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WILLARD LEFTWICH

Willard Leftwich Jr., 81, a native of Morgan City and resident of Ragley, died Tuesday, Jan. 2, 2018.
He was preceded in death by his parents, his mother and his wife.
He is survived by two daughters, Jo Ann Vandenburg Willis and Penny Vandenburg; two sons, Douglas Leftwich and Dale Leftwich; two sisters, Kathy Taylor and Linda Blakeman; and numerous grandchildren, great-grandchildren and other family members.
Private services are pending.

Wheel House for Jan. 5

AMERICAN LEGION
Post 242 in Patterson will hold its monthly meeting at 7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 8. Members and veterans are urged to attend.

PRAYER SERVICE
Living in the Light Ministries will hold its weekly Community and Unity Prayer Service at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 9, at Golden Hands Ministries, 411 Field St., Bayou Vista. Public invited. Meetings are held each Tuesday at alternate locations.

Jim Bradshaw: It's cold here, but it's been much colder

It’s not unusual to get a night, or even two, when hard freezes visit Acadiana, but it is uncharacteristic for us to see a weeklong surge of frigid nights like the one that ushered in the new year.
Still, Old Man Winter will have to work some to beat the bleak, blizzardy January 1940. The overnight temperature fell below freezing — most nights far below freezing — on 22 of the 31 days of that month, and into really icy weather for 18 consecutive nights. The temperature dropped to 25 degrees or below on 12 of those nights, and into the teens on five.
That was not only the coldest January on record for much of south Louisiana, it was the coldest of all months for most of us, although February 1905 holds the record in Abbeville (45.5), Grand Coteau (45.0), Jennings (44.2), New Iberia (46.4), Opelousas (43.3) and Rayne (45.4).
The chill of 1940 was tough on people, pipes, and plants. The headline on the front page of the Lafayette Advertiser on Jan. 19 reported, “Louisiana Shivers as Frigid Blast Sweeps to the Coast” as “Lafayette residents shivered and slipped their way to work this morning following one of the severest cold spells this city has experienced in several years.”
J.J. Davidson, the government forecaster in Lafayette, “declared … that after thawing out the box in which his instruments were kept … he found the lowest temperature reached last night was 14 degrees. Mr. Davidson stated that at 9 a.m. … the temperature was around 19 degrees but soon after begin rising and at noon was around 24 degrees.”
Service station attendants scrambled as “motorists began pouring in for anti-freeze fluid for their cars.” Driving was dangerous. “Vision was poor due to the rain and sleet freezing on the windshields.” Alongside the streets and highways “exposed places were bathed in sheets of white as the sleet did not melt but froze into a solid mass of ice.”
That ice stayed in place for the rest of the month; the average temperature at Lafayette for January 1940 was only 40.4 degrees. The average low temperature was 29.7 degrees, more than 12 degrees below the norm, and communities across south Louisiana registered similar readings.
Snow fell on the morning of Jan. 22. The Associated Press reported that “except in the coastal regions, Louisiana and Mississippi … are mantled in the heaviest snow in years, measuring from one to 13 inches.” According to that day’s Advertiser, “sleet which began early in the morning soon turned into snow.”
Broken pipes became a big problem Jan. 23. Mayors and fire chiefs worried about water pressure that reduced the flow to a trickle as people turned on the tap to prevent freezing or let water flow from broken pipes.
Plants also took a beating. E.A. McIlhenny reported “incalculable damage” to the Jungle Gardens at Avery Island. He said he lost $100,000 (more than $1.5 million in today’s dollars) in camellias alone and that ice accumulations broke many limbs on the island’s huge oak trees.
“Accumulated ice … played havoc in bamboo thickets,” the newspaper reported. “Mr. McIlhenny said it would take at least a month just to clear away the debris, and it would be ‘maybe years’ before the damage could be rectified.”
On Jan. 27, “Many cases of flu and colds [were] keeping doctors … busy and livestock men report[ed] that some stock has been lost although the greater portion of the cattle have been driven to wooded areas where they are sheltered from the biting north wind. Hay and rice straw is being spread … to give the animals bedding and food.”
Schools in Rayne closed on Jan. 29, “due to a prevailing intense epidemic of influenza.” Rayne High School made “several attempts” to continue classes, “but the absentee roll was too large to give a successful operation of the school.” Schools in some other towns were closed because they couldn’t be properly heated.
Toward the end of the month tugs and barges on the Mississippi began to run into floating blocks of ice. R. G. Lovette, chief of the New Orleans district of the Corps of Engineers, said “solid cakes of ice varying from four inches to 18 inches in thickness and some blocks 15 to 20 feet wide were as far down as Plaquemines,” drifting toward the Gulf at about a mile an hour.
The weather bureau’s Monthly Weather Review said there were also ice blocks on the Atchafalaya late in the month. The Review’s editors said the month saw “decidedly subnormal” temperatures.
Decidedly an understatement, I think.
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.

