Tennis travels to Texas to take on Rice University, page 3 SATIRE: Sarah Palin to moderate Trump debate, page 5 FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 2016
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Volume 121 · No. 12
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STUDENT GOVERNMENT
Executive Branch talks student fees, budget cuts BY BETH CARTER @bethie_carter
THE OKLAHOMA DAILY
JAVIER FERNÁNDEZ / The Daily Reveille
“It’s not ‘me against him.’ If you watch basketball, you know it’s not ‘me against him.’ If you’re saying it’s ‘me against him,’ then you clearly don’t know too much about basketball. You must not watch if it’s ‘me against him’ because I won’t be guarding him.” BEN SIMMONS, LSU freshman forward
BUDDY VERSUS BENNY Tigers view matchup as more than just Hield versus Simmons BY JAMES BEWERS @JamesBewers_TDR LSU freshman forward Ben Simmons made sure to put the pregame billing to bed before he could be further asked about Saturday’s contest with No. 1 Oklahoma. Fresh off a morning SportsCenter interview, Simmons sat in front a host of reporters Thursday afternoon and was frank about his supposed battle with fellow Wooden Award candidate and
likely NBA lottery selection, Sooner senior guard Buddy Hield. “It’s not ‘me against him,’” Simmons said. “If you watch basketball, you know it’s not ‘me against him.’ If you’re saying it’s ‘me against him,’ then you clearly don’t know too much about basketball … You must not watch if it’s ‘me against him’ because I won’t be guarding him.” While the 6-foot-10 Simmons likely won’t draw the defensive assignment for the 6-foot-4
Hield, all most want to talk about is the matchup between two of the best players in college basketball, featured in an unusual nonconference showcase at midseason. But as Simmons, his teammates and LSU
see SIMMONS-HIELD, page 7
READ INSIDE Read what one sports columnist thinks of Oklahoma guard Buddy Hield, page 3
Buddy Hield Ben Simmons
Senior guard Freshman forward 6-foot-4 • 214 pounds 6-foot-10 • 240 pounds Freeport, Bahamas Melbourne, Australia
Primary Stats 33.9 minutes per game points per game 25.9 5.8 rebounds per game assists per game 2.5 steals per game 1.4 blocks per game 0.5 53% field goal percentage 52.3% 3-point percentage 90.3% free throw percentage
34.2 19.8 12.7 4.9 1.8 1.0 55.3% 33.3% 71.3%
Advance Stats 31.8 player efficiency rate 31.4 win shares 4.5 4.3 30.2% usage percentage 26.5%
LSU Student Government’s Executive Branch Senior Staff discussed possible fee hikes on Tuesday. The potential fee increases could affect student organization funding, commuter transportation and Memorial Tower renovations. If they pass through the Budget and Appropriations Committee, the proposed fees will go to the Student Senate for a vote on Feb. 3. If approved, the fee increases will be on the ballot as referendums for students to vote on this spring. One of the proposed fee increases is a $2 fee over 2-4 years which would serve as a gift on behalf of students to the Military Excellence Fund Commission. The fees would help pay for renovations for Memorial Tower, specifically the construction of the museum inside the tower dedicated to fallen Louisiana soldiers during World War I. Another fee, $2 per semester, would go toward the creation of a student sustainability fund, which would reserve money for campus sustainability programs. The fund would be available for any student, department or campus organization to request financial support for a project. The third proposed increase is a $1-5 fee for the creation of commuter shuttles that would be available for students who park in commuter lots. The shuttles would allow commuting students to park in less crowded lots farther from campus and have the assurance that a bus would bring them to and from campus. SG president Andrew Mahtook said these shuttles are part of the legacy items his campaign is working on. These initiatives, Mahtook said, will be the longlasting imprints his administration has on the LSU community. “It would be a system of Tiger Trails buses making loops around to the far out commuter lots and bringing students to campus,” Mahtook said. “We’ve seen a lot of complaints from students about not being able to find parking … and having to walk all
see STUDENT FEES, page 7
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CRIME BRIEFS:
Friday, January 29, 2016
Two students issued misdemeanor summons for marijuana and another student issued misdemeanor summons for disturbing the peace after fighting a transit employee. Read this week’s crime briefs online @ lsunow.com/daily
FACULTY
Professors named co-editors of ‘Taboo’ academic journal BY KATIE GAGLIANO @katie_gagliano Sociology professor Lori Martin and School of Education professor Kenneth FaschingVarner aren’t afraid to court the controversial. In fact, it’s their job. Martin and Varner have assumed the roles of co-editors in chief of Taboo: The Journal of Culture and Education. The online academic journal is published biannually and features five to seven academic articles in addition to an editorial column and book review section. Founding editors Joe Kincheloe and Shirley Steinberg established the journal to spark conversations around socio-cultural topics traditionally overlooked in academics. “They were both post-modern thinkers whose work pushed the envelope and tried to challenge people to think more profoundly about complex issues in a critical way,” Varner said. Martin and Varner said they hope to continue the journal’s boundary pushing tradition while bringing it to broader audiences. An important aspect of working as scholar-activists is bridging the gap between the academic sphere and society at large, Martin said. “We want every reader of the journal, no matter what their academic background is or their particular orientations around scholarship, to read each piece and say that’s interesting,” Varner said. The online-only style allows Taboo to extend beyond the limited academic circles that traditional print journals are often limited to, Martin said. The flexibility of online publishing allows Taboo to experiment with interactive audio and
video features to make the journal a living publication, Martin said. It also allows the journal to encourage dialogue across editions. “We don’t want it to just be a set of dictates or mandates or monologues, but we’d like to see it be a discourse and relationship between the readers and authors and editors,” Varner said. Under Martin and Varner, the journal will also extend access to undergraduate and graduate students by providing space for their contributions in each edition. Undergraduate and graduate scholarship is rarely recognized in journals, but inter-generational dialogue adds depth to the subject matter, he said. Incorporating the journal into the University’s student
and academic culture is essential to Martin and Varner’s mission. LSU Libraries has already reached out to work as a partner for the journal’s publication and outreach, Varner said. The editors are considering hosting a Taboo sponsored conference on campus or in the surrounding Baton Rouge area to create opportunities for local scholars to share research. Another goal is to incorporate journal articles into critical courses and host teach-ins to analyze the works and promote campus discussion, Martin said. “I think the message ever since I’ve been at LSU is about preparing ethical, prepared, responsible leaders that can tackle the big issues that face this community,” Varner said. “The journal is a natural link to what
a flagship institution like LSU is committed to.” Martin and Varner’s transition as co-editors in chief has been smooth thus far. Preparations for their first edition are underway and in April they have been invited to host a meet-the-editors session at the American Educational Research Association’s annual meeting in Washington D.C. Both Martin and Varner said they look forward to editing the journal and will stay as long as they can produce high quality, relevant work that pushes the boundaries of accepted academic thought. “Our goal is to facilitate the propagation of work that has the potential to bring about meaningful change on a number of levels,” Martin said.
