LSU Museum of Art hosts costuming lecture, page 5 Letter to the Editor: students respond to reform on tailgating policies, page 8 lsunow.com/daily
THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 2016
thedailyreveille
@lsureveille
Volume 121 · No. 52
thedailyreveille
ADMINISTRATION
Band director placed on administrative leave STAFF REPORTS @lsureveille
see TRADITIONS, page 11
see KING, page 11
JAVIER FERNÁNDEZ / The Daily Reveille
professional development modules, Military Traditions teaches cadets the social graces expected at formal military functions. In the military, Warmsley said ballroom etiquette is equally as important as battleground strategy. “There’s no lab for manners and protocol,” Warmsley said. “We just wanted to bring this activity to life.” After three months of planning, she recruited Capt. Mark Mosby, an Air Force instructor, to teach program participants how to approach a receiving line and how to properly toast. Mosby incorporated military traditions and tidbits of history into the nighttime lesson. History reveals the act of toasting began as a way to demonstrate a
Band director Roy King has been placed on administrative leave, according to his attorney Jill Craft who described the move as “an absolute travesty.” King has worked with the marching band for 18 years, taking the director position five years ago. Like athletes, Tigerband members, including Golden Girls and the color guard, receive stipends for the time they spend representing the U n i v e r s i t y. Craft said KING she believes this action has been taken because King refused to let “certain folks with the LSU School of Music” access Tigerband money. “Those kids have a huge routine. There is a lot of expertise involved in terms of following SEC games, SEC regulations as to when they can they play. [There are] NCAA regulations,” Craft said. “This is not some sort of show up and
Toasting
TACTICS
Military Traditions program teaches cadets etiquette, encourages personal development BY CAITIE BURKES @caitie1221
The University’s Reserve Officer Training Corps cadets are trading training gear for dress blues for their military ball on April 15. To prepare the cadets for the formal event, ROTC director of academic affairs and student development Linda Warmsley organized Military Traditions: Customs and Courtesies, a program introducing them to the social development side of the University’s ROTC Curious and concerned about campus perception, Warmsley conducted an informal empirical study to see what outside students knew about the ROTC program. While most of the responses involved combat and war preparation, Warmsley said she wanted to paint the greater picture of ROTC’s purpose. As one of ROTC’s required
CAMPUS LIFE
Students highlight issues with proposed tailgating policies BY CAITIE BURKES @caitie1221 The Student Union’s Capital Chamber was filled to the brim late Wednesday afternoon, students again seized the opportunity to voice their concerns regarding the proposed tailgating regulations shared Tuesday. After Tuesday’s town hall meeting, regulation committee members allowed more students to contribute to the discussion by holding a second town hall meeting. An assortment of involved students came armed and ready, noting “logistical issues” with
the proposals. Backtracking to the first night’s discussion, committee member and outgoing Student Government president Andrew Mahtook reiterated the drafted options were simply suggestions and not the final word. “There’s an extremely viable option that none of these options will even see the light of day,” Mahtook said. Committee members previously allowed students to electronically record their thoughts on a Campus Labs Respond app. Campus Life’s assistant director for leadership and
involvement Kathy Jones, a committee member who led both discussions, said Tuesday’s 1,343 survey response count jumped to 2,700 on Wednesday. While some students spurred social media conversations using the Twitter hashtag #TailgateTownHall, others voiced different takes on the situation, launching a series of talks that overran the allotted time. Though Interfraternity Council President and committee member Will Fisher
EMILY BRAUNER / The Daily Reveille
see TAILGATING, page 11
A committee from the LSU Dean of Students’ office held a meeting on Wednesday for students to voice their opinions on possible changes to the University’s tailgating policies.
The Daily Reveille
page 2
Thursday, April 7, 2016
University to cut Greek meal plan option Reveille The Daily
GREEK LIFE
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Incoming Greek students living in residence halls will be required to remain on a full LSU Dining meal plan instead of opting out and signing up for the Greek Paw Points Meal Plan, Margot Carroll, the assistant vice president of Auxiliary Services, said in an email. The new system will be implemented in the fall. According to the Auxiliary Services website, all first and second year students living on campus, except for those in East Campus and West Campus Apartments, are required to have meal plans. Carroll said the Greek Paw Points Meal Plan, which costs $700 for 700 Paw Points, would no longer be available. In the past, students were able to opt out of the University meal plans in exchange for the Greek Paw Points Meal Plan after joining a Greek organization, as some fraternities offer their own meal plans and include the cost in dues. Now, these students will be required to remain on one of the traditional plans for the full year, just as their non-Greek
QUINT FORGEY Editor in Chief CARRIE GRACE HENDERSON Co-Managing Editor JOSHUA JACKSON Co-Managing Editor ROSE VELAZQUEZ News Editor WILLIAM TAYLOR POTTER Deputy News Editor MEG RYAN Entertainment Editor CHRISTIAN BOUTWELL Sports Editor APRIL AHMED Associate Production Editor CLAIRE CASSREINO Associate Production Editor EMILY BRAUNER / The Daily Reveille
LSU Auxiliary Services plans to eliminate the Greek Paw Points Meal Plan as an option for Greek students starting fall 2016. counterparts are. “The proposal was shared with all impacted LSU departments, including Greek Life and [Student Life and Enrollment],” Carroll said. “Eliminating this
