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Centerville advances to 2nd round in playoffs

CENTERVILLE _ Centerville rallied for a 4-3 victory over the South Cameron Tarpons Wednesday in the State Class 1-A Bi-District Baseball playoffs at the CHS Baseball Field.
Centerville Coach Barry Price was proud of his team’s ability to fight through adversity.
“I was proud of how my team fought through adversity,” he said. “Their pitcher was really good and it took a while to adjust but we didn’t panic, we were able to do the things necessary to win.”
Centerville will travel to play Logansport on Monday at 5 p.m. in the second round of the State Class 1-A Baseball Playoffs.
Centerville winning pitcher Payton Nash turned in a stellar performance on the mound, fanning 11 while surrendering only three hits.
Nash went the distance while earning the mound victory. He went seven complete innings, giving up three runs (one earned) on only three hits with 11 strikeouts and five walks.
Centerville spotted South Cameron a 2-0 advantage in the first inning before striking back with four runs in each of the second, fourth, fifth and sixth frames for the comeback 4-3 victory.
South Cameron broke a scoreless tie with two runs in the top half of the first inning.
Centerville scored its first run in the bottom half of the second frame to trail South Cameron 2-1.
In the second inning, Landon Lanclos reached on a fielder’s choice, delivering Ben Simpson from third base as the Bulldogs trailed the Tarpons 2-1.
In the fourth frame, Centerville manufactured one run to knot the game at 2-2. Andrew Cuvillier walked to first base after being hit by a pitch before tagging home plate on Matthew LeBourgeois RBI-single.
Centerville secured a 3-2 cushion in the bottom half of the fifth frame when Braden Gaspard walked to first base before tagging home plate on Ben Simpson’s infield single.
One inning later, South Cameron added a run to tie the game at 3-3.
Centerville retaliated with the game-winning run in the bottom half of the sixth inning when off the bat of Matt LeBourgeois. In the sixth, LeBourgeois lined a RBI-single which plated Landon Lanclos _ who had reached on an error. Lanclos reached on an error before scoring the game-winning run on LeBourgeois’ RBI-single. On the play, Lanclos took advantage of an error, racing to first base and later advanced to third base where LeBourgeois’ timely single enabled him to cross home plate while breaking the 3-3 deadlock and giving Centerville the come-from-behind 4-3 victory.
Leading hitters for Centerville were: Matthew LeBourgeois, 2 for 3, 2 RBI; Ben Simpson, 1 for 3, RBI; Braden Gaspard, 1 for 2; Peyton Nash, 1 for 4 and Landon Lanclos, RBI.
Centerville will travel to Logansport on Monday for a regional round contest in the State Class 1-A playoffs.

BERTHA BELL EVANS

Bertha Bell Evans, 81, of Franklin, Louisiana peacefully departed this life on Tuesday, April 24, 2018 in Arlington, Texas.
She was a loving mother, grandmother, and great grandmother. Celebration of Life: High noon (12 p.m.) Saturday, April 28, 2018 at Cornerstone Baptist Church, 5415 Matlock Road, Arlington, Texas, 76018. Visitation: 10 a.m. Monday, April 30, 2018 at Otis Funeral Home, 501 Willow St., Franklin, La., 70538, with burial immediately following at Saint John Cemetery.
Bertha is preceded in death by her parents, Albert Evans and Rebecca Smith-Rawster; sons, Michael Charles Evans, and Steven Nathan Evans; and sister, Carolyn J. Smith. Survivors: daughters, Rebecca Denise Evans of Franklin, La., Debra Evans-Simmons (Lonnie) of Arlington, Texas, Patricia Beam (Dell) of Evans, Georgia, Elizabeth Beverly of Vancleave, Miss.; sons Joseph Evans of Franklin, La., and Eugene Evans (Marjorie) of Jacksonville, NC; 17 grandchildren; 15 great-grandchildren; sister, Dorothy M. Clarkson (Joseph); brother, Herbert J. Smith; and a host of other relatives and friends.

