Arcadia Police Department possibly getting a face-lift

By Michelle Bates

The Arcadia Police Department may soon be getting some much-needed upgrades and repairs, depending on what can be done, Police Chief Ciera Murphy said.

In Arcadia’s monthly council meeting Tuesday, Jan. 9, Murphy said the department is in need of several things, among them, an interrogation room, an evidence room and hopefully a place for dispatch.

“When I initially took office, we looked at doing some renovations so that we could add an interrogation room, an evidence room and I was looking at doing a dispatch room,” she said. “We looked at adding an evidence closet into an old office, putting a door access on our hall where the water clerk used to be for dispatch, and some repairs in our patrol room.”

Other repairs would include closing up and repairing holes in walls in the hallway where wiring is showing and other repairs as needed.

In the interrogation room, audio/visual equipment would be added, and the dispatch room would need radios, a computer and printer, she added.

“It just helps when you have your own dispatch,” Murphy said, “because at the sheriff’s office, they’re dispatching for everyone in the parish, and running 911. We have times where if something else is going on in Ringgold or somewhere else, officers have to be put on hold for radio traffic and things like that. If we have dispatch, we would be able to dispatch at night, which means we would qualify for a state grant, because you have to have someone on duty dispatching 24 hours a day.”

No bids or estimates were given on cost as of yet. Murphy was asked by the council to come back in February with three bids from contractors for the scope of the work and how much it would cost.

“It doesn’t do us any good (to discuss it) until we know what it’s going to cost,” District 2 Councilwoman Melanie Monroe said. “If she’s going to stay down here (at town hall), then she needs it. We can’t just bypass what she needs.”

The chief looked at the old bank building drive-through as a possibility to move the police department, but Mayor O’Landis Millican said he had a renter for it. However, he did not reveal the type of business or the business name during the meeting.

If the town enters into a contract with a renter, the council will have to approve the contract.

The police department renovations were tabled until February.


Roof repairs on Ringgold School Complex scheduled to take place this summer

By Paige Nash

At the January regular meeting the Bienville Parish School Board (BPSB) approved authorizing the Superintendent to advertise and receive sealed bids for a new permanent roof along with heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) systems for Ringgold School Complex.

Director of Maintenance and Transportation Eric Carter presented an estimate provided by Yeager, Watson & Associates, LLC as of Dec. 2023 for Ringgold re-roof and HVAC replacement totaling $5,173,622.50

This estimate includes demolition of the remaining roof, reimbursement for fees inccured and labor to install new roof with 60 mil PVC, deck repair, replacing (76) 3 ton rooftop HVAC units and curbs and (6) 15 ton rooftop HVAC units and curbs. 

The roof replacement is much needed following a severe storm that passed through the area last year and critically damaged the roof of the Ringgold School Complex. The school has been functioning with a temporary fix since then and will continue to do so until the permanent roof can be installed.

Board member for District 7 Donald Calloway expressed the importance of insuring the advertisement for bid went out in a timely matter, so that this issue will not be pushed back until the fall session. 

New Vice-President and Board member for District 6 Colton Guin asked, “On the Ringgold complex, is this all that needs to be done to completely finish it or is there anything else that needs to be done, as well?”

According to Carter there are other repairs needed at the school, but the roof is the department’s priority at this time.

“There will be other things that come up for instance we have to eventually replace the floor in the gym. It’s certainly playable now, they are doing quite well on it,” said Carter. “We do not want to do anything that would interfere with getting the roof finished. If we can complete that this summer then in the fall we can work on other stuff.”

Advertising for bids on the new roof and HVAC system will be going out in the next couple of weeks. 

 


Bienville Parish Basketball Report – Week 8


By Shawn C. White

Week 8 saw the action pick back up with the teams now back in school and back on the court.  The five locals didn’t disappoint either.  The five local teams put up 26 top performances for the week (15 points or more).  Bienville Parish is proving to be a powerhouse in basketball.  Boys from Bienville Prish finished 12-2 for the week.  Girls finished 9-2 for the week.

Arcadia Hornets went a perfect 4-0 for the week starting beating Simsboro, anhilating Glenbrook, going 2-0 in district after beating Homer, and rounding out Saturday winning the battle with Union Parish in the Lincoln Prep tournament.  Big performances from Omarion Carr and Ratrevious Crawley gave the Hornets their sting.   No. 3 Redskins also had a big week going 3-0 and staring district at 2-0.  Saline also had an unblemished week getting their first district win of the season by defeating Central-Jonesville.  

Not only did the Bobcats, but also the Lady Bobcats go undefeated at 2-0 taking wins from Weston and Central-Jonesville.   Baleigh Haulcy topped the girls top Starting 5 averaging 21 points for the 1-1 week for the GCHS Bulldogs.   Sky McMullin showed out with three double digit performances for the Lady Tigers including the top performance of the week with 26 points against Choudrant

This coming week is going to be light with Old Man Winter wiping out the early part of the week’s action.  Be sure to check with your school before heading on the riad to support your team.  Be safe and careful on the roads.

Boys

Monday, January 8

Arcadia 71, Simsboro 64

Gibsland-Coleman 70, Choudrant 66

Saline 64, Weston 54

Tuesday, January 9

Arcadia 75, Glenbrook 23

Castor 72, Cedar Creek 66

Ringgold 62, Magnolia SOE 22

Thursday, January 11

Castor 46, Lakeside 40

Friday, January 12

Arcadia 70, Homer 50

Choudrant 55, Castor 54

Ringgold 77, Glenbrook 20

Saline 67, Central-Jonesville 34

Saturday, January 13

Arcadia 60, Union Parish 47

Lincoln Prep 52, Gibsland-Coleman 50

Ringgold 57, Richwood 56

Girls

Monday, January 8

Gibsland-Coleman 46, Choudrant 21

Saline 47, Weston 34

Tuesday, January 9

Arcadia 62, Glenbrook 22

Cedar Creek 55, Castor 49

Ringgold 54, Magnolia SOE 22

Thursday, January 11

Castor 60, Lakeside 22

Friday, January 12 

Arcadia 62, Homer 29

Castor 52, Choudrant 42

Huntington 89, Gibsland-Coleman 31

Glenbrook 36, Ringgold 30

Saline 51, Central-Jonesville 17

Starting 5 – Boys

Ratrevious Crawley, Arcadia

Jordyn Wilson, Ringgold

Demarquis Durham, Gibsland-Coleman

Omarion Carr, Arcadia

Johnathan Warren, Castor

Next 5 – Boys

Eli Ferguson, Saline

Jbari Adams, Ringgold

Trent Ledbetter, Saline

DeAvery Durham, Gibsland-Coleman

Nash Warren, Castor

Starting 5 – Girls

Baleigh Haulcy, Gibsland-Coleman

Sky McMullin, Castor

Janasia Hullaby, Ringgold

Rhyanna Abney, Arcadia

DeAsia Alexander, Arcadia

Next 5 – Girls

Alana Gray, Saline

Alaya Gray, Saline

Kacidy Sims, Saline

Kailey Ann Shirley, Castor

Jakyria Cockerham, Arcadia

Boys Top Performances

Ratrevious Crawley, Arcadia:  Crawley scored 33 points in a win over Union Parish

Johnathan Warren, Castor:  Warren scored 28 points in a win over Cedar Creek

Eli Ferguson, Saline:  Ferguson scored 27 points in a win over Weston

Omarion Carr, Arcadia:  Carr scored 25 in a win over Homer

Ratrevious Crawley, Arcadia:  Crawley scored 24 points in a win over Simsboro

Jordyn Wilson, Ringgold:  Wilson scored 23 points in a win over Richwood

Jbari Adams, Ringgold:  Adams scored 21 points in win over Magnolia SOE

Jordyn Wilson, Ringgold:  Wilson scored 21 points in a win over Magnolia SOE

Ratrevious Crawley, Arcadia:  Crawley scored 20 points in a win over Glenbrook

Trent Ledbetter, Saline:  Ledbetter scored 19 points in a win over Weston

Demarquis Durham, Gibsland-Coleman:  Durham scored 19 points in loss to Lincoln Prep