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exemption is in alignment with exemption created an inequity LSU’s primary mission and pri- between the Greek and nonorities, especially in these chal- Greek students” in residence lenging budgetary times.” halls, she said. Former Delta Chi presi“The change was proposed dent Jonathan Kloor said the after careful review and comoption to switch to the frater- parison to best practices at nity meal plan has been avail- other institutions,” Carroll able since he joined his frater- said. “Research showed that nity. He said the change has the exemption was an uncomcome as a response to budget mon one at other colleges cuts as the University is “try- and universities.” ing to save as much money as Many of the Greek houspossible.” es provide their meal plans Kloor said the cost of joining through off-campus businesshis fraternity is around $1,000, es, Kloor said, and some of and the policy could make re- those businesses operate off cruiting new members more of minimum orders. If memdifficult for fraternities across bers stop signing up for the fraternity’s plan, they may campus. “They’re already spend- not be able to use the service ing a tremendous amount of at all. money to go to college now, That scenario could result and the luxury and the desire in a large loss of business for to enter the Greek system is those companies, Kloor said. going to be harder for them fiFraternity and sorority nancially compared to what it presidents held a meeting to was in the past,” he discuss the said. issue. Kloor “Eliminating this The default said several alumni meal plan, which exemption is in spoke up includes 12 Tiger Meals per alignment with LSU’s against the week and 600 plan and primary mission and new Paw Points, costs one alumnus $1,956 per sesaid it would priorities.” mester, accordd i s c o u r a ge ing to the 2015-16 new memMARGOT CARROLL bers from Greek Student Assistant vice president of Auxiliary eating at the Meal Plan Options Services house, damdocument on the aging one of Auxiliary Services website. Other traditional the core values of the Greek meal plans, with more Tiger system. “It’s going to make it harder Meals and fewer Paw Points, are $1,985 and $2,129 per for the chapters to truly get to semester. know these people and underCarroll said the exemption stand them,” Kloor said. “The had a “significant” financial culture down in the South, evimpact on the students partici- erything revolves around food. pating in the meal plans. The When you take away a commeal plan was designed to en- mon thing like a meal from sure students had convenient the new guys and the older access to meals between class- guys, it makes it even harder es and on weekends, but “the to bond.”
CODY SIBLEY Opinion Editor EMILY BRAUNER Photo Editor ARI ROSS Radio Director SAM ACCARDO Advertising Manager
CORRECTIONS & CLARIFICATIONS In Wednesday’s edition of The Daily Reveille, the story “Vast majority of LSUPD rape reports since 2010 fall on gamedays, gameday weekends” reads “All but one football and one basketball game were at home” referring to which sporting events correlate with rape reports. A road basketball game did occur on March 24, 2014, following an incident of rape which allegedly occurred on March 23, 2014, but was not included in the story because a home baseball game occurred March 23. That baseball game was included. The story’s second sentence should read “All but one football game were at home.” The Daily Reveille regrets this error.
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 BASEBALL NOTEBOOK
‘TAKE NOTICE’
Cartwright to have surgery, Latz ‘looks good’
BY JAMES BEWERS @JamesBewers_TDR
Twenty-eight games into the season and nine games into Southeastern Conference play, LSU baseball coach Paul Mainieri assures his No. 15 Tigers haven’t fallen into an unclimbable hole. Due to its well-publicized inexperience, LSU (19-9, 4-5 SEC) has looked vulnerable at times, even at home. The Tigers dropped a home series to Alabama for the first time since 1996 and endured its first loss to Tulane in Baton Rouge in the new Alex Box Stadium. Nevertheless, LSU is 10 games above .500 and is coming off its first series win of the season against Auburn and midweek victory versus Southern. In reality, a 3-3 outing in road conference series against Auburn and No. 3 Texas A&M is palatable for Mainieri. But in comes No. 6 Vanderbilt, which ranked as high as No. 2 in one major poll, for a three-game set at Alex Box Stadium beginning at 6 p.m. tonight. Even if the series won’t define LSU’s season, Mainieri isn’t minimizing what kind of opportunity lies in front of the Tigers. “This is an opportunity to establish some real credibility nationwide,” Mainieri said. “You’re playing the No. 2-ranked team in the country, a team that has been in the finals of the College World Series for the last two years. And if we can go out there and have success this weekend then people are going to stand up and take
BY JAMES BEWERS AND JARRETT MAJOR @JamesBewers_TDR | @jarrett_TDR LSU junior right-hander Alden Cartwright will have Tommy John surgery to remedy a complete tear of the ulnar collateral ligament in his elbow and a partially torn muscle, Cartwright and LSU coach Paul Mainieri confirmed Tuesday afternoon. The reconstructive surgery, which will be done on April 13 by orthopedic surgeon Mark Field, will keep Cartwright out for the rest of the season and a portion of next season. While the recovery time varies among players, it usually takes roughly a year, or more. However, because Cartwright’s injury occurred in the first half of the season and he had not played in more than 30 percent of the total 56 games on the schedule, he is eligible to receive a medical redshirt this season, as Mainieri confirmed. Still, after finding out the news Tuesday afternoon, Mainieri could only empathize with Cartwright as his blooming third season abruptly ends. “I walked in, and Alden was waiting for me in my office,” Mainieri said. “All I could do
see NOTICE, page 4 ZOE GEAUTHREAUX / The Daily Reveille
LSU junior outfielder Jake Fraley (8) runs toward first base on Saturday, March 5, during the Tigers’ 15-1 win against Fordham at Alex Box Stadium.
