Local events

Each Monday through Friday, the Lincoln Parish Journal will post a list of non-for-profit upcoming events happening in the parish. If you would like to add your event to this list or advertise your for-profit events, please email us at lpjnewsla@gmail.com

Thursday, Dec. 18
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Kiwanis Club lunch and program (Trinity Methodist Church fellowship hall)
4-7 p.m.: Ice skating (Ruston Sports Complex, 2001 Champions Way)
6 p.m.: Southern A’Chord Chorus rehearsal (Presbyterian Church fellowship hall, 212 N. Bonner St.; open to all women singers)
6:30 p.m.: Ruston Rudolph Run 5k  (Ruston Sports Complex, 2001 Champions Way)
7 p.m.: Holiday Portraits Concert by Russ-Town Band (212 N. Vienna, Ruston)


Saturday, Dec. 20
9-11 a.m.: Christmas at the Complex (Ruston Sports Complex, 2001 Champions Way)
9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Farmers Market
12-2 p.m.: Free ice skating (Ruston Sports Complex, 2001 Champions Way)
2 p.m.: Lady Techsters basketball 
5:30-8 p.m.: Holiday movie and hot cocoa (Ruston Sports Complex, 2001 Champions Way)

Monday, Dec. 22
11:30 a.m.: Lunch on Us (Presbyterian Church, 212 North Bonner Street., Ruston) — everyone welcome
6 p.m.: Toastmasters International meeting (Louisiana Center for the Blind, 101 South Trenton Street)
6-9 p.m.: Creative Meetups (Creatives at Work, 301 N. Trenton)
6:30 p.m.: LA Tech basketball

Wednesday, Dec. 24
Christmas Eve
7-8 a.m.: Veterans Coffee Club (PJ’s Coffee)
11:30 a.m.: Lunch on Us (Presbyterian Church, 212 North Bonner Street., Ruston) — everyone welcome
12-1 p.m.: Rotary Club meeting (Historic Fire Station)

Thursday, Dec. 25
Christmas

Saturday, Dec. 27
9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Farmers Market

For the latest local news, subscribe FOR FREE to the Lincoln Parish Journal and receive an email each weekday morning at 6:55 right to your inbox. Just CLICK HERE to sign up.

Dogs fall to Green Wave in New Orleans

Courtesy of LA Tech Athletic Communications

Louisiana Tech was unable to secure its first road win of the season, falling 61-53 to Tulane on Wednesday night inside Avron B. Fogelman Arena in the Devlin Fieldhouse.
 
LA Tech (6-4) and Tulane (8-4) were only one made field goal apart.  Both hit only three three-pointers.  Therefore, the difference in the game ended up being free throws as the Bulldogs made 14 of their 18 attempts while the Green Wave lived at the charity stripe even more so, sinking 24 of their 31 tries.

“Every possession matters,” said head coach Talvin Hester.  “This was a good basketball team that we played.  On their home floor, we had to exceed their effort and energy.  I thought we let some possessions get away from us, particularly at the end of the first half. 

“We were up 20-19 and we do not close the half out well and they go up eight at halftime.  And that ended up being the deficit that we lost by.  We fouled way too much, played too handsy.  They went to the free throw line 31 times.  You cannot put people on the free throw line.  This box score is hurtful.”

There were only 10 total fouls called in the first half, allowing for a smoother basketball game but still very little offense.  With the Bulldogs down five, they proceeded to go on a 6-0 run capped by a bucket in the paint by AJ Bates to take their first lead of the contest at 17-16 with 5:43 to play in the stanza.

The Green Wave regained the lead just 17 seconds later thanks to a triple by Scotty Middleton, but DJ Dudley countered with a deep three of his own to give the ‘Dogs a 20-19 edge.  That would be the last basket LA Tech would make in the first half as Tulane closed on a 9-0 run to take an 8-point advantage into halftime.

The second half was littered with fouls … 28 of them to be exact.  LA Tech was able to hold Tulane, who came in averaging 76 points a game, to just seven made field goals in the entire second stanza (and only four over the final 15 minutes).

However, the Bulldogs could not generate an offensive run or keep the Green Wave off the foul line.  LA Tech managed to get to within six on two occasions, one of which was following an old-fashioned three-point play by Scooter Williams at the 1:26 mark.  But Tulane drew three more fouls down the stretch and made all six of its free throws to finish off the contest.

Dudley finished with a game-high 17 points, reaching double figures for the sixth consecutive game.  Williams (13) and Bates (10) also tallied double-digit points.


Strong second half guides Tech past Sugar Bears

(Photo by Josh McDaniel)

Courtesy of LA Tech Communications

RUSTON – Louisiana Tech’s strong defense and second half scoring guides them to its ninth straight home win over Central Arkansas, the best home start in 20 years.

“I thought tonight was a really good win against a top 100 NET team that is extremely well coached,” Lady Techster Head Coach Brooke Stoehr said. “Central Arkansas puts a lot of pressure on you and forces you to guard all five positions from the three. They get downhill and kick out to open three-point shooters and are solid defensively, only giving up 55 a game. That first half was not looking great for us, but I was really proud that when we were not scoring, we still defended on the other end and battled. I thought our bench was huge tonight as well. We had a number of defensive possessions where we got a deflection, and we started picking them up to apply pressure.

