The Daily Reveille - October 28, 2015

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Reveille The Daily

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015

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IN THIS ISSUE • Junior point guard Tim Quarterman leads Tigers, page 3 • Opinion: Women’s voices undervalued in society, page 4

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TECHNOLOGY

University email system to change Monday

MAIZE

RUNNERS

BY JOSHUA JACKSON @Joshua_Jackson_

LSU AgCenter Botanic Gardens cultivates fun at annual corn maze BY CARRIE GRACE HENDERSON @carriegraceh Long before most swap their swim suits for sweaters, the LSU Burden Museum and Gardens begins work on a fall tradition as hotly anticipated as pumpkin spice lattes — the corn maze. Research associate and farm manager Keith Lewis kicks off designing the maze in July, sticking to a Louisiana or LSU theme. This year, the almost four-acre plot features a huge Brown Pelican and the words “LSU AgCenter Botanic Gardens.” “This is our fifth year, and this is the third year that we’ve really put a lot of effort into the design,” said LSU AgCenter Botanic Gardens Director Jeff Kuehny. “We had a drone come out and take photos of it from overhead, and that turned out really great.” The process is a long one, Kuehny said. Burden employees plant the corn in August, and after Lewis finishes with the design, an outside company plots the maze’s GPS coordinates. Unlike some of the larger corn mazes around the country with GPS-guided tractors, Kuehny said Burden takes a more old-fashioned approach. “We are probably a little less technical than some of the bigger mazes, in that we simply have somebody with a handheld GPS unit in their hand that goes in front of the lawn mower and guides them on how to cut the shape,” Kuehny said. “Ours is on a much smaller scale.” The cutting started in September and finished before photos by EMILY BRAUNER / The Daily Reveille

LSU AgCenter Botanic Gardens hosts its fifth annual corn maze at the LSU Burden Museum & Gardens, with events lasting until Oct. 31.

Volume 120 · No. 47

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see CORN MAZE, page 2

The LSU student email system is changing Nov. 2, and students who don’t make the transition will lose access to emails sent to their old accounts next semester. Current Google Mail-based TigerMail accounts will change to the new Microsoft Outlook-based LSUMail. TigerMail accounts will remain active until Feb. 2, 2016. Students have until then to make the transition, a decision made by LSU Information Technology Services. Email addresses do not have to be changed, so students can keep their current @ tigers.lsu.edu domain. The new mailboxes are automatically created for students, but ITS encourages making the switch before the final date to ease the transition. The decision to make the transition date Nov. 2 was based on the low amount of emails sent during this time of year, said Senior Vice Provost Jane Cassidy. Early in the semester, students receive emails about financial aid and football tickets, which could potentially not come through if students were not to make the transition by then. Sheri Thompson, IT communications and planning officer, said the decision to move from one email provider to another was a plan in the works for years. She said teachers and faculty have used Microsoft Outlook for a while now, and it was more cost efficient to bring students to Outlook as well. “Due to our Microsoft contract, students will now have the ability to have Microsoft Office on their phones and tablets for that mobile access they didn’t have before,” Thompson said. “The way we do that is by giving the students their own email accounts.” LSU faculty and staff who

see EMAIL, page 2


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EMAIL, from page 1 are alumni must also make the transition from TigerMail to LSUMail. Students who never set up a TigerMail account and had their LSU emails forwarding to another inbox must also make the transition, Thompson said. They can create their new LSUMail

CORN MAZE, from page 1 families began arriving the first weekend in October. But the corn maze is a small fraction of the 440-acre rural life complex in the heart of Baton Rouge. Kuehny said Burden started hosting the maze to draw people to the Botanic Gardens, LSU Rural Life Museum and other exhibits at the site. “It’s so close to an urban area. We want people to have fun learning about agriculture,” Kuehny said. “It is also a fundraising event for our friends group, the Burden Horticulture Society, and they help support the different

Wednesday, October 28, 2015 addresses to forward to a separate email. Cassidy said the Student Technology Fee Oversight Committee was made aware of the transition, but no ITS proposals were required because the transition has no cost to students. “This is something that is going to be benefitting students,” Thompson said. educational programs we have out here for the community.” The Botanic Gardens at Burden are an LSU AgCenter research station that conducts small plot research and community outreach and education through annual events. Burden will host a night maze on Halloween along with a bonfire, petting zoo and pumpkin painting. There is also a hay ride and a hay mountain in the middle of the corn maze for small children to climb, Kuehny said. “It’s a lot of work, and it’s also a lot of fun,” Kuehny said. “We decided this would be a good opportunity for us and for the community.”

