Red River baseball handcuffs Pine Prairie in series win

Matt Vines

COUSHATTA – Before this season, Red River baseball had just one playoff win since online LHSAA records began in 2003.

The No. 4 seed Bulldogs won two playoff games to sweep the second-round series against No. 13 Pine Prairie, scoring victories of 3-2 and 6-2.

Red River (24-8) will host No. 5 Doyle, who topped No. 12 Many twice in scores of 9-3 and 8-7.

Red River will play Doyle on Friday at 6 p.m. and Saturday at 11 a.m. with an if-necessary game to follow for the right to go to Sulphur for the semifinals.

Red River 3, Pine Prairie 2
Game One appeared to not be Red River’s night as Pine Prairie pitcher Riley Fontenot was throwing a no-hitter through the first five innings and the Bulldogs facing a 2-0 deficit.

But a sixth-inning walk by Ethan Williamson, just Red River’s second base runner of the game, started a three-run inning.

Doubles from Jaxun Moore and Tyler Hughes followed, the latter scoring Red River’s first run to slice the deficit to 2-1.

With two out and runners on the corners, Eli Murphy singled in two runs to give Red River the 3-2 lead. Murphy struck out in his first two at-bats before delivering the go-ahead runs.

Hughes came on in relief to record the final three outs, including one strikeout, to secure the win.
Aston Hester pitched admirably as the starter, surrendering two runs on five hits and one walk with four strikeouts.

Those two Pine Prairie runs came in the third inning when the Panthers loaded the bases with a walk, single and hit by pitch with just one out.

McCollough doubled in two runs for Pine Prairie’s lone scores of the day.

Red River 6, Pine Prairie 2

Red River’s offense came to life late again in the second game, scoring six runs in the final three innings after four scoreless frames.

But the Bulldogs piled up 10 hits in the process.

Base runners were more plentiful for both teams as each squad committed four errors.

Tyler Hughes went the distance, allowing just two unearned runs on three hits and a walk. Hughes struck out five.

Pine Prairie struck first in the third inning, capitalizing on back-to-back errors and a passed ball to score a run on a McCollough single.

Red River got that run back in the fifth inning on a Hunter Tingle RBI single to tie the game 1-1.

Pine Prairie re-established its lead in the bottom of the fifth by scoring on an error, leading 2-1.

Red River took the lead for good with four runs in the fifth inning.

Jaxun Moore hit an RBI single to tie the game before a Pierce RBI ground out handed Red River a 3-2 lead.

Hughes (2-for-4) doubled in a pair of runs to build a 5-2 edge.

The Bulldogs added an insurance run in the seventh inning with a Murphy RBI single.

Kenneth Lazarus had a team-high three hits with one run scored.


Red River Cafe offers breakfast/lunch and a side of history

Although the Red River Cafe has only been open for a month, Coushatta is already in love. Offering breakfast and lunch, this restaurant offers a home-cooked taste in a charming environment.

Lucas Vargas has opened the latest Vargas family restaurant. With his flair, he wants to continue the tradition of fine family restaurants. Vargas loves history and wants to share that passion with everyone who visits the cafe.

Patrons, stepping into the cozy walls of the cafe, are greeted with photos of Red River Parish’s history. Not only are there stories like the one of the Red River Ferry and complementing pictures, but there is also a signed Hank Williams Jr. guitar and a Percy Sledge autographed photo. Customers are encouraged to walk around and soak in the history that lines the walls.

Sitting down to breakfast could mean enjoying a French Toast Sandwich with egg-battered toast, snuggling crisp bacon, or savory sausage patties. There are favorites like buttermilk pancakes with eggs any way you like or epic burritos that are filled with a full breakfast. The smell of waffles and hashbrowns permeates the room, and the sight of omelets stuffed with meats and veggies can make even the casual diner a regular. Breakfast can be ordered at any time of the day.

Lunch and dinner bring a new round of options. Hamburgers made any way you like, club sandwiches, bologna fried to a crisp, and Po-boys with fish, shrimp, and more start the lunch menu. On Sunday, the offering is a full-plate lunch that looks like grandma cooked it.

If you are on the fence, try the chicken and waffles. It will give you the best of both worlds.

The cafe is open every day except Wednesday. Check the Facebook page to find the weekly Sunday lunch menu and specials.

Monday
6:00 AM – 2:00 PM
Tuesday
6:00 AM – 2:00 PM
Wednesday
CLOSED
Thursday
6:00 AM – 2:00 PM
5:00 PM – 8:00 PM
Friday
6:00 AM – 2:00 PM
5:00 PM – 9:00 PM
Saturday
7:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Sunday
7:00 AM – 3:00 PM


Riverdale Academy Students of the Month

VFW Post and Auxiliary 7287 last week presented recognition to several Riverdale Academy
students as Students of the Month. Each was presented a certificate marking the occasion and
a gift card from Lott Oil/Chevron.

Students of the Month for February were elementary student Ella Rae Pickett, 7th grader Kandyn
Nettles, and high school student Alaina Boyd.

For March, students selected were Seth Long from the Elementary School. The Junior High
student was Hayden Huckabay who is in the 8th grade. And eleventh grader Jadyn King was
selected from Riverdale High.

Each month students from all of the schools in Red River Parish are selected by their teachers
and staff to be the Student of the Month. The program is sponsored by Red River Memorial
Post and Auxiliary 7287 at Coushatta and by Lott Oil/Chevron.


Community gathers for Operation Christmas Child ‘Connect1Day’ event

Operation Christmas Child’s West Central La Team joined the watch party for a Connect1Day event to praise, worship and hear the many ways God has blessed Operation Christmas Child this past year locally, and internationally.

