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Richard to continue playing career at Xavier University in New Orleans

Former Morgan City High School hoops standout Makye Richard always has wanted to attend Xavier University, but hasn’t been able to. Coming out of Baton Rouge Community College, he was schedule to attend a tryout with the squad but was unable to due to bad weather preventing him from making the tryout. Instead, he found a home at Northern New Mexico College where he played basketball along with former Morgan City High School teammate Tywaun Walker. A year after being 16 hours away and a desire to play in front of family, Richard will finally get his chance to suit up at the ...

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Fleming, Pearson lead redfish tourney

Stephen Fleming and Robert Pearson lead the Morgan City Madness Elite Redfish Tournament after a day of action.
The duo, sponsored by Mojo, caught four fish weighing 28.42 pounds in the Elite Redfish Series Tournament event.
Kevin Harvey and Lance Trahan, sponsored by Waypoint Marine, were second with a four-catch total weighing 27.88 pounds, while Mike McClure and Mike Sartin, sponsored by Breakline Optics, were third with a four-catch total of 27.7 pounds.
The second and final day of the tournament is Thursday as boaters left from the Amelia Boat Launch and weigh-ins will be held Thursday afternoon under the E.J. Lionel Grizzaffi U.S. 90 Bridge near First Street.
In all, 35 teams fished Wednesday, 98 fish were weighed and 96 were released.
The tournament is one of three events on the Check-it Stick Team Tournament division. Fishermen are vying for points for a chance to compete in the Tidewater Team Championship at South Padre Island, Texas, Oct. 4-5.
For more information on the tournament, visit www.theredfishseries.com/morgan-city.
Additional reporting by John K. Flores.

Stats point to slowdown in second quarter

St. Mary Parish’s on-again, off-again recovery from the fall 2018 plunge in energy prices was off again in June, at least to judge by last month’s parish sales tax collections.
More information will come from the release of June unemployment figures, expected Friday. July sales tax figures are likely to be affected by Tropical Storm Barry, the resulting lack of business during a weekend-long, parishwide blackout, and spending on storm preparation and repair.
State and local statistics show an economy that started 2019 on a roll but slowed in the spring.
St. Mary’s 4.3% sales tax brought in a total of $3.02 million in June, down about 4% from June 2018, according to the St. Mary Sales & Use Tax Department. The June 2019 figures were up from $2.8 million in May.
Total second-quarter collections were $8.9 million, down 1.5% from May-June 2018.
St. Mary’s first-quarter collections were up 1.5% from 2018 to about $9.3 million.
June hotel-motel tax collections, which are heavily influenced by energy industry activity in the region, were down $6,400 or 5.3% from June 2018. For the year, hotel-motel collections are down about 0.5%.
The state got mixed signals about recent economic activity in recently released statistics.
The state’s gross domestic product grew at an annual rate of 3.8% in the first quarter, according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. That made Louisiana the 10th-fastest growing economy in the United States.
“This latest ranking is further proof that Louisiana’s economy continues to grow and move in the right direction,” said Gov. John Bel Edwards in a press release. “We have seen the largest unemployment decline since last year of any state, the lowest it has been in 11 years, personal income is at an all-time high and for the first time in a long time, our state debt is declining.”
Non-durable goods manufacturing was the main contributor to growth, contributing 2.09 percentage points.
Retail trade contributed 0.82 percentage points and mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction contributed 0.80 percentage points.
In April, the state posted a seasonally adjusted unemployment rate of 3.5%, a record low. The previous record was 3.6% in April 2008.
“We have a lot of work left to do, but in Louisiana, our future looks brighter than ever, and these numbers only reinforce that,” Edwards said.
But the state’s unemployment rate, following the trend shown in the St. Mary sales tax collections, has been trending upward since April. Jobless rose to 4.1% in May and 5.3% in June.
The unemployment rate measures how many people are seeking jobs but can’t find them.