CONSTRUCTION

New street additions to improve pedestrian safety BY TIA BANERJEE @tiabanerjee_TDR martyjs.net 225.636-2052 4001 Nicholson Dr Ste D FOR RELEASE OCTOBER 28, 2015

THE Daily Commuter Puzzle 1 5 10 14 15 16 17 18 20 21 22 23 25 26 28 31 32 34 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 44 45 46 47 50 51 54 57 58 59 60 61 62 63

ACROSS Fold Fence openings Hotels Like gooey cinnamon rolls Lay __; put on the shelf Banister “My Country, ’Tis of __” Insincere words Layer of turf “Dear me!” Lubricated Fine fabric for a tablecloth Light brown Beautiful Pair of small drums Desert refuge Runs one’s words together Doggy doc Smooch Grand or spinet Greek “B” Building annex Swats Liquid part of the blood Solar __; sun and planets Head lice areas Womanizer Peruvian beast Kareem __Jabbar Injure Expert __ with; write to “It Came __ a Midnight Clear” Barber’s focus Harmony Celebration Catch sight of Actress __ Moorehead Some of Keats’ poems

DOWN 1 Tiny pieces 2 Reverberate 3 Unnecessarily

4 ...FDR, HST, __, JFK, LBJ... 5 Ship’s kitchen 6 Laotian or Chinese 7 Helpful hints 8 Begley & Asner 9 Behold 10 Berlin, for one 11 Tack 12 Pleasant 13 Snow toy 19 Reddish horses 21 Colony insects 24 “How sweet __!”; Jackie Gleason’s line 25 Spanish bull 26 Jab 27 Train tracks 28 Hot cross __; sweet treats 29 Lay partially on top of 30 Arrangement 32 Thailand, once 33 Drink like Fido 35 Scottish caps 37 Implored

by Jacqueline E. Mathews

Tuesday’s Puzzle Solved

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

38 40 41 43 44

Sun’s ray No longer fresh Con game Go quickly Playground equipment 46 Warrior’s spear 47 Throb painfully 48 Crushing vipers

49 Faucet problem 50 Complain 52 Learn by __; memorize 53 Singles 55 Hot tub 56 Cribbage piece 57 Eerie saucer, for short

The next step to improving pedestrian safety through the Easy Streets project on campus began Tuesday with the start of construction on the realignment of the intersection South Stadium Road and South Campus Drive. Easy Streets Phase II, Part 2 aims to improve the safety of the intersection at Fieldhouse Drive and South Campus Drive, said Jeff Campbell, senior director of Administrative Services, Risk Management and Parking. “We kind of felt like the intersection at Fieldhouse and South Campus is just an area that has potential for some accidents because people don’t really know whether they should stop or whether they should go,” Campbell said. “It’s just not very clear.” The Easy Streets project is part of a campus-wide construction master in progress. Phase II is projected to end by the beginning of next semester, said Dennis Mitchell, Assistant Director of Physical Plant/Facility Services. About two years ago Easy Streets Phase I changed the parallel parking near the Greek Amphitheater to perpendicular parking. The alignment of South Stadium Road and South Campus Drive allows for development to begin on Etienne de Bore’ Street, making it the main north-south connection between South Stadium Road and Nicholson Drive Extension once construction on Patrick F. Taylor Hallis completed, Campbell said. Easy Streets Phase II includes the building of a new road, connecting Fieldhouse Drive to Etienne de Bore’ Street and running along the Nuclear Science building, Mitchell said. The new road

