This & That…Friday, May 30, 2025

Fairview Baptist Church is hosting a ‘Beach Bash’ Friday, May 30 from 5:30-8pm. The family fun night will include Kiddie Pool Kickball, and many other beach games. Supper will be provided.

The Great Louisiana Fair at Louisiana Downs in Bossier City runs May 30 – June 15, 2025. It features a full size midway filled with amusement rides for all ages. The fair features family fun entertainment, all FREE with admission including a circus under the big top, petting zoo, and a number of shows. Hours are: Mondays – Fridays: 5pm – 11pm, Saturdays: 1pm – 11pm and Sundays: 1pm – 11pm.

Open Door Fellowship Youth Ministry will hold a Pulled Pork Plate & Bake Sale Saturday, May 31 from 9am until 2pm at Rivertown Market. Plates are $10 and will include sandwich, coleslaw, chips, dessert and water. 

The Coushatta-Red River Chamber of Commerce will host a Farmers Market Makers Fair Saturday, June 7 from 7am – 2pm on Front Street in Coushatta. All types of vendors are welcome. There is no vendor fee but each vendor must register to participate. Contact Brandon Baxley for more information or questions at 318 332-4159.

The 75th Annual Louisiana Peach Festival will be held Saturday, June 7 in Downtown Ruston. Discover the homegrown flavors, art, music, and culture of Ruston. This free fest will feature over 12 hours of live music, a juried arts market, food vendors, kids’ activities, and more peachy fun.

Get ready for the first ever Rumble on the Bayou Saturday, June 14 at Grand Bayou Resort. All cars, trucks, motorcycles and Rat Rods are welcome. Registration starts at 10am with awards at 2:30pm. There is a $25 registration fee. Free admission for spectators. Vendors are needed. If you are interested contact Jacqueline Martin 318.471.8370 or Patrice Harper 318.471.4714.


Notice of Death – May 29

John L. McCray
November 29, 1958 – May 21, 2025
Funeral services will be held Saturday, May 31, 2025 at 11am at Summer Hill Baptist Church in Pelican.

Wanda Giddings Welch
August 7, 1947 – May 19, 2025
Graveside services will be  Sunday, June 1, 2025 at 2:30pm at Thomas-Wren Cemetery in Martin.

Jeri Jones Cobb
July 8, 1940-May 24, 2025
A private service will be held for the family.


Changes coming for Red River High School administration and athletics

Tuesday, DeSoto Parish Schools announced the appointment of Coach Patrick Lindsey as the new Assistant Principal of Logansport High School.  

 Most recently, Coach Lindsey served as Assistant Principal and Athletic Director of Red River High School, where his visionary leadership earned him the honor of being named the 2025 Louisiana High School Athletic Association’s District V Athletic Director of the Year.  

 As the announcement from DeSoto hit social media, a separate announcement from Red River Parish Schools welcomed the promotion of Dadrian Harris as the new Athletic Director for Red River High.  Harris, the men’s basketball coach, led the Bulldogs to an appearance in last season’s final four. He has been coaching for 11 years and has served as the Head Boys Basketball coach at RRHS for the last 5 years. Harris also takes his position in the community to heart, mentoring youth through various programs outside of school.  He brings a wealth of knowledge and experience to the position.


Red River’s Latson to march with the “World Famed” Grambling Band

Congratulations to Red River High senior Jemarcus Latson. He has been selected to join the Grambling State University “World-Famed” Tiger Marching Band.

Latson will play the French horn.  However, the French horn is often called a mellophone in a marching band. It’s a marching-style adaptation of the French horn, and many marching bands use it as the equivalent of a French horn in their ensemble. The mellophone is usually referred to as “the horn”. 

He plans to study music education at GSU.

While at Red River High School, Latson was a member of the Marching Band for six years and the Captain for the last three years. He is also in the Ed Rising teacher preparation program, a teacher assistant, Vice President of the Student Council, 4-H Junior Counselor, and a member of the Cross Country track team.

Latson is the son of Jasmin Latson and the grandson of Marie Carroll. His Godparents are Pastor Jimmie and First Lady Thelma Mitchell of Deliverance Temple. 

He will sign a letter of intent on Monday, June 9. The public is invited to attend.


Coushatta Chute visits veterans home

Coushatta Chute Chapter DAR delivered baskets to the Veterans Home of Shreveport on May 28, 2025.  The crocheted baskets were filled with toiletries for both men and women.  The chapter spent part of the programming during the March meeting filling the baskets with items donated by members.  

Giving back to and honoring veterans is one of the cornerstone initiatives for each DAR chapter.  


One Big Beautiful Bill

President Trump’s comeback was much more than a rejection of Washington’s failed leadership. It was a mandate to take our country in a new direction — a call to write the next chapter of American history by and for the people.

House Republicans are cementing President Trump’s bold vision with One Big Beautiful Bill. This legislation makes the largest investment in border security in a generation, provides historic tax relief for American workers, will rein in Washington’s waste, unleashes energy dominance, strengthens our military, and puts America back on a path to peace, strength, and prosperity.

House Republicans passed the One Big Beautiful Bill on Thursday morning. Click here for a full list of this bill’s key wins. Click the image below to watch Speaker Johnson’s speech on the House floor.

