today in print - december 3, 2010

16
Reveille www.lsureveille.com Watch students discuss their highlights of the semester on lsureveille.com e Daily LSU likely to be chosen to play in Cotton Bowl, p. 7 Friday, Dec. 3, 2010 Volume 115, Issue 68 ResLife planning to adopt roommate matching program next year, p. 4 PUPPY LOVE New student group demands open dialogue with Regents Admins making move back to faculty ZACH BREAUX / The Daily Reveille A group of puppies waits Tuesday at the Yelp! house on Lanier Drive with hopes of being adopted. Read more about Yelp!BR, an organization that rescues local dogs, on page 5. Sydni Dunn Staff Writer As the funding of higher edu- cation is put under a microscope, University administration often cites personnel cutbacks and re- structuring as evidence of the University’s ef- ficiency. But as many admin- istrators have returned to the faculty, their salaries remain largely un- changed. Accord- ing to statistics from the Office of Budget and Planning, the average salary of a University professor is about $108,827, with median salaries for associate professors, assistant SALARIES, see page 6 Another new organization aimed at representing Louisiana students’ interests to state offi- cials made its first public showing Thursday at a Board of Regents meeting, the body that over- sees the state’s higher education system. Three of the new College Caucus’ members joined three state representatives at the start of the meeting to ask the Regents for greater leadership in the higher education funding crisis. Aly Neel, mass communica- tion senior and Caucus founding member, says the group is de- signed to be “an umbrella group” to unite others like Flagship Ad- vocates at LSU and SAVE UNO at the University of New Orleans. College Caucus demanded open communication and a plan for the future of higher education from the Board of Regents. “You need to have students looking out for their own institu- tions,” Neel acknowledged. “But you also need to have a unified voice.” Neel said the group’s next steps will be to refine its “expecta- tions” of the Regents and to start “recruiting” students. “We are a coalition of con- cerned students and alumni,” Neel said. “We hope to generate con- versation, highlight expectations of the student population and drive long-term reform for student success.” Neel said the group hopes to grow to include communication with the Governor’s Office, the Board of Regents, business lead- ers and those who are passionate about the state of higher educa- tion. She said the group strives to have “an open ground with open minds and ears.” Neel said Baton Rouge Com- munity College Student Govern- ment President David Coleman attended the meeting in support of the Caucus. Neel, former LSU Student Government President Colorado Robertson and business junior Leda Williams presented some of the Caucus’ preliminary ex- pectations at the meeting, most of which asked the state to focus more heavily on institution’s per- formances when doling out funds. College Caucus asked the Regents to create and promote a student success-oriented plan for higher education. The group asked BRIANNA PACIORKA / The Daily Reveille Aly Neel, mass communication senior and founding member of College Caucus, speaks Thursday to the Board of Regents about including students in the budget discussion. Matthew Albright and Sydni Dunn Staff Writers ‘If a person resigns, they need to have breathing room, but not semester after semester.’ Kevin Cope Faculty Senate president College Caucus joins with state reps CAUCUS, see page 6 Search for missing student called off Catherine Threlkeld Contributing Writer The Coast Guard has called off the search for LSU alumnus and Chimes Restaurant employee James de Brueys, according to his sister Simone. James de Brueys was lost in the Pacific Ocean on Nov. 25, and Coast Guard officials had said Wednesday they were still search- ing for him. But a post on James de Brueys’ Facebook page by Ste- ven de Brueys, James’ brother, said the Coast Guard had called off the search. “We are doing everything within our power to convince them otherwise by going through Bobby Jindal and Mary [Landrieu],” the post says. “They have found the pregnant woman’s body but were not able to retrieve the body, be- cause the Australian Navy had to go back for another assignment. Just pray that we can convince the Navy and Coastguard to continue DE BRUEYS, see page 6

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Page 1: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

Reveille Reveille Reveillewww.lsureveille.com

Watch students discuss their highlights of the semester on lsureveille.com

� e DailyLSU likely to be chosen to play in Cotton Bowl, p. 7

Friday, Dec. 3, 2010Volume 115, Issue 68

ResLife planning to adopt roommate matching program next year, p. 4

PUPPY LOVE

New student group demands open dialogue with Regents

Admins making move back to faculty

ZACH BREAUX / The Daily Reveille

A group of puppies waits Tuesday at the Yelp! house on Lanier Drive with hopes of being adopted. Read more about Yelp!BR, an organization that rescues local dogs, on page 5.

Sydni DunnStaff Writer

As the funding of higher edu-cation is put under a microscope, University administration often cites personnel cutbacks and re-structuring as evidence of the University’s ef-fi ciency.

But as many admin-istrators have returned to the faculty, their salaries remain largely un-changed.

A c c o r d -ing to statistics from the Offi ce of Budget and Planning , the average salary of a University professor is about $108,827 , with median salaries for associate professors, assistant

SALARIES, see page 6

Another new organization aimed at representing Louisiana students’ interests to state offi -cials made its fi rst public showing Thursday at a Board of Regents meeting , the body that over-sees the state’s higher education system.

Three of the new College Caucus’ members joined three state representatives at the start of the meeting to ask the Regents for greater leadership in the higher education funding crisis.

Aly Neel , mass communica-tion senior and Caucus founding member, says the group is de-signed to be “an umbrella group”

to unite others like Flagship Ad-vocates at LSU and SAVE UNO at the University of New Orleans .

College Caucus demanded open communication and a plan for the future of higher education from the Board of Regents .

“You need to have students looking out for their own institu-tions,” Neel acknowledged. “But you also need to have a unifi ed voice.”

Neel said the group’s next steps will be to refi ne its “expecta-tions” of the Regents and to start “recruiting” students.

“We are a coalition of con-cerned students and alumni,” Neel said. “We hope to generate con-versation, highlight expectations of the student population and drive long-term reform for student success.”

Neel said the group hopes to grow to include communication with the Governor’s Offi ce, the

Board of Regents, business lead-ers and those who are passionate about the state of higher educa-tion. She said the group strives to have “an open ground with open minds and ears.”

Neel said Baton Rouge Com-munity College Student Govern-ment President David Coleman attended the meeting in support of the Caucus .

Neel , former LSU Student Government President Colorado Robertson and business junior Leda Williams presented some of the Caucus’ preliminary ex-pectations at the meeting, most of which asked the state to focus more heavily on institution’s per-formances when doling out funds.

College Caucus asked the Regents to create and promote a student success-oriented plan for higher education. The group asked BRIANNA PACIORKA / The Daily Reveille

Aly Neel, mass communication senior and founding member of College Caucus, speaks Thursday to the Board of Regents about including students in the budget discussion.

Matthew Albright and Sydni DunnStaff Writers

‘If a person resigns,

they need to have

breathing room,

but not semester

after semester.’

Kevin CopeFaculty Senate

president

College Caucus joins with state reps

CAUCUS, see page 6

Search for missing student called offCatherine ThrelkeldContributing Writer

The Coast Guard has called off the search for LSU alumnus and Chimes Restaurant employee James de Brueys, according to his sister Simone.

James de Brueys was lost in the Pacifi c Ocean on Nov. 25, and Coast Guard offi cials had said Wednesday they were still search-ing for him. But a post on James de Brueys’ Facebook page by Ste-ven de Brueys, James’ brother, said the Coast Guard had called off the search.

“We are doing everything within our power to convince them otherwise by going through Bobby Jindal and Mary [Landrieu],” the post says. “They have found the pregnant woman’s body but were not able to retrieve the body, be-cause the Australian Navy had to go back for another assignment. Just pray that we can convince the Navy and Coastguard to continue

DE BRUEYS, see page 6

Page 2: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

The Daily Reveille

CORRECTIONS AND CLARIFICATIONS

POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

The Daily Reveille holds accuracy and objectivity at the high-est priority and wants to reassure the reporting and content of the paper meets these standards. This space is reserved to recognize and correct any mistakes which may have been printed in The Daily Reveille. If you would like something cor-rected or clarifi 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 Offi ce of Student Media in B-34 Hodges Hall. The Daily Reveille is published daily during the fall and spring semesters and semi-weekly during the summer semester, except during holidays and fi nal 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 regu-lar semester, $2 during the summer; one copy per person, addition-al copies 25 cents each. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Daily Reveille, B-39 Hodges Hall, LSU, Baton Rouge, La.,70803.

