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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>

<pb facs="00059554_0001"/>
.<lb/>
Volume 80 Number 28<lb/>
City plans<lb/>
presented<lb/>
to senate<lb/>
Don Edwards showed the<lb/>
senate plans for Greenville.<lb/>
Issues, concerns raised<lb/>
A.J. WALTON<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
SGA discussed issues con-<lb/>
cerning the continual effort of<lb/>
revitalizing downtown and West<lb/>
Greenville at their fifth meeting<lb/>
Monday night.<lb/>
Don Edwards, appointed<lb/>
by the mayor as the chairmen<lb/>
for the redevelopment commis-<lb/>
sion, showed the city's layout<lb/>
plans for improving the areas.<lb/>
He presented several visual lay-<lb/>
outs, some conceptual and some<lb/>
already in the works.<lb/>
The 10th Street connector<lb/>
project, which involves ECU,<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
and Greenville, has already been<lb/>
approved and is in the first stage<lb/>
of pre-engineering planning.<lb/>
It will create a road that will<lb/>
connect 10th Street directly to<lb/>
Highway 264 and should be com-<lb/>
pleted within five years.<lb/>
Edwards said the project<lb/>
hopes to create a more pedes-<lb/>
trian-friendly community.<lb/>
"It will be a great, attractive<lb/>
new way into town and make<lb/>
locating ECU a much easier task<lb/>
said Edwards.<lb/>
Edwards also introduced the<lb/>
"Raise the Bar" plan for down-<lb/>
town Greenville.<lb/>
This project would create a<lb/>
more vibrant scene in the down-<lb/>
town district. The project would<lb/>
make use of misused develop-<lb/>
ments, bring more businesses<lb/>
into the neighborhood and create<lb/>
an atmosphere where students<lb/>
could live, go to school and work<lb/>
all in the same vicinity.<lb/>
He said the city-center rede-<lb/>
velopment plan would make the<lb/>
downtown area a broadly based<lb/>
entertainment district.<lb/>
Edwards also addressed the<lb/>
West Greenville plan, causing<lb/>
many SGA senate members to<lb/>
raise questions of concern.<lb/>
The project would revitalize<lb/>
West Greenville by using federal<lb/>
funding and bonds to pay for<lb/>
rebuilding homes but would also<lb/>
force residents to relocate.<lb/>
One senator questioned<lb/>
whether forcing residents to<lb/>
relocate would do more harm<lb/>
than good in the long run.<lb/>
Edward said the goal is to pro-<lb/>
vide better housing for everyone<lb/>
but people would be displaced.<lb/>
A guest at the meeting asked<lb/>
whether better housing was<lb/>
simply another word for projects.<lb/>
"Assisted living will not be a<lb/>
project Edwards said.<lb/>
Another senator asked a ques-<lb/>
tion regarding a parking deck in<lb/>
the downtown area.<lb/>
He said the existence of a<lb/>
parking deck has been discussed<lb/>
for the east side of Evans Street or<lb/>
possibly a few other locations.<lb/>
Edwards said these improve-<lb/>
ments will ultimately help the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
"With improvements, ECU<lb/>
can become an even greater uni-<lb/>
versity Edwards said.<lb/>
At the meeting, two new sen-<lb/>
ators, Brian Billops and Allison<lb/>
Bradey, were sworn in by SGA Attor-<lb/>
ney General Matt Stambaugh.<lb/>
Charmane Ford, the Diversity<lb/>
Team leader, reminded the senate<lb/>
about the upcoming "Diversity<lb/>
Week" which will be held Nov.<lb/>
1S-20.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news&amp;theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
November 9, 2004<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha brothers and the Ronald McDonald' House executive director stand with a check for $10 thousand<lb/>
to be donated to the Ronald McDonald House in Greenville.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha walks for good will<lb/>
Raises $11,000 for<lb/>
Ronald McDonald House<lb/>
NICK HENNE<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
ECU'S Pi Kappa Alpha frater-<lb/>
nity chapter walked from ECU's<lb/>
campus to Wilmington on Sat-<lb/>
urday in a charitable fundraising<lb/>
event for the Ronald McDonald<lb/>
House of Greenville.<lb/>
Tucker Beck, president of Pi<lb/>
Kappa Alpha, said the fraternity<lb/>
has been doing this event for the<lb/>
past three years and has raised a<lb/>
total of more than $35,000 for<lb/>
the organization.<lb/>
"It's 120 miles split into sev-<lb/>
eral shifts said Mike Crollman,<lb/>
community service chair of Pi<lb/>
Kappa Alpha.<lb/>
"We started walking at 10<lb/>
a.m. at the Wright Plaza<lb/>
Each shift was 11 miles, with<lb/>
five people walking per shift.<lb/>
A car flashing its caution lights<lb/>
followed the walkers.<lb/>
Crollman said they mapped<lb/>
out the most sufficient directions<lb/>
to Wilmington and spoke with<lb/>
the sheriff departments in each<lb/>
county to make them aware of<lb/>
what they were doing and work<lb/>
out any legal hassles.<lb/>
The aspect that took the most<lb/>
work was raising the charity money.<lb/>
Each member of the fraternity<lb/>
made an effort to seek businesses<lb/>
and individuals who were willing<lb/>
to donate to their cause. Frater-<lb/>
nity members parked their cars<lb/>
on the street and spent several<lb/>
hours going from house to house.<lb/>
"We pretty much went door<lb/>
to door and asked for donations<lb/>
said Beck.<lb/>
"Several businesses donated<lb/>
over $300, some donated $100<lb/>
Crollman said he got all the<lb/>
fraternity members to set a goal<lb/>
of $300 a piece.<lb/>
While the fraternity has<lb/>
already donated $10,000 to the<lb/>
Ronald McDonald House, they<lb/>
are still receiving more money<lb/>
from organizations that did not<lb/>
have the funding at first.<lb/>
"We raised a little over11,000<lb/>
from solicitation of area resi-<lb/>
dents and businesses Beck said.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha is looking<lb/>
into getting corporate sponsors<lb/>
to participate in an effort to raise<lb/>
their goal of $20,000.<lb/>
Beck said nearly 50 of the<lb/>
57 active members of Pi Kappa<lb/>
Alpha fraternity participated in<lb/>
the event, which makes the occa-<lb/>
sion an enjoyable experience.<lb/>
see WALK page A3<lb/>
Wife accuses top Palestinian officials<lb/>
of trying to grab power from Arafat<lb/>
Yassar Arafat with his wife, Suha, before he left for Paris.<lb/>
CLAMART, France (AP) �<lb/>
Yasser Arafat's wife accused his top<lb/>
lieutenants of seeking to grab con-<lb/>
trol from her ailing husband on<lb/>
Monday, nearly torpedoing a visit<lb/>
by three top Palestinian officials<lb/>
in the first sign of an open power<lb/>
struggle while Arafat clings to life.<lb/>
In a screaming telephone<lb/>
call from Arafat's hospital bed-<lb/>
side, Suha Arafat told Al-Jazeera<lb/>
television that Arafat's aides<lb/>
were conspiring to usurp her<lb/>
husband's four-decade-long role<lb/>
as Palestinian leader.<lb/>
"Let it be known to the honest<lb/>
Palestinian people that a bunch<lb/>
of those who want to inherit are<lb/>
coming to Paris she shouted in<lb/>
Arabic in her first public com-<lb/>
ments since Arafat left his West<lb/>
Bank compound for France.<lb/>
"I tell you they are trying to<lb/>
bury Abu Ammaraliveshe contin-<lb/>
ued, using Arafat's nom de guerre.<lb/>
"He is all right and he is<lb/>
going home<lb/>
In response, Prime Minister<lb/>
Ahmed Qureia, Foreign Minister<lb/>
Nabil Shaath and Mahmoud<lb/>
Abbas, the former prime minister<lb/>
and deputy chairman of Arafat's<lb/>
Palestine Liberation Organiza-<lb/>
tion, briefly canceled a planned<lb/>
trip to Paris on Monday to con-<lb/>
sult with Arafat's doctors and<lb/>
French officials. Shaath later said<lb/>
the trip was back on.<lb/>
A senior aide to Arafat, Tayeb<lb/>
Abdel Rahim, originally said the<lb/>
three wereangry with Arafat's wife<lb/>
and did not want to travel to Paris.<lb/>
"What came fromSuha doesn't<lb/>
represent our people he said.<lb/>
"If the president were to hear<lb/>
that, he would reject it completely<lb/>
He said Mrs. Arafat "wanted<lb/>
to destroy the Palestinian leader-<lb/>
ship's decision and to be the lone<lb/>
decision-maker<lb/>
Mrs. Arafat said she was call-<lb/>
lnR from Arafat's bedside at the<lb/>
French military hospital, where<lb/>
the 75-year-old leader has been in<lb/>
intensive care since Wednesday.<lb/>
A producer from Al-Jazeera told<lb/>
The Associated Press the station<lb/>
was confident it was Suha Arafat<lb/>
on the phone. She first called<lb/>
the network's Ramallah office,<lb/>
then its headquarters in Qatar.<lb/>
Her insistence that Arafat was<lb/>
doing fine came a day after French<lb/>
Foreign Minister Michel Barnier<lb/>
called his condition "very complex,<lb/>
very serious and stable right now<lb/>
Palestinians have been<lb/>
making contingency plans in<lb/>
the event of Arafat's death.<lb/>
Qureia and Abbas have been<lb/>
working together to run Palestin-<lb/>
ian affairs in Arafat's absence and<lb/>
to prevent chaos and violence<lb/>
if the Palestinian leader dies.<lb/>
Qureia has taken on some of<lb/>
Arafat's executive and security<lb/>
powers, while Abbas has been<lb/>
chairing meetings of the PLO's<lb/>
executive body.<lb/>
Jamil Tarifi, the Palestin-<lb/>
ian minister of civil affairs,<lb/>
told Al-Jazeera the group was<lb/>
initially hesitant about going,<lb/>
but that the executive commit-<lb/>
tee decided the trip would help<lb/>
reassure worried Palestinians.<lb/>
Iraq's prime minister Ayad<lb/>
Allawi in Baghdad Nov. 8.<lb/>
U.S. forces<lb/>
storm Fallujah<lb/>
NEAR FALLUJAH, Iraq (AP)<lb/>
� Backed by a barrage from<lb/>
warplanes and artillery,<lb/>
U.S. troops fought their way<lb/>
into the western outskirts of<lb/>
Fallujah on Monday, seizing a<lb/>
hospital and two bridges over the<lb/>
Euphrates River in the first<lb/>
stage of a major assault on the<lb/>
insurgent stronghold.<lb/>
The U.S. military said Iraqi<lb/>
troops captured 38 people,<lb/>
including four foreigners<lb/>
when they swept into the first<lb/>
objective, Fallujah's main hospi-<lb/>
tal, which the military and Iraqi<lb/>
Prime Minister Ayad Allawi said<lb/>
was under insurgent control.<lb/>
Iraqi soldiers stormed<lb/>
through the facility, blasting<lb/>
open doors and pulling hand-<lb/>
cuffed patients into the halls in<lb/>
search of gunmen.<lb/>
Allawi said he had given the<lb/>
green light for international<lb/>
and Iraqi forces to launch the<lb/>
long-awaited offensive against<lb/>
Fallujah which is considered the<lb/>
see FALLUJAH page A2<lb/>
www.theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
Phi Beta<lb/>
Sigma<lb/>
recognized<lb/>
ECU chapter awarded<lb/>
for service to Greenville<lb/>
SALMA KHAN<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The Xi Nu chapter of the Phi<lb/>
Beta Sigma fraternity at ECU<lb/>
received the State Collegiate<lb/>
Chapter of the Year award last<lb/>
month bestowed by the national<lb/>
headquarters of the organization.<lb/>
The chapter was awarded<lb/>
based on the numerous hours the<lb/>
fraternity has given back to the<lb/>
local Greenville community.<lb/>
Dale Thomas, president of the<lb/>
Xi Nu Chapter of Phi Beta Sigma,<lb/>
Inc. at ECU, said the fraternity<lb/>
participates in many programs<lb/>
with the Greenville community<lb/>
through organizations such as<lb/>
the American Cancer Society<lb/>
with Relay for Life, March of<lb/>
Dimes and the Little Willie<lb/>
Center, where children from<lb/>
impoverish neighborhoods are<lb/>
mentored. They also participated<lb/>
in voter registration drives.<lb/>
The chapter devotes time<lb/>
volunteering services to social<lb/>
action programs like their own<lb/>
Sigmas Against Teen Pregnancy<lb/>
in conjunction with their sister<lb/>
sorority, Zeta Phi Beta.<lb/>
The award was given to the<lb/>
chapter during the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Conference for Phi Beta<lb/>
Sigma on the NC State campus.<lb/>
Although the chapter was<lb/>
up against the rest of the fra-<lb/>
ternity chapters of NC, the<lb/>
members felt that receiving the<lb/>
award was not part of succeeding<lb/>
in a competition.<lb/>
"Though we were up against<lb/>
other chapters, we feel that<lb/>
we are all equally qualified<lb/>
said Thomas.<lb/>
"The other chapters  also<lb/>
(contribute to) their respective<lb/>
communities in many ways. We<lb/>
live to serve the community<lb/>
The Xi Nu chapter at ECU was<lb/>
founded Jan. 29, 1983 with the<lb/>
core institution to promote and<lb/>
impact ECU and the Greenville<lb/>
community in a beneficial<lb/>
manner under its principles and<lb/>
mottos.<lb/>
Phi Beta Sigma is an interna-<lb/>
tionally recognized, historically<lb/>
African American fraternity with<lb/>
more than 600 and 100,000<lb/>
members throughout the United<lb/>
States, Europe, Africa and India.<lb/>
The fraternity was founded in<lb/>
1914 at Howard University on the<lb/>
three principles of brotherhood,<lb/>
scholarship and service. These<lb/>
ideals are exemplified under the<lb/>
fraternity motto, "culture for ser-<lb/>
vice and service got humanity<lb/>
The official Web site of the<lb/>
fraternity explains the found-<lb/>
ers of Phi Beta Sigma held a<lb/>
deep conviction they should<lb/>
return their newly acquired<lb/>
skills to the communities from<lb/>
which they came rather than<lb/>
gain skills to be utilized exclu-<lb/>
sively for themselves and their<lb/>
immediate families.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
Doctors praise heart stocking device, wait for apporval<lb/>
Dr. Spencer Kubo holds a model<lb/>
of the device around a heart.<lb/>
NEW ORLEANS (AP) � A<lb/>
simple fabric device that looks<lb/>
like fishnet hose but acts like<lb/>
support stockings helped<lb/>
weak hearts pump more effi-<lb/>
ciently and even shrink back to<lb/>
a more normal size, researchers<lb/>
reported at an American Heart<lb/>
Association conference.<lb/>
The device is targeted at<lb/>
people with heart failure, which<lb/>
happens when a weak or dam-<lb/>
aged heart can't pump as force-<lb/>
fully as it should. The heart<lb/>
enlarges, fluid backs up into the<lb/>
lungs, and people get more and<lb/>
more short of breath and tired,<lb/>
often making many trips to the<lb/>
hospital until their hearts even-<lb/>
tually give out.<lb/>
About 5 million Americans<lb/>
have this condition and more<lb/>
than a million have the type<lb/>
that might be helped by the new<lb/>
stocking-like device.<lb/>
The mesh stocking is still<lb/>
experimental but its maker, Acorn<lb/>
Cardiovascular Inc. of St. Paul,<lb/>
Minn already has approval to sell<lb/>
it in Europe and will seek the same<lb/>
from the federal Food and Drug<lb/>
Administration early next year.<lb/>
Several experts said Sunday<lb/>
the surgically implanted stocking<lb/>
could fill a gap for people who<lb/>
are not helped by drugs or pace-<lb/>
makers and who do not want or<lb/>
cannot have a mechanical heart<lb/>
pump or an organ transplant.<lb/>
"We have little to offer surgi-<lb/>
cally said Dr. Timothy Gard-<lb/>
ner, a heart surgeon from the<lb/>
University of Pennsylvania in<lb/>
Philadelphia who had no role in<lb/>
the study.<lb/>
"There's a lot of interest in<lb/>
this kind of simple technique<lb/>
Dr. Douglas Mann, the Baylor<lb/>
College of Medicine cardiologist<lb/>
who led a company-funded study<lb/>
of the device, called it break-<lb/>
through technology.<lb/>
"This does more than any<lb/>
existing therapy that's out there<lb/>
today he said.<lb/>
The company-sponsored<lb/>
study included 300 patients at<lb/>
28 hospitals in the United States<lb/>
and one in Canada.<lb/>
One part Involved 193 people<lb/>
having surgery to fix a leaky<lb/>
heart valve, a common problem<lb/>
in heart failure patients. Doctors<lb/>
gave 102 standard surgery and<lb/>
the other 91, surgery plus the<lb/>
heart stocking.<lb/>
The second part of the study<lb/>
involved 107 people who did<lb/>
not need valve surgery. Fifty<lb/>
were given standard treatment<lb/>
drugs, ACE inhibitors, beta block-<lb/>
ers and water pills, and the other<lb/>
57 got drugs plus surgery to<lb/>
install the stocking.<lb/>
After an average of two years,<lb/>
38 percent of the stocking group<lb/>
had improved compared with<lb/>
27 percent of the others, accord-<lb/>
ing to a rating system including<lb/>
survival and other factors. About<lb/>
37 percent with the stocking got<lb/>
worse compared to 45 percent of<lb/>
the others.<lb/>
Only 19 stocking recipients<lb/>
needed a transplant, a mechani-<lb/>
cal heart pump or other major<lb/>
heart operation, but 33 in the<lb/>
other group did.<lb/>
"We think this stabilizes the<lb/>
disease process" by relieving the<lb/>
pressure on the heart and giving<lb/>
it support so it can rest between<lb/>
beats, Mann said.<lb/>
Researchers also measured<lb/>
changes in the heart's shape and<lb/>
size and found dramatic differ-<lb/>
ences with the stocking around<lb/>
the organ.<lb/>
"These big hearts, with this<lb/>
device, became small hearts<lb/>
and went from a basketball shape<lb/>
to the more natural football<lb/>
shape that lets them beat as they<lb/>
should, Mann said.<lb/>
The stocking actually changes<lb/>
the size of the cells making up the<lb/>
heart, said Dr. Spencer Kubo,<lb/>
Acorn's medical director.<lb/>
"If this was just taking a size<lb/>
eight person and putting them<lb/>