“Credit to UCA, they scout really well. Rebounding in the second half was huge, that is what we really needed. Getting downhill helped us get those 33 free throws and that was huge for us. I cannot express how proud I am of our players for continuing to attack and create. Jianna has made huge plays every game and her growth has been big for this team. Her leadership is so valuable to this team and her confidence continues to grow. She was so good in that third quarter for us.”

It quickly became apparent that scoring would be difficult on both ends for both teams, with no basket being recorded in the first two minutes of the game. Louisiana Tech would not score their first points until Jordan Marshall’s spinning layup after 3:46 minutes of game time. The offense struggled early, with LA Tech shooting 1-8 from the field entering the first media timeout. After heading back onto the court, the Lady Techsters full court press immediately produced, forcing a turnover and leading to a Kaleigh Thompson layup, scoring her 800th career point. The defense would grab two more steals in a row, allowing the Lady Techsters to tie the game 7-7 behind Paris Bradley’s free throws. Bradley would end up shooting a season high eight free throws in the first quarter, the most by a Lady Techster. The game would stay close throughout the quarter, but Jordan Marshall’s second three of the season would give LA Tech the lead heading into the second quarter, 12-11. Bradley would go 5-8 from the charity stripe, tying with Marshall for the scoring title with five points in the first. Six Lady Techsters recorded a steal, totaling seven.

The Sugar Bears would take control early in the second quarter, running out to an 11-1 run in the first four minutes. Jianna Morris nailed a triple to get the first Lady Techsters basket, marking the 16th game in a row the junior guard has made a three-pointer. Louisiana Tech would trail as much as nine, but closed the quarter on a 9-2 run to only be down 27-25 entering the second half. Fifty-two points in the half is the second lowest mark in a Lady Techster game this season. Jianna Morris’s two threes would give her six points, the most of a Louisiana Tech player in the quarter.

Louisiana Tech would put together their best 10 minutes offensively in the third quarter, jumping out to a 12-6 run into the first media of the quarter. Jianna Morris shined in the third, scoring eight points on 3-3 shooting with three assists and two rebounds. Jordan Marshall’s steal and layup would cap an 8-0 Lady Techsters run, pushing the lead to 10. Joy Madison-Key would reject a Sugar Bear layup to close the half with a 51-41 LA Tech lead. Twenty-six points by the Lady Techsters was a game high for both teams, led by Morris’s eight points. Seven LA Tech players chipped in to score, with five securing two or more rebounds.

The Lady Techsters would use the fourth quarter to stay ahead and keep the lead safe. Kaleigh Thompson’s and-one layup would help break the two-minute field goal drought, giving her 10 points on the night, a new season high. A few scoreless minutes would be ended by another and-one, this time by Paris Bradley, her first basket of the night. Free throw shooting would keep the Lady Techsters ahead to close the game, ultimately shooting 13-14 in the quarter from the line. The lead ballooned to as much as 16 as the Lady Techsters closed out their ninth home win in a row, 70-55.

The 6-0 start in the TAC is the best home start for the Lady Techsters since the 2005-06 season. Paris Bradley went 12-17 from the free throw line, the most attempts since Jianna Morris had 16 against New Mexico State on Jan. 4th, 2025. Bradley tied Marshall with 16 points for the team high. Marshall led the way with 10 rebounds, securing her fourth double-double of the season. Four Lady Techsters dished three assists; the first time this season a four-way tie was set for a statistic.

“If you want to win a championship, you have to find a way to win on the road and take care of home court,” Stoehr said. “It is something that we take great pride in. We need to take care of the ball and communicate defensively. Once we do that, it is a recipe you want in order to win on the road. Defending, rebounding and taking care of the ball will give us an opportunity to win every night.”

Tech returns to action Saturday, Dec. 20, against Central Baptist.


Notice of death — Dec. 17, 2025

Henry Robinson 
Friday 10/07/1949 — Thursday 12/11/2025  
Funeral Service: Thursday 12/18/2025 11:00am at King’s Funeral Home 
Interment: Thursday 12/18/2025, Northeast La Veterans Cemetery, 2412 US 425, Rayville  

Dennis J. Miller  
Sunday 07/24/1955 — Thursday 12/11/2025   
Memorial Service: Friday 12/19/2025 2:00pm at King’s Funeral Home  

Patrick O. Washington   
Saturday 03/14/1964 — Sunday 12/07/2025   
Memorial Service: Friday 12/19/2025 12:00pm at King’s Funeral Home   
Private Burial 


Shop with a Cop brings holiday cheer to local children

by Hanna Singh

The Ruston Walmart Supercenter got a little extra crowded this Tuesday afternoon as over 20 officers and 58 excited children lined up for the annual Shop with a Cop event, hosted in partnership between the Lincoln Parish Sheriff’s Office, Walmart and other participating law enforcement officers.

Invited to help were officers from the Ruston Police Department, Choudrant Police Department, Dubach Police Department, Louisiana Tech University Police Department and the Grambling State University Police Department. Each cop was paired one by one with a child allowed to pick out up to $100 worth of items for Christmas.

LPSO Sgt. Iris Winston, who is head of the Community Services Division, touched on how the event brought joy to both the shoppers and the officers.

