Submitted by Elizabeth West on Sun, 10/01/2017 - 17:49
Do our “leaders” in Baton Rouge ever learn?
Amendment No. 3 on the October 14th ballot proves that the answer to that question is obviously no.
Submitted by Elizabeth West on Thu, 05/25/2017 - 00:15
Surprise, surprise the State wants more money from the people.
This time around it’s for roads, and the way they expect to receive it is through increasing what we pay to the State in gasoline taxes from 20 cents a gallon to 37.
Submitted by Elizabeth West on Fri, 05/05/2017 - 22:53
From day one as Associate Editor at the Ville Platte Gazette I have always done my best to provide our readers with a newspaper they can be proud of, and tomorrow I will continue to do the same but with the new title of Managing Editor.
Submitted by Elizabeth West on Fri, 05/05/2017 - 22:51
Here is the truth about leaving a job.
Submitted by Elizabeth West on Fri, 03/10/2017 - 23:51
It had been three months since I graduated from LSU in May of 2004 that I first met JL Brignac.
Submitted by Raymond Partsch on Sat, 01/23/2016 - 16:57
On Jan. 19, 1870, the (Franklin) Planters’ Banner reported, “They lately had an earthquake in St. Landry, and it extended to Alexandria. Houses trembled, lamps shook on the table so that they nearly upset, families were alarmed, and it produced a decided sensation.
Submitted by Raymond Partsch on Sat, 01/23/2016 - 16:56
The roads weren’t all paved but neither were they crowded when one of the first ocean-to-ocean highways stretched through south Louisiana.
Submitted by Raymond Partsch on Sat, 01/09/2016 - 17:42
I stand corrected. I wrote several weeks back that there had never been a white Christmas in Acadiana. Eddie Broussard sends a note reminding me that a good part of coastal Louisiana woke up to snow on Christmas Day in 2004, and sends along pictures of his home on Pecan Island to prove it.
Submitted by Raymond Partsch on Sat, 01/09/2016 - 17:40
If you have roots in north St. Landry or Evangeline parishes, the chances are pretty good that you are a Soileau or kin to one. But the family may never have made it to south Louisiana if the first of the clan to come to these parts hadn’t been able to escape a Natchez Indian massacre.
Submitted by Raymond Partsch on Sat, 12/26/2015 - 19:27
Last week, I wondered in this column about the origin of a woman named La Christiane who distributed gifts to Cajuns at Christmas time. That was about all I knew about her, and that little was based on an article that appeared in the Morning Advocate in 1980.
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