Notice of Death – January 11

Notice of Death – January 09, 2024

Willie G. Glover, Sr.

Sept. 12, 1952 – Jan. 05, 2024

Ringgold, La.

Wake: 5 – 6 p.m. Friday, Jan. 12, 2024, Memorial Funeral Home, Ringgold, La.

Graveside Service: Saturday, Jan. 12, 2024, Coleman Cemetery, Ringgold, La. with interment to follow.

Kenneth Lee Williams

April 14, 1973 – Dec. 30, 2023

Farmerville, La.

Visitation: 2 -5 p.m. Friday, Jan. 12, 2024, Memorial Funeral Home, Farmerville.

Funeral service: 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 13, 2024, St. Paul Baptist Church, Marion, La.

Interment: 3:15 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 13, 2024, St. Paul Cemetery #1, Marion, La.

Ralph Nisley

March 8, 1935 – Dec. 2, 2024

Lison, La.

Graveside Service: Saturday, Jan. 13, 2024, Friendship C.M.E. Cemetery, Lisbon, La.

Interment to follow.

Varnita Merrie Bartholmae Witcher

March 16, 1939 – Dec. 27, 2023

Minden, La.

Celebration of Life Memorial Service: 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 20, 2024, North Acres Baptist Church, Minden.

Bienville Parish Journal publishes paid complete obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $80. Contact your funeral provider or bpjnewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Above death notices are no charge.)


BPSB approved contract for new Superintendent

By Paige Nash

The Bienville Parish School Board (BPSB) officially approved Dr. Byron Lyons’ contract as Superintendent during last Thursday’s monthly meeting held on Jan. 4, following a fairly lengthy review of the contract.  

Member for District 2 Oswald Townsend requested that in the future that members have the opportunity to view information like this before the meetings. 

“Going forward, can we have information like this to look over and make a decision on before time instead of trying to get here and figure it out,” Oswald asked. “This is something concerning taxpayers’ money, so to be responsible, we need to take a look at it before we get here.” 

Sharolyn Boston, member representing District 1, asked when Lyons’ official start date would be.  

According to the newly elected school board President Darren Iverson, the contract must be approved and following the approval Lyons will put in his two-week notice at his current job with the Lafayette Parish School system. Lyons starting date is set for Jan. 22. 

The two-year contract, set to terminate on June 30, 2026, stated the general duties of the BPSB Superintendent, as well as organizational duties and civic organization requirements. 

According to the contract, Lyons’ shall be paid a minimum base salary of $135,000 exclusive of any sales tax components with any percentage or step increase granted during his term to be automatically added. These steps include annual incentive pay increases if the district meets or exceeds the following criteria under Lyons’ leadership: 

“In any year in which the Bienville Parish School District obtains a performance rating of “A” or its equivalent from the Louisiana Department of Education, the Superintendent shall receive additional compensation in the amount of $2,500.  

“In any year in which Ringgold Elementary School obtains a school performance score of “B” or its equivalent from the Louisiana Department of Education, the Superintendent shall receive additional compensation in the amount of $2,000. 

“In any year in which Ringgold Elementary School obtains a school performance score of “C” or its equivalent from the Louisiana Department of Education, the Superintendent shall receive additional compensation in the amount of $1,000.”

Lyons will also be reimbursed an additional $500 a month for covering maintenance and upkeep of his personal vehicle in the performance of his duties. He will be responsible for providing his insurance with a minimum liability coverage of $100,000/$300,000. 

All board members were in attendance and voted in favor of passing the Superintendent’s contract.


Bienville Parish Basketball Report – Week 7


By Shawn C. White

(Under the Radar NWLA)

The kids got back in school and Saline High School was already closed on the first Friday.   Good reason, though.   The Saline Bobcats and Lady Bobcats got to participate in a “Court of Dreams” program put on by the NBA’s New Orleans Pelicans.  The Bobcats and Lady Bobcats played the Cedar Creek Cougars and Lady Cougars before the New Orleans Pelicans took on the Los Angeles Clippers at the Smoothie King Center.   Saline Boys snuck in a 54-52 win over the Cougars.  The Lady Bobcats came up short 40-39

Ringgold Redskins just won’t take the easy route.   The Redskins were ranked No. 3 at the time they faced the No. 1 Lakeview Gators.    Lakeview edged the Redskins by one in Campti.  That wasn’t enough for them as they headed to the Bossier Tournament and came up short against Bossier.   They ended the week on a high with a win over 4A Woodlawn.    Tough week but made their team more hardened.  

Castor Tigers and Lady Tigers started the week out rough both with a loss to Sterlington but both picked up big wins over Glenbrook and Downsville.   

Arcadia Hornets headed over to Monroe to get in one last tournament before district play as the competed in the Ouachita Parish tournament.  They took a win over AJ Ellender but were knocked out by the host team.  

Gibsland-Coleman boys and Arcadia girls took a break for the week.

We are over halfway through the season and heading into district play so let’s take a quick look at the playoff situation.   The five non select schools will be competing for 28 slots in each of their divisions.   We will also add a first round prediction of where they might be.  These are from the Geaux Preps on January 9

Boys – Nonselect

TeamDivisionRecordRank / First Round
ArcadiaIV6-9No. 14   (Home)
CastorV7-11No. 31  (Out)
Gbsland-ColemanV10-8No. 6   (Home)
RinggoldIV15-8No. 3   (Bye)
SalineV14-9No 15  (Home)

Girls – Nonselect

TeamDivisionRecordRank / First Round
ArcadiaIV19-2No. 1  (Bye)
CastorV13-3No. 11 (Home)
Gbsland-ColemanV7-11No. 14 (Home)
RinggoldIV4-11No. 18 (Away)
SalineV7-16No. 27 (Away)

Boys

Tuesday, January 2

Saline 62, Ouachita Christian 55

Sterlington 49, Castor 38

Lakeview 56, Ringgold 55

Wednesday, January 3

Arcadia 58, AJ Ellender 44 (Ouachita Parish)

Thursday,  January 4

Castor 66, Glenbrook 37

Bossier  52, Ringgold 42  (Bossier)

Ouachita Parish 79, Arcadia 65 (Ouachita Parish)

Friday, January 5

Saline 54, Cedar Creek 52

Castor 59, Downsville 20

Ringgold  68, Woodlawn-SHV 62  (Bossier)

Girls

Tuesday, January 2

Ouachita Christian 47, Saline 40

Sterlington 67, Castor 38

Lakeview 55, Ringgold 20

Wednesday, January 3

Parkway 41, Gibsland-Coleman 33

Thursday,  January 4

Castor 57, Glenbrook 18

Friday, January 5

Cedar Creek 40, Saline 39

Castor 61, Downsville 11

Starting 5 – Boys

  • Kristopher Jackson, Arcadia
  • Maddox Williams, Saline
  • Jordyn Wilson, Ringgold
  • Ratrevious Crawley, Arcadia
  • Eli Ferguson, Saline

Next 5 – Boys

  • Gavon Dailey, Saline
  • Omareion Carr, Arcadia
  • LaDaunte McCoy, Ringgold
  • Johnathan Warren, Castor
  • Dawson Wood, Castor

Starting 5 – Girls

  • Alana Gray, Saline
  • Ambree Collinsworth, Castor
  • Kacidy Sims, Saline
  • Samora Sampson, Gibsland-Coleman
  • Kalena Smith, Castor

Next 5 – Girls

  • Baleigh Haulcy, Gibsland-Coleman
  • Heather Cox, Ringgold
  • Janasia Hullaby, Ringgold
  • Kaylie Ann Shirley, Castor
  • CaRiya Lewis, Gibsland-Coleman

Boys Top Performances

Kristopher Jackson, Arcadia:  Jackson scored 27 points in win over AJ Ellender

Jordyn Wilson, Ringgold:  Wilson scored 25 points in win over Woodlawn

Jordyn Wilson, Ringgold:  Wilson scored 20 points in a loss to Lakeview

Maddox Williams, Saline:  Williams scored 20 points in a win over Ouachita Christian

