LQHBA SCHOLARSHIPS: $6,000 to be awarded

Join us for the Mardi Gras Futurity and Louisiana Downs Futurity at Louisiana Downs on Saturday, March 25, 2023


Three scholarships will be awarded through a LIVE drawing in the Louisiana Downs winner’s circle on Saturday, March 25th, immediately following the 4th race.


Applicants must register in person beginning at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, March 25, 2023.


Registration will close promptly after the third race.


ENTRANTS MUST BE PRESENT TO WIN

  • For more information on the scholarship eligibility or the rules, please see the attached flyer or visit LQHBA.COM

Congressman Mike Johnson Visits Natchitoches for a Town Hall Meeting

Congressman Mike Johnson of Louisiana’s fourth congressional district, which includes Natchitoches, spoke at a town hall meeting Tuesday, March 14 at the Natchitoches Events Center. The congressman stated that this marked his 102nd town hall since entering congress in 2017.

The town hall was attended by a number of officials and candidates such as members of the Natchitoches Parish School Board and city council as well as Superintendent Grant Eloi, Sheriff Stuart Wright, Parish President John Richmond, state senate candidate Alan Seabaugh, State Senator Louie Bernard, Representative Gabe Firment, Provencal’s Mayor and an Alderman, and Mayor Ronnie Williams. The overflow crowd also consisted of numerous ordinary citizens.

Congressman Johnson began the meeting by speaking about his priorities, addressing federal spending and border security. He also touched on the ongoing banking crisis caused by the failure of the Silicon Valley Bank. He then took questions from constituents for a bit over 30 minutes.


LSU PRESIDENT, DR. WILLIAM F. TATE, IV VISITS CENTRAL AND NORTH LOUISIANA

By Billy West, Jr.

LSU President, Dr. William F. Tate, IV, has been traveling across Central and Northwest Louisiana for the past two days to promote the LSU Scholarship First Agenda and discuss the economic impact of LSU on the State’s economy. The promotional tour by Dr. Tate emphasizes that Louisiana is at the center of many of our nation’s core challenges. Louisiana is filled with an abundance of natural resources and LSU is at the forefront of research regarding agriculture, biomedical issues, coastal preservation and energy production. LSU has become a leader in the field of cybersecurity.

The Scholarship First Agenda emphasizes the rich history of LSU as well as the $6.1 billion dollar total economic impact on the State of Louisiana for 2021-2022.

President Tate is on a mission to explain the economic impact of LSU and to remind citizens that for every dollar invested by the Louisiana Legislature that LSU returns approximately $14.

Specifically, LSU Health Shreveport provides direct economic impact of $600 million in the Shreveport region and a combined economic impact of $2.3 billion of its practicing alumni. LSUHS has a total economic impact of over $3 billion in North Louisiana.

LSU is an economic engine that will help catapult the State of Louisiana and improve the lives of all Louisiana residents. LSU’s commitment to the agriculture industry, biomedical research, coastal preservation, cybersecurity and national defense as well as energy-related research is a great investment for the future of the State of Louisiana.

LSU and Dr. Tate should be applauded for the Scholarship First Agenda and for educating the residents of Louisiana in general and the State Legislature, in particular, on the true treasure and value that is Louisiana State University.

For more information on the Scholarship First Agenda, visit https://www.lsu.edu/scholarship-first/index.php

Event Photos: Kevin’s Gallery


The Village of Natchez Holds a Brief Village Council Meeting

The Village of Natchez held a village council meeting at the fellowship hall of the New Birth Baptist Church on Tuesday, March 14. The brief, four minute meeting only had two items on the agenda. The first was “to approve a resolution to continue to qualify for FEMA fundings by adopting the Village of Natchez Hazard Mitigation Plan update.” The second resolution was to approve advertising for a Clerk for the Village of Natchez. Both resolutions passed unanimously. The meeting was attended by Mayor Patsy Ward Hoover and Aldermen Monique Sarpy, Sheila Johnson and McKinley Hoover as well as a handful of citizens.


Bass tournament controversy can stem from unintentional blunders

As they say, records are made to be broken. Well, the same can be said of rules in a bass tournament. 

Every bass tournament organization has its own set of rules and not all circuits are the same. Some tournament trails are called “team trails” and others are  called Pro/Am events in which a pro is randomly paired up with a co-angler. The pro fishes out the front of the boat and has total control of the trolling motor and where they fish, while the co-angler/amateur fishes out of the back of the boat and is not allowed to fish off the front deck. 

