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<pb facs="00059556_0001"/>
80 Number 30<lb/>
We (Remember<lb/>
Veteran's (Day, 'Uov, 11, 2004<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
November 11, 2004<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
www.theeastcarolinian.com<lb/>
Upcoming winter demands increased heating, bills<lb/>
-B B - II ' ?IBB ii BaBbI ?' Bn - 'Bei Bl Bk JBw? Bl bCi'bb i bbbbbbbbbbb -m Jbbwbbbbb<lb/>
Officials provide suggestions to keep bills down this winter.<lb/>
Efficiency saves<lb/>
student money<lb/>
MICHAEL HARRINGTON<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
During winter months, stu-<lb/>
dents are often faced with high<lb/>
utility bills due to the addi-<lb/>
Computer<lb/>
programmers<lb/>
prepare to<lb/>
compete<lb/>
ACM programming<lb/>
competition held<lb/>
MICHAEL HARRINGTON<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
A team of three ECU com-<lb/>
puter science majors are compet-<lb/>
ing Saturday at Duke University<lb/>
against approximately 160 teams<lb/>
from the mid-Atlantic region in<lb/>
the first tier of the Association for<lb/>
Computing Machinery computer<lb/>
programming competition enti-<lb/>
tled "The Battle of the Brains<lb/>
The competition, sponsored<lb/>
by IBM, is part of a larger ACM<lb/>
contest nicknamed the Tech<lb/>
Olympics, which has teams of<lb/>
three members from universities<lb/>
across the world solve real world<lb/>
programming problems over a<lb/>
five-hour time period.<lb/>
The top four finishers in<lb/>
every regional competition qual-<lb/>
ify for the world finals held<lb/>
during the first week of April in<lb/>
Shanghai, China.<lb/>
see COMPETITION page A2<lb/>
tional amount of heating used.<lb/>
Greenville Utilities has several<lb/>
suggestions to help residents keep<lb/>
their expenses low.<lb/>
Andy Yokim, energy supervi-<lb/>
sor of Greenville Utilities, said the<lb/>
most important thing to focus<lb/>
on is conserving energy while<lb/>
heating your residence in order to<lb/>
avoid paying extremely high bills<lb/>
during the cooler months.<lb/>
Yokim said he recommends<lb/>
setting the thermostat at 68<lb/>
degrees during the winter months.<lb/>
He said students commonly<lb/>
keep their thermostat around<lb/>
75 degrees during the winter,<lb/>
allowing them to walk around<lb/>
the house in shorts and t-shirts<lb/>
instead of sweaters and pants.<lb/>
"If you are not going to<lb/>
wear your winter clothes in<lb/>
the summer, don't wear your<lb/>
summer clothes in the winter<lb/>
said Yokim.<lb/>
Yokim said this seven degree<lb/>
heating difference can end up<lb/>
costing a lot more since heat-<lb/>
ing and cooling compose the<lb/>
majority of energy expenses.<lb/>
The cost of heating your<lb/>
apartment depends on a variety<lb/>
of different factors including<lb/>
what type of heating system is<lb/>
being used, how well insulated<lb/>
the residence is and the design<lb/>
of the residence.<lb/>
Yokim said many times<lb/>
when students complain of high<lb/>
utility bills, it is because their<lb/>
residences are being heated by<lb/>
electric resistant heat furnaces<lb/>
instead of the higher quality<lb/>
heating system, heat pumps.<lb/>
"Electric furnaces are installed<lb/>
because they are the cheapest<lb/>
thing to manufacture and buy<lb/>
Yokim said.<lb/>
The heat pump was not<lb/>
invented until the 1960s, so many<lb/>
of the older houses around campus<lb/>
still run off electric furnaces.<lb/>
Yokim said an older residence<lb/>
often demands lower rent, but<lb/>
the heating expenses will make it<lb/>
just as costly as a new apartment.<lb/>
"If your house is heated by a<lb/>
heat pump, avoid moving the ther-<lb/>
mostat up and down Yokim said.<lb/>
"Set it and forget it<lb/>
Heat pumps use electric resis-<lb/>
tant strips for back up heating,<lb/>
and every time the thermostat is<lb/>
moved, the more costly electric<lb/>
resistant strips are triggered.<lb/>
Yokim said students should<lb/>
keep an eye on their filters, which<lb/>
can build up dust and dirt and make<lb/>
your heating system less efficient.<lb/>
"Check them once a month<lb/>
when you get your utilities bill<lb/>
Yokim said.<lb/>
Greenville Utilities allow its<lb/>
customers to check the past utili-<lb/>
ties history of apartments they<lb/>
are looking to rent.<lb/>
Yokim said he strongly<lb/>
recommends doing research<lb/>
on the residences you are<lb/>
considering renting.<lb/>
"I talk to maybe a hundred<lb/>
students a year Yokim said.<lb/>
"Our job is to get the lower<lb/>
bills for you<lb/>
Matthew Jackson, ECU gradu-<lb/>
ate school accounting student,<lb/>
said he didn't ask Greenville<lb/>
Utilities for the past history of<lb/>
his apartment.<lb/>
"I just switched it over<lb/>
said Jackson.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
ECU honors Native Americans<lb/>
FV ? s- " v  ???'??<lb/>
-? i ? . ?<lb/>
?m ,?<lb/>
??<lb/>
?lSic f<lb/>
?<lb/>
K <lb/>
? ?<lb/>
In celebration of November as Native American Heritage Month, ECU Campus Living posted flags in the lawn representing<lb/>
the massive number of Native Americans who died on the Trail of Tears. Seen here is a portion of the red flags which<lb/>
represented the 3,000 Cherokee Indians who died on the march.<lb/>
ECU participates in annual<lb/>
Heart Walk fundraiser<lb/>
Campus organizations<lb/>
active in event<lb/>
NICK HENNE<lb/>
NEWS EDITOR<lb/>
Numerous students, student<lb/>
organizations and Greenville resi-<lb/>
dents are getting ready to partici-<lb/>
pate in the annual Heart Walk to<lb/>
be held this Saturday at the ECU<lb/>
Blount Sports Complex.<lb/>
Joanna Iwata, director of stu-<lb/>
dent involvement said the walk<lb/>
is an annual Pitt County event<lb/>
hosted by the American Heart<lb/>
Association. The projected goal of<lb/>
the community event is to raise<lb/>
$127,000 for the American Heart<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
"This is  an annual ECU<lb/>
event that involves several of<lb/>
our groups over the past several<lb/>
years said Iwata.<lb/>
"Typically there are over<lb/>
1,000 volunteers who walk and<lb/>
raise funds<lb/>
While there are a variety<lb/>
of ECU campus organizations<lb/>
participating in the walk,<lb/>
including Greek life, residence<lb/>
hall associations and student<lb/>
government, individuals are also<lb/>
free to participate.<lb/>
Participants have to either<lb/>
register in advance by going<lb/>
to the Web site or they can<lb/>
register at the time of the event.<lb/>
Individuals or teams are<lb/>
eligible to register.<lb/>
"Participants are<lb/>
encouraged to raise money or<lb/>
make a donation if they choose to<lb/>
participate Iwata said.<lb/>
"Every little bit helps<lb/>
At 9 a.m. there is a brief<lb/>
welcome session before they<lb/>
begin the walk around the<lb/>
complex.<lb/>
Director Paula Kennedy-Dudley helps a student at the center.<lb/>
Center for Off-Campus<lb/>
Living improves student life<lb/>
Office makes an impact<lb/>
on living conditions<lb/>
J students and Greenville residents participate In last years Heart<lb/>
Walk event sponsored by local organizations.<lb/>
"A lot of our student groups<lb/>
do participate and it is something<lb/>
that does not require a lot of<lb/>
pre-organization Iwata said.<lb/>
A number of corporations<lb/>
participating In the event<lb/>
have made contributions to<lb/>
help achieve this goal. ECU'S<lb/>
organizations make up only<lb/>
one of the teams that will be<lb/>
participating. All the proceeds<lb/>
will be contributed to the same<lb/>
charity.<lb/>
Iwata said in past years ECU<lb/>
organizations have presented<lb/>
a pretty impressive check of<lb/>
$5,000.<lb/>
Iwata said this is an<lb/>
important issue to work toward<lb/>
because of its prevalence within<lb/>
a wide range of groups.<lb/>
"When you think about<lb/>
see HEART page A3<lb/>
f) Heart Walk<lb/>
On-site registration on site<lb/>
begins at 8:30 a.m. Saturday<lb/>
at the Blount Sports Complex<lb/>
off Charles Boulevard. The<lb/>
event begins at 9 a.m.<lb/>
- Slogan: "Change tomorrow<lb/>
Today"<lb/>
- 3.31 mile walk<lb/>
- Contact Kim Etheredge<lb/>
American Heart Association<lb/>
with Pitt County at 355-1112<lb/>
- PR person: Contact Andrea<lb/>
Gardiner at 327-5256<lb/>
A.J. WALTON<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
The Center for Off-Campus<lb/>
Living, serving as a voice for<lb/>
ECU students living on and off<lb/>
campus, opened less than a year<lb/>
ago with the welfare of every<lb/>
student in mind.<lb/>
Mary Louise Antieau, the<lb/>
director of the Center for Off-<lb/>
Campus Living, said about three<lb/>
years ago, a number of faculty<lb/>
realized there was no entity on<lb/>
campus to assist students' off-<lb/>
campus needs.<lb/>
"It bothered me said Antieau.<lb/>
"We decided that we needed<lb/>
something that would assist<lb/>
everyone who lived off campus<lb/>
 commuters, distance educa-<lb/>
tion students and those in Greek<lb/>
Life. Everyone involved had<lb/>
similar issues with the city, their<lb/>
neighbors, their community and<lb/>
the university<lb/>
Paula Kennedy-Dudley heads<lb/>
the Office of Adult and Com-<lb/>
muter Services. The office pro-<lb/>
vides programs for commuter<lb/>
students and for adults re-enter-<lb/>
ing college. It gives a chance for<lb/>
adult and commuter students<lb/>
to interact socially with similar<lb/>
students, and it provides informa-<lb/>
tion about campus, community<lb/>
and regional programs and ser-<lb/>
vices available to the adult and<lb/>
commuter student population.<lb/>
The Office of Greek Life,<lb/>
directed by Ion Outterbridge, pro-<lb/>
motes diversity, life-long learn-<lb/>
ing, friendship and service. It<lb/>
enhances sorority and fraternity<lb/>
membership through leadership<lb/>
developing, networking, ethical<lb/>
decision-making and career-life<lb/>
skills. It also assists members with<lb/>
academic, risk management and<lb/>
social activities.<lb/>
In the Office of Student Con-<lb/>
flict Resolution, mediation ser-<lb/>
vices are offered for those who<lb/>
wish to participate in and learn<lb/>
about alternative conflict resolu-<lb/>
tion. It assists ECU students, fac-<lb/>
ulty and staff, as well as Greenville<lb/>
community members who are<lb/>
involved in a dispute with a stu-<lb/>
dent or a student organization.<lb/>
The Student Neighborhood<lb/>
Relations Office, facilitated by<lb/>
Michelle Lieberman, works<lb/>
closely with students and neigh-<lb/>
borhood areas within Greenville.<lb/>
see CENTER page A3<lb/>
Dr. Shepard will be at ECU Nov. 12<lb/>
NASA<lb/>
scientist to<lb/>
speak at ECU<lb/>
Shepherd hopes to<lb/>
inform students, faculty<lb/>
COLE WAHAB<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
J. Marshall Shepherd, a scien-<lb/>
tist with the National Aeronau-<lb/>
tics and Space Administration,<lb/>
will be presenting a lecture at<lb/>
ECU regarding urban areas and<lb/>
how they create precipitation<lb/>
Nov. 12.<lb/>
Shepherd's lecture, entitled<lb/>
"How Cities Create Their Own<lb/>
Rainfall centers around the<lb/>
idea of how satellites can be<lb/>
used to measure the relationship<lb/>
between a city's air temperature<lb/>
and the amount of precipitation<lb/>
they receive as a direct result of<lb/>
that temperature.<lb/>
Shepherd said he looks for-<lb/>
ward to his lecture at ECU and<lb/>
hopes the audience will take<lb/>
away something important from<lb/>
his message.<lb/>
"I just hope they leave with<lb/>
a greater understanding of how<lb/>
delicate our earth is and that we<lb/>
need to understand it as much<lb/>
as we try to understand other<lb/>
planets said Shepherd.<lb/>
"This is the one that we're<lb/>
stuck on and it's changing.<lb/>
Whether it's natural or human<lb/>
induced remains to be seen<lb/>
Scott Curtis, a geography pro-<lb/>
fessor, said he hopes Shepherd's<lb/>
visit will encourage people to<lb/>
check out the new atmospheric<lb/>
science program In the depart-<lb/>
ment as well as inform people<lb/>
about the important issue.<lb/>
"This is one thing that geog-<lb/>
raphers do is look at the atmo-<lb/>
sphere and try to understand<lb/>
about climate said Curtis.<lb/>
"We're trying to advertise<lb/>
for atmospheric science classes<lb/>
on campus  this is the way to<lb/>
do that, as well as inform people<lb/>
about this issue<lb/>
Curtis said he hopes the audi-<lb/>
ence will learn something they<lb/>
did not know before.<lb/>
"They'll realize that we can<lb/>
change our environment in<lb/>
many different ways and that<lb/>
can affect us down the line<lb/>
Curtis said.<lb/>
"Also, I hope they learn that<lb/>
by building structures, roads and<lb/>
sidewalks, we're trapping heat,<lb/>
which not only warms a city<lb/>
environment, but can also create<lb/>
rainfall and storms<lb/>
Shepherd, who has presented<lb/>
findings to the White House<lb/>
and the Department of Defense<lb/>
for NASA, grew up just north<lb/>
of Atlanta in Cherokee County,<lb/>
Ga. He first became interested in<lb/>
weather and meteorological stud-<lb/>
ies in the sixth grade while work-<lb/>
ing on a middle school science<lb/>
project entitled, "Can A Sixth<lb/>
Grader Predict the Weather?"<lb/>
Upon receiving three meteo-<lb/>
rology degrees from Florida State<lb/>
University and beginning work<lb/>
on his master's degree, Shepherd<lb/>
developed a program that studied<lb/>
hurricanes and their changes,<lb/>
ones that might influence other<lb/>
changes in the storms when they<lb/>
hit landfall.<lb/>
Years later, after becoming the<lb/>
first African American to receive<lb/>
a doctorate degree in meteo-<lb/>
rology from FSU and working<lb/>
with NASA, Shepherd received<lb/>
the highest award the federal<lb/>
government bestows upon new<lb/>
scientists and engineers. He<lb/>
was granted the Presidential<lb/>
0<lb/>
see NASA page A3<lb/>
NASA<lb/>
The event Is taking place<lb/>
Friday, Nov. 12 at Brewster<lb/>
Building B102 at 4 p.m.<lb/>
For more Information, call<lb/>
Scott Curtis 328-2088<lb/>
INSIDE I News:A2 I Comics: A4 I Opinion: A5 I Living: Bl I Sports: B4 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059556_0002"/><lb/>
Page A2 news@theeastcarolinian. com 252.328. 6366<lb/>
?NICK HENNE News Editor KRISTIN DAY Assistant News Editor<lb/>
THURSDAY November 11, 2004<lb/>
n-11-<lb/>
Pc<lb/>
Campus News<lb/>
Free Flu Shots<lb/>
ECU Student Hearth Service will<lb/>
sponsor a student flu shot clinic today<lb/>
on the second floor of the Student<lb/>
Hea?hCenlBr?om9am - 4pm There<lb/>
is no charge lor students with an ECU<lb/>
D and vaid NC Teachers and Stale<lb/>
Employees Healh plan insurance card.<lb/>
Shots are $12 without these cards.<lb/>
For more information, can 328-6841<lb/>
Grant-In-Aid<lb/>
Delta Xi is offering financial support<lb/>
to female students who will be<lb/>
going into the teaching profession.<lb/>
Applicants must have a 3.0 GPA<lb/>
and display financial need. The<lb/>
aid will be awarded during the<lb/>
February chapter meeting. For<lb/>
questions about requirements<lb/>
and application, contact Dr.<lb/>
Katalin Szucs at 320-1908.<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<lb/>
go to domestic violence victims<lb/>
who need a constant and free<lb/>
way to call 911 and a 24-hour<lb/>
crisis line. Collection bins are at<lb/>
the Dowdy Student Store, Food<lb/>
Lion on 10th Street, East Carolina<lb/>
Bank on Red Banks Road and<lb/>
the Alltel store inside Wal-Mart.<lb/>
Contact Sara Munzer with the FVP<lb/>
at 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/>
ECU Gospel Choir<lb/>
A special intermission, Guest<lb/>
Salvation and Deliverance church<lb/>
choir from Tarboro, NC, under<lb/>
the direction of Kristan Herring<lb/>
will perform tonight at 6 p.m. at<lb/>
MSC in Hendrix Theater. Prices<lb/>
are $3 for students and military<lb/>
and $5 for the general public.<lb/>
For more information, call Arturo<lb/>
Cummings at 328-7148 orTarrick<lb/>
Cox at 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<lb/>
today 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 Nov.<lb/>
12 The concert begins at 8 p.m. For<lb/>
more information, call 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<lb/>
4 p.m. In 102 Brewster B. Contact<lb/>
Scott Curtis at 328-2088.<lb/>
American Heart Walk<lb/>
Participate in this charitable event<lb/>
Saturday, Nov. 13 at the ECU<lb/>
Blount Sports Complex. Check-in<lb/>
at 8:30 a.m. and the walk begins at<lb/>
9:30 a.m. Groups can still register<lb/>
online at heartwalk.kintera.org<lb/>
DownEastNC or pick up team<lb/>
packets in 207 Mendenhall.<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. 13.<lb/>
The race will take place at Lake<lb/>
Kristi on Mobley Bridge Road. Call<lb/>
329-4530 for more 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 Fine<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/>
For more information, e-mail Tim<lb/>
at ts0712 mall.ecu.edu.<lb/>
News Briefs<lb/>
Local<lb/>
Hoke escapee captured<lb/>
