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JAMES EDWARD RYAN SR.

James Edward Ryan Sr., a native of Biloxi, Mississippi, a past resident of Port Bolivar, Texas, and a resident of Morgan City for the past 50 years, passed away Monday, June 26, 2017, at the age of 93.
James attended Ball High in Galveston, Texas. After graduation, he enlisted in the United States Navy where he proudly served from 1943 to 1946. Upon release of duty with the Navy, James began his life-long career with Shell Oil and there he worked for 38 years until his retirement.
James leaves to cherish his wonderful memory, his wife of 65 years, Esther Stanley Ryan; his loving children, James E. Ryan Jr. and his wife, Carol, Terry Michael Ryan, and Cathy Ryan Holland and her husband, Tony; five granddaughters, Melissa Holland, Candace Breaux and her husband, Jeremy, Erin Marietta and her husband, Matthew, Danielle Leger and her husband, John, and Katie Ryan; five great-granddaughters, Kelsey Collins, Taylor Collins, Caroline Kerby, Rylie Leger and Lillian Marietta; five step great-grandchildren; one sister, Mary Kahla; and numerous nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his parents, Angus Sr. and Mary Ryan; one brother, Angus Ryan Jr.; and two sisters, Margie Kreuzer and Velma “Red” Strimple.
The family requests that a time of visitation be observed Wednesday, June 28, 2017, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Hargrave Funeral Home and again on Thursday, June 29, 2017, from 9 a.m. until time of services at 11 a.m. at Hargrave Funeral Home. Following services, James will be laid to rest in the Morgan City Mausoleum where a rendering of Military Honors will be held by the East St. Mary Veterans Funeral Squad.
Pallbearers will be James Ryan Jr., Terry Michael Ryan, Tony Holland, Jeremy Breaux, Matthew Marietta and John Leger.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made in James’ name to St. Jude Children’s Hospital.

MALINDA WILSON

Malinda Burnett Wilson, 59, of Morgan City, died Friday, June 23, 2017.
She is survived by her husband, James A. Wilson; and her children, Jimmy Wilson and Lisa Dahl.
Services will be held Wednesday at 9 a.m. at Hargrave Funeral Home.
Hargrave Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Wheel House for June 27

SALE
St. Mary Council on Aging summer dates for its Treasures under the Oaks at 304 Iberia St., Franklin, is 8 a.m. to noon on Saturdays, July 1 and 15, and Aug 12 and 19. The thrift store houses practical, whimsical, modern and vintage items. Next door at the Franklin Senior Activity Center, meals sold from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Proceeds support St. Mary Council on Aging activities and services.

Kelly receives military degree

James Kelly Jr. graduated June 5 from Air University in Montgomery, Alabama, with a Master’s Degree in Military Operational Art and Science.

Kelly will be the executive officer of the 2-6 Cavalry (Aviation Apache Battalion) at Wheeler Army Airfield, Hawaii.

The Morgan City High School and Southern University graduate is the son of Rosalie and James Kelly Sr. of Morgan City.

Nicholls, other system schools to charge more

BATON ROUGE (AP) — Students will be paying more out of pocket to attend seven of the University of Louisiana System’s colleges in the next school year, under $19 million in fee hikes approved Friday.

An increase of $212.36 per semester for students at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette is the biggest hike approved for the 2017-18 school year, a 4.5 percent bump over last year that is estimated to raise $7 million annually for the campus.

The average increase per campus is $108.89 per semester, or 2.8 percent. Two of the system’s campuses, Grambling State University and the University of New Orleans, aren’t raising fees.

The fee hikes were approved Friday by the executive committee of the college system’s governing board. Even students who receive tuition from the state’s TOPS program won’t get to skip the boosted costs. TOPS doesn’t cover fees.

The increased charges come as Louisiana’s public colleges escaped state budget cuts for the first time in nearly a decade in the just-ended legislative session. UL System President Jim Henderson said that helped to keep student cost increases down.

Officials described the growing charges as the lowest average fee increase in a decade for its 90,000 students.

“While any increase in cost is significant to students, the average increase of $108 will provide valuable services in the classroom,” Henderson said in a statement.

Higher education leaders have said they’ve had difficulty keeping up with mandated increases in retirement and other expenses without new dollars from the state to pay for them. They say they’re struggling to hang on to faculty and students when competing with better-funded peer institutions.

The UL System said Louisiana’s four-year colleges rank lowest among their Southern peers in total dollars spent per student.

“The disparity puts Louisiana universities at a disadvantage in the recruitment and retention of faculty, especially at our research institutions,” Henderson said.