“We love to give back to the community. As we take the kids to shop around Walmart, you can just see the light in their eyes,” Sgt. Winston said. “It is so beautiful. We just like showing our softer side at the Sheriff’s office and giving back.”

Not only does the event allow officers to provide an exciting shopping experience for the children, but the night gives the departments an opportunity to connect with the community on a deeper level. While many children and young adults might be used to seeing law enforcement in a more intimidating light, families were able to connect with officers serving time outside of their regular shifts in a more personal environment. Lincoln Parish Sheriff Stephen Williams shared the driving force behind the department’s community initiative.

“At the Sheriff’s Office we stress with our employees, our motto that is ‘we’re here to help’,” Sheriff Williams said. “We try to express that here with this opportunity to give back to the community, something in the spirit of Christmas.”

In an effort to grow and provide support for the event, the Walmart Supercenter raises money throughout the year from donations along with providing a grant from the Walmart Corporation. They partner with local law enforcement annually to support families in the surrounding community. Walmart Community Project Coordinator Leah Frazier explained how the corporation works to keep the program going each year.

“We partnered together over 15 years ago to do something positive for the kids around Christmas,” Frazier said. “Walmart helped by providing grant funding for the program and we have helped with fundraisers and stuff like that. It’s just a matter of partnering with law enforcement each year to put this on for these kids.”

For many children and officers, this event holds a special place in their heart. After years of volunteering and making connections with the kids, officers have given back time and love to their community more and more. Lincoln Parish Sheriff’s Deputy Garrett Madden highlighted what makes the Shop with a Cop event meaningful to him.

“One reason I love Shop with a Cop is because my job is being a school resource officer, and I love working around kids,” Madden said. “So an extra opportunity I have to give back to our community and work more with the kids and to put a smile on their faces. That is reason enough for me. To give them a merry Christmas is very satisfying for me.”

Tuesday night many children with full carts and happy hearts, alongside officers and families filled with a little extra Christmas cheer this year.


FEATURE, Part 2: Reclaiming our peace — A look at light & sound pollution

By Laura Hunt Miller

PART 2: Let there Be (Less) Light

I used to live next to a school parking lot that was occasionally used for drag racing late at night. The powers-that-be decided to curb the young racers’ enthusiasm by installing lights that stayed on ALL night. Every night. All year.  Once we could, we moved.

Ruston currently has a Bortle Scale rating of 6.8, a tool used to measure light pollution. Anything above a five means backyard stargazing is limited, with 1 being a “pristine dark sky” and 9 being bright “inner city sky glow.” A 6.8 puts us in the “bright suburban sky” category, where only the brightest stars are visible. Things like the Milky Way? You’re not likely to see it here.

That’s not to say lighting is bad. Humans instinctively associate light with safety and darkness with danger. It’s primal; early survival depended on it. 

Civic design from the 1960s onward followed the “more light = less danger” policy, building on the assumption that a brightly lit place is a safe one. 

Overly bright streetscapes have negative consequences too, such as making neighborhoods less hospitable. Relocating like we did, is surprisingly common according to studies done by the London School of Economics. And in downtown areas, excessive lighting can shift a space from feeling safe, to feeling unwelcomingly on display. 

Over-lighting costs us literally as well. Let’s just say that the parking lot from my past had ten light fixtures. At 200 watts each, and $0.13/kWh (the current average cost of electricity in north Louisiana), that’s an annual energy consumption of $1,139 a year. 

But what if that parking lot had been equipped with motion sensor lights? The average light usage could be reduced by 80%, cutting that $1,000-plus bill to about $200 a year. 

Upfront these upgrades cost about $100-200 more per a fixture. So for that 10-light parking lot, adding motion sensors would raise the initial cost by $1,500–$2,000. But sensors can also prolong the life of the light bulb by five to ten years, according to the U.S. Department of Energy, resulting in less maintenance, less disruption, and less energy waste.

Now apply that math to every city or parish-funded parking lot with fixtures on a similar lighting plan. In theory, over $10,000 in annual power bills would drop to $2000. 

This kind of cost reduction benefits both public and private sectors. But energy use is only part of the equation. The color temperature of light matters as well.

Most modern LED streetlights emit a cool-spectrum, bluish-white light. They look brighter but it come with tradeoffs:

• Blue light disrupts night vision more than warm light. That harsh “screen glow” we’re told to avoid? Modern society put it everywhere, sorry folks.

•  Blue light worsens glare, especially for older drivers and those who have had eye surgeries.

• Blue light suppresses melatonin, disrupting natural sleep cycles.

• Blue light washes out the night sky more. So long, stars. 

In contrast, warm-spectrum LEDs are softer on the eyes, more biologically compatible, and still highly energy efficient according to studies done by Harvard University.

So why don’t we use more of them? When warm LEDs first hit the market, they were more expensive and less efficient. That price gap has narrowed, but the old perception lingers, while some cities are playing catch-up installing warm lighting as old cool LEDs burn out.

Then there is the actual brightness of the bulb. Many cities didn’t account for the improved performance of LEDs when they upgraded older lighting.  One high-efficiency LED can match the light output of two or even three older bulbs. Swapping fixtures one-to-one, and keeping the same pole heights resulted in well-lit streets that suddenly became overly-lit ones; a change that was welcomed without fully understanding the long-term consequences. 

