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E.D. White defeats MCHS 49-20

E.D. White rolled past Morgan City 49-20 in District 7-4A action Friday.
While the Cardinals (4-1 overall, 2-0 in district) totaled 387 yards of offense, including 317 rushing and seven scores, they could have had more as a Brandon Legendre punt return for a score and a pick six were nullified via penalty in the first half. Legendre had another first-half punt return for a touchdown nullified via an inadvertent whistle.
Despite its adversity with flags, the Cardinals took a 28-0 halftime lead and led by as much as 42-6 on an Aaron Arcemont 15-yard run with no time left in the third quarter.
Morgan City (2-3, 0-1) outscored E.D. White 14-7 in the fourth quarter.
“It wasn’t pretty,” E.D. White Coach Chris Bergeron said of the win. “The most important thing was we got out of here with a win, and we got out of here healthy. Definitely not the way we wanted to play tonight. We were a little lackluster early on and had some big penalties, some big plays called back, but we found a way to win.”
Morgan City Coach Eric Howard said, “Since I’ve got here, our kids are willing to compete. As long as we keep doing that, we’re going to be fine, but we played a pretty good football team tonight. Made more mistakes than we needed to to win the game.”
The Tigers also had problems with penalties as they had 12 for 105.
Legendre led the Cardinals with 11 carries for 113 yards and three scores. He also completed 3 of 6 passes for 70 yards with an interception.
Nik Shanklin added 12 carries for 62 yards and two touchdowns, while Dex Trosclair had six carries for 59 yards and a score, and Arcemont, eight carries for 46 yards and one score.
Defensively, E.D. White held Morgan City to 219 yards of offense (30 rushing and 189 passing).
Shanklin scored the Cardinals first two touchdowns, rushing in for scores from 9 yards with 4 minutes left in the first quarter and then from 3 yards out with 6:32 remaining in the first half for a 14-0 E.D. White lead.
Legendre then scored the next two touchdowns. The first came on a 34-yard run with 4:06 remaining in the first half, while the second came via a 14-yard run with 1:25 remaining. Miles Loker, who was 7-for-7 on point-after attempts, booted the extra-point through for a 28-0 E.D. White lead.
Legendre scored his third touchdown on a 5-yard run with 8:27 remaining in the third quarter to cap E.D. White’s opening drive of the second half for a 35-0 lead.
Morgan City scored in the third on a block punt return with 2:42 left when Andrew Williams scooped up the loose football and took it in from 20 yards for a score. The Tigers’ two-point conversion was no good for a 35-6 E.D. White lead.
After E.D. White extended its lead to 42-6 on Arcemont’s 15-yard run on the ensuing drive, Morgan City needed just two plays to score as on the second play of the drive, Morgan City quarterback Alex Brocato connected with Devonta Grogan on a short pass and he raced down the E.D. White sideline for a 73-yard touchdown reception with 11:16 remaining in the ball game. Brocato’s two-point run was good for a 42-14 E.D. White lead.
Grogan scored one more time in the game, this time on defense. After E.D. White had reached the Morgan City 37, a fumble on a third-down-and-three play was scooped up by Grogan, who raced down the E.D. White sideline for a 67-yard touchdown with 8:08 left. The Tigers’ two-point conversion attempt was no good.
Brocato completed 11 of 16 passes for 189 yards with one touchdown and one interception. He led the team in rushing, too, with seven carries for 31 yards.
Grogan had five catches for 159 yards and a score to lead Morgan City’s receivers.
Morgan City will return to action Thursday when it travels to face South Terrebonne in Bourg in District 7-4A play.
E.D. White will return to action Friday when it travels to face Vermilion Catholic in nondistrict action.

