Back-to-school supply inventory speaks a harsh reality

It’s “go time” for high school students as they return today to their respective campuses in Caddo and Bossier. Elementary school and middle school students in Caddo got a head start by beginning their school year last week. 

For the past 12 years, part of the Byrd Family tradition on the opening day of school has been to end our day by wading through the mass of late back-to-school shopping humanity at Target, Office Max, and Office Depot along Youree Drive in South Shreveport. 

It’s not for the faint of heart. 

Last year, while hunting for the perfect three-ring binder for my daughter, I saw a backpack which included a new feature for 2021-2022 … bulletproof backing at Office Max. Usually, backpacks will advertise stain resistance or liners in the pockets. I guess we have moved away from those bells and whistles to advertise how well it can hold up to a bullet.

Strange and sad times, indeed.

While I had heard that these were a thing, there was a different feeling seeing it in person hanging in the store and parents checking it out. 

My initial thought: manufacturers playing to the fears of the public – perpetuated by mainstream media. 

Then May 24, 2022 happened. 

Nineteen children and two adults were killed at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, Texas, the third deadliest school shooting in United States history.

There are no words in the dictionary to adequately describe what that community experienced on that day or has experienced in the 78 days since.

On June 21-22, my school year ended. As an assistant principal at C.E. Byrd High School, my last assignment was to attend the Louisiana’s Safe Schools Conference held by the Louisiana School Resource Officers, at the Shreveport Convention Center.

The keynote speaker, Phil Chalmers, talked to a room full of school administrators, school resource officers, sheriffs from around the state, and district level security personnel. 

As he talked to the attendees, calls came in over the sound system. These calls were from prisoners who had committed school shootings.

After Chalmers would briefly interview the school shooter, asking them what was going through their mind when they carried out the violence, and what–if anything–would have prevented them from doing it in the first place, he asked the convention attendees if they had any questions for the school shooter. 

Some law enforcement in the audience did, in fact, ask questions. I did not. 

This happened two or three times.

Chalmers interviewed these cold-blooded killers like a sleep-deprived sportswriter interviewing the quarterback after a high school football game. 

Later, Chalmers showed actual video footage of school shootings.

I’ve been an educator of 27 years, and it made me physically ill to watch the reactions of the bodies of students and teachers going limp from bullets received inside the classroom — to the point that I almost got up and walked out. 

Why am I watching this? What is the point?

I’ve thought about that convention and those questions in the seven weeks since. I’ve also thought about the mothers and fathers, the brothers and sisters, in Uvalde, Texas who are starting the school year without a child. Without a parent. Without a classmate.

Again, no words.

There is no back-to-school shopping excitement this year in that Southwest Texas town. Only horrific memories, anxiety, and emptiness left from the innocence lost on that day in Uvalde. 

While the mainstream media and politicians continue the blame game from a procedural standpoint, educators and school leaders across the country begin this school year adding emergency management protocols, lock down procedures, and active shooter trainings to their 2022-2023 lesson plans.

Sadly, it’s the new normal. Like loading up new back-to-school supplies in a bulletproof backpack.

Contact Jerry Byrd at sbjjerrybyrd@gmail.com


Captain Shreve’s Scotty Simo: Just a football player 

By LEE BRECHEEN, Louisiana Football Magazine

I remember watching the Captain Shreve football team in 2020 and seeing a number of Division I prospects in person as I was on the field during pregame warmups. There was Kendrick Law Jr., who signed with Alabama, and others. There was one young player who got my attention, and his name was Scotty Simo. All he did was make plays and play the game as it’s supposed to be played: one speed, full throttle.

I did not think of him two years ago as an FCS or Division II or D-III player. It just caught my attention to keep an eye on him for later on. So here we are two years later and he’s one of the top leaders for the Gators. He’s grown to 5-10, 195, and he is still that full-throttle guy. I was very impressed in 2021 when watching a game where Simo had several solo tackles on a great Class of 2023 running back by the name of Trey Holly of Union Parish, who you might have heard of since he has a chance this fall to break the record for yards in a career for a Louisiana running back – and he’s an LSU commitment.

So does Simo have FBS or FCS size? No, but what he has you can’t coach. He’s a “football player,” and there’s a place for players like this in college. He would be a big-time Division II linebacker with just a little more weight (200-plus), and for a Division III team, he’d be a steal. If he walked on to an FCS program, he’d be the type of player who would start within two years. If he decided to walk on at an FBS program, he would be a leader in the locker room, on the team, and play special teams within a year or two.

Linebacker coach Chip Kendall sees Simo making a smooth transition to inside linebacker.

“Scotty Simo was first team all-district as the defensive flex player last year, which perfectly describes how he worked in our defense,” Kendall said. “Simo was our outside linebacker, which is probably the most important position in our defense. He had to be able to step up on the line and set the edge in some calls, and at other times he had to cover a slot-wide receiver like a defensive back.

“Scotty did these things so well, he was recognized on the all-district team,” Kendall said. “During this past offseason, Scotty got stronger and gained some weight. This will be a transition year for Simo; with our losses at middle linebacker to graduation, we decided to move him inside, and he has picked it up quickly. His reads on defense and knowledge of our calls have been outstanding. He’s a leader; he lets guys know when they need to step up. His work ethic on the field carries over to the classroom. I don’t have to worry if he’s taking care of his grades or if he’s a discipline problem. We will be expecting a lot out of Scotty; he knows this and he embraces it. I’m looking forward to seeing his hard work pay off this season.”

Simo says he likes playing linebacker because of the leadership role that comes with it.

“What I enjoy most about football, apart from being a linebacker and getting to hit people, is the leader role that comes with being the QB of the defense,” said Simo. “While it does bring more pressure, I like that. I love my teammates knowing I’m the guy to come to if they are confused about anything. I like knowing, no matter the call, what all 11 starters’ jobs are on any given play. Football isn’t just about physicality; it’s a game of wits and if you’re not doing your job every play, then that will lead to a score. So making sure we are all in sync is my job.”

Notes on Scotty Simo: He recorded 52 tackles, 7 1/2 tackles for loss, three sacks, two forced fumbles, one safety and a pass deflection last fall.

Simo on his hobbies: “ I enjoy hoops with my friends whenever we are all free, playing video games such as 2K or Call of Duty, and walking or playing with my dog.”

On family and football: “My dad Scotty Simo Sr. and my uncle Jonathan Simo both still hold a lot of records at Loyola Prep. My dad only played his senior year, though, and my uncle played all throughout high school.”

In the classroom he has a GPA of 4.1 and ACT score of 22.

Thoughts on his favorite colleges: “LSU. I grew up watching them and being surrounded by LSU fans. Texas Tech for no real reason; they just have a nice football program. Louisiana Tech has a nice football program and I’ve been to their campus before.”

He would like to major in physical therapy. “I had a knee injury during the spring, which led to me going to physical therapy this whole summer. Before, I didn’t know what I wanted to major in, but this has brought a lot of interest in physical therapy to me.”

Contact Lee at lbrecheen@aol.com


Win streak moves to five weeks as Fed Ex Playoffs begin

No, we didn’t nail a 165-1 shot as we’ve done in the past, but another profitable week was delivered.

Our biggest bet of the week — Alfredo Garcia-Heredia to finish in the Top 20 – sent us to the window for a fifth-straight profitable week.

The PGA Tour Playoffs begin this week in Memphis, but I think they’re onto us. I did not find one single bet of value for the FedEx St. Jude Classic, but we have some Euro and Korn Ferry action!

Good luck and take a little bit of your profits from the past month to help make the day better for someone else.

Notes

All bets are measured in units. For instance, if your normal bet on a game is $100, that is one unit. If the bet is listed as .2 units, it’s a $20 bet.

Best line (as of Tuesday) is listed in parenthesis. Find the best price, one key to being a successful sports bettor! Shop around! Remember this is a VALUE-based system, so if don’t settle for a price significantly less than the one listed. And jump on better prices!

Sportsbook legend

CAE: Caesar’s

FD: Fan Duel

MGM: Bet MGM

DK: DraftKings

BS: Barstool

LANG’S LOCKS

Last week recap: +2.68 units

THIS WEEK’S SELECTIONS

DP WORLD TOUR

ISPS Handa World Invitational 

Top 20 bets

Deon Germishuys, .8 units, +270 (FD)

Richard Mansell, .6 units, +135 (FD)

Joakim Wikstrom, .5 units, +750 (FD)

Matthew Baldwin, .4 units, +250 (FD)

Maverick Antcliff, .4 units, +550 (FD)

Craig Howie, .4 units, +280 (FD)

Marco Penge, .3 units, +650 (FD)

Simon Thornton, .3 units, +1100 (FD)

David Borda, .3 units, +1100 (DK)

KORN FERRY TOUR

Pinnacle Bank Championship

Win bets

Taylor Montgomery, .1 unit, +2200 (DK)

Byeong Hun An, .1 unit, +19000 (FD)

MJ Daffue, .1 unit, +4100 (DK)

Contact Roy at roylangiii@yahoo.com


Tech, NSU developing confidence and raising expectations in practice

COMING TOGETHER:  With preseason workouts settling into a routine, Louisiana Tech football players and coaches are encouraged by the progress under new coach Sonny Cumbie.

JOURNAL SPORTS

RUSTON – With four fall camp practices complete, the Louisiana Tech football team continues to focus on improving daily and applying concepts from meetings to the playing field.

“At this point, it is just to get better from practice three and I think we got that done,” defensive coordinator Scott Power said. “We wanted to run the ball better and tackle better than we did last practice. Every day we teach new concepts, so guys are learning and applying them to the field. They did a good job of that and we will try to do the same thing when we come out here for practice five.”

One of the major themes of camp thus far has been the focus on meeting rising expectation levels.

“Yesterday in our meetings, our coaches raised our expectation levels,” stated defensive lineman Deshon Hall. “We took a step in the right direction today. We made those adjustments that Coach Power asked us and we have to keep making adjustments and improving as we raise those expectations throughout fall camp.”

In addition to improving each day, some things that have impressed Power about the LA Tech defense are the players’ retention of information, added depth and willingness to show up every day ready to work.

“I am impressed with our guys and how we have retained our information in the spring and the work they put in over the summer,” Power observed. “I think we have improved our depth from day one to where we are now. Everyone has bought into what we do and comes to work every day. It has been a really fun group to coach and work with. I want to see continued growth and improvement from our players. They have been really receptive so far in camp and I do not expect that to change.”

