The Daily Reveille - April 30, 2013

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LAWSUIT

Tuesday, April 30, 2013 • Volume 117, Issue 132

Gallo’s lawsuit against University to be heard today Staff Reports The Daily Reveille’s Editor in Chief Andrea Gallo will go to court at 9:30 a.m. today for her lawsuit regarding the secrecy of the search for newly appointed LSU president F. King Alexander. Gallo’s suit, which charges

that the applicants of the search for someone to fill the newly created LSU president position should be made public, follows a similar hearing held Thursday for the joint lawsuits of NOLA. com | The Times-Picayune and The Advocate, in which Judge Janice Clark ordered the Board of Supervisors release the names

of the candidates. “I’m excited to go to court today and stand up for transparency and the public’s right to know information about their elected officials,” Gallo said. “We look forward to the outcome.” Board Chairman Hank Danos released a statement

Friday saying the University was disappointed in the ruling and planned to appeal Clark’s decision. “In addition, some press reports that the judge ruled the search was conducted illegally are flatly wrong,” Danos said in the statement. “The judge ruled that certain

P ng Pr blems

information must be disclosed, not that the search was conducted illegally.”

Contact The Daily Reveille’s news staff at news@lsureveille.com; Twitter: @TDR_news

FOOTBALL

Miles suspends Hill, return indefinite RB charged with simple battery Tyler Nunez Sports Writer

photo illustration by TAYLOR BALKOM / The Daily Reveille

Beer pong balls may not be as dirty as they appear, according to recent findings.

Study shows beer pong balls may not contain many pathogens

Zach Carline

Contributing Writer

Three red cups with a few ounces of fermented goodness stand in the way of victory. The shot is all in the elbow; line it up and launch. The ping pong ball taps the rim of one cup, rolls across the table and onto the floor where it finds a home under the

couch. After a quick blow to remove dust and a dip in water, the game is back on. Beer pong is one of many classic college games, and The Daily Reveille partnered with the University’s Food Science Department to discover just how dirty those little white balls can become and if their lack of cleanliness can be a hazard to students’ health. The results of the test show that although beer pong balls may be riddled with bacteria, there are usually not many pathogens on the balls’ surfaces, and a healthy college-aged person should not be concerned with contracting an illness after a night of beer

pong fun. Prior to the test, food science professor Marlene Janes said she believed there would only be a slim chance of a college student becoming sick from playing. “You’d have to have a highenough number of bacteria,” she said. “Most young kids who are healthy wouldn’t be severely sick because of this.” Janes also said if someone were to become sick from playing, the symptoms may be similar to those of a hangover, and the person may not be able to discern a difference. For the test, a total of four BEER PONG, see page 15

HOW THE EXPERIMENT WAS DONE: · Three balls were submitted to beer pong conditions and swabbed for bacteria. · Indoor was the dirtiest, followed by outside and then the bar. · A fourth ball was bounced on a surface contaminated with E. coli, and there was a 6 percent transfer of bacteria. · The ball from the bar was submerged in beer and no transfer of bacteria was recorded, but it is possible the alcohol in the beer eliminated any transfer.

The LSU football team could be without its 2012 leading rusher next season, as LSU coach Les Miles announced Monday that sophomore running back Jeremy Hill has been indefinitely suspended from the football team for his involvement in an incident outside of Reggie’s Bar on Saturday morning. Miles said he will refrain from making any additional comments on the incident until it is resolved. Hill, 20, was arrested and charged with simple battery after allegedly punching another man outside of Reggie’s Bar. He is currently in the midst of serving a two-year supervised probationary period after pleading guilty to misdemeanor carnal knowledge of a juvenile in January 2012. Hill led the Tigers with 755 yards and 12 touchdowns in 2012 as a freshman. He was also the leading rusher in LSU’s spring game earlier this month, picking up 103 yards on 13 carries. Contact Tyler Nunez at tnunez@lsureveille.com


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