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Wheel House for June 6

HARVEY RABBIT
And Friends at Morgan City Public Library 2 p.m. Thursday, June 8. Registration for Summer Reading Club and all programs are free and open to public. Call Morgan City Public Library for info, 985-380-4646.

VACATION BIBLE
School at First Baptist Church, 1915 Victor II Blvd., Morgan City, 9 a.m. to noon Monday throught Friday, June 26 to 30. Pre-registration available, call 985-384-5920.

VACATION BIBLE
Camp Super God Super Me Super Possibility at Morning Glory Ministries 6-8 p.m. Monday through Friday, June 26 to 30. Call 985-253-0921 or 985-255-3910.

HJ Scholarship winners

Submitted Photo
Briana Ruffin and Caylee Deshotel were presented with the HJ Scholarship at the Morgan City High School senior award ceremony. Both received a one-time award of $500. Presenting the scholarships were Herman Hartman, left, and Earl Johnson, right. Ruffin, second from left, is the daughter of Lana Taylor and Irvin Ruffin. Deshotel is the daughter of Christy and Sonny Deshotel.

Suspect caught with mayor’s stolen truck

A 20-year-old Berwick man, who allegedly was found in possession of Morgan City Mayor Frank “Boo” Grizzaffi’s stolen truck, has been apprehended.
—Wesley R. Bass, 20, of River Road in Berwick was arrested 1:10 p.m. Monday on a charge of possession of a stolen item over $1,500, Morgan City Police Chief James Blair said in a news release.
Bass was located and arrested at the Morgan City jail on an active arrest warrant. The warrant stems from an investigation conducted by the Morgan City Police Department Criminal Investigation Division in regard to a stolen vehicle from the area of Sixth Street.
During the investigation, evidence was obtained linking Bass to the crime. Bass was booked into the Morgan City jail with bail set at $50,000. The investigation is ongoing.

St. Mary Outreach needs volunteers

St. Mary Outreach, a local United Way affiliate, needs local support more than ever for United Way’s Day of Caring after seeing a lack of volunteers in recent years. Day of Caring has not been held in the last two years due to that lack of volunteers. Every June, United Ways nationwide host a Day of Caring, when local United Ways link up with businesses to provide volunteer services for local agencies and their projects. The last Day of Caring that St. Mary Outreach had was in 2014 and the volunteers didn’t show up. There hasn’t been a confirmed business for this year.
“With the economic downfall, companies have cut back and are not giving as much,” said Brenda Liner, executive director of St. Mary Outreach. United Way of South Louisiana in Houma is the local office that St. Mary Outreach falls under as well as agencies in Assumption, Lafourche and Terrebonne parishes. According to Liner, because St. Mary Parish Outreach sits on the border between the coverage area of the Houma and Lafayette offices, donations can be a problem. According to the United Way of South Louisiana’s Facebook page, the office is gearing up for their “Pack the Bus” school supply drive which is geared towards students in Terrebonne and Lafourche parishes but not St. Mary Parish. In the past, companies such as Walmart, Oceaneering and Target helped with projects around the outreach center.
“I would like to see more local St. Mary Parish businesses help,” said Liner. St. Mary Outreach receives volunteers from local students who need to fulfill community service requirements and regular locals looking to contribute acts of kindness. There is always work to be done and St. Mary Outreach is always in need of volunteers and donations. For more information about United Way of South Louisiana, contact the office at 985-8792416. For more information about St. Mary Outreach, contact the office at 985-385-0525.