'Singin' in the Rain' movie 4 p.m. at Teche

Teche Theatre for the Performing Arts will present the movie “Singin’ in the Rain” this afternoon.
The show is set for 4 p.m. and admission is free.
A classic musical, it stars Gene Kelly, Donald O’Connor and Debbie Reynolds.

Funds sought in revitalization study for MC-Berwick area

If successful, plans are to extend into the entire parish

An initiative to revitalize the Morgan City and Berwick area received parish funding Wednesday.
The St. Mary Parish Council approved a $20,000 allocation to St. Mary Excel, a committee of the St. Mary Parish Community Foundation, for a technical assistance visit by the Urban Land Institute.
Alice Pecoraro, committee member, said the concentration has been on Morgan City and Berwick, as well as the entire parish.
“We focused on discussing how we could improve our community,” she said. “Many times we talked in circles, trying to figure out what we might need to do to diversify the economy, to bring jobs back, to make our community a place for our young people to want to come back to.”
A local family in the target area is developing land near Lake Palourde, and Pecoraro said the group met with Steve Oubre, developer of River Ranch in the Lafayette area. Oubre showed plans for the project, but said, “This plan is not going to work unless you do something with your city…it doesn’t look good, there’s not enough going on there, you have to do something.”
The committee delved into The Urban Land Institute. Morgan City-Berwick were chosen because “when we spoke to The Urban Land Institute they told us that we had to focus, we couldn’t take the parish as a whole, we had to pick a small area, because that’s what they do. So we thought the model we would use would be something that could be replicated throughout the parish.”
Dr. Monica Mancuso, committee member, said a quality of life survey was conducted in the target area. “From that survey, a majority of the 340 business people felt that we were not doing enough in our area to attract business and entrepreneurial opportunities, to provide job opportunities that support young people staying in the area and attract jobs that pay well and offer benefits.”
The committee examined initiatives in other communities for inspiration, and found that those area engaged entities like the institute, which is a non-profit organization with many professional members and services, who are volunteers.
“These are senior-level professionals that come into your community in site assessment visits,” Mancuso said.
Committee member Laura Dozar said the institute would make a six-day visit assessment of the community. The institute would meet with 75-100 local people to be interviewed. That would be followed by an examination of the results period and make recommendations.
The total cost is $135,000 for the study. The parish’s $20,000 contribution would come from the general fund.
Councilman Craig Mathews stressed a diverse cross section of the community in the assessment methodology.
“There has to be an adequate and very diverse representation in the entire process from start to finish,” he said. “If that does not happen, it will be virtually impossible to capture a comprehensive view of our unique parish.”
Pecoraro said that diversity would be a factor in the assessment.
“I think what our community lacks the most is momentum,” she said. “If these people come here and give us momentum…then the leadership is not going to be able to forget about us because we’ll have the involvement of the community.”
Contributions will be requested from Morgan City, Berwick, the Port of Morgan City, the Cajun Coast Tourist Commission and the family developing the land, as well as private donors.
In other business:
—A ribbon cutting will be held Friday at 11 a.m. at the West St. Mary Civic Center dedicating the completed overpass and exchange on US 90.
—Ordinances were introduced renewing the library system ad valorem tax and the ad valorem tax for the criminal justice system; setting the speed limit on Foxglove Drive in Patterson to 15 mph; and authorizing lease of the Jessie B. Hayes Memorial Boat Landing between the Parish and the City of Patterson.
—Final approval was given to the bond issuance of $10 million for road repairs.
—A resolution of respect was approved in memory of John J. Lajaunie Jr.
—An election will be held Nov. 6 to elect a coroner after the resignation of the former official.
—$3,250 was allocated to Water and Sewer Commission 4 for hydrant testing.
—The St. Mary Chamber of Commerce requested a $3,000 allocation for its annual Bayou BBQ Bash, but the request was not acted upon.
—John R. Higdon, Larry J. LeBlanc and Ulysses Knight Jr. were reappointed to the Fire Protect Dist. 2 board; Johnny Sutton was reappointed to the Fire Protect Dist. 11 board.