in a size four dress, you'd say 'Of<lb/>
course you've made the heart<lb/>
smaller said Kubo.<lb/>
"The mass of the heart is<lb/>
reduced. This is not just a scrunch-<lb/>
ing effect, a corset effect<lb/>
The device did not help<lb/>
people avoid hospital stays,<lb/>
but doctors hope it will with<lb/>
longer use. They also hope to<lb/>
develop a way to install<lb/>
it through "keyhole" sur-<lb/>
gery rather than a big cut in<lb/>
the chest. Company officials<lb/>
would not say what the device is<lb/>
expected to cost.<lb/>
INSIDE I News: A2 I Classifieds: A10 I Opinion: A4 I Scene: A5 I Sports: A7 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059554_0002"/><lb/>
Page A2 news@theeastcarolinian. com 252. 328. 6366<lb/>
NEWS<lb/>
NICK HENNE News Editor KRISTIN DAY Assistant News Editor<lb/>
11-OS<lb/>
TUESDAY November 9,2004<lb/>
Campus News<lb/>
Cell Phone Donation<lb/>
The Family Violence Program<lb/>
of Pitt County is sponsoring<lb/>
a used cell phone drive until<lb/>
Thursday'Nov. 18. The phones go<lb/>
to domestic violence victims who<lb/>
need a constant and free way to<lb/>
call 911 and a 24-hour crisis line.<lb/>
Collection bins are at the Dowdy<lb/>
Student Store, Food Lion on 10th<lb/>
Street, East Carolina Bank on Red<lb/>
Banks Road and inside the Alltel<lb/>
store inside Wal-Mart. Contact<lb/>
Sara Munzer with the FVP at<lb/>
758-4400.<lb/>
Give yourself Italy, Greece<lb/>
and the Greek Islands In<lb/>
summer 2005.<lb/>
You deserve it. ECU 6 s.h. credit,<lb/>
funding available. Visit Rome,<lb/>
the Vatican, the Sistine Chapel,<lb/>
Pompeii, Delphi, Athens and<lb/>
many other places. Contact<lb/>
. Calvin Mercer at 328-4310 or<lb/>
mercerc mail.ecu.edu.<lb/>
Benefit Concert<lb/>
Christy's Euro Pub is hosting<lb/>
their second annual breast<lb/>
cancer research benefit concert<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 10 from 9 p.m.<lb/>
-1 a.m. The event will feature<lb/>
"Mac N Juice, and all proceeds<lb/>
will be donated to the American<lb/>
Cancer Society's Breast Cancer<lb/>
Research Fund.<lb/>
ECU Gospel Choir<lb/>
A special intermission Guest<lb/>
Salvation and Deliverance church<lb/>
choir, Tarboro, NC under the<lb/>
direction of Krlstan Herring,<lb/>
Thursday, Nov. 11 at 6 p.m. at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, in<lb/>
Hendrix Theater. Prices are $3<lb/>
for students and military and $5<lb/>
for the general public. For more<lb/>
information call Arturo Cummlngs<lb/>
at 328-7148 or Tarrick Cox at<lb/>
328-1518.<lb/>
Veteran's Day Celebration<lb/>
The Pitt County Veteran Council<lb/>
will host an event honoring our<lb/>
past and present veterans at<lb/>
Greenville's Town Commons Nov.<lb/>
11 at 11 a.m. Call 758-2788 for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
Jazz at Night<lb/>
The school of music will present<lb/>
a jazz concert at Mendenhall<lb/>
Nov. 12. The concert begins at<lb/>
8 p.m. For more information, call<lb/>
328-6851.<lb/>
NASA at ECU<lb/>
Dr. Marshall Sheperd, a NASA<lb/>
scientist will be giving a geography<lb/>
department colloquium entitled,<lb/>
"How Cities Create Their Own<lb/>
Rainfall and Storms The event<lb/>
will take place Friday, Nov. 12 at 4<lb/>
p.m. in 102 Brewster B. Contact<lb/>
Scott Curtis at 328-2088.<lb/>
NCAA Southeastern Cross<lb/>
Country Regional<lb/>
A competition of cross country<lb/>
teams from all over the southeast<lb/>
will meet in Grimesland Nov.<lb/>
13. The race will take place at<lb/>
Lake Kristi on Mobley Bridge<lb/>
Road. Call 329-4530 for more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Faculty Exhibition<lb/>
The 2004 Faculty Exhibition, "A<lb/>
Tradition of Excellence began<lb/>
Wednesday and will end Nov. 20<lb/>
in the Gray Gallery at Jenkins Rne<lb/>
Arts Center. The exhibition displays<lb/>
various works including ceramics,<lb/>
digital imaging, photography and<lb/>
weaving. Contact Gil Leebrick,<lb/>
gallery director, at 328-6336.<lb/>
Dissertation Defense<lb/>
Come see Tim Saltuklaroglu with<lb/>
the communication sciences<lb/>
and disorders department's<lb/>
dissertation defense called The<lb/>
Role of Gestural Imitation in<lb/>
the Inhibition of Stuttering The<lb/>
presentation will be Nov. 16 at<lb/>
3:30 p.m. in 103 Belk Building<lb/>
(school of allied health). For<lb/>
more information, e-mail Tim<lb/>
ts0712 mail.ecu.edu.<lb/>
The Children's Hour<lb/>
On the main stage at McGlnnis<lb/>
Theatre, ECU will present The<lb/>
Children's Hour by Lillian Hellman.<lb/>
The play centers around two<lb/>
women who run a school for<lb/>
girls. A malicious youngster starts<lb/>
an entirely unfounded scandal<lb/>
about them, which precipitates<lb/>
tragedy for the women. Parental<lb/>
guidance is suggested due to the<lb/>
adult subject matter. Runs Ncv.18<lb/>
- 23. Contact 328-6829 for more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
News Briefs<lb/>
Local<lb/>
Most of 31 E. coll<lb/>
cases linked to State Fair<lb/>
RALEIGH, NC - An outbreak of E. coli<lb/>
cases linked to last month's North<lb/>
Carolina State Fair is bigger than<lb/>
previously thought, with 31 confirmed<lb/>
cases and another 103 under review,<lb/>
health officials said Saturday.<lb/>
The number of confirmed infections In<lb/>
the outbreak grew from 20 cases on<lb/>
Friday to 31 on Saturday, said health<lb/>
investigators.<lb/>
The Department of Health and Human<lb/>
Services said it was investigating<lb/>
103 additional cases of illness that<lb/>
had not yet been confirmed as E.<lb/>
coli infection, up from 39 on Friday.<lb/>
Department spokesman Bill Furney<lb/>
attributes the jump in potential<lb/>
cases to a heightened awareness<lb/>
from doctors and the general public.<lb/>
Furney said now that health officials<lb/>
are conducting an investigation, "we're<lb/>
in a state where we are looking for it<lb/>
Of the 31 people with confirmed E.<lb/>
coli cases, 27 visited the State Fair<lb/>
in Ociober. The outbreak might be<lb/>
linked to a petting zoo at the fair, state<lb/>
hearth authorities have said.<lb/>
E. coli commonly lives inside of<lb/>
animals and can be passed to<lb/>
humans by eating contaminated<lb/>
maat or through contact with manure,<lb/>
animals or contaminated surfaces.<lb/>
The highly contagious bacterium<lb/>
produces a toxin that can cause<lb/>
stomach cramps, bloody diarrhea and<lb/>
in some cases death. Children, the<lb/>
elderly and people with compromised<lb/>
immune systems are most at risk.<lb/>
Seventeen of the confirmed cases<lb/>
were reported from Wake County,<lb/>
where the fair was held. Another three<lb/>
were in nearby Chatham County and<lb/>
two others in neighboring Durham<lb/>
County. One each was reported<lb/>
in Forsyth, Harnett, Johnston, Lee,<lb/>
Mecklenburg, Moore, Person, Union<lb/>
and Wilson counties.<lb/>
Ordinarily, North Carolina sees about<lb/>
four or five cases of E. coll infection<lb/>
per month.<lb/>
Man cleared of murder charge<lb/>
starts foundation to help Inmates<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM, NC - A man<lb/>
exonerated of murder after spending<lb/>
18 years In prison for the crime has<lb/>
started a nonprofit foundation to help<lb/>
investigate the innocence claims of<lb/>
other inmates.<lb/>
Darryl Hunt said he began thinking<lb/>
about forming such an organization<lb/>
while he was imprisoned.<lb/>
"I wanted to help other people, to give<lb/>
them a voice, because I know I was<lb/>
fortunate to have people supporting<lb/>
me and speaking up for me said<lb/>
Hunt. "I was innocent, and I know<lb/>
how hard it is for people who are in<lb/>
prison to have voices on the outside<lb/>
to speak up for them<lb/>
The Darryl Hunt Project for Freedom<lb/>
and Justice will also help support<lb/>
people who have been released from<lb/>
prison as they rejoin society.<lb/>
Hunt incorporated the foundation this<lb/>
week and said he plans to finance it<lb/>
through fund-raisers and money he<lb/>
earns in speaking fees.<lb/>
Hunt was convicted twice in the 1984<lb/>
slaying of Deborah Sykes, a newspaper<lb/>
copy editor In Winston-Salem. DNA<lb/>
evidence proved in 1994 that Hunt<lb/>
was not the man who had raped<lb/>
Sykes, but it was not enough to win<lb/>
Hunt a new trial on the murder charge.<lb/>
He was released from prison only after<lb/>
DNA evidence led to a new suspect<lb/>
in December, a man who police and<lb/>
the State Bureau of Investigation say<lb/>
acted alone in killing Sykes.<lb/>
Hunt was exonerated in February and<lb/>
pardoned by Gov. Mike Easley in April.<lb/>
Hunt said he wants the nonprofit<lb/>
group to work with the NC<lb/>
Center on Actual Innocence In<lb/>
Durham, which looks into potential<lb/>
cases of wrongful convictions.<lb/>
Because of the time Involved in<lb/>
investigating cases, the center cannot<lb/>
accept cases in which the defendant<lb/>
has less than three years to serve<lb/>
in prison. <lb/>
Hunt said he wants to hire private<lb/>
investigators to look at cases In<lb/>
Forsyth County to start, and eventually<lb/>
grow larger.<lb/>
National<lb/>
No untutored TV. No<lb/>
Internet No visitors.<lb/>
REDWOOD CITY, Calif. - After a<lb/>
weekend without the creature<lb/>
comforts of home, sequestered jurors<lb/>
in Scott Peterson's murder trial were<lb/>
set to resume deliberations Monday<lb/>
for a third full day.<lb/>
Jurors were monitored throughout<lb/>
the weekend in an area hotel where<lb/>
they could only watch sports and<lb/>
movies on television, and could use<lb/>
a computer without access to the<lb/>
Internet. They were forbidden from<lb/>
discussing the case.<lb/>
Judge Alfred A. Delucchl has decided<lb/>
to allow them to deliberate only<lb/>
Monday - Friday. Twenty-one bailiffs<lb/>
have been sworn in to watch over<lb/>
them throughout the process.<lb/>
Peterson is charged with two counts<lb/>
of murder in the deaths of his wife,<lb/>
Lacl, and the fetus she carried.<lb/>
Prosecutors claim Peterson killed<lb/>
Laci around Dec. 24,2002, then sunk<lb/>
her weighted body in the bay.<lb/>
The remains of Laci and the fetus<lb/>
were discovered a few miles from<lb/>
where Peterson claims to have<lb/>
gone fishing alone the day his wife<lb/>
vanished. Defense lawyers claim<lb/>
someone else abducted Laci while<lb/>
she walked the couple's dog and<lb/>
killed her, then framed her husband.<lb/>
Jurors have two choices should<lb/>
they decide to convict Peterson,<lb/>
first-or second-degree. First-degree<lb/>
convictions, carrying the death penalty<lb/>
of life without parole, would mean jurors<lb/>
believe Peterson planned the killings<lb/>
in advance. Second-degree murder<lb/>
convictions don't require a finding of<lb/>
premeditation and carry sentences<lb/>
of 15-years-to-life for each count.<lb/>
On Friday, jurors asked to review<lb/>
some evidence, including the boat<lb/>
prosecutors allege Peterson used<lb/>
to dispose of his wife's body. On<lb/>
Thursday, they asked to review<lb/>
evidence including photographs<lb/>
taken at the Petersons' home in the<lb/>
days after Laci vanished.<lb/>
Relatives mix<lb/>
ashes with artificial reef<lb/>
ON THE GULF OF MEXICO - Twelve-<lb/>
year-old Justin Pierce loved to fish<lb/>
and snorkel before he died in an<lb/>
accident on an all-terrain vehicle.<lb/>
Now his parents think they've found<lb/>
a way for their son to remain close to<lb/>
the water he loved.<lb/>
They mixed his ashes with cement<lb/>
to form a hollow concrete ball that<lb/>
was placed in the shallow water off<lb/>
Sarasota in late October. The ball<lb/>
helps restore a critical underwater<lb/>
habitat while becoming a living<lb/>
memorial with coral and fish.<lb/>
"In a way, he's still alive said Justin's<lb/>
mother, Lorna.<lb/>
The growing trend of alternative<lb/>
funeral services has led to innovative<lb/>
ways of memorializing the dead, from<lb/>
turning cremated remains into reefs<lb/>
and fireworks, shooting them into<lb/>
space, turning them into diamonds or<lb/>
enclosing them in keepsake jewelry.<lb/>
"What Is unappetizing to One person<lb/>
is very much appealing to another<lb/>
said Jack Springer, executive director<lb/>
of the Chicago-based North American<lb/>
Cremation Association.<lb/>
The trend of personalizing funeral<lb/>
services is driven, In part, by an<lb/>
increase In cremation. According to<lb/>
Springer, about 687,000 people were<lb/>
cremated in 2003 and that number<lb/>
is expected to increase by about 40<lb/>
percent by 2025.<lb/>
"ft is expanding the options that are<lb/>
available to families said Paul Dixon,<lb/>
executive director of the Funeral Ethics<lb/>
Association. "I do think that it appeals<lb/>
to a certain segment of society, but<lb/>
I don't know that it's for everyone<lb/>
Roberta Morris, 77, a retiree In nearby<lb/>
Venice, had planned to spread the<lb/>
ashes of her husband at sea, but then<lb/>
she learned about the cremation reefs.<lb/>
"It's not death said Morris.<lb/>
"It's just the most romantic<lb/>
thing to do with your spouse<lb/>
Her husband, Robert, was an avid<lb/>
fisherman until 15 years ago, when he<lb/>
was disabled with a brain disorder. "He<lb/>
would have loved this Morris said.<lb/>
The concrete reefs began as an<lb/>
ecological project, not a funeral<lb/>
service, said founder Don Brawley. He<lb/>
and some friends who are amateur<lb/>
snorkelers developed the reef balls to<lb/>
help restore the underwater habitat.<lb/>
Now more than 500,000 reef balls rest<lb/>
on the ocean floor off 48 countries.<lb/>
World<lb/>
Military court<lb/>
acquits four of conspiracy<lb/>
AMMAN, Jordan - Jordan's military<lb/>
court on Monday acquitted four men<lb/>
of conspiracy to attack U.S. forces in<lb/>
the kingdom, saying a government<lb/>
declaration last year that no foreign<lb/>
troops were stationed in Jordan<lb/>
nullified the charges against them.<lb/>
The four, including a policeman<lb/>
and a Finance Ministry official,<lb/>
were convicted, however, of Illegal<lb/>
possession of an automatic weapon<lb/>
and sentenced to one year in jail. The<lb/>
verdict can be appealed.<lb/>
Before the U.Sled invasion of<lb/>
neighboring Iraq, speculation grew<lb/>
that U.S. forces were stationed in<lb/>
Jordan to mount attacks against<lb/>
Baghdad. The government denied that.<lb/>
Later, Jordan acknowledged there<lb/>
were "several hundred" American<lb/>
military personnel in the country. But<lb/>
officials said they were in the country<lb/>
to help set up anti-missile batteries<lb/>
in eastern Jordan to protect the<lb/>
kingdom from Iraqi rQckets.<lb/>
During the1991 Gulf War, Iraq tired 39<lb/>
Scud missiles over Jordan to Israel.<lb/>
In Monday's brief hearing, court<lb/>
President Col. Fawaz Buqour said<lb/>
the court found the four defendants<lb/>
innocent of terror conspiracy charges<lb/>
since the prosecution has failed<lb/>
to prove that a crime had been<lb/>
committed against state security.<lb/>
Buqour defined the crime as<lb/>
conspiring to attack American forces<lb/>
in Azraq and Ruweishid, two desert<lb/>
towns near the Iraqi border. He said<lb/>
the crime became "null and void'<lb/>
when the government "declared there<lb/>
were no American forces in Jordan<lb/>
Buqour said the State Security<lb/>
Court found the four men guilty<lb/>
of possessing a Russian-made<lb/>
Kalashnikov rifle. Three of the men<lb/>
have been In police custody since<lb/>
late last year; the Finance Ministry<lb/>
official remains at large.<lb/>
Another earthquake<lb/>
strikes northern Japan<lb/>
TOKYO - A strong earthquake rocked<lb/>
northern JaRan on Monday near the<lb/>
area where the country's deadliest<lb/>
quake in a decade struck last month.<lb/>
At least eight people were injured.<lb/>
The 5.9-magnitude quake, which hit at<lb/>
11:16 a.m was centered close to the<lb/>
earth's surface in the Chuetsu area<lb/>
of Niigata state, the Meteorological<lb/>
Agency said. It was considered an<lb/>
aftershock to the 6.8-magnitude<lb/>
tremor that hit on Oct. 23.<lb/>
After the quake, service on a high-<lb/>
speed train line between Tokyo and<lb/>
Niigata was suspended for safety<lb/>
checks. One train derailed last month<lb/>
when the initial quake struck almost<lb/>
directly under its tracks.<lb/>
Television footage from Niigata<lb/>
showed swaying power lines and<lb/>
celling lamps. Three weaker tremors<lb/>
of magnitudes 5.0,4.5 and 4.2 struck<lb/>
in rapid succession In the half hour<lb/>
following the initial aftershock, the<lb/>
Meteorological Agency said.<lb/>
There was no danger of a tsunami,<lb/>
or ocean waves triggered by seismic<lb/>
activity, it said.<lb/>
A man in Uonuma was Injured after<lb/>
being buried briefly by a small landslide,<lb/>
said Atsushi Moriyama, a spokesman<lb/>
for Niigata state. Five kindergarten<lb/>
students and their teacher were hurt<lb/>
in a nearby town when a wall they<lb/>
were walking past collapsed, and<lb/>
a woman was injured after she lost<lb/>
control of her motorbike, he said.<lb/>
Takeshi Minagawa, an official at the<lb/>
town hall in Nakanoshima, among<lb/>
several towns the quake shooKsaid<lb/>
merrerr 10 seconds of rocking, though<lb/>
items did not fall off shelves.<lb/>
The town closed several roads to<lb/>
confirm they were safe after the<lb/>
quake, Minagawa said.<lb/>
Japan, which rests atop several<lb/>
tectonic plates, is among the world's<lb/>