While most of the rules are very similar, some circuits might have a couple of rules specific for what body of water they are fishing. But no matter what, it’s the responsibility of the angler to read, know, and follow the rules of each event. There are no excuses for violating a rule under any circumstances, especially not a plea of ignorance.            

Let’s look at a controversy in a recent Bass Champs Team Trail event on Toledo Bend about the third-place team of Bill Cook and his partner Ken Burgess. First and foremost, most of the time when anglers violate a rule in a tournament, it’s unintentional. This does not make them cheaters; it means they violated a rule they didn’t realize was a rule. This Bass Champs event was a trailering tournament, which meant you could launch your boat anywhere on the lake but could not start fishing until 7 a.m. 

On this particular morning, Bill and Ken left the ramp and headed for the area they were going to start fishing, arriving around 6:45. Around this time, Bill lowered the trolling motor with his Livescope screen activated. This was an immediate rules violation. Livescope is part of Garmin Electronics’ fish-finder system that is what anglers call a forward-facing sonar. It allows an angler to see fish up to 100 feet in real time. 

The rule that Bill and his partner were not aware of was that you could not turn on your Livescope until the official start fishing time. They were, however, allowed to use their electronics before then, but only for navigational purposes.  

After revealing how Bill and his partner caught their fish on an episode of Tackle Talk Live and the radio program Hook’N Up & Track’N Down, a tournament competitor heard how they were using Livescope before the official start time. This guy then called Bass Champs and reported the violation. Bass Champs verified the accusation and concluded that indeed Bill and Ken had violated the Livescope rule.  

Bass Champs notified Bill that he and his partner would have to forfeit their third-place winnings of $2,700. Embarrassed and upset with himself, Bill posted his reaction on Facebook and apologized for the rule violation that he and his partner inadvertently committed. He never made any excuses and said no one was to blame for this mistake other than himself and his partner. They took full responsibility and emphasized that they should have done a better job of reading and understanding the rules. 

From this angler’s perspective, Bill and Ken are two awesome individuals who made an honest mistake. But I can say with 90 percent confidence that out of 169 other teams in this event, there were others who violated the same rule but never came forward and admitted it. 

If you were one of these in this category, shame on you for not being honest! One thing I’ve always praised about tournament bass fishermen is that most do hold themselves accountable whenever they break a rule, from forgetting to wear a life jacket while changing locations on the lake, to having more than five fish in the live well and forgetting to cull one.

It’s the responsibility of the angler to call the tournament director and report any violation when it occurs and accept whatever penalty or punishment that might be handed down. Rules are not intended to make things tougher on anglers. They exist to level the playing field for all anglers.  

The message to take away from this story — always read the rules for all tournaments. Nothing is worse or more embarrassing for an angler than being disqualified from an event.

 Until next time, good luck, good fishing and don’t forget to read the rules! 

Contact Steve at sgraf26@yahoo.com


Attention Drivers! Protect Yourself and Your Family!

At the Harrington Law Firm, we spend a great deal of our time fighting with insurance companies in order to compensate our clients for legitimate damages resulting from car, big truck, and motorcycle wrecks.

Because of that, it may seem a bit odd that we are recommending to our clients and other drivers to buy more insurance. On its face, it may look as if we are trying to help out the very same companies that we are fighting. What we are actually doing is urging all drivers to protect themselves and their families by purchasing Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist Coverage as part of their automobile policy.

It probably won’t come as a surprise to many reading this to learn that statistics show that over 1 in 10 drivers on our Louisiana highways are driving with absolutely no insurance coverage. Of the drivers who do have insurance in non-commercial vehicles, more than half have “minimum limits” liability coverage. (Under Louisiana Law, non-commercial drivers are required to carry a minimum of $15,000/$30,000 in liability coverage.)

What this means is that when someone has minimum limits coverage and the driver negligently causes an accident resulting in injuries and damages to another person, the most that the insurance company will have to pay is $15,000 for a single injured party and a cumulative total of $30,000 for all injuries and damages to all parties, no matter how many there are and no matter how much the injuries and damages are.

These limits include damages for pain and suffering, medical bills, lost income, disability, etc., etc.

In other words, if a person sustains serious injuries in an automobile accident as a result of another person’s negligence with huge medical bills, loss of income, etc., and if that person only had minimal limits insurance the most that claimant will be able to collect is $15,000.

Of course, even worse, if the driver negligently causing the accident has no insurance, then there is no one to collect from and party or parties are, simply put, out of luck!

