Orders continue for Bearcat state title posters

  

What a ride it was.

Head coach Jerrod Baugh and the Ruston Bearcats took our community on a memorable journey this year, capturing the 2023 Nonselect School Division I title with a 31-17 win over Zachary in the Caesar’s Superdome.

Baugh and the Bearcats captured the school’s ninth state title, its first since 1990 and they did so in a first-class fashion.

In recognition of the state title run, the Lincoln Parish Journal commissioned local graphic designer Courtney Pugh of Donnie Bell Design to create a commemorative edition and limited poster featuring photos from official GeauxPrep’s state title game photographer Josh McDaniel (FourSix3).

The poster is for sale with 25 percent of all proceeds going directly to the official Ruston Bearcat Football Club.

There are two unique versions of the 18 x 24 inch poster, each printed on 100-pound glossy:

a) a LIMITED edition ($75) with ONLY 75 copies available that features a gold gilded tint and a numbering system to differentiate each poster

b) a COMMEMORATIVE edition ($25) with an unlimited number of sales based on orders.

The posters will be available in late January-early February with additional details provided on pickup/sales dates and locations. However, orders are being taken now.

To order and secure a copy of either poster, email lpjmerchandise@gmail.com and include your name, email address, cell phone number, version of the poster (LIMITED or COMMEMORATIVE), and total number wanting to purchase. The LPJ will take orders on a first come, first serve basis and will continue to sell while supplies last.

The LPJ will take payment via credit card (an email invoice will be sent which can be processed by the buyer with a credit card) or cash. No checks will be accepted.

Don’t miss your chance to purchase this beautiful keepsake depicting the Bearcats title run in 2023. Email lpjmerchandise@gmail.com and include your name, email address, cell phone number, version of the poster (LIMITED or COMMEMORATIVE), and total number wanting to purchase.

Special thanks to Origin Bank and Forth Insurance for their support of this project.

COMMEMORATIVE EDITION ($25)
LIMITED EDITION ($75)

Domestic incident in Grambling prompts arrest

The Grambling Police Department arrested a 24-year-old woman last Monday evening after officers investigated an alleged domestic battery incident.

At about 6 p.m., officers investigated a complaint at a Greene Lane residence. The alleged victim told responding officers she had gotten into an argument with her sister that turned physical. She stated Kierra T. Kilson was upset that she could not find her houseshoes. Kilson blamed her for having the shoes, retrieved a hammer, broke a child’s table in half, threw items around the house, and shattered a mirror.


The victim said she locked Kilson out of the house, but she went to the rear of the apartment and opened a window and threw the hammer, striking the victim in the shoulder. She said Kilson had left the home. The victim’s one-year-old child was in the residence at the time.

At about 9 p.m., the victim called again to report Kilson had returned to the residence. Kilson surrendered to responding officers and was arrested for aggravated domestic abuse battery with child endangerment.

Bail was set at $5,000.

This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named or shown in photographs or video as suspects in a criminal investigation, or arrested and charged with a crime, have not been convicted of any criminal offense and are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. 

Traffic stop leads to two arrests

Two occupants of a vehicle stopped by the Lincoln Parish Sheriff’s Office Sunday were arrested on warrants and possession of marijuana.

At about 11 p.m., an LPSO patrol supervisor stopped a vehicle on LA Highway 33 for an equipment violation. The driver was identified as Gerald Buffett, 41, of Ruston. A records check showed Buffett was wanted on two warrants for failure to appear in Ruston City Court. He was placed under arrest and when asked if he had any marijuana on him, he stated it was hidden in his pants.


A passenger in the vehicle, Shanika Branch, 38, of Grambling was wanted on two warrants for failure to appear in Ruston City Court and a warrant for failure to appear on an improper supervision of a minor by a parent charge from Third District Court.

When Branch was arrested, the deputy detected a strong smell of marijuana and Branch said she had marijuana hidden on her. The suspected marijuana was retrieved.

Both were taken to the Lincoln Parish Detention Center. Buffett was booked for possession of marijuana and the two warrants. His bail was set at $4,000.

Branch was booked for possession of marijuana and the three warrants. Bail was set at $8,000.

This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named or shown in photographs or video as suspects in a criminal investigation, or arrested and charged with a crime, have not been convicted of any criminal offense and are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. 

TOP STORIES OF 2023: My princess and the snake

This story was originally published on July 7, 2023.

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by Dusty McGehee

Friday, June 23, 2023, began as a great morning at my house.  I had the day off. The weather was nice and both boys were awake, so we decided to go sit on the back porch and watch a movie. Mae was still asleep.  Soon after, Rachel came out with a cup of coffee and relaxed in the rocking chair.  Mae (my Princess) wasn’t too far behind her.  I consciously remember looking around at my family at one point, and thinking this was perfection; boy was I ever wrong.

Mae enjoyed a few powdered donuts and then walked out of sight around to the front of the house to find Reese, one of our dogs.  A couple of minutes later, she rounded the corner with something in her grip.  Rachel saw her first and was stunned.  Mae was smiling, obviously proud of her accomplishment. I was squinting from the couch trying to identify what creature she had (from a distance, I assumed it was a lizard). 

She got to the porch, held up her trophy and said “Well look at what I have!  This little cutie just bit me!” We noticed it was a snake and immediately knew this was not a normal one.  In a split second, my brain comprehended the colors: black, red, yellow.  Red was touching yellow. In unison, Rachel and I both yelled “DROP IT!”

She did, and it slithered under the couch where the boys and I were sitting.  We jumped away from the couch and looked at Mae in disbelief at what she just said. 

“It bit you?!  Are you sure?!?,” we asked, panicked. 

“Yep!  Right here,” she replied, pointing to her thumb.  Sure enough, on the tip of her thumb are two small puncture marks, bleeding slightly. 

We started throwing pieces of the couch out of the way to get another look at the snake to confirm what we already knew. It was a coral snake. 

“Get her to the hospital NOW!” I yelled to Rachel, which prompted Mae to start crying. 

“What’s going to happen to me,” she cried. 

Uh oh, we knew she didn’t need to get upset. She needed to be as calm as possible.

I made a phone call as they loaded up to my cousin Jeff.  His son suffered a cottonmouth/water moccasin bite a couple of years ago, so I figured he knew the drill.  In a panicked voice I asked “Where did Jack go to get antivenom. Mae just got bit by a coral snake!?” 

He responded “St. Francis.”  I didn’t even say bye… at this point I knew seconds were crucial.  I relayed the information to Rachel and they raced to St. Francis. While they were on the way, I tried to find the snake to kill it and get a better picture as I knew the hospital would want to confirm.  But I couldn’t find it. I knew it was hiding somewhere in the patio couch.  I gave up, thinking my neighbor would be able to come over and kill it while we were gone.

I called St. Francis to let them know what happened and that Mae was on her way.  One last check outside before I headed to the hospital, and I spotted the snake.  Success.  It would never strike again. 

Mae was rushed back to the ER as soon as she arrived at St. Francis.  The staff was shocked to see that it was a coral snake that bit her.  It’s rare to see a coral snake, much less be bitten by one.  In all my years of being outdoors, I had never seen one until that day.  I asked about the antivenom, and they told us they didn’t have the proper antivenom for a coral snake.  They informed us we were being transferred to Children’s of Mississippi Hospital because they had a great toxicologist that was better equipped for the type of snake bite and an amazing PiCU, as the likelihood of her being intubated was high.  Yes, a breathing tube.

Our minds were racing.  “Wait…What??” Rachel and I were both thinking.  We could tell the swelling in her hand wasn’t getting any worse so why were we now talking about a breathing tube??  Well, coral snake venom is not like pit viper (copperhead, cottonmouth, rattlesnake) venom where your concern is bite site tissue swelling & necrosis.

It’s a neurotoxin.  It affects the person neurologically: muscle weakness, difficulty speaking, swallowing, breathing, etc.  It got real, real fast.

I headed back home to pack bags as Rachel and Mae were waiting on the helicopter. As I crossed over the Ouachita River, I saw the helicopter taking off from St. Francis and my heart sank.  The feeling of seeing my baby girl flying away from me was almost indescribable, and something I never want to experience again. 

They landed in Jackson a short time later and were whisked down to the ER.  Mae was given more pain meds and some anti-anxiety meds in the helicopter, so she was sort of out of it when they arrived.  The staff was concerned as this inhibited their ability to assess her neurological state.  The doctor decided to give her a few more minutes to come out of it so they wouldn’t intubate her unnecessarily.  Thank the Lord they waited. 

Mae began to wake up and was able to answer questions clearly and correctly.  It’s at this point she informed everyone that the snake bit her not just once, but three times: thumb, middle finger, and ring finger.  During this short time, it was like a parade through her triage room. 

Children’s of Mississippi Hospital is a teaching hospital so there were many future doctors coming to see the patient.  The staff informed us that we would be admitted to the PiCU and would be there at least 24 hours, but most likely longer.  They also told us the antivenom was on its way from the Memphis Zoo.  Yep, the zoo.  Before we headed upstairs, the ER doctor and I asked Mae if she planned on picking up snakes any time soon.  Her response surprised us both. “Just the green ones,” she said groggily.

