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Three City of Kaplan employees were recognized at the Kaplan council meeting for their years of service to the City. Receiving recognition were (l-r) Wynn Hoffpauir for his 20 years of service; Rhonda Baudoin for her 20 years of service and Timmy Farris for his 30 years of service.

Kaplan employees years of service

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Councilwoman Melissa Guidry (second from left) named the Kaplan All-Stars Voodoo team and their managers as her ‘Citizens of the Month.’ Accepting the nomination are (front) Madi Hardee and Chloe Chargois (back) C.J. Chargois, Jeremy Richard and Bart Baudoin.

Voodoo All-Stars team named August ‘Citizens of the Month’

Councilwoman Melissa Guidry named the Kaplan All-stars Voodoo team as her August ‘Citizens of the Month.’ They are being recognized for their leadership and athletic skills.
This past summer, on the weekend of July 7-9, the Kaplan All-stars Voodoo Team competed on their home turf during the 2017 KYAA Summer Shootout, placing first in each teams division, 8U, 10U, 12U, and 14U.
Congratulations to all of the players, coaches, parents and volunteers on such an amazing and successful season. May God continue to bless you with talent, heart and dedication.
A letter from Coach Bart - Have you ever had the opportunity to experience something that you truly loved to do?
Something that lit a fire in your belly and left you hungry for more?
Something that kept your blood pumping when you thought things could not get worse?
I have.
For six years I was fortunate to have the pleasure to lead the most amazing group of young ladies I have ever encountered onto the field of play. To guide them, shape them, and mold them into who they are today.
But the funny thing about it is I was never the one guiding, shaping and molding. The funny thing is they were the ones guiding, shaping and molding me.
That’s what this journey has meant to me. To see someone fight for what you believe in and day after day lay everything out on the line for you is a life changing event.
This team has changed my life. I am not the person I was six years ago. This team has taught me that life is not only about me. It is about the people around you and how you treat those people on a day to day basis can not only determine their lives, but can determine your life. For that I can never repay them, for that I am forever grateful.
We started six years ago with 12 young ladies who were just trying to figure out the game of fastpitch softball. It was tough, at times it was brutal, but they never gave up, they never gave in and today we stand with four age groups of 50+ young ladies all representing the same goals in life. It is truly amazing to watch how the younger girls look up to the older age groups. I have told my team countless times that the one thing I hope they get out of this entire experience is that you are never too young to be a role model. You are never too young to have a positive impact on someone else’s life.
I have forged so many friendships through this process including C.J. Chargois, David Packard, Ryan Hebert, Anthony Sistrunk, Wendy Smith, Johnathan Hebert, Jeremy Richard, Amber Primeaux, Seth Abshire, Brandt Mouton, Marcus and Danielle Greene and Vernon Landry. Thank you for believing it what we have built. These people have gone above and beyond what should be expected from coaches. They have bought into what I believe can be accomplished by a youth recreation sports program. They have emotionally invested themselves into the children of this community and have proven that a united community can accomplish anything.
So what do you say at the end of such an amazing journey?
What do you say after completing something so life changing?
What do you say after watching someone laying it all out on the line for you?
The only two things that come to mind are thank you and I love each and everyone of you.

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This is the multipurpose building at Herod Elementary in Abbeville. One like this will be built at Dozier Elementary.

Vermilion Parish School Board OKs building Dozier Multi-Purpose building

The Vermilion Parish School Board approved the building of a new multi purpose building at Dozier Elementary ...

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Darryl Richardelle

Rule changes in Louisiana high school football

Written by Darryl Richardelle, who is a Louisiana high school football official, free-lance writer, & occasional contributor to the Abbeville Meridional.

Rule changes occur every year in high school football. Most of the time these changes concern things like penalty enforcement and uniform requirements which aren’t noticeable to most fans. This year, however, there are three significant changes that fans will notice.
Onside kicks, blocking techniques, and intentional grounding are all being affected by the 2017 rules adjustments.
Before I explain these changes, it’s important to remember that all rules and penalties exist primarily for a couple of reasons: to keep someone from getting an unfair advantage over his opponent and to keep anyone from getting injured.

