Volume 55, Issue 5

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AUGUSTA STATE UNIVERSITY

www.asubellringer.com

VOLUME 55, ISSUE 5

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NEWS | PAGE 2

New bus and new features added to the Jaguar Express shuttle service.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012

ARTS & LIFE | PAGE 6

Zombies take over downtown Augusta, Ga., in the third annual Zombie Walk.

Early voting dates change for Georgians

New program aims to improve Georgia college retention rates By KARL FRAZIER senior reporter

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By JILLIAN HOBDAY news editor

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he duration for early voting is being cut by more than half, and although the change was for economic reasons, negative byproducts are evident as the issue of voter fraud and voter regulation captivates the nation prior to this year’s election. Georgia House Bill 92 changed inperson voting from 45 days to 21 days. The bill took effect on July 1, 2011 and includes a mandatory Saturday, which takes place on Oct. 27 for all counties in Georgia. The bill’s intent was to address complaints from smaller counties that do not have the money to maintain an open polling place for 45 days, according to Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp. However, as the issue of voter fraud remains in the media, there is a concern that a shorter early voting period hinders the ability to vote for some people. “This is part of a bigger movement to make it harder to vote, and people who are critical of that movement say it’s for dubious reasons,” said Kathleen Searles, an assistant professor of political science. “It excludes some people that those in power may not want to vote, and when you think about it that way, it makes you want to question the motive (behind the bill).” Searles agreed that the bill’s intent to reduce spending sounds legitimate, but whether it’s significant enough to make it harder for people to vote is in question. Research proves early voting appeals to African-Americans and the elderly, “historically disenfranchised” segments of the population, Searles said. “(Early voting) boosts people’s morale about the system,” she said. “When you make it easier for people to get involved and they feel like the system is helping them be involved, it makes people feel better about the way government is working... Giving more people the opporsee VOTING on PAGE 3

Richmond Co. Early Voting Info

Oct. 15-26 Mon.- Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Board of Elections Office Oct. 27 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Oct. 29 - Nov. 2 Mon. - Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Board of Elections Office Henry Brigham Community Center Warren Road Community Center

SPECIAL TO THE BELL RINGER

On the morning of Tuesday, Oct. 9, countless “Save the A” signs were staked in front of the house of Ricardo Azziz, the president of Georgia Health Sciences University. The “Save the A” campaign initiative is to keep “Augusta” in the name of the new merged university, currently set to be named Georgia Regents University.

Summer graduates prohibitted to ‘walk’ in May graduation as result of merger By KARL FRAZIER senior reporter

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tudents must delay their ceremonial graduation walk an extra semester. Katherine Sweeney, the registrar and director of admissions at Augusta State University, said students who finish courses in the summer of 2013 can get their degrees but cannot walk with students in the May commencement ceremony. Sweeney said the decision was made because of limited space. “Next May, we will be one consolidated university, and we will have over 9,000 students,” Sweeney said. “So it was really the physical location issue and the sheer number of people we are trying to accommodate that drove that decision.” Sweeney said because Augusta State and Georgia Health Sciences University are coming together as one, the only venue that could hold all of the students and their families was the James Brown Arena, which seats up to 8,500 people. Despite the number of seats, Sweeney said both schools individually overcrowd the venue. However, the schools have tried to come up with a plan to control seating, she said. “They are going to limit the number of tickets that each graduate receives,” Sweeney said. “There will be a lottery system where if you don’t need all of your tickets, you can turn them back in and somebody who needs extra tickets can go request extra tickets.” With more students graduating at one time, Sweeney said a group was put together to examine what would be the best option to accommodate everybody in the James Brown Arena. She said they determined their best option was

to only allow students who finished all their classes during the spring semester to participate in the May graduation ceremony. While space was the main reason for the decision, there were other factors involved. “The new university will have its first commencement in May,” said Carol Rychly, the vice president for academic affairs at Augusta State. “The thought was that it would be really cool to have everybody who is graduating graduate and participate in one ceremony.” Rychly said the plan is to see how the commencement ceremony works out. Some of the students, though, said they are not happy about the idea. “I don’t like the decision,” said Jordan Pruner, a senior double major in political science and French at Augusta State. “If you finish in the summer because you needed maybe one or two classes, it’s closer to May than December. They should just go ahead and let them walk in May.” While this will be a first for summer students, they are not the only students who have to wait for commencement. Rychly said students who finish in the fall semester do not get to march until the spring of next year. She said students who finish in the fall are a bigger group than students who finish in the summer. While there has always been a gap, Rychly said it only applied for the students who finished in the fall. The university is trying to make changes to fix this gap in the future, she said. “The plan is to have two graduations a year from here on out,” Rychly said. “In the recent history, we just had the one (graduation) in May and so we will have another graduation in December.” see GRADUATION on PAGE 3

