The Two Sides of Tournament Fishing

By Steve Graf

The sport of tournament fishing offers many options of trails that an angler may participate in. But to fish more than one tournament trail is very draining, both mentally and physically. Most people think that bass fishing is a very relaxing sport. This might be true for the weekend warrior or all the crappie fishermen, but not for anglers that compete on a high level. There are times that tournaments seem to take all the fun out of fishing, as it turns into work. To be successful on any tournament trail, local or regional, you must be committed to time on the water. It’s just like any other sport…those that put in the extra time, are the ones that will be the most successful.

Tournament fishing takes a big toll on the body, especially after the age of 60. Based on my experience, it takes a little longer to recover from 5 or 6 straight days on the water. Even in good weather conditions with little to no wind, boat rides take their toll on the body. Some lakes are worse than others and present a big challenge even for the youngest of anglers. Lakes like Toledo Bend, Sam Rayburn or Texoma (north of Dallas) take boating to a whole other level. Each lake is laid out differently, but for Toledo Bend a wind straight out of the south or north means 3- and 4-foot waves. At Toledo Bend we call this “right down the pipe,” a direction you don’t want to see, especially on tournament day. For Sam Rayburn, high winds out the southeast or northwest mean a rough ride and can be very hard on a boat. I’ve seen waves so bad that anglers have had their trolling motors or electronic units knocked completely off the bow. I’ve seen anglers break bones and dislocate joints, not to mention the number of back injuries I’ve seen. Shoulder and knee surgeries, inflamed elbows and wrist issues are just a few of injuries that are common among anglers.

Now let’s talk about the mental side of tournament fishing, which can be even tougher than the physical side. A lot of preparation goes into getting ready for an event. The internet has really created a great shortcut for information that’s important for each body of water. You can find previous tournament results, old and new fishing reports, and maps, not to mention the amount of info you can gain from YouTube videos. No one likes to brag more about their catch than bass fishermen and that’s where Google Earth, Facebook and YouTube videos will take your research to another level. Once on the water, you must apply what you’ve learned, but you can’t totally rely on this information to put you on the winning stringer. You must take this info and apply it to what you learn each day during your practice time. Very seldom can an angler repeat what another angler did to win an event. That’s why the sport is so mentally draining; you can’t always do what someone else has done. What the fish bite today, will not necessarily be what they’re biting tomorrow. Every day is a new day when it comes to bass fishing, but that’s what makes tournament fishing such a great sport. Most of the time, it’s unpredictable!

As you can see, tournament fishing is tough, but it can also be very rewarding, financially and emotionally. Nothing like the feeling of beating some of the best anglers in your region! Tournament fishermen are like a small cult or a band of gypsies…a group of anglers that have great respect for each other but can’t wait to kick the other’s butt at the next event. It’s a brotherhood of anglers who are stubborn, quirky, and intelligent, but most of all….competitive. To all my angling buddies, I look forward to the 2022 bass fishing season. Happy holidays everyone!


Holiday Events at the Library

Tonight is drive in movie night at the main library in Mansfield.  The feature is How the Grinch Stole Christmas.  Bring the family for the show from the comfort of your automobile.  The library will serve snacks, drinks and hot cocoa to your vehicle.  The movie begins at 6:00 pm.

The next installment for Cooking and Nutrition Classes for Children will be Monday, December 20th.  Classes are presented at the Stonewall Branch Library at 10:00 am each Monday through January 17th.  It’s presented by the Food Bank of Northwest Louisiana.

Tuesday afternoon, December 21st is movie time at the Logansport Library.  Showtime is 1:00 pm for Home Sweet Home Alone.

Also on Tuesday, the Mansfield Main Library is conducting Bingo from 2:00 to 3:00 pm.  The library invited you to “come join us and win presents for your parents for Christmas.”  Call Mrs. Spencer at 872-6100 for more information.


Sherry Darlene Parker

Sherry Darlene Parker was the daughter and youngest child of Thomas Ray Parker and Sandra Norwood Parker. She entered this world on August 16, 1977, in Mansfield, LA and departed it on December 13, 2021, for eternal rest in Mansfield, LA. She was “Daddy’s Girl” from the start. She and her father shared a lot of the same traits, mannerisms and a love for horses and other animals, which she passed on to her three children and her granddaughter.

