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RONNIE JOSEPH COMEAUX

November 16, 1946 -October 4, 2017

Ronnie Joseph Comeaux, 70, a resident of Morgan City, passed away Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2017.

Ronnie was born Nov. 16, 1946, in Morgan City, the son of Ervin Joseph Comeaux and Helen Morgan Comeaux.

Ronnie started working in the grocery business when he was 16 years old, working for National Grocery, Canal Villere and Rouses. He worked hard to provide for his family and after 50 years in the grocery business, he retired. When Ronnie wasn’t working he loved being with his family, spending time with his children and grandchildren, often times watching football. Spending time with his family was something very near and dear to his heart. Ronnie served his country proudly while serving in the United States Army.

Ronnie will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his wife of 40 years, Nelda Greenwood Comeaux of Stephensville; two sons, Jesse Comeaux and wife Christine of Morgan City, and Scott Comeaux of Morgan City; one daughter, Chrissy Mayon and husband Adley of Morgan City; one stepson, Jeffery Holland of New Iberia; one brother, Irving Comeaux and wife Janet of Bayou L’Ourse; one sister, Catherine Hauser and husband Richard of Morgan City; nine grandchildren, Cindy O’Gara, Jesse Lee Comeaux Jr., Holly Badeaux, Colby
Comeaux, Scott “Scotty” Comeaux Jr., Kane Mayon, Alexis Comeaux, Addison Mayon and Kace Comeaux; and numerous nieces and nephews.

Ronnie was preceded in death by his parents, Ervin and Helen Morgan Comeaux; one step-daughter, Diana Deshotel; and one sister, Virginia Comeaux.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at 11 a.m. on Thursday, Oct. 12, 2017, at Holy Cross Catholic Church with Father Clyde Mahler celebrating Mass. A visitation will be held from 5 p.m. until 9 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 11, 2017, at Twin City Funeral Home with the visitation resuming from 8 a.m. until 10:30 a.m. on Thursday at the funeral home. Following Mass, Ronnie will be laid to rest in the Morgan City Cemetery with Military Honors rendered by the East St. Mary Veterans Funeral Squad.

FRANCISCO L. BASSA

July 8, 1930-October 9, 2017 Francisco L. Bassa, a native of Holguin, Cuba, a citizen of the United States and a resident of Morgan City, passed away on Monday, Oct. 9, 2017, at the age of 87. Those left to cherish Francisco’s memory are his loving wife of 61 years, Mercedes Segura Bassa; his sons, Carlos Sr. and Omar Bassa; his two daughters-in-law, Terrie Lynn Marie Bassa and Bridgett Michelle Lemoine-Bassa; two brothers, Raphael Basas and Julio Basas; two sisters-in-law, Emelina Basas and Raquel Basas; seven grandchildren, April Lynn Bassa Heard (Grant E. Heard), Carlos F. Bassa Jr. (Heidi D. Bassa), Francis ...

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JENNIFER TABB ROGER

Jennifer Tabb Roger, 55, a native of Milton, Florida and resident of Patterson, died Thursday, Oct. 5, 2017.

She is survived by her husband, Francis Roger of Patterson; daughter, Shyra Tabb of Bayou Vista; son, David Tabb Jr. of Franklin; one grandson; two sisters, Susan Parrish of Chattanooga, Tennessee and Teresa Sessions of Milton, Florida; and two brothers, Michael McCall of Bayou Vista and Patrick McCall of Milton, Florida.

She was preceded in death by her parents and one sister.

Memorial services will be Wednesday at 11 a.m. at Crossing Place in Bayou Vista.

Wheel House for Oct. 10

FATIMA
St. Bernadette Catholic Church, 1112 Saturn Road, Bayou Vista, holding a Mass in celebration of 100th anniversary of the Fatima apparitions at 6 p.m. Friday, Oct. 13. Everyone invited.

SPECIAL SERVICES
At PromiseLand Church, 200 Stable Road, Suite 1, Patterson, 6 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 14 and 10:30 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 15. Featuring Evangelist Rod Vincent. Public invited. For info call 985-518-0338.

