PUBLIC NOTICE / LOCAL ASR NOTICE / APPLICATION

The Towers LLC proposes building a 310’ Guyed Communications Tower; per the FAA, this tower will be lit by a medium-dual intensity system. The Site location is 6001-6009 US-84E, Campti, Natchitoches Parish, LA 71411 (31 49 17.67, -93 00 28.26). The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Antenna Structure Registration (ASR, Form 854) filing number is A1377702. Environmental Comments – Interested persons may review the application at www.fcc.gov/asr/applications by entering the filing number above. Should interested parties raise environmental concerns, the FCC requires parties to file Requests for Environmental Review online, and instructions for making such filings can be found at www.fcc.gov/asr/environmentalrequest.

Historic Properties Comments – In accordance with FCC regulations (47 CFR § 1.1307) for Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA) and for the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), parties interested in commenting on this Federal undertaking relative to potential effects on cultural or historic properties should contact GSS, Inc., 3311 109th St, Urbandale, IA 50322 515-331-2103 within 30 days of the posting of this notice (W26106).

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ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS: NPSB Child Nutrition Program RFP 26-27-1:Food

Notice is hereby given that the Natchitoches Parish School board will receive the following:

April 20, 2026 10 a.m. NPSB Child Nutrition Program RFP 26-27-1:Food

Bid/proposals will be accepted until the date and time specified and will be publicly opened and read aloud on April 20, 2026 at 2:00 p.m. in the School Board’s Central Office, 310 Royal Street Natchitoches, LA 71457-5709.

Please find bid-related documents and place electronic bids, if desired, at WWW.CENTRALBIDDING.COM.

For questions relating to the electronic bidding process please call Central Bidding at 225-810-4814.
Bid/proposals received after the date and time of opening will not be considered. Facsimile transmissions will not be considered.  Additional information may be obtained upon request by contacting Michelle Delmery at Michelle.Delmery@npsb.la or 318-352-2358 between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. The Board reserves the right to reject any or all bids.

3/20/26, 3/23/26, 3/24/26

NPSB Notice of Advertising for Bid Signed letter.


Tulane Expert Points to Possible Causes Behind Coushatta Earthquake Surge

Dr. Cynthia Ebinger, a Tulane University professor and earthquake expert

Residents in and around Coushatta have felt more than a few unsettling tremors lately, and the recent spike in earthquakes is drawing increasing attention from both the public and government agencies.

Those concerns were the focus of a community meeting held Friday night, where about 50 people gathered to hear from Dr. Cynthia Ebinger, a Tulane University professor and earthquake expert, about the recent seismic activity affecting the area. Ebinger was the featured speaker for the meeting, which centered on her knowledge, research, and professional insight into what may be causing the earthquakes near Coushatta and what residents should know moving forward.

According to information shared during the meeting, the U.S. Geological Survey has recorded 10 earthquakes in the past 30 days in the area. A survey connected to the recent activity reportedly had about 1,575 people complete it, showing how many residents have been paying attention to the shaking and looking for answers.

Ebinger says one possible factor may be underground wastewater and saltwater injection. During the meeting, she explained that disposing of large amounts of water deep underground can increase pressure below the surface. Over time, that pressure can affect older rock formations and weak points underground, causing them to shift and sometimes trigger earthquakes.

She said small tremors are not unusual, but what stands out now is that both the number of earthquakes and their magnitude are drastically increasing. “That change is one of the biggest concerns in the Coushatta area right now,” stressed Ebinger.

Part of the challenge in tracking the full scope of the activity is that seismic stations across Louisiana are spread so far apart that they do not always pick up the smaller earthquakes. Ebinger said that in October, more instruments were placed around the area to help gather better data and improve monitoring closer to where the shaking is happening.