Once in the PiCU, she had hourly neuro checks.  The staff told us if she had any neuro issues or difficulty breathing within 13 hours of the bite, she would be given the antivenom and possibly intubated.  The antivenom would not prevent any of the neurological or breathing issues but would (hopefully) stop them from worsening once they began.  We found out she could not have any pain medicine, food, or water.  Excruciating.  This was excruciating for us all.  She was in major pain, and it was painful for us to not be able to help.

After a very long day and night, the pain subsided, slightly.  She showed no signs of any neuro/respiratory issues and was cleared by three different doctors.  We were cleared to head west back home.  Thank God!  Mae was a little disappointed we had to take the car home and not the helicopter.

I know this story is long, but I hope there are some key lessons here:

  1. Children picking up/playing with snakes is not a good idea. Sounds obvious, but they have seen me catch a few in the past. Mae thought it was ok.  This was not the first snake she had brought to me.  Every time I told her that was not the correct thing to do, and to wait for me to identify it before anyone got closer.  Obviously, the example I set was not the best, so watch what you do.
  2. St. Francis appears to be the hospital to go to for your normal snake bites from our common venomous snakes. Knowing where to go could be the difference between life and death.
  3. Teach your kids snake identification and to respect them. The saying “red on yellow kill a fellow, red on black friend of jack” that I was taught as a child sure helped with this incident.  Luckily the saying didn’t mention a Princess.

A few days later, Cousin Jeff had us over for dinner to celebrate Mae’s victory over the coral snake.  As we discussed the theories on why Mae was able to overcome this, Jeff spoke up and said, “You know why it turned out this way?”  I tried to guess using my biology and herpetology background on what I knew about snake bites, but he butted in before I could finish. “Prayers is what healed your baby girl.”

I couldn’t argue.  The prayers from our friends, family, and our entire community were overwhelming.  Every one of you is amazing, and we are forever grateful.  Thank you. I hope to never write a story like this again!

The culprit! Only 15 to 25 people a year in the United States are bitten by coral snakes … and Mae McGehee was one of those in 2023.


TOP STORIES OF 2023: Former local radio personality wins “Hot Wheels Challenge” 

T. Scott Boatright took this photo while watching Nick Harrison’s appearance on “Hot Wheels Challenge.”

This story was originally published on July 27, 2023.

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By T. Scott Boatright

Lincoln Parish native Nick Harrison has always seemed to take a “full-speed ahead, pedal-to-the-metal” approach to life.

The 42-year-old former teacher and Sports Talk 97.7 personality became well known and much beloved throughout north Louisiana for his quick wit and humorous musical lead-in segments for the Ruston-based radio station.

A graduate of Grambling State University’s Department of Visual and Performing Arts who went on to the master’s program in Speech/Theatre at Louisiana Tech also became an internet sensation for his comical TikTok videos.

But Harrison, who now lives in Hammond and is personality/account executive for ESPN 100.3 radio in New Orleans, has now gone nationwide by racing to victory on a recent episode of NBC’s “Hot Wheels Challenge,” a show on which two contestants transform ordinary vehicles into extraordinary Hot Wheels showstoppers, with their designs inspired by personal stories and pop culture touchstones.

Harrison’s design was based on the Chevrolet Monte Carlo his father drove when Harrison was a child.

“That car holds a special place in my heart and is truly a family affair,” Harrison said. “My parents were divorced and my father would come up from his home in Houston and we’d spend time in that car. Sometimes we’d take it back to Houston when I’d spend some time with him down there. And we spent a lot of time in it driving around north Louisiana.

“So that Monte Carlo has a sense of family for me, and ‘Hot Wheels Challenge’ allowed me to take that sense of family even further by carrying it over to the family I’ve created where I’m the father,” Harrison said. “And it’s that family I have now that led to the inspiration I used to create the car design.”

The end result was a tricked-out 1984 Monte Carlo with a Mardi Gras theme he named “Mardi Gras Mania.”

“I wanted a bold, vibrant, and loud car, like one you’d see in a Mardi Gras parade,” Harrison said. “Being from Louisiana, I wanted that to be part of the theme, and what’s more Louisiana than Mardi Gras?”

Harrison, who recently married into a combined family including his son and his wife’s children, said that fact also played a role in his car’s theme.

“Despite being from Louisiana, I grew up in Lincoln Parish,” Harrison said. “I had never been to a real Mardi Gras parade until early spring when my wife and I took our family to parades like Bacchaus in New Orleans. It was one of the first things we did together as a family. And it was amazing. Better than I probably expected, and definitely unforgettable. 

“So that was the inspiration behind wanting a Mardi Gras-theme for the car. At first we were going to go with purple, green and gold for the colors. But we ended up just sticking with gold for the car with purple and green lighting from underneath.”

While he was aided by “Hot Wheels” experts, Harrison’s also went “hands on” in helping create his car.

“That was something new to me, but I jumped right in there and it was fun,” Harrison said. “I grabbed tools and jumped right in. But the most fun in that part of it for me was probably gluing the Mardi Gras beads onto the steering wheel, because that just felt like it was helping create that theme — that mystique — behind the car I was looking for.”

Harrison said his Hot Wheels journey began early in 2023 when he heard about the competition and applied online. Then came virtual interviews before learning he had been accepted as a contestant.

“It was unreal when I learned I was going to be on the show — unbelievable,” Harrison said. “I’ve always been outgoing and love performing and that kind of thing. But this is on a whole new level. Just unbelievable.”

Those feelings only intensified when Harrison, a big fan of professional wrestling who has also been featured on Fox television’s  “WWE Friday Night Smackdown,” learned that pro wrestler Big E was going to be a guest judge on the show.

“That’s when it got super-surreal,” Harrison said. “Being a Michigan guy, he loves cars and I guess he seemed like a natural fit for the show. I had no idea that was going to happen — that he would be part of the show. Getting to meet him and know him a little was special and just another incredible aspect of this amazing journey.”

Harrison’s win not only garnered him $25,000, but also the potential opportunity to become one of three finalists that will be chosen for the show’s final two episodes, which will air on Aug. 1 and Aug. 8.

“No matter what happens, it’s already been an incredible journey and a dream come true,” Harrison said. “I’m just a fortunate guy from north Louisiana who’s been blessed in life. I’m just living the dream and enjoying the ride.”


TOP STORIES OF 2023: Burroughs, buddies bound by 1987 Dixie World Series experience

The 1987 Meridian, Miss., 14u All-Stars with current LA Tech head coach Lane Burroughs middle of the second row (kneeling). (Courtesy Photo)

This story was originally published on August 14, 2023.

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By Malcolm Butler

Louisiana Tech skipper Lane Burroughs was the featured speaker for the opening ceremonies of the Dixie World Series that the City of Ruston hosted at the Ruston Sports Complex the past few weeks.

Burroughs spoke from his heart on back-to-back Friday nights as dozens of teams from around the nation converged on Ruston to play in their respective age groups Dixie Youth World Series.

A big stage for 10u and 12u teams, but one they have worked all summer to earn.

Burroughs was the perfect man for the job. After all, the Bulldog Boss knows a thing or two about playing in the Dixie World Series.

At age 14, the now-grizzled 50-year old and 15 of his Mississippi buddies represented Meridian and the entire Magnolia State in the 1987 Dixie World Series in Rock Hill, South Carolina. It was a hard-nosed group of 13- and 14-year olds. To this day, Burroughs and his buddies cherish and recall the experience as if it were yesterday.

They were bound by baseball.

“I got to carry the flag at the opening ceremonies at the field,” said Burroughs, referring to a ceremonial part of the opening ceremonies for the Dixie World Series. “You go put your flag up. As you lose, you go get your flag.”

Burroughs, who played centerfield for the Mississippi All-Stars, was team captain for a talented group that included numerous boys who would eventually play college baseball later in life.

Meridian is known for producing some great baseball players, including names like Oil Can Boyd, the Cole Brothers (Popeye, Greg, Michael, Brian), Jay Powell, Frank Baker. The list can go on and on.

“Meridian has a rich, rich history of baseball,” said Burroughs. “Baseball is a big deal in that community.”

Burroughs and his boys were just another in a long line of Meridian-based all-star teams that made noise in the Dixie World Series.

Bound by baseball.

“Back in those days 13-and 14-year old was called Babe Ruth, but it was basically Dixie boys baseball,” said Burroughs. “The two teams that came right before us from Meridian had made it to the World Series as well, but hadn’t won it. We felt like we were the team.”

And if the district and state tournament was any indication, they would be. The Meridian All-Stars ran through the sub-district tournament in Laurel and then the state tournament in Hattiesburg.

“I will never forget. We beat Clinton,” said Burroughs referring to the state tournament. “We were just mowing through every team. I remember that game. Ironically, the kid we beat on the mound that game (Patrick Nation) ended up being one of my college roommates at Mississippi College. His son, Connor, is coming to play for us this year. It was like 4-1. I can remember us being like, ‘Dang, we didn’t beat the crap out of them. What is wrong with us?'”

