Amani Parade rolls down Patterson's Main Street
The Krewe of Amani's Lundi Gras event rolled from Patterson High through downtown.
The Review/Bill Decker
The Krewe of Amani's Lundi Gras event rolled from Patterson High through downtown.
The Review/Bill Decker
A Morgan City man faces an attempted murder charge after Sunday's stabbing that sent another local resident to the hospital with a neck wound.
Arrested by Morgan City police at 9:11 p.m. Sunday was Jarred Randle Womack, 40, Park Road, Morgan City on a charge of attempted second-degree murder.
According to the Morgan City Police Department at 5:30 p.m. Sunday, officers responded to the area of Park Road, where a subject who had been stabbed. Officers arrived and located a male victim who had been stabbed in the neck. It was learned that the suspect, who was identified as Womack, had fled the area on foot.
A description of the suspect was relayed to patrol officers, who located Womack in the area of La. 182 and Industrial Road moments later. Investigators with the Morgan City Police Department Detectives Division responded.
According to reports, evidence was uncovered linking Womack as the individual who had stabbed the victim. The victim, who suffered life-threatening injuries, was transported to an out of area hospital by Air-Med for medical treatment.
As of Monday morning, the victim was listed in critical but stable condition. An arrest warrant was obtained for Womack. Womack was booked into the Morgan City Jail and incarcerated. The investigation continues.
FRANKLIN – After a handful of tough years, when the Atchafalaya River often ran high and federal dredge funding came in trickles, the Port of Morgan City has found something to build on.
Along with funding through the Army Corps of Engineers and the work of various dredging companies, the port has managed to turn dredge material into new coastal land, port Executive Director Raymond “Mac” Wade told the St. Mary Parish Council on Feb. 23. That occurs at a time when Louisiana coastal loss is a major environmental concern
Wade has been making the rounds at local government meetings recently, reporting on happenings at the port.
Since at least 2015, Wade’s periodic reports have had to include gloomy news about commercial waterways narrowed and clogged by sediment.
This year, he can talk about a higher-than-usual appropriation of $16.3 million in the federal budget for local waterways, plus another $33.1 million in post-budget work plan funding for the Corps of Engineers.
The result has been a lot of dredging. Up to four dredges at a time were working in local waterways late in 2021. They included the Brice Civil Constructors dredge, agitating and removing fluff mud in the channel between Eugene Island and the sea buoy; the dredge Alaska working in the Crewboat Cut area; and the dredge Capt. Frank working in Berwick Bay.
The result, Wade told the Parish Council, is that the port channel from Crewboat Cut to Eugene Island is 400 feet wide and 22-23 feet deep, and 250 feet wide and 22-30 feet from Eugene Island to the sea buoy. The authorized dimensions are 400 feet wide and 20 feet deep.
“We finally got us a channel …,” Wade said. “It’ll help our fabrication yards and help bring some business.”
And, answering a question that came up during his reports to the Morgan City and parish councils, Wade said Bayou Chene will be dredged for the first time since 2009, probably in late summer.
Wade’s report wasn’t just about dredging sediment from channels. It was about what has been done with the sediment.
The sand and silt, millions of cubic yards of it, have been used to build up land over the years in places like New Bird Island, T-Pat Island and the area below Shell Island.
Taken together, the newly created land amounts to 12,000 to 15,000 acres, or 19 to 25 square miles.
Claire Davis-Wheeler, a post-doctoral research erat Tulane, wrote on the university's website that Louisiana loses about that much coastal land each year. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates the loss since the 1930s at more than 2,000 square miles. Terrebnnne Parish is one of the hardest-hit areas, leading to talk about a possible sediment pipeline from the Atchafalaya zone to our neighbor to the east to rebuild coastal land there.
But Wade told the council Wednesday that such a project could cost $350 million. The Bayou Chene Flood Control Structure, now nearing completion, costs less than a quarter as much and took decades to become reality – and then only after a series of expensive floods beginning in 2011.
Meanwhile, the Atchafalaya and Wax Lake deltas are rarities talong Louisiana’s coast in that land is being renewed, thanks to sediment diverted along with water from the Mississippi River into the Basin system.
The biblical overtones of separating the land from the waters were not lost on the council. At one point after Wade’s presentation, a councilman asked legal counsel Eric Duplantis whether an ordinance up for a passage vote could be amended. That ought to be possible, Duplantis replied.
“We just heard a man turn water into land,” he said.
International comedic variety entertainer Fantastick Patrick is bringing his absurd tricks and daring stunts to Morgan City Municipal Auditorium at 7 p.m. Thursday, March 10.
Single concert tickets are $25 for adults and $5 for students K-12.
Season tickets are now on sale for the 2021-2022 Concert Season.
All tickets, subscription or single concert, are available online at www.morgancitylive.com or at the door.