Keeps the border secure

The Biden Administration deliberately opened the border, and the results were catastrophic. The One Big Beautiful Bill is the largest border security investment in history to permanently secure our borders:

  • $46.5 billion to complete the border barrier system
  • $8 billion to hire 10,000 new ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) officers, 1,000 new Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) criminal investigators, and 750 support staff
  • $1.25 billion to hire 200 immigration judges and to expand immigration courtroom space

Grows our economy & cuts taxes

Washington Democrats created the worst inflation in forty years, thanks to trillions in reckless spending that crushed family budgets and sent everyday costs through the roof. Through One Big Beautiful Bill, House Republicans are backing President Trump’s economic revival:

  • Trump’s 2017 tax cuts will be made permanent
  • NO taxes on tips and overtime
  • Provides tax relief for seniors
  • Slashes regulations that are holding back our economy

This legislation is our best chance to deliver historic relief to American families, resulting in take home pay for American families to increase up to $13,300 a year.

Makes government more efficient

The federal government has become too large, does too much, and very little of what it does, it does well. Republicans in Congress are moving in lockstep with this administration to eliminate waste, fraud, and abuse within the federal government, and to ensure taxpayer dollars are spent wisely and efficiently. The One Big Beautiful Bill includes:

  • $715 billion in savings by eliminating waste, fraud, and abuse within Medicaid to strengthen the program for those who need and deserve it
  • Over $290 billion in savings by eliminating, waste, fraud, and abuse within the SNAP program
  • $500 billion in savings by repealing and phasing out provisions of Democrats’ so-called Inflation Reduction Act

Restores America’s energy dominance

President Biden and Democrats in Washington waged war against American energy for four years straight. President Trump and Republicans in Congress are paving the way for a return to American energy dominance. Our legislation builds on the President’s bold steps to tear down the regulatory barriers that have held back American energy producers, and it gives American producers and job creators the confidence to build, grow, and innovate.

  • Mandates onshore and offshore oil and gas leases
  • Resumes leasing for energy production
  • Supports domestic critical mineral mining development

Returns to peace through strength

President Biden left America weaker, our adversaries emboldened, and the world more unstable than at any time in decades. Our One Big Beautiful Bill will deliver on President Trump’s promise to modernize our military, revitalize our defense industrial base, support our servicemembers, and construct the ‘Golden Dome’ to defend every American from a dangerous world:

  • $9 billion to improve servicemember quality of life
  • $25 billion for the Golden Dome for America
  • $13 billion for nuclear deterrence

Courtesy of the Office of Speaker Mike Johnson


The Biden Health Coverup is Unnerving and Dangerous

I didn’t intend to address this topic until “reporter” Jake Tapper came out with the promotion of his new book. Not only is what he says transparently hypocritical but the truth he previously attempted to obscure sets a dangerous precedent for America.

Let me recap: any one of us who observed President Biden for much of the last 4 years could recognize he was suffering from some form of mental and physical deficit. We saw him falling up the stairs, walking off from other world leaders in a group photo—requiring one of those leaders to gently grab him by the arm and lead him back to the group, struggling to merely exit a stage from which he had just spoken although there were frequently 3 or 4 well marked exits from which to do so, and regularly and awkwardly losing his train of thought—slurring and stammering in such a way he was simply not able to be understood. We saw it clearly but were attacked and then subjected to world class gaslighting by Biden supporters and the Leftist national “media” when we pointed it out.

Then came the June 2024 debate between President Trump and President Biden and the wheels came off; the lies were completely unmasked when Biden was unable to stand at his podium and speak coherently. However, what is astounding is how the Left is incapable of seeing itself in its true light. How it is so often wrapped up in its own fabrication and virtue-signaling that it simply cannot comprehend what average Americans see clearly—that the emperor has no clothes.

The Wall Street Journal makes this point well: “The Biden senility coverup is also a media reckoning. Whenever someone dared to point out that Mr. Biden wasn’t up to the job, a praetorian media guard assembled to deny it. We could quote chapter and verse from many media sources, but one example worth citing is none other than Mr. Tapper” with “the CNN host casting doubt on those who cast doubt on Mr. Biden’s mental fitness.” (WSJ, May 18, 2025).

WSJ concluded its blistering critique of Tapper and major media by stating, “the coverup of Mr. Biden’s mental decline will go down as one of the great scandals of modern politics. By refusing to admit what voters could so clearly see, Democrats denied their party an open primary. Democrats and the press are now appalled by Mr. Trump’s second term. They would do better to think upon, and seek contrition for, their own role in making it possible.” Ouch.

Tapper has responded as anyone would whose tail feathers were being burned, stating he had found “tremendous humility about my coverage.” I laughed out loud. If he had any humility he would never have been so smug and dishonest in the first place.

Broadly though, it makes you wonder who was making presidential decisions.

The presidential autopen scandal is being looked into now. I also recount a story Speaker Mike Johnson has related publicly, and with me privately. It involves a conservation he had with President Biden when Speaker Johnson was at the White House on a different matter. Speaker Johnson pulled President Biden aside and stated something to the effect “Mr. President, may I ask why you imposed the ban on Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) exports … it’s really hurting my state of Louisiana.” To which Biden replied, “I didn’t do that.” Speaker Johnson respectfully but firmly pushed back, “Sir, it’s happening in my own state. I assure you that you did impose the ban.” To which Biden again stated, “I didn’t do that.” Speaker Johnson was truly taken aback. How could Biden not know he had imposed the ban and how many other things did Biden supposedly do that he had no idea he had done, or did not do himself at all?

This is all disturbing but what is truly worrisome is that an incapacitated Biden could have been called upon to make life and death decisions, perhaps in a crisis involving an Iranian nuclear strike on Israel, for example, or the need to send American troops to war. There are countless grave and dangerous situations with which a president must contend. To think Biden would have been faced with one or more of them in his fragile mental and physical health is alarming.

This coverup needs to be fully exposed and memorialized in hopes this kind of treachery never occurs again.

