Dating in college problems, 3
Govs win basketball season opener, 8 /theallstate
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Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2013
The Student Newspaper of Austin Peay State University Since 1930. First copy FREE, additional copies 50 cents each.
Cold, dry winter ahead SGA passes » By PHILLIP SWANSON Staff Writer
Winter is only a few weeks away, and that means the threat of snow, ice and freezing conditions. For those looking ahead to the coming season, there are two sources for distant weather predictions: the Old Farmer’s Almanac and the Farmer’s Almanac. The 2013-2014 winter weather outlook for Clarksville, according to the Old Farmer’s Almanac, calls for a mix of sun, rain and mild temperatures for the rest of November. The average temperature will be 53 degrees, two degrees below average, with around six inches of precipitation, one inch above average. According to the Old Farmer’s Almanac, beginning in December, the average temperature will drop to around 46 degrees with average precipitation around four inches. Northern Tennessee will begin to see snow around Christmas. For the rest of the winter, the almanac calls for colder than normal temperatures, with “below-normal precipitation and snowfall in all but the northernmost part of the region.”
In late December and early January, the 12.5 inches, so the next should be temperature will drop to its lowest point, seen between 2016 and 2020. and our greatest Neither the Old chance for snowfall Farmer’s Almanac nor Farmer’s Almanac will arrive. Farmer’s Almanac is Predictions According to the designed to be used Farmer’s Almanac, as a prediction that is average significant 100 percent accurate. temperature snowfalls are They claim a high for remainder expected for every accuracy rate, but use of November zone. their own methods to The Farmer’s make predictions. amount of precipitation Almanac also says More often than in November that Tennessee not, their highest should expect snow amounts of success average for Thanksgiving. are in generalized temperature According to the weather conditions, for December National Oceanic such as saying a region and Atmospheric will receive lower than years Administration, normal temperatures. between starting in 1996, To make predictions, significant snowfall Tennessee usually the Old Far mer ’s in Tenn. has a 6 to 10 year Almanac’s Founder, span between Robert B. Thomas, used last significant studies of solar activity significant snowfalls, plus or variations, astronomical snowfall, minus two years. cycles and previous in 2010 The last weather cycles to create significant his own “secret” method, snowfall was in 2010 at around which is still in use today. TAS
53° 6” 46°
6-10
12.5”
three acts
» By LAUREN COTTLE Staff Writer
The Student Government Association passed three acts, and senators proposed four new pieces of legislation during the meeting on Wednesday, Nov. 6. Act No. 1 was passed, which will push the SGA to begin publicly publishing the voting records of senators. Senator Chris Hayes, who sponsored the bill, said its goal was to allow the SGA to “be more open to the student body.” Act No. 2 was passed, which clarifies and expands legislation responsibilities of senators. Act No. 3 was also passed, which defines the veto power of the SGA president. Senator Jed Dugger proposed Act No. 4, which aims to end SGA discrimination “against students who take advantage of multiple dual enrollment and AP credit
opportunities.” If passed, the bill will require the SGA to elect senators according to the number of credit hours earned and not semesters spent on campus. Dugger also proposed Act No. 5, which intends to complete academic qualifications for legislative branch members of the SGA. If passed, the bill will require freshman senators to have a high school GPA of “at least 2.75 on a 4.0 scale” and graduate senators with no graduate credit to have an undergraduate GPA of “at least 2.745 on a 4.0 scale.” Resolution No. 5, sponsored by Senators Thomas Thornton and Chris Tablack, plans to send “a formal recommendation to the Physical Plant to install a sidewalk along the intramural fields side of the road on Marion Street.”
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New football stadium construction to start soon Typhoon
The original Governors Stadium wil be torn down and replaced with a new stadium over the next year. APSU will lose 140 student parking spots to the construction area, but two gravel lots will make up for some of the lost spots. ARIANA JELSON | STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
New stadium to begin construction after last game » By MYRANDA HARRISON Staff Writer
On Saturday, Nov. 16, APSU will play a home football game against Southeast Missouri State University, the Govs’ last home game of the season. The kickoff will be at 1 p.m.