Sherry was preceded in death by both her parents and her daughter, Halie Diane McDonald. She was also preceded in death by a friend who became a brother, Chris Bell. She is survived by Burton McDonald and their three children, Dawn “Dawnie” Meshel Parker (Andrew) of Coldwater, LA; Kirstin Maria “Kirstin Sue” Thomas of Provencal, LA, and Bryce Ray “Bubba Ray” Parker of Provencal, LA, her granddaughter, Halie Maria Hayes of Provencal, LA, which she referred to lovingly as her “Mini Mini”. Sherry is also survived by her siblings, Rusty Parker, Johnny Parker, Dorene Nix, Terri Parker Whitlock-Buckmeyer and Kayla Parker Brooks.

Sherry was a strong supporter in all that her children did and accomplished. Not only did she support them she supported her nieces and nephews as well as those that had become part of her family. She may have appeared rough around the edges, but she had a heart of gold and would give anything she had to anyone in need or that was down on their luck.

Sherry was a hard-worker and often bragged that there was not a man at IP that could do the work that she did. She would also tell you in the same breath that she did not expect to be treated differently for working in a “man’s world”, she wanted to be treated as an equal. She also wanted to be recognized for her hard work, knowledge, and devotion to the job she loved so much. Sherry was an electrician and damn proud of it.

You never had to guess what Sherry was thinking or what her opinion was on a matter. She would openly share it with you, whether you wanted to hear it or not. Sherry was loud and full of life. She enjoyed celebrating the little or big moments in life with family and friends. With her passing there is now an emptiness within our family. She left some mighty big work boots to fill. However, she instilled in all her children that to make it in this life you must be willing to work hard and endure. She also instilled in them that they can do and become whatever they choose to be, that they must take the reins, make their own decisions and not let life dictate to them.

Visitation was Thursday, December 16, 2021, starting at 4:00 p.m. for family and from 5:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. for friends at Kilpatrick Rose-Neath Funeral Home in Mansfield, LA. Funeral services will be held in the funeral home chapel on Friday, December 17, 2021, starting at 2:00 p.m. and interment will follow at Beulah Baptist Church Cemetery in Mansfield, LA. Those honored to serve as pallbearers are Matthew Bell, Clarence “CJ” VanHook Jr., Ricky French, Larry Page, Josh Ballard, and Evan Nix. Honorary Pallbearer will be Bobby Bell.


Roland Nicholson Hall, III

Funeral services for Roland Nicholson Hall, III were held Tuesday, December 14, 2021 at 11:00 a.m. at Salem Baptist Church in Stonewall, Louisiana with Bro Mike Hawkins officiating. Interment followed at Stonewall Cemetery. Friends and family were received at 10:00 a.m. Tuesday at the church preceding the service.

Roland was born April 10, 1948 in Shreveport, Louisiana and died Thursday, December 9, 2021 in Shreveport. He graduated from Stonewall High School in 1966. He earned a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology from Louisiana State University Shreveport, and a Master of Arts in Industrial Psychology from Louisiana Tech University. Roland retired from the Human Resources department of Lucent Technologies in 2005. For many years, he served on the Stonewall Town Council, also serving several years on the Planning and Zoning Commission during his tenure.

As a teenager, Roland developed an avid interest in music and began a lifelong career as a songwriter and musician. Over the years, he played guitar and sang in several different bands. Roland’s years with the Back Porch Boogie Band resulted in maturity as a musician and lasting dear friendships. He was best known for the more than 20 years he spent with The Convertibles. All members of The Convertibles were inducted into the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame in 2001. Toward the end of his career, Roland played several years with Percy Sledge’s band, The Aces.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Roland N. Hall, Jr. and Kitty Webb Hall, and granddaughters, Elliana Celine Barz and Brynn Ingram Barz.

Roland is survived by his wife of 50 years, Brenda Ebarb Hall; daughter, Olivia Kitty (Kitt) and husband, LTC Daniel Squyres; daughter, Laurel Caroline (Callie) and husband, Dr. Arnold Barz; grandchildren, Karolina Brown Squyres, Evangeline Barrett Squyres, and Nicholson Guenter Barz; brother, T.C. Hall and wife Jenny; sister, Elizabeth Hall McDaniel; and several nieces and nephews.

