COLUMN: The father I never met

Once again I’m going off the rails and taking a break from talking fishing. Those of you that have read my articles from the very beginning know about my history as a kid. Growing up on the streets of Rosenburg, Texas, and Houston, made me a little tougher than most kids my age. I knew first-hand by the age of 8 what it was like to be footloose and fancy free running the streets ‘til all hours of the night, with zero guidance. 

While my biological mother was more concerned with her modeling career and surviving the beatings she took at the hands of my stepdad, I was just trying to survive. I was the one sneaking into houses looking for a quick meal. 

The one thing I always wondered — where was my real dad during all of this and why did I never get to meet him? Why was he never involved in my life?

Was this his choice to avoid contact with me or was there some kind of a mutual agreement between my mother and him that he was to never reach out to me for any reason?


These are questions that I’ll never get the answers to until the day I’m reunited with my dad and the loved ones who have crossed over to the other side. But as a father myself, I cannot imagine having a child in this world and not knowing who or where they were. 

I’ve always heard that my athletic abilities came from my dad. I’ve heard stories from my older brother, Mike (we share the same mom and dad), on the kind of dad he was to him and how he supported him and his athletic career. 

But the same questions continue to go through my head today, even at the age of 64. How was it that we never met? Why didn’t he reach out to me? 

Every kid wants that relationship with their dad. A dad plays an important role in the development of a young boy growing into a man. He also provides a sense of security to all his children that no matter what, dad always has their back.  

He provides advice and guidance for life’s troubled journey and teaches how to navigate those trials and tribulations. He’s the man who jerks a knot in your tail when you need correcting or get out of line. He’s the rock you look up to and hope to make proud one day. He’s the man you only hope you can be one day. 

But for me, that connection was never made. The years went by with zero contact from the man that I only heard about from relatives. From what I’ve been able to learn over the years, he had a good side and a bad side. 

I’ve been told that he enjoyed his Friday and Saturday nights at local taverns, but he also had wandering eyes for the ladies and traded one for another frequently. Guess this is why he and my mother divorced while she was pregnant with me. All total, he was married seven times (the legal limit in Texas) and once to the same lady, twice. 

So, maybe those that knew him thought it was in my best interest NOT to have a relationship with him; that nothing good would come out of us having that father-son bond that a boy wants with his dad. 

But looking back, he missed out on so much of my life’s great experiences. Things that a dad is supposed to be there for like a high school state championship, graduation, signing an athletic scholarship, getting married, being drafted by a Major League Baseball team and so much more! He missed out on so many of my life’s ups and downs — and three great grandkids. 

Growing up, I had the best childhood a young boy could ever ask for while being raised by my aunt and uncle in an awesome small town in East Texas. My uncle, who I called Dad after being adopted, was a great provider and taught me about responsibility and hard work while growing up on a ranch. He assumed the role of a loving father as best he could, but it’s just not the same.

There’s something about having a relationship with the man you share the same DNA with as it completes the internal connection — the connection that only a father can have with his children. 

So, I know the day will come when I’ll get all my questions answered. I’ll finally get to meet the father I never met.  But in the meantime, I’ll do my best to be the best father I can be to all three of my children.  

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.

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, Jan. 29
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Kiwanis Club lunch and program (Trinity Methodist Church fellowship hall)
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.: Lady Techsters basketball


Friday, Jan. 30
6-9 p.m.: St. Jude Red Carnation Ball (Ruston Civic Center)

Saturday, Jan. 31
9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Farmers Market
2 p.m.: Lady Techsters basketball

Monday, Feb. 2
Groundhog Day
10 a.m.: Ribbon cutting celebrating Party Fowl (102 N. Homer St.)
11:30 a.m.: Lunch on Us (Presbyterian Church, 212 North Bonner Street., Ruston) — everyone welcome
5:30 p.m.: Ruston City Council meeting (Ruston City Hall)
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)

Tuesday, Feb. 3
10 a.m.: Ribbon cutting Cenla Christian Childcare Center of Ruston (1004 Center St.)
Noon: Lincoln Parish School Board meeting (Choudrant Elementary School)

Wednesday, Feb 4.
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.: LA Tech basketball

Thursday, Feb. 5
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Kiwanis Club lunch and program (Trinity Methodist Church fellowship hall)
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.: GSU women’s basketball

Saturday, Feb. 7
9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Farmers Market
2 p.m.: GSU women’s basketball
2 p.m.: LA Tech basketball
4 p.m.: GSU men’s basketball

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.

First place Techsters host Owls tonight

Jianna Morris

Courtesy of LA Tech Athletic Communications

First place Louisiana Tech returns to home to face Kennesaw State in the Thomas Assembly Center tonight.

Tipoff is set for 6:30 p.m. and the game can be seen on ESPN+.

This marks the third matchup on the hardwood for the programs, splitting conference play last season.

The Lady Techsters (13-5, 6-1) are returning to Ruston after their second away-stand sweep, beating the Missouri State Lady Bears and FIU Panthers to improve to 6-1 in conference play. Louisiana Tech is currently in first place in the Conference USA standings and have the longest active winning streak in the league.

Louisiana Tech’s defense shut down the top three scorers in Conference USA this past week. Kaemyn Bekemeier of Missouri State averaged 20.8 points per game, the most in the league, but only managed seven against the Lady Techsters, almost 14 points lower than her average. LA Tech then faced Rhema Collins and Parris Atkins of FIU, who then took the one and two spots after Bekemeier’s average fell. Collins scored nine (-9.5) while Atkins scored 14 (-3.6), both below their averages.

Kennesaw State (10-8, 3-4)  currently sit at seventh place in Conference USA after sweeping their home stand against New Mexico State and UTEP. The Owls most recently bested New Mexico State with a heroic 31-point Keyarah Berry performance, her new career high.

Berry leads the team with 15 points per game, the sixth most in the league. Kailyn Fields sits third in the league in assists per game, dishing 4.5 per game. TaTianna Stoval has the most blocks in Conference USA with 27.

Kennesaw State has the best efficiency offensively and defensively in the conference. The Owls shoot a league best 44.4 percent from the field and hold defenses to 38.7 percent, the lowest mark in the league. KSU also shoots the triple at the second-best clip, making 34.6 percent of their attempts.  


Dogs pick up first road win, downing Miners in El Paso

Avery Thomas recorded a double double to help lead Tech to a 69-59 road win. (photo by Kane McGuire)

Staff Report

DJ Dudley scored 20 points and Louisiana Tech used an unfamiliar method in picking up its first road win of the season, defeating UTEP 69-59 at the Don Haskins Center Wednesday night.

