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Chick's Burger celebrates 30 years

A ribbon cutting was held Friday to celebrate the 30th Anniversary of Chick’s Burger in Baldwin. Local officials, friends and family turned out to support the business and enjoy the new expanded menu. Allen and Thelma Guillotte opened Chick’s Burger in 1987 and current owners Trish and Randy Mestayer are the third generation of the family to run the business. Located at 502 Main St. in Baldwin, Chick’s Burger is open Monday through Thursday from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Friday and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. They are closed on Sundays. To place an order or for more information, call 923-4390.

District 3 AA Tournament action washed out, rescheduled

Action at the District 3-AA Dixie Youth Tournament was washed out again Tuesday due to inclement weather. Games now will be held Thursday, with F r a n k l i n a n d Thibodaux meeting at 5:30 p.m. and Morgan City and Patterson playing at 6:45 p.m. If necessary to determine the top two teams from the tournament, St. Mary Central and Franklin will play Friday. The top two teams from the district tournament will advance to the state tournament. Patterson 12s to begin state tourney play T h e P a t t e r s o ...

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Colonel volleyball unveils 2017 slate

Head Coach Tommy Harold released the Nicholls State University volleyball program’s 2017 schedule June 27, highlighted by four non-conference tournaments, nine home matches and an alumni scrimmage.
“Our schedule lines up nicely this year,” Harold said in a news release. “We will see a mix of different styles of play that should serve us well as we prepare for play in the Southland. There are some very challenging matches on the schedule that should push us to improve. I think the team will embrace these challenges and process of improving daily.”
The Colonels will participate in two-day tournaments at Southern Miss (Aug. 25-26), UL-Lafayette (Sept. 1-2), Tulane (Sept. 8-9) and Memphis (Sept. 15-16) before commencing Southland Conference play at McNeese Sept. 19.
The Colonels’ home opener is Sept. 12 against Mississippi Valley State at 6:30 p.m.
Harold and his squad have 16 Southland Conference contests lined up, eight at home and eight on the road.
The 2017 Southland Conference Tournament will be held at the Dugan Wellness Center on the Texas A&M-Corpus Christi campus. The three-day event, beginning Nov. 17, will
host the top-eight Southland Conference teams based on regular-season conference winning percentage.
The match featuring the 2017 team and Nicholls volleyball alumnae will take place Aug. 19 at 1 p.m. inside Stopher Gym.
Berwick High alum Brie Hill is a member of the Nicholls State volleyball team.
For the latest news on Colonel volleyball, follow the team on Twitter @Nicholls_VB.

Lombas-Engleton set July 22 wedding

Mr. and Mrs. Fredy Belsome of Chauvin wish to announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Vanessa Marie Lombas, to Matthew Engleton Sr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Engleton Sr. of Berwick. The wedding will take place at 5 p.m. July 22 at the Patterson Area Civic Center.

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Soy ‘milk’? Even federal agencies can’t agree on right terminology

NEW YORK — Dairy farmers want U.S. regulators to banish the term “soy milk,” but documents show even government agencies haven’t always agreed on what to call such drinks.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture “fervently” wanted to use the term “soy milk” in educational materials for the public, according to emails recently released in response to a lawsuit. That irked the Food and Drug Administration, the agency that oversees the federal rule defining milk as coming from healthy cows.
It’s “not a trivial decision,” the FDA warned in one of the 2011 emails about the USDA’s desire to use the term.
The sour history over who gets to use “milk” reaches back to at least 1997, when a soy foods group petitioned the FDA to recognize the term “soymilk.” A couple of years later, the group pointed out that the FDA itself had used the term. Even now, the National Milk Producers Federation says it’s working to build support for legislation directing the FDA to enforce the federal standard. The dairy group says both “soy milk” and “soymilk” are inappropriate ways to describe non-dairy drinks made from soybeans, and that the one-word version is just an attempt to get around the definition.
There are plenty of other food names at issue. A European Union court recently ruled that a company named TofuTown can’t describe its products as “cheese.” U.S. rice producers have railed against “pretenders “ like diced cauliflower and said they may take the issue to the FDA.
But the FDA hasn’t even always been able to get other agencies to go along, as illustrated in the emails obtained by the Good Food Institute, which advocates alternatives to industrial animal agriculture. The GFI sued the FDA for public records relating to soy milk.
The email exchange started when a nutrition adviser at the Department of Health and Human Services alerted the FDA that the USDA planned to use “soy milk” in educational materials about dietary guidelines.
“USDA staff are preparing consumer publications and fervently want to use the term ‘soy milk’ because beverages are widely marketed this way,” the adviser wrote.
The FDA bristled and provided the federal definition of milk as a “lacteal secretion” from cows. Therefore, the FDA declared that referring to soy, almond and rice drinks as “milk” would be incorrect. It suggested the other agency say “beverage” or “fortified beverage.”
When that didn’t put the matter to rest, the FDA warned that the USDA’s use of the term could undermine the FDA’s regulatory authority.
That apparently didn’t stop the USDA, either.
“They are adamant about using the term in consumer publications,” the nutrition adviser wrote. The USDA had indicated that it would use “soy beverage” in official policy documents, but it wanted to use “plain language” in materials for the public.
Despite the federal regulation, others may also consider “soy milk” an acceptable term. For its definition of “milk,” for instance, the Merriam-Webster dictionary allows for a “food product produced from seeds or fruit that resembles and is used similarly to cow’s milk.”
Asked how the spat was resolved, the USDA provided materials from 2011 that use both terms by referring to “soymilk (soy beverage).”
The agency also uses the term elsewhere, including on its “Choose My Plate” website, which currently says “calcium-fortified soymilk (soy beverage)” is part of the dairy group.
The National Milk Producers Federation says the USDA’s usage of the term shows even other government agencies are confused about how to describe soy beverages in the absence of consistent enforcement by the FDA.
The FDA didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Man who inspired ice bucket challenge is back in hospital

BOSTON (AP) — The man who inspired people around the world to dump buckets of ice water over their heads to raise millions of dollars for Lou Gehrig’s disease research is back in the hospital and is keeping his sense of humor.
A Facebook post from the family of 32-year-old Pete Frates said he is resting comfortably at Massachusetts General Hospital and that “doctors, medicine, prayers and love continue to help him get stronger.”
After some news outlets erroneously reported Monday that he had died, Frates responded by posting a 45-second video on Twitter showing him lying in a hospital bed while the song “Alive” by Pearl Jam plays in the background.
Frates’ family said Sunday that he had returned to the hospital and was “battling this beast ALS like a Superhero.”
He was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in 2012. The disease weakens muscles and impairs physical functioning. There is no known cure.
The ALS Ice Bucket Challenge raised more than $220 million when it took off worldwide on social media in 2014.
Frates is a native of Beverly, Massachusetts, and played baseball at Boston College. He played professionally in Germany after graduation and in amateur leagues upon his return to the U.S.
He received his diagnosis after getting hit on the wrist by a pitch and noticing it wasn’t healing properly.

Widow reconsiders romantic overture from an old friend

DEAR ABBY: This is something I can’t talk about in my grief support group. I’m a 70-year-old widow. I lost my dear husband of 35 years 17 months ago. I always was more sexual than he was. Since the funeral, I have had a one-night stand with a nice younger man, but it was a failure for me physically. Since then, I am leery. Last night, a dear friend visited. He knew both of us for years. I had flirted with him last year, but nothing happened. Last night he came on to me. I was upset about my failure to ...

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Franklin Banner-Tribune
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