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MARK M. ST. ROMAIN SR.

Mark M. St. Romain Sr., at the age of 55, passed away Sunday, Nov. 12, 2017, at his residence in Erath, Louisiana. Services were held at Louisiana Funeral Services & Crematory on Saturday, Nov. 18, 2017. Fr. Louie Richard officiated in the Chapel at noon. Calvin LeMaire, Mark’s great-nephew, assisted.
Mark was born in Bossier City, Louisiana, at the Air Force Base where his parents were stationed. He was a native of Morgan City, Louisiana, and has made his home in Vermilion Parish for the past 29 years. He worked in the oil and gas industry doing welding quality control all of his life.
Mark was an avid fisherman, enjoyed cooking, and loved spending time with his family and friends.
He will be sadly missed by his wife of 31 years, M. Vivian Stoute St. Romain; children, Kimberly Sons Norwood and her husband Justin of Prairieville, Louisiana, Karen Sons Thibodeaux and her husband Starsky of Lafayette, Louisiana, and Mark M. St. Romain Jr. and his wife Lindy Gier St. Romain of Navasota, Texas; grandchildren, Keller and Molly Thibodeaux, Beau, Ben and George St. Romain and Karson Norwood; mother, Gail Juneau St. Romain; brother, Al “Marty” St. Romain Jr.; sister, Tanya St. Romain; brother-in-law, Jessie L. Stoute and his wife Louann; brother-in-law, Ralph D. Stoute and his wife Tina; sister-in-law, Audrey Stoute Duhon and her husband Calvin; along with numerous nieces, nephews, great-nieces and great-nephews.
He was preceded in death by his father, Al Martin St. Romain Sr.; paternal grandparents, Ivy and Aline St. Romain; his maternal grandparents, Seltz and Lilly Juneau; and in-laws, Rene and Janice Stoute.
The family would like to extend special thanks to Janalice J. Duhon, Troy L. Stoute, Paul and Betty Fraley, Howard and Debbie Dorr, and especially thanking his nurse, who went above and beyond, Robin Broussard, RN, and Hospice of Acadiana. The family cannot begin to thank you all for the support shown. Forever grateful.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Hospice of Acadiana, 2600 Johnston Street, Lafayette, LA.
Share your condolences, words of comfort and send memorial gifts to the family of Mark St. Romain at www.lafuneralservices.com.
Mark Martin St. Romain Sr. and his family were cared for and entrusted final arrangements to Louisiana Funeral Services & Crematory of Broussard, (337) 330-8006.

GENEVIEVE DRAGNA LIPARI

March 7, 1926- November 21, 2017
A Mass of Christian burial will be held Friday, Nov. 24, 2017, at 3 p.m. at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Patterson for Mrs. Genevieve Dragna Lipari, a native of Morgan City and a 72-year resident of Patterson, who passed away peacefully at her home in the early morning hours of Tuesday, Nov. 21, 2017, at the age of 91. Following the Mass, Genevieve will be laid to rest with her husband in the St. Joseph Cemetery Mausoleum. Fr. Jacob G. Lipari III, her grandson, will be the Celebrant for the Mass and conduct the services. A gathering of family and friends will be Friday at the church from noon until time of Mass, with the Holy Rosary being prayed at 2 p.m. Serving as pallbearers will be her grandsons, Jacob V. Lipari, Jason J. Lipari, Nicholas G. Lipari, Ryan V. Lipari, Damon G. Lipari and Mark J. Lipari.
Those she leaves to cherish her memory include her five sons, Peter J. Lipari and his wife Rose Ann of Patterson, Andrew J. Lipari and his wife Becki of Conroe, Texas, Jake Lipari Jr. and his wife Paulette of Houma, Chris F. Lipari and his wife Cheryl of Patterson, and Joe M. Lipari and his wife Ampaporn of Houston, Texas; daughter-in-law, Sue T. Lipari of Cypress, Texas; 10 grandchildren, Lia K. Lipari of Patterson, Jacob V. Lipari of Patterson, Jason J. Lipari of San Diego, California, Jaime L. Schultze of Liberty Hill, Texas, Fr. Jacob G. Lipari III of Houma, Nicholas G. Lipari of Lafayette, Ryan V. Lipari of Patterson, Damon G. Lipari of Central, Kathryn L. Villanueva of Cypress, Texas, and Mark J. Lipari of Denver, Colorado; 16 great-grandchildren; and numerous nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Jake P. Lipari; her parents, Andrea Dragna and Frances Mula Dragna; three brothers, Joe, Matt and Sam Dragna; six sisters, Katie Mancuso, Camille Cortez, Mary Grizzaffi, Lucy Ratcliff, Dominque Saleme and Beatrice Taylor; and one great-granddaughter, Madelyn Drew Schultze.
In lieu of flowers, the family asks that memorial donations be made to the St. Joseph Catholic Church, 1011 First St., PO Box 219, Patterson, LA 70392.
Family and friends may view the obituary and express their condolences online by visiting www.iberts.com.
Arrangements have been entrusted to Ibert’s Mortuary, Inc., 1111 Lia Street, Patterson, LA 70392, (985) 395-7873.

