RSS Feed

EMILE DESIRE SOLAR

September 16, 1936-January 9, 2019
Emile Desire Solar, 82, a resident of Morgan City, passed away Wednesday, January 9, 2019, surrounded by his loving family.
Emile was born September 16, 1936, in Morgan City, the son of Emile Joseph Solar and Pauline Giroir Solar.
Emile was a very kind and loving man; he enjoyed being on the water, woodworking and welding. Emile loved his dog, Honda, that was like his son.
Emile will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his wife of 14 years, Faye Stinett Solar; three daughters, Tammy Mayon and husband Donald Jr. of Bayou Vista, Rebecca “Becky” Solar and fiancé Toby Percle of Patterson, and Kim Breaux and husband Joe of Bayou Vista; one son, John Pitts of Morgan City; one brother, Calvin Solar of Texas; three sisters, Vina Glynn of Plaquemine, Evelyn Duval of Bayou Vista, and Leona Davis of Morgan City; 11 grandchildren, Joe “Joey” Breaux III, Jordan and Jean Granger, Dylan, Haley and Serenity Mayon, Kirsty Solar, Blade Ballard and Hallee Ballard, Toby Percle “Tut” and Nolan Pitts; and five great-grandchildren, Tyler, Emily and Ethan Breaux, Rhett Granier III and Blaise Ballard.
Emile was preceded in death by his parents, Emile and Pauline Solar; three sisters, Elizabeth Stansbury, Lena Breaux and Flavia Lodrigue; and one brother, Robert Solar.
Visitation will be held Sunday, January 13, 2019, at Twin City Funeral Home from 5 p.m. until the time of service. Services will be held Sunday, January 13, 2019, at Twin City Funeral Home at 7 p.m.

Wheel House for Jan. 11

JR. BETA CLUB
Patterson Junior High School Jr. Beta Club is hosting a BBQ Sausage Po’boy Fundraiser, which includes a po’boy, chips, dessert and beverage, for $8 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 12 at Patterson Junior High. The fundraiser helps defray the cost for Jr. Beta members attending the National Jr. Beta State Convention next month.

QUILTERS GUILD
The Bayou Belle Quilters Guild will conduct its monthly meeting at 6 p.m. Monday, Jan. 14. The meeting will be held at Artists Guild Unlimited, Everett Street Gallery, 201 Everett St., Morgan City. The Guild is open to anyone with an interest in quilting.

Speaking to the Rotary Club

Submitted Photo
Morgan City Rotary Club members heard from Dr. Eric Melancon, the newly elected St. Mary Parish coroner, at a recent luncheon. From left are Melancon and Casey Shannon, Morgan City Rotary Club president.

Young Memorial offering English Language Acquisition classes

Are you interested in becoming a citizen or learning English as a second language? South Louisiana Community College’s Young Memorial WorkReady U Program offers free English Language Acquisition and citizenship day and night classes at 900 Youngs Road, Morgan City. Registration is every Monday at 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Night classes are also held at J. S. Aucoin Elementary, 739 Julia St., Amelia. Amelia registration is every Tuesday at 5 p.m. Arrive promptly and plan to stay three hours for testing. Applicants must be at least 18 years old and provide a valid state or federal picture ID. Call 985-380-5872 or 985-631-2464 for more information.

¿Estás interesado en ser ciudadano ó aprender inglés como segunda lengua? SLCC, el programa WorkReady U de Young Memorial ofrece clases nocturnas gratuitas de Adquisición del Idioma inglés y de Ciudadanía en 900 Youngs Road, Morgan City. Las registraciones son todos los Lunes a las 8am y 5pm. Las clases nocturnas también se ofrecen en J. S. Aucoin Elementary, 739 Julia St., Amelia. Las registraciones en Amelia son cada Martes a las 5PM. Llegue puntualmente y planee permanecer 3 horas para las pruebas. Los solicitantes deben tener por lo menos 18 años de edad y proporcionar una identificación válida del estado ó federal con fotografia. Llame 985-380-5872 o 985-631-2464 para más información.

Central Catholic Students of the Month

Submitted Photo
Central Catholic has named its Students of the Month. They are, front row from left: sixth-grader Zachary Landry, seventh-grader Sofia Kiyanfar, eighth-grader Brady Shannon and ninth-grader Abbie Scully. Back row: 10th-grader Mary Francis Cali, 11th-grader Grant Stansbury and 12th-grader Alyssa Landry.

