The Daily Reveille - January 26, 2012

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Nutrition: Diet as important as exercise for LSU athletes, p. 8

Academy Awards: Is ‘The Artist’ the film to beat this year? p. 13

Reveille The Daily

www.lsureveille.com

Food: MSN’s Andrew Zimmern judges jambalaya cook-off in Baton Rouge, p. 11 Thursday, January 26, 2012 • Volume 116, Issue 78

photo illustration by CATHERINE THRELKELD / The Daily Reveille

Brian Sibille Staff Writer

LSU cheerleader gains notoriety through acrobatics

Sports Writer

Asante “Tiger” Hooker didn’t tell anybody he was going to do it. He just went for it. After all, he is a self-proclaimed exhibitionist, and he wanted to give the 93,000 LSU faithful a show they would remember. Starting at the end zone in Tiger Stadium, Hooker sprinted toward the opposite end zone, planted his feet and flipped. Then he flipped again. And again. And again. Hooker’s dizzying acrobatics lasted all the way until his feet were planted on the Eye of the Tiger at midfield. “I was very alarmed because there’s all

types of presentations and things that go on the field,” said LSU spirit coordinator and cheerleading coach Pauline Zernott. “When he did it, I thought, ‘Oh my goodness, I hope he doesn’t tumble into anybody.’” But Hooker wouldn’t have noticed the impediments to his march down the field. He was focused. In his ears, Tiger Stadium fell deathly silent until his HOOKER feet connected to the turf and stayed there. “In the stadium, it’s a feeling like no other,” Hooker said. “Once I stop and land, everybody

BR Tea Party leaders resign

E-mails suggest internal conflict

Flipping Out

Luke Johnson

POLITICS

yells. It’s exciting.” After he finished, Zernott gave a nervous look to Associate Athletics Director Eddie Nunez, who oversees things on the field. But Nunez looked like he was enjoying himself. So goes the true effect Hooker has on people who see his dazzling aerial displays. With the 2011 football season in the books, Hooker has taken his airshow to the PMAC, where he somersaults down the floor during FLIP, see page 6

Watch a video of Hooker’s acrobatics at lsureveille.com/multimedia.

The Baton Rouge Tea Party lost its president, vice president and secretary Wednesday after word spread of internal conflict. A resignation letter was released Wednesday by then-President Mike Thibodeaux, Vice President Rebecca Favre Lipe and Secretary Karen Daniel. “After much deliberation, the President, Vice President, and Secretary have concluded we are extremely uncomfortable working with Mark Holmes, Treasurer, and submit our resignations,” the letter stated. Only a day earlier, Holmes shared an e-mail he sent to Lipe with BRTP members and the press. The e-mail addressed Holmes’ discovery of an alleged request Lipe made to restrict his access to TEA PARTY, see page 6

CULTURE

Hill Memorial Library hosting Charles Dickens exhibit

Rachel Warren Staff Writer

From now until April 28, students will be able to take a step back in history just by walking through the doors of Hill Memorial Library. The library has compiled an exhibit to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens’ birthday. Michael Taylor, assistant curator of books, said the library wanted to commemorate Dickens’ work and took the opportunity to highlight the University’s collection. “We don’t have a huge collection, but we’ve displayed all different kinds of his work here,”

he said. The exhibit includes first editions of novels like “Oliver Twist” and “A Tale of Two Cities,” along with an engraved plate originally used to illustrate the author’s books and several magazines containing short stories. Taylor said many of Dickens’ readers were poor, and he published some of his stories in magazines or in parts so they could afford to read them. “When you see that first edition, it tells you about how it was to be a reader in that time,” he said. The exhibit also boasts several fliers for performances of Dickens’ work. “He’s had a really long

afterlife,” Taylor said. “He died in 1870, and by 1880, people were adapting his stories for theater productions.” Taylor said people also used to host bazaars where they would dress up as Dickens characters and converse with each other as if they lived in the stories. He said several of the books and pieces of work were already in the University’s library and were moved to a special collection as they became rarer. The library purchased others, including a first edition of “Oliver Twist” for $2,000. Contact Rachel Warren at rwarren@lsureveille.com

BENJAMIN OLIVER HICKS / The Daily Reveille

Hill Memorial Library is hosting a Charles Dickens exhibit to celebrate his birth. The exhibit, open until April 28, includes one of Dickens’ illustrators’ original engraved plates.


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