Volume 123 · No. 11
Thursday, March 23, 2017
EST. 1887
lsunow.com
@lsureveille
thedailyreveille
dailyreveille
dailyreveille
MEN’S BASKETBALL
Will Wade announced as new coach BY SETH NIEMAN @seth_nieman Tucked away on the east coast and over 1,000 miles outside of Baton Rouge, LSU ventured to find its new basketball coach. It found thirty-four year-old “dream maker” Will Wade. “It’s a new day for LSU basketball,” Wade said. “I’m so excited about the opportunity to lead this program and LSU basketball back to the top of the SEC and back to regular consistent NCAA Tournament appearances. We’ve been to four Final Four’s and 20 NCAA Tournaments, we have 10 SEC Championships and we’re going to add to all three of those categories over my tenure.” Wade recently coached at Virginia Commonwealth University, where he led the Rams to back-to-back NCAA Tournament appearances in 2016 and 2017. He was an assistant coach at VCU under Shaka Smart when the Rams advanced to the Final Four in 2011. Wade left his assistant coaching role at VCU in 2013 to become the coach at Chattanooga. He coached the Mocs to a 40-25 record in two years and was named the Southern Conference Coach of the Year in 2014. LSU athletic director Joe Alleva spent five years on the
see COACH, page 7
cuts across the board House Bill 34 looks to consolidate Louisiana higher education boards BY CHRIS CLARKE | @ChristophClarke Big changes could be coming to the way higher education in Louisiana is administered. A proposed constitutional amendment being considered by the Louisiana House of Representatives would overhaul the structure of the policymaking system in the state by consolidating the current five boards related to postsecondary education into one board. The current higher education board system in Louisiana operates on a two-level system. The Louisiana Board of Regents oversees all of the higher education programs in the state. A constitutionally-mandated government body, the Board of Regents, holds five enumerated powers under Article VIII, Section 5 of the Louisiana Constitution: To revise or eliminate an existing degree program or department of instruction; to approve, disapprove or modify a proposed degree program or department of instruction; to oversee the creation or merger of any institutions; to create master plans for higher education in Louisiana; to submit budget recommendations to the Louisiana legislature
based on annual budgets prepared by the supervisory boards. Any responsibilities not specifically assigned to the Board of Regents are then delegated to one of four boards of supervisors: University of Louisiana System, Louisiana State University System, Southern University System and the Board of Supervisors of Community and Technical Colleges. All colleges and universities which do not intrinsically fall under any of these systems are governed by the University of Louisiana system, making it the largest of the four with more than 90,000 students. Each board is composed of 15 members: two from each congressional district and the rest selected from the state at large. Members are appointed by the governor with consent from the state Senate, and sit for six-year terms. A student member is also appointed to each board who serves for one year at a time. House Bill 34, proposed by Rep. Stephen Pugh, R-Ponchatoula, aims to overhaul the
see HOUSE BILL 34, page 7
HASKELL WHITTINGTON / The Daily Reveille
ACADEMICS
Lesley Fair gives #AlternativeFacts talk in Holliday Forum BY DENA WINEGEART @DenaWinegeart When President Donald Trump’s senior adviser Kellyanne Conway wanted to defend the Trump administration’s claim that his inauguration saw the biggest crowd size in history, Conway insisted it was an “alternative fact.” Lesley Fair, a senior attorney for the Federal Trade Commission’s Bureau for Consumer Protection, spoke in the Holliday Forum Wednesday about corporations and advertising companies that may try to use a defense similar to Conway’s when the FTC approaches them about an intentionally deceptive advertisement. The FTC, as Fair pointed out
during the forum, also stands for “for the consumer,” meaning the FTC’s primary focus is to protect consumers from deception, false advertising or “alternative facts.” “We are the nation’s general consumer protection agency … [the FTC wants to make sure consumers] have a right to believe in the truthfulness of what advertisers are telling them,” Fair said. Throughout the forum, Fair showed students and communications professionals examples of advertisements and claims made by advertising agencies or brands that violate the FTC’s statutes and have landed the companies in legal disputes. But Fair said she hopes this forum was the last time she
see FTC, page 7
Federal Trade Commission senior attorney Lesley Fair talks to students about legality in PR campaigns on March 22 in the Holliday Forum.
CAROLINE MAGEE /
The Daily Reveille