the daily reveille - sept. 27, 2011

16
A sea of pink shirts filled the PMAC on Monday night as students flocked to hear World Health Organi- zation Goodwill Ambassador Nancy G. Brinker’s message of strength, de- termination and the “Power of One.” Brinker, the founder and CEO of the Komen for the Cure Founda- tion, gave students, faculty and com- munity members advice on making a difference in the world. “Don’t ever let anyone tell you what’s impossible,” Brinker said. Komen for the Cure Foundation is a global breast cancer movement committed to educating and raising awareness about breast cancer and leading fundraising events for cancer science research. Brinker said she started her mission after her sister, Susan G. Komen, was diagnosed with breast cancer. Before Komen passed away, she told Brinker to work to find an end to cancer. “That promise between us be- came the passion of my life,” she said. But the success of the foundation did not happen overnight. Brinker recounted the original small group of advocates that repeat- edly encountered hang-ups and door slams when they sought help. They kept on pushing and even- tually developed the foundation into what it is today — the world’s largest grassroots network of breast cancer survivors and activists. Brinker said she thought of holding a Race for the Cure after having a dream in which she saw groups of women running in pink. Nobody thought anyone would come to a Race for the Cure, but through hard work and persistence, the group accomplished its goal, she Reveille www.lsureveille.com Music: The Reveille scores a Q&A with DJ Tiesto, p. 10 e Daily Comedy: Brian Posehn to perform stand-up tonight, p. 9 Tuesday, September 27, 2011 Volume 116, Issue 26 NFL: Saints tight ends coach has family ties at LSU, p. 5 COMMENCEMENT December grads to don new gowns Josh Naquin Staff Writer GOWNS, see page 4 LAUREN DUHON / The Daily Reveille Ambassador Nancy G. Brinker, founder of Susan G. Komen for the Cure, told University students Monday about breast cancer and her sister’s fight against the disease. PHILANTHROPY Komen for the Cure founder advocates personal strength KOMEN, see page 4 Talk kicks off awareness month Juliann Allen Contributing Writer photo courtesy of THE OFFICE OF THE UNIVERSITY REGISTRAR L ET S GET PHYSICAL Living healthy The University’s redesigned commencement gowns may be purple or black depending on the degree earned, but they’re also “green.” Students graduating in Decem- ber will be required to purchase one of the new garments made of recycled materials. “Everyone has to buy a new gown. You can’t borrow an old black one,” said University Students looking to adopt a healthier life- style now have an incentive to do so with two new campus programs offering students rewards for their ef- fort. The first, the TigerFIT Warrior Challenge, gives students a chance to earn points and win prizes as they improve their fitness. The program, sponsored by the University Recreation Center, is designed to educate and motivate students to participate in the GroupX workout classes offered at the UREC, accord- ing to Lacee Breeden, program creator and UREC coordinator of Healthy Lifestyles. “We want to get students to try a variety of classes and learn something new in the pro- cess,” Breeden said. Students earn points for participating in the program. One point is awarded to students each time they attend a dif- ferent GroupX class, and two points are given for attending a TigerFIT session. Students who accumulate 24 points will receive a TigerFIT Warrior Challenge T-shirt, Breeden said. Those who acquire 30 points or more will obtain a mystery prize, which will be revealed Nov. 18, the last day points can be earned. The TigerFIT sessions, which differ from the GroupX classes, include workshops titled “Fitness & Nutrition” and “Beyond Ra- men Noodles.” The sessions also include two New student programs provide incentives to get active Claire Caillier Contributing Writer FITNESS, see page 4 If you are unable to attend the various fitness classes on campus, follow these tips for a healthy lifestyle: Source: Pennington Biomedical Research Center Park in the farthest spot in the lot on campus and walk the distance. Exit the bus one stop before your destination and walk the extra distance. Take the stairs instead of the elevator. Dance while listening to music. While housecleaning, exercise at the same time. Form a workout group to stay motivated. If looking to lose weight, a diet containing 1,300 to 1,500 calories per day will result in weight loss. photos by AMY BROUSSARD and MARIAH POSTLETHWAITE / The Daily Reveille

Upload: the-daily-reveille

Post on 17-Mar-2016

218 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

News, sports, entertainment, opinion.

TRANSCRIPT

A sea of pink shirts fi lled the PMAC on Monday night as students fl ocked to hear World Health Organi-zation Goodwill Ambassador Nancy G. Brinker ’s message of strength, de-termination and the “Power of One.”

Brinker , the founder and CEO of the Komen for the Cure Founda-tion , gave students, faculty and com-munity members advice on making a difference in the world.

“Don’t ever let anyone tell you what’s impossible,” Brinker said.

Komen for the Cure Foundation is a global breast cancer movement committed to educating and raising awareness about breast cancer and leading fundraising events for cancer science research.

Brinker said she started her mission after her sister, Susan G. Komen , was diagnosed with breast cancer. Before Komen passed away, she told Brinker to work to fi nd an end to cancer.

“That promise between us be-came the passion of my life,” she said.

But the success of the foundation did not happen overnight.

Brinker recounted the original small group of advocates that repeat-edly encountered hang-ups and door slams when they sought help.

They kept on pushing and even-tually developed the foundation into what it is today — the world’s largest grassroots network of breast cancer survivors and activists.

Brinker said she thought of holding a Race for the Cure after having a dream in which she saw groups of women running in pink.

Nobody thought anyone would come to a Race for the Cure , but through hard work and persistence, the group accomplished its goal, she

Reveillewww.lsureveille.com

Music: The Reveille scores a Q&A with DJ Tiesto, p. 10

� e DailyComedy: Brian Posehn to perform stand-up tonight, p. 9

Tuesday, September 27, 2011 • Volume 116, Issue 26

NFL: Saints tight ends coach has family ties at LSU, p. 5

COMMENCEMENT

December grads to don new gownsJosh NaquinStaff Writer

GOWNS, see page 4

LAUREN DUHON / The Daily Reveille

Ambassador Nancy G. Brinker, founder of Susan G. Komen for the Cure, told University students Monday about breast cancer and her sister’s � ght against the disease.

PHILANTHROPY

Komen for the Cure founder advocates personal strength

KOMEN, see page 4

Talk kicks off awareness monthJuliann AllenContributing Writer

photo courtesy of THE OFFICE OF THE UNIVERSITY REGISTRAR

LET’S GET PHYSICALLiving healthy

The University’s redesigned commencement gowns may be purple or black depending on the degree earned, but they’re also “green.”

Students graduating in Decem-ber will be required to purchase one of the new garments made of recycled materials.

“Everyone has to buy a new gown. You can’t borrow an old black one,” said University

Students looking to adopt a healthier life-style now have an incentive to do so with two new campus programs offering students rewards for their ef-fort.

The fi rst, the TigerFIT Warrior Challenge, gives students a chance to earn points and win prizes as they improve their fi tness.

The program, sponsored by the University Recreation Center, is designed to educate and motivate students to participate in the GroupX workout classes offered at the UREC, accord-ing to Lacee Breeden, program creator and UREC coordinator of Healthy Lifestyles .

“We want to get students to try a variety of classes and learn something new in the pro-cess,” Breeden said.

Students earn points for participating in the program. One point is awarded to students

each time they attend a dif-ferent GroupX class, and two points are given for attending a TigerFIT session.

Students who accumulate 24 points will receive a TigerFIT Warrior Challenge T-shirt, Breeden said. Those who acquire 30 points or more will obtain a mystery prize, which will be revealed Nov. 18, the last day points can be earned.

The TigerFIT sessions, which differ from the GroupX classes, include workshops titled “Fitness & Nutrition” and “Beyond Ra-men Noodles.” The sessions also include two

New student programs provide incentives to get active

Claire CaillierContributing Writer

FITNESS, see page 4

If you are unable to attend the various � tness classes on campus, follow these tips for a healthy lifestyle:

Source: Pennington Biomedical Research Center

Park in the farthest spot in the lot on campus and walk the distance.

Exit the bus one stop before your destination and walk the extra distance.

Take the stairs instead of the elevator.

Dance while listening to music.

While housecleaning, exercise at the same time.

Form a workout group to stay motivated.

If looking to lose weight, a diet containing 1,300 to 1,500 calories per day will result in weight loss.

photos by AMY BROUSSARD and MARIAH POSTLETHWAITE / The Daily Reveille

Matthew Jacobs • Editor-in-ChiefChris Branch • Associate Managing EditorRyan Buxton • Associate Managing Editor

Marissa Barrow • Managing Editor, External MediaSydni Dunn • News Editor

Rachel Warren • Deputy News Editor & Entertainment EditorRowan Kavner • Sports Editor

Katherine Terrell • Deputy Sports EditorKirsten Romaguera • Production Editor

Devin Graham • Opinion EditorChristopher Leh • Photo Editor

Brianna Paciorka • Deputy Photo EditorBryan Stewart • Multimedia Editor

Steven Powell • Radio DirectorScott Cornelius • Advertising Sales Manager

� e Daily Reveille

CORRECTIONS AND CLARIFICATIONS

POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

The Daily Reveille holds accuracy and objectivity at the highest priority and wants to reassure the reporting and content of the paper meets these standards. This space is reserved to recog-nize and correct any mistakes which may have been printed in The Daily Reveille. If you would like something corrected or clari� ed please contact the editor at (225) 578-4811 or e-mail [email protected].

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 within the Manship School of Mass Com-munication. A single issue of The Daily Reveille is free. To purchase additional copies for 25 cents, please contact the Of� ce of Student Media in B-34 Hodges Hall. The Daily Reveille is published daily dur-ing the fall and spring semesters and semi-weekly during the sum-mer semester, except during holidays and � nal exams. Second-class copies postage paid at Baton Rouge, La., 70803. Annual weekly mailed subscriptions are $125, semester weekly mailed subscrip-tions are $75. Non-mailed student rates are $4 each regular semes-ter, $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.