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Associate professors Lori Martin and Kenneth Fasching-Varner are named co-editors in chief of Adademic Journal Taboo.
Body scanner helps professors to change apparel industry Researchers from the College of Agriculture are reshaping the apparel industry with a new study that could change how clothes are sized and manufactured. The research strives to create a new database of average American body sizes and encourage a method for clothing brands to make items fit customers’ exact measurements. Textiles, apparel design and merchandising assistant professors Laurel Romeo and Casey Stannard are leading the study with the help of a high-tech 3-D body scanner called the Size Stream. Their focus is to study modern American body shapes and
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TECHNOLOGY
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Reveille The Daily
how clothing brands can use this data to make clothes custom fit to customers’ body shapes. Romeo and Stannard would like to use the data to transform “grading”, which are the measurements of average clothing sizes. Current grading measurements are based on incorrect assumptions about body shape and make it even harder for those who buy plus-size clothing to find the right fit, Romeo said. “The assumptions are that as a person gets wider, they also get taller. So with plus size clothing, people perhaps sometimes look sloppy. The clothes don’t fit them correctly,” Romeo said. Romeo said she and Stannard will hopefully create new algorithms for the grading method, which will align better with
modern American measurements. Current clothing sizes are based on a grading system from a study done after the end of World War II, over 70 years ago. “Our population is very different and much more diverse. We have many more body shapes and sizes than we did at that time,” Romeo said. The study includes 5,000 participants of all ages, especially those 18 years or older who are currently in a weight-loss program. Each participant stands in a curtained area while the Size Stream’s surrounding scanners measure every part of their body. Within seconds, a virtual avatar appears on the computer screen with their exact measurements. Romeo said she hopes the
results and use of the Size Stream will bring the apparel industry closer to its future of “purchase activated manufacturing.” With purchase activated manufacturing, a store would have its own body scanner and hold only one item of each piece of clothing. When a customer decides which piece they want, they step into a body scanner. The store would then send the customer’s measurements to a local manufacturer to be made within the hour. Romeo said this shift would bring more apparel manufacturing into the United States and make the industry more sustainable because no fabric would be wasted. “It’s a whole new paradigm of how we do business in the apparel industry,” she said.
The Daily Reveille holds accuracy and objectivity at the highest priority and wants to reassure its readers the reporting and content of the paper meets these standards. This space is reserved to recognize and correct any mistakes that may have been printed in The Daily Reveille. If you would like something corrected or clarified, please contact the editor at (225) 5784811 or e-mail editor@lsureveille.com.
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 MEN’S BASKETBALL
‘IT ENDS WITH ME’
Why Buddy is the best player in the nation TEAM JACOB JACOB HAMILTON Sports Columnist
Tigers embrace motto to remain positive despite mistakes BY CHRISTIAN BOUTWELL • @CBoutwell_TDR
EMILY BRAUNER / The Daily Reveille
LSU all-around junior Ashleigh Gnat performs a beam routine during the Tigers’ 196.575195.100 victory against Kentucky for the Pink & Blue Meet in the PMAC.
After the semifinals in Fort Worth, Texas, and a summer of work, the LSU gymnastics has team adopted yet another motto. “It ends with me,” said LSU coach D-D Breaux after the Tigers’ 196.575-195.100 victory against Kentucky on Friday. Associate head coach Jay Clark and Breaux created the aphorism. After the Tigers (3-0, 1-0 Southeastern Conference) suffered two falls from junior all-arounder Ashleigh Gnat and freshman sensation Sarah Finnegan on the uneven bars in their last meet against the Wildcats, Breaux said there was no rattled confidence as the team headed into its next rotation, balance beam. It ended with them. LSU rebounded. The Tigers didn’t seem flustered as they maintained a positive mentality. Although retaining confidence through falls was LSU’s main struggle last season, Breaux said consistency is this season’s biggest speed bump, not confidence. LSU has plenty of that. The rattled confidence headed to beam dates back to last season. In the NCAA Semifinals, LSU led off with a fall and a score of 9.300. The pressure, as great as it was at the time, was too much. Two gymnasts after the leadoff beamer fell off the apparatus, as well, and led LSU to following scores of 9.375 and 9.250.
