COLUMN: The unwritten rules of tournament bass fishing

Last week we covered some of the issues going on with anglers on our lakes and waterways. We talked about the confrontations taking place daily as guys compete for water space. Every angler of course, wants an area of the lake to themselves. Twenty-five to thirty years ago, this might have been possible but not in 2024! Since the Covid pandemic, it is crazy how many people have taken to the outdoors, and specifically the water, for either fishing or just pleasure boating.

So, with so many people on our lakes and rivers, competition for water space is at an all-time high. Today, I’m going to grab my whistle and put on my coach’s cap and teach anyone willing to listen (boat captains and high school anglers) on the unwritten rules of tournament bass fishing. Actually, these rules should apply to all anglers!  


Rule #1: Don’t back your boat down the ramp if you’re not ready to launch. This is a major sore spot with anglers as so many times some anglers will block the ramp by loading all their gear, putting on the running light, loading their rods, removing the trailer bar and unhooking all the trailer straps. Do all this before you get to the ramp! Same goes for pleasure boaters; do all your prepping away from the ramp. Now when you get to the ramp, you’re ready to drop the boat in the water and get out of the way.

Next, brush piles….Rule #2: You don’t own a sunken brush pile. This might be the most controversial topic among tournament anglers and can be a major source of tension. But you must understand, that even though YOU spent hours sinking brush piles all over the lake, in reality, you do not own them. Once anything is sunk on a public waterway, it is no longer YOUR personal fishing spot, it’s public. YOU DO NOT OWN THAT OR ANY OTHER BRUSH PILE! Anyone and everyone have just as much right to fish that brush pile as the person that put it there.

Now, with all this being said, if I know that an angler in the tournament put out a particular brush top, I’ll honor him by not fishing it. Also, if I see a good friend fishing a particular brush pile, I’ll check it off my list of places to fish out of respect for him.  

Here’s the thing about brush piles; most lakes have hundreds of brush piles all over the lake. All you have to do is use your electronics and go find them. Which leads us to Rule #4: Go find your own fish! Don’t rely on another angler to find fish for you! Find them on your own! You’ll get a greater satisfaction from fishing when you do it on your own.

Rule #4: Don’t cut another angler off! This is the most controversial unwritten rule there is and the one that has created the most verbal wars on the water. Nothing sets a bass fisherman off quicker than another angler cutting them off. If you see a boat going down a stretch of boat docks, grass line or tree line, don’t run in on him and start fishing a few hundred feet in front of him. THIS IS A MAJOR NO NO! Give the angler his space and go at least 300 yards or more before dropping your trolling motor. Or start behind the angler and go away from him which is what he would prefer anyway.

Rule #5: Don’t run up on another boat and shut down on top of them. This is more of a problem on lakes that have a defined boat lane with little to no wiggle room. If another angler is fishing close to the boat lane, shut down at least 40 yards from them and idle by him a few yards before getting back on pad.

In some cases, anglers will motion you with a hand signal waving you on to stay on pad and run by them. I personally would rather have someone just run by me on pad rather than shutting down and throwing a 2-foot wake on me. A running boat produces a smaller wake than one with a fast idle. But it’s always good to be courteous and let the other angler tell you what they want you to do.

Rule #6: Never drop waypoints with your GPS of another angler’s fishing spot. This one is a major issue with all tournament bass anglers. Just because you see one of the local favorites on a particular body of water fishing a specific spot, does not mean you should idle by him and drop a waypoint. I’ve seen anglers go out of their way to mark another angler’s location only to return and fish the same spot. If you can’t find your own fish, don’t enter the tournament!

Rule #7: At no point should an angler have a pair of binoculars in their boat! This really makes an angler using them look pitiful. It shows you’re spending time sitting and watching other anglers catch fish while you’re waiting for them to leave so you can fish that spot. Don’t do this! Binoculars have no place in a bass boat!

The next two rules (#8 and #9) apply mainly to anglers fishing a pro/am tournament. Rule #8: Don’t throw past the front of the boat. This is actually a written rule, but also the most overlooked or ignored rule by co-anglers. Some co-anglers think they can cast anywhere they want, but that’s not the case. The co-angler should fish the water from the imaginary line from the middle of the boat to the back of the boat. My advice to co-anglers…if you want to fish in front of the boat, then sign up as a boater/pro.

Rule #9: Make sure to help the boater/pro with gas on tournament day. Most guys will never ask for the money, so it’s up to you (co-angler) to offer. It’s pretty much understood that unless gas prices are high, $40 is a good offer. Some boater/pros may not take it, but it’s a courteous gesture on your part to offer, especially if you covered a lot of water that day.  

Finally, Rule #10: Your bass boat is not a rocket ship! You’re not impressing anyone on the lake by going fast. So SLOW DOWN and be courteous and respectful of all boaters. In the words of former Dallas Cowboys Head Coach Jimmy Johnson…speed kills! Now obviously he was talking about football, but the same rule applies for going too fast in a bass boat.

Whether we think it or not, we (anglers) do not own any portion of the lake. Everyone is entitled to all areas of any public lake or river. So be respectful of all boaters using the lake. As hard as it can be, exercise patience and try to be nice.

The rules listed above have been passed down to me by previous generations of anglers during my many years of tournament experience. These are things that all bass fishermen need to be reminded of from time to time.

We all get frustrated, but today our lakes and waterways are overrun with boaters and it’s up to us to educate each other as to what is considered acceptable behavior on the water. If you know of anyone, like a boat captain, high school angler or someone new to tournament bass fishing, please share this information with them.  Till next time, good luck, good fishing and when in doubt…set the hook!







Having a sale? Take advantage of the LPJ Digital Deals

Do you own a business? Are you having a sale?

Well the LPJ Digital Deals is for you!

The Lincoln Parish Journal will send out the LPJ Digital Deals email each Thursday that will include coupons from local businesses, giving out loyal readers opportunities to take advantage of special savings from local businesses.

In order for a business or individual to participate, their coupons must contain (a) a savings and (b) an expiration date that falls within one month if the date of run.

Any business who wishes to take advantage of this new piece of inventory may contact the LPJ at LPJNewsLA@gmail.com.

The cost of the weekly coupon to run within the special Thursday afternoon email and then again on Friday morning as an all-inclusive LPJ Digital Deals is $125 per week (or a discounted rate of $350 for a 4-week run).

This is just one more way that the Lincoln Parish Journal can bring its advertising partners together with our loyal readers.








Tech’s Ballard named finalist for Gold Glove

Michael Ballard

Courtesy of LA Tech Athletic Communications

Louisiana Tech’s Michael Ballard was named an ABCA/Rawlings Gold Glove Finalist, the ABCA announced on Tuesday. Ballard would be the second Louisiana Tech player to win the award, following the footsteps of Tech’s former second basemen, Taylor Young, who won it in 2021.

Ballard finished the 2024 season batting .312 at the plate with 77 hits and 38 RBI. The Florida native had four homers and 12 doubles while having a 21-game on-base reach streak, and his longest hitting streak was 15 games.