GASTONIA, NC - Thelma King's<lb/>
afternoon TV watching was interrupted<lb/>
by a man wanting to use her phone<lb/>
to call a cab.<lb/>
The 81-year-old woman obliged,<lb/>
apparently unaware that the man at<lb/>
her door was William Glenn Barefoot,<lb/>
an escaped convict with two<lb/>
handguns in his backpack who had<lb/>
been on the lam since late October.<lb/>
Before Barefoot could get into the cab,<lb/>
Gastonia police converged on King's<lb/>
house around 3 p.m. Tuesday and<lb/>
arrested him, dousing Barefoot with<lb/>
pepper spray after a short struggle.<lb/>
King was not injured.<lb/>
"She said he was real nice, real polite<lb/>
said her son, Tim King, 52. "She's an old<lb/>
mountain girl, itdidrftexcitehertoo much"<lb/>
One person was charged with helping<lb/>
Barefoot evade capture since his<lb/>
escape, said Charles Reavis, U.S.<lb/>
marshal for the Eastern District of<lb/>
North Carolina. He refused to name<lb/>
the suspect or describe the person's<lb/>
relationship to Barefoot.<lb/>
Officers tracking Barefoot found a<lb/>
campsite in a wooded area where<lb/>
they believe Barefoot had stayed<lb/>
for about a week. They also found<lb/>
bandages, which they believe he<lb/>
used on his feet because he was<lb/>
barefoot since his escape.<lb/>
Earlier Tuesday, Barefoot was sighted<lb/>
near Interstate 85. Officers chased<lb/>
him, but lost the trail in a creek. Three<lb/>
schools were put on lockdown while<lb/>
authorities searched.<lb/>
Investigators said they believed<lb/>
Barefoot might have broken Into<lb/>
several homes in the Gastonia<lb/>
neighborhood.<lb/>
Barefoot was serving an almost 85-<lb/>
year sentence in the Hoke County<lb/>
Jail for a daylong crime spree in 2001<lb/>
after he was convicted of trying to kill<lb/>
a Scotland County sheriffs deputy.<lb/>
Woman cleared of murder<lb/>
after co-defendant confesses<lb/>
WILMINGTON, NC - A woman who<lb/>
had been jailed for 19 months<lb/>
on murder charges was released<lb/>
after her co-defendant<lb/>
confessed she killed the man<lb/>
on her own, authorities said.<lb/>
Stephanie Davis was accused in the<lb/>
April 2003 stabbing death of Douglas<lb/>
Sasser at his home in Whiteville.<lb/>
District Attorney Rex Gore dismissed<lb/>
the charges against her Friday after<lb/>
Janice Thomas confessed Davis had<lb/>
not played a part in the crime.<lb/>
"She didn't do anything. She had<lb/>
been there just before Janice<lb/>
Thomas going in there and<lb/>
killing him, but she was not at<lb/>
the scene Gore said Tuesday.<lb/>
Davis, 45, was charged with first-<lb/>
degree murder and robbery with a<lb/>
dangerous weapon. Her trial was set<lb/>
to begin this week, Gore said.<lb/>
Thomas, 37 pleaded guilty to second-<lb/>
degree murder and robbery with a<lb/>
dangerous weapon In April and was<lb/>
to testify against Davis.<lb/>
Assistant District Attorney Lee<lb/>
Bollinger was preparing for the trial<lb/>
"and he got suspicious of what<lb/>
the cooperating co-defendant was<lb/>
saying. He asked her to take a<lb/>
polygraph test on Friday and it<lb/>
backed up what Stephanie Davis was<lb/>
saying Gore said.<lb/>
The women had gone to Sasser's<lb/>
house apparently to rob him,<lb/>
authorities said.<lb/>
He was stabbed at least five times<lb/>
with a kitchen knife, Gore said.<lb/>
National<lb/>
Young cancer vlcftm's<lb/>
lemonade stand funds research<lb/>
WYNNEWOOD, Pa. - Three months<lb/>
after her death from cancer, Alexandra<lb/>
Scott's original goal to raise $1<lb/>
million for cancer research by selling<lb/>
lemonade has been exceeded.<lb/>
Alexandra's parents said Tuesday<lb/>
that the 2004 total probably will be<lb/>
close to $1.5 million, which the Alex's<lb/>
Lemonade Stand foundation will<lb/>
donate to cancer-research institutions,<lb/>
as it has done since Alex set up her<lb/>
charity four years ago.<lb/>
Officials at Children's Hospital of<lb/>
Philadelphia, where Alex was treated,<lb/>
said they have expanded research and<lb/>
experimental medication programs<lb/>
because of the little girl's charity.<lb/>
"We believed in Alex said<lb/>
her mother, Liz Scott. 'We<lb/>
believed in her dream. But most<lb/>
of all, Alex believed in herself<lb/>
Shortly before she died of cancer<lb/>
on Aug. 1, Alex told her parents her<lb/>
new goal for 2005 was to raise $5<lb/>
million. Her parents are now seeking<lb/>
continued financial support from<lb/>
individuals and companies.<lb/>
"We are confident we can succeed,<lb/>
knowing Alex's spirit is with us said<lb/>
her father, Jay Scott<lb/>
Alex was diagnosed the day before<lb/>
her first birthday with neuroblastoma,<lb/>
an aggressive form of.childhood<lb/>
cancer. She set up a lemonade<lb/>
stand in 2000 in front of her suburban<lb/>
Philadelphia home. She took in<lb/>
$2,000 that first year, and $200,000<lb/>
through 2003.<lb/>
In June, lemonade stand fund-<lb/>
raisers were set up In all 50 states,<lb/>
as well as in Canada and France<lb/>
and Alex and her family appeared<lb/>
on Oprah Winfrey's TV program and<lb/>
NBC's "Today" show. Even as her<lb/>
energy waned, Alex insisted on doing<lb/>
interviews to reach her goal of raising<lb/>
$1 million, her father said.<lb/>
Peterson Judge replaces<lb/>
a juror, orders to 'start all over'<lb/>
REDWOOD CITY, Calif. - Jurors<lb/>
deliberating the fate of Scott Peterson<lb/>
went back to square one when a<lb/>
second juror in the five-month long<lb/>
murder trial was dismissed and the<lb/>
judge told the remaining panelists to<lb/>
"start all over again<lb/>
Juror No. 7, an Asian woman in her<lb/>
50s or 60s, apparently did her own<lb/>
research on the case, a source with<lb/>
close knowledge of the case told<lb/>
The Associated Press on condition<lb/>
of anonymity. Such research would<lb/>
violate the judge's order to consider<lb/>
only evidence presented at trial.<lb/>
Judge Alfred A. Delucchi replaced the<lb/>
juror with an alternate on Tuesday. He<lb/>
then ordered the other 11 members of<lb/>
the panel to set aside any conclusions<lb/>
they had made during the first five<lb/>
days of deliberations and begin anew.<lb/>
"You must decide all questions of<lb/>
fact in this case from the evidence<lb/>
received In this trial and not from any<lb/>
Students perform step show<lb/>
Members of Delta Sigma Theta draw crowds as they perform a step show in Wright Plaza<lb/>
in celebration of their chapter's 31st anniversary.<lb/>
U.S. forces hold 70 percent of Fallujah<lb/>
An Iraqi boy walks by a burning oil pipeline near Fallujah.<lb/>
NEAR FALLUJAH, Iraq<lb/>
(AP) ? American forces bot-<lb/>
tled up guerrillas in a narrow<lb/>
strip of Fallujah's alleys and<lb/>
streets Wednesday after a stun-<lb/>
ningly swift advance that seized<lb/>
control of 70 percent of the insur-<lb/>
gent stronghold.<lb/>
Insurgents have been trying<lb/>
to open a "second front" with a<lb/>
wave of attacks todivert U.S. forces<lb/>
from their offensive in Fallujah.<lb/>
In Fallujah, the military said<lb/>
U.S. troops pushed insurgents<lb/>
into a section of the city flank-<lb/>
ing the main east-west highway<lb/>
that bisects the rebel bastion. At<lb/>
least 71 militants had been killed<lb/>
as of the beginning of the third<lb/>
day of intense urban combat,<lb/>
the military said, with the<lb/>
casualty figure expected to rise<lb/>
sharply once U.S. forces account<lb/>
for Iraqis and foreign fighters<lb/>
killed in air strikes.<lb/>
As of Tuesday night, 10 U.S.<lb/>
troops and two members of the<lb/>
Iraqi security force had been<lb/>
killed, a toll that already equaled<lb/>
the number of American troops<lb/>
who died when Marines besieged<lb/>
the city for three weeks in April.<lb/>
Major Francis Piccoli, of<lb/>
the 1st Marine Expeditionary<lb/>
Force, characterized fighting<lb/>
overnight as "light to moderate"<lb/>
and said U.S. casualties were<lb/>
"extremely light<lb/>
Piccoli said U.S. forces that<lb/>
pushed south through Fallujah's<lb/>
central highway overnight now<lb/>
control 70 percent of the city.<lb/>
He said troops would move on<lb/>
Wednesday into the strip of<lb/>
territory where guerrillas were<lb/>
bottled up. "The heart of the city<lb/>
is what's In focus now he said.<lb/>
The northwestern- neighbor-<lb/>
hood of Jolan, the historic warren<lb/>
of crooked streets where Sunni<lb/>
militants and foreign fighters<lb/>
had rigged booby-traps, was<lb/>
now "secured and under con-<lb/>
trol he said, although Marines<lb/>
were expected to continue<lb/>
house-to-house searches for<lb/>
fighters and weapons.<lb/>
About 100 men, women and<lb/>
children left their homes in<lb/>
Fallujah and made their way<lb/>
to American positions in the<lb/>
south of the city where they<lb/>
gave themselves up Wednesday,<lb/>
an officer from the Army's 1st<lb/>
Cavalry Division said. The group<lb/>
was to be searched for weapons<lb/>
and questioned, and all mili-<lb/>
tary-age men would be detained,<lb/>
the officer said.<lb/>
other resource Delucchi reminded<lb/>
panelists. "The people and the<lb/>
defendant have the right to a verdict<lb/>
reached only after full participation<lb/>
"We're going to send you back. Start<lb/>
all over again and keep in touch<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
Peterson, 32, is charged with two<lb/>
counts of murder in the deaths of his<lb/>
wife, Laci, and the fetus she carried.<lb/>
Prosecutors claim Peterson killed<lb/>
Laci around Christmas Eve 2002, then<lb/>
dumped her weighted body from his<lb/>
boat into San Francisco Bay.<lb/>
Deliberations were set to<lb/>
resume Wednesday.<lb/>
World<lb/>
Iraq prime minister's<lb/>
family members kidnapped<lb/>
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Two members of<lb/>
the Iraqi prime minister's family were<lb/>
abducted from their Baghdad home,<lb/>
his spokesman said Wednesday<lb/>
and militants said they would be<lb/>
beheaded in two days if their demands<lb/>
are not met<lb/>
Interim government spokesman<lb/>
Thair al-Naqeeb said in a statement<lb/>
that militants had snatched interim<lb/>
Prime Minister Ayad Allawi's two<lb/>
relatives from their home in the<lb/>
western Yarmouk neighborhood<lb/>
Tuesday evening.<lb/>
Al-Naqeeb identified the missing<lb/>
as the prime minister's cousin,<lb/>
Ghazi Allawi, and the cousin's<lb/>
daughter-in-law.<lb/>
"Ghazi Allawi is 75 years old. He<lb/>
has no political affiliation and is not<lb/>
holding a government post the<lb/>
statement said.<lb/>
A posting on an Islamic Web site by<lb/>
a group calling itself Ansar al-Jihad<lb/>
group claimed responsibility for<lb/>
kidnapping three Allawi relatives,<lb/>
and threatened to behead them in 48<lb/>
hours if their demands aren't met.<lb/>
They demanded that Allawi and his<lb/>
government release all female and<lb/>
male detainees In Iraq, and lift the<lb/>
siege on Fallujah.<lb/>
"We promise Allah and his messenger<lb/>
that if the agent government doesn't<lb/>
respond to our demands within<lb/>
48 hours, they the hostages<lb/>
will be beheaded<lb/>
The group claims to have kidnapped<lb/>
Allawi's cousin, the cousin's wife<lb/>
and another relative. The claim's<lb/>
authenticity couldn't be verified.<lb/>
European police forge<lb/>
closer ties to fight terrorists<lb/>
LONDON - Jolted by the carnage<lb/>
of the Madrid train bombings<lb/>
and the cross-border rape and<lb/>
killing spree of a French pedophile,<lb/>
EU states are coming together<lb/>
on an ambitious new vision for<lb/>
policing Europe. It involves joint<lb/>
investigation teams and the sharing of<lb/>
hitherto jealously guarded<lb/>
criminal records and crime-<lb/>
fighting technology.<lb/>
"Police cooperation now has a<lb/>
very broad support in Europe said<lb/>
Genevieve Bourdin, in charge of<lb/>
international coordination at the<lb/>
French police.<lb/>
"Recent events provide us<lb/>
with a good reason to cooperate,<lb/>
a terrorist attack could happen<lb/>
anywhere, anytime<lb/>
Shortly after Islamic terrorists<lb/>
blew up four crowded commuter<lb/>
trains on March 11, killing 191<lb/>
people In Madrid, EU leaders<lb/>
pledged to improve common anti-<lb/>
terrorism efforts.<lb/>
While authorities still rule out a federal<lb/>
police force, a European version of<lb/>
the FBI, recent strides in cooperation<lb/>
have been significant: The EU has<lb/>
appointed an anti-terrorism czar and<lb/>
adopted a long-delayed European<lb/>
arrest warrant, which speeds up the<lb/>
extradition of suspects.<lb/>
Critics, however, say efficient<lb/>
police cooperation is hampered by<lb/>
differences In law, methodology and<lb/>
organization, not to mention national<lb/>
rivalries.<lb/>
"French police are not easy to<lb/>
work with, Spanish police are more<lb/>
difficult, but the worst are the Italians<lb/>
said Paul Van Thielen, general<lb/>
director of the Belgian police.<lb/>
"Their services are so complex we<lb/>
have to have a full-time liaison<lb/>
officer In Italy<lb/>
Despite the difficulties, the new<lb/>
spirit of collaboration has already<lb/>
yielded results.<lb/>
COHipetltlOn from page A1<lb/>
While the competition is<lb/>
open to multiple teams from the<lb/>
same university, only one team<lb/>
from every school can move on to<lb/>
the finals. The top finishers from<lb/>
four different universities of the<lb/>
mid-Atlantic region would move<lb/>
on to Shanghai.<lb/>
ECU computer science pro-<lb/>
fessor, Ronnie Smith, said this<lb/>
year's team should put in a good<lb/>
showing for ECU.<lb/>
"We have a very bright group<lb/>
of students said Smith.<lb/>
"This team is capable of fin-<lb/>
ishing in the top half<lb/>
Smith said the competi-<lb/>
tion is very difficult to win, but<lb/>
he is competitive by nature and<lb/>
would love to see more than just<lb/>
a good showing.<lb/>
"Our goal is to win Smith said.<lb/>
The three ECU computer sci-<lb/>
ence majors taking part in the<lb/>
event are sophomore Constan-<lb/>
tine Murenin and juniors Chris<lb/>
Betancourt and Daniel Green.<lb/>
Murenin and Betancourt were<lb/>
on last year's team and all three<lb/>
said they hope to be a part of next<lb/>
year's as well.<lb/>
All three teammates said<lb/>
they enjoy the competition<lb/>
and Monday afternoon<lb/>
training sessions.<lb/>
"I look forward to it, it's a lot<lb/>
of fun said Green.<lb/>
Betancourt said the team last<lb/>
year was ranked 46 out of about<lb/>
ISO teams, a finishing he and the<lb/>
team hope to beat at this year's<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
"We'll do the best we can<lb/>
and hopefully improve on our<lb/>
performance from last year said<lb/>
Betancourt.<lb/>
The ACM competition is an<lb/>
annual event which first took<lb/>
place 29 years ago and has qua-<lb/>
drupled since 1997 when IBM<lb/>
began sponsorship. The stated<lb/>
goal of the competition is to<lb/>
continue developing computer<lb/>
technology talent worldwide.<lb/>
ECU's team will be traveling<lb/>
to Duke's campus in Durham<lb/>
for this year's event, where<lb/>
they will be joined with close<lb/>
to thirty teams from the mid-<lb/>
Atlantic region.<lb/>
The answers to the program-<lb/>
ming problems are submitted<lb/>
over the network where they<lb/>
are viewed by judges who are<lb/>
stationed at Virginia Tech Uni-<lb/>
versity, a process that takes about<lb/>
five to ten minutes. This allows<lb/>
the nearly 160 schools to compete<lb/>
against each other from different<lb/>
locations in the region.<lb/>
Smith said Duke was chosen<lb/>
due to its ability to accommo-<lb/>
date around thirty schools and<lb/>
because it is geographically con-<lb/>
venient to many of the schools<lb/>
traveling for the event.<lb/>
The fondest memory Smith<lb/>
had from past competitions is<lb/>
when ECU'S team finished higher<lb/>
than every other state school<lb/>
except Duke, a feat Betancourt<lb/>
and his teammates would like<lb/>
accomplish as well.<lb/>
"It would be nice to beat<lb/>
them Betancourt said.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059556_0003"/><lb/>
11-11-04<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? NEWS<lb/>
PAGE A3<lb/>
Palestinian leaders prepare burial, funeral plans Center<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
 M<lb/>
A freshTy" painted mural<lb/>
headquarters in Gaza City, Wednesday.<lb/>
LAMART, France (AP) ? A<lb/>
top Islam.cel hc rushed from the<lb/>
WestBanktoVa: Vrafat's hos-<lb/>
pital bedside Wednes ir hat<lb/>
an aide to the Palestinian I<lb/>
called the "final phase" of his litt.<lb/>
"I'm here to be by ni long<lb/>
time friend's side in his time of<lb/>
need and to pray for his speedy<lb/>
recovery the cleric, Taisser<lb/>
Bayoud Tamimi, told The Asso-<lb/>
ciated Press by phone short'<lb/>
before arriving at the hospit .<lb/>
"It's absolutely reje- d<lb/>
he shouted outside the<lb/>
ho pi il when asked by reporters<lb/>
if e i'e support would be turned<lb/>
o , buying it would remain on as<lb/>
long as ther" were signs of life.<lb/>
But aide aid Arafat's health<lb/>
ormer<lb/>