When we talk about light pollution, color temperature, intensity and light spread are big players, but let’s not overlook the simplest fix of all: point the light down, not up.

Whether it’s floodlights on a business sign, “safety lights” illuminating a wall, or lights shining up trees, upward-facing lights create glare, further obscure the stars, and spill across yards and windows where it doesn’t belong.

Progression from most light pollution-causing-lighting to least.

Good security lighting illuminates only the areas needed, avoids casting harsh shadows criminals can hide in (although it’s great for hide-and-seek), reduces contrast blindness, and doesn’t blind passersby or drivers.

Yes, a glowing building or tree look cool. But one that glows intensity all night, year-round, and can be seen from over a mile away? That may be a bit much. Even simply converting up-lighting to warmer or to a less intense bulb can go a long way.

So if we think we may have sound and light pollution problems, what can we do about it? We will explore what other communities are doing in the next installation of this article. 

Ruston, Edna Karr in talks for 2026 regular season matchup

(Photo by Reggie McLeroy)

By Kyle Roberts

NEW ORLEANS — Two Louisiana football powerhouses — one from the North and one from the South — are currently working on an agreement to schedule a regular season matchup next year in what would be the first game of a home-and-home between Ruston High and Edna Karr.

“There’s a mutual respect for what each of our schools has been able to accomplish recently and with the background of both schools,” Ruston High Head Coach Jerrod Baugh said. “He’s played some out-of-state teams, and so have we, so we figured if we’re going to travel all over the place, then why not play each other? It would be something that gets a lot of interest from people, and it’s a game I think people would like to see.”

The Edna Karr Cougars are coming off their second consecutive state championship after beating St. Augustine in the Superdome this past weekend 49-14 for the 2025 Select, Division I title. Ruston recently appeared in its fourth consecutive state championship in New Orleans and fell 21-20 in a heartbreaker to Ouachita.

Baugh noted that talks between him and Cougar Head Coach Brice Brown are progressing toward a formal agreement, though the contract has yet to be signed between the schools. And while the venue for the 2026 matchup has not been finalized, there is discussion of holding the game in the Caesars Superdome.

“(Playing a regular season game in the Superdome) is something they did last year,” Baugh said. “Coach Brown said they had already checked into the possibility of using the Superdome again, so right now it’s working through concert schedules and other events they have — so they’re just waiting to hear back from the Superdome officials.”

The plan is for Edna Karr to make a return trip in 2027.

Edna Karr joins Neville, Catholic and Longview as Ruston’s projected non-district opponents for the first four weeks of the regular season. Both Neville and Catholic would be played in Hoss Garrett Stadium, while Longview and Edna Karr would both be on the road.

Currently, Week 5 is an open date, and Baugh said that he would be fine giving his Bearcats a bye-week before District 2-5A starts.

“The way it is right now, I don’t feel bad about (having a bye) going into district, as tough as our district has been,” Baugh said. “I can’t say for sure I would fill that date, but I don’t feel necessary given how tough our non-district schedule is shaping up to be.”

Ruston’s district slate will include the usual Ouachita, Pineville, West Monroe and Alexandria Senior High. Peabody Magnet out of the central Louisiana is slated to join District 2-5A next year as Neville will move down a classification to 4A.

The Bearcats are planning keep the Neville Tigers on the schedule for the 91st consecutive year.


Four arrested in Ruston bar fight

From left. to right: Landry Freeman, Ella Burnham, John Burnham, and Jon Hebert

Three men and a woman were arrested at a Ruston bar following a fight early Sunday morning.

Landry Freeman, 18; John Burnham, 46; and Ella Burnham, 19, all of Ferriday; and Jon Hebert, 41, of Eunice, were arrested at about 2 a.m. on December 14 by Ruston Police at a Park Avenue bar.

An officer working a special detail at the location was informed of a fight inside the bar. Once the parties were separated, the officer noticed Hebert had a large bump over his right eye.


An investigation showed two of the men had been engaged in an arm wrestling match. The loser reportedly punched the other in the face. Others jumped into the altercation. Officers used video from the bar to determine who threw punches.

The video showed Ella Burnham stomping on one of the men who had fallen to the floor, according to an officer’s report.

During the investigation, Freeman allegedly used his arm to forcibly strike an officer in the groin.

E. Burnham, J. Burnham, and Hebert were arrested for disturbing the peace by fighting. Freeman, who officers wrote was extremely intoxicated, was charged with battery of a police officer and disturbing the peace by appearing intoxicated in public.

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.

For the latest local news, subscribe FOR FREE to the Lincoln Parish Journal and receive an email each weekday morning at 6:55 right to your inbox. Just CLICK HERE to sign up.

Gunshot fired at traffic crash

A Dubach man was arrested over the weekend after he allegedly used a pistol to threaten a motorist involved in a traffic crash near his property.

The Lincoln Parish Sheriff’s Office arrested Garrett Wayne Puffer, 27, on December 13 for aggravated assault with a firearm, DWI, and open container at a crash scene on U.S. 167 near Hayhouse Road.

A woman told deputies she was involved in a crash and then Puffer drove up and banged aggressively on her window, telling her she was on his property. He then fired a pistol near her car, placing her in fear for her life.