In his 64 starts at second base, Ballard had just one error with 121 putouts and was involved in 37 double plays in 2024. Ballard, in his first year with the Bulldogs, had a fielding percentage of .997.

The ABCA/Rawlings Gold Glove teams were first recognized in 2007 and are presented annually to the top defensive players from each division of collegiate and high school baseball.

The winners of the 2024 ABCA/Rawlings Gold Glove Award will be announced on Wednesday, June 19.








Remembering Dorothy Dean Vining Clark

Dorothy Clark

Dorothy Dean Vining Clark was a wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, and sister who died peacefully at the age of 90 at home in Ruston, Louisiana with family around her after a lengthy illness. She was born in West Carroll Parish in the village of Forest to Mike Lee Vining and Stella Oldham Vining on July 23, 1933. Her parents preceded her in death.

The Vining family was a large and happy one. Her siblings who preceded her in death included Dixie Vining Harrison, Long Allen Vining, Robert Vining, Michael “Mitch” Vining, and Harry Vining. Those surviving include Joy Vining Ferrell, Mary Vining Morgan, and Mike Vining (Sammie).

Dorothy graduated from Forest High School and immediately enrolled at Louisiana Tech. There she met the love of her life, Glenn E. Clark, who passed in December 2019. They were married on July 1, 1954 at First Baptist Church and proceeded to live in Ruston the rest of their lives with short stints in Baton Rouge, College Station, Texas, and Oak Ridge, Tennessee for educational purposes. Between the two of them, they achieved three advanced degrees after their marriage. They built their first home together on Dogwood Street in 1963 and remained there until death while raising their four daughters: Glenna Clark Fallin (Russell) of Baton Rouge; Connie Clark Schavrien (Steve) of Frisco, Texas, Karen Clark Canterbury (James) of Richardson, Texas, and Cynthia Clark of Ruston.

Dorothy and Glenn, both educators, were proud of their grandchildren who all received college degrees and some with advanced degrees: Laura Schavrien Rummel (Hayden) of Frisco, Texas; Christopher Fallin of Baton Rouge; Lisa Schavrien of Baton Rouge, Rebecca Fallin Allen (Mark) of Fort Worth, Texas, Sarah Canterbury Kyne (Eoghan) of Seattle, Washington; and Jason Canterbury (Heather) of Austin, Texas. Left to cherish her memory are five great-grandchildren: Eloise Allen, Madeline Allen, Eamonn Kyne, Seamus Kyne and Caroline Canterbury.

Many will remember Mrs. Clark as the Algebra I or English III teacher at Ruston High School which was a highpoint of her life, whether it be in the classroom, sponsoring students at the Louisiana High School State Rally, preparation for ACT exams or at Ruston High School football games.

Mrs. Clark was active as a volunteer in Girl Scouts, church youth groups, Lincoln Parish Retired Teachers’ Association, and served as treasurer for the Pierian Club.

Services for Mrs. Clark will be held at First Baptist Church of Ruston where Mrs. Clark was a member for 70 years on Friday, June 21, 2024 led by Dr. Chris Craig and Rev. Clayton Owen. Visitation time is 1:00 pm followed by the service at 2:00 pm.








Remembering Drucilla Sherrard

Drucilla Sherrard

Graveside services for Drucilla Sherrard, age 91, of Chattanooga, TN will be held at 2:00 PM, Thursday, June 20, 2024 at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Ruston, LA. Services will be under the direction of Owens Memorial Chapel Funeral Home.

Mrs. Drucilla was born, October 14, 1932 in Monroe County, AL to the union of George and Lillie Belle McClammy. She died, June 14, 2024 in Chattanooga, TN.

Drucilla’s lifelong passion was gardening and she took great pride in all of her flower beds. Her family will dearly miss her.

Mrs. Drucilla is preceded in death by her parents: Fred and Lillie Belle McClammy; husband, E.B. “Buddy” Sherrard; son Mike Sherrard; and her brothers: David McClammy and James McClammy.

She is survived by her son, Rick Sherrard and his wife Elizabeth; grandchildren: Ashley Price and her husband Joseph, Annie Ewing and her husband Brenson, and Austin Sherrard and his wife Autumn.

Visitation will be held at Owens Memorial Chapel in Ruston, LA on Thursday, June 20, 2024 from 1:00 PM until 2:00 PM.  To leave an online memorial message for the family, please visit http://www.owensmemorialfuneralhome.com

 








Notice of death — June 18, 2024

Gloria Rabon 
Monday 04/08/1940 — Wednesday 06/12/2024  
Memorial Service: Friday 06/21/2024 1:00pm, Mt. Zion Baptist Church, 2586 Hwy 150, Grambling  

John Robert Jackson 
Sunday 09/10/1967 — Sunday 06/16/2024  
Family Gathering: Thursday 06/20/2024 2:00pm at King’s Funeral Home 
Visitation: Thursday 06/20/2024 3:00pm to 6:00pm at King’s Funeral Home 
Celebration of Life: Friday 06/21/2024, New Hope Baptist Church, 204 W Vaughn Ave., Ruston 
Interment: Friday 06/21/2024, Bonner Cemetery, Ruston 

Dorothy Gray 
Wednesday 02/01/1956 — Saturday 06/15/2024  
Visitation: Friday 06/21/2024 3:00pm to 6:00pm at King’s Funeral Home 
Celebration of Life: Saturday 06/15/2024 11:00am 
Interment: Saturday 06/22/2024, Grambling Memorial Garden, Highway 80 West, Grambling 

Drucilla Sherrard 
October 14, 1932 – June 14, 2024 
Visitation: Thursday, June 20, 2024, 1:00 PM, Owens Memorial Chapel Funeral Home 
Graveside Service: Thursday, June 20, 2024, 2:00 PM, Forest Lawn Cemetery, 2500 West California Ave, Ruston 

 

 

 








Jonetta’s Locs of Love provides different kind of freedom

Rixie Thompson (center wearing pink dress) cuts the ribbon during Saturday’s ceremony celebrating the opening of Jonetta’s Locs of Love. (Photo by T. Scott Boatright)

By T. Scott Boatright

Freedom can come in many forms and ways.

So, it is only fitting that in the midst of the city of Grambling’s biggest day of observance of Juneteenth, with much of the city congregating on Main Street for a parade and other festivities, a smaller ceremony celebrating a different kind of freedom was held nearby inside Heavenly Hair Beauty Salon.

Juneteenth commemorates the effective end of slavery in the United States. Juneteenth (short for “June 19th”) marks the day when federal troops arrived in Galveston, Texas, in 1865 to take control of the state and ensure that all enslaved people were freed.

Saturday afternoon, a ribbon-cutting ceremony was held inside the Heavenly Hair Salon for its latest addition that will offer a different form of freedom — a little peace of mind in troubled times — as the grand opening of Jonetta’s Locs of Love Wig Parlor located inside the beauty salon was celebrated.

It is a specialized shop established in large part by the More Than Conquerors Breast Cancer Support Group to provide wigs free of charge for breast cancer survivors as well as those patients currently undergoing chemotherapy.