was deteriorating, with a "com-<lb/>
plication" to his vital organs<lb/>
as doctors struggle to stop the<lb/>
bleeding in his brain.<lb/>
The Palestinian envoy to<lb/>
France, Leila Shahid, had insisted<lb/>
in an interview with France-<lb/>
Info radio that Tamimi was not<lb/>
coming "to disconnect" Arafat<lb/>
from life support.<lb/>
m<lb/>
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anagement<lb/>
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"It is clear, as for a Christian,<lb/>
as for a Jew, that a religious man<lb/>
needs to be with his patient<lb/>
when he is in the final phase of<lb/>
his life Shahid said.<lb/>
"That is why he is here<lb/>
On Tuesday, doctors said<lb/>
Arafat's coma had deepened and<lb/>
his caretaker government chose<lb/>
a burial site and began preparing<lb/>
for a funeral.<lb/>
Shahid told France-Info that<lb/>
he was still "in a deep coma"<lb/>
Wednesday morning, but added<lb/>
there was a "complication in the<lb/>
state of all of his vital organs<lb/>
He was therefore "in a critical<lb/>
state she said.<lb/>
"The reality is that he is in<lb/>
the hands of God<lb/>
At a press conference in<lb/>
Ramallah late Tuesday, Pales-<lb/>
tinian Cabinet minister Saeb<lb/>
Erekat said doctors were trying<lb/>
to relieve bleeding from a severe<lb/>
brain hemorrhage, which can<lb/>
cause brain damage.<lb/>
A Palestinian official, speak-<lb/>
ing on condition of anonymity,<lb/>
said Wednesday that French<lb/>
doctors told the Palestinian del-<lb/>
egation that this kind of bleed-<lb/>
ing meant that Arafat's death<lb/>
was expected within 24 hours, a<lb/>
period that has since passed.<lb/>
Shahid saiddoctorsat the Percy<lb/>
Military Training Hospital were<lb/>
fighting to keep him alive. The<lb/>
physicians "are doing everything,<lb/>
in the intensive care unit, to try<lb/>
to give him his.chances she said.<lb/>
But she also said that France,<lb/>
which sent a plane to bring Arafat<lb/>
to France on Oct. 29, would also<lb/>
organize his repatriation.<lb/>
"France has already proved<lb/>
that it was capable, in less than<lb/>
24 hours, of putting in place<lb/>
what was necessary to go and get<lb/>
him. It will organize his return<lb/>
home she said.<lb/>
Palestinian Foreign Minister<lb/>
Nabil Shaath said Tamimi, "a<lb/>
very close friend" of Arafat's<lb/>
who heads the Islamic court<lb/>
in the West Bank and<lb/>
Gaza Strip, was not coming to<lb/>
give advice on removing Arafat<lb/>
from life support.<lb/>
Palestinian leaders, mean-<lb/>
while, decided that when the<lb/>
time comes, they would bury<lb/>
Arafat at his sandbagged West<lb/>
Bank headquarters, known as<lb/>
the Muqata, in Ramallah, and<lb/>
turn it into a shrine, defusing<lb/>
a potential conflict with Israel<lb/>
by dropping a demand for a<lb/>
Jerusalem burial.<lb/>
The Israeli Cabinet on<lb/>
Wednesday approved that plan<lb/>
and has relayed the decision<lb/>
to the Palestinians, Israeli and<lb/>
Palestinian officials said.<lb/>
Heart<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
have been affected by the disease<lb/>
 it affects all'ages Iwata said.<lb/>
"This event builds awareness<lb/>
of the issues related to every<lb/>
American<lb/>
ECU'S participation in this<lb/>
event is another positive commu-<lb/>
nity partnership that began wvenl<lb/>
years ago and continues to grow.<lb/>
Iwata said since ECU began<lb/>
participating in the event it<lb/>
blossomed significantly over<lb/>
the past several years and has<lb/>
attracted more students and<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
Volunteerism is a strong posi-<lb/>
tive aspect of ECU and has more<lb/>
than 8,000 student volunteers to<lb/>
help the community.<lb/>
Andrea Blevins, Panhellenic<lb/>
treasurer, senior physical activity<lb/>
and fitness major is a student leader<lb/>
involved in organizing the event.<lb/>
She said the money is coming<lb/>
from each organization who is rais-<lb/>
ing a certain amount which would<lb/>
then go toward the Heart Walk.<lb/>
The funds collected are from<lb/>
?kmh?is sources within the com-<lb/>
munity including businesses or<lb/>
private donors.<lb/>
"It's just coming from a vari-<lb/>
ety of sources said Blevins.<lb/>
Crystal Herring, director of<lb/>
corporate relations walk, the<lb/>
Greenville office of the American<lb/>
Heart Association said it is very<lb/>
important for people to be aware of<lb/>
heart disease and stroke and real-<lb/>
ize just how big a threat they are.<lb/>
"The goals of the event<lb/>
are to heighten the awareness<lb/>
of heart disease and stroke <lb/>
heart disease is the No. 1 killer of<lb/>
Americans and eastern North<lb/>
Carolina would be the belt buckle<lb/>
of all that said Herring.<lb/>
"The event is an opportunity<lb/>
for the community to come<lb/>
together and raise money for two<lb/>
of our nation's top three killers.<lb/>
"I personally think it's a<lb/>
good event because the money<lb/>
benefits people who need it. Its<lb/>
going to a really good cause<lb/>
Herring said she feels Pitt<lb/>
County and the surrounding<lb/>
areas are certainly under rated<lb/>
and I feel we have the capacity<lb/>
to achieve the projected mon-<lb/>
etary goal.<lb/>
She said funds have been suc-<lb/>
cessfully gathered from local busi-<lb/>
nesses and corporate sponsors.<lb/>
Private donations and additional<lb/>
wrap around events are differ-<lb/>
ent smaller events organizations<lb/>
do within their company to<lb/>
raise money to achieve the goal.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news(Stheeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
iSend us your Rants<lb/>
Submit onlineatwww.lheeastcamlinian.com, or e-mail editor@theeastcarolinlan.com. !<lb/>
Lieberman works to establish a<lb/>
safe and healthy living environ-<lb/>
ment for off-campus students.<lb/>
Since the opening of the<lb/>
office, Lieberman has assisted<lb/>
more than 80 students with<lb/>
problems ranging from land-<lb/>
lord disputes, lease issues<lb/>
and general tenants' rights.<lb/>
She said that her job is not to<lb/>
cause problems for students, but<lb/>
to be an advocate for them.<lb/>
"There's a negative percep-<lb/>
tion of ECU students within the<lb/>
Greenville community, but only<lb/>
10 percent are the bad seeds<lb/>
said Lieberman.<lb/>
"The students are great.<lb/>
When they move into the neigh-<lb/>
borhoods, however, sometimes<lb/>
landlords and neighbors will<lb/>
literally pick on them because<lb/>
they think they're bad<lb/>
Lieberman said it is her job to<lb/>
not allow students to be treated<lb/>
like this.<lb/>
She said fraternity and soror-<lb/>
ity houses are often blamed for<lb/>
parties due to the huge Greek<lb/>
letters that identify them. The<lb/>
office has offered assistance to<lb/>
these organizations several times.<lb/>
Lieberman said students<lb/>
seem to be responsive to the pro-<lb/>
gram and take advantage of the<lb/>
fact they have someone to talk to.<lb/>
In January, the Center for<lb/>
Off-Campus Living is hosting<lb/>
a Landlord Fair where students<lb/>
can meet landlords, see the<lb/>
apartments and then possibly<lb/>
sign a lease on spot. Another<lb/>
idea would allow students to<lb/>
compare rent housing prices via<lb/>
the Internet.<lb/>
The overall purpose of the<lb/>
office is to empower students<lb/>
to become model citizens of the<lb/>
university and ECU community<lb/>
and emphasize personal integ-<lb/>
rity, positive neighborhood rela-<lb/>
tions, participative leadership<lb/>
and ethical decision-making.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
NASA<lb/>
from page A1<lb/>
Early Career Award for Scientists<lb/>
and Engineers, due to his<lb/>
work with NASA's Global<lb/>
Precipitation Management<lb/>
Mission, where he served as<lb/>
deputy project scientist. He<lb/>
received the award at the White<lb/>
House from the president's<lb/>
chief science advisor John Mar-<lb/>
Durget:1" '<lb/>
Ahmed Salahuddin, a coastal<lb/>
resources management graduate<lb/>
student, said it has been adver-<lb/>
tised well around campus, hope-<lb/>
fully showing it is an important<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
"Well, I've seen the fliers<lb/>
all around campus and it is<lb/>
important for understanding the<lb/>
atmospheric phenomenon that<lb/>
needs to be addressed including<lb/>
rainfall and other factors said<lb/>
Salahuddin.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
news@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059556_0004"/><lb/>
COMICS<lb/>
Page A4<lb/>
Crossword<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Fragrant sack<lb/>
7 Bosc or Anjou<lb/>
11 'The Best Years<lb/>
ofLives"<lb/>
14 Sometime<lb/>
15 Intertwine<lb/>
16 NAFTA<lb/>
participant<lb/>
17 Ustinov<lb/>
autobiography<lb/>
18 Stopped<lb/>
20 Have supper<lb/>
21 Tobago's<lb/>
neighbor<lb/>
23 Omelet<lb/>
ingredient<lb/>
24 Polished<lb/>
25 Hover<lb/>
threateningly<lb/>
28 Fictional Butler<lb/>
30 Directed<lb/>
31 Watts of "Le<lb/>
Divorce"<lb/>
32 Cardiff's land<lb/>
34 Singer Emmylou<lb/>
35 Stood by<lb/>
38 Puts up a fight<lb/>
39 Pickpocket's<lb/>
pick<lb/>
40 Rolls-<lb/>
41 Psychologist<lb/>
Havelock<lb/>
42 Tailor's fastener<lb/>
43 Adjust<lb/>
47 Trudge along<lb/>
48 Relief<lb/>
50 At the moment<lb/>
51 Unreservedly<lb/>
53 Word on diet<lb/>
foods<lb/>
54 In a manner of<lb/>
speaking<lb/>
56 Non-clerics<lb/>
58 Marsh<lb/>
59 New Jersey five<lb/>
60 Off-course<lb/>
61 Earmark<lb/>
62 Dalmatian detail<lb/>
63 Landed<lb/>
property<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 More forlorn<lb/>
2 "Anchors"<lb/>
3 Transform<lb/>
4 Place on the<lb/>
payroll<lb/>
5 Slippery tree?<lb/>
1234581 2289101 19I1213<lb/>
'4<lb/>
171H27<lb/>
29<lb/>
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35'3844? 45? 46<lb/>
39-<lb/>
41? 52?"53<lb/>
47?4950<lb/>
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b4115657<lb/>
58.60<lb/>
616263<lb/>
? 2004 Tribune Media Services, Inc.<lb/>
All right! reserved.<lb/>
111104<lb/>
6 Saw's cutters<lb/>
7 DesIL<lb/>
8 Deserved<lb/>
9 Pungent<lb/>
10 Marsh grass<lb/>
11 Into the open<lb/>
12 Play for a fool<lb/>
13 Way cool!<lb/>
19 On the payroll<lb/>
22 Miffed<lb/>
24 Virginia and<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
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dark<lb/>
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33 Permit to<lb/>
34 You there!<lb/>
35 Fills with<lb/>
wonder<lb/>
36 Mural site<lb/>
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38 Popeil company<lb/>
40 Superlatively<lb/>
wealthy<lb/>
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Mexico<lb/>
Solutions<lb/>
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(Mathis hit)<lb/>
THURSDAY November 11, 2004<lb/>
'Ufcr4zjU-S?AFvTe&amp;cVTS <lb/>
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<pb facs="00059556_0005"/><lb/>
?r 11, 2004<lb/>
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3 VOUB "T?<lb/>
NOVWKR.I<lb/>
IT VOO 5AI1V<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page A<lb/>
editor@theeastcarollnian.com<lb/>
252.328.6366<lb/>
AMANDA Q. UNGERFELT Editor in Chief<lb/>
THURSDAY November 11, 2004<lb/>
Our View<lb/>
Veteran's Day serves as<lb/>
a day of remembrance<lb/>
The United States will observe Veteran's Day<lb/>
today - a day that is used as a remembrance<lb/>
for American soldiers since the ending of the<lb/>
World War I, Nov. 11,1918.<lb/>
In 1954, congress officially declared Veteran's<lb/>
Day an official federal holiday to be celebrated<lb/>
each year on Nov. 11.<lb/>
This year, we feel this holiday deserves extra<lb/>
recognition for a few reasons.<lb/>
First, the United States still has troops that are<lb/>
overseas and in danger.<lb/>
According to a count by the Associated Press<lb/>
on Tuesday, at least 1,145 members of the U.<lb/>
S. military have died since the beginning of<lb/>
the Iraq war in March 2003.<lb/>
Second, ECU rests close to many major<lb/>
military bases. Soldiers were deployed from<lb/>
Camp Lejune, Cherry Point, Seymour John-<lb/>
son, Fort Bragg and Pope Air Force Base.<lb/>
Each of these bases still have soldiers<lb/>
deployed.<lb/>
Third, more than 650,000 soldiers lost their<lb/>
lives defending the safety and honor of this<lb/>
country, and all Americans have benefited<lb/>
from their sacrifices.<lb/>
TEC would like to remind all of you that<lb/>
Veteran's Day is not simply a federal holiday<lb/>
that renders a day off from work or school.<lb/>
Veteran's Day should be used as a day of<lb/>
remembrance and thanks for the sacrifices<lb/>
soldiers have made for our freedom and our<lb/>
country.<lb/>
We would like to give our heartfelt thanks to<lb/>
all soldiers. We appreciate and respect all<lb/>
you do.<lb/>
Our Staff<lb/>
Nick Henne<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Robbie Den-<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Tony Zoppo<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Nina Coefield<lb/>
Head Copy Editor<lb/>
Tanesha Slstrunk<lb/>
Photo Editor<lb/>
Kristin Day<lb/>
Asst News Editor<lb/>
Carolyn Scandura<lb/>
Asst. Features Editor<lb/>
Brandon Hughes<lb/>
Asst Sports Editor<lb/>
Rachel Landen<lb/>
Special Sections Editor<lb/>
Herb Sneed<lb/>
Asst Photo Editor<lb/>
Alexander Marclnlak 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/>
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 edltor@theeastcarollnlan.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/>
THeY ALWAYS<lb/>
?AlDHeWASA<lb/>
STRONG CLoSeR,<lb/>
Opinion Columnist<lb/>
The wonders of Constitutional rights<lb/>
What wondrous<lb/>
games we play<lb/>
PETER KALAJIAN<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
You know what I love: criticism.<lb/>
Not critique, not suggestion - criticism.<lb/>
Naturally, 1 would prefer the type with<lb/>
some constructive content, but blatant<lb/>
accusation and innuendo are always<lb/>
fun too.<lb/>
Every opinion writer, gloriously<lb/>
unrestrained by the nature of their craft<lb/>
and reveling daily in the enjoyment of<lb/>
such a far-reaching pulpit from which<lb/>
to croon, experiences, at one point or<lb/>
another, critical reviews of their "liter-<lb/>
ary" content.<lb/>
1 think there is something that we<lb/>
should speak about. The views and<lb/>
revelations contained herein, for better<lb/>
or for worse, are the views and revela-<lb/>
tions of exactly one person: Me. As your<lb/>
weekly guide through the enchanted<lb/>
forest of political and social commen-<lb/>
tary, I consider it both a pleasure and a<lb/>
responsibility to convey what I feel are<lb/>
highly relevant issues in the most forth-<lb/>
right and honest manner possible.<lb/>
The responsibility part comes into<lb/>
play as I see the alarming social and<lb/>
governmental apathy displayed by so<lb/>
many Americans, and for that matter<lb/>
all people, particularly people attend-<lb/>
ing this university. We are the few, the<lb/>
happy few, who have the privilege and<lb/>
good fortune to have access to higher<lb/>
education. Approximately one quar-<lb/>
ter of the U.S. population is college<lb/>
educated, and while that number may<lb/>
seem low, many other countries in the<lb/>
world still have large percentages of<lb/>
their population unable to read and<lb/>
write functionally. College students<lb/>
should be the loudest, most vocal<lb/>
advocates for social issues, since very<lb/>
soon, this generation of intellectuals<lb/>
will be assuming control of the entire<lb/>
nation. As the Baby Boomers begin to<lb/>
retire, they will vacate massive sections<lb/>
of the workforce, straining the health<lb/>
care system and buying up every beach<lb/>
house in Florida. The nation will be in<lb/>
our hands, and I think it is very impor-<lb/>
tant for everyone, myself included, to<lb/>
do everything they can to improve<lb/>
knowledge and understanding and<lb/>
stamp out one of the worst scourges on<lb/>
our society today: Ignorance.<lb/>
Now, ignorance can be tricky. Very<lb/>
often, it is unavoidable. Education is<lb/>
simply not available to an individual;<lb/>
therefore they lack fundamental under-<lb/>
standing of many issues that seem so<lb/>
common to others. This demographic,<lb/>
which by the way is shrinking by<lb/>
the year yet seems to be constantly<lb/>
refreshed by that ugly little phenom-<lb/>
enon called childhood indoctrination,<lb/>
seems to me to be highly blameless.<lb/>
An African peasant in the Sahara<lb/>
desert who is unable to read or write<lb/>
cannot, naturally, be held to blame for<lb/>
that condition, and very well may be<lb/>
a wonderful, loving and kind human<lb/>
being. But there seems to be a growing<lb/>
movement, and it runs to the highest<lb/>
levels of educated ignorance. Now, call<lb/>
me judgmental, call me elitist, but an<lb/>
Individual who knows the richness<lb/>
of the world and has been exposed to<lb/>
education yet happily wallows in the<lb/>
filthy sty of deep-seeded racial or social<lb/>
