Residence Hall

Jackrabbit Village: Spencer, Abbott, Thorne

Hall Features

  • Wireless internet
  • Central air conditioning and heating
  • Personal lockers in the bathrooms
  • Smaller floor communities with up to 36 people on each floor
  • 24-hour visitation
  • Study rooms on each floor
  • Elevators
  • Cooking and baking equipment for the community kitchens available to checkout at the Spencer front desk
  • Laundry rooms on each floor
  • Living room/lounge area on every floor:
    • Fireplace
    • Flatscreen TV with cable
    • Community kitchen

Room and Furniture Dimensions

The communities are smaller than in other halls. Jackrabbit Village feels like home.
Jackrabbit Village student residents
View of Jackrabbit Village.
History of Jackrabbit Village
Abbott Hall

Cleveland Abbott, a 1916 alumnus from Watertown, was South à£à£Ö±²¥Ðã State University's first African American varsity athlete, earning 14 letters and competing in track, football, basketball and baseball.

A World War I veteran, he was hired to coach and teach at Tuskegee Institute by the famous African American educator, Booker T. Washington.

Abbott distinguished himself as both a football and track coach, winning 12 Southern Intercollegiate Conference football championships in 32 years of coaching. The football stadium at Tuskegee bears his name. As a track coach, Abbott's team won 14 national outdoor titles, including eight in a row.

Abbott served on the 1946 U.S. Olympic committee and coached the first African American woman, Alice Coachman, to win an Olympic gold medal, taking the high jump title at the 1948 Olympic Games.

Spencer Hall

Velva Lu Spencer earned a bachelor's degree in 1986 and a master's degree in 1989 in sociology, both from South à£à£Ö±²¥Ðã State University. She was an enrolled member of the Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate and a scholar on Native American education. She was an advocate for human rights, particularly providing opportunities for Native Americans. From 1988-2003, Spencer served as SDSU's third Native American adviser with remarkable success in retention and graduation of Native American students.

Spencer's family commented on her career, saying, "Just as SDSU's students, faculty and staff make this university much more than a collection of buildings and books, Velva Lu was much more than just an adviser. To those whose lives she touched and whose lives touched hers, Velva Lu was a friend, a sister and auntie and a mother — not by relation, but by building relationships. She guided, nurtured and encouraged her students."

Thorne Hall

Josef Thorne attended South à£à£Ö±²¥Ðã State University to study civil engineering. He was a fullback on the Jackrabbits' 1961 North Central Conference champion football team; he earned All-American and conference most valuable player.

Thorne was drafted by the Green Bay Packers in 1962 but instead joined the Army as a second lieutenant and became a helicopter pilot.

Flying with the 145th Aviator Airlift Platoon, Thorne was originally assigned to fly mail but instead volunteered for combat missions. During one of these missions on April 19, 1965, Thorne's "Huey" helicopter took enemy fire and crashed.

Thorne was the first South à£à£Ö±²¥Ðãn to die in Vietnam, just 21 days after combat forces arrived there. Thorne's memorial service was held on the SDSU campus in Doner Auditorium, where more than 800 students, faculty, staff, family and friends attended to honor his name. Thorne's name is 21st on the list of names of casualties appearing on the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, D.C.

Get Involved

Hall government is an opportunity to be a leader in your residence hall, plan programs and make decisions about how funding is utilized. Look for applications in the fall.

Your Hall Director