The West Central La area is blessed to serve the Lord through this ministry. Its goal this year is 18,300 shoeboxes. National Collection Week is Nov. 18-25. Become a part of this ministry by going online to Samaritan’spurse.org or by calling Susan Longino at 663-4769.


Double your impact by donating with LifeShare for Give for Good

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

SHREVEPORT, LA — LifeShare Blood Center is partnering with the Community Foundation of North Louisiana to participate in this year’s annual Give for Good campaign. This event empowers the entire community to get involved in causes they care about while building awareness and support for local nonprofits. While the event takes place on May 7th, advanced giving is now open!

“LifeShare’s mission is to connect donors and the lives they impact,” says Mandi Johnson, Director of Community Engagement. “By participating in this event, our donors have the opportunity to double the impact in their local community.”

LifeShare is honored to partner with the following local businesses who are committed to strengthening the community’s blood supply by their sponsorship of blood drives and financial contributions during this year’s Give for Good: Gallagher, Gibsland Bank & Trust, Kendra Scott, Mercedes Benz of Shreveport, and Roadrunner Car Wash.

To participate in this year’s Give for Good with LifeShare, contribute directly to our fundraising campaign at http://www.giveforgoodnla.org/organization/lifesharebloodcenter, or schedule your life-saving blood donation at http://www.lifeshare.org/give.

Please contact Mandi Johnson or Katherine Stringer-Davis, if you have any questions.

Mandi Johnson, MLIS                                          Katherine Stringer-Davis

Director of Community Engagement                    Director of Philanthropic Engagement

LifeShare Blood Center                                          LifeShare Blood Center

318.671.5850 (O)                                                   318.673.1526 (O)

mandi.johnson@lifeshare.org                               katherine.davis@lifeshare.org

8910 Linwood Ave                                                8910 Linwood Avenue

Shreveport, LA  71106                                          Shreveport, LA  71106


Pres. Reagan Was Right: His ‘Star Wars’ Missile Defense COULD ‘Hit a Bullet with a Bullet’ and save Israel from Iran’s Missile Attack

From the days of my youth, I recall with great fondness the presidency of President Ronald Reagan. Full disclosure—my brother Tom was working on the White House Staff at the time, and I was attending The Heights Preparatory School in Potomac, Maryland. So, on the weekends, I rode the Metro down to D.C. to meet my brother at the White House where we would often remain in his office late on Saturday nights as he wrapped up his work for the week.

I clearly remember Pres. Reagan’s unbounded optimism about America and its place in the world, his strong domestic record including record employment and an economy exploding with growth, his focus on the traditional family unit and the conservative social values that were its foundation, and his view of the need for America to be militarily strong.

It is in connection with this need for America to maintain a powerful and unquestioned military advantage over our enemies that I write this article.

One of the many defense initiatives of President Reagan—the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI)—was based upon his recognition that the most effective strategy against the former Soviet Union’s ever-increasing number and capacity of ballistic missiles was to develop a technology by which such missiles could be shot down from space. While the U.S. never created a space-based system, the same technology developed because of that initiative has been stunningly successful.

President Reagan wisely concluded that in the nuclear age the traditional deterrence strategy of ‘mutual assured destruction’ (MAD) was, in fact, insane and amounted to a global suicide pact between the United States and the Soviet Union.

Well, as others have also observed, the individual who saved Israel two weeks ago from direct attack by Iran was President Reagan.

As the Wall Street Journal recounts: “allow me to identify who saved the people of Israel last weekend from Iran’s missile barrage: Ronald Reagan. In 1983, President Reagan in a televised speech proposed what he called the Strategic Defense Initiative. Its core idea was that the U.S would build defense systems that could shoot down nuclear-armed ballistic missiles, then expected to be fired by the Soviet Union at the U.S. mainland.” (WSJ, D. Henninger, 04-18-2024).

Unsurprisingly, liberal members of Congress and the liberal establishment at the time mocked the idea, deriding the program as “Star Wars.”

I was later working in D.C. in the U.S. Congress for the late Clyde C. Holloway, former Congressman and Public Service Commissioner, and recall having a conversation with a liberal colleague of mine who worked in the same House office building. He said to me regarding SDI “well, it’s not going to be able to knock down every missile anyway, so what’s the point in having it?” I remember being astounded and responded that “if we could knock down 98 or 99 out of 100 incoming nuclear missiles, that was still very good and worth pursuing!”

Also unsurprisingly, then-Senator Joe Biden was wrong about this issue as well, saying in a 1986 speech that “Star Wars represents a fundamental assault on the concepts, alliances and arms-control agreements that have buttressed American security for several decades … ” (WSJ, Id.) Of course, President Biden, who mocked and opposed the program, is currently accepting congratulations from the technology’s recent success in Israel.

How do we prove how correct Reagan was? “By universal acclamation, the hero of last weekend was Israel’s missile-defense systems. The world watched in real time Saturday night as Reagan’s commitment to shooting down missiles protected Israel’s population from the more than 300 drones and ballistic and cruise missiles fired by Iran and its proxies at cities across Israel.” (WSJ, Id.)

We should also recall that this initiative of President Reagan so spooked the Soviet Union that Reagan’s unwillingness to abandon the program prompted him to abruptly walk out of a summit in Reykjavik, Iceland with Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev.

It is also only fair to mention that President Trump supports and restarted Reagan’s missile defense initiative in 2019. It will become only more important in time and the nation owes Pres. Reagan great credit for understanding its significance and thrusting the initiative forward.

President Reagan concluded his address to the nation introducing the Strategic Defense Initiative on the evening of March 23rd, 1983, from the Oval Office.

Thank God for his foresight and resolve.

Royal Alexander


CHRISTUS Cancer Center hosts annual skin cancer screening; Preregistration is required for the free event

(SHREVEPORT, Louisiana) – May is Skin Cancer Awareness Month and CHRISTUS Cancer Center is hosting its 33rd annual skin cancer screening event in partnership with Dermatology & Skin Surgery on May 14.