will include a bike lane. “Bicyclists will be able to use it as well as pedestrians,” Mitchell said. German instructor Justin Myers, who rides his bicycle around campus, said he thinks a bike lane will be beneficial, especially since people can be inattentive to bikers. “I think that will keep the cyclists safe from cars as well as keep any collision from people on the sidewalk getting run over by people on a bike and stuff like that, so I think it’ll be good for everybody,” Myers said. The new road was the previous site of an unusually shaped parking lot, he said. “It was just kind of a patchwork parking lot so a lot of that’s been torn up and modified to accommodate this new road,” Mitchell said. The new road will have campus standard-sized sidewalks, 8-feet wide, and improved crosswalks. The construction will run through the B and C parking lots along South Stadium Road and South Campus Drive, Campbell said. To offset the blocked parking spaces, spots have been made available in the Old Front Nine Lot along CEBA Lane and in the South Stadium Lot, according to the Parking and Transportation Services website. The next phase of the Easy Streets project is not planned yet, but Mitchell said he thinks there will be another. “We’re about to embark on a campus master plan, an update to the campus master plan, so once we get through that process, we’ll be able to prioritize and look at that future,” Mitchell said. “We’re going to build this one, and then we’re going to plan for the next one.”

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ABOUT THE DAILY REVEILLE The Daily Reveille (USPS 145-800) is written, edited and produced solely by students of Louisiana State University. The Daily Reveille is an independent entity of the Office of Student Media within the Manship School of Mass Communication. A single issue of The Daily Reveille is free. To purchase additional copies, please visit the Office of Student Media in B-39 Hodges Hall. The Daily Reveille is published daily during the fall and spring semesters and twice weekly during the summer semester, except during holidays and final exams. Second-class copies postage paid at Baton Rouge, LA, 70803. Annual weekly mailed subscriptions are $125, semester weekly mailed subscriptions are $75. Non-mailed student rates are $4 each regular semester, $2 during the summer; one copy per person, additional copies 25 cents each. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Reveille, B-39 Hodges Hall, LSU, Baton Rouge, LA 70803.


Sports

page 3 TENNIS

ON

GUARD

Senior point guard Hornsby leads rotation among veterans and newcomers BY JAMES BEWERS @JamesBewers_TDR

Of the players who could see regular action for the No. 19 LSU men’s basketball team this season, the backcourt contains a potential 2016 first round pick, and ESPN’s No. 3-rated shooting guard in the nation and No. 1-rated player from Louisiana, both

see GUARDS, page 5

photos by Y HASKELL WHITTINGTON and ZOE GEAUTHREAUX / The Daily Reveille

Senior point guard Keith Hornsby leads LSU’s rotation, which is leading to increasingly physical competition in practice.

Tigers transition to new facility BY HEATHER ALLEN @Hallen_TDR As the LSU men’s tennis team prepares to host its first home tournament of the 2015 season Nov. 5 at the new LSU Tennis Facility, LSU coach Jeff Brown recalls checking the progress of the new facility on his way to the W.T. “Dub” Robinson Tennis Stadium every day. “Basically, I made it my new route to stop at the tennis courts to watch them being built before I went to the old courts,” Brown said. “It was just exciting for all of us. I’d tell the guys, ‘Hey, they did this today,’ or ‘They put up the roof on the indoor.’ Just watching it happen was a long process, but it was exciting.” The new facility’s construction began in May 2014 and finished for the start of the fall 2015 semester. In comparison to the old courts, it gives the team a much needed upgrade. The W.T. Robinson Stadium is entirely outdoors, offering six playing courts and six practice courts. The stadium seats a maximum of 550 fans. The new indoor complex prevents weather from being an issue, and it provides six indoor courts and 12 more outdoor courts. It also allows room for more tennis fans because it can seat 1,384 people outdoors and 308 indoors. Along with the extra courts and seating, players now

see TRANSITION, page 5

Late Oct., early Nov. best time of year for sports fans INTO THE WOODS

JACK WOODS Columnist The lyrics from “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” lied to me. I love Christmas time and everything that comes with it — except for shopping. But the most wonderful time of the year, for me, takes place during the next couple of weeks, because sports. Enjoy the bounty of games available right now because you’ll miss them when they’re

gone. The overloaded fall sports schedule is like the SuperHarvest Blood Moon we saw recently: rare and gone in a flash. I complained a few months ago about no sports happening during the summer, but late October and early November are fun because the exact opposite is true. I don’t believe there is such a thing, but if “too many sports” was a real thing, this would be the time of the year where that applies. I legitimately don’t know how to divide my time among the NFL, college football, the NBA, the NHL, the World Series and

soccer both abroad and domestic with the MLS Cup Playoffs starting. But I can’t think of a better way to spend my fall break than trying to maximize my sports intake while free from the responsibilities of school and work for a few days. This is the best “problem” I’ve faced in a long time. I’ll take “too many sports” over “not enough sports” any day. I don’t have enough screens, enough eyes or a large enough attention span to watch

NAM HUH / The Associated Press

see FALL SPORTS, page 5

New York Mets pitcher Jacob deGrom throws during the first inning of Game 3 of the National League baseball championship series against the Chicago Cubs.


