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Pope: Leftovers are food for thought, sharing, not waste

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis says leftover grub should serve as food for thought instead of getting thrown out.
Francis told the faithful gathered in St. Peter’s Square on Sunday that people should “examine their conscience” about what to do with leftovers. He suggested using them for another meal or donating them.
Francis said: “I’m thinking of people who are hungry and how many leftovers we throw away.”
The 81-year-old pope recommended asking grandparents for recipes that use leftovers. He often praises the elderly for their wisdom.
Francis said everyone should think about what happens to food leftover from big lunches and dinners.
If they do, he says the clear next step is to “cook them up again or donate them to whoever can eat them, who’s in need.”

Man’s devotion to his mom spoils wife’s travel plans

DEAR ABBY: I have been married to my husband for 38 years. We both had long professional careers and saved diligently for our retirement. Our children are on their own and doing well with their careers. My husband retired six years ago. His daily routine is visiting his mother (every day) in an assisted living facility. It is an expensive place, and they take great care of her. I have just retired. I waited to do it until I was 67, thinking we could start to travel (not move). My husband has now informed me he doesn’t want to go on ...

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Soap Opera Review: Steve goes bionic on ‘DAYS’

THE BOLD AND THE BEAUTIFUL: Angry after seeing Hope and Liam in a compromising situation, Steffy made a “deal” with Bill to marry him. Steffy told a stunned Liam she turned to Bill because of all the hurt Liam and Hope have caused her to go through. DAYS OF OUR LIVES: Tripp asked Ciara if she has a romantic interest in Ben. Jennifer is getting close to finding out that it was Victor who planted drugs in J.J.’s apartment, which in turn caused Brady to lose Tate to Theresa. Steve’s bionic eye surgery worked. GENERAL HOSPITAL: Finn was frantic over not being ...

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'Hunchback of Notre Dame' at the Teche

The Teche Theatre for the Performing Arts is anxiously anticipating opening night of its 2018 summer musical, The Hunchback of Notre Dame.
Based on the Victor Hugo novel and songs from the Disney animated feature, The Hunchback of Notre Dame showcases the film’s Academy Award-nominated score, as well as new songs by Alen Menken (Beauty and the Beast, Little Mermaid, Newsies) and Stephen Schwartz (Wicked, Godspell, Pochantas). Peter Parnell’s (An Imaginary Life) new book embraces story theatre and features verbatim passages from Hugo’s gothic novel.
The musical begins as the bells of Notre Dame sound through the famed cathedral in 15th-century Paris. Quasimodo, the deformed bell-ringer who longs to be “Out There,” observes all of Paris reveling in the Feast of Fools. Held captive by his devious caretaker, the archdeacon Dom Claude Frollo, he escapes for the day and joins the boisterous crowd, only to be treated cruelly by all but the beautiful gypsy, Esmeralda. Quasimodo isn’t the only one captivated by her free spirit, though: The handsome Captain Phoebus and Frollo are equally enthralled. As the three vie for her attention, Frollo embarks on a mission to destroy the gypsies, and it’s up to Quasimodo to save them all.
A sweeping score and powerful story make The Hunchback of Notre Dame an instant classic. Audiences will be swept away by the magic of this truly unforgettable musical. The cast is made up of community members throughout Acadiana joining together to further the Arts in St. Mary Parish. Making their Teche Theatre directorial debut but no strangers to the Teche Stage are director Mitchell Prudhomme; music director Jesse Duplechain and choreographer Jhalon Thomas.
The show runs July 28 and 30 August 1, 2 and 3 at 7 p.m. and July 29 at 3 p.m. Advanced tickets may be purchased at Lamp Lighter Antiques for $15 for adult and $10 for children 12 and under. Advanced tickets are also available on Eventbrite.com. Tickets will be $20 at the door. For further information on this production, audition announcements and the Teche Theatre’s 2018/2019 upcoming season follow them on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

The Landrys

Family means depending on each other, and never giving up

Mandy Landry’s mother and father will have been married for 47 years this August.
They fell in love in their early teens, and are said to be each other’s first and only love, “a true love story,” according to Mandy.
Theresa Landry and Jeffery Landry Jr. are the owners of Landry’s Hot Tamales at 1104 Main St. in Franklin.
Mandy said that after a decade or so of marriage, her mother told her father that she wanted to work, because she had never had a job. So she set out to do what she knew how to do.
Mandy said the thing Theresa knew how to do—was cook.
She and Jeffrey decided to open up what their daughter called a “shack” on Cayce Street where they sold hot tamales and hot dogs cooked by Theresa.
“Mama loved cooking,” Mandy said. “She said it’s the only thing she knew how to do.”
Once parking for traffic at the Cayce Street location became scarce, Mandy said her father purchased the Main Street location for her mother, to make room for dine-in customers, too.
They moved in 2008, and have been at their current location ever since.
Whether on Cayce Street or Main Street, Landry’s has been operating for 34 years with family at the helm every step of the way.
These days, it’s Mandy during the day, and her sister, Shantel Palambo, takes the afternoon/evening shift.
Before last June, it was Theresa, full-time.
Mandy said her mama was always at the restaurant, all day.
But last May, Jeffery had a stroke and required full-time care.
That’s when Theresa handed the daily operation of the restaurant over to Mandy.
“She promised him (Jeffrey) she would stay by his side if something ever happened,” recalled Mandy of her mother. “They promised each other.”
So, Mandy took on running the restaurant with the help of Hailey Smith, her self-proclaimed sidekick.
The staff/family took two big hits between January and March, when they lost Linda Frederick, Theresa’s sister, and Tina DeMarco, Theresa’s niece, both of whom had worked at Landry’s for 20-plus years.
Frederick passed away due to an unexpected aneurism, and DeMarco passed away due to lung cancer.
Mandy called it “a bad time for us, because we are family.”
So, with Theresa at Jeffrey’s side in the hospital, and the passing of Frederick and DeMarco, the sisters and their kids and loved ones have soldiered on to keep Landry’s going despite the trauma of their losses.
The staff answered in unison that the best thing about Landry’s, is “family.”
“It is work,” Mandy said, “we get on each other’s nerves sometimes, but we let it go.
“We’re family, and that’s what keeps us together. We see each other every day, and we still hang out on the weekends.”
As far as what brings the customers back, Smith said she thought it was the hot dogs; Mandy said she thought the whole menu should apply; and Brian G., of Maumee, Ohio said in a Yelp review, that Landry’s shrimp po-boy is “the best in the state.”
Mandy admitted that when she initially took the reins from Theresa, she would call her to get recipe reminders of how to make the food taste authentic.
“I was on the phone with her every day,” she said, “and she would tell me what to do with the (plate) lunches, and I finally have almost perfected it, like she had it, or close enough that nobody can tell the difference.
“I never had to cook any of this stuff before she left.”
According to her, Theresa was offered a canning business in the past, and was even asked to sell her recipes, both of which she refused.
“She’s very personal,” she said, so much so that she reportedly never committed her recipes to paper, but only passes them on from mouth to ear.
When asked what she expected for the future of the family restaurant, Mandy said, “I’m going to keep going. I have to, as long as I can, and then I’ll turn it over.”
No doubt to “kin,” as Mandy calls them.
After all, that’s how Landry’s has survived up to now—family and determination…and home-cooked food.

Armory

After a dozen years empty, the former National Guard Armory gets a breath of life

It’s been a fixture on Cynthia Street for well over half a century.
The National Guard Armory building hasn’t been staffed in a dozen or so years, but it remains in the memories of those who served in its purpose.
It once housed a shooting range, offices, a gym and outside on the grounds, a secure ordnance storage facility.
There are still many locals who recall the building in its heyday, the sound of drills and range fire, a kitchen at work, lockers and duffels and desks in offices filled with paperwork.
Constructed about 1957, withand an open house held for the public in 1958, now the building is being repurposed to serve the St. Mary Parish Office of Emergency Preparedness and Homeland Security, and its new director, David Naquin, is overseeing its rebirth.
The building was given to the City of Franklin some years ago, and in turn was transferred to the parish.
“We’re going to use it for bulk storage,” Naquin said. “It’s hot in here, obviously, but we’re going to put exhaust fans in the two louvered windows, that should suck a lot of this hot air out.
“This building trained our parish president, David Hanagriff,” he added. “National Guardsmen used to train out of here. Several people have come by to look at it, just to tell me about their time here.”
Naquin took over from former director Duval Arthur in February. The dominant supply feature in the expansive gym area right now is cots for use in emergency situations if residents are driven from their homes. Though in a bit of disarray at the moment, Naquin is having them shrink-wrapped on pallets and stacked neatly against the walls.
“The main thing with wrapping them is to keep the dust and moisture out,” he said.
The supply room has a secure, walk-in locker, marked “RESTRICTED AREA” and “NO SMOKING”; a nearby door stenciled in black, “MASTER GUNNER,” and there is a sort of shadowy ambiance that speaks of a time when the old brick building bustled with activity, voices and proud Guardsmen.
Racks and shelves line the walls where arms and personal items were stored. Due to the structure’s age, Naquin said all lead and other hazardous materials have been abated.
There are signs of vandalism and attempts at forced entry, but there were no apparent intrusions.
Stacks of wooden chairs dating back decades were used for classes, now at rest along a long, gray wall with one bright window.
Naquin, a former four-term sheriff of St. Mary Parish, also pointed out a number of Hesko baskets, which can be filled with sand and utilized to hold back flooding.
There’s a supply of mops, brooms and buckets for emergencies.
Items that require cooler conditions, such as MREs and bulk cases of bottled water, will be stored at a more appropriate location, Naquin said.
A brand-new fire suppression system is in place in the kitchen.
Supplies will be situated in rows that leave room for a newly-acquired forklift to move them into and out of a large roll-up door at the rear. There are pet carriers, too.
With doors long ago marked “Male Latrine” and “Female Latrine” the halo of its military presence remains in place, if diminished.
The old building is in remarkably good shape considering its age, though the hedges out front have grown wild and wooly, and various other species of plants peek out from the gutters. A main roof at the sides and a higher one at the center once had many windows, but Hurricane Andrew broke them all, and it was re-sided with sheet metal panels.
“How many hurricanes this thing has been through?” Naquin noted.
OEP’s office will remain in the courthouse, and the Armory will only be used in an emergency situation.
A generator will be installed to power the building in the event of an outage, Naquin said.
“We’re going to try to keep the flora and fauna of the National Guard Armory as we can, because there were so many people that were here,” he said. “You can name a lot of people who have been through this building over the years. We’ve got all the price quotes in. I’m trying to get approval on the next grant cycle, and I think it’ll go through. I think we’ll spend $13,000 to $15,000 and we’ll be up and running.”
As Naquin closes and locks the old door with a clang that reverberates within the Armory, one might be tempted to believe they heard a shout of order or a call to chow.
Or perhaps it is just the memories of an old building, an old soldier in its own right, stirred again by footsteps on its tile floors and voices between its walls.

WALTER MILES SR.

Walter Miles Sr., 96, a native of Terrebonne Parish and resident of Gray, died Saturday, July 21, 2018.
Visitation will be Saturday from 9 a.m. until services at 11 a.m. at Mt. Vernon United Methodist Church in Gray. Burial will follow in Halfway Cemetery.
He is survived by his son, Walter Miles Jr. of Gray; daughters, Martha Williams and Tammy Maddox, both of Gray; three grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; sister, Bessie Williams of Morgan City; and a host of other relatives.
He was preceded in death by his wife, son, parents, brothers and two sisters.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

TAWANDA ROGERS

Tawanda Rogers, 41, a native of Natchez, Mississippi and resident of Houma, died Wednesday, July 18, 2018 in Las Vegas.
Visitation was today at Mt. Calvary Baptist Church in Chauvin. Burial followed in church cemetery.
She is survived by a daughter, Ty’Ashia Stewart of Houma; parents, Patricia and James Earls Sr. of Natchez, Mississippi; brother, James Earls Jr. of Morgan City; sisters, Amanda Earls, Chelsea Earls and Jontranae Eanochs, all of Houma; maternal grandmother; and a host of other relatives.
She was preceded in death by her paternal grandparents and maternal grandfather.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

WELTON WALKER SR.

Welton Walker Sr., 65, a native of Terrebonne Parish and resident of Gray, died Friday, July 20, 2018.
Visitation will be Saturday from 9 a.m. until services at 11 a.m. at New Magnolia Baptist Church in Schriever. Burial will follow in Halfway Cemetery.
He is survived by his wife, Cora Odomes Walker of Gray; sons, Welton Walker Jr. of Morgan City and William Walker; seven grandchildren; two great-grandchildren; mother, Mable Walker of Gray; brothers, Ernest Smith and Wallace Smith; sisters, Diane Walker, Barbara James and Yvonne Coleman, all of Gray; and a host of other relatives.
He was preceded in death by his grandparents.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Supporting AGU art show

Submitted Photo
Morgan City attorney J. Patrick Skiles gives a Purchase Award donation to Helen Allen for the Artists Guild Unlimited Labor Day Art Show & Sale. The show will run Aug. 20-Sept. 22. Call AGU, 985-385-9945, or Diane Martin, 985-513-2341, for more information.

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