The free event is set for 5:30-7:30 p.m. at the CHRISTUS Cancer Center at Highland Medical Center, 1453 E. Bert Kouns Industrial Loop. Appointments are limited. Individuals can preregister by calling (318) 681-6231.

The event provides an opportunity to be screened by a physician who can answer questions about irregular shaped moles, dark skin spots or areas that could become problematic. The screening takes just a few minutes with results immediately available.

“Skin cancer concerns can come with some scary sounding diagnoses like basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma and malignant melanoma,” CHRISTUS Oncology Medical Director Dr. Scott Boniol said. “But we are willing and able to offer support from diagnosis to treatment and long-term follow up.”

According to the American Cancer Society, skin cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in the U.S. It is estimated that 8,290 people will die from melanoma, the deadliest type, in 2024.

Sherry Shephard 
Public Relations Specialist
CHRISTUS Health Shreveport-Bossier
C: (318) 230-1820
sherry.shephard@christushealth.org


Hall Summit receives gift

Hall Summit now has a Community Sharing Box located at the Walking Park thanks to Mrs. Kerry Remer, Mrs. Leila Kay Warren, and Mr. Clayton Warren.  

Filling the box with books, canned goods, and more is a small act that can make a big difference in the community. Show your support for one another by donating books for all ages, canned goods of all kinds, other non-perishable items, and toiletries.


Week: 04/19/2024 – 04/25/2024

All persons are presumed innocent until proven guilty

LAFFITTE, BOBBY
51   W   M   4/20/2024    4/22/2024
FAILURE TO APPEAR – CRIMINAL FINES & COSTS $1,000.00
ARRESTING AGENCY: RED RIVER PARISH SHERIFF’S OFFICE

CASTELLO, ROBERT
25   W   M   4/21/2024   INCARCERATED
POSSESSION OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA $1,000.00 (CONCURRENT)
POSSESSION OF SCHEDULE II CONTROLLED DANGEROUS SUBSTANCE
$5,000.00 (CONCURRENT)
ARRESTING AGENCY: RED RIVER PARISH SHERIFF’S OFFICE

FOWLER, JOHN
44  W   M   4/21/2024    4/24/2024
CRIMINAL TRESPASS $1,000.00 (CONCURRENT)
THEFT OF A VALUE LESS THAN $1,000 $2,500.00 (CONCURRENT)
ARRESTING AGENCY: RED RIVER PARISH SHERIFF’S OFFICE

THOMAS, STARLENA
32   B   F   4/21/2024   4/24/2024
POSSESSION OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA $1,000.00 (CONCURRENT)
POSSESSION OF CONTRABAND IN A PENAL INSTITUTION $2,500.00 (CONCURRENT)
ARRESTING AGENCY: RED RIVER PARISH SHERIFF’S OFFICE

WILLIAMS, TAYLOR
21   W   M   4/21/2024   4/23/2024
SWITCHED LICENSE PLATE $1,000.00 (CONCURRENT)
DRIVING UNDER SUSPENSION $1,000.00 (CONCURRENT)
POSSESSION OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA $1,000.00 (CONCURRENT)
ARRESTING AGENCY: RED RIVER PARISH SHERIFF’S OFFICE

MORRIS, KEVIN
47   B   M   4/22/2024   4/26/2024
THEFT OF A VALUE LESS THAN $1,000 $2,500.00 (CONCURRENT)
POSSESSION OF SCHEDULE II CONTROLLED DANGEROUS SUBSTANCE $5,000.00
ARRESTING AGENCY: RED RIVER PARISH SHERIFF’S OFFICE

POINDEXTER, JOSEPH
19   W   M   4/22/2024   4/23/2024
POSSESSION OF DRUG PARAPHERNALIA $1,000.00 (CONCURRENT)
POSSESSION OF SCHEDULE II CONTROLLED DANGEROUS SUBSTANCE $5,000.00 (CONCURRENT)
POSSESSION OF SCHEDULE II CONTROLLED DANGEROUS SUBSTANCE $5,000.00 (CONCURRENT)
ARRESTING AGENCY: RED RIVER PARISH SHERIFF’S OFFICE

LINDSEY, TONYA
48   W   F   4/22/2024    4/24/2024
CRIMINAL TRESPASS $1,000.00 (CONCURRENT)
THEFT OF A VALUE LESS THAN $1,000 $2,500.00 (CONCURRENT)
ARRESTING AGENCY: RED RIVER PARISH SHERIFF’S OFFICE

MOORE, STEVEN
52   B   M   4/22/2024   INCARCERATED
DOMESTIC ABUSE BATTERY $5,000.00
ARRESTING AGENCY: COUSHATTA POLICE DEPARTMENT

MOORE, YOUREE
56   B   M   4/23/2024   INCARCERATED
AGGRAVATED ASSAULT $3,000.00
ARRESTING AGENCY: COUSHATTA POLICE DEPARTMENT

SETTLE, AUSTIN
28   W   M   4/23/2024   INCARCERATED
CRIMINAL TRESPASS $1,000.00 (CONCURRENT)
THEFT OF A VALUE LESS THAN $1,000 $2,500.00 (CONCURRENT)
ARRESTING AGENCY: RED RIVER PARISH SHERIFF’S OFFICE

TINGLE, KEVIN
34   B   M   4/25/2024   INCARCERATED
DOMESTIC ABUSE BATTERY PENDING
THEFT OF A VALUE LESS THAN $1,000 PENDING
ARRESTING AGENCY: RED RIVER PARISH SHERIFF’S OFFICE


This & That…Monday, April 29, 2024

St. James Church of God in Christ, in Powhatan, will celebrate the Anniversary of Pastor and First Lady Brandon and Kristen Jackson on Sunday, May 5 at 3pm. Guest speaker will be Pastor Joey Miller of Victorious Life Ministries of Coushatta. 

