284. Friend of the podcast Lamar White joins us to
discuss the fall
elections in Louisiana. He also gives us an update on his project,
The Bayou Brief. For more than eleven years, Lamar White, Jr. published
CenLamar,
one of Louisiana’s most acclaimed and well-known progressive blogs,
attracting more than two million readers and repeatedly receiving
recognition from national and international news organizations.
The Bayou Brief expands the original scope of CenLamar to cover the entire state. For news that's both factual and progressive, follow
The Bayou Brief.
- This week in Louisiana history. October 27, 1768. Rebellion
against Ulloa began with spiking of protective New Orleans
cannons.
- This week in New Orleans history. John William Corrington
(October 28, 1932 – November 24, 1988) was an American film
and television writer, novelist, poet and lawyer. While
on leave from LSU, Corrington obtained his D.Phil. in 1965,
from the University of Sussex and then moved to Loyola
University New Orleans in 1966, as an Associate Professor of
English, where he also served as chair of the English
Department. Corrington graduated from Tulane University Law
School in 1975, joined a small New Orleans personal injury law
firm, Plotkin and Bradley, and spent the next three years
practicing law. With his wife, Joyce Hooper Corrington,
Corrington wrote five screenplays, Von Richthofen and
Brown (1969), The Omega Man (1970), Boxcar
Bertha (1971), The Arena (1972) and Battle
for the Planet of the Apes (1973) and a television
film, The Killer Bees (1974).
- This week in Louisiana.
50th Annual Louisiana Pecan Festival
November 2-4, 2018
318.627.5196
Downtown
Colfax, LA
The Louisiana Pecan Festival takes place on the
first full weekend of November each year. The festival and the
Town of Colfax play host to 60,000 to 75,000 visitors each
year, who come from all over Grant Parish, central Louisiana,
the state and throughout the U.S. for three days of fun, great
food, live musical entertainment and much more.
Why celebrate the pecan? For one, many area
farmers grow the crop, and pecans are native to the area.
Pecans were a staple of the diets of the local Native
Americans, and when the settlers began to arrive here from the
Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi, large plantations
grew pecans along with their other crops. Wild pecans were
grafted and new varieties cultivated, and soon the crop
flourished in the rich soil of the Red River Delta. Local
homesteaders also benefited because almost every yard had one
or two trees that produced enough pecans to "keep some and
sell the rest", providing them a small money crop in the fall.
- Postcards from Louisiana. Bruce listens to African drums in the Musicians' Village in New Orleans.
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