Royal Alexander


Geek’d Con 10th Anniversary: Shreveport’s ‘Comic Con’ Just 90 Days Away

Geek’d Con, North Louisiana’s premier comic and pop culture convention, is 90 days from launching its 10th-anniversary event. Scheduled for August 22–24, 2025, at the Shreveport Convention Center, “Geek’d Con X” promises a star-studded weekend marking a decade of fandom and economic impact.

The annual event consistently draws over 10,000 attendees, injecting millions into the Shreveport-Bossier economy. Its regional and national draw is evident, with consistent ticket sales to fans in states as far as Washington, Michigan, and New York. Additionally, vendors annually travel to Shreveport from California, Iowa, and Florida.

Key Attractions Confirmed:

The extensive guest list for Geek’d Con X features notable personalities, and cast reunions, including:

  • Shell-a-Bration:  Commemorating the 35th anniversary of the original 1990 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles film. Four of the movie’s original actors—Brian Tochi, Robbie Rist, Kenn Scott, and Ernie Reyes, Jr.—will be in attendance
  • Mallrats Cast: The film Mallrats was released 30 years ago in 1995, Geek’d Con will host stars Jason Lee, Jeremy London, and Ethan Suplee
  • Charmed Cast: Four of the main cast stars from the TV series Charmed will be in attendance, including Rose McGowan, Holly Marie Combs, Brian Kruse, and Dorian Gregory
  • The Voice of Mickey Mouse: Bret Iwan has been Disney’s official voice of Mickey Mouse since 2009. Portraying the icon in Mickey Mouse Clubhouse, Have a Laugh!, Mickey Mouse Funhouse, and across the Disney parks. Anything Mickey is Bret.
  • Terrifier Duo:  Actor David Howard Thornton (Art The Clown) and actress Samantha Scaffidi (Victoria Heyes) from the Terrifier film franchise are scheduled to appear. David is planning to appear for photos in his Art The Clown makeup
  • My Name is Earl Stars: Actors Jason Lee and Ethan Suplee portrayed Earl and Randy Hickey in the popular TV series My Name is Earl
  • Barry Bostwick: From The Rocky Horror Picture Show, celebrating its 50th anniversary
  • Scott Steiner: WWE Hall of Fame member
  • Alan Ruck: Legendary actor known for his role as Cameron Frye in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off and Connor Roy in the award winning series Succession

For a complete list of confirmed guests and photo-op opportunities, visit the official Geek’d Con Lineup page.

The convention will also host comic book creators from iconic titles like The Avengers, Spider-Man,Teenage Mutant Ninja TurtlesThe SimpsonsBatman, and Tremors

As well as voice actors from English dubs of anime shows like Dragon Ball, My Hero Academia, Fullmetal Alchemist, and Yu Yu Hakusho. 

Traditional voice actors will also be appearing, like Kat Cressida. Kat is the voice of Constance Hatchaway, The Bride, from Disney’s Haunted Mansion. She’s also voiced characters for franchises like Toy Story, Star Wars, and Marvel.

Event Details:

  • Dates: August 22–24, 2025
  • Location: Shreveport Convention Center, Downtown Shreveport, LA
  • Features: Over 200 vendor booths, cosplay contests, celebrity panels, and autograph sessions.

Tickets and Vendor Registration:

Tickets for Geek’d Con X are available now. Purchase yours directly via TicketSpice.

Vendor registration remains open for businesses and artists looking to connect with thousands of attendees. Interested parties can find detailed information and application forms on the Geek’d Con Vendor Information page.

About Geek’d Con:

Established in 2015, Geek’d Con has solidified its position as the largest pop culture event in the Ark-La-Tex region. The convention serves as a vital community event, celebrating all facets of geek culture, from comics and movies to gaming and cosplay, and drawing a diverse audience from across the nation.

Connect with Geek’d Con:


U.S. Olympian returns to finish LSUS degree

Three-time U.S. Olympian weightlifter Kendrick Farris stands with LSUS weightlifting coach Dr. Kyle Pierce as Farris celebrates his graduation on May 16. Farris returned to LSUS in 2023 to finish his general studies degree with a concentration in applied and social sciences.
CREDIT: Abigail Johnson/LSUS Media Relations

U.S. weightlifting record holder, Olympian, husband, father, “citizen of the world.”

Kendrick Farris has earned a lot of titles in a career that’s spanned more than two decades.

But the Shreveport native picked up one more – college graduate.

Farris walked across the Brookshire Grocery Arena stage on May 16 with an LSUS general studies degree with a concentration in applied and social sciences.

“This is the first graduation I’ve taken part in since middle school,” Farris said. “It felt really good.

“My row was called, and I was still sitting there watching others. It was one or two rows later when I realized I needed to go up there.”

Farris is used to having all eyes on him as a three-time U.S. Olympian who is the only American male to break two U.S. records in two different weight classes.

His weightlifting journey started as a youth in the LSUS Weightlifting Center as part of Dr. Kyle Pierce’s community program and has taken him around the world as a competitor and ambassador.

Pierce, who admitted he didn’t attend any of his own graduations, stood next to Farris with a big smile.

“(Pierce) always encouraged me to finish my education, said I needed to finish,” Farris said. “We’ve had all these conservations, and it was great to share that moment with him.”

Farris is in his first year as a juvenile detention officer in Caddo Parish, having mentored youth there before becoming a full-time employee.

“It’s a place where I’ve done some counseling and recreation with kids, and this is a great opportunity to work with these youth in a different way,” Farris said this past summer. “Correction is love, and if it’s not rooted in love, then it’s not correction.