Tech (12-8, 5-4), which has made a living recently falling behind and playing catch up, actually flipped the script against the Miners.

The Bulldogs used a 20-5 run late in the first half to build a 14-point lead and then held off a valiant Miners rally down the stretch.

Dudley hit four three-pointers in his 39 minutes of action.

“We practice hard every day,” said Dudley. “My teammates believe in me. My coaches believe in me. And most importantly, I believe in myself. We knew tonight was going to be a dog fight.”

Tech led 36-27 at the half and kept the advantage between eight and 13 points for most of the final 20 minutes of play.

However, UTEP made a late run. Trailing 61-50 with just over six minutes to play, the Miners Kaseem Watson scored six straight points in a 30 second stretch to close the deficit to 61-48 with 4:24 remaining. 

But Tech held UTEP without a field goal the rest of the way while the Bulldogs converted 8-of-10 free throws to seal the win, it’s first on the road in eight tries.

“We knew they were going to be physical coming into the game,” said Dudley. “They made a run right before halftime and Coach Hester told us every good team is going to make a run. We just couldn’t give them the easy stuff.”

Tech held UTEP to 31 percent (17-54) shooting for the game, including just 6-of-24 in the second half. The Bulldogs also outrebounded the Miners 41-29.

In addition to Dudley’s performance, Scooter Williams scored 14 and Avery Thomas added 12 points and 11 rebounds.

UTEP was led by Elijah Jones with 25 and Watson with 20.


Remembering Claire Aycock Brown

Claire Aycock Brown entered into the arms of her Lord and Savior on Saturday January 24th in Ruston, Louisiana. She was 97 years old. 

Claire was born on August the 27th of 1928 in Vicksburg, Mississippi to Eunice Downes Aycock and Charles Sellers Aycock Sr.  She grew up in Rayville, Louisiana, a place she held dear all of her life. After high school she attended Judson College in Marion, Alabama, then completed a bachelor’s degree in mathematics at the University of Mississippi in Oxford. After graduation, Claire returned to Rayville where she was a beloved schoolteacher and was eventually introduced to James Russell Brown by his relatives City Hatch and Mary Moon Ball. They were married in August of 1952 in Rayville then moved to New Orleans, Louisiana until James’ graduation from LSU’s School of Medicine.   From New Orleans, they moved to Shreveport, where James completed a residency in pathology at Confederate Memorial Hospital. Their children James Morrison Brown and Claire Anne Brown were born during this time. The family then moved to Monroe where George Gardiner Brown was born.  

In 1965, Ruston became their lifelong home until the time of Claire’s passing. In all the places she lived, she developed deep and abiding lifelong friendships there in Ruston. She was an active member of several organizations including the Culture Guild, and the Women’s Medical Auxiliary. She was a member of First Baptist Church in Ruston where she was a Sunday school teacher for many years.   

She was a beloved figure in Ruston and had countless friends who loved and adored her. She was always ready to lend an ear to anyone in need of support or just to share her wonderful sense of humor. She was an avid gardener, a wonderful cook and the consummate hostess. Her home was never empty, even in her later years of life. Her love and devotion for her community spread out and surrounded her as she grew to need more assistance and care. Even in her weakest moments, she was the first to smile, even when she could no longer speak. She loved her children and her grandchildren with a gentle presence that was steadfast and strong. Above everything, she loved God and was a loyal and faithful servant to the Lord all her life. She shared her faith at all times with her family and friends, reminding everyone of the boundless Love and strength that moves throughout this world. 

Her loyal friend and steadfast caretaker, Juanita Phillips, rarely left her side during her final years. Claire and Juanita could know what each other were thinking without speaking. Juanita’s compassion, kindness, and dedication made the last years of Claire’s life so much more wonderful and comfortable. Claire loved Juanita and cherished their friendship deeply.

She was preceded in death by her parents, husband and beloved siblings Sarah and Sellers, now together at last. Claire is survived by her three children, James M. Brown, Dr. Anne McPherson (Scott), and George Brown; six grandchildren, James Alexander Brown (Maria), Claire Downes Whitehurst, Andrew Lawson Whitehurst (Hanna), Gardiner Allen Brown, Carlos Daniel Brown, and Christian Russell Brown, Jonathan Muller; great-grandchildren, Dove, Flair, Zallia, and Nehemiah and her beloved sister-in-law, Sarah Ella Aycock, beloved nieces, nephews, great-nieces, and great-nephews as well as the many loving friends and members of her wide community. 

The Downes family’s love of poetry is longstanding.  Claire shared this deep love of poetry, carrying it forward in her own life and passing it on to her children and grandchildren, often reciting her favorite poems from memory during moments of joy and loss.  One of her favorites was from an unknown poet.

“Life is like a journey, taken on a train.

With a pair of passengers at each windowpane

I may sit beside you all the journey through.

Or I may sit elsewhere, never knowing you.

But if life should be so kind as to put you by my side

Let’s be pleasant passengers, it’s such a short ride”

Services for Claire will be held at 1:00 PM, Saturday, January 31, 2026, at Kilpatrick Funeral Home Chapel in Ruston, with Rev Clayton Owen officiating.  Interment will follow at the Rayville Masonic Cemetery in Rayville, LA.   A visitation will be held prior to the service from 12:00 to 1:00 PM at Kilpatrick Funeral Home Chapel in Ruston.

In lieu of flowers, memorials can be made to First Baptist Church in Ruston or the Louisiana Baptist Children’s Home.

 


Notice of death — Jan. 28, 2026

Ronald “Ronny” Gene Posey, Sr. 
February 19, 1955 – January 23, 2026  
Funeral Service: Thursday, January 29, 2026, 10:00 AM, Alabama Presbyterian Church, 2091 LA-145, Choudrant  
Cemetery Committal: Thursday, January 29, 2026, 11:00 AM, Sibley Cemetery, 1515 East Sibley Road, Choudrant  

Donald Eugene Shankles   
October 21, 1932  –  January 21, 2026   
Visitation: Friday, January 30, 2026, 1:00PM – 2:30PM, Grace Methodist Church, 3401 N. Trenton St, Ruston   
Service: Friday, January 30, 2026, 2:30PM, Grace Methodist Church, 3401 N. Trenton St, Ruston   
Final Resting Place: Sharon Cemetery, 2769 Hwy 152, Dubach   

Shirley Ann Curry   
Monday 01/23/1961 — Tuesday 01/20/2026    
Family Gathering: Friday 01/30/2026 2:00pm at King’s Funeral Home   
Visitation: Saturday 01/31/2026 9:00am, Stonewall Baptist Church, 807 Eatman Street, Bossier City   
Celebration of Life: Saturday 01/31/2026 11:00am, Stonewall Baptist Church, 807 Eatman Street, Bossier City   
Interment: Saturday 01/31/2026 Following Service, Forest Park Cemetery, 3700 St. Vincent Ave, Shreveport   