The woman said Puffer drove away but then returned and pulled behind her vehicle as deputies arrived.

When Puffer stepped out of his vehicle, a deputy noticed he was unable to stand without using his vehicle for balance. Puffer said he had consumed three large glasses of Jim Beam whiskey and Sprite. When asked about a firearm, Puffer said he had a pistol on the front seat.

Puffer said he had gotten in an argument with the woman and had fired the gun to scare her.

Puffer was arrested and taken to the Lincoln Parish Detention Center where a breath test was administered. The test showed a blood alcohol content of .203g%, more than twice the Louisiana legal limit.

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.

For the latest local news, subscribe FOR FREE to the Lincoln Parish Journal and receive an email each weekday morning at 6:55 right to your inbox. Just CLICK HERE to sign up.

Road Closure: Gains Avenue

GAINS AVENUNE TRAFFIC CLOSURE

The City of Ruston announces, weather permitting, that Gains Ave., between Cook St. and Cooktown Rd., will be closed to thru traffic, Wednesday, December 17, 2025, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. This closure is necessary for road repair(s).

The City of Ruston regrets any inconvenience this necessary work may cause residents and motorists.

We appreciate your patience, and any questions can be received by the Public Works Department at (318) 242-7703.


Book yourself some down time this Christmas

The late Mississippi author Willie Morris, one of my favorite writers and people, the personable, hilarious, and slightly tardy yellow-jacketed, gin-soaked star of an Authors in April event in Shreveport some 20 years ago, wrote my favorite Christmas story of all-time — not counting Luke 2 or the annual Charlie Brown Christmas Special.

Willie Morris, a country-boy genius, wrote in an honest — which means painful — sort of way about the south in North Toward Home and Always Stand In Against The Curve and The Courting of Marcus Dupree. Each is worth more than the price of admission.

Hollywood made a movie of his book My Dog Skip, a love story to the Jack Russell terrier and dear friend of his youth in Yazoo City, Miss. Willie Morris was an only child, and Skip was an only dog. I took my Little League team of 11-year-olds to see it — three times. Every time at the end, when Skip dies and is buried in Willie’s letter jacket, the biggest player on our team, our catcher, pulled his little jersey up over his eyes and cried. Every time. So did his coach. 


Willie Morris was an essay writer hardly matched. My favorite is Mitch and the Infield Fly Rule. Classic. It has nothing to do with Christmas and everything to do with a lovely Ole Miss co-ed, English class, baseball’s knotty rules, and wine.

Second favorite is A Return to Christmases Gone. It would be my favorite if it weren’t for the co-ed named Mitch. (You’ll have to read Mitch and the Infield Fly Rule. Then you’ll understand. “I’ve always thought it such a fine rule,” Mitch says.)

In this Christmas story, Willie Morris, as he’s listening in December in a New York City bar to execs devising a plan to have their boss fired on Christmas Eve, impulsively decides to leave the snow of the world’s most famous city, where he is working as a magazine editor and writer, to fly home to another city, his hometown of Yazoo City.

He and Old Skip would get up on those Christmas mornings of boyhood, open presents and listen to momma play some carols on the Steinway baby grand, and then they’d hop in the car to go the 40 miles south to Jackson to be with his grandmother Mamie, grandfather Percy, “and my two old incorrigible great-aunts, Maggie and Susie, who were born during the Civil War. The drive itself is etched in my heart…”

Now as a grown man, Willie buys roses. On this gray and cheerless Christmas morning, he leaves one each on the grave of his mother and father in the Yazoo City cemetery. In the back yard of his old home, there is no marker, but his heart tells him where Old Skip is. He leaves another rose there for the comrade of his boyhood.

Then on to Jackson, where a Jitney Jungle parking lot has replaced the home of his grandmother and grandfather. The magnolia is still there, but all else is wet asphalt and slush. On the asphalt, on this cold December 25 so far removed from those Christmases Gone, he places his last two roses where the dining room table was. “Tomorrow someone will run over them in the parking lot. But who would disturb them today?”

Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu

For the latest local news, subscribe FOR FREE to the Lincoln Parish Journal and receive an email each weekday morning at 6:55 right to your inbox. Just CLICK HERE to sign up.

Panthers fight off slow start against Bastrop

Jabari Levington (5) led Lincoln Prep with 14 points to beat Bastrop. (Photo by T. Scott Boatright)

 

By T. Scott Boatright

 

Lincoln Prep used a strong third-quarter effort to overcome a shaky start and pull off a 38-25 home win over Bastrop Tuesday night.

The Rams led 13-12 at halftime but the Panthers roared out in the third quarter to outscore the Rams 16-2 in the stanza.

“That was good to see because we really needed it at that point,” Hudson said. “I wasn’t really happy with the way we started. We just didn’t show the kind of effort I wanted in that first half. IT wasn’t the (lack of) scoring that bothered me, it was just the lack of effort and focus.

“We looked like it’s still early in the season, which it is. But we have to start games better against really good teams. We can’t afford to start games the way we did as far as the energy level we started with. That wasn’t nearly good enough. But we came out strong to start the third quarter and that was really good to see. 

The Panthers were also playing without starting point guard Trey Spann, who missed practice on Monday on a football visit to Centenary.