inequity has little to offer the rest of<lb/>
society. By closing ones mind to pos-<lb/>
sibility, by ruling out the unpleasant<lb/>
and masking reality under a veil of<lb/>
absolutism and superstition, we really<lb/>
close the book on life. Life is learning.<lb/>
Life is thinking and understanding<lb/>
more completely. Without these driv-<lb/>
ers, without the innate human curios-<lb/>
ity for knowledge and understanding,<lb/>
the great montage of human existence<lb/>
would wither and die.<lb/>
If you do not agree with the views of<lb/>
another, and choose to adopt a differ-<lb/>
ent (perhaps less reasonable, but that's<lb/>
another article altogether) platform,<lb/>
great. But the lines of discussion should<lb/>
always remain open. I hold many<lb/>
unpopular beliefs, and that's OK, but<lb/>
the idea is to learn as much as possible.<lb/>
I am certainly willing to reconsider<lb/>
anything, provided I am shown jusl<lb/>
cause and that those reconsiderations<lb/>
would not conflict with the rest of my<lb/>
principles.<lb/>
Perhaps the next four years can be<lb/>
spent out from under the suffocating<lb/>
blanket of religious extremism, both<lb/>
in this country (unfortunately, at our<lb/>
highest levels of government) and<lb/>
abroad. Perhaps we can inject a little<lb/>
thought and feeling into our govern-<lb/>
ment. We need to abandon the arro-<lb/>
gance of the Bush administration and<lb/>
re-embrace knowledge.<lb/>
There is a saying that says, "Who-<lb/>
ever dies with the most toys, wins<lb/>
(this credo seems to have become the<lb/>
driving force behind our society). I say<lb/>
whoever dies with the most toys, still<lb/>
dies, but he who departs this world with<lb/>
as much understanding and knowledge<lb/>
as he is able to cram into his brain, dies<lb/>
a far more glorious death, for that man<lb/>
has truly experienced life.<lb/>
In My Opinion<lb/>
Decision 2004 goes far beyond simplicity<lb/>
(KRT) ? A favorite mid-Novem-<lb/>
ber pastime for politicians and the<lb/>
press is to bash the losing presidential<lb/>
candidate and come up with a simple<lb/>
explanation for the motivations of 120<lb/>
million voters, preferably in 25 words<lb/>
or less.<lb/>
This year's rap on Sen. John F. Kerry<lb/>
is that he looked like an elitist wind-<lb/>
surfing, threw a wimpy first pitch and<lb/>
looked goofier in his goose-hunting<lb/>
gear than Elmer Fudd, not to mention<lb/>
that his wife wasn't likable and he<lb/>
responded too slowly to the swift-boat<lb/>
veterans' attacks. Howard Dean liber-<lb/>
als thought he was too wishy-washy<lb/>
on the war, and moderates thought he<lb/>
was too liberal.<lb/>
Meanwhile, this year's simple<lb/>
story line for the election result is that<lb/>
conservatives concerned about moral<lb/>
values voted in record numbers, tipping<lb/>
the election to President Bush.<lb/>
Both deconstructions have some<lb/>
truth to them, but both are too sim-<lb/>
plistic.<lb/>
Kerry had his shortcomings. His<lb/>
nuanced views on the war in Iraq<lb/>
seemed contradictory. He didn't<lb/>
give the voters a clear enough picture<lb/>
of what he would do as president,<lb/>
and voters weren't attracted to shades<lb/>
of gray. To the majority of voters,<lb/>
Bush seemed the stronger of the<lb/>
two. He was more likable (the beer-<lb/>
buddy factor) and had a simpler, more<lb/>
consistent message about fighting ter-<lb/>
rorism.<lb/>
Despite all of the ink that Demo-<lb/>
cratic voter registration drives received,<lb/>
Republican volunteers were quietly<lb/>
outhustling the Democrats in key<lb/>
battlegrounds like central Florida.<lb/>
Religious conservatives were instru-<lb/>
mental in these grassroots GOP efforts.<lb/>
And in the decisive state of Ohio,<lb/>
the amendment banning gay mar-<lb/>
riage may have brought out enough<lb/>
religious conservatives to counter the<lb/>
increased interest among young voters<lb/>
for Kerry.<lb/>
But political operatives as percep-<lb/>
tive as Bush's chief strategist, Karl Rove,<lb/>
say the decisiveness of this moral values<lb/>
vote has been exaggerated.<lb/>
While the total number of voters<lb/>
was at a historic high, there is no<lb/>
evidence that evangelical Christians<lb/>
turned out in substantially larger num-<lb/>
bers than in 2000.<lb/>
What mattered, then? A significant<lb/>
shift toward Bush among Hispanics<lb/>
and women helped Bush's margin of<lb/>
victory. Kerry still won both groups,<lb/>
but Bush picked up 12 percent more<lb/>
Hispanic votes than four years ago<lb/>
and 5 percent more women's votes,<lb/>
according to exit polls. The votes of<lb/>
married white women - security moms,<lb/>
as they've been called - nearly closed<lb/>
the gender gap.<lb/>
At the same time, Bush was adding<lb/>
about 4 percent to his margin among<lb/>
white Protestants and picking up even<lb/>
bigger increases among Catholic and<lb/>
Jewish voters.<lb/>
Another big shift came among<lb/>
voters age 60 and older - fearful of<lb/>
terror? hopeful about prescription<lb/>
drug benefits? - who voted against<lb/>
Bush four years ago but supported<lb/>
him this year. There was a smaller but<lb/>
significant defection of church-going<lb/>
blacks, particularly in Ohio, Florida<lb/>
and Pennsylvania.<lb/>
The election results also can be<lb/>
seen as vindication of some of Bush's<lb/>
policies. Older voters stand to benefit<lb/>
from the Medicare prescription drug<lb/>
benefit. Some Jewish voters reacted<lb/>
favorably to Bush's pro-Israel stance,<lb/>
and Catholics and Hispanics approved<lb/>
his "pro-life" agenda. Women shifted<lb/>
to the candidate who seemed stronger<lb/>
on terrorism. Those who got the biggest<lb/>
benefits from his tax cuts also increased<lb/>
their support.<lb/>
The challenge for the Republicans<lb/>
is not to mythologize the 2004 election<lb/>
as the triumph of those with moral<lb/>
values over those who have none. The<lb/>
fastest way for Bush to surrender his<lb/>
mandate would be to push the agenda<lb/>
of the religious right at the expense of<lb/>
reaching across the aisle.<lb/>
Pirate Rants<lb/>
For the love of God, can my<lb/>
adviser please have a clue about<lb/>
what classes are required, what<lb/>
things I should know before grad-<lb/>
uating and where I need to go to<lb/>
get forms for certain things?<lb/>
Anyone who thinks that the<lb/>
Electoral College is the worst<lb/>
thing about this country is obvi-<lb/>
ously uneducated. The Electoral<lb/>
College assures that politicians<lb/>
must campaign everywhere and<lb/>
represent everyone's vote. If<lb/>
there was no Electoral College,<lb/>
politicians could focus their<lb/>
strength entirely on "big" states<lb/>
like California and Texas, earning<lb/>
a large majority of votes there and<lb/>
winning the election. Without<lb/>
the Electoral College politicians<lb/>
could carry 95 percent of Texas,<lb/>
California, New York, Florida,<lb/>
Pennsylvania, Massachusetts,<lb/>
Michigan, Indiana, New Jersey<lb/>
and Illinois and win the election,<lb/>
while losing the other 40 states by<lb/>
90 percent.<lb/>
I'm tired of hearing people<lb/>
say that the Constitution states<lb/>
that there should be a separation<lb/>
of Church and State. That is not<lb/>
true. Nowhere in the Constitu-<lb/>
.tion does it say that they should<lb/>
be separate. The First Amend-<lb/>
ment says, "Congress shall make<lb/>
no law respecting an establish- .<lb/>
ment of religion, or prohibiting<lb/>
the free exercise thereof A<lb/>
politician stating his religious<lb/>
beliefs and voting along those<lb/>
lines is not established religion<lb/>
no matter how you slice it.<lb/>
Smokers - contrary to what<lb/>
you may think, the world is not<lb/>
your ashtray. Put your butts and<lb/>
cigarette boxes in the trash. Your<lb/>
existence is the only litter 1 am<lb/>
required to tolerate.<lb/>
1 second the notion of being<lb/>
excited about ECU basketball. I<lb/>
sure can't wait to drool over Mike<lb/>
Cook. That will keep me going to<lb/>
every game!<lb/>
John Kerry - all you could do<lb/>
is criticize. You had no game plan<lb/>
for anything. You're just another<lb/>
person that detests this country.<lb/>
The moral majority has spoken,<lb/>
and denounced you. Just move to<lb/>
Canada, please.<lb/>
This is referring back to Tues-<lb/>
day's "Rant Left-wing liberals,<lb/>
we DO want our children to<lb/>
think and make their own deci-<lb/>
sions, just like we did when we<lb/>
re-elected President Bush. Our<lb/>
children will not be having<lb/>
back alley abortions because we<lb/>
haven't outlawed abortions (Roe<lb/>
v. Wade, look it up), but we are<lb/>
against dilation and extractions<lb/>
(partial birth abortions, look<lb/>
that up too). Britney Spears isn't<lb/>
a political issue, but many liber-<lb/>
als wouldn't like their children<lb/>
dressing like her either. And as<lb/>
for the re-runs from "Real Sex 39"<lb/>
teaching our kids sex-ed, I think<lb/>
they got enough of that from the<lb/>
Clinton Administration.<lb/>
I would like for whoever<lb/>
said Bin Laden was the invisible<lb/>
boogeyman, to tell the families<lb/>
in New York that the "invisible<lb/>
boogeyman" killed their loved<lb/>
ones.<lb/>
It's still a sad day in America.<lb/>
I'm sorry to those of you who<lb/>
have medical bills through the<lb/>
roof and will have to pay out of<lb/>
pocket. I apologize to college stu-<lb/>
dents who will graduate in debt.<lb/>
I apologize to my homosexual<lb/>
friends who can't marry who<lb/>
they choose. I apologize to those<lb/>
who get pregnant because of rape<lb/>
or incest and can't get an abor-<lb/>
tion. Wait until you or someone<lb/>
you know has been affected by<lb/>
these decisions, then ask yourself<lb/>
if you made the right decision.<lb/>
As for the "Today we salute<lb/>
you Mr. John Kerry Voter how<lb/>
lame could that be? Yay, its so<lb/>
awesome that Bush isn't afraid of<lb/>
a football. If that's all you people<lb/>
look for in a president then you're<lb/>
a moron.<lb/>
Hey, Tony: I voted for Bush,<lb/>
too. But if you think about it<lb/>
(if you think), they both rot.<lb/>
Waste of a vote this quadren-<lb/>
nial. The election's over and no<lb/>
one won. Talk about something<lb/>
else.<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 editortiPtheeastcarolinian.<lb/>
com. The editor reserves the right<lb/>
to edit opinions for content and<lb/>
brevity. <lb/>
<pb facs="00059556_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? NEWS<lb/>
PAGEA6<lb/>
rA<lb/>
A House Not a Complex<lb/>
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W. <lb/>
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more information call Wainright<lb/>
Property Management 756-6209.<lb/>
1 &amp; 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/>
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/>
CLASSIF<lb/>
1<lb/>
THURSDAY November 11, 2004<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/>
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/>
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/>
Ceorgetowne 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/>
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/>
J600.00month. Call 341-4608.<lb/>
Spacious 3 bedroom townhouse<lb/>
full basement, enclosed<lb/>
patio, WD hook-up, ECU<lb/>
bus route, no pets. 752-7738,<lb/>
7:30-4:30 available January.<lb/>
Pinebrook Apt. 758-4015-1 St 2<lb/>
BR apts, dishwasher, CD, 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, Si cable.<lb/>
Rent Special- Gladiolus St Jasmine<lb/>
1 St 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/>
101 S. Woodlawn- 3 BDRM, 1 bath<lb/>
house, 3 blocks from campus,<lb/>
central heatingair, washerdryer<lb/>
included, available immediately.<lb/>
Call Jeff at 252-327-4433.<lb/>
For rent University Area Wyndam<lb/>
Court 3 bedrooms 2 baths.<lb/>
Call Renee Carter 347-2602.<lb/>
5 Bedroom for rent two blocks<lb/>
from campus one block from<lb/>
City Market $1075.00 per month.<lb/>
Call 355-1895 leave message.<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/>
Services<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. St Videos<lb/>
At www.SpringBreakTravel.<lb/>
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1 Spring Break Website!<lb/>
Lowest prices guaranteed. Free<lb/>
Meals St Free Drinks. Book<lb/>
11 people, get 12th trip free!<lb/>
Group Discounts for for 6<lb/>
www. Spring BreakDiscounts.<lb/>
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Bahamas Spring Break Celebrity<lb/>
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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/>
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1 Spring Break Vacations!<lb/>
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110 Best Prices! Book Now<lb/>
St Get Free Parties St Meals!<lb/>
Group Discounts. Campus<lb/>
Reps Wanted! 1-800-234-7007.<lb/>
endlesssummertours.com<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/>
We need Campus Reps! Put up<lb/>
flyers around campus St 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/>
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/>
Get Paid cash to answer<lb/>
text messages on your cell<lb/>
phone! Cet 1 to 3 messages<lb/>
per week. It's FREE. It's Easy.<lb/>
Opt-In @ www.Pollcbst.net.<lb/>
Bartending! $250day<lb/>
potential. No experience<lb/>
necessary. Training provided.<lb/>
(800) 965-6520 ext. 202.<lb/>
Greek Personals<lb/>
The sisters of Phi Beta Chi<lb/>
would like to congratulate<lb/>
Amanda Glisson on being<lb/>
our sister of the week! Don't<lb/>
forget to 80's social this Friday!<lb/>
Thank you Delta Chi for rocking<lb/>
the night away with us. Pref<lb/>
night was a blast! Love, the<lb/>
Ladies of Zeta Tau Alpha.<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma would<lb/>
like to thank everyone that is<lb/>
participating in the heart walk-<lb/>
its for a good cause so get your<lb/>
sponsors in. Lauren D. is finally<lb/>
21- live it up chica! Thanks to all<lb/>
our sober drivers, we love ya'll!<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/>
Announcements<lb/>
ECU Swing Dance Club<lb/>
is sponsoring a dance in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Great Rooms<lb/>
November 13th from 8pm to<lb/>
11pm. Free beginner lessons<lb/>
at 7:30pm. Members $3.00,<lb/>
Students $4.00, Public $5.00.<lb/>
SKYDIVE<lb/>
Carolina Sky Sports<lb/>
1-800-SKYDIVE<lb/>
www.carolinaskysports.com<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
? of poor maintenance response<lb/>
? of unrelumcd 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 appliances that don't work<lb/>
Wvndham Court &amp;<lb/>
Kastgate Village Apl.s.<lb/>
3200 K Moselev Dr.<lb/>
561-RENTor561-7679<lb/>
www.pinnatiepropcrty<lb/>
management corn<lb/>
Campus Reps!<lb/>
Spring Breakers!<lb/>
Barn SS or Discounts<lb/>
Alltlie HOT destinations!<lb/>
NEW-IasVfsas!PuertiVallaria!<lb/>
28 Years of student Travel<lb/>
15 travelers-TWOFREE trips!<lb/>
1 -866-SPRINGBREAK<lb/>
www.u3aspri11gbreaJc.com<lb/>
TOUIld ?irlilMiil<lb/>
K kinking for PACKAGE HANDLERS lo loud van<lb/>
and unload trailers for ihc AM shift hours 4 AM to<lb/>
8AM. $7.50 hour, tuition avsiMantv available after<lb/>
M) days. Future career opportunities in iiurwgcrocni<lb/>
possible Applications can be tilled out at 2410<lb/>
I fated Dttvt Hicarlhe aquatics cent en Grrcnville.<lb/>
EEimmm<lb/>
loin America's 1<lb/>
Tour Operator<lb/>
CANCUN<lb/>
ACAPUIC0<lb/>
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Sell Trips, Eon Cult,<lb/>
Go Free! Now Hiring<lb/>
Call for group discounts<lb/>
1 -800-648-4849 www.ststravel.iom<lb/>
flORIDA<lb/>
X<lb/>
TRAVEL<lb/>
umvteu<lb/>
A nycUl ultiwrioUt ctnar nkii<lb/>
tl pMtlbla to ?? th atorlrlBC<lb/>
?kin jmt. iatm oj Uw tun. iad<lb/>
?IBM 1U; jMrlOSM .111 lUTtlOf)<lb/>
?kin onttr in th.ir llfitlaa,<lb/>
Mutt MU?r rMaen to alM7? na<lb/>
rawi-Mi, v protMtlT clothlaf<lb/>
(m<lb/>
AMERICAN ACADEMYOl" DERMATOLOGY<lb/>
ill o: ueiu<lb/>
V<lb/>
CAlVipUS Po.NTE One month's rent FREE w1 year Iease<lb/>
ilNCiUCjES WATER, SEWER, iVsic CAblE, CONVENIENT loCATJON<lb/>
5 BecJrooivis, 2 BatIhs ? $590mo.<lb/>
Hiqh SpEEd Internet4<lb/>
252.355.1313<lb/>
OF GREENVILLE<lb/>
APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED<lb/>
beginning MONDAY NOVEMBER 8TH<lb/>
TOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS:<lb/>
?SERVERS, HOSTHOSTESS<lb/>
?COOKS<lb/>
?DISHWASHERS<lb/>
?PREP<lb/>
?BARTENDERS<lb/>
Si<lb/>
Esrj<lb/>
Cotanche SI<lb/>
i -1<lb/>
<lb/>
APPLY IN PERSON<lb/>
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY<lb/>
9:00 TO 7:00 PH<lb/>
FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES<lb/>
PAID VACATIONS<lb/>
MEDICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAM<lb/>
E0E<lb/>
TEXAS STEAKH0USE AND SALOON<lb/>
400 GREENVILLE BLVD. SW<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC<lb/>
SUCCESS IS WHAT YOU MAKE IT<lb/>
AND WE MAKE IT GOOD<lb/>
JANUARY<lb/>
BPRINCjBREiAK<lb/>
MOLSON<lb/>
SKI<lb/>