According to promotional material, Fantastick Patrick is an international performer who specializes in variety entertainment combining situational improvised comedy with a backdrop of absurd tricks and daring stunts that give life to a truly unparalleled experience.
Each show is unique, and is guided by the audience members in attendance for each performance.
His over-the-top shows could feature anything from a ride on a 10-foot unicycle to balancing step ladders to improvised songs on the ukulele.
November 2, 1935 — February 23, 2022
Hillary “Buddy” J. Falgout Jr., a resident of Lafayette, passed away peacefully Wednesday, February 23, 2022 at his home, surrounded by his loving family.
Buddy was born November 2, 1935, in Morgan City, the son of Hillary J. Falgout Sr. and Agatha Veyre Falgout.
Buddy was a servant of God; he was a man full of faith who always put God first. Buddy had great character and integrity; he was well-known and everyone who knew him loved him. Buddy’s dry-wit was also a huge part of his personality and a favorite amongst friends and family. Buddy enjoyed spending time with his grandchildren and great-grandchildren, who were his world. Buddy was an avid LSU and Saints fan. He also served in the Army National Guard as a Team Leader for 8 years from 1952 to 1960.
He will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his wife of 56 years, Lucy Thompson Falgout of Lafayette; two sons, Troy Falgout and wife Penny of Lafayette, Michael Falgout of Youngsville; seven grandchildren, Cade Falgout and wife Anna, Taylor Melancon, Taylor Falgout, Brett Falgout, Kaitlynn Falgout, Brooke Falgout, and Blakley Falgout; two great-grandchildren, Lucy Babineaux and Emmalou Falgout; one great-grandchild on the way; brother-in-law, David Thompson and wife Martha; many nieces and nephews; and his dear friend and neighbor Jon Ryker who was like a son to him.
Buddy was preceded in death by his parents, Hillary Falgout Sr. and Agatha Veyre Falgout; and sister, Noelia Martin.
A memorial service will be held at 12:00 p.m., Saturday, March 5, 2022, at Twin City Funeral Home. A memorial visitation will be held Saturday, March 5, 2022 at Twin City Funeral Home from 10:00 a.m. until the time of service. After services, Buddy will be laid to rest in the Morgan City Cemetery, where military rights will be rendered.
Happy 85th birthday to my loving husband Larry Giroir, who celebrated Monday, much love, Nedra and all your family.
LENTEN FISH FRY
Sponsored by Bayou Vista Knights of Columbus every Friday during Lent, except Good Friday, at St. Bernadette Catholic Church Parish Hall, Bayou Vista. Menu: fried fish, white beans and rice or French fries, and bread. Cost: $10.
Some years ago, I tried to write a single paragraph that contained every cliché used to describe what happens in towns across south Louisiana on Mardi Gras.
It went something like this: “Sounds of ‘throw me something, mister,’ cascaded above the carefree Carnival chorus of ribald revelers who thronged into the city’s center to greet the mystical rulers of Mardi Gras’s madcap merriment. Raucous throngs of masked merrymakers and good-natured fun seekers donned fanciful and outlandish garb as they turned out to laissez les bons temps rouler as the Monarch of Mirth and his lovely Queen toured their domain aboard resplendent regal barges in a playful prelude to the pomp and pageantry of a fairy tale ball and tableau that will end at the stroke of midnight, the beginning of the somber Lenten season.”
The Monarch of Mirth and his lovely queen have traveled under several names in their annual visits to south Louisiana communities, but they all shared the common trait of returning from some faraway place each year to greet their loyal subjects — sending an emissary beforehand to let their fun-loving subjects know royalty was on the way.
The Lake Charles celebration in 1882 was proclaimed by The Great Momus, “The Merry Monarch! The loved of the wise! The worshipped of fools! The promoter of friendship, and … the Friend of Man!” He commanded that the people “lay aside your cares and troubles, your traffics and trades, and prepare to meet us on our entrance into our Royal City … with the firing of guns, the waving of banners, the look of delight, and the shout of joy.”
In 1887, “his exalted Majesty King Cotton” arrived by steamboat in the town of Washington “amid all the pomp and eclat that could assure a triumphal entry and that could elicit the most striking testimonials of the love and fealty of his liege subjects in this portion of his extensive empire.” The “august personage” was greeted by a “long retinue of peers, dukes, nobles, guards, civic officials, ladies of honor, and household subjects.”
King Attakapas, “Lord of all he Surveys,” and “The Royal Leader of Mystic Knights,” ruled Lafayette in 1897. He decreed that Mardi Gras day should be “set apart as a day of mirth and merriment throughout my entire realm” and commanded “all loyal subjects to abandon … domestic and business cares ... and unite in making the event one of memorable enjoyment.”
In 1899, the “great and mighty potentate, King Progress,” invited “the big hearted and wide awake citizens of St. Martinville, a town of which he has grown very fond, … to decorate their carriages with flowers” and ride in a procession with him.
