Showing posts with label Louisiana State University. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Louisiana State University. Show all posts

Friday, January 04, 2008

Campus Girl of the Day: Ashley DeCoste

The Frat Boy News Campus Girl of the Day

Ashley DeCoste, of Louisiana State University, is this Monday's Frat Boy News Campus Girl of the Day!

Ashley's Details
Hometown:
Spanish Fort, AL
College: Louisiana State University
Age: 19
Birthday: January 12
Year: Freshman
Major/Minor:
Advertising
Favorite Drink: Sweet Tea
Favorite Movie: Old School
Favorite Actor: Johnny Depp
Hobbies: Tanning, working out, partying.
Plans after Graduation: Haven't thought that far ahead yet.

Each and everyday a different Campus Girl from around the country will be featured on The Frat Boy News. If you would like to be chosen as a Campus Girl of the Day, drop us an email at fratboynews@yahoo.com

Monday, November 26, 2007

Mizzou New #1, WVU #2

Missouri Takes Over Top Spot

Missouri is No. 1 in The Associated Press Top 25 for the second time in school history. The Tigers have to be hoping this stay is longer than the first.

Missouri became the fourth team this season - joining Southern California, LSU and Ohio State - to hold the top ranking, a day after beating Kansas 36-28 to earn a spot in the Big 12 championship game. Not since 1997 have so many teams been No. 1 in a season.

The Tigers' only other time at No. 1 lasted a week in 1960.

West Virginia moved up to No. 2 on Sunday, its highest ranking ever, and became the eighth team this season to be ranked second. The Mountaineers' 66-21 victory over Connecticut earned them the Big East title and knocked the Huskies out of the rankings.

No. 3 Ohio State, Georgia and LSU complete the top five.

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Mississippi State Looks to Upset LSU in Season Opener

The Frat Boy News Daily Sports Page

College Football (compiled by SportingNews.com)

As the college football season opens, there is even optimism at Mississippi State -- where the Bulldogs haven't had a winning season since 2000.

Season ticket sales are up in Starkville and coach Sylvester Croom believes in his fourth season at Mississippi State he's finally got a team that can compete in the Southeastern Conference.

"People are very passionate about Mississippi State football and I'm looking forward to this game and this season with a great deal of excitement," Croom said.

If recent history holds, the excitement will have worn off by halftime. The Bulldogs have lost seven straight to No. 2 LSU by a total of 295-81, including shutouts of 51-0 and 42-0. Last year the Tigers led 21-0 after one quarter and 35-3 at halftime before winning 48-17.

Croom said his players don't need reminding about what LSU can do.

"They understand if they're not ready to play from the first whistle that could happen again because they're a very explosive football team," he said.

LSU coach Les Miles said his team shouldn't take the Bulldogs lightly despite their recent troubles.

Mississippi State hasn't won more than three games in a season since 2000 and are finally off NCAA probation. But Miles saw improvement by the Bulldogs when he reviewed film from last season and calls them "conceptually very good."

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

The Nation's Top Liquor Drinking Schools

2008 Best 366 College Rankings

The following list is the Princeton Review's 2008 rankings of the nation's top liquor drinking colleges.

20. Hampden-Sydney College
19. Centre College
18. State University of New York in Albany
17. Penn State University
16. Loyola College in Maryland
15. Ohio University
14. Wake Forest University
13. Trinity College (CT)
12. University of Georgia
11. University of California in Santa Barbara
10. DePauw University
9. University of Florida
8. University of Texas
7. West Virginia University
6. Indiana University
5. University of Iowa
4. Providence College
3. University of Mississippi
2. Louisiana State Universty
1. Washington and Lee University

Click here to go back and check the other lists!

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Campus Girl of the Day: Alicia Wise

Vote for LSU's Alicia Wise - Campus Girls USA

Louisiana State University's Alicia Wise is Wednesday's Campus Girl of the Day!!!

Alicia's Details
Hometown:
New Orleans, LA
College: Louisiana State University
Age: 20
Birthday: July 15, 1986
Year: Junior
Major/Minor:
History/Political Science, Business
Favorite Drink: Jack and Coke
Favorite Movie: Boondock Saints
Favorite Actor: Johnny Depp
Favorite Actress: Angelina Jolie
Hobbies: Watching football (mostly college), laying on the beach, camping, fishing, and overall hanging out with the boys.
Best Part of Being a Campus Girl: Trying something new and getting so far with it.
Plans after Graduation: Become a physician assistant and part time college history professor.