“Unless you’ve experienced it, been a woman to lose every hair on their body to chemotherapy, you don’t know what it feels like and what it can do to you during an already hard and emotional time,” said Rixie Thompson of More Than Conquerors. “And getting to wear a wig and feel you look like you should that can be very important to some of those who are battling or have battled breast cancer. So, this is a freeing kind of thing, letting breast cancer patients be who they want to be, and that is very important.”

Jonetta’s Locs of Love Wig Parlor is named in honor of the late Jonetta Collinsworth of Lincoln Parish, who passed away in 2009 while battling breast cancer.

More than 200 wigs donated by Collinsworth’s daughter, Tamishia Moats, a Louisiana Tech graduate and wife of former Louisiana Tech and NFL running back Ryan Moats, has provided a good start for Jonetta’s Locs of Love.

Moats said it is all about honoring her late mother and her legacy. 

“I was always committed to do something for her legacy and I’m so grateful to Ms. Rixie, who went through the same fight with my mom, and all of the others because I’m running around all over the country so much,” Moats said. “They’ve kept my mother’s and the legacies of many others that were a part of the group alive. And that’s very important.”

Moats said the wigs from Jonetta’s Locs of Love are either human hair or premium, high-quality synthetic hair and that some type of fundraising event will be held annually to maintain the supply of wigs for Jonetta’s Locs of Love.

She also said the caring approach the shop will take toward its clientele is an important part of what Jonetta’s Locs of Love has to offer. 

“When my mom first lost her hair, she had not worn a wig,” Moats said. “She had never worn weaves or anything. She didn’t like them and said they were too hot. But I remember going to stores to look with her at wigs and the workers weren’t very friendly. And when people are going through chemo, they’re dealing with a lot at that time. So, when we opened our store in Frisco (Texas), we made sure to make everybody feel welcome.

“I didn’t know what my purpose was in all this when it all started. My background is in sports administration. So, I asked myself, why am I here? And when the clients started coming in, I realized that this was my testimony. So, every day I’m listening to people. It starts with breast cancer. But a lot of times it grows into other things and problems, people who just are just looking are looking for a friendly face willing to listen.”

Counseling, educational seminars and financial support from More Than Conqueror are among other resources that will be available through Jonetta’s Locs of Love.

And while the shop is Grambling based, it is willing to provide help to breast cancer patients and survivors across the nation.

“This isn’t only for Grambling, this is for the entire United States,” Thompson said. “We ship wigs anywhere in the country as long as it’s going to someone undergoing chemo or a survivor who lost their hair during their fight against the disease.

“All they have to do is get in touch with the More Than Conquerors Breast Cancer Support group and we will be there for them.”

For more information, call 318-278-0346.








Ruston’s Womack wrangles rodeo scholarship with Panola

By Kyle Roberts

Say the name “Womack” to any bull ’round these parts and watch him shudder — they don’t take too kindly to that name.

That’s because for decades Ruston Fire Chief Chris Womack had also been one of the most well known bull fighters in the professional rodeo circles, and now, his son Tanner will be taking the family business by the horns — literally —  after rustling up a partial scholarship to bull fight for the Panola College Ponies in Carthage, Texas, where he hopes to study how to work on HVAC units.

“Tanner’s a great kid,” Panola rodeo head coach Jeffrey Collins said. “He knows that he’s going to be underpaid for the job he does. But guys that fight bulls — they’re wired differently. They’ll go in there and take a hit for a rider. Sometimes it’s multiple hits, and they can just get up again and again. I’m very proud to have that.”

After playing football for most of his high school life, Tanner decided it was time to try the rodeo for the past year and found that he truly had a niche gift for taking some licks.

“I tried bull riding first, but I got hurt a lot and quit doing that,” Tanner said. “I found out I was pretty good at fighting bulls and getting its attention. So if somebody’s going to get hit by a bull, it’s going to be me.”

The primary role for a bull fighter in modern rodeo is to distract the bull after it’s bucked its rider. Two to three bull fighters at a time will then do their best to distract the bull while the rider is tended to on the ground and moved to safety.

It’s a challenge that the recent Ruston High grad is certainly up for and has the endorsement of his dear old dad to boot.

“He’s doing a great job,” Chris said of his son. “And if this will help him get an education and ease the burden on “mom and dad,” then it’s a win for everybody.”

Take an even higher view and you’ll not only see the father-son connection between bull fighting, you’ll see that the main purpose is to put yourself on the line in service of others — something Chris does for a living as the city’s Fire Chief and now Tanner gets to do as a bull fighter.

“It gives you goosebumps when you think about it that way,” Collins said in conclusion. “It’s pretty cool stuff, because that’s going to be Tanner’s role here.”

During Collins tenure the head coach at Panola College, the Ponies won the 2019 national championship, competing against larger schools such as Sam Houston State and McNeese State.








75 bankers advance skills at LA Tech’s School of Banking

Courtesy of LA Tech University Communications

Bankers from across Louisiana, Arkansas, and Mississippi participated in the third year of the Louisiana Tech University School of Banking, June 3-7, in Ruston.

Presented by the College of Business in collaboration with the Louisiana Bankers Association, the week-long professional development program expands the skills and knowledge base of rising bank leaders. The 75 participants engaged in trainings and discussions about fintech, regional economic development, and cybersecurity to hone skills that have become increasingly critical to the banking industry.

“My classmates and I engaged in discussions with industry leaders about issues affecting us today and some that will affect us in the very near future,” said Angelle David, vice president and business development officer for b1BANK. “In the classroom, instructors guided us through deep dives of banking from every angle.

“This allowed us to learn more about other departments and more fully understand how each works together. Our class represents every corner of our field, and we each look forward to going home and serving our organizations as better bankers and leaders because of the opportunity to attend Louisiana Tech University’s School of Banking.”

Courses taught by Louisiana Tech faculty members, top banking executives, consultants, and regulators covered a variety of topics including operations, risk management, liquidity, marketing, sales, and regulations.

“The Louisiana Tech School of Banking is not just for those who are early in their banking career; it is also for those who have had years of experience in the banking field,” said Kim Lee, vice president and compliance officer for Community Bank of Louisiana. “I had the opportunity to network with other banking professionals and to share ideas that directly impact our day-to-day operations. I am thankful that my employer allowed me to attend this school to gain more knowledge in an ever-changing economic environment.”

The event concluded with a graduation ceremony celebrating 35 bankers who completed their second year of the School of Banking.