Pop-Up Kicks are now Illegal

We’ve all seen onside kicks where the kicker kicks the top of the ball driving it off of the tee and immediately into the ground. This would cause the ball to fly high into the air in hopes that the kicking team will catch or recover it once it has gone the required ten yards. In an effort to protect members of the receiving team who would be waiting for the ball to come down, this type of kick is now illegal. If the kicking team executes this type of kick, the ball will be immediately blown dead; they will be penalized five yards and have to re-kick.
If the kicking team wishes to attempt an onside kick, the ball must be kicked along the ground. The bouncing motion combined with the shape of the ball and its pointed ends may cause the ball to bounce up, but it will not go nearly as high. The rule change is designed to eliminate the extremely high pop-up kicks coming directly off of the tee which pose a risk to the receiving team.

Blind Side Blocks are now illegal

In the past, a defensive player who would be pursuing the ball carrier in the open field would be susceptible to full-speed hits he may not see coming. For example, a defensive player who’s chasing the ball carrier to his forward-right with his focus of attention to his forward-right would not be able to see a blocker coming from his forward left, so he would not be able to brace himself for the impact. That blocker would then be able to lay a shoulder into that defensive player knocking him to the ground and drawing “Ooohs” and “Aaahs” from the crowd. That block will now draw a fifteen-yard personal foul penalty assessed against the offense from what is called the basic spot which is the spot of the foul or where the run ends, whichever is further back.
Because of the rule change, that blocker will now have to extend his arms out and make initial contact with his hands. This will lessen the impact on the defender and reduce the number of high speed collisions in the open field.

Out-of-Pocket Protection for Quarterbacks

If you watch football on television, you’ll often hear announcers say something like, “He was out of the pocket when he threw that one away. No intentional grounding.” This stipulation has never applied to high school quarterbacks. If a prep QB threw the ball into an area unoccupied by an eligible receiver, he was flagged for intentional grounding, no matter where he was on the field.
Beginning this year in Louisiana, quarterbacks may throw the ball away to avoid being sacked as long as two stipulations are met.
The first stipulation is that he is out of the tackle box, more commonly referred to as “the pocket.” This is an imaginary box that runs along the offensive line from tackle to tackle, and backwards towards the quarterback’s own end zone. If he is out of this imaginary box, he may throw the ball away without penalty.
The second stipulation is that the thrown ball must reach the line of scrimmage or the line where the ball was snapped. It doesn’t matter if the ball is inbounds or out of bounds, so long as it flies to at least the line of scrimmage.
If either of these stipulations are not met, the offensive team will be penalized five yards from where the quarterback threw the ball and suffer a loss of down.
This “out-of-pocket” rule is being tested only in Louisiana for 2017. At the end of the season, evaluations regarding this rule will take place, and a decision will be made as to whether or not the rest of the country will join in or if Louisiana will revert back to the previous rule.
Other, less noticeable rules changes for 2017 include:
• the ban of commercial advertising on footballs.
• the jersey of the home team shall be a dark color clearly contrasting to the white jersey required for the visiting team. (mandatory by 2021)
• the offended team has the option to start the clock on the snap for an accepted penalty inside the last two minutes of either half.
All rules are set forth by the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS). The NFHS is the rules governing body of scholastic sports across America.

