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baseball Outfielders play integral part in team’s success page 5
The Daily
Thursday, February 12, 2015 sports
Hawthorne to retire in 2016
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opinion LSU shouldn’t implement plus/minus grading system page 12 @lsureveille
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Courir de Costume
Hawthorne called Tiger football, basketball and baseball for 35 seasons
see hawthorne, page 15
construction
Ground breaks on Center for River Studies
The Water Campus will promote coastal research
BY chandler rome editor@lsureveille.com Jim Hawthorne, the radio play-by-play man for LSU football, baseball and basketball for the last 35 seasons, will retire after the 2015-16 basketball season, the school announced Wednesday. “I want to sincerely thank the LSU administration, all of the coaches I have had the pleasure to hawthorne work with and the entire Fighting Tiger nation for their support,” Hawthorne said in a news release. “It has meant more to me than I could possibly describe.” Hawthorne, 71, joined LSU in 1979 to call Tiger basketball games and has been with the school since, calling six baseball national titles, two football national championships and three Final Four appearances. He joined the football broadcast alongside John Ferguson in 1983 and took over the playby-play duties the following season when Ferguson moved to TigerVision. “Jim is a true LSU legend and one of the very best in the broadcast business,” LSU Vice Chancellor and Director of Athletics Joe Alleva said in a statement. “When you hear Jim’s voice, you immediately think LSU. That’s the mark of a great play-by-play man. His passion and enthusiasm for LSU
Volume 119 · No. 90
BY deanna narveson dnarveson@lsureveille.com
home, where she makes each costume by hand. The costumes represent the history of Courir and its ties to carnival season and Louisiana’s French history. Runners in Courir wear hats resembling a bishop’s mitre, royal hennins and graduates’ mortarboards. This headgear, first worn by the
Gov. Bobby Jindal, LSU President F. King Alexander, Baton Rouge Mayor-President Kip Holden and representatives from several public and private agencies gathered Wednesday in a sunny field beside the Mississippi riverbank to break ground on the new Center for River Studies. The center is the first of three buildings to make up The Water Campus. It will house a state-ofthe-art model of the Mississippi river for researchers. The Water Campus is a $45 million, 33-acre development funded through a partnership between the State of Louisiana, the City of Baton Rouge and the Baton Rouge Area Foundation. The center is part of the state’s 2012 Coastal Master Plan and is one of the University’s core research initiatives. Alexander said researchers from around the world will use the center to work toward solving environmental problems along the globe’s coastlines. “This is not just what we are doing at LSU,” Alexander said. “There will be international faculty, from the Maldives to the Netherlands, who will be coming together here to solve these coastal problems in unpredictable ways.” BRAF purchased the plot of land along the levee from the East Baton Rouge Parish Housing Authority and donated it to the University to be used as a
see costumes, page 15
see river, page 15
Louisiana Mardi Gras tradition kept alive with costumes BY gerald ducote gducote@lsureveille.com Mardi Gras is fast approaching, and many people, both local and visiting, will soon flock to New Orleans. These crowds will clog the city streets, drinking copious amounts of alcohol. While the season dominates New Orleans and the remaining lower portion of Louisiana, a different way of life dictates how people party in the central and southwestern areas of the state. These regions of open farmland are home to the Cajun tradition of Courir de Mardi Gras, which translates to “Mardi Gras Run.” Typical Courir involves drinking, horse-riding and dancing. A notable feature of Courir is the participants, known as “Les Mardi Gras,” who disguise themselves in colorful costumes and perform dances in exchange
LSU Career Expo Today Only!
photos by Zoe Geauthreaux / The Daily Reveille
for chickens from the surrounding community. Susana Ortego Guillory of Elton, Louisiana, has made a 14-year hobby of creating traditional Courir de Mardi Gras costumes for her family, friends and anybody else interested in an authentic rural Mardi Gras experience. Originally from Kinder, Louisiana, Guillory resides in her great-grandparents’ Elton
THIS EVENT WILL BE A ONE-DAY ALL MAJORS CAREER EXPO!
10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Geaux Get Hired! TIME: LOCATION: PMAC
SPONSORS:
audubon