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Louisiana, Southern Miss Set For Regular-Season Finale

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Louisiana, Southern Miss Set For Regular-Season Finale


HATTIESBURG, Miss. – The Louisiana Ragin’ Cajuns Baseball team closes out its regular season beginning Thursday when it faces No. 23-ranked Southern Miss in a three-game Sun Belt Conference series at Pete Taylor Park/Hill Denson Field.

First pitch for Thursday’s opener is scheduled for 6 p.m. The series resumes on Friday at 6 p.m. before concluding on Saturday at 1. All three games will be streamed live on ESPN+ with fans able to listen to each game in the Lafayette area on KPEL-FM (96.5) and worldwide on the Varsity Network app.

Louisiana (35-18, 17-10 SBC) closed out its home slate last weekend with a three-game sweep of Texas State. The Ragin’ Cajuns face USM (35-15, 20-7 SBC), winners of its last 13 games, for the first time as a Sun Belt member with the Golden Eagles claiming a pair of wins in last season’s non-conference series in Lafayette.

Kyle DeBarge, who has hit safely in his last 13 games, leads Louisiana at the plate with a .357 average. Heath Hood (.340-5-36), Julian Brock (.335-11-59), Carson Roccaforte (.323-4-41) and John Taylor (.307-6-40) are next in hitting for the Ragin’ Cajuns, who are 7-3 in their last 10 games while hitting at a .312 clip.

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Conor Higgs, hitting .393 since being inserted in the lineup last month, is hitting .375 for the Ragin’ Cajuns with five home runs and 25 RBI.

Jackson Nezuh (8-4, 6.81 ERA) will earn the start in Thursday’s opener for Louisiana with Carson Fluno (2-0, 4.38 ERA) expected to start on Friday. Saturday’s starter is to be determined.

Dustin Dickerson (.325-3-31), Matthew Etzel (.316-5-37) and Slade Wilks (.313-18-53) are the top hitters for USM, which is 24-4 at home.

All-American candidate Tanner Hall (10-3, 2.70 ERA) will earn the start for the Golden Eagles in Thursday’s opener with Billy Oldham (6-2, 4.64 ERA) getting the start on Friday. Matt Adams (3-2, 4.15 ERA) is expected to take the mound on Saturday.

Fans are encouraged to stay engaged with the Ragin’ Cajuns by downloading the #GeauxCajuns app. Click here [apps.apple.com] for iOS/Apple platforms and here [play.google.com] for Android platforms.

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For the latest updates on Ragin’ Cajuns baseball, follow on Facebook (RaginCajunsBaseball), Twitter (@RaginCajunsBSB) and Instagram (@RaginCajunsBSB) or check RaginCajuns.com.

GAMES 54-56 PREVIEW 

Louisiana Ragin’ Cajuns (35-18, 17-10 SBC) at Southern Miss Golden Eagles (35-15, 20-7 SBC)

DATE/TIMES (dates and times are subject to change) 

Thursday – May 18, 6 p.m.

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Friday – May 19, 6 p.m.

Saturday – May 20, 1 p.m.

LOCATION/SITE 

Pete Taylor Park/Hill Denson Field (4,500) | Hattiesburg, Miss.

PITCHING MATCHUPS 

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THURSDAY – 6 p.m. 

LOUISIANA | RH Jackson Nezuh (6-1, 180, Jr., St. Cloud, Fla.)

’23 Stats: 8-4, 6.81 ERA, 70.0 IP, 74 H, 56 R, 53 ER, 24 BB, 79 K, .273 OppBA

 

SOUTHERN MISS | RH Tanner Hall (6-1, 186, Jr., Zachary, La.)

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’23 Stats: 10-3, 2.70 ERA, 80.0 IP, 61 H, 29 R, 24 ER, 29 BB, 88 K, .211 OppBA

 

FRIDAY – 6 p.m. 

LOUISIANA | RH Carson Fluno (6-1, 185, Jr., Sun Prairie, Wis.)

’23 Stats: 2-0, 4.38 ERA, 3 Sv., 39.0 IP, 40 H, 23 R, 19 ER, 15 BB, 43 K, .260 OppBA

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SOUTHERN MISS | RH Billy Oldham (6-1, 217, Jr., Brookfield, Conn.)

’23 Stats: 6-2, 4.64 ERA, 54.1 IP, 42 H, 32 R, 28 ER, 20 BB, 69 K, .205 OppBA

 

SATURDAY – 1 p.m. 