Opinion

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

RAIN CHECK

LSU inconsiderate of students’ storm burdens MY BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL CLARKE PERKINS Columnist LSU should consider making its motto “There will be school come hell or high water.” LSU shocked many students Monday morning when the school tweeted, “#LSU campus remains open today, 10/26.” There might as well have been a tropical storm in our backyards Sunday night — flooding in the Baton Rouge area caused numerous street closures, including Alaska Street, Nicholson Drive, Burbank Drive, Roosevelt Street, Bob Pettit Boulevard and Gourrier Avenue, among others. Pictures surfaced on social media showing water near campus up to students’ knees and cars close to being totally submerged in water. The flood water was especially high near University House Baton Rouge and University Edge Baton Rouge. Videos on Twitter showed

students swimming, wakeboarding and using swan-shaped floating devices to get from University House to University Edge — that’s how deep the water was. It’s infuriating it rained during homecoming weekend, but what’s even more annoying is LSU decided not to cancel classes. The university believed because it was no longer raining or flooding, it was acceptable to still hold classes on Monday. LSU did not consider the burdens the severe weather made on many students’ academic performance. Accounting senior Kristin Swanson, whose car was ruined in the flood said, “I couldn’t get back to my school work, which was at my apartment … the water was too high everywhere to get back.” LSU failing to cancel class sends students the message that its main concern is academics, but what about the safety of students? Some students contemplated risking their safety in order to get what they needed to prepare for their Monday classes. Nobody should have to do that.

ZOE GEAUTHREAUX / The Daily Reveille

Students return to campus Monday despite several road closures during a weekend of stormy weather. “I was willing to damn near flood another car to get to it,” Swanson said. She was unable to get to school the next day, and if school was cancelled, it would’ve saved her the stress of dealing with her car and emailing professors at the same time. Yes, it’s possible to explain your situation to the professor and hope they understand, but we shouldn’t have to hope. Some professors may not be as understanding as others, and a student shouldn’t have to stress over whether their professor will excuse them.

LSU didn’t seem to care the flood happened on a Sunday. Sundays are typically the day students come back to town after leaving for the weekend. So, there are more students than usual unable to get on the roads due to the weather conditions. Students took to Twitter to express their frustrations with LSU: “Y’all [LSU] don’t care about us,” @Oh_JayMoore said. Other students were confused by LSU’s failure to cancel classes because of the number of streets that were still closed Monday morning. @FcknDapper

tweeted, “But what about off campus students trapped by closed intersections?” If this was a test to see how well this university cares about its students inconveniences, LSU failed. During the next storm, LSU needs do a better job of taking everything into consideration. It may have been clear skies Monday morning, but there was an aftermath from the night before. Clarke Perkins is a 19-year-old political science sophomore from New Orleans. You can reach her on Twitter @ClarkePerkins.

Society needs to acknowledge women’s voices, expertise BEYER’S REMORSE MICHAEL BEYER Columnist It’s amazing we continue to undervalue what women, who represent more than half of the population, have to say. From Hollywood to college campuses, undervaluing women’s voices is all too common. When women speak out, they are told they are shouting or aren’t being team players. Jennifer Lawrence recently described this experience. After she spoke bluntly on an issue, a male coworker of hers responded with, “Whoa! We’re all on the same team here!” J-Law nails why this is problematic in the Washington Post: “All I hear and see all day are men speaking their opinions,

and I give mine in the same exact manner, and you would have thought I had said something offensive.” This isn’t just happening in Hollywood. It’s also in the workplace. When women speak, they often have to soften what a man could say in the bluntest of terms. Washington Post columnist Alexandra Petri skewered this with famous historical quotes if they were said by a woman in a meeting. “I will be heard” is changed to “Sorry to interrupt. No, go on, Dave. Finish what you had to say.” When women try to be declarative, men become uncomfortable. In the last Democratic presidential debate, U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders responded to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s claim he isn’t tough on gun violence with, “All the shouting in the world won’t fix the issue.”