The Southern Plainsmen Quartet will be in concert at the Ashland Baptist Church Sunday, May 5 at 6pm.

Woman Church will be held May 7 from 6-8pm at The Shop, 1942 Hwy 507. Worship leaders for the night are Maura Dupree and Kaitlyn Beard and the speaker is Kat Arnold. Dinner will be provided. Bring your Bible and a friend. 

Interested in learning more about using that air fryer you still have in a box? Red River Parish Helping Hands will host an instructional presentation at the Jack & Laura Center May 9 at 1pm.


Louisiana Office of State Inspector General Official Report completed for Ware Youth Center

 The Office of State Inspector General (OIG) conducted an investigation of Ware Youth Center (Ware) in Red River Parish at the request of the Office of the Governor. This request followed the publication of a news article alleging “repeated abuses, overlooked complaints and a surge in suicide attempts” at Ware.

The primary focus of the OIG’s investigation was to determine whether Ware is presently a safe and secure environment to house juveniles who have entered Louisiana’s juvenile justice system.

The conclusion of the report found the following: 

• Office Of State Inspector General, through its statutory authority, was able to access and conduct an independent review of records without redactions. Redacted records do not identify juveniles by name, and therefore it was not possible to determine from those redacted records the number or nature of incidents involving repeat offenders.

• It is also difficult to determine from redacted records which incidents involved multiple juveniles, and whether those juveniles were among the small group of repeat offenders responsible for a large percentage of critical incidents at Ware.

• During nine different visits to Ware, OIG investigators observed clean, safe and secure facilities and professional staff. Over the past three years, as part of its oversight responsibilities, OIG has physically visited every secure care facility operated by OJJ in the State of Louisiana. The Ware campus compares favorably to those other facilities.

• Notwithstanding the issues identified in this report, OIG concludes that Ware is presently a safe and secure environment suitable to house juveniles who have entered Louisiana’s juvenile justice system.

The entire report is included here:  https://drive.google.com/file/d/16h9Fk2hKQ7W-Wv0jHUMQnpUUIhWMYtOe/view?usp=sharing


Red River ready for home playoff baseball in Coushatta

Matt Vines

COUSHATTA – Red River High hasn’t traditionally still been playing baseball when the second round of the playoffs come, but the not only are the Bulldogs still alive, they’ll be at home.

No. 4 seed Red River (20-8) kicks off a best-of-three series with No. 13 Pine Prairie (18-12) beginning today at 6 p.m. Saturday action begins at 1 p.m. with an if-necessary game to follow.

The Bulldogs earned a first-round bye while Pine Prairie took two games from No. 20 Church Point by scores of 7-6 and 11-4 to advance.

Appearing in the second round just once in the last decade means the Bulldogs have already hit a milestone, but first-year coach Todd Moore said his club has aspirations of playing in the state tournament in Sulphur.

“Making it to Sulphur was our goal in August and it’s still our goal,” Moore said on The Tim Fletcher Show on AM 1130 on Thursday. “(The buy-in) wasn’t immediate, but it didn’t take long for the kids to get accustomed to our practices and our philosophy on things.

“We started 10-0 and had immediate success, so that reinforced what we were doing. We’ve had ups and downs, and we’ve won some games that we weren’t expected to and lost some we weren’t expected to as well. But it’s how you respond that defines your program.”

Red River will have a couple things in its favor against Pine Prairie.

The Bulldogs are built around their pitching with arms like Tyler Hughes, Ethan Williamson and Aston Hester.

Needing to win two games to take series eliminates a team getting hot at the plate on a given day or one pitcher having an off day.

Moore also said that no home runs have been hit in Red River’s home ball park, calling it a “graveyard” where fly balls die.

Red River’s pitching also has plenty to do with that.

Moore said both offenses will be focused on having good approaches at the plate and not swinging for the fences, which measure about 325 feet down the lines and 375 to centerfield.

“Being good line drive hitters is the key to winning,” Moore said in his radio interview. “The ball doesn’t carry here, and it’s a beautiful park to pitch in, but for hitters, you need to focus on hitting line drives from gap to gap.

“We do have some guys with power that have hit home runs in other parks, but that’s just not part of the game at home.”

Moore said that Pine Prairie is a typical South Louisiana team that’s “really scrappy,” but he likes where his Bulldogs are at this time of year.

“We lost our last regular season game 1-0 to Converse, but our guys have really focused on what they need to do to be successful hitters,” Moore told Fletcher. “I want our guys to be relaxed but to go out with intensity and energy.

“With six seniors on the team, they know if they don’t play well, it’ll be their last series. They know what’s at stake … but the players and the town are ready to roll.”


Budget Bills pass in the House

Representatives Increase Teacher Stipend Allocation & Prioritize Infrastructure

BATON ROUGE, La. – The House of Representatives advanced House Bill 1 (HB1) by a unanimous vote of the members present (104-0) sending it to the Senate for further consideration.  HB1, along with the other budget bills, collectively work together to appropriate funding for the operation of state government in the next fiscal year (FY 25).  It totals $47.5 billion in its current posture.

“Today, the House approved $166M to provide bonus pay to teachers. That means an anticipated stipend of approximately $1,700 that will ultimately be calculated by the Department of Education.” said Appropriations Chairman Jack McFarland.  “We now have time to work with the Senate through the budget process to further increase educators’ compensation. With this bill, as adopted, stipends and differentiated compensations could increase teacher pay in FY 25 by as much as $191M.”

