twelfth NFL season, spent the last two years<lb/>
with Oakland He started eight games for the Raiders in 2003. completing<lb/>
116 of 221 passes for 1,257 yards and three touchdowns Before coming to<lb/>
Oakland, Mirer played for San Francisco and Lions coach Steve Mariucci<lb/>
from 2000-01. The former Notre Dame star also has played for Seattle, the<lb/>
New York Jets, Green Bay and Chicago,<lb/>
Jets DB injured in bike accident<lb/>
New York Jets cornerback Jamie Henderson was hospitalized in critical but<lb/>
stable condition Monday following a weekend motorcycle accident. Grady<lb/>
Memorial Hospital spokeswoman Denise Simpson confirmed Henderson's<lb/>
condition, but would not give additional details The Jets said in a statement<lb/>
that Henderson was injured Saturday night, but did not comment further.<lb/>
Henderson was a standout defensive back at Carrollton High School, 40<lb/>
miles west of Atlanta. He later played for Georgia before the Jets drafted him<lb/>
in the fourth round in 2001 The 6-foot-2,202-pound Henderson, who also is<lb/>
a top special teams player, has 30 defensive tackles in 32 games with the<lb/>
Jets. He also has 41 special-teams tackles. Last season, he played in 14<lb/>
games with 11 tackles, one interception and one forced fumble Henderson's<lb/>
agent, Pat Dye, did not immediately return a phone message.<lb/>
Second C.U. coach put on leave<lb/>
Colorado placed assistant defensive coach Vance Joseph on leave amid<lb/>
a recruiting scandal that includes rape allegations and other misconduct<lb/>
by football players. Joseph was put on administrative leave last week,<lb/>
the school said Monday It called the suspension a "personnel matter"<lb/>
and refused to say why he was suspended University spokeswoman<lb/>
Pauline Hale said only that the school 'will take appropriate action upon<lb/>
completion of the investigation" Coach Gary Barnett was placed on leave<lb/>
in February pending the outcome of investigations into whether the football<lb/>
program used sex and alcohol to entice top recruits Three women have<lb/>
filed lawsuits against Jhe university claiming they were raped during or<lb/>
right after a 2001 off-campus party for football recruits. A total of eight<lb/>
women have said they were raped by Colorado football players or recruits<lb/>
since 1997 Joseph, 31. has been a full-time assistant for two years He<lb/>
was a quarterback at Colorado from 1990-94 but was a defensive back<lb/>
in the NFL for two seasons. His younger brother. Sammy, is a sophomore<lb/>
cornerback for the Buffaloes.<lb/>
Alabama's Shula restores Croom's name on award<lb/>
Coach Mike Shula reinstated Sylvester Croom's name to a spring award<lb/>
Monday, reversing a decision that angered some former players and<lb/>
Crimson Tide fans.<lb/>
Ryan Jones has been on fire for ECU this season, hitting .429 with nine homers and 29 RBI.<lb/>
Pirates in Durham for<lb/>
showdown tonight<lb/>
BRENT WYNNE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The Pirate baseball team will<lb/>
look to mimic their performance<lb/>
nl last weekend! their greatest<lb/>
offensive series of the season,<lb/>
when they travel to Durham<lb/>
today for a 7 p.m. battle against<lb/>
Puke.<lb/>
I he Blue Devils will be look-<lb/>
ing to rebound In the mid-week<lb/>
game after being swept in a<lb/>
three-game series by Virginia.<lb/>
I he three losses dropped<lb/>
Duke to 15-17 over-<lb/>
all and 3-6 in the ACC.<lb/>
Two of the three ACC wins<lb/>
came against the former 17th<lb/>
ranked NC State Wolfpack.<lb/>
The Blue Devils dropped<lb/>
the opener in this series<lb/>
but rebounded nicely to<lb/>
take games two and three.<lb/>
ECU will not be Duke's first<lb/>
series against a Conference USA<lb/>
foe.<lb/>
file Devils took tun ot three<lb/>
from Cincinnati earlier this<lb/>
season. The Bearcats are 4-22<lb/>
overall.<lb/>
Duke's pitching Staff has<lb/>
struggled at times this season<lb/>
against mediocre competition.<lb/>
They will be facing the oppo-<lb/>
site this week as ECU boasts one<lb/>
of the nation's elite offenses.<lb/>
ECU will enter the game<lb/>
against Duke, riding a five-game<lb/>
winning streak.<lb/>
During the live games, the<lb/>
Pirates have smashed 14 home<lb/>
runs, 10 coming in the series<lb/>
against Charlotte.<lb/>
Because of his efforts in the<lb/>
Charlotte series, Trevor l.awhorn<lb/>
was named C-USA hitter of the<lb/>
week.<lb/>
l.awhorn hit a home run in<lb/>
each game batting .500, with a<lb/>
three hit game and a career-high<lb/>
four hit game.<lb/>
It was Lawhorn's first C-USA<lb/>
weekly honor.<lb/>
l.awhorn leads C-USA in<lb/>
home runs with 12 and has a<lb/>
team-high 31 RBIs.<lb/>
With someone different<lb/>
getting hot every week, the<lb/>
Pirates seemed poised to end<lb/>
their nine-game road trip with<lb/>
a win.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sport5@theeastcarolinain.com.<lb/>
Lady Pirates prepare for UNC-W<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are off course after beginning the season with a 14-game winning streak.<lb/>