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Clinton turned this exchange to show the subtle sexism women feel everyday. According to Salon, Clinton said, “Sometimes when a woman speaks out, some people think it’s shouting” at the Iowa Jefferson-Jackson dinner. But for women who aren’t Clinton and J-Law, having your voice heard is difficult. This is especially true for sex workers who accuse politicians of using their services. In 2007, Sen. David Vitter, R-La., denied rumors he paid women for sex in New Orleans at a press conference where he apologized for his “serious sin” he committed in Washington D.C. On Monday, Vitter said on TV the station WDSU that the Wendy Ellis story is “completely false and discredited.” Wendy Ellis alleged she had a relationship with David Vitter in the ’90s. She said she had a child with him whom she gave up

for adoption, and at the time, he encouraged her to abort the child. A former sex worker, Jeanette Maier, known as “The Canal Street Madam,” alleged Vitter was a client of hers. Maier said she spoke with Ellis on the phone and she said, “No one believes you because of what you did.” With both of these women alleging Vitter has a New Orleans problem, why is he left politically unscathed from his sex scandal? Gov. Eliot Spitzer, D-N.Y., resigned from his position in 2008 after he was discovered dallying with sex workers, and Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., resigned after he was sexting someone other than his wife. These women bear the price of, but Vitter still parades around the state as a credible candidate for governor. Only now are voters starting to question

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The Daily Reveille (USPS 145-800) is written, edited and produced solely by students of Louisiana State University. The Daily Reveille is an independent entity of the Office of Student Media within the Manship School of Mass Communication. Signed opinions are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the editor, The Daily Reveille or the university. Letters submitted for publication should be sent via e-mail to opinion@lsureveille.com or delivered to B-39 Hodges Hall. They must be 400 words or less. Letters must provide a contact phone number for verification purposes, which will not be printed. The Daily Reveille reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for space consideration while preserving the original intent. The Daily Reveille also reserves the right to reject any letter without notification of the author. Writers must include their full names and phone numbers. The Daily Reveille’s editor in chief, hired every semester by the LSU Student Media Board, has final authority on all editorial decisions.

his authenticity. When women raise their voices for other women, they can lose their job. According to the Huffington Post, a Harvard professor filed a lawsuit in March alleging the university “denied her tenure due to her advocacy on behalf of sexual assault survivors.” What women say is important. Women need autonomy when using their voices because their experiences and knowledge count just a much as men’s. I want to live in a world where I can tell my daughter her voice matters and she shouldn’t be afraid to speak up. That shouldn’t be a controversial sentence to say. Michael Beyer is a 21-year-old political science senior from New Orleans. You can reach him on Twitter @michbeyer.

Quote of the Day ‘Hold on, man. We don’t go anywhere with ‘scary,’ ‘spooky,’ ‘haunted’ or ‘forbidden’ in the title.’

Shaggy (Scooby-Doo) The Scooby Doo Movie


The Daily Reveille

Wednesday, October 28, 2015 FALL SPORTS, from page 3 everything, but I’m going to enjoy as much as I can, while I can. You should too. It’s wonderful to think that by changing the channel I could go from watching Daniel Murphy blast another clutch home run for the Mets to watching some 3-on-3 NHL overtime. A few seconds later, I could be watching the unbeaten Green Bay Packers squaring off against the unbeaten Denver Broncos. How cool is that? If you’re not a fan of those sports, you could wake up and watch some Barclays Premier League action early Saturday morning and follow it up with a day full of college football before watching the New Orleans Pelicans and Golden State Warriors go toe-to-toe for the second time in four days.