� e Daily ReveilleB-16 Hodges Hall • Baton Rouge, La. 70803

Newsroom (225)578-4810 • Advertising (225)578-6090

INTERNATIONAL NATIONAL STATE/LOCAL

Nation & World Tuesday, September 27, 2011page 2

2,000-year-old Dead Sea Scrolls go online, launched by Google

JERUSALEM (AP) — Two thou-sand years after they were written and decades after they were found in desert caves, some of the world-famous Dead Sea Scrolls went on-line for the fi rst time on Monday in a project launched by Israel’s national museum and web giant Google.

The appearance of fi ve of the most important Dead Sea Scrolls on the Internet is part of a broader at-tempt by the custodians of the cel-ebrated manuscripts to make them available to anyone with a computer.

Chile suffers third and worst major blackout in as many days

SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — Chile is suffering its third major elec-tricity blackout in as many days, prompting the energy minister to call for strong new investments in the country’s energy network.

Saturday’s blackout was the worst, affecting more than half of the country’s 17 million people. That was followed Sunday by a blackout around Chile’s port city of Valparaiso.

On Monday, much of north-ern Chile lost power. The reasons remain unclear, but failures in the transmission grid are suspected.

Activists say they set � re to Idaho fur and � rework retailer

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Animal rights activists said they pumped fuel into an Idaho fur and fi re-works seller before setting the place ablaze early Monday, and federal agents said they were tak-ing the claim seriously.

Jerry Vlasak, a spokesman for the North American Animal Liberation Press Offi ce in Los Angeles, said he received a mes-sage from activists shortly af-ter the fi re began at the Rocky Mountain Fireworks & Fur Co. on Monday morning.Bomb squad makes odd � nd in unclaimed luggage at airport

ATLANTA (AP) — Police say a bomb squad called to the world’s busiest airport found something fi shy about the unclaimed luggage at Atlanta’s international airport — spicy fi sh wrapped up in aluminum foil.

Baggage handlers going through unclaimed luggage Mon-day thought something was amiss and called police. Broadcaster WSB-TV reports that the Atlanta Police Department shut down about half of the baggage claim area for an hour and ordered pas-sengers to stand back 200 feet.

Tournament participants say Atchafalaya Spillway alive, active

(AP) — While the debate contin-ues about the Atchafalaya Spill-way’s 14-inch minimum-size bass limit, fi shermen at the recent An-glers Against Autism tournament talked about abundance — and the action.

“Man, I’m excited. We caught lots of fi sh,” tournament veteran Don Hutchinson said, “And we caught them most all day. The spillway is alive and well.”

Hutchinson teamed with rising-tournament angler Corey Wheat to win the 42-boat event (fi ve bass, 15.04 pounds), and Wheat’s near 5-pound largemouth was the tournament’s big fi sh.

PHOTO OF THE DAY

AMY BROUSSARD / The Daily Reveille

A mockingbird perches on a left turn sign Monday on Dalrymple Drive.

WeatherTODAY

7191

Isolated T-storms

89 69

WEDNESDAY

@lsureveille, @TDR_news, @TDR_sports

facebook.com/thedailyreveille

LSU scientists studying oil spill with bugs, sparrows, oysters

(AP) — Pelicans and other birds drenched in oil got lots of attention during last year’s BP oil spill. But bugs?

LSU Agricultural Center sci-entists will compare bugs and spiders from areas hit by oil last summer to those in oil-free areas to learn more about the spill’s effects.

The study is one of three for which the AgCenter got $2 million through the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium.

Few talking after shoving match at United Nations assembly

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — This much is agreed: Last Friday at the United Nations, as all eyes were on the Palestinian president’s speech asking for statehood recognition, U.N. guards and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s security detail were in the hallway in a shoving match.

It is still not clear exactly what turned an apparent disagree-ment over security rules into a physical confrontation.

SEBASTIAN SCHEINER / The Associated Press

Dr. Adolfo Roitman presents a part of the Isaiah Scroll, one of the Dead Sea Scrolls, inside the vault of the Shrine of the Book building at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem on Monday.

Today on lsureveille.com

89 66

THURSDAY

89 60

FRIDAY

82 56

SATURDAY

Online exclusive: Baton Rouge opens tax-free shopping refund center for international shoppers today in The Mall of Louisiana.

Read an awesomely bad movie review of “The Gore Gore Girls” on the LMFAO entertainment blog.

Chick-n-Grill is now open in Pierre’s Landing!o� ering healthy menu options prepared just for you

Build your own salad, wrap or bowlor choose delicious chicken � ngers and wings!

Open Monday - Friday 7 am - 2 pm

DO YOU HAVE AN OCCURRENCE?Call Annabel at the Student

Media O� ce578-6090, 9AM- 5PM or

E-mail: [email protected]

Get the latest news by downloading the LSU

Reveille app in the iTunes Store and Android MarketReveille app in the iTunes

Check out the Out of Print news blog about Ambassador Nancy G. Brinker’s “The Power of One” speech.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27

Pigs are probably the last thing to come to mind when one thinks of opera.

But the curly-tailed creatures are getting a little more musical as University students prepare to per-form “Three Little Pigs” to an un-conventional soundtrack — Mozart.

Twelve music students are preparing the classic children’s story for performances in East Ba-ton Rouge elementary and middle schools through a service-learning class as part of the Louisiana Opera Outreach Program .

Michael Borowitz, co-direc-tor of LOOP, said the rendition of “Three Little Pigs” is arranged by John Davies and uses Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart scores to tell the story.

Dugg McDonough , artistic di-rector of University Opera, said the program serves a dual purpose of al-lowing University students perfor-mance exposure and bringing opera to young students at a time when fi nancial hardships often require reductions or entire cuts in schools’ arts programs.

Borowitz and assistant profes-sor of voice Dennis Jesse serve as music director and stage director of the program, respectively. Mc-Donough said students in the pro-gram work with Borowitz early in the semester to master the musical elements of the opera and later take staging directions from Jesse .

Jesse said he thinks the pro-gram serves an important purpose for the Baton Rouge community.

“[The University’s] music program is nationally acclaimed, but we don’t have music in our schools,” Jesse said.

McDonough said opera is es-pecially effective for younger audi-ences because it involves “telling a story to music.” He said opera interests young students because it includes acting, singing, movement, scenery, costumes and props.

Students are selected for enroll-ment in the service-learning class each semester through an audition process. Jesse said this semester’s opera has only four parts, but the class is split into three casts that take turns performing.

Borowitz said his favorite part of the program is “watching the kids’ faces” at the elementary and middle schools during performanc-es.

Jesse said he is always excited by the students’ engagement during performances.

“Who doesn’t want what they love to be fun for people?” he laughed.

Jesse said he is inspired to work for the program because of the live theatre exposure it provides to young students. He recalled his own childhood experience with a live production of “Hansel and Gretel” in school.

“Kids have to have some enjoyment,” he said.

The costumes and sets for the LOOP shows are typically less elab-orate than those of mainstage pro-ductions because of a lower budget and the fact that they must be easily transportable, McDonough said.

The host schools vary in the fall and spring semesters and audi-ence sizes range from 25 to 250, Borowitz said. The group will per-form at a minimum of six different schools beginning Nov. 8 and will also perform once on campus to create a video to be streamed live to schools across Louisiana.

Borowitz said the program serves as many students’ fi rst expo-sure to live theatre and University participants have enjoyed interact-ing with younger students and mak-ing a difference in their lives.

University students who have previously participated in the pro-gram were also grateful for the performance experience, especially those students interested in educa-tion, McDonough said.

Richard Coleman , a music sophomore who participated in LOOP in the spring , said his perfor-mance skills improved tremendous-ly as he learned the level of expec-tation the opera program sets for its students. He said he even earned the lead role in this semester’s main-stage production of “La Bohème.”

The audience of schoolchildren gives students good experience in keeping an audience engaged.

“Kids are less forgiving than adults,” Borowitz said. “If they’re bored, they’ll let you know.”

Jesse said the program is proof that students can appreciate opera.

“It doesn’t all have to be Lady Gaga. There are other ways to get into a child’s mind,” he said.

� e Daily Reveille page 3Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Newsbeat LIVE 3PM (Campus Channel 75)Sports Showtime 4:30 PM (Campus Channel 75)Tuesday Newsbeat 5PM (Cox Cable Channel 4)Tuesday Newsbeat 5PM (Campus Channel 75)Newsbeat 7:30PM (WBTR Cable Channel 19)Tuesday Newsbeat 9PM (Campus Channel 75)Sports Showtime 9:30PM (Campus Channel 75)Sports Showtime 10PM (WBTR Cable Channel 19)Tuesday Newsbeat 11:30 PM (Cox Cable Channel 4)

Plucker’s Wing BarMon: $14.99 All You Can Eat Wings and $3 Pluckers Specialty Drinks

Tues: Kids Eat Free, $3 Mexican Beers and MargaritasWed: Live Trivia at 8 pm, $4.50 34oz Mugs

Thurs: $12.99 All You Can Eat Boneless Wings, $4.50 34oz Mugs, $5.50 Patron MargaritasSun: $3 Pluckers Specialty Shots

EVERYDAY BEER SPECIAL: $6.50 34oz Mugs--Blue Moon, Dos Equis, Abitas

Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, INC. The Iota Theta Chapter PresentsFinancial Fortitude

Wednesday September 28, 2011 tureaud hall RM 102 7:13 pm

LSU UREC at Fall Fest this Friday!Visit the LSU UREC booth to scale the rock wall

compete in other action-packed challenges!Visit www.LSU.edu/UREC for details.