Running game powers Colonels past Lamar 41-14

The Nicholls State University football team received 100-yard rushing performances from sophomores Kyran Irvin and Jeremy Rounds and the defense shutdown Lamar as the Colonels claimed their first road win with a 41-14 victory Saturday night at Umphrey Stadium.
Both sophomores had career nights to fuel a season-high 354 yards on the ground. Irvin rushed for 152 yards and two touchdowns on 24 carries, while Rounds turned out 103 yards and a score on 16 totes. It marked the first game with two 100-yard rushers for the Colonels since their last trip to Lamar on Nov. 7, 2015. Tuskani Figaro added 67 yards rushing and a touchdown.
Nicholls’ defense allowed just one score, excluding a late one after a muffed punt return, and two interceptions led to a pair of touchdowns. Allen Pittman had a 54-yard return on a pick in the second quarter that gave Nicholls a 20-0 lead, and Darryl Adams intercepted a pass at midfield, returning it 52 yards to the 2 in the third quarter. Two plays later, Irvin scored for the final touchdown for the Red and Gray.
The Colonels (3-2 overall, 2-1 Southland Conference) outgained the Cardinals 506-237 in total offense, and the defense limited Lamar (1-4, 0-3) to 4 of 17 on third-down conversions. Chase Fourcade had an efficient night for the Colonels, completing 12 of 17 passes for 152 yards and a score.
Nicholls’ defense was led by Corey Abraham with nine tackles. As a team, the Colonels totaled eight tackles for loss, including a sack by Hezekiah White.
For the game, Nicholls used two big plays by Rounds to get the opening drive started. Rounds had a 13-yard rush and a 14-yard catch to move the ball across midfield.
Two plays later, Fourcade hit Christian Booker for a 28-yard touchdown. The extra point was blocked for a 6-0 advantage.
Early in the second, Dai’Jean Dixon had a 43-yard grab down the sideline to place the ball at the 1. On the next play, Irvin found pay dirt for a 13-0 lead.
On the ensuing possession, Terrell Encalade pressured Lamar’s Darrel Colbert Jr. and forced an errant pass that was intercepted by Pittman at midfield. Pittman raced untouched for a touchdown, and Lorran Fonseca’s extra point made it 20-0.
Lamar cracked the scoring column on a 36-yard pass to Kirkland Banks, but Nicholls answered immediately with a 10-play, 75-yard scoring drive. Irvin rushed five times for 40 yards before Rounds bounced to the outside for a 16-yard touchdown.
In the third quarter, the defense continued to dominate by forcing two punts, and the Colonels extended the lead to 34-7 on a 10-yard touchdown run by Figaro.
On Lamar’s first pass of the next drive, Adams stepped in front of the intended receiver for a pick and was wrestled down before reaching the end zone. Irvin needed just two rushes for his second touchdown and a commanding 41-7 advantage.
Lamar’s final touchdown came in the fourth after a muffed punt return inside the 5. Andrew Allen scored on a 4-yard rush to make the final.
Central Catholic High alum Garret LeBlanc received playing time for the Colonels.
UP NEXT
The Colonels return to John L. Guidry Stadium next weekend to host rival Northwestern State for Homecoming. Kickoff is slated for 6:30 p.m. The game will be televised on Cox Sports TV and broadcast on ESPN Radio New Orleans 100.3 FM.

Patterson church members form annual pro-life 'chain'

For the more than 40 years since the U.S. Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision, no issue has divided Americans more than abortion. But on Sunday, along one stretch of westbound U.S. 90 near Wise Street in Patterson, there was no division. About 70 people, most members of nearby St. Joseph Catholic Church, lined the highway for the church’s annual Life Chain event. The participants ranged from elementary school age to the age at which sitting in chairs a few yards off the highway was the better part of valor. The leaders were the Rev. Herbert Bennerfield III, St. Joseph’s priest, and ...

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Louisiana Spotlight: Deficits prompt spending review

BATON ROUGE — Louisiana’s decade of financial problems may have a silver lining, forcing more scrutiny on how the state spends its money, what dollars agencies receive and what tax breaks the state gives its businesses and people.

Many lawmakers often avoid digging into the weeds of the state’s dense budget and tax issues. But amid years of perpetual budget shortfalls and deficits, more legislators appear to be trying to educate themselves — to learn how much money comes into the treasury and exactly where it goes.

They’re tracking bank accounts, enacting tighter controls over new escrow accounts and analyzing the dollars that agencies receive from fees, penalties, fines and other charges that often seemed off-limits for examination.

House Republicans have pushed for reviews of the multimillion-dollar contracts that agencies have. The Senate’s tax committee spent months combing through the tax breaks on the books. And lawmakers in both chambers have embarked on a study of the pots of money previous
Legislatures have locked away and protected from cuts.

