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January 2017 Articles

Just Rambling January 2017
• LSU student overcomes obstacles along path to graduation
It’s time to plant tulips, hyacinths
Spiritual Corner
Forage producers hear about pasture conditions after floods
2016 was a tough year for Louisiana agriculture
Goat Nutritional Disorders
Asian ladybeetle showing up in Louisiana
LSU AgCenter researchers awarded technology transfer grants
Consider the gifts of the garden
UPDATE: Equine Herpesvirus Confirmed at New Orleans Fair Grounds Racetrack
Statement by Zippy Duvall, President, American Farm Bureau Federation, Regarding
Statement by Zippy Duvall, President, American Farm Bureau Fede
Statement by Zippy Duvall, President, American Farm Bureau
Statement of Zippy Duvall, President, American Farm Bureau Federation, on the No
National 4-H Council, American Farm Bureau F
Farm Fences Continued from December Issue
NCBA, PLC meet to Discuss Federal Land Priorities for New administration
Just Rambling December 2016

(19 articles found)

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LSU student overcomes obstacles along path to graduation

LSU student overcomes obstacles along path to graduation Writer: Tobie Blanchard at 225-578-5649 or tblanchard@agcenter.lsu.edu
(12/20/16) BATON ROUGE, La. – When Alexandra Arceneaux crossed the stage with her service dog, Mishka, at the LSU College of Agriculture commencement ceremony on Dec. 16 at the Maddox Fieldhouse, the crowd erupted in applause. To say Arceneaux’s journey to graduation had obstacles is to understate her struggle.
Arceneaux, of Bogalusa, came to LSU in 2008, but before she could finish her degree, she developed Neuromyelitis optica, a condition that left her paralyzed from the shoulders down.
“It’s sort of like a cousin to multiple sclerosis,” Arceneaux said. “But it comes on suddenly.”
This was in 2012. Arceneaux spent the next year and half recovering in therapy. She regained use of her arms but remains in a wheelchair.
“I could have continued in therapy to focus on walking, but I wanted to come to back to school and get my degree,” she said.
Arceneaux received her degree in nutrition and food sciences with a focus on food science and technology. She hopes to work in quality assurance in the food industry.
“The program had everything I wanted out of science,” she said. “My food science professors have been so supportive, realizing my limitations. I felt a sense of community in the program.”
Mishka, a Great Pyrenees, helped Arceneaux navigate the LSU campus. Mishka pulls Arceneaux’s wheelchair, but getting around campus presented some challenges, including squirrels that would sometimes distract Mishka.
LSU was very accommodating, Arceneaux said. She said she always felt comfortable asking for things she needed to make her experience better.
Arceneaux is now turning her focus to her career, but she said she still hopes to walk again.
“I’m young. There is a lot of technology to be developed, so I’m hopeful,” she said.
Arceneaux said she doesn’t feel like her quality of life is diminished because of her disability. With Mishka, she can live Independently – he provides support when she is standing and is trained to pick up things for her.
“I am doing everything I want to do, and going where I want to go,” she said.
Mishka, who attended all of Arceneaux’s classes, received an honorary degree from the College of Agriculture at the commencement ceremony.

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