Nicholls State University - La Pirogue Yearbook (Thibodaux, LA)

 - Class of 1977

Page 31 of 376

 

Nicholls State University - La Pirogue Yearbook (Thibodaux, LA) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 31 of 376
Page 31 of 376



Nicholls State University - La Pirogue Yearbook (Thibodaux, LA) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 30
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Nicholls State University - La Pirogue Yearbook (Thibodaux, LA) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 32
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Page 31 text:

You mean this is the dorm? by Iames deGraauw A dorm with wall-to-wall carpeting, central air conditioning and heating, plus, being off-campus . . . seem like a nice place to live? Well, that didn't exactly seem to be the case with some entering freshmen as they first saw the St. Ioseph Dorm, and yelled obscenities, and coma ments like, You gotta be kidding! You mean this is the dorm? Phrases like this, and some a lot worse, were heard being screamed throughout the first week of registration during the spring semester. Because of the overcrowded conditions in the dorms on campus, the nurses' quarters at the old St. joseph Hospital on La. 1 had been converted to dormitory space for male students in the fall. The hospital personnel had moved to the new Thibodaux General Hospital behind the campus and the old facilities were not being used. The St. Ioseph accommodations were first used in the fall when students were glad to have a room of any nature and did not complain about the dis- tinctive hospital smell that accompanied their rooms. Mixed feelings then emerged about living in the St. Ioseph Dorm. Some of the men polled said they would rather live there than anywhere else on campus, while others were willing to trade for a room in one of the other men's dorms. Some men fand some women, too, it was rumoredl signed up for a second semester after living there in the fall. However, in the final count, only 7 of the original 17 men in the dorm elected to return for a second semester. Dorm director Rob- ert DeFelice was one of those. These seven, assured by the administration the dorm would again be open for the spring, were also told they would be getting single rooms. Returning for the spring, they found out, to their horror, that some rooms for large closetsj were to be occupied by as many as four men. This over- crowding never did materialize, however, partly because some freshmen, after seeing the dorm, yelled obscenities and then disappeared. The most disappointed dorm residents. after hearing of the lack of single rooms were identical twins Michael and Malcolm Peytavin, who had finally hoped to have individual rooms, even if it wasn't at home. Most of the students quartered there had the same gripes about the building: overcrowding, the necessity for a meal ticket for an off-campus loca- tion, the poor overall conditions and only one phone. The majority agreed that a lower rental fee would take care of many of the complaints. One of the most used facilities was the sundeck, the converted roof of the garage, where students spent much of their time while at the dorm. Because of the newly repaired roof Cone room had collected 16 gallons of water during a two-day periodl, and the overcrowding on campus, it appears the St. Ioseph Dorm will remain a part of the university for some time. Perhaps it might even become coed. Overshadowed by the now-famous poster of Far- rah Fawcett-Maiors. Michael Peytavin relaxes in the St. Ioseph Dorm. i .1 4 , - , fi jffdli 4 F -E- gi: ' 1. -tw. X -, ' fl' ,ifQ+ 1' .5 i. Q , dufirnnuw Dorm Lift

Page 30 text:

john Reilly engages in some tricks with the cam- era as he photographs himself in his Long Hall dorm room. SQDIME Z5 ECI HT 0 ME legislature preventing the construction of new dorms will not help the situa- tion. However, married students, who make up 29 percent of Nicholls' student body will be offered some relief by Sep- tember, 1978. At that time, construction should be finished on a S650,000, 40- family housing unit on campus. When Charles Roemer, executive assistant to Governor Edwin Edwards, came for the official groundbreaking, the first step was taken towards solving at least part of Nicholls housing prob- lems. For other students, it still looks like a long wait. You can't even die to get into the hospital. cont. With the help of dictionaries, roommates Cristina Hernandez and Mary Pennington work out their language problems. Hernandez is a nursing major from Medellin, Colombia, and Pennington is an education major from Gretna. it E5 it in I Wt T i . 3 E ' ':k'iMu'-- f, ,. ta 1 pw! if , mf-.ww..!nuiw1A af, 'A-Hf



