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Veteran to veteran

Jerrel J. Frederick, 92, talks with Lt. Col. Corey Williams on Monday during VFW Post 4222 and the Post 4222 Auxiliary's Veterans Day observance at Cypress Park. Frederick served in France and Germany during World War II. Williams served tours in Iraq and Afghanistan in more recent conflicts. Williams directs the JROTC program at Morgan City High. The school's band and JROTC cadets participated in Monday's program.

The Daily Review/Bill Decker

First freeze of season coming soon

The Tri-City area will get an early look at winter this week.
And, although forecasters now say the mercury won’t dip quite as low as previously expected, we’re still likely to see freezing temperatures for at least a couple of hours before dawn Wednesday.
The chance of rain will increase Monday night from 30% to 80%, according to the National Weather Service in Lake Charles.
When the rain clears out Tuesday, it will leave behind colder temperatures. The high Tuesday will be only about 45 degrees.
The low Wednesday morning will be near 28 degrees, the forecast said.
Highs the rest of the week will be in the mid-50s, and the lows will be in the low 40s.
The sub-freezing weather calls for precautions with exposed pipes, outdoor plants and pets.
Experts also regularly warn people to be careful with space heaters by keeping them away from flammable material.
The National Weather Service said a cold front is expected to move into southwestern Louisiana Monday night. By Tuesday night, a hard freeze is expected north of Interstate 10, and a light freeze is expected along the coast.
The Wednesday morning low in Breaux Bridge is expected to be 24 degrees.
The front to blame for the unseasonably cold weather is from Siberia — yes, Siberia — and it’s heading toward a huge chunk of the United States. It could set record-low temperatures from Texas to New England.
National Weather Service meteorologist Kevin Donofrio said Saturday that the weather service’s National Digital Forecast Database indicates that some 200 records might fall between Monday and Wednesday. For example, the Tuesday expected high of 23 degrees (-5 Celsius) at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport would be a full 5 degrees lower than the record-low set in 1995, he said.
The cold front moved through the Upper Midwest and the northern Plains on Sunday and was expected to continue southward and eastward on Monday and Tuesday, sending temperatures plunging below freezing all the way south to the Gulf Coast.
It will bring January-like temperatures to some locations that are as much as 30 degrees (17 degrees Celsius) colder than normal for this time of year.
Donofrio said the leading edge of the system was expected to bring some snow on Monday. Although the snow is expected to taper off on Monday, temperatures are forecast to keep falling.

Louisiana Spotlight: The mud flies as governor race nears end

By MELINDA DESLATTE
Associated Press
BATON ROUGE — The Louisiana governor’s race has devolved into a trash-talking slugfest in its final days ahead of the Nov. 16 election.
Democratic incumbent John Bel Edwards and his Republican challenger Eddie Rispone have traded accusations of race-baiting and veteran-bashing. The state Republican Party dredged up ancestral history to hurl insults at Edwards. And the only debate of the runoff competition disintegrated into finger-pointing about lies told on the campaign trail.
A negative turn likely was inevitable when the governor’s race reached a head-to-head matchup between Edwards and Rispone. In tight runoff competitions like this one, campaigns regularly turn to attack ads to try to peel support off their challenger.
Any questions about just how intense the mudslinging would get were answered in the only runoff debate between Edwards and Rispone. The two men talked over each other, accused each other of falsehoods and offered little in the way of a policy discussion.
Rispone accused Edwards of releasing dangerous criminals. Edwards accused Rispone of planning to strip health care from hundreds of thousands. Both candidates accused each other of lying and fearmongering.
At one point, Edwards told his Republican challenger: “You don’t know what you don’t know. And quite frankly, what you don’t know is astounding.”
Rispone, meanwhile, knocked Edwards as a “liberal trial lawyer” and a “career, tax-and-spend politician” in nearly every response he gave. Outside of his support for Trump, those criticisms of Edwards are among Rispone’s favored talking points.
A few days later, Rispone repeated those criticisms of Edwards in an interview with an Alexandria radio station — but then added another. He said the Democratic incumbent, a West Point graduate, has “hurt the reputation” of the military academy because of his work as a trial lawyer.
Edwards called the comments offensive and Rispone desperate.
“If he had served his country in the military, he might be able to understand why so many veterans are rightfully upset with his comments,” Edwards said.
The moment gave Edwards an opportunity to highlight his military service, both at West Point and his time as an Army Ranger. He’s running TV and radio ads about the topic and put out statements from veterans praising his service.
Rispone said his radio interview comments stemmed from “two West Point people” who told him they were embarrassed by Edwards’ behavior. Rispone wouldn’t name them.
“I love veterans. I support veterans,” the Republican contender said. “What I was talking about was a liberal, tax-and-spend trial lawyer as our governor. And then they flip that around trying to say I don’t like vets. That’s ridiculous.”
While Edwards continued to hammer Rispone on the West Point comments and call him “phony Rispone,” Rispone added a new complaint of his own against Edwards. He blamed Edwards for anti-Trump radio ads, including one linking the president and Rispone to former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke.
“That’s how low they will stoop to win this race. It’s incredible. It’s disgusting,” Rispone said.
The advertising was done by the New Orleans-based Black Organization for Leadership Development, or BOLD. One of several radio spots, the ad encouraged minority voters to “vote against hatred” by choosing Edwards.
Edwards said he wasn’t involved in the advertising. The Duke-themed spot is no longer running, according to a BOLD member. Still, Rispone is using it to energize his voters, including clips from the radio spot in his own ads and bringing it up in speeches.
Rispone doesn’t mention, however, that his own party invoked race even as it criticized Edwards and his backers for stoking racial tensions.
In an email, the Republican Party described Edwards as coming from a family that “has been racist for generations.” The email linked to conservative news sites’ descriptions of Edwards’ family as slave owners before the Civil War and his grandfather as a segregationist lawmaker.
Edwards’ campaign provided comments from the leader of the Louisiana Legislative Black Caucus defending Edwards’ record as fighting for equal opportunity and a statement from Edwards saying his ancestors’ actions “if true, do not in any way reflect my views.”
As Louisiana reaches the last week before the election, the remaining ballots likely will be cast among more volleying of attacks, rather than substance.
Melinda Deslatte has covered Louisiana politics for The Associated Press since 2000. Follow her at http://twitter.com/melindadeslatte

DR. KAREN HAYES ORDOGNE

June 18, 1953 — November 7, 2019
Dr. Karen Hayes Ordogne was born on June 18, 1953, in Morgan City, Louisiana. She died on November 7, 2019, at the age of 66 surrounded by her family. She was preceded in death by her mother, Bernadine Mula Hayes, and survived by her father, Dale Hayes Sr., her husband, Mark Ordogne, her brothers, Dale (Sharon) Jr. and Tommy Hayes, her daughter, Lauren (Geoff) Gentile, her son, Luke (Adelaide) Ordogne, and her seven grandchildren. She was a graduate of Central Catholic High School, Nicholls State University, and one of 16 women in the second graduating class at Louisiana State University Veterinary School in 1978. By 1983, she was the sole owner of the Morgan City Veterinary Hospital where she worked for 35 years.
Karen mastered the art of play. She knew every Kenny Chesney song by heart, loved to drink “funny coke” with her family, and could bounce for hours with her grandchildren on the trampoline. Her expertise was in cutting diagonal lines in her lawn, and at the Atchafalaya Health Club she was especially fond of keeping up with the younger women in “Body Combat”. She traveled extensively with her husband, and would always recall her trip to the Holy Land as surpassing all the others.
A devout Catholic, Karen heard Mass daily, embraced her weekly Holy Hour commitment, and founded the Morgan City chapter of Come Lord Jesus. Her love for the Blessed Mother found expression in praying a daily Rosary and devoutly wearing her brown scapular. Her faith helped her persevere in the spiritual and corporal works of mercy, especially during the tender care she gave during her mother’s years-long struggle with dementia. Near the close of Karen’s life she received her cancer diagnosis and devastating prognosis not with fear or anger, but with supernatural tranquility and an unshakable confidence in God’s providence and mercy. Moments before her passing, a brief quickening of strength allowed her to offer a final act of trusting abandonment to God as she mouthed her last words: “Into your hands, Lord, I commend my spirit.”
Her funeral Mass will be held at Sacred Heart Church on Tuesday November 12 at 11 a.m.
In lieu of flowers, Karen asked that donations be made to St. Jude Children’s Hospital in her honor, or that Masses be offered for her soul’s repose.

MARVIN LEE VERRET

September 1, 1943 — November 7, 2019
Marvin Lee Verret, 76, a resident of Patterson, passed away Thursday, November 7, 2019, at Thibodaux Regional Medical Center.
Marvin was born on September 1, 1943, in Bayou Chene, the son of Jessie and Lottie Wisdom Verret.
He will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his wife of 54 years, Mary Grace Landry Verret of Patterson; two daughters, Allison Wood and companion Glenn Horsley of Denham Springs, and Amanda Robertson and husband Clark of Houma; seven grandchildren, Brittany Torgrimson, Jessica Torgrimson, Lesley Torgrimson, Seth Browning, Tyler Wood, Neil Robertson and Jess Robertson; and three great-grandchildren, Bailey Torgrimson, Emma Bair and Mia Bair.
Marvin was preceded in death by his parents, Jessie and Lottie Wisdom Verret; one brother, Wesley Verret; and four sisters, Bertha Coussou, Theresa Seneca, Gracie Carline and Dorothy Lajaunie.
A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated at 12:10 p.m. on Monday, November 11, 2019 at St. Bernadette Catholic Church. A visitation was held from 9 a.m. until 11:30 a.m. in the parish hall with a rosary being prayed at 11:30 a.m. Following Mass, Marvin was laid to rest in the Berwick Cemetery.

Wheel House for Nov. 11

SENIOR CITIZENS
Annual Thanksgiving Dinner at Mt. Pilgrim Baptist Church, 113 Federal Ave., Morgan City, at noon Thursday, Nov. 21. Dine-in only. Free and senior citizens invited.

A little love for the lunch ladies

Submitted Photo
The Pre-K3 students in Erica Clements’ and Heather Walker’s classes presented the Central Catholic food service workers with a thank you sign that read, “Let’s Taco Bout Our Awesome Cafeteria Ladies!” They also sang a “Taco” song and gifted the ladies with a treat. Pictured are the Pre-K3 teachers and students with Freda Jones, Charmaine Singleton, cafeteria manager, and Fredricka Calloway.

Boy Scout dinner

Submitted Photo
Berwick Mayor Duval Arthur receives a ticket from Lenny Dartez for the annual Boy Scouts of America Dinner scheduled for Dec. 12. The steak dinner begins with refreshments 6:30-7:30 p.m. The dinner will be at the St. Mary Senior Citizens Center, 4014 Chennault St., in Morgan City. Tickets are $75 each. The Morgan City Rotary Club is the sponsor and tickets are available by calling Dartez at 985-759-0515 or Bill Cefalu at 095-387-1445.

Morgan City, Berwick development ready

The Daily Review/Jaclyn Breaux
Morgan City and Berwick became the newest participants in a statewide program called Ready Communities offered by Louisiana Economic Development. Morgan City Mayor Frank “Boo” Grizzaffi and Berwick Mayor Duval Arthur completed the program and were presented with certificates at Tuesday’s Chamber of Commerce meeting. Pictured from left are Grizzaffi, Don Pierson, secretary of the Louisiana Department of Economic Development; Cindy Cutrera, economic development manager for the Port of Morgan City representing St. Mary Excel; Vic Lafont, president and CEO of the South Louisiana Economic Council; and Arthur.

Administrative assistance award

The Daily Review/Jaclyn Breaux
Tori Henry, center, office manager at the Port of Morgan City, received the Administrative Assistance Award for November from the St. Mary Parish Chamber of Commerce at its meeting on Tuesday.

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