
APD responds to UrbanCast article



The Village of Forest Hill has issued a boil advisory for Willis Gunter Rd. from OV Robbins Rd. going west to the end of the line. This includes Bell Rd. The village apologizes for the inconvenience.

On this day in history, July 23, 1885, former U.S. President and Civil War hero Ulysses S. Grant died of throat cancer at the age of 63. His death, though anticipated after a long illness, sent shockwaves through the nation. But what many may not realize is that this solemn moment in American history also gave rise to a peculiar and lesser-known “first”—a form of medical documentation that some now jokingly refer to as the world’s first “autopsy selfie.”
Dr. Shrady, Grant’s attending physician, was so determined to document the president’s final moments and the ravages of his disease that he invited an artist to sketch Grant on his deathbed and post-mortem. The results were a series of drawings that eerily resemble today’s obsession with visual documentation—even at life’s end. One image in particular, now housed at the Library of Congress, shows Grant shortly after his death, surrounded by pillows, bathed in natural light, with careful anatomical precision. It was neither macabre nor exploitative in its original intent—it was, for its time, an act of reverent scientific observation. Still, the image caused a stir when it was later reproduced in newspapers and medical journals, igniting early debate on the ethics of photographing or illustrating the deceased.
This moment, strange and morbid as it may seem by today’s standards, symbolized the late 19th century’s fascination with both death and progress. Photography was in its infancy, and deathbed portraits—both drawn and photographed—were not uncommon in Victorian households. But the Grant drawings were among the first examples of a public figure’s death being medically documented for educational purposes and public consumption. They bridged art, medicine, journalism, and a growing national obsession with hero worship and mourning.
President Grant’s funeral itself was a monumental event. Over 1.5 million people lined the streets of New York City for the largest funeral procession in the country’s history at the time. His body was placed in a temporary tomb in Riverside Park until the construction of his mausoleum—now known as Grant’s Tomb—was completed in 1897. The illustrations created immediately after his death, however, remain a strangely intimate piece of the historical record, tucked between heroism and humanity.
While historians have long noted the significance of Grant’s military campaigns and presidency during Reconstruction, the strange side note of his post-mortem portraits remains a curious footnote—a Victorian precursor to today’s digital oversharing and visual documentation of every stage of life (and death).
In retrospect, the drawing of Grant on July 23, 1885, may not have been a “selfie” in the modern sense, but it represents one of the earliest known instances where a personal and scientific image of a death became part of public record. It was a moment when mourning, medicine, and media collided—and a strangely appropriate reflection of a man whose life was lived so publicly, from the battlefields of the Civil War to the highest office in the land.
So while July 23 marks the death of one of America’s most revered figures, it also quietly marks the birth of a new way of recording history: not just through words and monuments, but through visual moments frozen in time—no matter how private or strange.

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Benny Dawain Gunter
April 6, 1954 – July 21, 2025
Service: Thursday, July 24, 2025, 11am at Pentecostals of Alexandria, Alexandria.
Martha Janice Deville
July 29, 1944 – July 19, 2025
Service: Wednesday, July 23, 2025, 11am at Hixson Brothers Funeral Home, Pineville.
Peggy Paul
May 9, 1923 – July 17, 2025
Service: Friday, July 25, 2025, 11am at Redeemer Lutheran Church, Alexandria.
Donna Carol “Momma Donna” Wilson
November 10, 1961 – July 17, 2025
Service: Wednesday, July 23, 2025, 11am at Landmark Tabernacle Church, Pineville.
Pamela Ann Couvillion
October 21, 1967 – July 14, 2025
Service: Thursday, July 24, 2025, 10am at John Kramer & Son Funeral Home, Alexandria.
Mabel B. Foster
December 19, 1925 – July 14, 2025
Service: Saturday, July 26, 2025, 10am at First United Methodist Church, Lecompte.
Mary Lee Goldman
October 21, 1947 – July 10, 2025
Service: Saturday, July 26, 2025, 12pm at Magnolia Funeral Home Masonic Chapel, Alexandria.
Bruce Edward Van Zandt
January 13, 1948 – June 25, 2025
Service: Saturday, July 28, 2025, 10am at Greenwood Memorial Park Cemetery, Pineville.
The Rapides Parish Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $95. Contact your funeral provider or RPJNewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to RPJNewsla@gmail.com)