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Rodney Luke Langlinais

January 2, 1934 ~ August 21, 2017

ABBEVILLE — A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 10:00 AM on Thursday, August 24, 2017 at St. Mary Magdalen Catholic Church honoring the life of Rodney Luke Langlinais, 83, who died Monday, August 21, 2017 at Eastridge Nursing Center. He will be laid to rest at St. Paul Cemetery with Reverend Randall Moreau officiating the services. Concelebrant for the Mass will be Reverend Louis Richard.
Rodney was a lifelong resident of Abbeville. He graduated from Northwestern Louisiana State College School of Pharmacy. He owned and operated Rodney's Pharmacy and Gifts for over 23 years, and worked for several local pharmacies until his health declined. When he could, Rodney loved to travel, enjoyed entertaining friends, watching football, on TV, and was an avid bridge player.
He is survived by his sister-in-law, Pat Langlinais; numerous nieces and nephews; and many friends.
He was preceded in death by his parents, Luke Langlinais and the former Therese Landry; and brothers, James J. Langlinais and Robert J. Langlinais.
The family requests that visiting hours be observed at Vincent Funeral Home - Abbeville, 209 S. St. Charles St., on Wednesday, August 23, 2017 from 5:00 PM until 8:00 PM with a rosary being prayed at 7:00 PM; Thursday, August 24, 2017 from 8:00 AM until 9:45 AM when the procession will depart for the church.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made in Rodney's name to St. Mary Magdalen Catholic Church, 300 Pere Megret, Abbeville, La 70510, the Carmelite Monastery, 1250 Carmel Drive, Lafayette, Louisiana 70501 or a favorite charity of your choice.
Condolences may be sent to the family at www.vincentfuneralhome.net.
All funeral arrangements are being conducted by Vincent Funeral Home of Abbeville, (337) 893-4661.

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Bicyclist Dies in Early Morning Crash near Lafayette

JUDICE – Shortly after 5:30 am on August 22, 2017, Troopers from Louisiana State Police Troop I began investigating a fatal crash on LA 342 near Brooklyn St. in Lafayette Parish. The crash claimed the life of 33-year-old Kerry Theriot of New Iberia.
The initial investigation by State Police revealed that the crash occurred as Theriot was traveling east on LA 342 near the fog line on a bicycle. At the same time, 37-year-old Nicholas Broussard of Duson was driving a 2007 Mazda CX-7 eastbound on LA 342 and struck Theriot’s bicycle from behind. At the time of the crash, Theriot was not wearing a helmet, but the lights on his bicycle were believed to be operational. Theriot had the required red light on the rear of the bike, but Troopers are attempting to determine if the light was visible from the required distance.
Theriot sustained fatal injuries and was pronounced dead on scene by the Lafayette Parish Coroner’s Office. Broussard was wearing a seat belt and was not injured. Broussard voluntarily submitted to a chemical breath test, and Troopers determined he was not impaired. A toxicology sample was taken from Theriot and submitted to the Louisiana State Police Crime Lab for analysis, but impairment is not believed to be a factor in the crash.
This crash remains under investigation.
As this is the second fatality crash involving a bicycle that Troop I has investigated in less than a week, Louisiana State Police wish to remind motorists to always pay attention to the roadway and never drive distracted. Troopers also wish to remind bicyclists of the laws if they wish to ride on the roadway between sunset and sunrise. More information on certain laws regarding bicycles can be found at http://wwwsp.dotd.la.gov/Inside_LaDOTD/Divisions/Multimodal/Highway_Safe....