One might think you could simply sue the person who caused the accident individually and make them pay. While that is true that person would be individually liable for the damages he or she caused, our experience at the Harrington Law Office is that in situations where the driver causing the accident is uninsured or has minimum limits, it would be extremely rare that they would have the personal financial assets or income to compensate the injured party. Even if you sued them personally and got a judgment, in most cases they could simply file bankruptcy and get out of it.

So as Louisiana drivers, how can we protect ourselves and our families against these potentially devastating results? The answer is simple. Make Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist Coverage a part of your automobile policy.

Louisiana Law requires that when a person purchases a policy of automobile insurance, Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist Coverage will be a part of the policy unless the purchaser rejects that coverage. In other words, when you buy car insurance, you must sign or initial your application rejecting that type of coverage, or you will automatically have it.

Unfortunately, because of high insurance costs, many people simply tell their agents they want the cheapest coverage possible and end up rejecting Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist Coverage. Thereby, they are leaving themselves vulnerable to those Uninsured and Underinsured Motorists who are traveling our highways.

PROTECT YOURSELF AND YOU FAMILY AGAINST THOSE DRIVERS! Make certain that your automobile policy includes Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist Coverage! It is relatively inexpensive and could help you avoid a catastrophic financial loss should you or someone you love be injured or damaged by an Uninsured/Underinsured driver. Also, do not try to save a few dollars by purchasing “Economic Only” Uninsured/Underinsured coverage. This would only compensate the injured party for medical bills and lost income but not for pain and suffering, which often can be substantial.

Again, the difference in cost between regular Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist and “Economic Only – UM,” is fairly insignificant.

In conclusion, while it may seem strange for us, Personal Injury Attorneys, to recommend that you help the insurance companies by buying more insurance, what we are really doing is recommending that you protect yourselves, and the only way to do so is making sure that you have Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist Coverage.


The main office of the Harrington Law Firm is located at 459 Jefferson Street in Natchitoches, Louisiana, and partners, Rodney and Eddie Harrington represent clients all over Louisiana in all types of injury cases including automobile accidents, slip and fall, and medical malpractice. They also handle bankruptcy and debt negotiation, Social Security claims, and successions. For a free appointment, call 318-352-5900.


Goldonna News: March 15, 2023

Spring has sprung in the Village of Goldonna. The trees are taking on a light shade of green and there are flowers buds galore. The Christmas in the Park Committee held their fish fry fundraiser last weekend and it was a huge success, as always. The whole community pitched in and made it another year to remember.

The Goldonna Assembly of God Youth Group has announced they will present “The Life of Jesus”. This will take place on Friday, April 7th and Saturday April 8th at 7:00pm. This will be a Silhouette Performance which has become a local favorite. The church is located at 108 Talley Street, downtown Goldonna.

Goldonna Baptist Church is laying the groundwork to have the biggest year of Operation Christmas Child that the Goldonna community has ever seen. Pastor Dupree recently announced the following donation schedule:
March Toothbrushes & floss
April Toys (cards, dominos, jump ropes, small musical instruments, matchbox cars
May Hard plastic cups, bowls, utensils
June Sewing kits and multi tools
July School supplies, pencil cases, notebooks, crayons, coloring books
August Hats/caps, tshirts, undies, socks
September wipes, makeup, hair clips, maxi-pads, solid deodorant
October Christmas Stockings, Christmas Cards
November Packing Party

Pastor Dupree extends the invitation to the area churches and the entire community. He also invited everyone to attend the packing party as well. This is when you see all of the hard work that was dedicated during the year come to fruition.

Every Sunday evening at 5:00pm, Mr. Wiley Cole will be teaching an in-depth Bible Study at GBC. Kingdom Kids is still going strong every Wednesday night. Mark your calendars! The church will also be holding a 5th Sunday Singing on April 30th with food and fellowship to follow.

Pastor George Procell, River of Life Family Worship Center, announces that their church will host an “Iron Sharpens Iron Men’s Prayer Breakfast” on Saturday, April 8th, at 8:00am. Brother Wade Smith will be the guest speaker. Everyone is invited to enjoy a hot breakfast and fellowship with their brothers in Christ. For more information be sure and visit the event page on the church’s Facebook page.

The Healthy Living Club at Goldonna Elementary Junior High will be hosting a “Take Down Tobacco Week” from March 27-31. For $1 a day the students can dress down and donate the money to the club. The Wildcat and Lady Wildcat ball teams will be having their Spring Fundraisers. Please contact the school’s office at 318-727-9449 for more information on the “Egg my Yard” and “Easter Desserts” fundraisers.