ECU looks to end<lb/>
four-game skid<lb/>
DAVID WASKIEWICZ<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Alter falling to Louisville in<lb/>
a three-game series last weekend,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates will look to get<lb/>
back on track today as they play<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington in a double-<lb/>
header.<lb/>
ECU defeated the Seahawks<lb/>
earlier this season and will try to<lb/>
repeat the task. The lady Pirates<lb/>
currently stand at 35-11-1 overall<lb/>
and 4-8 in conference play this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Ii II swept both games of a<lb/>
doubleheader in the first meeting<lb/>
with the Seahawks this season,<lb/>
winning 4-0 in the first game<lb/>
and 8-7 in the second.<lb/>
The wins extended the Lady<lb/>
Pirates winning streak to 14,<lb/>
their longest winning streak<lb/>
since 1998. The streak was also<lb/>
the longest winning streak the<lb/>
Lady Pirates had since joining<lb/>
Conference USA in 2002. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately for ECU, the streak was<lb/>
snapped in their next series<lb/>
against Del'aul.<lb/>
With a couple of victories<lb/>
over the Seahawks, ECU will<lb/>
he looking to start a new streak<lb/>
against the same team that was at<lb/>
the end of their last one<lb/>
The Seahawks are coming oft<lb/>
a series loss against lames Madi-<lb/>
son last weekend and the lady<lb/>
Pirates will be looking to add salt<lb/>
to the team's wounds with a win<lb/>
in both games.<lb/>
Leading the way for ECU is<lb/>
junior infielder Kate Manuse.<lb/>
Manuse currently leads the team<lb/>
in hitting average, homeruns,<lb/>
base hits, doubles and RBIs. She<lb/>
is only three doubles away from<lb/>
breaking ECU'S single season<lb/>
record set by former ECU player<lb/>
Angela Manzo in 2001.<lb/>
Wins in both games against<lb/>
Wilmington would put ECU'S<lb/>
all time record against the<lb/>
Seahawks at an impressive 63-<lb/>
10.<lb/>
The wins would also give<lb/>
the lady Pirates the momentum<lb/>
they need heading into confer-<lb/>
ence play this weekend In a<lb/>
three-game series against South<lb/>
Florida, who is currently on a 16-<lb/>
game winning streak.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will open<lb/>
play against the Seahawks in<lb/>
Wilmington today at 4 p.m.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Fuchs wins 800-meter run<lb/>
Sophomore Trent Fuchs<lb/>
recorded a time of 1:54.98 in the<lb/>
800-meter run to earn top honors<lb/>
at the I Hike Invitational last week-<lb/>
end at Wallace Wade Stadium.<lb/>
The men's 4x 100 team, com-<lb/>
prised ot Reginald Williams,<lb/>
DcAndrc I lyman, Thomas Lewis,<lb/>
and B.J. Henderson also claimed<lb/>
first place honors as they posted<lb/>
a time ol 40.39.<lb/>
During the two day event, the<lb/>
Pirates placed 13 members in the<lb/>
tup 20 in 14 events.<lb/>
Kyle McKenzle recorded a<lb/>
sixth place finish in the 1500-<lb/>
metei run with a time of 3:<lb/>
SH.82.<lb/>
In the 400-meter seeded<lb/>
dash, ECU had three runners in<lb/>
the top 15 with Domonick Rich-<lb/>
mond Finishing loth i48.2ii,<lb/>
Darrus Coetield (48.5.1) 13th<lb/>
and Mii heal llillian (48.80)<lb/>
placed 15th.<lb/>
lor the women, senior Col-<lb/>
leen McGinn recorded a fourth<lb/>
place finish in the high jump<lb/>
at the Duke Invitational with a<lb/>
jump of 5 feet, 7 inches 11.70m)<lb/>
on Friday at Wallace Wade Sta-<lb/>
dium to pace a solid effort by<lb/>
the Lady Pirates. ECU had 10<lb/>
ladies post top 20 finishes in I?-<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Distance runner Tara DeBri-<lb/>
elle continued her solid perfor-<lb/>
mance this spring as she posted a<lb/>
time of 2:12.35 in the 800-meter<lb/>
run for a sixth place finish.<lb/>
Brie BerkowitZ placed seventh<lb/>
in the 400-meter hurdles with a<lb/>
lime ot 1:08.25, while Ireshman<lb/>
Sharon lleilig posted a time of<lb/>
16.31 in the lOO-meter hurdles<lb/>
tor a ninth place finish.<lb/>
In the field events, Nicole<lb/>
Marchewka placed 17th in<lb/>
the pole vault (10-10), Emily<lb/>
Thompson finished 33rd in the<lb/>
discus throw (113-01) and 34th<lb/>
in the shot put (35-00.50), and<lb/>
Chelsea Salisbury placed 11th in<lb/>
the javelin (128-07).<lb/>
ECU will compete in the<lb/>
Sea-Ray Relays in Knoxville,<lb/>
Tenn. on April 8 - 10, before<lb/>
heading to Charlotte, N.C. for<lb/>
the US'I'CA Collegiate Challenge<lb/>
on April 10.<lb/>
See track chart for complete<lb/>
results from both of the week-<lb/>
end's events.<lb/>
Track Chart<lb/>
Men's Results<lb/>
Hammtr Throw<lb/>
15. MaysoPofch<lb/>
14628m)<lb/>
110-Meter Hurdles<lb/>
20. Mark McGee<lb/>
151-10<lb/>
1745<lb/>
1500-Meter Run<lb/>
6. Kyle McKenzle 3:58.82<lb/>
52. James Mclellan 4:10.70<lb/>
63. Tom Gorman 4:13.96<lb/>
400-Meter Dash<lb/>
25. MaiQues Woolford49.48<lb/>
52. Jeff Walls50.72<lb/>
800-Meter Run<lb/>
1. Trent Fuchs1:54.98<lb/>