Gender on Film- “I Don’t Know How She Does It” 10/3/2001$5 refundable deposit required to reserve tickets

Contact Women’s Center @ 225-578-1714 for more info

The Society for Human Resource Management at LSUJoin Us Tonight at 6:00 PM

2149 E.J. Ourso College of BusinessOpen to ALL majors

Gisclair Memorial Historical MiniaturesTournament and ConventionOctober 1st 9:00am-9:00pm

All Star Lanes 9829 Airline Hwy.$5 play all day

DO YOU HAVE AN OCCURRENCE?Call Becky at the Student

Media Offi ce578-6090, 9AM- 5PM or

E-mail: [email protected]

THEATRE

LOOP brings opera to EBR schoolsTour of area schools begins Nov. 8Catherine ParsiolaContributing Writer

Contact Catherine Parsiola at [email protected]

photos by LAUREN DUHON / The Daily Reveille

Haley Summerlin [left] and Cameron Carnley and Meroe Adeeb [right] rehearse Sept. 20 for Louisiana Opera Outreach Program’s production of “The Three Little Pigs.”

fi tness challenges and a weight-room orientation. The class sched-ule is available on the UREC web site, and the fi nal course is sched-uled for Nov. 7 .

Breeden said two classes have taken place as of Monday, both yielding great results. She said 195 students have signed up for the program overall.

Erika Blanchard, nutrition senior and GroupX instructor, has been teaching classes at the UREC for almost three years, and said she is excited about the program.

“I’ve wanted some kind of promotional program to involve more people at the UREC,” Blanchard said. “Once we got the TigerFIT Challenge, I have seen an increase in class sizes.”

Laura Pimentel , fi rst year mu-sic graduate student , said she en-joys the program.

“It’s encouraging me to work out and see that there are other classes offered besides Zumba,” Pimentel said.

Scott Belanger, UREC as-sistant director of marketing and promotions, said since TigerFIT

is a fi rst time initiative, the UREC will monitor its success to deter-mine future programming.

“We’ll see what participants liked and didn’t like, and we’ll tweak it from there,” he said. “That way we can do something similar in the future.”

S t u d e n t s are encouraged to sign up for the program at the UREC Op-erations Desk, Breeden said. If a student is un-able to attend the class, videos of the TigerFIT ses-sions are avail-able on-demand through the UREC web site.

But students looking to get fi t in an alternate environment may turn to Genesis, a student-driven fi tness program with a philan-thropic element.

Genesis, which was started by two University students this semester, will offer free workout sessions for students. Participants are encouraged to bring canned goods as a donation to Genesis’

cause, said Garrett Collins, edu-cation and kinesiology junior and one of the founders of Genesis.

Collins said the ultimate pur-pose of the organization is to make a difference in the Baton Rouge community by promoting more community gardens and farms,

and delivering food thrown out by local restau-rants and grocer-ies to those in need.

The fi tness classes, which are led by Collins , are intended to inform students of the organiza-tion’s purpose

and to gain support, he said. “We do not want to be just

[two] people, but to have the school behind us and eventually the community behind us,” Col-lins said.

The date of the next Genesis class has not yet been confi rmed.

Registrar Robert Doolos .The gown purchase require-

ment was put in place to make sure all graduates are matching at com-mencement ceremonies, Doolos said.

The Faculty Senate’s Executive Committee created the initiative to give the old gowns a fresh look ap-proximately a year and a half ago.

“We were determined to de-sign gowns which would refl ect well upon the fl ag-ship university,” said Faculty Sen-ate President Kevin Cope .

According to Cope , the com-mittee was presented an array of options by the gown supplier, Bal-four – in cooperation with Oak Hall – and crafted an original design

with a purple dye specially made for the University.

“The University has transi-tioned from a generic gown to a custom one,” said Denise Plessala , regional manager for Balfour col-lege division .

The redesigned undergradu-ate gown is now purple and features two gold LSU logo tabs while the graduate gown re-mained black and added the tabs. The doctoral gown also transitioned from black to purple with gold accents.

The graduate gown remained black in accordance with an old Ameri-can tradition, said Cope .

The new gowns are made with GreenWeaver , an environmentally friendly fabric comprised wholly of recycled plastic bottles. The bag and box in which the gown is

shipped are made of recycled mate-rial as well, Plessala said.

“Each gown is made of 23 re-cycled bottles,” Plessala said. “We have reused 9 million bottles so far.”

The new gowns have been met with positive reviews.

“I like that they have added in some local color, especially with the doctoral gown,” said Aleca Ar-mentor, philosophy sophomore .

Psychology sophomore Ashleigh Waters said she doesn’t mind not being able to borrow a gown from a friend.

“Graduating college is a big step, and I think it’s worth it to buy a new gown for the occasion,” said Waters .

Commencement caps and gowns are available for purchase from the LSU Bookstore.

� e Daily Reveillepage 4 Tuesday, September 27, 2011

KOMEN, from page 1FITNESS, from page 1

GOWNS, from page 1

Contact Juliann Allen at [email protected]

Contact Claire Caillier at [email protected]

Contact Josh Naquin at [email protected]

Gown changes include• Undergraduate: Purple with two gold LSU logo tabs• Graduate: Black with two gold LSU logo tabs• Doctoral: Purple with gold accents• All gowns: Made with a fabric of recycled plastic bottles

‘‘‘We want to get students to try a

variety of classes and learn something new

in the process.’Lacee Breeden

UREC coordinator of Healthy Lifestyles

said.“Anything in life that is truly

successful is a marathon, not a sprint,” she said.

And though the foundation was seen as a success, Brinker said com-placency has set in, causing some to think there is nothing left to do to work for a cure.

“There’s not enough pink when breast cancer is the No. 1 cause of death in women age 40 to 59 ,” she said.

Foundation branches have been established throughout the U.S., gaining 75 cents of every dollar that is raised in that particular commu-nity.

Brinker said the foundation is striving to increase the breast cancer survival rate by 2 percent each year. She said she now fi nds women who have been living fi ve to seven years with a serious case of breast cancer.

She said society has been pro-grammed to think that there will never be a cure for cancer, but lots of people have been told that things are impossible before achieving what nobody thought they could.

People can work together for

a common cause and make a dif-ference with what Brinker calls the “Power of One” — the power within each person to change others’ lives.

“Don’t listen to people who tell you what you can’t do, listen to peo-ple who tell you what you can do,” she said.

Kinesiology sophomore Em-ily Vidrine said Brinker taught her someone has to be willing to fail in order to succeed. She said it was good to see someone fi ghting for a cure.

The Student Activities Board hosted the event. Maurice Kirksey , SAB Trending Topics Chair and po-litical science junior, said the board organized the event to go along with the other breast cancer events sched-uled for the upcoming weeks, as October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

“[Speakers have] had a dream and vision…they used it as a medi-um to express ideas of service to the fellow man, leadership and making a difference in the world,” Kirksey said.

Football coaches constantly em-phasize the game-changing impor-tance of turnovers and the need for sound special teams.

Following another dominating turnover margin and a special teams score against West Virginia, few teams are capitalizing on the two facets quite like LSU this season.

Junior cornerback Morris Clai-borne ’s 99 -yard kickoff return late in the third quarter put the fi nal separation between the Tigers and the Mountaineers , while sophomore defensive back Tyrann Mathieu ’s blitzing defl ection and interception just before halftime set up LSU for a 1 -yard touchdown.

The Claiborne scamper marked the second special teams touchdown of the season for LSU — Mathieu’s

forced fumble and score on an Or-egon punt return was the fi rst — and the Mathieu pick was his second forced turnover in the fi rst half of Saturday ’s contest.

Through four games, LSU is now plus-9 in turnover margin and has forced four turnovers against both West Virginia and Oregon .

Mathieu, whose fi rst-quarter forced fumble put him in a tie for the LSU career record for the statis-tic, said the defense’s penchant for fi nding the ball developed from an enhanced focus in practice.

“Every day out there, we’re running strip drills,” the second-year nickelback said. “From that, every time a running back breaks the line, we’re hawking them down. When the ball is up in the air, the defensive guys look at it like a receiver.”

LSU coach Les Miles said the defense’s swarming attitude comes

from its extreme athleticism.“I think we have great speed,

get to the ball violent, understand that the ball is the issue,” he said.

Though the defense continued to create turnovers, it didn’t exhibit the usual dominance Saturday night that it established throughout the fi rst three games, allowing more than 500 yards of total offense.

Enter the LSU special teams.Redshirt freshman punter Brad

Wing pinned the Mountaineers in-side their own 11 -yard line on each of his six punts, with three being downed inside the West Virginia 5-yard line.

The long fi eld likely aided some of opposing junior quarterback Geno Smith ’s 463 yards and prevented LSU’s secondary lapses from trans-lating into more Mountaineer points.

The New Orleans Saints and LSU football are linked by more than just a common sport — each is an important part of modern Louisiana culture, inspiring passion and pride equally.

Saints tight ends coach Terry Malone and his family have been able to experience both from a unique perspective for the last several years.

Two of Malone’s children, Kara and Patrick , are enrolled and in class at LSU while he spends his weeks around some of the most visible ath-letes in professional sports.

“It’s great to share the work and accom-plishments of your job so closely with the fans of

south Louisiana,” said the elder Malone, who has coached for the Saints since 2006 . “Whether it’s LSU or the Saints, the people are so passionate and loyal to both.”

And those accomplishments have come in major ways for Malone so far in his NFL stint.

Along with a Super Bowl championship in 2009 , the Saints were the only team in the league to have three tight ends catch at least 30 passes last season. Under Malone’s tutelage, second-year tight end Jimmy Graham has become one of the NFL’s most feared at the position, catch-ing four passes for 100 yards with a touchdown in Sunday’s 40-33 victory against the Houston Texans .

But with that success comes a different kind

of pressure. “It’s different and a little weird to have peo-

ple talking about the games and what happened, good or bad, around campus on Monday,” said Kara, a communication studies senior . “People you don’t know, hearing their conversations about your dad’s team. It’s not real common to see such a public reaction to your parent’s job.”