After the game, APSU is hosting a demolition ceremony for Governors Stadium. Attendees will see the first piece of dirt dug up from the stadium as the university prepares for the construction of a new stadium. Executive Director of Public Relations and Marketing Bill Persinger said in an email, the
construction of the new stadium will affect parking on campus. Summer Street will be permanently closed, as the area will become a plaza for the new stadium. Summer Street is in between the Foy parking lot and the stadium. At the Wednesday, Oct. 30 Student Government Association meeting, Dean of Students Gregory Singleton said 140 student parking spots will be lost. Singleton said two new gravel lots will be available. The gravel lots will not account for all of the lost spots, however. The new stadium, according to Vice President of Finance and Administration Mitch Robinson, will cost a total of $16 million. Private contributions account for about $2.5 million of the total. “It’s an important facility to not only the university, but the entire community,” said Persinger. “We are well overdue to make an improvement there.” According to a press release, APSU President Tim Hall said we “cannot progress in our recruitment and retention efforts, especially football, without improving the stadium.” The new stadium, Persinger said, will be ready by the next football season and will hold around 10,000 people. The new stadium will feature new offices, training rooms for the players, locker rooms, meeting rooms and more weight rooms. Ten skyboxes and club seating similar to those at professional football stadiums will be included in
Staff Writer
At APSU, the percentage of students considered “nontraditional” is approaching 45 percent. From Monday, Nov. 4 to Friday, Nov. 8, the Adult and Nontraditional Student Center celebrated Nontraditional Student Week. “Nontraditional Student Week celebrates the adult learners who have carved out time from their busy lives to pursue a higher education,” said ANTSC Graduate Assistant Linda McIntosh. On Monday, Nov. 4, the center sponsored a table for the Non-Traditional Student Society to hold a fundraiser. On Tuesday, Nov. 5, they held the CoffeeBRAKES event, and on Wednesday, Nov. 6,
a Nontraditional Student Luncheon took place. During the luncheon, Director of Academic Support Martin Golson talked about the services provided by the Academic Support Center. He explained where the center is, the operating hours and how it can benefit students. Golson believes students should not be reluctant to seek help from faculty and staff when needed. “There are some great strengths that come from having a large number of nontraditional students because they come to the university with a number of life experiences,” Golson said. “It means that they also come with some challenges.” According to Golson, the diverse backgrounds of APSU students mean many must be employed and live off-campus throughout their college careers. Golson also said their experiences outside of
» ASSOCIATED PRESS
school bring unique opportunities and challenges. Kelby West, a junior vocal performance major, took a couple of years off of school before transferring to APSU from Lipscomb University. “I feel as any student would,” West said. “I kind of wish that things had happened differently and that I had graduated by now, but things happen.” The ANTSC, in UC 112, is open to all students. It offers a six-computer lab, a television area and a place for students to study and share meals with friends. Public relations major Jason Hartley started school in 2004 and, after a “lackluster” academic experience, spent the next seven years working at Target, a custom T-shirt store and touring
MANILA, Philippines — One of the most powerful typhoons ever recorded slammed into the Philippines early Friday, Nov. 8 with one weather expert warning of catastrophic damage. The U.S. Navy’s Joint Typhoon Warning Center shortly before Typhoon Haiyan’s landfall said its maximum sustained winds were 314 kilometers per hour (195 mph), with gusts up to 379 kilometers per hour (235 mph). “195-mile-per-hour winds, there aren’t too many buildings constructed that can withstand that kind of wind,” said Jeff Masters, a former hurricane meteorologist who is meteorology director at the private firm Weather Underground. Masters said the storm had been poised to be the strongest tropical cyclone ever recorded at landfall. He warned of “catastrophic damage.” Local authorities reported having troubles reaching colleagues in the landfall area. The local weather bureau had a lower reading on the storm’s power, saying its speed at landfall in Eastern Samar province’s Guiuan township had sustained winds at 235 kilometers (147 miles) per hour, with gusts of 275 kph (170 mph). The bureau takes measures based on longer periods of time. Authorities in Guiuan could not be reached for word of any deaths or damage, regional civil defense chief Rey Gozon told DZBB radio. Forecaster Mario Palafox with the national weather bureau said it had lost contact with its staff in the landfall area. More than 125,000 people had been evacuated from towns and villages in the typhoon’s path, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said. Haiyan’s wind strength at landfall had been expected to beat out Hurricane Camille, which was 305 kilometers per hour (190 mph) at landfall in the United States in 1969, Masters said. The only tiny bright side is that it’s a fast-
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Nontraditional students celebrate getting higher education » By DAVID HARRIS
Haiyan hits Phillipines