Gavon Dailey, Saline:  Dailey scored 17 points in a win over Ouachita Christian

Maddox Williams, Saline: Williams scored 17 points in win over Cedar Creek at Smoothie King Center

Omareion Carr, Arcadia:  Carr scored 16 points in loss to Ouachita Parish

Ratrevious Crawley, Arcadia:  Crawley scored 15 points in a win over AJ Ellender

Girls Top Performances

Alana Gray, Saline:  Gray scored 20 points in loss to Cedar Creek at Smoothie King Center

Ambree Collinsworth, Castor:  Collinsworth scored 19 points in win over Glenbrook

Kacidy Sims, Saline:  Sims scored 18 points in loss to Ouachita Christian

Alana Gray, Saline:  Gray scored 16 points in loss to Ouachita Christian

Kalena Smith, Castor:  Smith scored 15 points in loss to Sterlington

Download the Under The Radar NWLA App for iPhone and Android

Photos courtesy of Saline High School Facebook Page

Memorial Recognizes Success Of Coach Clyde ‘Buster’ Carlisle

By Marilyn Miller

There’s an old Johnny Cash song that goes, “I’ve been everywhere, man, I’ve been everywhere, man…” Most people have heard it. Matter of fact, some of you won’t be able to get it out of your heads now. Insert little smiling emoji…

Take late Coach Clyde “Buster” Carlisle during his 41 years of teaching and coaching in the public school systems in Louisiana and Texas for example. From the early sixties until 2003, Carlisle and his family tripped around to Midway Jr. High to Winnsboro to Castor, to a short stint at a Florida school, home to Belcher for three years to put his father’s farm back together, then back to coaching at Minden, LA for a decade, onto the Texas years, where Buster coached at Marshall, Huntington, Kirbyville (sitting out a year in-between to recover from a heart attack), and finally to the Clarksville Independent School District in Texas, where he coached until his retirement in 2003.

The Carlisle family has truly been everywhere. However, it was Minden and Clarksville where Buster spent over half of that 41-year career. And it was at those high schools where he found the most success, not including the number of sons and grandsons who have followed in his steps.

“His Minden High School team went to the State play-offs in 1972…then again when Reny Bailey was playing in ’79 and I think one more time,” said Debbie Brown, one of three daughters born to Buster and Frances Carlisle. Debbie and her husband, Teddy, decided to settle in Minden when Buster and Frances left for Texas. Today, Frances is back in Minden residing with the Browns.

“One writer picked up that daddy won three State titles in Minden,” Debbie added. “But he didn’t…I don’t know how that got out there, except that it probably was a misunderstanding because he coached the AAU and BBCI (Amateur Athletic Union and Basketball Congress International) teams for Louisiana during the 1980s. His team of 15 and 16-year-olds won two State titles and the National title that was played in Las Vegas.”

On May 31, 2017, Yahoo Sportswriter Les Carpenter wrote an article headlined “The amazing story of the greatest AAU team you’ve never heard of…” Among the members of that team…Karl Malone, Joe Dumars, “Hot Rod” Williams, and Benny Anders. The coach of the team was Buster Carlisle.

The greatest success that Buster achieved in high school sports was undoubtedly at Clarksville High School in the Clarksville ISD in Texas. “Coach gave 40-plus years to education and coaching, twenty in Louisiana and twenty in Texas. His teams won two state championships in Clarksville, Texas, in 1995 and 1998,” a clip on Facebook said. “At the time of his retirement in 2003, he was ranked the third winningest coach in the nation and the second winningest coach in Texas, winning (a total of) 1,103 games.”

Buster was born Sept. 5, 1933 in East Point, LA and entered into rest on March 3, 2014 in Minden, LA. Earlier in January, Buster’s family was invited to Clarksville, TX, where a memorial to Coach Clyde (Buster) Carlisle has been painted onto the gymnasium floor in two opposite places.

Bruce Williams contributed a story in the Jan. 4, 2024 edition of the Paris (TX) News.

“A special event will unfold at halftime of Friday’s 6 p.m. boys basketball game between the Clarksville Blue Tigers and Liberty-Eylau Leopards in the Clarence L. Nix Jr. gym in Clarksville, as the high school gym floor will be dedicated in honor of Clyde ‘Buster’ Carlisle’s record-breaking tenure at the Red River County school,” Williams wrote. “During his tenure in Clarksville, he led the Blue Tigers to 12 district championships, and 11 regional tournament appearances, as well as five trips to the Drum in Austin for state tournament appearances.

“Carlisle guided the Tigers to a pair of state championships, in 1995 and 1998. He also led Clarksville to an 87-game district win streak.”

Eight members of the Carlisle family attended the dedication ceremony, Frances Carlisle, Debbie Brown, Lindsay Brown, John Carlisle, Randy Carlisle, Randal Carlisle, Jacob Brown, and Hudson Brown.

“We are very appreciative of the Clarksville ISD for honoring our father, grandfather, great grandfather and husband,” Debbie Brown said. “We thank you for the halftime ceremony, and for the reception for us afterwards in my dad’s former classroom. You just don’t know how much this means for my mom and us.”

Buster Carlisle was also known as a Godly man. But Johnny Green of the Texarkana Gazette probably summed him up best when he wrote, “Simply put, Clyde “Buster” Carlisle was the best high school basketball coach I’ve ever seen. His ability to motivate his players to run his disciplined motion offense was incredible. And he was a character on the sidelines, from his sports jacket, denim jeans and boots to his steely blue eyes that stared down many an official.”


Bienville Parish students graduate BPCC

Listed are Bossier Parish Community College fall 2023 graduates from Bienville Parish.

Darlisia Baxter AAS Practical Nursing, Arcadia 

Shyloh Kaiyaa Bell CGS General Studies, Bienville 

Zyon Sanaa Bell CGS General Studies, Bienville 

Tilley Sullivan CTC Emergency Medical Technician, Castor 

Chloe Grace Claudio AA Performing Arts, Ringgold 

Heather G Cox CGS General Studies, Ringgold 

Jyshawn Mantrell Marshall CGS General Studies, Ringgold 

Latarus Rapheal Scott AAS Criminal Justice, TD Criminal Justice, Ringgold 

Megan Nicole Teutsch AS Nursing, Ringgold 

Taylor Shantoria Weathers AGS General Studies, Ringgold 

Trevor Williams CGS General Studies, Ringgold 

Kennedy Davis Hudson AS Nursing, Ringgold 


A Profitable Prank

Virginia was born and raised in Wareham, Massachusetts where she learned to play the piano and flute at an early age.  By her teenage years, Virginia was so accomplished that she became the organist at her church.  Popular in high school, she was the head cheerleader in her senior year.  She attended New England College in Henniker, New Hampshire and transferred to Boston University, leaving there just a couple of credits shy of earning her degree.

Virginia moved to New York and found work as a salesclerk at the women’s specialty clothing store called Ann Taylor.  Day after day, Virginia, dressed in Ann Taylor clothing, helped other women select just the right outfit from their collection.  On one Saturday, Virginia, dressed in her Ann Tayler clothing, stopped by the Ann Taylor store with some of her friends.  In the showroom window, they saw a couple of mannequins dressed in Ann Taylor apparel sitting at a little café table as if they were having lunch.  Plastic food sat on the plates in front of them.  A mischievous thought came over Virginia.  She turned to her friends and said, “Hey, dare me to go and sit in the chair?”  With wide grins, they replied, “Yeah, go ahead, do it.”  When no one was looking, Virginia snuck into the showroom display window and sat down with the mannequins.  She sat perfectly motionless.  Her friends just stared from outside the store.