see POSITIVE, page 4
The best college basketball player in the nation is suiting up in the PMAC for the first time this season tomorrow. No, that’s not some stupid metaphor suggesting LSU freshman forward Ben Simmons can finally officially be considered the best player in the country after willing LSU to a 6-2 record through a grueling opening stretch of conference play. The player I’m referring to is Oklahoma senior sharpshooter Buddy Hield. Hield is in line to receive a bevy of seasonal awards, and it’s really not even close. Not to downplay the efforts of Simmons, Michigan State senior guard Denzel Valentine and Providence junior guard Kris Dunn, all of whom are surefire All-Americans — Hield has simply been that good. He’s by far the most entertaining scorer in the NCAA since BYU guard Jimmer Fredette, averaging 25.9 points on just 15.9 shots per game. But hey, you may have assumed I was referring to Simmons when talking about the
see HIELD, page 4 GYMNASTICS
Tigers put past behind them before Metroplex Challenge BY CHRISTIAN BOUTWELL @CBoutwell_TDR Happiness and good memories are not what the LSU gymnastics team remembers about Fort Worth, Texas after last season’s debacle in the NCAA Semifinals. The Tigers, while having performed well up until balance beam, crumbled on the nation’s biggest stage — which led LSU coach D-D Breaux to call the team’s fifth-place finish in the second semifinal “the all-time biggest disappointment of my career,” after the meet on April 17. But LSU hopes to change what Texas saw from the Tigers in their last visit. Junior all-arounder Ashleigh Gnat said she’s excited to bring
new thoughts of LSU gymnastics to the same stage as the National Championship at 7 p.m. on Saturday in Fort Worth, Texas, where the No. 6 Tigers will face No. 2 Oklahoma, No. 12 Stanford, No. 16 Missouri and Washington in the Metroplex Challenge. “I think that we’re going to be able to get out there and show everybody what we’ve been working on and improved on since the last time we were there,” Gnat said. “This is a new team and a new year. We’re going to make a step in the right direction.” LSU’s new team, as Gnat called it, will be competing in a podium-stage meet for the first time as a group. The podium — an elevated, bouncier, softer surface raised above eye level for the judges and exactly at eye
level for fans — is what LSU will have to adjust to in warmups as podium-staged training is impossible to replicate at LSU. The pressure of competing on a podium is super intensified, Breaux said. “It gives the equipment a different feel,” Breaux said. “Plus, you’re eye level with your audience. It gives the judges a different level of watching you from down below and it just feels like everything you do is bigger.” The Tigers will summon their entire team to surround each gymnast in practice to resemble the heat of the moment that Fort Worth will present. Breaux said the Tigers’ lack of consistency in competition is
see GYMNASTICS, page 4
EMILY BRAUNER / The Daily Reveille
LSU all-around sophomore Erin Macadaeg gets ready fo routine during the Tigers’ 196.575195.100 victory against Kentucky for the Pink & Blue Meet on Friday in the PMAC.
The Daily Reveille
page 4
Friday, January 29, 2016
TENNIS
Tigers and Lady Tigers prepare for bout with Rice University BY MARKUS HÜFNER @Hufner_TDR The LSU women’s and men’s tennis teams will head to the Lone Star State to take on Rice University at noon on Sunday in Houston, Texas. Coming off a successful weekend with ITA National Indoor Intercollegiate Championships qualifications in the bag, the No. 18 women’s tennis team looks for momentum against a team the Lady Tigers have not defeated in nine years. “I think it’s time for revenge,” said junior Joana Vale Costa. “I think we’re all ready to go out there and compete.” Last year’s home match against the Rice Owls is burned in the players’ memories like any tough loss. At that time, the Lady Tigers’ roster had three new players on the team and some suffered from injuries. This weekend, the program goes into the matchup with a 4-0 record and its highest ranking since 2009, but for LSU coach Julia Sell it’s more about the progress than the record.
COLUMN, from page 3 best player in the country, and there’s a reason. Most experts think he’ll be the No. 1 pick in the impending draft, and he’s definitely playing like it. There’s not a player in the country who can lock him up when he puts his head down to drive, and his 55.3 field goal percentage proves he can convert when he gets down there. But even my high-schooldropout of a brother knows three points is worth more than two, and Hield is All-Galaxy from downtown. As far as his pure shooting ability — in case you haven’t watched him play — I’ll go out on a limb and dub him the NCAA’s equivalent of Warriors
GYMNASTICS, from page 3 the weak link of the 2016 team thus far, as they have counted “too many” falls to begin the season. “We’re lacking a little bit of consistency,” Breaux said. “We’re having to count a fall in some of our events. That’s very costly. That’s minus fivetenths from your team score. At the same time, we’re having to change our lineup a little bit. We’ve used some of our depth a little bit. We have 15 kids and we want to feel like we can have 10 ready on every event on every weekend.” The injury-blanketed Tigers have yet to have all gymnasts available for competition, which is a goal for the Metroplex, Breaux said. Freshmen all-arounders McKenna Kelley and Lexie
NICHOLAS MARTINO / The Daily Reveille
Sophomore Simon Freund waits at the Tennis Invitational on Nov. 05, 2015, at the new Tennis Complex on Gourrier Ave. “It would be nice to get the W, but our focus right now is just to get better and better every match,” Sell said. “If that means we get the win then it’s great, but otherwise we need to keep improving.“
Sell wants to see her players press as hard as if they were behind to extend leads in deciding situations after almost allowing comebacks against Georgia Tech last weekend. With ITA Indoor
guard Stephen Curry. Of course, that is to be taken with a grain of salt, but you don’t shoot 53 percent from the field, 52.3 percent behind the arc, and 90.3 percent at the free throw line by accident. That’s not a typo — he took the everallusive 50-40-90 and raised it 10 more from three-point land. That’s wild, man. Hield doesn’t have the passing pazzaz Simmons has, and it’s unlikely he will slam home a half-court alley oop. But, he’ll sink more than his fair share of beyond-NBA-range, contested threes, and you’ll come to assume everything that leaves his hand will end up at the bottom of the net. If the Dr. Jekyll LSU team that dusted then-No. 9
Kentucky shows up, it’s more than capable of matching No. 1 Oklahoma bucket for bucket. Simmons is one of the only players in the country who can match Hield’s impact and likely the only one who can actually outplay him. If it becomes a scoring chess match between the two, it’s important to keep in mind LSU is 8-1 when Simmons scores at least 22 points. The last time Hield caught fire while battling against one of the top players in the nation, he ended up with 46 points in a triple-overtime game. What a treat that would be. On the other hand, if we get the Mr. Hyde LSU team tomorrow, well, at least one thing’s for
Priessman have been held from competing for an ankle, and ankle and shoulder injuries, respectively — along with senior allarounder Jessica Savona who’s battling a yearning ankle injury. Breaux said she hopes to be able to expand the Tigers’ range on each event with a variety of gymnasts, and the process begins at the Metroplex against a few of the nation’s elite teams. “That’s our goal,” Breaux said. “Being able to get McKenna Kelley into the floor lineup this weekend was really big. We’d like to get Lexie Priessman into maybe another event. We’d like to get [freshman all-arounder] Sarah Finnegan in on maybe another event. At the same time, we’d like to get Jessica Savona in off of her ‘my foot is hurt’ mentality. And if she does, she’s one of the best tumblers in the country.”