The increased seismic activity has now drawn the attention of both state and federal officials. A 4.9 magnitude earthquake in the area prompted greater involvement from the U.S. Geological Survey, which is now working to better understand what is happening underground. Ebinger said she was surprised that a 4.9 earthquake happened in North Louisiana. She noted that a 4.9 is considered a moderate earthquake and said she believes it is probably the strongest earthquake the area will feel.

Officials also noted that any earthquake over 4.5 magnitude receives help or investigation from the federal government, which explains the increased federal response following the larger quake near Coushatta. In addition, a task force is now being created as officials continue responding to the recent activity and studying what steps may be needed moving forward.

To gather more information, new seismic equipment has been installed in the area to track earthquake activity in real time. The added monitoring is expected to help scientists map the faults involved, study the sequence of events, and answer questions many residents have raised, including whether groundwater could be affected, how many faults may be involved, and whether stronger earthquakes are possible in the future.

Ebinger also encouraged that the river levees be inspected, noting concern about the direction of the earthquake waves moving from Coushatta toward the Pleasant Hill and Pelican area.

Another concern raised during the meeting involved the many pipelines that run through the region. In response to a question from a concerned citizen, Shane Hubbard, director of Red River Parish Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness, said that after a moderate earthquake, pipelines are inspected immediately before production continues.

Hubbard also added that additional earthquake information and preparedness resources can be found on the redriverready.com website.

With concern continuing to grow, local residents are paying close attention as experts and officials work to learn more about the unusual wave of seismic activity beneath North Louisiana.

Continue your article here…


PUBLIC NOTICE: Jury duty cancelled for TODAY

For all Natchitoches Parish Citizens that received a Jury Summons for Monday March 23, 2026 (TODAY), all business in front of the 10 Judicial District Court has been completed and this jury has been cancelled. Thanks for your willingness to serve. 

David Stamey
Clerk of Court Natchitoches Parish
318-352-8152


NSU gears up for home meet with 12 event golds at Louisiana Classics; Lady Demon tennis suffers first SLC loss

Kalen Beavers (left) won both the 100 and 200 meter dashes on the second day at the Louisiana Classics, highlighting the first outdoor meet for Northwestern this season. (Photo courtesy Southland Conference)

LAFAYETTE — It was a sensational indoor season for Kalen Beavers and his performance Saturday shows he will be one of the best sprinters in the Southland Conference outdoors.

Beavers, competing near his Carencro home, had two of the 12 event victories to lead Northwestern State in its outdoor track and field season opener, the two-day Louisiana Classics on the campus of Louisiana-Lafayette.

“Kalen had another great day, as did a lot of other people,” head coach Mike Heimerman said. “I was very pleased with how everyone competed with where we are in training. All four relays ran well, as did Sileena (Farrell). I mean, so many people ran well and throwers threw well and jumpers did well, I could go down the rosters and point each of them, but the story would be too long.

“It was a very impressive start to the outdoor season. I am very proud how everyone competed with the workloads that have been put on them since indoor conference. I am very pleased.”

Northwestern gets its only home competition next Saturday in the Leon Johnson NSU Invitational at the Walter P. Ledet Track Complex.

With 12 gold medal performances in Lafayette, it seems the Demons and Lady Demons are ready to put on a show for the home folks.

Winners at the Louisiana Classic included xx Lady Demons event victories and xx by the Demons. In the 4×400 relay, both the men (3:09.50) and women (3:40.41) won comfortably, after they held off others to take the 4×100 races.

The Northwestern women got individual first-place performances Saturday by Farell in the 100 meter dash (11.47), Margaret Conteh in the 200 (23.92) and Dynia Lewis in the 100 hurdles (13.76)

The Demons’ individual wins Saturday came from Roy Morris in the long jump (23-11.75) and La’Darion Dudley (58-4.50) in the shot put.

Friday in a short schedule, NSU got winning performances from discus throwers Tarajh Hudson (173-4, men’s division) and Shakera Kirk (158-6) in the men’s and women’s discus, and newcomer Anisha Gibbons (155-8) in the women’s javelin.