Award for meritorious service

Submitted Photo
The Atchafalaya Chapter API recently presented Daily Review reporter Zachary Fitzgerald with the American Petroleum Institute Meritorious Service Award for his coverage of API meetings and events during his seven years here in Morgan City. Friday is Fitzgerald’s last day with The Daily Review. The citation expresses “sincere appreciation of his professional reporting of our Chapter’s monthly meeting, special events and scholarship awards.” Present were, standing from left: API Treasurer Greg Roussel and Chapter Chairman Burt Adams. Seated: Bob Miller of the Scholarship Committee, Fitzgerald and Advisory Board Chairman Red Adams.

RALPH CURTIS RAGEUR

Ralph Curtis Rageur, 90, a native of Kaplan and resident of Morgan City, died Thursday, July 18, 2019.
He is survived by a son, Rebel Rageur; a grandson; and a stepbrother, Alvin Broussard.
He was preceded in death by his wife, parents and siblings.
Services were Friday at Morgan City Cemetery.
Hargrave Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements.

Wheel House for July 26

FAMILY/FRIENDS
Good Hope Baptist Church, 908 Washington St., Patterson, hosting Family and Friends Day at 11 a.m. Aug. 4. Everyone welcome.

COACHES NEEDED
Girls on the Run, a physical activity-based, positive youth development program for girls in third-eighth grade, serves girls at multiple school sites in St. Mary and other parishes. Coaches teach a 10-week program of critical life skills, encourages personal development and fosters team building and community service. Volunteer coaches facilitate lessons to small teams of girls who typically meet after-school twice a week for 75-90 minutes. Criteria: must be 18 years old to serve as assistant coach or 21 to serve as head coach and must complete a background check and participate in on-line and in-person training. Registration is open online at www.gotrbayouregion.org/Coach.

Making St. Mary resilient

Submitted Photo
After evaluating the Morgan City and Berwick area for strategies to diversify its economy, the Urban Land Institute panel in fall 2018 recommended making resiliency a regional export. The panel recognized that just as the river rises and falls with snow melts and storm surges, so too has the economic impact of the river on residents responding to the water challenges. As part of what economic diversification may look like in moving the community forward, a breakout group of St. Mary Excel met with potential partners in resiliency exploration. The focus of the meeting was to highlight the unique ecology of the Morgan City legacy oil and gas community. The group also discussed workforce development as a tool to equip workers with responding to living in a coastal community. The group will continue to meet to chart a course of action to advance the resiliency initiative recommendation of the ULI panel report. Shown, back row from left: Alice Pecoraro and Monica Mancuso, St. Mary Excel; Frank “Boo” Grizzaffi, Morgan City mayor; Cindy Cutrera, manager of economic development, Port of Morgan City; and Catherine Holcomb, St. Mary Excel. Front row: Charles Sutcliffe, chief resilience officer, Office of the Governor; Allison Clune, Nicholls State University advocate; Jay Clune, president, Nicholls State University; and Scott Hemmerling, director of human dimensions, The Water Institute of the Gulf.

