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Narcotics Section makes 3 arrests

The St. Mary Parish Sheriff’s Office Narcotics Section made arrests Tuesday on charges of oxycodone and marijuana possession, Sheriff Blaise Smith said.
—Cody S. Lucore, 29, Stephensville Road, Stephensville, was arrested at 7:16 p.m. Tuesday on charges of improper lane usage and possession of a Schedule II controlled dangerous substance (oxycodone) with intent to distribute. No bail has been set.
—Claude Williams, 33, Utah Street, Berwick, was arrested 9:34 p.m. Tuesday Tuesday on charges of possession of a Schedule I controlled dangerous substance (marijuana) and possession of a controlled dangerous substance in the presence of a minor. Williams was released on a summons to appear Sept. 24.
—Courtney Bourda, 37, Utah Street, Berwick, was arrested at 9:34 p.m. Tuesday on charges of possession of a Schedule I controlled dangerous substance (marijuana) and possession of a controlled dangerous substance in the presence of a minor. Bourda was released on a summons to appear Sept. 24.
Smith also reported these arrests:
—Schyler Stelly, 26, General MacArthur Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 2:01 p.m. Tuesday on a warrant for failure to appear on the charge of disturbing the peace by fighting. Stelly was released on a summons to appear Sept. 24.
—Shauntell Nicole Hartdegen, 37, La. 20, Schriever, was arrested at 8:24 p.m. Tuesday on charges of proper equipment required on vehicles, general speed law and driving under suspension. Hartdegen was released on a summons to appear Sept. 24.
—Shannon Wainwright, 48, Arenz Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 11:22 p.m. Tuesday on charges of obstructing public passage and possession of marijuana. Wainwright was released on a summons to appear Sept. 24.
—Samantha Davis, 30, Arenz Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 12:27 a.m. Wednesday on charges of proper equipment required on vehicles, possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia. Davis was released on a summons to appear Sept. 24.
Morgan City Police Chief James F. Blair reported these arrests:
—Kyler Anthony Ross, 33, Lawrence Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 11:06 a.m. Tuesday on a charge of criminal damage to property less than $1,000 and a warrant for nine counts of failure to appear.
—Kearsten Richard, 20, Morgan City was arrested at 11:18 a.m. Tuesday on a charge of criminal damage to property less than $1,000.
Officers were called to an address on Brashear Avenue for a disturbance. They learned Ross and Kearsten Richard had damaged property at the address. A warrant check revealed the City Court of Morgan City held active warrants for Ross’ arrest.
Both Ross and Richard were placed under arrest and transported to the Morgan City Police Department for booking and incarceration.
—Shanika Shantle Guidry, 38, Barrow Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 6:39 p.m. Tuesday on a charge of driving under suspension.
An officer conducted a traffic stop in the area of Federal Avenue. The driver was identified as Guidry. A computer check revealed her driver’s license was under suspension.
She was placed under arrest and transported to the Morgan City Police Department for booking and incarceration.

Another 25 COVID cases but no deaths in three local parishes

St. Martin Parish logged another 20 COVID-19 positives and St. Mary picked up five new cases in Thursday's midday report from the Louisiana Office of Public Health.

Statewide, the number of people hospitalized for treatment of COVID-19, which is a red flag statistic as the number of new cases continues to increase, was up by 22.

St. Mary's five new cases mean 415 people here have tested positive for the virus since the pandemic began. About 5,200 St. Mary people have been tested. Thirty-seven people have died.

St. Martin's 20 cases, a continuation of a pattern of big fluctuations in the daily totals, making the parish's total 606 with 26 deaths. About 7,500 tests have been performed.

Assumption had no new cases Thursday. The case count remains at 334, and the number of deaths remained at 14. About 3,100 tests have been performed in Assumption.

Statewide:

--938 new positives were reported Thursday, continuing the recent upward trend in new infections.

--12 deaths were reported, raising the toll to 3,051.

--The number of people hospitalized with COVID-19-related illness is at 653. Ten days ago, 568 people were hospitalized.

--77 people are on ventilators.

