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Progressive Bowling League report

PROGRESSIVE BOWLING LEAGUE
Nov. 13 – Week 11
W L
Bowling Stones 29 15
Gutter Cleaners 24 20
Wild Ones 19 25
Putt’s Honk Tonk 16 28
High scratch series and game of 1008 and 340 were bowled by Bowling Stones. High handicap series and game of 1261 and 452 were bowled by Gutter Cleaners.
High scratch bowlers were Angela Fields 633 (221, 210, 202) and Rosie Fournier 509 (204, 156, 149).
Splits were accom-plished by Angela Fields 3-10, Cathy Daigle 6-7-10, 2-7 and Beverly Mayon 4-5.
Nov. 27 – Week 12
W L
Bowling Stones 31½ 16½
Gutter Cleaners 26 22
Wild Ones 21 27
Putt’s Honk Tonk 17½ 30½
High scratch series and game of 1119 and 480 were bowled by Putt’s Honky Tonk. High handicap series and game of 1282 and 465 were bowled by Gutter Cleaners.
High scratch bowlers were Pam Hensgens 599 (205, 203, 191) and Angela Fields 530 (203, 166, 161).
A split was accom-plished by Shirley Bar-ras 5-9-10.

Sheriff: Burglary suspect caught in ongoing investigation

A suspect was arrested on burglary charges in Bayou L’Ourse after authorities initially found the man in a shed that held a large number of firearms, Assumption Parish Sheriff Leland Falcon said in a news release.

—Lucien James Aucoin, 57, of Felicia Street in Bayou L’Ourse, was arrested on charges of three counts of simple burglary, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and resisting an officer.

—Nicholas Channing Massoletti, 33, of Felicia Street in Bayou L’Ourse, was arrested on a charge of accessory after the fact to simple burglary.

The investigation into the incident is ongoing.

On Wednesday, Assumption Parish sheriff’s detectives conducted a warrant check for Aucoin at a home in the 100 block of Felicia Street and encountered Massoletti. At the time detectives appeared, Massoletti exited a shed on the property and appeared to be acting very nervous, Falcon said.

Agents and deputies had previously spoken to Massoletti on Nov. 26. At that time, Massoletti said that Aucoin had been on the property but was not there at the time. Massoletti was informed of the consequences of harboring a fugitive.

Investigators returned to the property Wednesday and again spoke to Massoletti near the same shed. At some point, the shed doors opened, and Aucoin fled to a wooded area and temporarily eluded police, Falcon said.

Detectives determined that there was a large number of firearms in the shed, Falcon said. Sheriff’s deputies, assisted by some detection equipment from Bayou L’Ourse Fire Department, captured Aucoin a short time later.

Sheriff’s detectives had previously arrested Danny Willis, 33 and James Aucoin, 35, both of Bayou L’Ourse, and Curtis Gaudet, 45, of Amelia, in connection with the same case.

Gaudet previously posted bail. The other four suspects remain incarcerated pending a bail hearing.

Patterson Police Chief Janis Merritt reported the following arrests:

—Blaise K. Crane, 24, of Verdunville Road in Verdunville, was arrested at 9:17 p.m. Thursday on charges of two counts of burglary of an inhabited dwelling, two counts of theft and two counts of simple criminal damage to property. No bail was set.

—Herman Butler, 37, of Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue in Patterson, was arrested at 4:11 a.m. Friday on charges of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute, violation of uniform controlled dangerous substance law in a drug-free zone and distribution of cocaine. No bail was set.

Morgan City Police Chief James Blair reported that officers responded to 42 calls and reported the following arrests:

—Charles E. Romero Jr., 44, of Erath, was arrested at 2:47 a.m. Friday on charges of DWI second offense, driving under suspension and possession of alcoholic beverage in a motor vehicle.

An officer in the area of La. 182 near Florence Street observed a vehicle swerving in and out of the lane of travel. A traffic stop was conducted, and the driver, Romero, appeared intoxicated and had a suspended driver’s license, Blair said.

The officer also observed an open container of an alcoholic beverage inside the vehicle, and Romero performed poorly on a field sobriety test, Blair said. Once at the police department, Romero refused the chemical test for intoxication, Blair said.

A warrant was obtained for a sample of blood to be withdrawn from Romero. Romero was transported to a medical facility for the retrieval of the sample. The results of the sample are pending. Romero was transported back to the police department and jailed.

—Candice L. Ross, 32, of Pine Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 1:04 p.m. Thursday on charges of possession of marijuana with intent to distribute and violation of uniform controlled dangerous substance law-drug-free zone.