Craig Abney   
Wednesday 09/04/1963 — Friday 01/23/2026    
Visitation: Thursday 01/29/2026 3:00pm to 6:00pm at King’s Funeral Home   
Funeral Service: Friday 01/30/2026 11:00am at King’s Funeral Home   
Private Burial   

Terry Gayle Plamondon   
April 30, 1943 – January 21, 2026   
Funeral Service: Thursday, January 29, 2026, 2:00 PM, Salem Church of Dubach, 2769 LA-152, Dubach

Howard T. Bell    
Tuesday 05/30/1944 — Sunday 01/18/2026     
Visitation: Friday 01/30/2026 3:00pm to 6:00pm at King’s Funeral Home    
Celebration of Life: Saturday 01/31/2026 11:00am, Shiloh Baptist Church, Bienville    
Interment: Saturday 01/31/2026 Following Service, Collier Cemetery, New Hope Rd., Chatham 


Ronny and Kay Walker lead with servants heart during winter chaos

Kay Walker (left) joined her husband Ronny (not pictured) helped pass out food and water to stranded motorists on I-20 Tuesday.

by Hanna Singh

Amidst the chaos of the winter storm, Mayor Ronny Walker and his wife Kay have braved the cold to serve the community over the icy weekend.

With hundreds of people stuck on the frozen interstate, families without power, and students stranded with no way home, the storm left many in disarray. Mayor Walker and Kay spent the last few days helping the people of Ruston in any way they could.

Starting on Saturday, Kay prepared gumbo to serve to linemen, street workers and first responders. With his 4-wheel drive truck, Mayor Walker assisted people on the streets and made sure everyone made it home safely. Walker explained why being hands on with the community is important to him.

“Kay and I both love serving people,” Walker said. “That’s what this job is all about. We’re both Christians and that’s what God expects us to do. We just love being out in the community. If there are people who are in need, we want to help.”

They continued to provide warm meals for workers Sunday and Monday, with bowls of chili and cheesy chicken spaghetti for those working to restore power. On Monday morning, with the assistance of Chief of Patrol, Dylan Castaneda, they delivered food and water to truck drivers and citizens stuck on the interstate due to the weather.

“I think for both of us, we aspire to be God’s feet on the ground,” Kay said. “I try to live my life like that every day. I think one of the most interesting things about today was what people appreciated. Not necessarily just the food and water we provided, but the comradery. When we went to talk with people on the interstate, they were happy to have someone to talk to and come visit with them. These people are so kind and have been so awesome.”

Mayor Walker highlighted some of the individual issues that arise when the South faces unprecedented weather conditions such as these. Not only do people face the regular challenges like icy roads and power outages, but unexpected problems can cause dire situations.

Earlier this weekend, a Louisiana Tech student working at a convenience store was prepared to journey home by foot after closing the store during an outage. Mayor Walker and Kay were able to provide the student with a ride home and assure that she made it safely. 

Another issue arose when the gymnasium at New Living Word Ministries collapsed. The mayor and his council are working diligently to find an alternative space for the teams to practice until the gymnasium space is restored.

“The city really pitches in during cases like this,” Walker said. “They come together and want to help each other out.”

For example, Log Cabin and several other restaurants stayed open to provide meals for police officers and first responders while Karl Malone Toyota also served local law enforcement and first responders.

Mayor Walker shared how Sundown Tavern owner, Heath Hightower provided some ingredients to help serve the workers.

Ruston Construction Projects Supervisor John Freeman and the Ruston Police were even able to locate a student stuck on the interstate whose parent had lost contact with, to assure them that he was safe.

Throughout the frigid weekend, Mayor Walker continued to update the community about weather conditions and power restorations. He and Kay assisted the community in many ways, from bottled water and warm meals to even giving people rides.

Ruston Main Street Director, Lauren Dowden, shared what it’s like to work alongside the mayor.

“Mayor Walker truly leads with a servant’s heart,” Dowden said. “Working with him, you see how intentional he is about showing up, listening and caring about the people of his community. He’s deeply invested in Ruston and works every day to support the families, businesses and people who make this city what it is. It means a lot to work alongside someone who truly puts service and the community first.”

Anticipating a few more days of icy weather, Mayor Walker urges citizens to stay safe and stay off the roads if possible.

“When we say please stay off the roads and we put weather alerts out, we really need the community to listen,” Walker said. “We know what’s going on out in the streets and we are trying to protect our people.”


Ice storm spurs fatalities across South, injuries locally

Administrators, nurses, and other personnel at Northern Louisiana Medical Center clear ice from the landing zone so a helicopter could air lift a patient safely.

 

by Wesley Harris

 

At least 26 fatalities across the South and four deaths in Louisiana have been attributed to Ice Storm Fern.

Local authorities have pleaded with motorists to stay off the roads because of dangerous conditions. Chief Deputy Landon Hunt said the Lincoln Parish Sheriff’s Office had responded to numerous crashes, including motorists who unexpectedly came upon downed trees in the roadway that were difficult to see because of the heavy sleet falling Saturday. No serious injuries were reported in the crashes, Hunt said.

While a few of the lost lives across the South occurred during car crashes, other mishaps have caused fatalities and injuries, including the loss of two teenagers in sledding incidents in Arkansas and Texas. The incidents are similar to the serious injury and paralysis of a Louisiana Tech student in 1988 while he was sledding down a campus hill on a garbage can lid and collided with the concrete base of a light pole.

In Arkansas, officials confirmed a 17-year-old was killed in a sledding accident Saturday. Saline County deputies responded to Benton to find the young man had been riding a sled pulled by a motor vehicle before the sled hit a tree.

A 16-year-old girl was killed in Frisco, Texas Sunday after she and another teen on a sled collided with a tree while being pulled by a vehicle.  The sled reportedly struck a curb on a city street and then collided with the tree.

Local deaths and injuries run the gamut from exposure to the cold to falling objects due to the weight of the ice left by the storm.

Authorities reported two men apparently died from hypothermia in Shreveport and a woman was found dead outside her home in Franklin Parish. The State Fire Marshal reported a man died from carbon monoxide poisoning inside a residence in DeSoto Parish.

While no data is available on slips and falls on the ice this week, such injuries are very common after snowfall or an ice storm. According to the National Institutes of Health, back injury is most common injury during a fall after an ice storm. When fractures occur, they are mostly likely to involve the wrist, hip, and ankle.