By JIM BUTLER
A substantial overhaul in the operation and management of the Rapides School Board’s Head Start program though productive has been for naught.
The board administration has been informed the program has been awarded to Save the Children, which operates Head Start in several other parishes.
From the board:
On Thursday, July 17, 2025, the Rapides Parish School Board Administration was officially notified that it will no longer be the Head Start grantee. Effective August 1, 2025, Save the Children Head Start will become the official grantee. Rapides School Board Administration and Save the Children Head Start are committed to ensuring a smooth transition.
The Office of Head Start, through the Designation Renewal System (DRS), has named Save the Children Head Start to provide services within the Rapides Parish Community. Therefore, on August 1, 2025, the administration of the program will be the responsibility of Save the Children Head Start. All current families will remain enrolled, and those who have completed applications will be handled through Save the Children Head Start.
Jeff Powell, Superintendent of Rapides Parish Public Schools, said, “We were privileged to have served the children and families of Head Start for the last five years and know that we have made a positive contribution to the children and families in our community. We look forward to partnering with Save the Children Head Start as part of our Rapides Early Childhood Network, as an effective Head Start program has a direct impact on the overall success of the children and community it serves. We are confident that Save the Children Head Start will continue to provide important and quality Head Start and Early Head Start services. We offer them our best wishes for success.”
Families and current employees will be receiving information directly from Save the Children Head Start in the next few days.

I know this isn’t the week of Thanksgiving, but I am in a mood to count my blessings. When you find yourself lamenting this and complaining about that, a good counter measure is to count your blessings.
So here we go.
I am thankful for my wife, our children and grandchildren. My siblings. My cousins. My friends. Ah, my friends. How fortunate Janet and I have been to have a core of great friends we have known for several decades. We raised children together; we’ve been through good and bad times together. We’ve laughed with them, wept with them, worked with them, played with them and prayed with them.
“A good friend,” according to an Irish proverb, “is like a four-leaf clover; hard to find, lucky to have.” …
I’m thankful that on a given day I can be full with leftovers. In a world where starvation is as real as rain, we are beyond blessed to have bountiful amounts of food – and great food here in Louisiana – to eat, and clean water and other beverages to drink. …
We’re thankful we are free to worship and not persecuted or even killed just for being a Christian, a Jew or a Muslim. We are also free to not worship, or to ignore our Creator. …
I am thankful for air-conditioning in the summer, for heaters in the winter. …
And music. All kinds of music. From Toby Keith to Toby Mac. From the Righteous Brothers to Simon and Garfunkel. From Lionel Ritchie to Elvis Presley. From Andrea Bocelli to Luciano Pavarotti. From Aaron Copland to Aaron Neville. From Matt Redman to Mercy Me. From Neil Diamond to Nat “King” Cole. From Pete Fountain to Al Hirt. From Ray Charles to Roy Orbison. From the Beatles to Herb Albert and the Tijuana Brass. From Johnny Mathis to John Denver. From Lauren Daigle to Leonard Cohen.
That list could go on and on. …
I’m thankful for my hometown of New Orleans and my adopted town of Alexandria. The historic town of Natchitoches is just under an hour’s drive away. The white sandy beaches beside green and blue Gulf water in Alabama and Florida aren’t too far away. Yellowstone is long journey but so thankful to have made it. …
I’m thankful for good people I’ve met across the country and globe. People who can laugh at themselves, people who’d give you the coat off their back, people who by their example shed light not darkness on the landscape. …
I’m thankful for the stories my grandfather, who was born in 1900 in New Orleans, could tell about life in the Crescent City in the early 20th century. We grew up near the Milton Latter Library on St. Chares Avenue. Built as a mansion in 1907, it wasn’t converted into a library until 1948 to honor Milton Latter, who died in World War II. It is built on a hill, which is surprising in a city that is below sea level, but Grandaddy used to tell the story, my sister reminded me, of how mules, attached to two-wheel carts, would bring the mud from the nearby Mississippi River “batture” – the wide swath of shifting mud along the river banks – to the designated site. Someone would pull a rope to unfasten the cart to dump the load of mud. …
I’m thankful for sports, especially considering I made a career writing about them, but it wasn’t so much the sports themselves as the people involved with them. The first big-name sports star I interviewed was legendary Baltimore Colts quarterback Johnny Unitas when I was sports editor of the Blue Jay, the monthly magazine the students produced at Jesuit High School. He was an early pro football hero of mine and he more than lived up to my expectations. He was more than just an extraordinary quarterback, he was a first-class gentleman, humble and kind.
There are scores of others from so many other sports I’m thankful to have connected with, but I’m thankful for the late Masters champion Jackie Burke Jr., for the lesson in grace he showed me as a host at his Champions Club in Houston. He also gave a lesson in humility with an unforgettable answer.
After I asked him how he wanted to be remembered, he said with a frown: “Remembered? I’m not gonna be remembered and neither are you.”
You had to have been there to understand he wasn’t meaning to be ugly. It was more his way to remind in snappy fashion what Qoheleth said in the Book of Ecclesiastes: “Vanity of vanities; all things are vanity. Nothing is new under the sun.”

