The Daily Reveille - November 19, 2013

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ENTERTAINMENT: Compare the PS4 and Xbox One, p. 10

SPORTS: Columnist says basketball players should be able to go pro after high school, p. 5

Reveille The Daily

Old War Skule

CRIME

3 armed robberies reported Monday Incidents appear to be related

TECHNOLOGY

Tech fee committee approves funding Renee Barrow Contributing Writer

Zach Carline Contributing Writer

Three separate armed robberies were reported late Monday QLJKW E\ /68¡V HPHUJHQF\ WH[W service. LSU Police Department spokesman Capt. Cory Lalonde ZDV RQO\ DEOH WR FRQĂ€ UP WKDW D ZHDSRQ ZDV SXOOHG LQ WKH Ă€ UVW LQFL dent at the intersection of Highland Road and Raphael Semmes Road. /68¡V HPHUJHQF\ WH[W VHUYLFH QRWL Ă€ HG VWXGHQWV RI WKH LQFLGHQW DURXQG 11:17 p.m. Lalonde said the suspect, a 6-foot-3-inch, slender man wearing a gray hoodie and traveling in a white four-door sedan, approached the victim on foot and asked the victim for their phone and wallet. The second incident on State Street was being handled by the Baton Rouge Police Department, which reported a similar suspect to WKH Ă€ UVW UREEHU\ OHDGLQJ /683'

CONNOR TARTER / The Daily Reveille

www.lsureveille.com

Tuesday, November 19, 2013 r Volume 118, Issue 58

At its last meeting of the semester, the Student Technology Fee Committee approved $39,156.67 worth of new software and multimedia funding for the University. From that amount, $32,000 was allocated to Information Technology Services to purchase a new site license for LabVIEW software. LabVIEW is a system design and development software from National Instruments. LabVIEW is the standard for engineering in multiple countries, said Department of Chemistry instructor Kresimir Rupnik. “My students got jobs because they know how to deal with problems through LabVIEW,â€? Rupnik said. Rupnik said without LabVIEW, in tradition. well as eight female veterans from the quality of education at the UniTo honor the University’s rich the war. military history, Student Govern“It is important to ensure past, versity would decrease. The second passing proposal, ment is holding Old War Skule present and future students know our Week, a series of events to honor and PLOLWDU\ KLVWRU\ Âľ VDLG ([HFXWLYH 'L IURP WKH 2IĂ€ FH RI WKH 8QLYHUVLW\ recognize LSU veterans leading up rector of the Cadets of the Old War Registrar, called for $7,156.67 to give Room 2147 in Patrick F. Taylor to LSU Salutes on Friday. Skule Randy Gurie. 7KH Ă€ UVW RIĂ€ FLDO IXQFWLRQ In the spirit of the rivalry be- Hall multimedia capabilities. The workstation-based room is of LSU Salutes is a luncheon WZHHQ /68 DQG 7H[DV $ 0 IRRWEDOO recognizing POWs and those missMILITARY, see page 15 FEE, see page 4 ing in action during World War II as

Student Government honors University’s military history

Camille Stelly

Contributing Writer

In a single day, thousands of University students will step foot on the Parade Ground. From lively tailgating to quiet study sessions, people often forget the Parade Ground is one of many memorials on campus that once served as a military training ground for LSU, a school steeped

ROBBERIES, see page 15

STUDENT ORGANIZATION

BESO hosts sweet potato sale Sale at Highland, S. Stadium corner Alexis Rebennack Staff Writer

As Thanksgiving approaches, the University’s Biological Engineering Student Organization is providing the LSU community with festive ingredients to make the holiday a success. BESO members provide sweet potatoes and rice at its annual sale, with profits helping to send biological engineering students to the

yearly Institute of Biological Engineering conference. The sale takes place on the corner of South Stadium Drive and Highland Road from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday and Nov. 25-27. Customers gathered Monday around sacks of potatoes and rice, while sharing stories with BESO students about how sweet potatoes and popcorn rice are a part of family holiday meal traditions. “My husband’s stepmother — who is no longer with us — was a gourmet cook, and she used to make these sweet potatoes for us, and they were amazing,� said Louisiana resident Lisa Supple.

“She would bake them and make sweet potato casseroles, so I’m going to try and bake them like she did.â€? Other customers couldn’t stop talking about the deals the organization offers. “They’ve got pretty good sweet potatoes, and they are at reasonable prices,â€? said Pierre Rabalais, a University alumnus. “I’m originally from a sweet potato parish, so I’ve literally grown up around sweet potatoes, DQG ,¡P Ă€ [LQJ D JXPER WRQLJKW and, you know, sweet potatoes go with gumbo.â€? SALE, see page 15

GRACE STEINHAUSER / The Daily Reveille

The Biological Engineering Student Organization hosts its 32nd annual sweet potato and rice sale Monday at the intersection of South Stadium Drive and Highland Road.


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