Not much was wrong with that Meridian team of 1987. Burroughs was far from a one-man show, and he will be the first to clarify that point quickly. The team was comprised of David Booker, Bill Cornish, Laverne Crowther, Jimmy Files, Shadrick Glass, Richard, Hickman, Monte Marshall, Marcus McCoy, Phillip Moore, Jamie Parker, Marcus Portis, Ashley Robinson, Jessie Smith, Brian Temple and Eric Wooten.  Corky Null, Mike Sterling and Randall Hall were the coaches.

A team bound by baseball.

And from August 7 through August 13 of 1987, these Mississippi-based all-stars took their talents to Cherry Park to face the best from across the south led by their team captain.

“Fast. Gritty. Sweat bands,” said Temple, recalling what 14-year-old Lane Burroughs was like in 1987. “Skinny as a rail. Hustle. Lead off hitter. Leader. Those are the first things that come to my mind. He was our captain.

“I remember Lane and other leaders on the team embracing everyone and making us all feel like a unit. We had a lot of team chemistry.”

Temple, who still lives in Meridian and is a stock broker for Stifel Financial, is still great friends with Burroughs. They tandem would serve as co-captains at Meridian Junior College in 1993 and talk “just about every week” according to Burroughs.

Afterall, they are bound by baseball.

Marshall, who was one of the few 13-year-olds on the Meridian all-star team, said Burroughs make him feel a part of the team instantly.

“He was very much a team player,” said Marshall, who lives in Birmingham and is a financial advisor for NBC Securities as well as the founder of the 33s baseball summer travel ball organization. “He cared about every body doing well and winning.

“He was a very hard-nosed player, from batting practice just before a game to the very last pitch. He was on every pitch. Very intense. He wanted to win but he wanted to do it together. And he made me feel included.

“He was the first older player that I looked up to and say, ‘Hey, I want to be like that.’ If I get a opportunity with a younger player … that’s how I want to treat them. It was a whole lot of fun to play with him.”

These traits and more are the reason that Burroughs was voted the captain of the team.

“I remember taking batting practice at John Moss Field and Corky Null said, ‘Alright we need to elect a captain and person to carry the flag out to when we play in Hattiesburg and if we advance and to be the leader of our team,'” said Temple. “I vividly remember Marcus McCoy coming out and saying, ‘Ya’ll vote for Lane. Ya’ll vote for Lane.’

“We were an integrated team. Marcus was black. And here was the most talented player on the team saying, ‘Ya’ll vote Lane.'”

Bound by baseball.

After the opening ceremony, Burroughs and Co. got punched in the mouth in the opener, falling to Tennessee in the double elimination tournament.

“We lost to Tennessee in game one,” remembered Burroughs. “We had worn these blue jerseys with grey pants all season. One of our gifts for going to the world series was the (Meridian) mayor came and talked to us and presented us new red jerseys. We hadn’t lost a game (all summer) in the blues, and then we lost to Tennessee in the first game in the blue jerseys.”

It would force them to play their way through the loser’s bracket in order to make the championship.

They did.

“We voted that we were going to wear the red jerseys now,” said Burroughs. “So we ditched the blue and then it was ‘Here we go.’ We just kept winning in the red jerseys after that (first loss).”

It set up a match-up against Auburn Montgomery, Alabama and a tough task for the Mississippi fellas if they wanted to take home the title of 1987 Dixie World Series champions.

“We had to beat them twice,” said Burroughs. “We beat them (in game one), and so we had to play them again like an hour later. We are hot and sweaty, but we are rolling. We just knew we were going to win.

“But There was a division on the team on which color jersey we were going to wear. It was almost like there was a face off on which jersey we were going to wear. The red ones were all sweating from playing the first game.

“Our coach Corky Null said, ‘Lane, you are the captain. You decide.’ I said, ‘We are going to put the blue back on.’ And then we got beat. To this day, if I see one of the guys, they say ‘Hey, put those blue jersey’s back on.'”

According to Burroughs, the championship game was a back-and-forth contest. Basically, what a title game should be. Only the wrong guys won.

Auburn Montgomery 12, Meridian 10 … or that’s the score to the best of Burrough’s memory.

“It was eerie at the championship because there was nobody there,” said Burroughs. “You go from that place being packed and people everywhere. Then you make it to the championship game, and there are only two teams left and its their parents and our parents.”

“Pain. It still hurts today,” said Temple. “We should have won. I remember sobbing afterwards, and my dad telling me to quit acting like a little child. We all cried. I remember getting on the bus and Lane and I were sitting by each other sobbing.”

A couple of boys bound by baseball.

The thrill of victory. The agony of defeat.

“We didn’t lose because we were cocky,” said Temple. “We just didn’t play well.”

The summer was over. The season was over. The dream of winning a Dixie World Series was over.

“We probably weren’t able to do that without players like Lane,” said Marshall. “As talented as some players can be, that never-say-die mentality has to be there. You have to have players like that. We had a couple, and Lane was definitely one of those guys for us.”

More than 35 years later, the memories and the relationships built during the summer of 1987 created a bond so strong with 16 boys that it has lasted well into their adult lives.

“You don’t realize it at the time, but you are making memories and friends that will last a lifetime. We are on a group text, and we are constantly communicating,” Burroughs said. “It’s special. These are the guys I played little league with 36 years ago.”

Bound by baseball.

Burroughs won two state titles at West Lauderdale High School. He played for a national championship at Meridian Junior College. He has been a part of SEC and CUSA championship teams as an assistant coach and head coach. He has managed in numerous NCAA Regionals.

But the the Meridian All-Stars still hold a special place in his heart.

“That ’87 team … there was something different about it,” said Burroughs. “It’s the group of kids that you grew up with and went to school with and you are playing for your city. Now you are playing for your state. We almost did it, and really should have done it. You are connected now. Whether you like it or not, you will always be connected.”

Bound by baseball.


TOP STORIES OF 2023: Campus, community react to Guice’s retirement announcement

From his school days as an architecture student stepping on campus for the first time in 1972 to an appointment as Louisiana Tech’s 14th President in 2013, Dr. Les Guice has shown an unwavering commitment to leadership and service to his alma mater. (Photo by Emerald McIntyre/Louisiana Tech University)

This story was originally published on September 13, 2023.

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by Malcolm Butler

Dr. Les Guice has spent more than five decades of his life on the Louisiana Tech campus, starting as an undergrad student and ending as University President.

On January 1, that run will come to an end.

Guice announced his decision to retire Tuesday in an inconspicuous way, sending an email to faculty and staff that didn’t even lead with his decision. It was unassuming, much like Guice who has always focused on the Tech student body and the advancement of his alma mater.

“Anyone that gives 45 years of their career to an institution should be celebrated, and that’s not even counting what he gave as a student,” said University of Louisiana System President Dr. Jim Henderson. “I don’t know if anybody embodies that catch phrase Ever Loyal Be more so than Les Guice. His contributions to Louisiana Tech and the state Louisiana are going to last for generations to come, and I am deeply appreciative of his service.”

Guice is a man who has always directed the focus onto others.

Since taking over as University President in 2013 following the 25-year reign of Dr. Dan Reneau, Guice has worked passionately to build a personal relationship with the Tech student body — something that has been evident to those around Ruston.

“Every conversation and interaction with Dr. Guice is about putting students’ needs first,” said Donna Thomas, Interim Provost. “If you spend time with him or watch him engage with students, it’s evident that he truly sees the success and well-being of our students as the reason that Louisiana Tech exists.”

“He has been a loyal and dedicated servant to his alma mater for his entire career,” said Steve Davison, member of the Board of Supervisors for the UL System and Tech alum. “I’m very proud of his numerous achievements on behalf of our school. One very noticeable strength is the strong connection and bond that he developed with students.”

There is rarely a day that Guice isn’t seen walking through the quad, engaging with Tech students, faculty and staff on a truly personal level.

“He loves the university and cares deeply about the students who attend this institution and that is what any university hopes to have in a president,” said Dickie Crawford, Vice President for Student Advancement. “He has been a tremendous example of a humble servant leader and his example has driven the culture of this institution over the last decade, and this is why so many parents and high school students look at Louisiana Tech as the preeminent higher education institution in the state.”

Guice’s leadership as president has significantly contributed to the growth and strength of the Tech Family. Groundbreaking faculty and student research, numerous national and global rankings, record-breaking enrollments and graduations, historic philanthropic campaigns, and innovative expansion and enhancement of the campus are some of the many milestones from his presidency.

“President Guice leaves an admirable legacy through his years of service to advance academics and athletics programming, as well as his commitment to developing a vision for the university’s future, including his focus on economic development with projects like Louisiana Tech’s Enterprise Campus,” said William Dearmon, President and CEO of the Ruston-Lincoln Chamber of Commerce. “Though President Guice and his leadership will be missed, we wish him nothing but the best as he embarks on this new chapter.”