People passing by noticed the girls’ fixed stares at the showroom display.  A crowd began to gather outside the showroom window.  They were curious and asked, “What are you looking at.”  The girls would only say, “Just wait, just wait.”  Virginia’s friends knew that she would have to blink her eyes eventually.  Finally, Virginia blinked her dry eyes.  It was over in an instant.  She made no other movement.  The people in the crowd who saw her blink said, “Wooo!”  The people who missed it asked the ones who had seen it what they missed.  Some of those who saw her blink were second guessing what they had just seen.  Did she really blink?  Was she real or a mannequin?  The crowd became larger.  All eyes were fixed on Virginia’s eyes.  Finally, another blink.  The people in the crowd who saw her blink went wild.  The crowd grew larger, as did the cheers, at every blink of Virginia’s eyes.  Although no one in the crowd could tell, because she sat completely motionless except for an occasional blink which was over in an instant, Virginia was thoroughly enjoying her prank. 

Finally, the manager noticed the noise coming from outside the showroom window and went to investigate.  She looked at the crowd and looked at the mannequins sitting in the showroom window.  Finally, Virginia blinked, and the crowd went wild again.  The manager rushed back into the store and scoldingly told her to “Get out of the window!”  As Virginia stood to remove herself from the window, the manager had a sudden realization.  Their showroom window had never drawn so much attention before.  “Stay in the window!” she said.  Virginia sat back down and continued to pretend to be a mannequin.  The large crowd was delighted and continued to watch in eager anticipation of every blink.  The store hired Virginia every Saturday to be a mannequin.

The mannequin prank led to bigger things for Virginia.  A few Saturdays later, Virginia signed with New York’s Zoli modeling agency.  From there she was cast in the 1982 film Tootsie.  In jest, Virginia described her part in the film as “someone who’s going to be in their underwear a lot of the time.”  She was cast in the short-lived television series Buffalo Bill, and guest-starred in Family TiesRiptideRemington Steele, and Knight Rider.  Virginia appeared in the Chevy Chase comedy Fletch, and starred in Transylvania 6-5000the FlyEarth Girls Are Easy, Beetlejuice, Thelma & Louise, A League of their Own, and The Accidental Tourist, for which she won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress.  The list of films and television shows which Virginia has starred in continues to grow.  Virginia Elizabeth Davis was given a nickname shortly after her birth by her older brother, Dan, to differentiate her from an auto also named Virginia.  You and I know her as Geena Davis.

Source:  “Geena Davis on Her Early Gig as a Living Mannequin,” National Public Radio, February 11, 2023, https://www.npr.org/2023/02/08/1155478251/geena-davis-on-her-early-gig-as-a-mannequin.


Grandma Draper’s Sour Cream Cake

There are some recipes I simply refuse to pass up, and when I saw southern belle Reese Witherspoon share her Grandma Draper’s Sour Cream Cake I promptly put it on the list to bake.  It is the best cake I have made in a long while!  Make this on a Sunday afternoon to bookend your weekend and have a piece every day of the next week!

Cake:

  • 1 1/2 sticks butter, slightly softened
  • 3 cups cake flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 1 1/4 cups full fat sour cream
  • 4 teaspoons vanilla
  • 2 cups sugar
  • 6 eggs

Praline Frosting:

  • 1 stick butter
  • 1/2 cup brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup heavy cream, plus more if necessary
  • 3 3/4 cup powdered sugar, sifted
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla

Directions

Butter two 9” cake pans, then cut parchment paper circles to line the bottoms, buttering again and finally flouring the pans. This step is very important because this cake sticks easily.

Sift flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt. In a separate bowl stir vanilla and sour cream.

Beat butter and sugar with mixer until light and smooth.  Slowly add each egg, then 1/3 of the flour mixture, half the sour cream mixture, half the remaining flour mixture, remaining sour cream mixture, and finally the remaining flour mixture.  Do not cut these corners!

Once the batter is smooth with no streaks, divide between the cake pans and bake 30-40 minutes.  Cool completely.

To make the frosting:  melt butter in sauce pan, then stir in brown sugar and cream. As soon as it reaches a boil pour into icing bowl and beat on medium speed.  Slowly add powdered sugar and vanilla until the right consistency is redhead.  The frosting will harden quickly.  If it feels too thick to spread add a tablespoon or two of extra cream.  As soon as it is ready scoop ¾ cup of frosting onto one cake layer and stack the other on top.  Then quickly frost the top and sides.

This recipe is Reese Witherspoon’s Grandma Draper’s recipe.

(Ashley Madden Rowton is a wife, mom and published cookbook author who lives in Minden, La.)


Surrounding yourself with the right people

We all want to be a part of a group. We want to feel like we belong to something, someone, or somewhere. Even as kids, it is important for one’s self-esteem to have a bond with others. Nothing is worse than to be excluded from your friends or co-workers.

Today, we’ll talk about just how important it is for tournament anglers to be a part of a group and to have guys they can trust.

Trust is the key ingredient or the glue that all anglers must have within the crew they run with. To be successful on the pro level, it’s important that you have a handful of guys that you can talk to about anything. Anglers you can trust to tell you the truth about how they might be catching fish. Guys that aren’t trying to lead you astray and send you on a wild goose chase. 

But one thing an angler must avoid during the course of a tournament is listening to what is called “dock talk.” This is where guys are standing around a boat ramp, weigh-in, or at dinner and spreading false information about how they are catching fish with the intention to lead another angler down the wrong path. The best advice I’ve ever been given as an angler is never trust an angler you do not know and proceed with caution on anything they tell you. It’s a game anglers play every tournament hoping to give themselves an advantage. Anglers are the best liars on the planet and will do or say anything to gain an advantage.

This is why it is so important that an angler find a group of guys he can travel with and trust. These are guys who will come to your rescue when you break down on the water or on the highway, guys who are willing to share their tackle when you need a bag of worms or a particular bait, guys you trust to tell the truth about what and how they might be catching fish.

Finding that right circle can be a challenge and it may take some time. But when you do, it can make your tournament experience so much more enjoyable and productive. Let’s face it, you’re never going to win every tournament, but your goal is always to finish in the money and collect a check.

But understand, there’s always competition within the group. Even within your own crew, you want to be the one that finished the highest. The best circles will help one of their own to win a tournament when they are in position to do so.

Tournaments today are highly competitive and it’s very difficult to be successful on your own. Anglers that have that circle of guys they can rely on, will have a greater chance for success. Even though pro fishing is not always a team sport, having guys you can share accurate information with is a huge advantage.

We’ve all heard how the key to success is to surround yourself with the right people. Professional bass fishing is no different and now you can see that being a part of the right group can lead to success on the tournament trail.

‘Til next time, good luck, good fishing, and when in doubt, set the hook!

Contact Steve at sgraf26@yahoo.com


College football to head back South

Over the past quarter century, the South owns college football national championships. Monday night’s Michigan-Washington title matchup was rare as a Baptist who hates bacon.

Hope our northern football-playing brothers and sisters enjoyed Monday’s scrap — hat tip to the Wolverines, a fast and fun-to-watch 34-13 winner over the Huskies — because history suggests it will be a while before such shenanigans happen again. 

In the 1998 season, trying to break free from naming a national champion by poll voting (and because the new way would mean more money for the TV schools), college football moved to a Bowl Championship Series.

The first BCS Championship game was the 1999 Fiesta Bowl.

Tennessee beat Florida State, 23-16. Rocky Top.

The second was the 2000 Sugar. 

Florida State beat Virginia Tech, 46-29. Remember how VA Tech teams were mean back then? Blocked like four kicks a game? 

The third was the 2001 Orange.

Oklahoma beat Florida State, 13-2, to finish the season undefeated in a game no one remembers — outside of the opening coin flip by beloved actor Denzel Washington (who I almost ran over in my Jeep, corner of Lake and Louisiana, years ago — another story for another time).

You can’t help but notice something about those matchups, right? All the teams, both the winners and losers, are from Southern states. (And yes, Oklahoma, our geography books say, is part of the West South Central States, along with the Ark-La-Tex. Boomer Sooner.)

Nebraska, an Official Northern State, at long last made the finals in 2002 and was summarily handed its helmet by Miami, 37-14, back when The U was still The U and Nebraska was enjoying its final days of football glory.