Wheel House for Nov. 22

USHERS’ TEA
At Mt. Era Baptist Church, 406 Lawrence St., Morgan City, at 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 26. Guest minister Overseer Muriel Brown, Deep Waters Ministries, Patterson. Public invited.

Congress debates drilling in U.S. refuge

CANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Sometime next April, pregnant cows in the Porcupine Caribou Herd in Canada will take the lead in an annual migration of nearly 200,000 animals north to Alaska.
From winter grounds in Canada’s Yukon Territory, the caribou traveling in small and large groups will cross rivers and gaps in the mighty Brooks Range on the 400-mile (643-kilometer) journey. Their destination is the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, a strip of flat tundra between the mountains and Arctic Ocean.
The plain provides food and a vantage point from which caribou can spot predators from far away. But beneath the lichens and cotton grass, there’s a hidden resource: crude oil.
Opening the coastal plain to petroleum drilling, with the hope for jobs and new oil for the trans-Alaska pipeline, has stood as a goal of every Alaska governor and the state’s members of Congress for three decades. And the opportunity is rising again in federal budget discussions.
Congressional Republicans are pushing for refuge drilling with a projected $1 billion from lease sales to help pay for President Donald Trump’s proposed tax cut. The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee on Wednesday advanced the drilling measure. Chairwoman Lisa Murkowski, a Republican U.S. senator, says oil production later would bring in much more revenue.
For three decades, environmental groups have fought opening oil development on the plain —home to musk oxen and polar bear dens.
“What this bill would do is turn America’s last great wilderness into a lost wilderness,” said Adam Kolton, executive director of the Alaska Wilderness League.
The refuge begins at the Arctic Ocean with salt marshes, barrier islands and beaches and transitions to the treeless coastal plain. About 25 miles (40 kilometers) from the ocean, the Brooks Range rises, providing spectacular vistas and habitat for Dall sheep, wolves and grizzlies.
The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge was created in 1960 during President Dwight Eisenhower’s administration. Congress in 1980 expanded the refuge to nearly the size of South Carolina with the provision that 2,300 square miles (5,957 sq. kilometers) of the coastal plain be studied for natural resources.
The U.S. Geological Survey estimates the plain holds 10.4 billion barrels of oil, which Murkowski calls North America’s greatest prospect for conventional petroleum production.
Murkowski has promoted legislation limiting drill pads and other infrastructure to 2,000 acres. But, while exploratory wells could be drilled only when caribou are not present, production would bring a web of drill pads connected by roads and pipelines.
Matthew Rexford grew up in the Inupiat Eskimo village of Kaktovik on a Beaufort Sea barrier island, the only village within the refuge. His people for centuries have survived on caribou, fish and bowhead whales, he said, but were brought out of starvation and third-world conditions by oil development at nearby Prudhoe Bay.
Tax revenue to the local borough, Alaska’s equivalent of a county, provided money for schools, clinics and amenities taken for granted elsewhere such as indoor plumbing. Rexford supports drilling in portions of the coastal plain.
“Further development would assure our community and region with a viable economic base to provide further governmental services to our residents,” he said.
Rexford is president of Kaktovik Inupiat Corp., a village corporation whose subsidiaries likely would bid on oil field work. Drilling, he said, can be done without harming caribou.
But Sam Alexander, representing Gwich’in Indian villages south of the refuge, takes the opposite view. The cultural identify of his villagers is tied up in the harvest of caribou, and they fear drilling’s effects on migration paths and birthing grounds.
The Gwich’in have been derided for resisting progress, he told Murkowski’s committee Nov. 2, but no amount of money earned in oil field jobs can replicate the Gwich’in healthy, traditional subsistence diet.
“Tell me how replacing caribou with highly processed food is going to be better for us,” he said. “We’d be looking at a steady diet of Spam, macaroni and cheese and other shelf-stable delicacies often at four to five times the price of what you would find in the Lower 48.”
Sandy Silver, Yukon Territory premier, says politicians of all stripes in the territory want the coastal plain kept as wilderness.
“It is... sacred calving ground for the Porcupine Caribou,” he said by phone from Whitehorse.
The herd, named for the Porcupine River, has grown to nearly 200,000 caribou, up from an estimated 170,000 in 2010, he said, noting it’s one of the only caribou populations increasing in North America.
The GOP budget projects $1.1 billion in revenue from drilling leases over 10 years. With oil production, substantially greater revenue will flow to the federal government from royalties and federal income taxes, according to Murkowski.
Critics call that overly optimistic. But drilling fits Donald Trump’s call for America to be not only “energy independent” but “energy dominant,” using coal, nuclear power, and untapped petroleum, especially on federal lands.
Author Debbie Miller was introduced to the refuge while teaching in the Gwich’in community of Arctic Village in the 1980s. She camped with her family in the refuge, witnessed thousands of caribou crossing the Canning River, wrote about her experience in books and testified in Congress that oil rigs don’t belong there.
She scoffs at the idea that $1 billion earned from lease sales, or even future royalty earnings, will play a significant role in the country’s trillion-dollar financial issues.
“You don’t try balance your budget by opening up a wildlife refuge or a national park,” she said.