Kristopher Davis, Arcadia:  Davis scored 18 points in a win over Glenbrook

Deveryuan Moore, Gibsland-Coleman:  Moore scored 16 points in win over Choudrant

Demarquis Durham, Gibsland-Coleman:  Durham scored 16 points in a win over Choudrant

Dawson Wood, Castor:  Wood scored 16 points in a win over Cedar Creek

Omarion Carr, Arcadia:  Card scored 16 points in a win over Union Parish

Omarion Carr, Arcadia:  Care scored 15 points in 

Girls Top Performances

Sky McMullin, Castor:  McMullin scored 26 points in a loss to Cedar Creek

Baleigh Haulcy, Gibsland-Coleman:  Haulcy scored 24 points in win over Choudrant

DeAsia Alexander, Arcadia:  Alexander scored 21 points in win over Glenbrook

Janasia Hullaby, Ringgold:  Hullaby scored 21 points in a win over Magnolia SOE

Sky McMullin, Castor:  McMullin scored 18 points in a win over Lakeside

Baleigh Haulcy, Gibsland-Coleman:  Haulcy scored 18 points in a loss to Huntington

Rhyanna Abney, Arcadia:  Abney scored 16 points in win over Glenbrook

Rhyanna Abney, Arcadia:  Abney scored 16 points in a win over Homer 

Alana Gray, Saline:  Gray scored 16 points in a win over Central-Jonesville

Boys

TeamDivisionRecordRank / 1st Round Prediction
ArcadiaIV (Nonselect)9-9No. 13 / Home
CastorV (Nonselect)9-12No. 31 / Out
Gibsland-ColemanV (Nonselect)10-9No. 7 / Home
RinggoldIV (Nonselect)18-8No. 3 / Bye
SalineV (Nonselect)15-9No. 15 / Home

Girls

TeamDivisionRecordRank / 1st Round Prediction
ArcadiaIV (Nonselect)21-2No. 2 / Bye
CastorV (Nonselect)15-4No. 13 / Home
Gibsland-ColemanV (Nonselect)7-12No. 14 / Home
RinggoldIV (Nonselect)5-12No. 20 / Away
SalineV (Nonselect)8-16No. 27 / Away

Boil advisory issued for Town of Arcadia


Yesterday afternoon, Jan. 16, many residents in the Town of Arcadia were experiencing low water pressure. The town quickly resolved the issue and all residents should now be experiencing normal water pressure at this time.

Due to this issue, the Town of Arcadia has issued a boil advisory for the entirety of the town. Once samples are back, the town will have an update on when the boil advisory will be lifted.

To sign up for alerts for issues as such, please use the link below.

https://public.alertsense.com/SignUp/

Wednesday weather report, closures


Wednesday: Sunny, with a high near 41. Wind chill values as low as 12. Light south wind increasing to 5 to 10 mph in the morning.

Wednesday Night: Increasing clouds, with a low around 26. South wind 5 to 10 mph.

Thursday: A 20 percent chance of showers before noon. Cloudy, with a high near 53. South wind 10 to 15 mph becoming west in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 20 mph.

Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 28. West wind 10 to 15 mph becoming north after midnight.

Road closures: LA 154 Bridge over Lake Bistineau in Bossier/Bienville Parish remains the only closure in Bienville Parish at this time. The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development advises motorists that the LA 154 over Lake Bistineau Bridge in Bossier/Bienville Parish is CLOSED effective immediately due to winter weather conditions.

School closures: ALL BIENVILLE PARISH SCHOOLS WILL BE CLOSED TODAY, JAN 17. ALL EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITES WILL BE POSTPONED TO A LATER DATE.

Gibsland Head Start Center will be closed Wednesday, Jan. 17 and will continue to monitor the weather and road conditions before making a determination about Thursday. Updates can be found on their Facebook page.

Business closures:

GBT of Arcadia will delay opening Wednesday, Jan. 17. in Arcadia and Gibsland (11 a.m. to 5 p.m.)

Arcadia Town Hall 

Bienville Parish Health Unit 

Bienville Parish Library Branches

State Farm in Arcadia

*** The Bienville Parish Police Jury announced the Republic Service will not be picking up trash on Wednesday, Jan. 17. Updates will be available soon. ***

The Bienville Parish Clerk’s Office issued an Emergency Proclamation due to the severe winter storm and will also be closed on Wednesday, Jan. 17.

All court settings or scheduled hearings are cancelled and will be rescheduled at a later date.

Several renewals expected on April ballot

By Michelle Bates

Voters will be asked to cast their ballot on several propositions in April, including a parish-wide renewal, a special tax renewal for the Shady Grove Recreation District and a proposition for Bienville Parish Fire Protection District 6.

Parish-wide renewal

In January’s Bienville Parish Police Jury meeting, the jury adopted a resolution to renew a parish-wide tax for road maintenance and other purposes for parish roads.

The continuation of the 6.03 mills on all property subject to taxation would provide roughly $2.5 million annually for the “purpose of building, improving and maintaining roads and bridges in the parish.” The renewal will be good through 2025.

For this renewal to be added to the April 27 ballot, it will cost the parish approximately $46,000.

The renewal below will appear similarly on the ballot on April 27:

“Shall the Parish of Bienville, State of Louisiana (the “Parish”), continue to levy a 6.03 mills tax on all the property subject to taxation in the Parish (an estimated $2,568,000 reasonably expected at this time to be collected from the levy of the tax for an entire year), for a period of 10 years, beginning with the year 2026 and ending with the year 2035, for the purpose of providing necessary funds for the purpose of building, improving and maintaining roads and bridges in the Parish, said millage to represent an .11 mills increase (due to reappraisal) over the 5.92 mills tax authorized to be levied through the year 2025 pursuant to an election held on March 28, 2015?”

Shady Grove Recreation District renewal

For the Shady Grove Recreational District, the renewal of this special tax will provide roughly $91,000 for the “purpose of acquiring, constructing, maintaining and operating recreational facilities for the District, including the acquisition of equipment therefor?”

The special tax is 5 mills for 10 years on all property subject to taxation. The renewal below will appear similarly on the ballot on April 27:

“Shall Shady Grove Recreation District, Bienville Parish, Louisiana (the “District”), continue to levy a special tax of 5 mills on all the property subject to taxation in the District (an estimated $91,580 reasonably expected at this time to be collected from the levy of the tax for an entire year), for a period of
10 years, beginning with the year 2025 and ending with the year 2034, for the purpose of acquiring, constructing, maintaining and operating recreational facilities for the District, including the acquisition of equipment therefor?”

Bienville Parish Fire Protection District 6

The Bienville Parish Fire Protection District 6 asked the police jury to add a proposition for a special tax to the April 27 ballot for the “purpose of acquiring, constructing, improving, maintaining, operating and/or
purchasing fire protection equipment and facilities and emergency medical service facilities, vehicles and equipment for the District, including payment of salaries in connection therewith?”

The proposition below will appear similarly on the ballot:

“Shall Bienville Parish Fire Protection District No. 6, State of Louisiana (the “District”), levy a 10 mills tax on all property subject to taxation in the District (an estimated $455,600 reasonably expected at this time to be collected from the levy of the tax for an entire year), for a period of 10 years, beginning with the year 2024 and ending with the year 2033, for the purpose of acquiring, constructing, improving, maintaining, operating and/or purchasing fire protection equipment and facilities and emergency medical
service facilities, vehicles and equipment for the District, including payment of salaries in connection therewith?”