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

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INTERNATIONAL NATIONAL STATE/LOCAL

Nation & World Friday, Dec. 3, 2010page 2

Egypt may consider making nuclear arms if Iran obtains atomic weapons

Largest forest fi re in Israeli history kills dozens, forces mass evacuation

Jobless Alabama woman charged with theft of 222 library books

Man sought in LA publicist’s death kills himself to avoid questioning

Man dies in Baton Rouge house fi re after running into burning building

Police investigate shooting near a New Orleans high school Wednesday

National home foreclosure rates at 25 percent, Louisiana at 10 percent

Sarah LawsonRobert Stewart

Stephanie GiglioSteven Powell

Xerxes A. WilsonRyan Buxton

David HelmanChris Branch

Matthew JacobsAndrew RobertsonAdam Vaccarella

Sheila De GuzmanMarissa Barrow

Care Bach

Editor-in-ChiefManaging Editor, ContentManaging Editor, ProductionManaging Editor, External MediaNews EditorDeputy News/Entertainment EditorSports EditorDeputy Sports EditorProduction EditorOpinion EditorPhoto EditorDeputy Photo EditorReveille Radio EditorAdvertising Sales Manager

Follow breaking news at

PARALLEL, PERPENDICULAR

BRIANNA PACIORKA / The Daily Reveille

See more photos of campus lines and angles on Snapshot at lsureveille.com

@lsureveille, @TDR_news, @TDR_sports

facebook.com/thedailyreveille

AVISHAG SHAR YESHUV / The Associated Press

The worst forest fi re in Israel’s history burns Thursday. The blaze, which may have beenintentionally set, has forced thousands to evacuate.

Hear reactions to new TSA fl ight security measures at5:20 p.m. on 91.1 KLSU

Read an online story about local shop Coffee Call

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ANNISTON, Ala. (AP) — Librar-ians in Anniston, Ala., said an unem-ployed woman has stolen thousands of dollars worth of books.

Police say 42-year-old Regina M. Smith, who has a library card, was arrested Wednesday on a felony theft charge. Offi cials determined Smith had taken 222 books valued at $5,432 — mainly crime novels, mysteries and vampire stories.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A man wanted in the slaying of a Hollywood publicist killed himself in a Los An-geles hotel as police closed in.

The slaying of Ronni Chasen, shot in her Mercedes as she left the premiere of an Oscar contender, re-mains under investigation.

Witnesses said the man bragged about the killing and an expected $10,000 payment.

CAIRO (AP) — Egypt’s president would consider making the coun-try a nuclear power if Iran acquired atomic weapons, leaked U.S. diplo-matic cables revealed.

A report from May 2008, one of hundreds of secret documents released by the WikiLeaks website over the past week, described how President Hosni Mubarak told a U.S. delegation that the region is “terri-fi ed” of a nuclear Iran.

“Egypt might be forced to begin its own nuclear weapons program,” the cable said, citing a meeting be-tween Mubarak and the delegation.

Iran’s growing nuclear pro-gram, which the country insists is for peaceful energy production, has sent chills throughout the region.

Omar Suleiman, head of Egyp-tian intelligence, cautioned against military strikes. He said such an attack would unite people against the U.S. and instead recommended sanctions, according to the cable.

(AP) — Firefi ghters say a 53-year-old Baton Rouge man was killed when he ran back into his burning home and was overcome by smoke.

Barry Mounce, fi re department spokesman, says Richard Green, his mother and his infant nephew were in the living room of the home about 7 p.m. Wednesday when they noticed smoke coming from a back bedroom.

Mounce said the other three res-idents escaped the fl ames unharmed.

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — New Or-leans police are investigating a dou-ble shooting near O.P. Walker High School at 8 p.m. Wednesday that left one man dead and another wounded.

Police say two victims were shot inside a vehicle. A victim shot in the arm was taken to the hospital while another died on scene. Neither victim has been identifi ed.

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Foreclo-sure homes accounted for 10 percent of all Louisiana home sales during the third quarter of 2010, a national tracking fi rm said Thursday.

RealtyTrac said 534 homes in a stage of foreclosure — ranging from an initial notice of default to outright lender repossession — were sold in Louisiana during the July-through-September period, garnering an av-erage price of $135,784.

Homes repossessed by lenders were sold at an average discount of 33.9 percent, RealtyTrac said.

Homes in default or scheduled for sale went for an average discount of 16.4 percent.

RealtyTrac said the drop — as in many states — likely is due to a dip in the foreclosure market rather than an overall improvement in the national home loan crisis.

Nationally, foreclosure homes accounted for 25 percent of all resi-dential sales during the third quarter.

MEGADIM, Israel (AP) — The worst forest fi re in Israel’s history on Thursday devastated one of the country’s few forested areas, killing at least 36 guards on their way to rescue inmates at a prison in the fi re zone, destroying homes and forcing the evacuation of thousands.

The fi re ripped through the Car-mel forest in Israel’s Galilee, reach-ing the coastal city of Haifa, jumping from place to place in the forest left tinder-dry by a lack of rain and un-seasonably hot weather.

Israel appealed for international assistance, a measure of the severity of the disaster, and Turkey put aside recent tensions to pledge aid.

Investigators speculated that the fi re could have been set accidentally, or it might have been a criminal act, but ruled out attack by a Palestinian group.

“This is a disaster of unprece-dented proportions,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.

Page 3: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

Spending time on Facebook can actually bring certain groups closer together, according to a recent study.

The study, titled “Got Face-book? Investigating What’s Social About Social Media” and conducted at the University of Texas, found that instead of weakening personal ties, Facebook use is driven by a desire to stay involved in other people’s lives.

“College students that I sur-veyed at LSU used Facebook for similar reasons, but they reported more self-disclosure with their face-to-face friends than with their Face-book friends,” said University re-search associate Pavica Sheldon.

“In terms of personal contact, I think Facebook can be limiting,” said Kayemba Mvula, political

science senior. “But Facebook can help in getting in touch.”

More than 60 percent of those surveyed said posting updates was one of the most popular activities. Sixty percent said they also wrote comments on their profile and 49 percent often posted messages to friends, according to the study.

The study also found women are more likely to communicate or share media related to friends and family, but men are more likely to post about news or current events.

“In offline relationships women are more affectionate,” Sheldon said.

“Their friendships involve lots of talking and sharing stories.”

Men’s friendships tend to center around an activity like watching a football game, Sheldon said.

“Girls post more pictures and write on people’s walls,” said Sarah Jameson, history sophomore.

Sharing content is a common Facebook use, according to the study. Of the content shared — photos, vid-eos, links and quizzes — 87 percent of those surveyed share photos.

“We present ourselves in dif-ferent ways, whether to friends, co-workers or family,” S. Craig Watkins, associate professor of radio, TV and film at UT who led the study, said in a news release. “Facebook engage-ment is not uniform. It’s constantly evolving and in a state of flux.”

The Daily Reveille page 3Friday, Dec. 3, 2010

Pluckers Wing BarMon.: $14.99 All You Can Eat Wings and $3 Pluckers Lemonades

Tues.: Kids Eat Free, $3 Mexican Beers and MargaritasWed: Trivia at 8 pm, $4.50 Mother Plucker Mugs of Bud and MillerThurs: $15.99 All You Can Eat Wings, $4.50 Mother Plucker Mugs

of Bud Light and Miller Lite, $5.50 Patron MargaritasSun: $3 Pluckers Specialty Shots

Friday December 3

9-10:30 AM How to Train Your Dragon12-1:30 PM Sex and the City 27:30-8:00 PM Newsbeat on Ch. 198:00- 9:30 PM Up in the Air11:00-12:30 PM Home for the Holidays

The Golden Band from Tiger-land solidified its place in TV history with an updated documentary, which aired Wednesday at 7 p.m.

The documentary, which aired on Louisiana Public Broadcast-ing, features the history of the band since its creation in 1893 to 1928, when former Gov. Huey P. Long transformed the Tiger Band into one of the most well-known marching bands in the country.

The documentary follows the Tiger Band through the century to the present day, with current Band Director Roy King and the building of the new band hall on Aster Street.

Dorothy Kendrick, LPB senior producer, said she produced a Tiger Band documentary in 2002 but felt the need to update it and make it “en-dure the test of time.”

“The great part about redoing it is we kept the best of the best and

got rid of things that were very dated but were the weaker links in the pro-gram,” Kendrick said.

The documentary begins by set-ting the scene outside Tiger Stadium before a football game.

“The excitement builds at ‘Vic-tory Hill.’ The band stops and begins to play the opening of the ‘Pregame Salute,’” says the opening lines of the documentary. “... It’s the kickoff to another memorable night in Tiger Stadium.”

Kendrick said they interviewed King, Drum Major Chase Howard, Color Guard Captain Emily Brinks and Golden Girl Captain Danielle Hardy.

Kendrick also interviewed Tiger Band alumni, including a man who played during World War II and a woman who performed in the 1980s.

Tiffany Adler, a band member from 1981 to 1982, said the band uniforms were all designed for men during her time.

“The gals in the band really didn’t have well-fitting uniforms,” Adler said in the documentary. “I remember having black shoes, spats, socks, track shorts, the wool pants that were falling down, a belt, a

T-shirt, a jacket, an overlay, a belt on top of that, a hat and the plume.”