most earthquake-prone countries.<lb/>
Fearing overthrow, loyalists confront Faiiujah<lb/>
French troops in violent standoff<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
Ivory Coast govemement supporters demonstrate at a roadblock.<lb/>
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast (AP)<lb/>
� French armored vehicles took<lb/>
up positions near the home of<lb/>
Ivory Coast's president Monday,<lb/>
and thousands of his supporters<lb/>
marched on the site, fearing an<lb/>
attempt to oust him as France<lb/>
clamped down on violence in its<lb/>
former West African colony.<lb/>
Fifty armored vehicles moved<lb/>
in around the home of President<lb/>
Laurent Gbagbo in Ivory Coast's<lb/>
commercial capital, Abidjan,<lb/>
presidential spokesman Desire<lb/>
Tagro said.<lb/>
"Their presence here is scar-<lb/>
ing people said Tagro.<lb/>
"They're crying and they<lb/>
think that President Gbagbo is<lb/>
going to be overthrown<lb/>
The French denied surround-<lb/>
ing the house or intending to oust<lb/>
Gbagbo, saying the forces were<lb/>
only securing a temporary base<lb/>
at a hotel a couple hundred yards<lb/>
away for foreign evacuations.<lb/>
Thousands of people filled<lb/>
the streets around Gbagbo's<lb/>
home after calls on state radio<lb/>
and television for them to do<lb/>
so. French troops fired warning<lb/>
shots to hold back the crowd,<lb/>
said a worker at the Hotel Ivoire<lb/>
reached by telephone and speak-<lb/>
ing on condition of anonymity.<lb/>
Protesters chanted against<lb/>
the French, yelling, "The whites<lb/>
don't like the blacks, but we don't<lb/>
care Some signs declare, "Ivory<lb/>
Coast is a sovereign state<lb/>
French forces have moved<lb/>
to take control of Abidjan after<lb/>
chaos erupted in this West<lb/>
African nation on Saturday.<lb/>
Ivorian warplanes launched a<lb/>
surprise air strike that killed<lb/>
nine French peacekeepers and an<lb/>
American civilian aid worker in the<lb/>
north, held by rebels since a 2002<lb/>
civil war divided the country. The<lb/>
government later called the<lb/>
bombing a mistake.<lb/>
France hit back within hours,<lb/>
wiping out Ivory Coast's newly<lb/>
built-up air force, two Russian-<lb/>
made Sukhoi jet fighters and at<lb/>
least three helicopter gunships,<lb/>
on the ground.<lb/>
Street-level violence<lb/>
erupted, with machete-wield-<lb/>
ing mobs seeking to exact<lb/>
revenge on French citizens. With<lb/>
armored vehicles and helicop-<lb/>
ter gun ships deployed, France<lb/>
used tear gas and concussion<lb/>
grenades to quell the mobs.<lb/>
France said it was not interven-<lb/>
ing to destabilize the country or<lb/>
take sides in the country's civil war,<lb/>
while Gbagbo appealed for calm.<lb/>
Over the weekend,<lb/>
hard-liners called for loyalists to<lb/>
form a "human shield" around<lb/>
Gbagbo's home, and on Monday<lb/>
state media called on young and<lb/>
old to take to the streets nearby<lb/>
and at the broadcast headquarters.<lb/>
. Near the president's house,<lb/>
mobs swarmed one foreigner, by<lb/>
appearance an immigrant from<lb/>
a neighboring northern country,<lb/>
caught up in their midst, kicking<lb/>
and beating him.<lb/>
"Kill him young men<lb/>
shouted, before he was dragged<lb/>
into the crowd.<lb/>
Six men, faces painted<lb/>
black, forced an AP reporter<lb/>
from his taxi at gunpoint and<lb/>
commandeered the vehicle.<lb/>
French Embassy spokesman<lb/>
Francois Guenon denied the<lb/>
French troops were targeting<lb/>
Gbagbo, saying, "Itisnotaquestion<lb/>
of ousting him, that is very clear<lb/>
French armored vehicles<lb/>
rolled through the city after<lb/>
taking control of the interna-<lb/>
tional airport and strategic<lb/>
points, including bridges, over<lb/>
the weekend.<lb/>
After angry government<lb/>
loyalists looted and burned<lb/>
businesses and roamed<lb/>
house-to-house in search of<lb/>
French citizens, residents on<lb/>
Monday assessed the damage to<lb/>
a skyscraper-lined city that once<lb/>
was West Africa's most prosper-<lb/>
ous, thanks to Ivory Coast's<lb/>
position as the world's top cocoa<lb/>
producer.<lb/>
"Everything is burned said<lb/>
one woman, a teacher at a French<lb/>
school that was looted and<lb/>
torched in the anti-French riots.<lb/>
"They have stolen everything<lb/>
they could<lb/>
"They even tore out the toilet<lb/>
seat she said, speaking on con-<lb/>
dition her name not be used.<lb/>
"The only thing I'm waiting for<lb/>
is for the airport to open, so I can<lb/>
get out of here<lb/>
strongest bastion of Iraq's Sunni<lb/>
insurgents.<lb/>
"We are determined to clean<lb/>
Faiiujah of terrorists Allawi said.<lb/>
Allawi initially said 38 people<lb/>
were killed in the hospital sei-<lb/>
zure, but the U.S. military later<lb/>
said the people were captured,<lb/>
not killed, at a hospital.<lb/>
Throughout the morning,<lb/>
artillery and mortars pounded<lb/>
targets in Faiiujah and on its<lb/>
outskirts and a U.S. jet swooped<lb/>
low to fire rockets at insurgent<lb/>
positions. An AC-130 gunshlp<lb/>
raked the city all night long with<lb/>
cannon fire, and before dawn,<lb/>
four 500-pound bombs were<lb/>
dropped, raising orange fireballs<lb/>
over the city's rooftops.<lb/>
Commanders said the tough-<lb/>
est fight was yet to come when<lb/>
American forces cross to the east<lb/>
bank of the Euphrates and enter<lb/>
the main part of Faiiujah.<lb/>
Marines secured an apart-<lb/>
ment building in the north-<lb/>
western corner of the city by<lb/>
noon, said Capt. Brian Heather-<lb/>
man of the 3rd Battalion 1st<lb/>
Marine Regiment.<lb/>
"The Marines have now<lb/>
gained a foothold in the city<lb/>
said Heatherman, 32, from<lb/>
Laguna Niguel, Calif.<lb/>
He said there were some Iraqi<lb/>
casualties as the troops seized the<lb/>
building, where Marines found<lb/>
an improvised bomb hanging<lb/>
above a doorway.<lb/>
Marine commanders have<lb/>
warned the offensive against<lb/>
Faiiujah could bring the heavi-<lb/>
est urban fighting since the<lb/>
Vietnam war. Some 10,000 U.S.<lb/>
Marines, Army soldiers and Iraqi<lb/>
forces are around Faiiujah, where<lb/>
commanders estimate around<lb/>
3,000 insurgents are dug in. More<lb/>
than half the civilian popula-<lb/>
tion of some 300,000 people is<lb/>
believed to have fled already.<lb/>
U.S. and Iraqi commanders<lb/>
have vowed to stamp out Sunni<lb/>
Muslim guerrillas controlling<lb/>
Faiiujah and other cities north<lb/>
and west of Baghdad ahead of<lb/>
vital January elections.<lb/>
lf<lb/>
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it state security,<lb/>
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9 State Security<lb/>
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3 Russian-made<lb/>
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earthquake rocked<lb/>
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struck last month.<lb/>
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ma, a spokesman<lb/>
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vhen a wall they<lb/>
: collapsed, and<lb/>
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torbike, he said,<lb/>
an official at the<lb/>
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if rocwng, trough<lb/>
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several roads to<lb/>
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ons.<lb/>
11-09-04<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN � NEWS<lb/>
PAGE A3<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
YOU OUGHT TO BE IN PICTURES.<lb/>
Show your school pride by helping promote East Carolina academics,<lb/>
campus life, and athletics. Come join our growing team of photographic<lb/>
models who appear in hundreds of ECU publications each year.<lb/>
All you need to bring<lb/>
with you is enthusiasm,<lb/>
Lots of it.<lb/>
Spots fill quickly, so stop<lb/>
by or call today.<lb/>
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or 328-6037<lb/>
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IAEA chief welcomes walk mi<lb/>
nuclear agreement<lb/>
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) � The<lb/>
head of the International Atomic<lb/>
Energy Agency on Monday said<lb/>
that a preliminary agreement<lb/>
between Iran and the European<lb/>
Union's three big powers over<lb/>
Tehran's nuclear program was a<lb/>
"step in the right direction<lb/>
Mohamed ElBaradei, director<lb/>
general of the Vienna-based U.N.<lb/>
agency, said he hoped the agree-<lb/>
ment will be made official in the<lb/>
coming days.<lb/>
The preliminary agreement<lb/>
was worked out in Paris with<lb/>
Britain, France and Germany,<lb/>
chief Iranian negotiator Hossein<lb/>
Mousavian told state-run Iranian<lb/>
television on Sunday.<lb/>
If approved, the deal would<lb/>
be a major breakthrough after<lb/>
months of threats and nego-<lb/>
tiations. It could spare Iran<lb/>
from being taken before the<lb/>
U.N. Security Council, where<lb/>
the United States has warned<lb/>
it would seek economic sanc-<lb/>
tions unless Tehran gives up all<lb/>
uranium enrichment activities,<lb/>
a technology that can produce<lb/>
nuclear fuel or atomic weapons.<lb/>
"I would hope that this would<lb/>
lead to the desired outcome,<lb/>
which is Iran to suspend both<lb/>
its enrichment and reprocessing<lb/>
related activities and open the<lb/>
way for normalization of Iran's<lb/>
relations with the international<lb/>
community said ElBaradei<lb/>
speaking from a conference on<lb/>
nuclear security in Australia.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Iranian lawmak-<lb/>
ers "are collecting support for a<lb/>
draft bill banning the production<lb/>
of nuclear weapons legislator<lb/>
Mohmoud Mohammadi told The<lb/>
Associated Press.<lb/>
Mohammadi said the bill<lb/>
could be presented to the par-<lb/>
liament next week. He said the<lb/>
draft was prompted by a religious<lb/>
verdict by Iran's supreme leader,<lb/>
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.<lb/>
Khamenei, who has the final<lb/>
say on all state matters, has said that<lb/>
production, stockpiling and using<lb/>
nuclear weapons was un-Islamic<lb/>
and against human interests.<lb/>
"Ayatollah Khamenei's ver-<lb/>
dict is clear Mohammadi said.<lb/>
"So why not make the pro-<lb/>
duction of nuclear weapons<lb/>
illegal under Iranian law?"<lb/>
In proposals to Iran last<lb/>
month, Britain, Germany and<lb/>
France offered a ttade deal and<lb/>
peaceful nuclear technology,<lb/>
including a light-water research<lb/>
reactor, if Iran pledged to indefi-<lb/>
nitely suspend uranium enrich-<lb/>
ment and related activities such as<lb/>
reprocessing uranium and build-<lb/>
ELBARADEI<lb/>
ing centrifuges used to enrich it.<lb/>
Europe and Washington fear<lb/>
Iran is trying to build nuclear<lb/>
weapons, but Tehran denies such<lb/>
claims, saying its atomic program<lb/>
has peaceful aims, including<lb/>
energy production.<lb/>
"We had 22 hours of nego-<lb/>
tiations. They were very difficult<lb/>
and complicated negotiations<lb/>
but we reached a preliminary<lb/>
agreement at the expert level<lb/>
Mousavian said.<lb/>
He said the four countries<lb/>
must now ask their governments<lb/>
to approve the accord.<lb/>
The preliminary agreement<lb/>
appeared to mark a dramatic<lb/>
breakthrough, since Iranian offi-<lb/>
cials have resisted indefinite or<lb/>
long-term suspension of nuclear<lb/>
enrichment, a process that Iran<lb/>
is permitted to pursue under the<lb/>
Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty,<lb/>
which Tehran has signed.<lb/>
While not being in breach of<lb/>
the treaty, Iran is under heavy<lb/>
international pressure to drop<lb/>
such plans as a good faith gesture.<lb/>
"If this is approved by all<lb/>
four parties, we will witness an<lb/>
important change in Iran's rela-<lb/>
tions with Europe and much of<lb/>
the international community<lb/>
in the not-too-distant future<lb/>
Mousavian said. He didn't elabo-<lb/>
rate on the agreement.<lb/>
The Europeans had warned<lb/>
Iran that they will back Wash-<lb/>
ington's threat to refer the<lb/>
Islamic republic to the Security<lb/>
Council for possible sanctions<lb/>
unless it gives up all uranium<lb/>
enrichment activities before a<lb/>
Nov. 25 IAEA meeting.<lb/>
Tehran suspended uranium<lb/>
enrichment last year but has<lb/>
refused to stop other related<lb/>
activities such as reprocessing<lb/>
uranium or building centrifuges,<lb/>
insisting its program is intended<lb/>
purely for the production of fuel<lb/>
for nuclear power generation.<lb/>
Be heard!<lb/>
Send us your pirate rants!<lb/>
Submit online at www.theeastcarolinian.com, or e-mail editor@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
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"Pretty much the<lb/>
entire chapter participates<lb/>
 it's a blast Beck said.<lb/>
"It was a really good broth-<lb/>
erhood event that benefited<lb/>
the children and families of<lb/>
the Ronald McDonald House,<lb/>
and I like to see all the guys<lb/>
get together and give back<lb/>
to the community<lb/>
The Ronald McDonald House<lb/>
is a hotel located across from the<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
geared to helping families who<lb/>
have children in the hospital and<lb/>
want to avoid the large expenses<lb/>
of hotels and restaurants. The fee<lb/>
to stay there is10 per night, and<lb/>
there are 40 rooms available.<lb/>
Phyllis Flye, executive direc-<lb/>
tor of the Ronald McDonald<lb/>
House said their budget is<lb/>
$330,000 per year, with more<lb/>
than 80 percent coming from<lb/>
donations and fundraisers.<lb/>
"Events such as this are very<lb/>
important to us said Flye.<lb/>
"It's one of our top three<lb/>
events every year<lb/>
The two other major events<lb/>
include a fundraiser selling<lb/>
luminary kits to people around<lb/>
Christmas time and the MGA<lb/>
Hooters pro tour golf tourna-<lb/>
ment in conjunction with Brook<lb/>
Valley Country Club.<lb/>
Beck said while<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha's event<lb/>
does take work to run and<lb/>
organize, it is a very doable<lb/>
event and he encourages other<lb/>
Greek organizations to put forth<lb/>
efforts in hosting these large<lb/>
charitable events.<lb/>
"It just takes dedication <lb/>
they have to be held accountable<lb/>
for it. They're expected to go out<lb/>
and raise a certain amount of<lb/>
money Beck said.<lb/>
He said Greek organizations<lb/>
should just find something<lb/>
everyone can get excited about<lb/>
and relate to in some way, then<lb/>
there will be less threat of losing<lb/>
motivation.<lb/>
"It is a general interest within<lb/>
the brotherhood to help this<lb/>
cause Beck said.<lb/>
Beck said continual support of<lb/>
the event is greatly appreciated.<lb/>
"A lot of the money comes<lb/>
from local businesses, so with-<lb/>
out them the event wouldn't be<lb/>
nearly as successful Beck said.<lb/>
"A lot of people just refused<lb/>
to give it to you, they just don't<lb/>
believe you are fundraising<lb/>
The Ronald McDonald House<lb/>
generally stays at about an 8S<lb/>
percent occupancy rate and has<lb/>
served 7,700 families and more<lb/>
than 13,000 admissions since it<lb/>
opened in 1987.<lb/>
Flye said occupants have<lb/>
always appreciated Pi Kappa<lb/>
Alpha's service.<lb/>
"They are generally thrilled<lb/>
to have a place to stay close<lb/>
to their child while they are<lb/>
staying in the hospital with-<lb/>
out the enormous costs<lb/>
of hotels and restaurants<lb/>
Flye said.<lb/>
"The group of young men in<lb/>
that fraternity have been sup-<lb/>
portive to our house they are a<lb/>
great group of guys to work with<lb/>
and we are delighted to have<lb/>
them as part of our charity<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
"Before giving, I<lb/>
always look for<lb/>
the Humane Seal<lb/>
 N0AHWYLE<lb/>
Star of NBC's hit show EFi<lb/>
The Humane Charity Seal<lb/>
of Approval guarantees that<lb/>
a health charity funds vital<lb/>
patient services or life-saving<lb/>
medical research, but never<lb/>
animal experiments.<lb/>
Council on Humane Giving<lb/>
Washington, DC.<lb/>
www. HumaneSeat. org<lb/>
202-686-2210, ext. 335<lb/>
PHYSICIANS COMMITTEE FOR RESPONSIBLE MEDICINE <lb/>
<pb facs="00059554_0004"/><lb/>
oMMuN<lb/>
Page A4<lb/>
editor@theeastcaroiinian.com<lb/>
252.328.6366<lb/>
AMANDA Q. UNGERFELT Editor In Chief<lb/>
TUESDAY November 9, 2004<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
While elections are over,<lb/>
discussion has just begun<lb/>
It's a week after Election Day and politics are<lb/>
continuing to remain on the front burner of<lb/>
everyone's conversations.<lb/>
TEC received so many Pirate Rants this past<lb/>
week concerning the election that we had<lb/>
to dedicate today's section to a special ECU<lb/>
"Election Rant<lb/>
Although TEC did not choose to publicly<lb/>
endorse a particular candidate, we had our<lb/>
concerns about both. Now that Bush will be<lb/>
in residence for another four years, we hope<lb/>
he takes time to address some of his previ-<lb/>
ous blunders and continue to push America<lb/>
to the best country we can be.<lb/>
First, the situation in Iraq needs to be resolved.<lb/>
Just how long will it take to give Iraqis total<lb/>
sovereignty? How long until our brothers,<lb/>
sisters, friends, etc. can come home?<lb/>
