Fun Times On Our Favorite Street

By Teddy Allen

This week in 1969, the children’s television program Sesame Street first aired on PBS.

What started with Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch launched an assortment of misfit, humorous, glorious creatures known as Muppets, and the world has never looked at a frog or at a pig the same way since.

Take your tacky comedians and your crude comics and give me Muppets any day.

Sesame Street was the idea of public television documentary producer Joan Ganz Cooney, who wanted to create an educational series for pre-kindergarten children, something that would help teach them their ABCs and how to count. It was set in a fictional New York City neighborhood with nice adults and the creations of puppeteer Jim Henson.

Immediate smash hit. Big Bird dominated the 1970s every bit as much as bellbottoms, tie-dye, and the Cincinnati Reds.

I was never a big Sesame Street guy. I was older by then and my pre-Sesame Street allegiance was to Captain Kangaroo (more on that another time). But Henson kept creating more and more characters, and each was bound for stardom and the silver screen — funny and clever and sometimes smart and sometimes silly — so by the 1980s, I was all about any Muppet movie that showed up.

The best in one small-brained man’s opinion is “The Muppet Christmas Carol,” released a mind-boggling 29 years ago in 1992. (I’d have guessed 10 years, tops.) During this holiday season — and Thanksgiving Eve is a week from tomorrow, Nov. 24 — you might want to give it a look-see. The songs aren’t great, but I think it’s overall genius, like most everything else this bunch creates and performs.

This adaptation of Charles Dickens’ 1843 novella “A Christmas Carol” stars Michael Caine as the miserly, Christmas-hating Ebenezer Scrooge, and he plays it straight as if he’s working with “the Royal Shakespeare Company,” he said. True to his word, he does nothing “Muppety.”

But the Muppets do.

The narrators are Gonzo the Great and, to add humor and wisecracks, the brilliant Rizzo the Rat. Love, love, love the Rizzo.

Kermit the Frog, the greatest Muppet of them all, maybe the Robert De Nero of Muppetdom, is, of course, Bob Cratchit. Miss Piggy is Mrs. Cratchit, and a tiny Kermit is Tiny Tim.

There is an understated scene early in which Bean Bunny shows up at Scrooge’s place of business on Christmas Eve, singing carols in the snow, and Scrooge sneers down and throws a wreath at him. It doesn’t sound like much, but it’s a rewind part for me, one of many tiny touches that make this must-see Muppets.

Remember Statler and Waldorf, the two cranky hecklers in the balcony in Muppet skits? They are the brothers Marley who come back to warn Scrooge and tell him he’ll be visited by three spirits. The loveable Fozzie Bear plays Scrooge’s old employer — Mr. Fezziwig in the original but Fozziwig here — who runs a rubber chicken factory.

And of course, a lot of rats like Rizzo are Cratchit’s co-workers, huddled about trying to keep warm underneath their shawls and stovepipe hats. A rat in a stovepipe hat? Now that’s comedy. (It’s the little things.)

Don’t get caught up in the gimmicks and forget the acting though. You’d think that after 50 years, Kermit the Frog would be typecast. Not hardly. Guy’s such a quality actor that I don’t see a frog when I see Kermit as Cratchit; I see Cratchit as Dickens might have imagined him — had Dickens imagined him as a frog.

Take 85 minutes, gather the loved ones, and enjoy yourself some “Muppet Christmas Carol” in the next few weeks. You’ll probably send me chocolates if you do.

God bless us, everyone.


“OLD TOWN” Coushatta Resurfaces!  

From Twin Blends Photography

“OLD TOWN” Coushatta Resurfaces!                   

Did you know that most of what was called “Old Town Coushatta” is now a part of the Red River? Yep, that’s right, the mighty Red River swallowed up a lot of this “wild west” looking town right after the turn of the century. Fire after fire destroyed many of the buildings and the final nail in the town’s coffin came when the railroad came through about a mile east. That’s when the businesses moved  to where they are now in order to be closer to the railroad.