The delicious history of cheesecake

Rich, creamy and decadent, cheesecake is enjoyed across the globe.
There are many famous cheesecake bakeries in North America. Those who can’t resist digging their forks into this beloved dessert may assume that cheesecake traces its origins there. In fact, cheesecake traces its origins to the ancient Greeks.
The first ‘cheesecake’ is believed to have been created from a ricotta-type cheese base on the Greek island of Samos. Excavated cheese molds were found there that dated to around 2,000 B.C.
Cheesecake was considered a good source of energy and there is evidence that even Olympic athletes were fed cheesecake during the first games. Greek brides and grooms also were known to rely on cheesecake as their cake of choice for weddings. Original cheesecakes were made from flour, wheat, honey and cheese, then formed and baked, according to Cheesecake.com.
After the Roman conquest of Greece, cheesecake was adopted by the Romans. Their name for this type of cake was ‘placenta’ and it was baked on a pastry base or sometimes inside of a pastry case, advises What’s Cooking America.
Cheesecakes also were called ‘libum’ by the Romans, and were used as an offering at the gods’ temples. Cheesecakes also were introduced to other areas of Europe thanks to conquering Roman armies. By 1,000 A.D., cheesecake could be found throughout northwestern Europe, England and Scandinavia.
Through the years, cheesecake’s popularity spread elsewhere. However, New Yorkers say that cheesecake was not really cheesecake until it got an Empire State makeover in the 1900s.
Many New York restaurants have their own versions of cheesecake, with Turf Restaurant laying claim to the first cream cheese-based cheesecake recipe in 1929. Turf Restaurant owner Arnold Reuben’s cheesecake recipe, also known as Jewish cheesecake thanks to his heritage and the recipe’s kosher ingredients, was allegedly a favorite of actors and actresses seeking late night indulgence after shows, according to bakefromscratch.com.
New York dairy man William Lawrence accidentally invented cream cheese in 1872 while trying to recreate a soft, French cheese known as Neufchatel. Little did Lawrence know that this mistake would inadvertently revolutionize cheesecake recipes.
Cheesecake technically is a pie and not a cake, and there are versions that are baked and others that firm up in the refrigerator without having to cook a custard base. Many cheesecake aficionados have a favorite cheesecake recipe.
This classic and iconic New York cheesecake, courtesy of Philadelphia Cream Cheese brand, is an ideal one to make your own.
NEW YORK CHEESECAKE
1¼ cups graham crumbs
¼ cup butter, melted
5 packages (8 oz.) Philadelphia Brick Cream Cheese, softened
1 cup sugar
3 Tbsp. flour
1 Tbsp. vanilla
1 cup sour cream
4 eggs
1 can (19 oz.) cherry pie filling
Preheat oven to 325 F if using a silver 9-inch springform pan or to 300 F if using a dark nonstick 9-inch springform pan.
Mix crumbs and butter; press firmly onto bottom of pan. Bake 10 minutes.
Beat cream cheese, sugar, flour and vanilla in large bowl with electric mixer on medium speed until well blended. Add sour cream; mix well. Add eggs, one at a time, mixing on low speed after each addition just until blended. Pour over crust.
Bake for 1 hour and 10 minutes or until center is almost set.
Run a knife or metal spatula around the rim of the pan to loosen cake; cool before removing the rim of the pan. Refrigerate for 4 hours or overnight. Top with pie filling before serving. Store leftover cheesecake in the refrigerator.

Hair-trigger temper keeps mom walking on eggshells

DEAR ABBY: I have one child, a daughter, “Anna,” I adopted at 19 months. She’s 41 now and has two small children. She had a normal upbringing, although her father and I divorced when she was 9. She has chosen to not have a relationship with him as an adult. Anna has never married, nor has she been in a relationship for longer than four or five months. According to a few counselors I have seen, she has attachment disorder.
Anna is very difficult. She’s mean, says hateful things and is an angry young woman. She takes no responsibility for any of her actions, and therefore cannot keep a job, friends, etc. for more than a few months. She is also extremely negative. If I try to say anything, she gets angry, starts cussing, yelling and slinging hate, and stops contacting me for weeks at a time.
We have nothing in common. We live in separate states, but I see her about a half-dozen times a year. When I do, I tiptoe around on eggshells because of her short fuse. Her attitude is starting to rub off on her boys.
This is not what I had envisioned all those years ago when I adopted her. I miss who I thought she would become. Is there anything I can do without completely alienating myself from my grandsons, which would break my heart?
TIPTOEING ON EGGSHELLS

DEAR TIPTOEING: I am sorry your adoption did not turn out as you envisioned. Your daughter is clearly troubled, and it is not surprising that her attitude has begun to affect her boys. It is time you accept that, as much as you wish to, you cannot change another person, and there’s nothing you can do to “fix” her.
You mentioned that you visit her every two months. Perhaps you should consider visiting fewer times than that. Ask if she would let the grandkids come and visit Grandma occasionally. However, if she isn’t receptive, refusing to engage with her is the price you will have to pay for seeing them and trying to cement a relationship with them.

DEAR ABBY: I have been dating a girl since high school. We were high school sweethearts, but now we are both 28. My girlfriend wants to get married and have kids, but I do not. I want to keep dating her. I am scared to break up with her because if I did, I wouldn’t know what to do with my life. Should I change, or should she change?
STATUS QUO IN COLORADO

DEAR STATUS QUO: I hereby appoint you to be the designated changer. You have been so absorbed with this romance you never took the time to develop interests of your own.
At the age of 28, many women start thinking about marriage and children. Doing that is normal and rational. However, because you don’t feel ready to make a lifetime commitment, you would be making a huge mistake to allow yourself to be pushed into it.
It is important that you learn who you are before you marry anyone. Accomplishing this is a process that takes time and a variety of experiences, and you should embark on that now. It would be unfair to continue dating her at this point because your paths are going to diverge as each of you learns to manage without leaning on the other.
***
To receive a collection of Abby’s most memorable — and most frequently requested — poems and essays, send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $8 to: Dear Abby — Keepers Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447.

B.I. Moody inducted into LPA's 50-Year Club

Braxton “B.I.” Moody III was inducted to the Louisiana Press Association’s 50-Year Club at the association’s annual stockholders meeting June 22.
LPA’s 50-Year Club honors and recognizes men and women who have 50 years or more cumulative professional affiliation with newspapers and news websites, including ties to Louisiana.
Affiliation can include time other than as a full-time employee. Work as a carrier or delivery person, as a stringer, or free-lance writer, for the college paper, or full or part-time work in any aspect of a newspaper or news website’s operation can count towards the 50 years.
Moody’s newspaper career began 57 years ago when he acquired the Rayne Acadian-Tribune and Church Point News in 1963.
He later launched the Crowley Post Herald which eventually merged with the competing Crowley Daily Signal, resulting in the Crowley Post-Signal in 1974. During the next three decades Moody’s newspaper group, Louisiana State Newspapers, acquired several other newspapers around Louisiana and today owns and publishes 22 newspapers.
Moody believes that every community should have a voice and that voice should be a local newspaper.
Currently, Moody is chairman of The Moody Company and of Louisiana State Newspapers, Inc., both headquartered in Lafayette.
The University of Louisiana at Lafayette renamed its College of Business Administration after Moody in recognition of his service to the business industry in Acadiana as well as his community involvement.
He graduated from Rayne High School and attended Auburn University. His college career was interrupted by service in the United States Navy during World War II. After the war, Moody returned and entered then-SLI where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in accounting.
Following graduation, Moody was the founding partner in the CPA firm of Moody, Broussard, Poché & Guidry. He also served as president and chief executive officer of Chart House, Inc., in Lafayette and chairman of the board for First National Bank of Lafayette.
His services on boards include Rayne State Bank & Trust Company, First National Bank of Crowley, Acadia Savings and Loan Administration, First Commerce of New Orleans, Coastal Chemical Company of Abbeville, Lastarmco, Inc., of Abbeville, Riviana Foods, Inc., of Houston, Celeron Oil Company, Inc., of Lafayette and Quantum Restaurants, Inc., of New York.
Moody was married to the former Thelma Hebert of Rayne for 70 years prior to her death in 2017. They are the parents of nine children, grandparents to 48 grandchildren and have numerous great-grandchildren.
To date, LPA has the following as members of the 50-Year Club:

2020
B.I. Moody III
Louisiana State Newspapers

2019
Henri Bienvenu
Teche News
Tom Kelly
Ruston Daily Leader/
Natchitoches Times

2017
Pam Mitchell
Louisiana Press Association

2016
Lou Gehrig Burnett
Political Columnist &
Fax-Net Update
Paul Kedinger
Rayne Acadian-Tribune

2014
Melba West
West Carroll Gazette (Oak Grove)

2012
David B Petty
The News-Star (Monroe)
Jerry Pierce
Northwestern State University,
Natchitoches

2011
Charles N. Lenox
University of Louisiana
at Lafayette

2010
Diana Daigle
Church Point News

2008
Ray Forman
The Bunkie Record

2007
Edwin Roy
St. Bernard Voice (Arabi)

2006
Jerry Byrd
Bossier Press-Tribune
(Bossier City)
Allen J. Lottinger
St. Charles Herald-Guide (Boutte)
Ted Uhall
The Daily Iberian (New Iberia)

2005
William J. Holliday
The Baker Observer
Sammy J. Franklin
The Jena Times
Olla-Tullos-Urania Signal
Porteous “Dickie” Broussard
The Daily Iberian (New Iberia)

2004
Jerry & Joy Wise
DeQuincy News
Raymond P. “Doc” Jeffress
Jackson Independent (Jonesboro)
Robert Gentry
The Sabine Index (Many)
Sam A. Hanna Sr.
Concordia Sentinel (Ferriday)

2002
John Blanchard
The Enterprise and
Interstate Progress (Mansfield)
Lovan Thomas
Natchitoches Times

2001
Annabelle McGuire Armstrong
South Baton Rouge Journal

2000
Fred “Pat” Achor
The Times-Picayune
(New Orleans)
Vera Hardman
St. Tammany Farmer (Covington)

1999
Sue Eakin
The Bunkie Record (Bunkie)

1998
Vincent Marino
The Advertiser (Lafayette)
Adolph C. Renaud
The Times (Shreveport)

1997
Bernard Curet
Pointe Coupee Banner
(New Roads)

1996
Robert H. Fackelman
Jennings Daily News
Peter Finney
The Times-Picayune
(New Orleans)
Douglas L. Manship, Sr.
The Advocate (Baton Rouge)
Clyde S. Miller
Madison Journal (Tallulah)
Anne K. Price
The Advocate (Baton Rouge)
Evelyn Short
The Advocate (Baton Rouge)
Joe D. Smith Jr.
Alexandria Daily Town Talk
Erbon and Marie Wise
Southwest Daily News (Sulphur)

1995
Bill Irwin
Amite Digest, Kentwood News

1994
Joseph Bosley
Madison Journal (Tallulah)
Lou Major Sr.
The Daily News (Bogalusa)
Willis Reed
Baton Rouge Post

1993
Fred Bandy
The Daily Iberian (New Iberia)
Frank J. Budde
The Times (Shreveport)
Earl Cobb
The Times-Picayune
(New Orleans)

1992
Ansley H. Colvin, Jr.
The Jackson Independent
(Jonesboro)
Lester G. Colvin
The Jackson Independent
(Jonesboro)
T.L. Colvin, Sr.
The Jackson Independent
(Jonesboro)
Bill Chapman
Bastrop Daily Enterprise

1991
Ray F. Dill
Houma Daily Courier
Ivy J. Smith
Houma Daily Courier
L.D. Young, Jr.
West Side Journal (Port Allen)
A.N. Dawson, Jr.
Alexandria Daily Town Talk

1990
Ralph Bienvenu,
Abbeville Meridional
Jo Cart
Rayne Independent
Myrta Fair Craig
Rayne Acadian-Tribune
Charles P. Manship, Jr.
State Times-Morning
Advocate (Baton Rouge)
William C. Risinger
Alexandria Daily Town Talk

Deacons for Defense: Teens got involved in integration struggle

Editor's Note: This is the fourth part of a four-part series.

FERRIDAY — David Whatley, the first black student to integrate Ferriday High in 1966, returned from tortuous days at school only to face just as many threats outside his home.
Come nightfall, he’d study his lessons by a spotlight illuminating his grandmother’s lawn while keeping watch for violent Klansmen enraged over his involvement in the civil rights movement.
In 1965, Klansmen had bombed the home of Whatley’s neighbor, Robert L. “Buck” Lewis Jr., who had raced outside with a shotgun to defend his family against the perpetrators. Minutes later, he, not his attackers, was arrested.
Not far from Lewis’ home lived Antonne Duncan, who days later ran through a Klan roadblock when he and other African American men transported Lewis home after his release from jail. Later on, Anthony “Lucky” McCraney’s gas station was firebombed, marking the sixth act of racial violence in Ferriday within a two-month period, according to CORE documents. Klansmen had learned that McCraney was a member of a secret organization of black activists, the Deacons for Defense and Justice.
These men had long been outraged by one horrid memory – the 1964 arson murder of Ferriday shoe shop owner Frank Morris. No one was ever arrested for the killing. Morris, a black man who had operated a business with a devoted interracial clientele for 30 years, had become a role model for young black men, many of whom got their first jobs as children helping Morris around his shop.
David Whatley was among the men inspired by Morris’ life and angered by his murder, and he would become the youngest member of the group that took on Klansmen and bad cops when they organized the Ferriday chapter of the Deacons for Defense and Justice. The Deacons were unlike any such group before or since. Born in Jonesboro before spreading most notably to Bogalusa, Homer and Ferriday, the Deacons’ main purpose was to fight fire with fire and to protect their communities.
Violent Klansmen had long been embedded with corrupt cops, some of whom wore robes themselves. The Deacons believed that arming themselves was the only way to hold off the Klan and protect their homes, neighborhoods and the white and black civil rights workers who came from across the country to help achieve equality.

'Rifles on
our shoulders'
Ferriday’s population of more than 4,500 residents was roughly half black and half white in the mid-1960s, a time when black citizens quietly celebrated civil rights wins and white supremacists desperately tried to halt legislative and social change.
Representatives of the non-violent Congress of Racial Equality flocked to Ferriday, deemed an “outlaw town” by the U.S. Justice Department’s head civil rights attorney, John Doar. CORE’s main task was to test whether the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 were being implemented, and for this their workers suffered in Ferriday.
Two white CORE members, who practiced the non-violent approach championed by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., were beaten. One of the men who was attacked, Michael Clurman, told the Concordia Sentinel in 2007 that his co-worker, Mel Atcheson of Iowa, was beaten and kicked in the face by a white man on the streets of Ferriday in July 1965.
Atcheson, who was familiar with the Deacons for Defense and Justice, later told FBI agent Don McGorty that Ferriday resident Victor Graham had contacted the Jonesboro Deacons and that a month later, in August 1965, the Ferriday chapter was formed.
The creation of the Deacons’ groups is outlined in a 606-page FBI file released through the Freedom of Information Act to the LSU Manship School of Mass Communication Cold Case Project, which investigates Klan activities.
McGorty reported that the Deacons membership in Ferriday totaled 23. They met weekly and conducted all-night patrols. In addition to each member owning his own weapon, the agent wrote, the unit allegedly possessed three semi-automatic carbines and two walkie-talkies used when patrolling.
David Whatley, who was a CORE member himself while a student at Ferriday High School, confirmed in a recent interview that the Ferriday Deacons were armed.
“We’d walk nights with rifles on our shoulders like you would see in some foreign countries,” Whatley said.
Whatley also was at a great risk for Klan attacks because CORE workers were housed in his grandmother’s home, where he also lived. Their only protection came from the Deacons, he said.
One night in January 1966 as Whatley slept, his first cousin and fellow Deacon, Joe Davis, fell asleep during his shift to guard the Whatley home. Klansmen took advantage of this, throwing a bomb just outside Whatley’s bedroom window. Luckily, only the detonator exploded, not the bomb itself, sparing the family from tragedy.
Whatley contacted CORE’s central office after the attack, sparking an FBI investigation. He said the bureau concluded that if the bomb’s two sticks of blasting powder would have ignited, the house might have been destroyed.
Two suspects were identified in FBI documents as members of the Silver Dollar Group, a Klan offshoot believed responsible for Morris’ murder and seven others in Louisiana and Mississippi over a three-year period.
Whatley said Klansmen also shot out the lights on his grandmother’s house and drove around the home several times for days to intimidate the family.
“We would make it known that we were alert and we were awake, and they would flee,” Whatley said. “This went on month after month while I was in this school system.”

Beatings,
bombings
and escapes
Robert Lewis, whose home was bombed by Klansmen, drew inspiration from the sacrifices of the CORE workers. Lewis decided that if two visiting white men like Atcheson and Clurman were willing to take a beating in the name of civil rights in Ferriday, it was time for him to take a stand, too, and in August 1965, Lewis got involved with the CORE-sponsored Ferriday Freedom Movement.
That drew the ire of Klansmen, and three months later, some of them snuck up to his house and threw a gasoline bomb at it. Lewis raced outside with a shotgun. With five children at home, Lewis kept the weapon unloaded. When he saw one of the perpetrators fleeing the scene, he instinctively raised his gun and pulled the trigger, only to hear an empty click.
Despite the damage the bomb caused to his home and the threat it posed to his family, Lewis was handcuffed by Ferriday police and charged with aggravated assault, according to FBI and CORE documents. Later, he was transported to the parish courthouse jail in Vidalia.
Lewis later told the Concordia Sentinel that it was a “dreaded thing” for a black man to be placed into a police car and taken to jail.
When Lewis was released after serving two weeks, Whatley and Antonne Duncan were part of a Deacon team organized to get him home safely. They knew Klansmen would await Lewis’ release and that deputies would notify the Klan that a black activist was being released from jail.
Duncan and a few other young, armed Deacons piled into his brother’s canary yellow Pontiac to rescue Lewis, who also received help from a white bondsman from New Orleans. Had Duncan and the others not rescued Lewis, the police might have dropped him off at the railroad crossing in Vidalia, where Klansmen often waited when black people were released from the jail.
Duncan was at the wheel, and when they reached the tracks with Lewis in the car, they bolted past Klansmen waiting there. They quickly gave chase, pursuing the yellow Pontiac for several miles before Duncan watched their headlights start fading away. Soon, Lewis was back in his Ferriday home and reunited with his wife and children.
That was not the only time Whatley helped an imprisoned black man in Ferriday.
Once arrested himself on a false claim and held in the local jail for two weeks, Whatley said a primary function of the Ferriday Deacons was to protest the unlawful arrests of local black men.
“The main force that we had was marches,” he said. “We’d march on the jail. If they held somebody in there that actually hadn’t done anything but was falsely accused, we would support them by showing up in court.”
Mission
accomplished
One unique feature of the Ferriday Deacons was that they had what Whatley called the “Junior Deacons League,” composed of a half dozen teenagers.
As a Junior Deacon, he and other members were vigilant and on call when the older Deacons needed them.
“It was kind of a barbershop-type of thing where you sit around, you talk about what has happened, who did this and who did that and what to expect next,” Whatley recalled.
Although both the Deacons and its younger subgroup were secretive, they let members of the black community know they would protect them from the Klan and law enforcement. They handed out flyers and leaflets to local congregations and spoke at churches.
Whatley said Deacons held meetings at Mercy Seat Baptist Church, where shoe shop owner Frank Morris had served as an usher, as well as Mount Olive Baptist Church and St. Charles Catholic Church.
“You open the doors of your church, you tell your members what’s going on and let them know that this is good for everybody involved,” Whatley said.
“So when there was a problem, there was a way of communicating to them what was going on.”
The Deacons’ connection to churches inspired the group’s name. Jonesboro Deacon and evangelist preacher Frederick Douglas Kirkpatrick told the FBI they chose to call the group the Deacons because that indicated it was for the good of all people.
A handful of members throughout the state also served as deacons within their churches, while others made their livings as teachers, construction workers, farm hands and general laborers.
The late Sammy Davis Jr.—no relation to the famous entertainer—was elected Ferriday’s first black mayor in 1984. He told the FBI in 1965 that though he was not a member, Deacons had sought his advice and counsel. Davis furnished the bureau a list of Ferriday Deacons, and he identified former Harlem Globetrotter Johnny Lloyd, who was a four-sport coach at the local black school Sevier High, as a Deacon.
When the group began to phase out in Ferriday and the other towns by 1966, the FBI stopped keeping close tabs on the Deacons. The dismantlement was due to several reasons, including the broader enforcement of civil rights laws, the progression of the Vietnam War and the election of blacks to school boards, town councils and police juries. Blacks also became deputies and police officers.
The Deacons came to life solely to protect their communities and others victimized by Klansmen and police. Once their mission was complete, members quietly returned to their modest lives.
For years, David Whatley has wondered how men can be so motivated by hate. Battered and ostracized while he attended Ferriday High, Whatley would go on to serve in Vietnam. He would return home wounded physically and confounded mentally over how he could have been considered good enough to risk his life for his country in Vietnam but not good enough to attend the local high school.
“We spent all those years hating each other for reasons we don’t know,” Whatley said.
Whatley said it was important for Deacons and activists to demand change in lawful yet effective ways during the civil rights era, and he said that still holds true for the nationwide protests against police abuses today.
He said anyone who wants to resolve racial injustices and divisions should do so legally, rather than violently.
“Let’s do it intellectually—not forcefully,” Whatley said.
According to FBI documents, Ferriday Deacons included David Whatley, Leo Graham, Victor Graham, Herman Brown, Levado Brown, Richard Thompson, Samuel White, Frank Fleming, James Fleming, Fred Brown, Shine Calhoun, Stafford Redvine, FNU Jones, Anthony “Lucky” McCraney, Simon Smith, Antonne Duncan, Lionel Hooper, Vernon Smith, Anthony White, Joe Davis, Jeffrey Scott, Mack Moore and Johnny Lloyd.

CLECO kicks off fan drive for area Councils on Aging

For the 20th year, Cleco is partnering with Councils on Aging and other agencies in the company’s service territory to host its Annual Fan Drive for the elderly while following new protocols due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Our seniors benefit during the hot summers months from Cleco’s fan drive,” said Ron Smith, director of customer experience. “Instead of postponing or canceling due to the pandemic, we are working with our partner agencies to continue providing this assistance but with new safety protocols. Fans and monetary donations will be accepted by the Councils on Aging offices only, and those wishing to contribute should schedule an appointment in advance.”
The participating agencies are not open to the public but will accept donations by appointment through July 3. To donate a fan or money, contact one of these local participating agencies:
—St. Mary Council on Aging, 337-907-6310
—St. Martin Council on Aging, 337-332-3063
The agencies will begin distributing fans to the elderly by appointment only starting July 6. To request a fan, seniors should contact the agency in their area and make an appointment. To receive a fan, seniors must be a Cleco customer and 60-years of age or older.
“Our senior citizens are more vulnerable, especially during the summer months,” said Smith. “Air conditioners are typically the largest energy users in a home, and raising the thermostat to 78 degrees and using a fan can help the air temperature feel 10 degrees cooler and help reduce energy usage.”
In addition to adjusting thermostats, Cleco recommends the following tips to help lower energy usage:
—Install a programmable thermostat and raise the setting to the highest comfortable temperature. Customers can save three to five percent on air conditioning costs for each degree raised on a thermostat.
—Use heat generating appliances such as dryers and ovens at night when temperatures are cooler outside.
—Seal holes and cracks around windows.
—Keep curtains and blinds closed during the day.

PRIDE MONTH

Submitted Photo
In honor of Pride Month, Ochsner St. Mary shows support by flying a Pride flag at its campus.

Metal Shark introduces 70-knot interceptor

Shipbuilder Metal Shark has introduced the welded-aluminum “52 Fearless Super Interceptor,” an offshore-capable, ultra-high-performance military patrol vessel delivering 70-knot top speeds, the company said in a news release.
Production has commenced at Metal Shark’s Jeanerette production facility, with 15 vessels currently on order for overseas military and law enforcement interests.
Metal Shark developed the 52 Fearless Super Interceptor in response to growing demand among military operators for larger and faster interdiction craft with greater range and better sea keeping., the company said.
“Customers from around the world have asked for a blue water-capable interdiction vessel with 60+ knot capabilities,” explained Henry Irizarry, Metal Shark’s vice president of international business development. “With the 52 Fearless Super Interceptor, we have exceeded that requirement by a significant margin, with a multi-mission high-performance vessel delivering unmatched speed, handling, and sea keeping while also leveraging over a decade of parent craft Fearless-class past performance.”
The new offering is a highly optimized version of Metal Shark’s 52-foot Fearless high-performance center console vessel, utilizing the proven Stepped Vee, Ventilated Tunnel running surface designed by naval architect Michael Peters. Metal Shark’s Fearless-class stepped bottom vessels are currently in service with the U.S. Navy, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and multiple law enforcement agencies in the United States and Caribbean.
A custom-configurable platform designed for missions ranging from counter narcotics to the protection of exclusive economic zones and other related maritime enforcement activities, the new vessel is available with multiple pre-engineered configuration, propulsion, and equipment options.
The first 15 Super Interceptors are being built in a center console configuration with seating for six crew in Shockwave shock-mitigating seats beneath an integrated aluminum hard top. The vessels will be powered by twin 1,650-horsepower MAN 12-cylinder diesel inboard engines mated to Arneson ASD14 surface drives via ZF transmissions. Thus equipped, the Super Interceptor will reach a projected top speed in the 70-knot range. The vessel’s flexible configuration allows for a maximum fuel capacity of 1,000 gallons, which results in an incredible 12.5 hours endurance at 50 knots.
With an overall length of nearly 58 feet, a beam of over 11 feet and an operational displacement of up to 8 tons, the vessel is large and imposing. To satisfy modern military visual-deterrent requirements, the Super Interceptor boasts chiseled and menacing lines, including the distinctive “faceted hull” initially developed by Metal Shark for the Navy and now being widely incorporated across Metal Shark’s product portfolio.
“In terms of speed, size, endurance, and sheer awe factor, this vessel represents a radical leap forward,” said Metal Shark CEO Chris Allard. “The Fearless Super Interceptor will be made available for our customers in a range of styles and sizes to meet various operational requirements. We look forward to showcasing the superlative performance of this next-generation military patrol platform and providing additional details in the months ahead.”

Reports differ over health of fracking industry

Several newly published reports suggest that the U.S. shale industry could collapse because of the coronavirus shutdowns and the Russian-Saudi Arabian oil war, which created a perfect storm of plummeting prices, job losses and economic losses hitting the once booming Texas industry hard.
Almost 36 North American explorers, frackers and pipeline operators have filed for bankruptcy since January, reporting an approximate $25.2 billion worth of cumulative debts, according to the law firm Haynes and Boone LLP.
Among them is Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake Energy Corp., which in 2007 Forbes listed as having the best-managed oil and gas company in the U.S.
“At its peak, Chesapeake pumped more American gas than anyone aside from Exxon and boasted a market valuation of almost $38 billion,” according to a report by Bloomberg News.
Chesapeake created “the template for the shale model that’s now unraveling for many companies,” Bloomberg reports.
Today, its indebtedness adds another 40% to the combined bankruptcy debts reported since January, Bloomberg estimates.
According to a new analysis published by the Australian think tank the Institute for Economics and Peace, the U.S. shale oil industry may collapse from the weight of historically low oil prices due to the coronavirus shutdowns.
The report factors in reduced commercial, travel and industrial activities from mid-March to now, leading to significantly lower oil consumption in an over-saturated market.
“These markets were already affected by an oversupply, emanating from Russia and Saudi Arabia who could not agree on production curbs,” the report states.
While not at rock bottom, natural-gas prices are trading 20% lower this year and haven’t hit bottom yet, according to S&P Global Platts Analytics.
Natural gas prices “face headwinds given a global supply glut and limited available storage capacity in Europe, Asia, and the U.S.,” Rich Redash at S&P Global Platts Analytics said, first reported on by MarketWatch News.
According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, for the week ending June 5, natural gas in U.S. storage was 36% higher than during the same time period last year.
“While concerns swirl about lower natural-gas production as a result of lower activity from U.S. oil basins, stymied demand amid milder weather and lower economic activity have meant that natural gas storage has swelled,” Matt Smith, director of commodity research at ClipperData, told MarketWatch.
Five major shale oil regions in the U.S. produced about 12% of the nation’s natural gas output in 2018, according to the EIA, which projects a decline for June shale oil production.
An IHS Markit report projects that the Shale Crescent region of Ohio, West Virginia and Pennsylvania will continue to expand its liquefied natural gas production.
According to a recent EIA Natural Gas Liquids Primer update, surging production of natural gas in the Appalachian Basin is expected to quadruple total eastern U.S. production from 2013 levels by 2050, and NGL production is expected to increase by more than 700% by 2023.

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