Second, Bush needs to construct a concrete<lb/>
plan to cut the deficit, which has grown mas-<lb/>
sively over the past four years.<lb/>
Third, it is our hope that Bush's history of<lb/>
making decisions based on his morals will<lb/>
be put somewhat in check. Legislation based<lb/>
on gay marriage abortions and other such<lb/>
highly controversial topics should be consid-<lb/>
ered based solely on the interest of the entire<lb/>
American public, not just those who are of a<lb/>
Christian or similar doctrine.<lb/>
One thing we were happy to see was the ease<lb/>
of the election process this year. This election<lb/>
season was, for the most part, free of the red<lb/>
tape and voting scandals that plagued the last<lb/>
presidential election. The straightforwardness j<lb/>
of this vote helped to reassure some of our<lb/>
faith in the electoral process.<lb/>
Moreover, TEC encourages our readers that<lb/>
just because the election is over, doesn't<lb/>
mean your comments are unwelcome. When<lb/>
the leader of our country does something<lb/>
you don't agree with, you have that freedom<lb/>
to express your discontent - and what better<lb/>
way to get your voice out to your peers than<lb/>
through the student newspaper of your uni-<lb/>
versity?<lb/>
Our Staff<lb/>
Nick Henne Kristin Day<lb/>
News Editor Asst News Editor<lb/>
Robbie Derr Carolyn Scandura<lb/>
Features Editor Asst Features Editor<lb/>
Tony Zoppo Brandon Hughes<lb/>
Sports Editor Asst. Sports Editor<lb/>
Nina Coefleld Rachel Landen<lb/>
Head Copy Editor Special Sections Editor<lb/>
Tanesha Sistrunk Herb Sneed<lb/>
Photo Editor Asst. Photo Editor<lb/>
Alexander Marcinlak Jenny Hobbs<lb/>
Web Editor Production Manager<lb/>
Newsroom<lb/>
Fax<lb/>
Advertising<lb/>
252.328.6366<lb/>
252.328.6558<lb/>
252.328.2000<lb/>
THANK You,<lb/>
MeRlCA,<lb/>
FoRYoUR<lb/>
VoTe.<lb/>
Serving ECU since 1925. TEC prints 9,000 copies<lb/>
every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday during the<lb/>
regular academic year and 5,000 on Wednesdays<lb/>
during the summer "Our View" is the opinion of<lb/>
the editorial board and is written by editorial board<lb/>
members. TEC welcomes letters to the editor which<lb/>
are limited to 250 words (which may be edited for<lb/>
decency or brevity). We reserve the right to edit or<lb/>
reject letters and all letters must be signed and<lb/>
include a telephone number. Letters may be sent via<lb/>
e-mail to editor@theeastcarolinian.com or to The East<lb/>
Carolinian. Student Publications Building, Greenville,<lb/>
NC 27858-4353. Call 252-328-6366 for more<lb/>
information. One copy of TEC is free, each additional<lb/>
copy is $1.<lb/>
FbRMYPART,<lb/>
I PROMiSe<lb/>
To Do MY<lb/>
VERY<lb/>
BKT<lb/>
To UMiTe<lb/>
THIS<lb/>
COUNTRY<lb/>
aespecr<lb/>
Die VIEWS<lb/>
OF THOSeWHO<lb/>
DiSAGRee<lb/>
HeAL<lb/>
OUR<lb/>
DMSiONS<lb/>
��<lb/>
GoVeRNWiTH<lb/>
BiPARTiSAN<lb/>
C0NS6NSUS<lb/>
AND Keep A STRAIGHT FACe<lb/>
WHiLe FiNiSHiNGTHiS SeNTBNCe.<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
Democrats losing touch with Americans<lb/>
One-party dominance<lb/>
leads to disaster<lb/>
TONY MCKEE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
I offer congratulations to all the<lb/>
organizations that had voter registra-<lb/>
tion drives for this election and also<lb/>
to all the people who helped make<lb/>
possible the incredible turnout for the<lb/>
election. Whether or not your candi-<lb/>
date (s) won last week, every one of<lb/>
you deserves to be proud for what you<lb/>
helped accomplish. 1 hope you con-<lb/>
tinue to take an active role in shaping<lb/>
our country.<lb/>
That said, I need to get something<lb/>
off my chest.<lb/>
I like to be the first to admit I<lb/>
am (was) wrong whenever possible.<lb/>
Unfortunately, it usually isn't possible<lb/>
because there is always someone who<lb/>
will quickly and loudly, point out any<lb/>
errors I make. This is one time where I<lb/>
will be able to be the first to admit my<lb/>
error and offer an apology.<lb/>
My apology goes to the college<lb/>
Democrats.<lb/>
I went over to their registration<lb/>
table before the election to compliment<lb/>
them on their registration efforts and<lb/>
wish them and their candidates the<lb/>
best. I also engaged in a little friendly<lb/>
political discourse with the people at<lb/>
the table. Well, at least with the people<lb/>
at the table who were courteous and<lb/>
mature enough not to get up and walk<lb/>
a few feet away when I moseyed up.<lb/>
I did have a good conversation with<lb/>
those who were decent enough to stick<lb/>
around though. And that is where my<lb/>
apology comes in.<lb/>
Just before 1 had to leave for class 1<lb/>
was asked how I thought the election<lb/>
would turn out. I told them President<lb/>
Bush would win by 5-6. I was wrong<lb/>
and man enough to admit it. President<lb/>
Bush's margin of victory was about 9-<lb/>
10. Sorry guys.<lb/>
There you have it: one of the rare<lb/>
W WvrS ?W:K<lb/>
H K" f ,i<lb/>
k J<lb/>
times I am able to be the first to admit<lb/>
my mistake. 1 must admit, it is refresh-<lb/>
ing and good for the soul.<lb/>
Now, let's move on to other mat-<lb/>
ters.<lb/>
With the election almost in the<lb/>
record books (the Electoral College still<lb/>
has to cast its votes and make it official),<lb/>
the results follow a trend that has been<lb/>
evident to everyone except the Demo-<lb/>
crat leadership and left wing fanatics<lb/>
since the early 1990s: the Democrat<lb/>
Party is imploding.<lb/>
This implosion began when Bill<lb/>
Clinton was president and has contin-<lb/>
ued to gain momentum. From that time<lb/>
on, the Democrats lost their majority<lb/>
in the House of Representatives, their<lb/>
majority in the Senate, numerous state<lb/>
governorships and the presidency<lb/>
twice. Despite all this they still can't<lb/>
see the forest through the hatred they<lb/>
harbor against everyone who is not<lb/>
them.<lb/>
I have noticed three basic "explana-<lb/>
tions" that Liberals are putting forth to<lb/>
explain the election results:<lb/>
First, Kerry was a micro managing<lb/>
idiot who couldn't make a decision<lb/>
without calling a bunch of friends to<lb/>
figure out how he should think and<lb/>
who let the "Clinton-istas" take over<lb/>
his campaign.<lb/>
Second, the Democrats were not<lb/>
able to get their message out to the<lb/>
public in such a way as to make people<lb/>
realize how much they cared.<lb/>
Third, the "Great Unwashed" Amer-<lb/>
ican voting public was either stupid<lb/>
enough to fall for Republican lies or<lb/>
too stupid to realize how much the<lb/>
Democrats cared.<lb/>
I kid you not. These are the basic<lb/>
opinions being expressed by liberals to<lb/>
explain their most recent trouncing at<lb/>
the polls. All you have to do is look at any<lb/>
major media outlet and you'll see them.<lb/>
The Democrats have lost touch<lb/>
with the American people and, in some<lb/>
cases, reality. Even now they can't get<lb/>
it through their thick heads they lost<lb/>
the election. They1 are still acting like<lb/>
they are in power and the President has<lb/>
to answer to them. I hope reality sinks<lb/>
in soon, but 1 fear it won't. 1 think the<lb/>
Democrats have to fall even further<lb/>
before they open their eyes and admit<lb/>
the truth. I hope it happens soon.<lb/>
Seriously, I hope the Democrats<lb/>
shake up their organization and get<lb/>
their act together soon. It will prob-<lb/>
ably require a major restructuring<lb/>
of the party leadership and a hard,<lb/>
honest self-examination, but it needs<lb/>
to be done.<lb/>
Without a viable opponent, the<lb/>
Republican Party could turn into<lb/>
what the Democrats are now: so<lb/>
used to being in power they become<lb/>
arrogant, ideologically corrupt and sore<lb/>
losers to boot. That must not happen.<lb/>
The Democrats have shown that<lb/>
one-party dominance leads to disaster<lb/>
and must be avoided. And frankly, the<lb/>
thought of only one party controlling<lb/>
the political landscape of this country<lb/>
should scare anybody, no matter what<lb/>
political affiliation.<lb/>
America needs at least two<lb/>
vibrant, healthy political parties. The<lb/>
Democrats have an opportunity<lb/>
to become one such party again.<lb/>
They have to be willing to change<lb/>
though. If they can't or won't, I pray<lb/>
some other party has the courage to<lb/>
do so.<lb/>
For all our sakes.<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
Sports in overtime: Avoid extending seasons<lb/>
(KRT) � All baseball fans have<lb/>
moments when they wish the season<lb/>
would never end. Sometimes it seems as<lb/>
though they've gotten their way.<lb/>
This year's World Series was a short<lb/>
one, consisting of only four games,<lb/>
but it didn't end until Oct. 27. Back in<lb/>
19S4, by contrast, the Series wrapped<lb/>
up on Oct. 2. On Oct. 2 of this year,<lb/>
the World Series hadn't even begun ,<lb/>
partly because the regular season still<lb/>
hadn't ended. A seven-game series with<lb/>
a couple of rain outs could have forced<lb/>
some teams relying on Mr. October to<lb/>
seek out a Mr. November.<lb/>
It's not as though the season has<lb/>
merely been pushed back. It has also<lb/>
been pushed forward. Ted Williams<lb/>
played his first Opening Day on April<lb/>
18, 1939. This year, the first pitch of<lb/>
the year was thrown on March 30. Our<lb/>
warm-weather sport now lasts from the<lb/>
chilly mists of April till the frost is on<lb/>
the pumpkin. If Roger Kahn were writ-<lb/>
ing a book about the Dodgers today,<lb/>
he'd call it "The Boys of Non-Winter<lb/>
Baseball is not the only offender, or<lb/>
even the worst. The NFL now begins in<lb/>
early September and sometimes doesn't<lb/>
play the Super Bowl until February.<lb/>
In the days before the Super<lb/>
Bowl, the championship was settled by<lb/>
New Year's Eve. The first Super Bowl,<lb/>
for that matter, was played on Jan. IS,<lb/>
1967.<lb/>
The NBA, well, we suspect there are<lb/>
convicted killers who go to jail at the<lb/>
start of the NBA season and complete<lb/>
their sentences before it has ended. The<lb/>
regular season tips off the first week of<lb/>
November and the title series doesn't<lb/>
wind up until the middle of June, three<lb/>
months later than in the 1950s and<lb/>
long after most people have exhausted<lb/>
their interest.<lb/>
The ceaseless expansion of playing<lb/>
seasons breeds boredom. It also lowers<lb/>
quality. More games mean more wear<lb/>
and tear on players. By the time this<lb/>
year's Series started, the St. Louis Car-<lb/>
dinals were running on fumes.<lb/>
Or maybe they just had trouble<lb/>
swinging the bat while wearing thermal<lb/>
underwear. Baseball was not designed<lb/>
for bracing winds and frigid tempera-<lb/>
tures, but they're what often prevails by<lb/>
the time the postseason rolls around.<lb/>
The sight of parkas, mittens and fur<lb/>
hats is now as much a part of the<lb/>
World Series spectacle as the victory<lb/>
champagne.<lb/>
Why do the leagues keep extend-<lb/>
ing the season? The obvious reason<lb/>
is money. The more game's, the more<lb/>
opportunities to sell tickets. But the<lb/>
logic of that approach would be 52<lb/>
weeks of competition in every sport.<lb/>
In any case, it's about time profes-<lb/>
sional sports traded a little quantity for<lb/>
quality. If three rounds of postseason<lb/>
competition are needed to produce a<lb/>
World Series champion, fine, keep the<lb/>
postseason as it is, but shorten the regu-<lb/>
lar season. Old-timers can recall that<lb/>
154 games was good enough for Babe<lb/>
Ruth and Ted Williams. They ought to<lb/>
be enough for modern players.<lb/>
Some fans will complain that abbre-<lb/>
viating the regular season would put<lb/>
some single-season records out of reach.<lb/>
(Roger Maris needed a longer season to<lb/>
break Ruth's 60-homer record.) Maybe<lb/>
so, but that might merely balance the<lb/>
effects of modern nutrition, training,<lb/>
videotape and even illicit substances.<lb/>
And what's wrong with starting a new<lb/>
record book?<lb/>
Contrary to the prevailing assump-<lb/>
tion, fans can get too much of a good<lb/>
thing. Samuel Johnson's remark about<lb/>
"Paradise Lost" is also true of the<lb/>
modern professional sports season:<lb/>
Nobody ever wished it were longer.<lb/>
Election Rants<lb/>
The elections are over. It is<lb/>
time to clean up those annoying<lb/>
political signs that are all over<lb/>
the roadsides.<lb/>
John Kerry walks into a bar.<lb/>
The bartender says, "Why the<lb/>
long face?"<lb/>
I was happy to see Bush beat<lb/>
Kerry. Raping the Constitution is<lb/>
better than killing it.<lb/>
As you right-wing conserva-<lb/>
tives obviously don't care about<lb/>
"other people" (read: the rest<lb/>
of the world and non-white<lb/>
Christian Americans), I must<lb/>
conclude you do it to save your<lb/>
own children. To this, I must<lb/>
reply. Despite all your efforts,<lb/>
many of your children will still<lb/>
likely: think for themselves,<lb/>
make their own decisions, learn<lb/>
sex-ed from re-runs of "Real Sex<lb/>
39 get back alley abortions<lb/>
because you outlawed it, dress<lb/>
like Britney, get divorced, date<lb/>
a foreigner, get divorced again,<lb/>
see a terrorist attack on America,<lb/>
see America run out of countries<lb/>
to attack because of it - but most<lb/>
importantly I hope they will<lb/>
recognize that being American<lb/>
does not mean you are special or<lb/>
better than others in the world.<lb/>
American rights are no different<lb/>
than human rights.<lb/>
Peter Kalajian must be one<lb/>
angry guy. First he bashes the<lb/>
Greek system and now President<lb/>
Bush. Do you hate everything<lb/>
that is cool?<lb/>
The constitution states there<lb/>
is to be a separation of church<lb/>
and state. To hear politicians<lb/>
like Bush so blatantly disregard<lb/>
a portion of the Constitution is<lb/>
rather upsetting.<lb/>
Today we salute you Mr. John<lb/>
Kerry voter. While others were<lb/>
at the polls making informed<lb/>
decisions about their candi-<lb/>
dates, you are relying on Michael<lb/>
Moore for political advice. Yes.<lb/>
No. Maybe. The only thing we<lb/>
know for sure about Kerry is his<lb/>
three Purple Hearts (say it again<lb/>
now). Sure, Bush isn't the most<lb/>
articulate public speaker, but<lb/>
he's not scared of a football. So<lb/>
crack open an ice cold Bud Light<lb/>
Democratic dirtbag, because the<lb/>
Republicans now have four more<lb/>
years.<lb/>
I would just like to thank<lb/>
everyone who voted for George<lb/>
W. Bush! I am just so excited for<lb/>
gas prices to raise another whole<lb/>
dollar and to not be able to find a<lb/>
job when I graduate. I can't wait<lb/>
for all my tax money to be spent<lb/>
on the death and destruction<lb/>
of innocent people in order to<lb/>
catch this invisible boogeyriian.<lb/>
Thanks for another four wonder-<lb/>
ful years.<lb/>
I have two questions for all<lb/>
those in favor of Bush. I know<lb/>
that all of you Bush supporters<lb/>
are happy, but do you honestly<lb/>
think that the president should<lb/>
have control over Congress and<lb/>
the Supreme Court? Secondly,<lb/>
how many of women's and eth-<lb/>
nic's rights are you willing to<lb/>
trade for the illusion of safety?<lb/>
I heard some students at a bar<lb/>
chanting "four more years on<lb/>
election night. Four more years of<lb/>
unjust war, lies and homophobic<lb/>
attitudes? Count me out.<lb/>
Yahoo for Kerry, showing true<lb/>
character while admitting defeat.<lb/>
Freedom is on the march <lb/>
back to the 1950s. The conserva-<lb/>
tives have made their choice and<lb/>
they will be responsible if Bush<lb/>
screws up the country. No more<lb/>
room to point the finger at Clin-<lb/>
ton or the "liberals my fellow<lb/>
Americans. If Bush messes up<lb/>
the next four years, it's entirely<lb/>
his fault. Who are you going to<lb/>
blame then?<lb/>
I personally think the Elec-<lb/>
toral College is the worst thing<lb/>
about this country. I am a demo-<lb/>
crat living in a state that tradi-<lb/>
tionally votes Republican for<lb/>
president. So my vote, in the<lb/>
grand scheme of things, means<lb/>
absolutely nothing. Why on<lb/>
earth do we not use the popular<lb/>
vote system? Probably because<lb/>
that makes too much sense.<lb/>
Editor's Note: The Pirate Rant is<lb/>
an anonymous way for students and<lb/>
staff'in the ECU community to voice<lb/>
their opinions. Submissions can be<lb/>
submitted anonymously online at<lb/>
www.theeastcarolinian.com, or e-<lb/>
mailed to editortheeastcarolinian.<lb/>
com. The editor reserves the right<lb/>
to edit opinions for content and<lb/>
brevity. , <lb/>
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PageA5jeatures@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 ROBBIE DtftR Features Editor CAROLYN SCANDURA Assistant<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY November 9, 2004<lb/>
Announcements:<lb/>
The ECU Gospel Choir will be<lb/>
performing on Thursday, Nov.<lb/>
11 at 6 p.m. in Hendrix Theatre,<lb/>
Mendenhall. Tickets will be $3<lb/>
for studentsmilitary and $5 for<lb/>
the general public. As a bonus,<lb/>
the special intermission guest will<lb/>
be the Salvation and Deliverance<lb/>
Church Choir from Tarboro, NC,<lb/>