GUARDS, from page 3 from the class of 2015. That’s without accounting for three other guards, including one player who logged the second-most minutes in the Southeastern Conference last season, another who led the NJCAA in points per game in 2014 and a third player who started the final 11 games for the Tigers in 2015. Then there’s the top-ranked freshman in the country, Ben Simmons, a 6-foot-10 forward whose talent lends itself to a point guard. While Simmons is asked to play in the post as well, the LSU backcourt — made up of junior Tim Quarterman, freshmen Antonio Blakeney and Brandon Sampson, seniors Keith Hornsby and Josh Gray and

TRANSITION, from page 3 have upgraded locker rooms, lounges and training rooms. “It’s awesome. We have pretty much everything you could ask for,” said junior Justin Butsch. “The Dub was small, and we all loved it, but this facility is definitely an upgrade.” As senior Tam Trinh looks ahead to his final year, he said a new facility is the perfect way to start the season. Trinh, who ranks No. 85 in the preseason polls, said he is ready to put the new courts to use against opponents. “I’m excited to play some actual matches on these courts, rather than just practice,” Trinh said. “I look forward to matches, practice and definitely the upcoming season. It’s a really nice facility.” Freshman Cameron Andry, the only newcomer on the team, has the biggest connection to the new complex because he gets to call it home for the next four years. Andry, the top prospect in Louisiana, never played a match

page 5

The possibilities are endless — for a short time, at least. Football season always seems to end too soon. For soccer fans, the MLS season is winding down. Baseball fans will soon have to come to grips with the reality that the spring is in a long time. And perhaps more importantly, this is the last time we’ll see Jacob deGrom’s magnificent, luscious locks as Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times tweeted deGrom said he’s cutting the flow after the World Series. Take it all in because the perfect storm of sports will be over before you realize you’ve missed it. Jack Woods is a 22-year-old mass communication senior from Ruston, Louisiana. You can reach him on Twitter @Jack_TDR.

Calgary Flames’ Johnny Gaudreau (13) scores the winning goal against Vancouver Canucks, Oct. 10.

sophomore Jalyn Patterson — is already loaded without him. The plethora of talented guards is leading to some increasingly physical competition, but the kind of physicality coach Johnny Jones wants. “It’s been crazy,” said senior guard Gray, who is in his second year at LSU after leading the junior college ranks in scoring at Odessa College. “We’ve been doing everything but fighting each other in practice. We’ve been really getting after it, making each other better. High intensity and high energy. “From elbows, to arms, to slaps, to scratches, to biting — teeth come out almost every day. We’ve been playing physical.” While there may be some exaggeration in Gray’s response,

the intense nature of fall prac“I tell our guys all the time. tices is partially attributable to If you’re not a little banged up team’s five-game tour of Aus- and having some nagging intralia during the summer. juries, you’re not playing hard Against Jones said. ‘From elbows, to arms, enough,” two all-star While Hornsby, teams and to slaps, to scratches, to who averaged 13.4 two teams biting — teeth come out points in 35.3 minfrom the Na- almost every day — we’ve utes per game last tional Basketbeen playing physical.’ spring, acknowledgball League, es the energy from JOSH GRAY the Tigers preseason practicLSU senior guard es is high, he said received a it’s something he’s taste of the bruising nature of profes- become accustomed to since sional play in August, toughen- transferring. ing them up for 30 plus-game “I remember always having bumps and bruises,” Hornschedule. Even if practices lead to sby said. “I still have scars some nicks, Jones, a former from my first year here. But LSU guard himself, said he it’s definitely physical. I’m expects a healthy roster by a little banged up right now the time LSU tips off against with a little something in my Southwest Baptist University lower abdomen, but a lot of for a home exhibition game on people have different things. That’s just how it goes. Our Nov. 6.

in the Dub, but he did practice there until the opening of the new facility. He said he looks forward to showing off the new facility. “It’s going to be nice having people come in here and see what improvements we’ve made with the facility. It’s a big jump from the last facility,” Andry said. “Our old facility was nice, but it wasn’t one of the top facilities in the nation. Now, this new one is probably up there.” As the team takes in the excitement of the new facility and get back in the swing of hosting events, the feeling of leaving the Dub is bittersweet. Brown said although the team will miss playing in the old stadium, everyone understands moving to a new and improved complex is needed to recruit top talent. “The guys love playing at home. They loved playing in the old facility as well. There were a lot of good matches they had in there,” Brown said. “The new facility is a place that the guys are proud of. They’re proud to have it on social media and pictures of it all over the place.”

Construction of the new LSU complex began in May 2014 and gives the LSU men’s tennis team a much needed upgrade.

