Reveille
FOOD AND DRINK Cookie delivery service coming to Northgate area page 4
The Daily
Wednesday, January 14, 2015 state
Campus sexual assault legislation advances Climate surveys to influence training
BY carrie grace henderson chenderson@lsureveille.com
see legislation, page 11
thedailyreveille
@lsureveille
Volume 119 · No. 70
thedailyreveille
$300 MILLION
campus life
Students to protest Jindal’s prayer rally
Approximately $200 to $300 million is expected in budget cuts for all public universities and colleges across the state — adding to the $700 million cut from Louisiana’s higher education since 2008.
BY william taylor potter wpotter@lsureveille.com
BY william taylor potter wpotter@lsureveille.com Gov. Bobby Jindal warned Louisiana’s public colleges and universities that their funding for the next fiscal year could be cut by $200 to $300 million, University officials said. Louisiana higher education funding has been cut by a total of $700 million since 2008, according to the Associated Press. The University’s funding also could be cut this fiscal year when the Revenue Estimating Conference meets with Jindal on Jan. 26 to amend the current state budget. Though the state cut spending by $180 million in the last two months, Jindal’s administration estimates that between $50 million and $100 million will be cut this year. Since two state constitutional amendments further protecting health care funding were passed Nov. 4, higher education is one of the few major areas left unprotected. House Speaker Chuck Kleckley, R-Lake Charles, said Jan. 9 that he would not support cuts to higher education.
THE DAILY REVEILLE ARCHIVES
Campus climate surveys and law enforcement training are two priority points for a sexual assault working group aimed to improve how college campuses handle sexual assault. Sen. J.P. Morrell, D-La., said the workmorrell ing group may incorporate new findings into legislation as they arise but wants these topics ready for next session’s prefiling deadline rallo of March 13. Campus climate surveys are anonymous polls given to all students on an annual basis. Students’ answers would help researchers understand the scope of sexual assault as well as how much students know about resources and prevention, said LSU Women’s Center
lsureveille.com/daily
OPINION The opinion staff reacts to the Charlie Hebdo attacks page 12
see budget cuts, page 15
Gov. Bobby Jindal’s Jan. 24 prayer rally, “The Response,” will face protests from several on-campus and local organizations. Protesters are citing issues with the rally’s sponsoring organization, the American Family Association, and its stance against the LGBT community. The AFA paid for the event to be held in the PMAC. In addition to protests, the Faculty Senate will consider a resolution at its Jan. 22 meeting to condemn the event and call for more education on the University’s tolerance policies. The proposal also encourages the University to plan a major event to address intolerance and similar issues. “That resolution itself is the first step,” said Faculty Senate President Kevin Cope. “The next step towards repair is doing those things.” Cope said faculty, student and administration participation protesting the event will “balance the sort of negligence that led to this situation.” One protest, “Organize, Reflect, Act: A Day of Action for Justice in Louisiana,” plans for around 800 participants throughout the day and will include a rally outside the PMAC,
see protest, page 11
football
Alabama linebackers coach Kevin Steele hired as new defensive coordinator BY marcus rodrigue sports@lsureveille.com The LSU football team has hired Alabama linebackers coach Kevin Steele as its new defensive coordinator, Sports Information director Michael Bonnette confirmed via Twitter on Tuesday afternoon. “This is a great hire for us,” said LSU coach Les Miles in a news release. “Kevin has had
a very successful coaching career, one that has seen him coach alongside some of the top coaches in the game. He won a national title with Tom Osborne at Nebraska, coached with Bobby Bowden at Florida State and coached in the NFL with one of the great defensive coaches in Dom Capers. “He has a great defensive mind and he’s an outstanding recruiter. He knows our
players and our system and his knowledge of the Southeastern Conference and the SEC Western Division makes him a great fit. We are very excited ... Kevin will be joining our staff.” Former LSU defensive coordinator John Chavis took the same position at Texas A&M following the Tigers’ 31-28 Music City Bowl loss to Notre Dame on Dec. 30. Chavis and Steele are both from Dillon,
South Carolina, and played college football together at Tennessee. Steele graduated from Tennessee before working as a linebackers coach at New Mexico State and Oklahoma State. He was linebackers coach for Nebraska from 1989-1994, during which the Cornhuskers won one national championship. Following a stint with the NFL’s Carolina Panthers,
Steele returned to the college ranks as Baylor’s head coach from 1999-2002. The Bears went 9-36 under Steele, featuring a 1-31 mark in Big 12 play. Current LSU defensive line coach Brick Haley, who was rumored to be a potential candidate for the job, served as Steele’s defensive
see steele, page 15