“You can share with them what they need to know, and at the same time be a person that they hopefully can confide in. Sometimes people go through things, and they feel like nobody else is going through that. But this is an opportunity to present something different to them, to be an example that maybe they haven’t been exposed to.”

He sees his long-term future in corporate wellness, combining weightlifting as a therapy along with nutrition and other wellness avenues.

Farris’ reputation in the weightlifting world opens many doors, but he said a college degree would allow him to work with more varied partners.

“Finishing my degree solidified everything,” Farris said. “The organizations I work with, the community things I do here in Louisiana and Texas and also in Colorado (home of the U.S. Olympic training center) – it’s going to allow me to do more.

“(The degree) opens doors to partner with different organizations. My persona does a lot, but for people who don’t know me, now the resume is more complete, and there won’t be that hesitation that’s sometimes been there.”

Not only has Farris experienced weightlifting therapeutic’s release in his own life, but he’s seen it in action many times in his volunteer work.

One notable example came in 2005 after Hurricane Katrina when New Orleanians staying in Shreveport lifted weights at LSUS as a way to blow off steam.

“It was a chance for them to come into the gym and forget about their circumstances for a little bit, and it was a really cool experience to have fun with them,” Farris said about his first real introduction into coaching. “I would always help my peers when we were lifting as a group, but the experience after Hurricane Katrina and then my first Olympics in Beijing really opened my eyes to the possibilities involved with coaching.”

Farris will return to that LSUS gym to host a youth weightlifting program through Caddo Parish Parks and Recreation.

The summer training opportunity is for youths 10-18.

The 12-week program begins June 3 (until Aug. 22) and will be held Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10 a.m.-noon.

Registration for one of the 15 slots can be made at caddoparks.org.

Farris acquired various sponsorships for the camp, including from Derrick Parker’s Heartwork Institute. Parker is an LSUS basketball Hall of Famer.


National Hamburger Day

Grill up a hamburger for yourself, or visit any number of sandwich shops and restaurants to enjoy one of mankind’s greatest, greasiest culinary inventions today to celebrate National Hamburger Day.

National Hamburger Day has been celebrated since at least 2010, but the history of the burger goes back much further than that! The invention of the hamburger has been claimed by so many that there’s only one real origin: Hamburg, Germany.

No matter who says they invented the hamburger, no one can deny that it was the second-largest city in Germany that was its namesake. While not all types of ‘burgers’ resemble the meat that came out of Hamburg, they all have the roots of their preparation in this noble city.

One of the most interesting things about hamburgers isn’t actually about the burger itself, believe it or not, there are actually people out there dedicated to finding out the truth about who really invented the hamburger.

If we track back to the beginning and look at the namesake Hamburg, where the burger undoubtedly gained its name, there are many people who think the burger was created in 1881 by a gentleman named Otto Kuase or Otto Krause.

On the other hand, the Library of Congress would have you believe something else. It seems the US audience seemed to favor the story of Louis Lassen in 1900. The popular story goes that a businessman was in a rush and wanted some food in a hurry. Louis is said to have placed a piece of grilled meat in between two pieces of toast and thus invented the burger.

Where this story gets interesting is here, the US disregards Otto Krause simply because his name has three different spellings, which is common with German names. As for the Lassen story, well, when it comes to putting grilled meat in between two pieces of toast, he was pretty late to the party, it seems the Chinese had been doing that since 1045.

So whether you believe it’s Otto, Lassen, or the people of the Zhou dynasty, there is no question hamburgers are one of the greatest creations in history, and National Hamburger Day is something that will go on for centuries to come.

Celebrating National Hamburger Day is easy peasy. You can grab one from local favorites Bailey’s, Fausto’s, The York Chop or chains Dairy Queen or Burger King.

Of course, if you’re daring and handy with a grill, we suggest making up your own blend of hamburger spices and having a good old fashioned cookout.

Source: daysoftheyear.com


Ponderings

This is a nostalgic opinion quiz for you.

In the 1960’s, who was the worst law enforcement officer depicted by television?

That is an easy one, right? I’m wondering how many of you thought that must be Barney Fife. Barney was the deputy to the wise and calm Andy Taylor, the sheriff of Mayberry. If trouble could happen, it would happen to Barney. Barney was allowed only one bullet for his gun. The bullet was kept in this shirt pocket, not in his service revolver. One of the recurrent gags was Barney accidentally firing his revolver. If an episode had mayhem, somehow Barney was in the middle of the mess. Most of the mess-ups in Mayberry were resolved in the thirty minutes of the sit-com. Barney would learn his lesson and we would tune in next week.

But my candidate for worst law enforcement officer in the television world of the 1960’s was Lt. Tragg, the foil of Perry Mason. Because Perry never lost a case, we knew that the person Lt. Tragg arrested was innocent. This detective of the Los Angeles police department was proven wrong every week. There were times that I felt sympathy for Lt. Tragg. He was depicted as a decent, moral, hard-working detective. His deductions were always spot on. The Perry Mason episodes were produced before the advent of forensic investigations. If there were fingerprints on a weapon, that was the guilty party. Or if the gun was registered to someone, they were certainly a prime suspect. Lt. Tragg never won! He was a loser each week! Although, he always held is on as a witness for the prosecution!

I get that Barney and Lt. Tragg are fictional characters. I understand the formulas that are a part of successful television shows. But sometimes an idea pops out of the strangest place. A clown character (Barney) or a perpetual loser (Lt. Tragg) can become examples of exemplary attributes.

I think both characters illustrate for me the Biblical concept of perseverance. Barney and Lt. Tragg go to work every day. They do their jobs. They show up. (Yes, I know they are fictional characters.)