In the men’s 100-meter dash, Beavers ran a personal best 10.20 to win the event before posting another personal best while taking the 200, clocking a 20.72.

“I feel great,” Beavers said. “Today obviously didn’t start off how we wanted with our 4×100 relay getting messed up. After that, I knew it was time to set the tone. It feels good being able to start the season off on a high note.”

TENNIS:  Northwestern saw its unbeaten start to Southland Conference women’s tennis play come to an end Saturday afternoon, falling 4–3 to McNeese at the Nancy Hank Tennis Center.

The Lady Demons (8–5, 4–1) ran into a red-hot host team with the Cowgirls (13–1, 3–0) clinching the match by taking the doubles and the first three singles matches for an insurmountable 4-0 lead before Northwestern swept the three matches still being contested.

NSU goes to Southeastern today, then comes home for a pivotal match in the conference race as Stephen F. Austin visits the Jack Fisher Tennis Complex Saturday. SFA and Northwestern were two of the three tri-champions in the Southland last year. SFA visits McNeese today hoping to hand the Cowgirls their first loss in league play this spring.


ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS: NPSB Child Nutrition Program RFP 26-27-1:Food

Notice is hereby given that the Natchitoches Parish School board will receive the following:

April 20, 2026 10 a.m. NPSB Child Nutrition Program RFP 26-27-1:Food

Bid/proposals will be accepted until the date and time specified and will be publicly opened and read aloud on April 20, 2026 at 2:00 p.m. in the School Board’s Central Office, 310 Royal Street Natchitoches, LA 71457-5709.

Please find bid-related documents and place electronic bids, if desired, at WWW.CENTRALBIDDING.COM.

For questions relating to the electronic bidding process please call Central Bidding at 225-810-4814.
Bid/proposals received after the date and time of opening will not be considered. Facsimile transmissions will not be considered.  Additional information may be obtained upon request by contacting Michelle Delmery at Michelle.Delmery@npsb.la or 318-352-2358 between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. The Board reserves the right to reject any or all bids.

3/20/26, 3/23/26, 3/24/26

NPSB Notice of Advertising for Bid Signed letter.


Tulane geoscientist will discuss north Louisiana earthquakes at community meeting today

A Community meeting organized by Homeland Security Coordinator Shane Hubbard will feature Dr. Cynthia Ebinger. Friday afternoon at 5:00pm at First Methodist Church, Coushatta, Ebinger will discuss the recent seismic activity and allow time for questions and answers for all participants.  

As reported by Stacey Plaisance of Tulane, Ebinger, a Tulane University geoscientist, has installed seismic monitoring equipment in northwest Louisiana following an unusual series of earthquakes in the Coushatta area of Red River and DeSoto parishes, including the largest inland earthquake recorded in state history.

Since December, at least 14 earthquakes with a magnitude greater than 2.5 have been detected in north Louisiana, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The most significant occurred on March 5 near Coushatta and measured magnitude 4.9. Several additional earthquakes, including one measuring magnitude 4.4, were recorded March 9 within minutes of one another.

Smaller earthquakes were missed because of the distances between large detection instruments.

Cynthia Ebinger, the Marshall-Heape Chair in Geology in Tulane University’s School of Science and Engineering, traveled to the region to deploy instruments that will help scientists better understand the source of the seismic activity.

“Scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey have used new data from instruments we recently installed to relocate the earthquakes,” Ebinger said. “They are occurring in crystalline rocks much deeper than any of the industrial activity and along an ancient fault line.”

Five additional earthquakes were recorded in the most recent sequence, and scientists expect the activity may continue.

The earthquake cluster has drawn attention in part because it aligns with the Haynesville–Bossier Shale formation, one of the largest natural gas production regions in the United States. Scientists have documented cases in other states where wastewater injection from oil and gas production can trigger earthquakes under certain geological conditions.

