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Obese America: 1 in 3 U.S. adults are obese

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — While a third of American adults and one in six children are obese, a report Aug. 31 suggests the rate of increase could be stabilizing in some states.
Citing statistics collected by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the report by the Trust for America’s Health and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation said West Virginia had the highest obesity rate at 37.7 percent. Mississippi was second at 37.3 percent and Alabama and Arkansas were tied for third at 35.7 percent.
The report says the adult obesity rate increased between 2015 and 2016 in Colorado, Minnesota, Washington and West Virginia, fell in Kansas, and was stable elsewhere. Colorado had the lowest rate, at 22.3 percent.
This is the first time in 14 years of conducting the annual report that any state’s rate dropped, and rates of increases in other states have begun to slow, Trust for America’s Health President and CEO John Auerbach said.
The report recommends focusing on early childhood prevention efforts, including promoting exercise, expanding investments in community-based programs, increasing health-care coverage for obesity prevention and treatment, and improving school-based efforts to provide healthy meals and physical activities.
“We conclude the report with a fair amount of optimism,” Auerbach said on a conference call. “The adult rates are showing signs of leveling off and the childhood rates are stabilizing. In our review of the policies and strategies, we found that many (states) show a lot of promise for reversing the trends and improving health if we make them a higher priority.”
The study analyzed CDC data on body mass index, a measure of height and weight. People with a BMI of 25 to 29 are considered overweight; 30 and above is obese.
The report noted that 25 states had obesity rates above 30 percent. In 2000, no state had a rate above 25 percent.
Nine of the 11 states with the highest obesity rates are in the South. States in the Northeast and the West had lower obesity rates.
Auerbach said obesity costs the nation more than $150 billion in preventable health care costs and contributes to many different health problems.
Those problems are particularly acute in the 13-state Appalachian region, which lags behind the rest of the country in 33 of 41 public health indicators, including seven leading causes of death, according to a separate study released last week by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Appalachian Regional Commission and the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky.
Obesity rates were higher among adults without a college education or with annual incomes below $15,000.
The report also found one in four young adults who tried to join the military were deemed ineligible due to fitness and weight concerns.
“Obesity rates are still far too high, but the progress we’ve seen in recent years is real and it’s encouraging,” said Dr. Richard E. Besser, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s president and CEO. “That progress could be easily undermined if leaders and policymakers at all levels don’t continue to prioritize efforts that help all Americans lead healthier lives.”

Woman posts photo of premature son delivered in amniotic sac

PITTSBURGH (AP) — A Pittsburgh woman gave birth to her premature son in a vehicle on the way to the hospital — with the baby still in its amniotic sac.
Raelin Scurry posted an Instagram photo of the newborn taken on the way to Magee-Womens Hospital of UPMC on Aug. 5. She woke her fiance to drive her there after what she thought were false labor pains turned into the real thing.
“I was just thinking we need to get to the hospital right now,” the fiance and the baby’s father, Ean Vanstory, told KDKA-TV. “And I was just driving around people and running lights.”
Scurry called 911, but before help could arrive she gave birth to the boy still in the water-filled sac.
The protective sac generally bursts in the earlier stages of labor, commonly referred to as a pregnant woman’s “water breaking.” Babies birthed in intact amniotic sacs are rare.
Scurry, who works in medical research, knew the baby would be safe in the sac. But she worried when she didn’t see him moving.
“At first he was very still, and I went to his face like this through the sac,” Scurry told KDKA, indicating she touched the sac with her finger. “And he pulled his hands and his feet up and covered his face in the sac. And I was like, ‘He’s OK.’”
Doctors broke the sac when Scurry arrived at the hospital, and the baby started crying immediately, she said.
The boy was born 11 weeks early after 29 weeks’ gestation. He was placed on oxygen and is doing well.
His parents named him Ean Jamal Vanstory Jr., after his father. They call him E.J.
—Instagram: www.instagram.com/p/BYM JRUYlNRi/?taken-by=raeee_nacoal23