In addition to back injuries, orthopedic doctors say falls on ice can result in head injuries, sprains, and knee and elbow injuries. Other injuries may be due to electrical shock from improper connections to a generator and carbon monoxide poisoning from using a generator indoors or use of heating devices without proper ventilation.   

Locally, several serious injuries have occurred in the aftermath of Ice Storm Fern.

______________________________

Electrocution fear of lineman

The greatest danger to utility workers attempting to restore power is the possibility of electrocution. A generator improperly connected to a home’s electrical system can backfeed into the power grid, re-energizing supposedly dead lines and risking fatal electrocution to linemen working to restore power.

Hunter Alexander, a lineman with Entergy was electrocuted Sunday while working on power lines, according to his family. He was in the bucket of his aerial lift truck when his crew found him with serious electrical burns to both arms. First responders were unable to transport him to Shreveport due to impassable roads and he was taken to the Northern Louisiana Medical Center (NLMC) in Ruston.

Alexander needed to be transferred to LSU Ochsner in Shreveport, but with Interstate 20 impassable, the only option was to fly him. Pafford Air One from a local ambulance service was cleared to fly but needed a safe landing zone at NLMC. The landing zone had to be cleared of ice before the helicopter could pick up the patient.

NLMC CEO Cathy Hall, ER nurses from both the day shift and night shift staff who had worked all night, and a Ruston police officer began shoveling. The Ruston Fire Department and other city employees arrived to continue the work with a city backhoe and a hospital employee’s tractor.

A NLMC statement on social media read, “Because of teamwork, grit, and an unwavering focus on patient care, the helicopter landed safely and the patient was flowing flown out.”

The statement continued, “This is what it looks like when a hospital, first responders, and a community come together with one goal doing what’s right for the patient—no matter what. We are incredibly proud of our employees whose quick thinking, selflessness, and determination truly made a difference. Thank you to everyone involved in exemplifying what it means to serve with heart.”

Recent reports from the family indicate Alexander is making a miraculous recovery from what could have been a fatal electrocution. Alexander has been up and walking and though he needs more treatment, he has amazed medical personnel with his recovery.

______________________________

Falling limb injures man

Johnathan Spence of West Monroe was critically injured when he was struck by a falling tree limb in Ouachita Parish. According to his family, Spence’s back was broken with vertebrae pressing on his spinal column.

According to a social media post shared by his mother and the family’s church, Spence was taken to St. Francis Medical Center after the incident and had no feeling from the waist down. He underwent surgery Sunday to decompress his spinal column. A lengthy hospital stay and more treatment is expected, the family said.

______________________________

Collapse due to ice

Jay Martin was cleaning articles out from under a carport laden with a thick sheet of ice at his home near Dubach when the structure collapsed on top of him Saturday. According to the Lincoln Parish Sheriff’s Office, an off-duty medic and a patrol deputy were first to the scene and were able to affect a rescue and apply a tourniquet to stop bleeding.

The victim was transported to Reeves Memorial Medical Center in Bernice for treatment and was later transferred to Shreveport for observation overnight with no broken bones, according to the man’s family.

Ice weighs considerably more than a comparable depth of snow and a heavy accumulation can seriously damage structures.

Such was the case in Sterlington Monday when the canopy over the gas pumps at a Shell service station on U.S. 165 collapsed, pinning one person under the debris.

According to the Sterlington Police Department, the victim was seriously injured and had to be extricated from under the fallen canopy. At least two vehicles were trapped under the debris.

A similar incident occurred at the Delta Mini Mart, an Exxon station on West California Avenue in Ruston Sunday. The canopy over the gas pumps fell under the weight of the ice, trapping two vehicles underneath. Information on injuries in that incident was unavailable.

Officials say staying home during and after a winter storm not only avoids the hazards of dangerous roadways but a host of other threats to personal safety.


Lincoln Parish Schools closed Wednesday, Thursday — see other closures

LPJ Staff Report

Lincoln Parish Schools: Closed Wednesday and Thursday. From Lincoln Parish School Superintendent Ricky Durrett: “We have consulted with the city and sheriff’s department, and we have determined that we need to make sure the backroads are clear and safe first and then we can get into schools and assess damage to see if anything needs to be done and repaired to safely get kids back on campuses hopefully by Friday.”

Cedar Creek: Closed Wednesday. Thursday, January 29. High school students (only) will have virtual learning and should look for an email from their instructors.  We will make a decision tomorrow about Friday.

Lincoln Prep: Closed Wednesday and Thursday.

Louisiana Tech University: Louisiana Tech University will remain closed through Thursday, Jan. 29. Tuesday’s temperatures will allow for some roadway melt but below-freezing temperatures overnight will likely result in iced roads.

For those who remain on campus, Tech Table will be open from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. The Lambright Center will be open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Grambling State: Remote classes and operations Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday out of an abundance of caution. Registration is extended. For more info: http://link.gram.edu/weather

 

 

 


UPDATE: Wednesday closure list

NOTE: This is a partial list of Lincoln Parish businesses and entities that are closed Wednesday (per their communicating to us). If you have an addition to this list, please email LPJNewsLA@gmail.com (include BUSINESS CLOSURE in the subject line. We will update this list periodically throughout the day.

We encourage anyone who doesn’t see a business listed on this to call or check their Facebook page before you try to go to said business … it still may be closed and just not on this list.

  • Advanced Audiology & Hearing Aids
  • Angel’s Touch Massage
  • Anna Stephens Aesthetics
  • The Art House
  • Bellissima Salon & Co.
  • Buie’s Photo Shoppe & Studio
  • Brandy’s Hair Care (OPENING AT NOON)
  • Building Futures Pediatric Therapy
  • Chessy’s Boutique
  • Christian Community Action
  • City of Grambling
  • City of Ruston — Garbage trucks will not operate on Wednesday. Updated garbage routes will be posted when available.
  • Classic Designs (OPEN FROM 10-12)
  • Cypress Creek Animal Hospital
  • Estes Taxidermy
  • Experience Ruston
  • Faulkenbery’s Prom and Pageant
  • Fine Line Supply
  • Green Clinic
  • Hair by Annabelle Bickham
  • Heard Freighthouse Food Park
  • Humanitarian Enterprises of Lincoln Parish – Transportation Department
  • Jan’s Optical
  • Johnston and Murphy Dental Care
  • Judges’ Office
  • Just Like You
  • Lilburn’s Boutique
  • Lincoln Community Health Center
  • Lincoln Parish Health Unit
  • Love Bug Apparel
  • Lowder Baking Co.
  • LPM Auto Glass
  • Pack and Mail
  • Ponchatoula’s Restaurant
  • Positive Solutions Tutoring
  • Pure White Janitorial Services
  • Ruston Rheumatology
  • Ruston Smiles
  • Simply Chic Boutique Ruston
  • Smith Chiropractic
  • Transforming Lives Counseling at FBC Ruston
  • Trenton Dental Center
  • Uptown Downtown
  • Willis Knighton Cardiology
  • Willis Knighton Pediatrics
  • Winnsboro State Bank

 


LA Tech speech and hearing center accepting insurance; expanding services

Courtesy of LA Tech University Communications

The Louisiana Tech University Speech and Hearing Center now accepts Medicare, Medicaid, and many private insurance plans, making comprehensive hearing and balance care more accessible and affordable for the Ruston–Lincoln Parish community and beyond.