One of the overlooked dynamics of our faith journey is the idea of perseverance. We are called to stick it out and to stick with it. We are called to follow Jesus with our last step. That is never giving in or never giving out.

Jesus said, “By your perseverance you will gain your souls.” (Luke 21:19) That means keeping on! So, get out there and keep on living for Jesus.


UPDATED: This & That…Wednesday, May 28, 2025

The Red River Republican Parish Executive Committee will meet Thursday, May 29 at 5:30pm at the Red River Parish Library. Dr. Sammy Wyatt, candidate for the US Senate will the guest speaker. The public is welcome to attend.

The Natchitoches Genealogical & Historical Association President Peggy Aycock announced new operating hours effective Tuesday, May 27, 2025 to better meet customer needs. Located at 600 Second Street, it will be open each Tuesday and Wednesday 10:00 – 3:00 pm; Thursday 9:00 – 4:00 pm; open by appointment only Friday – Saturday; closed Sunday and major holidays. Aycock said, “Our library offers an abundance of information to help trace family histories. We have information dating back to the 1700’s, some vital records, surname catalogs, maps and property records, collections of family genealogies, Rev. Donald Hebert Publications, three workstations with subscriptions to Ancestry.com; Fold3; Newspaper.com and much more”.

Anyone flying United Airlines this summer in the US? Starting June 3, the airline will require travelers with and without checked luggage to check in roughly 45 minutes before their flight, instead of the current 30-minute policy. (This updated policy will not affect international travel which is already at least 60 minutes before departure time.)

Castor Methodist Church will host a corn hole tournament Saturday, June 7 from 6-10pm. The event is open to all age groups so bring your friends and family for an evening of fun and friendly competition. Supper will be provided. Contact Brad McCoy at 318.475.9029 or Richard Twyman at 318.564.5160 for more information. 

The Louisiana Folklife Center at Northwestern State University will present the program “Fiddlin’ with the Finest! A Celebration of Louisiana Folk Fiddling” Saturday June 14 at 11 a.m. at the Many Depot Museum at 750 Highway 171 Bypass in Many. The event is free and open to the public. Three past Louisiana State Fiddle Champions, Clancey Stewart, Joe Suchanek, and Ron Yule, will discuss the importance of the folk fiddling tradition with Dr. Shane Rasmussen, director of the Louisiana Folklife Center and professor of English at NSU. Live music performed throughout the program will include various regional fiddle styles accompanied by demonstrations of fiddle stick playing and twin fiddling. A Q&A session on participating in fiddle competitions will follow. Fiddlers of all skill levels are invited to bring their instruments for a jam session with the invited musicians. For more information, call the Louisiana Folklife Center at (318) 357-4332, email folklife@nsula.edu, or go to nsula.edu/folklife


Notice of Death – May 27

Ruby Campbell Smith
July 25, 1963 – May 20, 2025
Funeral services will be held Wednesday, May 28, 2025 at 2pm at Rockett-Nettles Funeral Home Chapel in Coushatta.

John L. McCray
November 29, 1958 – May 21, 2025
Funeral services will be held Saturday, May 31, 2025 at 11am at Summer Hill Baptist Church in Pelican.

Wanda Giddings Welch
August 7, 1947 – May 19, 2025
Graveside services will be  Sunday, June 1, 2025 at 2:30pm at Thomas-Wren Cemetery in Martin.


Memorial Day reminds us why we remember

Every year, as May winds down and summer begins to stir, Memorial Day gives us a moment to pauser. Not just for the cookouts, the long weekend, or the sales—but to remember why this day exists in the first place.

Memorial Day is about honoring the brave men and women who gave their lives in service to our country. It is a day to reflect on sacrifice, not just in theory, but in real lives lost—sons and daughters, friends and neighbors, who never made it home. 

Here, in our community, that meaning is deeply felt. You see it in the rows of flags planted by volunteers at the cemetery. You feel it when a veteran, hand over heart, stands in quiet remembrance of those no longer standing beside them.

It’s easy to let a day like this become just another date on the calendar. But when we slow down, when we teach our kids what this day truly means, when we attend the ceremony instead of sleeping in—we do our part to make sure the stories of the fallen are never lost.

Memorial Day is about gratitude. It’s about remembering that freedom comes at a cost. And it’s about community—coming together not in mourning, but in respect and appreciation.

So whether you are placing a flower on a gravesite, attending a service, or simply taking a moment of silence at home, know this: remembering matters. Saying their names matters. And honoring their lives ensures their sacrifice is never forgotten.


Rebelettes are back; Breedlove & Cason to sponsor group

Riverdale Academy announced this week that the Rebelettes are back for the 2025-2026 school year.

Jennifer Breedlove and Amanda Cason will sponsor the group.

Breedlove graduated from RA in 1997 and is currently a 2nd grade teacher. Ironically, she teaches in the same classroom her mother, Mrs. Millie, taught in for over 40 years.

She was a member of the Rebelettes throughout high school and shared that being on the dance line was one of her favorite things about high school. She stated, “Honestly, some of my best memories are from my time as a Rebelette.” She is very excited to be a part of bringing the Rebelettes back this year.

Breedlove is married to Adam Breedlove and they have two sons who attend Riverdale.

Cason has taught high school math classes for several years at Riverdale.

She was on the danceline at Byrd High School and continued dance classes throughout college.

She is excited about working with the girls and cannot wait to see them on the field this coming fall.

Cason is married to Dan Cason, who is a Riverdale alum, and they have three children who also attend Riverdale.