A day earlier, LSU’s governing board approved more than $15 million in boosted fees across five of its campuses. The most sizable increase, to raise $14 million for pay raises and other expenses, will hit students at the LSU flagship campus in Baton Rouge. All students there will pay $270 more per semester for the 2017-18 school year.

FEE HIKES FOR UL CAMPUSES

Seven campuses of the University of Louisiana System are raising fees on students for the 2017-18 school year. Two of the system’s campuses, Grambling State University and the University of New Orleans, aren’t raising fees. A look at the fee hikes approved Friday and what they’ll raise over the year for campuses:

—$143.40 per semester at Nicholls State University, a 3.75 percent increase, raising $1.5 million.

—$212.36 per semester at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, a 4.5 percent increase, raising $7 million.

—$98.73 per semester at Southeastern Louisiana University, a 2.5 percent increase, raising $2.3 million.

—$100 per semester at the University of Louisiana at Monroe, a 2.4 percent increase, raising $1.5 million.

—$136 per quarter at Louisiana Tech University, a 4.5 percent increase, raising $3.8 million.

—$144.51 per semester at McNeese State University, a 4 percent increase, raising $1 million.

—$145 per semester at Northwestern State University, a 3.5 percent increase, raising $2 million.

100 Black Men scholarships

Submitted Photo
These young people were awarded the 100 Black Men of St. Mary Parish Inc. 2017 Scholarships. Shown from left are President Clarence Robinson Jr., Kamryn Bradford of Patterson High, Christopher Snowden of West St. Mary High, A’Lyrah Jones of Franklin High and Treasurer Tryrone Johnson. Winners not pictured are Jahne Baily of Morgan City High and Destini Catchings of Berwick High.

Port moves closer to boosting dredge capability

The Port of Morgan City Harbor and Terminal District Board approved the specifications for a dredge pump to be put out for public bid during a special meeting Thursday after hearing recommendations from the committee. The board is placing two public bids: one for the pump to be completed in 120 days and one for the pump to be completed in 180 days. If an offer is not made, both bids will be pulled by July 17. The committee, which consists of commissioners Ben Adams, Lee Dragna, Adam Mayon and Vice President Gary Duhon, was established during the port meeting ...

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Bourgeois signs with Baton Rouge Community College

Ex-Morgan City High School basketball standout Laqwaijha Bourgeois has signed with Baton Rouge Community College to continue her hoops career.
Bourgeois, who held a signing ceremony Thursday, excelled for the Lady Tigers during her first three seasons and played a portion of her senior season.
“It’s really a blessing, because I fell off on a lot of things, but I didn’t let that bring me down,” Bourgeois said of signing with Baton Rouge Community College.
While she said the coaching staff projects her at playing small forward, she has shown an ability to score anywhere on the court, including the three-point line.
“I usually play all over,” she said. “Where ever they put me, I can do just about anything.”
Bourgeois said she feels most comfortable at the shooting guard position.
As a high school junior, Bourgeois earned first-team All-District 7-4A honors and was an honorable mention Class 4A All-State selection. She scored 181 points in district as a junior and averaged about 18.1 points per game and 9.1 rebounds per contest.
Heading to college, Bourgeois said it’s her defending she needs to work on.
“I need to work on my defense, just getting up and down the court,” she said.
As for what she liked about the team, Bourgeois said they are nice people.
“It seemed like a group of girls I could really play with,” she said. “They just look like good people to be around.”
Bourgeois, who will major in kinesiology, said she hopes to spend the remaining two years following her time at Baton Rouge Community College at a four-year university.

Cindy affects softball, baseball tournament schedules

Tropical Storm Cindy again disrupted local youth softball and baseball tournaments Thursday, pushing the start of the Babe Ruth S t a t e S o f t b a l l Tournament back four hours and postponing the Dixie Youth District 3 AA Tournament a day. While play already had been affected at the Babe Ruth State Tournament, with pool games Wednesday cancelled and bracket play scheduled to start Thursday at noon, weather permitting, the weather didn’t allow games to begin until 4 p.m. Babe Ruth State Softball Commissioner Brien Laurent said Thursday that about three games would be ...

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Graduation rates set record

St. Mary Parish’s public school graduation rate reached 84.9 percent in 2015-16, beating the statewide rate by more than 12 percentage points, according to statistics from the state Department of Education. The state’s graduation rate is 77 percent. “The ongoing and highly collaborative effort personified by high school administrators, guidance counselors, and teachers have resulted in continued increases in graduation rates,” Superintendent Leonard Armato said in a press release. Berwick High, Morgan City High and Patterson High schools also reached record graduation rates this year. Centerville High School’s rate was 100 percent. So was Central Catholic, a Catholic high school whose graduation rate ...

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