“Rewarding quality teaching is critical to the future of Louisiana,” Chairman McFarland emphasized.  “The amendments the House adopted today are a testament to what we can accomplish when we work together, and I anticipate continued efforts to increase educator pay as the budget makes its way through the process.”

Additionally, the budget prioritizes infrastructure investments including more than $90M in HB1 using state general funds above what is normally allocated to the Department of Transportation & Development (DOTD) for maintenance, major repairs and acquisitions throughout the state.

“Hearing from constituents in every corner of state, I know infrastructure improvements are critical to our communities,” said Speaker of the House Phillip DeVillier. “Louisiana’s citizens want their roads, bridges and sewer/water systems maintained and functional.  My goal is to prioritize investments that improve our overall quality of life in Louisiana and act in a fiscally responsible way.  This budget does both.”

Total appropriations utilize $230M less in state general funds and $4.6B less in total means of finance when compared to the FY 24 operating budget in anticipation of a potential $500M budget shortfall next year.

The House also adopted the state’s Capital Outlay Budget (HB2) which funds state and local infrastructure projects. 

“An important part of budgeting for the state is understanding the unique needs of each district and finding ways to finance them responsibly,” said Julie Emerson, the state’s first female Chair of the Ways and Means Committee.  “This bill incorporates a wide range of projects that address members’ priorities based on feedback from their constituents.”

Final adjournment for the 2024 Regular Legislative Session must occur no later than 6:00 pm on Monday, June 3rd.    


4-H Junior Leaders holding fundraiser

The Red River 4-H Junior Leaders are holding a Pulled Pork Sandwich Fundraiser Friday May 10 from 11am – 1pm. 

For $10 you will get a sandwich, chips, dessert and water.

Pick up orders at the 4-H office (new location: 1919 Alonzo Street) or deliveries in Coushatta over 10 orders.

Orders must be placed before Tuesday, May 7.


I’m sick and tired of talking about it!

Steve Graf      

It’s finally time to put forward-facing sonar to rest. Last week, I gave a great breakdown on this topic. Now, I’m tired of all the debates about banning this new technology. I’m tired of hearing all the whining from anglers who either can’t master it or just refuse to learn it. It’s time to put this topic to rest and move forward!

This controversy is no different from any other issues that have arisen in other sports. This is not about some drug that enhances an angler’s ability to perform and fish better. It has nothing to do with any one angler having a bigger advantage over another. Why? Because every angler has the right and access to the same technology as the next one.

The problem with this controversy is the fact that it’s not the young anglers who are complaining. It’s the guys who have helped build the sport of professional bass fishing into what it is today. It’s the legends of the sport and guys who have made a good living fishing with B.A.S.S. or Major League Fishing (MLF).
They don’t like the fact that today’s young anglers are stepping out onto the big stage and not just competing with them but winning tournaments. They feel that forward-facing sonar is the only reason this is happening. So rather than get on board and improve, some have chosen to file complaints.
I relate to this topic the same way I had to become a better hitter to get the opportunity to get drafted by Major League Baseball.

One thing that separates an average hitter from a great hitter is the ability to hit the curve ball. This has kept more baseball players out of the highest level than any other baseball skill.
I was only an average hitter until I got better and learned how to go with the pitch. But I spent two years of my college career getting better, spending countless hours hitting in a batting cage and working off a batting tee. This was hours of what is referred to as soft toss and programming my body to hit the curve ball and go with the pitch.

I didn’t complain to Major League Baseball and push for a “no curve ball rule!” No, I worked at it and got better by putting in the work! These fishing pros need to apply this same effort. Instead of using the offseason to go hunting, it might be a promising career move to get on the lake and get better using forward-facing sonar.

Here’s some food for thought. If the older anglers on tour were winning with this new technology, would anyone be complaining about it? If Rick Clunn or Kevin Van Dam was kicking everyone’s butt with it, I’ll bet a dollar-to-a-donut that all pros would be figuring out how to get better with forward-facing sonar!
So, for all the anglers who just can’t grasp this new forward-facing technology, you have two choices: either get better with it or load your boats and go home. You cannot stop technology in an age where a new computer today is out of date before the end of the month you bought it.

Like any other advancement in the bass fishing world, forward-facing sonar is here to stay. Stop waiting on B.A.S.S. or MLF to make rule changes to accommodate the older anglers. In the words of my team partner, who got tired of my negative complaining, “Shut up and fish, you big baby!”


Moms Night Out

Red River 4-H Junior Leaders are hosting Moms Night Out Friday, May 10 from 6-9:30pm at the Red River Parish 4-H office.

There will be games, crafts, a movie, pizza, popcorn and more.

Open to children ages 3-11. $20 for first child, $15 for each additional child(ren). Money raised will help them attend 4-H University this summer.

Drop the kids off for a night of fun with 4-H and enjoy a great start to your Mother’s Day weekend!
Call the 4-H by May 7 to register. 318.932.4342


Speaker Johnson to Antisemitic Protestors: “Go Back to Class”

Speaker Johnson denounces Hamas-endorsed protestors, stands with Jewish students at Columbia University, demands Shafik’s resignation

NEW YORK CITY — At a press conference on the steps of the Low Memorial Library at Columbia University, Speaker Johnson denounced the inexcusable treatment of Jewish students on Columbia’s campus and called for University President Minouche Shafik to resign if she can’t bring an immediate end to the chaos.

“Sadly, Columbia’s administrators have chosen to let the threats, the fear, and the intimidation of the mob rule to overtake American principles like free speech and the free exchange of ideas and the free exercise of religion,” Speaker Johnson said. “They have co-opted First Amendment arguments to protect genocide and to elevate the voices of antisemitism. They have proven themselves to be incapable of achieving their basic responsibility, which is keeping students safe. We just can’t allow this kind of hatred and any antisemitism to flourish on our campuses, and it must be stopped in its tracks.”