see NOTEBOOK, page 4
SOFTBALL
Tigers’ consistent offense plates Southern Miss., 5-0 BY MARC STEVENS @MarcStevens_TDR
Consistent offense and a solid performance from sophomore pitcher Allie Walljasper forwarded the No. 8 LSU softball team to cruise to a 5-0 win against Southern Mississippi on Wednesday. The Tigers (29-9, 5-7 Southeastern Conference) scored a run in every inning but the first and seventh innings pressured the Golden Eagles (18-21, 5-7 Conference USA) the most. “I really liked how we swung the bats tonight,” said LSU coach Beth Torina. “It’s been awhile since we stepped up to the plate with that kind of confidence. [The team] swung well
and just hit things hard. I like seeing that from our kids. Even their outs seemed to be hit well.” Walljasper stifled any chance of a comeback as she stayed ahead in pitching counts to shut down the Golden Eagles’ batting order. She recorded four strikeouts, and forced 15 batters to ground or fly out. The sophomore hurler allowed six hits in the complete game effort and held the Golden Eagles to a .240 batting average. But her biggest moment came in a bases-loaded jam in the sixth. With the tying run at the plate, she forced Golden Eagles sophomore pitcher Samantha Robles to fly out, ending the
frame and Southern Miss’ attempted comeback. “She keeps everyone calm,” said freshman shortstop Amber Serrett. “She is so quiet and we talk about silently hunting. That’s kind what I think of Allie. She’s out there and she gets her job done, but she’s so quiet about it.” Serrett and junior first baseman Sahvanna Jaquish were the highlight for the LSU offense. The duo each blasted balls over the outfield wall. Serrett’s longshot added a second Tigers’ run in the second inning and Jaquish hit her team-high 10th homer that added the fourth LSU score.
see OFFENSE, page 4
JAVIER FERNÁNDEZ / The Daily Reveille
LSU senior catcher Kellsi Kloss (77) congratulates freshman infielder Amber Serrett (17) after scoring a home run during the Tigers’ 5-0 victory against Southern Mississippi on Wednesday in Tiger Park.
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page 4 NOTICE, from page 3 notice and say, ‘LSU is LSU, again. They’re going to be able to compete.’” The Commodores (24-5, 6-3 SEC), which took two of three from No. 8 South Carolina last weekend, bring a familiar brand of baseball to Baton Rouge under coach Tim Corbin — elite starting pitching and manufacturing runs with small ball. Headlined by projected Thursday night starter Jordan Sheffield, the Vanderbilt pitching staff bests all SEC teams in hits allowed while ranking second in earned run average, opponent’s batting average, strikeouts and saves. “They always have good arms every year,” said junior center fielder Jake Fraley. “That’s what Vanderbilt is really known for. We like to think it as it’s just going to be the same staff power wise, just like [Texas] A&M was. So, it’s not like it’s our first go-around with that.” The offense leads the league in runs and sacrifice bunts and is tied for first in stolen bases and sacrifice flies. The Commodores are also second in SEC in walks. While he is challenging his hitters to embrace to task of facing major-league caliber hurlers, Mainieri said quelling the Commodores’ leadoff hitter of each inning will be key, especially in what he expects will be a low-run contest. “They’re the epitome of
Thursday, April 7, 2016
taking advantage of their opportunities because they go crazy on the basepaths,” Mainieri said. “Now, they run into a lot of outs. They’ve been thrown out stealing more than anybody ... they do that because they know they also have a quality pitching staff — that if they do run into some outs, that they’re pitching staff is going to cover for them by holding the other team down. So, it gives them the opportunity to take a lot of risk.” Because the series opener against Auburn was postponed, LSU is once again coming into a conference series on a short week, giving Mainieri reason to start junior left-hander Jared Poche’ on Thursday. Mainieri said Poche’s finesselike style of pitching is less taxing on him than Lange’s power approach would be on four days of rest. Lange (2-2) is entering the series off his collegiate worst runsallowed outing in Game 1 against Auburn, where he conceded a career-high seven earned runs in 6.2 innings. However, Lange worked through a chaotic third inning to save the LSU bullpen for later in the series, which coaches and players commended him for accomplishing. “It happens to the best of us,” junior catcher Michael Papierski said of Lange. “Nobody is perfect. He had to work through it. He did. He kept us in the game, like coach said, and gave us a shot to win. WINGATE JONES / The Daily Reveille
[TOP] LSU sophomore catcher Michael Papierski (2) defends home plate during LSU’s 5-4 loss against Sacramento State on Saturday, Feb. 27 at Alex Box Stadium. [LEFT] Papierski heads back to home plate during LSU’s 6-3 win against Louisiana Tech on Tuesday, March 8 at Alex Box Stadium. [RIGHT] LSU junior outfielder Jake Fraley (8) bunts during LSU’s 7-5 victory against the University of Alabama on Sunday, March 20 at Alex Box Stadium.
OFFENSE, from page 3 Southern Miss. had opportunities but couldn’t find a hit when it needed it to bring baserunners home. The visiting Golden Eagles left eight runners on the basepath on Wednesday night. LSU associate head coach and former Southern Miss. captain Howard Dobson said he was happy with the result as his current squad beat his old ball club.
