Louisiana
Louisiana high school football final scores, results — November 7, 2025
The 2025 Louisiana high school football season continued on Friday, and High School On SI has a list of final scores from this weekend.
Louisiana High School Football Scores, Results & Live Updates (LHSAA) – November 7, 2025
A.J. Ellender 31, Morgan City 6
Acadiana 21, Carencro 14
Albany 46, Bogalusa 28
Ascension Catholic 54, East Iberville 16
Ascension Christian 25, North Iberville 24
Assumption 14, South Terrebonne 16
Barbe 70, Sam Houston 49
Beekman 86, Madison 58
Belaire 30, Baker 7
Belle Chasse 55, Kenner Discovery 0
Bonnabel 35, Riverdale 12
Bourgeois 38, East St. John 20
Breaux Bridge 22, Livonia 19
Brother Martin 31, Holy Cross 3
Brusly 6, Istrouma 0
Caldwell Parish 47, Vidalia 0
Calvary Baptist Academy 51, North Caddo 6
Carver Collegiate Academy 36, Fredrick Douglass 14
Catholic – N.I. 42, Houma Christian 8
Central 48, Scotlandville 7
Church Point 49, Ville Platte 6
Covenant Christian Academy 49, Central Catholic 6
Covington 14, St. Paul’s 34
De La Salle 49, Livingston Collegiate Academy 23
Delta Charter 32, St. Frederick 29
Denham Springs 54, St. Amant 26
Destrehan 49, Thibodaux 26
East Ascension 35, Walker 20
East Feliciana 58, Northeast 14
Episcopal 48, Capitol 0
Erath 40, Abbeville 12
Eunice 64, Washington-Marion 50
Evangel Christian Academy 55, Parkway 27
Ferriday 46, Rayville 6
Franklin 22, Delcambre 14
Franklin Parish 61, Tioga 22
Franklinton 41, Archbishop Hannan 17
Green Oaks 58, Magnolia 6
Gueydan 28, Highland Baptist Christian 10
Hammond 35, Ponchatoula 28
Haughton 58, St. Louis Catholic 34
Haynesville 47, Glenbrook 0
Homer 49, D’Arbonne Woods 42
Jeanerette 60, Hanson Memorial 0
Jena 52, Buckeye 0
Jennings 27, Westlake 6
Jewel Sumner 21, Amite 7
John Ehret 27, West Jefferson 0
Jonesboro-Hodge 30, Cedar Creek 0
Kaplan 28, St. Martinville 20
Kentwood 44, Central Private 14
Kinder 48, Avoyelles 6
Lafayette 41, Sulphur 14
Lafayette Christian Academy 13, Lake Arthur 0
Lafayette Renaissance Charter Academy 25, Ascension Episcopal 24
Leesville 56, LaGrange 24
Liberty 30, Woodlawn-B.R. 21
Lincoln Prep 51, Arcadia 28
Loreauville 15, West St. Mary 14
Loyola College Prep 28, Northwood 27
Lutcher 42, South Lafourche 3
Mamou 58, Pine Prairie 0
Mandeville 42, Fontainebleau 20
Mansfield 28, Many 10
McDonogh 35 56, Eleanor McMain 18
Metairie Park Country Day 42, Collegiate Academy 0
Minden 42, Southwood 0
Natchitoches Central 27, Benton 13
Neville 31, Alexandria 14
Newman 28, South Plaquemines 0
North Webster 31, Bastrop 0
Northlake Christian 57, Independence 15
Northwest 45, Iota 14
Patterson 28, Donaldsonville 19
Pickering 15, Plain Dealing 6
Pine 48, Springfield 12
Rayne 42, Crowley 27
Red River 54, Oakdale 18
Richwood 36, Carroll 14
Ringgold 40, Bolton 0
Riverside Academy 1, Crescent City Christian 0
Rosepine 40, East Beauregard 34
Ruston 49, West Monroe 44
Sacred Heart 42, Berchmans Academy 6
Salmen 28, Chalmette 24
Slidell 42, Northshore 3
Southside 65, New Iberia 7
St. Augustine 55, John Curtis Christian 28
St. Charles Catholic 24, Archbishop Shaw 0
St. Helena College and Career Academy 34, Pope John Paul II 24
St. James 63, Berwick 0
St. John 35, White Castle 6
St. Martin’s Episcopal 46, Varnado 28
St. Mary’s 58, Lakeview 0
St. Michael 52, McKinley 0
St. Paul’s 34, Covington 14
St. Thomas More 55, North Vermilion 7
Terrebonne 52, Central Lafourche 25
Teurlings Catholic 36, Northside 6
The Willow School 12, Abramson 8
University Lab 42, Port Allen 6
Vinton 21, DeQuincy 17
Washington 40, Woodlawn-Shreveport 14
West Feliciana 48, Tara 0
West St. John 46, Centerville 0
Westminster Christian Academy – Lafayette 20, Vermilion Catholic 19
Winnfield 20, Lakeside 6
Wossman 29, Peabody 20
Young Audiences Charter 36, Patrick Taylor Science & Tech Academy 0
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Louisiana
Burbank Arby’s shuts down
BATON ROUGE, La. (WAFB) – After only two years in business, the Arby’s on Burbank Drive has closed.