SNOULIBOFIRD<lb/>
PIJRTV<lb/>
You must lie 18<lb/>
to consume alcohol<lb/>
in i' in.ut.i<lb/>
TPaveL<lb/>
1 800 999 ski.9 SKITRAVEL.COM<lb/>
RINGGOLD<lb/>
TOWERS<lb/>
RENT<lb/>
CLL FOR DETAILS<lb/>
(252)752-2865<lb/>
635 Cotanche Street, No. 900<lb/>
Greenville, NC27858<lb/>
"Before giving,<lb/>
I always<lb/>
look for the<lb/>
Humane<lb/>
Seal<lb/>
ROUNDTRIP BUS AVAIL, it.<lb/>
" NOAH WYLE<lb/>
Star'olNBC's hit showBH<lb/>
The Humane Charity Seal<lb/>
of Approval guarantees<lb/>
that a health charity funds<lb/>
vital patient services<lb/>
or life-saving medical<lb/>
research, but never<lb/>
animal experiments.<lb/>
Council on Humane Giving<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
www. HumaneSeal. org<lb/>
202-686-2210, ext. 335<lb/>
PHYSICIANS COMMITTEE FOR RESPONSIBLE MEDICINE <lb/>
<pb facs="00059556_0008"/><lb/>
11-11-04<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? NEWS<lb/>
PAGE A8<lb/>
?p dpi<lb/>
"SSffif<lb/>
&amp;???<lb/>
i<lb/>
"m binn enthusiast<lb/>
? Seeking e"<lb/>
.SJV students with;<lb/>
H rpVP IP<lb/>
pNM?<lb/>
?<lb/>
ftW5<lb/>
? ;? J interest'm P4"9<lb/>
iiS!L-pip"de<lb/>
tion skills<lb/>
ma .Pirate itiuc<lb/>
. Excellent cornrnunica<lb/>
4Ht K <lb/>
1125 ?<lb/>
difterenCw tee the information<lb/>
University, see<lb/>
C<lb/>
Want to welcome new students to ECU during<lb/>
Orientation? Be an Orientation Assistant!<lb/>
Applications for Summer 2005 available NOW!<lb/>
Pick up your application at 203 Whichard Building or call ext. 4173.<lb/>
Information sessions will be held on the following dates:<lb/>
Tuesday, November 16, 7:00 - 8:00 pm, Mendenhall Student Center, Room 212<lb/>
Monday, December 6,5:00 - 6:00 pm, Whichard Building, Room 207<lb/>
Wednesday, January 12,4:00 - 5:00 pm, Whichard Building, Room 207<lb/>
Applications are due Wednesday, January 19 by 5:00 pm.<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059556_0009"/><lb/>
<lb/>
"V<lb/>
w<lb/>
Page B1 features@theeastcarollnian.com 252.328.6366 ROBBIE DERR Features Editor CAROLYN SCANDurm Assistant Features Editor<lb/>
THURSDAY November 11, 2004<lb/>
Announcemnts:<lb/>
Students are reminded to take<lb/>
extra care when using ATM<lb/>
machines at this time of year.<lb/>
Due to day-llght-savlngs-tlme,<lb/>
it Is getting dark outside earlier<lb/>
which opens the window for theft<lb/>
and assault earlier In the day.<lb/>
With the holidays approaching,<lb/>
people are becoming tighter on<lb/>
money and their will to steal is<lb/>
becoming stronger. Try to travel<lb/>
in groups, during the day and at<lb/>
night, as much as possible. Stay<lb/>
away from dimly lit areas and use<lb/>
common sense.<lb/>
The Greenville Veteran's Day<lb/>
Celebration is Thursday, Nov. 11<lb/>
at 11 a.m. in the Greenville Town<lb/>
Commons. This celebration will<lb/>
be honoring our past and present<lb/>
veterans of the U. S. Military.<lb/>
Please take some time to reflect<lb/>
on what Veteran's Day really<lb/>
means. For more information<lb/>
about the event, call 758-2788.<lb/>
Jazz Night will be In the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center on<lb/>
Friday, Nov. 12 at 8 p.m. This<lb/>
event, hosted by the ECU School<lb/>
of Music will feature exciting and<lb/>
talented jazz artists. For more<lb/>
information, call 328-6851.<lb/>
The Contra Dance, sponsored by<lb/>
the Folk Arts Society of Greenville<lb/>
and the ECU Folk &amp; Country<lb/>
Dancers, will be Saturday, Nov.<lb/>
13 at 8 p.m. This event will feature<lb/>
great live music of bluegrass,<lb/>
swing, old and popular tunes<lb/>
that will help you dance the night<lb/>
away. The event will be held at<lb/>
the Willis Building on the comer<lb/>
of First and Reade Streets in<lb/>
Greenville. For more information,<lb/>
call 752-7350.<lb/>
Healthy Hints:<lb/>
Correction: The student health<lb/>
center does give allergy shots to<lb/>
students, but does not do allergy<lb/>
testing.<lb/>
- The way you care for your skin<lb/>
now will Influence the way it looks<lb/>
when you are 40. This fact is the<lb/>
same for men and women: No one<lb/>
wants to look like they are 50 at age<lb/>
35. Following a few simple steps<lb/>
will help to keep skin its healthiest:<lb/>
- Again, for the millionth time, drink<lb/>
plenty of water. This will keep the<lb/>
skin cells big, helping to decrease<lb/>
fine wrinkles and flush out toxins.<lb/>
- Protect yourself against dry skin<lb/>
when the air Is not humid enough.<lb/>
With winter rapidly approaching,<lb/>
the air will be dryer and so will your<lb/>
skin. Use a moisturizer to keep<lb/>
your skin looking bright. Men's<lb/>
aftershave can be purchased with<lb/>
moisturizers and sunscreen just<lb/>
like women's products. No more<lb/>
excuses guys.<lb/>
- Use lukewarm water to wash<lb/>
your face and body. Hot water<lb/>
can cause skin to lose moisture<lb/>
and can cause redness of the skin<lb/>
which may not only be painful but<lb/>
also unsightly.<lb/>
- Avoid any face or body washes<lb/>
that burn or Irritate your skin. Most<lb/>
people think that If the product<lb/>
Is burning, it is working. For the<lb/>
most part, this is wrong. Some<lb/>
products can be causing more<lb/>
harm than good.<lb/>
Weekly Recipe:<lb/>
A different kind of<lb/>
Pumpkin Pie<lb/>
1 12 pints vanilla ice cream,<lb/>
softened<lb/>
3 eggs<lb/>
1 34 cups pumpkin puree<lb/>
34 cup white sugar<lb/>
12 teaspoon salt<lb/>
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon<lb/>
14 teaspoon ground ginger<lb/>
14 teaspoon ground nutmeg<lb/>
2 (9 inch) unbaked pie shells<lb/>
Preheat oven to 425 degrees F<lb/>
(220 degrees C.) Place ice cream<lb/>
near the warm oven to soften. In<lb/>
a large bowl, whisk together the<lb/>
eggs.<lb/>
Stir in the pumpkin puree, sugar,<lb/>
salt, cinnamon, ginger and<lb/>
nutmeg.<lb/>
Mix In soft Ice cream until smooth.<lb/>
Pour filling Into two 9 Inch pie<lb/>
shells.<lb/>
Bake for 15 minutes in the<lb/>
preheated oven.<lb/>
Reduce temperature to 350<lb/>
degree F (175 degrees C), and<lb/>
bake an additional 30 to 40<lb/>
minutes, or until filling is set<lb/>
TEC relationship guide 101<lb/>
Boyfriend, girlfriend relationship advice Surviving<lb/>
roommate<lb/>
troubles<lb/>
Are these relationships<lb/>
meant to last?<lb/>
DANIELLE WIGGINS<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Let's just face the facts, col-<lb/>
lege students do not come to<lb/>
school with intentions of run-<lb/>
ning into serious relationships.<lb/>
College life is a different atmo-<lb/>
sphere and students go to college<lb/>
to meet new people and experi-<lb/>
ence new things. Some students<lb/>
already have significant others at<lb/>
home or nearby. Either attending<lb/>
parties or going downtown, it is<lb/>
not unusual for someone to meet<lb/>
someone else, being the reason<lb/>
why some relationships don't<lb/>
last. Some use it as a break period<lb/>
to have fun, but overall most col-<lb/>
lege students almost always avoid<lb/>
getting too serious for the fear of<lb/>
commitment. If college was not<lb/>
enough, rushing into things too<lb/>
quickly and balancing educa-<lb/>
tion can become overwhelming.<lb/>
Those involved in a relationship<lb/>
choose to have closed or open<lb/>
relationships while they are away.<lb/>
The question is, "how do they<lb/>
keep that relationship going?"<lb/>
People say long distant rela-<lb/>
tionships don't last, others say<lb/>
that spending time away from<lb/>
someone makes the relationship<lb/>
stronger. Being involved in a long<lb/>
distance relationship of my own<lb/>
was hard to initially get used to,<lb/>
but eventually the week passes<lb/>
quicker than expected and we<lb/>
are able to see each other on<lb/>
the weekends. I would consider<lb/>
myself luckier than some with<lb/>
boyfriends or girlfriends thou-<lb/>
sands of miles away. Dealing with<lb/>
these types of relationships, com-<lb/>
munication is a "must" in keep-<lb/>
ing that bond as long as possible.<lb/>
There are those who attend school<lb/>
with their significant other and<lb/>
have the privilege of gracing their<lb/>
presence almost everyday of the<lb/>
week. They also have the luxury<lb/>
of motivating and helping each<lb/>
other throughout the school year.<lb/>
On the other end, those who are<lb/>
far away from their boyfriends or<lb/>
girlfriends are able to have time<lb/>
Many students come to college<lb/>
to themselves. They are able to<lb/>
get a lot more done when they are<lb/>
not too distracted. Strong rela-<lb/>
tionships can help when people<lb/>
are not too worried about finding<lb/>
love. College can either make or<lb/>
break a relationship, only if you<lb/>
allow it to.<lb/>
When dealing with hectic<lb/>
schedules and stress issues,<lb/>
having an unhealthy relation-<lb/>
ship puts the icing on the cake.<lb/>
We all want to be happy, espe-<lb/>
cially in a very serious relation-<lb/>
ship, so when everything else<lb/>
fails you are able to turn to your<lb/>
loved one and they are there<lb/>
to support you. That is what<lb/>
having a healthy relationship is<lb/>
all about. It is always crucially<lb/>
important to maintain a healthy<lb/>
boyfriendgirlfriend relationship<lb/>
especially in college if you plan<lb/>
to be involved.<lb/>
"I think it is important<lb/>
with significant others, but do<lb/>
because it is a foundation for<lb/>
future commitment, it opens you<lb/>
up to knowing that they can be<lb/>
dependable said Natalie Wood,<lb/>
freshman communication major.<lb/>
Although, maintaining a<lb/>
healthy relationship is not easy,<lb/>
we are all human, all the bicker-<lb/>
ing is normal to a certain extent<lb/>
and in the end, you are willing<lb/>
to forgive and forget. People are<lb/>
not expected to have a perfect<lb/>
relationship, only one that is<lb/>
healthy enough to keep both out<lb/>
of the crazy house.<lb/>
"It is important to me because<lb/>
it keeps me focused on school<lb/>
and everything else without any<lb/>
worries says Latonya Medlin,<lb/>
freshman criminal justice major.<lb/>
A healthy relationship pre-<lb/>
vents one from cheating or chal-<lb/>
lenging trust issues and it also<lb/>
prevents young adults from things<lb/>
such as suicide and depression.<lb/>
College friendships last for<lb/>
lifetime with these simple steps<lb/>
Tips to being a good<lb/>
friend to other people<lb/>
USA TUMBARELLO<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
College is the melting pot of<lb/>
life; it signifies the closing of one<lb/>
era and the beginning of a new<lb/>
one. With all the people that<lb/>
attend a university it is hard to<lb/>
think that you can be friends<lb/>
with so many people - but you<lb/>
can. By keeping a close, inner<lb/>
circle of friends and a dependable<lb/>
outsource of other friendly faces<lb/>
and acquaintances, the possibili-<lb/>
ties of connecting with people on<lb/>
a multitude of levels is endless.<lb/>
Entering college as a fresh-<lb/>
man, without a single friend by<lb/>
your side, can be a bit intimi-<lb/>
dating, but with these few tips,<lb/>
making friends will be easier<lb/>
than you ever imagined.<lb/>
Some people are shy and<lb/>
others more outgoing, but no<lb/>
matter your personality, by using<lb/>
some of these simple gestures you<lb/>
will attract people to you and<lb/>
open the door to new friendships.<lb/>
Make eye contact and smile.<lb/>
It sounds simple, but you may<lb/>
have to do it a few times before<lb/>
someone catches on.<lb/>
When having a conversa-<lb/>
tion with someone, start with<lb/>
something common such as, the<lb/>
weather, sports or news. This way<lb/>
you will be able to feel out the<lb/>
other person's likes or dislikes<lb/>
and you can take your conversa-<lb/>
tion from there.<lb/>
When in a social setting,<lb/>
single out a person from a group.<lb/>
It is often hard to get a word in<lb/>
when there are lots of people<lb/>
involved in a conversation. Make<lb/>
a friendly approach and act<lb/>
relaxed even though you may<lb/>
be nervous. Listen to someone<lb/>
and show an interest. By asking<lb/>
questions you prolong your con-<lb/>
versation and it allows you to dig<lb/>
further into the acquaintances<lb/>
personality.<lb/>
Ralph Waldo Emerson, a<lb/>
famous American author, poet<lb/>
and philosopher from the mid-<lb/>
Friendships play a major role in<lb/>
19th Century once said, "con-<lb/>
versation is an art in which a<lb/>
man has all mankind for his<lb/>
competitors, for it is that which<lb/>
all are practicing every day while<lb/>
they live<lb/>
When you see the person<lb/>
again you can pick up where you<lb/>
left off in the conversation, this<lb/>
will ensure that you will have<lb/>
something to talk about again<lb/>
and again. It will be easier to<lb/>
make small talk the next time<lb/>
you see them.<lb/>
Most friendships start from<lb/>
small gestures and random meet-<lb/>
ings. If you are new to a dorm or<lb/>
apartment, go borrow something<lb/>
from a neighbor, even if you don't<lb/>
really need it. This is a great way<lb/>
to meet people and strike up a<lb/>
conversation.<lb/>
"When 1 lived in the dorms,<lb/>
I went to borrow some dish soap<lb/>
from the girl living next to me.<lb/>
Now, two years later we are best<lb/>
friends and live together off<lb/>
campus said Heather Schmitt,<lb/>
junior exercise physiology major.<lb/>
Another great way to meet<lb/>
people is to get involved on<lb/>
campus. Find out what kind of<lb/>
clubs, churches, part time jobs or<lb/>
volunteer work you are interested<lb/>
in. By involving yourself in some-<lb/>
thing that interests you, you are<lb/>
likely to meet other people who<lb/>
students' success at school.<lb/>
share similar beliefs.<lb/>
Intimate friendships don't<lb/>
develop overnight. Let things<lb/>
progress gradually into sharing<lb/>
more feelings about general life.<lb/>
Singling out a person to have<lb/>
a strong relationship over your<lb/>
other friends Is healthy. Having<lb/>
this best friend can provide a<lb/>
release area when life becomes<lb/>
too much to bear.<lb/>
Make sure you don't become<lb/>
too involved with a best friend<lb/>
thus alienating your other<lb/>
friends. All friendships, from<lb/>
best friends to acquaintances, are<lb/>
important.<lb/>
"The only way to have a friend<lb/>
is to be a friend said Emerson.<lb/>
There is total truth behind<lb/>
this. One cannot expect to have<lb/>
a healthy friendship when they<lb/>
themselves don't provide the<lb/>
same respect to their friends.<lb/>
Check out www.ecu.edu to<lb/>
find out what organizations<lb/>
and activities are right for you<lb/>
to explore. Or visit the Center<lb/>
for Counseling and Student<lb/>
Development in the Wright<lb/>
Building. These resources<lb/>
will lead you on the path to<lb/>
great new friendships that will<lb/>
last forever.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
they end up leaving with them?<lb/>
Advantages in having healthy<lb/>
relationships are rewarding.<lb/>
"It is having someone to talk<lb/>
to about everything, I am able to<lb/>
go and talk to that person about<lb/>
the decisions that I make, and<lb/>
I have the advantage of having<lb/>
someone support me and my<lb/>
decisions Medlin said.<lb/>
"Having the security gives me<lb/>
self confidence, love assurance,<lb/>
security and being able to trust<lb/>
that person Wood said.<lb/>
Life is much easier without<lb/>
confrontation, constantly dis-<lb/>
agreeing with one another and<lb/>
always finding yourself involved<lb/>
in a stressful position, and it<lb/>
often times leaves one with a<lb/>
loss of energy and sometimes<lb/>
patience. Trust issues are brought<lb/>
into attention and a lot of ten-<lb/>
sion occurs when there is a large<lb/>
see RELATIONSHIP page B2<lb/>
At work,<lb/>
relationships<lb/>
are important<lb/>
Employee relationships<lb/>
play an important role<lb/>
in different job markets<lb/>
ASHLEY WHEDBEE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
Professional or friendly,<lb/>
comfortable or unpleasant, sat-<lb/>
isfying or frustrating, relax-<lb/>
ing or stressful. That's right,<lb/>
you know what we're talking<lb/>
about co-worker relationships.<lb/>
The relationships you have<lb/>
with your coworkers can make or<lb/>
break you in a job. Whether it is the<lb/>
relationship you have with your<lb/>
boss or the ones with those you<lb/>
work side by side with, if they're<lb/>
not healthy ones, you probably<lb/>
can't enjoy your job to the fullest.<lb/>
Many people work at a job<lb/>
day in and day out, enjoying the<lb/>
company of their coworkers.<lb/>
They spend their extra time<lb/>
chatting with them and finding<lb/>
out what has been going on in<lb/>
their lives. They may even spend<lb/>
lunch-breaks together or hang<lb/>
out on the weekends. On the<lb/>
other hand, many dread the fact<lb/>
that they have to go in to work<lb/>
and see the same faces everyday.<lb/>
They may not have anything to<lb/>
say to their boss or coworkers or<lb/>
feel that they have nothing in<lb/>
common with them. Even worse,<lb/>