Radio Logs for June 6

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, June 5 6:39 a.m. 300 block of Patton Street; Animal complaint. 7:09 a.m. 3200 block of Karen Drive; Medical. 7:13 a.m. 600 block of Aucoin Street; Complaint. 7:28 a.m. 100 block of Third Street; Complaint. 7:48 a.m. 400 block of Eighth Street; Animal complaint. 10:59 a.m. 1100 block of McDermott Drive; Welfare concern. 11:22 a.m. 900 block of Marguerite Street; Complaint. 11:35 a.m. 1000 block of La. 70; Complaint. 12:50 p.m. 300 block of Chennault Street; Animal complaint. 1:03 p.m. 1100 block of Federal Avenue;

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Bayou Vista Garden Club donates to promote healthy snacks

Donna Richard, Bayou Vista Garden Club Adopt-A-School chairman, presents Bayou Vista Elementary School teacher Marita McCain with a financial donation for the continuance of the “Healthy Snacks” program at Bayou Vista Elementary School. From left are Richard, McCain, and Bayou Vista Garden Club’s Carol Schaub, President Donna Bucci, Jo Ann Ryan, Janice Verret and Jean Chauvin.

Oh the Places You’ll Go! Dr. Seuss museum opens its doors

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — From the squiggly, pink handrails outside the entrance to the front hall decorated with scenes from “And to Think That I Saw it on Mulberry Street” — a real street just blocks away — the new Amazing World of Dr. Seuss museum says, “You’re off to Great Places!”
Walking into the museum that opened to the public Saturday in the author and illustrator’s hometown of Springfield, Massachusetts, is like walking into one of his beloved children’s books.
The museum dedicated to Theodor Geisel — who under the pen name Dr. Seuss wrote and illustrated dozens of rhyming children’s books including “The Cat in the Hat” and “Green Eggs and Ham” — features interactive exhibits, artwork never before displayed publicly and explains how his childhood experiences in the city about 90 miles west of Boston shaped his work.
“He would absolutely be at ease here,” said Leagrey Dimond, one of Geisel’s stepdaughters (He didn’t have any biological children). “And to know that he’s going to be here permanently, safe, protected, that people who want to know more are going to make this trip here to see him, it’s perfect.”
Examples of Geisel’s early advertising work and World War II-era propaganda and political illustrations that critics consider racist are conspicuously absent, but that’s because the museum is aimed primarily at children, said Kay Simpson, president of the Springfield Museums complex.
“They don’t acknowledge the full picture of him or they try to minimize that or sweep it under the rug,” said Ishizuka, director of The Conscious Kid Library, which lends what she says are more diverse and appropriate books for young readers.
Even in his children’s books, characters of color are subservient or secondary to the white characters, or depicted as stereotypes and caricatures, she said.
But by not referencing Geisel’s wartime work, which often stereotyped the Japanese, the museum is telling only half the story, said Katie Ishizuka, who has written on Geisel’s work.
Dimond never heard a prejudiced word out of Geisel, she said, and knows he had some regrets about the wartime work.
“If there is criticism of Ted, it has its place,” she said. “I would never try to, and he would not want any of us to try to hide away anything he did. I know that he changed with the times.”
Richard Minear, a professor emeritus of Japanese history at the University of Massachusetts, who wrote “Dr. Seuss Goes to War” about his political illustrations, says Geisel certainly had a blind spot on race, but it’s not fair to judge his entire career on that work.
“He matured and he developed a whole lot from those early years,” Minear said, noting that “Horton Hears a Who!” was an allegory about post-war Japan and the nation’s relationship with the U.S.
The organization has in the past hosted exhibits of Geisel’s wartime work, she said.
Kids are definitely the focus of the first floor of the museum, created in conjunction with Dr. Seuss Enterprises, the family company that protects Geisel’s legacy. It features games and climbable statues of Horton, the stack of turtles from “Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories” and Thing 1 and Thing 2 from “The Cat in the Hat.”
“This museum is about visitors encountering the creatures that sprang out from Ted Geisel’s imagination — Horton, the Cat in the Hat, the Lorax, Sam I Am — that got kids excited about reading, which was really his preoccupation later on in his career,” Simpson said.
Visitors are taken through Geisel’s boyhood bedroom, his grandparents’ bakery and brewery and different rooms painted in brilliant blues and radiant reds, and decorated in almost fanatical detail with scenes from the books.
The museum’s second floor has a more intimate feeling with the actual furnishings and assorted knick-knacks from Geisel’s studio from the La Jolla, California, home where he lived until his death in 1991 at age 87. Even his collection of 117 bowties is on display.
The museum is expected to draw about 100,000 visitors annually and along with a $1 billion casino scheduled to open in 2018. It is part of the Springfield’s economic renaissance, Mayor Domenic Sarno said. Geisel belongs in his hometown, the mayor said.
“Any other city in the country would be salivating to have a museum for a world-renowned author like Dr. Seuss,” he said.