Honoring Roland as pallbearers were Arnold Barz, Jarrad “Bubba” Conly, Rick Hagler, Bradley McDaniel, Rick McLaurin, and Noel Odom.

In lieu of flowers, the family suggests memorials may be made to the Salem Baptist Church Building Fund, 5187 LA-3276, Stonewall, LA 71078.


Trade Day Cancelled

Due to a forecast of 80-90% chance of rain for this Saturday, the Logansport Christmas Festival Board has made the decision to cancel the Trade Day that was scheduled. This was not an easy decision and we waited as long as we could in hopes that the forecast would change.

We hope that everyone understands.  We are praying for a blessed and Merry Christmas  and a healthy and Happy New Year for all.

The Trade Day had been scheduled for Saturday on the Riverfront park.


Notice of Death – Friday, December 17, 2021

Roland Nicholson Hall, III

April 10, 1948 to December 9, 2021

View the full obituary here:

https://desotoparishjournal.com/2021/12/16/roland-nicholson-hall-iii/

Sherry Darlene Parker

August 16, 1977 to December 13, 2021

View the full obituary here:

https://desotoparishjournal.com/2021/12/16/sherry-darlene-parker/

Minister Leeman Green of Frierson, LA.

October 1, 1939 to December 5, 2021

Graveside Services Tuesday, December 21, 2021 10:00 A.M. Northwest Louisiana Veterans Cemetery, 7970 Mike Clark Road – Keithville, LA.


ETC… For Friday, December 17, 2021

Come see Santa Wednesday, December 22, 2021, from 10 am to 1 pm at the DeSoto Parish Government Plaza.  Bring the children and their Christmas wish list.  Enjoy Cookies and Coco with Santa.

On Thursday Special Services Department surprised Mrs. Roxane West, Supervisor of Special Services, with a retirement party. Mrs. West has been an asset to DeSoto Parish Schools, and we want to thank her for her service to our district and students.

Logansport High School Basketball Tournament Schedule

Friday, December 17th

3:00PM Stanley vs. Mansfield- boys

4:30PM Logansport vs. Magnolia Charter- boys

6:00PM Logansport vs. Byrd- girls

7:30PM Logansport vs. Pleasant Hill- boys

Saturday, December 18th

10:00AM Byrd vs. Stanley- girl

11:30AM Magnolia Charter vs. Pleasant Hill- boys

1:00PM Logansport vs. Woodlawn- girls

2:30PM Logansport vs. Mansfield- boys


Logansport Takes Runner Up

It was a long grind for the Logansport Tigers as they fought through the regular football season.  They ended up the #1 seed in 1A and they put up an impressive list of victories in the playoffs.

The season came to an end last Saturday afternoon in the Superdome in New Orleans.  The state championship trophy eluded the Tigers as they lost to Homer 41 to 28.

The town’s pride in the team stood out in a post from Logansport High.  “The Tiger Nation showed up in NOLA for our Tiger team. It may not be the ending we wanted but hold your heads high guys – the summer workouts, overcoming all the covid quarantines, starting 0-4, everything else ya’ll faced, your perseverance paid off. Seniors thank you for your leadership and all you brought to this team for the last 4 years. We are proud of you!”

Praise for the Tigers came from DeSoto Schools Superintendent Clay Corley.  “The scoreboard and conventional thinking say that we came up short. HOWEVER, this team, this school, and this community came up anything BUT short! You showed up and showed out time and time again this season.  Keep your head up Tiger Nation, there’s so much to be proud of.  Congratulations Tigers on a heckuva ride.  We are all proud of you!”


Election Results

All of the proposed issues passed on Saturday as elections were held in parts of DeSoto Parish.  Unofficial results as reported by the Secretary of State shows voters in Logansport approved a package of five issues dealing with the sale and serving of alcoholic beverages.  And voters in School District #3 overwhelmingly approved bonds for school improvements at Stanley High.

The five alcohol sale issues passed in Logansport with 80% to 83% of the vote.  The School bonds for District 3 pulled 67% of the votes in favor.