DELMAS GREEN JR.

Delmas Green Jr., 68, a native and resident of Patterson, died Sunday, Dec. 31, 2017, at Teche Regional Medical Center.
Services will be at 10 a.m. Saturday at Jones Funeral Home in Morgan City.
He is survived by his wife, Kim Washington Green of Picayune, Mississippi; his mother, Genevieve Green of Corpus Christi, Texas; two sons, Delmas Green III of Sydney, Australia and Demetrius Green of Patterson; four daugh-ters, Renorda Bridget of Virginia, Bianca Bridges of Bayou Vista, Laneisha Washington of Patterson and Alaina Torres of Picayune, Mississippi; seven grandchildren; his siblings, Pamela Wash-ington and Yvonne Vining, both of Patterson, Spencer Colbert and Walter Colbert, both of Carencro, Annette Allen and Calvin Green, both of Houston, Carolyn Hall of Portland, Oregon, Felicia Ruiz of San Antonio, Jill Hollis of Fort Worth, Texas, Julie Whitmill of Corpus Christi, Texas, Tammy McKinney of Pensacola, Florida and Ethel Green of Austin, Texas; and a host of other relatives.
He was preceded in death by his father, a sister, a brother and both his maternal and paternal grandparents.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrange-ments.

Reindeer games

Robert Sampey, Angela Kraemer, Debbie Stevens, Shelby Mccarty, Jill Davis and Reina Fernandez, members of East St. Mary Kiwanis Club, enjoyed reindeer races Dec. 16 at the Tri-City Track Club Jingle Race held at Lawrence Park.

Kiwanis adopt Wyandotte

Submitted Photos
The Kiwanis Club of East St. Mary recently adopted Wyandotte Elementary as an Adopt a School. Pictured are Travis Richard, Kiwanian; Barbara LeLeux,
principal; students Zoe Makepeace, Dillon Ebbecke, and Talan Askew; and Jenifer McDill, Kiwanian.

Delmas Calvin "Boobie" Green Jr.

Delmas Calvin "Boobie" Green, Jr., 68, a resident and native of Patterson, LA, passed away on Sunday December 31, 2017 at Teche Regional Medical Center.
Memorial Services will be observed on Saturday, January 6, 2018 at Jones Funeral Home 715 Sixth Street Morgan City, LA at 10:00 AM.
Memories of "Boobie," as he was known to many, will forever remain in the hearts of his wife, Kim Washington Green of Picayune, MS; his mother Genevieve Green of Corpus Christi, TX; two sons, Delmas C.(Cahla) Green, III of of Sidney, AU and Demetrius Green of Patterson, LA; four daughters, Renorda Bridget of VA, Bianca Bridges of Bayou Vista, LA, Laneisha Washington of Patterson, LA and Mrs. Micheal ( Alaina Washington)-Torres of Picayune, MS; seven grandchildren; his siblings, Pamela Washington and Yvonne (Kirk) Vining both of Patterson, LA, Spencer (Veronica) Colbert and Walter Colbert both of Carenco, LA; Annette (Errol) Allen and Calvin Green both of Houston, TX, Carolyn Hall of Portland, OR, Felicia (Manuel) Ruiz of San Antonio, TX, Jill (Quintan) Hollis of Fort Worth, TX, Julie (John) Whitmill of Corpus Christi, TX, Tammy (Otis) McKinney of Pensacola, FL and Ethel Green of Austin, TX; three sisters-in-law, one brother-in-law and a host of nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends.
Delmas was preceded in death by his father, one sister, a brother, and both his maternal and paternal grandparents.
Jones Funeral Home of Morgan City/Franklin/Houma/Jeanerette in charge of arrangements.