LSU AgCenter to Host Inaugural Hay Day Event

Joshua L. Salley
Assistant Extension Agent (Livestock, Forages)
DeSoto & Red River Parishes

The LSU AgCenter is excited to announce its inaugural Hay Day event, scheduled for Thursday, June 12, 2025, at Dodson Ranch in Coushatta, Louisiana. This educational field day will focus on forage and hay production, providing valuable insights and demonstrations for producers across the region.

The morning session will feature expert presentations on a range of topics, including:

Armyworm control strategies

Bermudagrass varieties and sprigging techniques

Herbicide options for effective weed control

During the lunch break, attendees will have the opportunity to observe drone sprayer demonstrations, showcasing the latest technology in precision agriculture.

Following lunch, participants will head to the field for live equipment demonstrations. Hay equipment from various manufacturers will be tested under identical field conditions, allowing producers to evaluate performance and make informed purchasing decisions.

Event Schedule:
Registration begins: 8:00 AM
Welcome and presentations begin: 9:00 AM

Location:
Dodson Ranch
582 Riverfront Road
Coushatta, LA 71019

RSVP Information:

Participants are encouraged to RSVP by calling the Red River Parish Extension Office at 318-932-4342.

Don’t miss this opportunity to gain practical knowledge, connect with fellow producers, and see the latest advancements in hay production technology firsthand.


Louisiana LNG exports critical to Trump energy plans

By Bethany Blankley May 20, 2025

(The Center Square) – Louisiana is critical to the Trump administration’s energy plans, U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said.

The Trump administration selected McNeese State University as the site for a new center of excellence.

The Transportation Department’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration has selected the Lake Charles-based university as its first National Center of Excellence for Liquefied Natural Gas Safety. It’s the first undergraduate institution in the U.S. to offer a certificate program in LNG Business. The university already offers its own LNG Center of Excellence.

“Producing and exporting LNG is one of the most powerful ways we can unleash American energy, and the Lake Charles region is a critical hub of LNG activity in the U.S.,” Duffy said. “The sheer volume of product supplied by the state of Louisiana is unparalleled and growing, and there is no better place to locate our Center of Excellence.”

The designation came after U.S. Sen. John Kennedy, R-LA, established the PHMSA National Center of Excellence for LNG five years ago in the 2020 PIPES Act under the first Trump administration. Included in the law was a provision Kennedy added to create “the first-ever National Center of Excellence for LNG Safety, but I didn’t stop there,” Kennedy said. “I made sure in that bill that the newly created Center was required to be in Louisiana.”

Under Trump’s second term, the center was chosen to be headquartered at McNeese State University in Lake Charles, an oil and natural gas powerhouse in Calcasieu Parish along the Gulf of America.

The PIPES Act, which improves pipeline safety and infrastructure, created the PHMSA center to “enhance the United States as the leader and foremost expert in LNG operations by furthering the expertise of the Federal Government in the operations, management, and regulatory practices of LNG facilities; acting as a repository of information on best practices for the operation of LNG facilities; and facilitating collaboration among LNG sector stakeholders.”

The center will facilitate research and development, training, and regulatory coordination to develop “LNG safety solutions to real-world challenges through global and domestic collaboration among LNG stakeholders.”

“The Center will advance LNG safety by promoting collaboration among government agencies, industry, academia, and other safety partners,” PHMSA Acting Administrator Ben Kochman said. “Consolidating such remarkable levels of expertise will benefit the LNG sector for many generations to come.”

Being located at McNeese “will be a game-changer for our region in terms of workforce development and groundbreaking research,” McNeese State University President Dr. Wade Rousse said. “We are excited to be on the forefront of helping ensure safety and sustainability in the energy sector and look forward to working with PHMSA to develop a world-class facility to house their staff.”

The U.S. is the top LNG exporter in the world, with the U.S. oil and natural gas industry and Louisiana and Texas ports propelling it to its number one status, The Center Square reported.

Lake Charles also found itself at the center of a Biden administration LNG export ban. Applications for exports had been frozen until a federal judge reversed the Biden policy last year. Under the second Trump administration, LNG exports projects are expanding in Louisiana.

Major projects underway in Calcasieu Parish include an Energy Transfer subsidiary Lake Charles Exports LNG export project approved under the first Trump administration in late 2019 for a five-year extension. Building the facility is projected to create up to 4,000 construction jobs and 200 fulltime jobs once fully operational.

Another LNG project announced last month is being spearheaded by a west Australian company that’s making the largest foreign investment in state history to build an LNG production and export terminal in Calcasieu Parish, The Center Square reported.


Protect your eyes

May is Healthy Vision Month. Make your eye health a priority this month. The National Institutes of Health has these tips to keep your eyes safe.

Get a dilated eye exam: This can detect eye diseases at an early stage when you have no symptoms. During a dilated eye exam, your eye care professional puts drops in your eyes to widen your pupils so he or she can get a good look at the back of the eyes. Early treatment of eye diseases like glaucoma can slow or stop vision loss and reduce your risk of blindness.

Use protective eyewear: Wear sunglasses to protect your eyes from the sun’s ultraviolet rays. A hat offers great sun protection too!

Healthy lifestyle: Eat a nutritious diet rich in fruits, vegetables, and omega-3 fatty acids. Limit drinks with a lot of caffeine and foods with a lot of salt. Drinking too much alcohol can also hurt your vision. Don’t smoke.

Screen time: Follow the 20-20-20 rule to reduce eye strain. Every 20 minutes, shift your focus to an object at least 20 feet away for 20 seconds.

Exercise and rest: Regular exercise improves blood flow to the eyes. Meanwhile, getting enough rest helps soothe tired eyes.