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William Thibodeaux

Tragic Story of Ada LeBouef, Dr. Thomas Dreher

The year 1927 was historic. That was the year of the massive flood which began in April. It was one of the worse natural disasters in the history of the United States. More than 23,000 square miles of land was submerged for weeks. Hundreds of thousands of people were displaced and somewhere around 250 people died. A large part of Louisiana was flooded including Morgan City. When the floodwaters resided there was the body of James J. LeBouef. The area where the body was found wasn’t normally covered in water. The body of James LeBouef was found five days after his murder by local frog hunters. LeBouef had been the superintendent of the municipal electrical power plant in Morgan City. His face and body was disfigured beyond recognition due to crabs and other aquatic creatures in the lake. He was identified by his thumbs, which were said to greatly differ from anyone else’s.
The nation learned of the tragic love affair gone terribly awry after an Associated Press newspaper article was published on Friday, July 8, 1927, from Franklin, Louisiana. The article reported the body of James LeBouef was found the previous day in Lake Palourde, just north of Morgan City. According to St. Mary Parish Sheriff Charles Pecot, the body was tied with chains and railroad angle irons, which was supposed to keep it below water. The sheriff arrested Mrs. Ada Bonner LeBouef, 37, (wife of the deceased—James J. LeBouef), Dr. Thomas E. Dreher, 53, a prominent physician, and James Beadle, 43, a fisherman, trapper, and the doctor’s handyman. All were from Morgan City. The article also mentioned that Mrs. LeBouef and Dr. Dreher made statements to the sheriff that Jim Beadle had killed James LeBouef with a shotgun. The three were arrested and held pending an investigation.
Dr. Dreher confessed to the sheriff on July 8, 1927, that he (Dr. Dreher) had “instigated” the murder, but accused Jim Beadle with the actual commission of the crime. Three boats were on Lake Palourde on the night of Friday, July 1, 1927, said Dr. Dreher proclaiming that James LeBouef had gone for a boat ride, followed by Mrs. Ada LeBouef who was alone in another boat. The third skiff was occupied by Dr. Dreher and Jim Beadle. While the doctor and his handyman talked, they pulled within a few feet of James LeBouef’s boat. Beadle laid his shotgun across the gunwale and fired into “LeBouef’s side.” Dr. Dreher said that Mrs. Ada LeBouef made no outcry. The boat containing the body of LeBouef was towed to deep water, said Dreher, where heavy irons were fastened to it and pushed overboard. Later Dr. Dreher and Beadle washed away the blood stains and returned to shore.
Dr. Dreher said Mrs. Ada LeBouef had written him a note on the day before the murder stating that she and her husband would take a boat ride on the lake the next night. The letter, he said, urged him to be there. The doctor wasn’t done talking. He stated that Mrs. Ada LeBouef not only witnessed the murder, she helped dispose of the body. Sheriff Charles Pecot said that Mrs. Ada LeBouef admitted writing to Dr. Dreher telling him that she and her husband would be going for a boat ride but didn’t admit knowing that he was supposedly going to kill her husband and also denied luring her husband on the lake for that purpose. The doctor also stated that Mrs. Ada LeBouef had witnessed her husband die at the hands of Jim Beadle. Gossip had connected Dr. Dreher and Mrs. Ada LeBouef for some time said the sheriff.
Afterwards Sheriff Pecot again confronted Mrs. Ada LeBouef stating that he had evidence to prove that she knew who killed her husband. “Yes I saw my husband get killed,” she said as she sobbed. Then she said she and her husband had left home at Morgan City Friday night in separate skiffs to go to the home of her brother-in-law, Louis Blakeman, who, the sheriff said, was chief of police at Morgan City. She said, “My husband was ahead and I was following a short distance behind. After we had gone a short distance, I saw another skiff coming from the opposite direction. In it were two men.” Mrs. LeBouef said she did not know who the men were at first but then she said they were James Beadle and Dr. Dreher. She continued with her story and said the other skiff was about six feet away from the craft occupied by her husband when she saw Beadle raise his shotgun and fire directly at her husband. “I don’t know what happened after that, I turned and went back home, said Mrs. LeBouef. Mrs. LeBouef was asked why she had she not told someone of the killing. “I was afraid that people might suspect I was a party to the murder of my husband, so I kept quiet.”