Fall Movie Preview: 65 films coming to theaters this fall

NEW YORK (AP) — A month-by-month listing of 65 films coming to theaters this fall:
SEPTEMBER
“It” (Sept. 8)
“mother!” (Sept. 15)
“American Assassin” (Sept. 15)
“Brad’s Status” (Sept. 15)
“Kingsman: The Golden Circle” (Sept. 22)
“Ninjago” (Sept. 22)
“Battle of the Sexes” (Sept. 22)
“Stronger” (Sept. 22)
“Victoria and Abdul” (Sept. 22)
“American Made” (Sept. 29)
“Mark Felt: The Man Who Brought Down the White House” (Sept. 29)
“Our Souls at Night” (Sept. 29)
OCTOBER
“Blade Runner 2049” (Oct. 6)
“The Mountain Between Us” (Oct. 6)
“My Little Pony,” (Oct. 6)
“The Florida Project” (Oct. 6)
“The Foreigner” (Oct. 13)
“Marshall” (Oct. 13)
“Breathe” (Oct. 13)
“Goodbye Christopher Robin” (Oct. 13)
“The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected)” (Oct. 13)
“Geostorm” (Oct. 20)
“Only the Brave” (Oct. 20)
“The Snowman” (Oct. 20)
“Tyler Perry’s Boo 2! A Madea Halloween” (Oct. 20)
“BPM (Beats Per Minute)” (Oct. 20)
“Wonderstruck” (Oct. 20)
“Suburbicon” (Oct. 27)
“Thank You For Your Service” (Oct. 27)
“The Killing of the Sacred Deer” (Oct. 27)
“The Square” (Oct. 27)
“Professor Marston and the Wonder Woman” (Oct. 27)
NOVEMBER
“Last Flag Flying” (Nov. 3)
“Bad Moms Christmas” (Nov. 3)
“Thor: Ragnarok” (Nov. 3)
“LBJ” (Nov. 3)
“Daddy’s Home 2” (Nov. 10)
“Murder on the Orient Express” (Nov. 10)
“Lady Bird” (Nov. 10)
“Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” (Nov. 10)
“Mudbound” (Nov. 17)
“Justice League” (Nov. 17)
“Wonder” (Nov. 17)
“Coco” (Nov. 22)
“The Man Who Invented Christmas” (Nov. 22)
“Darkest Hour” (Nov. 22)
“Molly’s Game” (Nov. 22)
“Death Wish” (Nov. 22)
“Call Me By Your Name” (Nov. 24)
“The Current War” (Nov. 24)
DECEMBER
“The Disaster Artist” (Dec. 1)
“Wonder Wheel” (Dec. 1)
“All the Money in the World” (Dec. 8)
“The Shape of Water” (Dec. 8)
“Star Wars: The Last Jedi” (Dec. 15)
“Ferdinand” (Dec. 15)
“Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle” (Dec. 20)
“Pitch Perfect 3” (Dec. 22)
“Downsizing” (Dec. 22)
“The Post” (Dec. 22)
“The Six Billion Dollar Man” (Dec. 22)
“Bastards” (Dec. 22)
“Bright” (Dec. 22)
“The Greatest Showman” (Dec. 25)
Untitled Paul Thomas Anderson Film (Dec. 25)

In-laws won’t attend party unless they get to host it

DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have been married for 26 years. We have a daughter, 25, who recently graduated from college. We will have a small gathering of close friends and family to celebrate. During our entire marriage, anytime we invited my in-laws to birthday parties or other special occasions, they never accepted unless we agreed for the event to take place in one of their homes. I feel at this point they no longer deserve more invites. Although they were invited to attend the graduation, of course they refused. My husband feels we should invite them, even though he ...

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Soap Opera Review: Escape room adventure on ‘DOOL’

THE BOLD AND THE BEAUTIFUL: Eric was skeptical at first when Quinn told him that Shelia was out of bed and has been faking the extent of her head injury. Eric sent Sheila to a hotel. Bill arranged for the Spectra Fashions building to burn down. DAYS OF OUR LIVES: Chad and Abigail, who are re-marrying, and Sonny and Paul, who decided to tie the knot, agreed to have a double wedding. John and Marlena are trying to get out of the room someone locked them in at the mental hospital. GENERAL HOSPITAL: Maxie can’t figure out what kind of relationship Nathan ...

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Berwick, Patterson win week 1 contests

Berwick and Patterson High schools were the area's week 1 prep football winners Friday night.
Berwick defeated Morgan City, 34-13, in Morgan City, while Patterson topped Franklin, 26-0.
Central Catholic fell on the road in its week 1 contest to Pine High School, 27-8.
Central Catholic will return to action Sept. 8 when it hosts Class 3A Archbishop Hannan, while Berwick will host Northwest Sept. 8. Morgan City will travel to face Hanson Memorial Sept. 8, and Patterson will play at Assumption the same night.
Below are other Friday night scores from across the state, courtesy of The Associated Press:

PREP FOOTBALL
Abbeville 56, West St. Mary 21
Acadiana 17, Kaplan 12
Airline 30, Union Parish 0
Barbe 56, Ponchatoula 13
Baton Rouge Catholic 27, Parkview Baptist 25
Baton Rouge Episcopal 42, St. Michael 13
Benton 49, Wossman 7
Bossier 42, Madison 28
Buckeye 50, Block 30
Captain Shreve 48, Green Oaks 20
Cedar Creek 20, Loyola College Prep 15
Central 42, Dunham School 28
Comeaux 19, Cecilia 14
Covenant Christian Academy 27, Fisher 7
Covington 69, Franklinton 32
De La Salle 39, South Lafourche 7
Denham Springs 45, Hammond 10
Destrehan 42, Slidell 18
E.D. White 28, Central Lafourche 22
Easton 40, Jesuit 14
Franklin Parish 22, Rayville 20
Hahnville 41, West Jefferson 6
Haughton 42, Minden 7
Haynesville 19, North Webster 7
Holy Cross 2, Higgins 0
John Curtis Christian 27, Landry/Walker 18
Karr 42, Saint Paul's 23
Kinder 48, Oakdale 21
LaSalle 7, Beekman 6
Lafayette Christian Academy 48, Capitol 0
Lakeside 68, Ringgold 0
Live Oak 21, Woodlawn (BR) 0
Livonia 16, Avoyelles Charter 6
Logansport 34, Jonesboro-Hodge 19
Lusher Charter 19, Bonnabel 0
Mangham 33, Delhi 6
Marksville 44, Bunkie 0
New Iberia Catholic 42, Westgate 35
Newman 34, McMain 6
North DeSoto 28, Natchitoches Central 7
Northeast 46, Baker 22
Northside 42, Glen Oaks 0
Northwest 19, Opelousas Catholic 13
Oak Forest 34, Simpson Aca., Miss. 28
Oak Grove 23, Delhi Charter 20
Ouachita Christian 57, Arcadia 18
Ouachita Parish 42, Richwood 6
Parkway 35, B.T. Washington 8
Pearl River def. W.L. Cohen, forfeit
Pope John Paul II 40, Westminster Christian 0
Prairie View 44, Wilkinson County Christian Academy, Miss. 0
Riverdale 37, King 6
Ruston 19, Neville 10
Sacred Heart-Ville Platte 40, Ville Platte 19
South Beauregard 0, DeRidder 0
South Plaquemines 8, Belle Chasse 0
South Terrebonne 28, H.L. Bourgeois 12
Springfield 34, Ascension Christian School 7
St. Charles Catholic 29, Chalmette 0
St. Frederick Catholic 49, D'Arbonne Woods 6
St. Helena Central 50, Sumner 0
St. Martin's 13, Ben Franklin 6
St. Mary's 51, Lakeview 0
St. Thomas More 45, Lafayette 0
Sterlington 45, West Ouachita 13
Tallulah 32, Franklin Academy, Miss. 8
Terrebonne 38, Ellender 12
Teurlings Catholic 44, Breaux Bridge 7
Vandebilt Catholic 31, Thibodaux 28
Vidalia 34, Sicily Island 6
Walker 35, Dutchtown 10
West Monroe 47, John Ehret 32
Westlake 28, DeQuincy 14
Woodlawn (SH) 44, Carroll 14
Zachary 27, Northshore 7

POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS
Alexandria vs. Ferriday, ppd. to Sep 3rd.
Ascension Episcopal vs. Erath, ppd. to Sep 3rd.
Beau Chene vs. North Vermilion, ppd. to Sep 2nd.
Grand Lake vs. Vinton, ccd.
Houma Christian vs. Highland Baptist, ppd. to Sep 2nd.
Jennings vs. Church Point, ccd.
Lake Arthur vs. Elton, ccd.
Loreauville vs. Vermilion Catholic, ppd. to Sep 3rd.
Mentorship Academy vs. Ascension Catholic, ppd. to Sep 3rd.
North Central vs. Gueydan, ppd. to Sep 2nd.
Notre Dame vs. LaGrange, ccd.
Oberlin vs. Mamou, ppd. to Sep 2nd.
Plain Dealing vs. University (Lab), ppd. to Sep 3rd.
Rayne vs. Welsh, ccd.
South Cameron vs. Delcambre, ccd.
Winnfield vs. Jena, ppd. to Sep 2nd.

New name for Morgan City High field house

Morgan City High renamed its field house Friday in honor of former MCHS student and school board member Ogden E. "Oggie" Stansbury. Principal Mickey Fabre said Stansbury, who lettered in boxing at the school in 1934, was instrumental in getting the current high school built in the 1970s. On hand for the dedication were Stansbury's son, Mark, and daughter, Maria, as well as Mark Stansbury's daughters Belinda (green dress), Sally Ann (blue dress) and Jill (black dress).
The Daily Review/Bill Decker

