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REV. WILLIAM 'BILL' ROGALLA

Rev. William “Bill” Rogalla, 64, a resident of Bayou Vista, passed away Saturday, May 11, 2019, at Franklin Foundation Hospital.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, May 15, 2019, at St. Bernadette Catholic Church with the Most Reverend J. Douglas Deshotel, Bishop of Lafayette, celebrating Mass and Revered Garrett McIntyre will be the homilist.
Guests are invited to a visitation at St. Bernadette Catholic Church on Tuesday, May 14, 2019, from 5 p.m. until 9 p.m. with a recitation of the Rosary at 7 p.m. led by Reverend Gregory Cormier and the Knights of Columbus. Visitation will resume in the church on Wednesday from 8 a.m. until the Funeral Mass at 10 a.m. Following Mass, interment will be at the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist Cemetery in Lafayette.
Before he entered the seminary, he was a certified substance abuse counselor and was very dedicated to helping those who struggled with addictions. This was a compassion he would build upon with Ordination to the Holy Priesthood. He attended seminary at Holy Apostles in Cromwell, Connecticut. He was ordained on June 8, 1996. His assignments as a priest have included: St. Peter’s in New Iberia, St. Ann in Cow Island, Immaculate Conception in Forked Island, Sacred Heart in Pecan Island, St. Augustin in Basile, St. Stephen in Berwick and St. Bernadette in Bayou Vista.
His love for God’s People could be seen in his deep compassion for people and their struggles; his cooking for so many events and fundraisers (we will all miss his spaghetti and delicious cookies); his sewing of blankets for baptisms and other occasions to show how God’s love and mercy surrounds each of us; his love for the Sacrament of Confession so that others could find renewed hope and strength; his love of the Eucharist and the Mass and his desire to have others love the Eucharist; and his love and true devotion for Mary, our Blessed Mother, who he asked to pray for so many of his parishioners and friends. Despite having health issues for a number of years, he always manifested a fervent love for the Lord as well as a sincere concern for his parishioners. He looked forward to celebrating Masses with his parish community and to improving his health so he could better serve others. In his own acceptance of his health struggles, he inspired others to rely on the omnipotent love and care of God, Our Father.
As he has commended so many souls to Almighty God, we ask God to lovingly accept this son and dedicated priest. As he passed away on the doorway of the Feast of the Good Shepherd, we ask the Divine Shepherd to receive this shepherd into Your Flock.
He was preceded in death by his parents, John J. Rogalla and Marilyn George Leach. He is survived by his brother, Anthony Leach and his wife Cecelia and his niece, Cassie. He is also survived by so many parishioners from all of his parish assignments whom he considered family.
In lieu of flowers, donations for Masses for his repose may be offered as well as donations to St. Bernadette Catholic Church in his memory.
Twin City Funeral Home has been entrusted with the arrangements.

Space-tourism enters ‘home stretch’

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — Billionaire Richard Branson is moving Virgin Galactic’s winged passenger rocket and more than 100 employees from California to a remote commercial launch and landing facility in southern New Mexico, bringing his space-tourism dream a step closer to reality.
Branson said Friday at a news conference that Virgin Galactic’s development and testing program has advanced enough to make the move to the custom-tailored hangar and runway at the taxpayer-financed Spaceport America facility near the town of Truth or Consequences.
Virgin Galactic CEO George Whitesides said a small number of flight tests are pending. He declined to set a specific deadline for the first commercial flight.
An interior cabin for the company’s space rocket is being tested, and pilots and engineers are among the employees relocating from California to New Mexico. The move to New Mexico puts the company in the “home stretch,” Whitesides said.
The manufacturing of the space vehicles by a sister enterprise, The Spaceship Company, will remain based in the community of Mojave, California.
Taxpayers invested over $200 million in Spaceport America after Branson and then-Gov. Bill Richardson, a Democrat, pitched the plan for the facility, with Virgin Galactic as the anchor tenant.
Virgin Galactic’s spaceship development has taken far longer than expected and had a major setback when the company’s first experimental craft broke apart during a 2014 test flight, killing the co-pilot.
Branson thanked New Mexico politicians and residents for their patience over the past decade. He said he believes space tourism — once aloft — is likely to bring about profound change.
“Our future success as a species rests on the planetary perspective,” Branson said. “The perspective that we know comes sharply into focus when that planet is viewed from the black sky of space.”
Branson described a vision of hotels in space and a network of spaceports allowing supersonic, transcontinental travel anywhere on earth within a few hours. He indicated, however, that building financial viability comes first.
“We need the financial impetus to be able to do all that,” he said. “If the space program is successful as I think ... then the sky is the limit.”
In February, a new version of Virgin Galactic’s winged craft SpaceShipTwo soared at three times the speed of sound to an altitude of nearly 56 miles (99 kilometers) in a test flight over Southern California, as a crew member soaked in the experience.
On Friday, that crew member, Beth Moses, recounted her voyage into weightlessness and the visual spectacle of pitch-black space and the earth below.
“Everything is silent and still and you can unstrap and float about the cabin,” she said. “Pictures do not do the view from space justice. ... I will be able to see it forever.”
The company’s current spaceship doesn’t launch from the ground. It is carried under a special plane to an altitude of about 50,000 feet (15,240 meters) before detaching and igniting its rocket engine.
“Release is like freefall at an amusement park, except it keeps going,” Moses said. “And then the rocket motor lights. Before you know it, you’re supersonic.”
The craft coasts to the top of its climb before gradually descending to earth, stabilized by “feathering” technology in which twin tails rotate upward to increase drag on the way to a runway landing.
Branson previously has said he would like to make his first suborbital flight this year as one of the venture’s first passengers on the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing on July 20. But he made no mention of timelines on Friday.
Pressed on the timeframe, Whitesides said he anticipates the first commercial flight within a year.
Three people with future space-flight reservations were in the audience.
“They’ve been patient too,” Branson said. “Space is hard.”
Hundreds of potential customers have committed as much as $250,000 up front for rides in Virgin’s six-passenger rocket, which is about the size of an executive jet.
Space tourism has not been a complete novelty since millionaire U.S. engineer Dennis Tito in 2001 paid $20 million to join a Russian space mission to the International Space Station. Branson’s goal has been to “democratize” space by opening travel up to more and more people.
The endeavor began in 2004 when Branson announced the founding of Virgin Galactic in the heady days after the flights of SpaceShipOne, the first privately financed manned spacecraft that made three flights into space.
Space sector analyst Adam Jonas, a managing director of equity research at Morgan Stanley, said Branson’s venture could have an outsized impact in the age of social media on how the public visualizes space as a domain for scientific and commercial exploration.
“You bring them back to earth and they explain what they saw — that’s a story, put through the velocity of social media, people want to hear,” he said. “Sometimes you need some distance to gain a perspective, seeing the earth from space, seeing how thin that layer of atmosphere is that protects us.”
Branson’s plans have gradually advanced amid a broader surge in private investment in space technology with cost-saving innovations in reusable rockets and microsatellite technology.
Amazon tycoon Jeff Bezos announced Thursday that his space company Blue Origin will send a robotic spaceship to the moon with aspirations for another ship that could bring people there along the same timeframe as NASA’s proposed 2024 return. Bezos has provided no details about launch dates.

Wheel House for May 13

MEMORIAL DAY
In honor of Memorial Day, Berwick Historical Society and volunteers will be placing donated American flags on veterans’ graves in Berwick cemeteries at 10 a.m. May 22.

Parents of free-loading boy turn blind eye to son’s needs

DEAR ABBY: My 15-year-old son has a friend who stayed with us for five months during football and basketball season because he didn’t have transportation to early-morning practices. In the beginning it was one night, then it eventually became full weeks, full months and so on. We treated him like our own, providing food, washing clothes, giving him snack money. But when I asked him to assist with basic house chores, he would laugh and find ways to not help. It would frustrate me but, not knowing him too well, I let it slide. We have never met his parents,

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Soap Opera Review: ‘GH’: Donor? I barely know ’er!

THE BOLD AND THE BEAUTIFUL: Hope was shocked when Thomas suddenly kissed her. Thomas was not happy when Liam returned from Paris and confronted him over his efforts to woo Hope. Sally is tired of Quinn telling her to leave Wyatt. DAYS OF OUR LIVES: Brady was comforting Nicole about Holly when Xander walked in on them. Kayla warned Will and Sonny that Will’s tumor is growing. Claire is out to get revenge against Tripp and Hayley, who made her move out of the loft. GENERAL HOSPITAL: Jordan’s condition has grown worse, and she is in serious need of a kidney donor.

