The Daily Reveille - March 18, 2015

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Reveille

SPORTS Senior Sagstrom guides women’s golf team page 5

The Daily

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18, 2015

Shift in Focus

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OPINION Saggy pants ban in Opelousas racist page 9 @lsureveille

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Volume 119 · No. 111 ADMINISTRATION

Resolution may move spring holiday

Deaf local photographer focuses on intimacy

BY CARRIE GRACE HENDERSON chenderson@lsureveille.com

BY GERALD DUCOTE gducote@lsureveille.com

Students could see an earlier spring break beginning in 2017, pending approval of University administration. A divided Senate approved Resolution 15-02, “Rationalization of the Spring Holiday” 19-to-11, which recommends spring break be scheduled in March and not dependent on the Easter holiday. Because of the Mardi Gras holiday, spring break sometimes falls within a week of finals, which causes problems for students and professors closing lab work and cracking open textbooks for finals, said William Daly, chemistry professor and sponsor of the resolution. “We have more holidays than any other university I looked at,” Daly said. “I would prefer a better distribution of the holidays.” The new calendar would have breaks for Martin Luther King, Jr. Day in January, Mardi Gras in February, spring break in March and Good Friday in April.

it comes to photography, Tate Tullier has W hen always been able to turn a blind eye to his

deafness. For Tullier, Louisiana, known for its scenic rural areas and ghostly swamps, was the perfect place for an aspiring photographer to grow up. Living a silent life, his eyes were able to take in more than those of his hearing companions. However, Tullier’s inspiration for his career came not from his home state’s beauty, but from magazines. After coming across a copy of “Vogue Paris” as a child, Tullier became enthralled with the glossy glamour shots of entertainment and fashion publications. He describes his knowledge as “self-taught,” having worked on his school’s yearbook staff as an opportunity to take his own pictures. By the time Tullier headed off to college, he was sure of his future. After attending LSU, Baton Rouge Community College and Southeastern Louisiana University over several years, Tullier decided to enroll at Gallaudet University, the only American university for the Deaf and hard of hearing, located in Washington, D.C. Since graduating in 2003, Tullier has found his place as a successful artist and photographer, working out of his studio in Gonzales, Louisiana. Being deaf does have its difficulties when communicating with hearing subjects and clients, he said. RONNI BOURGEOIS / The Daily Reveille

see FOCUS, page 11

Tate Tullier uses professional photography to support his in-the-works collection, ‘Tub Time with Tate.’

see SPRING BREAK, page 4

POLITICS

Students disapprove of University guest speaker choice BY JAYCE GENCO jgenco@lsureveille.com As campus cooled from a warm spring Tuesday evening, tempers flared. Manhattan Institute for Policy Research fellow Heather Mac Donald joined Bob Mann, mass communication professor and moderator for a discussion titled “A Conversation on the Media, the Police, and the Culture.” The discussion focused on Mac Donald’s research in policing and race-related issues. Even though the Journalism Building was not filled

to capacity, some students did not hold back their concerns about Mac Donald’s research and questioned her authority to talk about certain issues. Mac Donald presented information about black-onblack crime and expressed concern about the reaction it gets from the community versus that of when a police officer uses force against a black person. History junior and Baton Rouge Organizing cofounder Blair Elizabeth Brown said it would have been more productive for the

University to invite another guest to talk about the sensitive issues. “It is very different than the reality that say a young black male goes through, than that of a middle-aged white woman who’s talking about what they go through, ” Brown said. Brown said it isn’t productive for the University to bring guests like Mac Donald to campus because her talk doesn’t “humanize” the real issues that affect minority communities.

see MAC DONALD, page 4

ZOE GEAUTHREAUX / The Daily Reveille

Heather Mac Donald participates in a discussion titled ‘A Conversation on the Media, the Police, and the Culture’ March 17 in the Holliday Forum.


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