CONCERT
Community Concert Association and Live On Stage presents 3 Redneck Tenors, finalists on “America’s Got Talent” at 7 p.m. Monday, Oct. 30, Morgan City Municipal Auditorium. Single event ticket, $25, adults and $5, students K-12. Tickets at the door. St. Mary Council on Aging offers free transportation for seniors 60 and older, call at least 24 hours prior to concert. For info on season tickets call 985-385-2307.

Zerangue-Mayon to wed Oct. 14

Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Zerangue of Bayou Vista wish to announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Nichole Ann Zerangue, to Craig Joseph Mayon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Mayon of Morgan City. The wedding will take place at 7 p.m. Oct. 14 at the Morgan City Municipal Auditorium.

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FDA panel considers gene therapy for blindness

A girl saw her mother’s face for the first time. A boy tore through the aisles of Target, marveling at toys he never knew existed. A teen walked onto a stage and watched the stunned expressions of celebrity judges as he wowed “America’s Got Talent.”
Caroline, Cole, Christian. All had mere glimmers of vision and were destined to lose even that because of an inherited eye disease with no treatment or cure.
Until now.
On Thursday, U.S. Food and Drug Administration advisers will consider whether to recommend approval of a gene therapy that improved vision for these three youths and some others with hereditary blindness.
It would be the first gene therapy in the U.S. for an inherited disease, and the first in which a corrective gene is given directly to a patient. Only one gene therapy is sold in the U.S. now, a cancer treatment approved in August that engineers patients’ blood cells in the lab.
A HEARING LIKE NO OTHER
Children, parents, doctors and scientists will tell the FDA panel what it’s like to lack and then gain one of our most primal senses.
Cole Carper, an 11-year-old boy who got the therapy when he was 8, describes how sight changed what he knew of the world. When he returned to his home in Little Rock, Arkansas, after treatment, “I looked up and said, ‘What are those light things?’ And my mom said, ‘Those are stars.’”
His sister, 13-year-old Caroline Carper, treated when she was 10, said that afterward, “I saw snow falling and rain falling. I was completely surprised. I thought of water on the ground or snow on the ground. I never thought of it falling,” because the sky was something she couldn’t see, along with other things like her mother’s smile.
The treatment, Luxturna, is made by Philadelphia-based Spark Therapeutics. It does not give 20-20 vision or work for everyone, but a company-funded study found it improved vision for nearly all of those given it and seemed safe. The company’s Nasdaq ticker symbol is ONCE, for how often it hopes the therapy is needed.
“It’s exciting” and in some cases might be a cure, although how long the benefits last isn’t known, said Dr. Paul Yang, an eye specialist at Oregon Health & Science University who is testing gene therapies for other companies. “There’s nothing else for these kids.”
HOW IT WORKS
The therapy has wider implications but was tested for Leber congenital amaurosis, or LCA, caused by flaws in a gene called RPE65. Those with it can’t make a protein needed by the retina, tissue at the back of the eye that converts light into signals to the brain that lets us see. People often see only bright light and blurry shapes and eventually lose all sight.
Parents are carriers of the flawed gene and it can lurk undetected for generations, suddenly emerging when an unlucky combination gives a child two copies of it.
“It’s usually a surprise that they have a blind child,” said Dr. Jean Bennett, a University of Pennsylvania researcher who with her husband, Dr. Albert Maguire, led testing at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. The couple designed an obstacle course to test vision after treatment, and the FDA accepted it as a valid measure of success.
“The maze was actually Al’s idea. I put it together first in our driveway,” using white tiles with arrows, foam rolls and cones, and black spaces to simulate holes that kids should avoid, Bennett said.
Maguire did many of the 45-minute operations to deliver the gene therapy; the rest were done at the University of Iowa. It involves puncturing the white part of the eye and injecting a modified virus that contains the corrective gene into the retina. Benefits appear within a month.
RESULTS