“Throughout the U.S. and elsewhere, we’ve learned that injecting wastewater produced during oil and gas extraction back into deep wells can cause earthquakes,” Ebinger said. “Over time, the added weight of the injected water can put pressure on ancient faults and cause them to reactivate.”

Still, researchers say determining the exact cause of the Louisiana earthquakes will require further analysis.

“The question of natural earthquakes versus human-induced earthquakes does not have a simple yes-or-no answer,” Ebinger said. “But the increase in the number and magnitude of earthquakes over the past 15 years since we’ve had local monitoring suggests something is changing.”

Ebinger leads Tulane’s Geophysics and Active Tectonics Research (GATR) Laboratory, which studies the forces that deform Earth’s crust and shape tectonic plate boundaries. Her research focuses on tectonic and volcanic processes in continental rifts and passive margins and their implications for earthquake hazards, energy resources and the evolution of Earth’s plates.

The monitoring effort builds on earlier work by Tulane and other researchers. Between 2019 and 2022, geoscientists installed seismometers across parts of Louisiana to monitor ground movements.

“Those instruments measure vertical and horizontal ground motions so small they can’t be detected at the surface,” Ebinger said. “Our goal was to establish a baseline for earthquake activity to inform state planners and to better understand Louisiana’s subsurface structure.”

That monitoring revealed clusters of small earthquakes and suggested activity in some areas was increasing over time. A Tulane array of instruments installed in October captured the recent earthquakes, providing researchers with detailed data about the sequence.

The instruments measure earthquake locations, depths, directions of fault movement and ground acceleration — the shaking people at the surface may feel.

The monitoring network is connected to the U.S. Geological Survey’s National Earthquake Information Center, which allows data from Louisiana to be analyzed alongside seismic information from across the country.

“Owing to the quick USGS response, Tulane data are now monitored remotely and automatically transmitted to a national automated system that collates and uses information from Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi and throughout the United States,” Ebinger said. “That allows scientists to quickly analyze earthquake locations and ground shaking and then combine those results with older data to visualize the subsurface faults.”

Research students are using aftershocks and other measurements to better understand the fault systems responsible for the earthquakes and to improve hazard assessments.

“We are using aftershocks to map out the fault plane or multiple fault planes,” Ebinger said. “We’re also measuring ground acceleration so engineers can use that information for hazard zoning and improved ground-shaking maps.”

For residents, the key factors that determine risk are the size of earthquakes and how strongly the ground shakes.

“Earthquakes happen all the time,” Ebinger said. “The important factors are the magnitude of the earthquake and the ground acceleration it produces. Fortunately, we now have instruments in place to collect that critical information.”

Continue your article here…


Rising NSU softball visits SLC-leading SLU; outdoor track season starts at Lafayette

Northwestern softball infielder Peyton Young (left) applies a tag to erase a McNeese baserunner on a steal attempt. (NSU photo by ZOEY FITTS)

While the Northwestern State baseball team is home for a weekend series, softball and track teams are headed south for competition today and Saturday. 

SOFTBALL:  Northwestern State takes its hottest stretch of the season on the road this weekend, traveling to league-leading Southeastern for a three-game Southland Conference series and the annual Cypress Trophy showdown.

The Lady Lions  (23-9 overall) are a perfect 6-0 in conference competition, and enter the series on a nine-game winning streak, including six straight run-rule victories.

The Lady Demons (14-15, 4-2) have won eight of their last 10 games, their best 10-game stretch since winning 11 of 12 during the 2022 season, and begin the weekend having outscored opponents 80-32 over their last 12 contests.

This weekend’s series once again carries added meaning with the teams playing for the Cypress Trophy, a rivalry award created through the efforts of Marcia and Cameron Barr, who donated a bald cypress, the Louisiana state tree, to both universities to be planted at their respective facilities. 

Northwestern won the trophy in the first two meetings in which it was contested in 2019 and 2021, but Southeastern) has held it the past four seasons after sweeping the Demons each year.