Kendrick said this year could have been a turbulent one because former Band Director Frank Wickes and former Assistant Band Director Linda Moorhouse left the University last year.

Kendrick said nothing pulls fans together like Tiger Band, the most symbolic part of the University.

“The traditions of the Universi-ty are carried out through that band, from the marches down ‘Victory Hill’ to the way every football game starts to the halftime performances to leading the cheers during the game,” Kendrick said.

LPB is airing the documentary during its pledge drive, a time when the network asks for donations. Ken-drick said they like to air their best work during pledge drives, including the Tiger Band documentary and a documentary of the Southern Uni-versity band, also known as the “Hu-man Jukebox.”

Contact Catherine Threlkeld at [email protected]

Catherine ThrelkeldContributing Writer

Movie chronicles creation to present

MUSIC

BENJAMIN OLIVER HICKS / The Daily Reveille

The Tiger Band performs Sept. 4 in Atlanta, Georgia at the Tigers’ 30-24 victory against UNC. A new documentary featuring the Tiger Band aired Wednesday.

Grace Montgomery Contributing Writer

Contact Grace Montgomery at [email protected]

TECHNOLOGY

Tiger Band history film updated

UT study says Facebook brings groups together

Page 4: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

As the next school year looms closer and housing applications are being sent in, students are begin-ning to stress over the possibility of being incompatible with their randomly selected roommates.

Residential Life’s solution is RoommateClick.

RoommateClick is a new on-line service offered by ResLife that matches students to compatible roommates.

RoommateClick questions students about their living hab-its, like the times they go to bed and wake up , how they study and their interests , according to Steve Waller , director of ResLife .

Third-party software compa-ny Lifetopia provides the service, which is currently available online

for students who live on and off campus , Waller said.

“Only about 5,000 students live on campus, so that means there’s potentially 23,000 students out there off campus looking for a roommate,” Waller said. “You just have to fi ll out a simple pro-fi le, answer some questions and your identity is masked.”

Because stu-dents must log in to Roommate-Click with their PAWS account , student security is maintained be-cause no one outside of the LSU community can create an ac-count, according to Waller . Only the student can re-veal who he or she is, and matched students communicate directly through the website.

There are mixed reviews on the effectiveness of Roommate-

Click , Waller said.“The effectiveness depends on

who fi lls out the survey and how honest they are ... It might not be as effective if someone’s mom fi lls it out for them,” Waller said.

The Freshman Leadership Council and the Residence Hall Association suggested the initia-

tive two years ago . Waller said ResLife decided to put Room-mateClick on a two-year pilot program . It took a year to develop the contract and get the program online.

Tulane Uni-versity and the University of

Southeast Missouri have used RoommateClick for the past few years, so it is not a brand-new ser-vice, Waller said.

“You won’t get matched with someone opposite of you. It might

even be someone you can hang out with,” said Cody Juneau , wildlife ecology freshman .

Elisabeth Ducoing , animal science freshman , said she had a friend from New Hampshire who was paired with an incompatible roommate, and it hurt her relation-ship with the University.

“I think [RoommateClick is] a good idea since it would really help out of state students to make friends,” Ducoing said.

The Daily Reveillepage 4 Friday, Dec. 3, 2010

7:20 a.m., 8:20 a.m.

Noon, 3:20 p.m.4:20 p.m., 5:20 p.m.

Representatives for the Offi ce of Research and Economic Devel-opment were surprised by the large turnout at a lecture Thursday after-noon at the Chancellor’s Distin-guished Lectureship Series.

Eric Cornell, senior scientist at the University of Colorado, gave the lecture and was impressed by the amount of people gathered in the Royal Cotillion Ballroom.

“I was very pleased. I was glad to see them have to bring more chairs out,” Cornell said. “It’s fl attering.” \Cornell spoke about thermodynam-ics and the confl ict in nature between low energy and high entropy.

Thomas Klei, interim vice chancellor for the Offi ce of Research and Economic Development, said there were twice as many people in attendance than he expected.

Klei also said he felt it was im-portant for Cornell to speak because his lecture is benefi cial to students and faculty.

“His work infl uences ... quan-tum physics, chemistry and engi-neering,” Klei said.

The lecture was titled “What Does Nature Like Better: Lazy or Sloppy?” Cornell used the term “lazy” to describe low energy and “sloppy” to depict disorganized, ran-dom and patternless high entropy.

Cornell also said he feels the second law of thermodynamics has what he called an “image problem.”

“People think it means that something interesting decays into something uninteresting, but that’s just not it,” Cornell said.

Cornell used everyday items like glasses of water and ice chests to appeal to a broad audience.

“I’m just trying to offer some-thing for everyone,” Cornell said.

According to the Offi ce of Re-search and Economic Development website, the series is funded by pri-vate donations.

Cornell graduated from Stan-ford University in 1985, received a Ph.D. from MIT in 1990 and re-ceived the Nobel Prize for physics in 2001.

“He’s seen a rapid rise to the top,” Klei said. “And that says a lot about him.”

Rachel WarrenStaff Writer

Contact Rachel Warren [email protected]

SCIENCE

Nobel-winning lecturer speaks on physics

TECHNOLOGY

Random selection issues addressedMeredith WillContributing Writer

Contact Meredith Will [email protected]

Service pairs roommates by personalities

Audience double expected numbers ‘‘

‘There’s potentially23,000 students

out there offcampus looking for

a roommate.’Steve Waller

director of Residential LIfe

Page 5: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

Thousands of dogs are rounded up annually and taken to East Baton Rouge Animal Control Center. For most, it’s the end of the line.

One local group, however, is doing what it can to save as many dogs as possible. Yelp!!BR is a non-profit animal welfare organization that takes dogs on the euthanization list and places them in loving homes.

The organization began in 2009 after Baton Rouge employees of Commercial Properties Realty Trust realized the extent of the problem, according to Betty Hullinger, Yelp’s executive director.

“Carolyn Martin [President and CEO of Commercial Properties] saw a need for it after finding out how many dogs were being put down ev-ery day in Baton Rouge,” Hullinger said. “There were around 5,000 dogs euthanized last year.”

The organization was founded to aid in the No Kill BR initiative, a movement to eliminate euthanasia of healthy and treatable and adoptable cats and dogs in the parish.

Sheila Kimball, Yelp! volunteer and office administrator for Com-mercial Properties, said she and her colleagues began fostering shelter dogs until they could be adopted.

“We had no idea what we were doing at first, but everyone jumped in with both feet,” she said. “We didn’t have our own location until April, which is when we acquired the Yelp! house.”

Kimball said Joe Greco, owner of Greco’s Pet Supplies on Green-well Springs Road, offered the house behind his store.

“Now that we have our own lo-cation, we can keep around 40 to 50 dogs at the house at one time,” she said. “And whenever we have a few dogs adopted, we go back to Animal

Control and pick up more.”The organization went from

having adoption events twice a month to having events every week-end.

“Now we just keep growing,” Hullinger said. “In our first year, we had more than 500 dogs adopted out. We really hope to double our num-bers this year.”

After Yelp! volunteers pull dogs from Animal Control, the animals are checked and vaccinated by a vet-erinarian, assessed for temperament, spayed or neutered and implanted with a microchip — all of which costs around $200 per dog.

“We only charge $100 to adopt, so we lose about $100 for every dog adopted,” she said. “That’s why the support is so necessary.”

Yelp! is funded solely by dona-tions and fundraisers.

“We are operating because of the donations,” she said. “There was a time when we were running out of food, so we put it on Facebook and the next day, people were showing up with food. Baton Rouge is a com-munity that cares about animals.”

Hullinger said she never real-ized how dire the situation was prior to visiting Animal Control.

“Before I got into this, I didn’t know the real need, but once you go out there and see what happens to these animals, you can’t help but want to help,” she said. “You can’t just have your head in the sand think-ing this isn’t happening.”

Hullinger, who has been vol-unteering at Animal Control for the past two years, said the facility is required to keep stray dogs for six days, but owner-surrendered dogs don’t have that required cushion.

“They can choose to put down an owner-surrendered dog within an hour after it has been dropped off if they don’t have enough space,” she said. “That’s why we try to only take dogs from Animal Control, so we can give them a chance.”

Hullinger said it is easy to become attached to the dogs.

“You want to pull up in an

18-wheeler and load up your en-tire car, but realistically you can’t do that. You’ve got to put things in perspective,” she said. “You can’t go out there and take home every ani-mal, but you can give the animals as much love and attention as you can while you’re out there and make a difference.”

Yelp! has around 100 volunteers that periodically come by the house, play with the dogs, clean cages and help with adoption events on week-ends, one of whom is Allison Clau-det, who says she tries to volunteer twice a week.

