The Optimist - Oct. 3, 2008

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Optimist the

a product of the JMC

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Pg. 8 Hitting Regionals: Men win spots, women to compete Friday

Friday, October 3, 2008 :: Vol. 97, No. 13 :: 1 section, 8 pages ::

Inside This Issue:

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‘World Famous Bean,’ The Den ammend hours of operation

Essence of Ebony promotes voter registration at Rock the Vote event

ACU police report drop in crime during ’07

By Elizabeth Coffee Student Reporter

The ACU Police Department has released its 2007 Crime Statistics Report to the public in accordance with the Jeanne Cleary Act; crime as a whole has dropped from previous years in most of the documented categories. Ellison “Fighting crime is a community effort,” said ACU police chief Jimmy Ellison. The report covers 11 different kinds of incidents: murder, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, motor vehicle theft, arson, forcible sex offenses, non-forcible sex offenses, liquor law violations, drug law violations and illegal weapons charges and possessions.

By Michael Freeman Managing Editor

ACU raised eyebrows last February when the university announced it would distribute iPhones and iPod touches to its incoming class of freshmen. In fact, it raised eyebrows from every continent in the world with the exception of Antarctica. More than 350 magazines, trade publications, newspapers, blogs, television stations and news Web sites have published articles about ACU’s Mobile Learning Initiative. “It’s just unbelievable the

2006 2007 9

Vehicle Theft:

6

1

Arson:

1

0

Sex Offenses:

3

1

Liquor Violations: 3

1

Drug Violations:

3

1

Illegal Weapons: 1

1

Initiative brings attention

Crime comparison

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There’s not a week that goes by when the phone rings or an e-mail says, ‘Hey, I’m so-and-so from such-andsuch school and I’m really interested in what you’re doing. :: George Saltsman, director of the Adams Center for Teaching and Learning.

Crime page 4

Burglaries:

Sub T-16 pledge Clint Holmes was admitted to Abilene Regional Hospital at 9 p.m. Sept. 19 after his kidneys started to fail during a pledging activity. Holmes, sophomore youth and family ministry major from Dallas, was driven to the Holmes emergency room by Sub T-16 member Brad Blanks, senior accounting and finance major from Haskell. When Holmes was 15 years old, he was diagnosed with high blood pressure. Doctors determined through tests that it was a hereditary condition, and he was put on medication. After quitting his high school football team because of his condition, he has not had any problems until now. “I figured I’d be fine on medicine and I could handle it,” Holmes said. Holmes was released from the hospital Sept. 25. Doctors said his muscle breakdown was blocking his kidneys, and they were functioning at onethird of what they should have been. The blockage prevented his kidneys from filtering properly. If he had not gone to the hospital when he did, he would have collapsed. Dr. Jeff Arrington, associate dean of Student Life, said he investigated the incident and found no university policies were broken. “There was no sense in which inappropriate action contributed to that situation,” Arrington said. Holmes said he had men-

Globe watching iACU

Videographer

Crime

Faustian Feature: Writer reviews devilish ACU performance

Sub T-16 pledge sent to hospital

By Brandon Tripp

See

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amount of publicity we’ve gotten from this,” said Lynne Bruton, director of public relations. “Now saying that, it’s not all positive. There are some negative pieces. But really, we’re getting our name out there. And the more you get your name out there, even though people are saying negative things, we’re still being perceived by our peer institutions as a leader in mobile technology.” Some of the national news organizations that have reported on the initiative include See