The series begins today with a doubleheader starting at 4 p.m. and concludes with a single Saturday game at noon. All three games of the Cypress Trophy series will air on ESPN+, with live stats available at nsudemons.com. Both the series opener on Friday and the series finale on Saturday can also be heard locally in Natchitoches on 100.7 FM KZBL.

NSU enters the weekend with momentum on both sides of the ball, led by reigning Southland Conference Pitcher of the Week Mattison Buster.

The junior right-hander earned her second weekly honor of the season after tossing a 10-inning, one-hit shutout against McNeese last Saturday to give Northwestern a surprising series win over the highly-regarded Cowgirls. McNeese was ranked 19th in the NCAA’s Ratings Percentage Index beginning last weekend.

Through two conference series, Buster owns a 2.08 ERA with 21 strikeouts while holding league hitters to a .190 average. She has four wins and four complete games in five conference appearances.

“I’m so proud of her because McNeese had some huge wins over the course of the season and nowadays it’s harder than ever to pitch the first and third game of a series,” NSU coach Jenny Fuller said. “She did that and came out with two wins and in today’s climate that is huge. I’m so proud of her for stepping up and she was at her best when her best was needed.”

Offensively, the Demons have shown patience at the plate during their recent run of success.

JT Smith, Brynn Daniel and Sister Arnold all have 15 or more walks this season and rank among the top 10 in the conference in the category, helping Northwestern move into third in the league with 104 walks as a team.

Smith carries a 13-game reached-base streak into the weekend, while Daniel has reached safely in 11 straight games for the second time this season and Makynlie Jones has reached in nine straight.

“We’re excited to play a team as good as Southeastern,” Fuller said. “They’ve had some huge wins too and made the NCAA Tournament the past couple of years. So we’re preparing for how they play and excited to go down there and compete.”

Southeastern leads the Southland in six offensive categories and three pitching categories and ranks eighth nationally with a 1.94 team ERA.

“Their pitching is just so solid,” Fuller said. “They have multiple pitchers with ones for their ERA. Their hitting is really good too and they play with a lot of energy. For us to go there and compete we’re definitely going to have to be dialed in on what we are doing.”

TRACK & FIELD:  A much-deserved break after the indoor season ends today for the Northwestern State men’s and women’s teams, whose outdoor season begins with a trip to Lafayette for the Louisiana Classics, a two-day meet that begins today.

Only a few field events are slated today: the women’s javelin and men’s discus begin at 3 p.m., while the men’s javelin and women’s discus follow at 5 p.m. Both events were not contested in the indoor season.

Both NSU teams finished in the Southland Conference’s top three in the indoor season, including a second-place finish by the men. Greater opportunities are ahead, said head coach Mike Heimerman.

“The outdoor season is what we are probably a little better suited for,” he said. “This is what we look forward to. Nothing beats being outside unless it gets too too hot. We are just excited to get back and doing some competition and it being such hard travel.”

The women have won the past two outdoor Southland Conference crowns and aim for a third after not winning an outdoor crown prior to that.

Next Saturday, March 28, will be Northwestern’s only home meet, the Leon Johnson NSU Invitational at the speedy new Mondo track oval in the refurbished Walter P. Ledet Track Complex.


Demons host Privateers in three-game SLC baseball series beginning this evening

Northwestern pitcher Dylan Marionneaux (right) and the Demons play their second straight home weekend Southland Conference baseball series when they host New Orleans this weekend. (NSU photo by CHRIS REICH)

The Northwestern State baseball team’s Southland Conference opener tonight against New Orleans is a “White Out” game, which is fitting for where the Demons are 21 games into their season.

Third-year head coach Chris Bertrand seemingly has needed an endless supply of White-Out – the office variety – to edit his lineups for a Northwestern team that enters the weekend 13-8 overall and 6-3 in league play, tied for the conference lead.