NOTEBOOK, from page 3
JAVIER FERNÁNDEZ / The Daily Reveille
[TOP] LSU junior catcher Sahvanna Jaquish (2) celebrates scoring a home run during the Tigers’ 5-0 victory against Southern Mississippi on Wednesday in Tiger Park. [BOTTOM] LSU sophomore pitcher Allie Walljasper pitches during the Tigers’ 5-0 victory against Southern Mississippi in Tiger Park.
was hug him and just tell him how sorry I was for his sake … his career is not over. He’ll still be able to contribute to LSU baseball. It’s just everything is going to be delayed a little bit.” Cartwright said his arm began to ache even before he threw the fourth pitch of his outing in Game 3 against Auburn on April 3. “It was hurting every pitch,” he said. “I was planning on coming out after that inning anyway. It was something different, not a normal hurt. And then on that fourth pitch, I felt it pop, felt a burning sensation in my elbow, and I knew it was done.”
“Anytime you play some former foes, friends, or people you’ve coached with or against you definitely want to get that win,” Dobson said. “I wouldn’t say it’s any better than any other win, but it’s always nice [to get a win]. I’ll sleep a little better tonight.” The Tigers’ victory gives them their third win in four games since being swept by then-No. 1 Florida on March 26. Torina’s squad will look to keep the momentum this
weekend in a rare Saturday, Sunday, Monday series against No. 16 Kentucky in Tiger Park. The Wildcats are the fifthstraight top-16 squad LSU will face in conference play. “They’re coach does a great job with strategy,” Torina said. “They always bring a great pitching staff, and they have a great pitcher with Kelsey Nunley who’s given us trouble in the past … we definitely have our work cut out for us. I feel good about the spot our team is in.”
Latz “looked good” against live hitters. Despite the unsettling news of Cartwright’s season-ending injury, Mainieri “couldn’t contain his enthusiasm” after redshirt freshman lefty Jake Latz completed two 15-pitch innings against live hitters in practice on Wednesday. Latz, who has not appeared in a game as a Tiger, has been steadily recovering from surgery on his throwing elbow in the fall and is targeting an appearance in one of two midweek games against McNeese State and Grambling next week. “His velocity is good — 8890 miles per hour,” Mainieri said. “He maintained it. His fastball command was pretty
good. He threw some really good changeups … He didn’t quite have a great feel for [his curveball]. That’s usually the last thing to come. When I talked to him after he threw, that was the least of his worries.” “I don’t think it could have gone any better, quite frankly. The whole key is how does he feel [Thursday].” After a long road for Latz to get back on the mound, the former Illinois High School Player of the Year is starting to feel like his old self again, he said. “It just felt normal to get back out there again,” Latz said. “I didn’t have any doubts or second thoughts. It just kind of came secondhand to me.”
Entertainment
page 5 music
Stan wars are overthe-top RANDALL RAMBLES kayla randall @Kay_Ran21
Hemlines & History MDA assistant professor to give lecture at LSU Museum of Art Thursday
GRETA JINES/ The Daily Reveille
Ashlyn, 3, models a costume designed by assistant professor of costume design Brandon McWilliams Friday, April 1, at the LSU Museum of Art. McWilliams will be giving a gallery talk April 7 at 6 p.m. at the museum.
BY lauren heffker @laurheffker Replicating historic clothing takes a lot more than a needle and thread. LSU College of Music and Dramatic Arts assistant professor of costume design Brandon McWilliams will be the guest speaker at “Costuming the Collection: A Gallery Talk Exploring the History of Fashion in Art” at the LSU Museum of Art tonight. The lecture is being presented in conjunction with the reinstallation of the museum’s permanent collection, which unveils a special selection of portraiture art. McWilliams, with the help of four
of his graduate students, re-created the dresses worn by the portrait models in children’s sizes. The miniature gowns were constructed as costumes for the brand new children’s education center. “I think [the portrait] is beautiful,” McWilliams said. “I think that portraiture is such an interesting art form because, as a designer, it’s the only way you know what people wore.” The process of replicating the centuries old style of clothing entails historical research, line drawings, pattern drafting and cutting and sewing the fabric together. McWilliams said the challenge with making the costumes was in manipulating the garment for a body
that has no corseted understructure, unlike the typical 1800s attire. “They weren’t just replicas — they were for kids,” he said. Altering the durable fabric to shape the bodice, along with pleating all of the material on a smaller frame, also proved difficult, the professor said. “The conversation becomes about how do you convey this period line,” McWilliams said. “How do you manipulate style lines to evoke shape on something that has no shape at all?” He identified the correct fabric worn by the sitter in each portrait from observation, logic and
see clothing, page 6
From the Beyhive to the Navy to the Barbz, these days stans represent their fandoms like gangs. While standom in general is based on borderline irrational enthusiasm for popular media figures, the disturbing trend of stan wars is starting to permeate media culture and it needs to stop. To be a stan is to be someone who is so dedicated to a celebrity, public figure or pop culture entity that they become a maniacal fanatic, praising who they stan at every turn, purchasing $500 concert tickets, going to see the movie starring the subject of their stanning at minimum seven times and attacking anyone who disagrees with the notion that who they stan is the second coming of Jesus. It’s that last part that is concerning. In general, there’s nothing wrong with really liking something, which is essentially all that being a stan is. However, Twitter has become a breeding ground of people simply attacking those who disagree with them or really like someone else. If, for whatever unthinkable reason, you say you enjoy Iggy Azalea, Nicki Minaj’s army of Barbz are ready to rip you to pieces. Granted, if someone said that in my
see STAN, page 6 music
22nd annual Baton Rouge Blues Festival to be held this weekend BY Dillon Lowe @d_lowe96
The Baton Rouge Blues Festival will kick off its 22nd annual event on April 9 and April 10 in and around Repentance Park and Galvez Plaza in downtown Baton Rouge. Originally held on the campus of Southern University in 1981, the free festival seeks to promote the blues as the heart of American music, particularly the swamp blues native to Baton Rouge. BRBF honors the local swamp blues legends who helped shape
the genre, like Slim Harpo, Raful Neal and Rudy Richard. This year, American blues guitarist and six-time Grammy winner Buddy Guy will headline the festival, performing Sunday night. “He’s the largest blues musician in the world, so to have him play free and open to the public in downtown Baton Rouge is truly something to celebrate and to give this to the city is something spectacular,” Baton Rouge Blues Foundation board member Chris Brooks said.