A sign placed on the restaurant’s door thanked customers who patronized the location.
The location, on Burbank Drive at Ben Hur, struggled for business, particularly over the past few months.
It opened around the same time the neighboring McAlister’s Deli location opened its doors.
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Louisiana
New Orleans artist Hannah Chalew imagines a postapocalyptic Louisiana through reclaimed oil wells
Hannah Chalew salvaged an old oil well from the Poland Avenue scrap yard in New Orleans. She coated it with bagasse, or sugar cane pulp, from Grow Dat, the urban farm in City Park. The paint is recycled, from another nonprofit, the Green Project, and the plants — palmettos, cypress, elephant ear — are largely from the Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana’s greenhouse.
The embedded plastic trash — a toothbrush, a COVID-19 test, an old burned CD — “came from my life,” she said. “Plastic will be a fossil marker of our time, here long after we’re gone.”
The result is an artwork that gestures at what humans might leave behind, a sculpture called “Orphan Well Gamma Garden.” It’s a window into the post-apocalypse, where the stuff of civilization has coagulated around Chalew’s reclaimed steel wellheads, that questions the kind of future that humans are creating, and what might survive us.
Trash is packed into an art piece called, “Orphan Well Gamma Garden” in the back of artist Hannah ChalewÕs studio in New Orleans, Wednesday, July 16, 2025. The piece was on display the the CAC in New Orleans during Prospect. 6. (Photo by Sophia Germer, The Times-Picayune)
“I felt kind of like a reverse archaeologist, imagining how some person in the distant future would think about this, like, disembodied sippy-cup top,” Chalew said. “What will the people, or the creatures, who encounter this make of it?”
That work turned out to be only the first in a series of orphan-oil-well-inspired work. A new piece, “Christmas Tree” — named after the Christmas Tree wellheads that pockmark Louisiana’s coastline and are so called because they taper somewhat like a tree — was inspired by a June trip to the mouth of the Mississippi River. There, Chalew saw wells that had become “orphaned.” The companies that owned them had gone bankrupt and responsibility for plugging them had fallen to the state. Some were leaking oil.
She wonders, too, what kind of plant life might recolonize old wells. She embedded “Christmas Tree” with oak wood and resurrection fern — a plant that can dry out and enter into a desiccated, dormant state, and remain that way for up to a century. When exposed to water, the fern comes back to life.
Artist Hannah Chalew poses in a studio in New Orleans, Wednesday, July 16, 2025. (Photo by Sophia Germer, The Times-Picayune)
She said she wanted to imagine “what might recolonize” old, abandoned fossil-fuel infrastructure.
Chalew’s “Christmas Tree” was just on display at Good Children Gallery part of a show called “Mining for Wonder in the Humdrum.” The show closes Dec. 7. She has work on display as part of another exhibition, called “Fragile Matter,” at the Hilliard Art Museum in Lafayette.
“I realized that this is a body of work,” she said. “These totemic sculptures are part of an eventual show that will be a kind of ‘orphanage’ of old well sculptures.”
Hannah Chalew’s new sculpture, “Christmas Tree,” on display at Good Children Gallery on St. Claude Ave. in New Orleans. (Photo by Alex Lubben, The Times-Picayune)
‘You don’t need to worry about the radon’
The ‘gamma garden’ in the title is an allusion to the post-World War II, U.S.-led initiative called Atoms for Peace, which sought to find peaceful uses for nuclear technology. The idea was to speed evolution in plants by planting them around a pole made of radioactive metal. (Most of the plants died.)