NORTHWESTERN STATE:  Every preseason football camp has mileposts, and Northwestern State hit a pair Tuesday morning.

Not only did the Demons don full pads for the first time, they did so at the one-week point of training camp.

“I think more importantly than talking about whether we’re in full pads or soft shells or just helmets is the consistency in execution,” fifth-year head coach Brad Laird said. “We’re six practices in. As we keep installing in all three phases, we have to continue to keep up. The consistency has not been there like I like it. Yes, it’s early on, but from an offensive and defensive standpoint, every part of practice is important.

“We were in full pads today, and there were a few live sessions, but there were a few sessions where we were thud. Those are just as important as the ones that are full go.”

The longer camp wears on, the less likely players are to relish workouts.

That wasn’t the case Tuesday.

“We’ve been looking forward to today for a long time,” said junior defensive lineman JaBralen Yarber. “Today was a very good first day in pads.”

NSU will conduct its first preseason scrimmage at around 9:45 Saturday morning.

Photo courtesy of Louisiana Tech


Rotisserie chicken offers a variety for dinner

By Kelsey Horath

Getting a meal prepared at the end of every day seems to be a steady reality that cannot be escaped. However, even after knowing this nightly ritual awaits, many do not plan for dinner until they drive home from work or school.

Lindsey Gregory, general manager of Smallcakes Monroe and longtime baker, knows just how hectic daily life gets and how hard meal preparation can be. To help save some time and energy after a long day, Gregory has shared her two most simple rotisserie chicken recipes.

“My time is the most valuable thing I have and every single second of my day matters, including the amount of time I spend preparing my meals,” Gregory said. “These recipes are two of my favorite go-to’s for a chicken recipe and they are so simple that they can even be made without a full kitchen.”

Busy days lead to extremely tired afternoons and having an already cooked portion of your meal gives more time for rest and leisure.

“The biggest benefit for me is the time saved by using a rotisserie chicken instead of having to cook one,” Gregory said.

Daniel and Cassidy Jones, Ruston residents, and newlyweds, know exactly how hard it is to make time for meals after a busy work and school day.

“After I go to classes all day, it is very frustrating trying to plan a meal on the spur of the moment,” Cassidy Jones said. “Rotisserie chicken recipes are always a favorite of mine to save a little extra time for Daniel and me.”

Not only do rotisserie chicken recipes save time but also provide leftovers and bigger portions to be made.

“We love to host other college students over at our home and the rotisserie chicken recipes allow enough portions to feed everyone,” Daniel Jones said.

Applying these recipes to everyday life also allows one to be watchful and educated on health and what enters the body.

“One of the most important benefits is knowing exactly what’s going into your food,” Gregory said. “I have psoriasis which is an autoimmune disease and knowing exactly what foods affect my body has made a huge difference in my body inside and out.”

Gregory added rotisserie chicken recipes are based on personal preference and taste; therefore, allowing the recipes to be easily modified to fit anyone’s budget, nutritional needs, and taste buds.

Buffalo Ranch Chicken Wraps

Ingredients:

1 rotisserie chicken
1 ¼ – ½ cup of Frank’s Buffalo Chicken Sauce
½ stick of butter melted (optional)
Sliced cheese of choice
Burrito size tortillas
Ranch Dressing
Lettuce
Sliced Tomatoes
Directions:

Remove chicken from the bone and shred. Place in a bowl and mix in Frank’s Buffalo Sauce. For a less spicy wrap mix ¼ cup of buffalo sauce with ½ stick of melted butter. If you desire extra spice, add ½ cup of buffalo sauce.

Lay a tortilla flat and start assembling your wrap. Add a slice of cheese, buffalo chicken mixture, lettuce, and tomatoes, and top with Ranch. Tuck the sides of the tortilla in, roll it up, and enjoy.

Chicken Enchilada Bowls

Ingredients:

1 rotisserie chicken
1 pack of taco seasoning
½ cup of sour cream
1 can diced green chilis
1 can enchilada sauce
Uncle Ben’s Ready Rice- Cilantro Lime is my favorite but use what you like
1 can black beans (optional)
Shredded cheddar cheese
Directions:

Remove chicken from bone and shred it into a bowl. Add in taco seasoning, sour cream, green chilis, and half a can of enchilada and mix well. Heat the Uncle Ben’s Ready Rice in the microwave according to the directions on the package. Drain and rinse black beans. Time to build the bowls: add ¼- ½ cup of rice, ¼ cup of black beans, ½ – 1 cup of the chicken mixture, and top with 2-3 tablespoons of enchilada sauce and shredded cheese.


Notice of Death – August 9, 2022

Jerry Malone
November 27, 1936 — August 7, 2022
Visitation: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 10:00 a.m. at First Baptist Church, 543 Ockley Drive, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at First Baptist Church, 543 Ockley Drive, Shreveport.

Bruce Newton Lynn, Jr.
September 10, 1950 — August 6, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 10:00-11:00 a.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 1815 Marshall Street, Shreveport.
Services: Friday, August 12, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 1815 Marshall Street, Shreveport.

Truett Brown
April 11, 1945 – August 5, 2022
Graveside services: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 3:00-4:00 p.m. at Converse Cemetery, Converse.

Mary Tom Arnold
April 20, 1937 — August 5, 2022
Visitation: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 10:00-11:00 a.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 1315 Ringgold Avenue, Coushatta.
Services: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 1315 Ringgold Avenue, Coushatta.
Interment: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 12:15-1:15 p.m. at Springville Cemetery, Coushatta.

Arthur James Reed
October 31, 1936 – August 3, 2022
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Sunflower Baptist Church, 349 East Texas Street, Bossier City.

Wayne Morris
July 14, 1956 – August 5, 2022
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Good Samaritan Funeral Home, 2200 Laurel Street, Shreveport.

Arthur Willie Bates
May 15, 1945 – August 5, 2022
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 1:00 p.m. at Good Samaritan Funeral Home, 2200 Laurel Street, Shreveport.

Earnest Phillip Fegley Jr.
September 30, 1941 — August 7, 2022
Visitation: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 12:30-2:00 p.m. at Calvary Baptist Church, 9333 Linwood Avenue, Shreveport.
Celebration of Life: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Calvary Baptist Church, 9333 Linwood Avenue, Shreveport.

Maurice H. Lamothe
June 11, 1933 – August 7, 2022
Mass of Christian Burial: Thursday, August 11, 2022, 10:00-11:00 a.m. at St. John Berchmans Cathedral, 939 Jordan Street, Shreveport.

James “Jay” Braden Atherton
August 12, 1974 — August 3, 2022
Graveside services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 3:30-4:30 p.m. at Rose-Neath Cemetery, 5185 Swan Lake Spur, Bossier City.

Judith “Judy” Babineaux Wells
January 27, 1941 — August 6, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 5:00-7:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 3:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Interment: Saturday, August 13, 2022, at Forest Park West Cemetery, 4400 Meriwether Road, Shreveport.

Lois Amy Stutts
July 17, 1929 — August 4, 2022
Visitation: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 9:00-10:00 a.m. at Kings Temple United Pentecostal Church, 8951 Kingston Road, Shreveport.
Services: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 3:00 p.m. at Kings Temple United Pentecostal Church, 8951 Kingston Road, Shreveport.
Interment: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, at Forest Park West Cemetery, 4400 Meriwether Road, Shreveport.

Patricia Ann Bazer Fullerton
August 19, 1939 — August 6, 2022
Graveside services: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Bethel United Methodist Church Cemetery, 219 Bethel Road, Logansport.

Russell McConnell
May 14, 1928 – August 5, 2022
Visitation: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 10:00-11:00 a.m. at Osborn Funeral Home, 3631 Southern Avenue, Shreveport.
Graveside services: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Forest Park Cemetery, 3700 St. Vincent Avenue, Shreveport.

Joseph Sherman
March 6, 1986 – August 1, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 11:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. at Heavenly Gates, 1339 Jewell Street, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 10:00 a.m. at True Holiness Church, Shreveport.
Interment: Saturday, August 13, 2022, following services at Lincoln Cemetery, 6917 W. 70th Street, Shreveport.

Gertie Allen
April 5, 1932 – July 31, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 11:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. at Heavenly Gates, 1339 Jewell Street, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Morning Star Baptist Church, 5340 Jewella Avenue, Shreveport.
Interment: Saturday, August 13, 2022, following services at Lincoln Cemetery, 6917 W. 70th Street, Shreveport.

Doris Anderson
August 29, 1954 – August 3, 2022
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Union Star Baptist Church, 600 W. 65th Street, Shreveport.
Interment: Saturday, August 13, 2022, following services at Lincoln Cemetery, 6917 W. 70th Street, Shreveport.

Kenneth Eugene Lemmons
December 26, 1934 — July 29, 2022
Visitation: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 2:00-3:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 1815 Marshall Street, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 3:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 1815 Marshall Street, Shreveport.

Katie Gertrude Amis
December 25, 1933 — August 5, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 1:00-2:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Services: Friday, August 12, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Interment: Friday, August 12, 2022, at Rose-Neath Cemetery, 5185 Swan Lake Road, Bossier City.

Claiborne “Barry” Broocks
January 23, 1954 — August 5, 2022
Visitation: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 11:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Services: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Interment: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, at Forest Park West Cemetery, 4000 Meriwether Road, Shreveport.

Samuel K. Carnahan
December 18, 1945 — July 29, 2022
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Aulds Funeral Home Chapel, 7849 East Kings Highway, Shreveport.

Tammy Lynn Rubey
June 7, 1970 — July 29, 2022
Visitation: Thursday, August 11, 2022, 5:00-8:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Services: Friday, August 12, 2022, 12:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Interment: Friday, August 12, 2022, at Providence Baptist Church Cemetery following services.

Lewis Kilbourne Forrester Kalmbach
July 22, 1961 — July 17, 2022
Services: A Celebration of Life honoring Lewis will be held from 2:00 p.m. until 6:00 p.m., Sunday, August 14, 2022, at Big Sun Studios, 619 Edwards Street, Shreveport.

Mary Harris
February 2, 1924 – July 22, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 11:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m. at Heavenly Gates, 1339 Jewell Street, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Lincoln Memorial Cemetery, 6915 W. 70th Street, Shreveport.

The Shreveport-Bossier Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $90. Contact your funeral provider or SBJNewsLa@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to SBJNewsLa@gmail.com)


Russell’s Louisiana-rooted legacy has more context than you may know

Where does Bill Russell fit in American sports history?