under the direction of Kristian<lb/>
Herrin. For more information,<lb/>
contact Tarrick Cox at 328-1518.<lb/>
For those students who meet<lb/>
the CDC definition of high risk flu<lb/>
sufferers, there will be a Student<lb/>
Health Flu Clinic on Thursday,<lb/>
Nov. 11 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.<lb/>
in the Student Health Building<lb/>
Multipurpose Room. The shot<lb/>
will cost $12 for regular, high<lb/>
risk students and free of charge<lb/>
for students with NC teachers<lb/>
state employees insurance, with<lb/>
insurance card and ID. For more<lb/>
information about the clinic or<lb/>
to determine whether you are a<lb/>
high risk flu sufferer, go to the<lb/>
Student Health Center Web site<lb/>
at ecu.edustudenthealth or call<lb/>
328-6841 for more details.<lb/>
There will be a presentation about<lb/>
"How Cities Create Their Own<lb/>
Rainfall" on Friday, Nov. 12 at 4<lb/>
p.m. in 102 Brewster B. Dr. Marshall<lb/>
Shepherd, a NASA scientist, will<lb/>
be presenting at Geography<lb/>
Department colloquium through a<lb/>
Minority Scholar Presence Grant.<lb/>
Dr. Shepard has researched<lb/>
meteorology in the Laboratory<lb/>
for Atmospheres at the NASA-<lb/>
Goddard Space Right Center. His<lb/>
experience with the White House,<lb/>
Department of Defense and<lb/>
NASA will make this presentation<lb/>
exhilarating. For more information,<lb/>
contact Dr. Scott Curtis at 328-<lb/>
2088.<lb/>
The Adapted Sports Day will<lb/>
take place on Saturday, Nov. 13<lb/>
from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the<lb/>
SRC. This year's theme, "From<lb/>
Greece to Greenville will feature<lb/>
Olympian and Paralympian Jean<lb/>
Driscoll. Driscoll has won the<lb/>
Boston Marathon eight times<lb/>
and was named one of the Top<lb/>
25 female athletes by Sports<lb/>
Illustrated. She will discuss her<lb/>
experiences as a disabled athlete.<lb/>
The Adapted Sports Day will also<lb/>
include wheelchair volleyball,<lb/>
wheelchair basketball, bowling,<lb/>
tai chi, hand cycling, goalball,<lb/>
table tennis, canoeing and seated<lb/>
aerobics. The $5 registration<lb/>
fee will cover breakfast, lunch,<lb/>
the keynote presentation, all<lb/>
instructional sessions, parking<lb/>
and a t-shirt. Call 328-6387 or<lb/>
2718 for more Information.<lb/>
Names in the News:<lb/>
How hot is Sarah Michelle Cellar's<lb/>
latest scary flick, The Grudge? So<lb/>
steaming that the movie, which<lb/>
has been out three weeks, has<lb/>
already spawned a sequel, the<lb/>
Hollywood Reporter said. No word<lb/>
on whether our favorite vampire<lb/>
slayer will star.<lb/>
Until now the closest you could<lb/>
get to your idol, Jessica Simpson,<lb/>
was to envelop yourself with her<lb/>
angelic voice as you slathered<lb/>
yourself with products from the<lb/>
pop star's Dessert cosmetic line.<lb/>
But soon, your deepest desires<lb/>
and grandest dreams will come<lb/>
true. Soon, you will be able to own<lb/>
Jessica Simpson wear! According<lb/>
to the New York Daily News, the 24-<lb/>
year-old vocalist and MTV reality<lb/>
star, has signed a deal with New<lb/>
York-based manufacturing firm<lb/>
Andrew Sports Club to produce<lb/>
a clothing line set to rival that of<lb/>
Ashley and Mary-Kate Olsen: a<lb/>
line of junior sportswear including<lb/>
kids' clothes, hats, watches,<lb/>
jewelry and even undies under<lb/>
the Jessica Simpson and Sweet<lb/>
Kisses brand names. Meanwhile,<lb/>
Jess and her less famous but<lb/>
supremely patient husband, Nick<lb/>
Lachey, tell People magazine that<lb/>
rumors of troubles in their perfect<lb/>
marriage are icky lies.<lb/>
Jessica Simpson is being sued by<lb/>
the manufacturer of the Dessert<lb/>
Beauty line of edible cosmetics.<lb/>
According to TV's "Celebrity<lb/>
Justice Cosmojet, which filed<lb/>
the suit in Los Angeles Superior<lb/>
Court, says Jess and Dessert owe<lb/>
it almost $200,000 after Cosmojet<lb/>
made$1 million worth of product<lb/>
but was paid only $800K.<lb/>
Sound swarms from Mendenhall<lb/>
Engine Down, The<lb/>
Capulets rock ECU<lb/>
TREVOR WORDEN<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
It seemed like an ordinary<lb/>
Thursday night at Mendenhall.<lb/>
People were at The Spot hang-<lb/>
ing out in the lounges or getting<lb/>
coffee from Java City. Although it<lb/>
wasn't an ordinary Thursday night<lb/>
because Engine Down would play<lb/>
at Pirate Underground, covered<lb/>
by The Capulets. The thought of<lb/>
going to this show sent electricity<lb/>
through my body and everyone I<lb/>
was with, making this Thursday<lb/>
night different than all the rest.<lb/>
When getting downstairs to<lb/>
the room the bands were playing<lb/>
in, there was a nice size crowd, all<lb/>
of which were talking, playing<lb/>
pool or finding the merchandise<lb/>
sold by the bands.<lb/>
Momentarily, The Capulets<lb/>
took the stage and began play-<lb/>
ing a strong set. Cover bands<lb/>
seem to fall into the extremities<lb/>
really good or really bad. When<lb/>
opening, the night crowds always<lb/>
seem to be more critical of the<lb/>
band. This band did fall into the<lb/>
extremities of being really good<lb/>
or really bad, and from the over-<lb/>
all opinion, I think it could be<lb/>
determined those there Thursday<lb/>
night really liked what they heard.<lb/>
The Capulets had a very<lb/>
unique look and sound. The<lb/>
band had an authentic, vintage<lb/>
look to add to their appeal. With<lb/>
the vocals of Ted Leo and The<lb/>
Pharmacists, a beat like Modest<lb/>
Mouse, and melodies comparable<lb/>
to Weezer, The Capulets proved<lb/>
to be one of the best bands from<lb/>
the Greenville area. They now<lb/>
have a competition under their<lb/>
belt, which proves their excellent<lb/>
product, winning a battle of the<lb/>
bands in Chapel Hill. Their blend<lb/>
of melodic guitars and driving<lb/>
beats fit nicely together. The dual<lb/>
vocals of Josh and Alex Pope gave<lb/>
a distinct and different approach<lb/>
to each song. The band includes<lb/>
members Stuart McLamb, Josh<lb/>
Rope, Alex Pope and Thomas<lb/>
Charles Simpson.<lb/>
When asked about what<lb/>
helped influence their sound,<lb/>
Stuart McLamb said, "We are<lb/>
influenced mainly by British Pop<lb/>
and Seventies Glam Rock<lb/>
When The Capulets finished<lb/>
their set, a brief intermission<lb/>
took place and people began to<lb/>
encircle the stage. Everyone knew<lb/>
what was coming and murmured<lb/>
in anticipation.<lb/>
Ending the hiatus, Engine<lb/>
Down began playing with the<lb/>
haunting opening chord from<lb/>
their first track off the Demure<lb/>
CD. A shady blue light was thrown<lb/>
across the stage setting the mood.<lb/>
Then sounds from the drum-<lb/>
mer came which added a lot to<lb/>
the band as a whole. He took<lb/>
a new and different approach<lb/>
to drumming using moroccos<lb/>
for drumsticks. The drummer,<lb/>
Cornbread Compton, did a kind<lb/>
of dance throughout the show as<lb/>
he played. Compton added to the<lb/>
feel of the band and the sound in<lb/>
general through his unconven-<lb/>
tional beats. Keeley Davis, lead<lb/>
singer and lead guitarist, had a<lb/>
melodic voice resembling Chris<lb/>
Connoly's from Saves the Day.<lb/>
One song led into another and<lb/>
the crowd showed their approval<lb/>
clapping joyously after every song.<lb/>
Engine Down played mostly songs<lb/>
from their new album which is<lb/>
self-titled and was released Aug.<lb/>
25. The members of the band<lb/>
include Keeley Davis, Cornbread<lb/>
Compton, Jonathon Fuller and<lb/>
�Jason Wood.<lb/>
They have been touring<lb/>
the east recently with Ted Leo<lb/>
and The Pharmacists, Keeley<lb/>
Davis said. They have previously<lb/>
toured with other bands includ-<lb/>
ing Ranier Maria.<lb/>
Their influences, include<lb/>
metal bands from the 1980s like<lb/>
Motley Crue and some outsider<lb/>
influences including artists like<lb/>
Prince. Through their wide range<lb/>
of influences the four guys have<lb/>
banded together to provide an<lb/>
excellent sound.<lb/>
If you missed the opportunity<lb/>
to see these two great bands in<lb/>
action, you can check out The<lb/>
Capulet's Web site at thecapulets.<lb/>
com, and Engine Down's Web site<lb/>
at enginedown.com.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
New ties for guys<lb/>
who want some<lb/>
change<lb/>
(KRT) � Want to get a guy riled<lb/>
up? Insult his taste in neckties.<lb/>
We did that last year, when<lb/>
we suggested in a fashion column<lb/>
that clip-on ties are "tacky<lb/>
Boy, did that get readers'<lb/>
necks in a knot!<lb/>
We heard from guys who<lb/>
love clip-ons. And we heard from<lb/>
guys who hate them, but defend<lb/>
the right of the convenience-<lb/>
conscious, fashion-challenged or<lb/>
klutzy to wear them.<lb/>
The vehemence of the<lb/>
responses left no doubt: Whether<lb/>
they knot or clip their ties, men<lb/>
care about neckwear. Even those<lb/>
who have sworn off wearing ties<lb/>
have an opinion about them.<lb/>
Now that fall is upon us, and<lb/>
summer's casual dress codes are<lb/>
going the way of autumn leaves,<lb/>
the time seems right to check on<lb/>
the evolving status of neckwear.<lb/>
Sales of men's ties are on the<lb/>
upswing, say trend-watchers. And<lb/>
women's ties, which pop up as a<lb/>
quirky accessory every few years,<lb/>
also are expected to be a popular<lb/>
item this fall.<lb/>
Ties were the crown jewels in<lb/>
the men's power-dressing move-<lb/>
ment of the 1980s, says Jerry<lb/>
Andersen, spokesman for the<lb/>
Men's Dress Furnishings Associa-<lb/>
tion, a trade group in New York.<lb/>
But neckwear fell out of favor<lb/>
during the dress-down 1990s, he<lb/>
says. That's when Casual Friday<lb/>
morphed into Casual Everyday.<lb/>
When "business casual" was<lb/>
defined, debated and redefined.<lb/>
When even the most tradition-<lb/>
bound bankers and lawyers<lb/>
swapped their suits and ties for<lb/>
khakis and polo shirts.<lb/>
Now the tide is turning.<lb/>
"There's a return to dressed-up<lb/>
style, especially among younger<lb/>
customers says Andersen.<lb/>
"We saw it first with the spe-<lb/>
cialty-store customer, who spends<lb/>
more money on clothes and is<lb/>
more tuned in to fashion<lb/>
The first ripple of change came<lb/>
in 1999, when ABC-TV game-<lb/>
show host Regis Philbin scored<lb/>
a double-whammy. His "Who<lb/>
Wants to be a Millionaire" show<lb/>
was a huge hit, and so were the<lb/>
Segways wobble<lb/>
but don't fall down<lb/>
solid-colored<lb/>
metallic ties<lb/>
he wore<lb/>
with his<lb/>
dark shirts. Men<lb/>
started buying dress<lb/>
shirts again, just so they<lb/>
could team them with "Regis<lb/>
ties<lb/>
But the dark, tone-on-<lb/>
tone look didn't last long.<lb/>
"Too dreary says Ander-<lb/>
sen.<lb/>
It is being replaced this<lb/>
fall by a flood of striking<lb/>
patterns and brilliant colors,<lb/>
including hot pink. Andersen<lb/>
expects these lively new looks<lb/>
to sweep even the most ardent<lb/>
no-neckwear advocates back<lb/>
into tie departments.<lb/>
"Our neckwear business is<lb/>
up says Craig DeLongy, an<lb/>
owner of John Craig clothiers in<lb/>
Winter Park, Fla. "I think we're<lb/>
on a run<lb/>
"There are men who love<lb/>
wearing neckwear DeLongy<lb/>
explains.<lb/>
"They find adding a new tie<lb/>
to an old shirt is a great way to<lb/>
update their wardrobe. And the<lb/>
neckwear right now is irresist-<lb/>
ible<lb/>
Orlando, Fla attorney David<lb/>
Paul is one of those men who are<lb/>
crazy about ties.<lb/>
"If I really like a tie, I'll buy<lb/>
it says Paul, 34.<lb/>
"I can spend J200 or more<lb/>
on a tie, which is completely<lb/>
irrational. But a really good tie is<lb/>
unique. It ties differently. It sets<lb/>
on you differently<lb/>
He is especially fond of seven-<lb/>
fold neckties by Robert Talbott,<lb/>
which he buys at Christopher<lb/>
Jude clothiers in Orlando for $210<lb/>
a pop. Fashioned entirely by hand<lb/>
from a single piece of luxurious<lb/>
silk, the tie is folded seven times<lb/>
into itself. The volume and qual-<lb/>
ity of the silk creates a substantial<lb/>
knot and exceptionally elegant<lb/>
drape.<lb/>
Paul enjoys buying souvenir<lb/>
ties when he travels, giving ties<lb/>
as gifts, and trading ties with<lb/>
friends and colleagues. "Kind<lb/>
of like adult baseball cards he<lb/>
says.<lb/>
A necktie<lb/>
"is one of those<lb/>
things you can wear<lb/>
and make a fashion statement<lb/>
without really doing a whole lot<lb/>
he says. "Everybody notices your<lb/>
tie. Not everyone likes them, but<lb/>
everyone notices them<lb/>
Nothing kills an outfit like a<lb/>
bad tie, says Carson Kressley, one<lb/>
of the Fab Five hosts on Bravo's<lb/>
hit show "Queer Eye for the<lb/>
Straight Guy<lb/>
In his just-published style<lb/>
guide, "Off the Cuff" (Dutton),<lb/>
Kressley offers a couple of tie-<lb/>
buying tips:<lb/>
"People ask how to find a<lb/>
good tie he writes. "It's kind<lb/>
of like when you see a puppy at<lb/>
the animal shelter: When it's the<lb/>
right one, you'll know it<lb/>
When shopping for neckwear,<lb/>
"Give the tie a good feel Kressley<lb/>
advises.<lb/>
"A good tie will have an inner<lb/>
construction that is actually<lb/>
tangible. If you took it apart,<lb/>
there would be something like a<lb/>
piece of mesh or screen that gives<lb/>
body to the structure. A bad tie is<lb/>
wimpy and soft<lb/>
The most useful tie knot is the<lb/>
four-in-hand, which works with<lb/>
all collar types, except the widest<lb/>
spread collar, he says. (Coachmen<lb/>
who drove a team of four horses,<lb/>
or four-in-hand, knotted their<lb/>
neckwear in this fashion,<lb/>
see TIES page A6<lb/>
(KRT) � A symphonic hum<lb/>
emanates from a Sunnyvale,<lb/>
Calif neighborhood as helmet-<lb/>
clad players cruise eight inches<lb/>
above the grass on Seg way super<lb/>
scooters, swinging their mal-<lb/>
lets at a small spongy soccer<lb/>
ball in an 8-mile-an-hour polo<lb/>
match.<lb/>
Standing on his Segway<lb/>
platform like a modern-<lb/>
day gladiator is Steve<lb/>
Wozniak, gracefully leaning<lb/>
forward and backward on the<lb/>
two-wheeler to propel himself<lb/>
across the field, popping the<lb/>
occasional wheelie.<lb/>
From the pavement to<lb/>
the playground, the 53-year-<lb/>
old Silicon Valley icon and<lb/>
Apple Computer founder<lb/>
known as "Woz" has become<lb/>
Segway's top unofficial sales-<lb/>
man in Silicon Valley. Wozniak<lb/>
gets such a charge out of the<lb/>
battery-powered Segway that he<lb/>
collects them like some would<lb/>
model airplanes and takes them<lb/>
wherever he goes.<lb/>
He crams them six at a<lb/>
time into his Hummer, four<lb/>
into his Toyota Prius, then<lb/>
cruises the rolling hills of<lb/>
his Los Gatos, Calif neigh-<lb/>
borhood and San Francisco's<lb/>
famously steep sidewalks<lb/>
(where Segways are officially<lb/>
banned out of concern that<lb/>
they endanger pedestrians, a<lb/>
contention that Segway and its<lb/>
customers vigorously dispute).<lb/>
He stops to chat up gawkers,<lb/>
sometimes letting them hitch a<lb/>
glide. After evening concerts at<lb/>
the Shoreline Amphitheater in<lb/>
Mountain View, he takes friends<lb/>
on moonlit trails where skunks<lb/>
scamper alongside the whirring<lb/>
scooters. He even hopes that<lb/>
his biographer will dedicate<lb/>
an entire chapter to Segways.<lb/>
"It's just a lot of fun Woz-<lb/>
niak said. "You get addicted<lb/>
to it<lb/>
On this Sunday morning,<lb/>
however, he temporarily loses<lb/>
his customary equilibrium.<lb/>
Smacking the soccer ball, he<lb/>
wobbles then falls on his rear<lb/>
end. For a moment he smarts<lb/>
that the self-balancing contrap-<lb/>
tion that he describes as an<lb/>
extension of his central nervous<lb/>
system has let him down. Then<lb/>
he climbs back aboard and<lb/>
floats away.<lb/>
"We will have to have an<lb/>
MIT award hoots one of the<lb/>
players, all Silicon Valley techies<lb/>
and venture capitalists, "for<lb/>
Most Impressive Tumble<lb/>
The Segway Human Trans-<lb/>
porter clearly has a faithful fol-<lb/>
lowing here in this digital incu-<lb/>
bator powered by microchips<lb/>
and misfits who know a thing<lb/>
or two about reinventing the<lb/>
wheel. Whether it will become<lb/>
fad or flop (or - in the valley<lb/>
lexicon - wired or expired)<lb/>
depends on Segway's ability<lb/>
to get traction outside of this<lb/>
silicon subculture filled with<lb/>
upwardly mobile technogeeks.<lb/>
So far the superscooter's<lb/>
nearly two-year test drive with<lb/>
the general public hasn't exactly<lb/>
been smooth. This so-called<lb/>
"evolution in personal mobil-<lb/>
ity" has begun with a whimper<lb/>
instead of the big bang every-<lb/>
one was expecting.<lb/>
The megahyped 2001<lb/>
launch was fueled by a leaked<lb/>
book proposal that built wild<lb/>
anticipation for the top-secret<lb/>
product known only by its<lb/>
code name. When he finally<lb/>
unveiled "Ginger" on national<lb/>
television, inventor and chief<lb/>
spinmeister Dean Kamen J<lb/>
claimed the Segway would<lb/>
revolutionize transportation<lb/>
the same way the automobile<lb/>
did a century ago. It hasn't even<lb/>
come close.<lb/>
Kamen predicted that the<lb/>
Segway LLC would sell 50,000<lb/>
to 100,000 in the first year.<lb/>
But the company that refuses<lb/>
to release sales or production<lb/>
numbers was forced to reveal<lb/>
in September 2003 after a<lb/>
