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Platform explodes in Gulf, 80 miles south of Vermilion Bay

An oil platform has exploded in the Gulf of Mexico, about 80 miles south of Vermilion Bay, and at least one person was injured.

Corexit’s 2-butoxyethanol detected in Florida swimming pool

Chemicals in Corexit dispersant turn up in Homosassa, Florida swimming pool.

Karma facing three-day suspension; revocation on hold

The Lafayette City-Parish Council, following more than two and a half hours of discussion Tuesday, tabled a vote on whether to impose a two-year liquor license revocation against downtown night club Karma.


Car Mooch: LHA lieutenant driving illegally

The Independent Weekly has just learned that the Lafayette Housing Authority official in charge of the embattled Disaster Housing Assistance Program, Jonathan Carmouche, is breaking the law every time he gets behind the wheel of an automobile, including LHA-owned vehicles.  

CPC, Durel terms will not be extended

The current terms in office of the Lafayette City-Parish Council and City-Parish President Joey Durel will not be extended by one year; a proposal to put a proposition before parish voters doing just that was tabled last night.


Alligator season opens with a whimper

The Louisiana alligator industry is about to take another one in the teeth.

 

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La. bank cited by feds

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation placed New Orleans-based First Bank and Trust under a cease and desist order in July, accusing the institution of unsound banking practices.

Lafayette named among most recession-proof cities

The Hub City ranks a respectable 14th among American cities in news/politics website The Daily Beast’s list of the 20 cities most resistant to the recession.

Sky Blue clothing opening next to Imelda's

Larie Barnett and Candace Meche are opening Sky Blue clothing on Sept. 10 in the Pearson’s Shopping Center on Ambassador Caffery Parkway.


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Worth every penny: Lafayette through the eyes of the Frugal Traveler

Lafayette makes a guest appearance in the annals of the New York Time’s Frugal Traveler this week.

Fall 2010 Bayou Film Series

University of Louisiana at Lafayette announces its Fall 2010 Bayou Film Series  

 

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Oysters under scrutiny

While the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration have been reporting a mostly clean bill of health for Gulf of Mexico seafood, oysters have been a bivalve of question.

R'evolutionary restaurant

Jambalaya stuffed in a crepe for breakfast? Turtle cappuccino with truffle spuma and cubes of sherry gelée? Let’s just say I remain curiously skeptical.

 

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Shreveport native makes statement at U.S. Open

Is Shreveport native Ryan Harrison the next American tennis star?

Bleed Black & Gold blood drive

United Blood Services of Lafayette is holding a “Bleed Black & Gold” blood drive Aug. 30 – Sept. 10.

 

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Soles4Souls RV is heading to Lafayette

The Great American Shoe Drive is at Brother's on the Blvd, Thursday, September 9.

Add a Twist to your day

Add a Twist to your day...

Joseph Ribkoff trunk show at Raffaele's

Jospeh Ribkoff trunk show, going on today only!


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Coffee Break
Written by Conni Castille   
Tuesday, 02 December 2008

 20081203-living-0101.jpg
 Photo by Conni Castille
 
It’s hard to walk past a place with rockers out front — the kind your great grandmother had on her porch. You have to walk around them to get to the bubble-glass door that rattles when you open it. If the rattle alone doesn’t let people know you’re there, then your footsteps will as you creak across the worn wooden floor. Warmth covers you once inside. It may come from the mint-green walls or the espresso machine or the steam from the coffee itself. But, most likely it comes from Frank Dupuis, the owner of The Coffee Break.

“I wanted rockers out front,” says Dupuis, “because I wanted to bring back that front porch community feel to create a place where it looks inviting and you want to go in.” A taller, thinner, and more energetic version of Tommy Lee Jones, Dupuis grew up in Breaux Bridge. He’s a bi-coastal hospital consultant who never lost the country boy inside. “I always felt a connection here,” he says. “My friends living away ask ‘What are you still doing here? You’re so not Louisiana.’ My response has always been, ‘But I am. Really. I like it here.’”

The idea to open a coffee shop came to him a few years ago. “It was a selfish reason to start off with,” Dupuis says. “When I came home, there wasn’t a coffee shop for me to sit in, have a cup of coffee, and work on my laptop.” That was two years ago. Today, the Coffee Break is more than just a place to have a cup of coffee and work on a laptop. Sure, it’s got free Internet access, lattes, mochas, espressos, cappuccinos, all the standard coffee shop fare. But those aren’t the only reasons locals come.

Every Saturday morning at about 7:30 a.m. the Degeytaire sisters arrive. Sarah, Sharon, and Stacy rock out front relishing the coffee and their private time away from their children, the only time when they can complete sentences and share sisterly secrets. “We used to stay in Lafayette after our Weight Watchers meetings,” says Sarah, “but when the Coffee Break opened, we decided to come here. It’s got great coffee, and it’s in town.” Around 10:30 a.m., the sisters’ cousin Bob drives by in his new Ford.

