Somewhere between the vitamin aisle and your grandmother’s kitchen cabinet lives a quiet little wellness trend with a surprisingly charming name: seed cycling.
Fifteen years ago, when I was first elected to the school board, I was genuinely excited. I was also young enough to be dangerous and confident enough to think that excitement mattered more than experience.
Protests in Iran have been building for weeks. Initially, the demonstrations were organized by merchants in December in response to a huge fall in the value of the Iranian Rial, their currency.
The Tangipahoa Parish Library is inviting writers, daydreamers, journal-keepers, and anyone who has ever scribbled a line on a napkin to come spend some time with poetry this winter.
The LSU AgCenter is proud to announce $1 million in federal funding that will supercharge ongoing initiatives aimed at stamping out invasive species that threaten agriculture and natural resources in Louisiana and across the Mississippi River valley.
There’s a saying making the rounds these days: “Everyone wants a village, but nobody wants to be a villager.” It’s a catchy little phrase — equal parts witty observation and gentle nudge — that captures a truth most of us feel but rarely admit.
The Louisiana Trust for Historic Preservation (LTHP) is now accepting nominations for its annual list of Most Endangered Places & the 2026 Louisiana Preservation Awards.
The end of the Holiday Season often carries a touch of sadness, but this year, it was particularly somber in the Hammond area. Just a few days before Christmas, longtime Southeastern Louisiana University Lady Lion Basketball Coach Frank Schneider passed on.
January is the month when gym memberships surge, planners are dusted off, and job boards suddenly feel full of possibility. The calendar flips, and with it comes a quiet but powerful belief that this might be the year things finally click.For job seekers, January isn’t just another month.