Lafayette, former St. Mary schools chief Aguillard retiring

Lafayette Parish School Superintendent Donald Aguillard is retiring after four years on the job. The resignation will become effective in May.
School Board President Erick Knezek did not immediately respond to a query Friday morning about procedures for hiring a new superintendent.
Aguillard sent a letter to school board members on Friday saying that he will be “spending the next chapter of my life enjoying family.”
Aguillard served as superintendent in St. Mary Parish prior to Lafayette, and spent a combined 15 years as a school chief executive in both parishes, he wrote.
“I will cherish the many personal relationships formed in both St. Mary and Lafayette parishes,” Aguillard wrote

Jim Bradshaw: First football game had pompoms and poetry

It probably wasn’t a Super Bowl, but it did get the program off to a good start when the Southwestern Louisiana Industrial Institute (UL Lafayette today) won what was said to be the first football game to be seen in Lafayette.
A high point of the day was the poetry reading after the game, something that I’m sure you’ll want to work in at your next tailgating party.
The Times-Picayune gave the complete report, but no box score, on Jan. 18, 1902:
“The football game announced in these columns last week between the Institute and the boys of St. Landry High School was played on the Institute campus last Saturday afternoon. The Opelousas team brought with them many friends to yell and ‘root’ for their eleven. Lafayette was ablaze with vermilion, the Institute color. Buggies, horses, harnesses, as well as walking sticks, lapels, and bosoms were bright with the flaring ribbons.
“The town had never witnessed a football game within its limits, but there was no lack of interest among young and old. The attendance numbered several hundred, the large majority of which were in sympathy with the home team.
“The ball was kicked off promptly at 3 p.m. and for twenty minutes the Lafayette boys showed their superiority over the Opelousas team. During the last half the home team kept on scoring, shutting out the visitors altogether. The final score was 21 to 0.
“On Saturday evening the students of the Institute gave a reception in honor of the young gentlemen and ladies visiting from Opelousas, and the Literary Society rendered a programme … [that] consisted of readings, recitations, music, solos and parts songs, a debate, and a selection by the Institute Glee Club.”
That wasn’t the first-ever football game for SLII; a team from the Institute beat Opelousas High 45-0 in 1901, according to records in the UL archives. Nor was it the only game played in Lafayette in 1902. A handbill in the archives reads, “Don’t miss [the] FOOTBALL GAME between Institute Team and Louisiana State University tomorrow Thursday 3:30 p.m.at the Institute.”
Hand-written on the side of the handbill is “Thursday, Oct. 16, 1902,” but I can find no report of who won.
1908 appears to be the first full season for an SLII team, and it was a good one.
That team defeated St. Martinville twice, Crowley, New Iberia, Lake Charles and Vinton, for a perfect 6-0 re
cord. The coach was C. J. McNaspy, for whom the old football stadium was named, and he apparently got advice from a coaching legend.
The archive files contain correspondence between McNaspy and Glenn (Pops) Warner, who won 312 games during a 44-year career that included stops at Georgia, Cornell, Carlisle, Pittsburgh, Stanford, and Temple.
In the early 1900s he offered a mail-order course on how to coach football, complete with a book of plays.
McNaspy took the course in 1908 and wrote for an updated version in 1911, sending payment of five dollars for the full course and Warner’s new book of “plays and line shifts.”
It appears that poetry and pompoms were linked from the very beginning.
The 1908 football program began under the auspices of an Intercollegiate Athletic and Oratorical Association formed that year for “the advancement of Amateur Athletics and the fostering of interest in Oratory among the schools of Southwest Louisiana.”
The association’s big event each year came to be a Field Day each Spring that featured a track meet and an oratorical contest.
The best athlete got a gold trophy and the best orator was given a complete collection of Shakespeare’s works.
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.

Levee board OKs shoreline protection work

Work should finish in about a week on a shoreline protection project in the Patterson area to ensure that erosion along the Intracoastal Waterway doesn’t affect nearby levees. The St. Mary Levee District Commission met Thursday at the parish courthouse. Commissioners approved a change order for Southern Constructors to do work on the project along the Intracoastal Waterway by Cotten Road and to the west in the Patterson area. That change order authorized an additional roughly $57,000 in expenses on top of the $65,000 already approved. Officials decided to place the rock along some sections of shoreline on the Intracoastal ...

PLEASE LOG IN FOR PREMIUM CONTENT. Our website requires visitors to log in to view the best local news from St. Mary Now. Not yet a subscriber? Subscribe today!

MCHS soccer teams fall to Vandebilt Catholic

The Morgan City High School soccer teams fell to Division III powerhouse Vandebilt Catholic in district action in Morgan City Tuesday.
In the boys’ contest, Morgan City fell 6-1.
Vandebilt Catholic took a 3-0 halftime lead and extended its lead to 5-0 in the second half before Morgan City’s Andy Rangel scored on a header.
In the girls’ game, Morgan City fell 8-0 to Vandebilt in a contest that was called early in the second half due to the mercy rule.
The Lady Tigers (1-15-1 overall, 0-3 in District 5-III) will return to action Thursday when it travels to face Runnels in nondistrict play.
The Tigers (4-9-2, 1-3) also will hit the field Thursday at Runnels for a nondistrict game.

Rising river

The Daily Review/Bill Decker
The shrimp boats moored to the wharves in Berwick and, in the background, Morgan City will soon be riding higher in the water. The Atchafalaya is expected to crest at 6.5 feet Wednesday night, a level expected to cause minor flooding.

Pages

ST. MARY NOW

Franklin Banner-Tribune
P.O. Box 566, Franklin, LA 70538
Phone: 337-828-3706
Fax: 337-828-2874

Morgan City Review
1014 Front Street, Morgan City, LA 70380
Phone: 985-384-8370
Fax: 985-384-4255