Louisiana
La. Art and Science Museum hosting event to educate people about ancient Egypt

BATON ROUGE, La. (WAFB) – The Louisiana Art and Science Museum is inviting the public to learn about ancient Egypt.
The museum is hosting an event called “Egyptian Art and Archology: A Day of Hands-On History.” It will take place at the museum on Saturday, April 5, between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Organizers said the interactive event will allow guests the opportunity to learn about ancient Egyptian traditions and explore the mysteries of Egypt through excavation activities. Museum visitors will also have the chance to create art and artifacts that ancient Egyptians once used.
The event will be facilitated by the Louisiana Division of Archeology, 2021 Louisiana Teacher of the year Nathalie Roy, and by Glasgow Middle’s Roman technology students.
“Come enjoy a day of hands-on history as my students help you experience ancient Egypt through its objects and archaeology,” Roy said. “Objects have stories to tell, stories about their functions, their purpose, and their owners. Once young students learn these stories, they love to tell them to others.”
The Louisiana Art and Science Museum also has a year long exhibition underway called “Discoveries on the Nile: Exploring King Tut’s Tomb and the Amin Egyptian Collection.” The exhibition includes authentic Egyptian funeral masks and reproductions of artifacts from the tomb of King Tutankhamun.
To see more about what the Louisiana Art and Science Museum has going on, click here.
Click here to report a typo. Please include the headline.
Click here to subscribe to our WAFB 9 News daily digest and breaking news alerts delivered straight to your email inbox.
Copyright 2025 WAFB. All rights reserved.

Louisiana
Louisiana Small Business Development Center’s director shares about impact on local economy

MONROE, La. (KNOE) – The Louisiana Small Business Development Center is an organization that provides resources for those looking to get into the business world.
Virendra Chhikara says starting a small business is not easy, but the LSBDC works to help businesses overcome the challenges they may face.
“When you start a business or you’re growing a business, you’re looking for blind spots, so you do not know those areas where you will fumble. When you’re running a business, you are handling too many things, the service the Louisiana Small Business Development Center provides, helps you to understand or navigate through those challenges,” says Chhikara.
There are several success stories from businesses who have used the LSBDC’s services. Chhikara says when small businesses are successful, they have a positive impact on the local economy.
“The biggest impact is wonderful when there are jobs created, when a business starts, when there is more capital infusion into the local economy through expansion,” says Chhikara.
Chhikara says those expansions include a local Zaxby’s franchise.
With technology advancing quickly, Chhikara says it can be difficult for small businesses to adapt, but it is not something that should be neglected.
“One of the biggest challenges in this community is adapting or adopting technology. The world is changing at a fast pace. If you have seen, AI is being integrated into the workforce, into businesses, and you cannot just say, ‘Oh, I will change when the time comes.’ No, this is the time—you have to change now,” says Chhikara.
If you would like to use the LSBDC for your small business, Chhikara says you can visit the organization’s website to make an appointment.
Copyright 2025 KNOE. All rights reserved.
Louisiana
President Donald Trump delivers remarks with Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry: Watch Live

Tune in at 2pm EDT as President Trump and Governor Landry speak from the Roosevelt Room at the White House. The Louisiana governor has praised Trump for signing a recent executive order to greatly downsize the Department of Education, giving states more power over education.
Louisiana
HEART OF LOUISIANA: Louisiana Landscape

BATON ROUGE, La. (WAFB) – I fell in love with Louisiana’s beautiful landscapes years ago, and I’ve been fortunate to have spent years traveling along bayous through forests and back roads, capturing video and photographs of what I see.
Since I was a child, I’ve seen this painting of a winding road through the woods at sunset. First in my grandmother’s house, then my parents, and now in my home. There is unspoiled nature here. I noticed the large trees, the moss and wildflowers. It was painted in 1926 by my elderly great-great-grandmother, Eleanor Lewis, who lived in Loranger. She signed her initials and the date on the painting,
“I see a painter who’s trying to evoke a feeling, the feeling that the landscape gives to her. I love her dramatic use of lighting and capturing this kind of vibrant sunset here.”
Bradley Sumrall is the curator of collections at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans. The museum has a gallery of southern landscape paintings. When we look at something that was painted in the mid 19th century of a landscape, can we trust that that’s the way that it really looked? Or is there a lot of artistic license that goes into some of these?
“For the most part, painters were painting the reality of the landscape,” said Sumrall.
But these images of bayous, bays, forests, and seascapes have something else that you don’t always get from a photograph.
“A photograph depicts the world as it is, whereas a painting can depict the world as we truly feel it,” Sumrall said.
Sumrall pointed to this painting by Joseph Meeker of Bayou Plaquemine from 1881.
“People that are not from Louisiana, I think they see that landscape with the sky on fire and they think, well, he took artistic license. No sunset is like that. But if you’re from south Louisiana, you do know that we have those sunsets,” said Sumrall.
Those sunsets still exist. I’ve seen them throughout Louisiana, a fiery sky shining through moss and cypress trees reflecting in the water. But does this place still exist? The one seen by my great-great-grandmother Lewis.
I remembered seeing writing on the back before I added a new frame. Someone had written a location. Well, there it is. On the Tangipahoa River, west and north of Dunnington Bridge in the swampland. I found the bridge south of Loranger. And with the landowner’s permission walked through the woods where perhaps my ancestor was inspired by its beauty. As I walked, I found a large old tree that looked similar to one in the painting. And I have to wonder if this, this tree might have been here 99 years ago when my great-great-grandmother was walking through these woods.
For me, this large tree was a connection between a landscape and an artist. And I couldn’t help but think that Eleanor Lewis’s love of our state’s natural beauty, had somehow survived for four generations.
More Louisiana landscapes and places to visit can be found on Heart of Louisiana’s website.
Click here to report a typo. Please include the headline.
Click here to subscribe to our WAFB 9 News daily digest and breaking news alerts delivered straight to your email inbox.
Copyright 2025 WAFB. All rights reserved.
-
Midwest1 week ago
Ohio college 'illegally forcing students' to share bathrooms with opposite sex: watchdog
-
News1 week ago
For Canadians Visiting Myrtle Beach, Trump Policies Make the Vibe Chillier
-
News6 days ago
Trump Administration Ends Tracking of Kidnapped Ukrainian Children in Russia
-
News6 days ago
Vance to Lead G.O.P. Fund-Raising, an Apparent First for a Vice President
-
News1 week ago
Arlington National Cemetery stops highlighting some historical figures on its website
-
News1 week ago
Black Lives Matter Plaza Is Gone. Its Erasure Feels Symbolic.
-
Movie Reviews1 week ago
Perusu Movie Review: Mourning wood provides comedy that won’t go down in history
-
Politics1 week ago
House Democrats to hold 'Day of Action' to push back against GOP-backed spending bill