The Daily Reveille - July 11, 2013

Page 1

ADMINISTRATION: New HSE college dean details plans for fall semester, p. 3

SPORTS: TDR predicts LSU football’s 2013 offense, p. 5

Reveille The Daily

www.lsureveille.com

Thursday, July 11, 2013 • Volume 117, Issue 145

Fertile Grounds

ADMINISTRATION

King discusses future plans Taylor Schoen Staff Writer

horticulturist, sun, rain or shine, work must get done. From Nicholson Drive to the LSU Lakes, she and her crew dot the University with an array of colorful plants and

Although the University campus lacks its usual hustle and bustle during the summer months, change is happening in subtle ways. Since last month’s retirement of William Jenkins, former interim LSU System president and chancellor, F. King Alexander has taken the reigns of the University. Alexander, former president of California State University at Long Beach, began his leadership in Baton Rouge at the end of June. In his short time here, he has been working on connecting with the Rice Research Station as well as LSU branches outside of Baton Rouge, including the Shreveport and Alexandria campuses. He also plans on visiting the Eunice campus next week. Alexander said he would like to visit all of the LSU System

PLANTS, see page 4

KING, see page 4

ANGELA MAJOR / The Daily Reveille

Debra Coltharp, horticulturist, waters plants Wednesday with a gardening hose outside of East Campus Apartments.

University horticulturist keeps campus beautiful

Tesalon Felicien Contributing Writer

Debbi Coltharp wiped her face as she tilled the pine-laden soil, Louisiana humidity causing streams of perspiration to race

down her face. Her objective today: transplant a set of pink begonia flowers to replace the weary caladium bulbs. “I started early today but I love working in the winter,” she joked. But for the campus

BATON ROUGE COMMUNITY

Baton Rouge to celebrate France’s Bastille Day Old State Capitol will host speakers Taylor Schoen Staff Writer

America isn’t the only country with an Independence Day in July. On July 14, France will be celebrating Bastille Day, the anniversary of the falling of the Bastille in Paris — formerly a state prison prior to the French Revolution. To celebrate France’s revolution and Louisiana’s French heritage, the Louisiana Secretary of State will be hosting a lecture series at the Old State Capitol today. Speakers will discuss the holiday and the connections between Louisiana and France. Florent Hardy, one of the speakers and director of Archival

Services of the Louisiana State Archives, said Bastille Day, or la fête nationale, commemorates the capture of the Bastille by French revolutionaries. While some may believe that revolutionaries aimed to liberate prisoners, Hardy said they actually stormed the prison to gain ammunition. “The storming of the Bastille was not to free the prisoners only,” Hardy said. “It was really to get the gun powder, which was within those 10-foot walls.” Hardy said there were only seven prisoners located in the fortress at the time of the storming. The lecture series will feature three speakers. Hardy will discuss the connections between Louisiana and France; William Arceneaux, president of Council for the Development of French

in Louisiana, will discuss his program and its preservation of the French language in the Boot state; and Paul West, site manager at SPF Flopam, will also discuss Louisiana’s associations with France. Hardy said France has made a significant impact on Louisiana’s culture and language including the use of common words like “Mardi Gras” the state’s civil code, musical influences like zydeco and the state’s general “joie de vivre” attitude. He also noted the name Baton Rouge means “red stick,” which refers to settlers spotting bloody totems from the Mississippi River. He also said that many cities in Louisiana are “twinned” with French cities. Baton Rouge is twinned with Aix-en-Provence, BASTILLE, see page 4

REMY DE LA MAUVINIERE / The Associated Press

A patrol made of French Air Force Rafales and Mirage 2000 jet fighters flies Tuesday above the Alexandre III bridge in Paris in preparation for the Bastille Day Parade.


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