Pre-K enrollment will be held March 16th from 9am until 11am at the school. Make plans to attend so you can be guaranteed a spot.

If you have news to include please email Reba Phelps at jreba.phelps@gmail.com


Name Games

In 1962, the U.S. Army created the Army Material Command, commonly referred to as AMC.  This Army entity has been developing and delivering “material readiness solutions to ensure globally dominant land force capabilities.”  In layman’s terms, the AMC is the primary provider of materials to the Army.  It operates ammunition plants, arsenals, depots, and other facilities on land and afloat.  The AMC sells Army equipment and services to allies of the United States.  It also negotiates and implements agreements between the United States and foreign nations for the joint production of weapons.  The AMC created a motto to simplify their purpose even further: “If a Soldier shoots it, drives it, flies it, wears it, communicates with it or eats it – AMC provides it.”
 
In January 1973, after 11 years in operation, the AMC was getting a new and more modern national headquarters in Huntsville, Alabama.  To boost morale, the AMC held a contest to name the new headquarters.  People came up with all sorts of names for the new headquarters.  When the deadline for suggestions was reached, the AMC had received more than 500 entries.  The official contest committee to name the new building carefully studied each one.  Some of the suggestions were comical.  Some were too colorful or risqué to list here.  Some were just downright strange. 

Finally, on January 14, 1973, Major General Charles T. Horner, the AMC chief of staff announced that the lucky winner was Francis Sikorski.  Along with the pride of winning the contest, Francis received a monetary award of $100.  After announcing the winner, the major general proudly announced the winning entry.  “The name of the new AMC building,” the major general said, “is…the AMC building.”  The choice was met with disappointment. 

More than 40 years later, officials in Britain had a similar situation in which the public was disappointed in a naming contest.  In 2016, Britain’s Natural Environment Research Council held an online poll to name its new £287 million polar scientific research ship.  The Natural Environment Research Council suggested dignified names such as Shackleton, Endeavour, and Falcon.  Members of the public also made their own suggestions.  Someone suggested naming the ship after the late David Bowie.  BBC radio host James Hand put forth his suggestion, but he eventually cast his ballot for another suggestion to name the boat in honor of English broadcaster, biologist, natural historian and author Sir David Attenborough.  Eventually, officials selected, not the entry which had the most votes, not the one with the second most votes, but the one which came in fourth place in the poll.  Officials named the boat the RRS Sir David Attenborough

People who had voted in the online poll were upset that National Environmental Research Council disregarded their choice in favor of one that came in fourth place.  They asked why they held a poll at all.  Science Minister Jo Johnson responded that there were “more suitable” names.  The online pollsters rallied behind BBC radio host James Hand’s suggestion because it came in first place with more than 124,000 votes.  Finally, to quell the row, the Council agreed to name a miniature yellow submarine onboard the ship as James Hand had suggested.  If the council had adopted the name based on the “name our ship” poll, the RRS Sir David Attenborough would have been named Boaty McBoatface.   

Sources:
1.      The Atchison Daily Globe, January 15, 1973, p.2.
2.     Whitehorse Daily Star, March 21, 2016, p.13.
3.     “‘Boaty McBoatface’ polar ship named after Attenborough,” BBC News, May 6, 2016, accessed March 10, 2023.  www.bbc.com/news/uk-36225652
4.     Tampa Bay Times, October 18, 2016, p.T11.


NCHS softball earns another district shutout, visits Haughton today

LADY CHIEFS’ CATALYST:  Senior Desi Robinson collected a team-high three hits Tuesday for Natchitoches Central. (Photo by DUSTY GRIMES)

Maddie Robinson having a dominant pitching performance is old news for the Natchitoches Central softball team. But when her strikeouts account for 17 of a possible 21 outs in another one-hitter, Robinson is an absolute show-stopper.

Tuesday, her pitching and another steady offensive performance by the Lady Chiefs produced a 6-0 District 1-5A victory over visiting Parkway.

In a nine-hit attack, Desi Robinson, Sydney Terrell, and Ehren Guidroz each had multiple hits for Natchitoches Central. Desi Robinson collected three hits in four at bats.

In the second inning, NCHS got going when Mallory LaCour’s sacrifice fly scored all the runs Maddie Robinson needed.

Only a sixth-inning single denied Robinson a no-hitter as Parkway dropped to 6-3.

The Lady Chiefs (13-3) will travel to Haughton today for a 5 p.m. district contest.


Demon pitching, defense stifles ULM

NATCHITOCHES – Jacob Farrell got the Northwestern State baseball team off and running Tuesday night.