Undoubtedly in the stratosphere. His teams won two NCAA basketball championships, an Olympic gold medal, and 11 NBA championships in the 13 seasons he played professionally. Despite never being the Boston Celtics’ top scorer, his defense, his rebounding, his intensity and his intelligence made him the cornerstone of pro sports’ greatest dynasty, one that produced eight straight NBA crowns and earned him five NBA Most Valuable Player awards.

Where does Bill Russell fit in Louisiana sports history?

He was born in West Monroe, on Feb. 12, 1934, during hard times for nearly all Americans and certainly for those of color living in the Deep South.  He spent the first nine years of his life there, where extended family members remain, where his mother, Katie, was buried after she passed at age 32, of a kidney infection, three years after she and his father, Charlie, decided to move their family west to Oakland, hoping for better opportunities. 

But membership in the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame is not among the cascade of accolades awarded Russell, who died in his sleep at the very wise old age of 88 Sunday a week ago.

Why not?

Because of a rule developed in the mid-1970s, when the Louisiana Sports Writers Association considered him for its Hall a few years after he retired in the wake of leading the Celtics to another NBA crown, the second time as player-coach, the first Black head coach in pro sports history. Through the years, that LSWA standard has been referred to as “the Bill Russell Rule” – to be eligible for selection, an athlete or coach has to have either played three seasons of high school sports and graduated with a Louisiana Department of Education degree, or have played two years at a state college, or competed for at least five productive years in the state as a pro.

That excluded Russell. And since, it’s been applied to star athletes including basketball greats Marques Johnson (born in Natchitoches), Antawn Jameson (Shreveport), baseball’s Reggie Smith (Shreveport) and gold medal USA Olympic gymnast Carly Patterson (Baton Rouge). That’s just a quick list of sports luminaries born, and in some cases, raised past their elementary school years here before their families relocated them.

Russell may not have contemplated being excluded by his home state’s Hall. After all, he declined to attend his Celtics’ jersey retirement ceremony or even his enshrinement in the nearby Basketball Hall of Fame. In his later years, at an NBA All-Star Weekend in New Orleans, LSHOF selection committee member Ted Lewis briefly spoke with him and asked if Russell had interest, better late than never, in being spotlighted here.

“No, not really,” was the reply, consistent with his lifelong values.            

“It is better to understand than be understood,” he would tell his daughter. And, “you should live a life with as few negatives as possible – without acquiescing.”

One of Russell’s trademarks was declining to sign autographs. Not even for his Celtics teammates.  That was almost uniformly taken as his being churlish and aloof but, instead, it was his belief that a handshake and perhaps a momentary greeting, or even a conversation, was infinitely more personal.

Bob Remy, an esteemed New Orleans sports historian who worked on stat crews for the New Orleans Jazz, Pelicans and Saints, decided as a young adult to ask for Russell’s signature when he visited as head coach of the Seattle Supersonics.

“He said he did not sign autographs. As I turned away, I felt him tap me on the shoulder, and I turned toward him. He looked at me and said, ‘Thank you for asking.’”

Boston-born Bill Magrath has a rarity. It’s a weathered, torn sheet of thin card-stock paper, the back of a roster card from a 1964 Celtics’ game in the fabled Boston Garden in the midst of the dynasty, the Celts on the way to their fifth-straight NBA championship in that mind-blowing string of eight in a row.

It’s got more than a signature — there’s a sweet backstory.

“From one Bill to another, Best wishes, Bill Russell,” it reads.

A keepsake from a kind man, once a lanky Bay Area kid with only one college scholarship offer but an incomparable competitor who rapidly ascended to become one of the world’s most successful athletes. As Boston’s biggest star left the Garden, discreetly from a side door on a stormy winter night, he encountered a very small-for-his-age boy, tugging on his raincoat and shouting, “Mr. Russell, Mr. Russell!” The very tall man, already well known for not signing autographs, swept up the kid in his arms. Then, after a brief chat, he scribbled a note nobody could have imagined would be such a treasure 60-some years later.

Bill Magrath was 9 years old.  Even then, he understood Russell’s reluctance. “Black people were not treated well in Boston in those days,” said Magrath, who holds a master’s degree in sports administration from Northwestern State and is the retired media relations manager for the Sports Business Daily.

Russell was not mean when his experience could have embittered him. But he always rose up against  racism and injustice. He stood alongside Martin Luther King Jr. and Muhammad Ali. Jackie Robinson asked for Russell, who didn’t know him personally, to be one of his pallbearers, because he was Robinson’s favorite athlete – for the way he competed, on the court, and in life.

Russell didn’t remain in Boston after shelving his sneakers. He returned to the west coast and eventually settled in Seattle. He lived a happy life, on his terms. He listened to NPR and watched Jeopardy or Star Trek. He enjoyed Aretha Franklin and Willie Nelson. He played golf. He read. He encouraged those he loved and, often unexpectedly, others. One night, Daily Show comic Jon Stewart fielded a call from Russell, completely out of left field. Stewart tweeted, “He thought I looked sad. Best pep talk of my life.”

Russell didn’t need, or want, to be in any Hall of Fame. But our teachers, our coaches, our leaders, our mentors need to share his story, much more than just his basketball feats, for generations to come.

Because Bill Russell fits in American history.

Contact Doug at SBJDoug@gmail.com

  • With attribution to reporting by the late Frank Deford, and Rick Reilly.

Bossier Parish – New central library complex

Steel beams are going up on the new $10 million, 39,000-plus square foot Bossier Parish Library System central branch location and expanded history center at the corner of Beckett St. and City Hall Dr.

Heather McEntee, director of the parish library system, said the new central library complex will be one of the finest facilities anywhere. Available in the new facility will be creative spaces for individuals who want to stretch their imaginations, a film and music studio, a separate teen area, and larger children’s areas.

One feature of the new central complex will be an expanded history center that will focus on the colorful, impactful history of Bossier Parish with more in-depth features on people, places, and events that have influenced the area.


Johnson’s Bearkats won’t shy away from lofty expectations

Sophomore Quintarion Scott (at left) didn’t play football last season, but he’s earned the starting quarterback job since joining coach DeAumante Johnson’s second Bossier HS team for spring practice.

By JERRY BYRD JR., Journal Sports

It’s year No. 2 of the DeAumante Johnson era on Bearkat Drive, and while Bossier High School will move up from Class 3A to 4A in 2022, Johnson’s expectations for his football team remain the same.

“Nothing has changed,” Johnson said. “The mindset will always be to win a state championship. I told our guys that when the level of competition rises, we rise with it. That’s why we push them every single day. We aren’t going to shy away from anybody.”

Johnson, who went 6-5 during his first year at the helm, finishing with a 36-7 loss in the first round of the LHSAA playoffs to Iowa, lost a couple of big-time players to graduation in Sedric Applewhite (McNeese State) and Marquise Harris (Arkansas State). But there is still plenty of talent on the Bearkat roster. And like most high school coaches this time of year, Johnson is excited about the product he will soon put on the artificial grass at Bossier’s Memorial Stadium. 

One of the main sources of Johnson’s excitement is his new sophomore quarterback, Quintarion Scott, who played basketball last year, then decided to come out for football.

“He watched from the stands last year,” Johnson said. “He liked what he saw and wanted to be a part of something special. He has really bought in to what we are doing.”

While Scott is relatively new to football, Johnson said that fans will not be able to tell when they watch him on game nights. 

Blocking up front for Scott will be one of Johnson’s best leaders on the team – senior offensive lineman Keith Hall.

“Keith can play left tackle or he can play center,” Johnson said. “The thing I like about him is that he is vocal and very positive. There is not a negative bone in his body.”

On the defensive side of the ball, the Bearkats return their leading tackler from a year ago, linebacker and defensive end Christian Johnson (6-1, 205), who won a state championship for the Bossier wrestling program during the offseason.

“He has a high motor,” Johnson said. “He loves contact. He is not very vocal, but he leads by example.”

If you attended a Bossier football practice last year, you probably heard Johnson tell his players to “be a shark” and noticed how the practices were high-tempo, high-energy.

“I use it every single day,” Johnson said. “I love sharks. I love what they stand for, and that’s how I want my guys to play. As far as the tempo goes, we are even faster this year now that we are in year No. 2. The expectations are even higher.”

While numbers in the past have been a problem at Bossier, those concerns do not appear to be an issue. The Bearkats finished 2021 with 46 players, and with additions, like Scott, there are currently 52 players on the roster.

Additions have been made on the coaching staff as well, where Johnson brought in former Evangel coach Virgil Williams in the spring and added Mississippi State graduate assistant C.J. Morgan during the summer. Williams will coach corners and Morgan will coach safeties.

“Those two guys bring a ton of knowledge with them,” Johnson said. “From drops to different coverages and eye placement, they know what they are talking about and our players understand that these guys have been there.”

The Bearkats will get a taste of where they are on Friday, Aug. 19 when they host Red River in a 6 p.m. scrimmage. A week later, the Bearkats host their annual Bossier Jamboree, battling with Plain Dealing before opening the 2022 season on the road at North Caddo on Thursday, Sept. 1.

Contact Jerry at sbjjerrybyrd@gmail.com

https://shreveportbossierjournal.com/2022/07/18/bossier-back-in-district-1-4a-for-2022-season/

https://shreveportbossierjournal.com/2022/06/22/bearkats-guice-should-shine-at-db-at-the-next-level/

Photo by JERRY BYRD, Journal Sports


Parkway has pair of solid LBs in Newman, Mayweather

By LEE BRECHEEN, Louisiana Football Magazine

Not many high school football teams go into a season with two potential all-state linebackers who can both be used all over the field (all linebacker spots), but that’s what Parkway coach Coy Brotherton has with a talented Class of 2023 set of linebackers in Barrett Newman who is 6-2, 215 and Ray Mayweather at 6-1, 205.

I saw Newman play on film on special teams as early as the 2020 season and knew then he had something to him talent-wise. This is someone who runs a legit 4.7 40 and looks faster on the field as a football player. I love his high effort every play and admire that at one time he was a four-sport athlete at Parkway.

I see Newman as a true mike linebacker in college with the ability to beef up to 225 or 230 pounds because he has the height to put on good weight and keep his speed. With that combo, he could have a career at the FBS or FCS level.

I saw Mayweather play as far back as 2020, also at Mansfield; he was a freshman and the best player on the field back then. He moved to defense in Week 5 in 2021 and had 12 1/2 sacks; he also had 50 1/2 tackles, three fumble recoveries, 22 1/2 tackles for loss and three blocked kicks.  That’s production.

