Dropping the Ball:
Volume 73, Issue 2
Tuesday, September 3, 2019
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Turnovers prove costly in Jaguars’ lost to McNeese State
James Eaglin | Jalyn Garner The Southern Digest
Many white flags and towels were waved at Cowboy Stadium last Saturday. Fans waved towels in hopes of cooling off from the hot Lake Charles temperatures at kickoff, and the flag twirlers of the McNeese State marching unit waved their flags in hopes of providing spirited entertainment to the record crowd of 20,437 fans. The Southern University Jaguars football team waved their towels in hopes of rallying the team to overcome the “money grab” game stereotypes and use the momentum from last year’s Bayou Classic victory and being one win away from a Celebration Bowl berth to propel them to victory over the McNeese State Cowboys. The 101st season of Jaguar football looked very promising in the first quarter under new defensive coordinator Lionel Washington, as Southern’s defense started hot. A first down hit-stick from senior linebacker Benjamin Harris was followed by a forced fumble that turned into a 15yard loss, leading to an early 3-and-out for the Cowboys. The ensuing bad punt allowed the Jaguar offense to have possession at midfield. Featuring a balanced rushing attack of quarterback LaDarius Skelton, tailback Devon Benn, and wideout See DROPPED page 3
SUpport System
Quarterback Glendon McDaniel drops back to pass under heavy pressure during the Jaguars season opener against McNeese on Saturday, August 21 in Cowboy Stadium.
The Rise Of Campus Transportation
Paris Duncan
The Southern Digest
A new school year brings about new opportunities, ideals, but also new obstacles for students. Southern University’s counseling center is the resource to ensure that students stay healthy, physically and mentally. This is especially true when taking into consideration that “nearly one in five college-age adults (18-25 years old) suffers from a mental illness” and that “more than 7% had serious thoughts of suicide in the previous year. Nearly one in ten (8.81%) college-age adults had at least one major depressive episode in the previous year,” according to the National Center of Campus Safety and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. The university counseling center, available to all students and faculty, provides group and individual counseling crisis intervention, as well as referrals for psychological and psychiatric evaluations. The counseling center often goes underutilized however. The stigma surrounding counseling prevents many from seeking treatment. This is unfortunate because while the center does offer support with psychological abnormalities, it also offers career counseling. A system
Students stop to talk to FYE mentors at the meet and greet hosted by the counseling center in front of the university counseling center on August 29.
is used by the office to analyze a person’s interests through general quizzes and provides different major options based on the responses. The center has a variety of different counselors, ranging in both age and experience. So, if students are hesitant in speaking to a more seasoned adult, the office offers counsel from two predoctoral students from the Chicago School of Professional Psychology at Xavier. Another way the center is tailoring to students’ needs is by trying to create peer education groups for undergraduate students interested in psychology. There’s See SUpport page 3
Left - One of the installed parking meters on campus. Right - Gotcha bike rack just outside the Smith-Brown Memorial Union. (DIGEST FILE)
Kiyanna Givens|Dante Davis The Southern Digest
In the wake of multiple campus improvements that occurred this past summer, transportation on campus has also received some upgrades. The new Gotcha bikes are one of the several upgrades and offer students a new way to commute around campus. For two dollars to start, and at ten cents per minute to use, the bikes offer students the ability to ride across campus, “ Scan the QR code and when you unlock the bike, it’s going to cost you two dollars initially and ten cents per minute after.” Some students, however, wonder if these bikes are doing more harm than
www.southerndigest.com THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY AND A&M COLLEGE, BATON ROUGE, LOUISIANA
good. Tremelle Carney, a nineteen year old mass communications major from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, feels that the students’ bad animus may stem from a lack of knowledge and familiarity, “I feel like the bikes are a great addition here, they definitely make things look better around the school and more innovative too, I just feel like a lot of people here don’t know how to use the bikes, and if they just read the instructions things would run a lot more smoothly for them.” This is not helped by the fact that students started encountering errors and glitches when operating the Gotcha app. When logging into the app, students are See THE RISE page 3