We will summarize here to make the point: counting Monday night’s Michigan-Washington game, there have been 26 title contests since the BCS began. Of those, 22 have been won by Southern teams. Four have been won by Northern teams: Ohio State won it all twice (in 2003 against Miami in OT, 31-24, and in 2015 against Oregon, 42-20), USC beat Oklahoma in 2005, 55-19, and Michigan beat Washington Monday night.

So the South is 22-4 in The Big Pigskin Enchilada. That overwhelming. That’s rain water against Noah. Consonants verses verbs. No mas.

Of the 26 title games since the first one in 1999, 15 have been All Southern matchups. Nine have been North vs. South, and the South has won seven of those; the North’s two wins came when Ohio State beat Miami in ’03 and USC beat the Okies in ’05. Two title games have been All North: Ohio State over Oregon in 2015 and Monday night’s scrap down in Houston.

If those illustrations aren’t enough, the following names and numbers, to me, hammer home the South’s dominance in the past quarter century.

From 1999-2006 (the BCS infancy), eight different schools won the title, and four of the eight title games were All South matchups. Of the 16 teams in those eight games, only three were non-Southern schools.

From 2007-2014 — the BCS National Championship Game series over eight seasons — Alabama won three titles, Florida won two, and Auburn/Aubrin, Florida State, and LSU won one each. You’ll find Big Foot before you’ll find a non-Southern champion during this run. (Only Ohio State twice and Oregon and Notre Dame, once each, even played for a title during those eight seasons.)

Finally, since the “College Football Playoff National Championship” began with Ohio State beating Oregon in 2015, the Buckeyes in 2021 (52-24 losers to Bama) are the only Northern school, until Monday night’s matchup, to play in the title game. The other seven games have been All The South, All The Time. A whole bunch of Bama, Clemson/Climpson, Georgia, and LSU. Over and over and over. TCU wandered in from “over Texas way” last January representing the South and played as if they were from the North, getting drubbed by 58 by Georgia. Still, they were America’s next-best opponent and the Bulldogs found them just one time zone over.

It will be no surprise when next season’s 12-team playoff is Southern flavored. Book it. And it should come as no surprise to learn, in case you didn’t realize it, that the campus of the 2024 CFP champs is in Ann Arbor, and that Ann Arbor is in … southern Michigan. Deep Southern Michigan. Almost to the state line. Figures … 

Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu


Arrest Reports

The following arrests were made by local law enforcement agencies.

December 31, 2023

Oscar Robinson Jr., 47, of Eastpoint, Georgia, was charged with maximum speed limit and operating a vehicle with a suspended license; other offenses.

Rodney Baker, 37, of Arcadia, was charged with operating a vehicle with a suspended license; no license issued.

January 1

Janauya Dallas, 20, of Shreveport, was charged with maximum speed limit, operating a vehicle with a suspended license; no license issued and arrested on a warrant for failure to appear (misdemeanor).

January 3

Curtis Morgan, 48, of Ringgold, was charged with domestic abuse battery (felony), possession of firearm/carry concealed weapon by a convicted felon (felony) and aggravated assault with a firearm (felony).

Orlando West, 40, of Homer, was charged with operating a vehicle with a suspended license; no license issued.

Dusty Waters, 43, of Castor, was charged with a violation of probation/parole.

January 4

Derrell Isreal, 37, of Gibsland, was charged with expose genital/p.hair/anus/vulva/nipple in public, to arouse (felony).

Jarvis Cowans, 28, of Byram, Mississippi, was charged with driver must be licensed and maximum speed limit.

David Abbott, 27, of Arcadia, was charged with child support obligation (misdemeanor).

January 5

Adonis Loyd, 28, of Saline, was charged with two counts of attempt/second-degree murder (felonies) and domestic abuse battery (felony).

Lesley England, 26, of Castor, was charged with misdemeanor theft and exploitation of the infirmed (felony).

Jeff Holloway II, 41, of West Monroe, was charged with driving while intoxicated (BAC .08 to .15) (misdemeanor), and driving on roadway laned for traffic.

January 6

Jamie King, 36, of Shreveport, was arrested on a warrant for failure to appear (misdemeanor) and jumping bail (misdemeanor).

David Hester, 36, of Jonesboro, was arrested on a warrant for failure to appear (misdemeanor).

Michael Willis, 32, of Arcadia, was charged with simple assault (misdemeanor), domestic abuse battery (misdemeanor), simple criminal damage to property (misdemeanor) and resisting an officer with force or violence (minor injury) (felony).

This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named 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.


Today in History

1776 – “Common Sense” by Thomas Paine was published.

1840 – The penny post, whereby mail was delivered at a standard charge rather than paid for by the recipient, began in Britain.

1861 – Florida seceded from the United States.

1863 – Prime Minister Gladstone opened the first section of the London Underground Railway system, from Paddington to Farringdon Street.

1870 – John D. Rockefeller incorporated Standard Oil.

1901 – Oil was discovered at the Spindletop oil field near Beaumont, TX.

1911 – Major Jimmie Erickson took the first photograph from an airplane while flying over San Diego, CA.

1920 – The League of Nations ratified the Treaty of Versailles, officially ending World War I with Germany.

1927 – Fritz Lang’s film “Metropolis” was first shown, in Berlin.

1928 – The Soviet Union ordered the exile of Leon Trotsky.

1943 – U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt sailed from Miami, FL, to Trinidad thus becoming the first American President to visit a foreign country during wartime.

1943 – The quiz show, “The Better Half,” was heard for the first time on Mutual Radio.

1946 – The first meeting of the United Nations General Assembly took place with 51 nations represented.

1950 – Ben Hogan appeared for the first time in a golf tournament since an auto accident a year earlier. He tied ‘Slammin’ Sammy Snead in the Los Angeles Open, however, Hogan lost in a playoff.

1951 – Donald Howard Rogers piloted the first passenger jet on a trip from Chicago to New York City.

1957 – Harold Macmillan became prime minister of Britain, following the resignation Anthony Eden.

1963 – The Chicago Cubs became the first baseball club to hire an athletic director. He was Robert Whitlow. (MLB)

1971 – “Masterpiece Theatre” premiered on PBS with host Alistair Cooke. The introduction drama series was “The First Churchills.”

1978 – The Soviet Union launched two cosmonauts aboard a Soyuz capsule for a redezvous with the Salyut VI space laboratory.

1981 – In El Salvador, Marxist insurgents launched a “final offensive”.

1984 – The United States and the Vatican established full diplomatic relations for the first time in more than a century.

1986 – The uncut version of Jerome Kern’s musical, “Showboat”, opened at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC.

1990 – Chinese Premier Li Peng ended martial law in Beijing after seven months. He said that crushing pro-democracy protests had saved China from “the abyss of misery.”

1990 – Time Inc. and Warner Communications Inc. completed a $14 billion merger. The new company, Time Warner, was the world’s largest entertainment company.

1994 – In Manassas, VA, Lorena Bobbitt went on trial. She had been charged with maliciously wounding her husband John. She was acquitted by reason of temporary insanity.

1997 – Shelby Lynne Barrackman was strangled to death by her grand-father when she licked the icing off of cupcakes. He was convicted of the crime on September 15, 1998.

2000 – It was announced that Time-Warner had agreed to buy America On-line (AOL). It was the largest-ever corporate merger priced at $162 billion. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) approved the deal on December 14, 2000.

2001 – American Airlines agreed to acquire most of Trans World Airlines (TWA) assets for about $500 million. The deal brought an end to the financially troubled TWA.

2002 – In France, the “Official Journal” reported that all women could get the morning-after contraception pill for free in pharmacies.

2003 – North Korea announced that it was withdrawing from the global nuclear arms control treaty and that it had no plans to develop nuclear weapons.

2007 – The iTunes Music Store reached 1.3 million feature length films sold and 50 million television episodes sold.

2019 – In Venezuela, Juan Guaidó and the National Assembly declared incumbent President Nicolás Maduro “illegitimate” and started the process of attempting to remove him from office.

2020 – The green Ford Mustang from the 1968 Steve McQueen thriller “Bullitt” was sold for $3.4 million at the Mecum Auctions event in Kissimmee, FL.


Upcoming Events

Please send all non-profit calendar events to bpjnewsla@gmail.com

January 13 (6 p.m.)

Public Auction hosted by Faulk Auction Co. – 1968 N. Railroad Ave, Arcadia

January 19 – 20 (8 – 4 p.m.)

Saline SWCD Tree Sale, 2263 Hall Street, Ringgold

January 19-21

Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days

February 10 (10 – noon)

Arcadia Cookie Decorating Class – The Gathering Place General Store’s pARTy Room

Instructor: Amy Hobbs with the Little Sweet Shoppe

February 10 (5 – 8 p.m.)

Ringgold Elementary Mardi Gras Sneaker Ball – Elementary Gym

$10 per students. Grades 1 – 5 only.

February 10 (6:30 – midnight)

Krewe of Arcadia Mardi Gras Ball – Arcadia Event Center

March 16 (9 – noon)

District 2 Star of Hope O.E.S. 30th Annual Gala, “Star Struck” Welcome to Old Hollywood.

630 Factory Outlet Dr. Arcadia.

Attire: Sunday’s best with “fascinators and fedoras.”

Entertainment, food, drawings. Public is welcome to attend with a $5 donation at the door. 

May 25

The Authentic Bonnie & Clyde Festival – Downtown Gibsland


Notice of Death – January 9

Notice of Death – January 09, 2024

Willie G. Glover, Sr.

Sept. 12, 1952 – Jan. 05, 2024

Ringgold, La.

Wake: 5 – 6 p.m. Friday, Jan. 12, 2024, Memorial Funeral Home, Ringgold, La.

Graveside Service: Saturday, Jan. 12, 2024, Coleman Cemetery, Ringgold, La. with interment to follow.

Kenneth Lee Williams

April 14, 1973 – Dec. 30, 2023

Farmerville, La.

Visitation: 2 -5 p.m. Friday, Jan. 12, 2024, Memorial Funeral Home, Farmerville.

Funeral service: 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 13, 2024, St. Paul Baptist Church, Marion, La.

Interment: 3:15 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 13, 2024, St. Paul Cemetery #1, Marion, La.

Varnita Merrie Bartholmae Witcher

March 16, 1939 – Dec. 27, 2023

Minden, La.

Celebration of Life Memorial Service: 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 20, 2024, North Acres Baptist Church, Minden.

Bienville Parish Journal publishes paid complete obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $80. Contact your funeral provider or bpjnewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Above death notices are no charge.)


Arcadia woman recieves federal prison sentence for Drug Trafficking Conspiracy in Natchitoches area

ALEXANDRIA, La. – Seven members of a drug trafficking conspiracy in the Natchitoches, Louisiana area have all been sentenced, announced United States Attorney Brandon B. Brown. United States District Judge Dee D. Drell sentenced all of the defendants for conspiracy to distribute 50 grams or more of methamphetamine. The last remaining one was sentenced on December 22, 2023. The names of those defendants and their sentences are as follows:

James Christopher Weeks, 51, of Montgomery, Louisiana, was sentenced to 360 months (20 years) in prison, followed by 10 years of supervised release. Weeks pleaded guilty to the charge on October 14, 2022.

Savannah Maria Weeks, 31, of Arcadia, Louisiana, was sentenced to 78 months (6 years, 6 months) in prison, followed by 5 years of supervised release. S. Weeks pleaded guilty to the charge on June 29, 2022.

Eric Joseph Sandifer, 36, of Pineville, Louisiana, was sentenced to 120 months (10 years) in prison, followed by 5 years of supervised release. Sandifer pleaded guilty to the charge on November 29, 2022.

Ashley Danielle Dowden, 39, of Natchitoches, Louisiana, was sentenced to 96 months (8 years) in prison, followed by 5 years of supervised release. Dowden pleaded guilty to the charge on August 3, 2022.

Candiace Shree Bronson, 39, of Alexandria, Louisiana, was sentenced to 78 months (6 years, 6 months) in prison, followed by 5 years of supervised release. Bronson pleaded guilty to the charge on September 26, 2022.

Louis V. Jackson, 39, of Natchitoches, was sentenced to 360 months (30 years) in prison, followed by 10 years of supervised release. Jackson was the only defendant who went to trial and was convicted of conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine, felon in possession of firearms and possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine, by a jury in April 2023.

Adam James Johnson, 41, of Natchitoches, was sentenced to 235 months (19 years, 7 months) in prison, followed by 5 years of supervised release. Johnson pleaded guilty to the charge on March 16, 2023.

In early March 2020, agents with the Natchitoches Multi-Jurisdictional Drug Task Force (NMJDTF) received information regarding a group of individuals selling large amounts of methamphetamine in the Natchitoches area. Law enforcement agents began an investigation into these illegal drug trafficking activities and learned that James Weeks, his daughter, Savannah Weeks, Adam Johnson, Louis Jackson, and Eric Sandifer, were major methamphetamine distributors in northwest Louisiana. Dowden and Bronson were working closely with them in this drug trafficking organization. Through their investigation, agents conducted surveillance of these defendants on numerous occasions and in both Natchitoches and Alexandria, Louisiana. They were also able to obtain information from other sources as to the drug trafficking activities of these defendants.

Through their investigation, agents learned that J. Weeks, who was serving a 192- month imprisonment sentence in the Yazoo City Medium federal prison facility on a Western District of Louisiana drug conspiracy conviction, was conducting drug trafficking operations from the federal prison facility. J. Weeks was communicating through Facebook Messenger with S. Weeks, Johnson, and other co-conspirators about methamphetamine trafficking. On March 26, 2020, a K9 utilized by HSI-Riverside, California, alerted on a package at the San Bernardino, California, shipping facility destined to J. Weeks’ mother and daughter, S. Weeks, in Arcadia, Louisiana. A state search warrant was obtained, and six pounds of methamphetamine were recovered. J. Weeks admitted to agents that he had met a methamphetamine source of supply through another inmate in prison and that he was involved in the package being sent to his mother’s residence. J. Weeks introduced these sources to Johnson, who purchased the methamphetamine from them on several occasions.

In March 2020, agents conducted surveillance on Johnson’s home in Natchitoches and observed Dowden arrive and enter the residence. Shortly thereafter, both Dowden and Johnson left in separate vehicles. They were subsequently stopped for a traffic violation and agents recovered suspected drugs in Dowden’s possession. A search warrant was also later executed at Johnson’s residence which resulted in the discovery of approximately 3,720 grams of methamphetamine in the attic of Johnson’s home. Dowden hid two large bags containing the suspected methamphetamine in the attic at the direction of Johnson and also took trips to Dallas with him to retrieve the methamphetamine in exchange for large amounts of cash. A chemical analysis conducted by the North Louisiana Criminalistics Laboratory determined
the substance was in fact methamphetamine, having a total net weight of 3,716.7 grams and ranging between 89.4 and 98.4% purity level.

On March 3, 2020, while on supervised probation by Louisiana State Probation and Parole, Sandifer was arrested on a drug charge out of Oklahoma. Officers responded to his residence and found Sandifer who advised that there was methamphetamine in the vehicle in his yard and he admitted that he had been using the vehicle for several weeks. A search warrant was obtained and executed, and officers seized approximately 127 grams of actual methamphetamine, a digital scale, and baggies from inside the vehicle. Sandifer also had messages on his cell phone in which he was communicating with Johnson regarding methamphetamine trafficking in Natchitoches.

During their investigation, agents conducted surveillance at the Motel 6 in Natchitoches and the Best Western in Alexandria. On April 16, 2020, they observed Jackson pull into the parking lot of the Motel 6 and then depart the property. Agents obtained search warrants on those rooms which yielded 34 Tramadol pills, a Marlin rifle; model: 336CS; caliber: 30-30, a SCCY pistol; model: CPX-1, and several pieces of paperwork with Bronson’s name. On May 13, 2020, agents observed S. Weeks and a male arrive at the Best Western hotel and enter a room. S. Weeks departed and was subsequently pulled over in a traffic stop. Agents seized approximately 132 grams of actual methamphetamine from her, and it was confirmed to be actual methamphetamine.

A search warrant was obtained and executed on the Best Western hotel room, where Bronson and Jackson were present. Agents seized approximately 498 grams of methamphetamine, $11,300 in U.S. currency, and a purse belonging to Bronson. Bronson and Jackson were subsequently arrested. A chemical analysis was conducted on the suspected narcotics by the North Louisiana Criminalistics Laboratory and determined the substances seized from S. Weeks and the Best Western hotel room were in fact methamphetamine, having a net weight of 132.7 grams with 89.9% purity and 498.2 grams with 92.7% purity level, respectively.

“The successful investigation by the local and federal law enforcement agents in this case has resulted in over 20 pounds of methamphetamine being taken off the streets of northwest Louisiana,” stated U.S. Attorney Brandon B. Brown. “These types of investigations take a lot of hard work and man hours to develop, and our communities are much safer after getting these bad actors off the streets. I commend the efforts of these local and federal partners and we will continue to prosecute those who choose to traffic drugs in our district.”

“This investigation, and its subsequent successful prosecutions, were the result of a complete law enforcement team effort,” stated Natchitoches Parish Sheriff Stuart Wright. “The Natchitoches Multi-Jurisdictional Drug Task Force invested significant resources over the past three years and joined with other sheriff’s offices and federal law enforcement partners to take action and remove over 600 grams of methamphetamine from our community. And seven narcotics distributors are now in prison as a result of their dangerous criminal activity.”

“We appreciate the diligent and ongoing effort of the U.S. Attorney’s Office in prosecuting these cases in federal court,” stated Natchitoches Parish District Attorney Billy Jo Harrington. “Some of the defendants, including Johnson, are also facing charges in Natchitoches Parish. I also commend our local law enforcement agencies for their hard work and effort in removing illegal narcotics from our parish.”

This case was investigated by the Natchitoches Multi-Jurisdictional Drug Task Force (NMJDTF), Department of Homeland Security Investigations, FBI, ATF, Natchitoches City Police, and Rapides Area Drug Enforcement (RADE) Unit, and prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Cytheria D. Jernigan and Brian C. Flanagan.


Saline Bobcats and Lady Bobcats Get Unique Road Trip


By Shawn C. White

(Under the Radar NWLA)

Quick trivia question…What does Trent Ledbetter, Alana Gray, Eli Ferguson, Kacidy Sims, Zion Williamson, and Kawhi Leonard all have in common?  Answer:  The will all be playing on the basketball court at the New Orleans Smoothie Center on Friday, January 5.   You didn’t read that incorrectly.  The Saline Bobcats (12-9) and Lady Bobcats (6-15) will get the opportunity to play the Cedar Creek Cougars (10-4) and Lady Cougars (9-8), respectively, before the New Orleans Pelicans (21-14) hosts the Los Angeles Clippers (21-12).

According to the article in  the Jackson Parish Journal, Bobcats head coach Klint Robinson saw the opportunity through the New Orleans Pelicans in a “Court of Dreams” promotion for two high schools to play a girls and boys game before the Pelicans play.  The date available was January 5 and Robinson reached out to Cedar Creek coach Lance Waldrin and agreed to participate.  

“This is an experience of a lifetime! I am so grateful to get to be a part of it with this incredible group of girls.” said Saline girls head coach Chris Toms. “As always we hope to come out with a win but more importantly with this opportunity I just hope the girls soak it up and then hold on to the memories made for the rest of their lives.”

The girls will play at 12:30 tomorrow and the boys will follow.  The New Orleans Pelicans and LA Clippers will square off at 7:00 pm. 

Weekend Forecast

Bienville Parish Weekend Forecast:
 
Friday
Showers. High near 43. East wind 10 to 15 mph becoming northeast in the morning. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New precipitation amounts between 1 and 2 inches possible.
 
Friday Night
A 20 percent chance of showers before midnight. Cloudy, with a low around 36. Northeast wind around 5 mph becoming west after midnight.
 
Saturday
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 52. West wind around 10 mph.
 
Saturday Night
Areas of frost after midnight. Otherwise, partly cloudy, with a low around 31. West wind 5 to 10 mph.
 
Sunday
Areas of frost before 7am. Otherwise, sunny, with a high near 56.
 
Sunday Night
Partly cloudy, with a low around 37.
 
*Information provided by National Weather Service.

Adjustments needed as deer season winds down


It is often necessary to adjust the game plan at halftime when a football team is engaged in an important game. If the defensive backs are locked in on the receivers every play, consideration is given to a few quick-hitters into the line by the running backs. Conversely, if the defensive linemen are clogging up the middle expecting a run, it’s time to air it out to receivers.

By the same token, as deer season reaches its final weeks, it’s often necessary for hunters to adjust their game plans. Why? Because the bucks are making adjustments and if hunters don’t figure out what’s going on, they’re left wondering what the heck happened.

What happens during the latter days of hunting season after the rut is over? Bucks aren’t chasing does, unless the few does not bred during the first estrous cycle are still available for breeding. Basically, it becomes a rather difficult game to play as the bucks, exhausted and worn down from breeding and fighting other bucks, become rather difficult to pattern. For many hunters, if they don’t get their deer early, they hang it up after the rut and head for the lake where the bunched-up crappie are more predictable.

David Moreland, who retired from the Deer Study Leader position with LDWF several years ago, offers suggestions as to the best way to hunt bucks late in the season.

“In Area 2, northwest Louisiana, December generally marks the end of the rut. However, bucks may be looking for a few does that have not bred, but generally by mid-January, it’s over,” Moreland said.

This time of year in this part of the state, a game plan change is necessary to improve your chances at a good buck, according to Moreland.

“This is the time of year where hunting between the feeders may pay off as bucks move around looking for does. In late December, the trails through the woods leading to food plots and feeders are generally quite distinct and visible and this should be areas hunters ought to check out, determining where the deer are coming from and then locate a stand to catch the deer as they come to feed late in the evening,” Moreland added.

Another tactic that can work on tagging a late season buck, according to Moreland is to move the feeder.

“I like to change a feeder location or hang a bucket feeder in an area where you have seen deer but not hunted. Keep in mind that prevailing winds this time of year are generally from the north-northwest so your stand location should be in the south-southeast corner of the area. Again, hunters should stay on their stands until last light,” he added.

Moreland also suggested that hunters might want to freshen up their food plots toward season’s end.

“With bucks going back to the feeding mode after the rut, you might want to consider adding some nitrate to the grass patches and keep them attractive. Also if the weather is good; clear and cold with high pressure, plan to stay on the stand longer than normal.”

What about native brows plants? Hunters should plan to utilize what Mother Nature has already put there.

“Since many of the woody shrubs and trees lose their leaves, the focus will be on those that still have them. Blackberry, privet and honeysuckle would be three to look for since these will tolerate the cold temperatures and put out new growth on warm days. I have especially seen heavy use of honeysuckle in northwest Louisiana during late winter,” said Moreland.

Want to be on the winning team when it comes to getting a late season deer in your sight picture? Be adaptable. Change your game plan to correspond to what the deer are doing.

Blessings over blemishes

Well, here we are again… a brand new year. New Years has always been my favorite holiday. There is just something about a clean slate- a fresh start. But I always use this as a time to reflect on the past year; see what all I have accomplished, progress made and where I can make improvements. 

I am sure it is the same for most of you, the negatives always seem to stand out more than the positives. 

I cannot recall if I have ever mentioned the struggles I have had over the last decade with acne- the countless appointments, dozens of different doctors, multitudes of medication with little to no results.  

I finally found an amazing aesthetician that I have been seeing off and on for about six months now. Unlike the dozens of dermatologists I have seen over the years, she was more concerned with why this was happening and trying to cure it than just trying to remedy it temporarily.  

My complexion has come a long way since I began seeing her, but this past week has been a stressful one and stress always triggers my acne. I had a couple of places break out pretty badly. I reverted to wanting to hide at my house and not go out in public because I was embarrassed, but I had to go to my parents’ house for a fish fry.  

One of the first things my dad did was compliment me on how well my face looked. I was a little taken aback. I said thank you, but I also pointed out the two huge breakouts and told him it looked better before this past week. But it made me really (literally and figuratively) look in the mirror.  

Overall, my face did look loads better than it has in ten years. It made me realize something.  

We always harp on the negatives, so much so that we often forget the progress we have made and how far we have come.  

Why do we let a couple of blemishes on our record of accomplishment overshadow all the improvements? 

Well, I did a little research, and there is this thing called “Negative Sentiment Override.” 

Negative sentiment override occurs when negative feelings, such as anger or distrust, overshadow positive emotions. This can cause individuals to focus on negative experiences and ignore positive ones, leading to an overall negative view. 

So, what can we do to overcome this? Which also leads me to my personal New Year’s resolution. 

I am going to focus actively and consciously on the positive. I am not going to let a couple of negatives outweigh the loads of positives. I will not let a couple of small blemishes block me from acknowledging my blessings. 

(On a side note, for anyone dealing with literal blemishes, go see my girl Hannah Walker at the Nurse Aesthetician.)

(Paige Nash is a mother of three girls, publisher of Bienville Parish Journal and Claiborne Parish Journal and a digital journalist for Webster Parish Journal.)


Next up in New Orleans

Harrison St. John (left) and E.J. Lagasse

I have often wondered what it must have been like to have attended the Beatles’ first live performance as a group at the Cavern Club in Liverpool in 1961. I would have loved to have been in the gallery on the 18th green at Tiger Woods’ first PGA win at the 1996 Las Vegas Invitational. The same goes for Michael Jordan’s entrée into the NBA, Joe Montana’s first start in the NFL and Mickey Mantle’s first at bat in the Majors. 

As I ponder those various scenarios I wonder if I would have known — in the moment — that I was in the presence of future greatness? 

Some may say it’s too early to call, but I’d be willing to lay a month’s salary on the belief that I dined in the presence of future greatness last week at the newly-reimagined Emeril’s restaurant in New Orleans. And it’s not necessarily the restaurant — although I think it now stands atop the New Orleans fine dining hierarchy — but the chef. And it’s probably not the chef of whom you’re thinking.

Celebrity Chef, Emeril Lagasse, one of the most well-known, recognizable and multi-talented chefs in the country — and certainly the most noted and celebrated in New Orleans — has been a mainstay on the Crescent City’s food scene since his days at Commander’s Palace in the early 1980s. His flagship restaurant in the Warehouse District has spawned dozens of other concepts from Las Vegas to Orlando. I’ve been an avid admirer of Emeril, and his restaurants, from day one. But great restaurants aren’t all Lagasse has spawned. His son, 20-year-old Chef E.J. Lagasse, now manning the pass of his father’s namesake establishment, is one of the most impressive culinarians — regardless of age — I have met in my 43-year restaurant career.

Lagasse the younger has a resume that most 40-year-old chefs would covet. While most kids his age were spending summers riding bikes, playing video games, and hanging out at swimming pools, E.J. spent three summers in his early teens in the New York kitchens of the country’s most talented French chefs, Eric Rippert and Daniel Boulud. After graduating high school early and graduating from culinary school at his father’s alma mater, Johnson & Wales, he headed to Europe and staged in two separate Michelin three-star kitchens in Stockholm and London.

I first met E.J. Lagasse in the summer of 2022 while he was working at Emeril’s Coastal in the Florida Panhandle. My family and I were sitting at the food bar overlooking the kitchen— as I used to in the original Emeril’s years ago— and could tell by the way he carried himself in the kitchen that he was wise and experienced with a presence and self-assurance that belied his years. It was confidence without a trace of cockiness, a rare trait, especially in someone so young. 

My family and I dined at Emeril’s this past summer, before they were set to close for a complete overhaul of the kitchen, dining room, menu and general culinary philosophy. We were told that a major renovation of the restaurant was on the way, but the menu had already changed slightly with E.J. acting as Chef Patron. One could feel bigger changes on the horizon buzzing through the team.

Emeril was 23 when he took over as executive chef at Commander’s. E.J. bested that by three years at his father’s establishment. E.J. Lagasse is 20 going on 50 and one of the most impressive young men I have met — chef, or not. 

Last week my family and I dined at Emeril’s 2.0. From the preparation, presentation, professionalism and obvious skill level across the board, to the china, glassware and silver paired with every course, Emeril’s 2023 is in an altogether different league. In a city known for fine dining, but typically on a more relaxed level, this is New York and Paris-level fine dining excellence. I have toured the kitchens at The French Laundry and Per Se as well as several other Michelin three-star establishments and the facilities the father and son team of Emeril and E.J. have built — in a glassed-in fully visible kitchen from every spot in the dining room — rivals any I have seen.

Most of the former front-of-the-house veterans appear to be back, but the kitchen payroll seems to have doubled from the 1.0 version of the restaurant. The dining room is smaller and has fewer tables. According to E.J. they have gone from 400+ covers a night to 54. The economics of that change — from a business and financial standpoint — would be enough to make most restaurateurs overly anxious. But one can tell that the entire team at Emeril’s has bought into the father and son’s vision and mission. I have always believed that success follows passion, and there is enough passion in that building to fuel a couple of restaurants.

The menu is next-level and the service — from the initial tour of the kitchen to survey the evening’s ingredients that are to be used over the course of your meal to the table-side cheese cart — is polished and professional. Emeril’s is, in this columnist’s opinion, the best fine dining restaurant in the city, and possibly the entire South.

The current buzz is that New Orleans might be the next city covered by Michelin (way overdue). If that’s the case, I couldn’t imagine the newly-reimagined Emeril’s being anything less than a two-star establishment. 

My son, who is now in his second year of culinary school in upstate New York, is set to start his externship at Emerils in a few weeks. It will be nice to have him closer to home, though — as his career path goes — it will be even better to have him work in an environment where the son has an opportunity to surpass the father, which has been my dream for him since he first started discussing a future career in the restaurant business in his early teens.

Greatness must begin somewhere. That initial Beatles’ performance was probably a little rough around the edges. Mantle went 1-for-4 with an RBI and a run scored — an average day. Montana had a mediocre outing in his first start going 13 of 23 for 96 yards and a touchdown. E.J. Lagasse has hit a grand slam on his first at bat with the newly-reimagined Emeril’s. 

I’m not sure if we’re witnessing “future” greatness at all. It seems the greatness has already landed.

Onward.

Lobster and Brie Bisque

2 1-1/2-pound lobsters, cooked and cleaned (reserve meat for soup and shells for stock)

1 cup white wine

1/2 gallon lobster stock

1 cup tomato paste

2 cups whipping cream

1 bay leaf

1 pound brie, rind removed and cubed

1/2 teaspoon dried thyme or 2 teaspoons fresh chopped thyme

1/4 cup butter

1/3 cup flour

1/2 cup sour cream

2–3 tablespoons fresh chives, chopped

In a large saucepan, bring the lobster stock, white wine, and tomato paste to a boil. Continue to cook, allowing stock to reduce by half.

Meanwhile, in a double boiler, heat the cream and cheese together until the cheese has melted. 

In a medium-size skillet, heat the butter and add flour to make a blond roux. Once stock has reduced, add cream and cheese mixture to the stock. Add roux and bring to a boil. Lower heat and add reserved lobster meat. 

Ladle soup into serving bowls and garnish with sour cream and freshly chopped chives.

Yield: 3 quarts

(Robert St. John is a chef, restaurateur and published cookbook author who lives in Hattiesburg, Miss.)


Today in History

1781 – Richmond, VA, was burned by a British naval expedition led by Benedict Arnold.

1885 – The Long Island Railroad Company became the first to offer piggy-back rail service which was the transportation of farm wagons on trains.

1896 – It was reported by The Austrian newspaper that Wilhelm Roentgen had discovered the type of radiation that became known as X-rays.

