LISKA KEMP
Liska Kemp, 60, a resident of Morgan City, died Friday, Feb. 15, 2019, at Ochsner Medical Center in Jefferson.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements, which are pending at this this time.
Liska Kemp, 60, a resident of Morgan City, died Friday, Feb. 15, 2019, at Ochsner Medical Center in Jefferson.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements, which are pending at this this time.
Germany Broussard, 39, a resident of Morgan City, died Saturday, Feb. 16, 2019, at his residence.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements, which are pending at this this time.
BLACK HISTORY
Program and Youth Service at Morning Glory Ministries, 1323 Railroad Ave., Morgan City, 10 a.m. Sunday, Feb. 24. Speaker: Elder-elect Stephanie Joseph.
GOOD HOPE
Baptist Church, 908 Washington St., Patterson, celebrating the Rev. Patrick T. Jones Sr.’s 19-year anniversary at 11 a.m. Sunday, Feb. 24. Speaker the Rev. Mark Lewis, Mount Calvary Baptist Church, New Iberia. Public invited.
AMELIA — Kimberly Perez ate her share of cauliflower, and then she asked for more.
“I normally don’t eat vegetables,” said the fourth-grader, a member of the garden club at J.S. Aucoin Elementary School in Amelia.
The cauliflower was grown in the school garden, and it was sautéed with bread crumbs by Jessica Randazzo, LSU AgCenter nutrition agent in St. Mary Parish.
While she cooked, Randazzo explained the benefits of cauliflower, including vitamin C, fiber and folates.
Another fourth-grader, Astrid Sanchez, said she likes cauliflower but with a twist. “When I eat cauliflower, I eat them with eggs,” she said.
The school garden club meets during recess, and students tend to the vegetables with help from Master Gardener Denise Mayon of Bayou Vista. She explained to students how to harvest broccoli and carrots.
She told students to leave one small broccoli clump that was about to flower. “We’ll let this keep growing to draw bees to the garden,” Mayon said.
Mayon said she enjoys working with the children. “I love seeing the kids getting excited about growing stuff. Aside from loving the sunshine, this is may be a good way to stimulate interest in an agriculture future.”
Several students have said they want to start a garden at home. “And the fact that they’re eating something fresh and green, that’s the reward,” she said.
School principal Shantell Toups said this is the third year for the garden club, and it has grown every year.
Students who participate meet during their recess to tend to the garden.
Randazzo has been the driving force behind the school garden. “She has been a phenomenal asset to this whole project,” Toups said.
Mayon and her husband, Dwain Mayon, have been a big help doing much of the physical labor to get the gardens established, she said.
And students are more eager to try vegetables they have grown. “They’ll try just about anything,” Toups said.
The club also brings parents to show them snacks that can be made with the vegetables, and students are given recipes to take home to parents.
An indoor herb garden is getting started, and work will start soon on a butterfly garden, Toups said.
School cafeteria cooks use vegetables from the garden, including romaine lettuce and collard greens, and students eat their lunches more enthusiastically, knowing that they grew some of the food, Randazzo said.
Students like salads, but the school system didn’t have the money for ingredients. “They had quite a demand, but it wasn’t cost-effective for the parish,” she said.
Now the school has a goal of serving salads to the whole school for lunch every Friday, and Randazzo got grant money to buy a 5-gallon salad spinner.
To start the garden, Randazzo used a grant from 4-H Food Smart Families funded by UnitedHealthCare and a Healthy Communities mini grant.
Bobbie Mitchell, LSU AgCenter nutrition agent in St. Martin Parish, came to the garden club meeting to see how Randazzo’s efforts have worked. Mitchell said she has a garden program at an adult daycare center in St. Martin Parish, but she would like to get a school garden program underway, too.
Arly Salinas of Morgan City was named to the fall 2018 President’s List at Georgia State University.
To be eligible for the President’s List, degree-seeking students must have earned a GPA of at least 4.0 for a minimum of nine semester hours of academic credit taken at Georgia State during the fall or spring term with no incompletes for the semester.
—Staff Reports
The St. Mary School board recognized its Employees of the Month. They are, from left: Celeste Pipes, third-grade English teacher at Bayou Vista Elementary; Cory Williams, Morgan City High Junior ROTC instructor; and Sadie Clinton, Centerville Junior High special education teacher.
The Daily Review/Bill Decker
The St. Mary Parish School board recognized its Students of the Month at Thursday's meeting in Centerville. They are, from left: Marlee LaCoste, Bayou Vista Elementary fifth-grader; Nathalie Falu LeBron, Centerville Junior High eighth-grader; and Matison LeBlanc, Morgan City High senior.
Juanita Baker “Nita” Newlin
September 20, 1926 — February 16, 2019
Juanita Baker “Nita” Newlin, 92, a resident of Morgan City, passed away Saturday, February 16, 2019.
The daughter of Hugo and Guadalupe Baker, Juanita Cecilia was born on September 20, 1926, in Brownsville, Texas.
Best known as “Granny” and “GG,” Nita loved nothing more than spending time with her family, especially her husband, Bob, her three children, six grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. Nita brought smiles wherever she went and brightened every face around her — especially with her cherished tacos. Even in her later years, she eagerly attended all her great-grandchildren’s events at auditoriums, ballparks, football fields, soccer fields, school yards, and classrooms throughout Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas.
Nita will be greatly missed and lovingly remembered by her three children, Mandy Russell and husband, Buck, of LaPlace, Sandy Daigle and husband, Terry, of Patterson, and Randy Newlin and wife, Cathy, of Morgan City; five grandchildren, Gary Russell, John T. Russell, Penne Leier, Greg Chasson and Randi Leigh Burgess; and 10 great-grandchildren, Olivia Russell, Luke Russell, Brannan Chasson, Maddie Chasson, Jacob Leier, Joseph Leier , Jason Michael Burgess, Drake Burgess, Kyleigh Burgess and Patrick Russell.
Nita was preceded in death by her husband, Bob Newlin; her parents, Lupe and Hugo Baker; two siblings, Ralph Baker and Bobby Baker; one granddaughter, Nicole Annette Chasson; and one son-in-law, Nolen Butch Chasson .
Twin City Funeral Home will host a visitation on Monday, February 18, 2019, from 10 a.m. until the funeral service begins at 1 p.m. Nita will be entombed in the Morgan City Cemetery Mausoleum alongside her cherished husband, Bob.
Donations may be made in Nita’s name to Central Catholic High School.
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