The Speech and Hearing Center provides comprehensive services to individuals of all ages, including hearing and balance evaluations, hearing aid selection and fitting, balance rehabilitation, tinnitus management, and custom earmolds for hearing protection and swim plugs. The center serves Louisiana Tech students, faculty, staff, alumni, and area residents while also supporting supervised clinical practicum, diagnostic services, treatment, and research within the School of Communication Sciences and Disorders.

With insurance billing now available, eligible patients can use their benefits for conditions such as hearing loss, vertigo, and tinnitus, significantly reducing out-of-pocket costs and improving access to needed care.

This expanded access is made possible through a new grant-funded partnership between the Louisiana Tech Hearing Center and the Department of Health Informatics and Information Management (HIIM), both housed within the College of Applied and Natural Sciences. The initiative is supported by an $8,915 Jonesboro State Bank – Pledge 10 Grant and a $5,000 grant from the Lincoln Chamber of Commerce.

The grants fund the creation of a Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurance billing specialist position at the Hearing Center, removing financial and administrative barriers for patients while strengthening the long-term sustainability of audiology services in the region.

The project, titled Enhancing Access to Audiology for the Underserved Through Developing a Medicare and Medicaid Billing Specialist Position at the Louisiana Tech Hearing Center, is led by Jamie Bahm, MHI, RHIA, CCS, assistant professor of graduate studies in Health Informatics, and Lindsey Carswell, MHA, RHIA, CBCS, assistant professor of undergraduate studies in Health Informatics and Information Management, in collaboration with Dr. Melinda Bryan, Ph.D., CCC-A, director of Louisiana Tech’s Doctor of Audiology program.

Through the partnership, HIIM faculty and students provide the expertise and operational support needed for the Hearing Center to bill public and private insurers.

“In addition to providing care to Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries, this partnership gives undergraduate students within the Department of Health Informatics and Information Management more opportunity for experiential learning, which will create better-equipped health information professionals,” said Bahm.

“It’s a win-win,” Carswell said. “Our community benefits from expanded access to services, and our students gain hands-on experience with compliant, patient-centered healthcare operations.”

“We are thankful for the opportunity to work with the faculty and students in the Department of Health Informatics and Information Management,” Bryan said. “Their presence in the Louisiana Tech Hearing Center allows patients to use their insurance benefits for hearing and balance services while helping us increase productivity and maintain high-quality, patient-centered care.”

The Lincoln Chamber of Commerce grant supports local businesses as they educate and train individuals to meet current and future workforce needs, contributing to a strong and sustainable regional economy. The Jonesboro State Bank Pledge 10 Grant invests 10% of the bank’s profits back into Jackson Parish and surrounding areas to support innovative projects in education, youth development, financial literacy, and community enrichment.


FEATURE — Confessions of a Former AI Skeptic, Part 3: Generating images, documents, and playing fair

By Laura Hunt Miller

In the first two parts of this series, I talked about using AI for low-stakes tasks and as a thinking space. There’s a meaningful shift, however, when AI moves from helping you internalize an idea to helping you externalize one.

Once words turn into images, or rough thoughts turn into finished documents, the outputs stop living quietly in your head and they enter the real world. This is where questions of ethics begin to surface.

In the context of AI, ethics has less to do with what the technology is capable of, and more to do with how we govern what we allow it to contribute on our behalf, and how those contributions affect others.

Before we take a dive into ethics however, let’s review how AI can help us make images and documents, and its limitations.



Yep, that is an AI generated image. Just for you.

Most people experimenting with AI-generated images are using free or low-cost tools. At first these tools feel quite expansive when all you have to do is ask for an image, and voilà, it appears. But free versions typically come with constraints such as:

  • limited number of image generations per day
  • lower image resolution
  • fewer controls over style and revision
  • stricter safety filters

Those limits aren’t just about monetization. They’re also part of how companies slow misuse, manage system strain, and identify where problems arise, like coding errors.

A more humorous (or frustrating) reminder of AI’s limits appears if you ask for a complex image with too many variables or vague instructions, and end up with a five-armed person. Remember AI is a pattern assembler without true understanding, not an art director. When constraints are unclear, results can get… strange fast. This quirk is amusing in images, but can be more consequential in documents.

Hm, I wonder what is wrong with this image…

When it comes to document creation, a common misconception is that AI models are constantly scanning all available content on the internet in real time. In reality, most models are trained on large datasets that include older material and are updated periodically rather than continuously. Depending on the system, that core knowledge may lag months behind current events, which is part of why AI can be very confidently wrong sometimes.

If you want up-to-date information, you have to explicitly ask for it. And even then, AI can only access so many sources. Paywalled databases, proprietary research, and private records are typically off-limits.

This is why AI should never be treated as a substitute for real research. But it can be a very effective data aggregator and a tool for revealing gaps in logic, assumptions, or missing information; more like a research compass than an academic authority.

I personally like to use AI as a thought whiteboard as discussed in the last article, then use skills I learned in school like doing my own independent research, producing an outline and draft, then feeding my work back into AI to edit, check grammar and logical flow. A singular asset to one who tends to ramble.

I keep my wording and tone, and make sure AI does not remove any information or points I want to convey, as it has a tendency to do when editing. When I am done, I have work that is 100% my thoughts, with about 10–15% help in organizing and expressing them, like having a human editor by my side, 24-7.

As for AI image generation, I have been trained in graphic and studio art, but when writing I am interested in quickly pairing content with visual support rather than producing finished art for each piece. This is not a situation in which I would pay another artist to do the work either, but rather something that allows me to get words and images on the page, then give my kids a bath and take care of life’s other to-dos.

Another fun example of image generation not quite living up to the hype, after being given the prompt to create an image from the previous paragraph.

Do I have to edit a lot of AI images in Photoshop to make them really work for me? Yes, yes I often do. But it is still far faster and more effective than creating images from scratch just so one person can say, “oh yeah, that image does represent what I just read.”

AI image generation has quickly come under scrutiny however, as selfish people misuse it to cause harm. AI can generate convincing likenesses that resemble real people, bodies, and scenes. Used responsibly, this can be playful, illustrative, or creatively useful. Used irresponsibly, it can be deeply violating.

Harm doesn’t require physical contact to be real. As a new technology, non-consensual image generation, especially sexualized or alarming images, has been difficult to assign consequences to thus far. Exploitation like this is not new, the technology just lowered the barrier for many bad actors to access it.

The concerns around AI-generated writing are typically less disturbing, but no less real. Students use AI to shortcut assignments. Employees submit AI-generated drafts as original work. Lines blur between assistance and substitution.

The ethical question isn’t “did AI touch this?” It’s “did the creator still do the thinking?”

We’ve navigated similar questions before. Calculators didn’t eliminate math education. Spellcheck didn’t end writing. Templates didn’t destroy learning. But skipping the learning process altogether has consequences, whether AI is involved or not.

AI is a tool meant to support thinking and labor, not replace it with hollow results.

If AI helps you organize, explore, refine, or express ideas you genuinely understand, that’s assistance. If it produces work meant to demonstrate learning you didn’t do, that’s misrepresentation, regardless of the results. (Yes kids, that is what most schools would call cheating.)

It’s easy to see why some push back on this distinction. Teachers often see assignments as necessary steps students must climb to reach their intellectual potential. Students, on the other hand, may experience some of that work as irrelevant, repetitive, or disconnected from their actual abilities. And sometimes, they’re not wrong.

And there are plenty of jobs with mundane, repetitive work where creative authorship hardly seems the concern of an employer. But bypassing the process doesn’t challenge the system or a dysfunctional work environment, it just avoids it. Using AI to substitute for learning or work isn’t outsmarting anyone; it’s opting out of the very skills the work was meant to build.

Creation is closely tied to identity. Words and images carry trust. When authorship becomes unclear, or is quietly replaced altogether, that erodes trust. People lose confidence not just in the work itself, but in the person presenting it. And that kind of blemish on your character is hard to shake.

What AI thinks guilt looks like.

Feeling worried about people or students using AI for work doesn’t mean one has to be anti-technology. It just means you know there are going to be misuses that slip through the cracks. But fear of drawbacks doesn’t require dismissing the good these tools can provide.

Once again, AI doesn’t remove responsibility or human effort, it just creates a new process for creation people must take responsibility for and be aware of. So rather than trying to outlaw AI entirely, here are a few guiding principles:

  • Don’t generate or share images of real people without consent.
  • Don’t generate harmful or misleading images intended to cloud truth and trust.
  • Don’t claim AI images as your own self-made creations from scratch.
  • Don’t outsource work meant to teach you something.
  • Don’t treat AI output as neutral or objective by default if using it for our own work.
  • Don’t publish what you wouldn’t defend as your own decision or point of view.

Used thoughtfully, AI can amplify creativity and clarity. Used carelessly or selfishly, it can amplify harm just as efficiently.

AI Homework Time! Ok, if the ethics talk didn’t scare you off, here are a few things you can try to familiarize yourself with AI image and document creation.

Exercise 1: Do you have kids or work buddies that need a little pick-me-up? Take a picture of yourself, then ask AI to create a cartoon version of yourself delivering some sort of cheesy slogan, like “I love you to the moon and back,” or “Hang in there,” complete with a kitten hanging on a branch if you like. You have permission to ask AI to make you look thinner.

Exercise 2: Pretend you need to deliver a short report to someone, for example, “Reasons Care Bears are as Tough as GI Joe’s,” or perhaps something more applicable, like an argument for a workplace policy you would like to change. Tell AI what your thoughts are, any relevant facts, then ask it to write a short persuasive piece. Edit it to fit your own voice, remove anything that doesn’t fit, and share it with a friend for funsies.

If either exercise feels helpful or fun, keep experimenting. If not, feel free to keep those jam sessions between you and your sketchbook or Steam account of choice.

In the next piece, we’ll move from individual use toward industrial work and AI as infrastructure, and the challenges and questions those issues raise.

Harris on History: Lincoln Parish Q & A

by Wesley Harris

Q: What early railroad led to the creation of Ruston and the development of the local economy?

A: The Vicksburg, Shreveport, and Pacific (VS&P) Railroad. The line linked Ruston to Vicksburg and Shreveport where other rails could take travelers to points further east and west.

***

Q: What location served as the seat of government for Lincoln Parish before it was moved to Ruston?

A: Vienna, from 1873 when the parish was created to 1884.


***

Q: What is the nickname for the Town of Dubach based on an unique architectural feature of the area?

A: Dubach is known as the “Dog Trot Capital of the World,” celebrating the traditional “dog trot”-style homes of the 1800s that featured an open breezeway running through the center of the structure.

***

Q: Where was Ruston’s first high school located?

A: Ruston High School was built in the block where City Hall now stands. Formerly, this block was the home of Ruston College. When the new Ruston High School was constructed in 1939, the old building was used as a junior high school. It was torn down in the 1960s with the City Hall/Civic Center complex replacing it in the early 70s.

***

Q: What led to the massive decline in peach production in Lincoln Parish?

A: Fungal diseases in the soil after the federal government banned the only pesticide that could kill it. Occasional massive spring freezes didn’t help, either.

***

Q: What was the original name of Louisiana Tech?

A: Tech was founded as Louisiana Industrial Institute in 1894. The name was changed to Louisiana Polytechnic Institute in 1921, although informally referred to as Louisiana Tech. In 1970, the name was officially changed to Louisiana Tech University.

***

Q: Where was Ruston’s first park that included recreational facilities?

A: Memorial Park on Memorial Drive. Over the years the park has included a baseball stadium, swimming pool, and playground equipment. The baseball stadium was dismantled and moved to Woodland Park as Fraser Field but has since been demolished. Soon a skate park will be constructed on the former pool site.

***

Q: Is Railroad Park’s magnificent fountain original to the park?

A: No. It is an exact replica of the 1890s fountain that was destroyed by a hard freeze.

***

Q: Of the post offices still operating in Lincoln Parish, which one has existed the longest?

A: Choudrant post office, established 1857, even before Choudrant was officially incorporated.

***

Q: What were the two most serious disasters in terms of property damage to occur on the Louisiana Tech campus?

A: The April 25, 2019, tornado that destroyed the softball and baseball complexes and damaged residence halls and other facilities and the January 6, 1936, fire that demolished the “Old Main,” which contained most of the campus’s classrooms, labs, administrative offices, and the auditorium and library.