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LOUISIANA | TBA

 

SOUTHERN MISS | RH Matt Adams (5-11, 189, CJr., Pearland, Texas)

’23 Stats: 3-2, 4.15 ERA, 52.0 IP, 45 H, 27 R, 24 ER, 20 BB, 59 K, .237 OppBA

 

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RANKINGS 

Louisiana – Not ranked

Southern Miss – No. 23 (D1Baseball); No. 14 (Collegiate Baseball); No. 24 (USA Today Coaches’ Poll, NCBWA)

RADIO/TV/LIVE STATISTICS 

RADIO (Pregame Show starts 30 minutes prior to first pitch) 

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Station – KPEL-FM (96.5) / The Varsity Network App 

Talent – Jay Walker (pxp); Anthony Babineaux (color)

STREAMING (ESPN+) 

Talent – Jason Baker (pxp); Cliff Russum (analyst)

LIVE STATS 

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CajunStats.com

SERIES RECORD 

Overall: Louisiana leads, 29-28

In Lafayette: Louisiana leads, 17-8

In Hattiesburg: Southern Miss leads, 18-11

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Neutral Sites: Southern Miss leads, 1-0

SBC Games: First meeting

Last 10: Southern Miss, 7-3

WHAT’S ON DECK 

Louisiana gets ready to defend its 2022 Sun Belt Conference Championship title when the 2023 edition begins on Tuesday at Riverwalk Stadium in Montgomery, Ala.

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The opening day begins on Tuesday with a single-elimination round between the No. 7-10 seeds in the field. The double elimination portion of the SBC Championship begins on Wednesday (May 24).

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In Louisiana’s River Parishes, one museum is helping residents’ piece together their histories

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In Louisiana’s River Parishes, one museum is helping residents’ piece together their histories


The land in Louisiana’s River Parishes is populated with lost families.

Unmarked graves of formerly enslaved people — sometimes totaling more than 1,000 in a single area — have been found in tree clusters in the middle of empty fields.

In 2018, Shell Convent memorialized the Bruslie Plantation and Monroe Plantation cemeteries, which had been found on its property. BASF completed a similar project in 2022, preserving a Native American burial site and cemetery of around two-thirds of the 300 enslaved people who lived and worked at what was once the Linwood Plantation.

And in October, research conducted by an environmental advocacy group identified five formerly enslaved people — Stanley, 31; Simon, 23; Harry, 18; Betsy, 18; and Rachel, 9 — believed to be buried on the site of the proposed Formosa plastics plant in St. James Parish.

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Many of the graves are unidentified. And family histories in the region remain incomplete because of the lingering effects of the trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, from the unmarked burials to the recording of people as property — without names — in U.S. Census Bureau records from the era.

But the River Road African American Museum in Donaldsonville is working to help people uncover and repair some of those voids through quarterly genealogy workshops, which educate attendees on databases and ways to search for their history.

Untold stories

One such largely forgotten story is that of Lawrence Minor, who was enslaved as a child at the Linwood Plantation, where the BASF plant in Geismar currently sits.

Regina Bergeron, the museum’s former board director and a BASF employee, led the museum’s most recent workshop in early December. During it, she explained her role in BASF’s preservation of the cemeteries on its property and her research into Minor’s life.

“Learning about this is history … opens doors, and we can have more conversations about it,” she said during the session. “ … I run into a roadblock with the 18th century, and so (for) my peers to understand those challenges that I had as an African American just opens a door and some additional dialogue.”

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The Linwood Plantation owner, Phillip Minor, had at least three children with an enslaved woman named Lucy, Bergeron explained. In his will, Phillip Minor left provisions for Lucy and her children to be freed.






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Workshop instructor Regina Bergeron laughs as she shares stories about her grandparents when presenting her family tree during the River Road African American Museum genealogy workshop in Donaldsonville on Saturday, December 7, 2024.




“One of those children is Lawrence Minor. Lawrence was the first president of Prairie View A&M, and he was very influential in the Underground Railroad,” she explained.

Prairie View A&M, a historically black college in Texas, is the second-oldest public college in that state and one of its two land-grant universities, according to its website. Bergeron said she discovered Lawrence Minor’s story when Steve Kleinpeter, another member of the BASF project, sent her an old newspaper article he found.

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“Steve actually found this article, and he saw that it was a Black man. And he said, ‘Well, this can’t be the same Minors that I’m looking for because this is a Black man,’” she explained. “And then when he read the article again, he said, ‘Maybe this is connected, it says this man came from a plantation in Ascension Parish.’”

He notified Bergeron early in the afternoon, and the two independently found Minor’s will that emancipated Lucy and her children around 3 a.m. the next day. From there, they reconstructed his tree using newspaper articles, and records from his bank and Oberlin College, which he attended.

Workshop in action

But reconstruction is difficult. Census records from 1850 didn’t record any names for enslaved people. Instead, they documented the enslavers’ name, and the age, sex and color of each person owned. Fugitive slave advertisements, which offered rewards for runaways and were posted in papers including The Advocate and Times-Picayune, usually only contained a first name.







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Historical documents like this one telling of the sale of people into slavery in the 1800s in Ascension Parish will be entered into databases by volunteers, to help make the search easier for people looking for their family’s history.