New schedules next year for parish middle and high schools

St. Mary Parish public middle and high school students will be on a different kind of schedule when they return to school next year. The goal is to improve academic performance while saving money.
At a special meeting Tuesday in Centerville, the school board decided to establish a seven-period day for high schools, and, for parish middle schools, it eliminated a “teaming” period used for collaboration among teachers.
High schools currently use a “4 by 4” system. Students take four courses in the fall semester and then change to a different four courses for the spring semester.
Beginning next year, high schools will go the more traditional seven-period day.
Currently, said Assistant Superintendent Teresa Bagwell, students are offered 32 “course opportunities” — the chance to take a credit course — over their four-year high school careers. They can pick up another one to four high school credits during middle school.
Students are required to earn 24 credits for a TOPS-university diploma from their high school and 23 credits for the technical- and career-oriented Jump Start diploma.
Under the new system, they’ll stay in the same classes in the same 50-minute periods all year. The students will have 28 course opportunities, still enough to get the credits they need. And they’ll continue to be able to earn up to four high school credits in middle school.
State educational standards are changing to define proficiency as scoring “mastery” on standardized tests rather than “basic,” as has been the case. The seven-period day will add another 1,200 instructional minutes to each course, Bagwell said.
In middle school, students attend on an eight-period schedule. Each teacher has one period for individual preparation and another period for collaboration with other teachers in their grade group.
Under the new schedule, the teaming period will be eliminated, adding another period of face-to-face instructional time to the schedule, Bagwell said.
In addition to the educational benefits, the schedule changes will save the school system more than $1 million each year.
That’s an important consideration for the school board. Members learned earlier this spring that they must find another $3 million to put the budget in balance by the end of the fiscal year July 1.
About two-thirds of the shortfall resulted from a drop in property tax revenue and a reduction in state Minimum Foundation Program funding. The MFP funding is based in part on enrollment, which is declining in St. Mary, and on each school system’s contribution toward its own finances.
“Throughout the state,” Bagwell said, “an increasing number of districts have adopted a traditional year-long high school schedule including Lafourche, Terrebonne and Vermilion parishes, while maintaining significant academic progress.
“In the end, the district seeks to maximize instructional funding and retain course options for students as they pursue on-time graduation and transition beyond high school.”

Bid to strike Jim Crow jury law advances

BATON ROUGE (AP) — Louisiana is a step closer to striking a Jim Crow-era law that allows divided juries to settle criminal cases.
The House criminal justice committee voted Wednesday to advance a constitutional amendment to require unanimous verdicts in serious felony cases.
Louisiana trials, including some murder cases, can be resolved when 10 out of 12 jurors agree on a person’s guilt. Even Oregon, the only other state in the country to allow split verdicts in felony cases, requires a unanimous verdict in murder cases.
Sen. J.P. Morrell, a New Orleans Democrat who sponsored the bill , said he traced the jury policy to an 1898 constitutional convention where lawmakers were trying to maintain white supremacy after the Civil War.
“This is like the vestigial tail of some prehistoric creature that we need to just chop off,” he said. “We are beyond this as a state.”
Two prosecutors spoke in opposition to the bill, arguing that it is sometimes hard to get all 12 jurors to agree and said that there’s no data to show that the current system results in injustice. The Louisiana District Attorneys Association has taken a neutral stance on the proposal but allows prosecutors to take individual positions.
It is difficult to gauge how many people have been imprisoned in Louisiana on split decisions, as not all prosecutors in the state maintain information on how juries vote. An analysis by The Advocate newspaper of felony trials over six years showed that 40 percent of 993 convictions came from split juries.
John DeRosier, district attorney in Calcasieu Parish, told the panel that the law’s roots in white supremacy aren’t a good enough reason to change anything.
“I’ve heard a lot about this system begin adopted as a vestige of slavery. I have no reason to doubt that. I’m not proud of that, that that’s the way it started, but it is what it is,” he said.
After the opponents testified, Rep. Ted James, an African-American lawmaker on the committee, took issue with DeRosier’s words.
“You are elected to represent everybody,” he told DeRosier, “and to admit that it started in slavery and say ‘it is what it is,’ I hope that the people of your parish are listening. And if they aren’t I’m going to make sure that they know what you said today. I am utterly offended.”
“I’m bubbling right now,” James said. A round of applause followed his comments.
Morrell’s measure passed the Senate by a single vote over the two-thirds margin needed to advance constitutional amendments through the Legislature. If successful in the full House, the proposal would go before voters in the fall.