Other notable performers include Latimore, Curtis Harding, and Kenny Neal and the Neal family, who will perform a tribute to the late Raful Neal. In an effort to provide more opportunities for attendees to engage with the city of Baton Rouge and the wide variety of performers, this year’s festival will be the first two-day BRBF in over 20 years. The festival’s performers will take to one of four stages this weekend: The Soul of BR stage, the Front Porch
see FESTIVAL, page 6
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The 22nd annual Baton Rouge Blues Festival will feature a lineup of various blues artists.
page 6 clothing, from page 5 deductive reasoning. The reflection of light off the fabric and the buoyancy of the cloth help determine what the garment is made of, as well as shade and dimension. Four costumes have been created, with eight as the goal for the project. The idea for the lecture stemmed from McWilliams’ ability to look at a garment in a portrait and correctly guess the year the portrait was made, a skill noticed by museum coordinator of school and community programs Lucy Perera. “I’m going to take everybody through the typical interrogation process that I would
go through to learn period,” McWilliams said. The costume designer knows the historical information surrounding different portraiture art, specifically the Antebellum period. “First of all, it’s my trade, it’s what I’ve been trained to do,” he said. “I have an understanding of historical garments, and I happen to understand the pattern of clothing in that period. It’s one that I know and I’ve been doing it for awhile, and I just know these things.” McWilliams said while partnerships similar to the museum’s and the College of Music and Dramatic Arts seem like a no-brainer, they’re sometimes rare at the
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university level. “I think with the nature of the academic system, we forget how rich and how similar so many of these people are for us. So whenever you get the chance to connect with them, like Lucy and I, it’s wonderful, and it’s really rewarding,” McWilliams said. The professor teaches drawing courses, costume design construction courses, stage makeup courses, an introduction to theatre design course and the history of theatrical style and adornment. He also assists with the LSU Theatre Department and freelances with other major productions. “Costuming the Collection” begins at 6 p.m. at the LSU Museum of Art.
stan, from page 5
NOW OPEN at LSU’s Northgates
presence I’d definitely give them the side eye, but still, people have every right to have bad taste. If you simply tweet that you enjoy Beyonce, certain members of the Rihanna Navy are ready to attack, bombarding your mentions with emojis and saying “Rihanna is better” and “buy ‘Anti’ on iTunes!” Then the Beyhive has to clap back at the Navy, and suddenly, you’ve got yourself an all out stan war. This kind of mob mentality is detrimental not only to the celebrity but also to the fans. It creates this awful “there can only be one” culture, leading people to believe that there can’t be multiple successful stars in a specific medium at any one time, which
Thursday, April 7, 2016 festival, from page 5 stage, the Foundation stage and the main Swamp Blues stage. “Our focus with the committee is that those people that come to the festival can really see what Baton Rouge is all about,” Brooks said. “That’s why we have our Front Porch singersongwriter stage because we have a great singer-songwriter community here, and that’s why we have a Soul of BR stage because our gospel community is absolutely enormous here and a lot of people don’t know about it.” Additionally, scheduled question and answer is nonsense. While these stan wars are typically about women, because apparently it’s totally unfathomable to not pit women against each other, male stars are certainly not out of the line of stan fire. Take a look through some of the Twitter feeds of Beliebers and Directioners and it’s like the Sharks and the Jets. When Kendrick Lamar drops an album, or even just a track, some stans use that as opportunity to put his rap contemporaries down. When Drake drops “Views From the 6,” the same is sure to happen, and it’s just plain annoying. You can’t really enjoy the music while typing a Twitter essay about how another artist is trash compared to who you like. Didn’t Champagne Papi warn you about having
sessions with festival performers will be held in the senate chambers of the Old State Capitol at an event called Backstage at the Blues Fest. The festival will also feature an arts market, a food market and a general market for local boutiques. BRBF is one of many initiatives of the Baton Rouge Blues Foundation, a nonprofit organization aimed at honoring the history of swamp blues through educational outreach and other campaigns throughout the city. The festival kicks off at 11:30 a.m. Saturday with Sundanze Howie. Twitter fingers? Here’s some controversial news: you can like both Beyonce and Rihanna. These two beautiful, successful and proud black women make great music and exist at the same time. For that we should be grateful, not trying to tear one of them down to promote the other. While stanning can be fun, it can also be toxic. Many of the stans who engage in social media attacking are young. Hopefully they’ll grow out of it, but in the meantime, I’m going to need the moms of the world to start disconnecting the WiFi when stan wars get out of control. Kayla Randall is 22-yearold a mass communication senior from New Orleans, Louisiana.