Jim Bradshaw: When UFOs appeared over Louisiana

The flying saucer that sped over the front yard made a visit to her sister’s house especially memorable for a Ville Platte lady in the summer of 1949 — and they were not the only ones to report the strange sighting.
There had been so many that summer and in the summer before that Adras Laborde, who later became managing editor of the Alexandria Town Talk, planned a convention of saucer sighters in his town.
The Ville Platte Gazette reported on its front page on July 14, 1949, “Mrs. V. Dardeau, of Ville Platte, and her sister, Mrs. Edward Wolff, saw a flying saucer over Alexandria last week. The two sisters were sitting on the lawn of Mrs. Wolff’s residence one night last week when they became aware of a saucer zooming overhead.”
They said it was the size and shape of a plate, flew lower and slower than an airplane, made no sound, and had a yellow light in the center.
The sisters were “emphatic that it could not be anything else but a saucer,” according to the Gazette.
Mrs. G. S. Hart also saw the saucer over Alexandria. “It was all lit up,” she said.
“Then it stopped or changed its course and drifted toward the east. Then it moved toward the west and changed its course once more and disappeared in the east.” She said four people were with her and saw it.
The Town Talk’s editors scoffed a bit at the stories, reporting on July 7 that “flying saucers were absent from the skies over Alexandria last night after making an appearance the night before.”
However, there was another saucer sighting in the middle of the day on July 11 over Prairie Hayes in Acadia Parish.
N. L. Martin and his son, Gene, saw two of them about 9 a.m. Martin told the Crowley Post-Signal they were “of an aluminum color and kept glinting in the sunlight” and that they “would spin in a clockwise motion and reverse themselves.
The UFOs were back over Alexandria on July 17, when Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Rhino and two of their neighbors saw a disc in the northwest sky that was visible for several minutes, disappeared for about five minutes, and then reappeared before disappearing altogether.
H. B. Hunter of Alexandria wasn’t a believer.
He pointed out in a letter to the editor that the sightings were close to the Fourth of July, and suggested that they were nothing but fireworks.
“About two or three years ago,” he wrote to the Town Talk, “the Nations’ Fireworks Co. designed a little gadget that was made up of a skyrocket with a flash powder base and a bright zinc or aluminum propeller that drifts with the air currents. … The whirling propeller gives it the saucer shape by first reflecting, then burning itself out.”
That might have been the answer, but a spokesman said about that time that the Air Force was getting a dozen flying saucer reports each month.
They were “not a cause for alarm,” the spokesman said, but neither were they a joke. According to a wire service report, “Intelligence section officers said 30 percent of the reports have been due to conventional aerial objects such as weather balloons” and that those objects could probably account for another 30 percent.
But, according to the wire report, “40 percent remain a mystery.”
All of that discussion prompted Laborde to begin writing to people who said they’d seen strange things in the sky, inviting them to a “flying saucer witness’ conclave” in Alexandria.
The Young Man’s Business Club said it would sponsor the event because “Alexandria has long enjoyed a reputation as a convention city” and that it had recently become a “flying saucer city.” It was only natural to put the two together.
Laborde thought the convention could bring together witnesses, scientists, science writers, “and other specialists,” and that it could also result in a “national; association of flying saucer eyewitnesses.”
He said during the summer that the YMBC would hold the meeting if he could get 10 people to come.
That didn’t work out. Just before Thanksgiving he reported that only two people had signed up, none of them from Louisiana.
There were no new signings or sightings for the rest of the year.
A collection of Jim Bradshaw’s columns, "Cajuns and Other Characters," is now available from Pelican Publishing. You can contact him at jimbradshaw4321@gmail.com or P.O. Box 1121, Washington LA 70589.

Suspect in Bayou Vista armed robbery arrested in Baton Rouge

The Baton Rouge Police Department has arrested the man who St. Mary authorities believe robbed the Bayou Vista Burger King at gunpoint.

The St. Mary Parish Sheriff’s Office identified the man Friday afternoon as Wayne Escort. No age or address for Escort was immediately released. Escort was arrested Thursday, the Sheriff’s Office said.

According to the St. Mary Sheriff’s Office, a man on foot went to the drive-through window of the Burger King about 2:38 a.m. Tuesday. He was armed with a gun, and he was able to get cash and flee from the scene.

As the investigation progressed, Saint Mary Parish Sheriff Office detectives developed Escort as the suspect in the armed robbery. A warrant was obtained for Escort on the charges of armed robbery and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Escort’s name and information was entered into the National Crime Information Center as a wanted person.

On Thursday afternoon, Escort was located by the East Baton Rouge Police Department and was arrested.

Authorities here are awaiting Escort’s return.. The investigation is ongoing.

Sheriff Blaise Smith thanked the Morgan City, Berwick, Patterson and Baton Rouge police departments for their assistance in the investigation and apprehension of Wayne Escort.

“There are no more lines drawn in the sand when it comes to police departments working together,” Smith said. “We all work together for the safety and protection of all the citizens of St. Mary Parish.”

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