Before joining the Saints, Terry spent nine seasons as an offensive line coach and coordina-tor at the University of Michigan from 1997 to 2005 .

“All my kids had ever known was that uni-versity [before moving to Louisiana],” he said.

SportsTuesday, September 27, 2011 page 5

All in the Family

photo courtesy of PATRICK MALONE

Sports administration sophomore Patrick Malone, left, and communication studies senior Kara Malone, right, enjoy a moment on the sidelines with their father, Saints tight ends coach Terry Malone, Sept. 18 during the Saints’ 30-13 home opener against the Chicago Bears.

FOOTBALL

FOOTBALL

Miles: Top-ranked Tigers can improveHunter PaniaguaSports Writer

MILES, see page 8

Turnovers, special teams leading Tigers this season

JEFF GENTNER / The Associated Press

LSU junior quarterback Morris Claiborne returns a kickoff for a touchdown Saturday during the Tigers’ 47-21 victory against West Virginia in Morgantown, W.Va.

Chris AbshireSports Writer

Saints coach Malone and family part of two Louisiana sporting institutionsChris AbshireSports Writer

MALONES, see page 8

LSU football coach Les Miles said the Tigers’ new No. 1 rank-ing in the Associated Press poll shouldn’t draw any extra attention from opponents.

“To be honest, we take it as a compliment to the program and a compliment to this team,” Miles said. “We don’t feel like it’s any ex-tra burden. We don’t feel like it’s an extra target on our back. Every time LSU comes to play, somebody’s trying to beat you.”

Despite cruising through the fi rst month of the season and defeat-ing three ranked opponents away from Tiger Stadium, Miles said his team still has room to improve.

“I know we haven’t arrived,” Miles said. “Our team understands that we’re imperfect in a number of ways, but we’re going to enjoy pre-paring with the idea that maybe we can get there.”

RASCO WON’T REDSHIRTFreshman defensive end Jer-

mauria Rasco saw the fi eld for the fi rst time against West Virginia, notching two tackles in his debut. Miles said the coaching staff want-ed to lift Rasco’s redshirt despite the depth on the defensive line.

“We wanted to watch him play and grow in this year,” Miles said.

MOMENTUM, see page 8

It was announced Monday that kickoff for the Oct. 8 game against Florida will be at 2:30 p.m.

The addition of Texas A&M to the Southeastern Conference will not only bring a storied foot-ball program to the conference, but also a men’s and women’s track team that won the last three outdoor national championships.

Aggies coach Pat Henry coached LSU’s track team from 1988 to 2004, winning 27 NCAA titles. LSU boasted 37 Olympi-ans and three Olympic gold med-alists during Henry’s tenure.

LSU coach Dennis Shaver was an assistant coach during 12 of those championships and coached the Lady Tigers to the 2008 Outdoor National Cham-pionship. Shaver coached seven runner-up teams since taking over as head coach in 2005.

“I worked with Coach Henry as an assistant for nine years and had the opportunity to continue to compete against him while he’s been at Texas A&M,” Shav-er said. “They bring a lot, at least in our sport, to the conference.”

The Aggies enter a histori-cally strong SEC, which has ac-cumulated 14 men’s national

titles and 10 women’s titles since 2000. The combined 24 titles for the SEC make up more than half of all of the championships dur-ing that time.

“They’re going to have to compete at the level in the con-ference championships that we’re accustomed to competing at before going to the national meet,” said assistant coach Mark Elliott. “Basically, the same guys they have to run against at the na-tional championship, they have to run against at the conference meet first.”

Elliott said the addition could give LSU an advantage in the national championship because the Aggies will be tired from competing in the grueling SEC championships.

“Now all their good guys and girls are really going to have to run hard to win the conference here and then also come back two or three weeks later to try and vie for the national championship,” Elliott said. “We all are tradition-ally going into the national meet somewhat banged up because the conference meet is so difficult for us, I don’t think they had as hard of a time with it.”

The Lady Aggies won nine Big 12 championships under Henry while the men swept both the indoor and outdoor titles in 2011, scoring a conference re-cord of 175 points in the outdoor meet and winning by more than 85 points.

Shaver said Texas A&M will have to adjust to the SEC, which has different strengths than the Big 12.

“It’s a little bit different conference makeup in the SEC, where it’s a lot more sprint- and hurdle-oriented,” Shaver said. “It creates new challenges for all of us in the conference, but I think it creates new challenges for Texas

A&M, too, in trying to win con-ference championships.”

The Lady Tigers enter the 2012 season defending indoor and outdoor SEC champions and finished third in both the indoor and outdoor national champion-ships. The Tigers finished fourth in the indoor and outdoor titles.

Shaver said he’s excited to have them in the SEC and hopes that Texas A&M’s focus on track will be contagious in the SEC.

“They’ve made a real significant commitment to that sport there, and maybe that will encourage other universities in our conference to make more of a commitment to our sport

here, too,” Shaver said.

No. 1-ranked LSU football team will storm the field before lunch time Saturday for its 11:20 a.m. match up with the Kentucky Wildcats.

The Southeastern Conference announced the early kickoff time last Monday because of a schedul-ing conflict with CBS’s Saturday time slots.

CBS chose not to televise the LSU-Kentucky game, turning it

over to the SEC Network, which is operated by ESPN, though the game will be broadcast on the local CBS af-filiate. The early start time is so that the game will not compete with CBS’s other tele-

vised games. While LSU players are mostly

unfamiliar with playing so early, they said that the game will be busi-ness as usual.

Sophomore cornerback Tyrann Mathieu said he played around 10 or 11 a.m. routinely as a kid.

“Everybody’s excited because it’s like pee-wee football again,”

Mathieu said. “We all used to wake up early and go straight to the park, and this is a lot like that.”

Sophomore defensive end Sam Montgom-ery said that it doesn’t matter where or when

the Tigers play but later revealed that he was unaware of the 11:20 a.m. time.

Montgomery said he had never played that early in the day, except for one game in high school.

“I guess you got to go to bed early then,” he said.

Montgomery said that of everyone on the team, he

will probably have the hardest time getting moving the morning of the game.

“I’m lazy when it comes to getting out there, but when I get out there I know it’s time to go,” he said.

Freshman punter Brad Wing, a Melbourne, Australia, native, said in his 15 years of Australian Rules Football in Melbourne, he played at 8 a.m. on Sunday mornings a few times.

“Every game that I have been involved in [at LSU] has been ei-ther an afternoon or a night game,” Wing said. “I’m sure there will be a

few differences, but nothing major.”Sept. 30, 2006, was the last

time LSU hosted a conference op-ponent in the pre-noon time slot. The Tigers beat Mississippi State, 48-17.

As a member of the SEC, LSU is bound to the contracts the SEC has with television networks. For tradition’s sake, all LSU home games are originally scheduled as night games, but television con-tracts often result in rescheduled kickoffs.

Instead of LSU and Kentucky, CBS will broadcast Auburn bout against at No. 10 South Carolina at 2:30 p.m.

The Daily Reveillepage 6 Tuesday, September 27, 2011

FOOTBALL

Players indifferent with early kickoff against Wildcats

TRACK AND FIELD

Coaches predict LSU advantage with Aggies’ move into SECAndrew ChappleSports Contributor

Scott BransonSports Contributor

Tigers say they will be prepared

Mathieu MontgoMery Wing

Contact Scott Branson at [email protected]

File photo

LSU coach Dennis Shaver instructs the track team during a 2009 practice. Shaver thinks the addition of Texas A&M will be beneficial to the SEC.

Contact Andrew Chapple at [email protected]

Wild and wonderful.There isn’t a state in the union

that has more of an appropriate state motto as West Virginia or a town that encompasses said motto as well as Morgantown.

From the moment my friend and I arrived on campus, we knew we were in for a brand-new experience.

We parked at a church a little more than a mile from the stadium. Armed with nothing but a fifth of Seagrams 7 and a large Sierra Mist from a gas station, we soon began our trek to meet up with friends.

We reached their tailgate in the parking lot of an AT&T store with the campus perched atop a mountain on the horizon. The tailgating scene was pretty simplistic, mostly just beer and finger foods with some lawn chairs all held together by a truck bed or two.

While at the tailgate, we did see a man among men. This man rebelled against everything his own school stood for simply because, well, I think he just felt like it.

Despite numerous advertise-ments, e-mails and even a refund of-fer from West Virginia officials about not wearing shirts that were profane, our new friend separated himself from the crowd.

He was perched at the tailgate next to us in a navy blue T-shirt that stated simply, in three words on three lines, “West Fuckin Virginia.”

So of course we had to take pho-tos with this trend-bucker.

Within the first hour of tailgat-ing, the Seagrams was gone. We were now reliant of the kindness of West Virginian strangers to fulfill our bev-erage requests.

Before we were allowed to have a beer from our new friends, we were told we needed to be initiated into the tailgate. The owner of the truck we were near went into the cab and pulled out a plastic pink flamingo. The flamingo’s beak had been cut off, and a hole was strategically placed in its stomach.

We all chugged beer out of a plastic pink flamingo.

Soon after our avian alcoholic adventure, we moved on to the big leagues of West Virginia tailgating — the RV lots.

It was just down a hill from the stadium — and by hill I really mean

mountain, but the people in Morgan-town laughed at me for calling any-thing around the campus a mountain — and were flooded with blue and yellow. It was a smaller scale than those that frequent Baton Rouge on a Saturday home game, but the setups were similar.

Our group had expanded to six by then, but we had no one in particu-lar to meet up with in the RV lot.

We wandered around and ended up being invited to a tailgate. We were treated with as much hospital-ity as we could have asked for. They shoveled beer, chips and even hot dogs with homemade chili at us.

Then they gave us the greatest gift of all — moonshine.