DARRYL DYCK / The Associated Press

practices are designed to test us physically. Also, we dive on the floor a lot. Coach Jones demands that — the utmost effort at all times.” The one-on-one practice matchup that displays the kind of effort Jones expects can be seen between Quarterman and Blakeney. The duo already accidentally bumped heads a few times, but that’s all par for the course, Quarterman said. The physicality, at the end of the day, is about team improvement. “It’s just making each other better each and every day,” Quarterman said. “Like I said, the older guys going at the freshmen, the freshmen going back at the older guys, just makes our team more competitive and just makes us compete more.”

photo courtesy of STEVE FRANZ


page 6

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Bakery sales clerks needed to greet and assist customers, cashier, answer phones & take cake orders. FT & PT shifts available Mon-Sat w/day off during week. No Nights & no Sundays. Muliple positions at our Florida Blvd & Perkins Rd. locations. Apply in person at 8046 Florida Blvd or 10550 Perkins Rd. or email resume to baums@bellsouth.net ___________________________ 4728 Constitution Ave Tues, Nov. 3rd 11am-3pm Openings in all Areas $10 - $28/hr (225) 925-2244 ___________________________

Part Time Leasing Consultant at Luxury Apartment Community in Baton Rouge. Some Saturdays required. Flexible Hours. For more info: turnberryplace@aol. com ___________________________ Hampton Inn College Dr. has Front Desk positions available, 7-3 & 3-11, flexible work schedules. Must pass drug test and background check. Apply @ 4646 Constitution Ave. Come join our team!! ___________________________ P/T SALES ASSOC. WANTED asap at Gift/Interiors store starting at $9/hr. Great place to work/flexible hrs/ open 7 days/wk. Send email to 2222gift@gmail.com with availability. ___________________________ Louisiana Athletics - Love working with kids? Tumbling instructors needed. Flexible hours, fun atmosphere. Email Jimbo@LAathletics. com or call 755.2503 ___________________________

Looking for a sophmore or junior with a minimum GPA of 3.0. Ideal candidate is pursuing a degree in Business (HR or related). Support a busy Benefits Department with other general HR duties assigned as needed. Duties include: processing of insurance enrollment forms in company database as well as vendor databases, processing terminations, making copies and distributing new employee eligibility information. This position will involve a lot of admin/clerical work. Must be: ready to roll your sleeves up and work; proficient in Microsoft Office, especially Excel; possess strong interpersonal, organizational, verbal and written skills; detail oriented; reliable, dependent, and on time for work. ___________________________

Personals Greetings fellow LSU students. In light of an opinion that students feedback does not reach professors, we have created an email account that you can use to anonymously contact past and present professors. The address is lsu.student.feedback@gmail.com In contacting professors please be reverent, within reason, and give meaningful, honest feedback. Please send messages to this address to be sent from this address to a specified email. Thank you LSU Students ___________________________

Scare up some interest with a

CLASSIFIED!

What’s up everyone? Ready for some Halloween? Kudos to those of you who decided to come to school in spite of Fall Holiday being half a day less. Tell me bout them Halloween stories, pumpkin shenanigans and tricked out treats. I’ll be at home with my doors barred, the lights off and sipping on some sweet pumpkin ale! -Layout

Misc. 2009 white Vespa S150 Scooter. 1600 miles. $3500.00. Call 225-603-5132 after 3:00 pm.

TUTOR NEEDED!! For a high school student. Spanish a MUST!! Please send email to bwalker@agrehab.com

visit lsureveille.com to place your ad today!


Wednesday, October 28, 2015

The Daily Reveille

page 7

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Madison Square ft. They Might Be Giants Installing and servicing melody since 1982 Alternative pop/rock, smart pop, experimental rock...No matter how you characterize them, this remains true: TMBG is a wonderfully quirky and brilliant clever band

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RED STICK RALLY E XPERIENCE C APITAL CIT Y CULTURE November 4

11am - 2pm

Parade Ground

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Free Food. Free Music. Free Fun. Advertising • The Daily Reveille • LSUReveille.com • Legacy • Gumbo • KLSU • Tiger TV

Burgersmith | Raising Cane’s Chicken Fingers The Salad Shop | Buf falo Wild Wings Schlit tz and Giggles | Nutrishop | Campus Apar tments Mr. Ronnie’s Donuts | Hungr y Howie’s Wildwood Baton Rouge


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