Each and everyday a different Campus Girl from around the country will be featured on The Frat Boy News. If you would like to be chosen as a Campus Girl of the Day, drop us an email at fratboynews@yahoo.com

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

The Frat Boy News Preseason Top 12 Power Rankings, Part IV

The Frat Boy News College News Preseason Top 12

3. Louisiana State Tigers (compiled by AOL Sports)

Matt Flynn. Jacob Hester. Early Doucet. Glenn Dorsey. That covers the running, throwing, catching, and defending part. Those are this year's impact players.

Despite losing 9 starters, including #1 overall draft pick Jamarcus Russell, two O-linemen, two WRs and both safeties, LSU is poised to be the most talented team in the conference for the second year running.

Yeah, they're talented, all right. LSU is so freakin' talented it's positively stunning. Best in the SEC? Shoot, this might be the deepest, most athletic and most talented team in the nation, except for top-ranked USC, and even that's debatable.

If the SEC could be won by talent alone, we could forego the 2007 season and hand the conference title trophy to the Tigers and not bother playing any games. However, LSU bore that mantle last year, and not only did they fail to win the SEC, they finished third in their division.

The message? It takes more than talent; but talent will get you a long way.


2. Southern California Trojans (compiled by Big Red Network)

You’ve got to beat the best to be the best. That’s a saying in sports that goes back as far as anyone can remember.

It’s been especially true in college football. In 2005, Texas beat #1 USC to win the national championship. In 2002 it was Ohio State over Miami. This year the consensus going into the season is that USC is the best team in the country.

If Nebraska were to take out the Trojans in week 3 (and assuming the Huskers were unbeaten prior to the game) the Huskers could well assume the top spot in the country and might be favored in each of their remaining games until they lose.

That’s the dream anyway. But USC is ranked high for a reason. They look awfully good.

Lindy’s rates their defensive line, linebacking corps, and secondary each individually as tops in the nation. That makes their defense tops in the country – by a mile.

It’s not like their offense is chopped liver either. Their offensive backfield is ranked third in the country by Lindy’s and their offensive line second.

Only their receiving corps doesn’t merit a top ten ranking. Does that make their receivers a “weakness”? Hardly. USC can roll out 5-star recruits in wide receivers Patrick Turner and Vidal Hazelton and tight end Fred Davis as well as a bunch of three and four-star guys.

What they lack in experience they make up for with loads of talent.


1. West Virginia Mountaineers (compiled by Rick Starr, Tribune-Review)

Expectations haven't been higher since Rich Rodriguez took over West Virginia's football program seven seasons ago.

They couldn't be higher. They've hit the ceiling.

After 30 victories the past three seasons, back-to-back top 10 finishes, and consecutive New Year's Day bowl victories over the SEC champion and the ACC runner-up, the Mountaineers now have their eyes on one prize.

Everything looks to be in place for the Mountaineers to make a serious run at their first BCS title, and they just may have the 4.4 backfield speed to do it.

From an explosive option attack led by two Heisman Trophy candidates, to a fast-talking head coach who recently turned down the Alabama job, West Virginia is a team in the spotlight.

"West Virginia is on everyone's radar," ESPN college football analyst Todd Blackledge said.

West Virginia's Heisman hopefuls, runner Steve Slaton and quarterback Pat White, appeared unfazed by all the preseason pressure and hype as they opened fall practice Saturday at Milan Puskar Stadium.

"We're kind of getting used to it," Slaton said. "Our goal every year is to go undefeated, win the Big East title, and play for the national championship. That's what you put in all the hard work for."

This time, national championship buzz goes beyond the Morgantown Mall. It's all over the Internet, cable channels and magazine stands.

"If West Virginia can make it through the Big East undefeated, it could find itself playing for the national championship," reported rivals.com.

Monday, July 30, 2007

LSU Preseason Pick to Win SEC

Monday's Frat Boy News Daily Sports Page

Louisiana State University (compiled by 13WMAZ.com)

Despite losing four players in the first round of the NFL draft and its offensive coordinator, LSU is the pick to capture the Southeastern Conference football crown this fall, easily outdistancing defending national champion Florida.

All-America defensive tackle Glenn Dorsey said, "We're just as talented as we were last year."

That team included Number one overall NFL draft pick JaMarcus Russell at quarterback and three fellow first-rounders, receivers Dwayne Bowe and Craig Davis and safety LaRon Landry.

