The Daily Reveille - November 16, 2009

Page 1

ROLLIN’ ON

LSUREVEILLE.COM Log on to find out if LSU fans want ’Bama or Florida to win the SEC championship.

Tigers take care of Warhawks, look to Indiana St., page 5.

THE DAILY REVEILLE Volume 114, Issue 58

CRIME

Woman stabbed on campus Saturday

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SLOPPY SUCCESS

Monday, November 16, 2009

LEGISLATURE

Holden’s bond issue defeated

By Ryan Buxton

By Adam Duvernay

Staff Writer

Senior Staff Writer

A female security staff member was stabbed twice around 1 p.m. Saturday at the LSU Law Center. The woman was stabbed by an unidentified man after she wouldn’t let him enter the Paul M. Hebert Law Center, said Sgt. Blake Tabor, LSU Police Department spokesman. The man asked to enter the Law Center around 11:30 a.m. and was not allowed in because of a private function being held there. The man argued with the victim before leaving. He returned at approximately 12:55 p.m. and again asked to enter. After another denial, a “verbal dispute and physical dispute” followed, which resulted in the man stabbing the security guard in the abdomen, according to an LSUPD news release. The woman was taken to the hospital with minor injuries and was in stable condition Sunday, Tabor said. Because of the woman’s “hysterical nature,” she was interviewed again several hours after the incident to verify her story and a description of the subject, Tabor said. The suspect fled the scene after the stabbing, and no arrest has been made. LSUPD is conducting an investigation with the East Baton Rouge Parish Sheriff’s Office and the Baton Rouge Police Department.

Press Top 25 and USA Today Coaches’ Top 25 polls. The Tigers moved down one spot Log on in the AP poll to see a but moved up slideshow one spot in the of photos Coaches’ poll from the and remained game. No. 8 in the BCS standings. “We did not play sharp,” said LSU coach Les Miles. “In the first half ... they kind of felt like we weren’t going to be tested. I kept trying to tell them that this is

After months of public debate and rigorous support from many parish officials, East Baton Rouge Parish Mayor-President Kip Holden’s $901 million capital improvement tax package was defeated by voters Saturday. The package failed with only 36 percent of parish-wide voters, or 25,766 votes, in favor of the proposed tax. The other 64 percent, or 45,851 voters, opposed the tax package and killed Holden’s hopes for long-term downtown Baton Rouge improvements, which included parking garages and traffic solutions. The tax package consisted of a half-cent sales tax increase and a 9.9-mill property tax. The proposal was akin to a measure which narrowly failed last November with 90,464 against and 87,393 in favor. Revenues from the tax would have been used to carry about $800 million in bonds to pay for most of the projects with the rest of the improvements paid for over time. Mike Futrell, chief administrative officer for Holden’s office, said 25 percent of the taxes would have been used to fund downtown infrastructure improvements. He said 75 percent of the funds would have been spent parish-wide. “We have to stop thinking like a small town and start thinking about

TECH, see page 11

BOND, see page 11

Contact Ryan Buxon at rbuxton@lsureveille.com

ADAM VACARELLA / The Daily Reveille

LSU senior defensive end Rahim Alem (84) tackles Louisiana Tech freshman running back Tyrone Duplessis (22) Saturday.

By Katherine Terrell Sports Contributor

KIM FOSTER / The Daily Reveille

LSU sophomore quarterback Jarrett Lee prepares to throw the ball Saturday in Tiger Stadium. Lee was booed by LSU fans at several points during the game.

The LSU football team got a painful reminder Saturday night of what a “trap game” means. The Tigers, down four starters and coming off a painful loss to Alabama, played a sloppy contest against a Louisiana Tech team with nothing to lose. No. 8 LSU (8-2, 4-2 SEC) was outplayed in almost every statistical facet of the game, but Louisiana Tech (3-7, 2-4 WAC) could not overcome the Tigers’ depth as LSU held off the Bulldogs for a 24-16 win. The close victory moved LSU to No. 10 in both the Associated

lsureveille.com

LSU escapes La. Tech with 24-16 win

SOCCER

Tigers fall out of NCAA by shootout By David Helman Sports Writer

The weight of penalty kicks proved again to be too much for an LSU soccer team which fought its way to its second shootout in seven days. The No. 11 Tigers (15-4-5) missed penalty kicks from their two most prolific scorers — senior midfielders Malorie Rutledge and Melissa Clarke — in a 4-2 loss decided by penalty kicks to No. 23 Texas A&M (15-6-3).

The loss was LSU’s second shootout loss in three games after the two teams fought to a 1-1 draw Log on to see Sunday. “We had plenty of highlights from chances, but so did they,” Sunday’s game. said LSU coach Brian Lee. “It was a 1-1 game that really could have been 3-3 with some better lucky guess ... finishing.” just happens.” Rutledge, who did not partake in last weekend’s 8-7 shootout loss to No. 8 South

lsureveille.com

Carolina, missed early when her kick was saved by Texas A&M junior goalkeeper Kelly Dyer on a dive to the left. “[Lee] told me, ‘Hit or miss, I want you to take it,’” said a teary-eyed Rutledge. “[Dyer] just had a It’s disheartening ... but it KICKS, see page 11

GRANT GUTIERREZ / The Daily Reveille

LSU sophomore goal keeper Mo Isom sits on the field Sunday after LSU lost to Texas A&M, 4-2, in a penalty kick shootout.


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