Thursday, February 6, 2014

Page 1

Broken Bells

Mountaineer Basketball

Fashion

Shins frontman and Danger Mouse release their second, more electronic album as “indie-rock” duo Broken Bells.

Six players on the App State women’s basketball team were selected to the academic honor roll.

Your source for the latest styles, product reviews and fashion news on campus and across Boone!

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TheAppalachianOnline.com

The Appalachian 02.06.14

Appalachian State University’s student news source since 1934

HIGH ON THE LIST App State ranks among top 50 colleges with most on-campus alcohol- and drug-related arrests

by Nicole Caporaso News Reporter

A

ppalachian State University makes lists for both the top 50 universities with the most on-campus drug and on-campus alcohol arrests per 1,000 students, according to an article by Business Insider. Appalachian is listed as 11th for number of on-campus drug arrests and 28th for on-campus alcohol arrests. No other North Carolina school made either list. The information was determined by the Department of Education’s Office of Postsecondary Education by tracking campus crime reports. “‘A lot of drug- or alcohol-related arrests on campus’ would not be the correct wording, but they are frequent,” said ASU Police Capt. Todd Corley. “When you look at our numbers compared to other UNC schools, they tend to be a little high, but that has to do with our aggressive enforcement on campus.” For the 2012 calen-

Vol. 88, No. 31

SGA writes resolution concering mission statement by Laney Ruckstuhl Intern News Reporter

Paul Heckert | The Appalachian

An evidence bag containing marijuana collected from a pending 2012 incident rests on a desk at the ASU Police Department. Appalachian ranked 11th for number of on-campus drug arrests and 28th for on-campus alcohol arrests, according to Business Insider.

dar year, there were 168 alcohol-related and 133 drug-related violations on Appalachian’s campus, Corley said. Numbers for the 2013 year are not yet available. “If you strictly enforce drug and alcohol laws on campus, aggressive enforcement of viola-

tions will reflect badly on campus because it makes it look like a drug problem, but there can be the same problem on another campus and that university might choose to just do a referral to student conduct,” SEE RANKING PAGE 3

App State signs 27 recruits entering first FBS season by Cory Spiers Sports Editor

Appalachian State University football announced its first Division 1 FBS recruiting class Wednesday on National Signing Day. The class includes five players who are currently enrolled at App State and 22 players who signed National Letters of Intent to play for the Mountaineers in its inaugural Sun Belt Conference season. The class consists of 12 players from Georgia, five from South Carolina, four from North Carolina, three from Florida and three from Tennessee. “Our staff and everybody here at App State did an awesome job of recruiting

these student athletes,” head coach Scott Satterfield said. “They did an outstanding job battling a lot of bigger schools that we have to play against in this conference and other schools in our state.” Satterfield said recruiting at the FBS level for the first time proved to be a new challenge for his staff. “High school guys that are playing football dream to play at the highest level they can possibly play at, so the FBS is where they want to be,” Satterfield said. “That’s going to get us in the door for a lot of these guys.” Satterfield said being involved with the prospects could help with the rigors SEE SIGNING DAY PAGE 2

Cara Croom | The Appalachian

Head coach Scott Satterfield addresses the media at Wednesday afternoon’s signing day press conference. Satterfield spoke of the 27 signees for the upcoming 2014 football season.

pp State

On-Campus Arrests

11th in drugs 28th in alcohol source: Business Insider

Watauga County NAACP branch applies for national chapter acceptance by Gerrit Van Genderen News Reporter

The Student Government Association wrote a resolution regarding Appalachian State University’s proposed mission statement to send to the University of North Carolina Board of Governors. SGA Senate Bill 147019, written by SGA’s Academic Affairs Committee, passed Tuesday, which approved the resolution to be sent to the BOG effective immediately. The resolution states: “[T]he Student Government Association of Appalachian State University supports; and be it further that the mission statement amendment changes from: ‘…intermediate programs and the doctorate in Education’ to ‘…intermediate programs and various doctoral degrees.’” This sentence of the mission statement has been debated back and forth between the BOG and Chancellor Kenneth

SEE SGA PAGE 2

Alumna organizes forum regarding program changes by Gerrit Van Genderen News Reporter

Approximately 130 people have officially registered to become part of the first National Association for the Advancement of Colored People branch in Watauga County, said Marg McKinney, the chapter’s temporary president. McKinney said the branch applied for charter in early December. The application was sent to the NAACP national office, which will make a vote to declare the branch official within the next couple of weeks. The requirements for applying to become an official branch include having at least 100 dues-paying members and to list why the hopeful branch thought it was a good idea to be located where it is. “We had to make a list of the problems we identified in our county that we think an NAACP branch could address,” McKinney said. Those problems for Watauga County included instances of discrimination, the poverty and disparity in wages, some bullying in schools, a lack of diversity and voter suppression, she said. McKinney said that the hopeful branch is also very concerned about the polarization of the community and the town. “In town, there is a lingering resentment that the students are deciding who governs us,” McKinney said. “That is not true. We have to educate folks to realize that even though students may be here for four years, a lot of them are putting their heart and soul into the community.” She said that she wants students to realize that it is not them against the town, either. McKinney said that she does not believe any Appalachian State University students were members of the branch yet, but hopes that will change. “We have not really gone and talked to the student associations, but we do have a new member who is very interested in doing that,” McKinney said. “We are going to encourage the students to join our large group because once they do that and reach 25 members, they can have their own student chapter.” Black Student Association President Candace Mollison said that while the BSA had not helped

A panel forum to discuss program prioritization at Appalachian State University was held Monday in Belk Library. Approximately 50 students, faculty and community members attended the forum. The event, titled “Healing the Divide: Academic Engagement and Best Practices in the 21st Century,” was meant to address the impacts that program prioritization can have both positively and negatively regarding students, faculty and the community, said 2013 alumna Amanda Moore, who organized the event. The panel consisted of Professor of Anthropology Gregory Reck and Professor of Government and Justice Studies Matthew Robinson, Special Assistant to the Provost Mary Reichel, Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education Mike Mayfield and Moore. Reck said everyone must unite against the program prioritization issue. “The pressure to produce prioritization is part of a national attack on public higher education,” Reck said. “We need to recognize that this is part of that attack that is coming along with reduction

SEE NAACP PAGE 3

SEE FORUM PAGE 3


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