***

Q: When did Louisiana Tech officially acquire its first live Bulldog mascot?

A: “Tech I” was given to the school in 1930 by Henry and Thomas Matthews, two students from Shreveport. The bulldog died August 17, 1932 after receiving injuries from an unknown source. He was buried off campus with plans to later move his grave to the athletic field. According to legend, five students unofficially adopted a bulldog in 1899 that had been wandering around campus. A fire broke out among the students’ house not long after. The adopted bulldog barked at his new masters until they all awoke, allowing them to escape the burning building. The bulldog, however, had inhaled too much smoke and never made it out of the building. The students supposedly buried the dog on campus.

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.

Motorist found with stolen pistol

Ruston Police arrested a Bernice man last week after he was stopped for a traffic violation and was found to be wanted in possession of a stolen firearm.

Ke’shawn Wilson, 24, was arrested Jan. 22 after his Chevrolet Impala was stopped for improper lane usage.

An officer on patrol stopped Wilson at about 1:20 a.m. Upon speaking with Wilson, the officer detected the odor of marijuana coming from the vehicle. When asked how much marijuana was in the vehicle, Wilson allegedly said none, but informed the officer he had smoked marijuana prior to leaving Bernice.


During a search of the vehicle, the officer found a 9 mm pistol cartridge in the driver’s door. A Taurus 9 mm pistol was found under the driver seat. A check revealed it had been stolen in Farmerville. Five more 9 mm cartridges were found in the center console along with a second magazine for the pistol.

A record check showed Wilson was wanted failure to appear in Ruston City Court on a criminal damage to property charge. He was arrested and booked at the Lincoln Parish Detention Center for illegal possession of a stolen firearm and the failure to appear warrant.

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.

Ponderings by Doug

Do you have a drawer under your oven? And more importantly—what’s living in there? Cookie sheets? Muffin tins? A colony of plastic lids that haven’t had matching bowls since the Bush administration.

And the bigger question: Are you even using that drawer correctly?

My mother used that drawer for cookie sheets, and therefore—by the sacred laws of Southern motherhood—I was required to do the same. You don’t question Mama’s kitchen theology. You just obey and hope she doesn’t notice you put the castiron skillet in the dishwasher.

But who gets to tell you what’s right? Who shapes your choices? And when does “that’s how Mama did it” turn into “that’s how I got myself into trouble”?

Before we go any further, let me ask something bold: Do you know the truth about oven drawers?

Let me tell you a story.


There’s an old African tale about a man and his beloved lamb. He fed it by hand, played with it, probably let it sleep on the porch. Hard times came, and he had to take the lamb to market.

Three thieves heard about this and cooked up a plan.

As the man walked down the road with the lamb over his shoulders, the first thief said, “Why are you carrying that dog?”

The man laughed. “It’s a lamb.”

A little farther along, the second thief said, “Finelooking dog you’ve got there.”

The man frowned. “It’s… a lamb. Pretty sure.”

Near the market, the third thief shook his head. “Sir, they won’t let you bring a dog in there.”

That did it. The man set the lamb down, stared at it, and thought, “Well, if three different people say it’s a dog, it must be a dog.” And he walked away.

If he’d turned around, he would’ve seen the thieves scooping up his verymuchnotadog lamb and heading home for supper.

Now, back to the oven drawer.

For years, I never questioned its purpose. Mama said it was for cookie sheets, so it was for cookie sheets. End of discussion. But like the man with the lamb, I realized I’d let other voices define reality for me.

Then I learned the shocking truth: Some oven drawers are storage drawers… and some are warming drawers.

If your oven is older than your church’s carpet, it’s probably storage. But newer ovens? That drawer might be designed to keep food warm.

Which means:  Trying to warm your biscuits in a storage drawer is just wishful thinking.  Storing your plastic lids in a warming drawer is how you end up explaining yourself to the fire department.

It is not your mother’s oven.

And that’s the point.

In a world where everyone has an opinion—loudly—and where people will swear up and down that the lamb you’re carrying is a dog, you need a center that doesn’t wobble. You need truth that isn’t based on trends, polls, or whoever shouts the loudest.

You need someone who won’t call darkness “light” just because it’s fashionable.

You need the One who doesn’t change.

You need the One who won’t mislead you for His own gain.

You need the One who tells you the truth—even when three thieves insist otherwise.

And that place, that Person, is where I always end up: Jesus.

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.

GSU mourning gridiron greats Lee Fobbs, Steve Dennis

Lee Fobbs (47) and Steve Dennis (21

By T. Scott Boatright

They were friends and teammates playing for legendary Grambling State University coach Eddie Robinson in the early to mid 1970s. 

And now Lee Fobbs and Stephen Davis, who both turned in significant coaching careers themselves, have rejoined Coach Rob on the sidelines in the sky after the deaths of both, Fobbs on Friday and Dennis on Saturday.

“The thing it reminded me of was 2010 when (former GSU and NFL standouts) James Hunter and (Gary) ‘Big Hands’ Johnson passed a couple of days from each other,” said GSU and NFL legend Doug Williams, who joined the Tiger football team just after Fobbs and Dennis had graduated. “When you think about Steve and Lee, and what they meant to the history of Grambling football, it’s something. It’s one of those things we have no control over, but as Coach Robinson used to say, there’s two more Tigers in the sky right now.

“Coach Rob is gathering his guys back together, and he’s got a pretty good team so far. We know things will happen, things that nobody is ready for, but when two guys — two friends — like that go within a day of each other, that’s pretty significant. That’s a tough one.”

During his time at Grambling State, Fobbs, one of a stable of solid running backs the Tigers had, and he earned all SWAC and All-America honors as a senior under the Robinson and GSU offensive assistant coaches Melvin Lee and Doug Porter.

Al Dennis, who later became Grambling’s athletics director, was an offensive lineman playing for Grambling in those days.

“I knew both of them were sick, but I didn’t expect for anything like this to happen,” Al Dennis said. “Steve and I were roommates at Grambling. Steve was special in that he started as a freshman. To go to Grambling and start as a freshman was unheard of back then.

“Lee had gone to what was then called Northeast Louisiana (now ULM), but then transferred here and was part of a great group of running backs, but they all played and they all played well. I think he might have scored two or three touchdowns against the University of Hawaii. All of those running backs could play, but I guess you credit Coach Rob, Coach Lee and Coach Porter for finding a way to make it work and get everybody to hang in there. We had some great running backs like (Rodney) Tureaud back then, too.

Fobbs was an eighth-round draft choice of the Buffalo Bills in 1973. He played professional football for the Canadian Football League’s Ottawa Rough Riders and Winnipeg Blue Bombers. He also played for the Detroit Wheels and Birmingham Stallions in the United State Football League. 