As the Demons open the conference series against the Privateers (9-14, 3-6) at 6:30 p.m., beginning Military Appreciation and First Responders Weekend, they do so with a group that has focused on what it has not what it doesn’t.

“When we say it’s next man up or whatever it takes, sometimes that needs to be applied in the correct way for the individual and their game,” Bertrand said. “At times, if you’re scuffling with the bat or there are deficiencies we have, a great player can continue to make a huge impact on the team if he utilizes all of his other resources. If he utilizes all of his other skills – there’s that complementary nature, there’s that ability to make others around you better – there’s that ability to celebrate what it is guys bring to the team.”

Northwestern carries the Southland’s top pitching staff in terms of ERA (4.10) and No. 2 fielding percentage defense (.976) into this evening’s series opener. The remainder of the series is games at 2 p.m. Saturday and 1 p.m. Sunday with all three contests airing on ESPN+.

The Demons will send out the same starting rotation that helped propel Northwestern to its first three-game Southland sweep of the season a week ago against Texas A&M-Corpus Christi.

Left-hander Brody Trosclair (3-0, 0.45) will make his second straight Friday night start while right-handers Dylan Marionneaux (1-2, 4.88) and Trent Hillen (1-1, 5.40) follow in their respective Saturday and Sunday slots.

The change in the rotation clicked for a weekend where each pitcher either set or tied a career high in strikeouts against the Islanders with Hillen notching his first career double-figure strikeout game when he punched out 10 Texas A&M-Corpus Christ batters in the series finale. It was the first double-figure strikeout outing for a Demon pitcher since Chase Prestwich fanned 10 against Troy on March 1, 2024.

“We made those moves because we’re in search of – at all times – what is best for the individual at the time and what is best for the Demons,” Bertrand said. “Those guys, the way they go about their business and attack their starts, they give us the best opportunity to put our team in a position to win three baseball games.”

The starting trio will be challenged by a New Orleans lineup that is hitting .295 on the season with 28 home runs and 32 stolen bases. The Privateers rank in the top four in the Southland in all three categories.


ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS: NPSB Child Nutrition Program RFP 26-27-1:Food

Notice is hereby given that the Natchitoches Parish School board will receive the following:

April 20, 2026 10 a.m. NPSB Child Nutrition Program RFP 26-27-1:Food


Bid/proposals will be accepted until the date and time specified and will be publicly opened and read aloud on April 20, 2026 at 2:00 p.m. in the School Board’s Central Office, 310 Royal Street Natchitoches, LA 71457-5709.

Please find bid-related documents and place electronic bids, if desired, at WWW.CENTRALBIDDING.COM.

For questions relating to the electronic bidding process please call Central Bidding at 225-810-4814.
Bid/proposals received after the date and time of opening will not be considered. Facsimile transmissions will not be considered.  Additional information may be obtained upon request by contacting Michelle Delmery at Michelle.Delmery@npsb.la or 318-352-2358 between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. The Board reserves the right to reject any or all bids.

3/18/26, 3/20/26, 3/23/26

NPSB Notice of Advertising for Bid Signed letter.


Word of the Day: Senescence

Phonetic: /se·nes·cence/

Part of Speech: Noun

Definition

  • the condition or process of deterioration with age.
    “leaves were measured after they reached full size and before they showed signs of senescence”
    loss of a cell’s power of division and growth.

BRIDGE CLOSURE: LA 118 over Little Sandy Creek on March 20

The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (DOTD), advises the public that on Friday March 20 from 8 AM – 4PM, weather permitting, Bridge# 083501170401211 on LA 118 over LITTLE SANDY CREEK will be reduced to one lane for routine bridge inspection. The bridge is located 1.2 miles East of LA 117 near Kisatchie.

Permit/Detour section
No detour will be needed as one lane will be open at all times. Please no wide loads.

Safety Reminder
DOTD appreciates your patience and reminds you to please drive with caution around the construction sites and be on the lookout for work crews and their equipment.