New Chamber member

The St. Mary Parish Chamber of Commerce recently welcomed its newest member, longtime parish resident Lonnie LaBouve, shown here with Chamber President Donna F. Meyer.

Ribbon-cutting for The Galley

The Daily Review/Bill Decker
The St. Mary Chamber of Commerce and local officials were on hand for the Nov. 16 ribbon-cutting at The Galley, 7409 La. 182 East. Cutting the ribbon are owners Carlos Izaguirre and Camille Iazguirre, Mercedes Izaguirre and manager Maria Izaguirre.

Louisiana Politics: EWE says harassment claims are 'serious problem'

The former Louisiana governor who’s fond of saying, “You’re only as young as the woman you feel,” offered up some unexpected remarks recently about the growing number of sexual harassment claims grabbing headlines around the nation.
Edwin Edwards transitioned into the issue earlier this month while addressing a reunion of the 1973 constitutional convention at Juban’s restaurant in Baton Rouge.
Edwards initially focused his comments on the lasting legacy of the Constitution, which was adopted by voters in 1974, but took a sharp turn soon after.
“All of the bad things that have been said about me, and I know some of you remember some of that, no one ever said I attacked a 14-year-old girl,” Edwards told the audience, making a reference to U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore of Alabama.
It was a surprise topic from a governor who once counseled that the best thing to do with a Republican is “sleep with them.”
When asked on another occasion about the number of women he was adding to his administration, Edwards said, “The motto from here on out is up with skirts and down with pants.”
Edwards attempted to strike that same humorous tone earlier this month, while simultaneously underlining his own concerns about the claims that are surfacing.
“It’s amazing to me how much of that is going on now. I didn’t think all of that was happening. I must have missed something in my life,” Edwards told the delegates, to a sprinkling of laughter. “I really think it’s a very serious problem in America. I hope in some way the attention it’s getting will help resolve it and bring some attention to this serious problem.”