Man decries false profiles on dating sites

DEAR ABBY: I was divorced three years ago, and recently went on some dating sites to find a possible companion. All the women I met had posted photos that looked nothing like them. It was embarrassing. You usually meet in a public place, so the gentlemanly thing to do is continue the encounter, only to not follow up. It would be so much nicer if women posted a recent photo/selfie so that there would be no surprises at the first date. Case in point: I had a date with a lady whose photo showed her to be slim, with black ...

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Police Reports 6-6-17

Franklin Police Chief Sabria McGuire reported the following arrests:
Mark Robin, 32, Clay Street, Franklin, was arrested on Tuesday, at 7:54 a.m., on a warrant for criminal damage to property. Robin was released on a $1,000 bond.
St. Mary Parish Sheriff Mark Hebert reported the following arrests:
Giang Duval, 36, 1214 Carmen St., Patterson, was arrested on Monday at 10:56 a.m. on a warrant for failure to appear on the charges of possession of Schedule I drugs and possession of drug paraphernalia. No bail is set.
Phi Duval, 33, 260 Vivian St., Morgan City, was arrested on Monday at 10:56 a.m. on a warrant for failure to appear on the charges of possession of Schedule I drugs and possession of drug paraphernalia. Duval was also charged on a warrant for failure to appear on the charge of theft of goods. No bail is set.
Clara Watkins, 66, 302 Glenwood St., Morgan City, was arrested on Monday at 1:01 p.m. on a warrant for failure to appear on the charges of speeding and operating a vehicle with a suspended driver’s license. No bail is set.
Yolanda Baker, 42, 917 Shady Brooks, Baton Rouge, was arrested on Monday at 4:04 p.m. for failure to yield and operating a vehicle with a suspended driver’s license. Baker was released on a summons.
Lacey Yates, 34, 5112 A Bayou Black Dr., Gibson, was arrested on Monday at 6:58 p.m. on a warrant for failure to appear on the charges of direct contempt, improper lane usage and failure to honor written promise to appear. No bail is set.
Angelo Giandelone Sr., 35, 5326 La. 182, Patterson, was arrested on Monday at 10:58 p.m. for domestic abuse battery. Giandelone was released on a $2,500 bond.
Narcotics agents arrested Charlotte McNabb, 53, 106 Riverview Dr., Patterson, on Monday at 6:24 p.m. for possession of Schedule II – methamphetamine with intent to distribute, possession of drug paraphernalia, obstruction of justice and transactions involving drug proceeds. No bail is set.

Roger Day to perform at the Franklin branch

A former camp counselor who studied German and spent ten years playing coffeehouses, Roger Day has risen to become a beloved children’s musical artist. Taking inspiration from The Beatles, U2 and The Clash, Roger Day has entertained children of all ages with his witty, whimsical lyrics. He has worked with a number of famous musical artists like the Indigo Girls, Nanci Griffith, and The Crickets, Buddy Holly’s legendary band. He has also won a number of awards including two time Parents’ Choice Gold Awards, the Dove Family Foundation Award, NACA Harry Chapin Award for Contributions to Humanity, and the National Association of Parenting Publications Gold Award. Using wit and wordplay to provide quality musical entertainment, Roger Day has succeeded in entertaining parents and children alike. He will perform at the Franklin Branch Library Wednesday at 10 a.m.

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ST. MARY NOW

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