Page 32 text:

gi-L 5 'ftitllilitli ii ' W. iitttititatf-Qiii - aim .I me f it it 'ff-'iffx'I1'ff.-t5ii1iiMQA .' tJvf'Efi-my . '1'.q.iR.'ap. f 1 ,will.,-,yx:.igg.'-..5.g.f-.- ,,fi . H .,,.zct5i-g,, sp: .WJ ,Q 41 ' t , Vi ...flip ,.L.WW5H.Wy an y Kun ti S I Af, I O 4.7 yti-1-gait., Tw, . 2, r 515,395 ' 4 I 1 I 1 , 5. '11.'JfViff:tlW'Us it-f Pykflfl Avg MIM' VM' wig, ff'- .,.:.hc'r.,.1'.W-Qvmwiy-1 5 ji, Q -5 N 11. do ,1 t9 , ,Nh fi t fy 1 ff 1 i iv ,I .f.'-'11,-.:f',i1fr.t ,AL - , ,. , . . ff W' ' ' f by Kevin Fambrough It was cold and windy that Wednesday morning. So cold that the walk-on passengers and drivers who left their cars huddled inside the ferry's cabin as it began to cross the Mississippi River. Several topics filled the brisk air, as the 125-foot ferry. George Prince, left its Destrehan dock. The Cincinnati Reds had defeated the New York Yankees for the second time in the World Series and it was the middle of the week for the workers at the various chemical plants in St. Charles Parish. Payday was still three days away. But what many didn't know. and 77 never would. was that in less than half an hour, 18 dazed, stunned survivors would be telling reporters and sheriff's deputies of the horror they saw and couldn't prevent. At 6:23 a.m.. October 23, 1976, the freighter Frosta plowed into the side of the George Prince, pushing it until the ferry capsized and sank in 65 feet of the muddy Missis- sippi water. Two survivors said the ferry moved directly into the path of the ship despite whistle warnings by the freighter and the shouts and horn blowing from the ferry's passen- gers. Charles Naquin, a 20-year-old worker from St. Rose, and a foot traveler on the ferry. later said that it was only when the ship was right on us that the captain cut the motor off and stopped. But it was too late. . The impact knocked passengers into the freezing water as cars slid off the deck of the ferry. Waiting motorists on both sides of the river watched in disbelief. Gwen Breaud and his father, P.I. Breaud, would have been the last passengers on the ferry but deckhands would not let them put their pickup truck on board. I cursed the ferry because I was left behind, but now I thank God I am alive, Gwen said. Within minutes an array of ships and small craft began rushing to the scene. Two tugs pushing a grain ship to the dock at the St. Charles Grain Elevator were the first on the scene. Also responding to the disaster was the capsized ves- sel's sister ferry. the Ollie K. Wilds. The ferry became the Two stud nt fatalities in earl mornin disaster l 5 0 i 1 R -1 ,,, . , ,, , . 41.3 , N E R if 53 .iz if 5' W vi 4 4: :A lf. ' if 'L . I I ffyf it , 'V f A bs . 4 -ev ii? 14 X I -- s gi, f 1.-'gif'-4 I ,. . L, :KT-gfffif? -. f . ' ,pf We i. Y.. flif Z fn.,- ' I if I 7' ' I I -. 5, i-i ' ' V I .14 Z., . it .FRI-fetffftiaovf, ' ' . wl62315?L,1,,Q 4, n i . M- .4 I ' 4 W Mt t ' 'l v4-'-wwf -'eff'-1-wfpr-I-w ,-fy. - f gv:-li, I - f-f,'.,jjff-fifzfgj :,-' 5 ,,,J1,, :L ' t : ?:I ,-. .1153 . 'wp-x Qi'-f.'3gz,.'-, . , twiki' W fa 'W' Q t I I , ' J '-+fi.zv1t'.f'..-,,1- , A . ff' .I -f , 3 Qf.iyW,,. I X I uhm if 2 Q I l.53fZfj:'i,.1'5ufJv.1'.-.,2 ,'!'1ltPf-fifii,fE5E'?j 'V ya ' if ' Emiffi 1 - . .viiifZ':2'l4,,.5l1'ldi'itf:Iii.lf+l8f1 it- tial.. 'i13: 'l'JY '

Suggestions in the Nicholls State University - La Pirogue Yearbook (Thibodaux, LA) collection:

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Nicholls State University - La Pirogue Yearbook (Thibodaux, LA) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 293

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