This was the real deal. Brewed at home with all the aromas of gasoline fumes that anyone could ask for. But its taste was eerily similar to apple pie. I’m glad I didn’t have more than one pull, though, because it was po-tent.

While in the RV lot, many Mountaineers wanted to talk confer-ence realignment. They all desperate-ly wanted to be in the Southeastern Conference. And after giving away free moonshine, it would be pretty difficult for me to argue against their inclusion. Seriously, though, their

brand of tailgating would fit in well with the SEC. Their fans get out there early, stay late and are passionate to a fault for their team.

We then began making our way up the mountainous terrain and into Milan Puskar Stadium. We were pre-pared for battle after being told all afternoon that despite its less than intimidating size, this would be the loudest stadium we’d ever been to.

There were moments where the stadium was rocking, but as a whole the entire experience was very remi-niscent of an Ole Miss game where they could legally serve beer.

Flamingo funnels and home-made booze made for a wild after-noon, and the homemade chili and friendly locals made for an overall wonderful experience in Morgan-town.

But once the game was over, it was time for the country roads to take me home.

Rob Landry is a 23-year old mass communication senior from Man-deville. Follow him on Twitter @RobLandry85.

The Daily Reveille page 7Tuesday, September 27, 2011

West Virginia’s not far from heaven SPORTS BRIEFS

BODY SHOTSRob LandRySports columnist

Contact Rob Landry at [email protected]

Contact The Daily Reveille’s sports staff at [email protected]

Wing named Special Teams Player of the Week on Monday

Freshman punter Brad Wing was named the Southeastern Con-ference Special Teams Player of the Week on Monday.

After missing the last two games due to injury, Wing returned against West Virginia, punting six times for an average of 48.7 yards. None of Wing’s six punts were returned, and all of them were downed inside the Mountaineers’ 11-yard line.

Wing has recorded 12 punts this season for an average of 45 yards per punt. Half of his punts have traveled more than 50 yards, with his longest sailing 60 yards.

Mathieu named Defensive Player of the Week for the second week

For the second week in a row, a member of the LSU secondary has been named the Walter Camp National Defensive Player of the Week, as sophomore cornerback Tyrann Mathieu’s six tackles, forced fumble and interception earned him this week’s honors.

Mathieu’s performance in the Tigers 47-21 victory also earned

him a spot in the record books, as he tied former Tiger linebacker Ali Highsmith’s career mark of seven forced fumbles just 17 games into his collegiate career.

Mathieu, who leads all Tigers with 30 tackles, has now been hon-ored in two of the first four weeks after he was named SEC Defen-sive Player of the Week in week one.

Boudreau named Co-Offensive Player of the Week for soccer

Senior midfielder Taryne Bou-dreau was named the Southeastern Conference’s Co-Offensive Player of the Week, marking the third straight week an LSU soccer player received an SEC Conference Play-er of the Week award.

Boudreau scored an SEC-lead-ing four goals during the opening weekend of conference play, scor-ing two goals in each match against Ole Miss and Mississippi State.

“There’s a lot of football in front of this team, and certainly Jermauria Rasco, and we’re looking forward to seeing him develop this year. We feel like we wanted him to start his career.”

Miles said the redshirt sta-tus of another freshman, of-fensive lineman La’El Collins, has yet to be determined. Collins played 21 snaps Sept. 10 against Northwestern State.

“Right now we’re still looking at La’El as a guy that might well play a lot of football in this season,” Miles said. “So we’re not ready to

determine a redshirt at this point.”

LSU INJURY REPORTMiles listed senior offensive

lineman T-Bob Hebert as day-to-day after he left the West Virginia game with a leg injury. Miles also listed ju-nior offensive tackle Alex Hurst and soph-omore safety Craig Loston as likely to play against Ken-tucky. Miles also said sophomore defen-sive tackle Michael

Brockers missed practice Monday but should return by the end of the week.

� e Daily Reveillepage 8 Tuesday, September 27, 2011

MILES, from page 5

Contact Hunter Paniagua at [email protected]

‘‘‘I know we haven’t arrived. Our team understands that we’re imperfect.’

Les MilesLSU football coach

“When we came here, it was a real eye-opening experience. I always thought when it was time for them to go to college, they’d go back to UM. But when Kara decided to go to LSU, she asked, ‘Why would I leave home?’ It’s a great feeling to know that your kids adjusted well and feel at home.”

Malone said the two schools share more than just large athletic programs.

“A real advantage of being a college coach is your kids get to grow up in a college atmosphere,” said Malone, who also coached at Boston College and Bowl-ing Green . “My kids were drawn to LSU because it has the same feel and passion on campus that is very much present at a place like Michigan, which is also a big school with a large support net-work in a state that’s been through some tough times.”

Patrick, who played wide re-ceiver at St. Paul’s in Covington prior to enrolling at LSU, said his father usually leaves the coaching demeanor on the fi eld.

“He’s a coach in the way that he’s always looking out for us,” he said. “He brings that concern, but I don’t think we really feel like he’s too intense when he’s around us. That’s kind of his time to re-lax.”

Patrick said the notoriously long hours an NFL coaching gig requires can be tough on the fam-ily, but was quick to point out that his family remains close.

Terry acknowledged that the rigorous schedule limits the time he has with his children, but said he enjoys the little moments he gets to spend with them during his hectic fall.

“The season’s always pretty tough,” he said. “One of my sons

plays high school ball, so I get to see that on Friday nights since we have that evening off. The bye week is where I get to go up to Baton Rouge for a visit. My kids made it down for our home opener against the Bears, which was fan-tastic. But it’s not easy on any family.”

While Patrick said he doesn’t consider his family to be a “ma-jor” part of anything LSU football related, he said it’s still “an honor” to experience the football tradi-tions of his adopted home state.

“It’s defi nitely pretty cool to go from being in Tiger Stadium and watching LSU to the next day, pulling up ESPN or whatever and catching my dad on the sidelines,” he said.

MALONES, from page 5

Contact Chris Abshire at [email protected]

Contact Chris Abshire at [email protected]

MOMENTUM, from page 5

Wing, who has averaged 45 yards per kick on 12 punts this sea-son, said he understands his role as a fi eld-position changer.

“You can have a great punt or a terrible one, but the most important is always the next one,” said Wing, who was named the Southeastern Conference Special Teams Player of the Week for his performance. “People talk about momentum, and it’s good that I can help out the team with consistency.”

Mathieu, who downed two of Wing’s six punts, said the whole team accepts the challenge to make big plays, not just the offense.

“Yeah, we take it as a defense, as a special teams unit,” he said. “We don’t want to put our offense at a dis-advantage. ... We want to put them in a position of power.”

Miles said Claiborne’s special teams’ heroics swung the atmosphere in the stadium right after a West Vir-ginia score closed LSU’s lead to six .

“Morris scored on a return at a time when the momentum of the game was in question,” Miles said. “It extinguished any hope that the opponent had at victory.”

With LSU’s offense protect-ing the ball better this season — the unit has just three turnovers — more Tiger takeaways and quality special teams could make those momentum changes the norm for LSU.

Sophomore defensive end Sam Montgomery said no one is surprised by this season’s barrage of big plays.

“It’s expected of us,” he said. “None of us are surprised. Whether it’s the picks or the returns, we know our guys are going to play big. It’s really just about who is on, which night, what the play is. We will be consistent there.”

Locals had the chance to eat tra-ditional Hispanic food, sing along to mariachi crowd pleasers and dance the merengue Sunday as the Hispan-ic Apostolate celebrated its 25th An-nual Festival Latino at the Catholic Deaf Center .

The fi rst Baton Rouge Hispanic Festival, called Feria Hispana, was held in 1986 as a Catholic Diocese of Baton Rouge Youth Ministry proj-ect to bring together the different

Hispanic cultures of the area, accord-ing to festivallatinobr.com. Because of the festival’s success, it continued with a new purpose — raising funds for various ministries of the Aposto-late.

Festival Director José Toral has worked with the festival for the past four years. He said the proceeds are used to fund programs that introduce Hispanic people to English culture through medical and educational ser-vices.

The event crew is made entirely of volunteers, and everything at the festival was provided by volunteers or donated, Toral said.

He said the average attendance at the festival is 3,000 people, but this year the crew aimed for 5,000 —

a goal they reached within six hours.A large attraction at the festival

was the variety of traditional food of-fered from various countries, includ-ing El Salvador , Nicaragua , Colom-bia , Venezuela , Mexico , Honduras , Peru and Cuba .

There was also a “Latin fl avor” booth as well as a Dulcelandia, a specialty booth for pastries. Patricia Charcap, a worker in the Peruvian food booth, said she and her hus-band have been helping prepare food for the festival for about fi ve or six years. She said they got involved through a friend who is a part of the Hispanic Apostolate.

Charcap helped prepare

What fi lm saga has made $1.8 billion since its debut in 2008?

If you read the title of this column, you already know the answer.

Who’s starred in a fi lm that hasn’t made anywhere near that amount?

All the stars of “Twilight” combined.

We r e w o l f Taylor Lautner’s “ A b d u c t i o n ” opened this weekend to un-remarkable box offi ce results, nabbing fourth place behind “The Lion King,” “Moneyball” and “Dolphin Tale.”

You heard me right. The movie about a boy befriending a tailless dolphin made more mon-ey than Lautner’s solo debut.

Hey, pretty boy, starring in a successful franchise clearly doesn’t guarantee you can act.

But this shouldn’t come as a surprise. “Abduction” is just the latest movie that proves how ter-rible the “Twilight” actors are.

“Abduction” currently holds a 3-percent “freshness” rating on the review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes, with critics like ReelView’s James Berar-dinelli saying, “The only way to approach ‘Abduction’ that will not result in a 105-minute

EntertainmentTuesday, September 27, 2011 page 9

‘Twilight’ stars need to stay in ‘Twilight’

TAYLOR BALKOM Entertainment

Writer

AMY BROUSSARD / The Daily Reveille

Festival Latino celebrated its 25th anniversary Sunday. Food stands offered a variety of Latin cuisine, including dishes from Colombia, Cuba, El Savador and Mexico.FESTIVAL, see page 11

LAUTNER, see page 11

BATON ROUGE COMMUNITY

Annual fundraiser sees large turnout Haylie Navarre Entertainment Writer

Comedian to perform tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the Manship � eatre

Joey GronerEntertainment Writer

CHRISTOPHER LEH / The Daily Reveille

Comedian Brian Posehn, best known for roles in sitcoms “Just Shoot Me!” and “The Sarah Sil-verman Program,” performed Monday night at the Manship Theatre and has another show slated for tonight at 7:30 p.m. Student tickets are available for $15 with a valid ID for to-

night’s show. Before stepping on stage Monday

night, Posehn sat down with The Daily Reveille to discuss his standup, acting and

how having a child infl uenced his infamously raunchy comedy.

TDR: What was the fi rst thing that made you pursue a career as a comedian?

Posehn: I was a fan since I was a kid ... but it was really when I was in college. I was going to school for journalism and kind

of didn’t know what I was going to do, and a buddy of mine at this

crappy day job was the fi rst

POSEHN, see page 11

BeingBrianPosehn

Festival Latino celebrates 25 years

Dutch DJ and prolific elec-tronic music producer Tijs Verwest, known to the music community as Tiësto, was scheduled to perform at the Baton Rouge River Center tomorrow night on his College Invasion Tour. Unfortunately, the show was canceled, but The Daily Reveille was still able to snag an interview.

TDR: Have you been to Loui-siana before?

Tiësto: I have been to Louisi-ana. It’s a nice, wild sort of party [state], and people are really nice. It’s like from the movies.

TDR: Why is the tour called “College Invasion Tour?”

Tiësto: In general, I love to play at the colleges to give them the experience because I don’t think many of them ever saw me live.

TDR: What can students

expect at your show?Tiësto: We didn’t hold back

on this tour. I bring the whole pro-duction with me, special effects. It’s going to be a mind-blowing experience.

TDR: Do you have any pre-show rituals?

Tiësto: Not really, but on this tour, I decided to play beer pong every night.

TDR: Well it makes sense for the college tour.

Tiësto: Yes, I picked it up on tour. Someone a couple of weeks back taught me, and I really like it.

TDR: I see that you recently released a single called “Work Hard, Play Hard.” With this in mind, how is the process of creat-ing music now versus back in the day?

Tiësto: Nowadays, it’s not so long anymore, you can even make music on the road. I can log into my studio in Holland and see what’s happening on the screen

there. It’s really easy now.

TDR: So when can we expect another full-length follow-up to “Kaleidoscope?” (“Kaleidoscope” was Tiësto’s last studio album released in Oct. 2009)

Tiësto: I have no plans for this year. I’m going to finish touring and wait a couple of months and work on new tracks, have a nice holiday and then hopefully in the summer I’ll have a new album ready. It will be a normal studio album.

TDR: You’ve worked with a lot of people in your career. Who would you say was your favorite collaborator?

Tiësto: I like Tegan and Sara a lot. I like to work with people who are fast. They have the ideas and creativity and certain things. I don’t like to be sitting around working on the same thing for days. Everything needs to go fast.

TDR: Are there any more people you wish you could collab-orate with or even a song you wish

you produced?Tiësto: There’s so much good

music out there. I’d love to work with Adele or Kanye West. When you hear great tracks, and you wish you made that one — like the

Martin Solveig track “Hello,” that’s a great track.

A study from the Pew Re-search Center has quantified what anyone who walks through the Quad likely already knows — young people use text messaging more than twice as frequently as older adults.

Young adults send and receive an average of 109.5 messages each day, while the entire adult popula-tion exchanges an average of only 41.5 messages per day according to a study released last week.

Chris Brady, mechanical engi-neering sophomore, said while he thought that number sounded high, he probably sends about 110 or more messages, depending on the day.

According to the study, 83 per-cent of American adults own cell phones, and 73 percent of those utilize text messaging.

Though the use of texting con-tinues to increase, the study found that 53 percent of adults who text still prefer to be contacted by phone call rather than an SMS message.

Taylor Erickson, nursing sophomore, said she believes the trend is because voice calls are more personal and make it eas-ier to maintain a back-and-forth conversation.

But kinesiology senior Ndia Hall disagreed.

“I just don’t like talking on the phone. I never have,” she said. “Texting saved my life.”

According to the study, young adults ages 18-24 take the most advantage of texting. Ninety-five percent of them own cell phones,

and 97 percent of owners use text messaging.

Hall said she thinks texting is a hit with today’s generation of young adults because they lack communication skills and prefer to be impersonal.

Joyce Wakefield, University Center for Freshman Year coun-selor, said she was surprised young adults don’t send and receive more than 110 texts a day.

She said she prefers texting over speaking on the phone.

“It’s easier than having a conversation, and human beings tend to do what’s easiest,” she said.

Young adults send more than double the amount of texts than adults slightly older than them, the study showed. The 25- to 34-year-old age group reportedly sends an average of 41.8 texts per day.

Brady said he likes texting because he can respond to messages at his convenience.

“You can delay respond-ing a text, and it’s not like you’re ignoring the person,” he said.

The Daily Reveillepage 10 Tuesday, September 27, 2011

MUSIC

STUDY

World-renowned DJ Tiësto talks new projects and life on tourKittu PannuEntertainment Writer

Young adults send 109.5 texts daily

Emily HerringtonEntertainment Writer

Contact Kittu Pannu at [email protected]

Contact Emily Herrington at [email protected]

photo courtesy of JUSTIN KLEINFIELD

World famous DJ Tiësto is currently on his College Invasion Tour. He said the shows will have special effects and described the experience as “mind-blowing.”

Adults still prefer phone calls

guy to say, “You could actually do that.” ... And that was it. If it wasn’t for this guy, I don’t know if I would have come up with it on my own.

TDR: You’ve always taken the supporting character part in TV shows. Do you prefer taking those roles, or would you like to have your own sitcom?

Posehn: Well, it’s funny, I actually am working on that right now. I just hooked up with a pro-duction company and we’re going to try and pitch a show this year.

But for the longest time, I didn’t want to do that. ... I just sort of fell into sitcom acting. I started booking those kind of parts, the really easy roles where I would just be the goofy guy, come in and say something completely dumb, get the laughs and walk out. I was never one of the people that had to carry it, which was great.

TDR: What’s been your fa-vorite role of your own?

Posehn: For sure Brian on “The Sarah Silverman Program.” Just because it was the role that’s closest to myself so far, other than being married to a dude. But ev-erything about that character was

based on me because my friends wrote it for me, so that was a lot of fun to play.

TDR: How do you find your comedy evolving between your first and second albums?

Posehn: I’ve definitely be-come more real and more person-al, that was the big thing. ... I have a two-year-old now, so there’s a big chunk about him, but it’s al-ways super important to me that it comes from my perspective on it and not just a generic thing like, “Hey, kids poop a lot, right?” I’m really hard on myself to make sure that it’s still my twist and some-thing I haven’t heard.

TDR: Do you find that you have to tone down some of your raunchier material now that you have a kid?

Posehn: No, I don’t care about that. He’s going to see some horrible things on the Inter-net when he’s able to. You can’t get rid of some things I did years ago, and that stuff still makes me laugh. If anything, there’s stuff in this new set that’s even dirtier than the last record. ... I’m still going to get dirty and silly because that’s the stuff that makes me laugh.

TDR: You mentioned your

sitcom. Do you have anything else in the works?

Posehn: Yeah, a lot. I’m al-ways trying to stay busy. I did a comic book a couple of years ago, and I’m working on a follow up

to that. ... I’m working on the new record. I’m close to having enough standup for a whole new album. That’s something I’m go-ing to do in the spring, probably shoot a special and a new record.

Just staying busy and trying to stay funny.

anticuchos de pollo, a popular street food from Peru made of chicken marinated in spices and grilled on a skewer. She also made arroz chaufa, which she compared to chicken fried rice. The booth also served chicha morada, a drink Charcap said is made of purple corn.

Charcap said many of the spic-es used to prepare the food were brought back from Peru.

The most popular treat among festival-goers seemed to be the El

Salvadorian pupusas. Patrons waited in line for nearly two hours for the stuffed pancake-like morsels.

Visitors enjoyed a day of ka-raoke, performances by the Latin Ballet of Virginia, live music from Mariachi Jalisco and songs by Milly Quezada, known as “the Queen of Merengue.”

Cultural crafts were sold, and there were also activities for children including face-painting, an inflatable bounce house and a train ride around the grounds.

East Baton Rouge Parish

Mayor-President Kip Holden, who was dressed in a traditional Latin American guayabera shirt, said he has been coming to the festival for the past six or seven years. Holden said the festival is important because the whole community must pull to-gether for common causes and look out for jobs and education.

“Poverty does not have a racial line,” Holden said.

Food science graduate student Reynaldo Moreno said he heard about the festival through word of mouth. He said he felt the festival

was a good representation of the His-panic community in Baton Rouge, but he wished a few more countries would have been represented with traditional food booths.

Alejandro Leyton, mechani-cal engineering and Spanish junior, heard about the festival through Phi Iota Alpha, the University’s Latino-based fraternity.

“I didn’t realize there would be this big of a turnout,” Leyton said.

Yagini Joshi, biology senior, heard about the festival through the University’s Spanish Club. She said

she enjoyed eating the “amazing to-stadas” and watching the ballet per-formance.

Eric Capina, international stud-ies freshman, also heard about the event through Spanish Club. Capina, who is from Connecticut, said he decided to check out the festival be-cause he hadn’t really seen festivals geared toward the Hispanic commu-nity in Louisiana.

boredom-induced coma is to think of it as a comedy, preferably with a drinking game attached.”

For those who thought the movie would be OK, all I can ask is: Really?

It’s Taylor Lautner. The only thing appealing about him, other than his abdominal region, was his short-lived romance with Tay-lor Swift, and simply because the idea of Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Laut-ner — literally — is hilarious.

I’m not saying “Twilight” is dumb. But I am saying the actors and actresses starring in the mov-ie are terrible.

Kristen Stewart starred as an emotionless blob in “The Run-aways.”

Robert Pattinson showed the world that he actually is really, really pale in “Remember Me.” (Spoiler: Dealing with Sept. 11 doesn’t even make this movie in-teresting.)

And now, Lautner puts the “ab” in “Abduction.”

I understand all actors and ac-tresses have to start somewhere. They can’t all be Brad Pitt or George Clooney, blah blah blah.

But Pitt’s and Clooney’s breakout performances weren’t in billion-dollar franchises.

Maybe times have changed and I’m getting old, but I always assumed you had to be a good ac-tor to star in successful movies.

Regrettably, several thousand 13-year-old girls have proven my point invalid.

The sad thing is that it’s be-coming a trend in Hollywood. Talentless actor stars in a success-ful movie? Quick! Get a no-name director and some bad writers to throw together a poor excuse for entertainment.

It’s not just the stars’ fault. Whatever idiot looked at Laut-ner and said, “This young man is a talented actor and should star in my movie” was either stoned, drunk or seriously jonesing for some eight-pack action.

“Twilight” stars need to stay in their cookie-cutter franchise roles for as long as they can. Be-cause unless they take some se-rious acting lessons, they don’t have a very bright future.

Taylor Balkon is a 19-year-old mass communication sophomore from Baton Rouge.

The Daily ReveilleTuesday, September 27, 2011 page 11

FESTIVAL, from page 9

POSEHN, from page 9

LAUTNER, from page 9

Contact Taylor Balkom at [email protected]

Contact Haylie Navarre at [email protected]

Contact Joey Groner at [email protected]

When it comes to portable gaming, Nintendo is clearly the king.

From the Game Boy to the DS, people associate portable gaming with the house Mario built.

Many other companies have tried to compete with Nintendo’s handhelds, but almost all have failed.

Sony introduced the PlaySta-tion Portable (PSP) in 2004 as a di-rect competitor to Nintendo’s DS. While the PSP was far superior in hardware and graphical capabili-ties, a lack of games and a horrible initial ad campaign put the PSP be-hind the DS.

Even today, the DS is virtually untouchable from any competition. Nintendo has sold 146 million DS units worldwide as of last March, while the PSP has only moved 71 million units.

Not a bad number for Sony. Just nowhere close to Nintendo. However, Nintendo has moved on from its DS line with the introduc-tion of its successor, the 3DS.

With a rough start thanks to the lack of games and high price, Nintendo has had some problems with the launch of the 3DS, which may leave room for Sony to make a move with its newest console. The PlayStation Vita is set for release later this year in Japan, and some-time in 2012 for North America.

Sony claims to have listened to its customers and packed the Vita with more bells and whistles than Freddie Mercury’s bicycle.

The Vita is set to have dual analog sticks, front and back multi-touch capabilities, a 5-inch OLED display, front and rear-facing

cameras and more processing power than both the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, according to Sony’s website.

Spec-for-spec, the Vita blows the 3DS out of the water.

H o w e v e r , many people said the same thing seven years ago comparing the PSP launch to the original DS.

My ini-tial hands-on with the new

Sony handheld came in June at this year’s Electronic Entertain-ment Expo, or E3, in Los Angeles. Unfortunately, I wasn’t impressed.

Sure, the screen was gorgeous, but the gameplay didn’t look on par with PlayStation 3 graphics as Sony suggested. I also felt there were almost too many features packed into the handheld and I was starting to get overwhelmed.

Another big concern I have for the Vita’s success is the hidden costs.

Many were shocked at E3 when Sony announced that the feature-packed Vita would start at $249. But $249 isn’t the final price gamers will be paying to enjoy the handheld.

Aside from Apple, Sony is the king of overpriced proprietary accessories, and the Vita is no different.

Many games will allow users to save their data on the gamecard itself, but some people will want a bit of extra memory for saves or full game downloads.

While the 3DS supports — and includes with every purchase — an SD card, the Vita uses anoth-er one of Sony’s proprietary mem-ory cards. The Vita memory cards will be sold separately in 4, 8, 16 and 32GB flavors and will range anywhere between $29 to $124.

For comparison, you could easily find a 32GB SD card for less than $50.

Another major concern of the Vita is the battery life. Many people ragged on the 3DS for its poor battery, yet the Vita’s battery only holds approximately three to five hours for games, according to

a Sony news release. That’s also with almost every

feature, such as Bluetooth and Wi-Fi, turned off — meaning many gamers should expect even less battery life.

Nintendo provides users with a charging cradle to more eas-ily charge the battery for the 3DS, while Sony sells one separately for around $36 — another hidden cost.

With all of the great games already announced for the Vita — and more on the way — the packed amount of features and the short-comings of Nintendo’s 3DS, it seems like the Vita will be nothing

but a success.The Vita has a much better

chance to topple Nintendo than the PSP did. Unfortunately for Sony, history isn’t on its side when it comes to handheld gaming.

Adam Arinder is a 22-year-old communication studies senior from Baton Rouge. Follow him on Twitter @TDR_aarinder.

The Daily Reveille

Opinionpage 12 Tuesday, September 27, 2011

The Daily ReveilleThe Daily Reveille (USPS 145-800) is written, edited and produced solely by students of Louisiana State University. The Daily Reveille is an independent entity within the Manship School of Mass Communication. Signed opinions are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the editor, paper or University. Letters submitted for publication should be sent via e-mail to [email protected] or delivered to B-26 Hodges Hall. They must be 400 words or less. Letters must have a contact phone number so the opinion editor can verify the author. The phone number won’t be printed. The Daily Reveille reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for space consider-ation without changing the original intent. The Daily Reveille also reserves the right to reject any letter without noti-fication of the author. Writers must include their full names and phone numbers. The Daily Reveille’s editor-in-chief, hired every semester by the Louisiana State University Media Board, has final authority on all editorial decisions.

Editorial Policies & Procedures Quote of the Day“A life without adventure is likely to be unsatisfying, but a life in which adventure is allowed to take what-

ever form it will is sure to be short.”

Bertrand RussellBritish philosopher

May 18, 1872 — Feb. 2, 1970

Editorial BoardMatthew Jacobs

Chris BranchRyan Buxton

Marissa BarrowSydni Dunn

Devin Graham

Editor-in-Chief

Associate Managing Editor

Associate Managing Editor

Managing Editor, External Media

News Editor

Opinion Editor

WEB COMMENTSAs usual, our website, lsurev-eille.com, has been absolutely buzzing with reader comments. Check it out today, and let your voice be heard.

In reference to the Sept. 23 article, “Congressman Ron Paul revives ‘American Exceptional-ism,’” readers had this to say:

“Thank you for the Ron Paul article. We need to donate to his campaign today and as often as we can until he is elected. There are other ways to help: Become a dele-gate, volunteer to campaign, make and post signs, buy and wear his T-shirts. Contact media outlets via phone or email and tell them you are aware of and dislike that they undermine his candidacy by not

reporting the facts. Get his mes-sage out via FB, YouTube, Twitter, MySpace, every outlet available.”

-TLR

“Ron Paul is the only can-didate who will bring about real change. Romney and Perry are Republicrates and that’s why the political establishment and main stream media is trying their hard-est to convince the voters that the ‘Top tear candidates’ are the only viable candidates. How sad, if we don’t stand up we will end up with another John McCain milk toast big government Republican”

-Anonymous

“The only HONEST man in the race Democrat or Republican ......... If your not voting for RON

PAUL ..You are part of the problem ……”

-Cary Douglas @Austin Tx

“Its amazing to me how far we’ve come in the past 4-5 years. With absolutely no help from mainstream media, the usual attacks by the establishment, the common lies politicians tell, etc., Ron Paul has managed to be-come top-tier...his ideas, austrian economics, liberty & freedom are indeed popular (if not contagious), especially for our generation! President Paul 2012!! End the Fed! Abolish the IRS! Bring our troops home! Give us back our civil liberties and natural rights! He is our Champion of the Constitu-tion!”

-c.k.

“While in middle school 9-11 happened and I was gung ho repub-lican, but after a time and more his-tory on rounding of country in high school my idea changed again to pro liberty constitutionalism. Later in college someone mentioned Ron Paul and he stood for everything I found out on my own...he’s the man for the job.

Restore America now!”-Anonymous

“* Ron Paul polls consistent-ly in a dead heat with President Obama (Rasmussen, Gallup, CNN)

* Ron Paul consistently places in the top three in major Republi-can Primary polls;

* Ron Paul is number two in fundraising and number one for individual donations;

* Ron Paul has more military donations than all other GOP can-didates and Obama

* Ron Paul is a 12-term Con-gressman and has spent his entire career defending the Constitution;

* Ron Paul is the only candi-date to accurately predict the hous-ing bubble, economic crises and the devaluation of the dollar.”

-ClimberBio

“Ron Paul brings a simple message of liberty - we only need to reach for it.

Revolution Calling - 2012”-Sevin Paul Dugas

BEST AND WITTIEST

cartoon courtesy of KING FEATURES SYNDICATE

PRESS X TO NOT DIE

AdAm ArinderColumnist Contact Adam Arinder at

[email protected]

Sony’s next handheld gives Nintendo real competition

Contact The Daily Reveille’s opinion staff at [email protected]

As I exited the Union Theater on Friday evening after Republi-can presidential hopeful Ron Paul opened his youth tour with a rous-ing campaign speech, I couldn’t help but be a bit impressed.

For many in attendance, a ren-egade hero of modern American politics stood on the stage before them. Paul outlined the platform he had stumped so many times before: essentially, government limits free-doms, and less government means more freedom for everyone.

The fervor of Paul’s support-ers is unquestionable. Though they may be small in number, they make up for it with their total investment in Paul’s policy positions.

Some chanted “End the Fed!” and a collective roar rose up when Paul made his entrance onto the stage.

Three weeks ago, I wrote a column about Paul’s difficulties with the theory of evolution, and the response it elicited brought to my attention the doggedness of his supporters. That being said, any time a political rally looks this much like a rock concert, the

candidate must be doing something right.

Paul is an effusive and skilled speaker. He hasn’t lost a step, so to speak, which is doubly impressive considering he’s only four years

— a presidential term, incidental-ly — away from being 80 years old.

I found my-self nodding in agreement with Paul’s take on the wars in Afghani-stan and Iraq

and the dismal failure colloquially termed the “Drug War.”

But at a point, it became clear to me that Paul’s recitation of the libertarian policy platform did not provide sufficient answers for real problems the United States has faced or will in the future.

Paul’s belief that the United States government should not tell its citizens what food and drugs are safe to consume is, aside from lacking in nuance, quite troubling to me.

Paul asked the crowd, rhe-torically of course, why Americans should not be able to make their own choices about the products they consume.

Of course, choice is impor-tant for consumers. But let’s take a look at these seemingly burden-some regulations that Paul is rail-ing against.

In 1938, the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act passed through Congress before being signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The bill authorized fac-tory inspections, set forth standards for hazardous materials included in products and sought to ensure that drugs were safe before hitting the market.

The stimulus for the bill was the public outcry that followed the deaths of more than 100 Ameri-cans, many of them children, due to ingestion of the poisonous drug elixir sulfanilamide, which was distributed by a pharmaceutical company.

Paul’s insistence that citizens should be able to choose what is safe to consume must exist outside

of an understanding of what the consequences are when regulation is dissolved or nonexistent in the first place.

A cursory Google search is not going to yield the kind of in-formation we need about the food and drugs we consume every day of our lives. Even textbooks have conflicting or outdated informa-tion.

The Food and Drug Admin-istration no doubt makes mistakes in judgment from time to time and has to constantly update its infor-mation to remain relevant.

At the same time, we can thank federal regulatory agencies for cre-ating an environment where the food we eat conforms to the safety standards required by NASA for its astronauts. The Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points man-agement system was developed in 1959 when NASA asked Pillsbury to develop food that would be safe for space travel, where the margin of error, in every sense, is terribly small.

This is not an issue of class. How could even the super rich

be expected to have an intricate understanding of what is in the food they eat, unless they were to build their own research laboratory and hire scientists to find out for them?

Big government is far from perfect, but there are certain tasks it performs more completely and efficiently than scores of compet-ing businesses could.

Our federal regulatory agen-cies that deal with food and drugs, primarily the FDA and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, do im-portant work. For Ron Paul to posit that these agencies are unnecessary is, like many other policy positions he espouses, a 19th-century answer to 21st-century problems.

Chris Seemann is a 21-year-old mass communication senior from Metairie. Follow him on Twitter @TDR_cseemann.

We are taught from an early age not to be disrespectful.

This is a trait most exemplified in the South, where phrases such as “yes ma’am” and “no sir” are commonplace. We’re also taught to chew with our mouth closed and to shut up when the President of the United States is giving a speech.

Well, maybe not the last one.

Representa-tive Jeff Landry, R-La., recently forgot his manners.

Let me set the stage. President Obama was delivering a speech to Congress, which is, if you haven’t heard, typically a group of well-dressed and well-mannered adults. Not on Sept. 8.

During the President’s speech, Congressman Landry, who’s from New Iberia, held up a piece of pa-per that simply said, “DRILLING = JOBS.”

There’s a time and place for everything, and I am fully confi-dent the president was aware prior to Congressman Landry’s art proj-ect that offshore drilling does in fact produce jobs in the state of Louisiana.

To me, this seems to be the congressional equivalent of cough-ing to cover up a smartass remark, then looking around to see who heard you. Landry did this purely for attention. He seems to think a snapshot of him holding up a “DRILLING = JOBS” sign will

make him look like a hardliner to his constituents, many of whom work in the oil and gas industry.

Congressman Landry also proceeded to take a drive down to New Orleans to investigate why the Bureau of Ocean Energy Man-agement, Regulation and Enforce-ment (BOEMRE), the branch of government that issues offshore drilling permits, was taking so long to do so. After arriving unan-nounced Landry was made to wait 20 minutes and was then turned away.

Landry proceeded to compare the workers at that particular gov-ernment office to the Gestapo, the Nazi secret police, only to later find out the head of BOEMRE, Michael Bromwich, is Jewish.

He probably didn’t mean it. But the civil thing to do would have been to apologize to BOEMRE and its employees and explain that he was angry and did not mean to compare them to a group of mass murderers.

He didn’t. In fact, he’s asking BOEMRE to apologize to him for making him wait and subsequently turning him away after arriving unannounced.

Regardless of whether one is visiting a doctor’s office or an escort, one needs to make an appointment. It’s impolite to arrive anywhere unannounced, start demanding things and then call everyone who works there a Nazi if one is not satisfied.

Being an elected official from Louisiana, Landry not only rep-resents his constituents’ interests

in Washington, but his actions re-flect on them. There is a difference between being a hardliner and fighting for what his constituents want and acting like a pubescent teenager when things don’t go his way.

I agree with Landry — off-shore drilling is crucial to the economy of this state. As long as we can cleanly and safely acquire oil while simultaneously

researching other cleaner and more sustainable sources of energy, I see no problem. But don’t act like a child to make sure drilling stays operational.

Remember, Congressman Landry, your actions reflect on us. Regardless of politics, when the President talks, you sit on your hands and listen until you are called upon to respond. Manners and proper legislation go much

further than a flippant remarks and a piece of paper.

Parker Cramer is a 20-year-old political science junior from Hous-ton, Texas. Follow him on Twitter @TDR_pcramer.

The Daily Reveille

OpinionTuesday, September 27, 2011 page 13

BEST AND WITTIEST

cartoon courtesy of KING FEATURES SYNDICATE

SEEMANN SAYS

Chris seemannColumnist

Contact Chris Seemann at [email protected]

SCUM OF THE GIRTH

Landry acts childish in Congress, makes Louisiana look stupid

Parker CramerColumnist

Contact Parker Cramer at [email protected]

Ron Paul has devoted supporters, troubling policy

CASA MARIA MEXICAN GRILL Hiring experienced waitstaff. Apply in person. 7955 BLUEBONNET @

Perkins.

*******BARTEND-ING*******

$300/Day PotentialNO EXPERIENCE NECES-SARY. Training Available. AGE 18+ OK 1-800-965-

6520 ext127

STATE GOVT. IT shop seeks full time CompSci, ISDS, or engineering student for up to 20 hrs/wk desktop hard-

ware/software support. Email resume to: StudentJob@crt.

la.gov, 225.342.3334

*FUN STUDENT WORK*$16.00 Base/appt, Flexible

schedules, scholarships avail, sales/service, ages 17+, condi-

tions apply, CALL TODAY:225-383-4252

workforstudents.com

BEAUTY CONSULTANT @ Merle Norman Mall of La... nights and weekends a must maybe some days. No exp necessary. Please email re-

sume to [email protected] or fax to 225-771-858

BARTENDER/SERVER/GEORGES 8905 highland/ starring lane apply today

11am-3pm must have server licence

EARN $1000-$3200 A month to drive our brand new cars

with ads. www. FreeCarJobs.com

NOW HIRING OPENING SOON Experienced Bartend-ers, Waitresses, Barbacks ap-

ply in person 2pm-5pmM-F glen’s 5110 Corporate

Blvd. next to Hooters

STUDENT MEDIA SALES!!! Looking for a job where you can get real-world experience in sales while going to school on campus?? We’re looking for some outgoing students who want to enhance their

resume and stand out from the crowd!

If you’d like to set up an inter-view please email us at [email protected]

COUNTER CLERKpart time afternoon position fl exible hours, great for stu-

dents Welsh’s Cleaners 17732 Highland Rd. @ I-10 apply in

person

STUDENTPAYOUTS. COMPaid Survey Takers Needed In Baton Rogue. 100% Free To

Join! Click On Surveys.

STUDIO APT FOR SUB-LEASE Great Location!!

Oakbrook ApartmentsNicholson Dr. and Lee Dr.

On LSU bus route$750/ month cable and inter-net included 832.444.3073

CAMELOT APTS. Large 1BR Water & sewer pd.

Swimming pool $495 $300 Deposit 225-766-3047

WALK TO LSU/NEAR TENNIS COURTS 2br/2b

house $750

3br/1b house $7503br/1b house $775

2br/1b duplexes $550-$650some have washer/ dryer

incl. pets okmcdaniel properties

225.388.9858

10 MIN FROM LSU! 2 BR 2 BA, New Appl, New

Carpet/ Ceramic Tile, Walk-In Closets & Storage, Fire-place. Pets welcome! $875

225.454.4550

NERD NSA single and smart 24 yo looking

for a fwb for the rest of the semester. please be

white and able to host. e mail if interested: cox-

[email protected]

WIZARDING FOLK WANTED

Need a travel buddy to Pigfarts?

Tired of living in a cup-board under your uncle’s

stairs?Wish you were able to

attend Hogwarts?Then email me (be you a witch or wizard) at [email protected], and we’ll eat Red

Vines together!P. S. Starship Rangers

also accepted.

� e Daily Reveillepage 14 Tuesday, September 27, 2011

The Daily Reveille page 15Tuesday, September 27, 2011

The Daily Reveillepage 16 Tuesday, September 27, 2011