Plus, offensive playcaller Jimbo Fisher left for Florida State, tailback Alley Broussard quit on Tuesday because his "heart was no longer in it" and prized quarterback prospect Ryan Perrilloux's status on the team remains uncertain after an arrest in May.

For some programs, all that might add up to a rebuilding year.

The Tigers' biggest issue right now might be dealing with huge expectations after back-to-back eleven-win seasons and a Sugar Bowl rout of Notre Dame.

They received 54 of 80 first-place votes from reporters who cover the SEC.

Florida got only seven, edging Arkansas (five) and Auburn (four), followed by Alabama (three), South Carolina (three), Tennessee (two) and Georgia (two).

The Gators were picked to win the Eastern Division, LSU the West.

Saturday, June 09, 2007

Mississippi State 1 Win Away from College World Series

The Weekend's Frat Boy News Daily Sports Page

College World Series
(compiled by The Clarion Ledger)

It took a pair of comebacks in front of a throng of 12,620 fans, but Mississippi State is one victory away from Omaha.

The Bulldogs erased two and three-run deficits to beat Clemson 8-6 this afternoon in the first game of the Starkville Super Regional.

A win in Saturday’s 11 a.m. game would send MSU (37-20) to its first College World Series since 1998. If Clemson (41-22) wins, it’ll force a winner-take-all third game at noon Sunday.

The Bulldogs won in front of a record-breaking crowd. The announced 12,620 at Dudy Noble Field was the largest crowd in the nine-year history of NCAA Super Regionals, beating a mark of 11,870 that Tulane and LSU set in New Orleans in 2001.

It was the seventh-largest crowd in Dudy Noble Field history and 21st crowd of 10,000 or more. After Clemson chased MSU starter Chad Crosswhite in the sixth, the Bulldogs trailed 5-2.

They came back strong in the bottom of the sixth, putting their first five hitters on base and tying the game on Mitch Moreland’s two-run home run to center. State took the lead for good when Moreland doubled home Jeffrey Rea in the seventh.

Aaron Weatherford entered in the ninth and retired the side after issuing a leadoff walk. John Lalor, who entered in relief of Crosswhite, earned his first win since March.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

LSU DKE Chapter Cleared of Goat Charges

LSU Lifts Fraternity's Suspension

Louisiana State University's chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity is no longer suspended on the Baton Rouge campus, after having their name cleared in an incident of hazing involving a goat stemming from an initiation party last November.

“In this day and age, whether it’s right or wrong when people hear ‘fraternity goat,’ it does not sound right to people,” LSU's dean of students, K.C. White, told WBRZ News.

LSU's administration agreed to take the suspension away Tuesday when brothers said they would gladly participate in a two-year introspection of the fraternity.

The brothers told the university in a letter they would exclude all animals from every initiation process and ritual they conduct.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Campus Girl of the Day: Ashley DeCoste

Vote for LSU's Ashley DeCoste - Campus Girls USA

Louisiana State University's Ashley DeCoste is hoping to be selected to the Campus Girls USA calender for her college, but she needs your help!

Ashley's Details
Hometown:
Spanish Fort, AL
College: Louisiana State University
Age: 19
Birthday: January 12
Year: Freshman
Major/Minor:
Advertising
Favorite Drink: Sweet Tea
Favorite Movie: Old School
Favorite Actor: Johnny Depp
Hobbies: Tanning, working out, partying.
Plans after Graduation: Haven't thought that far ahead yet.

Each and everyday a different Campus Girl from around the country will be featured on The Frat Boy News. If you would like to be chosen as a Campus Girl of the Day, drop us an email at fratboynews@yahoo.com

Thursday, May 03, 2007

LSU Students Need to Fight for Their Right to Party

Campus Witnesses 'War on Fun'

By Patrick W. Connelly
Co-Editor
, The Frat Boy News

A Louisiana State University student newspaper columnist saw the future three years ago, and he's making sure everyone on campus reads all about it.

"I've seen a concerted effort by many within the University to chip away at core elements of the student culture," writes LSU columnist Jason Dore in an editorial on the online edition of the student newspaper, The Daily Reveille.

Dore has been an LSU student for more than seven years and credits the campus for its uniqueness in student and social culture. Things are changing at the Baton Rouge campus, as Dore says the administration has severely cracked down on fun.