Morgan City, Berwick to meet in Week 1

Morgan City and Berwick are bracing for another slugfest Friday night.
The local teams have developed quite a rivalry facing off on the first week of the season, with Friday’s game at Tiger Stadium in Morgan City.
The Panthers beat the Tigers 27-21 last season, going on to an 8-3 record and a playoff berth, while MCHS finished 3-7.
“We are really excited to play this game,” first-year Morgan City Coach Eric Howard said. “The kids have worked really hard, and they deserve a game like this. We’ve been gearing up for Berwick. We didn’t even look at Patterson jamboree week.
“We know Berwick is a quality team, but face it: all the kids know each other, live five minutes away from each other and talk on social media,” Howard added. “So I don’t need a pregame speech. It will be a pregame count down.”
Morgan City lost to Patterson, 31-12, in the finale of the Morgan City’s Taco Bell Jamboree last week at Tiger Stadium.
The Tigers closed the game with a nice touchdown completion from Alex Brocato to Logan Tingle. The catch-and-run covered 72-yards.
Morgan City had 60 yards of total offense. The Tigers only could muster minus-22 yards rushing due to 43 yards loss via two safeties.
Tingle was Morgan City’s lone receiver with three catches for 87 yards and a score.
Brocato led the passing game, hitting 2-of-5 passes for 87 yards and a score.
Trey Derouen had seven carries for 19 yards, and Marquil Singleton carried five times for 17 yards and a score.
“I think the team that handles their emotions early will be in good position to win the game,” Howard said.
Berwick upended South Plaquemines, 20-6, in the early game of the Taco Bell Jamboree.
The Panthers jumped out to a 13-0 first-half lead, scoring on their second and third offensive possessions. Berwick’s first score came when quarterback Mitchell Sanford hooked up with wide receiver standout Kenan Jones for a 32 yard score. Running back Josh Jones added a short run for the 13-0 lead.
Keyon Singleton set up the Panthers next score with a long kickoff return before Collin Louviere connected with Josh Jones for 46-yard touchdown pass with 5:48 remaining.
Berwick totaled 230 yards of offense (158 passing and 72 rushing).
Denver Jenkins led the Berwick rushers with two carries for 29 yards, while Josh Jones had eight carries for 23 yards and a score.
Sanford completed 6-of-21 passes for 108 yards with a touchdown, while Louviere connected on 2-of-6 passes for 50 yards and a score.
Kenan Jones led the receivers with three catches for 80 yards and a score, while Josh Jones caught three passes for 48 yards and a score.
Berwick Coach Eric Holden was not available for comment.
Friday’s kickoff is 7 p.m.

Central Catholic to begin the season at Class 2A Pine

Central Catholic High School will begin its 2017 season Friday with an approximately three-hour trip to eastern Louisiana where it will face Pine High School.
The Eagles, a Division IV semifinalist in 2016 who are replacing many starters from a year ago with youth this season, will be facing a Pine High School squad that returns 15 starters. Pine advanced to the regional round of the Class 2A postseason a year ago where it fell to Kinder, 51-0.
A week ago, Pine fell in its jamboree contest to Franklinton, 23-16. Franklinton scored the game-winning touchdown with 21 seconds remaining.
“The first thing is they’re a quality opponent. …. The first thing that jumps out at you on film is how big they are,” Central Catholic Coach Tommy Minton said of Pine. “I mean they’re huge on the offensive and defensive line, so that’s two factors we’re going to have to work to control.”
Central Catholic will face its third consecutive wing-t team this week after facing Covenant Christian in its preseason scrimmage and Centerville in the jamboree. The move to face three teams that run the same offense was by design.
“It’s to get ready for, No. 1 we’re going to see Pine, and then when we get into district we see three teams in our district that run the wing t, so that’s why you schedule like you do to get yourself familiar with it,” Minton said.
Defensively, Pine will run a 4-3 look, Minton said.
In last week’s inaugural Eagle Jamboree, presented by Taco Bell, Central Catholic rallied for a 20-12 win. Trailing 12-6 with 11:49 remaining in the contest, the Eagles scored touchdowns on two Chris Singleton runs in the last 9:22 to win the game.
Singleton led the Eagles with 12 carries for 132 yards and three scores, while Davidyione Bias had 10 carries for 122 yards.
Quarterback Ryan Miller completed 1 of 2 passes, with his lone reception going to wide receiver DeDe Gant.
Friday’s kickoff is set for 7 p.m. The game will be broadcast by KBZE 105.9 FM, with pregame beginning at 6:45 p.m.

Patterson opens season at home against Franklin

Patterson opens the season Friday against longtime rival Franklin with the sting of last year’s loss still fresh on their minds. The Lumberjacks lost to the Hornets, 28-20, last season. The defeat ended Patterson’s longtime win streak against Franklin. “I think as a coach you get that uneasy filling in the opener when you’ve loss so much practice time this off season because of bad weather,” first-year Patterson Coach Ryan Stewart said. “Add that to how little field time we had in the month of August and it’s a concern. But we’re not the only team in that position, so ...

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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