Hearing moves closer
for Kyle Duncan
Despite concerns about his nomination from U.S. Sen. John Kennedy, it appears as if Baton Rouge native Kyle Duncan will finally receive his confirmation hearing by the Senate Judiciary Committee, of which Kennedy is a member.
Duncan is President Donald Trump’s choice for the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
His confirmation hearing had been delayed because Kennedy was withholding support for a vote. Kennedy has expressed some doubt in the past regarding Duncan’s qualifications.
Usually the objection of a committee member is enough to keep a confirmation hearing in limbo, but Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley of Iowa broke with tradition over the weekend and signaled that a meeting is coming.
Groups like the Judicial Crisis Network have rolled out campaigns in recent weeks to drum up support for Duncan. While Kennedy hasn’t been mentioned by name in the ads, those affiliated with the pro-Duncan groups have been working reporters hard and floating the idea that Kennedy’s eventual stance will be some sort of hard-right litmus test.
Roughly a month ago, the Louisiana Family Forum urged its followers to contact Kennedy and ask him to support Duncan.
The Judicial Crisis Network spent six figures in Louisiana on TV, radio and digital ads in support of Duncan. The ad running now features Attorney General Jeff Landry praising the nominee.

Political History:
Pardoning turkeys
Louisiana politicians know a thing or two about turkeys. Especially when the hunt is on.
Just go and take a look at the social media accounts of hunter-politicians like Gov. John Bel Edwards and state Sen. Rick Ward, a Senate judiciary chairman from Maringoiun. You’ll find, among other things, some prized photos of dead birds.
And while that is certainly one way to handle a turkey, it’s a much different story up in Washington, D.C. That’s where presidents share in the rather recent tradition of pardoning turkeys.
Political history nerds really dork out over the provenance of this fowl practice. Some point to an 1863 clemency, granted to a turkey by President Abraham Lincoln. Others claim Harry Truman was the first to spare the feathered life of a gobbler, although the Truman Library and Museum has officially debunked that myth.
John F. Kennedy supposed gave a reprieve to a turkey, and the Nixon and Carter families sent the birds they received from the poultry industry to live free on nearby farms.
Ronald Reagan set some turkeys free that were destined for a White House dinner table, too, marking the moment in the 1980s when the gimmick became a ceremony and a source of journalistic humor.
Did you know that Louisiana has its own pardoning ceremony as well? It’s for a crawfish. Lt. Gov. Billy Nungesser and Zatarain’s started the tradition earlier this year by pardoning a crawfish named Emile. Nungesser is hopeful that the annual pardoning might one day draw national attention.

They said it
“You can heat turkey up. You don’t have to eat it right out the oven.”
—U.S. Sen. Kennedy, on the urgency of a tax reform vote, on FOX News
“This is doing my work for me, this election.”
—Secretary of State Tom Schedler, on the need for election reform in light of recent turnout, in The Associated Press
For more Louisiana political news, visit www.LaPolitics.com or follow Jeremy Alford on Twitter @LaPoliticsNow.