"Whether you believe it or not, the university administration has been embroiled in its own war, the "War on Frats,'" the student for a few years short of a decade says. "They should follow the example of the Bush administration and give a name to their efforts."

Dore writes that the administration began to pick on the Greek system after the death of a student. The university even went as far as to board up the former Delta Chi house in 2003, only to allow Pi Kappa Alpha to move in several years later.

"The days of big on-campus fraternity parties occurring weekly are long gone," he says. The university won't be happy until fraternities merely exist as glorified service organization, he says in the column.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Campus Girl of the Day: Alicia Wise

Vote for LSU's Alicia Wise - Campus Girls USA

Louisiana State University's Alicia Wise is hoping to be selected to the Campus Girls USA calender for her college, but she needs your help!

Alicia's Details
Hometown:
New Orleans, LA
College: Louisiana State University
Age: 20
Birthday: July 15, 1986
Year: Junior
Major/Minor:
History/Political Science, Business
Favorite Drink: Jack and Coke
Favorite Movie: Boondock Saints
Favorite Actor: Johnny Depp
Favorite Actress: Angelina Jolie
Hobbies: Watching football (mostly college), laying on the beach, camping, fishing, and overall hanging out with the boys.
Best Part of Being a Campus Girl: Trying something new and getting so far with it.
Plans after Graduation: Become a physician assistant and part time college history professor.

Each and everyday a different Campus Girl from around the country will be featured on The Frat Boy News. If you would like to be chosen as a Campus Girl of the Day, drop us an email at fratboynews@yahoo.com

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Campus Girl of the Day: Ashley DeCoste

Vote for LSU's Ashley DeCoste - Campus Girls USA

Louisiana State University's Ashley DeCoste is hoping to be selected to the Campus Girls USA calender for her college, but she needs your help!

Ashley's Details
Hometown:
Spanish Fort, AL
College: Louisiana State University
Age: 19
Birthday: January 12
Year: Freshman
Major/Minor:
Advertising
Favorite Drink: Sweet Tea
Favorite Movie: Old School
Favorite Actor: Johnny Depp
Hobbies: Tanning, working out, partying.
Plans after Graduation: Haven't thought that far ahead yet.

Each and everyday a different Campus Girl from around the country will be featured on The Frat Boy News. If you would like to be chosen as a Campus Girl of the Day, drop us an email at fratboynews@yahoo.com

Monday, April 02, 2007

Campus Girl of the Day: Alicia Wise

Vote for LSU's Alicia Wise - Campus Girls USA

Louisiana State University's Alicia Wise is hoping to be selected to the Campus Girls USA calender for her college, but she needs your help!

Alicia's Details
Hometown:
New Orleans, LA
College: Louisiana State University
Age: 20
Birthday: July 15, 1986
Year: Junior
Major/Minor:
History/Political Science, Business
Favorite Drink: Jack and Coke
Favorite Movie: Boondock Saints
Favorite Actor: Johnny Depp
Favorite Actress: Angelina Jolie
Hobbies: Watching football (mostly college), laying on the beach, camping, fishing, and overall hanging out with the boys.
Best Part of Being a Campus Girl: Trying something new and getting so far with it.
Plans after Graduation: Become a physician assistant and part time college history professor.

Each and every day, a different Campus Girl will be featured on The Frat Boy News. Click here to vote for Alicia.

Sunday, April 01, 2007

Campus Girl of the Day: Ashley DeCoste

Vote for LSU's Ashley DeCoste - Campus Girls USA

Louisiana State University's Ashley DeCoste is hoping to be selected to the Campus Girls USA calender for her college, but she needs your help!

Ashley's Details
Hometown:
Spanish Fort, AL
College: Louisiana State University
Age: 19
Birthday: January 12
Year: Freshman
Major/Minor:
Advertising
Favorite Drink: Sweet Tea
Favorite Movie: Old School
Favorite Actor: Johnny Depp
Hobbies: Tanning, working out, partying.
Plans after Graduation: Haven't thought that far ahead yet.

Each and every day, a different Campus Girl will be featured on The Frat Boy News. Click here to vote for Ashley.

Monday, March 19, 2007

Confessions of a Sorority Chapter President

Confessions of a Theta
By Angela Rozas a Chicago Tribune staff reporter

I will not show you the secret handshake.

I never could remember the Greek alphabet, though I still can recite the names of our founders.

I have purged my closet of many T-shirts over the years, but I cannot give away the shirts that carry my Greek letters.