After his professional career, he returned to Grambling where he was a graduate assistant for Robinson while working on his master’s degree in Sports Administration. 

Later, Fobbs became part of a Who’s Who group of some of the first Black assistant coaches at the NCAA Division I level at  schools like Tulane, Alabama, Texas A&M, LSU, Minnesota, Kansas and ULM along with Southern and Grambling. 

Fobbs was also the head coach at North Carolina A&T from 2006-08. He later retired from GSU in 2019 after serving on the staff of his son, former GSU head  coach Broderick Fobbs, teaming with his son to lead Grambling to a 2016 HBCU National Title. 

Dennis came to Grambling as a quarterback but with another young Tigers at the time, Matthew Reed, quickly taking over the starting role, Dennis asked Robinson to move him to defensive back.

On the defensive side of the ball, Dennis joined a group of other young freshmen in the secondary, and the group grew into a stellar unit, helping Grambling win a pair of SWAC titles as well as a  National Black College Championship in his final season.

Steve Dennis recorded a Grambling record 27 career interceptions en route to three All-SWAC selections (one first team) and two All-American honors.

He then moved on to play 10 years in the Canadian Football League as a Toronto Argonaut and Saskatchewan Roughrider from 1975-85.

After his playing career, Steve Dennis returned to his hometown of Shreveport, becoming a longtime coach at Green Oaks High School.

One of his former Lions there, Ryan Williams, paid tribute to his former coach in a post on Facebook.

“Today I lost more than a coach, I lost a mentor, my fraternity brother, a protector, and father figure,” Ryan Williams wrote in that post. “My high school football coach from Green Oaks High School was one hell of a man the kind you don’t get twice in one lifetime. He was hard on us, but always fair. His expectations were high because he saw more in us than we sometimes saw in ourselves. He pushed me toward Grambling State University, pushed education, and pushed manhood not just in football. That same man also wrote my letter to join Kappa Alpha Psi, Inc. believing in me at pivotal moments of my life.

“Coach Stephen Dennis mentored countless young men on Cooper Road. He fed us. Gave us rides home. Checked on us. Loved us loudly and quietly. Even long after school, we stayed connected through phone calls and text messages when I was in the Air Force, and through conversations at the barbershop. He never stopped being ‘Coach’ He always knew how to pull the best out of us even when we weren’t at our best.”

Former GSU and NBA standout as well as former Grambling head basketball coach and athletics director Aaron James was friends with both Dennis and Fobbs in college.

“We hung out together a lot,” James said. “Everybody got along at that time. We didn’t have a lot of students, so basically all the athletes knew each other. For them to both die back to back like what happened was amazing — unbelievable.

“Lee was a pretty running back. He ran smooth and stepped high and he had quickness. Steve was a smart cornerback. Steve was right there as good as Everson Walls. Neither really had  great speed, but they both had great range. They both played a lot the same way as the other.”

GSU Hall of Fame baseball coach Wilbert Ellis called it a big loss for the university.

“They were both deserving Grambling legends,” Ellis said. “Both later served as great ambassadors for Grambling as football coaches. It’s just a big loss for everyone, they’re families, and the Grambling State family, too. It’s a big loss, and for them to die a day apart like they did, it’s hard to put into words. It’s a big loss.

“I’m just glad got to finish his career coaching alongside his son. I know he loved that and I know Broderick loved that. I know how much that meant to both of them.”


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, Jan. 29
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Kiwanis Club lunch and program (Trinity Methodist Church fellowship hall)
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.: Lady Techsters basketball


Friday, Jan. 30
6-9 p.m.: St. Jude Red Carnation Ball (Ruston Civic Center)

Saturday, Jan. 31
9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Farmers Market
2 p.m.: Lady Techsters basketball

Monday, Feb. 2
Groundhog Day
10 a.m.: Ribbon cutting celebrating Party Fowl (102 N. Homer St.)
11:30 a.m.: Lunch on Us (Presbyterian Church, 212 North Bonner Street., Ruston) — everyone welcome
5:30 p.m.: Ruston City Council meeting (Ruston City Hall)
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)

Tuesday, Feb. 3
10 a.m.: Ribbon cutting Cenla Christian Childcare Center of Ruston (1004 Center St.)
Noon: Lincoln Parish School Board meeting (Choudrant Elementary School)

Wednesday, Feb 4.
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.: LA Tech basketball

Thursday, Feb. 5
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Kiwanis Club lunch and program (Trinity Methodist Church fellowship hall)
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.: GSU women’s basketball

Saturday, Feb. 7
9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Farmers Market
2 p.m.: GSU women’s basketball
2 p.m.: LA Tech basketball
4 p.m.: GSU men’s basketball

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.

Tech men travel to face UTEP tonight

Courtesy of LA Tech Athletic Communications

Louisiana Tech heads to the Lone Star State tonight to face UTEP inside the Don Haskins Center in their second matchup of the season.

Tipoff is set for 8 p.m. CT and the game can be seen on ESPN+.

LA Tech leads the all-time series versus UTEP, 22-15. The Bulldogs claimed a 75-63 victory over the Miners in the conference opener this season in Ruston.

LA Tech owns a 15-7 advantage since the two became CUSA foes, having won five of the last six. The Bulldogs are 6-6 versus the Miners in El Paso during this stretch.

The Bulldogs (11-8, 4-4) staged yet another comeback on Friday, erasing a 12-point deficit in the second half to defeat Kennesaw State 82- 76 inside the Thomas Assembly Center. The Bulldogs outscored the Owls 46-31 after the break, picking up their third straight come-from-behind win of at least 12 points. Prior to this season, the Bulldogs had a total of three comebacks of at least 12 points in the previous five seasons combined. Five of their last six games have been decided by six points or less.

LA Tech ranks second in the country in scoring defense, allow­ing just 61.3 points per game. They also rank fifth in the nation in field goal percentage defense (38.1). During conference play only, the Bulldogs rank second in both scoring defense and field goal percentage defense. LA Tech has held 16 of its 19 opponents to under their scoring average this season.

Almost at the halfway point of conference play, UTEP (7-13, 3-6) is in a three-way tie for ninth in the league standings. The Miners are amid a four-game homestand, having recently defeated FIU 83-77 followed by a 62-57 loss to Missouri State in the Don Haskins Center.

Elijah Jones and Jamal West Jr. are the primary scorers for the Miners, averaging 14.1 and 13.5 points per game, respectively. Both players have started all 20 games this season and are shooting over 50 percent from the field. West had his best game of the season in UTEP’s last win over FIU, scoring 28 points