NFL: A columnist breaks down the best and worst surprises of the season, p. 5
MUSIC: Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros is headed to N.O., p. 9
Reveille The Daily
www.lsureveille.com
On-campus crime statistics released
Tuesday, October 2, 2012 • Volume 117, Issue 27
On Campus Criminal Offenses 2009-2011
2011
Burglary
Aggravated Assault Sex OffensesForcible
2011
Moodle ticket sale ban not enforced Chet Hebert
2011
Contributing Writer
As football season gears into full swing, football is materializing not only on the field but also in the inboxes of students at the University. Students frequently use the Quickmail function on Moodle to send mass emails to classmates regarding the resale of football tickets. However, the University prohibits this, and if reported, students misusing Moodle could face consequences, said Assistant Dean of Students Katie Barras. “It’s important for students to remember that Moodle is a resource provided to students by the University for academic use only,” Barras said. “It’s problematic when you’re given a resource and use it in a way it wasn’t intended to be used.” Rosanne Scholl, mass communication assistant professor, said she took matters into her own hands when the number of ticket sale emails through Moodle began
2010
2010 2009
2010
FOOTBALL
2009 2009
source: Reported crimes from the LSU 2012 Annual Security and Fire Report
LSUPD handled 80 reports of criminal offenses in 2011, up from 49 in 2010
Burglaries almost quadrupled, Of those 80 reports in 2011, 47 and drug and alcohol offenses were burglaries, nearly four times nearly doubled on the 13 reports seen campus from 2010 in 2010. Out of 47, Chris Grillot to 2011, according 31 were from UniStaff Writer to the University’s versity residential 2012 Annual Security and Fire Re- facilities, compared to two in 2010. port released Friday. LSUPD also made 308 drug The LSU Police Department and alcohol arrests last year comsaw 80 reports of criminal offenses pared to 155 in 2010, a 98.7 last year and had 49 in 2010, an increase of 63 percent. CRIME, see page 3
infographic by BRITTANY GAY / The Daily Reveille; photos from THE DAILY REVEILLE ARCHIVES
TICKETS, see page 4
MANSHIP SCHOOL
Political advertisers shed light on world of campaigning Megan Dunbar Staff Writer
ALYSSA SIRISOPHON / The Daily Reveille
Gerald Rafshoon of former president Jimmy Carter’s campaigns and Ray Strother of former Democratic presidential candidate Gary Hart’s campaign conversed Monday at the presidential campaign analysis held in the Holliday Forum.
Former political consultant for presidential nominee Gary Hart’s campaign Ray Strother told students that advertising experts are guided by their own personal ethics at the Political Madmen forum in the Holliday Forum on Monday evening. “We all have lines we should draw,” Strother said. All panelists agreed that the most important facet of a campaign is a solid candidate. Doug Bailey, who worked on former president Gerald Ford’s 1976 campaign, agreed and said he thinks it’s the candidate’s sense of integrity that matters when deciding which political campaign to
work for. “I worked with people who, on a variety of subjects, I didn’t agree with, but I respected,” Bailey said. Gerald Rafshoon, White House communications director during President Jimmy Carter’s one term, said to “find somebody you can believe in.” Mark McKinnon, a consultant for George W. Bush’s 2000 and 2004 campaigns, said voters can perceive genuine moments, so most of the time, he wouldn’t script his candidates. McKinnon said one of his concerns with the current race is factchecking. The problem, he said, is not with effective fact-checking, but with the fact that campaigns can say they won’t be held hostage by fact-checking.
“We’ve reached a very dangerous point. Campaigns are just thumbing their nose at fact-checkers,” McKinnon said. Rafshoon agreed that the game has changed. “There is more money, so much more money,” he said. Strother said to oversimplify it, the pollster is hired first, then the media consultant. “The creativity is being sucked out,” he explained. McKinnon said the money has increased, but the people working are still “all of the old guys who have been around a while,” though he added that “young guns” are making a splash. “As creative guys, we often PANEL, see page 4