OPINION: Racial microaggressions stem from a flawed society, p. 16
COMMUNITY: Local felines to compete in annual show, p. 11
Reveille The Daily
VOLUME 118, ISSUE 116
thedailyreveille
CRIME
thedailyreveille
@lsureveille
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STUDENT GOVERNMENT
Thursday, March 27, 2014
BOARD OF REGENTS
McDonald’s Groovin’ moved to River Center employees With Groovin’ moved to the River Center, arrested will you attend? Vote in our poll at for theft lsureveille.com.
Fiscal year funding approved
Zach Carline
Deanna Narveson
Fernanda Zamudio-Suarez Senior Reporter
Deputy News Editor
Four employees of the McDonald’s in the Student Union weren’t lovin’ it when they were arrested Wednesday and another is expected to be arrested today for involvement in a scheme, likely lasting more than a year, involving felony theft, said LSU Police Department spokesman Capt. Cory Lalonde. The suspects, all employees at the time of the thefts and some managers, allegedly overcharged students on their Tiger Cards through the Paw Points system before pocketing the difference. LSUPD suspects the scheme may have lasted longer than a year, but the restaurant’s record system only dates back one year, Lalonde said. Although The Advocate reported the scheme resulted in the theft of $30,000, Lalonde was unable to confirm that figure. He said the initial investigation began in October 2013, when the Student Union received an anonymous tip. McDonald’s looked at discrepancies in transactions, eventually confirming the thefts, and LSUPD secured warrants for the arrest of five individuals. Previously, LSUPD arrested individuals for misdemeanor theft charges in the investigation, but the four arrested Wednesday and the arrest expected today were all different individuals, Lalonde said. He added that in addition to the five arrests, there could be subsequent arrests as the ongoing investigation continues. While LSUPD did not release information on the fifth suspect, the four who were arrested and booked into East Baton Rouge Parish Prison are: Bertrand Lawrence Brown, 34, 4631 Aldrich Drive; Constance Lacole Brown, 31, 634 North 37th St.; Danielle Marie Casey, 23, 1550 Kaufman St.; and Jeannine Rooks, 34, 1466 North 35th St. — all of Baton Rouge. MCDONALD’S, see page 4
Groovin’ on the Grounds is moving from the Parade Ground to the Baton Rouge River Center Arena due to inclement weather expected Friday evening. Weezer, Pepper and Battle of the Bands winner Deacon Jones are still set to play at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the new location. Student Government Chief of Staff Gerard Zimmerman said when planning the event, the River Center was the backup location. The PMAC was the on-campus indoor option used in the past, but it is booked for Friday. Michael Smith, SG adviser in the Office of Advocacy and Accountability, said the PMAC
is booked for a football coach’s clinic run through the Athletics Department. Zimmerman said the chance of rain Friday put the concert in a risky position. Had the concert remained on the Parade Ground and lightning struck, artists could choose not to perform, the stage would need to be cleared and the show would be canceled. “I’m not going to play poker with student fees because we would lose a ton of money,” Zimmerman said. “This isn’t our first choice, and our first priority is to put on the concert for the students.” The event will still be open to the public and SG will provide shuttles from campus to the River GROOVIN’, see page 4
Staff Writer
Read an entertainment writer’s view on why Weezer is still relevant, p. 11
Tufts, Lambert named SG president, vice president
The Louisiana Board of Regents approved a recommendation for the distribution of funding to the state’s higher education institutions for 2014-15 at its March meeting Wednesday. The funding recommendation allocates the same amount of money to each institution as the 2013-14 fiscal year, with the exception of $6.1 million distributed to the higher education institutions that received the least state funding and $5 million to the LSU AgCenter. The amount of funding from the state for TOPS BOARD, see page 19
STUDENT GOVERNMENT
SG pushes for federal assistance Fernanda Zamudio-Suarez Senior Reporter
2,881 votes, while Experience LSU received 44.1 percent and 2,270 votes. The overall number of votes, including the presidential vote, increased from last year by 626 votes with 5,284 — compared to 4,658 in 2013. For senate and college council seats, 78.8 percent were Next Step candidates with 52 seats, while 21.2
Senior members of Student Government traveled to Washington, D.C., to advocate for higher education and returned feeling confident in the connections and relationships formed over their four-day trip. SG President John Woodard said the students took the trip with four goals in mind: reauthorize the Higher Education Act, discuss solutions to reduce rising education costs, support Pell Grant funding and examine ways to establish a federal matching program for higher education.
ELECTION, see page 4
ASSISTANCE, see page 19
TAYLOR BALKOM / The Daily Reveille
Newly elected Student Government President Clay Tufts (middle right) and Vice President Taylor Lambert (middle left) react to hearing election results Wednesday at the Live Oak Lounge in the Student Union.
Election saw an increase in total votes Jacquelyn Masse Contributing Writer
A roar erupted from the Live Oak Lounge of the Student Union as The Next Step Ticket was declared the winner of the Student Government election on Wednesday afternoon. The Next Step ticket won with 55.9 percent and