The Daily Reveille - October 15, 2014

Page 1

Reveille

SOCCER Gomez-Junco, Piña bring friendship to the field page 5

The Daily

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2014

lsureveille.com/daily

thedailyreveille

OPINION African-Americans need to embrace their culture page 9 @lsureveille

thedailyreveille

Volume 119 · No. 34

6th

Candidates evaluate strategies as election draws nearer

BY quint forgey qforgey@lsureveille.com With three weeks until Election Day on Nov. 4, candidates for Louisiana’s 6th Congressional District seat are counting on the votes of students they worked to rally throughout their campaigns. Since the start of the race, the University has seen an onslaught of student groups and campaign interns supporting candidates who range from a 28-year-old University alumnus to an 87-year-old former governor and convicted felon. Campaign managers for Republican state Sen. Dan Claitor, Republican Paul Dietzel II, Democratic former Gov. Edwin Edwards and Republican Garret Graves emphasized the importance of University students in the next stage of the race. “LSU, being 30,000 people, is an interesting place because

congressional district

PARTY AFFILIATION

Congressional campaigns prepare for home stretch

Other

VOTER BREAKDOWN

4%

Black 22%

RACE

data compiled by SAVANAH DICKINSON / The Daily Reveille graphic by RYAN LACHNEY/ The Daily Reveille

see election, page 11

White

AGE

74%

3%

26%

18-20

Check out The Daily Reveille’s 2014 election tracker at lsureveille.com/ elections2014 for candidate profiles and other data.

21-35

72%

35+

CAMPUS LIFE

Politics

Professor holds national croquet title St. George boundaries Win marks third consecutive title for math professor George Cochran BY rose velazquez rvelazquez@lsureveille.com For University mathematics professor George Cochran, the risk is worth the reward when it comes to a national championship title. Cochran and partner John Warlick are the three-time doubles national champions in the game of nine-wicket croquet. Cochran, a probability

specialist, brings his academic experience into his croquet strategy. In probability, Cochran said it’s preferable to have one risky play that, if successful, likely will guarantee a win as opposed to many conservative plays that must all succeed to win. “The appeal is it’s kind of a mixture of shooting skills and strategy and thinking,” Cochran said. “Playing the game requires some aspects of risk management, and it’s the risk management aspect that I find most appealing.” Cochran said he’s one of the more aggressive croquet

competitors in the Midwest, but his game strategy varies depending on who his opponent is and whether he is winning. “The interesting thing is that often when you play an aggressive game — and this has happened to me playing croquet — others think that you’re completely crazy,” Cochran said. “If the play works out, you’re crazy and lucky, and if it doesn’t work, then you’re just a crazy fool.” Cochran began playing croquet in his backyard with his

see wicket, page 4

will not be changed

BY QUINT FORGEY qforgey@lsureveille.com

Despite LSU President F. King Alexander’s concerns over the University’s stake in the St. George debate, proposed boundaries of the new city will not change, said St. George spokesperson Lionel Rainey III. Though the main campus is part of the city of Baton Rouge, University land southwest of campus remains unannexed — not included in Baton

Rouge proper. The land encompasses Innovation Park and the LSU AgCenter’s Ben Hur Farm. LSU’s Board of Supervisors filed a petition Oct. 8 with the East Baton Rouge Parish Metro Council supporting the annexation of the unincorporated land into the city of Baton Rouge. Mayor-President Kip Holden backed the petition, saying the University’s annexed land would receive the same

see St. George, page 11


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.