The arrival of Le Roi de Cypres, (King of Cypress) in New Iberia in 1895 was announced by a mile long parade that included “a mounted platoon of costumed ‘house guards,’ the king’s jester, the New Iberia Brass Band, the royal herald and his escort, and … the king’s body guards — the Knights of Pythos, No. 10.”
Some communities celebrated Mardi Gras even though they had no royalty of their own. Rex, the king of the New Orleans Mardi Gras, regularly toured south Louisiana and was fêted everywhere he went. Sometimes it was the actual New Orleans Rex, and his tours were designed to drum up business for the city’s Carnival celebration; sometimes a hometown king borrowed the name, and the celebration was designed to keep local folks (and their dollars) at home.
Whoever ruled and wherever their realm, the day almost always ended with the “pomp and pageantry of a fairy tale ball,” and the “somber season of Lent” began in many households with one monumental hangover.
You can contact Jim Bradshaw at jimbradshaw4321@gmail.com or P.O. Box 1121, Washington LA 70589.
Gerard Bourgeois and Emma Levert Aucoin reigned as King and Queen Hephaestus LXI during the Krewe of Hephaestus court held Saturday at the Morgan City Municipal Auditorium. Theme of the evening for the area’s oldest krewe was “Poseidon’s Realm.” The queen is the daughter of Michelle Trapp and Gregory P. Aucoin. The krewe will present its parade at 2 p.m. Fat Tuesday in Morgan City to close out the Tri-City area’s Carnival festivities.
Ben Jones wouldn’t mind “Peace River” becoming an overnight success. But that’s only if over a decade counts as “overnight.”
When the Baton Rouge oil executive’s inspirational movie get shown at the Cinemark Perkins Row and 560 screens nationwide on Thursday night, it will have taken that long for his idea to become a reality. His original concept didn’t envision some of the casting decisions it would entail.
“It’s almost a surreal experience to write the story and then go through … a 12-year process and see it come to fruition on the screen, and to be acting with my wife and my son in it,” Jones said. “That’s a trip, as they used to say.”
If that phrase dates Jones, 68, it’s not the only thing about “Peace River” that’s a throwback. Though set mostly in recent years, the movie focuses on timeless qualities like faith, love and loyalty, all of which are rolled into what Jones calls “the cowboy way.”
Having competed in rodeo in his youth and occasionally worked as a cowboy in adulthood, Jones learned the ethos of that lifestyle and built his film around it. It tells about multigenerational New Mexico ranching family.
A young cowboy, Casey Shane, played by Chase Garland, follows family tradition and joins the military after 9/11 only to be traumatized by combat experiences and have his life fall apart when he returns home — until he's rescued by faith in Christ. Jessica Wood plays his love interest, Maria Martinez.
For Jones, owner of Canada Energy Partners, this is his entertainment debut. He attended Dallas Theological Seminary in the 1970s and has preached and served as an interim pastor for various churches while pursuing his secular career, and he started writing “Peace River” in 2009.
The project got a jump start when Jones attended the International Christian Film Festival in Orlando, Florida, in 2019 and pitched his idea to filmmaker Douglas James Vail, who agreed to direct and serve as co-executive producer along with Jones.
When industry COVID-19 standards raised costs so high that Jones had to drop plans for a union-staffed film, the actor who played Bo Shane, Casey’s grandfather, dropped out, as did his replacement when a crew member was exposed to the coronavirus. At Vail’s suggestion, Jones agreed to play the part.
The original version of “Peace River” was 3 hours, so they had to find ways to cut it to its current 2 hours and 10 minutes. That was a painful process, Jones said, but he and his investors like the finished product.
“You’re so immersed in it, so deep into it, sometimes you wonder, ‘Have we drunk our own Kool-Aid here? Have we lost our objectivity?’” Jones said.
“But I felt real good about the film we delivered. … We had a number of people look at the film, so we had a real good feel that it wasn’t just our Kool-Aid.”
Getting it shown was another battles Fathom Events, which finds screen availabilities for faith-based and other specialty films, agreed to give “Peace River” its nationwide, one-night showing. It’s being marketed to Christian organizations, including cowboy churches, Jones said.
If it does well, an encore showing is a possibility, and if it continues to sell tickets, it could lead to a general release, Jones said. Four screens at Perkins Rowe have all but sold out, but tickets may be available at theaters in New Orleans and Covington. To find tickets, visit the Fathom Events website.
If it succeeds, don’t be surprised if Jones’ name appears on more movie credits.
“I’ve got about three prequels to this and one sequel and some nonfiction episodic stuff I think I could do,” Jones said, then laughed. “Ain’t nothing like starting a new career when you’re 68.”
Overnight successes, after all, aren’t always as overnight as they seem.
To buy tickets to “Peace River”: https://www.fathomevents.com/events/Peace-River/theaters
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