Holden steps down as Berwick football coach

Following the best two-year run in Berwick High School football during approximately the past 20 years, Berwick High School football Coach Eric Holden has tendered his resignation, effectively immediately.
Holden, who commuted from the Baton Rouge area to his job at Berwick, confirmed Wednesday that he submitted his resignation a day earlier, citing a need to be there for his daughter, who he said needed him at home.
“I enjoyed my time at Berwick,” he said. “It was a blessing. I loved the kids and the parents and the whole town. Everything was great.”
Holden’s departure marks the Tri-City area’s third head coaching change this offseason. Patterson already has replaced head coach Ryan Stewart with Don Jones (story coming Monday), while Morgan City Coach Eric Howard said he was relieved of his duties following the season.
“Coach came in and did what he said he was going to do,” Berwick High Principal Paul Broussard said of Holden. “He took us to the playoffs two years in a row, so for that, I’m thankful for that. I think the whole community’s thankful.”
Holden leaves after leading Berwick to St. Mary Parish’s best season in 2017.
In two years leading the Berwick program, Holden had a combined 16-7 mark. He led the Panthers in back-to-back seasons after a 20-year drought, including the team’s first playoff win this season in 20-plus years.
“I’m real proud of the work that we did. The kids gave great effort, and it was a community effort, and everyone did a great job. I’m proud of everyone.”
In the 2016 season, his first with the team, Berwick improved upon a 3-7 mark from a year before with an 8-4 record. Among the signature wins that season was the squad’s first win against Patterson in 20 years and another victory against E.D. White for the first time in years. Berwick’s season ended with a first-round loss to Brusly High School.
In his second season and with a beefed up schedule, Holden produced nearly the same record as his squad finished the regular season with a 7-4 mark and entered the postseason as the No. 11 seed. Berwick defeated No. 22 Eunice 34-14 before falling in the second round to eventual state champion West Feliciana 38-12.
In 2017, Berwick’s losses were to eventual Division IV runner-up Isidore Newman, eventual 3A semifinalist Kaplan, Class 3A playoff team Patterson and West Feliciana.
The Panthers also defeated Northwest, who advanced to the Class 3A quarterfinals.
Among the players to ink scholarships under Holden’s watch was recent LSU signee Kenan Jones, a standout wide receiver for the Panthers.
Holden also was the school’s athletic director, but Berwick announced just before winter break that Heather Templet, who serves as the school’s volleyball, softball and powerlifting head coach, will be the school’s Acting Athletic Director for the spring semester. Broussard said the next football coach then will take over the athletic director’s role.
“We’ve still got plenty of talent left, so the hunt is on,” Broussard said. “We’re going to try to get a good coach in here to keep developing that talent and keep us winning.”
As for his next move, Holden said he would remain in coaching but would be looking for something closer to the Baton Rouge area.

Teen charged with domestic abuse, false imprisonment

A teen was booked Thursday on domestic abuse battery and false imprisonment charges after he committed a battery on a female and then prevented her from leaving a Morgan City motel in December 2017, Police Chief James Blair said in a news release.

—Jordan Smith, 17, of Marietta Lane in Gray, was arrested at 2:02 p.m. Thursday on warrants charging him with domestic abuse battery, false imprisonment, criminal damage to property and failure to appear for trial.

Smith was located and arrested at the parish jail on warrants for Morgan City police and city court. The Morgan City police warrants stem from a Dec. 8, 2017, investigation during which police learned that Smith allegedly committed a battery on the victim and prevented her from leaving a motel, Blair said.

Smith also allegedly damaged property belonging to the victim, Blair said. The investigation continued and warrants were prepared for Smith’s arrest. Smith was jailed.

Blair reported that officers responded to 27 calls and reported the following arrest:

—Christy Bordelon, 36, of Fourth Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 3:05 p.m. Thursday on charges of driving under suspension and careless operation of a motor vehicle.

Patrol officers responded to the area of First Street in regard to a crash. Officers arrived, and Bordelon was identified as the driver involved. Police found evidence that Bordelon operated the vehicle in a careless manner, Blair said.

Bordelon also had a suspended driver’s license, Blair said. Bordelon was jailed.

St. Mary Parish Sheriff Mark Hebert reported that deputies responded to 39 complaints and reported the following arrest:

—Victoria Johnson, 38, of Fifth Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 1:18 p.m. Thursday on a charge of simple assault.

Deputies investigating a disturbance at a business on Lake Palourde Road in Amelia collected evidence that Johnson threatened the life of a female victim during an argument between the two. Johnson was transported to the St. Mary Parish Law Enforcement Center for booking. Johnson was released on $1,000 bail.

Berwick Police Chief James Richard reported the following arrest:

—Druvan Robinson, 20, of Fourth Street in Berwick, was arrested at 2:12 p.m. Thursday on charges of criminal damage to property and disturbing the peace. Bail was set at $750.