“When you see people’s faces when they are so excited to get their new dog, it makes it all worth it,” she said.

Claudet checks online lost-and-found dog databases like FidoFinder.com and Petfinder.com in effort to match owners with their missing pets.

Rebecca Owens, University ed-ucational theory instructor and Yelp! volunteer, said it’s vital to educate the public on the root of the problem.

“People need to realize the im-portance of spaying and neutering,” she said. “We hope to educate as many people as we can. It can only help.”

A study by two University so-ciologists shows troubles that come with language barriers run deep.

The study, “Latino Immigra-tion, Economic Deprivation and Violence: Regional Differences in the Effect of Linguistic Isolation,” conducted by associate professor of sociology Edward Shihadeh and so-ciology graduate assistant Raymond Barranco, found Latinos living in areas in the U.S. with newly-formed Latino populations are more likely to be murdered than Latinos living in areas where older Latino communi-ties have been established.

Many Latinos in America live outside established Latino immigrant communities in places like Florida,

New York and Chicago, where Span-ish is common and English is not necessary for routine tasks, accord-ing to a news release about the study.

In new destinations, English disfluency has led to a cultural and social isolation, greatly increasing the rates at which Latinos are mur-dered, according to the release.

“There is no penalty in estab-lished Latino destinations for not knowing English,” Shihadeh said.

Shihadeh said the research be-gan about four years ago.

Shihadeh said the recent find-ings have no relation to the new immigration laws in California and Arizona.

The Daily Reveille page 5Friday, Dec. 3, 2010

Study links language barriers to murder ratesKayla DuBosContributing Writer

Contact Kayla DuBos at [email protected]

RESEARCH

Yelp!BR finds homes for stray dogsOrganization saved 500 dogs last yearSarah EddingtonStaff Writer

COVER STORY

Contact Sarah Eddington at [email protected]

Page 6: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

The Daily Reveillepage 6 Friday, Dec. 3, 2010

CAUCUS, from page 1

professors and instructors ranging from about $43,680 to $78,866 .

Kristine Calongne , assistant vice chancellor for communica-tions , said faculty salaries are de-termined by a variety of factors, including experience, research, part-time and full-time work as well as the number of classes being taught.

C a l o n g n e said another vari-able that must be examined is the installments of the individual’s salary, which could be paid on a nine-month or 12-month basis.

Faculty Sen-ate President Kevin Cope said professors are often paid on a nine-month basis, and the length of the payment period is 12 months for administrators.

“Everyone who is an unclassi-fi ed employee starts out on a nine-month basis, meaning the totality of one’s salary is paid over a nine-month period,” Cope explained. “When you move into an adminis-trative position, it is extended.”

Cope said there is usually a substantial salary increase when a person moves into a higher admin-istrative role. When an administra-tor returns to the faculty, Cope said, the individual brings with them that new base salary, or the “de facto pay raise.”

This type of “golden para-chute” allows employees to carry about 78 percent of the salary they earned as an administrator down to the faculty level, a wage propor-tionately higher than other tenured professors.

Former University Provost Astrid Merget is just one example. Merget stepped down from her pro-vost position in June to return to the E.J. Ourso College of Business’ Public Administration Institute.

Merget’s current salary, which was reduced to a nine-month basis after her switch, is $212,732 and is generated solely on state funds.

Merget was unavailable for comment from Sept. 28 to Nov. 30, stating only that her current status was serving the University as an “academic” and a “scholar.”

“Dr. Merget is doing research and writing this semester in prepa-ration for the classes she will teach in the spring,” College of Business Dean Eli Jones said in an e-mail. “She is also serving on the col-lege’s promotion and tenure com-mittee, which is time consuming.”

F. Neil Mathews also made

the switch from vice chancellor for Student Life and Academic Servic-es in 2009 to return to the College of Education , where he currently teaches. Mathews’ current salary is $153,040 and is also paid by state funds. He holds no outside execu-tive duties.

Other administrators to step down from their positions include

Charles “Chuck” Wilson and Stacia Haynie , who both retired their careers as vice provosts in the Offi ce of Aca-demic Affairs.

Wilson left Academic Affairs earlier this semes-ter to focus on the Louisiana Sea Grant College Pro-gram and his class-

es in the Department of Oceanogra-phy and Coastal Sciences, leaving his duties to Jane Cassidy.

Haynie announced her deci-sion to step down last week and will formally return to the Depart-ment of Political Science in Janu-ary 2011 to teach introduction to American government and judicial process courses.

“Teaching is such a privilege, and I missed it immensely,” Haynie said Tuesday. “I hope I’ll be a much better professor with the adminis-trative experience I’ve enjoyed.”

Haynie said she also hopes to complete several research projects and two book projects that have been on hold. When asked if she would be interested in continu-ing some administrative duties on a part-time basis, she said it has been “an honor and a privilege to work with Chancellor Martin ” and continuing to do so would be “la-gniappe.”

Personnel documents have not yet been fi nalized for Wilson or Haynie.

“As far as duties go, if a person resigns, they need to have breath-ing room, but not semester after se-mester,” Cope said.

Cope said the administra-tion, in most cases, keeps resigna-tions quiet, and what may be the “speediest” solution is not always the cheapest.

“This strikes us as unfair, but the entire selection process [for ad-ministrative positions] is unfair,” he said, referring to the hiring of search fi rms and outside “celebrity” candidates that may not be quali-fi ed. “This is just plain old [King’s] Court behavior.”

‘‘‘I hope I’ll be a much better professor with

the administrative experience

I’ve enjoyed.’Stacia Haynie

former vice provost of Academic Affairs

SALARIES, from page 1

for “reorganization based on qual-ity of the program, not geographic access,” which Board member Robert Bruno called a “pretty loud statement.”

Neel acknowledged those proposals could both be fairly controversial because they benefi t institutions with high graduation rates like LSU , University of Lou-isiana at Lafayette and Louisiana Tech University.

“We think that’s very im-portant, but we’re willing to fi nd some common ground,” she said.

Neel said the group would re-main committed to those propos-als even if it meant losing some support.

“If you lose people, you lose people,” she said. “It’s time for people to stop looking out for just their own political interests.”

Robertson said students suffer many burdens and are responsible for generating future revenue.

“We’ve had a great discussion with the Legislature and hope we have the same with you,” he said.

According to Rep. John Sch-roder, R-Covington, the plan is not endorsed by the House of Rep-resentatives as a whole, but rather by 25 of his colleagues.

“A plan for a revamp sys-tem needs to be laid out for the

Legislature and for the citizens of this state,” Schroder said. “We look forward to receiving infor-mation on your plan and address-ing higher education and working with you, as the students said, to do our role at the Legislature.”

Other representatives stressed action must be taken now, as the state cannot afford to wait until the legislative session in the spring.

Regents agreed to meet with the group soon for further conver-sation.

LSU SG President J Hudson said he is not a member of the group, although he has helped those involved get organized.

Hudson said he didn’t want to get involved with the presentation at the Regents meeting because of discussions he is already having with the Council of Student Body Presidents .

“We’re already working on a packet for the Regents,” Hudson said. “I didn’t want it to seem like I was going behind their backs.”

Hudson , who is also involved with the Flagship Advocates , said he thought the two groups com-plemented each other. He said the Flagship Advocates targeted the Legislature, and the Caucus is fo-cused on the Regents.

In other action, four high-er education system presidents presented the Regents with a

number of options Wednesday for the 2011-12 anticipated cuts in funding. Offi cials were asked to participate in reduction exercises for a hypothetical $437 million cut to the state post-secondary education budget. The proposed measures included tuition hikes and reducing state-funded pass-through funding budgets for edu-cation by 21 percent.

“This meeting allowed the leaders of Louisiana’s higher ed-ucation community to put some potential budget solutions on the table for consideration and dis-cussion,” Regents Chairman Artis Terrell said in a news release.

The Regents also launched the statewide Transfer Degree Guarantee campaign Thursday during a joint meeting with the Board of Elementary and Second-ary Education.

Students will now have ac-cess to more information concern-ing the seamless transfer program through public service announce-ments, brochures, six grass-roots meetings and a website.

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

to search for my brother.”Simone de Brueys said in a

text message to The Daily Rev-eille late Thursday night the Coast Guard said they found the body of a pregnant woman and a teen-age boy, but not the bodies of her brother or his host father. She said the Coast Guard said “it’s impossi-ble for them to be alive,” and they would continue to search today, but that was all they could do.

She said the Coast Guard told them Thursday morning they were calling off the search, but she said

“we were just hoping they would fi nd him today.”

The Facebook group, called “Bring James Home!” says it is a “support group of sorts” that also lets people know how they can help the de Brueys family during this time.