F
Start by ELECTING to read the Library’s One Book One Community 2016 Book Choice KINGFISH: THE REIGN OF HUEY P. LONG By Richard D. White Jr.
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April Events: A portrayal of Huey P. Long on April 10, author on April 23 & More!
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Rihanna appears at 2016 Black Girls Rock! at New Jersey Performing Arts Center on Friday, April, 1 in Newark, New Jersey.
UNDER THE BIG TOP 3 DAY TENT PARTY WEEKEND
First 500 people get a free Midget Wrestling souvenir T-Shirt $1 Midget Coors Light cans 7 P.M. - 9 P.M. | GEAUX DJ 7 P.M. - 11P.M.
Come have a BIG time with the little people! Friday 4/8
Open Bar 8 P.M. - 10 P.M. The incredible AM/FM playing 10 P.M. - 2 A.M.
Saturday 4/9
Open at 11 A.M. | Cover $5 for Girls and $10 for Guys Freds Annual 3000 lb All You Can Eat Crawfish Boil with 500 Bowls of Chicken & Sausage Jambalaya and 800 Charcoal Grilled Burgers $3 Michelob Ultra 11 A.M. - 4 P.M. Party with The Scott Van Matre Band from 3 P.M. - 8 P.M. and The AC/DC Tribute Band THUNDERSTRUCK from 10 P.M. - 2 A.M.
Opinion TWITTER REACTS Tweet your story reactions to @lsureveille Here’s what readers had to say about #TailgateTownHall: @StephWaguespack Would love to know how many members of the committee attended LSU and drank at a student tailgate. #hypocritical #TailgateTownHall
@phildibenedetto #TailgateTownHall is showing that every option is a “logistical problem”
@NoahhhBallard I’ll never understand why TVs at tailgates are detrimental to students’ safety. #TailgateTownHall #LSU @jpbmill #TailgateTownHall Ultimately, this is a waste of time and energy by the administration that instead should focus on more pressing issues.
The Daily Reveille EDITORIAL BOARD
Quint Forgey Carrie Grace Henderson Joshua Jackson Rose Velazquez William Taylor Potter Cody Sibley
Editor in Chief Co-Managing Editor Co-Managing Editor News Editor Deputy News Editor Opinion Editor
page 8
Letter to the Editor: Tailgating proposals are out of touch with students, culture
Where do you see yourself on September 10? It’s the first of seven home football games for the LSU Tigers in Death Valley. You picture the sights and sounds. The fireworks going off as the Mad Hatter leaves the tunnel and 103,000 people are ready to watch Leonard Fournette. But something is missing. There is not the typical energy and excitement built up over 10 months bellowing from the LSU student section. On September 10, LSU Administration is planning to unveil one of their new plans to “increase student safety and accountability.” We understand, things get rowdy on Saturday’s in Baton Rouge, but the presented tailgating regulations are inadequately groomed and ill prepared. Students have every right to know of these unfeasible and impractical methods the Dean of Students’ office is attempting to impose on our student organizations. All student organizations — from religious groups to fraternities to the Quidditch team — that want to coordinate tailgating festivities will have to register a “space” within a certain number of days prior to kickoff. Let’s evaluate this situation. What happens when the spaces “run out”? Are you then not allowed to have any sort of tailgate as LSU fans have been accustomed since the inception of tailgating? What if a family sets up in your tailgating “space?” Now you can’t relocate because you will be in violation of the tailgating regulations. These new “reserved spots” will make groups responsible for anything that might happen in that area. Will this increase safety or increase consequences that will burden these student organizations trying to follow these new regulations? Additionally, in the proposed tailgating regulations, the Dean of Students’ office is also proposing to have a single beer vendor located near the Parade Ground. Student organizations will be required to pay for a third party vendor, costing well over $500 per
CHRISTIAN BOUTWELL / The Daily Reveille
Tailgating policies are currently being reviewed by the Dean of Students. game, and individually purchase alcohol from this location, regardless of whether or not members of the organization are of legal age to purchase their own alcohol as they please. That’s not even accounting that LSU currently only has a single approved alcohol vendor, All-Star Catering. Is that one vendor expected to serve 400+ organizations? We highly doubt it. Has anyone on the Tailgating Committee realized how impractical these “options” are? Waiting to use a portable bathroom in this area takes approximately 20 minutes minimum, and now they want all of the students involved with a Student Organization to sit in an even longer line to get beverages? How many workers do they expect to satisfy the demand of thousands of people in line? Who is supposed to pay for all of this? Will the cost be covered by LSU or shoved on the student orgs? Is LSU expecting to reap profits earned from this sale? If so, that’s a whole other minefield of ethical issues. If you are bewildered about these potential set of changes,
then you have read them correctly. LSU will force students to report where they will be mingling with friends and classmates and they will attempt to monitor the food and beverages you consume. This is going to ultimately lead to students trying to circumnavigate these rules in order to have fun (i.e. chugging copious amounts of liquor before setting out for the Parade Ground, leaving the Parade Ground ever so often to consume alcohol at a hastened rate meanwhile crossing busy streets drunker than ever before, etc.). This is going to lead to more student harm than student safety. The changes aren’t without cause, however. Any change that could improve the safety of all students on game day ought be considered, however the burden and responsibility ultimately lies on the individual students and their peers. If you want to receive the respect of a mature college student, then act like one. Don’t be afraid to tell your friends when they’ve had too much and display and inspire the maturity in others to know when they’ve
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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.