Since our dad’s family is from Coushatta, and they almost assuredly shopped in Old Town, we thought we would travel to the Red River Parish Library and do some investigating! We uncovered tons of old photos of the town and to top it off, Maxie Almond and Bobby Yarborough brought us a map of Old Town that blew us away! It shows all of the old business that have been lost to time. Well, we decided to bring the Old Town back to “the surface” by overlaying the old map over a Google Earth Shot from today! With that being said, the next time you drive over the Coushatta bridge just imagine the town below you underneath the flowing waters of the Red!!


REFUGE For Youth

Beginning Sunday, November 28 Red River Cowboy Church will begin having monthly youth nights- REFUGE! This will be open to RRCC youth as well as ALL in the ENTIRE community!!!

Cowboy Church said, “Our goal is to create a time for pre-teens and teens to unite together to have fun and fellowship, while learning and building skills to be bold for Christ!… Please be in prayer as we get started.”


Take Control of Your Health

The path to good health includes staying up-to-date on health screenings and diagnostic exams. Timely care and early detection can prevent serious illnesses and improve outcomes. The following are commonly recommended general health screenings for both men and women. You may also want to talk with your primary care physician about other possible screenings based on your personal or family medical history.

  • Age 18 – Routine wellness exam and labs are recommended for both men and women beginning at age 18 and then performed on an annual basis. Blood sugar levels should also be screened to determine risk for pre-diabetes or diabetes.
  • Age 20 – Cholesterol screenings are recommended for men and women every five years to assess the risk for cardiovascular disease. In families with a high incidence of cardiovascular disease, screenings may be recommended for children and adolescents as well.
  • Age 21 – A Pap smear is recommended for women once every 3 years to test for the presence of precancerous or cancerous cells on the cervix, the opening to the uterus. No physician referral is needed, and OB/GYN physicians provide these screenings.
  • Age 40 – A mammogram, to screen for breast abnormalities including cancer, is recommended for women at age 40 and then each year or two years thereafter depending on family history. No referral or doctor’s order is needed for an annual screening mammogram.
  • Age 45 – The American Diabetes Association recommends both males and females be screened for diabetes.
  • Age 45 – A colonoscopy is recommended for men and women to detect any abnormalities in the large intestine and rectum, as well as for colon cancer. Physicians base their recommendations for follow-up screenings on the findings of the initial colonoscopy and family history.
  • Age 50 – A prostate screening is recommended for men on an annual basis to help detect prostate cancer. This screening is performed by a urologist and includes a physical exam as well as blood work to measure prostate-specific antigen (PSA) present in the blood.
  • Age 60 – A DEXA scan for both men and women to measure bone density is recommended. This scan can help determine if you are at risk for osteoporosis. Physicians will then recommend appropriate follow-up screenings in subsequent years.

So, take control of your health by getting age-related screenings. It is important for you to speak with your primary care physician to schedule these screenings and ensure you stay on the path to good health!


An Unexpected Crow

By Brad Dison

Lloyd Jeffries of Memphis, Tennessee, suffered from Cerebral Palsy (CP), a group of disorders which affects a person’s ability to move and maintain balance and posture.  CP is the most common motor disability in childhood.  In severe cases, a sufferer of CP might require specialized lifelong care.    Lloyd’s case was severe.  In 1968, when Lloyd was just sixteen years old, he suddenly lost the ability to speak.  He could only produce a sort of crowing sound.  Doctors gave Lloyd’s mother the grim prognosis that Lloyd had a paralyzed larynx and would never speak again.  Lloyd eventually lost his ability to stand on his own and required a wheelchair to get around.  When it became too difficult for his family to properly care for him, Lloyd became a resident of the Shelby County Home for Incurables.

One morning in 1980, Betty Dozier, Lloyd’s nurse, came into his room and greeted him with a “good morning” as she did every morning.  She waited patiently to hear his normal crowing sound.  Lloyd started to crow, but then something unexpected happened.  His crowing sound merged into an intelligible reply.  Lloyd said “good morning.”  Lloyd had been unable to speak for 18 years. 