“In 1859, if enslaved people were transferred from one plantation to another, they would get the name of the plantation owner from the prior,” Bergeron said during the workshop. “So if they came from the Harris plantation, they might have the name Harris.”

The workshops guide attendees through the building their ancestry trees and locating these disparate sources of information. Dawn Kaigler, of Gonzales, said the December workshop was her second as she was trying to reconstruct her ancestral tree.

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“With my father’s family … they had already done theirs,” she said. “But I was looking to find out some information about my mom’s family because we’re still trying to piece together some information on that.”

Kaigler added that the previous workshop she attended included a presentation on the 272 enslaved people who Georgetown University’s Jesuit founders sold to two Louisiana sugar cane planters in 1838. In 2022, the museum opened a permanent exhibit in the Episcopal Church of Ascension in Donaldsonville about the sale. The Jesuit order formally apologized in 2017 to the descendants of the enslaved.







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Gay Square talks about her family history while beginning to fill out her family tree during the River Road African American Museum genealogy workshop in Donaldsonville on Saturday, December 7, 2024.

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“We got information on that and where some of those families migrated to once those enslaved people were sold off to further areas in Louisiana,” she said. “ … They had a list of the names of the people who were descendants … it was really quite interesting.”

During December’s meeting, Kaigler said she was looking into her grandfather’s history.

“My sister and I had started looking into things for that, and we went to the Ascension Parish Library and … got some information on various databases to try to start finding things,” she said. “And we kind of did find a census document from when my grandfather might have been about 16-years-old or so.”

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‘Stories are beginning to be become erased’

The museum, which celebrated its 30th anniversary this year, has another workshop tentatively planned for February, Executive Director L’Oréal Evans said. The museum owns five properties, including one of 400 original Louisiana Rosenwald Schools that were established to educate Black students between 1912 and 1932.







asc RR Rosenwald Restoration #01.jpg

The River Road African American Museum’s restoration of a Louisiana Rosenwald School was recently completed. The Louisiana Rosenwald Schools provided educational opportunities for African-American students between 1912 and 1932. With the help of businesses such as Shell, BASF, and Ascension Parish governmental entities, the Museum was able to fund the $450,000 restoration.

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In the school’s bathroom, a quote attributed to Henry Brougham is framed on the wall: “Education makes a people easy to lead, but difficult to drive, easy to govern, but impossible to enslave.”

Evans emphasized that historical education such as the workshops are vital to understanding the region’s history.

“We’re at a very detrimental time right now in America, where stories are beginning to be become erased as we see people taking books off of shelves, burning books, destroying books. Saying that these books are not good for education, for the future of America,” Evans said. “But what we do is we collect and preserve those stories. And so, part of doing so means that we allow people to come in, trace their heritage, find out … what their past is and who their people are. And in doing so, they record their own history.”



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I-10 shut down near Texas-Louisiana state line after crash

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I-10 shut down near Texas-Louisiana state line after crash


A crash near the Texas-Louisiana state line has shut down traffic in both directions on I-10 early Friday morning, officials say.

According to Texas DPS, both eastbound and westbound lanes are blocked and traffic is being diverted.

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According to Vidor Emergency Management, at least seven commercial vehicles are involved in the crash, but no injuries have been reported.

I-10 alternate routes

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Vidor Emergency Management says lanes will likely be shut down for most of the day.

On the Louisiana side, traffic is being diverted at Mile Marker 4. Drivers can travel north to LA-12 and then west into Texas.

 On the Texas side, traffic is being diverted at Mile Marker 877. Traffic is being rerouted to SH 87 and SH 12.

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This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

The Source: The information in this article is from the Texas Department of Public Safety, Louisiana State Police, Vidor Emergency Management.

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ACLU warns Louisiana school districts not to display Ten Commandments to avoid litigation

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ACLU warns Louisiana school districts not to display Ten Commandments to avoid litigation


BATON ROUGE – The ACLU issued a letter to Louisiana school districts and superintendents saying they should not implement Louisiana’s law to display the Ten Commandments in classrooms to avoid litigation.

The letter, sent by four organizations including the ACLU and the ACLU of Louisiana, says public schools whose districts may not be parties in the lawsuit and isn’t subject to the district court’s injunction that prevents the parties involved in the lawsuit from displaying the commandments could still face litigation due to “an independent obligation to respect students’ and families’ constitutional rights.”

“Because the U.S. Constitution supersedes state law, public-school officials may not comply with [the law],” the ACLU said.

Additionally, the ACLU says the law conflicts with the Supreme Court’s ruling in Stone v. Graham in 1980, which struck down a “similar Kentucky statute” that required public schools to post a copy of the Ten Commandments in every classroom.

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The current lawsuit has been appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth circuit, but it remains in full effect as the appeal proceeds after the appellate court rejected a request to temporarily suspend the lower court’s injunction.

Appellate oral argument in the case is currently set for Jan. 23, 2024 in New Orleans.



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