19. Vance Stevenson1:57.83<lb/>
33. Greg Marcl1:58.78<lb/>
60. Wes Riccl2:01.10<lb/>
91. James Mclellan2:04.54<lb/>
110-Meter Hurdles Seeded<lb/>
9. Hector Cotto14.55<lb/>
800-Meter Run Seeded<lb/>
12. Ricky Bell 1:52.61<lb/>
4il00 Relay<lb/>
1. ECU<lb/>
40.39<lb/>
400-Meter Dash Seeded<lb/>
10. Domonick Richmond48.23<lb/>
13. Darrus Coetield 48.53<lb/>
15. Mlcheal Hilllan 48.80<lb/>
3000-Meter Run 13. Gralg Schmidt 22. Steven Tausend8:54.08 9:03.13<lb/>
400-Meter Hurdles Seeded 6. Ron Pollard 52.89<lb/>
4x400 Relay 6. ECU7:42.82<lb/>
Shot Put 18. ErIcFrasure (13.26ml43-06.0<lb/>
Discus Threw 6. Eric Frasure (4758m)156-01<lb/>
f Women's<lb/>
" "Results<lb/>
High Jump<lb/>
4. Colleen McGinn<lb/>
Hammer Throw<lb/>
23. Jessica Georglo<lb/>
141.88ml<lb/>
6-711.70m)<lb/>
137-05<lb/>
100-Meter Hurdles<lb/>
9. Sharon Heilig 16.31<lb/>
1500-Meter Run<lb/>
14. Johanna Allen 4:50.84<lb/>
20. Caltlln Uttlefield 4:52.00<lb/>
irmisimi ?n in Staiomil<lb/>
24. Rebekah Bishop 4:52.83<lb/>
46. Jenna Prendergast 5:07.96<lb/>
inmatd in a, Stcmuil<lb/>
100-Meter Oath Develop<lb/>
38. Samara Joseph 1422<lb/>
400-Meter Dash<lb/>
37. Slmone Baptlste 1:00.17<lb/>
78. Kim Lash 1:04.55<lb/>
400-Meter Hurdles<lb/>
7. Btfe Berkowltz<lb/>
800-Meter Run<lb/>
13. Lauren Miller<lb/>
llmalwd 1st? Stataiult<lb/>
45. carla Wahltii<lb/>
1:08.25<lb/>
2:20.93<lb/>
2:28.94<lb/>
100-Meter Dash Seeded<lb/>
(Preliminaries!<lb/>
28. Dameshea Jones 12.51<lb/>
f?iM? H to StclKmll<lb/>
38 Ketsay Walker 12.64<lb/>
IFIn&amp;ietl m In SKttonitl<lb/>
100-Meter Hurdles (Preliminaries)<lb/>
32. Nicole Callaham 15.47<lb/>
inmsiat m m stamm<lb/>
200-Meter Dash<lb/>
17. Dameshea Jones 25.20<lb/>
Ifmaned rt i Seittomll<lb/>
40. Jenee Moore 26.09<lb/>
51. Slmone Baptiste 26.96<lb/>
800-Meter Run<lb/>
6. Tara DeBrlelle<lb/>
2:12.35<lb/>
Pole Vault<lb/>
17. Nicole Marchewka 10-10.00<lb/>
3.30ml<lb/>
Discus Throw<lb/>
33. Emily Thompson<lb/>
(34.46m)<lb/>
113-01<lb/>
Javelin Throw<lb/>
11. Chelsea Salisbury 128-07<lb/>
139.19m)<lb/>
Shot Put<lb/>
34. Emily Thompson<lb/>
110.68m)<lb/>
long Jump<lb/>
47. Jenee Moore<lb/>
(4.93ml<lb/>
61. Sharon Heilig<lb/>
14.69m)<lb/>
35-00.50<lb/>
16 02.25<lb/>
15-04.75<lb/>
<pb facs="00059504_0008"/><lb/>
PAGEA8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? SPORTS<lb/>
4 04<lb/>
Three Final Four teams fail to make grade<lb/>
ikkn - ihe top basketball<lb/>
U'jins m the country started bat-<lb/>
tling for a national championship<lb/>
in s.in Antonio on Saturday with<lb/>
Georgii lech and Connecticut<lb/>
dec uling wIki's the best team on<lb/>
Monda) night.<lb/>
Well, Jt least the best when it<lb/>
mint t on-ihi1-1onrt matters,<lb/>
When NCAA representatives<lb/>
introduce players during the<lb/>
tournament .is "studenl-ath-<lb/>
letes there arc often twitters<lb/>
and r.nsii eyebrows through<lb/>
the press corps.<lb/>
I luce I inal lour teams have<lb/>
graduation rates at or below t<lb/>
percent, according to data col-<lb/>
lected by the government and<lb/>
released In tile NCAA.<lb/>
I hat. and the fact that lour<lb/>
teams in the original field of<lb/>
63 graduated no players, is<lb/>
.1 shameful situation in the<lb/>
ut.r.is ot William Frldaj,<lb/>
ilu i hairman of the knight<lb/>
t ommisslon on Intercollegiate<lb/>
Athletics and president emeri-<lb/>
tus hi the University ot North<lb/>
i irolina.<lb/>
We bring 'em in, use vm up<lb/>
and let em go Friday said.<lb/>
i he i ommisslon is a<lb/>
watchdog group that has<lb/>
pushed lor reform in college<lb/>
sports since 1989. In 2001, it<lb/>
recommended schools he<lb/>
required to graduate SO percent<lb/>
ot its players to he eligible tor<lb/>
postseason competition.<lb/>
This sen's summary of how<lb/>
theA A men's basketball tour-<lb/>
nament field of 65 lares included<lb/>
such eye-openers as:<lb/>
 total ot 44 schools failed to<lb/>
meet the 50 percent threshold.<lb/>
Pen Schools didn't graduate<lb/>
even 20 percent of their players.<lb/>
Unly three ol 33 games in<lb/>
the play-in and first rounds<lb/>
pitted two schools that achieved<lb/>
SOperceni rates: Mississippi State<lb/>
v s Monmouth, Gonzaga vs. Val-<lb/>
paraiso and North c arolina s s.<lb/>
u I On c<lb/>
I hose are red-flag nunihers<lb/>
that draw attention to academic<lb/>
issues In the athletic departments<lb/>
,n ross the nation.<lb/>
I he Knightommisslon also<lb/>
points to academic Iransgressions,<lb/>
a Iim.iih i.il aims rat among Divi-<lb/>
sion I si hools and commercialisa-<lb/>
tion as problem areas in hig-time<lb/>
athletics, but the graduation<lb/>
rates arc perhaps the "sexi-<lb/>
est of its focus issues because<lb/>
i.itistics pun ide apparent<lb/>
lil.ii k anil-w full nie.isiircs<lb/>
Of course, use- Ol these rates<lb/>
has brought criticism from<lb/>
coaches and athletic direc-<lb/>
tors who quickly point out the<lb/>
methodology punishes them<lb/>
lor students who transfer, sign<lb/>
professional contracts or have<lb/>
personaj problems.<lb/>
To combat these perceptions,<lb/>
the NCAA, which recently beefed<lb/>