This month’s meeting of the joint House and Senate budget committee was a prime example of the digging from lawmakers into Louisiana’s income and spending. The committee received a lengthy, new report showing where agencies have socked away money in bank accounts that roll over from year to year, never reverting back to the treasury for general use.

“It’s surprising that we really haven’t focused on that like we should, because it is a lot of money,” said Sen. Francis Thompson, a Democrat from Delhi.

The accounts contain millions of dollars. Some of the money can’t be touched and spent on state programs and services, like the dollars the health department holds for patients in state-run health facilities or the dollars state prisoners earn. But other cash could be reshuffled around to help with budget gaps or likely should at least be considered when lawmakers are drawing up the annual operating budget.

Lawmakers seemed a bit stunned to learn what they didn’t really know or review as they built their spending plans each year.

“It’s hard for somebody to come whine about us taking action on a budget item when you know they’re sitting on this other money that they know that they have. It’s like my kids asking for money to go to the concession stand but they’ve got $8 in their pocket,” said Senate Finance
Chairman Eric LaFleur, a Ville Platte Democrat who has pushed for more tracking of the bank accounts.

At one point as lawmakers looked through the spreadsheet documenting the millions rolled over by agencies from last year to the current financial year, LaFleur remarked: “It doesn’t seem like we have a real uniform policy or rationale behind why we do what we’re doing.”

Not all agencies get to hang onto dollars they generate during the year. Some have to turn whatever they aren’t authorized to spend over to the treasury when a budget year ends. The decision-making over how each agency is treated has been done piecemeal, through legislation over the years.

In other words, lawmakers at some point enacted these policies — and then apparently did little follow-up of their impact.
Barry Dusse, director of Gov. John Bel Edwards’ Office of Planning and Budget, told lawmakers that governor’s offices have taken those holdover dollars into account when filling budget gaps during midyear deficits and when building their proposals for upcoming budgets throughout the years. Lawmakers, Dusse reminded the joint budget committee, have approved spending those dollars as part of budget adjustments and annual spending plans.

State agencies can’t use the dollars they have unless the Legislature gives them the appropriations authority. So, lawmakers may not have been closely tracking the money, but they’ve still been spending it without paying much attention.
It’s not yet clear whether the new levels of scrutiny will substantially change lawmakers’ approach to balancing Louisiana’s budget. Efforts to substantially change Louisiana’s tax break spending or its protected funds have gone nowhere so far, despite the studying.

But if nothing else, lawmakers might at least be better informed.
Melinda Deslatte has covered Louisiana politics for The Associated Press since 2000. Follow her at http://twitter.com/melindadeslatte

Berwick High homecoming queen

The Daily Review/Bill Decker
Hannah Henry was crowned homecoming queen Friday at Berwick High's game with Ascension Episcopal. She was crowned by BHS Prinicipal Paul Broussard, right. She was joined by her parents, J.P and Tori Henry, and the Berwick Panther mascot.

Morgan City High homecoming queen

The Daily Review/Mico Aloisio

Tayla Weary was crowned Morgan City High School’s 2017 homecoming queen during Friday’s 49-20 loss to E.D. White. Weary stands with her parents Reginald Weary and Theresa Weary during halftime of the football game. See Page 6 for a recap of the game.

Wheel House for Oct. 2

HOUSING
Morgan City Housing Authority accepting applications for public housing 8-11:30 a.m. and 1:15-3 p.m. Thursdays, Oct. 5, 12 and 19. Section 8 is currently closed. Must bring picture ID for all adults 18 or older, birth certificate and Social Security cards for everyone, and proof of all income.

PRAYER BRUNCH
At Mt. Era Baptist Church, 406 Lawrence St., Morgan City, 9 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 21. Speaker Ella Mahannah. Theme: “Pray, Pray, Pray.”

CHOIR
Mt. Era Baptist Church, 406 Lawrence St., Morgan City, celebrating Lenel Watson Memorial Inspirational Choir’s anniversary at 11:15 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 22. Guest speaker the Rev. Ronald McCoy, associate minister, Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Morgan City.