voluntary recall that it had<lb/>
sold just 6,000 scooters in six<lb/>
months. Sluggish sales won't<lb/>
help Segway fulfill Silicon<lb/>
Valley venture capitalist John<lb/>
Doerr's pre-release boast that<lb/>
the company would hit $1<lb/>
billion in sales faster than any<lb/>
other start-up. The Wall Street<lb/>
see SEGWAYS page A6 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059554_0006"/><lb/>
PAGE A6<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN -CAMPUS SCENE<lb/>
11-09-04<lb/>
SegWayS ton page A5<lb/>
Jon Bauer, Derek DiCarlo and Steve Wozniak battle for control playing polo on their Segway's.<lb/>
Journal reported in February that<lb/>
Segway's 2003 revenue was $25<lb/>
million.<lb/>
You don't need to take a<lb/>
look under the New Hampshire<lb/>
company's hood to know that the<lb/>
Segway hasn't replaced walking<lb/>
or driving (nor has its popular-<lb/>
ity dwarfed that of the personal<lb/>
computer, another improbable<lb/>
Kamen prediction). Segway users<lb/>
may cruise chat rooms en masse,<lb/>
but you rarely see the two-wheel-<lb/>
ers roaming Bay Area sidewalks.<lb/>
Will Segway go anywhere?<lb/>
A lot is riding on that Darwin-<lb/>
ian question: the superscooter's<lb/>
future and the $130 million-plus<lb/>
that investors like Doerr have<lb/>
sunk into the company.<lb/>
Part of the quandary is that<lb/>
even Segway's most evangelis-<lb/>
tic customers have a hard time<lb/>
articulating the mystique.<lb/>
"It's something you get once<lb/>
you actually experience it for<lb/>
yourself said Alex Ko, a 33-year-<lb/>
old mechanical engineer and<lb/>
founder of the year-old San Fran-<lb/>
cisco Bay Area Segway Enthu-<lb/>
siasts Group, which sponsors<lb/>
polo matches and glides around<lb/>
the Bay Area, even a riding tour<lb/>
of the penguins and tigers at the<lb/>
San Francisco Zoo in August.<lb/>
"Explaining it in words is so dif-<lb/>
ficult because it is so different<lb/>
than anything out there. People<lb/>
have kind of said, 'You think<lb/>
about what you want to do and<lb/>
it does it<lb/>
But until recently in most<lb/>
areas of the country, you couldn't<lb/>
even take the Segway for a spin<lb/>
before buying one. The only<lb/>
way to hook up with a Segway<lb/>
was through the company, spe-<lb/>
cialty retailer Brookstone or on<lb/>
Amazon.com. Some used Segways<lb/>
also are up for sale on eBay.<lb/>
Segway also faces the chal-<lb/>
lenge of proving that it is more<lb/>
than just an expensive toy. In<lb/>
post-bubble America, there are<lb/>
just far fewer idle rich willing<lb/>
to shell out a small fortune<lb/>
($2,995.95 for the smaller p<lb/>
series to $4,495.00 for the larger<lb/>
i series) for an alternative mode<lb/>
of transportation with limited<lb/>
use. Another possible hitch: The<lb/>
Segway faces opposition from<lb/>
some citizen groups.<lb/>
To keep its business afloat and<lb/>
get sales moving, Segway LLC has<lb/>
ramped up its strategy of hawk-<lb/>
ing the superscooters through<lb/>
authorized dealerships across<lb/>
the country to target commuters,<lb/>
corporations, retailers and ware-<lb/>
houses and government agencies.<lb/>
For example, the company is bill-<lb/>
ing the Segway as "the most effi-<lb/>
cient transportation device ever<lb/>
to set foot on a factory floor" and<lb/>
as a "police patrol workhorse"<lb/>
that covers eight to 10 miles in<lb/>
less than half the time it takes<lb/>
to patrol on foot, using about<lb/>
10 cents worth of electricity and<lb/>
burning no gas and giving off<lb/>
no harmful emissions. Another<lb/>
potential market: Hundreds of<lb/>
people with restricted mobility<lb/>
are using Segways even though<lb/>
the scooters are not approved<lb/>
or marketed to the disabled as a<lb/>
medical device.<lb/>
"The independent dealer<lb/>
network allows for a place where<lb/>
customers come, see, experience,<lb/>
try, buy and get service for their<lb/>
machines by passionate, experi-<lb/>
enced professionals in their home<lb/>
towns CEO Ron Bills, who was<lb/>
brought in to jump-start sales, told<lb/>
Segway Chat, the online bulletin<lb/>
board for Segway riders, in June.<lb/>
Kregg Williams, who owns<lb/>
California Speed-Sports, which<lb/>
now sells Segways alongside<lb/>
exotic European motorcycles and<lb/>
Italian scooters, says the strategy<lb/>
is working. Williams has found<lb/>
happy homes for 18 Segways in<lb/>
the past two and a half months,<lb/>
three alone to Wozniak, who<lb/>
piled them all into his Prius.<lb/>
Williams is banking $180,000<lb/>
that even the busted Bay Area<lb/>
still houses plenty of disposable<lb/>
income and a pioneering spirit.<lb/>
Most Segway fans welcome<lb/>
the strategy of building a national<lb/>
network of dealerships that sport<lb/>
the Segway name.<lb/>
But some longt ime<lb/>
Segway riders wonder whether<lb/>
Detroit-driven dealers of expen-<lb/>
sive engines and upholstery<lb/>
are the best routes to bigger<lb/>
sales. On Segway Chat one dis-<lb/>
gruntled fan objected to a large<lb/>
Lexus dealer in Florida snag-<lb/>
ging the first dealership, arguing<lb/>
instead for Segway to model itself<lb/>
on Apple Computer, branding<lb/>
itself as a maverick "think differ-<lb/>
ent" product.<lb/>
"At a Lexus dealership, it<lb/>
will be perceived as being more<lb/>
expensive and a luxury item the<lb/>
fan complained.<lb/>
"It destroys the Segway's dif-<lb/>
ferentness. That differentness<lb/>
cannot be maintained by selling<lb/>
it alongside cars, motorcycles or<lb/>
bicycles. If the Segway is a pedes-<lb/>
trian product, it shouldn't be sold<lb/>
with cars. It gives the impression<lb/>
that the Segway has sold out' to<lb/>
the automobile industry.<lb/>
"Of course Detroit would<lb/>
want the Segway portrayed as a<lb/>
toy or a novelty. If the Segway is<lb/>
in the pocket of the auto indus-<lb/>
try, how can any transportation<lb/>
revolution even begin?"<lb/>
But another Segway fan dis-<lb/>
agreed: "I think it is important<lb/>
that Segway develop additional<lb/>
outlets for sales, if for no other<lb/>
reason than for the viability of<lb/>
the company<lb/>
"I think that's the right<lb/>
strategy said Wozniak. "The<lb/>
company just didn't have that<lb/>
strategy soon enough<lb/>
KING'S ROW<lb/>
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� 1 &amp; 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath<lb/>
i Central Heat &amp; Air<lb/>
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i No Pets<lb/>
� Fully Carpeted<lb/>
� Mini Blinds<lb/>
� All Appliances Furnished<lb/>
� Laundry Facility St Pool<lb/>
� Basketball Court<lb/>
� ECU Bus Service<lb/>
NOW LEASING<lb/>
TIBS from page A5<lb/>
hence the name.)<lb/>
Bow ties should not be worn<lb/>
with regular suits, he believes.<lb/>
That look is "just a little too<lb/>
Orville Redenbacher And when<lb/>
worn with a tuxedo, they should<lb/>
be hand-tied.<lb/>
Which brings us back to dip-<lb/>
on ties. Style gurus do not like<lb/>
them. But some guys appreciate<lb/>
the convenience of clip-ons, espe-<lb/>
cially if medical conditions such as<lb/>
arthritis or dyslexia make knotting<lb/>
a tie painful or difficult. (JCPen-<lb/>
ney, Sears and Big &amp; Tall Men's<lb/>
Wear are among the few stores that<lb/>
carry clip-on ties for adults.)<lb/>
Men who work close to<lb/>
machinery with moving parts<lb/>
often wear clip-ons as a safety<lb/>
precaution. If the tie gets caught<lb/>
in the machinery, it pops off. The<lb/>
tie may get chewed up, but hot<lb/>
the wearer.<lb/>
Police officers also wear clip-<lb/>
ons, usually made from the same<lb/>
material and the same color as<lb/>
their shirts.<lb/>
"If someone were to grab<lb/>
them by the tie, he couldn't<lb/>
swing them around or use it to<lb/>
choke them. The tie would simply<lb/>
come off says Sgt. Brian Gilliam,<lb/>
public information officer for the<lb/>
Orlando Police Department.<lb/>
If a police officer wears a reg-<lb/>
ular wrap-and-knot tie with his<lb/>
uniform, it means just one thing,<lb/>
says Gilliam: "He's top brass, and<lb/>
he's in a formal setting<lb/>
taking care of business<lb/>
in healthcare<lb/>
A career in HEALTH INFORMATION MANAGEMENT places you right<lb/>
where healthcare meets the cutting edge of technology.<lb/>
Health information managers play a big role in making our<lb/>
healthcare system work. These professionals are the experts in<lb/>
managing patient health information and medical records.<lb/>
HIM fs one of the fastest growing occupations in one of the fastest<lb/>
growing industries. If you have an interest In the healthcare field<lb/>
and technology, this may be the career for youl<lb/>
ra<lb/>
l A T<lb/>
 ARCMINA<lb/>
School of Allied Health Sciences<lb/>
Dept. of Health Services and<lb/>
Information Management<lb/>
Belk Building, Room 308<lb/>
252.328.2202<lb/>
www.ecu.eduhima<lb/>
November 7-13 is National Health Information<lb/>
and Technology Week<lb/>
THIS WEEK AT STUDENT UNION<lb/>
�� Garden State<lb/>
Wed. 7PM<lb/>
Thurs. 9:30PM<lb/>
Fri. 7PM &amp; Midnight<lb/>
Sat. 9:30PM<lb/>
Sun. 7PM<lb/>
The Terminal -�<lb/>
Wed. 9:30PM<lb/>
Thurs. 7PM<lb/>
Fri. 9:30PM<lb/>
Sat. 7PM &amp; Midnight<lb/>
Sun. 3PM<lb/>
Tom Hanks<lb/>
Cotherine Zela-Jones<lb/>
lermmal<lb/>
GARDEN STATE<lb/>
life Is waiting<lb/>
Nov. 10 - BINGO @ 9:30PM in Mendenhall Dining Hall<lb/>
Nov. 11 - Open Mic @ 7-9PM in Pirate Underground<lb/>
Nov. 12 - Jazz at Night @ 8PM in the MSC Great Rooms<lb/>
Nov. 12 - Swash Improv Group @ 8PM in Pirate Underground<lb/>
INTERESTED IN GRAPHIC DESIGN?<lb/>
WOULD YOU LIKE A JOB WHERE YOU GET PAID TO CREATE? DO YOU WANT MY JOB?!<lb/>
THEN TURN OFF YOUR iPOD AND RUN OVER TO THE STUDENT UNION<lb/>
OFFICE IN MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER AND APPLY TODAY!<lb/>
www.ecu.edustudent union<lb/>
For more info ca: 328 6004 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059554_0007"/><lb/>
11-09-04<lb/>
Furnished<lb/>
ty &amp; Pool<lb/>
irt<lb/>
:e<lb/>
ness<lb/>
care<lb/>
es you right<lb/>
i.<lb/>
our<lb/>
xperts in<lb/>
ds.<lb/>
the fastest<lb/>
icare field<lb/>
wees<lb/>
d<lb/>
mnation<lb/>
N<lb/>
I?<lb/>
iB?!<lb/>
ON<lb/>
Page A7 sports@theeastcarollnian.com 252.328.6366 TONY Z0PP0 Sports Editor BRANDON HUGHES Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
TUESDAY November 9, 2004<lb/>
fi5 Road woes continue for Pirates<lb/>
Rank SchoolRecord'rev<lb/>
1 use 9-01<lb/>
2 Oklahoma9-0 2<lb/>
3 Auburn9-0 3<lb/>
4 Wisconsin9-0 5<lb/>
5 California9-0 4<lb/>
6 Texas8-1 6<lb/>
7 Utah 9-07<lb/>
8 Georgia8-1 8<lb/>
9 Michigan8-110 12<lb/>
10 Virginia7-1<lb/>
11 FSU7-213<lb/>
12 Louisville6-114<lb/>
13 West Virginia 8-115<lb/>
14 Boise State8-016<lb/>
15 Tennessee7-29<lb/>
16 Virginia Tech7-218<lb/>
17LSU6-217<lb/>
18 Miami6-2 11<lb/>
19 Iowa7-2 20<lb/>
20 Arizona St.7-2 23<lb/>
21 BC 6-224<lb/>
22 Texas A&amp;M6-3 22<lb/>
23 UTEP.6-2 25<lb/>
24 Notre Dame6-3 NR<lb/>
25 OK St.6-319<lb/>
Others Receiving Votes: Texas<lb/>
Tech 84, N. Illinois 77, Alabama<lb/>
52, Ohio St. 28, South Carolina<lb/>
24, Southern Miss. 12, Bowling<lb/>
Green 4, Georgia Tech 3, Oregon<lb/>
3, Toledo 3, Clemson 1, Navy 1.<lb/>
Rank School<lb/>
1 use<lb/>
2 Oklahoma<lb/>
3 Auburn<lb/>
4 Wisconsin<lb/>
5 Georgia<lb/>
6 California<lb/>
7 Texas<lb/>
8 Utah<lb/>
9 Michigan<lb/>
10 West Virginia<lb/>
11 Virginia<lb/>
12 FSU<lb/>
13 Boise State<lb/>
14 Louisville<lb/>
15LSU<lb/>
16 Virginia Tech<lb/>
17 Miami (FL)<lb/>
18 Tennessee<lb/>
19 Iowa<lb/>
20 Arizona St<lb/>
21 BC .<lb/>
22NIU<lb/>
23 Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
24 OK State<lb/>
25 Texas Tech<lb/>
Record Prev.<lb/>
9-0<lb/>
9-0<lb/>
9-0<lb/>
9-0<lb/>
8-1<lb/>
7-1<lb/>
8-1<lb/>
9-0<lb/>
8-1<lb/>
8-1<lb/>
7-1<lb/>
7-2<lb/>
8-0<lb/>
6-1<lb/>
6-2<lb/>
7-2<lb/>
6-2<lb/>
7-2<lb/>
7-2<lb/>
7-2<lb/>
6-2<lb/>
7-2<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
6-3<lb/>
I 1<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
6<lb/>
7<lb/>
8<lb/>
9<lb/>
12<lb/>
13<lb/>
13<lb/>
15<lb/>
16<lb/>
17<lb/>
18<lb/>
10<lb/>
11<lb/>
20<lb/>
23<lb/>
23<lb/>
14<lb/>
22<lb/>
19<lb/>
NR<lb/>
Others Receiving Votes: Bowling<lb/>
Green 70; Texas-El Paso 68; Notre<lb/>
Dame 66; Ohio State 46; Alabama<lb/>
26; Clemson 17; Georgia Tech<lb/>
9; South Carolina 7; Southern<lb/>
Mississippi 6; Fresno State 5;<lb/>
Navy 5; Oregon 2; Iowa State 1;<lb/>
Miami (Ohio) 1; Purdue 1.<lb/>
Around the<lb/>
C-USA<lb/>
Louisville 56, Memphis 49<lb/>
Air Force 31, Army 22<lb/>
Tulane42, Navy 10<lb/>
Cincinnati 52, Southern Miss 24<lb/>
This Day in<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
1946 - Notre Dame fights to a 0-0<lb/>
tie with Army to snap the Cadets'<lb/>
26-game winning streak.<lb/>
1953 - The U.S. Supreme Court<lb/>
rules 7-2 that baseball is not subject<lb/>
to antitrust laws, maintaining the<lb/>
game Is a sport, not a business.<lb/>
1957 - Claude Provost of the<lb/>
Montreal Canadians sets an NHL<lb/>
record by scoring four seconds<lb/>
into the second period of a 4-2<lb/>
victory over the Boston Bruins.<lb/>
1972 - John Bucyk of the Boston<lb/>
Bruins scores his 1,000th point<lb/>
with a goal in an 8-3 win over the<lb/>
Detroit Red Wings.<lb/>
1984 - Larry Holmes scores<lb/>
12th-round technical knockout<lb/>
of Bonecrusher Smith to retain<lb/>
the IBF heavyweight title in Las<lb/>
Vegas. Smith is cut around the<lb/>
eyes and nose, and the bout is<lb/>
hatted when he Is unable tp see<lb/>
out of his left eye.<lb/>
1991 -Marshall FaulkofSan Diego<lb/>
State returns after missing three<lb/>
games because of iniuryand breaks<lb/>
the NCAA record for touchdowns<lb/>
by a freshman with his 20th in a<lb/>
42-32 win over Colorado State.<lb/>
Harold Taylor (left) finished with five catches for 100 yards while Kevin Kolb (right) collected 298 yards of total offense for four scores (two rush, two pass)<lb/>
ECU'S weak second-<lb/>
half seals fate, 34-24<lb/>
ERIC GILMORE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Same story, different place.<lb/>
It seems to be the mantra for the<lb/>
youthful Pirates' season. Each<lb/>
week on the road, it's the same<lb/>
fateful ending, with only the<lb/>
setting changing.<lb/>
Another chapter was logged<lb/>
in the Pirates' tale on Saturday<lb/>
in Houston. A tough week for the<lb/>
Pirates ended with yet another<lb/>
road loss, 34-24 at Robertson<lb/>
Stadium. ECU appeared to be in<lb/>
the driver's seat at halftime, but<lb/>
their hopes of a win were dashed<lb/>
as the game continued.<lb/>
A back-and-forth game saw<lb/>
Houston's 21 unanswered second-<lb/>
half points take momentum of<lb/>
the game. Sophomore quarter-<lb/>
back Kevin Kolb's four touch-<lb/>
downs including two sneaks put<lb/>
away the restless Pirates.<lb/>
Kolb's masterful unveiling of<lb/>
the Houston (3-6, 3-3) game plan<lb/>
stifled the Pirate defense. The<lb/>
Stephenville, Tex. native amassed<lb/>
251 yards on 13 completions with<lb/>
two touchdowns.<lb/>
The Pirate (2-6, 2-4) offense<lb/>
helped seal their own bowl-game<lb/>
fate in accounting for four turn-<lb/>
overs. Sophomore quarterback<lb/>
James Pinkney threw all four<lb/>
interceptions, all of which proved<lb/>
to be costly. The reining Confer-<lb/>
ence USA Offensive Player of<lb/>
the Week was questionable after<lb/>
being involved in a car accident<lb/>
Wednesday, but managed to play<lb/>
the entire game. Pinkney threw<lb/>
for 267 yards, but the intercep-<lb/>
tions hurt his team.<lb/>
"It is tough, throwing four<lb/>
picks, no matter whose fault It<lb/>
is said Pinkney.<lb/>
"You're not going to win<lb/>
throwing four picks. The first<lb/>
half, we executed well. The<lb/>
second half, things didn't go<lb/>
our way and we just didn't play<lb/>
ECU ball<lb/>
Coach Thompson echoed the<lb/>
thought of his offensive leader.<lb/>
"We got out-played in the<lb/>
second half, that is pretty obvi-<lb/>
ous said ECU Head Coach John<lb/>
Thompson.<lb/>
"We made critical mistakes<lb/>
that they Cougars) capitalized<lb/>
on<lb/>
The 14 points Houston scored<lb/>
following ECU turnovers didn't<lb/>
help the Pirate cause. The four<lb/>
interceptions caused the ECU<lb/>
defense to be on the field more<lb/>
than usual.<lb/>
"It's the defense's fault that<lb/>
we are out there way too long<lb/>
Thompson said.<lb/>
"They (Cougars) made some<lb/>
third downs on us<lb/>
Even so, it seemed like the<lb/>
Pirates were a different team in<lb/>
the second-half.<lb/>
"There was a lot of energy on<lb/>
the sideline Thompson said about<lb/>
his team going into halftime.<lb/>
"In this dressing room during<lb/>
half-time, there was a lot of<lb/>
energy. But we just came out here<lb/>
in the second half and we really<lb/>
lost it down at the goal line<lb/>
Two questionable calls erased<lb/>
any momentum that ECU could<lb/>
have mustered. A personal-foul<lb/>
facemask penalty took away an<lb/>
ECU fumble recovery on the<lb/>
Houston two-yard line.<lb/>
Trailing 28-17, Donald<lb/>
Whitehead grabbed the facemask<lb/>
of Anthony Evans on third down<lb/>
and was subsequently called<lb/>
for the 15-yard infraction. The<lb/>
penalty catapulted Houston to a<lb/>
clinching 11-play, 98 yard scor-<lb/>
ing drive.<lb/>
The first half had a Houston<lb/>
Homecoming crowd in a daze.<lb/>
The Pirate offense struck first<lb/>
with unusual ease when Art<lb/>
Brown caught a 15-yard pass. It<lb/>
was the second touchdown for<lb/>