up progress-toward-degree<lb/>
requirements, plans to roll out<lb/>
additional measures of academic<lb/>
performance to provide addi-<lb/>
tional motivation to schools to<lb/>
improve results.<lb/>
The next step in approval<lb/>
comes at an NCAA board meet-<lb/>
ing later this month, with adop-<lb/>
tion virtually a given because<lb/>
there's "significant momentum<lb/>
at all levels according to Kevin<lb/>
Lennon, the NCAA's vice presi-<lb/>
dent whose staff oversees eligibil-<lb/>
ity, compliance and certification<lb/>
issues.<lb/>
The organization will collect<lb/>
graduation rates separately from<lb/>
the government so the Depart-<lb/>
ment ol Education's recent<lb/>
changes in reporting won't be-<lb/>
cause "to blot the sunshine from<lb/>
how intercollegiate athletics is<lb/>
doing with its more important<lb/>
objective as NCAA president<lb/>
Myles Brand said in a press release<lb/>
earlier this month.<lb/>
Additionally, the graduation<lb/>
rates will be compiled in such<lb/>
a way as not to punish schools<lb/>
when athletes transfer while<lb/>
academically eligible.<lb/>
The NCAA also has gener-<lb/>
ated a new measurement, the<lb/>
Academic I'rogress Rate, to pro-<lb/>
vide a snapshot of year-to-year<lb/>
academic progress.<lb/>
I hat's lacking in the gradua-<lb/>
tion rates, which are compiled six<lb/>
vears after a class enters school<lb/>
and may not reflect current status<lb/>
of the program.<lb/>
Ihe APR awards two points<lb/>
per semester, one for being<lb/>
academically eligible and<lb/>
another for returning to school<lb/>
the following semester, to calcu-<lb/>
late the rate.<lb/>
A system of incentives and<lb/>
disincentives is planned to<lb/>
reward and penalize a team that<lb/>
fails to meet various thresholds.<lb/>
Proposed penalties range<lb/>
from public warning and<lb/>
monitoring to scholarship and<lb/>
recruiting limitations to making<lb/>
a team ineligible for postseason<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
This latest reform effort<lb/>
started in 1999, when the NCAA<lb/>
decided to try to improve aca-<lb/>
Duke fell to U-Conn Saturday.<lb/>
demic performance while limit-<lb/>
ing impact on lower soclucco-<lb/>
nomic communities.<lb/>
There are potential problems<lb/>
to these efforts, at least accoruuig<lb/>
to I (avid Boles, Mississippi State's<lb/>
associate athletic director for<lb/>
student services. Ihe progress-<lb/>
toward-degree requirements,<lb/>
which, for example, mandate<lb/>
athletes complete 40 percent<lb/>
of their degree requirements<lb/>
before starting their third year of<lb/>
school, are starting to whittle<lb/>
down the number of degree<lb/>
options.<lb/>
"We have raised the in-house<lb/>
standard so high that our kids<lb/>
have absolutely no flexibility<lb/>
Boles said. "Once they come in<lb/>
here and choose a major, they<lb/>
can't change<lb/>
lie used former Long Beach<lb/>
High standout pitcher Bobby<lb/>
Reed as an example. Reed lettered<lb/>
at Slate from 1988-90 and ranks<lb/>
second in wins and winning<lb/>
percentage (35-5, SM) in school<lb/>
history behind Jelf Brantley.<lb/>
I le graduated with a median- <lb/>
ical engineering degree that took<lb/>
him five years to earn with a lot<lb/>
of summer school to complete<lb/>
the 130 or so semester hours<lb/>
necessary.<lb/>
"No, I'd tell Bobby to forget<lb/>
It I nowadays) Boles said. "That<lb/>
406080 percent of a degree is a<lb/>
mountain to climb<lb/>
NEED A JOB THIS<lb/>
summer<lb/>
Like to paint? Campus Living will be hiring student<lb/>
painters, at $7.00 per hour, for the paint crew this<lb/>
summer. If you are interested in applying, please<lb/>
stop by Office Suite 100, Jones Hall or visit us<lb/>
online at www.ecu.educampusliving and follow<lb/>
the student employment links for a<lb/>
downloadable application. Applications<lb/>
must be returned to the housing<lb/>
office by April 16.<lb/>
Y<lb/>
It's a fun job<lb/>
but<lb/>
somebody's<lb/>
got to do it!<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
CAMPUS LIVING<lb/>
rtytfiauunu?<lb/>
Be a Leader in the Army National Guard, and get the respect of soldiers who will look to you<lb/>
for leadership. You'll also get career training, money for college and opportunities to develop<lb/>
management skills - plus special training to prepare you for advanced positions. Most Guard<lb/>
members train part-time, so they're ready to respond if their community or the Nation needs them.<lb/>
If you have at least 60 college credits and meet other requirements, you can apply to<lb/>
Officer Candidate School. The Guard offers flexible Officer programs that can help<lb/>
you stay in school or let you work full-time.<lb/>
YOU CAN<lb/>
<pb facs="00059504_0009"/><lb/>
PAGE A9<lb/>
I 4 T1f ASTCAWX'NIAN<lb/>
itec<lb/>
4-7-04<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
FOR REfll<lb/>
Apt. tor rent for summer. 2 bedroom,<lb/>
3 person apt. at Ringgold Towers.<lb/>
Furnished, on campus. Available<lb/>
May-July 31st and next year it<lb/>