He’s a football player who rushes the passer off the edge with 4.6 speed but has the size for outside linebacker in college. He can either gain more weight and get up to 225 or 230, keep his speed, play buck/outside linebacker as a rusher, or he could go to outside linebacker and would need only maybe 10 more pounds of muscle to make that move; that would put him at 6-1, 215.

Mayweather would be a steal for any FCS program and can prove FBS programs wrong if they don’t offer him because they’re looking for 6-3 to 6-5 defensive ends who rush the passer at 250 to 275 pounds. The best pass rusher I ever saw come out of Louisiana was a guy named Greg Gathers from East St. John in LaPlace; he stood 6-0 and weighed 240 and went on to Georgia Tech and made All-American with over 30 career sacks.

Brotherton doesn’t mince words when he says Newman is what makes his defense go.

“Barrett is going to be a three-year starter for us in baseball and football,” said Brotherton. “He is a natural leader that makes our defense click. He reacts fast, plays downhill, and will hit you.”

Linebacker coach Chris Kennady thinks Newman will have a great season for the Panthers.

“Barrett is the type of kid you would like to build your program around,” said Kennady. “He led the team in tackles last year with 93 total. I expect another big year from him this year. He’s had a great offseason and that will carry over to this season. Barrett is also a great student, leader and of course a great football player.”

Brotherton says Mayweather plays at a high rate of speed.

“Ray moved over to defense last year,” said Brotherton. “He ended the season with 12 1/2 sacks coming off the edge in our 4-3 defense. Ray has one of the highest motors in all of Class 5A. He is fast and plays 100 miles per hour.”

Kennady sees Mayweather as one of the top players in Class 5A if he plays like they expect.

“Ray — ‘Nasty 19’ as he likes to be called — is an incredible player,” said Kennady. “If he has the year we expect from him, there will be a ton more offers coming his way in 2022. He’s going to be a force to be reckoned with this year in Class 5A.”

When it comes to looking into the future, Mayweather has some in-state programs in mind.

“Some of the colleges I like are Grambling State, Southern University and LSU,” said Mayweather. “I grew up watching those schools play and it’ll be a dream come true to be a part of one of those programs in the end of my recruiting. I can sum up what I like about football and that’s (winning games).”

Notes on Ray Mayweather: In the classroom he has a GPA of 3.6 and an ACT score of 18.

His “most recent family to play college football,” he said, are Arkez Cooper in 2017 and Deuntae Youngblood in 2020, both at Grambling State.

Mayweather likes playing Madden video games and football.

He attended the Grambling State camp over the summer.

Mayweather would like to major in sports medicine or kinesiology in college.

Notes on Barrett Newman: Newman’s dad played football for Army at West Point.

His hobbies are “working out to get stronger on the field and learning about history, especially wars because it is interesting.”

His favorite colleges are “Arkansas, Liberty and Louisiana Tech because they talk to me the most.

“I hit the camp circuit hard this summer and went to 13 camps and also had some visits,” said Newman. “Arkansas, Army, Yale, Penn, TCU, ULM, and UAB are some of the colleges I went to. What I like most about football is it’s legal to be able to hit the opposing team. You can play tough as much as you want and nobody can do anything about it — it’s football.”

Newman has a GPA of 4.1 and an ACT score of 24.

He wants to major in biology and go into med school and “become an orthopedic surgeon and perform Tommy John surgeries on MLB players,” he said.

Newman on playing other sports: “I also play baseball and I skipped out on playing with my National Team this summer to hit the football camp circuit and get bigger and faster. I play outfield in baseball and I’m very good at tracking balls down and making big plays.”

Contact Lee at lbrecheen@aol.com


Tigers get physical in first preseason full pads work under Jackson

By T. SCOTT BOATRIGHT, Special to the Journal

GRAMBLING — The popping of pads against pads filled the sweltering air at Grambling State University’s football practice field Monday morning as the Tigers donned full gear for the first time this preseason.

First-year head coach Hue Jackson said the practice presented for the most part exactly what he expected to see.

“It was a typical first day in pads — sloppy but physical,” Jackson said. “I didn’t expect to see anything more or anything less. The players are focused and working hard, and it was a good practice.”

Good, but by no means perfect, Jackson added.

“I think a lot of the sloppiness is it being the first day in pads,” Jackson said. “And that’s the way it usually happens. The players have been anticipating putting on the pads and doing some hitting and doing some live tackling. That raises the anxiety levels, and that turns into sloppy play sometimes.

“But today was a good day and last week was a good first week. Now we still have a long way to go before the season begins, but we’re off to a good start. We just have to stay focused on getting better every day.”

Jackson said newer players who weren’t out for spring practice are grasping more and more of GSU’s schemes and systems day by day.

“They’re catching on — they’re coming,” Jackson said of GSU’s newcomers. “They’re still learning and don’t know how it all works yet, but I think they’re handling it well.”

Another thing Jackson’s Tigers are handling well is the blistering heat that hovered around 95 degrees by the end of Monday’s practice.

“They can take it,” Jackson said. “I have a team that wants to win and they are willing to do whatever it takes to make that happen. That’s where it all starts.

“You’ve got to have the desire, the discipline, and dedication to doing it the way we do it. And that’s what they’re doing. So we just have to keep pushing through the heat and keep moving forward and getting better.”

The Tigers will take a break today before returning to the practice field on Wednesday.

Contact Scott at TScottBoatright@gmail.com

Photo courtesy Grambling State University


Trainer specializes in getting young horses ready to race

IN TRAINING: Sunny and Clear is a two-year-old filly that trainer Al Cates (at left) is preparing for her first race, assisted by Noel Almenarez.

By TONY TAGLAVORE, Journal Sports

Just as a child has to crawl before it can walk, a horse has to walk before it can run.

That’s where Al Cates’ horse sense pays dividends.

A full-time trainer since 2005, Cates works with racehorses of all ages. He is noted for having a knack for getting two-year-olds — the “babies” — ready for the track.

“I really enjoy the young horses because you just never know,” Cates said. “When you get one, no matter what they look like, you just never know until you get going with them and see what kind of heart they’ve got.”

Actually, with one horse, Cates did know.

In 2012, Our Quista was bought for $5,000 at a yearling sale in Monroe. Cates began training the dark brown mare when it was two years old. Our Quista finished in the money in nine of his 11 career starts, won multiple stakes races, and earned more than $266,000.

“I was never more confident that it was going to be a racehorse,” Cates remembered. “It had the look. It was big, and trained lights out. When I put the jockeys on it for their work, they would come back telling me how good it was. They were right on that one.”

But it doesn’t always work that way.

“Sometimes you can just get a feel if they’re going to be a racehorse or not,” Cates said. “There are some, that it’s just the opposite. It just doesn’t look like racing is going to be their career. But it’s a guess, because they can fool you. I don’t think you really know for sure until you put them out in a race.”

But before a horse ever leaves the starting gate, there is a lot of work to do. Work that includes teaching a horse how to leave the starting gate.

“The first time we go (to the track), we will take two (horses), so they will have a buddy with them,” Cates said. “We’ll just go up there and let them look at it. We’ll have the gate crew open the gate, and just let (the horses) walk through. That’s it — just walk through, then come on back. We’ll do that a few times, then slowly, we’ll let them stop and stand in there. Eventually, we will set the front, then hand-open it — not machine-open it — and let them walk out.”

Then, it gets serious.

“(The rider) will let them do it like they want — come out easy — a few times, and then that rider will start asking them a little bit. Then, when it comes time to ring that bell, that will startle them and help them come out.”

Training a young horse requires Cates to be mindful of more than how fast it breaks from the gate, or how quickly it breezes through three furlongs.

“With babies, you have to be careful,” Cates said. “Their legs aren’t fully developed. They don’t have a great immune system yet, so they catch a lot of colds. You just have to kind of monitor them as you go along.”

Owner Mike McDowell has trusted Cates to get several of his young horses ready for the show.

“He really does a great job of evaluating a two-year-old, as far as where they are physically, and maturity-wise,” McDowell said. “If he feels like one needs to be turned back out for another six months to mature a little bit more before they send them to the track, he’ll be flat-out honest with you.”

Patience is key when it comes to training a two-year-old. For example, Sunny and Clear — owned by McDowell — had been preparing for her first race. But . . .

“We worked her three furlongs a couple of weeks ago, and she came back with some sore shins,” Cates said. “That’s kind of common in babies. All it means is that we have to go kind of easy on her maybe the rest of the month. Then, she will resume her speed work. That will get her ready for a race.”

Sunny and Clear isn’t a particularly big horse, but that doesn’t mean she won’t win big.

“She’s kind of on the small side, but she was born in the middle of May, which is kind of late for a baby,” Cates explained. “That’s why we’ve had to go a little easy on her.

“One of the things she’s impressed me with is that she’s intelligent. It seems like she picks up things really easy. We’ve had her at the gate training, and she took that good. She’s easy to ride. She’s easy to train. Sometimes those may be a little slow in developing, but they usually come around.”

The 68-year-old Cates, who began training full-time after a 30-year career with AT&T, has more than 1,400 career starts. His horses have earned more than $4.9 million. Through the years, Cates has noticed something that separates the average newbie from a really good one — and it has nothing to do with physical ability.

“Some of the horses do it easier,” Cates said. “It comes more natural to them than others. I think they’re just smarter. I like a horse who has a good head on it. One that catches on quick (and) is not really spooky. And you can tell. Some of our babies, they’ve just got what I call, ‘A good head.’ They catch onto everything. Everything kind of comes easy to them, and I think they’re just smart.”

Cates runs his horses at Louisiana Downs, Oaklawn Park, and Keeneland — site of this year’s Breeders’ Cup. But when getting his younger horses ready to race, Cates prefers they do their work at Louisiana Downs.

“Billy McKeever is over the track,” Cates said. “He’s been there a long time, and I can’t say enough good things about him. He has us a good surface to train on. It can get a hard rain, and it’s still not bad. He just does a good job. I think that’s why I don’t have a lot of trouble with my two-year-olds.”

And the last thing a trainer — or a parent—wants is to have trouble with a two-year-old.

Louisiana Downs races Saturday through Tuesday. Post time is 3:05.

Contact Tony at SBJTonyT@gmail.com

Submitted photo

Mr. Menu is an advertising company that produces in-house and take-home menus for locally owned restaurants statewide. The menus are full color, printed on heavy stock paper and provided to the restaurants at no charge. The menus cycle every three to four months and they allow advertisers to speak to the customers of popular locally owned restaurants. Mike Whitler became the owner/operator of Mr. Menu in 2006, and has since grown the business to include dozens of menus and hundreds of advertisers across the state of Louisiana.