“I have worked with a lot of good leaders in my life,” said Sam Wallace, Associate Vice President for Administration and Facilities.  “None come to the same level as Les Guice.  Dr. Guice has a talent for leading a group to set a vision and challenging everyone to work toward that vision.  The Enterprise Campus is a prime example of what Dr. Guice led individuals from all disciplines on and off the campus to develop.  This area was for the lack of better words blighted and was a true barrier between the City of Ruston and the University holding both back.

“From visioning to master planning to development, Dr. Guice led the efforts to create the vision, to dream what could be, to pool resources from multiple sources and plan and design and implement that vision. We developed standards and everything we do in the development of the Enterprise Campus is measured by the standards and master plan.  The small details are important. We would not be as successful with the Enterprise Campus development as we have been without the vision and planning.  This is just one example of how he has led the campus.”

Guice’s journey to the 16th floor began as an undergraduate student at Tech where he earned his Bachelor of Arts in architecture in 1976 and subsequent master’s degree in civil engineering in 1978. He served as an assistant professor of civil engineering, earning promotion to associate professor in 1981. After obtaining his Ph.D. in civil engineering from Texas A&M University, Guice assumed the role of interim department head of civil engineering in 1988, attaining a full professorship and becoming the permanent department head the following year.

He served as academic director, executive associate dean, and dean, all within the College of Engineering and Science (COES). It was his time in these administrative roles that paved the way to his appointment as Tech’s vice president for research and development in 2004. In 2012, he was named executive vice president and in 2013 he was named President.

“You can look around our campus and literally see the progress we’ve made under his leadership,” said Thomas. “Alumni who return to campus are amazed at the transformation. Whether it’s new academic buildings such as the Integrated Engineering and Science Building, student housing, the enterprise campus, parking lots, or athletics facilities, Dr. Guice has served our campus and students by maximizing public funding through the engagement of private donors.”

As the sun sets on his academic career at Louisiana Tech, Guice will be remembered for his dedication and contributions for the past 50-plus years.

“Dr. Guice is the definition of loyalty and being a true Louisiana Tech Bulldog,” said Wallace.  “The campus and all of its family is number one in his thoughts and actions.”

“Dr. Guice has been a servant leader on the Louisiana Tech University campus for over 40 years,” said Dickie Crawford, Vice President for Student Advancement. “We have been blessed to have him as president for the past 10 years.”


TOP STORIES OF 2023: RHS graduate completes culinary internship for Biltmore Estates

This story was originally published on August 21, 2023.
____________________________________

By Emma Stone

After graduating from Ruston High School Class of ’21, Abbey Warren took her culinary skills to Nicholls State University where she hones her craft at baking.

“I knew from my freshman year that I wanted to go to Nicholls,” said Warren. “I’ve always been into baking as a kid. Once, I got cookie dough from the school to sell, and I baked it. I went around my neighborhood selling it and made about $100 that weekend.”

Warren said this was when her love for baking really grew.


“I was hooked after that,” said Warren. 

During her time at Nicholls, she has taken normal classes like English and history with four-hour culinary classes each week. 

This summer, she completed nearly 540 hours at Biltmore Estates, North Carolina, as part of an internship.

The first half of the internship was spent at Deerpark restaurant where Warren worked next to her manager to prepare pastries or baked goods for banquets and events. 

“It could be anywhere from five people to 500 that we were making desserts for,” said Warren. “It was very challenging.” 

Warren would have shifts going from as late as midnight to seven in the morning the next day. 

For her second half of the internship, she began working at The Bistro restaurant which had a much more rushed atmosphere.

“I would work prep two days a week, then work line three days a week,” said Warren. “It takes a lot of patience, but it’s a lot of fun.”

Warren has had past experience this past spring; she worked at Berckman’s Palace for the Master’s Golf Tournament in Augusta, Georgia. 

“It’s one of the only golf tournaments that never moves,” said Warren. “Berckman’s Palace is the VIP restaurant. I worked in commissary prep, so chopping foods.”

Her first three days were eight-hour shifts and the last seven days were 12-to-14-hour days. 

“That one was rough, but my internship was a really good learning opportunity,” said Warren.

Warren starts back at Nicholls today, where she will be taking classes on cooking Cajun creole.

“I learned a lot about myself, how I work and who I work best with in different management styles,” said Warren. “I’ve gained a lot of confidence in the kitchen and it was a good use of my summer.”

TOP STORIES OF 2023: “Project Middle” votes pass; company revealed

(Photo Credit: Kyle Roberts)

This story was originally published on September 28, 2023.

____________________________________

By Kyle Roberts

Following passages of votes with both the Lincoln Parish Police Jury and the Lincoln Parish School Board Thursday morning, “Project Middle,” which was revealed publicly to be an investment and project by JP Morgan Chase, will move forward with building an operations center in Ruston and providing a projected 200 jobs with salaries beginning at $50,000.

The facility will be located “north of I-20,” according to Justyn Dixon, president and CEO of the North Louisiana Economic Partnership. When asked, the exact location has not been publicly revealed.

“Ruston proudly celebrates JP Morgan Chase & Co.’s substantial $30 million investment, accompanied by the creation of new jobs,” said City of Ruston Mayor Ronny Walker. “This collaboration stands as a true testament to the extraordinary potential that the City of Ruston holds. A partnership like this goes to show the confidence in Ruston’s readiness for a future that will contain opportunities for everyone.”

To secure Chase’s new Operations Center in Ruston, the parish provided the company with a competitive incentives package that includes property and sales tax abatements. A Payment In Lieu Of Taxes agreement will be awarded contingent on the company’s creation of up to 200 full-time positions in Lincoln Parish over a course of time. JP Morgan Chase asked for a 15 year tax sliding property tax abatement, as well as a 50 percent abatement on tax from construction equipment and an abatement of five years on sales taxes on computers and technology. The property tax abatement will be dependent on the number of jobs created: starting at 25 percent for 0-24 jobs and capping at 75 percent for 151-200 jobs.

The Ruston facility will have a front operation office center with staff processing and computer processing of data with image scanners along with a vault that will be a large part of the square footage of the building.

Completion of the facility is projected to be by the end of 2025.

The police jury voted first and passed with a 10-0 vote with both Skip Russell and Theresa Wyatt absent from the meeting.

The school board followed 10-0 with both Otha Anders and Debbie Abrahm absent.

”We are working toward expanding our presence in Ruston,” Tania Hilburn, Chase Managing Director and location leader of the Monroe campus. “We look forward to providing more details in the future.”


TOP STORIES OF 2023: Gantt Graham honored with dedication of Origin Bank Pavilion

This story was originally published on October 12, 2023.
____________________________________

By Kyle Roberts

It’s hard to imagine Ruston High School football without thinking of the Graham family.

And that’s why it was a fitting tribute on Thursday for community members and friends of the family to come see the commemoration of the Origin Bank Pavilion on the southeast corner of Hoss Garrett Stadium, which was dedicated to Gantt Graham, who tragically passed away on Dec. 29, 2020.

Gantt’s parents, Randy and Sally, stood together and addressed the crowd and shared their love for their late son along with their appreciation for the Ruston community.

“There are very few people here that I haven’t known for most of their lives,” Randy said. “And we hold that close to us. The support that we’ve gotten from our community, our church, from every aspect of what a community is; it’s truly outstanding.

“To have the opportunity to stand here in front of you and celebrate the life of my son is something I never thought I’d have to do. But Gantt had a unique presence about him, and I thank his mother (Sally) for that. He got a lot of her characteristics and her passion. There wasn’t a room that Gantt could not go into or a person who he couldn’t carry a conversation with. And he is who he was because of all of you, and this program and this school.”


Gantt will have a plaque in the middle of the pavilion to serve as reminder of his smile and who he was– and what his family means to Ruston and the Bearcats.

“I knew Gantt personally,” Ruston High principal Dan Gressett said. “I had him in class and then years after when he was out of high school. He had such an infectious personality. But to have Origin Bank and the Graham family to do this for Ruston High School; it’s very special place and a special day.”

The planning and construction had been going on for over two years before completion for use along with Thursday’s dedication.

And could you possibly make the day even better? Well, Thursday just so happened to be Gantt’s birthday, when he would have turned 33 years old.

“It’s so special to be able to do this on Gantt’s birthday,” Drake Mills, Chairman, President and CEO of Origin Bancorp, Inc., said. “And it was special to be able to memorialize this building in its name for all the good things that he did for this community. This is a special day for Origin Bank just to be a small part of this, and to accelerate the football program at Ruston High School. It’s an awesome day.”

Randy, along with his three sons in Matt, Thomas and Gantt were privileged to put on the Bearcat uniform. Randy would go on to play collegiately at the University of Missouri, while all three sons went on to be part of Louisiana Tech’s football program: Matt and Thomas both served as deep snappers, while Gantt served on the sidelines in various roles, including the head of equipment operations for the Bulldogs from 2017-2019.

“I think it’s a token of appreciation to what the Graham family has meant to this school for generations now,” Ruston head coach Jerrod Baugh said. “Today was a great day to commemorate Gantt and show the family the appreciation for what they’ve done for us.”

The pavilion will serve multiple uses: from Friday nights for football fans with passes to hospitality for the Hoss Garrett Relays in the spring to hosting and serving food at freshman academy events.