Coat Drive

North DeSoto High’s Quest4Success class just concluded a Coat & Backpack Drive.  They collected unwanted, lightly used, coats and backpacks to help others to stay warm. They were dropped off in the NDHS front office.


Logansport Trade Day

Get ready for the 2nd Annual Logansport Christmas Festival Trade Day! There will be Arts & Crafts Vendors, Food Vendors, and Exotic Critters Excursions will be back with all of their wonderful animals.

Bring the kids and have cookies & photos with SANTA Saturday from 3:00 to 5:00 pm.

The Trade Day is a great time to get those last-minute gifts.  Bring the family to enjoy a day out. It’s this Saturday, December 18th from 10:00 am until 5:00 pm at Logansport Riverfront Park.


‘Brian’s Song’ and ‘Wonderful Life’: Tupperware Tales, Chapter 4

By Teddy Allen

Table scraps …

November 30 marked the 50-year anniversary of one of the most tear-filled nights in American history — at least for those who owned a television set.

That night in 1971 was the premier of Brian’s Song, a 90-minute TV movie about the real-life relationship between Gayle Sayers, a Chicago Bears football halfback draftee from Kansas and future NFL Hall of Famer, who was black, and fullback Brian Piccolo, a free agent who made Chicago’s team as a fullback free agent, who was white. The story is taken from Sayers’ 1970 book, I Am Third, one of my boyhood favorites.

The shy Sayers and the bubbling-over Piccolo ended up being roommates on the road in 1967, the first time Chicago players of different races had ever roomed together. The bromance grew in the four years they were teammates. Opposites attracted. The two young men and their wives became besties.

But then what happened would make a glass eye cry.

Piccolo took himself out of a game in Atlanta in 1969 and later learned he had cancer. It would kill him in 1970. The relationship between the two young men and their wives is the heart of the movie. A month before Piccolo died, Sayers received the George S. Halas Courage Award and gave the speech, recreated in the film, that made an 11-year-old boy in South Carolina (me and most others of all ages watching) cry:

“He has the mental attitude that makes me proud to have a friend who spells out the word ‘courage’ 24 hours a day, every day of his life. You flatter me by giving me this award, but I tell you that I accept it for Brian Piccolo. It is mine tonight; it is Brian Piccolo’s tomorrow. I love Brian Piccolo, and I’d like all of you to love him too.”

The casting was perfect timing for viewers. Billie Dee Williams as Sayers had not yet become a star. And James Caan as Piccolo was a year removed from his breakout role in The Godfather. So, they both were believable as football players.

As a football player, Sayers was almost unbelievable. There have been few more fun to watch than Sayers, who was poetry in motion. To see someone else run like a deer, watch him or Ruston’s Dub Jones, the 1950s Cleveland Browns star and Louisiana Sports Hall of Famer from Ruston. Those guys are two of only four players to ever score six touchdowns in an NFL game. Mercy.

If you can find Brian’s Song, watch it over the holidays. And count your blessings …

It’s the 75th anniversary of It’s a Wonderful Life, a semi-flop in post-war 1946 but a classic now. If you’ve never seen it, this Christmas is the perfect time to change that. You might just help an angel get his (or her) wings …

He coached in five different decades — multiple sports at multiple schools, including Woodlawn, Southwood, and Captain Shreve. Retired since 2009, Ken Ivy got a lot of what happened in that half century down on paper, and now those memories can be yours in an $11.99 paperback available online. That’s All Life Is, Is Stories, by Coach Ken Ivy (With Help From Some Old Friends) is 274 pages from Ivy, 83, and many of the players he coached during his winning, colorful career. It was published this month so it’s hot off the press, as they say …

Thank goodness that ball with full parks (mostly) came back last spring and that stadiums and gymnasiums with fans came back this fall. But more than that, community theater returned. Didn’t get to see many productions but was grateful for All Together Now from Ruston Community Theatre and Clue at East Bank in Bossier City. Also, at Shreveport Little Theatre, Boeing, Boeing in September and last weekend, White Christmas, a huge production, what they in the biz call a ‘big show,’ lots and lots of scene changes and costumes and a huge cast. Thank you for all these shows to everyone because making it look easy ain’t easy. Best wishes in your artistic pursuits in 2022. Looking forward to it. Break a leg!, (but not literally) …

Oh, about White Christmas, and since it’s the season, here are some lyrics I wrote 25ish years ago, updated. Maybe it’s the Baptist version of the classic:

I’m dreaming of a white cornbread,

Just like the ones I used to know.