At first, the nurse thought Lloyd was using some sort of electronic device to speak, but that wasn’t the case.  Lloyd and his nurse both looked at each other in stunned silence.  Lloyd tried another word, and then another.  After a short conversation, Lloyd said he wanted to call his mother. 

Lloyd’s mother was at home making a glass of tea when her telephone rang.  She answered it and heard Lloyd greet her with just three words.   At first, Mrs. Jeffries thought someone was playing a cruel joke.  “It’s me,” Lloyd said.  “I can talk again.”  Mrs. Jeffries was in shock.  Tears welled up in her eyes as that three-word greeting replayed over and over in her mind.  Tears turned into laughter as their conversation continued.

Lloyd was thrilled.  After his lengthy conversation with his mother, Lloyd wheeled himself around the nursing home and conversed with the other residents.  Everyone wanted to hear him speak and they certainly got their chance.

Several doctors examined Lloyd but were never able to explain how he regained his ability to speak.  To Lloyd and his mother, it was nothing short of a miracle.  Mrs. Jeffries said, “I was always a believer in God – but now I’m really a true believer.”  What were those three words, the first three words Mrs. Jeffries heard Lloyd speak in nearly two decades?  Mrs. Jeffries answered the phone and heard Lloyd say, “Happy Thanksgiving, Mother.”

Sources:

  1. The Tennessean (Nashville, Tennessee), November 29, 1980, p.3.
  2. The Daily News-Journal (Murfreesboro, Tennessee), November 30, 1980, p.6.
  3. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Cerebral Palsy.” Accessed November 13, 2021. cdc.gov/ncbddd/cp/facts.html

ETC… for Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Today is the day.  Red River 4-H has scheduled the sweet potato and pecan pickup for today.  If you bought from the fall 4-H fundraiser, you may pick up your order from 10:00 am until 4:00 pm today.  Red River 4-H said, “Thank you to 4-H families for selling and 4-H supporters for buying.”

Looking for a gift that everyone will find use for all year long.  Give them the gift of “news” from the Red River Parish Journal.  Email subscriptions are free for both the person giving and the person receiving it.  As Archie Bunker said, “If it don’t cost nuttin’ you can afford to be generous.”  For everyone who wants to keep up to date with Red River Parish happenings, give them the Red River Parish Journal.  Just CLICK HERE to sign them up.


Deck The Halls

As part of the effort to bring more Christmas spirit to Coushatta this year, the Chamber of Commerce is sponsoring a door/window decorating contest for our merchants.   Merchants may decorate their front door, their display windows or other places at their businesses.  The deadline for having the decorations done is December 1st. 

1st and 2nd place winners will receive a cash award, and the third place winner will receive a cookie basket from Red River Industries. The judges will tour the entries beginning December 2nd, and the winners will be announced at the parade.

If you’d like to participate, please reach out to Ginny Hines at ghines@rrbulldogs.com or on her cell at 318.517.7435.


Students of the Month

Each month during the school year the local VFW Post and Auxiliary recognize the Students of the Month.  Those from the public schools were recognized at the November School Board meeting on Monday.  Superintendent Alison Hughes read each student’s nomination statement.  Lee Rodgers represented VFW Post and Auxiliary 7287 by presenting a certificate and gift card to each winner.

From Red River Elementary, MACKYNZIE SMITH was selected.  The nomination was submitted by Shannon Arnold.

Mackynzie came to second grade struggling in reading and math. She may have been a little behind her peers, but she has persevered!  She is now reading and keeping up with her Zearn lessons, completing 4 per week.  Mackynzie works hard with me at the teacher table each day. She even tries to come to the table when it’s not her turn. Just recently, during indoor recess, she logged into Zearn to work instead of watching a video.  She is an awesome example of hard work and determination.

The student from Red River Academic Academy is CAMERON ARMSTRONG.  He was nominated by Intha Fields.