desired. Call 919-606-4615 or email<lb/>
alt0131@mail.ecu.edu<lb/>
Room Available at Pirate's Cove;<lb/>
Discount Rent for month of May,<lb/>
June, July; All inclusive; Contact<lb/>
Ronnie at (919)522-9033 for more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Early Birds get best homes,<lb/>
blocks to ECU. 1,2,3,4 bedrooms,<lb/>
all appliances, central heatac,<lb/>
see collegeunlversltyrentals.co<lb/>
m or call 321-4712.<lb/>
3 bedroom units walking distance<lb/>
to ECU, high-speed internetcable,<lb/>
large rooms, washerdryer hookup,<lb/>
some pets OK, large yard. Call Mike<lb/>
439-0285.<lb/>
Now Preleasing For Fall Semester-<lb/>
1,2 and 3 bedrooms. All units close<lb/>
to ECU. Cypress Gardens, Jasmine<lb/>
Gardens, Peony Gardens, Gladiolus<lb/>
Garden, Wesley Commons North,<lb/>
Park Village, Cotanche Street, Beech<lb/>
Street Villas and Woodcliff. Water and<lb/>
sewer included with some units. Pets<lb/>
allowed in some units with fee. For<lb/>
more information contact Wainright<lb/>
Property Management 756-6209.<lb/>
408 Biltmore across street from<lb/>
campus, renovations in process,<lb/>
4 BDRM 2 Baths, available July 1,<lb/>
washerdryer included, no pets, call<lb/>
252-327-4433.<lb/>
Pinebrook Apt. 758-4015- 1 &amp; 2<lb/>
BR apts, dishwasher, GD, central<lb/>
air &amp; heat, pool, ECU bus line, 9 or<lb/>
12 month leases. Pets allowed. Rent<lb/>
includes water, sewer, St cable.<lb/>
2 Bedroom house close to campus.<lb/>
J700 per month, available this<lb/>
summer. (919)605-6157<lb/>
1, 2, 3, 4, 5 bedroom houses and<lb/>
duplexes. Available Fall 2004. ALL<lb/>
walking distance from ECU. Call<lb/>
531-5701<lb/>
Quit paying rent! 2 bedroom duplex<lb/>
for sale in Dockside. 2 bedroom<lb/>
and 2 bathroom, washerdryer<lb/>
connections, live in one side and<lb/>
rent out the other, J1280mon.<lb/>
rental income, asking $140,000 call<lb/>
919-656-5053.<lb/>
Student Special. Walk to class! 3 BR<lb/>
1 BA Duplex. HW floors, WD, new<lb/>
windows, pets ok wfee. Available<lb/>
immediately, $650 a month Call<lb/>
252-341-8331.<lb/>
E. 4th Street house available August<lb/>
3, 3 BDRM, 1 bath, washerdryer<lb/>
included, no pets, 1 block from<lb/>
campus, call 252-327-4433.<lb/>
Twin Oaks townhouse, 2 BR, 1 12<lb/>
bath, end unit on ECU campus bus<lb/>
route. Patio, pool, WD hook-up.<lb/>
$575 per month. Call 864 -346-5750<lb/>
or 864-228-3667.<lb/>
E 3rd Street house available<lb/>
immediately, 2 BDRM 1 Bath, washer<lb/>
dryer included, fully remodeled,<lb/>
new windows, remodeled kitchen,<lb/>
new appliances. Call 252-327-4433,<lb/>
no pets.<lb/>
3 bedroom units walking distance<lb/>
o ECU, high-speed internetcable,<lb/>
large rooms, washerdryer hookup,<lb/>
some pets OK, large yard. Call Mike<lb/>
439-0285.<lb/>
Large house walking distance<lb/>
to ECU (over 2500 square feet),<lb/>
washerdryer hookup, high-speed<lb/>
internetcable, 4-5 people possible,<lb/>
large backyard, some pets OK. Call<lb/>
Mike 439-0285.<lb/>
Efficiency Available. Live-in wanted<lb/>
for veterinary clinic in Chocowinity.<lb/>
Excellent opportunity for a pre-vet<lb/>
student. For details call 946-9000.<lb/>
pinebrook apt. 758-4015- 1&amp;2 BR<lb/>
apts, dishwasher, GD, central air<lb/>
&amp; heat, pool, ECU bus line, 9 or 12<lb/>
month leases. Pets allowed. Rent<lb/>
includes water, sewer, &amp; cable.<lb/>
Above BW-3. 2 and 3 bedroom<lb/>
apartments for rent. Water and<lb/>
trash included. Available une, July,<lb/>
or August. Call 252-725-5458 or<lb/>
329-8738.<lb/>
4 bedroom apt. Pirate's Cove lease<lb/>
starting in August, $360month all<lb/>
inclusive! Security deposit already<lb/>
paid for! Free tanning, fully furnished,<lb/>
was originally $375month savings!<lb/>
Please call 327-3416<lb/>
Sub-Lease Rent Apt Pirate's Cove,<lb/>
$360 mo available NOW July 31,<lb/>
2004. Contact: Karen N. Lee, 919-<lb/>
894-8348 or 919-207-0804<lb/>
Pre-Register for spacious 2 and<lb/>
3 bedroom townhouses. Full<lb/>
basement, enclosed patio WD hook-<lb/>
up, no pets. 752-7738 daytime 7:30<lb/>
to 4:30.<lb/>
Pirate's Cove, Available Now, Sublet<lb/>
furnished apartment. Special Price:<lb/>
$325 all included. Call now 919-<lb/>
846-7360.<lb/>
Now Preleasing for Fall Semester-<lb/>
1,2 and 3 bedroom duplexes &amp;<lb/>
townhouses. College Towne Row,<lb/>
Verdant Street, Cannon Court,<lb/>
Cedar Court, Lewis Street and 2nd<lb/>
Street. All units close to ECU. Pets<lb/>
allowed in some units with fee. For<lb/>
more information contact Wainright<lb/>
Property Management 756-6209.<lb/>
2 BR 2 Bath Dogwood Hollow Apt.<lb/>
for sublease Mayluly. Very clean.<lb/>
10 minute walk to campus. Washer<lb/>
dryer included. $545 per month. Call<lb/>
(252)551-6124.<lb/>
2013-A Dockside at River Dr. 2<lb/>
bedroom- 2 bath. Available June<lb/>
1st, rent $600month. NO PETS!<lb/>
Call 252-355-6339.<lb/>
6-7 people possible. Large house<lb/>
walking distance. Total 9 rooms;<lb/>
2 kitchens 3 bathrooms. Central<lb/>
heatair, cablehighspeed internet,<lb/>
washerdryer hookup. Call Mike<lb/>
439-0285.<lb/>