Additional Information
Motorists can access the latest updates on real-time traffic and road conditions using the 511 Traveler Information System by dialing 511 from their telephone and saying the route or region on which they are seeking information. Out-of-state travelers can call 1-888-ROAD-511 (1-888-762-3511). Travelers can also access this information by visiting the 511 Traveler Information Web site at www.511la.org. Additionally, you can follow the Traffic Management Center on Twitter: (@Alex Traffic). Motorists may also monitor the LA DOTD website @ www.dotd.la.gov and the DOTD Facebook page.

PODCAST: Regarding Louisiana Senate Bill 123 – Removal of Elected Officials from Office

Louisiana Senate Bill 123 (SB123), introduced in the 2026 Regular Session by Senator Jay Morris, is a proposed constitutional amendment allowing the Governor to recommend the suspension or removal of district attorneys and certain judges. The bill enables the Senate to affirm suspensions, with possible removal, aiming to impact judicial oversight and potential removal.

Brought to you by Lance Lopez with Farm Bureau, the Harrington Law Firm, the Sharpco Hotel Group, the Mariner’s Restaurant and Local Businessman Pat Johnson;

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Demons drop pitchers’ duel at Tulane

Northwestern sophomore Carter White tossed four scoreless innings in Wednesday’s loss at Tulane. (NSU file photo by CHRIS REICH)

NEW ORLEANS – The complementary elements that accompanied the Northwestern State baseball team’s season-long six-game winning streak did not make the trip south Wednesday night.

The Demons got strong starting pitching and solid relief work, but Northwestern’s offense could not solve a quartet of Tulane pitchers in a 2-0 loss at Greer Field at Turchin Stadium. The Green Wave pushed across its runs in the bottom of the seventh and kept the Demons off the board.

NSU comes home to host New Orleans Friday in the opener of a three-game Southland Conference series. First pitch is set for 6:30 p.m. at Brown-Stroud Field.

“We have to pull from the good things we did, and we have to learn from the things we didn’t do so well,” third-year head coach Chris Bertrand said. “Anytime your pitching staff puts up seven zeroes against a good offensive team in an offensive ballpark, that’s good. We put up a zero in the error column. We just never were able to generate anything offensively.”

In a rare midweek pitchers’ duel, the Demons (13-8) got a strong start from sophomore left-hander Carter White, who spun four innings of shutout ball before handing things off to Jacob LeBlanc.

White wiggled out of trouble in the first and second innings before retiring the final eight hitters he faced, keeping the game scoreless through four innings. White began the season as the Demons’ Friday night starter, but has suffered three rocky outings and shifted to midweek work or relief assignments recently.

“Incremental steps forward, and I think that’s what he did tonight,” Bertrand said. “He started to show more flashes of his pitch execution and his pitchability. He showed the ability to get out of some jams and not letting it snowball on him. The last two innings were significantly better, because he started to get ahead of hitters, and he started to pound the strike zone a little bit more. It was wonderful to see him take a giant step forward and, hopefully, with the next couple of times we roll him out there, he can continue to do that.”

White needed to be at his best to match Tulane starter JD Rodriguez and Jude Abbadessa (1-1), who limited the Demons to four hits in the first seven innings.

Northwestern was unable to move a runner into scoring position against the pair as Tulane (11-11) limited the Demons to five total hits.

The Green Wave broke through against LeBlanc (2-2) in the seventh inning as a pair of walks helped set up a Matthias Haas RBI fielder’s choice and a Kaikea Harrison RBI double to give Tulane all the runs it needed.

Thomas Marsala III drew a leadoff walk in the ninth inning before LuisPablo Navarro entered and retired the next three Demons to secure his first save of the season.

“I didn’t think the quality of the at-bats was where it needed to be tonight,” Bertrand said. “Obviously, we didn’t capitalize when we were able to muster a little bit of traffic. It’s a lack of complementary baseball, but I’m proud of the fight that they had. We showed some really good things we can pull some value out of.”