Orange Breakfast Muffins

School is starting back for the kiddos, and that means all hands on deck to make it as easy as possible!  What that means for me is planning suppers we are happy to sit down and eat together at the end of the day as well as breakfast the boys actually want to eat.  Don’t get me wrong, we love a cereal or Pop Tart morning just like most others, but baking something like these Orange Breakfast Muffins makes me feel as if I’ve contributed to their day a little bit better than that strawberry Pop Tart will.

These are really so so good.  I love a muffin that can hold a taste and not taste just like crumbs after a day.  This recipe is definitely that!  I hope you will try them and enjoy them!

Muffins

• 1 3/4 cup flour
• 2/3 cup sugar
• 1 tablespoon baking powder
• 1/2 teaspoon salt
• 1/2 cup butter, melted
• 1 cup sour cream
• 1 large egg
• 1/4 cup orange juice
• Zest of 1 orange
• 1/4 teaspoon almond extract

Glaze

• 1 1/2 cups powdered sugar
• 1/4 cup orange juice
• 2 teaspoons orange zest

Directions

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Line a muffin tin with paper liners. 
In a large bowl whisk together flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt.

In another bowl whisk together the butter, sour cream, egg, orange juice, orange zest, and almond extract. Whisk well.

Add wet ingredients to dry ingredients. Stir with a wooden spoon until combined. Fill muffin tins. Bake 16-18 minutes. 

Meanwhile, make the glaze. Whisk powdered sugar with orange juice and orange zest. After muffins are done let them cool for 10 minutes before topping with glaze.

*Adapted from Damn Delicious.  Shared originally by Emily Porter.

Ashley Madden Rowton is a wife, mom, and contributor to Webster Parish, Natchitoches Parish, and Shreveport-Bossier journals, as well as a published cookbook author.


Notice of Death – August 8, 2022

Arthur James Reed
October 31, 1936 – August 3, 2022
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Sunflower Baptist Church, 349 East Texas Street, Bossier City.

Wayne Morris
July 14, 1956 – August 5, 2022
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Good Samaritan Funeral Home, 2200 Laurel Street, Shreveport.

Arthur Willie Bates
May 15, 1945 – August 5, 2022
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 1:00 p.m. at Good Samaritan Funeral Home, 2200 Laurel Street, Shreveport.

Earnest Phillip Fegley Jr.
September 30, 1941 — August 7, 2022
Visitation: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 12:30-2:00 p.m. at Calvary Baptist Church, 9333 Linwood Avenue, Shreveport.
Celebration of Life: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Calvary Baptist Church, 9333 Linwood Avenue, Shreveport.

Maurice H. Lamothe
June 11, 1933 – August 7, 2022
Mass of Christian Burial: Thursday, August 11, 2022, 10:00-11:00 a.m. at St. John Berchmans Cathedral, 939 Jordan Street, Shreveport.

Jimmy John Wilson
May 1, 1981 — August 5, 2022
Celebration of Life: Tuesday, August 9, 2022, 2:00-4:00 p.m. at Aulds Funeral Home Chapel, 7849 East Kings Highway, Shreveport.

James “Jay” Braden Atherton
August 12, 1974 — August 3, 2022
Graveside services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 3:30-4:30 p.m. at Rose-Neath Cemetery, 5185 Swan Lake Spur, Bossier City.

Judith “Judy” Babineaux Wells
January 27, 1941 — August 6, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 5:00-7:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 3:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Interment: Saturday, August 13, 2022, at Forest Park West Cemetery, 4400 Meriwether Road, Shreveport.

Betty Lee Jones
January 22, 1929 — August 7, 2022
Graveside services: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 10:00-11:00 a.m. at Arcadia Cemetery, 1776 Locust Street, Arcadia.

Lois Amy Stutts
July 17, 1929 — August 4, 2022
Visitation: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 9:00-10:00 a.m. at Kings Temple United Pentecostal Church, 8951 Kingston Road, Shreveport.
Services: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 3:00 p.m. at Kings Temple United Pentecostal Church, 8951 Kingston Road, Shreveport.
Interment: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, at Forest Park West Cemetery, 4400 Meriwether Road, Shreveport.

Kevin Ray Moseley
December 19, 1962 — August 3, 2022
Visitation: Tuesday, August 9, 2022, 10:00-11:00 a.m. at Open Door Fellowship Church, Coushatta.
Services: Tuesday, August 9, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Open Door Fellowship Church, Coushatta.
Interment: Tuesday, August 9, 2022, 12:30 p.m. at Mt. Zion Cemetery, Hall Summit.

Patricia Ann Bazer Fullerton
August 19, 1939 — August 6, 2022
Visitation: Tuesday, August 9, 2022, 5:00-7:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 1815 Marshall Street, Shreveport.
Graveside services: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Bethel United Methodist Church Cemetery, 219 Bethel Road, Logansport.

Russell McConnell
May 14, 1928 – August 5, 2022
Visitation: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 10:00-11:00 a.m. at Osborn Funeral Home, 3631 Southern Avenue, Shreveport.
Graveside services: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Forest Park Cemetery, 3700 St. Vincent Avenue, Shreveport.

Joseph Sherman
March 6, 1986 – August 1, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 11:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. at Heavenly Gates, 1339 Jewell Street, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 10:00 a.m. at True Holiness Church, Shreveport.
Interment: Saturday, August 13, 2022, following services at Lincoln Cemetery, 6917 W. 70th Street, Shreveport.

Gertie Allen
April 5, 1932 – July 31, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 11:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. at Heavenly Gates, 1339 Jewell Street, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Morning Star Baptist Church, 5340 Jewella Avenue, Shreveport.
Interment: Saturday, August 13, 2022, following services at Lincoln Cemetery, 6917 W. 70th Street, Shreveport.

Doris Anderson
August 29, 1954 – August 3, 2022
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Union Star Baptist Church, 600 W. 65th Street, Shreveport.
Interment: Saturday, August 13, 2022, following services at Lincoln Cemetery, 6917 W. 70th Street, Shreveport.

Kenneth Eugene Lemmons
December 26, 1934 — July 29, 2022
Visitation: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 2:00-3:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 1815 Marshall Street, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 3:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 1815 Marshall Street, Shreveport.

Katie Gertrude Amis
December 25, 1933 — August 5, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 1:00-2:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Services: Friday, August 12, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Interment: Friday, August 12, 2022, at Rose-Neath Cemetery, 5185 Swan Lake Road, Bossier City.

Claiborne “Barry” Broocks
January 23, 1954 — August 5, 2022
Visitation: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 11:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Services: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Interment: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, at Forest Park West Cemetery, 4000 Meriwether Road, Shreveport.

Swepson Jackson Weldon
March 29, 1941 — August 3, 2022
Visitation: Tuesday, August 9, 2022, 9:00-10:00 a.m. at Centuries Memorial Funeral Home, 8801 Mansfield Road, Shreveport.
Celebration of Life at Graveside: Tuesday, August 9, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Northwest Louisiana Veterans Cemetery, 7970 Mike Clark Road, Keithville.

Samuel K. Carnahan
December 18, 1945 — July 29, 2022
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Aulds Funeral Home Chapel, 7849 East Kings Highway, Shreveport.

Tammy Lynn Rubey
June 7, 1970 — July 29, 2022
Visitation: Thursday, August 11, 2022, 5:00-8:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Services: Friday, August 12, 2022, 12:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Interment: Friday, August 12, 2022, at Providence Baptist Church Cemetery following services.

Lewis Kilbourne Forrester Kalmbach
July 22, 1961 — July 17, 2022
Services: A Celebration of Life honoring Lewis will be held from 2:00 p.m. until 6:00 p.m., Sunday, August 14, 2022, at Big Sun Studios, 619 Edwards Street, Shreveport.

Maisie Joan Perrin
May 18, 1933 – July 20, 2022
Services: Tuesday, August 9, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Osborn Funeral Home, 3631 Southern Avenue, Shreveport.

Mary Harris
February 2, 1924 – July 22, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 11:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m. at Heavenly Gates, 1339 Jewell Street, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Lincoln Memorial Cemetery, 6915 W. 70th Street, Shreveport.

The Shreveport-Bossier Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $90. Contact your funeral provider or SBJNewsLa@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to SBJNewsLa@gmail.com)


Former Parkway star Eric Brown Jr. moves quickly to Low-A

Eric Brown Jr.’s whirlwind summer continued Sunday with a near-cross-country flight from Arizona to North Carolina. After just a week at the Arizona Complex League, the Milwaukee Brewers bumped the former Parkway baseball star to their Low-A minor league club in Zebulon, North Carolina.

“It’s all happened pretty fast,” Brown told the Shreveport-Bossier Journal as he waited in baggage claim Sunday night.

Brown was the 27th overall pick in the 2022 MLB Draft on July 17 and the 21-year-old shortstop hasn’t had a lot of time to reflect on his dream come true.

Brown, his parents, his girlfriend and his hitting coach were whisked to Milwaukee to visit the big club.

“I got to walk around (American Family Field), signed my contract and I met Christian Yelich and Andrew McCutchen — guys I’ve looked up to since high school,” said Brown, who has attempted to replicate parts of Yelich’s swing.

His first on-the-field stop came in Phoenix at the ACL, where he found a somewhat rude introduction to pro ball.

“I was up against a Double- or Triple-A pitcher, and after not seeing live pitching for about two-and-a-half months, it took a second to adjust,” Brown said.

Brown recovered from the 0-for-3 debut to post a .308 batting average and a 1.009 OPS during his first week.

“The Brewers have a great video crew,” Brown said. “They send the at-bats to your phone through an app and you can watch it whenever. Once I saw those first at-bats I was able to get back into the swing of things. When I got the first (hit) out of the way, everything started to click. It was pretty awesome.”

The 5-foot-10, 190-pounder also scored seven runs and swiped four bases in 17 plate appearances.

“It’s fun to steal bases,” Brown said. “I recently added that to my game. (Cape Cod League) coach (Mike) Roberts showed me a trick to steal bases. It’s made the games 10 times more fun. Basically, I feel that when I have a single I can make it into a double.”

The Brewers wasted no time moving him to the Carolina Mudcats in Zebulon, located less than three hours from where Brown exceled for Coastal Carolina University.

The Mudcats enjoy an off-day today before game action resumes Tuesday against the Delmarva Shorebirds in Salisbury, Maryland.