“We really haven’t put a finger on all that we can do with the structure, but I think it’s going to be something that’s going to be able to be utilized for every group, and not just athletics,” Baugh added. “This lends itself to be able to be used for the academic part of the school too. This season, the Bearcat football club furnishes food for anyone with a pass they’ve purchased.

“And I’ve always said I’d like to watch a game from up here. It’d be a little difficult to coach from here, but I think the atmosphere and everything that will be going on will make it worth the price of a pavilion pass.”

Fantasy Football Forecast: The best and worst of 2023

  

by Kirk Hollis

We have reached our final week for this column for this year and I hope you have enjoyed reading it each week or at least on occasion. As we wrap things up for this season, I wanted to give out some awards for the year and also give a list of the biggest surprises and disappointments of the fantasy season. First the awards:

Fantasy Football MVP: Christian McCaffrey

McCaffrey has been running alongside Tyreek Hill all season with respect to this award, but with Hill getting injured late, McCaffrey has surpassed him in my estimation. Both have had historic seasons to be sure.

Best Fantasy Playoff Performance: Amari Cooper (Week 16)

I hope at least a few of you had the good fortune to have Cooper in your lineups this past weekend. I know he almost single-handedly earned me a key playoff win.

Worst Fantasy Playoff Performance: Davante Adams (Week 16)

Yes, the Raiders upset the Chiefs on Christmas Day, but Adams was MIA in large part because his QB was so inept. Then again, if you were relying on Adams this season, you likely weren’t in the playoffs anyway.

Biggest Draft Bust (2023): Austin Ekeler & Joe Burrow

There were no colossal busts this season, but these two are as close as it gets by my estimation. Injuries certainly played a role in their demise and both should/could bounce back in 2024.

Now, let’s look at our version of the Naughty/Nice list:

Biggest Surprises of 2023:

  1. Kyren The Great- Undrafted in most leagues last August, Williams burst upon the scene to become a top-3 RB and a weapon few saw coming.
  2. Raheem The Dream- Also in the top-3 and drafted late in most August drafts (if at all) was the standout veteran from Miami. 21 TDs through 16 games.
  3. A Trio Of Talented Rookies- C.J. Stroud (QB), Puka Nacua (WR), and Sam LaPorta (TE) were way better than expectations.
  4. Old Man Evans- Considered a lukewarm prospect on Draft Day due to a change at QB, Mike Evans instead had perhaps his finest overall season.
  5. Super Sophomores, Part One- Brock Purdy and Sam Howell both rose to fantasy starter levels with Purdy rising to top-5 overall status.
  6. Super Sophomores, Part Two- Running backs Rachaad White and James Cook took huge leaps forward to become top-10 at their position.
  7. Nico’s Revenge- Finally paired with a competent QB, Nico Collins became a surefire fantasy starter in the improved Texan offense.
  8. Three For The Road- Jordan Love, Brandon Aiyuk, and Trey McBride shone much brighter from a fantasy standpoint than anticipated.

Biggest Disappointments of 2023:

  1. Burrowing In Circles- Joe Burrow first played poorly, then got right, then got hurt. Not at all the year fantasy GMs had in mind for him.
  2. The A-Team- Both Austin Ekeler and Aaron Jones failed to lanuch in 2023, some due to injury, and some due to slowed production.
  3. The Patrick Price- Mahomes wasn’t awful, but the Big Three of Mahomes, Allen, and Hurts turned into the Big Two with Patrick not included.
  4. Davante’s Peak- Davante Adams remains a supremely talented WR, but the fit with the Raiders this season just wasn’t there.
  5. Overpaid and Underproductive- DeShaun Watson was a disappointment and was out-played by Joe Flacco after the veteran took the reins in Cleveland.
  6. Hey Jeudy- The talent is obvious to see, but something is just not right with the Broncos’ underachieving wide-out. Time to cut bait on Jerry in Denver.
  7. A Quartet Of RBs Stuck In Cement- Tony Pollard, Najee Harris, Dameon Pierce, and Miles Sanders all failed to progress as was expected.
  8. Justin Jefferson’s health- An eight-week injury deprived us of getting to see what Jefferson was capable of this season. The loss of Kirk Cousins (Achilles) was disappointing as well.

As Championship week in fantasy league now is now upon us, here’s hoping you’re still alive and well in at least one league and that you enjoy great success this weekend as seasons wrap on New Year’s Eve. Again, I hope this column has been helpful this season and/or if not, that it’s at least been entertaining. Happy New Year!


COLUMN: The president’s daughter

When Grover Cleveland entered the White House as the 22nd President of the United States on March 4, 1885, he did so as a bachelor.  Shortly thereafter, Frances Folsom visited the president in our nation’s capital.  Frances’ father, Oscar, had been good friends with Grover until his death in 1875.  It was Oscar who had helped Grover, then 33 years old, win the election for Sheriff of Erie County, New York.  When Oscar died, Grover became the executor of Oscar’s estate.  Despite Oscar’s large amount of debt at the time of his death, Grover made sure Oscar’s widow, Emma, and daughter, Frances, were well taken care of. 

After Frances’ visit to Washington, in an act which is considered old fashioned these days, Grover asked and received Emma’s permission to write to Frances.  They soon fell in love and became engaged.  On June 2, 1886, the 49-year-old president married 21-year-old Frances Folsom in the Blue Room of the White House.  Grover Cleveland remains the only president to marry in the White House, and Frances Folsom remains the youngest first lady in history.  In the presidential election of 1888, Grover Cleveland won the popular majority vote but received fewer electoral votes than his opponent, Benjamin Harrison.  When Grover and Frances left the White House, Frances purportedly told a staff member, “I want you to take good care of all the furniture and ornaments in the house.  I want to find everything just as it is now when we come back again.” 


With more free time on his hands, Grover Cleveland began concentrating on building his family.  On October 3, 1891, Grover and Frances welcomed their first child, Ruth.  At the 1892 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Grover was nominated as the Democratic candidate on the first ballot.  On election day, Grover had a wide majority in the popular and electoral votes.  Grover Cleveland remains the only president in history to serve non-consecutive terms.  During their second term, Grover and Frances welcome two more children, Esther and Marion.   When Grover’s second term ended in 1897, Frances was eight months pregnant with their son, Richard.  Another son, Francis, was born in 1903.  The Clevelands looked forward to living happily ever after. 

In January 1904, Grover and Frances’ oldest child, Ruth, developed tonsilitis.  On January 6, doctors diagnosed Ruth with diphtheria.  Ruth struggled to breathe.  Her heart beat irregularly.  On the following day, January 6, 1904, 12-year-old Ruth Cleveland died from a heart attack.  The nation mourned along with the Clevelands.  Within a short time, companies began selling products named in memory of Grover and Frances’ late daughter.  There were dolls, kites, shoes, socks, and a whole clothing line.  In 1920, the Curtiss Candy Company renamed their Kandy Kake in memory of the president’s late daughter.  Under its new name, the former Kandy Kake became the best-selling five-cent confection by the late 1920s.  The toys, clothes, and confections were sold under the nickname that Grover and Frances called their daughter.  Through the years, the toys and clothes dropped Ruth’s name from their products.  Over 100 years later, only the confection retains the Cleveland’s daughter’s name.  You know the Kandy Kake as Baby Ruth. 

But wait a minute.  There is more to this story.  In 1920, George Herman “Babe” Ruth was in the midst of one of the most famous baseball careers in the history of the sport.  In 1930, ten years after the Baby Ruth candy bar went on sale, Babe Ruth saw the prosperity of the Baby Ruth candy bar—sales reached a height of $1 million per month—and created a company called “Babe Ruth’s Own Candy.”  Unfortunately, Babe Ruth was unable to patent the name because it was “confusingly similar to ‘Baby Ruth,’ a trademark on candy already registered.”  For nearly 100 years, many people have argued that the Baby Ruth candy bar was named after the the famous baseball player, but the Curtiss Candy Company has stood by their claim.  So, the next time you take a bite out of a Baby Ruth candy bar, take a moment to think about Grover Cleveland’s young daughter, Ruth Cleveland, and also think of one of the most famous baseball players of all time, Babe Ruth.

  Sources:

1.      The Champaign Daily Gazette, January 7, 1904, p.1.

2.     Jersey Observer and Jersey Journal, December 1, 1911, p.16.

3.     Messenger-Inquirer (Owensboro, Kentucky), April 20, 1928, p.1.

4.     Reading Times, February 11, 1930, p.3.

5.     The Manhattan Mercury, June 6, 2006, p.11.

Remembering Charles R. Penuell

Reverend Charles Penuell

Memorial services for Reverend Charles R. Penuell, age 79 of Choudrant, are scheduled for 1:00 PM, Saturday, December 30, 2023 at Douglas Church near Ruston with Reverend Jeremy Jones and Reverend Roger Rayburn officiating.  Visitation will be held from 12:00 PM until time of service at the church.  Services are under the direction of Owens Memorial Chapel Funeral Home of Ruston.

Charles was born June 19, 1944 to the union of Lane and Pauline Holstead Penuell and passed away Friday, December 22, 2023 at his home surrounded by his family.  After Charles graduated from Choudrant High School and Louisiana Tech University, he taught at Benton High School (where he met his future wife, Lynn) and Benton Elementary School.  From there, he moved to Houston, Texas to complete his masters thesis. He returned to Ruston and began working at Pabco insulation when it opened in Grambling.  He remained there until his retirement.  Charles became a lay speaker in 1991.  One day he received a call asking him to go to Athens UMC, in Athens, La, for two weeks. As God would have it, he remained at Athens UMC as their preacher for 13 years.  He then served at Wesley Chapel UMC, Quitman UMC and New Hope Dodson UMC Charge. Until wo months ago he continued to serve Quitman Community Church, Dodson Chapel, and New Hope. Charles’ greatest joy was his family, reading, and service to the Lord. 

He is preceded in death by his parents; two brothers-in-law:  Buddy McDaniel and Larry Baker; beloved uncle Cecil Holstead and aunt Katie Holstead and very close relatives, Jim and Polly Penuell.  Charles is survived by his loving wife of 47 years, Lynn Penuell; one son Jason Penuell and wife Ashley; five grandchildren:  Alban Penuell, Lillian Penuell, Dayton Penuell, Stetson Penuell and Lawson Penuell; two sisters:  Sue Lane McDaniel and Mary Roselyn Baker; one brother:  Larry Penuell and wife Cindy, all of Choudrant, and a host of other relatives and many friends.

Serving as honorary pallbearers will be Steve Matlock, Teddie Rayburn, Mike Oddo, Freddie Spigener, Alban Penuell, Chris Love, Dwight Lamkin and Stephen Gaar.

In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Douglas Church or Quitman Community Church.  A special thanks to Dr Stewart Bundrick and his Staff at Willis Knighton, and Blain Owens for his guidance and concern for our family.
 

 


Notice of death — Dec. 27, 2023

Michael Terrell Prater 
Tuesday 09/26/1972 — Saturday 12/16/2023 Age: 51 
Visitation: Friday 12/29/2023 3:00pm to 5:00pm at King’s Funeral Home 
Celebration of Life: Saturday 12/30/2023 11:00am, New Hope Baptist Church, 204 W Vaughn Ave., Ruston 
Interment: Saturday 12/30/2023, Grambling Memorial Garden, Highway 80 West, Grambling 

Kevin A. Mitchell 
Wednesday 12/13/1967 — Tuesday 12/19/2023  
Memorial Service: Saturday 12/30/2023 2:00pm at King’s Funeral Home 

Rev. Charles Ralph Penuell 
June 19, 1944 – December 22, 2023 
Visitation: Saturday, December 30, 2023. 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM, Douglas Church, 1642 HWY 821, Ruston 
Memorial Service, Saturday, December 30, 2023, 1:00 PM, Douglas Church, 1642 HWY 821, Ruston 

Timothy C. Babcock 
October 7, 1950 — December 24, 2023 
Visitation: 9-10 a.m. Friday, Dec. 29, 2023, at Temple Baptist Church 
Funeral service: 10 a.m. Friday, Dec. 29, 2023, at Temple Baptist Church 
Burial: Forest Lawn Cemetery 


Bearcat commemorative and limited edition title posters for sale

  

What a ride it was.

Head coach Jerrod Baugh and the Ruston Bearcats took our community on a memorable journey this year, capturing the 2023 Nonselect School Division I title with a 31-17 win over Zachary in the Caesar’s Superdome.

Baugh and the Bearcats captured the school’s ninth state title, its first since 1990 and they did so in a first-class fashion.

In recognition of the state title run, the Lincoln Parish Journal commissioned local graphic designer Courtney Pugh of Donnie Bell Design to create a commemorative edition and limited poster featuring photos from official GeauxPrep’s state title game photographer Josh McDaniel (FourSix3).

The poster is for sale with 25 percent of all proceeds going directly to the official Ruston Bearcat Football Club.

There are two unique versions of the 18 x 24 inch poster, each printed on 100-pound glossy:

a) a LIMITED edition ($75) with ONLY 75 copies available that features a gold gilded tint and a numbering system to differentiate each poster

b) a COMMEMORATIVE edition ($25) with an unlimited number of sales based on orders.

The posters will be available in late January-early February with additional details provided on pickup/sales dates and locations. However, orders are being taken now.

To order and secure a copy of either poster, email lpjmerchandise@gmail.com and include your name, email address, cell phone number, version of the poster (LIMITED or COMMEMORATIVE), and total number wanting to purchase. The LPJ will take orders on a first come, first serve basis and will continue to sell while supplies last.

The LPJ will take payment via credit card (an email invoice will be sent which can be processed by the buyer with a credit card) or cash. No checks will be accepted.

Don’t miss your chance to purchase this beautiful keepsake depicting the Bearcats title run in 2023. Email lpjmerchandise@gmail.com and include your name, email address, cell phone number, version of the poster (LIMITED or COMMEMORATIVE), and total number wanting to purchase.

Special thanks to Origin Bank and Forth Insurance for their support of this project.

COMMEMORATIVE EDITION ($25)
LIMITED EDITION ($75)

Lofton, Jr. released by Memphis; signs with Philadelphia

  

Former Louisiana Tech Bulldog Kenneth Lofton, Jr., was released by the Memphis Grizzlies a week prior to Christmas in order to make room for Ja Morant’s return to the franchise.

However, Lofton signed a two-way contract with the Philadelphia 76ers on December 23.

The undrafted second year player appeared in 39 total games for the Grizzlies the past two seasons. He averaged 4.1 points, 1.7 rebounds and 0.9 assists while shooting 48.5 percent from the field during his time with the Grizzlies.

The 21-year-old won the 2022-23 NBA G League Rookie of the Year, averaging 20.2 points, 10.5 rebounds, 3.9 assists and 1.2 steals per game during that award-winning G-League season..


COLUMN: A present that’s kept on giving

Unless someone slammed a shopping cart into your shin or cut you off in traffic or sat you buy a drunk uncle at Present Opening Time, you might have counted your blessings in the past few says.

The spirit surrounding Christmastime and the New Year usually lends itself to such positive behavior.

Smelling coffee brewing and watching our 17-month-old granddaughter eat an apple and tell the puppy to ‘Get down!’ (a new phrase learned on Christmas Day) and considering that I can sense these things, even at the advanced stage of my development, reminds me that I might be the luckiest piece of protoplasm you could ever meet.


If not the luckiest, then at least in the Top 10 or so. There is really no other excuse for me even being here except by some mistake of nature. 

First came winning the Uterine Lottery thanks to my personal mother, and then being born in America and not on some hill in some country whose name I can’t pronounce or even locate without Google and a map.

So started a chain of events of God putting people along my wayward path to teach and encourage and inspire. One of those has a birthday December 28, and since I’ve missed writing to tell him “Happy Birthday” for 80 consecutive years, I won’t make that mistake again this time.

He’s had other jobs before and after, but Keith Prince was the sports information director at Louisiana Tech for 25 years, beginning in 1969 through the time I was there as a student in the early 1980s. It was outside what is now Scotty Robertson Memorial Gym that he asked me if I wanted to go to graduate school and be his graduate assistant.

Once I finished laughing, I thanked him and reminded him it had already taken me six years to earn a four-year degree. But … besides being organized and efficient and a wonderful writer and athlete, he is a kind and persistent man, sneaky convincing, a teacher by example, and I signed on with him for what ended up being one of the great adventures of my life. Even graduated in the legit two years, like a person with any sense is supposed to do.

Sports information directors are today called Associate Athletic Directors for Strategic Communications, or something like that. The job is the same as always though: promote your student-athletes, cover the games, never get ahead, and have four days off a year.

It’s a job that requires stamina, talent, grace, and the ability to deal with egos that often accompany your more dynamic competitors. 

To make us better, Mr. Prince introduced us, maybe even shared us, to others who did his job at their schools, to Bob Anderson at what was then Northeast, to Collie Nicholson at Grambling, Jerry Pierce at Northwestern State, Larry Hymel at Southeastern, the incomparable Louis Bonnette at McNeese State, and a bunch of others. They became our teachers but also our friends. Tremendous break. 

Mr. Prince had all the tools, but his best attribute was grace under pressure. That, and the ability to convince you that you could earn a place. He gave me and so many others a chance. And he showed us the way. Still does.

For those reasons and many more, I hope this is his best birthday yet.  

Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu

Drug suspect spotted

The Lincoln Parish Narcotics Enforcement Team made two arrests last Wednesday afternoon after spotting the suspect in one of their drug investigations.

Members of the team were on proactive patrol when they spotted Antonio Sims, 37, outside his residence on West Line Avenue in Ruston. Sims was stopped and placed under arrest on drug distribution charges. He was asked numerous times if he had anything illegal on his body and Sims stated no. During a subsequent search, a small bag of suspected marijuana was found in his pocket.


Another man at the residence was identified as Victor West, 28, of Ruston. It was learned West was wanted on numerous warrants from Ruston City Court. He was arrested and searched and suspected marijuana was found.