Eighteen of 20 treated study participants improved on the mobility maze a year later, and 13 passed the test at the lowest light level. None in a comparison group of nine patients did. That group was allowed to get the therapy after waiting one year, so in all, 29 were treated, plus more in earlier studies. The two who did not improve may not have had enough healthy retinal cells to respond to treatment; one improved on other tests and another stopped deteriorating.
About half of those treated were able to read three or more additional lines on an eye chart, but the variability between the groups was too big to be sure, statistically, that they were different on this measure.
Many are no longer legally blind and gained independence.
“There were children who were able to move from a Braille classroom to a sighted classroom. One person who had never worked was able to get a job,” said Dr. Katherine High, president of Spark Therapeutics and the scientist who pioneered the therapy when previously at the children’s hospital.
There were two serious side effects, both deemed unrelated to the gene therapy itself. One was due to a drug given afterward and another was a complication of the surgery.
“WHOA, MOM, WHAT IS THAT?”
Ashley Carper recalled when her children were diagnosed with the disease.
“The doctor came out with tears in his eyes. He said it was the same condition and they will be blind, and nothing could be done. Nothing.”
Cole and Caroline used canes and went to a school for the blind.
“Cole played football but he played center,” and just stood on the field after the snap to the quarterback because he couldn’t see well enough to do more, his mother said.
Ten years ago, she went to a support group conference and happened to sit next to Bennett. It took two years for gene testing to determine whether the Carper kids would qualify for the study, and insurance wouldn’t pay because there was no established treatment. A Dallas hospital picked up the tab.
Finally, the siblings were enrolled in the study, but they landed in the comparison group so they had to wait a year to be treated. About a week after Cole’s treatment, they went shopping at Target.
“When we got to the Nerf aisle I was like, ‘Whoa, mom, what is THAT? Can I get this? Can I get that? Because I had never seen what that stuff looked like,” Cole said.
Caroline has had her own delights.
“Oh yikes, colors. Colors are super fun,” she said. “And the sunshine is blinding.”
SEEING GOLD
For Christian Guardino, a senior at Patchogue-Medford High School on Long Island, the most remarkable part about performing on “America’s Got Talent” a day before his 17th birthday earlier this year wasn’t winning the golden buzzer that showered gold confetti on him and sent him into further competition — it was seeing the confetti thanks to his gene therapy several years ago.
“I walked out on that stage all by myself,” he said. “I saw the judges. It was incredible.”
His mother, Beth Guardino, said the judges didn’t know about Christian’s blindness and gene therapy until after his audition.
Before treatment, “It was dark, life without light,” Christian said. “I found a way to work through it, to cope with it, and that was music.”
Since treatment, “I’ve been able to see the most incredible things. I’m able to see stars, I’m able to see fireworks, snow falling,” he said. His favorite? “The moon. Most definitely. I’m a huge astronomy fan.”
NEXT STEPS
The FDA must decide by Jan. 18 whether to approve Luxturna. What it might cost is a worry. One gene therapy sold in Europe cost $1 million and was used by only one or two people; another has had few takers.
Spark’s chief executive, Jeff Marrazzo, would not give an estimate for cost, which companies usually announce only after approval. Some rare disease treatments run a quarter to three-quarters of a million dollars a year. Spark has talked with insurers and “there is a clear path for it to be reimbursed one time per eye,” he said.
More than 260 genes can cause inherited retinal disorders, affecting 3 million worldwide. RPE65 mutations can cause other vision diseases besides LCA, so if the treatment is approved, it should be for people with the flawed gene rather than a specific disease, said Dr. Eric Pierce at Harvard-affiliated Massachusetts Eye and Ear, who was involved in its early testing.
Laura Manfre founded Sofia Sees Hope, a group named for her 14-year-old daughter, Sofia Priebe, who has LCA but not the gene Luxturna targets. The Connecticut woman will represent families at the FDA hearing.
Sofia said she longs for a therapy that would let her “drive a car, walk into a room and be able to identify my friends, to be able to do my own makeup and to read a book in print ... and see the night sky.”