“The coach texted me and said, ‘For your first minor-league game you have to travel six hours on a bus.’”

The Mudcats have barely more than a month left in the regular-season, but Brown will soak in every second, including the final series of the year, set for Sept. 6-11 at Myrtle Beach, South Carolina – where his draft stock rose while with the Chanticleers.

Contact Roy at roylangiii@yahoo.com

https://shreveportbossierjournal.com/2022/07/18/first-round-mlb-pick-brown-to-carry-memories-of-20-into-pros/


Four-star general born at Barksdale makes history

COMMANDING THE TROOPS: Lt. General Michael E. Langley (right) is the Marine Corps first black four-star general. (Photo by Casey Price/US Marine Corps)

By TONY TAGLAVORE, Journal News

When Lt. General Michael E. Langley asked about the weather in northwest Louisiana, he was not surprised to hear it is unbelievably hot and unbelievably humid.

The Lt. General knows all about our summers—and working long days outside in sweat-soaked clothes.

“I spent a number of summers going to help my grandmother, fixing fences and slopping the hogs down in Rodessa,” Lt. General Langley, who was speaking from Washington, D.C., told the Journal. “We were growing up in Fort Worth at the time. In the summers, my father would drive us out and drop us off in Rodessa to work the land.”

The 60-year-old Lt. General—who was born at Barksdale Air Force Base—recently became the first black, four-star general in the Marine Corps 246-year history. He doesn’t hesitate to credit at least some of his military success to what he learned during those summers in the 1970s.

“The value of hard work,” Lt. General Langley said. “Knowing no one is going to give anything to you. That’s the main reason my father, in the summers, would see us sitting around and not doing anything, and my grandmother needed some help because she still had over 80 acres in Rodessa. She was getting up there in age. He told her, ‘Miss Emma, I’m going to bring these kids down there and put them to work.’ That’s exactly what he did. We got there and she put us to work. It just built character.”

Lt. General Langley’s connection to Rodessa began before he was born. Willie C. Langley was traveling by train to his assignment at Barksdale. Lt. Langley’s mother got on the train in Marshall. The two struck up a conversation, and then she laid down the law.

“She said, ‘If you want to court me, you have to come to meet my father,’ who lived on the family farm in Rodessa.”

He did, they got married, and Lt. General Langley was born in 1961. Soon after, Lt. General Langley’s father was transferred, and the family moved to Florida. After Lt. General Langley’s mother died, he, his siblings, and his father moved to Carswell Air Force Base in Ft. Worth, to be closer to Lt. General Langley’s grandmother.

“It was like down-home, real people,” Lt. General Langley remembered of going to Rodessa. “It was a departure from the Dallas-Ft. Worth area. We always enjoyed our summer barbequing, fixing fences, and working the fields. It was bonding with our cousins, with our grandmother, our aunts, uncles, and siblings.”

“We always enjoyed going to the Ark-La-Tex area,” Lt. General Langley said. “Rodessa, Doddridge, Arkansas, and Atlanta, Texas—all of that area was pretty much our stomping grounds when we were kids.”

At his promoted rank, Lt. General Langley will be the commander of U.S. Africa Command in Stuttgart, Germany, and will command all U.S. military forces in Africa. He hopes his success is an example to those who are where he once was—working a farm in a rural northwest Louisiana village.

“It shows the youth across society the opportunities that the Marine Corps has for leadership and contribution to the country,” Lt. General Langley said. “Whether it’s a young kid on the south side of Chicago, or a young kid down there in Rodessa or some kid in the Appalachians, it doesn’t matter. Everyone gets an opportunity if they want to serve their country, and if they want to be a part of operational excellence.”

Contact Tony at SBJTonyT@gmail.com


Falcons started preparing right away to fly high again

Note – This is the first in a series previewing all local high school football teams.

By JOHN JAMES MARSHALL, Journal Sports

One day after a crushing 2021 quarterfinal loss to eventual Class 4A state champion Westgate, Northwood football coach Austin Brown called a meeting of the coaching staff to let them know one thing.

The 2022 season had just begun.

“I told the staff that we had a lot of guys returning with speed and strength,” Brown says. “We’ve got to focus on the mental aspect and the team aspect. Make sure egos stay checked and that personal expectations don’t outweigh the team goals.”

Nine months later, that message was brought home once again as Brown put the Falcons through a 72-hour “lock-in” at the school before the start of pre-season workouts. Throwing, catching and tackling will come soon enough, but Brown wanted there to be a bigger message with the lock-in.

“The focus is on team building,” he says. “When you go through something like this together, you tend to get a little bit closer to each other. Getting up at 6 o’clock, going at it all day long. Those things aren’t fun. But there is a lot of bonding, even with freshmen and seniors.”

Other than the slight issue of having security lights in the gym that wouldn’t go out at night – “they toughed it out,” Brown says – the coach says it got the Falcons where they need to be as they begin preparations for the ’22 season.

And make no mistake about it – there are high expectations for Northwood football this year.

This is a team that was the No. 4 seed, lost by two points to the eventual state champion and returns plenty of experience, including some of the top recruits in the area.

“It may be cliché, but it’s still the same thing for us,” Brown says. “Play good, hard, efficient football and play good defense. That’s the way it’s been for us the last few years. But with the players and coaching staff we’ve got, the expectations are high for our community.”

The 2018 team was undefeated in the regular season and 13-1 overall, so success is nothing new. But Brown believes there are intangibles at work for this year.

“You want your best players to be hard workers, but our best players also love Northwood football,” he says. “That’s shown through to our younger classes and it’s a team-wide thing. They all love Northwood football.”

Mar’Javious Moss will get plenty of attention from the opposition and Brown says using him in the right circumstances will be the key.

“We kind of outsmarted ourselves last year,” Brown says. “He was primarily on offense last year and defense when we needed him. Then we realized that we needed him on full-time defense and special packages on offense. He’s going to touch the ball 5-10 times on offense.”

Moss could line up anywhere – he’s played quarterback, receiver, running back, defensive end, linebacker, cornerback and safety – and scored six different ways last year. He also had five interceptions in a game.

“The most impressive thing about him is his football intelligence,” Brown says. “He understands what the (opposing) offense is trying to do or what the defense is trying to do.”

Senior defensive end TaDerius Collins, who showed up as a freshman at 6-1, 190 and is now 6-4, 250, “is just a freak. If you draw up what you want a Division I defensive end to look like, that’s him.”

Junior quarterback Mason Welch (6-3, 225) will be running the offense again. “We have to kick him out of the office sometimes,” Brown says. “The coaches are ready to go home and see their families and he’s wanting to watch more video. He’s a student of the game.”

Brown expects two-time All-District running back Quintavion White to get 20-25 carries per game. Slot receiver Marc Denison “will be our go-to guy on offense,” Brown says.

Offensive tackle Ja’marion Kennedy (6-3, 305) will be anchoring the offensive line and will be seeing time both ways.

On defense, there’s addition by subtraction. Disruptive nose tackle Ted Jamison moved over from offense. “I have to pull him out of practice sometimes because we can’t get anything done with him destroying everything,” Brown says.

Biggest question mark? “If our young offensive line can protect our quarterback and lead the run game,” Brown says.

Contact JJ at JohnJamesMarshall@yahoo.com

Northwood enters season on a roll

Northwood has quite the DL duo with Jamison, Collins

Northwood’s Dennison draws comparison to Trent Taylor

Northwood DB to sparkle this fall for Falcons


Southwood LB Walters has next-level talent

By LEE BRECHEEN, Louisiana Football Magazine

Southwood has had some really good players come out of its program the past few years, even though the team probably hasn’t been talked about as much, like back during the high school career of former Super Bowl quarterback Stan Humphries, who is now one of the state’s best amateur golfers, and girls basketball coaches (Ouachita Christian) many years later.

There’s still talent at Southwood, a program full of history. The most talented player on a team full of prospects right now is someone I have watched for three years:  Corinthian Walters, who I saw play quarterback going all the way back to the 2020 season when he started some games at that spot. He’s also played running back, wide receiver, defensive back, and now linebacker.

I feel Walters is a bona fide big-time sleeper FBS prospect at outside linebacker, a hard spot to find recruits that fit the FBS level right now. Walters runs a legit 4.55 to 4.6 40, is 6-1 and weighs anywhere from 200 to 205 pounds on the eve of his of his senior season.

Walters is mature beyond his years, smart, and what I love more is he’s a team player. He has played wherever the coaches need him.

I think as an outside linebacker in college he could be a three-year starter for many programs. He is capable, with a strong senior season in 2022, of being a very sought-after FBS player by many colleges that did not recruit him in the spring or summer. He has the “IT factor;” he has the stuff to be great.

“Corinthian Walters is the ideal student-athlete,” said head coach Jesse Esters. “He sports above a 3.3 GPA in the classroom. He’s a student leader to incoming freshmen and a role-model citizen around our campus. After the loss to Byrd in 2021, he made a promise to dedicate the next nine months to building and conditioning his body to be a better player on the field.”

“He powerlifted and ran track,” said Esters. “He had gotten up to 210 pounds before track season and trimmed down. Every recruiter that came through the doors of Southwood was impressed with who he was and what he brought to the table. We expect nothing but the best from him.”

“I like the game of football because of the competition,” said Walters. “I have always been a competitor since I was little, and football just did it for me.”

“My first offer was from Louisiana Christian (formerly Louisiana College), and I have high interest from schools like East Texas Baptist, ULL, Mississippi College, Belhaven College, and a few others from the spring and early summer.”

My guess is more opportunities will come his way this fall. At an FCS program, he could find the field quickly. At a lower level, he could start very early. Wherever he lands, he’s the kind of person and competitor who will make an impact.

Contact Lee at lbrecheen@aol.com


Generations bond as Demon Brothers’ tradition continues to develop

BONDS RENEWED:  Northwestern State football coach Brad Laird, who set the Demons’ career passing records from 1991-95, visited with fellow former players during Saturday’s Demon Brothers Booster Club ‘Feed the Team’ event in Natchitoches. 

By JASON PUGH, Special to the Journal

NATCHITOCHES – What began a few years ago as a stopgap measure to help the Northwestern State football team has morphed into a true fall camp tradition that bonds generations of Demon brothers.

A report-day lunch in 2018 that sent then-first-year head coach Brad Laird scrambling launched a reunion of sorts for several local NSU football alumni. Four years later, the number of former players involved in the event had grown nearly tenfold and added the support of the Demon Brothers Booster Club.

