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re: TulaneLSU's Top 10 memories at LSU

Posted on 5/29/23 at 8:34 pm to
Posted by TulaneLSU
Member since Aug 2003
Member since Dec 2007
13298 posts
Posted on 5/29/23 at 8:34 pm to




Mother, I am a bit embarrassed to share with you this LSU tradition, but since we are here, it is said that on the holiday, Valentine’s Day, when we remember how Valentine brought sight to the blind and was later martyred for his faith, if you bring your significant other to Memorial Tower and kiss him or her at midnight, you will get married. Others say it is then that you become a real LSU student.”

“Please tell me, TulaneLSU, that you did not participate in this.”

“Of course not. But a student in my biochemistry class did trick me into coming here on Valentine’s night. I wondered why so many others were there that night. She did not answer with a satisfying answer, so I told her I was going back to my dorm. She grabbed me and drew herself near to me. Her mouth opened. And I ran. I heard the bell ringing as I ran through the Parade Grounds. I never spoke to her again.”

“Rightfully so. She sounds like quite the strumpet. You deserve better.”





We entered the Union after passing my true love, my favorite live oak on the entire campus, which I named Ruth. I named her as such because her rootedness and steadfastness reminded me of that of Ruth in the Bible, whose husband died. Any other woman would have gone back to her own people, but she remained faithful and stayed with her mother-in-law, Naomi, who would have been in big trouble without Ruth. Ruth is such a beautiful tree. I was upset that someone had littered in her trunk, so I cleaned it.



“Mother, I rarely ate any meals in the Union. It was, and it looks like it still is, fast junk food. But I would, on some Fridays, eat in the Magnolia Room in the Union penthouse. I would get at least seven filets of fried catfish, jambalaya, gumbo, and then for dessert, peach cobbler. I loved Friday lunches. Even better was when a professor would invite me to the Faculty Club. Those meals were excellent!” Unfortunately, both restaurants were closed when we visited.



Some pugilists of the OT will be happy to learn that the LSU Union now is home to a Sonic. Meeting each other at Sonic no longer requires a drive off-campus.





I was also quite upset when I learned two institutions in the Union are no more. First, the barber shop, I was told by a worker, closed this semester and they are going to get rid of it. During my year at LSU, I enjoyed getting a haircut every three Fridays by the same barber. I do not remember his name, but he had a salt and pepper mullet. He also ended every hair cut with shaving the neck with a straight razor and then soothing the skin with a hot towel. It was one of the highlights of my time there and I always gave a $20 tip.



My other Union disappointment was walking the basement to find my old USPS P.O.Box only to find that the USPS office had closed and a UPS store has replaced it. “Mother, this was where I received all your letters and care packages. It’s gone! I wish you could have seen the old brass mailboxes!”



It looked like fast food was our only option nearby, so I asked Mother if she wanted to go to the first ever Cane’s at the North Gate. She has never had Cane’s, and she reluctantly agreed. So we headed north on Highland again.









We walked through the drive-through line. When we got the menu, we were shocked to find that the Caniac was $16. As the cashier began to take our order, she said, “Wait a minute, are you walking? You can’t walk through. You have to come inside.” So we obliged her by entering, and each of us ate a Caniac. It was okay. Mother said she would never eat Cane’s again.






This post was edited on 5/29/23 at 8:39 pm
Posted by TulaneLSU
Member since Aug 2003
Member since Dec 2007
13298 posts
Posted on 5/29/23 at 8:34 pm to
We were both hungry, so I suggested we go to the LSU Dairy Store, where I would get a chocolate milkshake, something I learned on a visit to Wieners Circle in Chicago never to order, twice weekly when I was a student. On the walk down Highland, I realized how precariously the sidewalk seemed next to cars zooming past. I also showed Mother my favorite campus bus stop, where I would get the bus when worshiping at St. James Episcopal. Mother agreed with me that it was one of the most beautiful bus stops she had ever seen.