The Demon bullpen then took care of things down the stretch, polishing off a 6-2 victory against ULM at Brown-Stroud Field that capped a season sweep of the Warhawks.

“Throwing strikes, staying ahead in counts, staying out of hitters’ counts – we did a good job of that tonight,” seventh-year head coach Bobby Barbier said. “Chase (Prestwich) was great. He wasn’t as sharp as he has been, but he battled. Dawson (Flowers) was really good. We needed that from him after a couple of tough ones. (Andrew) Cossio, same thing.”

Prestwich (3-0) gave the Demons another strong mid-week start, scattering six hits in five innings but limiting the damage to a single run in the fourth inning.

By then, Northwestern State (10-6) had built a 5-0 lead thanks in part to Farrell’s first career leadoff home run and a three-run blast from Gabe Colaianni that punctuated a four-run third inning.

Farrell’s solo shot on a 2-2 pitch from ULM starter Hollis Huff (1-1) gave the Demons the start they needed. A fifth-year junior who has worked his way into the everyday lineup, Farrell homered for the second time in the past seven games and delivered NSU’s first leadoff home run since Larson Fontenot’s inside-the-park starter against Lamar on March 24, 2019.

“I was trying to get a pitch to put in play, and luckily it went out of the park,” Farrell said. “I knew as soon as I hit it. I felt called to be here and wanted to be here. I believed in myself, and the Lord gave me a chance to play. I’m very grateful for that.”

The Demons were equally grateful for Farrell’s glovework.

After a 1-2-3 sixth inning by Flowers, Farrell helped the right-hander stay perfect on the night with a fully extended diving catch in left-center field that took extra bases away from ULM’s Riley Davis.

Flowers then retired Cardell Thibodeaux on a ground ball to end the seventh and pitch multiple innings for the first time in his six appearances this season. A year ago, Flowers recorded more than three outs in eight of his 20 relief appearances.

“Me and (assistant coach) Dan (Hlad) and coach Barbier have been talking about staying within myself and not getting caught up in my emotions – basically competing too hard,” Flowers said. “Just do what I do every pitch and let the results be what they are.”

Flowers’ two hitless innings were his longest outing without allowing a hit since March 1, 2022, when he held UL Lafayette hitless for two innings.

Cossio followed Flowers out of the NSU bullpen and ran into trouble after retiring Carson Jones on a grounder to start the inning. A single by Shawn Dalton Weatherbee (3-for-4) and a walk to Davis Meche, who battled back from an 0-2 count, preceded Kade Dupont’s RBI double and put runners on second and third with one out.

Cossio struck out pinch hitter Jarrett McDonald and retired Zack Floyd (2-for-4) to maintain the Demons’ four-run advantage.

“He’s given that up in the past when some bad stuff happens, but he matured and locked it in,” Barbier said. “It was good to see on the mound. That and we played good defense. We made some really nice defensive plays.”

Jeffrey Elkins and Michael Dattalo each had a pair of hits for Northwestern State. Each team finished with eight hits, but the Demons mixed in their two home runs and an Elkins double in their total while Dupont’s eighth-inning double was ULM’s lone extra-base hit.

The Demons return to action Friday when they host Little Rock in the opener of a three-game series. First pitch is set for 6:30 p.m. at Brown-Stroud Field.

Northwestern State 6, ULM 2

ULM 000 100 010 – 2 8 3

NSU 104 000 10x – 6 8 1

W – Chase Prestwich (3-0). L – Hollis Huff (1-1). 2B – ULM, Kade Dupont. NSU, Jeffrey Elkins. HR – NSU, Jacob Farrell (2), Gabe Colaianni (2). Highlights: ULM, Shawn Dalton Weatherbee 3-4; Dupont 2-4, 2B, RBI. NSU, Elkins 2-3, 2B; Michael Dattalo 2-4.

Records: ULM 7-11; Northwestern State 10-6.


Lady Demons held in check by Tech pitching

RUSTON – Northwestern State could not keep Louisiana Tech off the scoreboard in multiple bases loaded, less than two out situations on Tuesday night in a 5-0 loss to the Lady Techsters. 

While the Lady Demons (12-10) did a solid enough job of limiting the damage once the Lady Techsters (16-8) created the potential crooked number scenarios, the offense was held in check by the best pitching staff in Conference-USA. 

The first four batters of the game for Tech reached on two walks, a double and a hit by pitch. After getting the first run of the game on a throwing error, the first of any kind for catcher Ashlyn Walker, Tech had the bases loaded with no outs. 