POSITIVE, from page 3 As described best by Breaux, “We’re committing suicide!” she said during the event on April 17, 2015. Luckily the turmoil hasn’t transferred over to the 2016 season, as LSU continues to rally behind one of its many mottos. “That’s D-D’s thing,” Gnat said. “‘It ends with me.’ It’s something we’ve been working on in the gym. It’s getting in the mental mindset of ‘oh, someone fell in front of me, what are you going to do? How are you going to perform?’” In a test of responding to adversity this season, LSU has passed. When challenged by injuries, inexperience in competition and falls on equipment, the Tigers have responded well, as they channel their motto whenever momentum spirals downward
Championships around the corner, the players also focus on taking care of their body. “National Indoors is three days of hard competition,” Vale Costa said. “It’s time to practice as hard as we can, but we have
to take care of our bodies at the same time because the season is just getting harder and harder from here.“ For the men’s team (1-1, 0-0 Southeastern Conference) the match against the Owls (4-0, 0-0 Conference USA) serves more as warm up and orientation for the season. After losing in the final round of the ITA Kickoff Weekend against then-No. 13 South Florida, the team just missed qualifying for the ITA Indoors Championships. “It will be good to see where we are following having played a couple matches,” said LSU coach Jeff Brown. “The guys are excited to see their improvements, and usually there’s a big difference in improvement from the first weekend to the second.” When the team hosted Rice at the W.T. “Dub” Robinson Stadium last year, the Tigers dominated in a 6-1 win. Brown said the team hopes to make improvements at every position, while looking forward to putting practice into play on Sunday.
courtesy of THE OKLAHOMA DAILY
Senior guard Buddy Hield pushes past an Oral Roberts defender for two points Dec. 12. sure — we can enjoy watching Buddy ball out. P.S. If LSU does pull off the victory, don’t storm the court. That’s stupid.
Jacob Hamilton is a 21-yearold political science junior from Slidell, Louisiana. You can reach him on Twitter at @jac0b_hamilt0n
during meets. Any loss of mental focus, which senior all-arounder Jessica Savona says is “very important,” creates opportunity for mistakes to occur. “After something like that happens, we come together and have to decide that’s where it stops,” said junior all-arounder Sydney Ewing. “‘It stops with me’ mentality. It’s knowing that if someone falls in front of you, it doesn’t have to decide your performance.” Another key to the Tigers’ response to hardships is talent. LSU has a plethora of options for each event with five freshmen and a group of veteran gymnasts from last season. Talent makes forgetting a fall and moving on much easier. All of our girls, from freshmen to seniors, have the ability to bring out 10s on every event,” Savona said. “Every single event
and every single girl. Everything is as strong as the next, we just have to bring out the best in ourselves every single meet.”
EMILY BRAUNER / The Daily Reveille
LSU all-around junior Ashleigh Gnat smiles at the Pink & Blue Meet on Jan.22 in the PMAC.
Opinion
page 5
Minority organizations deserve greater respect on campus My Black is Beautiful Clarke Perkins Columnist
Black students need places on campus where they feel welcomed and comfortable. The responses to Stacey Dash’s latest ignorant statements help explain why. Her reaction to #OscarsSoWhite caused turmoil within the black community. She insists black people need to make up their minds — they either want segregation or they don’t. “Either we want to have segregation or integration,” Dash said. “And if we don’t want segregation then we need to get rid of channels like BET and the BET Awards and the [NAACP] Image Awards, where you’re only awarded if you’re black.” Actress Gabrielle Union had the best response to an Associated Press reporter asking about Dash’s recent outburst. “Who’s Stacey Dash?” Union asked. To answer Union’s question, she’s just a crazy lady climbing her way higher on the black-people-that-black-people-can’t-stand list. Union finished her point by saying, “It’s like why there’s a need for “The Birth of a Nation,” and why there’s a need for the Country Music Awards and the ALMO
SAM KARLIN / The Daily Reveille
LSU students and minority organizations show their support for the Mizzou community in front of the Memorial Tower. awards. If you don’t see yourself reflected in mainstream awards, you tend to create your own.” Same goes for organizations. People will create organizations that reflect their identities and their needs if one doesn’t already exist. Black people created organizations across the nation because they weren’t welcomed in most places. No organizations on campus have signs saying “no blacks allowed,” but students still don’t feel welcomed in certain places. We’re in the middle of another
civil rights era, so I understand if students don’t feel welcomed in some organizations. We’re still fighting racial inequality in America. Black organizations serve as a safe haven, especially for students at predominantly white institutions like the University. Black students make up 12 percent of the more than 30,000 students enrolled. We’re overwhelmed and exhausted because we’re surrounded by people who usually don’t know how being underrepresented feels. Minority students use black
organizations on campus to come together and unite. Those organizations and clubs are the few places underrepresented students feel safe and can relate to different injustices they may experience on campus. They allow students to motivate and uplift each other. Over the years, minority students on campus created organizations such as Black Student Union, Minority Women’s Movement, African American Cultural Center Ambassadors, National Society of Black Engineers and Justice Now, just to name a few. These organizations help
bridge the gap between students and the University. Students can voice their concerns and address the University collectively while also serving the community. “[Minority organizations] do not create boundaries that don’t allow the majority in. They simply create a space for those excluded from the ‘American Dream,” said LSU NAACP president Monturios Howard. “Without these groups, who would push racial boundaries? Who would be the voice for the voiceless?” The University also has organizations such as Hispanic Student Cultural Society, Latin American Student Association, Native American Student Organization and Asian American Ambassadors. They all have the same goal as black organizations: provide a comfortable space where minorities can be themselves. These organizations make a safe space for certain students, but they welcome anyone. They’ll never turn you away just because you’re black, white, gay, straight, rich or poor. No, minority students do not want segregation. All we want is to be represented and treated as equals. Until that happens, we will continue joining organizations that welcome, understand and protect us. Clarke Perkins is a 20-year-old political science sophomore from New Orleans, LA. You can reach her on twitter @ClarkePerkins.