One that melts the butter,

Makes taste buds flutter,

And makes you weep from head to toe.

I’m dreaming of a white cornbread,

In every skillet that’s in sight,

May the sides be crispy, to bite,

And may all your cornbreads be just right…

Gratefully, the Dad Jokes Calendar that was a 2020 Christmas present (that’s so 2020, right?) is almost no more. This is great news to those around me who’ve had to suffer these almost daily jabs for nearly 12 months; I’ve managed to get on my own nerves. Our final Dad Joke has a Christmas theme: What do elves post on Social Media? They post Elf-ies! (See? Instead of Selfies they pos … Well, never mind. But it’s almost like a joke. Almost.) …

Sincere Merry Christmas wishes to you. Hope this is your best one yet. If it’s Dad Joke-free, it’s got a chance.

Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu


Help Dealing With Life’s Issues

By Lee Hartman

Celebrate Recovery Stonewall UPC is a Christ-Centered recovery group that is reaching out to those that are struggling with life’s issues. Our goal is to make an impact in the lives of others that will leave a lasting impression and one that will be carried to others as we help transform the lives and homes of those within our community.

Even though Celebrate Recovery is viewed as an alcohol and addiction group, that is not our target. Those things are only the proverbial salve on a wound. We target the issues that cause people to turn to these quick fixes.

We dig up the roots that have infiltrated the heart so that true healing can take place and self-medication is no longer needed. We go straight to the one source and only healer, which is Jesus Christ! Together, we can overcome life’s challenges with the help of Jesus!

Contact Lee M. Hartman at 318.464.5827.  Celebrate Recovery meets at Stonewall UPC, 1709 US-171 every Friday at 7:00 pm.


The Greatest Gift

By Brad Dison

In 1939, author Philip Van Doren Stern awoke from a dream and immediately began jotting down notes.  He wanted to write down what he could while it was still fresh in his mind.  At first, the dream reminded him of A Christmas Carol, the Charles Dickens novella from 1843.  The more he wrote, however, the less it resembled the Dickens tale.

Stern was known for his non-fiction books on the Civil War.  During World War II, Stern had resized popular books so they would fit into the pockets of soldiers.   He had compiled and annotated works from Edgar Allan Poe, Henry David Thoreau, and Abraham Lincoln.  He had plenty of writing experience, but he had never written a work of fiction.  For four years, in between other writing projects, Stern wrote and edited his story.  Finally, in 1943, one hundred years after Dickens published A Christmas Carol, Stern completed his short book.  He called it The Greatest Gift.  

Despite being a noted historian and author with a catalog of successful books to his credit, could not find a willing publisher for The Greatest Gift.  That was almost the end of the story, but rather than discarding the story he had labored over for four years, Stern had another idea.  When traditional publisher refused to his book, he did as Dickens did with A Christmas Carol and published it himself.  Unlike Dickens, who sold his self-published book, Stern sent his 21-page books that year instead of Christmas cards.

During the 1943 Christmas season, Stern sent out 200 copies of The Greatest Gift to his friends, acquaintances, and even sent copies to his eight-year-old daughter’s teachers and her friends.  One of the books reached the desk of a producer at RKO Pictures.  He read the book and realized that it had potential.  RKO Pictures made a deal with Stern and purchased the rights for an undisclosed amount to turn The Greatest Gift into a motion picture.  The producer loaned the book to Cary Grant, who, after reading it, became interested in playing the lead character.  For reasons which are not entirely clear, although profit was the most logical motive, RKO sold the rights to The Greatest Gift to Liberty Films, Frank Capra’s production company, for $10,000.  Prior to adapting Stern’s book into a screenplay, Capra had directed classic films such as You Can’t Take It With You, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, and Arsenic and Old Lace.

Capra’s film version of Stern’s The Greatest Gift premiered at New York’s Globe Theatre on December 21, 1946.  Everyone at Liberty Films had high hopes for the film and began a promotional campaign directed toward Academy Award consideration.  It quickly became apparent that the film would be a commercial flop.  The film failed to even pay for the cost of its production.  In fact, it lost more than half a million dollars and caused the eventual bankruptcy of Liberty Films.  Despite its failure at the box office, the film received five Oscar nominations, including best picture, best director and best actor.  The film was a box office failure and was also a failure at the Academy Awards.  It won no Oscars. 

Stern’s The Greatest Gift seemed to be anything but a gift to Frank Capra and Liberty Films.  For nearly three decades, the film was ignored and was destined to fade into obscurity.  After the failure of Liberty Films, the rights to The Greatest Gift changed hands several times.  In 1974, the copyright for the film was not properly renewed.  The film went into the public domain which meant that television stations could air the film at no cost.

During every Christmas season since 1974, television stations around the world aired the film on constant rotation.  Due to its constant rotation, a whole new generation began to appreciate the ignored film.  In 1986, when the film became available on videocassette, more than 80,000 copies of the film were sold.  In 1987, customers bought more than 150,000 copies of the new colorized version of the film.  After more than four decades, The Greatest Gift was finally a hit. 

Even now, 75 years after it was released, the film is still shown repeatedly during the Christmas season. It is now considered one of the greatest films of all time.  It is ranked the most inspirational American movie of all time by The American Film Institute.

If Philip Van Doren Stern had not given copies of his book as Christmas cards in 1943 and simply tossed the manuscript aside, we may never have known the story of The Greatest Gift, which Frank Capra renamed…It’s a Wonderful Life.

Sources:

  1. The Baltimore Sun (Baltimore, Maryland), May 12, 1946, p.54.
  2. The Austin American (Austin, Texas), December 8, 1946, p.55.
  3. The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, North Carolina), December 2, 1984, p.107.
  4. The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois), December 20, 1987, p.12.
  5. Press and Sun-Bulletin (Binghamton, New York), December 8, 2006, p.33.
  6. Ashcraft, Jenny. “Classic Holiday Film Celebrates Its 75th Anniversary.” FishWrap. December 2, 2021. blog.newspapers.com/classic-holiday-film-celebrates-its-75th-anniversary/?utm_source=Headline&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=Headline-Dec-21.

Storms Are Possible Friday Night

The National Weather Service is predicting there will be a risk for strong to severe thunderstorms Friday Evening through the overnight hours, mainly across portions of Southwest Arkansas and Northern Louisiana.

A strong storm system will push through the ArkLaTex Friday evening and into the overnight hours. The SPC has issued a Slight Risk (Level 2/5) including the majority of the Four State Region for Friday and Friday night. The risk for severe weather will be associated with a line of strong thunderstorms pushing across the area with damaging winds as the primary threat. Additionally, isolated tornadoes and hail cannot be ruled out.

Here is the local forecast:

Friday – A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after noon. Some of the storms could be severe. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 82. South wind 10 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph.

Friday Night – Showers and thunderstorms likely. Some of the storms could be severe. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 50. South wind 10 to 15 mph becoming northwest after midnight. Winds could gust as high as 25 mph. Chance of precipitation is 70%.

Saturday – Partly sunny, with a high near 61. North wind 10 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph.


Omicron in Our Area

The Louisiana Department of Health (LDH) is reporting 20 additional probable cases of the Omicron variant of COVID-19 in the state.  Two of those cases are from northwest Louisiana. 

This brings the total number of Omicron cases in our state to 37 – 34 probable and 3 confirmed. The first confirmed Omicron case in Louisiana was identified on Dec. 3.

The CDC and LDH recommend everyone 5 years of age and older get vaccinated and that everyone 18 years of age and older get a booster if eligible. It is also more important than ever to use those public health tools we know work – mask according to applicable guidelines, practice good hand hygiene, and get tested and stay home if you feel sick.

On Nov. 26, 2021, the World Health Organization (WHO) classified a new variant, B.1.1.529, as a Variant of Concern and has named it Omicron. This new variant was first reported to the WHO by government officials in South Africa. Since that time, it has been detected in 50 countries and more than 20 states.

Information is still emerging, but Omicron includes multiple mutations across the SARS-CoV-2 genome. There is concern that this new variant may be more transmissible than previous strains and that Omicron may carry an increased risk of reinfection compared to other variants of concern. We expect to learn more about Omicron in the coming days.

LDH has established a network of laboratories to conduct genomic sequencing on positive SARS-CoV-2 specimens in order to track circulating SARS-CoV-2 lineages, including newly emerging variants such as Omicron. Epidemiologists, laboratorians and researchers will continue to closely monitor these data in order to continue to identify Omicron cases in Louisiana.


Calling Former Students

DeSoto Parish Schools is making contact with former students.  Please share! Let’s catch up! We want to hear from our former students! 

If you attended school in DeSoto Parish, where are you now? What are you doing these days?  Which school and years were you in DeSoto?


Trade Day is December 18th

The Logansport Christmas Festival is holding a Trade Day on December 18th. So, get ready for the 2nd Annual LCF Trade Day!

Riverfront Park will be the site of Arts & Crafts Vendors, Food Vendors and a whole lot more.  Exotic Critters Excursions will be back with all of their wonderful animals.  For the kids there will be cookies & photos with SANTA from 3:00 until 5:00 pm.

The Trade Day is a great place to get those last-minute gifts.  Enjoy a day out with the family and friends.

Logansport Christmas Festival Trade Day is DECEMBER 18th from 10:00 am until 5:00 pm at the Riverfront Park


U.S. Supreme Court Hears Consequential Abortion Case

By Royal Alexander

Depending on the Court’s decision, this could be a key first step: States may get the “Right to Choose” to protect pre-born Americans.

Much of the nation’s focus this week has been on the Mississippi abortion case, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization.  This Mississippi law would effectively prohibit ending the lives of pre-born human beings after 15 weeks of pregnancy.  This is earlier than the 23-24 week so-called “viability” threshold (“viability” is defined as the ability of the baby to live outside the womb) had been determined to be to this point.  It is also important to note that some babies have been born earlier than 24 weeks and have survived, so what we are really saying is that a child’s dependence on her mother in the womb—the child’s lack of ‘viability’—is a legal argument for killing her.

How might the U.S. Supreme Court rule in this Dobbs case and what effect would it have?

Firstly, if the Supreme Court overruled Roe v. Wade entirely it would return the question of protecting the lives of the defenseless unborn to the States and their state legislatures—state representatives, state senators and the governor.  Before Roe was decided in 1973—at a time when the unhinged Left said that the unborn were just a ‘blob of protoplasm’—political and legislative questions regarding the legal status of the unborn fell under the state’s “police powers” – even though then, as now, the unborn were and are biologically human and therefore should be considered to be legal persons as well.

This is why the argument of ‘precedent’ or ‘stare decisis’—that Roe should continue to stand simply because it has stood for 48 years—rings hollow: Roe had no legal, scientific or constitutional legitimacy when it was decided because abortion is not in the Constitution.   (Please recall that “precedent” and “stare decisis,” which come up at every Supreme Court nominee’s Senate hearing, simply mean that a court is generally obligated to follow a prior decision when it decides a similar case in the future.  That makes sense because treating the same legal issues similarly is what provides our nation with stability and lets us know what our law does and doesn’t allow.  However, please remember that “precedent” and “stare decisis,” are merely legal doctrines which may be considered but in no way rise to the level of our U. S. Constitution, the foundational document of our nation.)

Secondly, the Court could decide not to overturn Roe and instead decide only to affirm the Mississippi law, prohibiting abortion after 15 weeks.  This would have a powerful symbolic effect, further signaling the death knell of Roe and abortion on demand because it would be unmistakable that the violent scope of the Roe decision continues to be chipped away.

In its 1973 decision, the Supreme Court in Roe, with great judicial arrogance, took the issue of abortion away from all 50 states and “federalized” the issue, deciding that somehow our Constitution contains a “fundamental” right to abortion.  How can this be, you might ask, since the Constitution never mentions “abortion” or any concept or right roughly comparable to it. 