I knew there was something special about Cameron when, this summer, he was able to watch his 4 younger brothers so mom could meet with me about his coming to the Academy.  The special qualities that make Cameron awesome did not change once school started. He is one of the kindest young men I’ve had the opportunity to teach. He not only is there to help me with any and everything, but he’s also the first to offer a helping hand to any of his classmates. During these first couple of months of school, I have witnessed Cameron take a small moment to enjoy the success he has had in his work, then turn around and set a new, higher goal for himself.  He is the first to turn away from a conflict of any kind and even encourages his classmates to do the same.  The example Cameron sets everyday inspires me to be a better person.

From Red River Junior High, SADIE HAMMOND was selected.  Her nomination came from Dustie Jo Gibson.

Sadie is an absolute joy to have in the classroom. She is attentive and engaged in every lesson. Her motivation to succeed is seen in everything that she does. Whether it is classroom discussion or daily work, she puts out her best effort to ensure that she stands out. Sadie can also be found helping others at her table to stay on task and stay focused. There is no doubt that Sadie will continue to show academic excellence throughout the remainder of the school year and the rest of her years in school.

And from Red River High, the Student of the Month is ELI HARPER.  He was nominated by Debbie Guidry.

Eli Harper is indeed a worthy and deserving recipient for student of the month.  An intelligent young man, Eli exemplifies the student who always puts his best foot forward. He is an articulate self-starter who does not settle for anything less than perfection. His tough schedule includes numerous Advanced Placement courses which require great discipline, planning and hard work in order to maintain his flawless GPA and active extracurricular endeavors. His future looks bright and full of success.

Anyone wishing more information on the VFW Student of the Month program may call the post at 318-932-6557.


Quality Kids

Quality Ford presented awards to two students this month at the recent School Board meeting.  Thom and Kristi Hoeflinger, new owners of Quality Ford, presented the awards along with gift cards and other goodies.

From Red River Academic Academy, the Quality Kid of the Month is Jacarvis Speed.  His nomination statement read, ”Jacarvis wasn’t chosen because he is a straight A student. He was chosen because he has started working harder than some straight A students I have had in the past.  Jacarvis might not get the answer right the first time, but he is going to work on it until he gets it right. 

“At the beginning of the year, we watched videos about having a growth mindset and adding wrinkles to our brains. Jacarvis has shown himself to have that growth mindset. He doesn’t give up and he doesn’t compare himself to the rest of the class. 

“Jacarvis is working hard for himself. He is learning to set goals for himself and work towards them every day. I am proud to be part of his process. I look forward to all the growth he is going to make this year, and in the years to come.”

Elijah Murphy from Red River Junior High is the other Quality Kid.  He attends Red River Junior High. His nomination statement read, “From the time that Elijah was in the 6th grade, he has been a leader amongst his peers.  However, this year, that leadership role has changed and he has taken a positive shift toward steering his classmates in the right direction.

“Whether it be on the field or in the classroom, Elijah always tries his best to succeed. He can be found making big plays on the football field, but even bigger plays for his education. In the classroom, he motivates his peers, works with those at his table group, and strives to give his best effort to complete his coursework as well.

“His motivation to do his best and succeed has stood out amongst his peers. I cannot wait to see where that drive will take him in the coming years at Red River. I know that Elijah will do great things and continue to make all of us proud.”


High School Hosts Playoff Game

Red River finished the regular football season seeded #9 in 2A.  That earned them a home playoff game tonight.  Their opponent is #24 Rayville.

Bulldog Coach Jeff Harper looked forward to the game.  Harper said, “Our guys have their minds set on Rayville this week.  We are excited to host the first round which allows our seniors to play in front of the community in the playoffs.

Last Friday, the Bulldogs upended #3 seeded Avoyelles 50 to 32.  They finished the regular season 7-3 overall and 5-1 in district.

Presale Tickets for Fridays Home Playoff were sold at the RRHS main office.  Today is the last day of the presale.  Hours are from 9:00 am to 1:30 pm.  Avoid the line Friday night and get your tickets.   Ticket cost is $10.00 per ticket.  No discounts, and only LHSCA cards accepted.   No refunds, all sales final.