Prior to the press conference, Speaker Johnson met with Jewish students from Columbia alongside Rabbi Yuda Drizin. “We just left a meeting with Jewish students who told us of the heinous acts of bigotry that they have experienced simply because of their faith,” Speaker Johnson said. “Their bravery is inspiring, much more inspiring than some of the activities we’re seeing here. They should never have to confront such hate on an American college campus at such a revered institution.”

Speaker Johnson was joined at the press conference by Education and Workforce Committee Chairwoman Virginia Foxx, Rep. Anthony D’Esposito,  Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, and Rep. Mike Lawler.

Rep. Foxx: “So, I have a message, President Shafik, and a message for you all too. The inmates are running the asylum. Take back control of this once great institution. You took action last week, it’s time to act again. If not, the committee will pursue every possible avenue to create a safe learning environment for Jewish students. “

Rep. D’Esposito: “If you are a protester on this campus, and you are proud that you’ve been endorsed by Hamas, you are part of the problem. When you cheer on the fact that you enjoy Hamas and Hezbollah, you are yourself part of the problem. Mr. Speaker, I’m proud to join with you here today in calling for the immediate resignation of the President of Columbia. She has failed her duty. She is not keeping students safe.”

Rep. Malliotakis: “It is truly outrageous, and it’s clear that the president of this university cannot control the campus, she cannot and will not hold students who are doing these types of antisemitic activities accountable, and that she cannot keep the students who are of Jewish faith – who, who have paid a lot of money and have worked very hard to get to an Ivy League institution like this – that she cannot keep them safe. And that is why I joined my colleagues in calling for her resignation.”

Rep. Lawler: “I want Palestinians to be free too, from their oppressor, Hamas. And every single one of you students that support Hamas are an absolute abomination. …If you want a ceasefire, the fastest way for a ceasefire to occur is for Hamas to surrender and to release the hostages. And if you can’t call for that, you are a pathetic embarrassment to this institution and to students everywhere. It is time for President Shafik to resign in disgrace.”

Read Speaker Johnson’s full remarks below:

“We’re here today at one of America’s preeminent academic institutions on a very important day in a very important time. Throughout history, Columbia students have contributed to the great storybook of America’s life and thought. Visionary American leaders like Alexander Hamilton and John Jay and the Jewish leader Gershom Seixas knew the self-evident truth that was at the heart of this country, and once, at the heart of this university. And that is that we are endowed by our creator with certain inalienable rights. They should not be infringed.

“The founders and the great leaders who had come through this institution in the past believed in religious liberty. They believed in democracy. They believed in morality and virtue and the dignity of every human person. They believed in the free exchange of ideas, and they detested mob rule.

“We are standing here right now in the steps of the Low Library. In this very building right behind us, Columbia University once awarded Winston Churchill in an honorary degree, and it was Churchill who said, “It is manifestly right that Jews should have a national home where they may be reunited.” We believe in that principle, and today I’m here to proclaim to all those who gnash their teeth and demand to wipe the state of Israel off the map and attack our innocent Jewish students, this simple truth: neither Israel, nor these Jewish students on this campus, will ever stand alone.

“Today, Hamas issued an endorsement statement of the protestors on this campus. They called them the future leaders of America. It is detestable. All of this has to be said because the cherished traditions of this university are being overtaken right now by radical and extreme ideologies. They place a target on the backs of Jewish students in the United States, and here on this campus, a growing number of students have chanted in support of terrorists. They have chased down Jewish students. They have mocked them and reviled them. They have shouted racial epithets. They have screamed at those who bear the star of David.

“They have told Jewish students who wear the star of David to leave the country and shamefully some professors and faculty have joined the mobs. Things have gotten so out of control that the school has canceled in-person classes, and now they’ve come up with this hybrid model where they will discriminate against Jewish students. They’re not allowed to come to class anymore for fear of their lives. And it’s detestable.

“As Columbia has allowed these lawless agitators and radicals to take over, the virus of antisemitism is spread across other campuses. By some counts, as many as 200 universities have a similar form of protest. Right now at Yale, a Jewish student was stabbed in the eye with a Palestinian flag and 45 students were arrested. At NYU, Pro-Hamas protestors were shouting from the ‘river to the sea.’ Anti-Israel encampments are popping up at universities all across this country.

“The madness has to stop. We just left a meeting with Jewish students who told us of the heinous acts of bigotry that they have experienced simply because of their faith. Their bravery is inspiring, much more inspiring than some of the activities we’re seeing here. They should never have to confront such hate on an American college campus at such a revered institution.

“Antisemitism has been growing in America and it’s clear why. Powerful people have refused to condemn it, and some have even peddled it themselves. From university professors to public officials, people in positions of authority have denied the horrific facts of September 11th, 2001, the attacks on the United States. That happened right here in New York City, and they’ve attempted to excuse or to ignore the barbaric attack of Hamas in Israel on October 7th, 2023. Where Israeli women and children were savagely raped and murdered, and infants were cooked in ovens.

“Crowds of radical left activists have chanted death to America, and on our own streets in this country, and some public officials have refused to condemn them. Others have openly defended these acts on campus and the harassing and the intimidation and the threatening of innocent Jewish students simply because of who they are. They’ve called that peaceful protest, and some have even gone as far as calling for the state of Israel to be eliminated. These are words we expect from Ayatollahs in Iran, not American lawmakers, and not American students. And unsurprisingly, it has given way to threats and violence in a generation of students don’t feel safe in their own classrooms or where they live or where they worship. Let me say this very simply, no American of any color or creed should ever have to live under those kinds of threats. That is not who we are in this country.

