The Daily Reveille - March 16, 2015

Page 1

Reveille

SOFTBALL Tigers pick up two wins in series at No. 1 Florida page 5

The Daily

MONDAY, MARCH 16, 2015

lsureveille.com/daily

thedailyreveille

OPINION NSA infringes on American freedom page 9 @lsureveille

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Volume 119 · No. 109 MEN’S BASKETBALL

LSU lands No. 9 seed in NCAA Tourney

BY DAVID GRAY dgray@lsureveille.com

Read a recap of the BUKU Music + Art Project on page 4. Check out more highlights online at lsureveille.com/daily/entertainment.

photos by RONNI BOURGEOIS / The Daily Reveille

The LSU men’s basketball team can breathe a sigh of relief. For the first time in six years, the Tigers are going dancing. LSU (22-10) was selected as a No. 9 seed in the East Region and will face No. 8 seed NC State in the second round of the NCAA Men’s College Basketball Tournament, the NCAA Selection Committee announced on Sunday. The Tigers will tip off against the Wolfpack (20-13) at 8:20 p.m. Thursday at Consol Energy Center in Pittsburgh. If LSU wins, it will play the victor between No. 1 seed Villanova (32-2) and No. 16 Lafayette (20-12). It’ll be the first NCAA Tournament appearance for the Tigers since the 2008-09 season and only the second in the last nine years. But it’ll be the third NCAA Tournament appearance for LSU coach Johnny Jones, who took the

see TOURNAMENT, page 11

EDUCATION

Obama signs presidential memo for college affordability

BY WILLIAM TAYLOR POTTER wpotter@lsureveille.com

With budget cuts and the possibility of student fee increases on the horizon, Louisiana college students are preparing for the worst. President Barack Obama’s new Student Aid Bill of Rights might help relieve that burden. Obama signed a presidential memorandum on Tuesday highlighting his plan to make college more affordable. Obama outlined the plan to students at the Georgia Institute of Technology that same day and in his weekly

online address to the nation posted on Saturday. “I believe that America is not a place where higher education is a privilege that is reserved for the few,” Obama said in his Georgia Tech speech. “America needs to be a place where higher education has to be available for every single person who’s willing to strive for it, who’s willing to work for it.” Section 1 of the memo calls for a complaint and feedback system. Section 2 entails helping borrowers repay their loans and avoid default. Section 3 asks for

fair treatment of struggling and distressed borrowers. Obama’s memo says the complaint and feedback system would allow borrowers to file complaints regarding federal financial aid. Users could also monitor their complaints they are resolved. Part of the plan for helping borrowers repay their loans is to “provide enhanced disclosures to borrowers and strengthened consumer protections,” according to the memo. To ensure fair treatment, the

see STUDENT AID, page 11

Student Aid Bill of Rights

Presidential Memorandum I. State-of-the-Art Complaint and Feedback System II. Helping Borrowers Repay Their Loans and Avoid Default III. Fair Treatment for Struggling and Distressed Borrowers

Read the full memo at whitehouse.gov. Read President Obama’s editorial on college affordability on page 9.


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