The Morgan City Police Department Narcotics Division along with the assistance of the Louisiana Office of Probation and Parole conducted a compliance check at a residence on Pine Street.

Once at the home, officers located Ross and another individual. While inside the home, officers located several individually wrapped bags of suspected marijuana, Blair said.

The area that the home is located is within 2,000 feet of an elementary school, which is considered a drug-free zone. Ross was jailed.

—Janis M. Boudreaux, 63, of Louisa Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 3:05 p.m. Thursday on a warrant charging her with failure to pay fines.

Boudreaux was located at her home on Louisa Street and arrested on a city court warrant. Boudreaux was jailed.

St. Mary Parish Sheriff Scott Anslum reported that deputies responded to 32 complaints in the parish and reported the following arrests in east St. Mary Parish:

—Hector Santos, 37, of Shivers Street in Patterson, was arrested at 9:57 a.m. Thursday on a charge of theft.

Deputies were dispatched to a home on Shivers Street in order to locate Santos who had an active warrant. The deputies made contact with Santos at the home and advised him of the warrant. Santos was jailed with bail set at $1,500.

—Walter Howard, 31, of 1st Street in Patterson, was arrested at 1:20 p.m. Thursday for improper lane usage, possession of marijuana and on a warrant for failure to appear on the charge of failing to comply with the terms and conditions of drug court.

A deputy patrolling Bayou Vista observed a vehicle crossing over the fog line several times. The deputy conducted a traffic stop and made contact with the driver, Howard.

Through the stop, the deputy found a marijuana cigarette in the vehicle and learned of an active warrant for Howard, Anslum said. Howard was jailed with no bail set.

—Kristy Tedder, 38, of Clements Lane in Bayou Vista, was arrested at 1:20 p.m. Thursday on a charge of burglary of an inhabited dwelling.

Deputies patrolling Bayou Vista responded to a burglary complaint at a home on Clements Lane and made contact with the homeowner who stated that her neighbor made entry into her home and removed some items without permission, Anslum said. The deputy located Tedder and transported her to jail with no bail set.

—Caleb Evans, 17, of Taft Street in Patterson, was arrested at 4:46 p.m. Thursday on a charge of possession of marijuana.

A detective made contact with Evans at the sheriff’s office as Evans turned himself in on an active warrant. Evans was released on a summons to appear in court Jan. 30, 2019.

Berwick Police Chief James Richard reported no arrests.

DILLON FRANCIS ARABIE

November 22, 1992- November 24, 2018
Dillon Francis Arabie, 26, a resident of Baton Rouge, passed away Saturday, November 24, 2018 in LaPlace as a result of an automobile accident.
Dillon was born on November 22, 1992 in Honolulu, Hawaii, the son of Patrick Arabie and Donna Brennan Arabie.
Dillon graduated from Thibodaux High School and enlisted in the United States Army where he served in the infantry until he was honorably discharged. Dillon was a loving son, brother, grandson and nephew and a faithful friend to many.
He will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his mother, Donna Brennan Arabie and Danny Colgin and his father, Patrick Arabie and his wife Jenny; two sisters, Courtney Arabie and Madison Arabie; grandmother, Charllotte Brennan; and numerous aunts, uncles and cousins.
Dillon was preceded in death by grandparents, Thomas F. Brennan, Lawrence Arabie Sr. and Yvonne D. Arabie; and one uncle, Farrell Arabie.
Funeral services will be held at 5 p.m. on Saturday, December 1, 2018 at Twin City Funeral Home with a visitation being held from 3 p.m. until the time of the services. Following the services at 5:30 p.m., military honors will be rendered at the funeral home by the United States Army Fort Polk Honor Guard.

JUDY A. LANDRY

October 16, 1941- November 29, 2018
On November 29, 2018, Judy A. Landry passed away after a lengthy illness at the age of 77 years.
She was born on October 16, 1941. Judy was a strong and independent woman for all of her life. She graduated from Morgan City High School in 1959, and entered the oil and gas industry, eventually retiring from Shell Oil Company after a long career. Always a fighter, Judy was a lung cancer survivor, and remained very active in cancer awareness activities.
She is survived by a son, Brian Landry; daughter-in-law, Denise Landry; three grandchildren, Olivia Landry, Brian Landry Jr. and Adam Landry; one brother, Ira Landry; one sister, Betty Wiltz; along with a host of nieces and nephews.
Judy was preceded in death by her parents, Sidney Landry Sr. and Lena Landry; and three brothers, Sidney Landry Jr., Billy Landry and Robert Landry.
Visitation will take place on Sunday, December 2, 2018 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. at Twin City Funeral Home. A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated in memory of Judy on Monday, December 3, 2018, at 10:30 a.m. at Sacred Heart of Jesus Roman Catholic Church. Judy will be laid to rest in Morgan City Cemetery, alongside her beloved parents.
Memorial donations in Judy’s name may be made to Terrebonne’s Camp Bluebird through the Mary Bird Perkins Cancer Center at TGMC, P.O. Box 6037, Houma, LA 70361-6037.