Donald Trump to host own debate moderated by Sarah Palin Infrangible Icon John Gavin Harp Columnist This article is purely satire and meant only for the readers’ enjoyment. Presidential candidate and self-declared winner Donald Trump said he will host his own debate this weekend in Des Moines, Iowa because he could not stand to be in the same building as low-energy koala and Gov. Jeb Bush. Trump’s debate will be held at 7 p.m. on Saturday at the
Hy-Vee Hall, a prominent convention center in downtown Des Moines — though not nearly as prominent as the Trump Tower Donald plans to build once he bulldozes the White House. The debate will be moderated by Trump supporter and prominent schizophrenic, former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, who was present during Trump’s announcement Wednesday afternoon. “You betcha we’re gonna play by all of President Trump’s rules,” Palin said. “We won’t be asking any of those ‘gotcha’ questions the lame-stream media at Fox News is known for. Especially questions on geography. Man, those are the ones
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that getcha!” Palin also declared Trump’s private debate will be an event for all Americans who dropped out of high school. “Whether you’re a gun owner, a gay lover or a border hopper, this is the debate for you,” Palin said before being removed from the stage. “Please make sure to watch my new Travel Channel special, ‘Sarah Palin Gets Lost in Iowa,’” Palin yelled as security carried her away. “That woman is great,” Trump said of Palin. “She’s like a slice of apple pie. Nice lady.” When asked why he wasn’t attending Thursday night’s GOP debate, Trump cited journalist
Megyn Kelly’s involvement with Fox News as the reason for holding his own debate. Kelly tweeted a laughing emoji followed by a sassy emoji of paint drying on fingernails shortly after Trump’s announcement. Kelly’s spokesperson said the emojis are her only comment on the matter. The announcement comes after a week of heated public statements between Trump and executives from Fox News. “She doesn’t want to make America great again,” Trump said of Kelly. “I ran a poll. She’s a loser. It’s sad. Pathetic really. Jeb Bush can have her.” “We’re gonna have a nice show. I’ve got a drag queen
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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.
pretending to be former Secretary of State and presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and a toddler wearing a ‘Jeb!’ shirt. It’ll be a good time,” Trump said. “The ratings will be great.” When asked which network will be airing Trump’s debate, he responded, “whichever one I own.” As of this writing, Donald Trump does not own a television network nor has a network stepped forward to air Trump’s debate. John Gavin Harp is a 20-yearold mass communication junior from St. Francisville, Louisiana. You can reach him on Twitter @SirJohnGavin.
Quote of the Day ‘No human race is superior; no religious faith is inferior. All collective judgments are wrong. Only racists make them.’
Elie Wiesel
Writer Sept. 30, 1928 — present
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3BR/2.5BA Townhome available for rent January 1, 2016. Essen Lane area. CPTownhome.com _______________________________ FOR RENT:3/B/BA Luxury Condo, 900 Dean Lee Dr. Gated, Pool, Volleyball ct., On LSU Bus route, Ready For Move In Now!! Call/text Paul 2252669063, or email Talbots@cox.net _______________________________ 3 bd 1.5 ba home for rent, near LSU. Comes w/ appliances. In safe neighborhood near campus. Deposit is $1500. Small pet ok w/ $350 fee. $1500/month obo. Call 225-978-0588. _______________________________ GREAT LOCATION for student...between Burbank and LSU Spacious 2 BR with office, washer / dryer, wood floor, all utilities included. $1,100 / MO. Call: 225-615-8521 or 225-8928517 _______________________________
3 bedroom, 1.5 bath home for rent, near LSU. Comes with all appliances including wash/ dryer, and alarm system. Located in safe neighborhood not far from campus and Mall of LA. Deposit is one month’s rent, and is refundable. Small pets ok with $300 non-refundable pet fee. $1500/month or best offer. _______________________________ BRIGHTSIDE MANOR 2BR/1.5BA W/D NO PETS $625. 225-383-4064 _______________________________ GREAT DEAL ON RENT for a coed to take over lease on a private room/bath in 2BR apt. Call/ Text (917) 391-0061 for details. _______________________________
Services
Costs: $.40 per word per day. Minimum $5 per day. Deadline: 12 p.m., three school days prior to the print publication date
Help Wanted Behavioral Intervention Group (BIG) is a team of dedicated therapists focused on providing the skills, teaching environments and learning opportunities necessary to improve the quality of life for children with autism and other developmental disorders. BIG provides children with a highly individualized Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) program that is continually modified to meet the child’s needs as they progress. As a BIG line therapist, you’ll have an opportunity to gain valuable experience providing ABA services. Our therapists receive intensive training and are taught to be scientists, decision-makers and leaders. This is a full time position starting with an hourly rate of $14.00 hour plus benefits. Although this is an entry level position there is room for advancement at BIG. Must have completed or be presently pursuing a degree in Psychology, Education, Special Education, or a related field (preferred but not required). Previous experience with autism/ABA is helpful but not necessary, No past criminal history,Reliable transportation, Strong interpersonal skills, and a genuine passion for working with children. Please send resume to admin@big-br.com. _______________________________ Red Zeppelin Pizza now hiring pizza makers and waitresses . Apply at RZP. 225-302-7153 _______________________________
Nursery Workers Needed at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church on Goodwood Boulevard. Four hours on Sundays with the option to work other events throughout the year. Prior experience working with infants and toddlers preferred. Contact Fr. Watson Lamb at frlamb@stlukesbr.org or call the church office: 225-926-5343. _______________________________ Willies Restaurant on Coursey is now hiring hostesses, waitress, and buss boys for crawfish season. Apply with in at 11260 Coursey Blvd.