Source: OGB May Live Better Louisiana Newsletter


William’s Joke

Flying commercially in 1970 was a much more relaxed experience than it is today. The period from the 1950s to the 1970s is fondly considered “the golden age of travel.” Flying was more glamorous and luxurious. Many people dressed up to fly. Men often wore suits and women wore dresses. Their children were also dressed to impress. Smoking tobacco during flights was perfectly acceptable. Cocktails and other alcoholic beverages were often complimentary to passengers during flight. The food was comparable to that served in fine restaurants, often with multiple courses. The distance between the seats, the legroom, was normally between 36 to 40 inches. Today, legroom averages about 28 inches. There were no electronic devices, so airlines provided all sorts of entertainment to help passengers pass the time. At one point, American Airlines held in-flight fashion shows down the aisles. Airport security at the time was almost non-existent when compared to what it is today. There were no metal detectors, no scanners, and no drug-sniffing or bomb-sniffing dogs.

On Monday, September 21, 1970, William James drove to O’Hare International Airport in Chicago on what was his 20th birthday. He bought a ticket to fly to Denver, Colorado, and waited to board his plane. He passed the time by chatting with another passenger. William was jovial because he had left his teenage years behind and had entered his twenties. While William was waiting to board the airplane, he jokingly told another traveler that he had two bombs in his luggage. Even in the relaxed atmosphere of commercial flying in 1970, claiming to have a bomb on an airplane was nothing to joke about. The other passenger passed the information to the ticket agent who immediately called a nearby United States marshal.

Shortly thereafter, a marshal pulled William aside for questioning. William tried to explain that he was just joking, but the marshal found no humor in his claim. About that time, Chicago vice detectives stepped in though the airline had not called for outside police assistance. The detectives had been waiting to arrest William based on a different tip they had received about his luggage. The marshal and Chicago detectives carefully searched William’s luggage. The marshal was relieved that they found no bombs, but the detectives were delighted because they found what they were looking for. Inside William’s luggage, they found five bricks of marijuana which weighed two pounds each and had a street value of about $20,000. Adjusted for inflation, that would be just over $163,000 in today’s money. The detectives arrested William and transported him to jail.

On the following day, the judge in Chicago’s narcotics court saw no humor in William’s bomb claim but was lenient in his sentencing. Rather than jail time, William was sentenced to probation. In this incident, many people surely told William that he was not funny and to take life seriously. Luckily for us, William did not listen because he is known around the world for his humor. The man who was arrested for carrying 10 pounds of marijuana in his luggage after he jokingly claimed that he had two bombs on an airplane appeared in many films including “Caddyshack,” “Ghostbusters,” and “Groundhog Day.” The world knows William James Murray as Bill Murray.

Sources:

1. Jacopo Prisco, “What the ‘golden age’ of flying was really like,” CNN, August 5, 2022, accessed May 18, 2025, cnn.com/travel/article/golden-age-flying-really-like.

2. Chicago Tribune, September 22, 1970, p.3.


Public Service Commission ruling could leave customers with big rate hikes

By Nolan McKendry  May 20, 2025

(The Center Square) − The Louisiana Public Service Commission voted 4-1 this week to halt a years-long effort to examine alternative electricity models that could give industrial and residential customers more choice in how they buy power.

Monday’s decision effectively ends a push for what were termed “customer-centered options,” which aimed to open the state’s power market to greater competition and reduce rising costs for consumers.

The only dissenting vote came from Commissioner Davante Lewis, who argued that the commission should continue examining ways to modernize Louisiana’s energy framework and avoid locking in steep rate increases.

The vote came as Entergy Louisiana, the state’s largest monopoly utility, faces growing scrutiny over the cost of its planned infrastructure investments.

Logan Burke, executive director of the Alliance for Affordable Energy, called the decision “astonishing,” particularly because it shut down what she described as the only venue where the commission was actively working on long-term solutions for customers.

“It was pretty astonishing to see elected officials in Louisiana say no to free markets — especially when a significant number of energy companies were in favor of looking at this issue,” Burke said. “That doesn’t often happen.”

A recent analysis by energy advisory firm BAI Group found that base electricity rates for Entergy customers could increase by up to 90% between 2018 and 2030 if all of the company’s proposed capital projects move forward.

That includes billions in spending for new natural gas plants, grid hardening projects and major transmission upgrades for the hurricane-prone state.

Entergy’s service area includes its separate New Orleans subsidiary and stretches from Baton Rouge to the Arkansas state line in the north along with Lafayette and Lake Charles to the Pelican State’s boundary with Texas.

“Entergy is preparing to build a lot of new infrastructure, and in the absence of any problem-solving, those costs are going to land squarely on customers,” she said. “Bills are about to really start hurting folks.”

A chart presented by BAI to the commission shows base rates for Entergy already rising steadily from 2018 to 2024, with a sharp projected climb continuing through 2030. The upward trajectory reflects costs associated with Entergy’s slate of project — including the Magnolia power plant, grid resilience measures and multiple high-voltage transmission lines.

Industrial research firm ICF confirms this data, forecasting that electricity demand across the U.S. will rise 25% by 2030 and 78% by 2050, compared to 2023 levels.

For states in the MISO region, like Louisiana, residential electricity rates could double by 2050, with prices rising from 20 to over 40 cents per kilowatt-hour, according to ICF.

“Across a sample of four utility service territories, residential retail rates are projected to increase 15% to 40% by 2030 from 2025 levels,” ICF noted in a recent report. “By 2050, retail rates could double.”