NSU starter Maggie Darr buckled down to limit Tech to just one more run in the inning on an RBI groundout, retiring the final three batters of the inning in order. 

The Demons found themselves in a similar situation in the bottom of the second after two straight hits and another hit batter loaded the bags with one out. Another RBI groundout by the first batter reliever Kenzie Seely faced made it a 3-0 game and a wild pitch added another run, but Seely was able to get out of the jam with no more damage done. 

Seely retired six straight batters before a meaningless two-out single in the fourth to keep the Demons in the game. 

The Demon bats were stymied all night long by the vaunted Tech pitching staff. Bailie Ragsdale accounted for NSU’s only two hits through the first six innings of the game, leadoff infield singles in both the first and third innings. 

Her base hit in the third was the last hit and baserunner for the Demons until a two-out single by Kat Marshall in the sixth innings. The Tech pitching combination of Mary Martinez and Brook Melnychuk retired 11 straight NSU batters between base hits. 

Marshall’s knock came after a pivotal defensive play by the NSU first baseman prevented the Lady Techsters from blowing the game open in the only inning in which Seely saw any significant traffic against her. 

The third bases loaded, one out situation of the game came in the bottom of the fifth, and thanks to a head’s up play from Marshall, only one run came across for the Lady Techsters. 

After the second bloop single of the inning that fell between the drawn in infield and outfield brought in a run, a soft liner right at the first base bag was caught by Marshall and she was able to apply the tag on the runner for a critical double play to end the inning. 

The Demons were unable to produce anything offensively in the final five innings of the game, only getting a runner to second base once after an error and a walk in the second inning. 

NSU travels to Memphis this weekend for two games each against Indiana and Memphis beginning on Friday. 


Art & Flowers on the Bricks – a Wonderful Celebration of Art and Gardening!

Over 1,000 people came to enjoy a morning of family fun and shopping along Natchitoches’ iconic brick street as downtown Natchitoches played host to two beloved local traditions that have each graced our community for over 20 years on Saturday, March 11. The Annual Bloomin’ on the Bricks featured fun crafts and activities for the little ones, the parish library’s games and prizes, and a variety of gardening vendors for the Green Thumbs among us. The popular event was a great way to kick off the spring season.

Alongside Bloomin’ on the Bricks, the Natchitoches art community celebrated its Annual Art Along the Bricks. This celebration of creativity featured The Natchitoches Art Gallery, faculty, and students from NSU’s art department as well as fourteen vendors in a variety of artistic styles.

In addition to the two events, visitors downtown could also enjoy watching rowing crews from The Woodlands Rowing Club and Vanderbilt University training. Natchitoches has long been a preferred location for college rowing teams to train on the Cane River during their Spring Break. Natchitoches’ famous Indigeaux Tribal Fusion Belly Dance Troupe also performed several pieces for the delighted crowd.


LQHBA SCHOLARSHIPS: $6,000 to be awarded

Join us for the Mardi Gras Futurity and Louisiana Downs Futurity at Louisiana Downs on Saturday, March 25, 2023


Three scholarships will be awarded through a LIVE drawing in the Louisiana Downs winner’s circle on Saturday, March 25th, immediately following the 4th race.


Applicants must register in person beginning at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, March 25, 2023.


Registration will close promptly after the third race.


ENTRANTS MUST BE PRESENT TO WIN

  • For more information on the scholarship eligibility or the rules, please see the attached flyer or visit LQHBA.COM

LQHBA SCHOLARSHIPS: $6,000 to be awarded

Join us for the Mardi Gras Futurity and Louisiana Downs Futurity at Louisiana Downs on Saturday, March 25, 2023


Three scholarships will be awarded through a LIVE drawing in the Louisiana Downs winner’s circle on Saturday, March 25th, immediately following the 4th race.


Applicants must register in person beginning at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, March 25, 2023.


Registration will close promptly after the third race.


ENTRANTS MUST BE PRESENT TO WIN

  • For more information on the scholarship eligibility or the rules, please see the attached flyer or visit LQHBA.COM

BOM MAKES DONATION TO BOYS & GIRLS CLUB 

BOM was proud to make a $5,000 donation to the Boys & Girls Clubs of Acadiana Club Teen Center. Pictured left to right: BOM’s Mary Hooper, Micah Murchison, Blaise LaCour, Boys and Girls Club Unit Director De’Andrea Sanders, BOM’s Carrie Hough, and BOMFS’ Reba Phelps.