“I don’t like using players who don’t practice the day before a game,” Hudson said. “That’s all that was about.”

Hudson took advantage of the opportunity to work in other players at the position.

“We can move Josiah (Spann) to the point and move Jabari (Levingston) off the ball,” Hudson said. “So we worked some with that tonight. We’ve also got an eighth-grader that’s going to be pretty good, so it was good to get him some work out there.”

The football-like score showed the game’s physicality.

“That’s not a bad thing, though,” Hudson said. “It’s always good to play that kind of physical game against good competition.”

Levingston led the Panthers with 14 points while adding seven rebounds, six steals and two assists while Zion Hicks chipped in with 11 points, 10 boards, two blocks and a steal. 

Devin Shine added seven points, two rebounds and a steal for Lincoln Prep.

Next up for the Panthers, now 6-1, will be a home game starting at 5:20 p.m. today against Green Oaks. 

 

 


Brown, Lady Aggies close late in handing Calvin only second loss of season

Reese Brown (#34) scored six straight points down the stretch to help Choudrant defeat Calvin 61-50.

by Malcolm Butler

When senior guard Reese Brown stole the ball and converted a layup to start the third quarter Tuesday night, it gave Choudrant a comfortable 36-19 lead over Class C power Hicks at CHS Gym.

Things look good for the Lady Aggies. 

However, over the span of the next two minutes of action, Brown picked up her third and fourth personal fouls of the night, forcing head coach Brandy Roberson to pull her star from the game.

That’s when things go interesting. 

Calvin (14-2), one of the Class C powers in girls basketball, turned up the pressure a few more notches with Brown on the bench, forcing numerous turnovers to close the third quarter on a 20-9 run and to cut the deficit to 45-39.

Brown remained on the bench to start the fourth quarter, but Roberson subbed her back in with exactly six minutes remaining to play and the Lady Aggies (12-3) leading 49-44. 

She immediately made her presence felt.

Brown fed Kat Hernandez for an easy layup with 3:30 to play to give Choudrant a 53-46 lead and then scored six straight points over the next two minutes to push the advantage back to 59-50. By the time she fouled out with less than a minute to play, the Lady Aggies had the game in hand.

The Lady Aggies prevailed 61-50, picking up a big wins and some major power points. 

Roberson said Brown was a big reason why. 

“Reese has started since her freshman year, so she has been in a lot of games,” said Roberson. “She was our point guard (her first three years), but we pulled her off of that this year just to share some responsibility and not ask her to do everything. She came out really dodgy in the first quarter. I sat her down, and said, ‘Hey. We feed off of you, and if you can’t settle down then we aren’t going to win this game.’ 

“She got it going. She does such a good job of seeing the floor. Kat sees the floor well, but doesn’t quite have the experience of what is a good pass. Reese has been in a lot of close situations. If Reese isn’t playing well, then we aren’t playing well. That’s just how it goes. She calmed down and stepped up for us.”

The two teams battled back and forth through the first quarter.

A Hernandez layup followed by a Brown three-pointer gave Choudrant an early 5-0 advantage before Calvin answered with eight straight points. Calvin held a slim 12-10 lead after one.

Sadie Jones hit a short corner jumper to start the second quarter — two of the 12 points she netted in the frame — as the two teams went back and forth. However, with Calvin leading 16-15 with just over six minutes to play before halftime, the Lady Aggies began dominating on both ends of the floor.

Hernandez hit back-to-back buckets, the second coming off a nice feed from Brown, to start a decisive 19-3 run to close the first half. Choudrant shared the basketball throughout the stretch, time after time getting easy looks off of penetration and an assist. 

The Lady Aggies led 34-19 at the break. 

“They played a lot of that 1-3-1 and we were trying to run a two guard front,” said Roberson. “We moved to our five out, which is our man offense. We did a really good job of going to the open spot on the floor. We knew they would put a lot of trapping pressure on us up front, even in the 1-3-1. Whatever they do they trap.

“We told them the pressure would be up front and we just needed to dive to the basket, and we did. We figured it out. It clicked. I thought we moved the ball well and we saw the floor well in that stretch.”

With Brown sitting for an eight minute stretch over the final six minutes of the third quarter and the first two minutes of the fourth quarter, Calvin was able to make it a game. Amiyah Marshall was a big reason why as the physical combo-guard scored 10 of her team-high 17 points after halftime. 

“(Marshall) had a great game for them,” said Roberson. “I knew she was a threat, but four of their top five really are. I thought after we settled down we did a better job. But they were rebounding so well. They wanted it. We called a timeout and told them we had to have every rebound.”

Hernandez led the Lady Aggies with 18 points while Brown added 14 points and Jones scored 14 points.

In addition to Marshall’s performance, Calvin was led by Alexa Collins with 12 and Jaleigha Hogby with 11 points. 

 


Aggies roll past Calvin

Ryan Smith talks to his Aggies during a second half timeout Tuesday night.

by Malcolm Butler

Choudrant (11-5) used a strong second half to pull away from Calvin 66-51 Tuesday night at CHS Gymnasium.

Senior Brayden Pye was simply too much for the Cougars, scoring 11 of his game-high 22 points in the fourth quarter. Pye was relentless in the paint on both ends of the floor for head coach Ryan Smith’s team.

