Volume 122 · No. 30
Wednesday, October 5, 2016
EST. 1887
lsunow.com
@lsureveille
dailyreveille
thedailyreveille
FOOTBALL
71 percent of millennials support gay marriage
The median age for mixed-race Americans is
20
50 percent of millennials identify as independents politically
White and black Americans who agree race relations are good
2008
= AGREE
Number of teenage arrests have decreased 36 percent since 1993
2016
= DISAGREE
68 percent of millennials live independently from parents or relatives
THE NEXT AMERICA BY WILLIAM TAYLOR POTTER @wmtaylorpotter Before an LSU audience Tuesday, Pew Research Center Senior Fellow Paul Taylor referred to a Beyonce song when discussing the increase in mixed-race children in the U.S. “You mix that Negro with that Creole,’ and that’s what gave us Beyonce,” Taylor quoted the popular entertainer as saying. Mixed race was the theme of his talk and he described what was to come with
Pew Research Center Senior Fellow talks diversity at University symposium
what he called the “Mosaic Generation.” The Pew Research Center’s former executive vice president presentation in the Student Union was part of LSU’s presidential symposium on race relations and democracy. The two-day symposium was organized to address the divisive events during the 2016 summer in Baton Rouge. Taylor, whose book “The Next America” was the backdrop to the session’s agenda, described his “Aha!” moment when he saw the
see THE NEXT AMERICA, page 2
Miles cut from ‘Here to Win’ commercial
BY KATIE GAGLIANO @katie_gagliano The football field isn’t the only place where fans will be seeing less of Les Miles. Former head coach Miles was noticeably absent from the University’s national Here to Win commercial during an airing before Saturday’s game against the Missouri Tigers. Miles was originally featured in a five-second segment highlighting the University’s No. 1 ranked landscape architecture program. On Saturday, the segment was removed and the commercial was immediately cut from a segment highlighting the University’s ornithological discoveries to the video’s original conclusion. A list of academic honors, including the Harry S. Truman Scholarship, SEC Professor of the Year and Ford Foundation Fellowship, followed to fill the 30 second spot. The amended commercial was posted to the University’s YouTube account Monday, replacing the original version that featured Coach Miles. Interim vice president for strategic communications Jason Droddy said the amended commercial spot will run for the remainder of the football season. Alterations and additional
see LES MILES, page 2
STUDENT LIFE
Symposium features ‘The Other Schools Across Town’ panel BY WILLIAM TAYLOR POTTER @wmtaylorpotter Grambling State University associate physics professor Matthew Ware described the struggles of fundraising for small colleges and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). The portrait he painted was stark: struggling institutions with anemic resources. “In the entire history of my institution, we have about 50,000 graduates,” Ware said. “If every alumni who ever graduated from Grambling State University that is alive today, we would fill about half of [LSU’s] Tiger Stadium.” Ware joined LSU Vice Provost for Academic Programs and
Support Services Matthew Lee, Southern University Faculty Senate president Thomas Miller and LSU-Shreveport Faculty Senate president Mary Jarzabek on a panel called “The Other Schools Across Town.” The session was part of LSU’s presidential symposium, “Moment or Movement: A National Dialogue on Identity, Empowerment, and Justice for All.” The two-day event was organized to address racial relations in Louisiana after a divisive summer and to promote student voting. Ware and Miller, who represent historically black universities, focused on how many of
see OTHER SCHOOLS, page 2
[Left to Right] Panelists Thomas Miller of Southern University, Matthew Lee of LSU, Matthew Ware of Grambling State University and Mary Jarzabek of LSUShreveport engage in a discussion on historically black colleges and universities during a symposium on race relations Tuesday.
WILLIAM TAYLOR POTTER /
The Daily Reveille