The group has planned an event for Dec. 10 to raise money for the family. T-shirts, manufac-tured by Storyville Tee Shirts, are also being sold in honor of James de Brueys.

Contact Sydni Dunn at [email protected]

DE BRUEYS, from page 1

Read about how students will be affected by Caucus at lsureveille.com

Contact Catherine Threlkeld at [email protected]

Page 7: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

It’s not exactly March Mad-ness, but the 2010 NCAA Women’s Volleyball Tournament is sure to stir up some December drama.

No. 15 LSU (25-4) earned the No. 13 overall seed in the tourna-ment and faces a challenging first-round bout Friday night against a No. 23-ranked Tulsa team (30-2) that boasts the nation’s longest win-ning streak of 29 matches, dating back to Sept. 3.

“Tulsa is a very good team,” said LSU coach Fran Flory. “You are certainly a great team if you haven’t lost since September and you’re in December.”

The Tigers were placed in the Norman, Okla., region, considered one of the toughest in the nation.

LSU will face a Golden Hurri-cane squad that features a whirlwind of talent with both the nation’s kills and assists leader.

Sophomore outside hitter Tyler Hender-son has reeled in 6.23 kills per set, with most passes coming from sophomore setter Jordan Clampitt, who has dished out 13.18 assists per set.

“We know [Henderson] is a great athlete, and we know their whole team is prepared,” said freshman middle blocker Desiree

Elliot. “They’re really fast and they’re really quick, and they have a great defensive team. All aspects of their game are talented.”

With a load of talent surround-ing the Golden Hurricane roster, Tulsa coach Ed Allen said his team is playing just about its best ball of the season.

“We haven’t lost in 29 match-es, so I think we’re playing pretty well,” Allen said in a news release. “I can’t imagine that we could be playing any better than what we are right now.”

Allen also said his team was looking forward to its second NCAA tournament appearance in four years.

“We’re real thrilled to be back in the tournament, and we’re ex-cited about the opportunity to play an SEC team,” Allen said. “They’ve

The 2011 LSU football team will make history next September when it plays in the world’s largest domed sta-dium — Cowboys Stadium.

But history could come early, as there is a high probability LSU will be chosen for the 75th annual AT&T Cotton Bowl in Dallas.

LSU won’t receive a bowl invita-tion until early Sunday morning after the Southeastern Conference Championship is played Saturday, but local ESPN radio host Matt Moscona said LSU going to the Cotton Bowl is nearly a done deal.

“Yesterday, I was told by someone who said it looks like it’s 99.9 percent

Cotton Bowl,” said Moscona, who noted he hasn’t had personal conversations with anyone affiliated with the Cotton Bowl.

If that statement holds, LSU would play Texas A&M on Jan. 7. Tommy Bain, AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic chair-man, announced Tuesday the Aggies had officially accepted an invitation to the bowl game, which will be nationally televised on FOX in primetime. LSU last played in the Cotton Bowl in 2002 against Texas.

LSU currently leads the all-time se-ries 26-20-3 against Texas A&M. The two old rivals last squared off in 1995, and Texas A&M won, 33-17, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas.

The only thing in the way of a

renewed rivalry is the Capital One Bowl, which has the first shot at grabbing an SEC team after the BCS selections are made.

As of Thursday afternoon, the Ath-letic Department remained mum on where the Tigers would end up.

“We’re fortunate to have two quali-ty bowls that want the LSU Tigers,” said senior associate athletic director, Verge Ausberry, who is in charge of schedul-ing for LSU. “I couldn’t give you one way or the other. We’re just waiting to see what happens after the SEC champi-onship game.”

If No. 1 Auburn (12-0) beats No. 19 South Carolina (9-3) on Saturday in

SportsFriday, Dec. 3, 2010 page 7

LSU faces Tulsa in first round of NCAA TournamentVOLLEYBALL

FOOTBALL

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

Golden Hurricane boasts major talent

GRANT GUTIERREZ / The Daily Reveille

LSU senior outside hitter Angela Bensend dives for a dig Nov. 21 against Florida in the PMAC. LSU will face Tulsa in the first round of the NCAA tournament.TOURNAMENT, see page 11

BOWLS, see page 11

Sean IsabellaSports Writer

LSU waits to hear bowl fate after this weekend’s SEC championship game

Mark ClementsSports Contributor

Staff Reports

Oh, the places you’ll goBowl game ticket deadline extended

LSU has extended its dead-line for student ticket ordering to the football team’s bowl game, the Athletic Department announced Thursday.

Students now have until mid-night Saturday to order tickets to LSU’s bowl game. The specific bowl game won’t be known until Sunday morning.

The Tigers (10-2) are project-ed to play in either the Capital One, Cotton or Outback bowls. The Cotton Bowl is played in Dallas, while the Capital One and Outback Bowls are in Orlando and Tampa, Fla., respectively.

If LSU is selected to play in the Cotton Bowl, a limited number of $50 standing-room-only tickets will be made available to students. The ticket grants access to public concourses, concession areas and decks with a view of the field but no seat.

Students can also request stan-dard Cotton Bowl tickets for $125, which guarantees a reserved seat in the stadium’s LSU seating. There is a two-ticket limit per student.

LSU students will be notified of the status of their bowl game ticket requests no later than Friday, Dec. 10.

ZACH BREAUX / The Daily Reveille

The LSU football team huddles Oct. 2 before its 16-14 win against Tennessee. The Tigers will finally learn their bowl destination Sunday morning.

‘[Tulsa has] a great

defensive team. All

aspects of their game

are talented.’Desiree Elliot

LSU freshman middle blocker

Page 8: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

The Daily Reveillepage 8 Friday, Dec. 3, 2010

The LSU football team isn’t making the 525-mile trip north-east to Atlanta this weekend for the Southeastern Conference Champi-onship Game.

But the LSU coaching staff is making up for the lack of travel, scouring the state and country for high school recruits with the hopes the prospects can make the Tigers’ trek to Atlanta an annual occur-rence in future seasons.

The biggest target for LSU this week was Haughton High School quarterback Dak Prescott.

LSU coach Les Miles pulled the trigger and offered Prescott, the Scout.com second-best Louisiana quarterback, a scholarship Tuesday during a visit to Haughton. Prescott is the only Pelican State quarter-back prospect with an LSU offer.

The dual-threat quarterback is currently committed to Mississippi State.

“They couldn’t sit around for-ever and possibly lose a good guy,” said Derek Ponamsky, Bayou Ben-gals Insider recruiting analyst. “If Prescott wasn’t committed to Mis-sissippi State, it would be a differ-ent story. If you lose a guy to Texas or another non-SEC school, you don’t have to see him every year.”

Prescott pledged to Bulldogs coach Dan Mullen in July, but

rumors have been swirling about the second-year coach’s future with Mississippi State. Mullen is a candidate for the recent head coach opening at Miami, according to the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

“A lot of Mississippi State fans feel like it’s too little too late, but with most in-state kids, it may never be too late in the game for LSU,” said Shea Dixon, managing editor for TigerSportsDigest.com.

The 6-foot-3-inch, 225-pound prospect will enroll in the spring at the college he picks.

“It has to happen very quick-ly,” Ponamsky said. “That paper-work needs to be taken care of in the next two weeks or so.”

Prescott’s stock increased af-ter a 12-1 senior season in which he led the Buccaneers with 2,860 yards and 39 touchdowns while rushing for 831 yards.

Prescott will visit Baton Rouge on Saturday for a family weekend with a few other Tiger recruits, ac-cording to Dixon.

The recruitment of Prescott flew under the radar with recent at-tention given to Butler Community College quarterback Zach Metten-berger and current Miami commit-ment Teddy Bridgewater.

“It was a surprise to some be-cause people were expecting noth-ing to happen until Mettenberger made a decision,” Ponamsky said.

But it didn’t catch the former

Georgia quarterback off guard. Mettenberger will compete for

the National Junior College Cham-pionship on Sunday at 1 p.m.

“Mettenberger knew about Dak and said it doesn’t bother him,” Dixon said. “I expect him to commit [to LSU] as soon as his game ends, probably early next week.”

LSU has also been in top pur-suit of Bridgewater, a Scout five-star recruit out of Miami North-western High School. Bridgewater is still committed to Miami, but the Tigers are in contention for the 6-foot-3-inch, 192-pound quarter-back.

The Tigers already have one quarterback locked up for the 2011 class — Scout three-star recruit Stephen Rivers, the brother of San Diego Chargers quarterback Philip Rivers.

“If I’m Teddy Bridgewater, it should be eye-opening that they are recruiting Mettenberger and Prescott to come in and they still have Rivers,” Ponamsky said.

Dixon said he predicts LSU will sign Mettenberger and Prescott while Rivers will be given a greyshirt, meaning he won’t en-roll until spring 2012.