TRAVIS GAMBRELL

Travis Gambrell, 49, a native of Oklahoma and resident of Morgan City died Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2018.
He is survived by a daughter, Brooke Rulf; and a brother, Christopher Gambrell.
Visitation will be Sunday, 5-9 p.m., at Hargrave Funeral Home. Services will be held at a later date in his hometown.

Wheel House for Nov. 30

THRIFT STORE
At the corner of South Railroad and Second Street, Morgan City, holding a pre-Christmas sale 8:30-11 a.m. Wednesday and Thurs-day, Dec. 5-6. All Christmas clothing and decorations half-priced and all women’s tops 50 cents. All proceeds benefit Sacred Heart Catholic Church charities.

Louisiana colleges offer athletes mental health counseling

As a former collegiate gymnast, Lauren Li found comfort at LSU after experiencing emotional distress at Penn State.
“Anxiety, depression, eating disorders: It was tough just talking about it because being used to suppressing those emotions, I had to like learn how to be comfortable talking about it and seeking help for it if I wanted to help myself,” Li, who was on LSU’s highly ranked team over the last three seasons, said.
It is no secret that expectations are high for athletes at universities across the country. These pressures take a toll, emotionally and physically, on athletes in all sports. And there has long been a stigma that discourages many of them from seeking mental and psychological help.
But now schools in Louisiana and elsewhere are doing more to address the problem, thanks in part to guidelines that the National Collegiate Athletic Association created in 2016 to encourage them to address the problem.
LSU has done the most in Louisiana and now has three mental health counselors working in its athletic department.
“We have several support groups.” said LSU head football coach Ed Orgeron. “We have a lot of counseling for our guys, and anything that happens we put them in counseling.”
Tulane’s athletic department has hired its own mental health specialist. But most Louisiana schools still refer athletes to counseling centers that treat all students. Some of these schools — including Louisiana Tech, University of Louisiana Monroe and Northwestern State University — bring in speakers on mental health issues, give athletes surveys with questions designed to flag emotional problems or teach their coaches to spot signs of distress.
“It’s been a major shift,” said Greg Burke, Northwestern State’s athletic director. “There was a definite stigma.” But with greater transparency, “the awareness level can’t be high enough right now.”
Still, Gerald Jordan, the assistant athletic director for sports medicine at Louisiana Tech, cautioned that “it’s hard to compare the big and small schools just because the resources are typically so drastically different.
“What we can do here is probably not what Grambling can do five miles down the road versus what we can do here is probably not in comparison to what LSU can do,” Jordan said.
It also can still be hard for many athletes to get past the stigma themselves.
“When you think of most athletes, whether they’re at the collegiate level or beyond, they’ve been playing their sport for their entire lives,” said LaKeitha Poole, LSU’s director of sport psychology and counseling, said. “That’s a major part of their identity.”
“Any form of help-seeking, which in their terms would be seen as a weakness, definitely isn’t appealing initially,” she said.
Hannah Blackford, a freshman softball player at Southeastern Louisiana University in Hammond, said she suffered from anxiety after moving 950 miles from her home in Iowa. The transition to mounting schoolwork, rigorous softball practices and being away from her family led to constant struggles, she said.
At first, Blackford was caught up in the stigma, too. “Yeah, when my coach referred me to the counselor, I thought I could figure things out for myself,” she said.
She said she was shaking before her first meeting with the counselor and thought it was just going to cover “stupid stuff I already know.” But, she said, “i+t opened me up and opened my eyes to reality.”
Now she visits the counselor every week or two.
Anxiety is not the only issue that athletes face. Depression also can be a factor but might not show.
A survey of 257 college athletes by researchers at the University of Iowa in 2006 suggested that 21 percent of them were experiencing symptoms of depression.
Other researchers have estimated that 10 to 15 percent of college athletes have mental health issues that warrant counseling.
Pressure from coaches, the physicality of most sports and difficulties in balancing time demands all can influence the mental health of student-athletes. Athletes also often have an elevated status and are expected to uphold their school’s image.
Awareness of mental health issues in sports was boosted by research on concussions and the resulting brain injuries and by Will Smith’s movie “Concussion” in 2015.
The NCAA guidelines, passed in 2016, are voluntary and lay out the best practices for colleges to follow in four areas: identifying mental health care professionals for athletes, setting out routine and emergency practices for referring athletes to the counselors, developing preseason mental health screening questionnaires to identify potential areas of concern and promoting environments that support well-being and resilience.
Surveys also have shown that athletes are more likely to seek help if services are provided in familiar places, like athletic training centers.
LSU can afford to have three mental-health counselors in its athletic department because it is the only Louisiana school whose sports programs earn a profit.
Having mental-health specialists at athletic facilities “would be wonderful if the revenue was available,” said Jim Murphy, the head trainer at McNeese State University in Lake Charles.
“If you look at higher education in the state of Louisiana, there’s not much money, and in fact, they keep taking money away from it,” he said.
Murphy said that if the university’s student health center cannot see an athlete quickly enough, he will call mental-health professionals in Lake Charles and ask them to help out.
Louisiana Tech and UL Monroe both invite a mental-health counselor from HealthPoint Center in Monroe to speak to their athletes.
Louisiana Tech also gives athletes preseason surveys that include three “red flag” questions related to their sense of hope, everyday emotions and whether they have any thoughts of harming themselves or anyone else. If their answers raise concern, they see a counselor within a day or two.
Lauren Miller, the mental health specialist for the Tulane athletics department, said requests for counseling are evenly split now between male and female athletes despite the stereotype that women are more likely to open up than men.
Regardless of where student-athletes receive counseling, the emphasis placed on mental health issues is easing the stigma.
Li, the former LSU gymnast, said she thinks “we’re on the rise to turning that stigma around.”
“But I think it’s 50/50 right now,” she said, “because there are some people I know that are in denial about their mental health and some people that want to be open about it and want to seek help for it.”