Saturday’s meal under the Collins Alumni Pavilion brought to an end the first week of fall camp for the Demons, who open their season on Sept. 3 at Montana.

It also capped a weekend in which the Demons heard from three-time All-American and two-time Super Bowl champion linebacker Gary Reasons, a member of the College Football Hall of Fame and Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame.

“This thing has grown,” Laird said. “There were four men, former players, who really kick-started this thing. The cafeteria wasn’t available that year, so this started with four guys and now you’re at 100-plus involved. It shows our players — we talk about family and once they leave here the memories they’re going to have, the relationships they’ll develop – this shows them what we’re talking about. It works both ways.

“It’s good for our players to see these former players come back, and it’s good for these former players to be able to see who’s now in their locker room and on the same practice field they were.”

Those generations gathered following the fourth practice of camp for the Demons, listening appreciatively to the list of Demon football alumni who were involved with or donated to Saturday’s effort. It raised over $13,000 through the Demon Brothers, established by former players for their peers, coaches, staff, and their families to directly support the football program.

Like Laird, the original group of NSU alums who pitched in to start the impromptu tradition remains thankful for the bonds it has forged in a relatively short period of time.

“We’re just taking care of the kids,” said Gary “Mojo” Morgan, a linebacker from 1981-83 who fielded one of the initial calls from Laird in 2018. “We never had anything like this as players. It turned out to be a great deal, and we said then, ‘We need to continue it.’

“When you get to mingle with the kids, especially the ones who come up to you and want to talk to you about anything – whether it’s education or something you understand – when you go to a game, you find yourself watching that kid. It becomes special.”

Retired 17-year head coach Sam Goodwin (1983-1999), longtime team physician (1982-2021) Dr. Jim Knecht, and other former staffers mingled with current Demons and players from the mid-1960s to recent years. Demon Brothers brought meals to the players at their seats, then after the program, lingered for quite some time trading memories.

The decades of camaraderie and the wisdom from older players continue to resonate within the current Demon roster.

“It’s really important to know what it took for these guys to be successful, win college championships, be All-Americans,” sophomore wide receiver Dylan Fluellen said. “It’s very important for us to take that and use it to our advantage. We hear all year what these guys are talking about, but to hear it from guys in the Louisiana (Sports) Hall of Fame or the N-Club Hall of Fame, it’s that source that proves to us that it’s possible, and we’re capable of doing it. Same message, different voice.

“Having those guys come out here and share that with us today is a real boost for us going into the season. We’re always going to be connected no matter what happens or what adversity we face.”

Contact Jason at PughJ@nsula.edu

Photo by JASON PUGH, Northwestern State


Manchin-Schumer inflation reduction bill will do the opposite

By Royal Alexander/Opinion

Having worked as a staffer on Capitol Hill for a number of years, I know from experience that cynical members of Congress will often disguise the true content of legislation through the use of a legislative title that is misleading at best and a patent lie at worst.

As George Orwell wrote in 1984, this is the doublespeak of the Thought Police who insist that “War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength.” The goal is to deploy a compliant, dishonest media to repeat the title of the legislation ad nauseam until the lie is embedded in the news fabric and the truth is hidden from the people. As the propaganda minister for the National Socialist German Workers (Nazi) Party, Joseph Goebbels noted, “if you repeat a lie often enough it becomes the truth.”

The distressing news this week from the U.S. Capitol is the Manchin-Schumer legislation, deceptively titled the “Inflation Reduction Act,” which just passed the Senate on a party line tie vote broken by VP Kamala Harris. The truthful title would be “The Inflation-Recession Act.”

At a time when inflation is burning up an average $6,800 from two-worker families, the so-called Inflation Reduction Act would impose punitive tax increases, deepen the recession, savage household income, and accelerate price increases.

According to the Senate’s Joint Committee on Taxation, “taxes will increase by $16.7 billion on American taxpayers earning less than $200,000,” proving “that the Biden pledge to not raise taxes on anyone earning less than $400,000 is shattered.”

To summarize, this 725-page bill—laden as it is with union and Green Pork—strongly favors unions and specific projects in certain, often blue, states.

Let’s remember this plan has been sold to Americans as a way to combat the surging inflation created by the very people who are now championing this plan.

However, because the spending provisions kick in sooner (they always do with tax-and-spend bills) than the revenue-raising provisions this bill will actually increase the deficit in the first few years and—if it ever actually does—only begin to reduce the deficit in 2027 according to the Penn Wharton Budget Model.

How’s that going to address our crushing current inflation if there will be no effect on inflation for 5 years?

It won’t, of course, because that was never really the plan to begin with. What the Left is really trying to do is re-engineer the U.S. economy with another huge expansion of government. In fact, that’s one of the things that is so acutely disappointing about what Senator Joe Manchin is doing with this bill.

Recall that over the last year and a half Sen. Manchin (along with Senator Kyrsten Sinema) was instrumental in blocking the $5 trillion Build Back Better plan which would have been an unprecedented expansion of government. However, this so-called “skinny” version also won’t shrink the deficit and will constitute an enormous entitlement expansion that already struggling American taxpayers, directly or indirectly, will pay for.

And for what reason purportedly? Because of so-called “Climate Change.” All of these Green New Deal efforts by the federal government to reduce carbon emissions will have virtually no effect on the temperature of the planet. In fact, the impact on CO2 and temperature is “miniscule” according to Princeton’s Jose’ Luis Cruz ‘Alvarez and Esteban Rossi-Hansberg. Further, the National Academy of Sciences stated in 2013 regarding these episodes of huge federal spending on climate issues that they are a “poor tool for reducing greenhouse gases and achieving climate change objectives.”

This worldwide “climate” alarm is based upon the fact that the world has warmed by 1.1 degree Celsius since the late 1800s and even that is based upon multiple factors.

Unfortunately, none of that matters to the Climate Change Religionists, many of whom are profiting enormously on this Kill Fossil Fuel-Promote Renewables con job.

America is technologically decades away from being entirely free of fossil fuels and in a place where we may conceivably rely solely on renewable energy to sustain us. But today, Americans are far more concerned about high gas and food prices, which this kind of federal debt spending and worsening inflation will only make worse.

This dishonestly named legislation will result in both a policy failure and tax increase on all Americans — and especially hard-working Americans already devastated by the enormous Biden-Democrat inflation tax.

The midterm elections can’t come soon enough so that Americans can change the dangerous trajectory on which America now finds itself.


Bodcau Dam Rd. located between Ben Durden Rd. and Duck Dam Rd. has been closed

Bodcau Dam Rd. located between Ben Durden Rd. and Duck Dam Rd. has been closed while contractors for the Corp of Engineers make repairs to washouts on the levee section of the roadway.

Bodcau officials said visitors from the south may still be able to access the recreation area and visitors from the north will be able to reach Tram Rd. and Duck Dam Rd. Work on the road repairs is expected to take 90 days to complete.

Addresses in the 1–1750 range on Bodcau Dam Rd can be accessed from LA Hwy. 157/Cotton Valley Rd. and ranges 1900–2800 on Bodcau Dam Rd can be accessed from LA Hwy. 157/Whittington Rd.


Notice of Death – August 7, 2022

Russell McConnell
May 14, 1928 – August 5, 2022
Visitation: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 10:00-11:00 a.m. at Osborn Funeral Home, 3631 Southern Avenue, Shreveport.
Graveside services: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Forest Park Cemetery, 3700 St. Vincent Avenue, Shreveport.

Joseph Sherman
March 6, 1986 – August 1, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 11:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. at Heavenly Gates, 1339 Jewell Street, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 10:00 a.m. at True Holiness Church, Shreveport.
Interment: Saturday, August 13, 2022, following services at Lincoln Cemetery, 6917 W. 70th Street, Shreveport.

Gertie Allen
April 5, 1932 – July 31, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 11:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. at Heavenly Gates, 1339 Jewell Street, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Morning Star Baptist Church, 5340 Jewella Avenue, Shreveport.
Interment: Saturday, August 13, 2022, following services at Lincoln Cemetery, 6917 W. 70th Street, Shreveport.

Doris Anderson
August 29, 1954 – August 3, 2022
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Union Star Baptist Church, 600 W. 65th Street, Shreveport.
Interment: Saturday, August 13, 2022, following services at Lincoln Cemetery, 6917 W. 70th Street, Shreveport.

Thomas Conway Allen
May 25, 1945 — August 2, 2022
Services: Monday, August 8, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Aulds Funeral Home Chapel, 7849 East Kings Highway, Shreveport.

Kenneth Eugene Lemmons
December 26, 1934 — July 29, 2022
Visitation: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 2:00-3:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 1815 Marshall Street, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 3:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 1815 Marshall Street, Shreveport.

Katie Gertrude Amis
December 25, 1933 — August 5, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 1:00-2:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Services: Friday, August 12, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Interment: Friday, August 12, 2022, at Rose-Neath Cemetery, 5185 Swan Lake Road, Bossier City.

Claiborne “Barry” Broocks
January 23, 1954 — August 5, 2022
Visitation: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 11:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Services: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Interment: Wednesday, August 10, 2022, at Forest Park West Cemetery, 4000 Meriwether Road, Shreveport.

Swepson Jackson Weldon
March 29, 1941 — August 3, 2022
Visitation: Tuesday, August 9, 2022, 9:00-10:00 a.m. at Centuries Memorial Funeral Home, 8801 Mansfield Road, Shreveport.
Celebration of Life at Graveside: Tuesday, August 9, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Northwest Louisiana Veterans Cemetery, 7970 Mike Clark Road, Keithville.

Samuel K. Carnahan
December 18, 1945 — July 29, 2022
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Aulds Funeral Home Chapel, 7849 East Kings Highway, Shreveport.

Tammy Lynn Rubey
June 7, 1970 — July 29, 2022
Visitation: Thursday, August 11, 2022, 5:00-8:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Services: Friday, August 12, 2022, 12:00 p.m. at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive, Shreveport.
Interment: Friday, August 12, 2022, at Providence Baptist Church Cemetery following services.

 Betty Gray Eames
October 17, 1931 — August 2, 2022
Visitation: Monday, August 8, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Centuries Funeral Home, 8801 Mansfield Road, Shreveport.
Services: Monday, August 8, 2022, 12:00 p.m. at Centuries Funeral Home, 8801 Mansfield Road, Shreveport.
Interment: Monday, August 8, 2022, immediately following the service at Centuries Memorial Park, 8801 Mansfield Road, Shreveport.