Globe page 4

To see the complete report, visit www.acu.edu/ campusoffices/acu_police

tioned his condition on his health form for pledging but never to any of the Sub T-16 members. “Going into something like this, he should have made us aware,” said Quinn Powers, Sub T-16 member and sophomore education major from Eula. Holmes did not want his condition to prevent his participation. “Letting them know could have helped before it got worse, but I was too stubborn to let anybody tell me that I couldn’t do it,” Holmes said. Powers said he thought nothing could have prevented the incident. “If he had been doing any pledge activity for any club it could have happened; our members did as much as they could as soon as they could,” Powers said. Sub T-16 President Derrick Bibb, along with other members, visited Holmes every day at the hospital. “If anybody wanted to see the true character of Sub T-16, then they should have been in the hospital room as members sat and prayed for me,” Holmes said. “People don’t give them half the credit they deserve for being the men of God that they are.” Bibb, senior animal science major from Abilene, said this year’s pledge class has done a good job of rallying behind Holmes. Instead of tearing them apart, the incident has brought them together, Bibb said. “The whole situation and how it was handled personifies what Sub T is about,” Bibb said. “We don’t leave a man behind. This gives this pledge class the idea of what we are about.”

E-mail Coffee at: jmcnetwork@acu.edu

SA decides to help fund student trip

Pledges plunge into second phase

By Daniel Johnson-Kim

For almost two weeks, social clubs have tested their pledges by enforcing many rules pledges are required to follow. As pledging intensifies, pledges may struggle to balance the rigors of club and the academic challenges of school. Matching outfits, pledge pins, binders, baskets, red mirrors, chain links and other objects carried by pledges make them easy to spot around campus. Pledges of Ko Jo Kai also can be heard respecting Kojie Park by exclaiming, “I will respect Kojie Park!” each time they pass the two benches. “It doesn’t really embarrass me because I know everyone has to do it. I wasn’t the first one to do it and I won’t be the last one,” said Allie Souder,

Editor in Chief

The Students’ Association Congress voted to grant money to help a student organization attend a conference and appointed two new members to the Congress on Wednesday. After debating numbers for about an hour, SA voted to give more than $99 per member of the ACU student chapter of the Society for Human Resource Management to help pay for the group’s trip to the Human Resource Southwest Regional Conference in Fort Worth. The maximum SA voted it would provide was more than $1,100 if 12 people attended the conference,

which will be on Oct. 14-16. Congress decided on the dollar amount that would come from the Student Request fund—a sum of money set aside in SA’s budget to distribute among student groups—after voting each person on the trip should be required to spend $75 of their own money to attend the conference. The motion to allot the funds passed 31-2-5. Chris King, junior human resource management major from Houston and president of the ACU SHRM chapter, made the case for the student organization, laying out the expected costs of the conference and the amount he was requesting. See

SA page 4

aCU WeaTHer

By Linda Bailey Student Reporter

More from the

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Ko Jo Kai pledge and sophomore exercise science major from Arlington. Next week, the second phase of pledging begins. In the second phase, pledges will be involved in activities such as visiting and getting to know older members. Pledges could spend up to 15 hours per week doing activities, while in the first phase they only were allowed to spend 12 hours weekly. “It’s really about budgeting your time and keeping your priorities straight,” said Alpha Kai Omega pledge Abigail Sutphen, sophomore biology major from Houston. Michael Goodman, Gamma Sigma Phi pledge and mathematics major from Keller, said he utilizes time in between lunch and Chapel and after night activities to do homework.

Jozie Sands :: staff photographer Ko Jo Kai pledges Kortney Reeves, sophomore nursing major from Abilene, and Breanna Anderson, sophomore undeclared major from Keller, scream “I will respect Kojie Park!” in unison Thursday afternoon.

“It’s non-stop action all day trying to get everything done,” Goodman said. Although pledging can be time consuming, pledges use

different means to keep from being overwhelmed. Souder said she planned her class schedule See

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you feel safe Online Poll : onDoACU’s campus?

Log onto www.acuoptimist.com or www.youtube.com/acuvideo to see weekly News casts and Sports casts from the JMC Network News Team and videos profiling various events and stories around campus and Abilene.

a. Yes. The ACU police do a fine job. b. No. I stay indoors at night. c. Only when I carry my gun. d. Not if there are freshmen around.

acuoptimist.com Department of Journalism and Mass Communication ::

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