“Brayden is great,” said Smith. “He has played all four years of his high school career. He is always trying to do what we want him to do. This year we want him to focus around the rim.

“The last few years we have had him doing different things. But this year we have really solid guards so we want him down low. He is relentless, and he is a hard worker.”

Calvin got to experience how relentless on Tuesday night. 

Pye drew foul after foul in the lane, going to the free throw line 11 times on the night (making six) as he also converted eight field goals from the paint … many off offensive rebounds. 

The Aggies came out of the starting blocks slow, trailing 17-10 after the Cougars hit the first shot of the second quarter with 7 minutes to play. That’s when Choudrant flipped the proverbial script.

A Benton Case bucket followed by a Pye layup and a Toby Cooper three-pointer tied the game at 17-17. Turner Rhodes then drained a corner three-pointer with 2:54 to play before the half as the Aggies grabbed their first lead since it was 1-0.

Much of the run, which eventually grew to 14-0, was due to the Aggies pressing defense causing Calvin issues. 

“We don’t press a lot,” said Smith. “We try to be selective when we press. Sometimes you just have a gut feeling to try to do something different. We do have some quick guards, and we have the ability to turn opponents over and turn it into some easy opportunities.

“I feel like we play better when we have momentum, especially at home. Anytime we can build positive momentum you way, it helps the ball go in the basket a little easier. We try to do different things at different times.”

Neither team came out of the halftime lockerroom clicking offensively. The Aggies held a 29-23 advantage midway through the third quarter when Pye ignited another Choudrant run with a layup followed by a Cooper three-pointer. 

Jackson Ambrose scored five points during another quick 7-0 run as Choudrant’s lead ballooned to 41-23 with just over two minutes to play in the third quarter. 

Calvin would get no closer than 14 points the rest of the way as the Aggies biggest lead came at 62-42 on a conventional three-point play by Pye with 2:26 to play in the contest. 

Cooper added 12 points and Clarence Menyweather scored 11 for the Aggies. 

Alex Peters led Calvin with 17 points while Aden Caskey added 13 points.

Choudrant will face Albany next at the West Ouachita Tournament. 

 


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Local events

Each Monday through Friday, the Lincoln Parish Journal will post a list of non-for-profit upcoming events happening in the parish. If you would like to add your event to this list or advertise your for-profit events, please email us at lpjnewsla@gmail.com

Wednesday, Dec. 17
7-8 a.m.: Veterans Coffee Club (PJ’s Coffee)
11:30 a.m.: Lunch on Us (Presbyterian Church, 212 North Bonner Street., Ruston) — everyone welcome
12-1 p.m.: Rotary Club meeting (Historic Fire Station)
6:30 p.m.: Lady Techsters basketball


Thursday, Dec. 18
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Kiwanis Club lunch and program (Trinity Methodist Church fellowship hall)
4-7 p.m.: Ice skating (Ruston Sports Complex, 2001 Champions Way)
6 p.m.: Southern A’Chord Chorus rehearsal (Presbyterian Church fellowship hall, 212 N. Bonner St.; open to all women singers)
6:30 p.m.: Ruston Rudolph Run 5k  (Ruston Sports Complex, 2001 Champions Way)
7 p.m.: Holiday Portraits Concert by Russ-Town Band (212 N. Vienna, Ruston)

Saturday, Dec. 20
9-11 a.m.: Christmas at the Complex (Ruston Sports Complex, 2001 Champions Way)
9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Farmers Market
12-2 p.m.: Free ice skating (Ruston Sports Complex, 2001 Champions Way)
2 p.m.: Lady Techsters basketball 
5:30-8 p.m.: Holiday movie and hot cocoa (Ruston Sports Complex, 2001 Champions Way)

Monday, Dec. 22
11:30 a.m.: Lunch on Us (Presbyterian Church, 212 North Bonner Street., Ruston) — everyone welcome
6 p.m.: Toastmasters International meeting (Louisiana Center for the Blind, 101 South Trenton Street)
6-9 p.m.: Creative Meetups (Creatives at Work, 301 N. Trenton)
6:30 p.m.: LA Tech basketball

Wednesday, Dec. 24
Christmas Eve
7-8 a.m.: Veterans Coffee Club (PJ’s Coffee)
11:30 a.m.: Lunch on Us (Presbyterian Church, 212 North Bonner Street., Ruston) — everyone welcome
12-1 p.m.: Rotary Club meeting (Historic Fire Station)

Thursday, Dec. 25
Christmas

Saturday, Dec. 27
9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Farmers Market

For the latest local news, subscribe FOR FREE to the Lincoln Parish Journal and receive an email each weekday morning at 6:55 right to your inbox. Just CLICK HERE to sign up.

Bulldog volleyballers earn academic honors

Courtesy of LA Tech Athletic Communications

Four Bulldogs on the Louisiana Tech Volleyball roster were named to the 2025 Academic All-District Team in an announcement made Tuesday by the College Sports Communicators.

Grace Luevanos, Giulia Bonifacio, Jailen Hurley, and Riley Steubing all earned this academic honor, which recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the court and in the classroom.