Now that college football is about to go on hiatus for about a month (you know, outside of the lsureveille.com Bowl), you are going to have to find something to do with your time during winter break.

I’d suggest starting to pay at-tention to what is happening in the National Football League.

I’m not talking about Andre Johnson forgetting he isn’t a boxer or the whole impending possible labor pains with the collective bargaining agreement. It’s time for the playoff run down the final five weeks of the season.

This year is more interesting than the past few in that no team has already clinched a playoff berth.

Normally by now, the India-napolis Colts are resting everyone on their team. Not so much this year. They are sitting in second place in their division. In fact, they could miss out on the playoffs for the first time since James K. Polk was in of-fice.

The New York Jets and the New

England Patriots battle it out this weekend for supremacy in the AFC, while the Baltimore Ravens and the Pittsburgh Steelers will fight for the AFC North lead. Those two games may very well be the best you see all season, and that, for once, is not an exaggeration.

Then you have the somehow resurgent Kansas City Chiefs with Dwayne Bowe of LSU leading the way at wide re-ceiver.

Look for a possible Jets ver-sus Patriots rematch in the AFC Championship game with the Jets coming out on top for their Super Bowl trip.

But the more exciting races may come in the NFC.

Obviously, you have the “over-achieving” NFC West. St. Louis and Seattle are tied at the top with an outstanding 5-6 record with San

Francisco closing in at 4-7 on a one-game winning streak.

How is it that the west divisions in baseball and football are typically so “turrible” (as Charles Barkley would say)? There has to be some theory out there about that.

Anyway, the NFC North is a little more exciting. The Chicago Bears (8-3) are just a game ahead of the Green Bay Packers (7-4). Out of nowhere, the Bears are back to the team that defeated the New Orleans Saints back in the 2006 season. I see them back in the Super Bowl as the dark horse to win it all.

The NFC East will come down to the last game with the Philadel-phia Eagles and New York Giants tied atop the division. I don’t really think either of those teams will make it out of the first round with their in-consistency.

And finally, there is the NFC South with the ever-changing divi-sion winners.

Earlier this year, I said the Saints would have a tough time winning the

division. I’m prophetic sometimes. I think the Atlanta Falcons will win the division by a game over the Saints, but the Saints will make it to the NFC Championship game.

Needless to say, I’m overly ex-cited about meaningful football in the next few weeks. Plus, my fan-tasy teams are all in the playoffs, so I have them to take care of.

It’s going to be a fun month in the professional leagues. So while you are waiting around for LSU to

play, take a look at the NFL.Hell, it may be the last time you

get to see them for a few years (work it out, guys).

Andy Schwehm is a 21-year-old English and psychology senior from New Orleans. Follow him on Twitter @TDR_ASchwehm.

SCHWEHMMING AROUND

NFL stretch run should be entertaining while LSU is off

Contact Andy Schwehm at [email protected]

RECRUITING

LSU offers in-state QB Dak PrescottMichael LambertSports Contributor

Andy SchwehmSports Columnist

Contact Michael Lambert at [email protected]

Page 9: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

The Daily Reveille page 9Friday, Dec. 3, 2010

Stellar male basketball players are often referred to as men among boys.

Krystal Forthan epitomizes the female equivalent of that axiom.

Forthan is one of the newest signees on the LSU women’s bas-ketball team for the class of 2011. The 6-foot-4 forward has committed to the school with the right fit for her basketball style, according to Mark Lewis, ESPN HoopGurlz national recruiting coordinator.

“Krystal is a woman among girls,” Lewis said. “She’s physically strong and explosive athletically, and she’s not hesitant to use it. The tough thing to find in recruiting on the women’s side is an aggressive, physical, explosive player. She’s always played that way, even back to high school in the ninth and 10th grade.”

Forthan, ranked No. 5 in the na-tion by HoopGurlz, had narrowed her choice down to LSU and six oth-er schools – North Carolina, UCLA, Southern California, Texas A&M, Kansas and Utah – before signing her National Letter of Intent to play for the Lady Tigers on Nov. 10.

Clarissa Davis-Wrightsil, For-than’s coach on the TeamXpress Na-tional Travel Team, said Forthan has a bright future because of her length, athleticism on the court and motiva-tion off the court.

“I pushed her extremely hard to be better in every area of her life, and it has all come together,” Davis-Wrightsil said. “Her focus, work and discipline in the classroom and on the court over the past two years will be the foundation that she will build on for years to come.”

Forthan played her freshman season at Grant High School in her native Portland, Ore., where she av-eraged 15.1 points per game, and her

sophomore season at nearby Jeffer-son High School before moving to Texas.

She enrolled at Georgetown High School in Georgetown, Texas, as a junior and had to sit out the basketball season because of high school transfer rules.

Forthan and the Lady Eagles are 7-1 so far in her senior season.

Lewis said the physical nature of the LSU women’s basketball team in the Southeastern Confer-ence matches Forthan’s assets.

“You want to go somewhere with a tradition of winning, and you’ve got a coach like Van Chan-cellor who can train her profes-sionally, as well,” Lewis said. “Her choice in so many ways was terrific. It’s a perfect fit for both LSU and the SEC.”

Before the season began, LSU men’s basketball coach Trent John-son said the one player he was com-fortable putting on the court was ju-nior forward Malcolm White.

The expectations skyrocketed for the Ole Miss transfer, who sat out last season because of NCAA rules for transfers. Many people expected White and junior forward Storm Warren, the team’s top returning scorer, to lead LSU in most catego-ries.

That hasn’t been the case so far this season.

White is LSU’s fourth-leading scorer, averaging 8.3 points and 5.4 rebounds per game. Warren is aver-aging 6.9 points and 7.4 rebounds per game.

White said the size difference in non-conference games has given the big men trouble. Nicholls State, which handed LSU its first loss of the season on Nov. 16, didn’t have a player over 6-foot-6.

While many assume the 6-foot-9 White would dominate smaller competition, he said he can’t assert himself offensively the way he can against a big team. White played only 10 minutes against the Colonels after foul trouble.

“Most of the non-conference games, you’re not going to find too many guys [6-foot-9-inches] or [6-foot-10-inches] or big guys,” White said. “It makes it difficult to be as physical as you want to be.”

Many times White has to chase around a smaller, quicker player,

which can be exhausting through the course of a game.

“Some of these guys we’ve played have been undersized wing players,” Johnson said. “That takes away from his ability to be physical and bang when you start looking at how the game’s called.”

When White gets early fouls, Johnson hasn’t been hesitant to put in sophomore forward Eddie Lud-wig or junior forward Garrett Green. Ludwig and Green have combined for 8.7 points and 8.8 rebounds per game.

“A power game’s only going to work against so many people,” John-son said. “Eddie enables you to play one low-post guy and the other four to play the perimeter.”

Despite the big men’s lack of scoring, LSU is still 5-2 and on a three-game winning streak heading into its 11-day layoff for finals week.

A big reason for the streak is LSU’s young talent. Freshman guards Andre Stringer and Ralston Turner are the Tigers’ leading scor-ers, averaging 16.1 and 12.6 points per game, respectively. When they’re shooting and scoring, the big men consequently get fewer shots.

“I try not to worry about how many points I’m scoring,” White said. “Even if it’s just boxing a guy out and letting Storm get the

rebound, it really doesn’t matter as long as you get the win.”

Though White’s numbers may not be stellar, he has been relatively efficient. He is shooting 50 percent from the field, the same number he shot during his sophomore season at Ole Miss where he averaged 7.2 points and 5.7 rebounds per game.

White has shown promise when he stays out of foul trouble. He re-corded his first career double-double against Tennessee-Martin, scoring 12 points and adding 15 rebounds. The Skyhawks’ tallest player was 6-foot-9, the same height as White.

When White struggles, so do the Tigers. In LSU’s losses to Nich-olls State and Memphis, White had a combined seven points and six re-bounds after getting in foul trouble.

He said he thinks once the Southeastern Conference season be-gins and he sees more men his size, he will have the opportunity to be the player he wants to be.

“Once SEC play starts I’ll have to step up a little more inside,” White said. “But right now the perimeters are doing a great job scoring the ball. I think that’s great.”

SHAINA HUNTSBERRY / The Daily Reveille

LSU junior forward Malcolm White goes for a rebound Tuesday during the Tigers’ 73-57 win against Houston. White has foul trouble against teams with smaller players.

Smaller opponents trouble for WhiteRowan KavnerSports Writer

MEN’S BASKETBALL

Contact Rowan Kavner at [email protected]

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

Forthan brings versatility to LSURachel WhittakerChief Sports Writer

Contact Rachel Whittaker at [email protected]

Page 10: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

The Daily Reveillepage 10 Friday, Dec. 3, 2010

Page 11: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

The Daily Reveille page 11Friday, Dec. 3, 2010

had an outstanding year, and we ex-pect it to be a good match.”