“Sadly, Columbia’s administrators have chosen to let the threats, the fear, and the intimidation of the mob rule to overtake American principles like free speech and the free exchange of ideas and the free exercise of religion. They have co-opted First Amendment arguments to protect genocide and to elevate the voices of antisemitism. They have proven themselves to be incapable of achieving their basic responsibility, which is keeping students safe. We just can’t allow this kind of hatred and any antisemitism to flourish on our campuses, and it must be stopped in its tracks. Those who are perpetrating this violence should be arrested.

“And I’m here today joining my colleagues in calling on President Shafik to resign if she cannot immediately bring order to this chaos. As Speaker of the House, I’m committing today that the Congress will not be silent. As Jewish students are expected to run for their lives and stay home from their classes hiding in fear. In the House of Representatives, we’ve already acted to address antisemitism on campuses. We have passed a number of statutes to address this matter, and we call upon the US Senate to act upon our legislation.”


International Paper’s Red River Mill celebrates Earth Day and Love the Boot Week with highway cleanup

Red River Team Members Celebrate Earth Day and Love the Boot Week with Highway Cleanup

Red River team members are taking action to keep Louisiana beautiful.

On April 22, team members at the International Paper Red River Mill held a highway cleanup to support Louisiana’s Love the Boot Week and in conjunction with Earth Day. The group spent several hours walking alongside Highway 480 to pick up trash and debris.

Safety was top of mind as the team prepared to set out. They discussed guidelines for walking along the highway and the proper PPE was reviewed before starting work. A local deputy also drove alongside our volunteers as an extra safety measure.

International Paper (NYSE: IP) is a global producer of sustainable packaging, pulp and other fiber-based products, and one of the world’s largest recyclers. Headquartered in Memphis, Tenn., we employ approximately 39,000 colleagues globally who are committed to creating what’s next. We serve customers worldwide, with manufacturing operations in North America, Latin America, North Africa and Europe. Net sales for 2023 were $18.9 billion. Additional information can be found by visiting internationalpaper.com.


Investiture of the 15th President of LA Tech

A ceremony dating to the Middle Ages, the investiture or installation of a new university president is among the oldest of traditions in academia. Beyond honoring the individual assuming the office, the ceremony serves as an opportunity to recall the institution’s past, celebrate the present, and regard the future.

The appointment of a new president is a landmark in the university’s history and initiates a new era. The ceremony represents “investing” in a university leader the dignity and authority associated with the position.

Please join the Tech Family this Friday, April 26, to celebrate the investiture of Dr. Jim Henderson as the 15th president of Louisiana Tech University.

Investiture Events
  • Tree Planting Ceremony Honoring Dr. and Mrs. Jim Henderson – Hale Hall – 9:15 a.m.
  • Investiture Mass – St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church – 10 a.m.
  • Investiture – Howard Auditorium – 1 p.m.

  • Community Reception – Student Center – 2:15 p.m.

Dr. Jim Henderson became the 15th president of Louisiana Tech University on Jan. 1, 2024. His ties to the institution go back more than 80 years when his father, Clem Henderson, was recruited to play for famed Louisiana Tech football coach Joe Aillet. His mom, Martha, was a two-time Tech graduate.

Henderson previously served as the president and CEO of the University of Louisiana System, one of the nation’s largest university systems. As the longest-serving UL System president, he led the Universities of Louisiana in the creation of a strategic framework that charged its member institutions to produce the most educated generation in Louisiana’s history. Through various systemic initiatives such as Compete LA and the Reginald F. Lewis Scholars and the challenges associated with a global pandemic and fiscal uncertainty, he developed a notion of system that will continue to benefit each of the nine institutions for decades to come.

Henderson also served as president of his alma mater, Northwestern State University, where he reinvigorated student life and campus culture, leading to the highest enrollment in the school’s 135-year history. Previously, he served as chancellor of Bossier Parish Community College. During his tenure, the institution ranked among the five fastest-growing colleges in the nation for five consecutive years.

In 2012, Henderson was named a Northwest Louisiana Business Hall of Fame Laureate, and, in 2017, he was inducted into Northwestern State University’s hall of honor, the Long Purple Line. Henderson holds a Master of Science in Administration from University of West Florida and a Doctor of Management from University of Maryland—University College. In 2010, he completed the Institute of Educational Management at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. He currently serves as the Chair of the Board of Visitors of Marine Corps University.

The smartest decision Henderson has made is marrying his college sweetheart, Tonia, who founded her own media company after a successful career in advertising. The Hendersons have three children, Reagan, Nicholas, and Alexander, who is studying chemical engineering at Louisiana Tech, and four grandchildren, Zachary, Miguel, Maria, and Lucille.


The 2nd annual City of Lights crawfish cookoff

The 2nd annual City of Lights crawfish cookoff hosted by the Natchitoches Parish Fair Board will be held on May 4th at the fairgrounds. Teams will be boiling their best recipes competing for cash prizes and people’s choice.

This event is open to the public, 11 am to 5 pm for only $30 – all-you-can-eat crawfish!!! There will be live entertainment provided by the Comeback Kids & the Born to Boogie band. A Taste of Heaven Food Truck, Cane River Pizza Co., snow cones, Murphy’s Sweets & eats, a bouncy house play area for the kids, and Antoons will be selling beer to that id as 21 and over.

No ice chests or outside food or drinks will be allowed, bags will be checked, and lawn chairs are recommended. Visit our 2nd annual City of Lights crawfish cookoff Facebook page to find sponsorship and /or registration information to enter a team or to purchase pre-sale tickets.

All proceeds from this event will benefit the NRMC Cancer Center. So come to the fairgrounds on May 4th to support this great cause.


Innocent until proven guilty

For more than 60 years, people have accused Eddy of at least five murders, but the evidence against him is only circumstantial. When confronted with evidence which proves Eddy’s innocence, people who believe in Eddy’s guilt cry conspiracy, of which there is no evidence. Let us take a brief look at Eddy’s supposed crime spree.

The first murder happened at about 3:40 on the morning of August 31. A man named Charles Allen Cross was walking to work when he discovered what he initially thought was a tarpaulin on the ground at the entrance to a horse stable. Upon closer inspection, he realized it was the body of a woman later identified as 43-year-old Mary Ann “Polly” Nichols. Polly was lying on her back with her eyes open. Her legs were straight, and her skirt was raised above her knees. Another man on his way to work, Robert Paul, approached and spoke briefly about the deceased woman. They pulled her skirt down to preserve her dignity, then ran to fetch policeman Jonas Mizen who was only a short distance away. When the policeman arrived, Polly’s legs were still warm. Surgeon Dr. Llewellyn determined that Polly had been dead for approximately 30 minutes. Eddy was over 200 miles away at the time of the murder.

At about 5:15 on the morning of September 8, Albert Cadosch, a resident of 27 Hanbury Street went into his yard to urinate. He heard a woman say “No, no!” Then he heard something hit the fence dividing his property with 29 Hanbury street. He thought little of it at the time and went back inside. The mutilated body of 47-year-old Annie Chapman was discovered less than 45 minutes later by John Davis, an elderly resident of 29 Hanbury Street. Again, Eddy was over 200 miles away at the time of the murder.

At about 12:35 on the morning of September 30, policeman William Smith saw Elizabeth “Liz” Stride with a man at number 40 Berner Street. The man was carrying a package that officer Smith later said was about 18 inches long. With no reason to suspect anything, officer Smith continued on his patrol. Approximately 25 minutes later, Louis Diemschutz drove his horse and two-wheeled cart into the poorly lit Dutfield’s Yard. His horse abruptly shied to the left to avoid a dark object lying on the ground. Louis struck a match and saw a dead body lying on the ground. She was still bleeding from a single knife wound on her neck. Louis ran for help. When police arrived, parts of Liz’s body were still warm. They suspected that the killer had been interrupted by Louis.

At precisely 1:44 on the same morning, just 44 minutes after Liz’s body was discovered, policeman Edward Watkins discovered the mutilated body of Catherine Eddowes lying on her back in the southwest corner of Miter square. Officer Watkins had passed through Miter Square 14 minutes earlier, but the body was not there at that time. (According to google maps, the average person can walk the distance between the location of Liz’s and Catherine’s murders in just 17 minutes.) At the time Elizabeth Stride and Catherine Eddowes were killed, Eddy was over 500 miles away.

Sometime between 3:30 and 4 o’clock on the morning of November 9, Elizabeth Prater, who lived directly above Mary Jane Kelly’s apartment, along with a guest, Sarah Lewis, heard a scream. This being the roughest part of the city at the time, screams during the night were nothing new. They thought little about it at the time. At about 5:30 that morning, Elizabeth walked past Mary’s door but saw nothing out of the ordinary. At about 10:45 that morning, Thomas Bowyer went to Mary’s room to collect the rent which was six weeks overdue. He knocked on the door but got no response. He went to the window, but the curtains were drawn. He removed a piece of cloth which had been used to plug a broken windowpane and pulled back the curtain. Thomas was shocked to see the extensively mutilated body of Mary Jane Kelly.

Investigators believed Mary had died sometime between 1:45 and 8:00 a.m. that morning. They determined that her body was so badly mutilated because the killer struck in a private room which enabled the murderer to take his time. The murder of Mary Jane Kelly is considered by most to be the last of the murders some claim Eddy committed. Eddy was over 100 miles from the scene of the murder.

Eddy was never questioned by police, nor was he a suspect during his lifetime. Three years after the last murder, Eddy was engaged to be married. By all substantiated accounts, Eddy was in perfect health until a couple of weeks before his wedding date. Eddy became ill with influenza which turned into pneumonia. He never recovered and died at the young age of 28. Could Eddy have been the murderer?

For any investigation, police try to determine whether a suspect has an alibi and must judge the strength of the alibi. Eddy had many alibis. In fact, his movements were being tracked by newspapers all over the country, not because he had done anything wrong, but because of who he was. Based on newspaper accounts alone, Eddy could not have been the murderer. Even the Queen of England could have vouched for Eddy. In her journal, she recorded that on September 30, 1888, the date that the killer murdered two women in less than an hour, she had lunch with Eddy over 500 miles away. You see, Eddy was the family’s nickname for Prince Albert Victor. He was the grandson of Queen Victoria and second in line to the English throne. Despite the numerous books and films on the subject, Eddy, Prince Albert Victor could not have been the murderer known as Jack the Ripper.

Sources:

1. Western Daily Press (Bristol, England), August 28, 1888, p.3.

2. The North Star (Darlington, England), September 8, 1888, p.4.

3. The Yorkshire Herald and the York Herald, September 29, 1888, p.16.

4. The Gloucestershire Echo, November 5, 1888, p.3.

5. “Casebook: Jack the Ripper – Prince Albert Victor,” Casebook.org, 2019, https://www.casebook.org/suspects/eddy.html.


This & That…Friday, April 26, 2024

Clara Springs Camp will host Fourth Friday Fish Fry April 26 from 5-7pm. Hosted by Grand Cane Baptist. It is Foster Ministry Awareness Month. Everyone is asked to bring socks/underware donations for boys and girls sizes 2T-14 to give to Foster Care Closets. Foster families will eat FREE. Dinner is $15 and includes all you can eat fried fish, coleslaw, french fries, hushpuppies, pinto beans, lemon bread pudding, homemade ice cream and drinks. Kids 9 and under eat FREE. Only $10 for kids ages 10-17.

The Southern Plainsmen Quartet will be in concert at the Ashland Baptist Church Sunday, May 5 at 6pm.