PARTLY CLOUDY
IN THIS ISSUE
82º 61º
• Who is Miles’ best ex-LSU player in the NFL?, page 6
Reveille
• Your go-to guide for easy autumn fashion, page 9
The Daily
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2015
lsureveille.com/daily
• The most anticipated album releases of the fall, page 10 • OPINION: Grading gubernatorial candidates on higher ed funding, page 12
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at first glance
Visually impaired student Justin Champagne says college life without full sight is ‘nothing different’ BY KACI CAZENAVE @kacicaz Choosing a major and passing midterms are among some students’ greatest worries throughout college. But for physics sophomore Justin Champagne, there’s an added challenge to pulling all-nighters and daily decision-making: retinitis pigmentosa. According to the National Eye Institute, retinitis pigmentosa is a rare visual impairment produced by a group of inherited disorders that cause a person’s retinal cells to break down and dissipate. Medical Encyclopedia: MedlinePlus says the disorder affects one in 4,000 people in the United States.
see CHAMPAGNE, page 4
ZOE GEAUTHREAUX / The Daily Reveille
Volume 120 · No. 41
thedailyreveille STATE
Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood extended Judge’s ruling comes amid funding battle
BY SAM KARLIN @samkarlin_TDR Planned Parenthood in Louisiana must continue to be funded by Medicaid dollars for the next 14 days, a U.S. District Judge ruled Sunday in a lawsuit against Gov. Bobby Jindal’s attempt to halt federal funding for the organization. The suit followed the release of edited videos by the Center for Medical Progress in July, which purported Planned Parenthood profited illegally from selling fetal tissue samples. U.S. District Judge John deGravelles made the ruling after hearings in September and October, and a new hearing date will be set during a conference
see PLANNED PARENTHOOD, page 4
ACADEMICS
Hill Memorial displays history of LSU Press, Southern Review BY CARRIE GRACE HENDERSON @carriegraceh
TODAY!
Eighty years of LSU history is out for display in Hill Memorial Library in a new exhibition, “Advancing Scholarship and Learning for 80 Years: LSU Press and The Southern Review.” The exhibit details the storied history of the publishing company and literary journal and their long connection to LSU and the LSU Libraries Special Collections. The two institutions were founded in 1935, and LSU Libraries has archived objects
representing all eight decades. Some are simple, like original cover art and early editions of The Southern Review, but others — like correspondence between writers and editors — give a behind-the-scenes look at publication. “It gives everybody a good idea of the day-to-day look at the everyday workings of those different institutions,” said exhibitions coordinator Leah Wood Jewett. “But also it’s giving more insight into the individuals involved.” One case houses the original diary of Kate Stone, which details a firsthand
account of what life was like for young women during the Civil War. In another case are the letters between Stone’s daughter, Amy Holmes, and John Q. Anderson, who edited the diary in the 1955 into the classic “Brokenburn: The Journal of Kate Stone 1861 – 1868.” The QR code next to the display takes visitors to the e-book version of the journal. “Our exhibit emphasizes the fact that both the LSU Press and The Southern Review are active, thriving institutions,”
The ‘Advancing Scholarship and Learning for 80 Years: LSU Press and The Southern Review’ exhibit is open to the public Oct. 19 through Jan. 30 at Hill Memorial Library.
ZOE GEAUTHREAUX /
see HILL MEMORIAL, page 3
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