Dr. Dreher said, “I had told Beadle that LeBouef had threatened us and Beadle said he would see to it that LeBouef would not be able to do any harm.” Later Dr. Dreher was quoted by the sheriff as saying that Mrs. LeBouef knew what was going to happen. The sheriff said that he would proceed on the theory that the woman knew of a conspiracy to kill her husband and that she was an active participant in the “overt acts at the time of the murder.” The sheriff said he believed Dr. Dreher had hired Beadle to kill LeBouef and then hide the body. The sheriff believed a love triangle was the motive for the killing. The body of the slain man was found almost two miles from where it was thrown, the pieces of railroad angle iron were still attached to the body. Mrs. LeBouef was a mother of four, Dr. Dreher a father of three, and Beadle was a father of seven. He confessed to Sheriff Charles Pecot on August 1, 1927, that he was present when LeBouef was killed.
The murder trial began on July 25, 1927. The tiny courtroom was jam-packed. The entire first week was spent on jury selection. When court reconvened the second week, everyone was surprised when Jim Beadle stood in open court and requested that Judge James D. Simon appoint an attorney to represent him. At the time, defense lawyers: James R. Parkerson, L.O. Peck, and R.F. Walker were representing Beadle as well as Ada LeBouef and Dr. Dreher. A separate counsel was first order of business. Judge Simon asked Beadle if he wanted a separate attorney to represent him and Beadle answered, “I do.” The judge then asked, “Do you have any money to pay an attorney.” Beadle replied that he had not. The court then appointed Rene H. Himel, a former district attorney of St. Mary Parish, as Beadle’s attorney. There was a short recess afterwards so the attorney could confer with client. Jim Beadle had stated that the previous defense team was going to “railroad him to the gallows.”
When court reconvened legal arguments ensued. The defense objected to the state’s introduction of Mrs. LeBouef’s written confession. Ada LeBouef stated no promises or threats were made before she made her statement. Although she was told anything she said would be used against her. The DA asked that her confession be admitted as evidence. It was a case of she said, he said. Later when Jim Beadle was called to testify, he told the jury about the love affair between the doctor and Mrs. Ada LeBouef. His testimony shifted from Lake Palourde to a small cabin where the two lovers met on occasion. Again the defense object to Beadle’s testimony since it favored the state and proved motive against the two lovers. Jim Beadle said he was present when Dr. Dreher killed and then made incisions in James LeBouef’s body in an attempt at preventing it from “rising” while fastening heavy angle irons about the head and feet, and then dropping the body into Lake Palourde. Beadle said the doctor and defense attorney urged him to say that he had committed the crime in self-defense.
Dreher sat at the defense table with his pale, suffering wife, his son, a medical school student, and Dreher’s two daughters, both of whom were college educated girls. Close behind Dreher sat Ada LeBouef. “Her face heavily plastered in powder and touched up sharply with rouge.” The trial was sordid enough. It told how James LeBouef was jealous and suspicious. One day James LeBouef supposedly donned his wife’s clothes one evening and drove around town at dusk with a shotgun at his side hoping Dr. Dreher would take him for his wife and incriminate himself enough to justify emptying the shotgun into Dreher. It also told of a system of signals Dr. Dreher and Ada LeBouef had arranged. When James LeBouef was home, Ada would hang a pillowslip on a window sill. If there was no pillowslip on the window it meant everything was okay for Dr. Dreher to visit.