Scalise: 'Weird calmness while I'm hearing gunfire'

WASHINGTON — In his first interview since being critically wounded in an ambush shooting in June, Congressman Steve Scalise shared harrowing details of an ordeal that nearly cost him his life, but described his passion for politics as undiminished. Scalise, R-Jefferson, speaking with Norah O’Donnell of CBS’ “60 Minutes,” recalled trying to crawl away from the gunman’s withering rifle fire after being shot at a charity baseball practice for congressional Republicans on June 14. His arm gave out, leaving him lying on the field. “At that point I just went into prayer and it — it gave me a calmness,” Scalise said ...

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Lafayette Christian routs CCHS 48-7

Lafayette Christian Academy quarterback Zachary Clement kept the ball on the first play from scrimmage, got to the outside and rumbled down the side line for a 59-yard touchdown 33 seconds into Thursday’s District 7-1A contest with Central Catholic in Morgan City.
It was the first of four touchdowns for the standout quarterback and set the tone for what was a rough night for Central Catholic, who was routed 48-7.
Lafayette Christian scored on four of its five first-half drives to take a 28-7 lead into halftime.
In the second half, the Knights scored one more offensive touchdown and added two defensive touchdowns via a fumble recovery and an interception return.
“We got our butts kicked,” Central Catholic Coach Tommy Minton said. “They came out from the first play and hit us in the mouth and we didn’t answer. We got a lot of growing up to do as a football team, and I’m tired of hearing that we’re young, and we’re playing sophomores. We played five games, a jamboree and a scrimmage. It’s time for some of them to man-up.”
For the game, the Knights totaled 337 yards of offense (327 rushing and 10 passing).
Meanwhile, its defense held Central Catholic to 129 yards of offense (90 rushing and 39 passing).
Clement led Lafayette Christian with 19 carries for 221 yards and four touchdowns, while senior running back Trey Breaux added 10 carries for 54 yards and a score.
“Our tackling and our effort to tackle was not good,” Minton said. “Up front, we didn’t block. We basically played like we were the intimated football team.”
After Clement’s touchdown on the Knights’ opening drive with 11:27 remaining, Clement scored again on Lafayette Christian’s second drive with an eight-yard run with 7:32 remaining.
The Knights’ third touchdown was set up by an interception by Lafayette Christian’s Errol Rogers, who returned the turnover to the Central Catholic 48.
Four plays later, Breaux scored from a yard out for a 21-0 Lafayette Christian lead with 5:01 remaining in the first half.
Central Catholic cut its deficit to 21-7 on its next drive, utilizing some trickery.
Facing a fourth-and-13 situation from the Lafayette Christian 41-yard line, Central Catholic punter Tyler O’con received the snap, and then, instead of kicking, threw to sophomore tight end Nathan Hebb. Hebb took the pass in for a 41-yard touchdown with 11:30 remaining in the second quarter. Phillip Guarisco’s extra point was good to cut the Lafayette Christian lead to 21-7.
However, the Knights responded on its next drive with a lengthy, penalty-filled possession that was capped by Clement’s 6-yard run on which he extended the football across the goal line for the score with 5:49 remaining. Colin Lahaye, who was 6-for-6 on extra point attempts, converted the point-after attempt for a 28-7 Lafayette Christian lead.
In the second half, Central Catholic got the ball first.
On the Eagles’ first play from scrimmage, quarterback Davidyione Bias completed a pass to wide receiver Brooks Thomas. However, Thomas was stopped behind the line of scrimmage, and he fumbled the football. Lafayette Christian’s Martin Lee picked up the loose ball and returned it 20 yards for a score and a 35-7 Lafayette Christian lead.
The Knights added two fourth-quarter touchdowns. Clement reached the end zone on a 19-yard run after initially breaking three tackles, including two at one time, on a touchdown run with 6:50 remaining, while senior Aaron Jackson returned an interception 28 yards for a score with 1:04 remaining for the final margin.
Bias led the Eagles’ run game with 15 carries for 75 yards, while standout running back Chris Singleton was limited to 15 yards on 12 carries.
O’con led the Eagles through the air as he completed his lone pass attempt for a 41-yard touchdown.
Hebb led Central Catholic’s receivers with two catches for 47 yards and a touchdown.
Central Catholic will return to action Oct. 6 when it travels to New Iberia for a District 7-1A contest against Highland Baptist.

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