The Daily Reveille - October 12, 2009

Page 1

THE FUTURE

About 40 football recruits visit for the Florida game, page 8.

TAILGATERS

Log on to lsureveille.com to see how much time tailgaters spent setting up this week.

THE DAILY REVEILLE WWW.LSUREVEILLE.COM

Volume 114, Issue 33

Monday, October 12, 2009

Out of Reach

ENVIRONMENT

Recycling bins introduced in stadium

LSU’s offense totals 44 second-half yards in 13-3 Gator victory No. 1 Florida seemed hell-bent on making LSU to Alabama in 2002. look worthy of its then-No. 4 national ranking, a “Our football team is sick,” said LSU ranking which many media outlets coach Les Miles. “They By Andy Schwehm said LSU didn’t deserve. understand that it was Sports Writer But every time the Gators let a great opportunity, but the Tigers back into the game, the they also understand that Tigers just walked themselves right it counts.” back out. But the final score And the Gators clung on a 13-3 was not at all indicative of victory on a cool, wet evening in Log on to see a dominating performance front of an LSU record crowd of photos from of Florida’s defense against 93,129 Saturday night in Tiger Sta- Saturday’s game. LSU’s offense and LSU’s indium. ability to gain yards in the secThe loss dropped LSU (5-1, ond half. 2-1) to No. 10 in the AP and ESPN/ But the fact Florida couldn’t USA Today Coaches polls. It also marks the team’s put the game away left the Tigers continually just first Saturday night loss one play away from tying up the game or taking in Tiger Stadium in the lead, something Miles simply sneered at in his 32 games since postgame talk. the team’s “Tiger faithful, I apologize,” Miles said. 31-0 loss “I wish we were better.”

By Xerxes A. Wilson Staff Writer

lsureveille.com

While fans witnessed the LSU football team’s first loss this season, they also saw the introduction of recycling in Tiger Stadium. Twenty-five recycling bins were placed strategically in the stadium to gauge patron’s reactions. Recycling in the west upperdeck was the most successful, said Melissa Seanard, who came up with the original proposal for recycling in Tiger Stadium. Eight bins were placed in the east upperdeck and were attended by volunteers who directed fans toward the recycling bins when they were discarding recyclable items. About six or seven bags of recyclable material were gathered from the east side, Seanard said. Lauren Leist, mass communication freshman, volunteered in the west upperdeck and said the volunteers’ main job on the west side was to ask people if they could recycle their items instead of discarding it in the garbage can. Seanard said the eight bins in the east upper deck collected substantially less material than the west side because volunteers were instructed to simply view how the

DEFENSE, see page 15

MAGGIE BOWLES / The Daily Reveille

LSU junior linebacker Kelvin Sheppard, bottom right, tackles Florida’s redshirt junior Emmanuel Moody on Saturday night during the Tigers’ 13-3 loss in Death Valley.

BINS, see page 15

ENVIRONMENT

Fall Fest makes effort to go green Volunteers attempt to have zero waste By Adam Duvernay Senior Staff Writer

Students looking for a place to dump the cardboard burger trays during Fall Fest encountered teams of volunteers picking through trash and sorting it into bags. Facility Services and student volunteers were able to recycle almost half of the trash generated Friday as part of a campaign to eliminate waste from the festival.

The 53 volunteers, many of whom are members of Student Government and the Environmental Conservation Log on to see Organization, were part pictures from of the largely successful Fall Fest activities. efforts to make this year’s Fall Fest zero waste. At 15 stations around the Quad, volunteers helped festival-goers sort their trash between recycling bins, composting bags and a separate can for potato chip bags. “This is a perfect event to raise sustainability awareness,” said Shannen Holahan, ECO volunteer. “You never see this

many people in the Quad.” Facility Services and the volunteers said they collected 14 cubic yards of recycling. It was about 43 percent of the total waste — more than two full dumpsters. They collected 5 cubic yards of compost, about 15 percent of the festival’s waste and compiled another 1.5 cubic yards of chip bags. About 37 percent of the total trash, or 12 cubic yards, was non-recyclable. Cas Smith, SG director of sustainabil-

lsureveille.com

FALL FEST, see page 15

MAGGIE BOWLES / The Daily Reveille

The Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc. step team performs Friday in the Quad at Fall Fest.


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.