Lewis Kilbourne Forrester Kalmbach
July 22, 1961 — July 17, 2022
Services: A Celebration of Life honoring Lewis will be held from 2:00 p.m. until 6:00 p.m., Sunday, August 14, 2022, at Big Sun Studios, 619 Edwards Street, Shreveport.

Maisie Joan Perrin
May 18, 1933 – July 20, 2022
Services: Tuesday, August 9, 2022, 2:00 p.m. at Osborn Funeral Home, 3631 Southern Avenue, Shreveport.

Mary Harris
February 2, 1924 – July 22, 2022
Visitation: Friday, August 12, 2022, 11:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m. at Heavenly Gates, 1339 Jewell Street, Shreveport.
Services: Saturday, August 13, 2022, 11:00 a.m. at Lincoln Memorial Cemetery, 6915 W. 70th Street, Shreveport.

The Shreveport-Bossier Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $90. Contact your funeral provider or SBJNewsLa@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to SBJNewsLa@gmail.com)


Our favorite Corner this summer

Quite often when I go to a local restaurant I will see Larry Toms, a long-since retired basketball coach at Bossier High and a man who knows how to tell a good story. It was early summer and I had been thinking about upcoming stories for the Shreveport- Bossier Journal when I realized there was a potential feature two tables over.

So I sat down, turned on my voice recorder and told Larry “go.”

That’s how the summer series called “Coaches Corner” began. I knew there were plenty more out there like Larry Toms who had great memories of their coaching days.

As anybody can tell you who ever played a sport, you don’t forget your coach. So I knew this would be a fun weekly adventure and that readers would enjoying hearing from people who had influenced their lives.

There was no well-organized roadmap – the only loosely defined requirement was that they were all at least 70 years old – and in some way or another, I had a relationship with them.

Almost all I had covered in my first incarnation as a sportswriter. One had been my high school football coach. Another I would see at a local fitness facility. I’ve played golf with a couple of others.

In typically unplanned fashion, I just went from one to the next. Almost all were easy to track down – if I didn’t, I figured somebody knew how to get in touch with them – and after Toms, it was Clay Bohanan, Anthony Catanese, Alden Reeves, Doug Robinson, Gerald Kimble, Billy Don McHalffey, Will Marston and Ron Worthen.

This was among the easiest and most satisfying series of stories I’ve ever done. Easy, because it wasn’t like I had to come up with a long list of questions. These were just conversations that we had. All I had to do was throw in some adjectives and verbs when it was over and piece it all together.

Satisfying, because the reaction these stories got was far more than I expected.

Most of them were football coaches, but they had a wide range of backgrounds. Some stayed at one school, others moved around. Some were head coaches in multiple sports.

Amazingly, four of them are still working (though none as a coach).

It wasn’t a surprise to hear some universal answers. “The relationship with the kids” was the basic automatic response I got whenever I’d ask about the best part of coaching.

But the best part was how excited they would get when I’d get them into “coach” mode, as if they were still on the sideline or in the dugout and trying to find a way to win one more game. There were games from 40 years that they still haven’t forgotten. Not coincidentally, most of those were losses that still sting.

Some missed coaching, some didn’t, but I got the feeling that all of them would relish a crack at winning one more game.

But not all of the nostalgia was pleasant. The final story in the series was with Worthen, who was a long-time coach at Southwood. When I asked him what he remembered about coaching, he didn’t waste any time.

“I remember how horrible the conditions were as far as the practice area and facilities were,” he said. “We had to go out every day and pick up rocks and broken glass off the field. We’d go out with buckets and walk down and pick up everything that had come up from the ground.”

When Southwood was built in 1970, the topsoil that made the school grounds was sold, so when the Cowboys’ practice field was subsequently built “they brought stuff in but it wasn’t good soil. It was rubbish,” he said.

And then he paused for a moment before bringing up a subject that I knew about but, shame on me, never actually thought about.

There were three linebackers in succession at Southwood in the 1970s — Ken Serpas, Danny Huffstickler and David Adams — who were all outstanding players.

Adams died in 2007.

Huffstickler died in 2013.

Serpas died in 2015.

All three had amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).

There are many suspected causes of ALS. One of them is environmental toxin exposure.

So yes, these coaches still have great stories to tell. But some of those stories have a lot more impact than just who won or lost.

Contact JJ at johnjamesmarshall@yahoo.com

https://shreveportbossierjournal.com/2022/08/02/coaches-corner-once-a-cowboy-worthen-was-always-a-cowboy/

https://shreveportbossierjournal.com/2022/07/19/coaches-corner-taking-fatherly-advice-never-a-problem-for-mchalffey/

https://shreveportbossierjournal.com/2022/07/12/coaches-corner-kimble-kept-at-it-built-green-oaks-powerhouse/

https://shreveportbossierjournal.com/2022/07/05/coaches-corner-reeves-left-the-nfl-to-become-a-captain-shreve-gator/

https://shreveportbossierjournal.com/2022/06/28/coaches-corner-robinson-made-widespread-impact-in-various-roles/

https://shreveportbossierjournal.com/2022/06/21/coaches-corner-forty-years-later-coaching-still-hasnt-left-catanese/

https://shreveportbossierjournal.com/2022/06/14/coaches-corner-no-longer-in-dugout-bohanan-remains-vital-to-baseball/

https://shreveportbossierjournal.com/2022/06/07/coaches-corner-uncle-larry-knew-when-it-was-time-to-go/ 


Bossier Parish Police Jury: Meeting of August 3, 2022

BPPJ Meeting

Approval of three cooperative endeavor agreements between the state Department of the Treasury, the state of Louisiana and the Bossier Parish Police Jury will mean $400,000 in appropriations for the parish, including one which will provide sewer and water lines to serve a new sawmill in Plain Dealing.

Parish police jurors voted to move ahead with the agreements Wednesday.

Jury members were told $300,000 will be dedicated for services to the Teal Jones Group sawmill, a planned $110 million project located on LA Hwy. 3 just south of Plain Dealing. Officials say the new facility will support 125 new direct jobs with annual salaries averaging $47,000, plus benefits.

Louisiana Economic Development estimates the project will also support at least 369 indirect jobs, for a total of 494 prospective new jobs in the northwest region of the state. The production facility would generate up to 120 construction jobs at peak construction.

Groundbreaking ceremonies for the lumber plant were held July 11.

Other funds approved through the agreements will be dedicated to one existing parish park and another that is on the drawing board. South Bossier Park will be receiving $75,000 for improvements that include four new soccer/football fields. South Bossier Park, located off Caplis Sligo Rd., is becoming one of the most popular recreational facilities in the police jury’s system.

A future park at Kinston Rd., complete with walking trail, will be receiving $25,000 through the agreements.

In other business at Wednesday’s meeting, police jury members:

• Approved request from Bossier Parish Sheriff’s Office for a Quietus on the 2021 tax roll.
• Granted a three-week extension before enforcing condemnation order on property located on John Wilson Dr.
• Awarded bid for Project No. 2022-117, wall demolition and fencing project at Central Library, in accordance with bids received July 22, 2022, and authorize the Parish Administrator, Parish President, and/or Director of Libraries to execute any and all documents.
• Awarded bid for Project No. 2022-119, demolition of three (3) residential properties, in accordance with bids received July 29, 2022.
• Accepted a proposal for Project No. 2022-123, Castlewood Circle drainage repairs, located on Lot 19, Bayou Bend subdivision, Unit No. 7, and Lot 20, Bayou Bend subdivision, Unit No. 7A.
• Adopted a resolution authorizing the Parish Administrator or President to execute any and all documents in connection with required drainage servitudes for Project No. 2022-123, Castlewood Circle drainage repairs, located on Lot 19, Bayou Bend subdivision, Unit No. 7, and Lot 20, Bayou Bend subdivision, Unit No. 7A.
• Accepted a proposal for Project No. 2022-122, emergency drainage repair at Kingston Plantation – Cattails Trail and Colonel Burt Drive.
• Approved the plat of the proposed development of Willow Chute Estates subdivision, Unit No. 1, amended plat, being a replat of Willow Chute Estates subdivision, Unit No. 1, located in Section 27, Township 19 North, Range 13 West, Bossier Parish; located north of Wemple Road.
• Tabled for two weeks consideration of the minor plat for Susan Watts, located in Section 22, Township 20 North, Range 12 West, Bossier Parish; located off Dalrymple Road.
• Adopted an ordinance amending Chapter 82 of the Bossier Parish Code of Ordinances, “Parks and Recreation,” to add Article IV “Lake Plain Dealing.”
• Adopted an ordinance amending Chapter 94 of the Bossier Parish Code of Ordinances, “Roads and Subdivisions,” to add regulations for mailboxes in parish rights-of-ways.
• Approved the site plan for Swan Lake commercial subdivision, Unit No. 2, Lot 2B, C-Store and Retail, located in Section 26, Township 19 North, Range 13 West, Bossier Parish. (Located on the corner of Swan Lake Road and Duckwater Landing.)
• Recommended a disqualification hearing for developer and engineer concerning actions at a parish subdivision.
• Accepted report on meeting of the Insurance Committee.
• Agreed to impose a one-year penalty after company failed to meet obligations of the Industrial Tax Exemption Program contracts.
• Approved a resolution of acknowledgement and consent of the City of Bossier City Ordinance No. 82 of 2022 dated July 19, 2022, in accordance with La. R.S. 33:180.
• Approved a Termination of Option to Purchase in connection with Lot 4, Commerce Industrial Park, Unit No. 2.
• Approved a Waiver of Right of First Refusal in connection with Lot 4, Commerce Industrial Park, Unit No. 2.
• Ratified approval of a Letter of Support for Cajun Broadband in connection with their ConnectLA’s Granting Unserved Municipalities Broadband Opportunities (GUMBO) application.
• Ratified approval of a Letter of Support for Conexon Connect in connection with their ConnectLA’s Granting Unserved Municipalities Broadband Opportunities (GUMBO) application.
• Accepted the sewer main extension and improvements, Phase II, for Fairburn Avenue, into the Consolidated Waterworks/Sewerage District No. 1 of the Parish of Bossier sewer system for permanent maintenance.
• Approved Change Order No. 3 for Project No. 2021-109, Consolidated Waterworks/Sewerage District No. 1 expansion of wastewater collection system – Airline Drive.
• Approved Change Order No. 1 for Project No. 2021-127, Eastwood drainage improvements.
• Granted a variance for a home builder in Hope Hills subdivision.

VIEW THE MEETING AGENDA HERE: