Columns

Wed
09
Oct

Hey, Let’s Talk! No Strings Attached

Hey, Let’s Talk! No Strings Attached

I’d heard that the great Rhythm & Blues Soul artist Ben E. King had died and I wanted to look that up on the internet. His lovely poignant song “Stand By Me” from 1961 is one of my top five favorite songs of all time and is one of those perfect combinations of lyrics and melody I know. When it comes on the radio you want to turn up the volume to hear one more time …. Everytime.

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Wed
09
Oct

Along the Way

Along the Way

There’s just no telling what I’ll say or do when I’m in my mid-sixties when it comes to technology, but it’s foreshadowing (and often comical) to witness how some of today’s Baby Boomers handle different aspects of our ever-increasing technological advances.

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Wed
09
Oct

Did You Know?

Did You Know?

While reminiscencing about the Red River Campaign some additional information from old letters was found. This Campaign towards the end of the Civil War is one of my favorite and in order to understand the Red River Campaign some background is necessary.

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Wed
02
Oct

Did You Know?

Did You Know?

Most people do not give much thought to names but that is one of the most important things about a person. His parents gave a lot of thought before naming him as a baby. The same thing is true about a place or town. So where did DeSoto Parish get its name? Down through the years many thought the name was in honor of Hernando DeSoto the explorer, however, he never came near DeSoto Parish. The closest was probably Fulton, Arkansas where he died and was thrown in the Mississippi for burial. A better candidate is Marcelo (Marcel) DeSoto who brought the first thirty families to what is now our parish. He received a grant of land along the bayou that later became known as Bayou Pierre. He was half French and half Spanish and the grandson of St. Denis who established Natchitoches. His mother was the dynamic Mariede St. Denis DeSoto.

Wed
02
Oct

Along the Way

Along the Way

We were standing with our hands over our hearts, facing the flag, listening to the National Anthem being played by an orchestra over the loud speakers. It was just before one of my son’s football games a couple of weeks ago.

Suddenly, toward the end of the Anthem, something happened to the sound system and the music stopped.

The crowd in the stands stood silently for a couple of seconds before singing in unison a cappella, “O say does that star-spangled banner yet wave, O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave.”

 

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Wed
02
Oct

Hey, Let’s Talk!

Hey, Let’s Talk!

Kinda Taco Mac

One of the rewards of writing a weekly column like this is hearing from readers. I heard from Charlotte Miller, Grand Cane Mover & Groover AND who is also running for Police Jury Dist. 4B, texting me about her success with my Taco Mac Casserole recipe last week. I asked if she had any interesting suggestions and additions that I could pass on to you. First of all, she makes her own Gluten-Free Taco Seasoning mix (I have permission to re-print it for you) and used a family sized box of Kraft Macaroni & Cheese.

Charlotte’s Taco Seasoning: 1 cup minced dried onions 1/3 c. of chili powder 2 Tablespoons Cumin 4 T Red Pepper (the pizza type) 3 T oregano 2 Teaspoons garlic powder.

Thu
26
Sep

Did You Know?

Did You Know

It has been said, “Don’t ask a question that you don’t know the answer to”. Historical buffs who follow this article like to read history that they know but certain parts of it had slipped their mind – especially dates. Mansfield’s history is one of the writer’s favorite things to reminisce about.

Thu
26
Sep

Along the Way

Along the Way

Often, the most powerful evidence for Christ is what He has done in a person’s life — those individual experiences that can only be explained by God, and that become seared in a person’s heart and mind throughout their life.

I can recall something that happened just after I turned twelve years old that became very profound to me, even to this day.

I was in the seventh grade and a boy named Ben had given me his ID bracelet to wear. He had told me how much the bracelet meant to him, a gift from his dad, so I felt like it was extra special.

One afternoon, my grandmother picked me up from school. As I was riding in the front seat, I looked at my right wrist and realized that Ben’s bracelet was missing. I panicked and began frantically digging through my backpack which was at my feet, looking on the floorboard and between the seats.

 

Wed
18
Sep

The Business Doctor

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What the heck is a Tariff?

Tariffs are taxes imposed by a country on specifics or general goods and services imported from another country. This can also be done from Parish to Parish or State to State or City to City. Any product or service coming from anywhere into your community can have political or economic tariffs, whether used to promote growth or impose punishment.

So, lets breakdown the tariffs and its purposes:

Tariffs are used to restrict imports or promote a country to increase its prices to offset those same restrictions forcing vendors to increase the price of products and services (put a tariff on it to make the price go up if the price goes up it’s harder to sell)

 

 

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Wed
18
Sep

Did You Know?

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Probably the most successful article that I have written is the paper on Louis Moses Rose, the only deserter of the Alamo. A doctoral candidate from Rice Institute of Houston sent a small clipping to the Logansport Interstate Progress newspaper desiring information on Moses Rose who was buried in the Aaron Fergurson Cemetery six and half miles northeast of Logansport, La. Koy Pace contacted me and the search was on for the Fergurson Cemetery and Moses Rose. No one that we contacted had ever heard of either but around the turn of the century the name had changed from Fergurson to Whitten Cemetery. The article written on Moses Rose ran in the Shreveport Times, featured by Bob Griffin, and I gave a speech at St. Augustine, Texas. The Historical Group from there placed the article in the Alamo.

 

 

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