Chalew named her work after this practice because old oil wells can themselves be radioactive, which she learned as she was building the sculpture. She called up a friend who works at an environmental advocacy group, who told her, “You don’t need to worry about the radon. You need to worry about the benzene,” another carcinogenic chemical that can waft off oil wells.
She tested her wells for both and found them to be free of radiation and toxins.
The legacy of the petrochemical industry has been the focus of Chalew’s work. In one of her recent paintings, “Feedback LOOP,” now on display at the Hilliard, Chalew paints plants as intertwined — as they often are in south Louisiana — with industrial pipes and valves.
An art piece called, “Orphan Well Gamma Garden” stands in the back of artist Hannah Chalew’s studio in New Orleans, Wednesday, July 16, 2025. The piece was on display the the CAC in New Orleans during Prospect. 6. (Photo by Sophia Germer, The Times-Picayune)
An oak tree, downed in Hurricane Ida, almost appears to be fighting against the pipes that make up LOOP, an offshore oil hub connected to pipelines that weave their way through Louisiana’s coastal wetlands. As with her orphan well sculptures, the materials are natural or salvaged, with ink made from oak trees and paper made from sugar cane and used plastic.
Her critique extends further, calling out industry’s affiliation with the arts.
Artist Hannah Chalew poses near a pile of dumped metal near Venice, La., Thursday, June 5, 2025. (Photo by Sophia Germer, The Times-Picayune)
She emblazoned the words “HELIS OIL + GAS” on each of the wells, a reference to the one-time Louisiana oil and gas company, which, through its charitable foundation, is a major patron of the arts in Louisiana. By centering this particular well in her work, she is critiquing how the arts in New Orleans are funded. She’s refused funding from grant-making institutions that are linked to the oil and gas industry, she says, and won’t accept support from Helis.
She also logged the carbon footprint of producing and transporting the sculpture at 2.5 tons of carbon dioxide, which she’s tried to offset by planting cypress trees. She considers this a challenge to other artists to consider the environmental impact of their work.
“I want to create these visions that are beautiful, but then as you explore them, sort of unsettling,” she said. “Is this the future we want our descendants to inherit?”
Louisiana
Three inmates escape from Louisiana jail — cops racing to nab final fugitive murder suspect
Three inmates allegedly broke out of a Louisiana jail through a crumbling wall on Wednesday — and authorities are racing to capture the final escapee, who is a murder suspect.
The fugitive trio — Joseph Allen Harrington, 26, Jonathan Jevon Joseph, 24, and Keith Eli, 24 — escaped St. Landry Paris Jail in Opelousas by prying through a decaying wall over time and lowering themselves to freedom with sheets and other items, according to the St. Landry Parish Sheriff’s Office.
Joseph was soon nabbed, while Harrington killed himself after being found hiding inside a home. Eli is still on the run, authorities said.
“We would prefer that he surrender himself peaceably,” Sheriff Bobby J. Guidroz said of Eli, who is charged with second-degree murder.
“But we will not rest until he is captured.”
Officials said Joseph — jailed on rape and other charges — was nabbed Friday after a brief chase. Police tracked a tip to a home, where he ran to nearby storage shed before being cornered and surrendering.
Harrington killed himself with a hunting rifle Thursday after police found him at a home and used a loudspeaker to try to get him to surrender, according to Port Barre Police Chief Deon Boudreaux.
Records show Harrington had been facing nine felony charges, including home invasion.
Authorities and SWAT continued the manhunt Saturday.
Police warned anyone who spots Eli to stay away and call 911 immediately.
The jailbreak comes six months after 10 inmates escaped a New Orleans prison through a small window hidden by a toilet, leaving behind graffiti mocking authorities, including “To Easy LoL.”
Authorities scoured multiple states for the runaways as local officials blamed each other for the breakout.
It took five months to recapture all 10 inmates.
The sheriff’s office said the trio in this latest escape were more cunning than in past prison busts.
Officials said the jailbreakers pried through a degraded wall, gradually removing the mortar between concrete blocks until they could slip out. They then used sheets to scale an exterior wall, drop onto a roof, and lower themselves to the ground.
“These three were just a little more creative than in years past,” sheriff spokesperson Major Mark LeBlanc said.
“They’re charged with violent felonies and we know they’re desperate to get away.”
The prison break will be investigated internally.
With Post wires.
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