Confession: I was a sorority girl. In fact, I was president of my chapter, Delta Kappa of Kappa Alpha Theta, at Louisiana State University.

I wore Greek shirts to class, painted posters of support for my homecoming court sister to hang on our sorority row house, and yes, partied late into the night with the alcohol we squirreled away in flasks.

Every few years, some new crisis arises to give the nation a chance to lambaste fraternity and sorority life. This time it's the closure of the Delta Zeta chapter on the campus of DePauw University in Indiana.

The university recently evicted the chapter--which had been on campus 98 years -- after members charged that national officers forced 23 women from the local chapter into alumnae status. The women say they were kicked out because they didn't fit the model of a sorority girl: pretty, white and popular. Six more women quit out of solidarity with the members who were forced out.

The sorority's national leaders have denied those charges, saying they told the chapter they would close it if it could not improve recruitment. They insisted that image and race were not involved, though 12 women allowed to remain members were not minorities and were described as conventionally pretty.

From what I've read, it seems as if the Delta Zeta chapter, though small in numbers, was diverse and valued friendship and uniqueness over popularity and dress size.

If the women's charges are true, then the university was right to send a message of condemnation to the national organization. Telling women they need to be sexy and popular to attract the attention of fraternities and new members is archaic.

Instead, the women should have been congratulated for choosing members based on their character and distinctiveness. Perhaps the national officers should have done more to work with their existing members to help them recruit more women like these instead of giving them the boot.

Some might argue that the days of sororities and fraternities should be numbered, that organizations built on exclusivity, whose sole purpose is to "party," have no place in modern college life.

But there's more to sororities than parties.

Supportive sisterhood

My sorority--actually, it's a fraternity for women and never adopted the label sorority, a point of pride to this day--was formed in 1870 at, coincidentally, what is now DePauw University. Four women who were excluded at their mostly male college formed Theta to support each other in their quest for a college education and university experience.

I was a small-town girl when I moved to Baton Rouge to attend Louisiana State, a campus of roughly 30,000 students. I knew almost no one at the school. Joining my sorority helped me meet ambitious, smart, talented women who wanted the most out of their college experience and gave me years of support. I loved being part of an organization that placed so much value on scholarship (we had a required grade-point average), service and simply being classy ladies. And yes, we had fun too.

Not that sorority life was perfect. The dreaded weeklong process by which members were chosen at LSU, called "rush," often felt just like that--rushed and superficial. With so many women vying for spots, a first impression could make or break you. Like so many things in life, being pretty can make a difference. But so can being a leader in high school, a talented musician, a budding humanitarian.

Sororities often were labeled--the smart girls, the rich girls, the promiscuous girls. Sometimes a sorority got its label because its name rhymed with an adjective. Phi Mu was Phi Moo. Delta Zeta was Sleazy-DZ. It was stupid, kid stuff.

At DePauw, the Delta Zeta chapter was known as the "dog house," supposedly because the women were not conventionally pretty. But that label was as much a result of students' stereotyping and harsh ideas of beauty as it was a problem with the Greek system itself.

The smart girls--and more

At LSU, we were the smart girls, mostly because we consistently had the highest GPA. That inevitably also meant we were not the prettiest girls or the party girls. But the truth was that we had smart girls and pretty girls, average girls and arty girls. Nearly every chapter will tell you the same.

I regretted then, and now, too, that my chapter did not have any minorities, as was the case with all the sororities on my campus. But that is changing. A few minorities have joined my sorority and others on campus in recent years, and minority sororities have admitted white women. That change happened long ago in other chapters around the country.

That's why the DePauw incident, if true, is so disturbing. The national organization should be ahead of the curve, promoting more progressive ideals of sisterhood. You can be any shape, size and color and still believe in your organization's ideals and purpose. In Delta Zeta's case, that is "to unite its members in the bonds of sincere and lasting friendship, to stimulate one another in the pursuit of knowledge, to promote the moral and social culture of its members, and to develop plans for guidance and unity in action."

To look really hot for guys and new members isn't listed.

I don't regret my years as a Theta. Some people spend their whole life trying to fit in, with a group or ideal. With Theta, I got my chance to do that. But now, after years as part of a group with rules, ideals and traditions, I find that I prefer to be on my own. I guess being part of the in group gave me the confidence not to want to be in one anymore. It may not have been the lesson my sorority intended, but I thank it for that anyway.

And I still won't show you the secret handshake.

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