Man’s devotion to his family leaves girlfriend feeling lonely

DEAR ABBY: My boyfriend and I just moved in together. We have been a couple for seven years. Until now, we have lived with our parents.
I knew moving in would be a struggle for him because he’s very close to his four siblings. Now that we’ve moved in, he calls and video chats with them every day, visits twice a week or more and has sleepovers. He also leaves work early to take his siblings on field trips or attend their sports events.
I’m finding it very frustrating being alone all the time. I have talked to him and expressed my feelings about the amount of time he spends with his family. In my opinion, it’s excessive, especially since neither of his parents works.
He asked me to give him time to adjust, but it has already been a month. This is the man I want to marry one day, but I can’t help but feel like I’m never put first.
Please help!
CONFOUNDED IN CALIFORNIA

DEAR CONFOUNDED: You and your boyfriend have been living together a grand total of one month. This is a period of adjustment for both of you. It’s unrealistic to expect your boyfriend — who appears to be tightly bound to his parents and siblings — to instantly focus all his attention on you.
My advice, and I hope you will heed it, is to devote time to your own interests and activities so you won’t be so dependent on him. Give it six months. If things haven’t resolved in that amount of time, write me again.

DEAR ABBY: I am single, 33, and have two kids. I have dipped my toe in the dating pool without success. I am not lonely, but I find myself wanting a relationship.
When I tried dating websites, I got a mixed bag of colorful characters. When I do find someone I’m interested in, it fizzles out quickly.
We start out by messaging on the site, then we text each other. The problem I am having is that these men don’t ask “get to know you questions” or keep up a conversation at all. If I don’t text first or keep the conversation going, there’s no communication at all. All of them state they want a relationship, but they don’t put forth the effort. I’m not sure what the problem is.
Every time this happens, I forget about dating for a while, but it happens again and again. Have any sage advice for me?
LOOKING IN NEBRASKA

DEAR LOOKING: You say you are messaging back and forth. After a few days of conversation, have you suggested getting together for a coffee date? It might provide an opportunity to find out more about these men. If you have done that and encountered resistance, it might suggest you are coming on too strong or they aren’t quite as ready as they have advertised.
Because there is so much distraction and so much choice in online dating, perhaps you should consider meeting men the old-fashioned way — through friends, relatives or social groups. Meeting someone special when one least expects it has been known to happen.
***
Good advice for everyone — teens to seniors — is in “The Anger in All of Us and How to Deal With It.” To order, send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $7 to: Dear Abby, Anger Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447.

Sheriff: Threats made against deputies, families during Charenton incident

A 30-year-old man allegedly produced a gun and dropped a large sword while fleeing from authorities on foot and also threatened deputies and their families during an incident in Charenton, St. Mary Parish Sheriff Mark Hebert said in a news release.

—Jeremy Butler, 30, of Chitimacha Trail in Charenton, was arrested at 11:19 p.m. Monday on charges of disturbing the peace, resisting an officer, illegal carrying of weapons, public intimidation, terrorizing and a Chitimacha Tribal Police Department warrant charging him with disturbing the peace.
Deputies and narcotics detectives responded to a call for service about a man walking down the road waving a gun on Martin Luther King Road and Chitimacha Trail in Charenton.

When detectives arrived, they observed several residents outside their homes because of the suspicious person. Detectives made contact with the man. He then produced a shotgun and fled on foot, Hebert said.

A detective pursued the man on foot. The man then dropped a large sword and continued to flee, Hebert said. K-9 Buddy was deployed and apprehended the man, who was identified as Butler, Hebert said.

Detectives also located an active warrant for his arrest. During the subsequent investigation, Butler made multiple threats against the lives of the deputies and their families, the sheriff said.

Butler was transported to the St. Mary Parish Law Enforcement Center for booking. No bail is set.

Hebert reported responding to 34 complaints in the parish and reported the following arrest in east St. Mary Parish:

—Oscar Torres-Prodencio, 33, 903 Duke Street, Morgan City, LA was arrested on October 7, 2017 at 1:03 pm on a warrant for failure to appear on the charge of criminal neglect of family. While booking Prodencio at the St. Mary Parish Law Enforcement Center, a correctional deputy located the active warrants for his arrest. Bail on the warrant is set for $6,728.02.