Luevanos, majoring in Elementary Education, has a 3.86 cumulative GPA. The senior outside hitter, who is a two-time CUSA Commissioner’s Honor Roll recipient, appeared in 76 sets played out over 29 matches (19 starts). She finished the season with 109 kills, 154 digs, and 23 service aces.

Bonifacio, majoring in Fashion Merchandising and Retail Studies, has a 3.52 cumulative GPA. The senior outside/right-side hitter, saw action in 96 sets while playing in all 30 matches with 19 starts. A 2025 CUSA Commissioner’s Honor Roll honoree, she ranked second on the team in kills (190) to go along with 141 digs.

Hurley, majoring in Interior Design, has a 3.87 cumulative GPA. The right-side hitter wrapped up her four-year career as a Bulldog, seeing action in 107 sets over 30 matches (22 starts) as a senior. The Little Elm, Texas native, who is a two-time CUSA All-Academic selection and now a two-time CSC Academic All-District honoree, paced LA Tech with 237 kills with a .253 hitting percentage while also contributing 50 blocks on defense.

Steubing, majoring in Kinesiology and Health Sciences, has a 3.83 cumulative GPA. The junior libero played in a team-high 110 sets while seeing action in all 30 matches, 28 of which were as the primary defensive specialist. The Richmond, Texas native, who is now a two-time CSC Academic All-District selection, led the Bulldogs with 419 digs and 26 service aces.

This marks the second straight season that the LA Tech Volleyball program had four academic all-district selections.


Notice of death — Dec. 16, 2025

Dennis J. Miller 
Sunday 07/24/1955 — Thursday 12/11/2025  
Memorial Service: Friday 12/19/2025 2:00pm at King’s Funeral Home 

Patrick O. Washington  
Saturday 03/14/1964 — Sunday 12/07/2025  
Memorial Service: Friday 12/19/2025 12:00pm at King’s Funeral Home  
Private Burial 


Simsboro celebrates season through song

Photo provided by Lacey Holcomb

By Judith Roberts

Simsboro School is in the holiday spirit this week, starting off with a tradition that dates back to the 1960s: singing “The 12 Days of Christmas.” 

Simsboro brings all of their students from pre-kindergarten through 12th grade into the auditorium to sing the song. Each grade level has their verse of the song that they stand and sing when it’s their turn.  

Kicking off the Christmas week festivities, Simsboro principal Lacey Holcomb said the kids and staff are excited to sing the carol every year. 


“They know what to expect, and it’s something they look forward to each year because as they go up a grade level, they get to learn the next verse of the song and sing the new verse,” Holcomb said. “We have some kids who start here in pre-k and then they graduate in the 12th grade, so they look forward to being 12th graders and get to sing the 12 drummers drumming. They even bring pots and pans to drum.” 

Not to be outdone, some of the lower grades bring props, too, she said. 

“In seventh grade, they always wear swan hats to go with their verse,” Holcomb said. “Some grade levels bring stuff, and some just bring their loudest singing voice.” 

Staff and administrators work together during the week to do reindeer games for the elementary students, produce a Christmas program and an art walk for all of the students.  

“There’s something every day and for every age,” Holcomb said. “We have a lot of fun with the kids this week, and it’s really a time for us to build relationships with them and just enjoy being together. So it’s a good week for us to all bond and spend time together.  

“I remember when I started here nine years ago and my first time witnessing ‘The 12 Days of Christmas.’ It just gave me chill bumps because it’s such a special moment, and we’re all together singing this song and enjoying time together. It just shows how special our school is.” 

For the latest local news, subscribe FOR FREE to the Lincoln Parish Journal and receive an email each weekday morning at 6:55 right to your inbox. Just CLICK HERE to sign up.

Sting operation nets West Monroe man

 

A West Monroe man was arrested on numerous charges involving indecent behavior with a juvenile after he allegedly attempted to arrange a meeting with what he believed were 10- and 12-year-old children who were actually decoys in a sting operation.

According to booking records, Humphery Harris, 36, was arrested by West Monroe Police on December 10 for computer-aided solicitation of a minor and seven counts of indecent behavior with juveniles.

“EDP Watch,” a sting operation and associated media project led by internet personality and former YouTuber Demarcus Cousins III first exposed the case to police.

In a social media post, EDP Watch said Harris “had arranged to meet our 12- and 10-year-old decoys, and in the chat logs Humphery claimed to have previously abused a real eight-year-old girl who had been entrusted to his care; during our interview with him he sadly admitted that all things he stated in the chatlogs really did happen. He also admitted that recordings existed.”

EDP Watch contacted West Monroe Police, which opened an investigation. According to EDP Watch, Harris confessed to WMPD detectives. He is currently incarcerated at the Ouachita Correctional Center with bail set at $800,000, according to jail records.

Humphery is currently charged with eight felony charges based on the chat logs and evidence provided by EDP Watch. The child referenced in the conversations lives in another state. Her family has been notified, and authorities have begun a separate investigation into the abuse.

A spokesman for West Monroe Police could not be immediately contacted for additional information.

According to its website, EDP Watch focuses on exposing child predators, coordinating with law enforcement, and producing media content to raise awareness about online child solicitation. The name “EDP” is a reference to a specific internet personality who was himself accused of similar behavior, which served as the initial inspiration for the project.