2024 School of Banking Graduates

  • Mitchell Best, Louisiana Land Bank, ACA
  • Jason Blalock, Red River Bank
  • Kaila Boire, b1BANK
  • Royce Boyer, b1BANK
  • Courtney Carter Duplessis, Bank of Zachary
  • Jarred Cram, Bonvenu Bank
  • Reagan Cunningham, BOM Bank
  • Josh Curry, Origin Bank
  • Melissa Dickson, First Federal Bank of Louisiana
  • Chad Doucet, South Louisiana Bank
  • Chuck Elkin, Winnsboro State Bank
  • Jennifer Freeman, United Mississippi Bank
  • Bill Gibson, Gibsland Bank & Trust
  • Jessica Jester, Bonvenu Bank
  • Dylan Knotek, BOM Bank
  • Layne LaBudde, First Horizon Bank
  • Brenner Mabry, Bank OZK
  • Titan Marler, BOM Bank
  • Anna Martin, Bank of Oak Ridge
  • Vicky Meyer, b1BANK
  • Ross Michel, First National Bankers Bank
  • Amanda Moran, Bank of Zachary
  • Colby Nagem, Tensas State Bank
  • Clinton Oliver, BOM Bank
  • Albert Paxton, Bank of Oak Ridge
  • Josh Payne, Delta Bank
  • Robin Pearson, FISC
  • Wayne Robinson, Jr., Synergy Bank
  • Kyle Sisson, Mer Rouge State Bank
  • David Stephens, Citizens Progressive Bank
  • Reed Trisler, Guaranty Bank & Trust
  • Jonathan Vedros, b1BANK
  • Jonathan Wall, BOM Bank
  • Trent Williams, Winnsboro State Bank
  • Mackenzie Willis, Louisiana National Bank

A cohort of 40 bankers completed their first year of courses and will return in June 2025 for a second year featuring BankExec simulations and case studies that will complement classroom discussions.

2024 School of Banking First-Year Participants

  • Kaitlin Ainsworth, Caldwell Bank & Trust
  • Jake Bennett, Caldwell Bank & Trust
  • Amy Blaylock, Caldwell Holding Company
  • Whitney Boyd, Bank of St. Francisville
  • Jack Colvin, b1BANK
  • April Craft, Concordia Bank & Trust Company
  • Tia Culpepper, Origin Bank
  • Angelle David, b1BANK
  • Amy Flint, Caldwell Holding Company
  • Angelice Fried, Bank of St. Francisville
  • Misty Guidry, Synergy Bank
  • Danielle Hearne, Louisiana National Bank
  • Devon Hebert, State Bank & Trust Company
  • Wesley Lazarus, Progressive Bank
  • Kim Lee, Community Bank of Louisiana
  • Jonathan Little, Origin Bank
  • Elliot Macks, South Louisiana Bank
  • Kade Madden, Home Federal Bank
  • Lindsay M. McClaran, Gibsland Bank & Trust
  • Hilie McFarland, Delta Bank
  • Julie McMillin, Merchants & Farmers Bank
  • Kylie Middleton, b1BANK
  • Rusti Morel, Rayne State Bank
  • Greg Nichols, Barksdale Federal Credit Union
  • Dillon Patel, Louisiana National Bank
  • Briar Prewitt, b1BANK
  • Darryl Pruitt, Bonvenu Bank
  • Andrea S. Randall, First National Bankers Bank
  • Logan Reeder, Home Federal Bank
  • Trey Roberson, Century Next Bank
  • Karri Shaver, Century Next Bank
  • Kendall Shaw, b1BANK
  • Susan Skapura, Century Next Bank
  • Jessica Slaughter, Century Next Bank
  • Justin Stanley, Delta Bank
  • Mallory Taylor, Century Next Bank
  • Neil Thomason, Jonesboro State Bank
  • Peyton Underwood, Century Next Bank
  • Katie Vegas, State Bank & Trust Company
  • Michael Wilkes, Century Next Bank

For Whitney Boyd, vice president and branch manager for Bank of St. Francisville, attending the School was an opportunity for both personal and professional growth.

“The School of Banking is an excellent investment,” said Boyd. “It allowed me to hear and interact with the best speakers in a comfortable setting, enhancing our understanding of each concept. The program as a whole is an unbelievable experience that I highly recommend. I’m incredibly grateful for the connections I made while there—all made possible by my bank’s belief in me.”

Each second-year banker participated in BankExec, an intensive simulation designed to provide an understanding of financial management challenges in banks. Divided into seven banks, teams competed throughout the week and presented their final results prior to graduation. The following team was the 2024 winner:

Bank of Hope

  • Chad Doucet, South Louisiana Bank
  • Layne LaBudde, First Horizon Bank
  • Reed Trisler, Guaranty Bank & Trust
  • Jonathan Vedros, b1BANK
  • Mackenzie Willis, Louisiana National Bank

Sponsors for the Louisiana Tech School of Banking include b1BANK (presenting), Bonvenu Bank (gold), Origin Bank (gold), Century Next Bank (silver), Caldwell Holding Company (bronze), Gibsland Bank & Trust (bronze), and the Louisiana Bankers Education Council (bronze).

Registration will open in January 2025 for the next cohort of participants. For more information on the School of Banking, visit business.latech.edu/banking.








Burnett remained consistent while rising from Ruston to present NCAA’s Final Four trophy

Louisiana Tech alum Tom Burnett is the recipient of this year’s Dave Dixon Louisiana Sports Leadership Award.

By TEDDY ALLEN

Written for the LSWA

There are several people to blame for the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame’s 2024 Dave Dixon Louisiana Sports Leadership Award being presented to former Southland Conference commissioner and NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Selection Committee chairman Tom Burnett, not the least of which is Tom Burnett.

We’ll get to that.

Burnett, still surprised by his pending turn in the spotlight, is part of the 12-member Class of 2024 to be honored June 20-22 in Natchitoches. For participation opportunities, visit LaSportsHall.com or call 318-238-4255.

The reason a once-unlikely Dixon/Burnett pairing has come to this starts with Keith Prince, Louisiana Tech’s Hall of Fame sports information director from 1969-1993, who saw in the mid-1980s a kid from West Monroe by way of Houston — we’ll call him Tom Burnett — show up “in our office at a time when he was still searching for something,” Prince said, “maybe just something to care about … or even a reason to be in school.”

Prince let him hang around, and soon Tom was enjoying his new responsibilities, looking for more and even taking ownership of the job — a full-time assistant on a student assistant’s pay.

After graduation, Burnett dipped his toe into the sports writing waters in Monroe, felt a chill, and retired back to the safety of Ruston, where he pestered Prince for more loose change so he could hang around the SID office a bit longer, Things might have ended there, with Tom replacing a retiring Prince in 1993, had the next culprit not appeared.

Enter the new American South Conference and commissioner Craig Thompson, who found Tom on either a Ruston streetcorner or the baseline at Thomas Assembly Center — accounts vary — and offered him 20 bucks plus dental to manage communication and media services from the New Orleans-based office.

Over time, the “other duties as assigned” clause came into play and Burnett was overseeing staff, formatting league schedules, managing championship events, dealing with coaching issues, helping birth the New Orleans Bowl, hosting NCAA hoops gigs at the Superdome and, well, “through all that,” Burnett confessed, “I guess I became an administrator.”

“During those early days, I saw his passion for doing things the right way,” said Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame writer Dan McDonald, the sports information director at then-USL when Burnett was just getting his young administrative feet wet. “He was ‘old-school’ like me, and we did a lot of things at conference championship events that were special at the time — things that are taken for granted these days.

“He was dedicated to making events special for the student-athletes and coaches, but he also appreciated and understood the job that the media did and their importance at the time to making those events successful.”

The snowball was rolling. Roughly a dozen years passed and Burnett, at this stage with the Sun Belt Conference, still in New Orleans, was constantly spotted telling sportswriters where to sit and when to shut up at this Sun Belt event and then that, at this NCAA event and then that, until one day the next perpetrator, the Southland Conference Board of Directors, stepped in and made him, at 38, the commissioner of the entire SLC. A fellow named Greg Sankey had left for a job with the Southeastern Conference.

Now Burnett was telling not only sportswriters, but also coaches where to sit and when to tap the brakes. Same with athletics directors, ditto with the oddest species on the entire college athletics food chain, the university presidents.

But instead of weeping and gnashing of teeth, there was an air of respect for the young man in the necktie and helpful smile, a steady stream of gratitude for a guy who was proving himself a leader in an ego-heavy business because he was “mostly a great friend and a constant presence for many like me who have benefited from his years of insight, experience and humor,” Herb Vincent, associate commissioner for communications for the SEC since 2013, said.

“Tom carried the weight of being a leader and its responsibility — a responsibility which directly impacted as many as 12 universities and thousands of student-athletes — with a steady, caring and passionate approach for over 20 years,” said former Northwestern State athletic director Greg Burke. “He was a communicator with the conference board of directors, presidents, athletic administrators, coaches and many others, always with the goal of making decisions which were best for the overall good of the membership.”

“Tom’s always maintained the ‘hand in the dirt’ mentality that he got from working for Keith Prince at Tech, the philosophy that you do the grunt work just as gleefully as you do anything else, and you enthusiastically embrace doing it,” said Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame Chairman Doug Ireland, SID at Northwestern from 1989-2019. “He also models Keith in his ability to work with anyone and make everybody feel welcomed and part of the team.

“I don’t believe there was anyone at any level involved as a competitor, as a coach, or as an administrator who didn’t understand that even if Tom had to make an unpopular decision, he kept everyone’s best interests in mind and always wanted the best outcome for all. … Tom’s enthusiasm, pride and sheer joy in seeing Southland teams excel in out-of-conference and postseason competition was always apparent.”

Sadly, everyone asked about Burnett’s LSHOF honor ultimately points to the No. 1 culprit: Burnett his own self. So does his ‘commissioning’ record.

Named to the Division I Committee on Academic Performance in 2003, shortly after the NCAA ramped up scholastic standards and created the Academic Performance Rate (APR) and shortly after he became commissioner, Burnett found himself surrounded by reps from the Ivy League, Big 10, Pac-10, ACC, SEC — none of which had APR problems like the Southland’s.

Faced with significant penalties for failure to comply, the conference responded after Burnett convinced the presidents of just how real the problem was. That triggered an immediate improvement in the league’s APR scores; one of the poorest performing schools at first became a model of such dramatic improvement that it was featured in the NCAA’s quarterly magazine, and sooner rather than later, one year the SLC had a better collective APR score in men’s basketball than the ACC did.

When Burnett was a rookie commissioner, precious few SLC contests were televised. The league semi-invented its own in-house TV network of weekly football games and men’s and women’s basketball doubleheaders.

The Southland Conference Television Network, an old school “over-the-air” operation, grew into close to three dozen affiliates across the South and Southwest, before an enhanced ESPN agreement and an expansion into volleyball, softball and baseball telecasts.

Eventually, SLC schools were producing hundreds of digital telecasts combined (like most leagues do now), which allowed for negotiation of the Southland’s multi-million-dollar agreement in 2020.

In 2007, Burnett approached the Big 12 about combining the two leagues’ football officiating programs into a consortium, something that was being done between leagues in other college sports, but not football. Officiating consortiums between FCS and FBS leagues are common throughout the NCAA today — but the Southland was the tip of the spear.

The Southland simply took ownership of the FCS Championship Game. Before the 2010 season, Frisco, Texas won the bid to host and the SLC embraced the event, put passion behind it, and 12 of the first 13 title games sold out. Besides leading to the Frisco Bowl’s birth, the game is estimated to bring in $16 million in economic impact annually.

In 2014, the Southland was the first FCS league to adopt full-time instant replay at every home game like the FBS leagues had.

Easier said than done, but somehow in between the league’s spring meeting and the first game — 90 days — the league installed cameras, cables, extra power, developed a set of four stationary cameras in each stadium and, well … it worked. Soon after, the Big 10 added stationary cameras in their stadiums for additional replay angles, and although it took a few years, everyone in FCS was eventually in the replay business.

Five March Madness wins followed, the first one courtesy of the Northwestern State over Iowa in 2006, the league’s first win in the Round of 64 since the Karl Malone-led Louisiana Tech team in 1985.

While Demons coach Mike McConathy waited for his postgame interview on CBS, Burnett planted a can’t-help-myself “big wet kiss on his cheek,” Burnett said. “I hope he’s forgiven me for that. But it was such a needed validation for the league, proving what our teams were capable of doing, winning in the national tournament and belonging in the mainstream of Division I.”

That win also triggered another first for the league — NCAA Tournament revenue-sharing the conference had never realized previously.

Along with providing two of those March Madness wins, Stephen F. Austin upset No. 1 Duke at Cameron Indoor Stadium in 2020, the SLC’s first-ever win against a top-ranked team and Duke’s first nonconference home loss in over 20 years.

Thanks to Sam Houston State, the league finally won its football national championship in the COVID-delayed 2020 season, played in the spring of 2021.

“The conference was a trendsetter nationally among its peers,” Ireland said, “because Tom was an innovator and bold enough to give new ideas a chance.”

Then in 2021-22 — and who knows where the blame lies here, maybe with the NCAA? — Burnett became just the ninth commissioner and first since 2009 to chair the NCAA Division 1 Men’s Basketball Committee, the first FCS commissioner to serve in the role.

This is, of course, the group that manages the selection and administrative processes of the national championship, just about the most important college athletics showcase in the whole world, and this is the truth because right there on national TV on Final Four Weekend in 2022, there was NCAA president Mark Emmert introducing Tom, who congratulated the Kansas team for winning the title and handed to Jayhawks coach Bill Self the actual trophy, right there on the floor of the Superdome in the city where Burnett first began administrating.

Cinderella story is all it is. A happy ending for a necktie-wearing but purposeful blend of an i-dotter, t-crosser, dice-roller, smile-wearer, and problem-solver, the longest-tenured commissioner in the SLC’s history.

“I’ve always felt college athletics was something special, and when I was involved, I worried about its future,” McDonald said. “But I always felt better knowing people like Tom were in charge and were doing the right things to help keep it special.”

“I’ve never been surprised by Tom’s career success,” Prince said. “He’s a natural leader, and his vision for things that are needed and will work has always been exceptional. He proved that many times over as a conference commissioner and as chairman of the NCAA basketball selection committee.

“No doubt he deserves to be in the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame. He’s been in mine for a long time.”

______________________________________

Teddy Allen is a Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame inductee as the 2022 recipient of the Distinguished Service Award in Sports Journalism. He writes for LincolnParishJournal.com.








Weekend sees I-20 car fire, 18-wheeler overturned

An 18-wheeler traveling east bound overturned in the median on I-20 in the Ruston city limits on Sunday morning. (photo by Malcolm Butler)

by Malcolm Butler

Tow trucks and emergency responders were busy this past weekend as Lincoln Parish saw at least two one-vehicle incidents on I-20.

Friday morning saw a one-car fire around mile marker 98 just inside the Lincoln Parish line headed east on I-20.

According to the Lincoln Parish Fire District, they were dispatched to the scene at 10 a.m. for a passenger vehicle fire. When LPFD arrived, firefighters found a vehicle fully engulfed with fire. LPFD personnel were able to quickly extinguish the fire.

Due to the fire’s location, Ouachita Parish Fire and Choudrant Fire also dispatched trucks to the scene. Once the fire was extinguished, one LPFD unit remained on scene until the burned vehicle was towed from the interstate.

No injuries occurred as a result of the fire. The cause was determined to be a mechanical issue with the vehicle.

Sunday morning at 9:34 a.m. the Ruston Police Department and Ruston Fire Department worked an accident that saw an 18-wheeler going east bound overturn in the median just east of Exit 85 on I-20.

Ruston Police Deputy Chief Chad Hamblin said an officer was patrolling near the North Vienna Street bridge and discovered a semi-truck overturned in the median of I-20 eastbound. The driver was able to crawl out through the windshield to escape the truck.

The driver told police he had a tire blow out and the weight of the truck shifted, causing the truck to overturn. The driver was transported to Northern Louisiana Medical Center where he was treated for moderate injuries.

No other vehicles were involved in the crash.








Six arrested in hunting contest fraud

Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries enforcement agents arrested six men for allegedly committing fraud in hog hunting contests in Caldwell and Bienville parishes.

Wildlife agents received information the six allegedly won two Louisiana hunting contests by capturing wild hogs in Texas prior to the contests and entering the animals in the competitions.

Agents arrested Trace Davis, 30, of Longville; Hunter Webb, 27, of Pitkin; Colby Bushnell, 26, of Dry Creek; Davy Haymon, 35, of Pitkin; Nathan Granger, 34, of Vinton; and Don Pollard Jr., 40, of Pitkin; for hunting contest fraud and criminal conspiracy. Davis, Webb, Bushnell, Haymon, and Pollard Jr. were also arrested for violating interstate commerce. Davis was also arrested for obstruction of justice. Webb was also cited for hunting under a hunting license suspension.


The arrests come on the heels of a fishing contest fraud arrest last month stemming from a Toledo Bend tournament. The arrested man allegedly placed lead weights inside fish in attempt to win the contest.

During the hunting contest investigation, wildlife agents obtained evidence indicating the six men caught hogs in Texas to be used for the Dingler Wild Hog Roundup in Bienville Parish on February 9-10 and the Swamp Time Hog Hunt in Caldwell Parish from March 14-16.

The feral hog is an invasive species that causes severe crop and land damage throughout Louisiana. An estimated 500,000 wild hogs inhabit all 64 Louisiana parishes causing millions of dollars in damage to the state’s agriculture and natural resources.

Nathan Granger turned himself in on June 4 to the Bienville Parish Jail since he did not participate in the Caldwell Parish hog hunting contest. The five other subjects turned themselves in on June 7 at the Bienville Parish Jail and the Caldwell Parish Jail.

The rules of both hog hunting contests stipulated the hogs must be caught during the contest dates and be caught in Louisiana.

Hunting contest fraud may be punished by a fine of up to $3,000 fine and one year in jail. Criminal conspiracy carries a fine in the same manner as the offense considered by the conspirators. Violating interstate commerce brings a $900 to $950 fine and up to 120 days in jail. Obstruction of justice carries up to a $10,000 fine and five years in jail. Hunting under a hunting license suspension can incur a $250 to $500 fine and up to 90 days in jail.

Even with hunters harvesting over 200,000 feral hogs each year in Louisiana, the population continues to grow.

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.







Local students place in state piano rally

By Shelley Cole Parker

This year the Louisiana Music Teachers Association’s annual Torgrimson/Swanzy Competition for Outstanding Students looked a little different than it has in the past.

Louisiana State University’s School of Music was unable to host, so the First United Methodist Church in Baton Rouge allowed the use of their facilities for the event which was held on June 8th.

Piano students from all over the state competed with two songs from memory typically in different musical styles played in “recital” fashion with parents, teachers and onlookers in the room. A judge awards 1st-3rd place awards for each section and often adds in Honorable Mention(s) for stand out performances that did not place.

Five Ruston area students received awards as follows:

Prep B-1
Honorable Mention – Esther Allen
Student of Jeanne Patterson

Prep B-2
1st place – Krystal Jeong
Student of Steele Moegle

Level I-1
1st place – Lucas Chen
3rd place – Zoey Wang
Both students of Steele Moegle

Level III-2
1st place – Preston Parker
Student of Denise Cox








Cooking Column: Chowin’ Down with Trey

Dentist by day. Chef by night.

Our good friend Trey Hanna at Ruston Smiles is at it again!

Trey is providing the Lincoln Parish Journal a cooking column/recipe periodically. This time Trey’s menu includes black bean salad. You won’t want to miss it.

Just click on the link below for ingredients and direction.








Failure to register as sex offender prompts arrest

A Lincoln Parish deputy sheriff serving papers determined a convicted sex offender had moved and failed to register at his new residence.

Alex Terrell Jenkins, 27, was arrested last Monday after a deputy investigated his place of residence.

The deputy was near Jenkins’s supposed home when he realized the location was vacant and abandoned. The deputy could see the residence was vacant with the front door missing and windows damaged. A neighbor told the deputy nobody lived at the address.


The deputy attempted to call Jenkins but the number was no longer in service.

Jenkins was contacted by phone at his place of employment. He confirmed he lived at the address the deputy found vacant.

Jenkins met the deputy at the Lincoln Parish Sheriff’s Office. He was asked for proof that he was living at the location in question. He stated he did not have any proof.

Upon further questioning, Jenkins said it had been a few weeks since he had stayed there, constituting a violation of his sex offender status. Jenkins eventually admitted he was living on Fairview Street in Dubach rather than the address he had provided to the sex offender registry.

Jenkins was arrested and booked at the Lincoln Parish Detention Center. 

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.

 







Parkerson talks about Cougars offensive outlook as summer workouts progress

by Malcolm Butler

Cedar Creek head coach William Parkerson knew he was going to be inexperienced at quarterback this coming season.

That hasn’t changed.

What has changed is the fact that Kade Luker, who was set to be the starter this coming season, has informed Parkerson that he doesn’t plan to play football as he focuses on baseball.

Luker saw limited playing time under center for the Cougars during his true freshman season when starter Ladd Thompson went down with an injury early in the year.

However, now with Luker’s decision to forego football, the Cougars QB position is a competition between freshman Cason Floyd, senior James Myers and junior Hayden Durrett.

None of the three have ever taken a snap at QB in a varsity high school game.

“This spring all three of them saw some time at QB,” said Parkerson. “I’m assuming it will be one of those three. I’m not ready to say just yet. Between those three whoever wins the QB job will play quarterback and the other two will play defensive back and tie back.”

Floyd did play quarterback for the Creek junior high last year.

“The good news is four of the starting five offensive linemen from last year will return,” said Parkerson. “The fullback (Wyatt Gremellion) isn’t a returner but he got a lot of reps and I think he has a chance to be special. We are going to put a lot on the offensive line and the fullback to pick up the slack.”

Parkerson said he is looking for a number of things when making the decision on the starting signal caller.

“No. 1 is toughness,” said Parkerson. “It needs to be one of your best athletes who can think on the run. Competitiveness is No. 2. Leadership. Are the other 10 guys standing in the huddle looking at him and believing in him. If they believe in him, the rest will take care of itself.

“Regardless of who was going to be the QB, the offense was going to be build around the offensive line and the fullback. I think the O-line has a chance to be pretty dog-gone good, and I think the fullback has a chance to be elite.”

Although last year’s starting center Brett Johnson graduated, Creek returns Bryce Martin, Logan Canales, Landon Hall and Kaden Williams. Parkerson said there is a good chance Williams will move over to center while Martin and Canales will play guard and Hall one of the tackles.

“Aiden Woods and Logan Amidon will most likely compete for the other tackle spot,” said Parkerson. “We will try to live off of the O-line. If they can dominate it won’t matter who is at quarterback.”

Parkerson said the Cougars are currently conditioning and weight training this summer while also practicing in helmets only two days a week.

“It’s been good,” said Parkerson. “First week we didn’t do as much as we wanted to because it rained all week. Kids are working hard. We are really starting to see the team personality that we are trying to cultivate break through. We are seeing more of a attitude. It’s been good.”

Parkerson said the Cougars have 31 players currently working out this summer, but hopes to see a few more join prior to the start of the fall.








COLUMN: When We Were Free to be Kids

Theodore Savas

by Theodore P. Savas

My son asked an interesting question during the endless summer that finally ended this week: “Papa, when you were a kid, what did you do in the summer?”

How do you tell a seven-year-old who has almost everything that it was better way back when without almost anything? And that as kids, we perfected the art of doing nothing for days on end—and loved every hour?

How do you put in plain words we enjoyed ourselves without Xboxes, PlayStations, cell phones, computers, and TVs in cars? How journeys of exploration and adventure did not include a hand-held device indoors on a sofa? That swimming holes were so much better than swimming pools in the backyards of homes we would have considered mansions available only in our dreams?

Can he possibly comprehend that when we left the house not long after dawn in cutoffs and a T-shirt, mom never asked where we were going? That catching pond frogs and building tree houses with rope swings was better than having 471 TV channels? That staying out all day and doing whatever we wanted and making our own decisions was (gasp!) normal? That our summons home was the street lights popping on and not a call on a cell phone?

Would he believe that we hoofed miles around town or rode our bikes (spray painted cool neon colors) with friends seated between the handle bars, holding on for dear life while trying to keep their toes out of the spokes? Or that those same spokes made the coolest “tat-tat-tat” sound if you attached a playing card with a clothespin? That no one had heard of a bicycle helmet, and that we would not have been caught dead in one anyway?

That digging for night crawlers so we could fish in a muddy creek for bullhead cat with a bamboo pole and a red and white bobber (with your brother yelling at you for tangling his line) beat the pants off sitting in an air-conditioned house playing Nintendo?

Can you imagine the damage I might inflict on the psyche of a modern-day child if I told him our idea of pure drinking water was letting a garden hose in a backyard run for several seconds before taking a warm sip? Or that “organic food” was eating Mr. Weydert’s sweet corn raw off the cob out in the field before heading to the barn to wash it down with milk straight from a cow’s udder?

That nothing was more fun than a round-trip sneak attack on Mr. Bogart’s apple tree, hiding among his leafy branches happily munching green apples while stuffing another half-dozen in our pockets and planning our getaway? That spine-tingling terror could be had crawling on our hands and knees into old lady Taylor’s backyard (we thought she was a witch), pushing aside a large piece of slate hiding a well, dropping in a rock, and being brave enough to stay put long enough to hear the splash?

Today, kids can’t play in their own front yard without adult supervision. We used to play king of the hill on a large dirt and rock pile in someone’s driveway blocks away. When we got hurt or broke something, we went home for a band aid and iodine (and occasionally a well-deserved belt-to-bottom spanking) instead of to the lawyer’s office with dad to sue the homeowner.

Can today’s children even begin to conceive we waged war from behind stacked up Culligan salt pellet bags with REAL WWII rifles our dads brought home from Europe or the Pacific, decked out in authentic German and American helmets and canteens—and that it was much more fun than playing Age of Empires or Call of Duty on a PC over the Internet with a stranger? Would they believe every 9-year-old had a BB gun, every 12-year-old a .22 or 12-gauge, and responsible use was shooting cans off a fence or nailing an egg-stealing blackbird—but never a robin?

How could I get my son to understand that sleepovers meant Jiffypop popcorn on the stove (usually burned black), “Kick the Can” in the backyard and, if you were very lucky, one scoop of vanilla ice cream smothered in Hershey’s syrup? Or that bedtime meant squeezing into the hot top bunk with your buddy (not a single soul had air conditioning) while your friend’s two brothers crammed into the bottom bunk and fought their way asleep?

How could I explain all this in a way that made sense?

“Long ago,” I began, in an effort to answer his question.

“You mean back in the olden days?” my son interrupted.

I smiled. “Yes. Way back when.”

“When what?” he asked.

My smile melted away and I let out a heavy sigh. “When we were free to be kids.”

_________________________________________

Ted Savas is a noted author and book publisher. He lives in South Carolina but discovered crawfish at Ponchatoula’s and Southern hospitality all around Ruston.








Round Table Luncheon Saturday will provide up-close, memorable moments


The “youngest” event during this weekend’s Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame Induction Celebration is the most exclusive, yet casual, opportunity for the public to enjoy hearing from the Class of 2024 inductees.

It’s the Round Table Luncheon this Saturday, June 22, at noon at Riverside Reserve, 104 Mill Street, in Natchitoches. There arestill a few seats available among the 300 guests for the sixthannual Round Table Luncheon presented by the Tiger Athletic Foundation.

Registration is available for the luncheon can be made by visiting LaSportsHall.com, or by calling 318-238-4255. It is a ticketed event.

Festivities begin Thursday evening at 5 with the free of charge Welcome Reception open to all, no registration necessary, at the Hall of Fame museum facing the traffic circle at 800 Front Street in Natchitoches.

Friday’s slate begins with the BOM Celebrity Bowling Bash at Four Seasons Bowling Center in Alexandria. Friday evening is the free Rockin’ River Fest concert on Cane River Lake in downtown Natchitoches, from 6-10:30, with the Class of 2024 introduced at 9:15 right before a sports-themed fireworks show over the water.