they may fear going in the job<lb/>
and having the supervisor stand<lb/>
over their shoulder, making sure<lb/>
everything is done exactly the<lb/>
way they want it, with no free-<lb/>
dom in the workplace at all.<lb/>
"I think coworker relation-<lb/>
ships impact your job a lot said<lb/>
Laura Thompson, sophomore<lb/>
elementary education major.<lb/>
"If the environment you are<lb/>
a part of and work at is one you<lb/>
enjoy going to, you're obviously<lb/>
going to enjoy working better.<lb/>
It's important for all coworkers to<lb/>
get along or at least have respect<lb/>
towards each other in order for<lb/>
everyone to best serve the cus-<lb/>
see WORK page B3<lb/>
Are they friends or<lb/>
are they foes?<lb/>
MEREDITH STEWART<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
It's mid-semester and students<lb/>
have learned ECU'S campus,<lb/>
learned their professors and most<lb/>
of all have had time to learna thing<lb/>
or two about their roommate.<lb/>
"I decided to room with a<lb/>
friend from high school because<lb/>
I felt comfortable around her, and<lb/>
knew that we would get along<lb/>
said freshman Michelle Yopp.<lb/>
It always seems like a good<lb/>
idea to room with a friend, but<lb/>
it can also turn into a very nasty<lb/>
situation. When you live with<lb/>
people who you have been friends<lb/>
with for a while, you begin to<lb/>
realize their "little habits Some<lb/>
of which you can get over, but<lb/>
others that drive you crazy.<lb/>
"So far we have had a few<lb/>
arguments, but we just yell at<lb/>
each other to let out our stress<lb/>
and then get over it Yopp said.<lb/>
Taylor Uzzell and Katie Bland<lb/>
were friends for four years and<lb/>
decided to be roommates. So far<lb/>
they are both happy with their<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
"I'm happy that I'm living<lb/>
with someone that I previously<lb/>
knew said freshman Katie<lb/>
Bland.<lb/>
"I didn't want to take a pot-<lb/>
luck chance and get someone<lb/>
that I didn't like said freshman<lb/>
Emily Dnistran, who has known<lb/>
her roommate for five years.<lb/>
When you don't know some-<lb/>
one that you are living with, it's<lb/>
really hard to relax and be ydurself,<lb/>
especially if you are a shy person.<lb/>
While these students are<lb/>
happy that they are rooming<lb/>
with their friends, other entered<lb/>
ECU without knowing anyone,<lb/>
therefore rooming with a com-<lb/>
plete stranger. And some had<lb/>
friends at ECU, but chose to room<lb/>
with people they didn't know.<lb/>
"People who know each other<lb/>
and live together end up hating<lb/>
each other and I wanted to con-<lb/>
tinue liking my friends said<lb/>
freshman Brittany Meadows,<lb/>
who has many friends attending<lb/>
ECU, but chose to meet someone<lb/>
new.<lb/>
Taking that risk of rooming<lb/>
with a stranger is scary. Some stu-<lb/>
dents chose to live with someone<lb/>
they didn't know simply because<lb/>
they wanted a new experience.<lb/>
"I wanted to meet new people<lb/>
and not go through college only<lb/>
knowing the same people from<lb/>
high school said freshman<lb/>
Jessalyn Santiago, who is happy<lb/>
with her potluck roommate<lb/>
Andrea Stahl.<lb/>
"Jessalyn is my best friend at<lb/>
ECU Stahl said.<lb/>
They are both happy with<lb/>
their decision to room with<lb/>
strangers, and have made an ever-<lb/>
lasting friendship. This seems<lb/>
like a rare situation when you ask<lb/>
some ECU students.<lb/>
It's really difficult living with<lb/>
a person who doesn't respect the<lb/>
other persons' personal belong-<lb/>
ings, or doesn't respect the other<lb/>
person in general. It's essential to<lb/>
live with someone who you some-<lb/>
what trust, and get along with.<lb/>
Potluck is risky, and for most<lb/>
people it just doesn't work out. But<lb/>
some people love the challenge of<lb/>
getting to' know someone new.<lb/>
"I'm an only child, and I<lb/>
was really looking forward to<lb/>
having a roommate said Aja<lb/>
Campbell.<lb/>
After the first month her<lb/>
roommate just didn't sleep in the<lb/>
room any longer. She would stay<lb/>
with friends off campus, leaving<lb/>
Aja alone. I'm sure most students<lb/>
would love to have a room-<lb/>
mate who never showed up, but<lb/>
Campbell was looking forward to<lb/>
having a "sister-like" relationship<lb/>
with her roommate.<lb/>
Whether you like your room-<lb/>
mate or have serious issues with<lb/>
them remember that the semes-<lb/>
ter is almost over and you can<lb/>
change rooms next semester.<lb/>
The overall roommate Situation<lb/>
this year seems to be at its best<lb/>
whether students are living with<lb/>
a friend, or a stranger. Preference<lb/>
is really up to the individual.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com. <lb/>
<pb facs="00059556_0010"/><lb/>
PAGE B2<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? LIVING<lb/>
11-11-04<lb/>
11-11-04<lb/>
Relating with relatives is not always easy<lb/>
??i 1<lb/>
JTwi r<lb/>
Lk TM. '  N.<lb/>
Mill mJlL Jfl<lb/>
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Ajfy vl<lb/>
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Getting along with family members might not always be easy, but it's something everyone should try to do.<lb/>
Family relationships<lb/>
take both time, effort<lb/>
LAURA KEELING<lb/>
SENIOR WRITER<lb/>
There is nothing better than<lb/>
going home for the holidays and<lb/>
seeing the people that truly love<lb/>
you the most, your family. This<lb/>
Thanksgiving, many will travel<lb/>
countless hours just to stay for<lb/>
a mere weekend. Though many<lb/>
will get home and find them-<lb/>
selves quickly heading back to<lb/>
Greenville, the most important<lb/>
part is that they made it home and<lb/>
only for a short time got to see the<lb/>
people that they cherish the most.<lb/>
This is the time of year when<lb/>
most can look back and reflect on<lb/>
both the year and how thankful<lb/>
they are for the many blessings<lb/>
that have been received. Person-<lb/>
ally, when I think about all the<lb/>
things that 1 am thankful for, 1<lb/>
think first and foremost about<lb/>
my family. I think about the<lb/>
sacrifices they have made just<lb/>
to send me to college, the large<lb/>
amounts of money that they have<lb/>
given to keep me fed, warm and<lb/>
safe, and how they have provided<lb/>
emotional support through any<lb/>
major trials or tribulations that I<lb/>
may have gone through.<lb/>
There are many different<lb/>
types of families. Some are really<lb/>
big and some are really small, yet,<lb/>
no matter where you go or what<lb/>
you do, you will always have<lb/>
some type o: family. This being<lb/>
friends from school or work that<lb/>
you are constantly with that sup-<lb/>
port, love and care about you very<lb/>
much. As a student I can truly<lb/>
admit that if it weren't for my<lb/>
ECU family and my work family,<lb/>
I would not be able to make it<lb/>
through each week.<lb/>
Family relationships play<lb/>
a vital role into the well-being<lb/>
of human beings. In an online<lb/>
article by Michelle Gottlieb,<lb/>
healthy family relationships are<lb/>
described to have "healthy com-<lb/>
munication, respect, love and<lb/>
liking one another Gottlieb is a<lb/>
marital and family therapist from<lb/>
California that specializes in<lb/>
trauma and depression issues.<lb/>
"Families shape the qual-<lb/>
ity of our lives said an article<lb/>
on 4therapy.com.<lb/>
"Emotional links among<lb/>
family members stretch across<lb/>
households and decades, influ-<lb/>
encing our outlooks on life, moti-<lb/>
vations, strategies for achieve-<lb/>
ment and styles for coping with<lb/>
adversity. Family relations are the<lb/>
earliest and most enduring social<lb/>
relationships. As a result, family<lb/>
life experiences deeply affect the<lb/>
competence, resilience and well-<lb/>
being of each of us<lb/>
The article goes on to describe<lb/>
that most people think that all<lb/>
family relationships are positive,<lb/>
yet for many more the relation-<lb/>
ship is negative. Some people<lb/>
have had many bad experiences<lb/>
with sexual or verbal abuse from<lb/>
a family member, which gives<lb/>
them a very negative outlook.<lb/>
Everyone has their own per-<lb/>
sonal experiences with some<lb/>
type of family. No matter if the<lb/>
experience has been good or bad,<lb/>
somehow there are always going<lb/>
to be those special someone's<lb/>
there to help you through.<lb/>
Overall, family relationships,<lb/>
including your college family,<lb/>
work family, church family or<lb/>
next of kin are a vital part of your<lb/>
everyday life. Without their pres-<lb/>
ence and influence you would<lb/>
not have been molded into the<lb/>
person you are today.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Relationship from page B1<lb/>
amount of jealousy which is the<lb/>
reason why trust has to be a prior-<lb/>
ity if you want your relationship<lb/>
to go far. Having no trust in the<lb/>
relationship usually opens up as a<lb/>
sign of an unhealthy relationship.<lb/>
Compromise keeps a relationship<lb/>
going and you should not feel<lb/>
like the person who is giving<lb/>
and never receiving anything in<lb/>
return. Someone who is in love<lb/>
should not always feel depressed<lb/>
because of the other person.<lb/>
Being a person who is con-<lb/>
stantly verbally or physically<lb/>
abused is not a great feeling<lb/>
especially from the person they<lb/>
are suppose to love. The one who<lb/>
is doing the abusing is not doing<lb/>
any justice but showing appar-<lb/>
ent signs of weakness and no<lb/>
one should have to tolerate such<lb/>
treatment. A lot of times, victims<lb/>
of abuse are open to insecurity<lb/>
and sr clal issues. Being involved<lb/>
in a relationship sometimes<lb/>
can give one the fear of leaving<lb/>
that person. Conflicts with one<lb/>
another can cause a big collapse<lb/>
In the relationship. If you are<lb/>
stuck in that type of relationship,<lb/>
it is best to either seek counseling<lb/>
or move on. No one deserves to<lb/>
be stuck in an unhappy relation-<lb/>
ship. There is always plenty of<lb/>
fish in the sea if your relationship<lb/>
is not going anywhere.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
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Saturday - Meat or 5 Cheese Lasagna<lb/>
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Paily Prink Specials<lb/>
Monday - M.75 Powestic Pottles<lb/>
Tuesday - 2 Imports<lb/>
Wednesday - ?1 Mug Pud It 4 Pitchers<lb/>
Thursday - V House Hi-ballsWine<lb/>
Z50 Import of the day<lb/>
Friday - 3 Margarita fr 2.50 Import of the day<lb/>
Saturday - ?? lit S- 2.5Q Import of the Pay<lb/>
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Newcastle, Black and Tan<lb/>
leal Smoothie<lb/>
YOUR Help!<lb/>
Send us the name &amp; ingredients<lb/>
for a new ECU smoothie!<lb/>
The winner will recieve FREE<lb/>
smoothies for a month.<lb/>
Ingredients to choose from: Strawberry Blueberry Grape Banana Cranberry Raspberry Peach Lime Almond Orange Mango Coconut Pineapple Kiwi<lb/>
'Stop by for details Mail suggestions to the address.<lb/>
?Mtl c , 0 .? v Power Smoothies also available<lb/>
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Prizes will be given away for Is! &amp; 2nd place<lb/>
For more information contact MSC Recreation office at 328-4738<lb/>
TALK IS CHEAP!<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059556_0011"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
11-11-04<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? LIVING<lb/>
PAGE B3<lb/>
II<lb/>
EXPRESS30RS<lb/>
ROMANCING YOUR ADDICTIONS<lb/>
TOBACCO ACCESSORIES ? ADULT NOVELTIES<lb/>
EXOTIC CIGARETTES ? T-SHIRTS<lb/>
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Rolling Papers ? Glass Pipes ? Loose Tobacco<lb/>
Stickers ? Blow-up Friends &amp; Farm Animals ? Incense<lb/>
Body Piercing &amp; Jewelry ? Detox Solutions ? Candles<lb/>
Hair Dye ? Adult Videos ? Black Lights ? Whipcream<lb/>
Gag Gifts and a Bunch of Other Cool Stuff<lb/>
Welcome Back Students!<lb/>
Show Your Student ID And Get<lb/>
13 OFF EVERYDAY!<lb/>
205 E. 5th Street<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC<lb/>
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Work<lb/>
from page B1<lb/>
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Golf anytime after 12:00 p.m.<lb/>
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Rates Include Cart Fee &amp; 1 Bucket Of Range Balls<lb/>
Call For Tee Times 5 Days In Advance<lb/>
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Grill Open To The Public<lb/>
600 Clubhouse Dr. ? Chocowinity, NC ? (252) 946-7788<lb/>
A positive work environment Is key<lb/>
tomers<lb/>
The way you interact and<lb/>
communicate with those you<lb/>
work with is an important aspect<lb/>
of job satisfaction. For exam-<lb/>
ple, a survey conducted at The<lb/>
University of Tennessee in June<lb/>
2004, found that 68 percent of<lb/>
the employees surveyed at the<lb/>
university said they thought it<lb/>
was a good place to work, but<lb/>
for good co-worker relations,<lb/>
it could be better, mostly by<lb/>
improving relationships between<lb/>
employees and supervisors.<lb/>
With all the college students<lb/>
working in Greenville, it's not<lb/>
hard to find a coworker that you<lb/>
have something in common with<lb/>
or who you enjoy talking to.<lb/>
There's a good chance that<lb/>
you may have had a class with at<lb/>
least one person at the job or that<lb/>
you know someone, who knows<lb/>
someone, who knows them.<lb/>
Although it seems inevitable that<lb/>
you find someone you get along<lb/>
with, there also seems to always<lb/>
be that person that you just don't<lb/>
get along with.<lb/>
"I know I don't want to work<lb/>
with someone I can't stand to be<lb/>
around Thompson said.<lb/>
So, what about romantic or<lb/>
physical relationships with those<lb/>
you work with?<lb/>
? Are they acceptable? Are they<lb/>
strictly forbidden? Does it make<lb/>
the workplace more stressful?<lb/>
These are all things that should<lb/>
be considered. Some people<lb/>
think these relationships are OK.<lb/>
"I think co-worker relation-<lb/>
ships are fine, but I don't want to<lb/>
see it at work said Amy Combes,<lb/>
junior biology major.<lb/>
On the other hand, some<lb/>
don't.<lb/>
"Co-worker relationships<lb/>
should not occur because if some-<lb/>
thing were to happen it could<lb/>
make the work place uncomfort-<lb/>
able and then you probably can't<lb/>
do the work that you could if you<lb/>
were in a better environment<lb/>
said Sean Hampton, junior exer-<lb/>
cise physiology major.<lb/>
There are considerable advan-<lb/>
tages to positive coworker rela-<lb/>
tionships, though not necessarily<lb/>
referring to romantic ones.<lb/>
Not only will the job be more<lb/>
satisfying for you, but you will<lb/>
also be more satisfying at the job.<lb/>
You are more likely to be fun<lb/>
to work with and to do your job<lb/>
well. This could help you move<lb/>
up in the business or perhaps<lb/>
get a raise.<lb/>
The disadvantages of<lb/>
negative relationships with<lb/>
coworkers include unenthusias-<lb/>
tic attitudes, boredom, frustra-<lb/>
tion and overall discontent at<lb/>
the workplace and perhaps even<lb/>
the job in general. You are more<lb/>
likely to quit a job where you<lb/>
don't enjoy those who surround<lb/>
you or the atmosphere that you<lb/>
are surrounded by.<lb/>
"I believe that co-worker<lb/>
relationships are some of the<lb/>
most important you can form<lb/>
in your life said Diane Lareau,<lb/>
senior communication major.<lb/>
"Not only are coworkers the<lb/>
people you interact with daily,<lb/>
but they have the ability to help<lb/>
you grow, learn and inspire<lb/>
So, if you're having problems<lb/>
on the job with coworkers, don't<lb/>
give up. Those relationships<lb/>
could turn out to be some of the<lb/>
most influential ones in your life.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
features@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
to PePtor<lb/>
The only Kaplan MCAT class for<lb/>
April 2005 at ECU begins soonl<lb/>
Saturday, November 20th<lb/>
Call or visit us online today to enroll!<lb/>
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By 6th grade, an alarming nurber<lb/>
of girls lose interest in math,<lb/>
science &amp; technology. Which means<lb/>
they won't qualify for most future<lb/>
jobs. That's wrhy parents have to<lb/>
keep their interest alive,<lb/>
in every way we can.<lb/>
Its her future.Da the math<lb/>
mwr.gt rlsgotechiorg<lb/>
m fllGHScoMti<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/>
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Spots fill quickly, so stop<lb/>
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Department of<lb/>
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2 Rawl Annex<lb/>
Telephone: 328-2836<lb/>
or 328-6037<lb/>