Thanks to those who serve as role models

In 1993, professional basketball star Charles Barkley made headlines when he used a Nike commercial to say, “I am not a role model … . Just because I can dunk a basketball doesn’t mean I should raise your kids. ... Parents should be role models.”
These were quite controversial comments at that time. While some agreed wholeheartedly, many saw his comments as an excuse for perceived bad behavior on his part and that of several other athletes during that era.
Louisiana Tech legend Karl Malone said of his colleague at the time, “Charles, I don’t think it’s your decision to make. We don’t choose to be role models; we are chosen. Our only choice is whether to be a good role model or a bad one.”
Kareem Abdul Jabbar was quoted as saying, “As a parent, I have a job as a role model to my children, and by extension, to other young people.”
I think these future halls of famers were right in their own way… and today’s environment only emphasizes that point more clearly.
Even Barkley was on to something. The America of today is in desperate need of some good role models, and our most pressing vacancy is in the home. Too many parents are not effectively parenting, and a generation of kids are coming of age without the same level of manners, soft skills, work ethic, education and respect for their fellow man that we typically saw not that long ago.
If role models are hard to find inside the home, where do kids find them outside of it? A growing number of our political leaders fail to live up to the same level of civility and statesmanship as their predecessors once did. Too many entertainers and athletes today literally market and exploit their negative influence on today’s youth for personal gain and fortune. Social media is becoming a race to the bottom. Traditional media responds to that same toxic demand by increasingly ignoring stories of inspiration and instead focusing more on a daily diet of unrest, crime, scandal and name-calling.
Role models are in high demand yet they are unfortunately becoming harder to find. Perhaps it’s time to go back to the basics.
Let’s start saluting soldiers and veterans again, thank them for their service and tell stories of their heroism. Police officers, firefighters and other first responders risk their lives every minute of every day to help the strangers that live among us…perhaps it’s time to tell their stories, listen to their families and learn from their daily interactions with mortality. Teachers that try to instill discipline in our children need to be supported and praised, rather than second-guessed and undermined. Businesses that grow and invest in our communities should be viewed as a critical local partner rather than an easy, poll-tested scapegoat for all of society’s shortcomings.
We used to emulate the military, first responders, teachers and business leaders. We used their experiences to teach the right morals and convictions in our children. Is that the case today?
This week at our annual Free Enterprise Awards celebration, the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry recognized several business and industry leaders that have proven to be good role models and inspiration in Louisiana.
Roland Toups with Turner Industries was awarded the Ed Steimel Achievement award. Steimel, a businessman who became a strong voice for decency, morality and reform in Louisiana from the 1970’s through the turn of the century, was a strong proponent for higher education and served as the initial leader of both the Public Affairs Research Council (PAR) and LABI. Roland Toups has been just as much a successful businessman and moral community leader as Steimel was, lending his time, faith and effort to help others time and time again during his fifty years with the company.
Jay Lapeyre and John Finan were both awarded the Free Enterprise Champion award, thanks to their efforts to reform how we assess, treat and train those offenders ready to re-enter society, as well as the countless civic volunteer positions they have held over the years to treat our sick, rebuild our cities and protect us against waste and abuse.
Donny Rouse was recognized for his actions to help those in need in the days after Hurricane Harvey, the type of largely unnoticed action taken by so many Louisiana businesses each time our people face adversity.
Graphic Packaging International Inc. and the North Louisiana Economic Partnership were recognized for the tremendous impact they are making to the economy in that region. Dow Chemical’s $2 billion in new investments focused on two Louisiana parishes were heralded and lauded, as well as the family-owned Cajun Chef Products, Inc. for the civic value they provide in St. Martinville. Christel Slaughter with SSA Consultants and the “Louisiana Calling” initiative they designed was singled out as an effective tool to help place young adults in the training they need to get a good job right here at home.
The fact is I am proud of the countless efforts throughout the year businesses big and small make across Louisiana. Hopefully, you share that pride. pay our bills. Every day they do it all again.
Stephen Waguespack is president of the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry.

Thanks from Claire House

Submitted Photo
Claire House for Women and Children, a nonprofit organization, recently thanked Henry Giroir, of Henry’s Washer & Dryer Service Repair, for donating his services. For the past 25 years, he has been repairing washers and dryers for Claire House at no cost. The residents of Claire House greatly appreciate his generosity by presenting him with a token of love.

Centerville drops tourney game to Episcopal School

Centerville drops to 1-1 on the season with a 50-40 loss to Episcopal School of Acadiana in the Ascension Episcopal School Invitational in Youngsville.
Centerville will play the loser of Westminster and Delcambre Wednesday at 6 p.m.
Leading scorers for Centerville were Jaylon Williams with 15, Marquis Strawder put up nine, Jackson Hebert tipped in six and Tykeith Joseph had five.
For ESA, leaders were Mark Dibbs with 24 and Tucker Arkin with 14.

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Franklin Banner-Tribune
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Phone: 337-828-3706
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Phone: 985-384-8370
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