Brown since he scored four in<lb/>
Houston almost two years ago.<lb/>
Kolb established two drives<lb/>
to take the lead at home. Touch-<lb/>
downs via a 35-yard pass to backup<lb/>
quarterback Blade Bessler and a<lb/>
seven-yard scamper by Anthony<lb/>
Evans were the end results of<lb/>
Houston's next possessions.<lb/>
Sandwiched in between the<lb/>
Houston possessions was a clip<lb/>
called against ECU that negated a<lb/>
78-yard sprint by freshman Chris<lb/>
Johnson. The clip was nowhere<lb/>
near the play and no flag was<lb/>
visible on the field.<lb/>
Nevertheless, the Pirates<lb/>
responded with 10 points of<lb/>
their own. Following consecu-<lb/>
tive interceptions by each team,<lb/>
ECU scored on a four-yard pass<lb/>
to fullback Jermarcus Veal. The<lb/>
touchdown pass was the eight<lb/>
consecutive for Pinkney, the<lb/>
longest span since David Gar-<lb/>
rard threw a touchdown strike in<lb/>
eighth straight games during the<lb/>
2001 season.<lb/>
The Pirates also used a ten-<lb/>
play drive to score as time expired<lb/>
in the first half. A season-long<lb/>
45-yard field goal by Cameron<lb/>
Broadwell brought the Pirates to<lb/>
their last lead.<lb/>
Injuries added up in the first<lb/>
half like change in your couch. A<lb/>
steady flow of bodies were carted<lb/>
off the field. Sophomore receiver<lb/>
see FOOTBALL page A8<lb/>
Lady Pirates fall 2-1 to UL in<lb/>
first round of C-USA tourney<lb/>
ECU takes early exit <lb/>
after crushing 2-1 loss Women's Soccer Season Statistics<lb/>
ROBERT LEONARD<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
All good things must come<lb/>
to an end. That's how the saying<lb/>
goes at least, and it proved to be<lb/>
true for the ECU Women's Soccer<lb/>
team as they suffered a 2-1 loss<lb/>
to Louisville in the Conference<lb/>
USA tournament, bringing sev-<lb/>
eral upsides in the Lady Pirates'<lb/>
season to a screeching halt.<lb/>
Their five-game win streak, their<lb/>
dreams of a conference title and<lb/>
their season all ended at once.<lb/>
"I'm still really proud of the<lb/>
way the team hung in there said<lb/>
Head Coach Rob Donnenwirth<lb/>
about his team's play against UL.<lb/>
"I honestly feel we played<lb/>
the best soccer of the year even<lb/>
though we lost, but that's what<lb/>
soccer is about. We played great<lb/>
in the second half; just happened<lb/>
to give up a counter attack goal<lb/>
The Lady Pirates and the<lb/>
Cardinals battled for a right to<lb/>
play top seeded St. Louis and to<lb/>
advance in the tournament. Ear-<lb/>
lier in the season, ECU defeated<lb/>
Louisville. That win gave the<lb/>
Pirates their second in a row,<lb/>
which eventually led to a school<lb/>
record tying five in a row.<lb/>
Almost like every game this<lb/>
season, the Lady Pirates headed<lb/>
to halftime down a goal. The<lb/>
Cardinals scored the first half's<lb/>
only goal in the 32nd minute<lb/>
of play.<lb/>
Even during the win streak,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates seemed to be<lb/>
down at halftime. Like the ladies<lb/>
have done all season, they did not<lb/>
give up at this point and came<lb/>
out ready to tie the game.<lb/>
Junior Carmen Calpo would<lb/>
get the offense going in the<lb/>
second half. She dribbled up and<lb/>
found Senior Sarah Stoltz open.<lb/>
Stoltz found the goal and tied the<lb/>
game at 1-1.<lb/>
The Cardinals bounced back<lb/>
from the goal and scored what<lb/>
proved to be the game winner<lb/>
with 13 minutes left in the game.<lb/>
The Pirates would not be able to<lb/>
score, ending the game, the win<lb/>
streak and their season.<lb/>
The top seed and host St.<lb/>
Louis Billikens, who only lost<lb/>
one game in regular season con-<lb/>
ference play, lost the champion-<lb/>
ship game to the UAB Blazers.<lb/>
Overall: 8-9-2<lb/>
Conference USA: 6-3-1<lb/>
Team Statistics<lb/>
Goals-Shot attempts<lb/>
Goals scored average<lb/>
Shot pet<lb/>
Shots on goal-Attempts<lb/>
SOG pet<lb/>
ShotsGame<lb/>
Assists<lb/>
CORNER KICKS<lb/>
PENALTY KICKS<lb/>
Yellow cards<lb/>
Red cards<lb/>
Individual Team Leaders<lb/>
No. Name<lb/>
28 Meghan McCallion<lb/>
25 Krystel Pabey<lb/>
9 Sarah Stoltz<lb/>
10 Carmen Calpo<lb/>
16 Rachel Hills<lb/>
Home: 6-1-2<lb/>
Away: 2-7-0<lb/>
ECU OPP<lb/>
26-195<lb/>
1.32<lb/>
.133<lb/>
98-195<lb/>
.503<lb/>
10.3<lb/>
24<lb/>
73<lb/>
1-1<lb/>
14<lb/>
0<lb/>
39-254<lb/>
1.97<lb/>
154<lb/>
138-254<lb/>
.543<lb/>
13.4<lb/>
37<lb/>
107<lb/>
0-0<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
GP<lb/>
19<lb/>
18<lb/>
19<lb/>
19<lb/>
18<lb/>
G<lb/>
10<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
Points<lb/>
25<lb/>
11<lb/>
10<lb/>
10<lb/>
5<lb/>
ECU suffered four shutout losses for the season, all of them<lb/>
coming in the last six games, including one against UM.<lb/>
ECU finishes season<lb/>
in six-game slump<lb/>
Men's soccer ends<lb/>
year with 4-0 loss<lb/>
The championship for UAB, who<lb/>
finished second in the regular<lb/>
season, was their first title in<lb/>
women's soccer.<lb/>
Last season, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
started strong and finished<lb/>
poorly. The season ended with an<lb/>
overtime loss to Charlotte, a win<lb/>
ECU needed to make the confer-<lb/>
ence tournament. Donnenwirth<lb/>
was much happier with the way<lb/>
the season went this year.<lb/>
"Talent wise we had a great<lb/>
team last year he explained.<lb/>
"I just felt like for a lack of a<lb/>
better word we choked last year,<lb/>
so this was a little reversal that<lb/>
last year<lb/>
Even though the Lady Pirates<lb/>
were not a part of more action<lb/>
during the tournament, they still<lb/>
had a very successful season. The<lb/>
main theme of this season would<lb/>
be who would play defense. With<lb/>
only one senior in the backfield<lb/>
and four freshmen, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates struggled at first. At one<lb/>
point, they were 3-8-2. A 5-1 finish<lb/>
to their season put ECU just below<lb/>
.500 for the year, not bad consid-<lb/>
ering what it could have been.<lb/>
"When you're struggling at<lb/>
the end of September, as a coach-<lb/>
ing staff, we were never going to<lb/>
give up Donnenwirth stated.<lb/>
"We just wonder how the<lb/>
team Is going to keep going; for-<lb/>
tunately we had four very good<lb/>
seniors with strong character<lb/>
that would not let it happen.<lb/>
We started wining and getting<lb/>
confidence, I always felt like we<lb/>
had a team that could win - the<lb/>
way they came back and finished<lb/>
fourth shows the leadership of<lb/>
the seniors. Other players played<lb/>
well, but the seniors mentally<lb/>
never gave up, they stepped it<lb/>
up<lb/>
Those four seniors (Stoltz,<lb/>
Meghan Schwanke, Krystal Pabey<lb/>
and Rachelle Cabeceiras) were<lb/>
the anchors of this year's squad<lb/>
and will be sorely missed.<lb/>
Cabeceiras was honored with<lb/>
third team all-conference along<lb/>
with Junior Meghan McCallion.<lb/>
Cabeceiras was a leader on the<lb/>
field this season, not by scoring<lb/>
many points, but by helping con-<lb/>
trol the tempo of the game.<lb/>
Heading into next season,<lb/>
the Lady Pirates will need to<lb/>
keep their heads up. They will<lb/>
have loads of talent returning<lb/>
next season even without their<lb/>
four seniors. Both goalkeepers<lb/>
will still be in Pirate uniforms<lb/>
along with McCallion leading<lb/>
the attack and almost every<lb/>
defender.<lb/>
McCallion will lead the Lady<lb/>
see SOCCER page A8<lb/>
KYLE ROGERSON<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The Pirates ended their 2004<lb/>
season on a down note as they<lb/>
dropped their sixth consecu-<lb/>
tive game to No. 13 Memphis,<lb/>
4-0. The losing streak success-<lb/>
fully knocked ECU out of any<lb/>
postseason play and placed the<lb/>
Pirates In ninth place, ahead of<lb/>
DePaul, a team that won only<lb/>
three games the entire season.<lb/>
Memphis had lost just one<lb/>
Conference USA match the entire<lb/>
season and they brought a 13-3-1<lb/>
overall record with them to the<lb/>
see PIRATES page A8<lb/>
Men's Soccer Season Stat,<lb/>
Overall: 6-12-0 Conference USA: 2-7-0 Team Statistics ECU Goals-Shot attempts 30-202 Goals scored average 1.64 ShotsGame 11.2 Assists 22 Comer Kicks 70Home: 4-6-0 Away: 2-6-0 OPP 37-214 2.03 11.9 29 82<lb/>
Penalty Kicks 1-1 Yellow cards 26 Red cards 14-4t j-<lb/>
iJBmb3oints 22 13 9 9<lb/>
Name GP 4 Terron Amos 14 18 J.W. Gallagher 17 11 Michael Logan 17 7 Matt Kowaleski 18G A I 10 2 4 5 3 3 3 3<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059554_0008"/><lb/>
PAGEA8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN � SPORTS<lb/>
11-09-04<lb/>
Swimmingdiving split at Duke "rates<lb/>
from page A7<lb/>
A touch pad malfunction may have cost the ladies a win.<lb/>
Women fall short of<lb/>
claiming victory by .10<lb/>
TRENT WYNNE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The ECU men's and women's<lb/>
SwimmingDiving teams headed<lb/>
into Durham this past Saturday<lb/>
boasting identical, undefeated<lb/>
records and looked to add another<lb/>
'W" beside the name Duke on the<lb/>
schedule. The last race of the day,<lb/>
400-yard freestyle relay, proved<lb/>
to be the Ohio of the swim<lb/>
meet, as both the Pirates and<lb/>
Blue Devils needed to carry it in<lb/>
order to declare victory in this<lb/>
extremely close competition.<lb/>
With just one point separat-<lb/>
ing the Pirate and Blue Devil<lb/>
men heading into the day's<lb/>
final showdown, ECU'S freestyle<lb/>
relay squad of Josh Curnutte,<lb/>
Greg Neville, Kelly Hendrick<lb/>
and Gavin Stark turned In a<lb/>
blazing time of 3:08.63,<lb/>
good enough to seal a Pirate vic-<lb/>
tory, 124-118.<lb/>
Stark also won the 200 free-<lb/>
style (1:43.82) and 100 free-<lb/>
style (46.81) while senior Casey<lb/>
Cronin took home the 200 IM<lb/>
(1:54.44) and 200 breaststroke<lb/>
(2:06.83). Freshman diver Ryan<lb/>
Hunt claimed the one-meter<lb/>
event, posting a winning score<lb/>
of 269.55.<lb/>
The ECU women were not as<lb/>
fortunate in the relay, touching<lb/>
the wall just one-tenth of a second<lb/>
after a Lady Blue Devil and losing<lb/>
by the final score of 123-120.<lb/>
However, a wall pad malfunc-<lb/>
tion and judging error may have<lb/>
cost the Lady Pirates the victory.<lb/>
ECU'S Adrienne Williams<lb/>
touched one half-length<lb/>
ahead of Duke's Julia Lewis<lb/>
but the time did not register<lb/>
immediately after she hit the<lb/>
wall. The judge at the far side<lb/>
of the starting blocks marked<lb/>
down the time that showed<lb/>
up on the board, giving Lewis<lb/>
the victory by .01 seconds.<lb/>
Senior Diane Parker proved<lb/>
again to be the rock of this<lb/>
team, picking up wins in the 200<lb/>
breaststroke (2:18.84) and 200<lb/>
IM (2:05.83). Freshman Christie<lb/>
Icenhower, like her partner on the<lb/>
men's side, won the one-meter<lb/>
event with a score of 241.95.<lb/>
"We swam well today, in a<lb/>
very hostile environment said<lb/>
ECU Head Swimming Coach Rick<lb/>
Kobe in an interview with SID.<lb/>
The Pirates have swam well<lb/>
 all season and it's starting to be<lb/>
� recognized nationwide.<lb/>
� CollegeSwimming.com<lb/>
S recently posted the top-100 col-<lb/>
or legiate swim times in each event<lb/>
for the 2004-2005 season thus<lb/>
far. The Pirates had an astound-<lb/>
ing 26 times make the list, seven<lb/>
coming from the women's side<lb/>
and 19 from the men. With this,<lb/>
ECU enjoys the most top-100<lb/>
times to ever make the list this<lb/>
early in the season.<lb/>
Cronin's time of 1:53.48<lb/>
in the 200 IM against George<lb/>
Mason ranked 27th in the land,<lb/>
while freshman Josh Barthlow's<lb/>
100-backstroke time of 50.45,<lb/>
an ECU varsity record, placed<lb/>
25th. Cronin's top times in the<lb/>
100 and 200 yard breaststroke<lb/>
as well as the 200-freestyle also<lb/>
made the list.<lb/>
Four of the men's relay times<lb/>
found the top-30 as well.<lb/>
On the women's side,<lb/>
Diane Parker has three times<lb/>
listed in the 100 breast-<lb/>
stroke (37th), 100 fly (48th)<lb/>
and 200 breaststroke (63rd).<lb/>
ECU travels to George Wash-<lb/>
ington on Saturday, Nov. 13 to<lb/>
take on the Colonials at 1 p.m.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
Soccer<lb/>
from page A7<lb/>
Pirates next season as a senior<lb/>
and once again led in this season.<lb/>
She also received all-conference<lb/>
first team honors for her play.<lb/>
Coach Donnenwirth has<lb/>
this program headed in the right<lb/>
direction, and has several plans<lb/>
for the off-season in order to<lb/>
build a strong team for next year.<lb/>
"The first thing we have to<lb/>
do as a coaching staff is see who<lb/>
are leaders are gong to be, all our<lb/>
seniors were leaders this year<lb/>
said Donnenwirth.<lb/>
"Our captains (Megan and<lb/>
Rachel) were captains for two<lb/>
years, so we need to see who will<lb/>
step into a leader role. We also<lb/>
need to recruit, I like the play-<lb/>
ers we have now, but in order<lb/>
to keep the program going we<lb/>
have to recruit. Every weekend<lb/>
from now until January we will<lb/>
be on the road looking for good<lb/>
players. The off-season will be<lb/>
critical as well; spring is where<lb/>
players develop<lb/>
The writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
pitch. The Tigers extended their<lb/>
streak of shutouts to four after<lb/>
� the game against ECU.<lb/>
Memphis scored the<lb/>
; opening goal within the first<lb/>
10 minutes of the match after<lb/>
earning a corner kick opportunity.<lb/>
: The Pirates have consistently<lb/>
allowed their opponents to create<lb/>
more offensive opportunities in<lb/>
the first half than they have been<lb/>
able to muster.<lb/>
However, it seems as<lb/>
though ECU plays better as the<lb/>
game progresses. They have<lb/>
taken more shots than their<lb/>
opponents in the second half of<lb/>
their matches this season and have<lb/>
accumulated several more goals<lb/>
in overtime periods than the<lb/>
opposition.<lb/>
However, Memphis never<lb/>
looked back once the second<lb/>
half began.<lb/>
Less than 20 minutes into the<lb/>
second frame, the Tigers added<lb/>
their second and third goals of the<lb/>
game. They had finally worn the<lb/>
i ECU defenders down after more<lb/>
than 50 minutes of scoreless play.<lb/>
Two of the four goals scored<lb/>
by Memphis were following a<lb/>
corner kick given up by ECU.<lb/>
Dayton O' Brien was server on<lb/>
both of the occasions and his two<lb/>
assists in that contest tied him<lb/>
for the most ever by a Memphis<lb/>
player at 12.<lb/>
The Pirates will not continue<lb/>
into the C-USA playoffs and end<lb/>
their season with an overall<lb/>
record of 6-12-0<lb/>
ECU Head Coach Michael<lb/>
Benn made a special point to<lb/>
thank his seniors for their hard<lb/>
work and leadership throughout<lb/>
the season. The time they have<lb/>
put into practice and other prep-<lb/>
aration will not go unnoticed.<lb/>
ECU will be graduating<lb/>
only a small percentage of their<lb/>
2004 roster and look forward<lb/>
to the upcoming schedule.<lb/>
The large amount of freshmen<lb/>
on the team now have a year<lb/>
of experience under their belt<lb/>
to guide them to success next<lb/>
year.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports�theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
ECU swept by UL, UC Football<lb/>
from page A7<lb/>
ECU volleyball falls<lb/>
twice in final road trip<lb/>
DAVID WASKIEWICZ<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
With just four games left<lb/>
on their schedule, the ECU Vol-<lb/>
leyball team headed into their<lb/>
toughest weekend of the season<lb/>
last Friday when they faced No.<lb/>
22 Louisville and Cincinnati.<lb/>
Both teams were coming off<lb/>
of wins and were top ranked<lb/>
contenders in the Conference<lb/>
USA standings. The Lady Pirates<lb/>
would have to play flawless vol-<lb/>
leyball and hope their momen-<lb/>
tum from their previous two<lb/>
wins would be enough to defea<lb/>
their opponents.<lb/>
Unfortunately for ECU, Lou-<lb/>
isville made quick work of the<lb/>
Lady Pirates. The Lady Cardinals<lb/>
swept ECU in three straight<lb/>
games, 30-18, 30-24, 30-14.<lb/>
Louisville had a combined team<lb/>
hitting average of .304 in the<lb/>
win. Freshman Kelley Wernert<lb/>
led ECU with 11 kills and had an<lb/>
attack percentage of .280. Junior<lb/>
libero Johanna Bertini had 14<lb/>
digs and became only the sixth<lb/>
Lady Pirate in school history to<lb/>
have above 1,000.<lb/>
ECU looked to bounce back<lb/>
from the loss the following<lb/>
Saturday when they traveled to<lb/>
Cincinnati, OH to face the Lady<lb/>
Bearcats. Despite junior Paige<lb/>
Howell's .500 hitting percentage<lb/>
and junior Erica Wilson's eight<lb/>
kills, the Lady Pirates were swept<lb/>
once again, this time 30-18, 30-<lb/>
17 and 30-22. The win gave Cin-<lb/>
cinnati a first round bye in the<lb/>
upcoming C-USA tournament.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are now<lb/>
confronted with a 12-16 record,<lb/>
4-7 in conference play. Next<lb/>
weekend ECU will wrap up<lb/>
their season at home with their<lb/>
final two opponents DePaul<lb/>
and Marquette.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Bobby Good suffered a possible<lb/>
season-ending knee injury and<lb/>