Word multimillionaires

Submitted Photo
Two Central Catholic Elementary School fifth-graders, Emmy Robison and Lucy Kincade, have read over 2 million words so far during this 2018-2019 school year. After reading each book, the students are tested through the Accelerated Reader Program on classroom or library computers verifying their accomplishment.

Lady Tigers win against Crusaders

The Hanson Memorial Lady Tigers prevailed over the Westminster Lady Crusaders 60-14 Thursday at the Billy Gene Talbot Gymnasium.
Carlie Pellerin poured in a game-high 18 points to propel the Lady Tigers.
Miya Hidalgo and A’Myrie Foulcard collected nine points apiece while Abby Dugas tallied 8 points.
Rounding out the scoring for the Hanson Lady Tigers were: Celia Bishop, 4; Rosemary Colley, 4; Camille Baker, 3; Riley Trahan, 3 and Madison Parro, 2.

Lady Hornets win vs. Eagles

DELCAMBRE _ The Franklin Lady Hornets dropped a 72-49 decision to the Vermilion Catholic Lady Eagles on Wednesday in the opening round of the Lynette Viator Memorial Tournament here at the DHS Gym.
In the first game of the tournament, Franklin was defeated by Vermilion Catholic 72-49.
Leading scorers for the Lady Hornets were: Rontrinia Hawkins with 12 points (4 FGs and 4/6 FTs) and Makhai Fernandez with 12 points (5 FGs and 2/4 FTs).
Other standouts were Aaliyah Smith with 10 points on 5 FGs, Sta’Trail Butler with 7 points on 2 3FGs and 1/2 FTs, Autumn Jones with 6 points on 3 FGs, and Kirtsen Perro with 2 points on 2/2 FTs.
Franklin 49, Comeaux 42
The Franklin Lady Hornets defeated the Comeaux Lady Spartans 49-42 in their 2nd game of The Lynette Viator Memorial Tournament held in Delcambre.
Leading the Lady Hornets were Rontrinia Hawkins with 14 points (6 FGs and 2-7 FTs) and Sta’Trail Butler with 13 points (4FGs, 1 3FG, and 2-3 FTs).
Other top scorers were Kirsten Perro with 8 points (2 FGs, 1 3FG, and 1-2FTs), Brineisha Jack with 6 points (2 3FGs), Makhai Fernandez with 6 points (3 FGs), and Autumn Jones with 2 points (1 FG). For Comeaux, Olivia Scott scored 20 points on 7 FGs, 1 3FG, and 3-6 FTs.
The Lady Hornets will travel back to Delcambre on Saturday for their final game and take on Erath at 11.

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

Morgan City Review
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Phone: 985-384-8370
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