The two were booked at the Lincoln Parish Detention Center with Sims charged with two counts of distribution of alprazolam, two counts of distribution of marijuana. possession of marijuana, a warrant for failure to appear in court on a possession of marijuana charge, and introduction of contraband into a penal facility. Bail was set at $116,000.

West was booked for possession of marijuana and five warrants for failure to appear in Ruston City Court for running a stop sign, failure to register a vehicle, no liability insurance, speeding, and expired inspection sticker. His bail was set at $10,000.

This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named or shown in photographs or video as suspects in a criminal investigation, or arrested and charged with a crime, have not been convicted of any criminal offense and are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. 

Fleeing driver allegedly throws drugs out as deputy pursues

A Lincoln Parish Sheriff’s Office patrol supervisor arrested a 47-year-old man early last Friday morning after a high-speed pursuit in which bags of suspected methamphetamine and marijuana were thrown from the vehicle.

Just after midnight, the patrol supervisor saw a Nissan SUV make a from the I-20 Service Road onto Tarbutton Road from the wrong lane. The vehicle almost hit the curb and had to stop and maneuver abruptly to make the turn. When the deputy attempted to stop the SUV, it immediately sped up, running the stop sign at Tarbutton Road and La. Highway 150. The vehicle continued west on La. 150 at speeds over 100 miles an hour, leaving the roadway multiple times. At one point, the vehicle left the roadway completely, driving through the ditch and back onto the roadway. On three occasions during the pursuit, the driver threw bags out the driver’s side window.


The SUV stopped in the 2000 block of Martin Luther King Avenue in Grambling and the driver, Melvin J. Williams, surrendered. He was taken into custody.

Officers from Louisiana Tech Police, Grambling Police and Lincoln Parish deputies located two of the three bags. One of the bags contained suspected methamphetamine in multiple individually wrapped bags and the second suspected marijuana contained in multiple individually wrapped bags.

Williams said the drugs were his and not the passenger’s. He was taken to the Lincoln Parish Detention Center and booked for aggravated flight from an officer, possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, and possession of methamphetamine with intent to distribute. Bail was set at $62,500.

This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named or shown in photographs or video as suspects in a criminal investigation, or arrested and charged with a crime, have not been convicted of any criminal offense and are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. 

 

TOP STORIES OF 2023: She loved me hard

This story was originally published on April 11, 2023.
____________________________________

By Josh McDaniel

Major League Baseball is back and in full swing, and you’re sure to see a plethora of MLB hats when you’re out and about. There’s one hat I own that is more than just a hat; it’s a bond between my Maw-Maw and me.

This is her story.

This our story.

She stood maybe five foot five inches.

But she was a giant: built like an oak.

You have probably heard the phrase “big boned” a countless number of times, but Rubie Lee Jackson’s bones were solid. Even at her most frail, I struggled to lift her frame.

Her wit was sharp and quick, and so was her temper. I knew I was straying over the line with just a look from her dark eyes, and I knew I had crossed it when she said, “Go pick me out a switch.”

Now, young folks probably do not understand the art of switch picking.

Never, ever go for the thin, pliable bushes.

I learned this lesson the hard way. A weeping willow branch will wrap around your bare legs, and it will sting to high heaven.

Never go thin.

Get you a branch.

Heck, pull up a tree trunk if you can.

It may hurt, but it will not sting nearly as bad.

She gave me my share of whippings, and I most likely deserved them all.

But she never held a grudge, and she loved me.

She loved me hard.

When my first pet died (a Beta fish named Deon), she loved me hard.

When my paternal grandmother died suddenly a few months before her 61st birthday, Rubie, despite my screaming and crying, loved me hard.

When I was at my lowest point during basketball season of my senior year in high school, she loved me hard.

We had an incredibly special bond that is hard to put into words.

She once told me, “I don’t like your spiky hair, and I don’t like when you color it. I don’t like your pants with holes in them. And I especially don’t like your earrings. But I love you, and this is my house. If you ever need a place to go, you’re always welcome here no matter what you look like.”

She loved me hard.

When I first started to school at Louisiana Tech in 2001, I could not find a job, so I decided that I would give plasma each week in order to make ends meet. Rubie got wind of my scheme, and she was appalled. She asked me, “How much will you make selling your blood each week?” Back then, the going rate was $40 per week. She said, “If I give you $40 a week, will you promise me that you will never sell your blood?”

I lived on $40 a week for a year, and I still have not sold my blood.

I never will.

She loved me hard.

She was the daughter of a sharecropper. My great-grandfather never had a son, and he treated Rubie like a mule. From all accounts I have been given, he was mean, and he was a drunk. Rubie stood up to him on behalf of her younger sister, and she often bore the brunt of his rage.

She married young, and she had three children with a man named Albert Henry. Albert, too, liked the bottle, and a divorce came soon after the third baby.

I often think about her strength.

How strong must she have been to divorce a man in the 50s while she had three young children?

On August 2, 1953, she married a man who once told me, “I knew from the moment I saw your Maw-Maw, I had to marry her. She was the most beautiful woman I had ever seen.”

Mitchell and Rubie would have three kids together.

Their youngest would bring a baby boy into the world on July 13, 1981, and that is when I guess I officially met my best friend.

I do not remember much about the early years, but I do remember the smell of bacon, the taste of scrambled eggs with a slice of Kraft cheese melted ever so slightly, the feel of a soft quilt on my skin in front of a roaring fire, the sound of a country record on a Saturday morning as she cleaned, and the smell of PineSol after she was done.

Growing up, I never really spent the night at my friends’ house, I spent the night with Maw-Maw and Paw-Paw.

Their house was a safe haven where PBS shows helped mold my mind, and Little Debbie zebra cakes helped ruin my dinner.

Rubie loved her family, and she loved sports.

My cousins would often ask if they could watch TV, and she would tell them no regularly.

I learned how to play the system at a early age.

“Maw-Maw, can we watch the ballgame?”

Never once was I denied.

Football in the fall. She loved Warren Moon and his Oilers. I was a Broncos fan, and she hated John Elway or “El-Ray” as she called him.

Winter was basketball season. We both loved the Celtics and Larry Bird. Larry was considered a member of the family. If she talked about Larry, you just knew who she was referring to.

My parents bought her tickets to see Bird and the Celtics play in Houston in the early 90s. By then Larry’s back was bad, and Rubie’s first bout with cancer had taken a toll on her body, and she could not travel.

She would beat the cancer.

And then it came back again.

She beat it again.

I told you.

She was a strong woman.

The strongest I have ever known.

She worked and raised six kids while Uncle Sam sent my Paw-Paw to Germany and then to fight in Korea and then two tours of duty in the jungles of Vietnam. She helped raise grandkids, and she never lost her fighting spirit or that twinkle in her eye.

It was that twinkle I will never forget as I kissed her goodbye on her forehead on June 12, 2005.

She had beaten the cancer, but her body was not ready for the strokes. Her brain was betraying her, but I could see her mind was still there. I told her I loved her, and she mouthed, “I love you, too.”

Two days later, my mom called.

My Rubie Lee, my Maw-Maw, was gone.

I think about her often.

Every time I see flowers come to life in the spring, I think of her.

Some people were born with a green thumb; Rubie was born with green hands. Her flower beds were magnificent, and her lawn was meticulously mowed and shaped. She grew azaleas along the sidewalk, and roses just to the left before you got to the front porch steps. There were so many gorgeous bushes around the yard, and trees I would guess that are older than our country standing watch over it all.

It was paradise which she took great pride in.

I used to play football by myself on the sidewalk. I made up my own sports league, and each of the flowers and bushes were my fans. Their leafy green adoring hands reaching out to give a high five to their hero, the awkward kid in the Rec Specs with the big imagination.

I practiced my Pete Rose head-first slides in that yard.

Years before, I made mud pies and used sticks for guns.

Spring and summer were special times down Leon Stracener Road.

Those seasons brought baseball on the TV, and crops in the field.

I could hold my own in the watermelon field, but when it came to picking peas, I was an absolute failure.

My one and only time to pick peas came when I was 14. I had just finished eighth grade, and I was in pretty good shape to venture into the pea patch (or so I thought). I was the absolute slowest and worst pea picker to ever grace a South Louisiana field. Maw-Maw stood at the end of my row watching my struggles, and when everyone else had finished picking ALL OF THE OTHER ROWS IN THE FIELD, she quietly came to my rescue. I watched her frail, but knowing hands, shred the pea plants. I knew she grew up picking cotton, and apparently she picked a few peas in her day. When she finished picking my row and filling my bucket, she said, “Now you can get paid.”

I have never felt so unworthy of $4 in my life.

When I was in high school, we had lunch every Sunday at her house. She was often too weak to eat much more than Golden Flake cheesy poofs, but the quality time we had together is something I will forever treasure. It was through these years that she became my confidant, my listening ears, my best friend.

All throughout college, I tried to make it home as many weekends as I could. One of these college visits would give me the best memory I have of my Maw-Maw.

I popped in to her house announced, and I found her lying down in her back bedroom. We visited for a while, and I took my hat off because that is what you did in Maw-Maw’s house. After several minutes, I told her I was going to get a drink, and I would be right back. Before I had a chance to make my way back, I was greeted by the sight of a tiny frail woman and her walker.

She was wearing my Yankees hat and a huge grin.

I was overcome with laughter, and I told her, “Maw-Maw, I could have gotten it later.” To which she replied, “It’s alright. I like the Yankees.”

A month or so later, I graduated from Tech.

She smiled when she saw my diploma, but it was nothing like the grin on the moment shared by just the two of us.

I had the privilege of giving her eulogy at her funeral, and I did so with a brand new Yankees hat on the podium, New Era 5950, size 7 1/4, just like the one she wore that day. Before her casket was closed, I managed to sneak her new Yankees hat inside.

So now if you see me on Sunday, I will be wearing my Yankees hat.

Sundays were our days, so my hat is a small tribute to a woman who wore it better than I ever could. It’s no longer the original 7 1/4. Steroids and my brain tumor pushed my head up three hat sizes, and I’m now in a 7 5/8. It’s dirty, and it shows some stains from the years we have spent together.

I will inevitably catch flack from someone for being a band wagoner or for supporting the Evil Empire, but I am used to the jeers and jabs at this point.

I welcome the question, “Why are you wearing a Yankees hat?!” because I get to share my story of a lady who liked the Yankees and loved her grandson.

She loved him hard.


TOP STORIES OF 2023: Creek hires Parkerson as head football coach

William Parkerson is the new Cedar Creek head football coach.
This story was originally published on April 25, 2023.
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By Malcolm Butler

Cedar Creek will turn to a familiar face as its next head football coach.

Former Creek assistant coach William Parkerson was introduced to the Cougar players Monday afternoon culminating a three week search following the resignation of Matt Middleton, who departed April 3 to join the staff at Harding University.

Cedar Creek Head of School Cindy Hampton said Parkerson was chosen from an impressive pool of candidates.

“We were very fortunate and grateful to receive interest from many qualified football coaches, and we can’t say enough how impressed we were with the quality of the candidate pool,” said Hampton. “During the interview process, Coach Parkerson revealed himself to be an excellent fit for our football program.”

Parkerson returns to the Ruston-based Class A program where he previously spent seven seasons as an assistant coach for the Cougars on Ben Haddox’s staff. During that stretch, the Cougars posted a record of 57-26 with six playoff appearances, including four quarterfinal appearances and semifinal runs in 2013 and 2016.

“It’s returning home,” said Parkerson. “This place became home during my seven years here. I am excited to be back.”

He served as both the program’s offensive coordinator (2017-18) and defensive coordinator (2011-2017). He also led the Creek track and field team during his time at the school, including to state runner-up finishes on the boys side twice.

Parkerson said he plans to return to his roots when it comes to X’s and O’s.

“The plan is to move back to the flex bone triple option,” said Parkerson, referring to what offense the Cougars ran during his time at Creek. “It’s what I know, and it’s what I believe in. I always thought the entire time I was (at Cedar Creek) that it fit the kids we had, year in and year out. You can tweak it if you have a special quarterback. But I always said that if you can’t fix it on Friday night, then don’t run it. That’s what I’m able to fix when things are going bad so that is what we will do.”

Haddox, who is a Creek alum and who served as the head football and baseball coach and the school’s AD before departing to enter the business world a few years ago, said he believes Parkerson will be a great fit for the school.

“Having the opportunity to work alongside Coach Parkerson was tremendous,” said Haddox. “His dedication to his craft is second to none and it challenged the coaches, and more importantly, the players to perform at their best. I feel confident that he will prepare our student athletes not just for the challenges they face on Friday Nights, but for the world that awaits them when their Cedar Creek careers are over. I could not be more excited to have him leading our Cedar Creek football program.”

Parkerson, who served as a student assistant for Jack Bicknell at Louisiana Tech while earning his bachelor’s degree from the University, was the head coach at Catholic Pointe Coupee in 2008. He also served as an assistant coach at Central Catholic (2009, 2010) prior to his seven seasons with the Cougars.

The 41-year-old comes from a football family. His father was the head coach at West Feliciana High School for more than a quarter of a century and he knows the importance of the coach-player relationship.

“Building that trust is crucial.” said Parkerson. “I will meet with the seniors quickly and tell them whatever happens five years from now, you guys laid the foundation. I will ask them to trust me and buy into everything we are doing. And in return I will invest in them and fight for them.”


Parkerson, who will begin May 1, said he plans to forgo spring practice due to the tight time-frame. Instead he will utilize the LHSAA rule and add an extra week on the front end of fall workouts. However, he will use the final few weeks of the current school year and summer to begin acclimating himself back to the school and program and learning the current roster.

“I look forward to meeting with everyone individually and getting to know them,” Parkerson said. “I will probably observe for a week to see how everything is going before we start implementing how our training will be. I want to watch them work for a week without ripping the band aid off.

“We will stress from the beginning that everything we do we want to be fast, physical and aggressive. That will be how we work out. How we practice. Everything we do will be geared towards being fast, physical and aggressive.”

Parkerson did confirm that both Mark Ware and Jacob Angevine would remain on the staff with their current positions, something that he and school officials feel is integral for the stability of the program.

“It is critical to for us to build long-term success and stability for our program and for our student athletes,” said Board of Director member Lance Hall. “We are so fortunate to have such strong coaches and leaders in Coach Ware and Coach Angevine on campus to invest in and lead these young men. We look forward to long-term success as Coach Parkerson leads this strong staff.”

TOP STORIES OF 2023: Ruston School District bond fails to pass in landslide vote

This story was originally published on April 29, 2023.
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By Malcolm Butler and Kyle Roberts

After a much contested bond proposal was sent to a public vote, the voters of the Ruston School District loudly cast a NO vote at the ballot box Saturday.

At least those that took the time to vote.

When the dust settled, a bond that would have generated $65 million over the next 20 years and that would have led to a consolidation of the four elementary schools within the parish was soundly defeated by a vote of 1,856 to 814 (70 percent to 30 percent).

Only 14 percent of a total of 18,761 eligible voters turned out at the polls. Of that percentage, early voting accounted for 46 percent of that total.

Lincoln Parish School Board Superintendent Ricky Durrett said that he isn’t 100 percent sure what would be next, but that he feels that for the time being its best to move forward as is.

“I am not sure what the next step is right now,” said Durrett. “We wanted to let everybody have a say. I think right now we will leave it like it is and continue with the way we have the schools presently.”

Members of the Coalition Against School Closures have been adamant that the plan would be detrimental to the black community.

“We are here for one purpose and one purpose only, hoping that the school board will reconsider consolidating our four elementary schools into two enhanced schools on the north side of Interstate 20,” said Co-Chair of the CASC Terence Flucas during the April school board meeting. “We believe that closing two schools on the south side of I-20 will be a detriment to our community. We understand that this Board took a vote back in the month of February to consolidate four elementary schools, but in the best interest of this school system we believe that this is a decision that should have been made with input from the community.”

Dr. Liz White, Co-Chair of the Coalition Against School Closures, said late tonight she was happy with the results.

“We still have a lot of work to do,” said Dr. White. “I think the people — and when I say the people I mean those who took an interest and voted — got involved in what was going on. They used their voice which is the ballot to vote. I am really happy that they did that. I just pray and hope that this will be an indication of what we will do in the future. This is what democracy is all about. If we don’t vote, then we are saying we don’t matter.”

The topic of consolidating the schools was first publicly addressed by the Lincoln Parish School Board in the February meeting. Some critics claimed that not enough time was given and enough clarity provided for the public to fully understand the details of the millages and the long-term affects of consolidating the elementary schools.

If the April 29 vote had passed, it would mean an existing 17.5 millage would be extended thus generating $65 million, the majority of that earmarked to restructure existing elementary schools within the parish.

The plan would have combined Hillcrest Elementary and Glen View Elementary back into K-5 schools and would have repurposed the two Ruston elementary schools on the south side of the city – Ruston Elementary and Cypress Springs. Both buildings would have been utilized for other purposes, including plans to move the LPSB central office to Cypress Springs.

“I think it was the right time to do it,” said Durrett. “I think we put a lot of time and effort in trying to figure out the options. I don’t think we did a good enough job of getting the clear message out there exactly what we were doing and how we got to that point. We will just stay with what we got. There may be a time, but people just don’t want to do anything right now. I still think we have good school system; good kids, good parents and good teachers working. We will continue to do that under the current system we have.”

Another portion of the $65 million was earmarked for construction of a multi-purpose covered facility at Ruston High School as well as upgrades to the Ruston High School baseball field. The multi-purpose covered facility at Ruston High School would have been used by soccer, football, band, cheerleaders, baseball and softball.

“We really needed a bond issue to be able to do (those projects),” said Durrett. “Those will be put off until maybe we can go back to the voters, whether it be in another year or three or four down the road. We just don’t have the money to do it out of the general fund. That will have to be put on hold for now.”