Morgan City Police Chief James Blair reported responding to 22 calls and reported the following arrests:

—Angela Rhodes, 48, of Tupelo Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 5:11 a.m. Monday on a charge of possession of methamphetamine.
Patrol officers responded to a business in the area of La. 182 in regard to a narcotics complaint. Rhodes was one of the people involved. Rhodes was in possession of suspected methamphetamine, Blair said. Rhodes was jailed.

—Harmanpreet Kaur, 29, of Roderick Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 3:30 p.m. Monday on a charge of possession of drug paraphernalia.
Over the past several months, the narcotics division conducted an investigation into the sales of drug paraphernalia from a business.

The items being sold were allegedly being portrayed as being used in the consumption of illicit drugs, Blair said. Kaur was developed as a suspect and warrant was prepared for his arrest, Blair said. Kaur was located and arrested at the police department. She was jailed.

—Eric W. Robertson, 54, of Mallard Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 3:43 p.m. Monday on a charge of resisting an officer.
Patrol officers observed a person acting in a suspicious nature in the area of Mount Street, Blair said. Officers attempted to speak with the person at which time he fled on foot, the chief said.

The person, Robertson, was apprehended a short time later, Blair said. Robertson was jailed.

—Erica Pederson, 37, of Domino Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 7:04 p.m. Monday on charges of possession of alprazolam and buprenorphine.
Patrol officers responded to a local business in the area of Victor II Boulevard in regard to a person sleeping in a vehicle. Officers arrived, and Pederson was identified. Pederson was found to be in possession of suspected alprazolam and buprenorphine, Blair said. Pederson was jailed.

—Mike W. Stelter, 37, of Egle Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 8:12 p.m. Monday on a warrant charging him with probation violation
Stelter was located and arrested in the area of La. 182 on a 16th Judicial Court warrant. Stelter was jailed.

Berwick Police Chief James Richard reported no arrests.
Patterson Police Chief Patrick LaSalle reported no arrests.

Allain: More budget woes are ahead

State Sen. Bret Allain, the top Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, sees more budget problems ahead. And he hopes Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards will continue working with the Legislature to solve Louisiana’s budget problems. “I hope Edwards comes to the Legislature before he presents his budget proposal and works with us so that he makes cuts in areas that hurt the people the least,” Allain, R-Franklin, said Monday at the St. Mary Industrial Group meeting at the Petroleum Club. Allain said the projected 2018 fiscal year budget comes with a $1.5 billion deficit that can no longer be fixed ...

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Radio Logs for October 10

The following are the radio dispatch logs from the Morgan City Police Department. To report unlawful or suspicious activity, call the police department at 985-380-4605.
Monday, Oct. 9
6:45 a.m. 2300 block of Federal Avenue; Animal complaint.
6:55 a.m. 400 block of Leona Street; Medical.
10:29 a.m. Centerville; Complaint.
10:39 a.m. 1200 block of Victor II Boulevard; Welfare concern.
11:14 a.m. 500 block of First Street; Alarm.
11:18 a.m. U.S. 90 West; Stalled vehicle.
11:27 a.m. Sixth Street and Levee Road; Animal complaint.
1:42 p.m. 300 block of Grizzaffi Street; Disturbance.
2:16 p.m. 300 block of Federal Avenue; Animal complaint.
3:28 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Arrest.
3:39 p.m. Railroad Avenue and Eleventh Street; Complaint.
6:34 p.m. 2400 block of Cypress Street; Suspicious vehicle.
6:38 p.m. 1200 block of Victor II Boulevard; Suspicious person.
7:11 p.m. Hemlock and Shaw streets; Signals and signs.
7:16 p.m. 1100 block of Brashear Avenue; Suspicious person.
8:41 p.m. Louisiana Alley; Loud music.
8:42 p.m. 1000 block of Sixth Street; Missing juvenile.
11:27 p.m. Garber Street; Suspicious per-son.

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Franklin Banner-Tribune
P.O. Box 566, Franklin, LA 70538
Phone: 337-828-3706
Fax: 337-828-2874

Morgan City Review
1014 Front Street, Morgan City, LA 70380
Phone: 985-384-8370
Fax: 985-384-4255