_______________________________ Louie’s Cafe is hiring cooks, servers & dish staff. Apply in person, online or via email. louiescafe.com 3322 Lake St. _______________________________
St. Luke’s Episcopal Church is now hiring compassionate, energetic, and responsible nursery workers to care for our little ones on Sunday mornings. Contact Fr.Watson Lamb, frlamb@stlukesbr.org, or call the church office, 225-926-5343, with interest. _______________________________ Student Worker Needed Position in Downtown BR (close to LSU). Pays $9/hr. MUST BE full-time student, detailed and dependable. Will reconcile payments, answer calls, assist audits, etc. Work up to 20 hrs/week (29 hrs/week during summer, if not in school). Submit resume to Kasey @ UNOMedicaidSupport@LA.gov . Include €œStudent Worker€ in email€™s subject. _______________________________ John’s Pro Window Cleaning is looking for (20-30 hours per week) 2 part-time window cleaners. No experience necessary. Must have reliable transportation and be prepared to work as early as 6 am. Must be completely honest, in good physical condition and self-motivated (references required). Great working conditions, flexible hours and great pay. Start at 10.00 an hour with significant monthly raises (17.00 an hour within first 7 months). Mileage allowance and 8 paid holidays. Great opportunity for the right college student. To apply call Judy at 225-927-6748 between the hours of 9-5 ONLY. _______________________________ Java Mama Cafe’ & Indoor Play, a child-friendly coffee shop and indoor play area, is hiring for part-time. Coffee experience is preferred, but not required. Email resume and availability to melissa@javamama.com _______________________________
Office Assistant needed to organize and assist.Basic computer and organization skills needed.$650.00 weekly interested persons should contact:(lorenzmacaroo@hotmail.com) for more info _______________________________ MANSURS On The BOULDVARD Restaurant, 5720 Corporate, hiring Hostess & Server Positon (busser). Must have some type of daytime availability. No experience necessary. Call Brandon @ 225 229 4554. _______________________________ NOW HIRING! Fitness Attendants (part-time). Must be able to work Mon-Fri evening shift and alternating weekends. Kinesiology background is required. $8-8.50/hr. DOE. Apply in person: Paula G. Manship YMCA, 8100 YMCA Plaza, BR, LA (225) 767-9622 _______________________________
Looking for a part time or full time job while in college? The Best Western PLUS Richmond Inn & Suites on Energy Drive is looking for several Front Desk Agents and Bartenders. Email gary.gillette@smchotels.com for more information and to apply. _______________________________ Fat Cow is now hiring for cooks, cashiers, and dishwashers. Come join the herd and enjoy flexible hours, best wages in the business and a great drug and smoke free work environment. Prior experience preferred but not a must. Apply in person 4350 highland rd ste B1. _______________________________
Jason’s Deli is Now Hiring Delivery Drivers & Cashiers in CitiPlace Baton Rouge! Location: Jason’s Deli 2531 Citiplace Ct. Baton Rouge, LA 70808 Why do our employees love their jobs? http://bit.ly/1PScPqK DELIVERY DRIVER REQUIREMENTS: We will run a motor vehicle report on all hired drivers!You must have an active driver’s license.You must
use your own vehicle.Valid proof of insurance in your name. Apply online: https:// jasonsdelijobs.clickandhire. net/ and select our Baton Rouge (BTR) location For more information about Jason’s Deli, visit us online at www.jasonsdeli. com EOE _______________________________ Part-time position available for a local company in Baker. Flexible hours. Hourly wage PLUS Bonuses. Task include: Outbound calling, appointment setting, and lead generation.Send Resume to cody@gbpdirect. com _______________________________ P/T Monogrammer & P/T Sales Asssoc. for gift store in B.R. $9/ hr to start, flex. hrs, great atmosphere resume to 2222gift@ gmail.com _______________________________ Need afternoon help daily from 3:00-5:30 picking up 2 kids from school and taking them to after school activities and/or helping with homework, SERIOUS and LONG TERM commitment preferred! A driving and background check will be required. Call 252-7023 for interview. _______________________________ Part-time help wanted walking around upscale community passing out literature. $14/hour. Must have vehicle. Contact Beverly at 225-387-5931 _______________________________ Anthony’s Italian Deli is looking for general, reliable help. We can work with school schedules. Apply in person at 5575 Government St 70806 From 2-4 daily. Must be able to work Saturdays. _______________________________
For Sale 838 Meadowbend Unit E; spacious, 2 Bedroom/2 bath, immaculate. Gated community close to Bluebonnet, Essen and LSU. $123,000.00 listed by Covington & Associates 225-6673711 or call Charmaine 225-3287625. _______________________________ Rare find - gated 2 br/2bath condo in highly sought after University View #503 at 710 East Boyd...walk to campus 172k. Seller has done 6k of improvements in the last 3 years. All wood laminate and tile...no car-
The Daily Reveille
Friday, January 29, 2016 pet. Great location and very well maintained. Coming soon 3br/2bath. Call Jessica Antilley, Realtor 763-3414 and visit www. jessicaantilley.cjbrown.com for more information. _______________________________
***Just Announced*** Electro Rouge Presents: VASKI Performing Live @ City Bar Baton Rouge - Friday, January 29 - More Info: h t t p s : / / w w w. f a c e b o o k . c o m / events/560911700725756/ _______________________________
Let your local animal shelter help. Email lostpets@caabr.org (www.caabr.org)
STUDENT FEES, from page 1 the way to campus.” In light of possible cuts to the University’s budget due to the state’s budget deficit , the executive staff also discussed how the shortfall affects SG and its impact on students. Mahtook said the Student Advocacy Commission, run by executive branch members State Capitol advisor Myles Sonnier and chief advisor Zack Faircloth, will help students make sure their needs are addressed by state representatives. “A lot of our efforts revolve around working together with legislators to help complete the promises that they made during their campaigns,” Mahtook said. Chief of staff Kat Latham assured students that SG will maintain an open line of communication between the administration and the students. Latham also urged students to continue to make their voices heard to legislators and show solidarity toward preserving higher education funding. “We are keeping on top of it to ensure protection of the university we love and the students we represent — past, present and future,” Latham said. “We will do whatever we can to always keep this conversation going.”