Events on Saturday include the filled-to-capacity Saints and Pelicans Junior Training Camp, the Round Table Luncheon, and the Induction Reception and Ceremony, which is sold out. It will be live-streamed on LPB.org online.

The Round Table Luncheon starts with tremendous Louisianacuisine and quickly kicks into gear with Fox Sports announcer (and 2020 LSHOF inductee) Tim Brando interviewing small groups of inductees on stage in a very informal and fast-movingsetting. 

A poignant scene at the 2019 luncheon unfolded before the program when Peyton Manning, being inducted later that day,stopped by to greet LSU legend Johnny Robinson, who was inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame two months later.

Scenes like that, up-close access and the fun-filled dialog between Brando and the 2024 inductees combine to provide a memorable 90 minutes.

The Hall of Fame Round Table Luncheon shapes up as a highly entertaining opportunity for guests to have an up-close-and-personal experience and be entertained and well fed in a casual setting, with a touch of elegance at the brand-new Riverside Reserve on the banks of Cane River Lake just a mile from downtown Natchitoches.

This is a Journal Services advertorial.







Pistol Pete exhibit opens at Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame

LEFT:  “Pistol” Pete Maravich scoring two of his 3,667 points with the LSU Tigers against the Florida Gators. Photo by John Musemeche. RIGHT: A close up of the floppy wool socks worn by Pete Maravich during his playing days at LSU. Photo by John Musemeche.

BATON ROUGE, La. – The 2024 Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame induction reception will have a special flair this year as the Louisiana State Museum and Lieutenant Governor Billy Nungesser celebrate the opening of Showtime: LSU’s Spectacular Pistol Pete, a new exhibit showcasing the incredible career of Pete Maravich through the photographs of John Musemeche. Opening night is set for Thursday, June 20, from 5 p.m. – 7 p.m. at the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame and Northwest Louisiana History Museum. Sponsored by the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame Foundation and La Capitol Credit Union, this event is free and open to the public.

“Pete Maravich was the ultimate showman on the basketball court. He definitely had his own style that wowed the crowds and opponents alike. Louisiana was fortunate to have a front row seat to his jaw-dropping no-look passes, scoring prowess, and those floppy socks every kid wanted to start wearing. We are fortunate to be able to display these amazing images of one the greatest to play the game,” said Lieutenant Governor Billy Nungesser.


During his record-shattering career at LSU from 1967–70, the incomparable Peter Press Maravich, better known as “Pistol” Pete,” captivated basketball fans not only with his incredible scoring ability but also with his sensational showmanship. The “ooohs and aaahs” came loud and often as Pete astounded fans, opponents and even teammates with his incredible ball-handling and passing ability and an array of free-style moves that mystified defenders. Following a 10-year NBA career, the Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity member was named to the NBA’s 50th Anniversary team in 1996 and 75th Anniversary team in 2021.

The exhibition features more than 40 photographs from John Musemeche and Musemeche Photography in Baton Rouge. John Musemeche, a photographer in addition to his full-time role as a sportswriter for the Morning Advocate, had back-stage access to Pete and his dad, Press, then LSU’s head basketball coach. In 1969, Musemeche published Maravich, the first book about the “wizard of aahs.” The still-active photographer and his son, Rob, are regarded among Louisiana’s premier sports photographers. John Musemeche’s reflections on Maravich also play a key role in filmmaker Drew Tewell’s short documentary about Pistol Pete, “We Were Fans,” which is included in the exhibition.

Photographs in the exhibit feature the dazzling moves of Maravich on the court along with casual behind-the-scenes photographs of the athlete’s life. The exhibition was made possible with funding from the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame Foundation and Raising Cane’s Chicken Fingers.







GSU to play at Ohio State in 2025


Courtesy of GSU Athletic Communications

For the first time in school history, the Grambling State University football the will travel to Columbus, Ohio to take on Ohio State on Sept. 6, 2025. It will also be the first time that GSU faces a member of the Big Ten Conference.

The game features two of the most historic football brands in college football history. Grambling State boasts 27 Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) Championships, 16 Black College National Titles and has produced four Pro Football Hall of Famers in Willie Brown, Buck Buchanan, Willie Davis and Charlie Joiner. The Tigers also cultivated Super Bowl XXII MVP Doug Williams, James “Shack” Harris and the first player to be drafted to the NFL, Paul “Tank” Younger.

“This is another example of us being able to showcase our brand to a national audience,” said Vice President for Intercollegiate Athletics Dr. Travyean D. Scott. “We are thrilled that our players and fans will get to experience a matchup between two of the most storied football programs in the country. When you think of college football, Grambling State and Ohio State are two of the names that many think of immediately. This contest will allow our both fan bases to experience the cultural and athletic excellence of both institutions.”

GSU is also known for legendary head football coach Eddie Robinson, who built the Grambling State University football program from the ground up, winning 408 games during his tenure.

Ohio State has won eight national titles, 42 conference crowns, seven Heisman trophy winners and has produced 10 Pro Football Hall of Famers.








Notice of death — June 17, 2024

Dorothy Clark 
June 23, 1933 – June 16, 2024 
Arrangements to be made 








ICYMI: Man held on $1 million bail after shooting

All persons are presumed innocent until proven guilty.

A Ruston man has been arrested following the shooting of another man early Saturday morning, the Lincoln Parish Sheriff’s Office announced Sunday.

Dentavius Jerod Wright, 34, was arrested for attempted murder and other crimes within hours of the shooting of Cedric William, 48, of Ruston.

LPSO Lt. Matt Henderson said deputies received a call that a man later identified as Williams had been dropped off at the Northern Louisiana Medical Center emergency room at about 3 a.m. Saturday. He had been seriously injured by an unspecified number of gunshot wounds.


Early investigation determined the shooting occurred on Pecan Street near Second Street just southeast of Ruston.

Patrol deputies went to the scene and secured it until detectives from the LPSO Criminal Investigative Division responded and processed the scene, collected evidence, and interviewed witnesses.

Once a suspect was identified, a search warrant was obtained for a Pecan Street residence. During the execution of that warrant, Wright was taken into custody. He was interviewed by detectives who also determined he was wanted on drug charges by the Lincoln Parish Narcotics Enforcement Team.

By midmorning Saturday, LPSO had booked Wright, charging him with:

–attempted second degree murder.

–possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.

–3 counts of possession of a Schedule II controlled substance with intent to distribute

–3 counts of violation of the Uniform Controlled Substances Act

–illegal use of a weapon

Wright is being held at the Lincoln Parish Detention Center with bail set at $1,030,000.

Henderson said the investigation is ongoing and more arrests are expected.

On April 16, another man with multiple gunshot wounds was found at the same intersection. Several arrests have been made in that case.

The Sheriff’s Office requested anyone with information regarding this incident please contact detectives at 318-251-5111 or CrimeStoppers of Lincoln Parish. CrimeStopper information can be given in several ways: call 318-255-1111, or text a tip to “TIP515 plus your message” to CRIMES (274637) or submit a tip online at http://www.rustonlincolncrimestoppers.com.

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.