Red River High has announced a new bag policy effective with the game Friday.  Clear bags only allowed in the stadium.  Small purses and some other bags will be allowed in certain cases.  See the flyer below.


Playoff Spirit Preparations

Riverdale Academy will hold a pep rally on Friday afternoon in the gym as part of their spirit preparations for Friday night’s playoff game.  The pep rally will begin at 2:00 pm.

The theme is western.  The school said, “Let’s send the Rebels off for a wild, wild ride in the semi-final game.”

Students may wear regular clothes on Friday as long as they meet dress code requirements!


Concert Planned at Social Springs

Bro. James Hester invited everyone to join us at Social Springs Baptist Church on Saturday, November 20, 2021 at 6:00 pm to see Trevor Thomas LIVE!

For three decades actor and entertainer, Trevor Thomas, has been touring America. He creates characters that people can laugh at, cry with, and learn from. Trevor holds a bachelor’s degree in communication with a minor in theater performance. He has worked professionally in theater, commercials, television, and film. When schedules allow, he is joined in performance by his wife, Sawyer, and their daughter, Claire. Sawyer holds a bachelor’s degree in vocal music education and offers a variety of musical styles with her professional and polished voice. Trevor, Sawyer, and Claire record exclusively for CHapel Valley Music on the Sanctuary label.

Trevor keeps up with a schedule of approximately 180 engagements each year. He can be seen at churches, concerts, and various special events. In each appearance, theater, comedy, music, and evangelism collide; and Broadway, Shakespeare, and Carol Burnett meet Billy Graham. Trevor and his family merge their talents in a combination of characters, sketches, songs, and mime. Everything varies from funny to serious; however, all of their material is worshipful, evangelistic, and edifying for the church. It is and unforgettable worship experience for the believer and a picture of salvation for the lost The Gospel of Jesus Christ is always the theme!


Hard Times Lie Ahead

By Steve Graf

For the past 4 years, our gas prices dropped dramatically and stayed around the $2.00 mark. But with the Democrats taking charge of the White House and Covid-19 making its presence felt, gas is once again soaring. At the time of writing this article, gas was at $2.99 and rising. This has a huge impact on tournament anglers, especially the weekend warriors and those who compete in local and area wide tournaments for the love of the sport. Today, we’ll talk about what 2022 might be like in terms of bass tournaments and how anglers will be affected.

Let’s first start with boats and the demand for parts. It has been, and could continue to be, a problem for boat owners to get parts needed to keep their boat engines running. If you own a bass boat, it’s just a matter of time before you’ll need engine repairs. Getting the parts, like powerheads, filters, or water pumps, has been a real issue ever since Covid hit a year ago last February. Since many parts come from overseas, the back log of the supply chain has also had a ripple effect into boat manufacturing facilities. Without parts, some boat factories have had to cut production in half or even completely shut down. When parts do arrive on American shores, getting the parts off-loaded is a whole other issue. Then to top it off,  there are not enough truckers to get the parts to the marine dealers.

The next issue is the increase in pricing for both new and used boats. It’s all about supply and demand. When the demand is higher than the supply chain, boat dealers can and will increase their prices as well. The other side of the coin is that, if anglers continue to buy these high-priced boats, dealers will continue to raise the prices.  As for the boat manufacturers, they have had to increase prices because the cost of materials continues to skyrocket. Furthermore, after a boat has been built, there is a major challenge to get a new outboard motor to put on the boat. Dealers will tell you that you’re probably looking at 6 months before they will see a new motor. The brand of engine does not matter at this stage of the game. Some guys who have always run a certain brand like Mercury or Yamaha, are now taking whatever, they can get.