Patterson comes back to defeat Berwick

The Patterson Lumberjacks overcame a huge first-quarter deficit against Berwick by outscoring the home standing Panthers in the next three quarters en route to a 48-45 win in both teams’ District 8-3A opener Wednesday.
Trailing 16-3 after a quarter, Patterson outscored Berwick 20-10 in the second period to cut its deficit to 26-23 at halftime.
The Lumberjacks took a 34-33 lead after three quarters and outscored Berwick 14-12 in the fourth quarter for the three-point win.
Tyrone Tillman led Patterson with 17 points, while Kai Schexnayder also reached double figures with 11 points. Other Patterson scorers were Dajon Richard and Drew Lucas with six points each, James Butler, four, and Reginald Talver and Elijah Williams with two each.
Josh Carver led Berwick with 11 points. Other Berwick scorers were Donald Tillman and Tavaris Howard with eight points apiece; Patrick Robertson, seven; Travis Whitehead, six; Dayton Clark, five; and John Coler, two.
Last week, Berwick finished play at North Vermilion’s tournament Friday with a 64-35 loss to Crowley.
Crowley led 12-6 after a quarter, 24-17 at halftime and 40-25 after three quarters.
Whitehead led Berwick with 11 points, while Howard also reached double figures with 10. Other Berwick scorers were Carver, four; Clark and Baline Louviere, three each; and Robertson and Reggie James, two apiece.
Berwick (6-9, 0-1) will play again Friday when it hosts Brusly in nondistrict action.
Prior to Wednesday’s matchup, Patterson finished play Friday at St. Martinville’s tournament with a 52-46 victory against St. Martinville.
No individual stats were submitted.
Patterson (11-3 overall, 1-0 in district) will return to action Friday when it continues district play with a home contest against David Thibodeaux.
MCHS falls to
St. Martinville
The Morgan City Tigers fell to St. Martinville 74-64 in Morgan City Tuesday.
St. Martinville outscored Morgan City in every quarter, taking a 17-13 lead after a quarter, a 32-25 halftime lead and a 49-40 lead after three quarters.
Tywaun Walker led Morgan City with 17 points, while Ke’Sean Francois also reached double figures with 12. Other Morgan City scorers were Jared Singleton, nine; Deondre Grogan and Kerwin Francois, eight apiece; Taaj Daniels, six; and Morrquise Charles, four.
Last week, Morgan City concluded play at North Vermilion’s tournament with a 71-49 win against Barbe.
Morgan City led 16-6 after a period of play, 40-22 at halftime and 62-36 after three quarters.
Kerwin Francois led three Morgan City players in double figures with 16 points. Other Morgan City scorers were Singleton and Walker with 12 points each; Daniels, eight; Ke’Sean Francois and Charles, seven each; Nylan Francois, four; and Grogan and Tyson Boatman, three each.
Morgan City (13-4) will return to action Friday when it travels to face Westgate.
CCHS finishes 1-2 at
E.D. White tourney
After falling to Central Lafourche 62-58 in overtime Thursday, Central Catholic defeated South Lafourche Friday 44-40 in overtime before falling to Terrebonne 44-38 Saturday.
Against Central Lafourche, the Trojans took a 10-7 lead after a quarter and led 27-24 at halftime. Central Lafourche extended its lead to 39-35 after three quarters before Central Catholic outscored it 19-15 in the fourth quarter to force overtime with the game tied at 54.
In the extra period, Central Lafourche outscored Central Catholic 8-4.
Elijah Swan led three Eagles in double figures with 22 points. Other Central Catholic scorers were DJ Lewis, 13; Brooks Thomas, 12; Davidyione Bias, six; and Taylor Blanchard, five.
Against South Lafourche, the Tarpons led 15-12 after a quarter and 32-26 at halftime. Central Catholic cut its deficit to 37-34 after three quarters. Central Catholic forced overtime after outscoring South Lafourche 6-3 in the final quarter to tie the game at 40 at the end of regulation.
In the overtime period, the Eagles outscored the Tarpons 4-0.
Blanchard and Swan led Central Catholic with 11 points apiece. Other Central Catholic scorers were Lewis, nine; Thomas, eight; Bias, three; and Seth Williams, two.
Against Terrebonne, Central Catholic trailed 9-6 after a quarter but took an 18-17 lead into halftime.
However, Terrebonne outscored Central Catholic 28-19 in the second half for the win. The Tigers took a 29-27 lead after three quarters before finishing the game with a 16-11 scoring advantage.
Lewis led Central Catholic with 15 points. Other Eagles’ scorers were Thomas and Swan with eight apiece and Blanchard, seven.
Central Catholic (6-6) will return to action this week when it begins play in Thomas Jefferson’s tournament, which starts Thursday and continues through Saturday.

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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