If passed by voters, the tax would be 10 mills for 10 years, bringing in roughly $455,000 annually.

BPFD 6 already has a property tax they collect, which brings in around $300,000 annually, but officials say it’s not quite enough to make ends meet.

In the coming editions all propositions and ballot items will be covered.

Early voting for the April 27 election will begin April 13 through April 20, excluding Sunday, April 14. Voting hours will be from 8:30 a.m. until 6 p.m. On Election Day, the polls will be open from 7 a.m. until 8 p.m.


‘The Positive Power of Words’

The church near Victor’s home was badly in need of repair, but no one seemed to care.  Generations of worshipers had passed through its doors, but, with each passing year, the building got dirtier, darker, and more damp.  It needed a new roof.  Its rafters needed repairs.  It needed a little of everything, but nothing was offered.  Unless something drastic happened, Victor feared that the old church would be torn down and a more modern building, maybe not even a church, would be put in its place.  Victor was horrified by the thought.  He saw something in the old church building that most others failed to see.  Maybe they had seen it at one time, but most people in town largely ignored the old church.  To Victor, the building was much more than merely walls and a roof.  To him, the church was important. 

What could Victor do?  He was not an architect or carpenter.  He held no political office.  He had no authority to do anything towards preserving the church that he loved so dearly.  Victor was a writer, mostly of poetry.  Oh, dear.  He published a paper entitled War [declared] on the Demolishers in which he argued for the preservation of old buildings such as his beloved church.  Most of the people who read his paper were the ones who wanted to demolish buildings to make room to erect more modern structures.  Victor was distraught.

Victor decided to write a book about the church in his spare time.  For three years, Victor struggled to find the time to work on the book as his other literary projects, ones that earned money, took precedence.  Rather than a clever title which would draw interest to the story, Victor simply used the name of the church as the title of the book.  The church, an inanimate object, became almost a living, breathing character in itself.  Finally, Victor finished the book, sent it to his publisher, and waited.  Would anyone read a book about an almost forgotten church?       

To Victor’s surprise, his book about the church became a hit.  Readers flocked to see the old church which was featured so prominently in the book.  They flocked to the same church they had previously ignored.  The church had not changed, but their perception of it had.  Victor’s book brought new interest in the church.  With each passing year, Victor’s book became more popular.  Thirteen years after Victor published his book, the king of the country ordered the restoration of the church, a project which lasted twenty years.  With the success of Victor’s book, the church became much more than a building of worship.  It became a national icon.

In the years since Victor’s book was first published, millions of visitors, myself included, have flocked to see the church because of the book.  The church is currently undergoing another restoration following a disastrous fire.  You and I know the story and the church well because of the book’s many stage, television, and film adaptations.  Had Victor not written his book, the church which had stood for over 700 years would not have been saved, and you and I would never have heard of the church Notre-Dame de Paris.  The original French title of Victor’s book was Notre-Dame de Paris, but English speaking countries know Victor Hugo’s 1831 book by its adapted title, The Hunchback of Notre Dame.  This is just one example of the positive power of words.

Source: Daniel Christian, “The Hunchback of Notre Dame,” Notre Dame Cathedral Paris, July 22, 2019, https://notredamecathedralparis.com/the-hunchback-of-notre-dame/.


Green Chile Cheese Rolls

Give me a few extra hours at home on the weekend, and I am making some kind of BREAD.  These Green Chile Cheese rolls caught my eye, and they were no less than super perfection since I love all of these flavors. Enjoy!

Ingredients:

  • 12 Rhodes rolls, thawed & risen
  • 1 tablespoon butter
  • 2 cups chopped onions
  • 8 ounces green chiles
  • 2 cups grated sharp cheddar cheese

Directions

Lay a piece of parchment paper on the counter.  Spray with nonstick cooking spray.

Combine rolls to form one big ball and roll into a 13×15” rectangle on the parchment paper.

Melt butter in skillet and sauté onions until soft and translucent.  Remove from heat and add green chiles.

Spread mixture over dough and sprinkle with cheese.  Roll up lengthwise, jelly roll style. Slice dough into 12 equal pieces and place in sprayed 9×13 baking pan.

Cover with sprayed plastic wrap and let double in size.  Remove wrap and bake at 350 degrees for 20-25 minutes or until lightly browned.

(Ashley Madden Rowton is a wife, mom and published cookbook author who lives in Minden, La.)


NFL tales of frozen tails

It was one of those NFL playoff weekends that suggested someone put another log on the sideline bonfire.

The National Frozen League.

Consider the piercing minus-4 degrees in Kansas City Saturday afternoon when the Chiefs beat Miami, 27-7, easily a record for the coldest game at Arrowhead Stadium. The hard part was the 25 miles-per-hour wind gusts that equated to a tear-inducing minus-27.

A day at the beach compared to Sunday afternoon in Buffalo, where the Wild Card Round matchup between the Bills and the Pittsburgh Steelers was delayed until Monday because of high winds and blinding snow. 

“When I heard they were delaying it I told somebody that sets a bad precedent,” said Bo Harris, who starred at Captain Shreve and LSU before playing eight years for Cincinnati, including a start in Super Bowl XVI in 1982, a 26-21 loss to San Francisco inside the Pontiac Silverdome (while outside, a blizzard semi-paralyzed Detroit). 

“Hours later I saw what was happening in Buffalo and had to call the guy back and say, ‘Check that,’” Harris said with a laugh. “My mind wasn’t understanding what was happening.”

What was happening was you couldn’t see the field. Visibility near zero. The team even hired fans to shovel snow for $20 an hour Sunday to help clear the stadium. The online video of Buffalo crazies doing just that is as fun to watch as the game was, won by the Bills, 31-17, in a clear but cold Highmark Stadium.

Kyle Williams watched that game from the comfort of his couch in Lincoln Parish, six seasons removed from a 13-year career playing defensive tackle in Buffalo after four years starting for Ruston High (he was a hard-to-bring-down running back as a freshman!) and after helping the Tigers win a national championship at LSU. Grew up hot, but figured out quickly that life in the National Football League can be a cold business. 

“In Cleveland my rookie year, during warmups it looked like just a normal winter day game,” said Williams, a father of five who helped coach Ruston High to a state football championship this fall in his semi-retirement. “Field was green … perfect. Twenty minutes later we come back and the whole field is snow.”

Then there was December 23, 2007, “the coldest I’ve ever been,” he said. Final regular season game, the Giants needing to win to get into the playoffs, New York at Buffalo, and it’s a first-half downpour, a storm front off Lake Erie. “After halftime, it drops down to 19 degrees and the wind starts blowing. It got colder the more we kept trying to hang on to (Ahmad) Bradshaw (151 yards rushing) and (Brandon) Jacobs (143 yards). We never got going.”

The Giants won, 38-21, and went on to upset New England in the ‘Helmet Catch’ Super Bowl. Good news?: Williams, a Class of 2022 Louisiana Sports Hall of Famer, lived to play another day.

“You can never really prepare, gear-wise, for the cold,” said the sneaky funny Williams, a master of understatement. “You’ve got Spandex pants, a Spandex jersey, cotton socks, and athletic shoes. Your attire’s not covering all your parts that need covering.”

There’s chicken broth on the sidelines, and those welcoming and lush heated benches thank the good Lord, but it’s a “never ending tango,” Williams testifies, of what to keep warm and just how warm to keep it, like managing your helmet’s insides so the plastic pads will stay warm and loose instead of getting too cold so they’re brittle or too hot so holes are burned in them. 

“All kinds of issues,” said Williams, recalling from the warmth of his den a time of ice and mud, a calm man with a security blanket, a man who can now go to bed at halftime if he wants. “Easy for guys in those conditions to make a mistake doing what they’re needing to do to stay warm.”

This weekend when he heard about the delay in Buffalo, he knew how bad it must be. A decade-plus of living there coached him up on how prepared Erie County is for the worst. “The world does not stop,” he said, not for any ol’ storm; businesses and road crews are ready to counteract just about anything. 

“In all my years up there, only one time did the weather affect us where we had to postpone or cancel,” he said, recalling a “wall of snow” halfway up the house he and wife Jill shared with their very young, very cold family. 

Once the county got 80 inches of snow in a 48-hour period. The Bills Emergency Alarm went off — picture the Bat Signal above Gotham — and players were hiking to the interstate to get rides on snowmobiles to the airport so the team could fly to Detroit, practice a couple of days, and play a “home game” against the New York Jets in Ford Field. Weather won, the Bills won, the Jets lost. 

If you’re in the mood to shiver, you can Google “Freezer Bowl” and watch Bo Harris and his Bengals teammates beat San Diego, 27-7, in Riverfront Stadium in January 1982 to win the AFC Championship. The temperature was between minus-8 and plus-5, but it was the wind chill — a mind-numbing minus-57 during gusts — that made it the coldest NFL game ever.

“San Diego came out during warmups with ski masks on under their helmets and defensive backs were backpedaling with their hands in their pants,” Harris said. “I looked at one of my guys and said, ‘Oh yeah. We’re winning today.’” 

Dan Fouts. Gary Johnson. Louie Kelcher. Kellen Winslow. Wes Chandler. Charlie Joiner. Chuck Muncie. San Diego had a very good team. That Sunday in Cincinnati, they had a very cold team. And the Bengals had a secret weapon.

“Vaseline and panty hose saved the day,” said Bo, who coated himself in the stuff to protect his skin, then layered up with the hose. Any port in a storm; dude had one of Cincinnati’s two sacks in the win.

Also now retired in Lincoln Parish, Petey Perot is a Natchitoches Favorite Son and former Northwestern State Demon and Philadelphia Eagle. And like Bo, he played in a chillier-than-chilly Conference Championship game.

“1980 against Dallas in the Vet,” Perot said. “Minus-17. Santa Claus had gotten beat up in the stadium the week before,” (a true story illustrating that it’s cold in Philly in more ways than one; you can look it up).

“I don’t think it ever really bothered me,” said Perot, who was 23 at the time, an age of blissful unawareness. “I didn’t think about how cold it was. I didn’t even know how cold it was when we went out there. We wore fishnet jerseys and a half shirt and didn’t even try to do anything to keep from being cold. Our deal was, we were just focused on trying to get to the Super Bowl: who cares how cold it is?”

And if he had free tickets and great seats to the same kind of game today?

“I wouldn’t go,” he said with zero hesitation, almost offended at the suggestion, a man warm and wise.

At left guard, Petey and the gang sprang Wilbert Montgomery for a 42-yard touchdown run on the Eagles’ second play from scrimmage that icy day as Philadelphia beat the Cowboys, 20-7, and made it to Super Bowl XV. The bad news? They lost to Oakland. The good news? It was in the Superdome and 72 degrees with no wind.

This Sunday at 7:15 p.m., Kansas City will visit Buffalo in one of four Division Round weekend playoff games. The expected forecast is like Houston at Baltimore at 3:30 p.m. Saturday: 16 degrees with a 15 percent chance of snow and light winds.

Like taking a candy football from a warm baby.

Contact a very toasty Teddy at teddy@latech.edu


Today in History

1377 – The Papal See was transferred from Avignon in France back to Rome.

1562 – French Protestants were recognized under the Edict of St. Germain.

1773 – Captain Cook’s Resolution became the first ship to cross the Antarctic Circle.

1795 – The Dudingston Curling Society was organized in Edinburgh, Scotland.

1806 – James Madison Randolph, grandson of U.S. President Thomas Jefferson, was the first child born in the White House.

1852 – The independence of the Transvaal Boers was recognized by Britain.

1871 – Andrew S. Hallidie received a patent for a cable car system.

1882 – Thomas Edison’s exhibit opened the Crystal Palace Exhibition in London.

1893 – The Kingdom of Hawaii’s monarchy was overthrown when a group of businessmen and sugar planters forced Queen Liliuokalani to abdicate.

1900 – The U.S. took Wake Island where there was in important cable link between Hawaii and Manila.

1900 – Yaqui Indians in Texas proclaimed their independence from Mexico.

1900 – Mormon Brigham Roberts was denied a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives for his practicing of polygamy.

1905 – Punchboards were patented by a manufacturing firm in Chicago, IL.

1912 – English explorer Robert Falcon Scott reached the South Pole. Norwegian Roald Amundsen had beaten him there by one month. Scott and his party died during the return trip.

1913 – All partner interests in 36 Golden Rule Stores were consolidated and incorporated in Utah into one company. The new corporation was the J.C. Penney Company.

1916 – The Professional Golfers Association was formed in New York City.

1928 – The fully automatic, film-developing machine was patented by A.M. Josepho.

1934 – Ferdinand Porsche submitted a design for a people’s car, a “Volkswagen,” to the new German Reich government.

1938 – “Stepmother” debuted on CBS radio.

1945 – Soviet and Polish forces liberated Warsaw during World War II.

1945 – Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg disappeared in Hungary while in Soviet custody. Wallenberg was credited with saving tens of thousands of Jews.

1946 – The United Nations Security Council held its first meeting.

1949 – “The Goldbergs” debuted on CBS-TV. The program had been on radio since 1931. The TV version lasted for four years.

1959 – Senegal and the French Sudan joined to form the Federal State of Mali.

1961 – In his farewell address, U.S. President Eisenhower warned against the rise of “the military-industrial complex.”

1966 – A B-52 carrying four H-bombs collided with a refuelling tanker. The bombs were released and eight crewmembers were killed.

1977 – Double murderer Gary Gilmore became the first to be executed in the U.S. in a decade. The firing squad took place at Utah State Prison.

1985 – Leonard Nimoy got a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

1991 – Coalition airstrikes began against Iraq after negotiations failed to get Iraq to retreat from the country of Kuwait.

1992 – An IRA bomb, placed next to a remote country road in County Tyrone, Northern Ireland, killed seven building workers and injured seven others.

1994 – The Northridge earthquake rocked Los Angeles, CA, registering a 6.7 on the Richter Scale. At least 61 people were killed and about $20 billion in damage was caused.

1995 – More than 6,000 people were killed when an earthquake with a magnitude of 7.2 devastated the city of Kobe, Japan.

1997 – A court in Ireland granted the first divorce in the Roman Catholic country’s history.

1997 – Israel gave over 80% of Hebron to Palestinian rule, but held the remainder where several hundred Jewish settlers lived among 20,000 Palestinians.

1998 – U.S. President Clinton gave his deposition in the Paula Jones sexual harassment lawsuit against him. He was the first U.S. President to testify as a defendant in a criminal or civil lawsuit.

2000 – British pharmaceutical companies Glaxo Wellcome PLC and SmithKline Beecham PLC agreed to a merger that created the world’s largest drugmaker.

2001 – Congo’s President Laurent Kabila was shot and killed during a coup attempt. Congolese officials temporarily placed Kabila’s son in charge of the government.

2001 – The director of Palestinian TV, Hisham Miki, was killed at a restaurant when three masked gunmen walked up to his table and shot him more than 10 times.

2002 – It was announced that Microsoft had signed a joint venture agreement to produce software with two partners in China. The two partners were Beijin Centergate Technologies (Holding) Co. and the Stone Group.


Upcoming Events

Please send all non-profit calendar events to bpjnewsla@gmail.com

January 19 – 20 (8 – 4 p.m.)

Saline SWCD Tree Sale, 2263 Hall Street, Ringgold

January 19-21

Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days

January 20

Castor High School Sadie Hawkins Dance (CANCELLED)

January 20 (9 – 2:30 p.m.)

Bobcat Cheerleading Clinic 

For Girls and Boys: Pre-K to 8th grade

February 8 (10 – noon)

Winter Lunch and Learn hosted by the Circle of Bienville Medical Center

Arcadia Event Center

RSVP: Sharla McClusky at 318-572-0274 or sharla.mcclusky@ahmgt.com

Deadline for reservations: Feb. 1

February 10 (10 – noon)

Arcadia Cookie Decorating Class – The Gathering Place General Store’s pARTy Room

Instructor: Amy Hobbs with the Little Sweet Shoppe

February 10 (5 – 8 p.m.)

Ringgold Elementary Mardi Gras Sneaker Ball – Elementary Gym

$10 per students. Grades 1 – 5 only.

February 10 (6:30 – midnight)

Krewe of Arcadia Mardi Gras Ball – Arcadia Event Center

March 16 (9 – noon)

District 2 Star of Hope O.E.S. 30th Annual Gala, “Star Struck” Welcome to Old Hollywood.

630 Factory Outlet Dr. Arcadia.

Attire: Sunday’s best with “fascinators and fedoras.”

Entertainment, food, drawings. Public is welcome to attend with a $5 donation at the door. 

April 5 (9 a.m.)

Ringgold High School’s Class of 2025 Ring Ceremony

May 25

The Authentic Bonnie & Clyde Festival – Downtown Gibsland


Notice of Death – January 16

Notice of Death – January 16, 2024

Emery Champion

June 20, 1934 – Jan. 12, 2024

Arcadia, La.

Visitation: 1 – 6 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 18, 2024, Memorial Funeral Home, Mrs. Johnnie M. Walker Chapel, Arcadia. 

Celebration of life: 1 p.m. Friday, Jan. 19, 2024, Memorial Funeral Home, Mrs. Johnnie M. Walker Chapel, Arcadia. 

Neva Buggs-Kemp

July 10, 1927 – Jan. 13, 2024

Homer, La.

Visitation: 1 – 6 p.m. Friday, Jan. 19, 2024, Memorial Funeral Home, Homer.

Celebration of life: 11 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 20, 2024, Memorial Funeral Home, Homer.

Vera Holyfield

Feb. 14, 1934 – Jan. 06, 2024

Haynesville, La.

Visitation: 2 – 6 p.m. Friday, Jan. 19, 2024, Memorial Funeral Home, Homer.

Funeral service: 11 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 20, 2024, Shiloh Baptist Church, Haynesville.

Interment: 12:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 20, 2024, Gordan Heritage Cemetery, Haynesville.

Varnita Merrie Bartholmae Witcher

March 16, 1939 – Dec. 27, 2023

Minden, La.

Celebration of Life Memorial Service: 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 20, 2024, North Acres Baptist Church, Minden.

Mary Rockett Tomlin Williamson

Oct. 24, 1936 – Dec. 27, 2023

Minden, La.

Visitation: 5 until 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 2, 2024, First Baptist Church of Minden.

Graveside service: 11 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 3, 2024, Springhill Cemetery, Springhill, La.

Bienville Parish Journal publishes paid complete obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $80. Contact your funeral provider or bpjnewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Above death notices are no charge.)


Update: 7 p.m. Monday

Gibsland, Bonnie & Clyde Ambush Museum (Photo credit: Perry Carver)

Tonight

Mostly cloudy, with a low around 13. Wind chill values as low as -1. North wind 10 to 15 mph.

Tuesday

Mostly cloudy through mid morning, then gradual clearing, with a high near 28. Wind chill values as low as -1. North wind 5 to 15 mph.

Tuesday Night

Clear, with a low around 12. Wind chill values as low as 5. Northwest wind around 5 mph becoming calm.

School closures: ALL BIENVILLE PARISH SCHOOLS WILL BE CLOSED TOMORROW, JAN 16. ALL EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITES WILL BE POSTPONED TO A LATER DATE.

Gibsland Head Start Center will be closed Tuesday, Jan. 16 and will continue to monitor the weather and road conditions before making a determination about Wednesday. Updates can be found on their Facebook page.

Road closures: LA 154 Bridge over Lake Bistineau in Bossier/Bienville Parish remains the only closure in Bienville Parish at this time. The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development advises motorists that the LA 154 over Lake Bistineau Bridge in Bossier/Bienville Parish is CLOSED effective immediately due to winter weather conditions.

Business closures:

GBT of Arcadia will delay opening Tuesday, Jan. 16. in Arcadia and Gibsland (10 a.m. to 3 p.m.)

Louisiana National Bank will have the drive-thru open on Tuesday, Jan. 16 in Arcadia (9 a.m. to 3 p.m.)

Giddy Up Pediatrics will be available by phone or video only at 318-372-8797.

Arcadia Town Hall will be closed on Tuesday, Jan. 16 and will monitor weather and road conditions before making a decision to resume normal business hours on Wednesday.

Bienville Parish Health Unit will be closed on Tuesday.

*** The Bienville Parish Police Jury announced the Republic Service will not be picking up trash on Tuesday, Jan. 16 or Wednesday, Jan. 17. Updates will be available soon. ***

The Bienville Parish Clerk’s Office issued an Emergency Proclamation due to the severe winter storm and will also be closed on Tuesday, Jan. 16.

All court settings or scheduled hearings are cancelled and will be rescheduled at a later date.

The Bienville Parish Journal will continue to update as needed. Please send in business closures for Tuesday, Jan. 16 and email weather-related photos to bpjnewsla@gmail.com.


Update 11:30 a.m. School closures

Warnings currently in effect:

Hazardous Weather Outlook
Hard Freeze Warning in effect from January 15, 06:00 PM CST until January 16, 12:00 PM CST
Winter Storm Warning until January 15, 06:00 PM CST
Wind Chill Advisory in effect from January 15, 06:00 PM CST until January 16, 12:00 PM CST

Today:

A chance of snow, freezing rain, and sleet before noon, then a chance of freezing rain and sleet between noon and 3pm. Cloudy and cold, with a high near 21. Wind chill values as low as 7. North wind around 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50%. Total daytime snow and sleet accumulation of less than a half inch possible.
 
Tonight:
 
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 14. Wind chill values as low as 2. North wind 10 to 15 mph.
 
School closures: ALL BIENVILLE PARISH SCHOOLS WILL BE CLOSED TOMORROW, JAN 16. ALL EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITES WILL BE POSTPONED TO A LATER DATE.
 
Northwest Louisiana Technical Community College – Minden, Shreveport and Mansfield campuses will be closed both Tuesday and Wednesday. 
 
Road closures: LA 154 Bridge over Lake Bistineau in Bossier/Bienville Parish The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development advises motorists that the LA 154 over Lake Bistineau Bridge in Bossier/Bienville Parish is CLOSED effective immediately due to winter weather conditions.
 
 
 
The Bienville Parish Journal will continue to update throughout the day. Please send in business closures for Tuesday, Jan. 16 and email weather-related photos to bpjnewsla@gmail.com.

Update: 10:45 a.m. Monday

Warnings currently in effect:

Hazardous Weather Outlook
Hard Freeze Warning in effect from January 15, 06:00 PM CST until January 16, 12:00 PM CST
Winter Storm Warning until January 15, 06:00 PM CST
Wind Chill Advisory in effect from January 15, 06:00 PM CST until January 16, 12:00 PM CST

Today:

A chance of snow, freezing rain, and sleet before noon, then a chance of freezing rain and sleet between noon and 3pm. Cloudy and cold, with a high near 21. Wind chill values as low as 7. North wind around 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50%. Total daytime snow and sleet accumulation of less than a half inch possible.
 
Tonight:
 
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 14. Wind chill values as low as 2. North wind 10 to 15 mph.
 
School closures: Still no word on whether Bienville Parish Schools will be closed tomorrow, Jan. 16. Will keep you updated.
 
Northwest Louisiana Technical Community College – Minden, Shreveport and Mansfield campuses will be closed both Tuesday and Wednesday. 
 
Road closures: LA 154 Bridge over Lake Bistineau in Bossier/Bienville Parish The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development advises motorists that the LA 154 over Lake Bistineau Bridge in Bossier/Bienville Parish is CLOSED effective immediately due to winter weather conditions.
 
 
 
The Bienville Parish Journal will continue to update throughout the day. Please send in business closures for Tuesday, Jan. 16 and email weather-related photos to bpjnewsla@gmail.com.

Update: 6:30 p.m. Sunday

Tonight: Freezing rain and sleet likely. Cloudy, with a low around 18. Wind chill values as low as 9. Northeast wind around 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 70%. Total nighttime ice accumulation of less than a 0.1 of an inch possible. Total nighttime sleet accumulation of less than a half inch possible.

Road Closures:

LA 154 Bridge over Lake Bistineau in Bossier/Bienville Parish

The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development advises motorists that the LA 154 over Lake Bistineau Bridge in Bossier/Bienville Parish is CLOSED effective immediately due to winter weather conditions. DOTD will advise when this roadway has been reopened and is safe for travel. 

Schools

Bienville Parish Schools: No announcement has been made as of yet concerning school closures on Tuesday, Jan. 16. They will continue to monitor the weather and give updates.

Louisiana Tech University’s Barksdale and Bossier campuses will be closed through Wednesday with classes resuming Thursday.

Essential staff who need to be on campus for work will be notified by their supervisors. The Payroll Office will provide guidance for essential employees required to work and instructions for recording leave for the weather closure.  

Though the Ruston campus is closed, some services will be open for students who remain on campus.

Tech Table will be open from 11 a.m.-8 p.m. today, closed Monday for MLK, and open Tuesday and Wednesday from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m.

The Lambright Center will be open from noon to 8 p.m. today. Hours for Monday through Wednesday are 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. TechCare will be open normal hours.

Please continue to monitor campus communications through email, social media, and the ERT website at https://ert.latech.edu/.

Bossier Parish Community College campuses in Bossier, Natchitoches, and Many will be closed Tuesday, January 16 and Wednesday, January 17. Virtual classes will still meet and student services will still be available virtually.

Campuses will also closed Monday, January 15 in observance of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.

Campuses will reopen Thursday, January 18. Administrators will continue to monitor the weather throughout the weekend and send updates as needed. Information will be posted on the BPCC website, social media and communicated through BPCC email and Cavs Alert System.

Updates

Updates on the weather, as well as closures, including streets will be posted throughout today and Monday.

Click here for the original forecast: https://bienvilleparishjournal.com/2024/01/14/keep-track-of-weather-updates-road-closures-for-bienville-parish/


Keep track of weather updates, road closures for Bienville Parish

A winter storm warning and a winter weather advisory are now in effect through Monday afternoon, Jan. 15. For zones along and north of I-20, sleet and snowfall accumulations of 1-2 inches are expected, with locally higher amounts possible. 

Areas between I-20 and I-30 could also see freezing rain and ice accumulations between a tenth and a quarter of an inch. The winter weather advisory area south of I-20 will see freezing rain and sleet accumulations of 0.1 to 0.2 tenths of an inch.

Temperature at the Shreveport Downtown Airport at 12:30 p.m. Sunday was 32 degrees, with temperatures expected to drop throughout the day. Ground temperatures were 43 degrees Saturday night.

Bienville Parish Journal will be updating this information, while adding closures, throughout the rest of the day and Monday.

Please send all weather-related photos to bpjnewsla@gmail.com.


Castor man sentenced to prison for drug trafficking and firearm charges

A Bienville Parish man has been sentenced to federal prison for selling drugs and having a firearm in his possession. 

Jereaud Egans, 38, of Castor was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Elizabeth Foote to 16 years, 3 months in prison, followed by five years of supervised release. He pleaded guilty on Feb. 22 to possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine and possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime. 

According to information presented in court, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration started investigating Egan’s drug trafficking activities in October 2022 after seizing meth that was purchased from him. In another instance in January 2023, agents stopped Egans near his home for a traffic violation and found a loaded 9mm pistol under the driver’s seat. And in a front middle seat compartment were two vaccuum sealed plastic bags containing a pound of methamphetamine. 

Shortly thereafter, DEA agents searched Egans’ home and found crack cocaine, marijuana, cannabis pre-roll cigars, THC edibles, THC “moon rocks” and marijuana seeds. Additionally, they recovered 18 firearms, one of which had been reported as stolen.

The case was investigated by DEA and prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian C. Flanagan.


Impatient patient catches ride to jail

By Bonnie Culverhouse

A Minden Medical Center patient’s impatience was possibly behind his arrest Tuesday evening.

Robert L. Jones, 53, of the 1300 block of School Street, Ringgold, was arrested by Minden Police for aggravated arson in his MMC room.

Chief Jared McIver said Sgt. Chris Cayer and Lt. Spencer Tippen were dispatched around 9 p.m. to Jones’ room in reference to a fire.

“The medical staff told officers that Jones had been released earlier, and they allowed him to stay in his room because he didn’t have a ride,” McIver said. “A nurse walking the floor smelled smoke and entered the room. She stated Jones had set fire to a styrofoam plate.”

Jones reportedly saw the nurse and dropped the burning plate in the trash can, then poured milk over it.

“Another staff member utilized a fire extinguisher to ensure the fire was out, but the third floor was extremely smoked up,” said the chief.

Jones, who reportedly refused to speak with officers, was arrested and transported to Minden Police Department for booking.

This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named as suspects in a criminal investigation, or arrested and charged with a crime, have not been convicted of any criminal offense and are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.


Bienville Pre-K December Student of the Month


Bienville Pre-K 3 is celebrating Greyson and Alayna as their Decemeber Students of the Month.

Greyson is a 4-year-old prince who speaks with a quiet gentle voice of love. Greyson’s favorite color is blue and he loves his family and mother. He is very energetic. Greyson loves to play outside, watch T.V., and play on his iPad with his siblings. When he grows up he wants to be a cop and an artist. Greyson doesn’t like for people to be mean to little puppies. 

Alayna is a 4-year-old super-sharing beautiful royal princess. Alayna’s favorite color is pink and for a fun time she likes to hang out with family, read, play baseball, and watch Frozen.  Her favorite quote is “That’s Rude!!” Alayna doesn’t like wearing her hair up and riding roller skates. Alayna describes herself as smart and sweet. When she grows up she wants to be a grown- up and eat her favorite food – spaghetti.

CONGRATS Greyson and Alayna.

Teen anglers dominate on Caney

Colby Dark is an 18 year old first year student at LA Tech from W. Monroe. Until recently, his goal in life was to become a success at construction; he wants to be a builder; that’s his college major.

However, he is putting the hammers and nails and saws and levels on the back burner for now because he’s in the process of building something else, a successful bass fishing guide business. There is a good chance for success in the guide business because of something phenomenal that happened on Caney Lake last week. Fishing with a partner, 19 year old Gage Struben, the pair hit the mother lode of big bass.

The pair had fun fishing on Caney that day and experienced something not many other bass anglers have accomplished anywhere. Fun fishing it was because they were obviously having a blast when over the course of two days, the two teens landed 10 bass that weighed 86 pounds and change. Folks, that’s over an 8 pound average topped off with Dark’s personal best weighing 13.5 pounds and Struben’s best weighing almost 12 pounds.

I was able to chat with Colby’s dad, Randall Dark, he shared how this amazing two days on the water happened.

“The boys had been out the day before and were fishing shallow in spots they knew,” said Dark. “They didn’t have any luck fishing shallow so they decided to try another place and were just idling along using a side scan sonar when they spotted something that captivated their attention.

The sonar picked up a big school of what they believed to be large gizzard shad being followed by a gathering of big fish that were obviously interested in the shad.

“At first, they felt the big fish following the shad were probably carp but they decided to see just what they were. Casting jigs, the show was on. Between noon when the first fish was caught – not a carp but a huge bass – and 3:00, the guys brought 38 pounds of bass to the boat, including Gage’s personal best 11.8 pounder” said Dark.

“My son had just signed up to fish the pro series this year and he had arranged for a camera man and media guy to work with him. They decided to go back to the same area the next day to see if they could duplicate what they had done the first day.”

With the camera rolling, they second day was even better as the pair brought to the boat five bass weighing 46 pounds, 6 ounces topped off by Colby’s personal best 13.5 pounder.

We were able to visit with Colby later that day to pick his brain a bit. He is a member of the LA Tech Fishing Team and will be headed for the College National Championship January 6 to be held on Lake Tohopekaliga in Florida.

“I went to Florida to pre-fish and was able to locate some good bass, catching 30 pounds two days straight,” Colby said.

He’ll be putting his school work on the back burner for awhile as he will be fishing tournaments and inviting people to go to his Facebook page and check out his Hooked Up Guide Service.

What is this teenager’s secret? “I’ve just been lucky”, he said. In my opinion, it has taken much more than luck to produce the amazing results he has enjoyed catching big bass. The professional bass fishing world has a young fellow from W. Monroe who is on a path to eventually see his name up there on the same level as the Kevin Van Dam’s of pro fishing fame.


Powerful people take powerful action

I believe I mentioned this last week, but I absolutely love the beginning of a new year. I always wait a couple weeks into the new year, you know, to get a feel for her before I decide on my annual “Word of the Year.” I don’t really make resolutions because I will forget about them and move on before January is even over. But one thing I have always loved to do that has been extremely beneficial for me is picking out one single word. 

This word could be anything you want it to be. It could be an action you want to take this year. It could be an affirmation or a goal. To give you an idea, some of my previous “Words of the Year” have included PATIENCE, MONEY, LIMITLESS, OPPORTUNITY, SELF-CARE, etc.  

I usually start out by making a list of a few words that may have popped up in my head during those first two weeks of reflection and then I slowly start narrowing that list down to my one word and then I write it on a note card and usually put it somewhere that I know I am going to see it every day, maybe a bathroom mirror or the dash of my car.  

For 2024, I have landed on the word…. drum roll please…. POWERFUL.  

I spent so much time during 2023 feeling powerless… well I decided to get my power back for 2024. 

The word powerful could mean so many different things for different people. Being powerful to one person may mean having control or overseeing someone or a group of people. The word powerful to someone else may mean being strong or forceful.  

To me being powerful means being confident.  

Powerful people that have influenced me during my lifetime are just that – confident. They do not second guess their decisions or actions. They wake up each morning and make it their mission to find a way to better not only themselves, but others around them, whether it be their children, students, employees or just society in general.  

But the most important thing to note here is that those people who strive to serve others in this capacity… they also seek personal growth.  

Your thoughts are powerful. I believe it was Buddha himself that once said, “We are what we think. All that we are arises with our thoughts. With our thoughts, we make the world.”  

And those thoughts are a good starting point, but if we do not take action, more specifically action with confidence, then we really are no better off than when we started. Confidence is key. It is what EMPOWERS us to move forward in order to discover and develop our capabilities, whether those capabilities include serving others, moving past a specific fear, trying something new or whatever else.  

Powerful people take powerful actions! 

So really in the end I guess I do have a resolution, but the thing with choosing one word – it can take many different shapes and forms throughout the year. Instead of setting a goal to lose 30 pounds or eat healthier (both are pretty linear) choosing a word opens the door to many more opportunities to better yourself and the lives of those around you.

(Paige Nash is a mom of three girls, digital journalist for Webster Parish Journal and publisher of Bienville Parish Journal and Claiborne Parish Journal.)


Good morning, Hattiesburg

A few weeks ago, an interviewer asked, “Give me a typical day in the life of Robert St. John.” 

I had never thought about it and so my knee-jerk reaction was, “Every day is different.” That’s true. But there is a certain structure to how my day typically begins.

When I’m working out the day starts at 5:30 a.m. in the gym, three days a week. Other than that, every day starts the same when I’m in town. I typically pop into the bakery between 6:00 a.m. and 6:30 a.m. to check on the morning’s bake and then head to the Midtowner for breakfast. I make a point to say “Good morning,” to everyone working in the kitchen and on the floor and then take my seat at table 19. 

One can learn a lot in that initial 60 seconds of entering a restaurant in the early morning. If I receive an enthusiastic return, “good morning,” I know we’re getting everything set and ready for breakfast service in a smooth manner. If a morning welcome is half-hearted, I usually check up on that person to see if everything’s ok with their position in that moment, and if there is anything they may need help with in their personal life or at home.

It’s rare that a return “good morning” is delivered in a downbeat manner at The Midtowner. That has been one of the great surprises with this breakfast-lunch concept I opened several years ago. Before we opened, I wondered if we were going to be able to retain a team that could wake up at 5:00 a.m. and make it to work on time.

If you’re not a restaurant person then you should know that a large percentage of the foodservice world— especially in a college town— likes to have a good time after work. I’m not talking about a rousing game of Scrabble or milk and cookies and a few rounds of charades. Restaurant people are party people. It’s always been that way, or at least during the time I’ve been doing this since 1981. The hours are long, the pace is fast, the pressure is sometimes intense. It’s not The Bear-level intense, but many times it gets hairy and young people are going to do what young people do. 

I was part of that post-work release madness for my first couple of years in this industry until I got clean and sober.

I spent 10 years thinking about opening a breakfast joint before I ever opened a breakfast joint. I knew my hometown of Hattiesburg, Mississippi would respond positively to a locally owned independent breakfast place that also served good, old-fashioned southern home-cooking for lunch. I knew our location was perfect for what we wanted to do. My biggest concern was if our team members would consistently be able to show up to work on time. A couple of our other concepts sometimes had trouble getting people to an 11:00 a.m. lunch shift in a timely manner. It’s never been a problem at The Midtowner.

This concept has been such a pleasure to own and operate. I love all my concepts. They’re like one’s children. One day one of them is dealing with an issue while the other is perfectly fine. The Midtowner has been a steady presence in the New South Restaurant Group fold. My early fears of team members not being able to get up early and get to work were unfounded.

All restaurants have a certain energy and vibe. The vibe at The Midtowner is always upbeat and positive. I wanted to create a restaurant that felt like it had been in operation since the late 1940s, a true local, community café. Back in those days that’s pretty much all that existed— small cafes or fine dining restaurants with French chefs. There weren’t any theme restaurants or national chains littering the landscape. It was all local.

I wanted to create a place where the entire community could get together and share a meal— young, old, black, white, rich, poor, guys with their names stitched to their work shirts, and sorority girls with Greek letters on their sweatshirts. It was one of the proudest moment s of my restaurant career when— two weeks into our initial run— I turned around while working the window and looked out into the dining room, and that’s what I saw— all ages, all walks of life, all occupations, all sharing a meal. I wanted to create the most Hattiesburg restaurant that had ever existed in Hattiesburg, and I felt as if I had done that. It still feels that way.

One of the greatest compliments I receive is when someone is surprised when I tell them that we’ve only been open a little over five years. “But it looks like it’s been here since the fifties.” That was the plan.

I am wired for a breakfast joint— to own one and to be in one. It just fits my lifestyle and personality, and I feel overly blessed to own one and have such a positive team running it every day. When my “day in the life” starts out at a breakfast joint— whether it’s mine or someone else’s— it sets a positive, productive tone for the rest of my day.

Onward.

Sweet Potato Pancakes

Yield: 10-14 pancakes

Preheat oven to 200 degrees for holding pancakes 

1 2/3  cups All Purpose Flour

1 TBSP Baking Powder

½ tsp Baking Soda

½ tsp Kosher Salt

½ tsp Nutmeg

1 ½ tsp Cinnamon

1 ½ cups Cooked and mashed sweet potato (approximately two medium sweet potatoes)

3 Large Eggs

¼ cup Sour Cream

1 ½ cups Milk

¼ cup Maple Syrup

¼ cup Unsalted Butter, melted

1 TBSP Pure Vanilla Extract  

Melted butter or non-stick spray for cooking  

Combine flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, nutmeg and cinnamon in a medium sized bowl. In a separate mixing bowl whisk together the sweet potato puree eggs, sour cream, milk, maple syrup, melted butter and vanilla extract. Whisk the sweet potato mixture into the flour mixture, do not overmix. A few lumps is fine. 

Allow batter to sit 10-15 minutes before cooking pancakes. 

To cook the pancakes, heat a non-stick griddle to 325-350 degrees (models vary, so test your griddle with a small bit of batter to assure you have the heat adjusted correctly). Brush griddle with melted butter or spray with non-stick spray. Form pancakes by using a one-third cup measuring cup. Cook until surface of pancakes has some bubbles and a few have burst, 1 to 2 minutes. Flip pancakes and cook for an additional two minutes. If holding pancakes in oven before serving, place them on a wire rack in preheated oven.

Serve with warm Cinnamon Cream Syrup                                

Cinnamon Cream Syrup

Yield: approximately 2 cups

1-14 ounce can Sweetened Condensed Milk

¼ cup + 2 TBSP Maple Syrup

1 ½ tsp Cinnamon

1 tsp Pure Vanilla Extract

Pinch Salt

Set up a small sauce pot to act as a double boiler. Combine all ingredients in a small stainless-steel bowl and place over double boiler on medium-high heat. Cook for 4-5 minutes, stirring frequently. Remove from heat and serve. 

The cooled syrup can be refrigerated in an airtight container for one week.

(Robert St. John is a chef, restaurateur and published cookbook author who lives in Hattiesburg, Miss.)


Today in History

1519 – Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I died.

1773 – The first public museum in America was established in Charleston, SC.

1866 – The Royal Aeronautical Society was founded in London.

1875 – Kwang-su was made emperor of China.

1879 – The British-Zulu War began when the British invaded Zululand.

1882 – Thomas Edison’s central station on Holborn Viaduct in London began operation.

1895 – The first performance of King Arthur took place at the Lyceum Theatre.

1896 – At Davidson College, several students took x-ray photographs. They created the first X-ray photographs to be made in America.

1904 – Henry Ford set a new land speed record when he reached 91.37 miles per hour.

1908 – A wireless message was sent long-distance for the first time from the Eiffel Tower in Paris.

1915 – The U.S. House of Representatives rejected a proposal to give women the right to vote.

1915 – The U.S. Congress established the Rocky Mountain National Park.

1926 – “Sam ‘n’ Henry” debuted on WGN Radio in Chicago, IL.

1932 – Hattie W. Caraway became the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate.

1938 – Austria recognized the Franco government in Spain.

1940 – Soviet bombers raided cities in Finland.

1942 – U.S. President Roosevelt created the National War Labor Board.

1943 – The Office of Price Administration announced that standard frankfurters/hot dogs/wieners would be replaced by ‘Victory Sausages.’

1945 – During World War II, Soviet forces began a huge offensive against the Germans in Eastern Europe.

1948 – The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states could not discriminate against law-school applicants because of race.

1949 – “Arthur Godfrey and His Friends” was debuted on CBS-TV. The show stayed on the network for seven years.

1949 – “Kukla, Fran and Ollie”, the Chicago-based children’s show, made its national debut on NBC-TV.

1955 – Rod Serling’s career began with the TV production of “Patterns.”

1960 – Dolph Schayes of the Syracuse Nationals became the first pro basketball player in the NBA to score more than 15,000 points in his career.

1964 – Leftist rebels in Zanzibar began their successful revolt against the government and a republic was proclaimed.

1966 – U.S. President Johnson said in his State of the Union address that the United States should stay in South Vietnam until Communist aggression there was ended.

1966 – “Batman” debuted on ABC-TV.

1967 – “Dragnet” returned to NBC-TV after being off the network schedule for eight years.

1970 – The breakaway state of Biafra capitulated and the Nigerian civil war came to an end.

1970 – Nigeria’s civil war ended.

1971 – “All In the Family” debuted on CBS-TV.

1973 – Yassar Arafat was re-elected as head of the Palestinian Liberation Organization.

1986 – Space shuttle Columbia blasted off with a crew that included the first Hispanic-American in space, Dr. Franklin R. Chang-Diaz.

1991 – The U.S. Congress passed a resolution authorizing President Bush to use military power to force Iraq out of Kuwait.

1995 – Northern Ireland Secretary Patrick Mayhew announced that as of January 16 British troops would no longer carry out daylight street patrols in Belfast.

1998 – Tyson Foods Inc. pled guilty to giving $12,000 to former Agriculture Secretary Mike Espy. Tyson was fined $6 million.

1998 – 19 European nations agreed to prohibit human cloning.

1998 – Linda Tripp provided Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr’s office with taped conversations between herself and former White House intern Monica Lewinsky.

1999 – Mark McGwire’s 70th home run ball was sold at auction in New York for $3 million to an anonymous bidder.

2000 – The U.S. Supreme Court, in a 5-4 ruling, gave police broad authority to stop and question people who run at the sight of an officer.

2000 – Charlotte Hornets guard Bobby Phills was killed in a crash during a drag race.

2005 – NASA launched “Deep Impact”. The spacecraft was planned to impact on Comet Tempel 1 after a six-month, 268 million-mile journey.

2006 – The U.S. Mint began shipping new 5-cent coins to the 12 regional Federal Reserve Banks. The coin has an image of Thomas Jefferson taken from a 1800 Rembrandt Peale portrait in which the president is looking forward. Since 1909, when presidents were first depicted on circulating coins, all presidents had been shown in profile.


Upcoming Events

Please send all non-profit calendar events to bpjnewsla@gmail.com

January 13 (6 p.m.)

Public Auction hosted by Faulk Auction Co. – 1968 N. Railroad Ave, Arcadia

January 19 – 20 (8 – 4 p.m.)

Saline SWCD Tree Sale, 2263 Hall Street, Ringgold

January 19-21

Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days

February 10 (10 – noon)

Arcadia Cookie Decorating Class – The Gathering Place General Store’s pARTy Room

Instructor: Amy Hobbs with the Little Sweet Shoppe

February 10 (5 – 8 p.m.)

Ringgold Elementary Mardi Gras Sneaker Ball – Elementary Gym

$10 per students. Grades 1 – 5 only.

February 10 (6:30 – midnight)

Krewe of Arcadia Mardi Gras Ball – Arcadia Event Center

March 16 (9 – noon)

District 2 Star of Hope O.E.S. 30th Annual Gala, “Star Struck” Welcome to Old Hollywood.

630 Factory Outlet Dr. Arcadia.

Attire: Sunday’s best with “fascinators and fedoras.”

Entertainment, food, drawings. Public is welcome to attend with a $5 donation at the door. 

April 5 (9 a.m.)

Ringgold High School’s Class of 2025 Ring Ceremony

May 25

The Authentic Bonnie & Clyde Festival – Downtown Gibsland