help urn<lb/>
Male non-smoker roommate wanted<lb/>
for a 2 bdrm apartment $200 deposit,<lb/>
$205mon. 12 utilities and cable.<lb/>
Call leave message 258-7857.<lb/>
Roommate wanted to share 3-<lb/>
bedroom apartment. Walking<lb/>
distance to campus! $241.00 plus<lb/>
13 bills. W &amp; D included in rent.<lb/>
Flexible move-in date. Call Maria at<lb/>
353-5008.<lb/>
Female roommate needed to<lb/>
sublease bedroom in three bedroom<lb/>
three bathroom apartment at<lb/>
Riverwalk Lease rens until July 29,<lb/>
2004 Apartment is on ECU busline.<lb/>
Rent is $321 13 utilities. March's<lb/>
rent is paid for! Contact Jess 252-<lb/>
349-5360.<lb/>
Female roommate needed to share<lb/>
4 bedroom house. Walk to ECU.<lb/>
Available August 2004.2 bathrooms<lb/>
free parking. Upstairs $450mo.<lb/>
downstairs $425mo. All inclusive.<lb/>
Call (336) 918-8871.<lb/>
2 female roommates needed to<lb/>
share 4 bedroom house. Walk to<lb/>
ECU. Available August 2004. 2<lb/>
bathroomsfree parking. Upstairs<lb/>
$450mo. Downstairs $425mo. all<lb/>
inclusive. Call (336)918-8871<lb/>
f OR SALE<lb/>
Get around campus in style! Own a<lb/>
49cc scooter for $899 DELIVERED!<lb/>
Up to 35 mph and easy to handle.<lb/>
No moto. lie. neededl Check out<lb/>
www.dirtcheapliquidators.com<lb/>
scooters for models available. Or<lb/>
call 866-347-8247! We are the 1<lb/>
Scooter Wholesaler!<lb/>
WasherDryer for sale. Like new. Only<lb/>
$400 for set. Call 321-1206<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
Attention: Local Hip Hop Group<lb/>
wants to play your party for free!<lb/>
Contact us at artisticanarchists@y<lb/>
ahoo.com or at 252-561-7303 for<lb/>
further information or FREE CD's.<lb/>
Crossword<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Kind of jockey or<lb/>
brake<lb/>
5 Wine container<lb/>
9 Night hunter to<lb/>
be<lb/>
14 Choir part<lb/>
15 Mane man?<lb/>
16 Chicago airport<lb/>
17 Push-button<lb/>
forerunner<lb/>
18 Supply of BB's<lb/>
19 Climbing device<lb/>
20 Arrangements<lb/>
22 &amp; others<lb/>
24 Trial by fire<lb/>
25 Botch<lb/>
27 Honest man?<lb/>
29 Astronaut turned<lb/>
senator turned<lb/>
astronaut<lb/>
32 Filled with<lb/>
wonder<lb/>
37 Watched a tape<lb/>
again<lb/>
38 Track gatherings<lb/>
39 Com serving<lb/>
40 Middle of the<lb/>
road<lb/>
42 Having a will<lb/>
44 Very dry, as wine<lb/>
45 Dash to pieces<lb/>
47 Desert spnngs<lb/>
48 Peevishness<lb/>
50 Uncorks<lb/>
51 Writer Buntline<lb/>
52 Rich or Worth<lb/>
54 Work gang<lb/>
57 Needle hole<lb/>
59 Categorize<lb/>
63 Swift<lb/>
65 Seth's son<lb/>
67 Siamese, today<lb/>
68 Stage type<lb/>
69 Farm parcel<lb/>
70 Orange coat<lb/>
71 Like an unkempt<lb/>
lawn<lb/>
72 Notices<lb/>
73 Oxen link<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 June celebrants<lb/>
2 Nastase of tennis<lb/>
3 ERA, e.g.<lb/>
4 Like colonnades<lb/>
5 Set of students<lb/>
" P P F B F 7 lolH w 11 i? 13<lb/>
20 21 -?22 123 JB24<lb/>
29 30 3" ??3?? ? 33 " 34 3i 36<lb/>
40 4- 1 Hi ?<lb/>
44 HF 46 <lb/>
48 49 IEc<lb/>
?-mi<lb/>
60 61 G2 I<lb/>
 "l<lb/>
TTTJ<lb/>
? 2001 Tribune Media Services, tnc<lb/>
All rights reserved<lb/>
6 Objective<lb/>
7 Anybody<lb/>
8 Windsor or<lb/>
bowline<lb/>
9 Alley in comics?<lb/>
10 Blanch<lb/>
11 Better than<lb/>
never?<lb/>
12 Love god<lb/>
13 Hiker's shelter<lb/>
21 Summit<lb/>
23 Blanche's<lb/>
leader?<lb/>
26 Humiliate<lb/>
28 Woodwind<lb/>
instalments<lb/>
29 Gel a hold on<lb/>
30 Embankment<lb/>
31 Put up<lb/>
33 Leash<lb/>
34 Discontinue<lb/>
35 Consumed<lb/>
36 Apply bandages<lb/>
to<lb/>
41 Test score<lb/>
43 Wall hanging<lb/>
46 Systematized<lb/>
Solutions<lb/>
1X0As33sAG33M<lb/>
aN1d1d0VVN3dV<lb/>
iVH-s0N3G1dVb<lb/>
it)0ssivl3ab1AA3113<lb/>
1N 3H1a3N<lb/>
sN3d03ONV1,n13d<lb/>
s3SV0Hslvd333S<lb/>
31V-S3I3Vd3AV<lb/>
aV 33s133INNVU3d<lb/>
ONVd1N3NN319<lb/>
3a10ms1n<lb/>
iS3X13Isdn13S<lb/>
N011d0WnViV1a<lb/>
3dVH0N0i1011V<lb/>
131M0MsV00s1a<lb/>
knowledge<lb/>
49 Relax<lb/>
53 Relaxes<lb/>
54 Bird's crop<lb/>
55 Few and far<lb/>
between<lb/>
56 Fencer's toil<lb/>
58 Affirmative votes<lb/>
60 Buckeye State<lb/>
61 Line of cabs<lb/>
62 Powerful trend<lb/>
64 Calendar<lb/>
component<lb/>
66 Mispickel, e.g.<lb/>
finally! Earn $5 in 10 min. @<lb/>
www.brandport.coml Watch ads,<lb/>
earn cash. Free registration!<lb/>
Join the BBC: The Buffalo Brew<lb/>
Crew. Buffalo Wild Wings (bw-3)<lb/>
is now hiring waitstaff positions<lb/>
for Summer. Apply in person @<lb/>
114 East 5th Street, 1:00p.m. 'til<lb/>
6:00p.m. daily. Flexible schedules<lb/>
available.<lb/>
International Public Utility<lb/>
Expanding. We need reps who<lb/>
can work PTFT From home or<lb/>
dorm. Call 1-866-873-8722.<lb/>
Lifeguards and swim instructors<lb/>
needed. Call 355-5009. Summer<lb/>
only, interviews April 5th-9th.<lb/>
Are you DIFFERENT? Most students<lb/>
will be waiting tables, lifeguarding,<lb/>
or making copies this summer.<lb/>
Do one of those jobs and be<lb/>
like everyone else. Work with us<lb/>
&amp; build your resume. Average<lb/>
student makes $8,138. Call 1-<lb/>