In fact, in the Declaration of Independence—the prism through which the Constitution must be read—Thomas Jefferson writes that we are all, not born, but “created equal and are endowed by our Creator with certain inalienable rights, among them, life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”  Medical science was primitive in Jefferson’s time, but after nine months of pregnancy and awareness of the life in her womb, no mother—then or now—would ever say that her child was “created” at birth.  And yet, this lethal legal violence toward the defenseless pre-born—the Child of the Sonogram—was declared by Roe to be a “fundamental constitutional right.”

That is why the legal perversion at stake here involves much more than just a landmark decision that has no legal, scientific, or constitutional foundation.  It also completely flouts and undermines the democratic principles of self-government set up by our Constitution.  Further, it also damages the deeply-held Judeo-Christian belief in the sanctity and intrinsic value of life while also denying the scientific reality of life in the womb—America’s most vulnerable and voiceless citizens, unborn girls and boys.

Current scientific and medical knowledge about unborn life is literally light years ahead of the medieval dark ages of prenatal science when Roe was decided in 1973.

At conception, it is a medical fact that an individual with a unique and completely different genetic code from the mother’s is created; a new human being who is roughly 50 percent of the time, of a different gender than the mother, and often has a different blood type.  The heart of this human being begins to beat at about 21 days after conception, and brain waves are emitted roughly 45 or 50 days after conception.  At 10 weeks, the baby is about one and a half inches long and is perfectly formed, in need of only time, nourishment, protection—and love.

The question has never really been, when does life begin? But, rather, when does love begin?

Today, unborn children are operated on while still in the womb and long before birth for spina bifida and heart defects.   How can a baby be a patient and not a person?  So, on the critical issue of “when does life begin” the Supreme Court should “follow the science.’ (I’ve heard that somewhere …).

The Roe decision also puts a lie to the idea that, as boldly declared in the 5th and 14th Amendments, American citizens cannot be deprived of “life, liberty or property without due process of law.”  These unborn Americans have had no due process, they have committed no crime … they’ve never even taken a breath.  How can 9 unelected, life-tenured federal judges, in nothing more than an exercise in raw judicial power, determine the laws of—and the will of the people in—all 5o states.

Nevertheless, overturning Roe, or upholding the Mississippi 15-week ban, is a critically important first step toward vindication of the humanity of preborn Americans.

And we can only pray that, on a future beautiful and glorious day, as the persuasive power of medical science continues to make the humanity of the Child of the Sonogram more and more clear, and America’s love and kindness for the weakest and most defenseless members of the human family finally makes the barbarity of abortion unthinkable, another state law will reach the Supreme Court and will be upheld as including preborn Americans as citizens fully deserving of the protections of  “life, liberty, and property’ in all 50 states.

May the Supreme Court find the courage to right a nearly half century injustice and take this critical First Step, and then one day, the Second Step to grant millions of preborn Americans the most fundamental constitutional right—the Right to Life.


Defense Bill Passed the House

Congressman Mike Johnson predicted the US House would pass the National Defense Authorization Bill during a Town Hall meeting at Grand Cane on November.  When the bill came up on the floor, Johnson (LA-04) voted in support of the bill.  It passed the House of Representatives on Tuesday evening by a bipartisan vote.

Johnson mentioned during the Town Hall that this bill would fund major priorities for our country’s national defense and for Louisiana’s 4th Congressional District, which is home to Barksdale Air Force Base and the Global Strike Command, Fort Polk and the Joint Readiness Training Center, and the Louisiana National Guard Training Site at Camp Minden.


Pick a Better Snack

On Wednesday, Ms Shelly Duplantis from the Food Bank of Northwest Louisiana presented the first session of the Pick a Better Snack program to children in K-3rd grades.  The children learned fun facts about root vegetables and how to prepare them.  We had some very brave children who tasted carrots and sweet potatoes for the first time. 

Duplantis came back to the Logansport Library Thursday at 4:00 pm to present the program to 4th-6th graders. 

This is a 6 week program to inform, educate, and encourage children to make healthy snack choices.  Ms Shelly will be at the Logansport Library every Wednesday at 4:00 p.m. for K-3rd grades and every Thursday at 4:00 p.m. for 4th-6th grades.

For more information call Logansport Library: 318-697-2311