All eyes will most likely be on the 2009 All-American Honorable Mention in Henderson, but Flory warned her team not to overlook the rest of the talented Tulsa team.

“They’re not just one-dimen-sional,” Flory said. “They have some other kids on the court and really just come after you and play hard. They’re feisty, they have nice ball control skills and they’re very well-coached, and very disciplined in their system.”

But Flory said the team’s focus is not on the competition, but rather on themselves.

“We’ve been really focused. I’m really happy with our week. I’m happy with our mental approach,” Flory said. “We have to be a team that’s on a mission and decide that we truly belong and we deserve to be here. I think attitude-wise this group has been really focused.”

The Tigers have not advanced past the second round of the tour-nament since their 1991 Final Four run, including a tough early exit last

season in a five-set clash with Texas A&M.

Senior outside hitter Angela Bensend, who has been a part of LSU’s NCAA tournament appear-ances the past four years, said this year’s team may have what it takes to get over that second-round hump.

“We all believe more in our-selves and each other this year than in the past,” Bensend said. “Instead of us trying to play the best game of our lives each and every game, we’re just going to play like we normally do because we know that wins. As long as we keep our pace and our play, I have full confidence that we’ll go farther this year.”

First serve is slated for 6 p.m. If the Tigers win their first round match, they will face either host Oklahoma (21-10) or Wichita State (21-7) on Saturday.

The winner of that match will advance to the Sweet 16, held in University Park, Pa., and likely face No. 4 Penn State.

TOURNAMENT, from page 7

Contact Mark Clements at [email protected]

BOWLS, from page 7

Atlanta, it would clinch a spot in the Tostitos BCS National Cham-pionship game. No. 7 Arkansas (10-2) would likely head to the Sugar Bowl, leaving the Capital One Bowl to choose from No. 10 LSU (10-2) or No. 16 Alabama (9-3).

If South Carolina upsets Au-burn, it would go to the Sugar Bowl, Auburn would likely land in the Orange Bowl and Arkansas most likely in the Capital One Bowl. That scenario would al-most make the possibility of LSU going to the Cotton Bowl a lock.

“Capital One typically plays the company line, and they’ll take the highest-ranked team,” Moscona said. “That would be LSU, but it wouldn’t shock me if they passed and took Alabama.”

Alabama hasn’t been to the Capital One Bowl, formerly known as the Citrus Bowl, in 16 years. It would be LSU’s second- straight trip to Orlando after a 19-17 loss to Penn State last season. Whether it be Arkansas, LSU or Alabama, the opponent is almost certain to be No. 8 Michigan State (11-1), who clinched a share of the Big Ten title last weekend with No. 5 Wisconsin (11-1) and No. 6 Ohio State (11-1).

The clear financial favor-ite seems to be the Capital One Bowl, with a sleek payout of $4.3 million, slightly ahead of the $3.6 million from the Cotton Bowl. But payouts are often mis-construed, as total revenue from all the SEC bowl games is totaled and then redistributed.

“All the money goes to the conference,” Ausberry said. “There is no difference in mon-ey. People get caught up in that too much. Most people think it’s more money.”

Another player in the SEC bowl scenario is the Outback Bowl, which picks after the Cot-ton Bowl but has first preference for SEC East teams. But Aus-berry said the Outback, played in Tampa, Fla., will not play much of a factor in LSU’s postseason.

“The Capital One and the Cotton Bowl, I think those are the only two bowls you’d look at,” he said. “I don’t think we’d fall that far.”

A berth in the Cotton Bowl would help LSU get acclimated to Jerry’s World or Six Flags over Jerry, as the $1.5 billion stadium is regularly referred to, before the team travels back to Dallas for the 2011 season opener against Oregon.

The Cotton Bowl is also a sure-fire winner from a recruiting aspect. LSU traditionally battles schools like Texas, Texas Tech, Texas A&M and Oklahoma for Texas’ plentiful recruiting crop. Shea Dixon, managing editor of TigerSportsDigest.com, said a win against Texas A&M would do wonders.

“Playing in front of a kind of east Texas crowd, especially high school kids, would be big, espe-cially because they are playing A&M,” Dixon said.

Contact Sean Isabella at [email protected]

Page 12: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

To all students of the Univer-sity, the time has come to expose the truth.

And no, this has nothing to do with budget cuts — for once.

The truth: We pay tuition fees each semester to-ward mass public transportation.

Don’t under-stand what I’m saying?

Ever notice the mother and three children get-ting on the Tiger-land bus at Alvin Dark Avenue only to get off at cam-pus to wait for another bus conve-niently driving up Highland Road?

Ever notice a person carrying numerous grocery bags walk onto the bus only to get off a few streets later?

Whether you have seen them or not, these are the people who are taking advantage of the convenience you pay for each semester: Tiger Trails.

The problem seems to be wide-spread across many of the Tiger Trails routes.

Michael Langteau, petroleum engineering sophomore, said he has seen many non-students frequent the Highland-Burbank buses. He commented on one particular ride-moocher.

“About every day there’s this same lady with groceries who gets on at Walmart and gets dropped off by some apartments on Highland [Road],” Langteau said.

Other students also claimed to see obvious non-students taking ad-vantage of student-funded transpor-tation.

“One time some woman got on with three kids,” said Rachel Zavecz, English and psychology junior and Tigerland route rider.

Whitney Gomez, dental hygiene sophomore, also claimed to have similar problems when riding Tiger-land buses.

“There’s at least three or four people [who don’t attend LSU] ev-ery time I ride the bus,” Gomez said. “Sometimes there are people who bring little kids.”

While these examples may seem nothing more than a mere an-noyance, they can pose problems.

One problem is time. It takes time for the bus to stop and pick up people and time to drop them off. People bumming rides can only ex-acerbate the tedious process of the buses constantly stopping and going. When these people bum rides during school hours, they could make stu-dents late for class.

Another problem is space. A woman with multiple children or a man with groceries takes up enough space for a few students. If you’ve ever taken the bus around 10:30 a.m. or 4:30 p.m., you know how crowd-ed the bus can get. There’s no room for people who have no business be-ing there.

Technically, the people who take advantage of Tiger Trails are not doing anything wrong.

According to an e-mail from the Office of Parking, Traffic and

Transportation, the University must allow public access to Tiger Trails in accordance with an agreement with Capital Area Transit System to allow University students to continue rid-ing CATS buses for free.

But the fact of the matter is we shouldn’t have to pay for people to get around the city.

We pay tuition to get educated and the extra fees to get the extra stuff that comes along with the Uni-versity, like Tiger Trails. We don’t pay them so the guy without a car can get around.

The Office of Parking, Traffic

and Transportation needs to figure out some sort of way to fix this prob-lem.

My solution? They could ask for IDs from people who clearly don’t look like students. That would keep paying students on the bus.

Or maybe just make people who can’t produce an ID pay for the ride.

When did the students become responsible for providing transporta-tion to people they aren’t affiliated with in any way?

The answer: We aren’t respon-sible and never should be.

We’re only responsible for

ourselves — not for the people who can’t get around Baton Rouge.

’Tis the season to give — not the season to fund a social welfare program with money for education.

Have a merry Christmas.

Chris Grillot is a 19-year-old mass communication and English sophomore from New Orleans. Follow him on Twitter @TDR_Cgrillot.

Today is the last day of classes, which means we can now look back on the semester and evaluate it.

In short: Budget cuts, and stu-dents’ reactions to their effects, have defined the University this fall.

It’s been fiscal madness from day one, with each week bringing newer and greater figures from Gov. Bobby Jindal’s office to cripple our campus.

And aside from a handful of student protests, University adminis-tration has faced little resistance as it carried out the will of its benefactor — the state government.

In a nutshell, that is the cause of budget cuts.

The University relies on a little less than 50 percent of its operating expenses to come from the state. As state finances dwindle, so too will

the operating budget of LSU.It would be far too easy and un-

productive to con-tinue to lambast state government officials, so I have decided to answer a question posed by Chancellor Michael Martin to me in a Sept. 23 meeting.

The ques-tion from Martin:

“What would you do [about budget cuts]? Where would you cut from?”

At the time, I retorted with a bashful, “I don’t know, but there’s got to be a better solution than slash-ing language programs.”

But now, as the semester comes to a close, I have something to add to

my response.Walking around campus, it

seems all is well and prosperous. We have a brand new Business College Complex under construction, the 150-year anniversary of LSU was a success, and classroom doors will open back up for the wintersession term and spring semester.

What has been forgotten, as these signs of prosperity cloud our judgment, is that we are still facing financial ruin.

And while we’ve lost 14 foreign language instructors as well as four language programs, University ad-ministration isn’t hurting — at least not financially.