888-478-S330.<lb/>
Mystery Shoppers needed! Earn<lb/>
while you shop! Call now toll free<lb/>
1-800-467-4422 Ext. 13400<lb/>
Wanted I Reliable, honest, energetic<lb/>
people to monitor crops. From<lb/>
May through August, 2004. We<lb/>
train! Must have own dependable<lb/>
vehicle. Learn to ID insects, weeds<lb/>
and other field conditions. No<lb/>
Nights. Hourly pay ? mileage.<lb/>
Must be 19 or have 1 year of<lb/>
college. Mail or fax resume with<lb/>
cover letter and work experience<lb/>
to : MCSI, POB 370, Cove City,<lb/>
NC 28523 Fax: 252-637-2125<lb/>
mmclawhorn@mcsiag.com<lb/>
Two (2) part-time positions<lb/>
available. Shifts will be 8:00 a.m.<lb/>
to 1:00 p.m. and 1:00 p.m. to 6:<lb/>
00 p.m. plus every other Saturday.<lb/>
Duties include answering phones1<lb/>
as well as other clerical duties for<lb/>
staff. Knowledge of Microsoft Word<lb/>
and Excel a must. Applications<lb/>
being accepted at Greenville Pool<lb/>
&amp; Supply Co. 3730 S. Charles Blvd<lb/>
Greenville, between 9:00 a.m. and<lb/>
5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Responsible ECU student needed<lb/>
to spend weekday afternoon<lb/>
caring for a bright and friendly<lb/>
6 year-old girl. Student must<lb/>
have a valid NC driver's license,<lb/>
clean driving record, and be able<lb/>
to provide references. Education<lb/>
majors, family development, or<lb/>
students who have experience<lb/>
as nannies or sitters preferred.<lb/>
Position available beginning early<lb/>
June. Call 531-9426 and ask for<lb/>
Carol.<lb/>
The Greenville Recreation Si Parks<lb/>
Department is recruiting part-time<lb/>
youth baseball coaches for the<lb/>
spring t-ball program. Applicants<lb/>
must possess a good knowledge of<lb/>
baseball skills and have the ability<lb/>
and patience to work with youth.<lb/>
Hours are from 3:30 pm to 8:00<lb/>
pm, Monday-Friday with some<lb/>
weekend coaching. Flexible hours<lb/>
according to class schedules. This<lb/>
program will run from April 19- early<lb/>
June. Salary start at $6.25 per hour.<lb/>
Apply at the City of Greenville, Human<lb/>
Resources Department, 201 Martin L.<lb/>
King Dr. For more information, please<lb/>
contact the Athletic Office at 329-<lb/>
4550, Monday through Friday, 10 am<lb/>
until 7 pm.<lb/>
Greenville Recreation and Parks<lb/>
Department is seeking scorekeepers<lb/>
for their Adult SpringSummer Softball<lb/>
Leagues. Applicants must possess<lb/>
knowledge of adult slow pitch softball<lb/>
and scorekeeping duties. Games are<lb/>
played Monday through Thursday.<lb/>
Each scorekeeper can expect three<lb/>
games per night. Rate of pay is<lb/>
$7.00 per game. Leagues will play<lb/>
from April 26 until the end of July.<lb/>
Interested applicants can contact the<lb/>
Athletic Staff at 329-4550 to arrange<lb/>
an interview andor receive additional<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Panhellenic Exec would like to congrat.<lb/>
Kappa Delta on their house.<lb/>
HELP<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
I Reliable, honest, energetic<lb/>
I people to monitor crops<lb/>
I From May through August<lb/>
2004 We train! Must<lb/>
I have own dependable<lb/>
I vehicle. Learn to ID<lb/>
I Insects, weeds, and other<lb/>
I Held conditions. No nights.<lb/>
I Hourly pay? mileage.<lb/>
I Must be 19 or have one<lb/>
I year of college. Mall or<lb/>
I lax resume with cover<lb/>
I letter and work expert<lb/>
I ence to:<lb/>
NC78S23<lb/>
37 2125<lb/>
You want it.<lb/>
You can afford it.<lb/>
You'll never see it,<lb/>
1 Racial<lb/>
Steering<lb/>
Js Illegal<lb/>
Fight Housing<lb/>
Discrimination<lb/>
and Win.<lb/>
www.rutlwnrfiirtHHUlng.com ? 1-866-222-FAIR<lb/>
E Q2<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
? of rxxir maintenance response<lb/>
? of unreturned phone calls<lb/>
? of noisj neighbors<lb/>
? of crawl) critters<lb/>
?of high utility bills<lb/>
? of ECU parking hassles<lb/>
? of ungrateful landlords<lb/>
? of unanswered questions<lb/>
? of high renls<lb/>
?ofgrumpj personnel<lb/>
? of unfulfilled promises<lb/>
? of units that were not cleaned<lb/>
? of walls lhat were neier painted<lb/>
? of appliances lhat don't work<lb/>
Wyndham Court &amp;<lb/>
Kastgatc Village Apts.<lb/>
3200 F Muscles Dr.<lb/>
561-RENT or 531-9011<lb/>
wMw.piiniiK IcpropcrtJ<lb/>
nianagement.com<lb/>
MONITORED NIGHTLY BY SECURITY<lb/>
Get the cure.<lb/>
l-SOO-ACS or cancer.org<lb/>
We show you ours every week, now<lb/>
SHOW<lb/>
US YOURS!<lb/>
We want to see your photos of this year at ECU. The East<lb/>
Carolinian is putting together a retrospective of this year<lb/>
at ECU to be published in our commencement edition.<lb/>
This look back wouldn't be complete without your<lb/>
favorite photo taken during an event or activity<lb/>
this school year. You can submit a conventional<lb/>
photo print or a digital file. Please include a note<lb/>
with the photo and tell us your name, the name(s) of<lb/>
anyone clearly pictured in the shot and wherewhen it<lb/>
was taken.<lb/>
Send your favorite ECU memory of the year to<lb/>
