CRIME BRIEFS: Student arrested for removing fire alarm from ECA, p. 4
FOOTBALL: Young kickers compete to fill void left by Alleman, p. 10
Reveille The Daily
www.lsureveille.com
Wednesday, April 24, 2013 • Volume 117, Issue 128
LSU’s pitching staff ranks 8th nationally, with a 2.44 ERA. Turn to p. 8-9 for a breakdown of the 17-man pitching corps. THE DAILY REVEILLE ARCHIVES
HEALTH
All eyes on eye care, Bill 257
Controversial bill to be debated today
Gabrielle Braud Contributing Writer
Some University students will have their eyes on the prize today as a bill goes to the House floor for debate regarding whether optometrists will be allowed to perform certain surgeries without going to medical school. If passed, the bill known as House Bill 527 would allow optometrists to perform certain surgical eye procedures on patients that currently only ophthalmologists are allowed to do. The bill would allow optometrists to bypass years of extra schooling. “There is a great deal of medical background that optometrists are never exposed to,” said Brad Black, a Baton Rouge pediatric ophthalmologist who has been practicing for 31 years. EYES, see page 6
REMEMBRANCE
Students to run Kentucky marathon to support Boston Class has trained for 15 weeks Jonathan Olivier Staff Writer
MARY LEAVINES / The Daily Reveille
Assistant professor Laura Stewart’s kinesiology class jogs Tuesday in front of the Huey P. Long Fieldhouse. They are running the Kentucky Derby Marathon in support of Boston.
As the terrorist attack at the Boston Marathon played before the nation’s eyes April 15, people from across the nation sought to support those who were affected. University students are continuing that movement by participating in the Kentucky Derby Festival Marathon in Louisville, Ky., on Saturday in honor of everyone involved in the tragedy. Students in the University’s physiology of endurance training
class are participating in the Kentucky marathon with Boston as a driving force to commemorate those who lost lives or were in some way affected by the terrorist attack, said kinesiology senior Avery Barrilleaux Beal. The class will don race-day shirts with the saying “Keep Calm and Marathon On,” and Beal said the motto is fitting not only for the class’s goal to run for Boston but to also prove that the running community is a resilient one. “This could have happened at any event,” Beal said. “It just so happened that the Boston Marathon of all things was targeted. These people wanted us to be terrorized — if we don’t just keep calm and continue running these
races and everything, then they’re going to win.” Kinesiology senior Jonathan Grace has been running since middle school and will participate in the marathon for those close to him, but for a larger reason as well, he said. “It’s kind of running in honor of [and] celebrating life and just the ability to go run, to go run a race,” he said. “Although those will be the people that will be on my mind … it’s so much more personal because it was a marathon — we knew people that were there.” Athletic training junior Brendan Jacob was volunteering for MARATHON, see page 6