Last, but not least, tackle! Companies like Strike King, V&M and Berkley are having a hard time keeping up with the demand for products like spinnerbaits, crankbaits, or jigs. This is mainly due to the lack of hardware needed to produce these types of baits. Hooks, swivels, wire, and plastic are just a few of the thing’s manufacturers are having trouble getting their hands on. For months, retailers have been out of stock and are doing their best to keep up with the demand. But as fast as manufacturers can get it to the dealer, customers are grabbing them up, and in some cases, one customer will buy every bait on the peg just because he does not know if or when they’ll be restocked. It’s created a type of panic mode similar to the ammunition demand.

So, if you’re an angler, try and exercise a little patience as manufacturers push to get caught up. But don’t expect to see any relief anytime soon as this could go all the way into 2023. Nothing will change until the supply chain gets back to a normal mode. Tune into the Hook’N Up & Track’N Down Show on AM 1130 The Tiger KWKH, every Wednesday at 11:00 and Saturday mornings at 6:00 for the latest outdoor news.  Till next time, good luck, good fishing and don’t forget to set the hook.


Afghans For Veterans

There is a group of ladies in Coushatta who get together every Monday morning to sew.  They call themselves Sewing God’s Love.  One of their ongoing projects is to knit afghans to give to veterans.

Last Sunday morning group members gathered at First Methodist Church with examples of their afghans with patriotic designs.  They were presented on the church altar railing to be blessed.

Pastor Stuart Sherman prayed that the vets who received the afghans would realize that they are getting a gift of love from the ladies who labored to make them.

The program of giving area veterans has been ongoing for several years.  In recent weeks the group presented them at various area churches.  At a couple of churches, they ran out before every vet in attendance got one.  So, the ladies are meeting again next Monday to continue Sewing God’s Love.

Group spokesperson Susan Taylor said they would welcome anyone who would like to sew and benefit members of the community.  Contact Taylor at 318-932-6253.


4-H Explorers Club

The parish 4-H Agent, Jacque Fontenot reported on the Explorers Club activities this month.

Fontenot said, “The Explorers club explored Citizenship at the November meeting. Alaina Boyd, a youth 4-H volunteer, helped us out.  She talked to the group about her citizenship projects.”

“‘They also created a Veterans Day display and worked together to make an edible ant farm,” said Fontenot.


Physics and Roller Coasters

You may have your interest sparked by that headline.  What does physics have to do with a roller coaster.  That is what Nicki Smith wants her students to ask.  From the looks on their faces they not only found the answer but learned a thing or two.

The students built and tested their own roller coasters.  Smith said, ”The students had a blast applying concepts of centripetal force, kinetic, and potential energy!!! Looks like we may have some future engineers on our hands.”


New York Law Seeks to Narrow Scope of Second Amendment

By Royal Alexander

The 2nd Amendment Is What Makes All the Rest Possible.

(Noted by several authors including Bill Flax, Forbes.com)

I always find it curious to see the lengths that gun control states are willing to go to limit the full reach of the Second Amendment, and how uninformed many state and federal officials are concerning the purpose of the 2nd Amendment: To allow citizens the ability to protect themselves from the government, and to allow citizens the opportunity to protect themselves when the government fails to protect them.

As Thomas Jefferson said, “What country can preserve its liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance. Let them take arms.” (Thomas Jefferson, letter to William S. Smith, 1787).

So, with the tyranny of King George III fresh and in the forefront of their minds, the Founders intended the 2nd Amendment to limit the government’s power to restrict weapons, not the citizens’ right to possess weapons, weapons which may be necessary to protect themselves from the government.  

Let’s recall that the Supreme Court has not directly addressed the issue of gun rights since its landmark rulings in 2008 and 2010.  The 2008 Heller decision held that the right to keep and bear arms was both a collective (military and law enforcement) right as well as an individual right.  The 2010 McDonald decision simply held that the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment extended to the states and municipalities the 2nd Amendment’s right to keep and bear arms.

Pending now is another example of this effort to limit gun rights in the case of New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen.