Later when Ada LeBouef was on the witness stand, she told the jury that her husband had first fired a handgun at Dr. Dreher, and Beadle returned fire twice in self-defense with his shotgun killing James LeBouef instantly. But no gun was found. Dr. Dreher testified that James LeBouef, his wife, and he were supposed to air out their differences on the lake and then they’d all be friends. That was the reason for their meeting on the lake that Friday night. The doctor also testified as to why they decided to “bury” the body in the lake. They were afraid that if they reported the incident and brought the body to authorities, they would be arrested and jailed. During trial a surprise witness had turned up. Julien Slade and an unnamed friend said in early July 1927 Beadle had informed Slade and his friend that he had killed a man and sunk his body in the lake. He supposedly said “he wasn’t worried about getting caught because if the body was ever found, it would be linked to the doctor who was running with the man’s wife.” The DA said the new witness would be charged with accessory to the murder. And nothing more was ever said about the “new witness.” The defense team now had somehow gotten their hands on a handgun that allegedly had been found in the lake where James LeBouef supposedly fired at Dr. Dreher. Jim Beadle said the gun story was a lie and reiterated his story saying Dr. Dreher shot James LeBouef and tried to put the blame on him.
The three perpetrators were found guilty of murdering James LeBouef. When they were first arrested, Beadle lost his nerve, pled guilty, and took a life sentence. The doctor and Mrs. LeBouef decided to roll the dice…they got snake eyes! Over 408,000 words were telegraphed from Franklin during the trial. Since Beadle had pled guilty earlier, he was given a life sentence at Angola. Ada LeBouef and Dr. Thomas Dreher were sentenced to be hanged. There was more legal haggling’s after two trials, the jury begged to reverse their earlier decision, two pardon board hearings, and Dr. Dreher and Ada LeBouef were found to be sane by Judge Simon. There was also infighting between justices of the Louisiana Supreme Court as well as the U.S. Supreme Court over the murder case. And there were three reprieves for the condemned murderers. But in the end, it was left up to Governor Huey Long, who said he would not interfere with the legal process. Governor Huey Long made a dramatic statement about the case saying: “It was cold blooded murder! Not a person in Louisiana thinks that any pistols or guns went off accidently on Lake Palourde. LeBouef was brutally murdered and dismembered. And, if there had been any miscarriage of justice, it was the failure to hang Jim Beadle, too.” The night before the execution, Governor Long told Mrs. Dreher over the telephone that he would not interfere with the legal process.
At the time of James LeBouef’s murder, Lake Palourde was at flood stage. Someone had stated that perhaps after the killing of LeBouef, the doctor and Jim Beadle were so excited and possibly disoriented in the lake since it was dark. They weren’t sure where they were. If they would have gone in the opposite or correct direction, the body would have gone down in 100 feet of water and the crime might have escaped detection. When they were arrested, Beadle lost his nerve, pleaded guilty and took a life sentence. The doctor and Mrs. LeBouef decided to fight it out…and lost!
· Joseph Clodomiro James LeBouef was born June 3, 1884 in Montegut, Louisiana, in Terrebonne Parish. At the time of his death, he was 43 years of age. James LeBouef was buried at the Morgan City cemetery.· Ada Regina Bonner LeBouef, 39, was the daughter of Charles Ernest Bonner and Marie-Virginia. Ada LeBouef was hanged for her husband’s murder on Friday, February 2, 1929. She was reportedly the first white woman to hang in Louisiana. She died instantly after the trap was opened at 12:03 p.m. and pronounced dead at 12:16 p.m. Ada LeBouef had requested to be buried in the Morgan City cemetery next to her husband’s tomb.
· Dr. Thomas E. Dreher, 55, was hanged a few minutes after Mrs. Ada LeBouef on Friday, February 2, 1929. He died instantly after the trapdoor was opened. Dr. Dreher was from Clayton, Louisiana. He asked to be buried there in the family cemetery.
· James “Jim” Beadle was 43 years of age at the time of James LeBouef’s murder. He was sentenced to life in prison at Angola State Penitentiary. Beadle was considered for clemency in October 1936. His application was one of more than 100 clemency pleas taken under advisement by the state board of pardons. Jim Beadle was released from prison in April 1939 and was living in Berwick, Louisiana, at the time of his death in 1955.