Gipson resigns to take Austin Peay head coaching job

NATCHITOCHES – After engineering a 13-win turnaround for the Northwestern State men’s basketball team, head coach Corey Gipson has resigned his position to accept the head coaching position at Austin Peay.

Gipson will be introduced as the Governors’ new coach Tuesday.

In his lone season at Northwestern State, Gipson led the Demons to their most wins in a single season in a decade and their most Southland Conference wins in a season since 2014-15. Gipson took Northwestern State to its first Southland Conference Tournament championship game since 2013 and the Demons’ second-place finish in the SLC regular season was its best since the 2012-13 season.

“Corey Gipson did a tremendous job during his time here at Northwestern State,” NSU Director of Athletics Kevin Bostian said. “From the hours of off-the-court community service to the on-court product, his program was deeply tied to the university and the city of Natchitoches. Together, they brought national recognition to Northwestern State while succeeding in the game of basketball and outside of it. While it is difficult to lose good coaches, Austin Peay’s interest speaks highly of the work Corey and his staff did during their time here.”

Under Gipson, Northwestern State collected its first regular-season victory against an Associated Press Top 25 team, defeating then-No. 15 TCU, 64-63, in Fort Worth, Texas, on Nov. 14. Northwestern State’s 8-2 start to the season was the best 10-game mark for the program since moving to the Division I level in the 1976-77 season and its best since the 1952-53 season.

In the past week, Gipson has been named a finalist for the Ben Jobe Award, honoring the nation’s top Division I minority coach, the Hugh Durham Award for the nation’s top mid-major coach and the Joe B. Hall Award, which honors the top first-time head coach in Division I.

An Austin Peay alumnus, Gipson helped tutor the Southland Conference Player and Newcomer of the Year DeMarcus Sharp, who is a finalist for the Lou Henson Player of the Year that is given to the nation’s top mid-major player.

“The year-to-year improvement shown by coach Gipson and his program elevated the perception of our program,” Bostian said. “I wish he, April, and their family all the best in the immediate and more distant future and thank them for what they did for Northwestern State and the Natchitoches community.”

A national search for Gipson’s replacement has begun.

PHOTO: Chris Reich/NSU Photographic Services

Good for Gipson, who gave NSU his best in his short stay


Good for Gipson, who gave NSU his best in his short stay

Don’t blame Corey Gipson one bit. Thank him for his remarkable season – not plural — as Northwestern State’s men’s basketball coach.

Accept the new paradigm in college sports. You may detest the transfer portal, not to mention Name, Image and Likeness payments to athletes. But those are defining standards these days.

Coaching moves after brief stays were happening before the portal or NIL. They felt like the portal and resulted from the motivation behind the NIL. There’s lots of money in reach climbing the ladder in college sports. Now the players can access it, too.

Sources indicate by moving to Austin Peay, Gipson will nearly double his $160,000 base salary at NSU as the Governors open a new arena. Those are undeniable and understandable incentives. It’s his alma mater, where he played in Austin Peay’s glory days. Can’t deny that appeal, although it’s a nice sidebar, not the primary motivation.

Speculation that has swirled for weeks about Gipson’s upward mobility crystalized over the weekend, with reputable national basketball observers and others reported he was heading to Austin Peay after one season in Natchitoches. APSU made it official with a Tweet posting its announcement Sunday night.

Gipson spent 356 days as the Demons’ coach. Don’t let that upset you.

He accomplished a bunch, built around a core of three outstanding players – DeMarcus Sharp, Ja’Monta Black and Isaac Haney – who loyally followed him to Natchitoches from Missouri State, where Gipson was an assistant coach for seven seasons. He boldly signed Hansel Enmanuel, whose journey from the amputation of his left arm when he was six had already earned global notice and a huge social media following.

The patient development of Enmanuel into a player able to start and play significant minutes as the season ended is a fabulous achievement for all involved, especially Gipson. The mind-blowing exposure Northwestern got in conventional and social media pathways was justifiably phenomenal, and the young man proved he was not a “dog and pony show,” Gipson said after the Southland Conference Tournament championship game.

Gipson continued the long tradition of community service established by his predecessor, Mike McConathy, who received a prestigious National Association of Basketball Coaches’ “Guardians of the Game” award in 2012 for community outreach though educational initiatives off campus.  Gipson, staff and coaches did a wonderful job coming in blind and quickly getting involved across the community with good causes, and making new inroads. They were quite justified in talking about it, although the impression that it was new to NSU basketball was way off-base.