reached their own limit. The main problem is the drastic amount of changes the Administration wants to impose without making smaller, more effective changes first. We understand these are just ideas, but these ideas need to be fully developed to make them even feasible before being pushed forward. Instead of working with student organizations in a way that could foster a positive and beneficial relationship between both parties, they are instead opting to change an LSU tradition — a tradition that is carried on by students and parents, the old and the young, the season ticket holder and the first time Death Valley attendee. It’s a cultural way of life that has been ingrained in every person that loves purple and lives gold, and it is the reason students fall in love with Louisiana State University under the Stately Oaks each Fall. LSU students, make your opinions heard. Contact your friends and your student organizations, and make them aware of the impending changes to a tradition that is a memorable part of their collegiate career. You are encouraged to take the student survey from the Dean of Students Office (http://studentvoice.com/lsu/ tailgatingpractices). Talk to your friends and classmates on the LSU Football team and see how they feel about a tradition being tainted. On September 10 when we play Jacksonville State, it could be a very different Game Day for LSU Tiger Fans unless we rally together behind a common goal. Every student, even those not in an organization, needs to come together and be as loud about this issue as they are on the 4th quarter in Death Valley. While this plan may fail, Administration has officially leveled its gaze at one of our favorite parts of being an LSU student. We work far too hard during the week to have this taken away from us. Cheers to Gameday. - Concerned Students and Organizations
Quote of the Day “In a country well governed, poverty is something to be ashamed of.”
Confucius
teacher 551 BC — 479 BC
The Daily Reveille
Thursday, April 7, 2016
page 9
Head to Head Should food stamp recipients have to work to receive benefits? Yes, taxpayers shouldn’t have to pay for food stamps for someone who could be working MADE YOU THINK CHARLIE BONACQUISTI
@Charlie_Bonac2
There is no such thing as a free lunch. I am sure you have all heard this, but it’s never been more true than now. Under House Bill 594, proposed in the Louisiana House of Representatives by Rep. Jay Morris, R-Monroe, “able-bodied” childless adults who receive food stamps will be required to work. This proposal is far from unreasonable. The food stamp program was created to help those in need until they can get back on their feet. It wasn’t meant to be taken advantage of. Passing this bill will give adults the incentive to find a job or obtain the proper skills that will help them provide for their families. Nothing should be given freely to some, while forcing others to pay through taxation. “We’re a hard working state, and I think we need to continue to incentivize work,” said Morris in an interview with Elizabeth Crisp from the Advocate. “Not getting up in the morning and doing something constructive is bad for the brain and bad for society.” According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Louisiana has one of the top 10 highest unemployment in the United States, with 5.9 percent unemployment. This rating is unacceptable. Why are we allowing the state to rank so low when we have the opportunity to encourage more able-bodied adults to work? The proposal doesn’t take away food stamps from “able-bodied” individuals as long as they consent to work for the food they’ve been given, like every other American. For the last 19 years, Louisiana has applied for a waiver from the federal government so childless adults didn’t have to work the required 20 hours per week or be enrolled in a job-training program to receive the food aid. The bill would require legislative action for any future attempts to get the waiver. Even Gov. Edwards appears to be changing his position on the work requirements through an executive order. According to Edwards’ chief lawyer, the governor intends to ensure Louisianians experiencing the changes have job training and
placement services available to them. Edwards’ executive order might render the proposed bill unnecessary, but Morris wants to continue with his proposal until he knows for sure. When people work for the things they receive, they gain confidence in their ability to care for themselves. Our state takes pride in the hard working nature of Louisianians, so let’s continue this tradition by bringing more people into the workforce.
Charlie Bonacquisti is a 20-year-old mass communication sophomore from Dallas, Texas.
No, Louisiana shouldn’t kick people off SNAP benefits during a statewide recession BEYER’S REMORSE MICHAEL BEYER @michbeyer Giving poor people no way to feed themselves and their families is always shameful. But doing so during a statewide recession, which Louisiana is in right now, is even more shameful. For 19 years, Louisiana has received a waiver from requiring food stamp, or Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, recipients to work in order to receive this federally funded benefit,
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
House Bill 594 would require SNAP recipients to work 20 hours per week to continue receiving benefits.
according to The Advocate. The state would save no money in trying to curb the numbers of food stamp recipients because the program is federally funded. However, Louisiana has had a waiver for 19 years precisely because its economy is in such poor shape. The state legislature’s chief economist Greg Albrecht said in February, “for all practical purposes, Louisiana is in its own recession. It’s come on pretty rapidly.” You can’t tell people they need to get jobs when there aren’t any jobs in the state. Even before the recession, Louisiana has done a poor job developing resources to help the state’s disconnected workers. The Center for Planning Excellence estimates nearly 50 percent of Louisiana’s working age adults are disconnected from employment because of structural barriers. Many of these workers lack the proper skills and transportation to seek or maintain employment. In the Baton Rouge region, CPEX estimates 168,000 people are disconnected from employment. This is partially because our city and state don’t adequately fund job training efforts and transportation to connect people to jobs. We’ve tried work requirements with Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, or TANF, which gives cash benefits to low-income people. The work requirement has failed to move people out of poverty, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Rather, all TANF has done with its work requirements is kicked families off welfare — it hasn’t moved many recipients into gainful employment. According to the Department of Health and Human Services, only 23 percent of TANF cases in Louisiana were closed because recipients moved into employment in 2013. Having work requirements for TANF hasn’t worked, so why would it magically work for SNAP? If you want to move people out of poverty and into the workforce, invest in things that work, not things that feel good or are easy. I understand that kicking off people who are barely making ends meet feels right for conservatives, but that doesn’t make it good policy. Instead, Louisiana should invest in public transportation and job training programs to move low-income people into gainful employment that will benefit their families. Before you talk about kicking SNAP recipients off the program, put your money where your mouth is.