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Joseph A. Istre

November 5, 1927 ~ August 20, 2017

KAPLAN — Funeral services will be held at 2:00 PM on Wednesday, August 23, 2017 at Vincent Funeral Home - Kaplan honoring the life of Joseph Istre, 89, who died Sunday, August 20, 2017 at Vermilion Health Care Center. He will be laid to rest at Cossinade Cemetery with Deacon David Vaughn officiating the services.
Joseph was a veteran and served in World War II. He was a member of the honor guard and was a usher for many years at Holy Rosary Catholic Church.
He is survived by his godchild, Albert Mire, Jr.; his companion, Barbara Este; and numerous nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Bernice Istre; his parents, William Istre and the former Aimee Guidry; three brothers, Antoine, Amedie “Blackie”, and Whitney Istre; and one sister, Marie Istre.
The family requests that visiting hours be observed at Vincent Funeral Home - Kaplan, 300 N. Eleazar Ave., on Wednesday, August 23, 2017 from 8:00 AM until services.
All funeral arrangements are being conducted by Vincent Funeral Home of Kaplan, (337) 643-7276 [Service Information 225-5276]. Condolences may be sent to the Istre family at www.vincentfuneralhome.net.

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Ray Dupuis

June 21, 1943 ~ August 19, 2017

KAPLAN — A gathering of family and friends was held at Vincent Funeral Home - Kaplan on Monday, August 21, 2017 from 3:00 PM until 10:00 PM with a rosary being prayed at 7:00 PM honoring the life of Ray Allen Dupuis, 74, who died Saturday, August 19, 2017 at his residence.
He is survived by his wife, Pearl Broussard of Nunez; two sons, Todd Dupuis and his wife, Tammy of Cincinnati, OH and Dale Dupuis and his wife, Tricia Borel of Abbeville; two daughters, Carla Dupuis of Abbeville and Sarah and her husband, Shane Redwing of Nunez; one sister, Lucy Leleux of Leleux; two brothers, Larry Vidallier and his wife, Marynell of Lockport and Mervin Dupuis, Jr. and his wife, Nannette of Sulphur; one step-brother, Gerald Vidallier and his wife, Judy of Abbeville; 11 grandchildren; 13 great grandchildren; 11 nieces and nephews; and many friends.
He was preceded in death by his son, Troy Daniel Dupuis; two sisters, Brenda Vidallier and Willie Uze; parents, Mervin Dupuis, Sr. and the former Agnes Cormier; step-parents, Valarie and Helen Broussard; one niece, Pat Adams; and one great niece, Amanda Lege.
The family would like to extend great thanks to Dr. Michael Cane and his staff and Mula’s Pharmacy. The family would like to also thank family and friends for their ongoing prayers and emotional support.
-All funeral arrangements are being conducted by Vincent Funeral Home of Kaplan, (337) 643-7276 [Service Information 225-5276]. Condolences may be sent to the Dupuis family at www.vincentfuneralhome.net.

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Takunrat Taksima, a doctoral student from Kasetsart University in Thailand, is spending a year at the LSU AgCenter studying the antiaging effects of the chemical astaxanthin, which is derived from crawfish shells. She is working in Subramanian Sathivel’s laboratory, where several projects are looking at deriving benefits from various parts of crawfish. Photo by Tobie Blanchard/LSU AgCenter

More than meat: LSU AgCenter researcher sees benefit in all parts of crawfish

BATON ROUGE — An LSU AgCenter researcher is working on ways to add value to the Louisiana crawfish crop. Tail meat is the main reason farmers raise crawfish, but Subramaniam Sathivel sees benefits in the entire crustacean.
Sathivel, an AgCenter food processing and engineering professor, is working on a minced meat made from undersized crawfish, which have low economic value. Sathivel is also helping a local crawfish farmer start a crawfish minced meat company.
Sathivel is putting whole undersized crawfish through a deboning machine, which removes the shells and minces the meat in the process.
“You can use the minced meat to add crawfish flavoring to products or produce crawfish patties,” Sathivel said.
Takunrat Taksima, a doctoral student from Kasetsart University in Thailand, is using the shells from the process to study the antiaging effects of a chemical derived from the shells.
Taksima is extracting and developing a delivery system containing astaxanthin, an antioxidant, to study its use in slowing the progression of Alzheimer’s disease.
She is spending a year in Sathivel’s lab working on this project. Midway through her study, she has explored ways to get the proper dosage of astaxanthin into a capsule from. Her next step will be testing its antiaging effects on laboratory rats.
“I will divide the rats into five groups to study them,” Taksima said. “I will study their behavior, body weight and oxidation levels on their organs.”
Sathivel said he also plans to study astaxanthin’s effects on oxidative stress-related diabetes and obesity.
Alexander Chouljenko, a doctoral student in the LSU College of Agriculture School of Nutrition and Food Sciences, is studying the oil removed from the minced meat.
“I am looking at the oil’s nutritional profile, the lipid oxidation properties, and how the oil flows,” Chouljenko said.
Chouljenko also is studying the application potential of the oil, which he suspects is high in omega-3 fatty acids. The oil is expected to provide health benefits, and he said it could be used to fortify foods. Because of its bright red color, the oil could also be used as a food coloring.

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