‘We are keeping on top of it to ensure protection of the university we love and the students we represent.’ KAT LATHAM SG Chief of Staff
SIMMONS-HIELD, from page 1 coach Johnny Jones will point out, the top-ranked Sooners (17-2, 6-2 Big 12) earned their ranking for a reason, and it’s more than just Hield. “They’ve got a team full of guys,” Jones said. “Buddy Hield is not their leading three-point field goal percentage shooter. He’s actually second. They’ve got three guys in the top four in their league in terms of knocking down 3-pointers ... Buddy’s an excellent player. But, again, you’ve got to stop their team. They are averaging well over 80 points a game. “You’ve got to defend their basketball team, not one individual. If you’re concentrating on him, someone else is going to hurt you.” Hield, who is the No. 2 scorer in the nation with 25.9 points per game, is as efficient of a scorer as any in the country, averaging a gaudy 53 percent from the field, 52.3 percent from 3-point territory and 90.3 percent from the field. But beyond him lies an experienced, battle-tested starting lineup, including sharpshooting guards Jordan Woodard and Isaiah Cousins, versatile forward Ryan Spangler and shot-blocking forward Khadeem Lattin. Moreover, Woodard is No. 1 three-point shooter in the nation, Spangler averages nearly a double-double and Lattin blocked eight shots in Oklahoma’s most recent win against Texas Tech. Despite Spangler and Lattin’s prowess in the paint, it’s clear to LSU senior guard Keith Hornsby, who will be turning 24 on Saturday, the Sooners have a guarddominant roster that likes to run the floor and is capable of pulling up from anywhere around the arc. “It will be interesting,” Hornsby said. “We’ve haven’t gone against a team where each of the
three guards are such an incredible threat from three and also shoot it willingly.” Hornsby said the Tigers (13-7, 6-2 Southeastern Conference) haven’t officially determined how they will slow down the Oklahoma transition attack, possibly sending an additional player back instead of attacking the offensive glass. In whatever way LSU plans its defensive assignments, both junior guard Tim Quarterman and freshman guard Antonio Blakeney embrace the task of squaring up against Hield. For Quarterman, his length is his biggest asset against Hield’s quick trigger and his moves to the basket. “Just be long,” Quarterman said when asked about his strategy. “Try to stay in his wheelhouse. Don’t let him get easy shots and just make it tough on him.” While Jones gave his team the day off on Wednesday, LSU began its preparation for the Sooners relieved it didn’t let late lead against Georgia slip away in an 89-85 win Tuesday night. In a drawn-out contest due to the 55 fouls called, the Tigers took a double-digit lead into the final minute of the game. But, the Bulldogs cut the lead to one point in less than 30 seconds and had a chance to tie the game on freshman forward E’Torrion Wilridge’s errant jumper with four seconds left. Despite LSU missing four foul shots down the stretch, Blakeney nailed his final four free throw attempts to salvage the victory. “The only positive thing about that was that we didn’t suffer a loss because it really was a bad way to end the game,” Blakeney said. “Within 50-something seconds, we were up 10 points, and there’s no way it should get to where — if they hit a three — we’re losing the game. That’s just
page 7
Game Info No. 1 Oklahoma versus LSU 4 p.m. Saturday PMAC ESPN, 98.1 FM Game Highs
Hield
46 points in a game 9 rebounds in a game 7 assists in a game 5 steals in a game 2 blocks in a game
43 20 10 5 3
Simmons
Eye-popping Facts Hield leads all major conference players with seven 30-point games. Hield is No. 4 among major conference players in player efficiency rating, according to former ESPN columnist John Hollinger’s Divison I Player Statistics.
Simmons leads all freshman in Division I basketball in points and rebounds per game (tied for second in assists per game). Simmons has 15 double-doubles, which is the most of any Division I freshman and is fifth in the nation.
HASKELL WHITTINGTON / The Daily Reveille
not a good way end the game at all, but I’m just glad we got the victory.” Even with the unpleasant ending to their sixth conference win, the Tigers charge forward to their soldout Big 12/SEC Challenge contest with more to gain
than to lose. At the very least, it will be fun, even if it’s just a “regular game,” Simmons said. “It’s going to be a memory that I will always hold onto once I leave, whenever that is,” Simmons said. “It’s going to be a fun night.”