Further, the ruling stymies state development and expansion of a diverse energy portfolio, which some advocates say has been bypassed in favor of more natural gas, which utilities maintain is a cheap and clean source of generation. 

Natural gas prices have decreased since a spike in January sent prices soaring to $9.86 per million British thermal units. Those prices are now at $3.42 per MMBtu as of Tuesday.

According to Burke, closing the docket also means abandoning progress on community solar — a program that allows groups of residents or businesses to share a solar installation and receive credit on their electricity bills. 

Despite $150 million in federal funding headed to Louisiana through the Solar for All initiative, most of the money is earmarked for community solar projects that can’t move forward without supportive rules from the commission.

“Right now, there’s no workable program outside of New Orleans,” Burke said. “This was the only docket where those issues were even on the table.” 

Though Entergy has their own solar programs, Burke called them “over-subscribed.”

That means they’re too small to handle the demand, meaning customers who want solar options often can’t get them−or the benefits are limited.

Despite these warnings, the commission’s vote puts Entergy on track to maintain its control over power delivery to Louisiana’s massive industrial sector, and ratepayers may have to shoulder the costs of the state’s aggressive industrial and infrastructure buildout.


Northwestern State University’s sonography program earns national accreditation

Northwestern State University’s Diagnostic Medical Sonography program has been awarded Initial Accreditation by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP). The accreditation was granted following a recommendation by the Joint Review Committee on Education in Diagnostic Medical Sonography (JRC-DMS).

The newly accredited program includes three specialized concentrations, Abdominal-Extended Sonography, Obstetrics and Gynecology (OB/GYN) Sonography and Vascular Sonography.

“Receiving this accreditation validates the quality of our program and our commitment to meet the growing demand for qualified sonographers,” said Jennifer Evans, assistant professor and coordinator of NSU’s sonography program. “As educators in the sonography program, we are extremely proud to receive national recognition for delivering excellence in sonography education.

The accreditation, effective May 16, is valid through the next scheduled evaluation in 2030. The program was reviewed under the 2020 Standards and Guidelines for the Accreditation of Educational Programs in Diagnostic Medical Sonography. No areas of non-compliance were identified, signaling full alignment with national standards for quality and educational rigor.

“This accreditation validates the exceptional work of our faculty, clinical partners and staff in developing a high-quality, comprehensive sonography program,” said Dr. Aimee Badeaux, dean of the College of Nursing and School of Allied Health. “It demonstrates our ongoing commitment to academic excellence, patient-centered training and workforce readiness.”

The announcement comes on the heels of another major milestone for the program, the graduation of its inaugural cohort in May 2025. These graduates are now preparing for national certification exams in their respective specialties and are poised to enter the healthcare workforce.

CAAHEP is recognized as one of the largest programmatic accreditors in the health sciences field. Its rigorous accreditation process ensures that educational programs meet nationally established standards and prepare competent entry-level professionals.

NSU’s sonography program plays a critical role in addressing workforce needs in diagnostic imaging and improving access to quality healthcare services throughout the region, Badeaux said.

“Providing our students with high-quality instruction and hands-on training is at the heart of our mission,” Evans said. “We recognize that our local healthcare communities are depending on us to educate sonographers who will enter the field with compassion, confidence, and clinical competence—an expectation now affirmed through our national accreditation.”

To learn more about the program or to explore enrollment options, visit http://www.nsula.edu or contact the School of Allied Health at http://www.nsula.edu/alliedhealth


What does an angler have to do to be competitive?

I heard a song the other day that said, “Sometimes you’re the bug and sometimes you’re the windshield.” So far this fishing season I’ve been the bug.

My tournament success looks like I have no idea what I’m doing! I’ve been about as competitive as a high school kid fishing against a full-time professional angler. But for me, my confidence remains “hopeful” that I’ll turn this season around.

In 2024 in the ABA Texas Pro League, I was runner-up for the Angler of the Year. Oh, what a difference a year makes, as I’m not even close to being competitive, much less winning an event in 2025. My highest finish is a 12th place at Sam Rayburn. So why has this year been such a grind? Why am I not catching the quality bass I caught last season? I go to church, say my prayers, and do things the right way!

I’ve never cheated in a bass tournament and always want to represent myself and sponsors I’m affiliated with in the proper manner. I don’t ask other anglers for their waypoints or for any other help! One thing I came to the realization of a long time ago as a tournament angler is that it’s hard to go and catch another angler’s fish. Even if you have his waypoints, it’s still hard to catch them.

Is this a God thing? Is He trying to prove a point to me? Or is this just a phase all anglers go through? Whichever way, something must change quickly with only a few tournaments left on the schedule.

Tournament fishing is one of those sports that can bring even a great angler to his knees. It might be the most humbling sport there is. But one thing I like about the sport is the fact that there is no one else to blame for my failures or success than myself.

It’s truly you against the fish and Mother Nature! Excuses are a dime a dozen when things aren’t going an angler’s way. They range from maybe it’s a weather change to the lake is low or too high. It could be that maybe the water temperature is too hot or cold or maybe the spawn is taking place and fish just aren’t biting. Oh, wait a minute, it could be the phase of the moon we’re in, or the fact that there are too many anglers on the water! Ha!

One thing I will never do — quit! I still find bass fishing to be such a mental challenge and look forward to every day I get to spend on the water. But there are days that I wonder why I’m out there trying to catch bass that don’t want to cooperate.

So, I guess the best thing I can do for now is to put my favorite rod in my hand, shut up and keep fishing hard! If you see me on the lake or at a local boat ramp, make sure to stop me and say hello.

‘Til next time, good luck in all your fishing adventures.

Contact Steve at sgraf26@yahoo.com