starting center Charley Dempsey<lb/>
hurt his leg.<lb/>
To begin with, the Pirates<lb/>
were without the services of four<lb/>
offensive linemen, which caused<lb/>
lesser experienced players to see<lb/>
their first significant action of the<lb/>
year. Only one lineman started<lb/>
in his same position last week.<lb/>
In the second-half, it was all<lb/>
Cougars. Anthony Evans, a third-<lb/>
team C-USA player last season,<lb/>
grounded out 153 yards on 35<lb/>
carries. The Houston ground<lb/>
game exploited the smaller<lb/>
Pirates and allowed for Houston<lb/>
to play ball-control. The Cougars<lb/>
held the ball nearly five minutes<lb/>
more than the Pirates.<lb/>
Junior linebacker Chris<lb/>
Moore did his part in the defen-<lb/>
sive cause registering 14 tackles<lb/>
including five for loss. Zach<lb/>
Baker picked off his team-leading<lb/>
fourth pass of the year.<lb/>
However, the multiple offen-<lb/>
sive sets Houston implemented<lb/>
confused the Pirates. ECU was<lb/>
called for several penalties<lb/>
involving too many players on<lb/>
the field. Art Briles's system has<lb/>
given ECU and John Thompson<lb/>
trouble the last two seasons.<lb/>
ECU tried to rally late when<lb/>
Will Bland caught his first pass<lb/>
of the season. The little-used<lb/>
sophomore receiver scored on a<lb/>
58-yard reception to cut the lead<lb/>
to 10. The Pirates had a flicker<lb/>
of hope when Mickey McCoy<lb/>
recovered the ensuing onsides<lb/>
kick. However, the Pirates failed<lb/>
to convert on fourth down and<lb/>
Houston ran out the clock.<lb/>
The Pirates lost their first<lb/>
game ever in Houston and fall<lb/>
even deeper in the conference<lb/>
standings. ECU will travel to<lb/>
Tampa to take on South Florida<lb/>
on Saturday at 7 p.m. The Pirates<lb/>
will be playing for pride after<lb/>
being eliminated from bowl com-<lb/>
petition. Next week, the setting<lb/>
will be different, and hopefully<lb/>
the ending will follow suit.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
Qulksllver. Blllabong. Volcom. Lost. Rip Curl. O Neil. Eiekiel. Hurley, Split. HIC. Fox<lb/>
Plus Much Much More<lb/>
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Celebrating<lb/>
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504 West 1 Oth Street<lb/>
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Health Professions Week<lb/>
November 7-13,2004<lb/>
ALLIED HEALTH PROFESSIONS WEEK is celebrated nationally to<lb/>
honor health care providers working in more than 80 allied<lb/>
health professions.<lb/>
Take this opportunity to congratulate all allied health<lb/>
professionals in your community who4are instrumental in<lb/>
maintaining your high standard of health care and responding<lb/>
to your health care needs.<lb/>
And take a minute to learn more about allied health<lb/>
professions by going to www.ecu.eduah.<lb/>
Oil<lb/>
School of Allied Health Sciences<lb/>
Carol Belk Building<lb/>
252.328.4400<lb/>
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NEED COMPUTER PARTS?<lb/>
HOW ABOUT CUSTOMIZED SYSTEMS?<lb/>
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<lb/>
The Lady Pirates have two<lb/>
games left for this season.<lb/>
Never, never, never give up.<lb/>
� commitment!<lb/>
Pass It On. THI l IQI a iiim Lin www foVb.tt.rlifa.org<lb/>
Enter to win<lb/>
AmertcanW8<lb/>
We want to know how food fits into your campus routine, how campus<lb/>
Dining Services locations are meeting your needs, and how we can come<lb/>
closer to providing your ideal campus dining experience.<lb/>
"��nil<lb/>
CAMPUS LIVING<lb/>
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A tptctal ultraviolet own aaka It poiiiDlt to ��� tb� unurlvinj ikln dMtgt dou by tM inn. AM Binci 1 in 5 AaarlcaM "111 ItTOlof �kin cuur in thtlr UfotiM, vhftt Mttir rwion to iltai mi �owcrooB, itar protiotlra clothiw ud um comoa tout.<lb/>
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The only Kaplan MCAT class for<lb/>
April 2005 at ECU begins soon!<lb/>
Saturday, November 20th<lb/>
Call or visit us online today to enroll!<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059554_0009"/><lb/>
11-09-04<lb/>
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East Carolina University<lb/>
FIND OUT ABOUT SUMMER STUDY ABROAD.<lb/>
Summer Study Abroad Information Session<lb/>
Monday, November 15, 2004<lb/>
Mendenhall Great Room 7:00 p.m9:00 p.m.<lb/>
Refreshments will be provided.<lb/>
� Meet the professors leading Summer Study Abroad trips.<lb/>
� Find out where you can go and what classes you. can take.<lb/>
LTB<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Tomorrow starts here.<lb/>
For more information, call the Summer Study Abroad office at 328-2409, or e-mail dunnca@mail.ecu.edu. <lb/>
<pb facs="00059554_0010"/><lb/>
&amp; COMICS<lb/>
Page A10<lb/>
TUESDAY November 9, 2004<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
Rent Special- Gladiolus &amp; Jasmine<lb/>
1 ot 2 bedrooms. Lease ends<lb/>
June 30, 2005. Close to ECU.<lb/>
Pet allowed with fee. For more<lb/>
information call Wainright<lb/>
Property Management 756-6209.<lb/>
Cotanche Street, Cypress<lb/>
Gardens and Park Village. 1 &amp;2<lb/>
bedroom apartments. Located<lb/>
near ECU. Watersewerbasic<lb/>
cable included with some units.<lb/>
Short term leases available. For<lb/>
more information call Wainright<lb/>
Property Management 756-6209.<lb/>
Sublease 1 BR in a 3 BR house,<lb/>
fenced backyard, wireless<lb/>
internet, 5 blocks from campus.<lb/>
$375mo. plus 13 utilities<lb/>
cable. Jessica (804)304-2815.<lb/>
1 fit 2 bedroom apartments,<lb/>
walking distance to campus, WD<lb/>
conn pets OK no weight limit,<lb/>
free water and sewer. Call today for<lb/>
security deposit special- 758-1921.<lb/>
Cannon Court &amp; Cedar Court- 2<lb/>
bedroom, 1 12 bath townhouse.<lb/>
Stove, refrigerator and dishwasher.<lb/>
Located on the ECU bus stop. Basic<lb/>
cable included with some units.<lb/>
Short term leases available. For<lb/>
more information call Wainright<lb/>
Property Management 756-6209.<lb/>
Beautiful House, 3BDR, 2 Bath<lb/>
one block from campus, females<lb/>
non-smoking; high speed<lb/>
wireless internet option; WD,<lb/>
all kitchen appliances, parking,<lb/>
no pets. Please call 347-1231.<lb/>
Wildwood Villas 2 BR, 2 12<lb/>
bath townhouse. Unfinished<lb/>
basement, includes washer and<lb/>
dryer. Available now! Short<lb/>
term lease available. $575 per<lb/>
month. Call Chip 355-0664.<lb/>
College Town Row- 2 bedroom,<lb/>
1 bath Duplex. Close to ECU. Pet<lb/>
allowed with fee. Stove, refrigerator<lb/>
and washerdryer connections.<lb/>
Short-term lease available. For<lb/>
more information call Wainright<lb/>
Property Management 756-6209.<lb/>
Pinebrook Apt. 758-4015- 1 &amp; 2<lb/>
BR apts, dishwasher, GD, central<lb/>
air St heat, pool, ECU bus line, high<lb/>
speed internet available, 9 or 12<lb/>
month leases. Pets allowed. Rent<lb/>
includes water, sewer, &amp; cable.<lb/>
3 bedroom 3 bath house across<lb/>
from baseball stadium available<lb/>
now or next semester. New<lb/>
houses with all appliances<lb/>
and washerdryer. $1050 per<lb/>
month. Call Chip 355-0664.<lb/>
EastgateWoodcliff-1 &amp; 2 bedroom<lb/>
apartments. Stove, refrigerator<lb/>
and watersewer included.<lb/>
Short term leases available. For<lb/>
more information call Wainright<lb/>
Property Management 756-6209.<lb/>
For rent University Area Wyndam<lb/>
Court 3 bedrooms 2 baths.<lb/>
Call Renee Carter 347-2602.<lb/>
For Rent- 2 Bedroom 1 bath<lb/>
brick duplex, central air,<lb/>
Stancill Drive. Walking distance<lb/>
to ECU. $540month. Pets<lb/>
OK wfee. Call 353-2717.<lb/>
Georgetowne Apartments. Pre-<lb/>
lease now for spring semester.<lb/>
Located downtown across<lb/>
from the ECU Student Rec.<lb/>
Center. Spacious 2 BR, 1 12<lb/>
bath townhouses. Remodeled<lb/>
kitchen and bathrooms.<lb/>
$675. Call 757-0079 and ask<lb/>
about our pre-lease specials.<lb/>
One, Two, three and four<lb/>
bedroom houses, duplexes,<lb/>
and apartments. All within four<lb/>
blocks of campus. Pet friendly!<lb/>
Reasonable rates, short leases<lb/>
available. Call 830-9502.<lb/>
Wesley Common North- 1 &amp;<lb/>
2 bedroom. Stove, refrigerator<lb/>
and watersewer included. Pet<lb/>
allowed with fee. Short-term<lb/>
lease available. Close to ECU. For<lb/>
more information call Wainright<lb/>
Property Management 756-6209.<lb/>
Beech Street Villas- 3 bedrooms<lb/>
and 2 bath apartment. Stove,<lb/>
refrigerator, dishwasher and<lb/>
washerdryer connections.<lb/>
Cat allowed with fee. Water<lb/>
sewer included. Short term<lb/>
leases available. For more<lb/>
information call Wainright<lb/>
Property Management 756-6209.<lb/>
Walk to campus, 3 bdrm,<lb/>
1.5 bath, 116B N. Meade St.<lb/>
Hardwood floors, ceiling fans,<lb/>
all kitchen appl. included,<lb/>
washerdryer, attic space and<lb/>
shed. Nice size frontback yard.<lb/>
$600.00month. Call 341-4608.<lb/>
Services<lb/>
Roommate Wanted<lb/>
Room for Rent in RiverPointe Apts.<lb/>
available mid-Dec. First month of<lb/>
rent free $415 a month all inclusive<lb/>
(utilities, cable, internet) No<lb/>
deposit. Contact Suzanne� 412-<lb/>
4559 or skm0614@mail.ecu.edu.<lb/>
Grad student seeking mature<lb/>
female roommate. Newapartment<lb/>
w beautiful view on Blue Banks<lb/>
House Ranch next to hospital.<lb/>
3BD2BA, large patio, WD,<lb/>
dishwasher. $350, 12 utilities.<lb/>
Available Nov. 1. 341-9538.<lb/>
Failed, failed, failed.<lb/>
And then<lb/>
PERSISTENCE<lb/>
Pass It On,<lb/>
m foundation till Htlll IIM<lb/>
www.forbetterlife.org<lb/>
Crossword<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Practice<lb/>
punching<lb/>
5 Network of<lb/>
"Nature"<lb/>
8 Easily led<lb/>
14 Jug handles<lb/>
15 Holbrook or<lb/>
Roach<lb/>
16 More boring<lb/>
17 Spanish caverns<lb/>
19 Spring bloomer<lb/>
20 Block of paper<lb/>
21 Three little<lb/>
words<lb/>
23 Implicit hints<lb/>
25 Retarding force<lb/>
29 Edited film<lb/>
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34 Florida island<lb/>
35 Chairman's<lb/>
philosophy<lb/>
36 Army rets.<lb/>
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city<lb/>
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fear<lb/>
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for<lb/>
56 Pebble Beach<lb/>
standard<lb/>
57 Chan or Coogan<lb/>
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Fictional<lb/>
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11 Unwell<lb/>
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13 Period<lb/>
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catcher<lb/>
22 NASA's ISS<lb/>
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41 Report to the<lb/>
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42 Actress Kerr<lb/>
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sl1VH3Vs11V1H<lb/>
i9V0C3ti310Vr<lb/>
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43 U.S. uncle<lb/>
44 Poker openers<lb/>
45 Acquire by<lb/>
trickery<lb/>
46 Starlet<lb/>
48 Fedora, e.g.<lb/>
52 Pricey<lb/>
54 Like a dipstick<lb/>
55 Polanski film<lb/>
57 Oliver Stone film<lb/>
58 Pub brew<lb/>
59 Is qualified to<lb/>
49 Menial worker 61 Gangster's rod<lb/>
1 Spring Break Vacations!<lb/>
Cancun, Jamaica, Acapulco,<lb/>
Bahamas, Florida, &amp; Costa Rica.<lb/>
110 Best Prices! Book Now<lb/>
&amp; Get Free Parties &amp; Meals!<lb/>
Croup Discounts. Campus<lb/>
RepsWantedl 1-800-234-7007.<lb/>
endlesssummertours.com<lb/>
Bahamas Spring Break Celebrity<lb/>
Cruise! 5 days from $279!<lb/>
Includes Meals, Port Taxes,<lb/>
Exclusive Beach Parties with 20<lb/>
of Your Favorite TV Celebrities<lb/>
as seen on the Real World, Road<lb/>
Rules, Bachelor! Great Beaches,<lb/>
Nightlife! Ethics Award Winning<lb/>
Company! Located in Chapel<lb/>
Hill www.SpringBreakTravel.<lb/>
com 1-800-678-6386.<lb/>
Spring Break! Cancun, Acapulco,<lb/>
Jamaica from $459tax! Florida<lb/>
$159! Our Cancun Prices are<lb/>
$100 Less Than Others! Book<lb/>
Now! Includes Breakfast, Dinners,<lb/>
30-50 Hours Free Drinks! Ethics<lb/>
Award Winning Company!<lb/>
Located in Chapel Hill View<lb/>
500 Hotel Reviews &amp; Videos<lb/>
At www.SpringBreakTravel.<lb/>
com 1-800-678-6386.<lb/>
Help Wanted<lb/>
Full-Time Sales Position available-<lb/>
great time for December<lb/>
graduates to apply! Available<lb/>
territories: Charlotte, Winston<lb/>
Salem, Greensboro, Raleigh,<lb/>
Durham, Fayetville, Elizabeth City,<lb/>
Wilmington, Greenville. Email<lb/>
resume and territory preference<lb/>
to gblackwelder@hotmail.com.<lb/>
Greenville Recreation k Parks<lb/>
Department is recruiting 14-<lb/>
18 part-time youth basketball<lb/>
coaches and officials for the<lb/>
upcoming basketball program.<lb/>
Applicants must posses a good<lb/>
knowledge of basketball skills and<lb/>
have the ability and patience to<lb/>
work with youth. Applicants must<lb/>
be able to coach young people<lb/>
5-18 in basketball fundamentals.<lb/>
Hours are from 4 pm to 9 pm,<lb/>
weekdays with some weekend<lb/>
coaching. Flexible with hours<lb/>
according to class schedules. This<lb/>
program will run from November<lb/>
29 through the beginning of<lb/>
March. Salary rates start at $6.25<lb/>
per hour. For more information,<lb/>
please contact the Athletic Office<lb/>
at 329-4550, Monday through<lb/>
Friday, 10 am until 7 pm, Apply<lb/>
at the City of Greenville, Human<lb/>
Resources Department, 201 Martin<lb/>
L. King Dr. Phone 329-4492.<lb/>
Cct Paid cash to answer<lb/>
text messages on your cell<lb/>
phonel Get 1 to 3 messages<lb/>
per week. It's FREE. It's Easy.<lb/>
Opt-In 9 www.Pollcast.net.<lb/>
Bartending! $250day<lb/>
potential. No experience<lb/>
necessary. Training provided.<lb/>
(800) 965-6520 ext. 202.<lb/>
We need Campus Reps! Put up<lb/>
flyers around campus &amp; get a<lb/>
free trip! Work for the only Spring<lb/>
Break Company ever recognized<lb/>
for Outstanding Ethics.<lb/>
Bahamas, Cancun, Acapulco,<lb/>
Florida. www.SpringBreakTravel.<lb/>
com 1-800-678-6386.<lb/>
Adult Entertainment help wanted.<lb/>
Will work around school schedule.<lb/>
Call Rex at (252)746-6762.<lb/>
Earn $10hour; ECU Hazard<lb/>
Center hiring undergrads to<lb/>
canvass area neighborhoods<lb/>
distributing information and<lb/>
soliciting contributions. Send<lb/>
e-mail to hazardcenter@mail.<lb/>
ecu.edu for information.<lb/>
TEC is now accepting immediate<lb/>
applications for student sales<lb/>
representatives. Call 328-2000<lb/>
or stop by the ad department<lb/>
in the old cafeteria building<lb/>
above the cashier's office.<lb/>
Casting: TV Series seeks people<lb/>
struggling with painful addictions-<lb/>
especially danger, video<lb/>
games, steroids, promiscuity,<lb/>
plastic surgery. Also seeking<lb/>
troubled teens and desperate<lb/>
housewives, www.habitstv.com<lb/>
Greek Personals<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma would<lb/>
like to thank its nationals for<lb/>
spending the weekend with us.<lb/>
We got a lot accomplished and<lb/>
we appreciate it. Happy Birthday<lb/>
to our November girls, cheers!<lb/>
Hopefully everyone got registered<lb/>
and the stress is over! Good luck<lb/>
with soccer this week ladies.<lb/>
Other<lb/>
All year round- SKYDIVE!<lb/>
Tandem skydive or learn to<lb/>
jump on your own. www.<lb/>
JumpRaeford.com 910-904-0000.<lb/>
Contact us today for details.<lb/>
Spring Break 2005 Challenge<lb/>
find a better price! Lowest prices,<lb/>
free meals, free drinks, hottest<lb/>
parties! November 6th deadline!<lb/>
Hiring reps- earn free trips and<lb/>
cash! www.sunsplashtours.<lb/>
com. 1800-426-7710.<lb/>
round mmmtmm<lb/>
I looking for PACKAGE HANDLERS to load vans<lb/>
and unload nailers for the AM shift hours 4 AM to<lb/>
SAM. $7.50 hour, tuition assistance available after<lb/>
�'I days. Future career opportunities in nianagcmcnl<lb/>
possible. Applications can be filled oul at 2410<lb/>
United Drive (near the aquatics center) Grrenvillc.<lb/>
EttTSE<lb/>
1 The most rJangerow j.tmin iis in the foiikl ; J don 1 live there i5<lb/>
1- O �<lb/>
ii SfuoW Tevr Operator<lb/>
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Sail Trips, Ian Cash,<lb/>
Go free! Now Hiring<lb/>
Call for group distouirts<lb/>
AjjcO nuvit<lb/>
I -800-648-4849 www.stslravel.com<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
� of poor maintenance response<lb/>
� of unretumed phone calls<lb/>
� of noisy neighbors<lb/>
� of crawly critters<lb/>
�of high utility bills<lb/>
� of ECU parking hassles<lb/>
' of ungrateful landlords<lb/>
� of unanswered questions<lb/>
� of high rents<lb/>
� of grumpy personnel<lb/>
� of unfulfilled promises<lb/>
� of units that were not cleaned<lb/>
' of walls that were never painted<lb/>
� of appliance! thai don't work<lb/>
Wyiidham Court &amp;<lb/>
Eastgate Village Apts.<lb/>
3200KMoscleyDr.<lb/>
561-RENT or 561-7679<lb/>
www.pinnacleproperty<lb/>
managenient.com<lb/>
www.mortco ajtt.com 92<lb/>
The Family Monster by Josh Shalek<lb/>
PAUL<lb/>
DON'T WORRV. THE OTHER<lb/>
6UV ONLY HAS II. AND<lb/>
THE FACT THAT VO0 SAID<lb/>
"600" JUST NOW BUMPS<lb/>
VOCJ UP TO<lb/>
SO THAT'S HOW<lb/>
WORKS. OHM THEN,<lb/>
REU6ION TOR EVERYONE<lb/>
bv mwfmnmwM<lb/>
HEV, LOOK NOW  HAVE AN<lb/>
APPROVAL RATIN6. AND LULL O'REILLV<lb/>
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'<lb/>
 
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