1900 – In Ireland, Nationalist leader John Edward Redmond called for a revolt against British rule.

1903 – The general public could use the Pacific cable for the very first time.

1914 – Ford Motor Company announced that there would be a new daily minimum wage of $5 and an eight-hour workday.

1925 – Mrs. Nellie Taylor Ross was sworn in as the governor of Wyoming She was the first female governor in the U.S.

1933 – In California, construction of the Golden Gate Bridge began.

1934 – Both the National and American baseball leagues decided to use a uniform-size baseball. It was the first time in 33 years that both leagues used the same size ball. (MLB)

1935 – Phil Spitalny’s All-Girl Orchestra was featured on CBS radio on the program, “The Hour of Charm.”

1940 – The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) got its very first demonstration of FM radio.

1944 – The London “Daily Mail” was the first transoceanic newspaper to be published.

1948 – Warner Brothers-Pathe showed the very first color newsreel. The footage was of the Tournament of Roses Parade and the Rose Bowl football classic.

1956 – In the Peanuts comic strip, Snoopy walked on two legs for the first time.

1961 – “Mr. Ed” debuted. The show would run for six years.

1970 – “All My Children” premiered on ABC.

1972 – U.S. President Richard M. Nixon ordered the development of the space shuttle.

1987 – U.S. President Ronald Reagan underwent prostate surgery.

1993 – The state of Washington executed Westley Allan Dodd. It was America’s first legal hanging since 1965. Dodd was an admitted child sex killer.

1996 – Yahya Ayyash, a member of the Hamas in Israel, is killed by a booby-trapped cellular phone.

1998 – U.S. Representative Sonny Bono died in skiing accident.

2002 – A 15 year-old student pilot, Charles Bishop, crashed a small plane into a building in Tampa, FL. Bishop was about to begin a flying lesson when he took off without permission and without an instructor.


Upcoming Events

Please send all non-profit calendar events to bpjnewsla@gmail.com

January 8 (9 a.m.)

Bienville Parish Police Jury Meeting

January 10 (9 a.m.)

Bienville Parish Police Jury Meeting- 100 Courthouse Drive, Arcadia

January 13 (6 p.m.)

Public Auction hosted by Faulk Auction Co. – 1968 N. Railroad Ave, Arcadia

January 19 – 20 (8 – 4 p.m.)

Saline SWCD Tree Sale, 2263 Hall Street, Ringgold

February 10 (5 – 8 p.m.)

Ringgold Elementary Mardi Gras Sneaker Ball – Elementary Gym

$10 per students. Grades 1 – 5 only.


Notice of Death – January 4

Notice of Death – January 04, 2024

Catherine “CAT” Williams

Aug. 31, 1950 – Dec. 31, 2023

Farmerville, La.

Visitation: 2 – 5:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 5, 2024, Memorial Funeral Home, Farmerville.

Funeral service: 11 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 6, 2024, Zion Hill Missionary Baptist Church, Farmerville.

Interment: 12 noon Saturday, Jan. 6, 2024, Zion Hill Missionary Baptist Church Cemetery, Farmerville. 

Rosie Jackson

Sept. 2, 1946 – Jan. 1, 2024

Farmerville, La.

Visitation: 2 – 6 p.m. Friday, Jan. 5, 2024, Memorial Funeral Home, Farmerville.

Funeral service: 2:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan 6, 2024, Blooming Grove Baptist Church, Farmerville.

Interment: 3:45 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 6, 2024, Community Memorial Gardens (City) Cemetery, Farmerville.

Kenneth Lee Williams

April 14, 1973 – Dec. 30, 2023

Farmerville, La.

Visitation: 2 -5 p.m. Friday, Jan. 12, 2024, Memorial Funeral Home, Farmerville.

Funeral service: 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 13, 2024, St. Paul Baptist Church, Marion, La.

Interment: 3:15 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 13, 2024, St. Paul Cemetery #1, Marion, La.

Varnita Merrie Bartholmae Witcher

March 16, 1939 – Dec. 27, 2023

Minden, La.

Celebration of Life Memorial Service: 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 20, 2024, North Acres Baptist Church, Minden.

Bienville Parish Journal publishes paid complete obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $80. Contact your funeral provider or bpjnewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Above death notices are no charge.)


Arcadia and Ringgold Continue To Show Tournament Dominance


By Shawn White

(Under the Radar NWLA)

The No. 1 ranked  Arcadia Lady Hornets (19-2)went 4 for 4 this season in tournament play and they grabbed a big tournament title in the Doc Edwards Tournament played around North Bossier this past weekend.  The Lady Hornets started with a win over Northwood-SHV 64-47.  Interestingly enough, the Lady Falcons won the consolation bracket.  Arcadia then was once again matched up with parish rival, Gibsland-Coleman (6-10).  The Lady Bulldogs were the defending champions but the Lady Hornets prevailed 53-34.  Arcadia’s trip to the championship had them go through the daunting Benton Lady Tigers (11-10) with a 45-40 win for their second game on Friday.  This set up a chance for a fourth tournament title in 2023 by defeating the Hornbeck Lady Hornets (15-7).

The No. 3 ranked Ringgold Redskins (14-6)  looked to bring another trophy back to Bienville Parish.  Unfortunately, the first round for the Redskins was the defending tourney champions Huntington Raiders (12-5) and fell 50-47.  Ringgold had to take the consolation bracket route.  Ringgold’s Jbarri Adams put up 15-plus performances in each of the four games during the tournament.  The Redskins topped Homer (1-4) and Benton (8-9) to reach the consolation finals to face Loyola (4-9).   Ringgold ran past the Flyers 61-48.

No. 7 Division V non-select ranked Gibsland-Coleman Bulldogs (9-6) were two and out with losses to Bossier (12-6) and Haughton (9-10).

Saline Bobcats (11-9) started post-holiday action playing at Natchitoches Central against Division V Non-Select No. 6 Hicks Pirates (13-9).  Trent Ledbetter was the Bobcats top scorer with 18 points in the loss to Hicks.

No Starting 5 or Next 5 but should be back next week with teams getting ready for the start of the district. 

Boys

Thursday, December 28

Bossier 61, Gibsland-Coleman 51  (Doc Edwards)

Huntington  50, Ringgold  47  (Doc Edwards)

Friday, December 29

Hicks  58, Saline 47

Haughton 81, Gibsland-Coleman 76 (Doc Edwards)

Ringgold 81, Homer 53 (Doc Edwards)

Ringgold 59, Benton 50 (Doc Edwards)

Saturday, December 30

Ringgold 61, Loyola 48 (Doc Edwards)

Girls

Thursday, December 28

Arcadia  64, Northwood-SHV 57  (Doc Edwards)

Friday, December 29

Arcadia 53, Gibsland-Coleman 34 (Doc Edwards)

Arcadia 45, Benton 40 (Doc Edwards)

Saturday, December 30

Arcadia 65, Hornbeck 32 (Doc Edwards)

Boys Top Performances

  • Demarquis Durham, Gibsland-Coleman:  Durham scored 21 in a loss to Bossier
  • DeAvery Durham, Gibsland-Coleman;  Durham scored 20 in a loss to Bossier
  • Jbarri Adams, Ringgold: Adams scored 18 points in a loss to Huntington
  • Trent Ledbetter, Saline:  Ledbetter scored 18 points in a loss to Hicks
  • Jbarri Adams, Ringgold: Adams scored 17 points in a win over Benton
  • Jbarri Adams, Ringgold: Adams scored 17 points in a win over Loyola
  • Jbarri Adams, Ringgold: Adams scored 15 points in a win over Homer

Girls Top Performances

  • Arianna Williams, Arcadia: Williams scored 21 points in a win over Northwood-SHV
  • Rhyanna Abney, Arcadia:  Abney scored 16 points in a win over Benton
  • DeAsia Alexander, Arcadia: Alexander scored 15 points in a win over Northwood-SHV
  • Justice Young, Arcadia:  Young scored 15 points in a win over Benton.