photos@theeastcarolinian.com by April 16 and we may<lb/>
include it in our commencement special edition.<lb/>
NOTE: by submitting a photo you give us your permission to reproduce it in our special edition.<lb/>
<pb facs="00059504_0010"/><lb/>
PAGEA10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? SPORTS<lb/>
4-7-04<lb/>
Doherty not winning over everyone<lb/>
(KKIl ? former Notre Dame<lb/>
and North Carolina coach Matt<lb/>
Doherty has emerged as the<lb/>
front-runner in St. John's search<lb/>
for a new coach, but not every<lb/>
Red storm supporter is in favor of<lb/>
hiring the 2001 National Coach<lb/>
of the Year.<lb/>
At least one of the factions<lb/>
that does not support Poherty's<lb/>
candidacy has approached the<lb/>
Rev. Donald J. Harrington, St.<lb/>
John's president, with the sug-<lb/>
gestion ol bringing back former<lb/>
Georgia lech coach Bobby Cre-<lb/>
mins to j college sideline.<lb/>
( reinins has not coached<lb/>
since retiring tromiech in 2000.<lb/>
but is said to want to get back into<lb/>
the game.reinins sent much of<lb/>
the winter talking to members of<lb/>
the city's high school basketball<lb/>
community who felt disenfran-<lb/>
chised during the MikeJavis era.<lb/>
When he was at Georgia lech,<lb/>
Cremins was successful with<lb/>
recruits from the city, notably<lb/>
Kenny Anderson and Stephon<lb/>
Marbury.<lb/>
"1 le wanted to see whether we<lb/>
would come back to St. John's and<lb/>
he wanted to know if we liked<lb/>
the sound of him becoming<lb/>
the coach said one member of<lb/>
the city's high school basketball<lb/>
ranks. "The answer to both was<lb/>
"yes' - people want to get back<lb/>
behind St. John's<lb/>
The powerbrokers who have<lb/>
been trying to sway Harrington<lb/>
in his decision have already had<lb/>
an impact. Memphis coach John<lb/>
Doherty is one of the choices for the open spot at St. John's<lb/>
C alipari - at one time considered<lb/>
one of the favorites - saw the<lb/>
fragmented support for the pro-<lb/>
gram and wanted no part of the<lb/>
overpoliticized situation.<lb/>
Cremins, 56, attended All Mal-<lb/>
lows in the Bronx before becom-<lb/>
ing the point guard at South<lb/>
Carolina under Frank McGulre.<lb/>
In 19 seasons as head coach<lb/>
at Georgia lech, Cremins went to<lb/>
the NCAA Tournament 10 times,<lb/>
including a trip to the Final Four<lb/>
in 1990 with Anderson.<lb/>
Hornung's comments lingering<lb/>
(KR'I) ? When I'aul llomung<lb/>
spoke the other day, saying Notre<lb/>
Dame needs to lower its academic<lb/>
standards to "get the black<lb/>
athlete" because the Irish foot-<lb/>
ball schedule is so tough, it<lb/>
left him sounding like he was<lb/>
speaking from the front porch<lb/>
of a plantation. Now he gets<lb/>
to live with that, even after his<lb/>
apology.<lb/>
But what if he had said this:<lb/>
"Notre Dame needs to lower<lb/>
its academic standards to get the<lb/>
black athlete because one of the<lb/>
missions of this university should<lb/>
be its commitment to diversity<lb/>
Would there have been an<lb/>
outcry?<lb/>
Or, what if he had said this:<lb/>
"The SAT discriminates<lb/>
against minority high school kids,<lb/>
so Notre Dame needs to lower its<lb/>
academic standards to get more<lb/>
black athletes into the school<lb/>
Would anyone have yelled?<lb/>
Or, what if he had said this:<lb/>
"College athletics should<lb/>
be about winning and about<lb/>
opportunity. And given that<lb/>
most of the difference-making<lb/>
athletes in big-time college<lb/>
football arc black, we can do<lb/>
our school a service and we<lb/>
can help fulfill a social goal<lb/>
by lowering our academic-<lb/>
standards and expanding the<lb/>
pool of potential recruits to<lb/>
include more black athletes<lb/>
Would this have caused an<lb/>
uproar?<lb/>
Probably not like this one.<lb/>
This isn't to defend llornung,<lb/>
whose words painted him as a<lb/>
Neanderthal. I don't know it he<lb/>
is or not. I don't know the guy at<lb/>
all. But the words are what they<lb/>
are, and the apology he issued the<lb/>
next day is what it is - too late.<lb/>
The only hope is that the man's<lb/>
life isn't forever judged by a few<lb/>
minutes on a radio show Nobody<lb/>
deserves that.<lb/>
So, llornung was wrong,<lb/>
underlined. The reality is that<lb/>
Notre Dame has a black coach,<lb/>
and it has been reported it has<lb/>
more black players than the<lb/>
national average. The problem is<lb/>
that it just doesn't have enough<lb/>
good players So llornung was<lb/>
wrong. Again: wrong, underlined.<lb/>
So that's settled, which<lb/>
means that the only reason<lb/>
for writing this column - and<lb/>
for bringing up the alternative<lb/>
phrasings listed above - is to<lb/>
say that this isn't a subject of<lb/>
which we should be afraid any-<lb/>
more.<lb/>
It's OK to say that most of t he<lb/>
star football players, in big-time<lb/>
college football and in the Ml.<lb/>
are black. 1 mean, we all have<lb/>
eyes, don't we?<lb/>
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