NSU President Dr. Marcus Jones and athletics director Kevin Bostian surely knew Gipson’s departure became inevitable in the last 2-4 days as the coach visited Austin Peay and contract terms were wrapping. There were plenty of rumors floating about a hefty pay hike Jones supposedly proposed for Gipson, but it seemed implausible. Adding tens of thousands of dollars would have shattered the salary structure not only in the athletic department, but across campus, at a time when the university is laying off employees and making tough budget decisions in the wake of an enrollment free-fall not entirely unique to NSU – although it’s not just because of COVID, despite what the party line has been.

You can bank on the fact that Bostian and Kyle Bowlsby, who is the one-man search firm that identified both Bostian and Gipson for NSU last year, already have a list of potential successors and those are being vetted, at least.

There probably have been some conditional conversations with a handful of candidates in case the job opened. Don’t expect there to be much of a gap in hiring the new guy. It’s the way the business gets done nowadays, and that’s necessary because every competitor is already building next year’s team.

Speaking of that – don’t be surprised if there’s a total roster rebuild. It’s as reasonable as the Academy Awards running way long that Black, Enmanuel, Haney, Sharp and some other 2022-23 Demons will be at Austin Peay in the fall.

Fair, and feasible with the portal. The mindset that players choose a school primarily because of the institution and its community is secondary to recruits or transfers being totally invested in their coach – and available dollars from scholarships and financial aid and if any exists (there’s only a trickle at NSU), NIL money.

Bottom line: the landscape is very different than what St. Denis saw. It’s not much like what Demon fans enjoyed when nearby prep stars Clifton Lee and Jermaine Wallace, then Will Mosley, James Hulbin, Jalan West and Zeek Woodley wowed us with their feats in some best of times for Demon basketball.

Hopefully Bostian, Bowlsby and Jones can pick another winner, and this time, he’ll stay for a bit longer. It’s happened before at Northwestern.

Baseball coach Jim Wells got the Alabama job in 1994. Tynes Hildbrand hired Dave Van Horn, who has become one of the game’s icons at Arkansas. When he left in December 1997, Greg Burke hired John Cohen, who is now Auburn’s AD after a long, highly successful career at Mississippi State and Kentucky. Cohen left in 2001, and Burke brought back Wells’ assistant Mitch Gaspard, who also became head coach at Alabama.

Here’s hoping for some of that magic.

Contact Doug at sbjdoug@gmail.com


East Natchitoches Elementary School Sends Fifteen to the District IV Regional Science Fair!

Thirty-seven students from four schools in Central Louisiana competed at the Louisiana Region IV Science and Engineering Fair held Saturday, March 11 at the LSU-A Campus in Alexandria. East Natchitoches Elementary School set the pace, bringing in a bus with 15 students under East Natchitoches Elementary Principal Chrystal Davis and science teachers Lori Bertrand and  Britani Fields, and art teacher Daniel Rockett. The students were the top finishers among the competitors at their school’s science fair. It should be noted that the Natchitoches group comprised almost half of the competitors present and was the largest contingent from a single school. That is a remarkable achievement that speaks well of the students, their families, and their teachers.

As a writer for the Natchitoches Parish Journal and a former teacher in one of the poorest parishes in the state, I have long maintained that there are talented and intelligent children in each and every one of our parish’s schools. They will rise to any challenge placed before them. All they need is leadership.  It is quite evident that the leadership and faculty of East Natchitoches Elementary School share that belief. It is long past time for every single public school in the parish to have students competing at the Regional Science and Engineering Fair.

The following East Natchitoches Elementary School students won honors at the 2023 Region IV Science and Engineering Fair.

Halayah Wafer Honorable Mention Animal Science
Jordan Willis 2nd Biomedical
Nahla Hobley 3rd Chemistry
Kyron Bolton Honorable Mention Environmental Engineering 
Braxton Kennedy 1st place Environmental Engineering
Jaquan Lair 1st Material Science
Aniya Antwine 2nd Material Science
Sandra Ponce 2nd Microbiology
Taylor Hardison 3rd Microbiology
Chancelor Williams 3rd Physics

The following East Natchitoches Elementary School students will represent their school and our community at the state Science and Engineering Fair at LSU Baton Rouge in April.

Jordan Willis
Braxton Kennedy
Jaquan Lair
Aniya Antwine
Sandra Ponce

The Natchitoches Parish Journal wishes to commend the faculty and staff of East Natchitoches Elementary School for all their hard work in providing this wonderful opportunity to the children entrusted to you. We also extend our best wishes to the young men and women who are going on to compete at LSU. Go Eagles!