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Toussaint indicted in 2016 shooting death in Franklin

Franklin Police Chief Morris Beverly reported Saturday the indictment in Franklin of Lunden Toussaint.
According to Beverly, Toussaint, age 19, was indicted by a grand jury on the charge of principal to second degree murder in the death of Braylen Foulcard.
In December 2018 investigators with the Franklin Police Department received additional information pertaining to the Foulcard homicide.
The investigators were able to present the findings to the grand jury of the 16th Judicial District Court, Parish of St. Mary.
The original police report of the Foulcard homicide stated that on Oct. 23, 2016 at approximately 3:50 p.m. the Franklin Police Department received a complaint of shots fired in the area of Augustine Maze Road.
Upon officer’s arrival, they discovered one deceased victim on the scene. The victim was identified as 16-year-old Braylen Foulcard.
Foulcard was a junior at West St. Mary High School, and resided in the Jeanerette/Four Corners area.

'Death Over A Diamond Stud' author at library

“Death Over a Diamond Stud: The Assassination of the Orleans Parish District Attorney” author Chris Pena will be at the Allain Branch Library in Franklin May 16 at 6 p.m.
The book was released in November, 2018 and is the second of a trilogy of famous, yet little known, murders that occurred in New Orleans during the late 19th and early 20th century. Pena’s first book, “The Strange Case of Dr. Etienne Deschamps,” was released in February, 2017.
According to the publisher, “The gripping true story of the first judicial murder of the 20th century is delivered in stunning detail, from the crooks and crevices of the city streets and courthouses, to the very fibers of the hangman’s noose.”
The story revolves around the murder of District Attorney J. Ward Gurley shortly after his election, a brutal and brazen killing that shocked New Orleans. Accused was Lewis Lyons, a working man who became a cold-blooded killer “that begins with a tragic miscarriage of justice concerning a stolen diamond stud.”

(Updated) Cars advised to avoid La. 70 in Stephensville; high water road closures in lower St. Martin

Until further notice, due to rising water, East Stephensville Road, Tower Tank Road and Bayou Estates Subdivision in lower St. Martin Parish will be closed to vehicular traffic except for residents who reside there, a St. Martin Parish Sheriff’s Office news release said.

As of Monday morning, La. 70 in Stephensville was open, but officials were advising cars not to go through due to water over the highway. Trucks may proceed with caution on La. 70, said Brandie Richardson, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Transportation and Development.

Lower St. Martin Parish between milepost 7.6 and 8.1 has water across La. 70, a news release said.

The Atchafalaya River stage at Morgan City was 7.9 feet Monday morning and is forecast to crest near 8.2 feet Friday morning, according to the National Weather Service.

Adell Street, Edna Street, Landry Road, and Four Mile Bayou Road, were previously closed and will remain so until further notice, the sheriff’s office news release said. Do not sightsee or attempt to go around barricades and/or signage that have been put in place, and be respectful of those who live in these affected areas. Do not attempt to drive through standing water on the roadway. By doing so, it can lead to deadly consequences.

Long defunct Hospital Service District abolished

St. Mary Parish Council members approved an ordinance Wednesday abolishing Hospital Service District 3.
Councilman Glenn Hidalgo, who introduced the ordinance during the 15-minute meeting, said when the service district, which was once the site of Fairview Hospital, was closed two municipalities and the biggest part of the unincorporated area “without any representation on any hospital in our parish. That was my reason for this.”
Hidalgo said that Hospital Service District 2 supported the move.
Parish President David Hanagriff noted that the abolishing of the district brings the original two districts back as they were before Dist. 3 was created.
The boundary between the two remaining districts is the Calumet Cut.
In public comment, Councilman Craig Mathews said the school shooting in Colorado “as a result of this epidemic tragedy that has taken place in our country. I’m at a loss for emotions to know how to react to the fact that we live in the United States of America and to stare at my television and watch 12-year-old children try to express the thoughts of defending themselves and trying to save each other’s lives.
“We live in a country with political leaders that have taken a deaf ear and a blind eye to this situation. All far appears to be the love money and power. It moves me so because I still have a school-age child that attends a public school campus…even though this is also happening on street corners, churches, all across every facet of our environment, and nobody’s even attempting to do anything about.”
Mathews concluded that the incident is a sign that “we are living in the most dangerous signs that any of us have ever know, and if there’s anything we can do to help heal families and communities then that should be a core of our agendas.”
Also Wednesday:
—An ordinance was adopted for the 5.72 mills tax supporting the St. Mary Parish Library System, excluding Morgan City, and .31 mills on all property subject to taxation excluding Morgan City.
—An ordinance was passed for a 7.24 mills tax located outside of municipalities and a 3.26 mils tack within, for costs of the criminal justice system.
—A resolution of respect was approved for Warren Span.
—Eva D. Rollins was reappointed to the Fire Protection Dist. 11 board.

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