Michael Beyer is a 22-year-old political science senior from New Orleans.
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THE Daily Commuter Puzzle ACROSS 1 Rowdy bunch 4 Place for a boutonniere 9 Farrow and Kirshner 13 Mrs. Joe Biden 15 Do penance 16 Meditative exercise 17 Chimney pipe 18 Poets of yore 19 Has bills to pay 20 Ridiculous 22 Cushions 23 Cash register 24 Inventor __ Whitney 26 Elevator alternative 29 Nail treatment 34 Sends via the USPS 35 Did a lawn chore 36 Single-reed woodwind 37 Troubles 38 Rescued 39 Pocket bread 40 Gout site 41 Kelly and Autry 42 Agitated 43 Place in harm’s way 45 Disgusting insect 46 Lady Di, to Prince William 47 Hit the ceiling 48 Soft cheese 51 Biblical book 56 Merit; deserve 57 Lunch hours 58 Tidy 60 __ on; trampled 61 Traditional Apache home 62 Make gentle 63 Cluckers 64 Worries; frets 65 __ as a beet DOWN 1 Monogram for actor Fox 2 Lubricates 3 Feeling down
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Thursday, April 7, 2016
play an instrument and/or put on a show. It’s very difficult, and this scenario is frankly ridiculous.” LSU Media Relations Director Ernie Ballard confirmed King was on administrative leave. “This is not as a result of any alleged dispute between Tiger Band and the School of Music,” Ballard said. “As of this time, this matter is ongoing and the University plans to not
TAILGATING, from page 1 conceded that allowing students to spend the night on the Parade Ground “open[s] up a Pandora’s box of issues,” he said the committee should not let the actions of the few govern the future of the many. Describing the committee’s rationale for the proposal, Fisher said the University saw three hospital transports last football season because of overconsumption of communal alcohol. “I don’t think this is about student health,” a law student
TRADITIONS, from page 1
April 5 • 6:30 p.m.
vs. VANDERBILT April 7 • 6 p.m. April 8 • 7:30 p.m. April 9 • 2 p.m.
SOFTBALL vs. SOUTHERN MISS April 6 • 6 p.m.
vs. KENTUCKY April 9 • 2 p.m. April 10 • 6 p.m. April 11 • 6 p.m.
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BASEBALL vs. SOUTHERN
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degree of mutual trust between two political or military enemies, Mosby said. If they drank from the same source at the same time and suffered no ill effects, rapport was established. Though today’s toast drastically differs in its significance, Mosby said the military-inspired tradition has withstood the test of time. Whether in a military setting or not, he said knowing how to give a nice toast is a useful skill to have. Additionally, Mosby said he gave cadets pointers on the traditional receiving line, or the line at the entrance to formal events in
comment further.” Craft said the stipends have been given to band members for decades, and in her opinion, “rightfully so.” “Right now I am just trying to represent him to make sure he does not get unjustly railroaded into some terrible scenario,” Craft said. “They certainly don’t need to leave this man twisting in the wind, which they essentially have been doing by conducting these witch hunt things which have yielded nothing.”
LSU’s Director of Athletic Bands Roy King directs the National Anthem after the pregame show on Sept. 5, 2015, in Tiger Stadium.
said from the crowd. “I think this is about money.” Another student pulled out the LSUPD crime log, questioning a claim made on television by Dean of Students Mari Fuentes-Martin regarding the average number of students sent to the emergency room. According to the student, the highest recorded number was 31 despite Fuentes-Martin’s claim it was 50. Committee members said they were unsure about the disparity but would look into it. When asked which students belonged to a student
organization, everyone in the room raised their hands. From wakeboarding club members to sorority and fraternity members, the BYOB policy mentioned in Option 3 gained the most traction. Along with the unanimity of the crowd, a former fraternity president said he believed Option 3 to be the most realistic solution, albeit with a slew of revisions. He expressed concerns of losing the distinctive tailgating culture. “This is starting to look a lot like what Ole Miss does,” he said.
which prominent officials stand in order of rank and importance. He said attendees must introduce themselves to the officers as they would hosts of a party. While the lessons may seem like common sense, Mosby said knowledge of etiquette contributes to a lifelong skill set both inside and outside military settings. “It’s not specifically military development — it’s complete personal development,” he said. In a press release for the event, Warmsley said the human brain does not fully develop until the age of 25. Since students typically leave for college around 18 years old, there is a seven-year
gap in their mental maturation. Warmsley said ROTC offers guidance for this crucial period in young adulthood, and etiquette provides a structural basis for that development. When high school graduates leave home, ROTC picks up the duty of routinized education, she said in an interview. “ROTC moves [students] from one developmental stage to the next,” Warmsley said.
WOMEN’S TENNIS
vs. GEORGIA April 8 • 4 p.m.
vs. TENNESSEE April 10 • 11 a.m.
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KING, from page 1
The Daily Reveille
TRACK & FIELD BATTLE ON THE BAYOU April 9 • Noon
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