Mother asked me about where most of my classes were, and I told her Coates Hall. It was, in a roundabout way, on our way to the Dairy Store. I showed her where I took a graduate level Civil War class with Charles Royster, who took me to lunch at the Faculty Club and told me I was one of the best students he had ever taught. I also showed Mother where I sat in a Coates Hall Christian philosophy class taught by the world renowned, and now deceased, John Whittaker.

Mother needed to use the washroom, but I warned her that Coates Hall was not the place for that. In fact, it was in the western most Coates Hall bathroom that I nearly became the victim of a sexual assault. I had been working on a computer science project in the LINUX lab when I felt the downstream effects of peristalsis. I moved briskly to the bathroom, which was just across the hall. I tore many sheets of toilet paper to make a sanitary blanket over the seat. I sat and suddenly felt the aura of someone watching me. I looked to my left and through a hole was a man’s eyeball.

When he saw that I had seen him, he said, “Hey pal, can you hand me some toilet paper. I’m out.”

I was trying to be a good neighbor, so I tore some toilet paper and started to put the toilet paper through the hole when suddenly he jammed a body part through the hole, hoping that I would touch it. I was horrified. Though I was not quite finished, and may have left a trail of droppings behind, I ran out of that bathroom. I had not returned until this day. I never told Mother that story, and I hope none of you will either. It is simply horrifying to me, and would be even worse for her. Needless to say, I will never let a family member of mine use the Coates Hall bathroom.













After Coates Hall, I took Mother to Memorial Oak Grove behind the Union. It was there that on a Saturday night, I was returning from the library when I came across a distraught young female student. Her hair was a mess and she was crying, causing her mascara to run down her cheeks to the point that she looked almost like a clown. I asked her what was wrong, and she just blathered some incoherent words. Her breath reeks of that deadly and dastardly drug alcohol. She tried kissing me several times, but I was able to repel her advances. Eventually I found out she was living in Acadian, so I brought her there where her roommate took over. I left my campus address with her roommate. Several weeks later, I received an apology letter from the lush. I responded with a heartfelt letter, a copy of The Twelve Steps, and a list of AA meetings in the area. She never responded, but I pray she did not let the fetters of alcohol ensnare her ever again.





We passed my dorm, East Laville and the French House. I never spent much time in the French House other than for advising sessions and one seminar. The Honors College had some real cliques when I was there, and I was an outsider. We also saw one of the Honors College’s faculty’s car while walking through the West Laville parking lot. As she was with Cane’s, Mother was not impressed. As for the roommate stories, Mother advised me not to share them in public, as he is now a very powerful person she fears would seek retribution if I divulged some of what he did, things only I know.








We finally arrived at the Dairy Store. I was famished, having burned off that Caniac. It does not look like much from the outside, but my memories of that little store are bright. We entered and two employees, who gave us the courtesy of looking up from their cell phones, half-heartedly greeted us.

After a quick look at the ice cream offerings – no chocolate, no vanilla, no strawberry, no chocolate chip, no mint chocolate chip, no cookie dough, no cookies and cream – I settled on the least offensive I could find: peach.

“I will have a peach milkshake. No, make that two, one for Mother.”

“Sorry, we are out of milk,” the employee said.

“Out of milk? A dairy store being out of milk is akin to a pizzeria being out of tomato sauce. How is that even possible?”

“It just is.”

I suspected there was milk somewhere in the facility, but that he did not want to go to the trouble of making me a milkshake. I settled on getting two scoops of peach ice cream instead.

The employee rang me up. “That’ll be $8.67.”

“$8.67? It says on the menu one scoop is $2 and two scoops are $3.50. How is this possible?”

“We charge by weight now.”

“But I can get a half gallon ice cream, which is more than four times this weight, and it would cost, according to that menu behind you, $7.50. There is no reason behind this capricious pricing.”

The young man responded, “It is what it is.”

With that, I turned my back and left. Mother commented that she has rarely before seen me so bothered.





That was but a portion of our day of LSU walking. We made it out to the Rec Center and to the Vet School and a host of other locales, including the lakes and the churches by the lakes. By the end of the day, Mother admitted to me, “LSU is a handsome campus, not as beautiful as Newcomb, but its trees are some of the most beautiful I have seen on any campus. You were right, TulaneLSU.”

Perhaps one day, friends, we could meet up for a prayer walk through campus. Together, we could all explore campus and share our most hallowed and cherished memories there. I do so hope.

Faith, Hope, and Love,
TulaneLSU

P.S. I was pleasantly surprised by a few new art installations around campus. There were no such public pieces of outdoor art I can recall from my time. One memorable piece is John Fleming’s piece Reflectivity, which is near the new campus bookstore, which seems to be built on the old Highland Cafeteria site, which closed in 2007. I was told around that time, that the Laville Food Emporium, which was once home to a Domino’s that ran specials for five large one topping pizzas for $25 and became famous as the site where LSU Pizza Girl made a name for herself, was to be renovated.


This post was edited on 5/29/23 at 8:39 pm
Posted by VirgilCaine
Orchard Park
Member since Dec 2010
2865 posts
Posted on 5/29/23 at 8:49 pm to
Shoutout Jody’s grandpa.
Posted by danilo
Member since Nov 2008
20498 posts
Posted on 5/29/23 at 8:56 pm to
quote:

so I spent nearly two semesters at LSU before transferring to Delgado

Sad.
Posted by BRgetthenet
Member since Oct 2011
117769 posts
Posted on 5/29/23 at 8:57 pm to
quote:

During my year at LSU, I enjoyed getting a haircut every three Fridays by the same barber. I do not remember his name, but he had a salt and pepper mullet. He also ended every hair cut with shaving the neck with a straight razor and then soothing the skin with a hot towel. It was one of the highlights of my time there and I always gave a $20 tip.





Lawrence
Posted by KD Burner Account
Out of Bounds
Member since May 2019
1529 posts
Posted on 5/29/23 at 9:06 pm to
quote:

Some pugilists of the OT will be happy to learn that the LSU Union now is home to a Sonic. Meeting each other at Sonic no longer requires a drive off-campus.


Posted by RidiculousHype
St. George, LA
Member since Sep 2007
10236 posts
Posted on 5/29/23 at 9:51 pm to
You both ate caniacs for lunch and were still hungry. Your 400 lb asses couldn’t walk no 22 miles in one day lol
Posted by PeteRose
Hall of Fame
Member since Aug 2014
16984 posts
Posted on 5/30/23 at 1:07 am to
quote:

I enjoyed getting a haircut every three Fridays by the same barber. I do not remember his name, but he had a salt and pepper mullet. He also ended every hair cut with shaving the neck with a straight razor and then soothing the skin with a hot towel


Friend, the barber’s name was Paul. The other one was John. Paul was the better of the two.

Yours,

Pete
Posted by Fred innocent
Member since May 2023
314 posts
Posted on 5/30/23 at 5:02 am to
Will your play about pronouns ever go on broadway?
Much power Fred
Posted by Havoc
Member since Nov 2015
29016 posts
Posted on 5/30/23 at 9:58 am to
quote:

During my year at LSU, I enjoyed getting a haircut every three Fridays by the same barber. I do not remember his name, but he had a salt and pepper mullet. He also ended every hair cut with shaving the neck with a straight razor and then soothing the skin with a hot towel. It was one of the highlights of my time there and I always gave a $20 tip.

Same here during the late 90s, friend. I got to notice how, when he would apply the warm damp towel to your neck, he would turn and look to the side or go get something, as if to give you your moment of zen comfort in private.
Posted by GumboPot
Member since Mar 2009
119481 posts
Posted on 5/30/23 at 10:52 am to
quote:

I was upset that someone had littered in her trunk, so I cleaned it.


You are a good dude.
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