In New York, it is very difficult for a typical law-abiding citizen to bear a firearm for personal defense.  Openly carrying a handgun is banned and, with only a few exceptions, such as for judges and prison workers, getting a concealed-carry license requires demonstrating “proper cause.”

Well, as the Wall Street Journal and many others have pointed out “proper cause” has been interpreted to exclude “a generalized desire for protection.”  Rather, applicants must show a “special need” for defense, beyond that of the general community or of persons engaged in the same profession.” (I note that with the government’s apparent inability—and in some cases, unwillingness—to protect its citizens from a skyrocketing crime rate in many cities, the need for citizens to be able to protect themselves has never been more important.)

Do we see the burden this imposes upon a normal New Yorker trying to possess a firearm?  What this really means is that if I have a job that requires me to walk through a rough part of town to get home, I can’t have a gun—because all I have is a generalized desire for protection.  It also does not matter whether I have a clean record or even significant firearm training.  What’s completely bonkers is that the very reason the Framers included the 2nd Amendment in the Constitution was to allow each and every one of us to address our “generalized desire for protection of our individual lives!”

What this can be reduced to is that in New York some law-abiding individuals may carry a gun while other similarly situated citizens may not.  How can that possibly be justified?  Simply because some bureaucrat decided that the first individual’s fear was “particularized” and the second was “generalized”?  Sorry.  It doesn’t work that way.

Again, the Second Amendment is a limitation on Government’s power to regulate weapons, not on the citizen’s right to possess weapons, and it absolutely does not allow for some random, faceless, government official to decide for me, a private law-abiding citizen, when I’m allowed under the U.S. Constitution to possess and bear a firearm. 

I’ll close with the words of President John F. Kennedy, words that are today even more true than when he spoke them, which make clear that the right to keep and bear arms is not only our right under the Constitution, but our duty as modern day Minute Men:

“Today we need a nation of minute men; citizens who are not only prepared to take up arms, but citizens who regard the preservation of freedom as a basic purpose of their daily life and who are willing to consciously work and sacrifice for that freedom. The cause of liberty, the cause of America, cannot succeed with any lesser effort.”  (wafflesatnoon.com/jfk-second-amendment/).

[In keeping with our gun rights topic, I can’t resist sharing a development this week.  New Jersey truck driver, Edward Durr, spent $153 dollars and, in an upset for the ages, defeated Steve Sweeney, New Jersey Senate President and the longest-serving legislative leader in state history.  Mr. Durr ran because he was frustrated he was denied a concealed carry permit despite having a clean record.  This is what happens when we stand up!].


Junior High Social Studies

The school administration only got to see and listen to one of the 7th grade debates in Mr. Ross’s social studies class.  These students did an amazing job debating the good and bad of the Articles of Confederation. 

Ross said, “Students learn best by doing and this class was debating and making great points.”


Child Tax Credit Signup Deadline Nears

Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards is urging parents and guardians to sign up their children for the tax credit.

Edwards said, “The Child Tax Credit is a part of the American Rescue Plan.  It provides relief for working families.” 

The deadline to signup is approaching.  “If you are not automatically receiving monthly Child Tax Credit payments,” said Edwards. “the deadline to sign up is November 15. Sign up for the tax credit here: GetCTC.org.


ETC… for Friday, November 12, 2021

Hickory Grove Baptist Church will begin a Mid-week Bible Study on Wednesday evenings at 6 pm.  Jimmy Lockey will be teaching.

There will be a team roping event at Red River Cowboy Church on Wednesday, November 24th.  Books close at 6:30 pm and roping events begin at 7:00 pm.  Call Scottie Johnson for more information at 318-652-0429.

Tomorrow in the Cowboy Church Arena will be the second in the Winter Playday Series.  The event begin at 11:00 am.

First Methodist Church will host the Community Thanksgiving Service on Sunday, November 21 at 6 p.m. Refreshments will be served after the service.  The full line-up of participating churches will be published when that information is finalized.

It will be Student Night Sunday at New Life Hall Summit.  Students in grades 7 through 12 are invited.  It all starts at 4:00 pm.