Administration is responsible for the managerial oversight of this institution. And while the short-fall of state funding may have been

unpredictable, the blame for this cri-sis falls on their heads.

So, to Martin, who is paid $400,000; Executive Vice Chancel-lor and Provost Jack Hamilton, who is paid $280,000; University CFO Eric Monday, who is paid $150,487 and LSU System President John Lombardi, who is paid $601,000 an-nually: Have you successfully done your jobs — or do your king-sized salaries further the illusion that all is well?

Andrew Robertson is a 23-year-old English writing and culture senior from Baton Rouge. Follow him on Twitter @TDR_Arobertson.

The Daily Reveille

Opinionpage 12 Friday, Dec. 3, 2010

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 Communi-cation. 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 Reveil-le reserves the right to edit letters and guest columns for space consideration without changing the origi-nal 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 ev-ery semester by the Louisiana State University Media Board, has final authority on all editorial decisions.

Editorial Policies & Procedures Quote of the Day

“Never spend your money before you have earned it.”

Thomas Jeffersonthird U.S. president

April 13, 1743 — July 4, 1826

Editorial BoardSarah Lawson

Robert Stewart

Stephanie Giglio

Steven Powell

Andrew Robertson

Editor-in-Chief

Managing Editor, Content

Managing Editor, Production

Managing Editor, External Media

Opinion Editor

CANCEL THE APOCALYPSE

The Jindal Count

Days Bobby Jindal has ignored our concerns:

49Would the governor put pressure

on the Legislature for constitutionalamendments to protect highereducation and allow for more

“across the board” cuts?

How does the governor propose to protect higher education

during budget cuts?

THE C-SECTION

Andrewrobertson

Opinion Editor

Chris GrillotColumnist

Contact Andrew Robertson at [email protected]

Contact Chris Grillot at [email protected]

THE PEN IS MIGHTIER

ZACH CHATELAIN / The Daily Reveille

Illusion of wealth blinds us from budget cuts

Tuition fees fund social welfare program — Tiger Trails

Page 13: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UWIRE) — In what might be the overstate-ment of the year, responding to this weekend’s release of more than 250,000 U.S. diplomatic ca-bles by WikiLeaks, Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini called the leak the “Sept. 11 of world diplo-macy.” He meant it in a way that the ground rules of diplomacy had been fundamentally changed. However, even in that context his statement seems more like postur-ing than actual sentiment.

If anything, WikiLeaks’ lat-est release is a departure from such posturing. It’s torn back the curtain on usually secret com-munications and shown the real sentiments of the U.S. diplomatic corps. Whether one agrees with the means of such a disclosure — and it is not difficult to have prob-lems with WikiLeaks’ tactics — the document dump is comforting because it reveals the frank, sane and reality-based thinking that goes on behind-the-scenes diplo-matically.

For those disconnected from the news over the holiday week-end, the WikiLeaks story is quite similar to those of the past. Giving warning to the U.S. government of the imminent release of secret documents, WikiLeaks contacted newspapers internationally for advanced disclosure of the cables. Stateside, The New York Times broke the story. The diplomatic cables released represent the day-to-day communications from more than 270 embassies and

consulates from around the world back to Washington D.C.

As alluded to, and expected, the diplomatic establishment is not taking kindly to the leak. Speaking for the U.S. govern-ment, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton gave the statement, “We condemn in the strongest terms the unauthorized disclosure of classified documents and sensitive national security information.”

The reporting of the leaks is ongoing, as information is be-ing made public incrementally. What’s been revealed thus far, though classified, is strikingly nu-anced and sane and can be com-forting in an otherwise black and white world.

For instance, the cables re-vealed that the U.S. and South Korea have had talks regarding the reunification of the Korean Peninsula if and when the econ-omy of North Korea collapses. It’s difficult to believe that such a prospect would be a surprise to many, and it’s pleasing to learn that such treatment of a former member of the “Axis of Evil” is on the table.

Not all the information re-vealed by the cables represents our diplomacy as benign and logical as above. In our attempts to close the prison at Guanta-namo Bay, the U.S. has dangled meetings with President Barack Obama to Slovenia in return for accepting prisoners. We’ve also enlisted the President of Yemen to lie about continued U.S. bombing in his country. He’s quoted in a ca-ble saying, “We’ll continue saying the bombs are ours, not yours.”

Indeed, even some not so nice things were said about world leaders in the cables. Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was described as a “mouthpiece” of Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. German Chancellor An-gela Merkel was noted as “risk averse.”

Throughout, the cables

describe what we really know and what we really think. There are some inconvenient truths and statements made that would be considered gaffs if said in pub-lic. And there are probably better ways to make this information public.

However, at the heart of the disclosure comes a sense that the

U.S. has smart, capable, realistic people working on the ground for us around the world. They shine an ordinary light on the extraordi-nary, and it’s difficult not to take comfort in that.

Throughout this semester, my nationality has come into question several times. While it has been entertaining to see it debated, it has often lead to me wonder what really makes some-one an Ameri-can.

Let’s get this out of the way first: I’m American.

Although I may have lived overseas most of my life and plan to do so for my career, it does not change this basic fact.

I may joke about being a “Global Citizen,” but in the end I can’t give any other answer but American. While I might be a quarter Vietnamese, the rest of me is the same conglomeration of nationalities that most Americans share.

Granted, my Twitter tease at the end of my columns — the one that says I’m from Poland —

probably hasn’t helped.Yet having lived as a “third-

culture kid” for the majority of my life, I probably couldn’t have put anything down that wouldn’t have been confusing. Try ask-ing almost any third-culture kid where they’re from, and you will most likely get an interesting, but not straightforward, answer.

Should I have made it Bruns-wick, Ga., where I was born?

Should I change it to Coving-ton, where I lived the longest in Louisiana?

Should it be where I first be-came politically aware: Phnom Penh, Cambodia?

To quote LeBron James, “What should I do?”

In the end, I decided to go with Warsaw, the place where I graduated from high school and still sometimes consider home.

While I thought I made my nationality pretty obvious throughout my articles, appar-ently the line at the end is what really counts.

Again, though, I still wonder

what it takes for most people to consider someone an American. In a time where illegal immigra-tion is a hot issue and where some insane people have questioned whether the president is Ameri-can, this could be a pretty impor-tant question.

For example, the 14th Amendment has recently come into question by many politicians.

A child born in America is automatically a citizen of the United States, regardless of whether or not the parents are, or even if they’re in the country legally.

This has led to what people have called “Anchor Babies,” which some people falsely be-lieve allows illegal families to make it into the U.S. easily. How-ever, despite the child’s status as an American citizen, they would not be able to file a visa for their parents until they turn 21.

So, if some people be-lieve being born in the states doesn’t make you an American citizen, there must be other ways

to qualify.A constantly recurring issue

is the assertion that illegal aliens “freeload” off those who do actu-ally pay taxes.

Taxpayers actively contrib-ute to the nation, so I can see the merits of this argument.

While paying taxes may seem like a reasonable way to consider someone a citizen of the country, this causes a problem when one takes into account those without the means to pay taxes.

Of course the citizenship test can’t be forgotten. I know people who have tried it and it’s not a walk in the park. And I would be amazed if most people in the country could pass the test right now.

To call someone an Ameri-can based on this seems flimsy at best.

On the other hand, maybe there are some who shouldn’t be considered Americans. Through-out our country’s history we have witnessed those who have taken it on themselves to do harm

to the country.These people include do-

mestic terrorists like Timothy McVeigh, the Unabomber and those who actively fight against our forces, like John Walker Lindh. Can we really consider these people Americans?

In the end, the question of nationality is hard to answer and will only get harder as globaliza-tion continues. As a nation known for being a melting pot of ethnici-ties and peoples, this really can’t be all too surprising.

Personally, all I think should matter in making someone an American is their allegiance to the country and their desire to help it. This, above everything else, is what’s truly important.

Zachary Davis is a 20-year-old history sophomore from Warsaw, Poland. Follow him on Twitter @TDR_zdavis.

The Daily Reveille

OpinionFriday, Dec. 3, 2010 page 13

VIEW FROM ANOTHER SCHOOL

FAILURE OF DIPLOMACY

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

Contact Zachary Davis at [email protected]

WikiLeaks comforting, expose US military strengths

Questions about nationality complicated by globalization

Zachary DavisColumnist

BEST AND WITTIEST

cartoon courtesy of KING FEATURES SYNDICATE

Mike MunzenriderMinnesota Daily

Page 14: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

Classifi edspage 14 Friday, Dec. 3, 2010

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Page 15: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

The Daily Reveille page 15Friday, Dec. 3, 2010

Page 16: Today in Print - December 3, 2010

The Daily Reveillepage 16 Friday, Dec. 3, 2010