NBA: Hornets to stay in New Orleans another year, p. 8
Football: Lineman Nevis drops out of Senior Bowl, p. 8
Reveille The Daily
www.lsureveille.com
Union: New Leisure Arts Studio now open, p. 4 Tuesday, Jan. 25, 2011 • Volume 115, Issue 75
BAC to school LSUPD issues 7 DWIs during first week of semester
Celeste Ansley Staff Writer
With few class assignments, back-to-school bar specials and the excitement of returning to campus after the holidays, the first week of classes can be a minefield of distraction and drinking for students. And with more drinking ostensibly comes a greater probability of students driving drunk. LSUPD dealt with seven driving-while-intoxicated instances during the first week of this semester — more than the department issued throughout all of last semester. Most of the DWIs between Jan. 13 to Jan. 22 were issued near Nicholson Extension, according to LSUPD crime reports. Other locations included West Lakeshore Drive and Skip Bertman Drive, according to the reports. LSUPD representative Sgt. Blake Tabor said four of the DWIs were University students, and the other three were people not affiliated with the University. Cody Juneau, renewable natural resources freshman, said he always made sure to have a driver the three times he went out during the first week of school. Juneau said he typically goes out once a week. “Everyone goes out the first week because we don’t have anything to worry about,” Juneau said. But Tabor said there aren’t necessarily more DWIs recorded during the first week of school than any other week in the year, and it’s hard to compare one week to another. In the days surrounding the Nov. 6 football game against Alabama — one of the busiest party weekends of the semester — there were no DWIs issued by LSUPD. And out of the five total DWIs last semester, two of them were issued during finals week. Tabor said students are trying to figure out where they fit photo illustration by ADAM VACCARELLA / The Daily Reveille
DWI, see page 15
BUDGET CUTS
Hamilton addresses higher ed ‘myths’ Xerxes A. Wilson Staff Writer
University Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor Jack Hamilton was accompanied by 140 empty chairs ‘If we stay Monday in an attempt to on our comcurrent dispel mon “myths” course, LSU regarding the will exist budget crisis in speech to the as only an aBaton Rouge insignificant Press Club. university futureAs of the the with a good U n i v e r s i t y ’s football budget rests in hands of team.’ the politicians over Jack Hamilton the next six LSU provost, executive months, Hamvice chancellor ilton called the address “LSU’s own version of Myth-Busters.” Hamilton used the 140 empty chairs at hand to illustrate his first point: that the University is not “fat” or unharmed by budget cuts. MYTHS, see page 15
RESIDENTIAL LIFE
About 75 percent of on-campus housing already full for fall Kirby-Smith opening to increase capacity Emily Herrington Contributing Writer
Tatiana Williams, mass communication freshman, spent her summer stressing over whether she had a place to live on campus for fall 2010. “I got to Baton Rouge in midAugust for orientation and had to find an apartment last minute because I was still on the dorm standby list,” Williams said in a Facebook message. “I was coming alone from California.”
She was one of more than last Friday, according to ResLife’s 1,000 students on the standby list website. for on-campus This number housing last fall does not include that was impleresidential colmented March 31. leges and is not enWilliams said tirely precise but is communication a good representafrom Residential tion of availability, Life was sparse. High said. ResLife exBased on last Jay High pects another fall’s data, High standby housing ResLife communications manager anticipates the relist this semesmaining 25 percent ter, as the demand for on-campus of available on-campus housing housing exceeds availability, ac- will fill up by mid to late March. cording to Jay High, communica“We were able to get in tions manager for ResLife. about 300 students [who were on For fall 2011, on-campus resiHOUSING, see page 6 dence halls are 75 percent full as of
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‘Our goal is to provide housing to as many people that want it.’
ADAM VACCARELLA / The Daily Reveille
Kirby-Smith Hall is being renovated and will re-open temporarily to alleviate the high demand for on-campus housing. The building will have new paint, lights and furniture.