Tobacco ban to be implemented in fall of 2014

By LEIGH BEESON copy editor

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he impending merger of Augusta State and Georgia Health Sciences universities will have unexpected effects on student smokers. Gina Thurman, the acting assistant vice president for student services and assistant dean of students, addressed Augusta State’s Student Government Association Friday and informed them that the administration of the new university has decided to extend GHSU’s tobacco ban to the Walton Way campus after the universities merge. GHSU went tobacco-free in 2007, Thurman said, and many other Georgia universities, including Emory University and Armstrong Atlantic University, have adopted similar policies. GHSU even offered assistance to help those addicted to tobacco, she said.

SPORTS | PAGE 11

Doubles partners advance to semifinals at ITA Southeast Regional Championship.

“When they went tobaccofree, they provided classes, kits to help you quit, different resources, counseling, treatment options to help those that wanted to quit do so,” Thurman said. “They’ve had some good results with that; they’ve seen some positive changes since then. The idea is that (the administration) would kind of introduce the policy for one year to give those people that do smoke that want an opportunity to try to quit or to come up with some other alternatives a year to do so because, obviously, if you smoke, quitting smoking is not going to be something you do overnight. It’s going to be a process.” The current plan is to introduce the ban in November 2013, coinciding with the American Cancer Society’s Great American Smokeout campaign, Thurman said. Then the policy will be gradually implemented over the course of the academic year. The tobacco-free policy is set to take full effect in the fall of 2014.

ABIGAIL BLANKENSHIP | THE BELL RINGER ARCHIVES

A student stubs out a cigarette in front of the the Jaguar Student Activities Center.

Carol Rychly, the vice president for academic affairs at Augusta State, said a survey of Augusta State faculty, staff and students showed some level of support of a potential ban, but Thurman mentioned that she had received complaints that the survey itself seemed biased in a way

that would skew results in favor of the ban. SGA President Andrew Phillips said he anticipates an unfavorable reaction to the ban because of lingering resentment over the merger and the new university’s name. see SMOKING on PAGE 3

ith the full support of the governor, Georgia colleges implemented a new program to increase graduation rates. Carol Rychly, the vice president for academic affairs at Augusta State University, said Complete College Georgia was started to help students finish college. “Each school (in Georgia) was asked to devise a plan to address the need for the state to have more people who have postsecondary education,” Rychly said. “So it’s a federal initiative and then a state initiative and then an individual unit.” Rychly said the program comes from Complete College America. Started in 2009, Complete College America’s goal is to work with states to significantly increase the number of Americans with quality career certificates or college degrees. While see COLLEGE on PAGE 3

Wiki page connects faculty and students through the Internet By RON HICKERSON chief reporter

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ne website is bringing Augusta State University students, staff and faculty together to work collaboratively on projects around campus. The Oak is an online program known as a “wiki” located on the Augusta State website. Maureen Akins, the assistant director for instructional services at Information Technology Services (ITS) and the functional administrator of the site, defined a wiki as “a web-based collaborate tool.” She said people can post pages, attach files, make comments on those pages and edit pages on a wiki. As an example, Akins cited the most famous wiki: Wikipedia. The website became an encyclopedia written by multiple members that could be edited by people who were experts on a particular topic, but the site required regular maintenance after people began posting incorrect information. Yet the site brought a lot of awareness to the potential of wikis. “Wikipedia didn’t start it, but it’s the most well-known,” Akins said. “It kind of brought everything to the attention of people. The need to collaborate has been around for quite some time and the web makes it easy to do it from multiple locations.” Lance Stuckey, the instructional technology specialist at ITS, agreed. As a user of The Oak, he said using a wiki creates a knowledge base for its users and being online provides another advantage. “You can get that information whether you’re on campus, off campus or you’re overseas,” he said. “If you can log into the wiki, you can access the information.” Akins said ITS launched the site when the desire to “collaborate” began showing up on the Augusta State campus. “We chose to develop this wiki in response to faculty members who said that they wanted a way for students to be able to edit each others’ work quickly and easily,” she said. “So the wiki allows you to do that. You can create a page and anyone with the appropriate permission can do the editing.” Akins said professors wanted a place that students could go to work on group projects and be able to track what each person has added. “If you put up something that I discover is incorrect and you’ve destroyed my work, I can go back and restore that to a prior version,” she said. “If you had a group report and see OAK on PAGE 2


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