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Page B4 sports@theeastcarolinian.com 252.328.6366 TONY Z0PP0 Sports Editor BRANDON HUGHES Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
THURSDAY November 11, 2004<lb/>
Pirates travel to USF<lb/>
ECU hits road to face<lb/>
inconsistent Bulls<lb/>
BRANDON HUGHES<lb/>
ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
With the season drawing to<lb/>
a close, the Pirates are search-<lb/>
ing for something positive to<lb/>
characterize Head Coach John<lb/>
Thompson's second year at the<lb/>
helm. ECU has been ravaged by<lb/>
injuries, but looks to finish strong<lb/>
against Conference USA oppo-<lb/>
nents South Florida and Memphis<lb/>
before hooking up with NC State<lb/>
on Nov. 27.<lb/>
The Pirates will take to the<lb/>
gridiron on the road this Satur-<lb/>
day, where they have struggled<lb/>
mightily. ECU is coining off a 34-<lb/>
24 defeat at the hands of Hous-<lb/>
ton while the Bulls are hoping<lb/>
to build more momentum after<lb/>
routing UAB 45-20.<lb/>
i M vs. UAB Recap<lb/>
South Florida exploded with<lb/>
four touchdowns in the fourth<lb/>
quarter to upset the Blazers 45-<lb/>
20 last week. USF running back<lb/>
Andre Hall rushed for 275 yards<lb/>
on 29 carries, including two<lb/>
touchdown runs of 35 and 63<lb/>
yards in the final quarter. The<lb/>
Bulls improved to 3-5 overall<lb/>
with the victory and UAB fell to<lb/>
5-3 on the season.<lb/>
Hall's school record perfor-<lb/>
mance enabled USF to overcome<lb/>
a 10-point deficit la the third<lb/>
quarter. Quarterback Pat Julmiste<lb/>
sparked the comeback with a 77-<lb/>
yard touchdown pass to receiver<lb/>
johnny Peyton. Julmiste com-<lb/>
ECU to host NCAA<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
ECU wants to banish memories of their loss against USF last year with a win this weekend.<lb/>
pleted 7-of-15 passes for 186 yards<lb/>
and two scores.<lb/>
The Bulls entered the game<lb/>
ranked last in total offense in<lb/>
C-USA, but racked up 535 yards<lb/>
against the Blazers and also broke<lb/>
a three-game losing streak in the<lb/>
offensive onslaught.<lb/>
Last Meeting<lb/>
ECU and South Florida partic-<lb/>
ipated in an epic battle on Nov. 8,<lb/>
2003 at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
The Pirates forced overtime with<lb/>
21 seconds remaining in regula-<lb/>
tion when fullback Vonta Leach<lb/>
plunged into the end zone from<lb/>
a yard out.<lb/>
Both squads traded field<lb/>
goals in the first overtime period<lb/>
and USF put the pressure on the<lb/>
Pirates when Elgin Hicks hauled<lb/>
in his third touchdown reception<lb/>
of the game in double overtime.<lb/>
ECU responded as Leach scored<lb/>
again, this time from three yards<lb/>
out. But Cameron Broadwell's<lb/>
extra point attempt was partially<lb/>
blocked, giving the Bulls a 38-37<lb/>
win.<lb/>
Leach and Marvin Townes<lb/>
both rushed for more than 100<lb/>
see FOOTBALL page B7<lb/>
regionals<lb/>
Meet to be held at Lake<lb/>
Kristi, starts at 11am<lb/>
TONYZOPPO<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
On Saturday, Nov. 13, ECU<lb/>
will once again play host to<lb/>
the NCAA Division I Southeast<lb/>
Regional Cross Country Cham-<lb/>
pionships. This annual event is<lb/>
the stepping-stone for competi-<lb/>
tors to reach the NCAA National<lb/>
Championships, to be held in<lb/>
Terre Haute, Ind. on Nov. 22.<lb/>
Men's and women's individual<lb/>
and team qualifiers will compete<lb/>
from more than 40 colleges and<lb/>
universities across North Caro-<lb/>
lina, South Carolina, Kentucky,<lb/>
and Virginia.<lb/>
"ECU is very excited to have<lb/>
the NCAA Regional back in<lb/>
Greenville this year said meet<lb/>
co-administrator Michael Weller.<lb/>
"We've had a very positive<lb/>
response from coaches and ath-<lb/>
letes on how much they enjoy<lb/>
competing here<lb/>
This is the third straight<lb/>
year ECU has hosted the event,<lb/>
which will be run at Overton's<lb/>
Lake Kristi Properties, east of<lb/>
Greenville. In each of the pre-<lb/>
vious two years, the women's<lb/>
national champion has come<lb/>
from the Southeast Regional.<lb/>
"This is a great opportunity<lb/>
for us to showcase ECU and the<lb/>
City of Greenville Weller said.<lb/>
"I'm proud of all the effort<lb/>
that's gone into our hosting<lb/>
an event of this size at such a<lb/>
remarkable venue. I encourage<lb/>
anyone who is interested in cross<lb/>
country to come out and watch<lb/>
the event<lb/>
The women's six-kilometer<lb/>
race will kick off the day at 11<lb/>
a.m with the men running a 10-<lb/>
kilometer race at 12:15 p.m. No<lb/>
admission or parking fees will be<lb/>
charged at this year's event.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
0FYI<lb/>
For directions and more meet<lb/>
Information, visit<lb/>
ecuplrates.com or nctrack.com.<lb/>
Lady Pirates to end season in Greenville<lb/>
ECU volleyball looks to<lb/>
rebound this weekend<lb/>
DAVID WASKIEWICZ<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
After coming off their tough-<lb/>
est weekend of the season with<lb/>
losses to Louisville and Cincin-<lb/>
nati, the ECU Volleyball team<lb/>
will be looking to get back on<lb/>
track this weekend when they<lb/>
face DePaul and Marquette.<lb/>
The games will close out<lb/>
the regular season for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates, who have earned the<lb/>
final spot in the Conference USA<lb/>
tournament on Nov. 19.<lb/>
ECU assistant coach Ryan<lb/>
Manning stressed the importance<lb/>
in preparing for the upcoming<lb/>
games after suffering two losses.<lb/>
"Wehavetogetbackinthegym<lb/>
and get focused said Manning.<lb/>
"This will allow us to regain<lb/>
confidence in our skills<lb/>
DePaul comes into Greenville<lb/>
at 12-16 (5-6). Senior Janet Gore-<lb/>
ham leads the Lady Blue Demons<lb/>
with 372 kills, averaging 3.58 a<lb/>
game. Junior Mandy Moorberg is<lb/>
not far behind Goreham, posting<lb/>
369 kills. As a team DePaul has a<lb/>
hitting percentage of .201.<lb/>
Marquette 18-6 (8-3) will<lb/>
prove to be one of ECU's more<lb/>
challenging opponents this<lb/>
season. The Lady Golden Eagles<lb/>
are ranked fourth in the C-USA<lb/>
c, um i fyrai i pzrj rs ECU wiH finish tneir season against DePaul and Marquette. MacKenzie will look to lead ECU once again at Lake Kristi.<lb/>
Week Nine: TEC predictions<lb/>
? if ?<lb/>
BRANDON HUGHES 52-28 Texas A&amp;M over Texas TechTONY ZOPPO 46-34 Texas A&amp;MBRENT WYNNE 40-40 Texas A&amp;MTRENT WYNNE 45-3S Texas A&amp;MERIC GILMORE 40-40 Texas A&amp;MROBERT LEONARD 56-24 Texas A&amp;MDAVID WASKIEWICZ 54-26 Texas A&amp;MMATT SAUNDERS 48-32 Texas A&amp;MMATTHEW FOSTER 52-28 Texas Tech<lb/>
West Virginia over BostonBoston CollegeWest VirginiaWest VirginiaWest VirginiaWest VirginiaWest VirginiaWest VirginiaWest Virginia<lb/>
Auburn over GeorgiaAuburnAuburnAuburnAuburnAuburnAuburnAuburnAuburn<lb/>
Miami over VirginiaVirginiaVirginiaMiamiMiamiMiamiVirginiaVirginiaMiami<lb/>
South Florida over ECUSouth FloridaSouth FloridaECUECUECUSouth FloridaSouth FloridaECU<lb/>
Ravens over JetsRavensJetsRavensRavensJetsJetsRavensRavens<lb/>
Jaguars over LionsJaguarsJaguarsJaguarsJaguarsJaguarsJaguarsJaguarsLions<lb/>
Seahawks over RamsSeahawksRamsRamsSeahawksSeahawksSeahawksSeahawksRams<lb/>
Redskins over BengalsBengalsBengalsBengalsBengalsBengalsBengalsRedskinsBengals<lb/>
Panthers over 49ersPanthers49ers49ersPanthersPanthersPanthers49ersPanthers<lb/>
?Not featured in this installment: Brand! Renfro (45-35)<lb/>
Leonard still leading<lb/>
BRANDON HUGHES<lb/>
ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR<lb/>
With an impressive 8-2 mark<lb/>
last week, Robert Leonard has<lb/>
widened his lead to two games<lb/>
over David Waskiewicz. Most<lb/>
of the staff remains in striking<lb/>
distance but will need to make a<lb/>
move quickly as the college foot-<lb/>
ball season is drawing to a close.<lb/>
ECU travels to South Florida this<lb/>
week and the panel is split on<lb/>
the outcome. There are a host<lb/>
of tough games once again, but<lb/>
I'm predicting a perfect week by<lb/>
someone on the staff.<lb/>
Texas Tech<lb/>
vs. Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
I think this game could be<lb/>
the toughest pick this week. Both<lb/>
squads come into this Lone Star<lb/>
state match-up ranked but who<lb/>
knows if they will both show up.<lb/>
Texas Tech has scored 70 points<lb/>
twice this season and Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
has been known to pull off the<lb/>
upset. I'm going with Texas A&amp;M<lb/>
in a 30-22 win.<lb/>
Boston College<lb/>
vs. West Virginia<lb/>
The staff heavily favors the<lb/>
Mountaineers this week but the<lb/>
game will be closer than most<lb/>
people think. Boston College<lb/>
is quietly having an impressive<lb/>
season as evidenced by its No.<lb/>
20 national ranking, but I think<lb/>
West Virginia pulls out a 27-24<lb/>
victory at home.<lb/>
Georgia vs. Auburn<lb/>
Easily the premier battle in<lb/>
the SEC and in the country, the<lb/>
Bulldogs travel to Auburn to face<lb/>
the undefeated Tigers. Auburn is<lb/>
sitting at No. 3 and it would be<lb/>
a shame if the Tigers couldn't<lb/>
play for a national championship<lb/>
ahead of USC or Oklahoma after<lb/>
an unbeaten season in the tough-<lb/>
est conference in the nation. I<lb/>
think Auburn keeps the hunt for<lb/>
the championship alive this week<lb/>
with a 20-17 win, but look for one<lb/>
of those three unbeaten teams to<lb/>
falter down the stretch.<lb/>
Miami vs. Virginia<lb/>
Everyone said Miami and<lb/>
Virginia Tech would dominate<lb/>
the ACC after the addition of<lb/>
the football powerhouses in<lb/>
the off-season. Nothing could<lb/>
be further from the truth as<lb/>
the Hurricanes have lost two<lb/>
straight. The Cavaliers have the<lb/>
potential to come out with a win,<lb/>
especially at home. But there is<lb/>
no way possible a team with as<lb/>
much talent as Miami, despite<lb/>
its shortcomings at quarterback,<lb/>
can lose three straight conference<lb/>
games. Hurricanes win convinc-<lb/>
ingly 35-17.<lb/>
ECU vs. South Florida<lb/>
The Pirates have followed a<lb/>
nightmare 2003 season with a<lb/>
more competitive, but still unsuc-<lb/>
cessful 2004 campaign. Things<lb/>
could be different if ECU would<lb/>
learn to play consistent football<lb/>
on the road, but it hasn't hap-<lb/>
pened. The inury plagued Pirates<lb/>
travel to USF on Saturday and<lb/>
I'm predicting a game similar to<lb/>
the Houston outcome. The Bulls<lb/>
win 34-20.<lb/>
Ravens vs. Jets<lb/>
The Jets were a lock to win<lb/>
this game before Chad Penning-<lb/>
ton went down with an injury.<lb/>
For the first time this season,<lb/>
Kyle Boiler will be the best quar-<lb/>
terback on the field. But it's the<lb/>
Ravens defense that will stifle<lb/>
backup Quincy Carter, which<lb/>
shouldn't be a difficult task. Bal-<lb/>
timore wins 17-10.<lb/>
Lions vs. Jaguars<lb/>
ECU alumnus David Garrard<lb/>
makes his first NFL start against<lb/>
Detroit and look for him to play<lb/>
well. The Jaguars defense will<lb/>
win the game and running back<lb/>
Fred Taylor will be solid as always.<lb/>
Garrard should complete 14-of-<lb/>
22 passes for 170 yards with a<lb/>
touchdown and run for another.<lb/>
An impressive outing will lead to<lb/>
a 23-13 Jags victory.<lb/>
Seahawks vs. Rams<lb/>
This match-up is another<lb/>
tough pick in the NFL ranks.<lb/>
I would like to go with St. Louis,<lb/>
but Head Coach Mike Martz<lb/>
still hasn't learned that<lb/>
giving Marshall Faulk the ball<lb/>
more than 20 times a game<lb/>
equates to a win. I say fire Martz<lb/>
after Seattle quarterback Matt<lb/>
Hasselback finally plays like<lb/>
a MVP candidate and Seattle<lb/>
wins 30-24.<lb/>
Bengals vs. Redskins<lb/>
How frustrating it is for Red-<lb/>
skins fans for Washington to<lb/>
have the best defense in the NFL<lb/>
with absolutely no passing game.<lb/>
It's time for a change and that is<lb/>
benching Mark Brunell in favor<lb/>
of Patrick Ramsey. That's proba-<lb/>
bly not going to happen this week<lb/>
and Washington hasn't scored<lb/>
20 points in a game this season.<lb/>
But I still trust in Joe Gibbs to get<lb/>
things turned around and I'm<lb/>
envisioning a 19-14 Redskins win.<lb/>
Panthers vs. 49ers<lb/>
As always the staff predicts<lb/>
one of the worst match-ups of<lb/>
the week and this one is as bad as<lb/>
it gets. There Is no hope in sight<lb/>
for either team but I'm predicting<lb/>
Carolina to win its second game<lb/>
of the season 20-12.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00059556_0013"/><lb/>
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Clarett allegations hold no water thus far<lb/>
(KRT) ? Where's the proof?<lb/>
That's the question hang-<lb/>
ing over the charges made by<lb/>
Maurice Clarett in an ESPN The<lb/>
Magazine story about cars, cushy<lb/>
jobs, money from boosters and<lb/>
other NCAA infractions.<lb/>
There is not a single piece of<lb/>
paper pointing to any of it.<lb/>
Did Clarett receive money<lb/>
and favors from boosters?<lb/>
What do you think happens<lb/>
at places like Ohio State and<lb/>
other schools where football is<lb/>
big business and fans treat play-<lb/>
ers like kings?<lb/>
Would OSU coach Jim Tressel<lb/>
andor his staff be stupid enough<lb/>
to authorize any of it?<lb/>
Hard to believe, at least<lb/>
until someone produces some<lb/>
real evidence.<lb/>
Is Clarett a viable witness?<lb/>
Does he have a history of telling<lb/>
the truth, or one of changing<lb/>
his story?<lb/>
Most fans know the answer<lb/>
to that.<lb/>
One player backing Clarett is<lb/>
former Buckeye Marco Cooper,<lb/>
who told ESPN he received the<lb/>
same favors. But Cooper was sus-<lb/>
pended from the team after two<lb/>
drug arrests. Other players said<lb/>
they had landscaping summer<lb/>
jobs like Clarett, but they worked<lb/>
for their money.<lb/>
Clarett is living in victim-<lb/>
hood. Unhappy because his<lb/>
plans to challenge the NFL's<lb/>
rules about turning pro failed.<lb/>
Unhappy about having to sit<lb/>
out TWO years before entering<lb/>
the 2005 NFL Draft. Unhappy<lb/>
because his value in the eyes of<lb/>
scouts keeps dropping.<lb/>
He blames OSU for his plight,<lb/>
claiming the Buckeyes ran<lb/>
him off.<lb/>
But if you are the OSU coach<lb/>
or athletic director and Clarett<lb/>
just led your team to the national<lb/>
title, what sense does it make<lb/>
to push the guy out the door<lb/>
- unless you had no choice?<lb/>
Clarett said that to remain<lb/>
on the team, Tressel said he<lb/>
had to work out at 6 a.m. and<lb/>
maintain a 3.5 grade-point aver-<lb/>
age. Clarett said he wasn't a<lb/>
morning person. He said the<lb/>
tutors would no longer help.<lb/>
He said a teacher banned him<lb/>
from class.<lb/>
If Clarett had simply shown<lb/>
up for his classes and made a<lb/>
decent effort at school, there<lb/>
would have been no academic<lb/>
problems. But school was not<lb/>
much of a priority. Early in<lb/>
his freshman year, Clarett<lb/>
first said he was considering<lb/>
going pro after his first season.<lb/>
That also was in an ESPN The<lb/>
Magazine story.<lb/>
There is no reason to doubt<lb/>
ESPN's reporting in that initial<lb/>
story or this one. Clarett said<lb/>
these things; they have it on<lb/>
tape. But is it true, or just an<lb/>
angry young man lashing out?<lb/>
The NCAA just finished<lb/>
an investigation of OSU and<lb/>
Clarett. According to OSU ath-<lb/>
letic director Andy Geiger, the<lb/>
school was not guilty of any<lb/>
violations, adding the NCAA<lb/>
examined the summer jobs and<lb/>
cars.<lb/>
The one iffy area was Tressel<lb/>
pointing Clarett and his mother<lb/>
to a dealership to buy a car.<lb/>
Geiger said this was OK with the<lb/>
NCAA, because there were no<lb/>
special favors, adding Clarett had<lb/>
at least one car repossessed.<lb/>
Maybe everything is legal,<lb/>
but it doesn't seem wise for a<lb/>
coach or anyone from an athletic<lb/>
department to recommend a<lb/>
player to a car dealership.<lb/>
The ESPN story also dis-<lb/>
cussed how OSU athletes take<lb/>
meaningless courses that don't<lb/>
Clarett has said that Tressel and the OSU coaching staff<lb/>
provided the former Buckeye with monetary benefits.<lb/>
count when the player trans-<lb/>
fers to another school. This a<lb/>
real problem not just at OSU,<lb/>
but at too many other major<lb/>
schools as well. Too often, play-<lb/>
ers are pushed into classes just to<lb/>
stay eligible.<lb/>
In the final years of coach<lb/>
John Cooper, the OSU program<lb/>
was an embarrassment with<lb/>
the Big Ten's lowest graduation<lb/>
rate. Geiger said 23 players were<lb/>
on the verge of being ineligible<lb/>
when Cooper was fired and<lb/>
replaced by Tressel.<lb/>
The athletic director said the<lb/>
graduation rate has risen from<lb/>
16 percent to 50 percent under<lb/>
Tressel. The football team also<lb/>
has been near the top in Big<lb/>
Ten academic honors the last<lb/>
two years.<lb/>