“Go home,” he yells.

“We are home,” Stacy hollers back.

The town’s rhythm is played out as certain as the next dip of the rocker.  Every Saturday morning Bud Peltier leaves his flower shop on the corner, stops to chat with the sisters a bit before he walks past them on his way to Simon’s Drug Store to buy cigarettes. Dressed in white, and carrying on a 100-year family bakery business, Sonny Champagne waives hello as he delivers French bread to Café des Amis. On any given day of the week, neighbors sip coffee and share the joys and pains of their lives. Dupuis can often be found in a rocker himself. “I sit out with these old men sometimes on the rockers out front and just hear stories from them. One day there won’t be these old men, and I’ll be the old man trying to pass on the stories that they told me. Collectively you keep that alive because they recollect, they reminisce, they have fond memories, and maybe some sad ones too. But you keep the culture alive just by doing that in the context of a little coffee shop.”

Just about everything is local at The Coffee Break and just about everything tells a story. The Hummingbird Cake is made by Dupuis’ mother. The coffee is Community. The jams — be it satsuma or hot pepper or Cajun music — come from Breaux Bridge soil. Dupuis’ love for his culture is reflected through the local artists — writers, visual artists, filmmakers, musicians — that he brings into the place. The artwork of Breaux Bridge natives Shine and William Sonnier — “Lee Roy’s Boys” as they describe themselves — whose art tells esoteric stories about the town, hang from the ceiling and the walls. They transform metal, glass, and other materials that were once on a car, bike, or house, into local cultural narratives mirroring the interior lives of the town and the people in it.

Unless you’re from Breaux Bridge you wouldn’t know that the corrugated tin piece, with a dust-masked young man pushing a lawn mower while pulling a wagon loaded with other lawn gear is Joey Robin who lives on St. Charles Street and who manicures lawns and parking lots for money — and a Dr. Pepper. You might not know that he comes from a hardworking family with special needs. Next time you’re in town, look for him. He’d love to talk to you.

And then there are the residents long gone who remain immortal only through the stories told at The Coffee Break. No one thought to photograph Ms. Alice of the long-closed City Hotel when she’d take her evening walks in her long-white nightgown contrasted by her even longer black hair. And even though no one thought to ask her what the daily numerical entries that appeared faithfully on years and years of calendars meant, folks at the coffee shop figure that the numbers were the morning and evening temperatures. And it is only through the collective memory of the community do the remains of Beno, the town drunk, live on, whose homelessness was nothing to be afraid of. My father survived to tell the story about the time my sister, 10 years old at the time, made him give Beno a ride home, a 2-mile drive that left my sister and Dad feeling good, and the car reeking of booze, body, and cigarette smells for another 20 miles.

Although anonymity may be scarce in a small town, the tourists or the occasional modern-day Beat traveler keep the locals on their toes. Dupuis’ guest book reads like a World Atlas — Paris, Dublin, Germany, Chicago, Michigan, Cecilia, Denmark. Although Dupuis plays down his role in creating a magical place, he does appreciate the magic. “The intersection of lives that takes place here is just incredible,” says Dupuis. “That a 13-year old kid from St. Bernard School across the street can come here after school and meet people from Austria filming The Coffee Break because it’s a quaint little place — I’m very proud to be a part of that.”

You never know who may drop by The Coffee Break. It may be somebody like vegan P.J. Chmiel who rolled in on a scooter after hours looking for directions during his tour of the Eastern U.S. and fell in love with Acadiana. It may be because Dupuis and his friends fed and watered him with food, wine, and conversation for a couple of hours. And then there were the British ladies who visited because of a YouTube clip of the Saturday noontime Cajun jam. “To think that the little bitty Coffee Break in Breaux Bridge had a YouTube thing that a 14-year old did on her camera that somebody in England saw and said ‘I have to go there.’ That’s wonderful to me,” says Dupuis. “That’s like spreading the love. How wonderful is that, that we can touch people’s lives that far away on just the magic that happens here?”

Writer Garrison Keillor says, “in a small town, it is like everyone has read the same book.” Through The Coffee Break, Dupuis has provided the town a reading room where locals gather to turn pages in their lives through conversations over coffee and muffins, sometimes flipping back to chapters written long ago.

The Coffee Break is located at 109 N. Main St. in Breaux Bridge and is open seven days a week.


Comments (1)add
...
written by Marie Delahoussaye-Diaz , December 05, 2008
I'm really glad to see this place recognized and the people of Breaux Bridge that it celebrates recognized as well. Frank has done an amazing job with this place, and it's the best coffee shop I've ever been in.
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