FOR RELEASE JANUARY 29, 2016
THE Daily Commuter Puzzle
by Jacqueline E. Mathews FOR RELEASE JANUARY 29, 2016
ACROSS THE Daily Commuter 1 Morning grass blade moisture 4 “...to __, dust to ACROSS dust...” 1 Morning grass 9 Paper fastener blade moisture 134 Chopping toolsto “...to __, dust 15 Brown dust...”ermine 169 Midwestern Paper fastener 13state Chopping tools 17 Car bumper 15 Brown ermine blemish 16 Midwestern 18 Brusque; curt state 19 __ 17Singer Car bumper Campbell blemish 20 18Deadlock Brusque; curt 22 19Marries Singer __ 23 Forbids entry to Campbell 24 Greek letter 20 Deadlock 26 22Actress MarriesSmith 29 23Hardworking Forbids entry to 34 24Villains Greek letter 35 Shoe bottoms 26 Actress Smith 36 __ 29Mauna Hardworking 37 of woe 34Word Villains 38 dirty 35Makes Shoe bottoms 39 or leg 36Arm Mauna __ 40 37Last Wordbut of __ woe 38least Makes dirty 3 __ away; left 39Actor Arm or leg 41 Jeremy 40Deadly Last but __ 4 Toward a ship’s 42 least rear 43 Symptom of __ away; left 41edema Actor Jeremy 53 Flower stalks Towarddance a ship’s 42Separate Deadly from 64 Israeli 45 rear 43aSymptom of 7 Vane direction nation to be Flower stalks edema 85 Spires independent Israeli dance 45Perpendicular Separate from 96 VIP 46 Vane direction a nationwing to be 107 Actor’s part building 8 Spires independent 11 Astounded 47 Hoodlum VIP 46Hit Perpendicular and 48 with a Taser 129 Quayle 10 Aykroyd Actor’s part building wingby 51 __ to Hoyle; 11 Astounded 47the Hoodlum 14 Horse homes rules 12 __ Quayle 48Vienna’s Hit with a Taser 21 down;and 56 Aykroyd 51nation: __ to Hoyle; deposits abbr. by 14 Bro’s Horsesibling homes the rules 25 57 Racket 21 Rivers __ down; 56Part Vienna’s 26 & Baez 58 of speech deposits nation: abbr. 27 Shining 60 Patella’s place 25 Wooden Bro’s sibling 57Mulgrew Racket and 28 box 61 26 “Nothing Rivers & __!”; Baez 58Middleton Part of speech 29 27 Shining 60 Patella’s place firm refusal 62 Sports event 28 Wooden box 61 Mulgrew and 30 Misfortunes 63 Deserve; merit 29 Aristocracy “Nothing __!”; Middleton 31 64 On the ball firm refusal 62 Sports event 32 Wanderer 65 Initials for 30 Misfortunes 63 Deserve; merit 33 Piece of dining Truman 31 Aristocracy 64 On the ball room furniture 32 Wanderer 65 Initials for 35 just of a bit DOWN 33 In Piece dining Truman 38 Asian nation 1 June honoree room furniture 39 In need of 2 Alimony payers 35 In just a bit DOWN 38 Asian nation 1 June honoree 2 Alimony payers 39 In need of
Puzzle
by Jacqueline E. Mathews
Thursday’s Puzzle Solved Thursday’s Puzzle Solved
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
41 “__ Be Home for Christmas” 42 __ off; repel 41 “__ Be Home 44 Of a pre-Easter for Christmas” season 42 __ off; repel 45 Most confident 44 Of a pre-Easter 47 season Baffling riddle 48 Most “Oh, for 45 confident Pete’s 47 Baffling__!” riddle 48 “Oh, for Pete’s __!”
49 Albacore, e.g. 50 Drug addict 52 Fuel, for some 49 Albacore, e.g. 53 Refer to 50 Drug addict 54 Ark builder 52 Fuel, for some 55 Periodontist’s 53 Refer to concerns 54 Ark builder 59 Periodontist’s Ping-Pong 55 table divider concerns 59 Ping-Pong table divider
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
The Daily Reveille
page 8 Track and field
Friday, January 29, 2016
Teams set to compete in Razorback Invitational this weekend
FRIDAY JAN 29th oP EN bA R 8- 10 pm
Last week, LSU’S 4x400-meter relay team ranked second in the NCAA with a time of 3:05.77. The teams participating in the women’s events are No. 1 Arkansas, No. 2 Georgia, No. 5 Oregon, No. 6 Florida, No. 20 Texas A&M, Florida State, Iowa, Iowa State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and UCLA. LSU junior sprinter Jada Martin placed seventh in the country with a time of 23.46
seconds when she ran her first women’s 200-meter dash of the 2016 season last weekend. In her season debut, LSU junior jumper Nataliyah Friar jumped 20 feet, 5 inches in the women’s long jump to rank No. 10 nationally. She will compete in the event in Friday’s opener. “Many of these events will be very much like an SEC and NCAA final with the teams that
are in this meet, so this will be a great opportunity for our athletes to take another big step in their progression this season,” Shaver said. Next, the Tigers and Lady Tigers will compete in the two-day New Mexico Collegiate Classic on Friday, Feb. 5 and Saturday, Feb. 6 at the Albuquerque Convention Center in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
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EMILY BRAUNER / The Daily Reveille
LSU junior Jada Martin participates in the 60 meter dash event during the Tigers’ track and field meet on Jan. 16.
ET IN F
The LSU track and field teams hope to continue their fast break to the 2016 season at the Razorback Invitational on Friday and Saturday at the Randall Tyson Track Center in Fayetteville, Arkansas. The Tigers and Lady Tigers look to perform as well as they did last week in the Conference Clash: Power Five Invitational at the Birmingham Crossplex in Birmingham, Alabama. Last Friday at the Conference Clash, eight Tigers and Lady Tigers qualified for the 60-meter hurdles, 60-meter dash and 200-meter dash to advance to the next day’s finals. LSU left the Conference Clash with eight NCAA Top-10 performances, five LSU alltime Top-10 event records and 16 indoor personal-bests. “We’ve shown good progression as a team through the first few weeks of the season,” said LSU coach Dennis Shaver in a news release. “It’s time to take it a step further and show improvement on the performances that we’ve seen to this point. The indoor season comes and goes very quickly. We’re already at the midway point of the season before we go to SECs, so it’s important to take advantage
of every opportunity we have. Together, eight Tigers and Lady Tigers, along with relays, are qualified to compete in the 2016 NCAA Division I Indoor track and field Championship at the Birmingham Crossplex on March 11 and 12. Friday’s multi-events start at 11 a.m., field events begin at 3 p.m. and running events kick off at 6 p.m. Saturday’s final rounds start with the field events at noon, and continue with the multievents at 11 a.m. and the running events at 11:15 a.m. The teams competing in the men’s events are No. 1 Florida, No. 3 Texas A&M, No. 5 Oregon, No. 7 Georgia, No. 11 Arkansas, No. 16 Oklahoma State, Florida State, Iowa, Iowa State, Oklahoma and UCLA. LSU junior hurdler Jordan Moore set a national-leading time of 7.69 seconds in the 60-meter hurdles last weekend. This weekend, he hopes to reinforce his status as a national championship contender and All-American candidate. LSU sophomore middle distance runner Jack Wilkes ran a career-record best of 1 minute, 49.79 seconds in his first 800-meter event a week ago. He ranked No. 15 nationally and aims to continue improving his times.
gIRLS G
BY Jourdan Riley @jourdanr_TDR
Win 1 of 5, 4 night trips to a Caribbean cruise. every saturday starting 1/30 to 2/27.