Changes proposed tax break program

BATON ROUGE (AP) — Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards is again seeking to make changes to a decades-old property tax break for industrial manufacturers.
The Advocate reports that the proposal released Wednesday would return the Industrial Tax Exemption Program to a 10-year break from paying local property taxes. That’s the way it had been for decades until changes made by the Edwards administration.
Under the latest proposal, instead of a complete forgiveness of property taxes, however, companies would be able to get a tax break covering 80 percent of the taxes they otherwise would owe. Companies would have to pay the remaining 20 percent of the assessed values.
The change would allow local governments to immediately start receiving revenues to pay for roads and schools needed by the newly hired workforce at the manufacturing facility receiving the tax breaks, Economic Development Secretary Don Pierson said.
Pierson outlined the administration’s proposal to the Board of Commerce and Industry, describing them as “process improvements.” The proposal has to go through a regulatory process, which allows for public input, before the Board of Commerce and Industry votes on the governor’s recommended changes.
There’s been confusion and worry since Edwards, a few months after taking office in 2016, ordered changes to a program that operated for years on autopilot.
The Democratic governor tied the tax breaks to job creation and ended automatic renewals and tax breaks for routine maintenance. He ordered that companies seeking the tax break get approval from the local taxing districts — such as school boards, municipalities and parishes.
Parishes with large industries already quickly got organized and created processes. Other localities without much experience had a tougher time. Businesses wanted more stability and firmer timelines.
Pierson said the governor asked his office to do a comprehensive study and come up with uniform procedures.
The state would present the proposed tax break contract to local tax authorities, which would need to hold a hearing and vote whether to reject the offer. This would give industries a stable timeline of 30 or 60 days to hear the outcome.
If a local taxing authority opts out, whatever property tax millage assigned to the district would still be collected. But it would end the possible confusion of each tax district setting its own rate and requiring assessors to juggle a bunch of different rates for the same property.

Springsteen ‘Born to Run’ manuscript heads to auction

NEW YORK (AP) — Bruce Springsteen’s songwriting scrawl is born to make bucks.
Sotheby’s said Friday that it will auction a handwritten working manuscript of “Born to Run” in June.
The presale estimate for the single sheet of notebook paper with 30 lines of writing is $200,000 to $300,000.
It will be offered in a books and manuscripts online auction from June 18 to June 28. It also will be exhibited in New York during that period. It’s being sold by an unidentified American collector.
Sotheby’s says many of the lines in this 1974 version are “apparently unpublished and unrecorded,” though the chorus is “nearly perfected.”
The artist tried out phrases, set off in parenthesis, with notes in the margin. His penmanship is adorned with curly-topped T’s.

HARRY JOHN McGOVERN

May 15, 1935 - April 24, 2018 Harry John McGovern died at the age of 82 on Tuesday, April 24, 2018, surrounded by his family. Harry was born in Lanesborough, Massachusetts, one of 12 children born to the late Terrence McGovern and the late Emma Sheldon McGovern. He was a former longtime resident of Stephentown, New York, where he raised his family and later moved to Pierson, Florida, until settling in Patterson in 2006. Those he leaves to cherish his memory include his three children, Terry “Odie” McGovern and his wife Charlene, Harry John “Skip” McGovern Jr., and Linda M. LaCoste and ...

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