As for Clarett's charges of<lb/>
corruption, OSU has to be con-<lb/>
sidered innocent until someone<lb/>
truly proves otherwise.<lb/>
Volleyball<lb/>
from page B4<lb/>
!lhe most dangerou<lb/>
animals in Ihe lurest<lb/>
don I live there<lb/>
'<lb/>
standings and are currently on<lb/>
a three-game winning streak.<lb/>
Junior Theresa Coughlin leads<lb/>
the team in kills with 324. Over-<lb/>
all, the team has scored 1,339<lb/>
kills, averaging more than 16 a<lb/>
game. Defensively, senior Erin<lb/>
Freer leads the team with 333<lb/>
digs and is averaging four per<lb/>
game. The team has a hitting<lb/>
percentage of .214.<lb/>
Coming off of two straight<lb/>
losses, ECU will need to<lb/>
step it up this weekend in<lb/>
hopes of carrying momentum<lb/>
into the C-USA tournament.<lb/>
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V) Garry's Has Been Published In Many<lb/>
Major Tattoo Magazines<lb/>
Garry's Accepts<lb/>
Juniors Erica Wilson and Paige<lb/>
I lowell continue to lead the Lady<lb/>
Pirates in kills, with a combined<lb/>
total of 511. Sophomore Heidi<lb/>
Krug will continue to add to<lb/>
her 1,054 assists this weekend.<lb/>
Overall, ECU is hitting .186 as<lb/>
a team.<lb/>
This weekend's games will<lb/>
give the Lady Pirates practice<lb/>
heading into the C-USA tourna-<lb/>
ment. With two wins, ECU could<lb/>
also gain a better seed in the tour-<lb/>
nament. Both DePaul and Mar-<lb/>
quette are participating in the<lb/>
tournament, so there is a chance<lb/>
ECU will face these teams again.<lb/>
ECU's final home games of<lb/>
the season begin this Friday at<lb/>
7 p.m. against DePaul. Play will<lb/>
then resume Saturday at 7 p.m.<lb/>
against Marquette. Both games<lb/>
will be held at Williams Arena<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
"It is a good thing to be at<lb/>
home Manning said.<lb/>
"Home court advantage is<lb/>
always a plus. We look forward<lb/>
to being back<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sports?theeastcarolinian. com.<lb/>
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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 who are 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/>
LTu<lb/>
School of Allied Health Sciences<lb/>
Carol Belk Building<lb/>
252.328.4400<lb/>
www.ecu.eduah <lb/>
<pb facs="00059556_0014"/><lb/>
PAGEB6<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? SPORTS<lb/>
11-11-04<lb/>
Clemens toying with retirement<lb/>
again, wins seventh Cy Young<lb/>
Clemens "retired" once already, but will he do it again after winning yet another Cy Young?<lb/>
(KRT) ? Roger Clemens has<lb/>
waited a half-dozen years now for<lb/>
sometelltalesign that histimeisup.<lb/>
He's waited for his fastball<lb/>
to shorten up, for his legs or his<lb/>
back or his shoulder to lock up,<lb/>
for batters to start creeping up in<lb/>
the box against him and just the<lb/>
opposite has happened.<lb/>
At 42, Clemens is as good<lb/>
as he's ever been, coming off a<lb/>
season that compares favorably<lb/>
with his best ever: A seventh<lb/>
Cy Young award, more wins<lb/>
and a lower ERA for the third<lb/>
year running, a 10-1 run over<lb/>
the second half of the season<lb/>
to secure a wild-card spot for<lb/>
Houston, followed by two wins<lb/>
in the playoffs.<lb/>
Perfect time for Clemens to<lb/>
retire? Sure. But so was the last<lb/>
time. Odds Clemens won't be back?<lb/>
"It's 99.9 he said. "I'll leave<lb/>
it right there<lb/>
Clemens was quick to point<lb/>
out that's exactly what he said<lb/>
last year, before unretiring 78<lb/>
days later. Michael Jordan said the<lb/>
exact same thing after his second<lb/>
retirement, came back and must<lb/>
have regretted it. Muhammad Ali<lb/>
didn't dabble in percentages, but<lb/>
maybe he should have. He might<lb/>
have left before It was too late.<lb/>
Nothing that drastic awaits Cle-<lb/>
mens if he does return, and that's<lb/>
the guess here. His skills clearly<lb/>
haven't declined the way Jordan's<lb/>
did and besides, baseball is a gentler<lb/>
racket than the court or the ring.<lb/>
Advances in conditioning<lb/>
have enabled a handful of the<lb/>
game's best players to keep push-<lb/>
ing the envelope into their fifth<lb/>
decade, Barry Bonds is 40 and<lb/>
Randy Johnson, who finished<lb/>
second in the Cy Young ballot-<lb/>
ing, is 41. And Clemens' work<lb/>
ethic is the envy of not just every-<lb/>
body in the Astros' clubhouse,<lb/>
but all of baseball.<lb/>
Yet that kind of longevity<lb/>
comes with a stiff price tag.<lb/>
"Obviously, committing to<lb/>
pitching again and getting my<lb/>
body ready to be a power pitcher.<lb/>
That's a short answer, but that<lb/>
entails a lot said Clemens, who's<lb/>
currently touring Japan with a<lb/>
major league all-star team.<lb/>
And though the Astros<lb/>
allowed him to be as much of a<lb/>
stay-at-home dad as the schedule<lb/>
allowed, Clemens said he wanted<lb/>
to be around when his oldest son<lb/>
left home for college or the June<lb/>
amateur draft, as well as catch<lb/>
UNCG i Gampus.com<lb/>
more of his two other sons' base-<lb/>
ball and football games.<lb/>
"Last Clemens added,<lb/>
"everyone who knows me knows<lb/>
my mother has emphysema, and<lb/>
even though she's a very strong<lb/>
lady, strong-willed, I worry about<lb/>
her health. The next step for me is<lb/>
the Hall of Fame, and that's five<lb/>
years after I finish playing. And if I<lb/>
continue playing, I prolong that<lb/>
On the other hand, he's also<lb/>
likely to file for free agency by<lb/>
Thursday's deadline. He also<lb/>
wouldn't give a direct answer<lb/>
when asked whether the Astros<lb/>
were the only team he would con-<lb/>
sider pitching for. And remem-<lb/>
ber: when Clemens came back<lb/>
last January, he said it was only<lb/>
because he had the chance to play<lb/>
in his hometown of Houston.<lb/>
And then there's that little<lb/>
matter of his less-than-satisfying<lb/>
exit from Game 7 of the National<lb/>
League championship series. For<lb/>
the first five innings of a cool Octo-<lb/>
ber night in St. Louis, Clemens<lb/>
looked like his old untouchable self.<lb/>
Then he challenged Albert Pujols<lb/>
and Scott Rolen with fastballs and<lb/>
got burned. He left the mound and<lb/>
see CLEMENS page B7<lb/>
fJ UNCG<lb/>
? ? I iwioti<lb/>
, nnttmiall paming<lb/>
Graduate sooner.<lb/>
WinterSession<lb/>
December 18-January22<lb/>
Got a mouseGet a degree.<lb/>
So, what are YOU doing over the winter holidays? You COULD be taking an online<lb/>
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you missed, or get ahead with a class you need. Best of all, it's all online, so you can catch<lb/>
classes at your convenience, wherever you happen to be spending your winter vacation!<lb/>
If youvc ever attended our Summer Session, you know what an advantage these<lb/>
between-semester classes can be. There's a great selection of undergraduate and graduate<lb/>
courses offered. You can even enroll as a visiting student and transfer credits back home.<lb/>
So, do something scholarly during the holidays. Sign up for WinterSession, and use<lb/>
your winter break to finish fasterVisit www.calldcl.com for a complete listing of<lb/>
courses, or phone (866)334-CALL for more information.<lb/>
ONLINE DEGREE PROGRAMS<lb/>
11-11-04<lb/>
Enter to win <lb/>
AinericanAWfs<lb/>
When: Now through November 12th<lb/>
Where: www.ecu.edudining<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/>
niiMiimiJ'mainn<lb/>
CAMPUS LIVING<lb/>
nun<lb/>
Featuring:<lb/>
Free Cable TV<lb/>
Free Water &amp; Sewer<lb/>
Sparkling Swimming pool<lb/>
Professional On-Slte Management<lb/>
24-hour Emergency Maintenance<lb/>
Laundry Center<lb/>
On ECU Bus Route<lb/>
WasherDryer Connections<lb/>
Spacious Floor Plans<lb/>
Pets allowed with fee<lb/>
'In some units<lb/>
11<lb/>
111<lb/>
Oi<lb/>
Si<lb/>
Diversity -<lb/>
International Education Week<lb/>
MOVIES<lb/>
w 'I- f<lb/>
Diversity Across the Globe:<lb/>
Celebrating Local Flavor<lb/>
November 15-20, 2004<lb/>
Wed. Nov. 17<lb/>
World Food Festival<lb/>
1PM - 3PM (Mendenhall Multi-Purpose Room)<lb/>
Have a toste of the world around and participate i<lb/>
some special activities.<lb/>
Dialogue on Diversity<lb/>
6PM (Ledonia Wright Cultural Center)<lb/>
Thurs. Nov. 18<lb/>
Fulbright &amp; International Scholars Reception<lb/>
4PM - 6PM (International House)<lb/>
Come visit with ECU faculty and administrators for informal<lb/>
conversation and refreshments<lb/>
"Gene Therapy" with Teja Arboleda i ?? e)<lb/>
7PM - 9PM (Wright Auditorium) ' ;<lb/>
Fri. Nov. 19 A<lb/>
Community Festival<lb/>
3:30PM - 6PM (Christenbury Gym)<lb/>
ECU is celebrating diversity through a special youth carnival<lb/>
with games and activities for children of all ages. If you<lb/>
are interested in volunteering at this event please call 328-2735<lb/>
or e-mail volunteer@mail.ecu.edu.<lb/>
Cookout and Pep Rally<lb/>
6PM - 7PM (Mendenhall Brickyard)<lb/>
Sat. Nov. 20<lb/>
Distribution of Diversity Pins<lb/>
12PM - 2PM (Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium Student Gate)<lb/>
Nov.17:Osama @ 9:30PM<lb/>
Nov.18.Mano Full of Grace @ 7&amp; 9:30PM<lb/>
Nov.19:Dangerous Living @ 9:30PM &amp; 11PM<lb/>
Maria Full of Grace @ Midnight<lb/>
Nov.20:Osama @ 3PM, Devdas @ 5PM, Dangerous Living @ 8PM<lb/>
Maria Full of Grace @ 9:30PM, Osama @ Midnight<lb/>
Nov.21 :Osama @ 3PM, Maria Full of Grace @ 5PM<lb/>
Devdas @ 8PM, Dangerous Living @11PM<lb/>
Diversity &amp; International Education Week Sponsors<lb/>
Campus Dining, Department of English and International Studies,<lb/>
ECU Student Involvement Team, ECU Studont Union, Ledonia Wright<lb/>
Cultural Center, Office of International Affairs, Division of Student Life,<lb/>
Student Government Association, Volunteer &amp; Service-teaming<lb/>
Center, Wellness Education and Student Health Services<lb/>
Submit)<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059556_0015"/><lb/>
-11-04<lb/>
11-11-04<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? SPORTS<lb/>
PAGE B7<lb/>
feS<lb/>
is<lb/>
ne<lb/>
ie<lb/>
8<lb/>
i!<lb/>
Football<lb/>
from page B4<lb/>
The Pirates' offensive line will have to give James Pinkney better protection Saturday.<lb/>
yards in the game as the Pirates<lb/>
led USF in every ofiensive cat-<lb/>
egory, including a 22-11 advan-<lb/>
tage in first downs and a 362-243<lb/>
advantage in total offensive<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
Players to Watch<lb/>
South Florida has struggled<lb/>
to move the football for most of<lb/>
the season, particularly through<lb/>
the air. The Bulls are averaging<lb/>
just below 150 yards passing per<lb/>
contest. Julmiste had a solid per-<lb/>
formance against the Blazers but<lb/>
has battled issues with accuracy,<lb/>
completing just 43.7 percent of<lb/>
his attempts this season for 873<lb/>
yards. His best outing this season<lb/>
came in a 45-44 overtime win<lb/>
against TCU where he completed<lb/>
22-of-33 passes for 324 yards. But<lb/>
the signal-caller was a combined<lb/>
5-for-30 for 90 yards in losses to<lb/>
South Carolina and Louisville<lb/>
and tossed four interceptions in<lb/>
a 27-20 defeat at the hands of<lb/>
Southern Miss.<lb/>
Running back Andre Hall is<lb/>
the playmaker for the Bulls and has<lb/>
taken the pressure off of Julmiste.<lb/>
The junior has rushed for 822<lb/>
yards this season with nine touch-<lb/>
downs and is second on the team<lb/>
with 12 receptions. Hall is averag-<lb/>
ing 6.4 yards per carry and 117.4<lb/>
yards per game. Clenton Crossley<lb/>
should also get 10-15 carries for<lb/>
the run-oriented USF offense.<lb/>
Crossley has carried the ball 70<lb/>
times for 318 yards this season.<lb/>
The Pirates secondary will<lb/>
face a tough task covering the<lb/>
Bulls' receivers on Saturday,<lb/>
even with a less than dangerous<lb/>
opposing quarterback. USF has<lb/>
completed passes to 12 different<lb/>
receivers with S.J. Green leading<lb/>
the team with 14 receptions.<lb/>
Freshman Johnny Peyton is a<lb/>
legitimate home run threat,<lb/>
averaging 25.5 per reception.<lb/>
Heading the defensive unit<lb/>
for USF are co-captains Lee<lb/>
Roy Selmon and Javan Camon.<lb/>
Selmon, a senior, was selected<lb/>
to the Preseason All-Confer-<lb/>
ence USA team as a defensive<lb/>
tackle and brings leadership to<lb/>
an experienced defensive line.<lb/>
Selmon is the team's leading<lb/>
returning tackier from 2003 with<lb/>
63 stops. Fellow senior Javan<lb/>
Camon will lead the secondary<lb/>
for USF. Camon is a hard-hitting<lb/>
free safety who took over for the<lb/>
departed J.R. Reed. Reed left the<lb/>
Bulls as the school's all-time<lb/>
leader in interceptions, setting<lb/>
a single season record in three<lb/>
consecutive seasons. Camon<lb/>
leads the team with 68 tackles<lb/>
this season but has yet to come<lb/>
up with a pick. USF has forced<lb/>
seven turnovers in eight games,<lb/>
but only two are interceptions.<lb/>
Keys to the Game<lb/>
South Florida holds a<lb/>
2-0 series advantage over the<lb/>
Pirates and ECU will need to<lb/>
play inspired football for sixty<lb/>
minutes in order to win its<lb/>
first road game of the season.<lb/>
The Pirates defense has forced<lb/>
six turnovers in the last two<lb/>
games and should have plenty of<lb/>
opportunities for interceptions<lb/>
against shaky USF quarterback<lb/>
Pat Julmiste.<lb/>
ECU is the 11th least<lb/>
penalized team in the country,<lb/>
but had an uncharacteristic<lb/>
outing last week against Hous-<lb/>
ton. The Pirates were whistled<lb/>
for 10 penalties for 96 yards,<lb/>
including a long touchdown<lb/>
run by Chris Johnson that was<lb/>
nullified. ECU'S discipline should<lb/>
be back on track on Saturday.<lb/>
The Pirates took another huge<lb/>
hit when leading receiver Bobby<lb/>
Good was lost for the season with<lb/>
a leg injury against the Cougars.<lb/>
ECU has been forced to empty<lb/>
the bench after Demarcus Fox,<lb/>
Edwin Rios and Iverick Harris<lb/>
were all either suspended or quit<lb/>
earlier in the season. Stepping<lb/>
in to start will be Brian Howard<lb/>
and Kevin Roach. Howard had<lb/>
a solid outing last week and<lb/>
Roach, more of a possession<lb/>
receiver, won't hesitate to go<lb/>
over the middle in traffic. Will<lb/>
Bland, who caught a touchdown<lb/>
pass against Houston, will also<lb/>
see plenty of action. Freshman<lb/>
punt returner and cornerback<lb/>
Travis Williams could make his<lb/>
debut on offense. The Pirates<lb/>
are 14th in the country in punt<lb/>
returns and Williams' speed will<lb/>
be a welcoming addition to the<lb/>
receiving corps.<lb/>
This writer can be contacted at<lb/>
sport5@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Be heard!<lb/>
Send us your pirate rants!<lb/>
Submit online at vmN.theeastoarolinim.com, or e-mail editor@theeastcarolinian.com.<lb/>
Clemens<lb/>
from page 66<lb/>
the Astros never got the lead back.<lb/>
Of course, even a perfect<lb/>
ending doesn't always seal the deal.<lb/>
Otherwise, Jordan would<lb/>
have left after the game-win-<lb/>
ning shot in Utah and Ali after<lb/>
"The Thrilla in Manila Sandy<lb/>
Koufax and Jim Brown always<lb/>
get credited with walking away<lb/>
from their sports at the peak of<lb/>
their powers, but Koufax' pitch-<lb/>
ing arm was about to fall off<lb/>
and Brown left because he could<lb/>
make more money in Hollywood<lb/>
than the NFL at the time.<lb/>
Clemens is as clear-eyed a<lb/>
professional as there's ever been.<lb/>
He knows there's plenty more<lb/>
innings in his arm and nowhere<lb/>
he can make more money or bask<lb/>
in half as much adulation.<lb/>
He said years ago the only<lb/>
reason he was leaving Boston<lb/>
was for a shot at the World Series,<lb/>
then took a detour through<lb/>
Toronto. He finally got the ring<lb/>
in New York, then left there<lb/>
thanking everybody in sight<lb/>
and threatening to boycott his<lb/>
own Hall of Fame induction<lb/>
ceremony unless he could stroll<lb/>
in wearing a Yankees cap.<lb/>
So while there's no reason to<lb/>
doubt Clemens' sincerity about<lb/>
wanting to spend more time<lb/>
around the house, it's also worth<lb/>
noting he's always reserved his<lb/>
greatest loyalty for his own cause.<lb/>
That telltale sign Clem-<lb/>
ens has been waiting for isn't<lb/>
coming, and probably won't<lb/>
for another season or two.<lb/>
ll could be a Staining Broblem.<lb/>
Get your kid Dlp now1<lb/>
1-888-GR8-HIND- www.iboutLD.org<lb/>
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752-1750 <lb/>
<pb facs="00059556_0016"/><lb/>
PAGE B8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN ? SPORTS<lb/>
11-11-04<lb/>
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,m ? 9:00 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/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
uravnsm<lb/>
Tomorrow starts here.<lb/>
For more information, call the Summer Study Abroad office at 328-2409, or e-mail dunnca@mail.ecu.edu. 
</div></body></text></TEI>