By JIM BUTLER
Alexandria’s Josh Johnson debuts tonight as one of the rotating hosts of The Daily Show (Comedy Central, 10 p.m.) He joins Jon Stewart and others in the rotation. Johnson has been a writer for the show since 2017.
A graduate of Holy Savior Menard and of Centenary College, Shreveport, Johnson, 35, enjoys a world-wide following via social media as a standup comic.
He has had two acclaimed hour-long comedy specials and voices Harry Buns on Disney Channel’s “Kiff” series His current tour is playing to large audiences at every stop.
Johnson is an Alexandria native, a son of teachers. His mother later worked for the parish library.
His host role begins amid extraordinary attention to late-night TV programming.
The unexpected deep-sixing last week by Paramount CBS of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert has two versions:
The company says dropping the show and Colbert is a financial decision, no longer throwing good money after bad.
Its critics say the company bowed to pressure from the White House, a regular target of Colbert darts, to smooth the way for a pending deal that requires FCC approval.

Morris Taft Thomas does a presentation and signing for his latest book, Art and Vision: A Family Tradition, on Friday, July 25, 5-6:30pm at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Branch of RPL.
Mr. Thomas has won numerous awards and recognitions for his many talents. Most notably he made a White House Christmas Tree Ornament and attended the festivities in 2001, received Louisiana’s Governor’s Art Award from Governor Mike Foster (2008), received commendations from the State Legislature (2018), and so much more. He is also the author of Contributions of Negro Artists in Louisiana (1972) and Eminent Black Artists in Louisiana (1975).
His work is in many public and private collections. Some of his public works are located at LSU in Baton Rouge, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, the Alexandria Museum of Art, Southern University Museum of Art, the Abbeville Museum of Art, the White House Archives, and the City of Alexandria. Notable private collectors include: B.B. King, Yolanda King, former South African President Nelson Mandela, the estate of Alex Haley, and the estate of President Jimmy Carter. He is also a huge supporter and advocate for the Rapides Parish Library and an esteemed member of the RPL Board of Control.
There will be a door prize giveaway from author.

The Rapides Symphony Orchestra has released its fall schedule.
And just in time for the schedule release, the RSO has launched a Summer Sale. Get a pair of tickets to each of the final three concerts of the 2025 Season for $100 (a 33% savings over individual ticket prices). Tickets may be purchased via the RSO site.

Oak Hill Fire Department has released its data relating to calls made between July 7 and July 13.
As a reminder, there are four prizes this year up for grabs. They are as follows.

Every month, the Rapides Area Drug Enforcement (RADE) Unit receives several complaints throughout Rapides and Grant Parish in reference to possible narcotics activity in certain areas. While each complaint received gets assigned to an agent, some go without an arrest being made within a short amount of time. These complaints take further investigation.
Between July 15-18, the RADE Unit dedicated extra manpower and time to revisit each of the complaints received during the past six months in Rapides and Grant Parishes. With the extra manpower from the RPSO Uniform Patrol, Resident Deputy Section and Crime Suppression Unit, along with the Grant Parish Sheriff’s Uniform Patrol Division and Louisiana Department of Probation and Parole, RADE conducted OPERATION: SUMMER HEAT-I.
Agents, along with the other uniform law enforcement, conducted traffic stops and search and arrest warrants in the following areas: Cotile Lake, Boyce, Flatwoods, Glenmora, Forest Hill, McNary, Plainview, Alexandria, Pineville, Lecompte, Cheneyville, Woodworth, Ball, Tioga, Kolin and Deville in Rapides Parish and several locations in Grant Parish including Colfax.
The results of OPERATION: SUMMER HEAT – I are below:
81 arrests
7 traffic citations issued
1 ICE detention assist
27 guns seized – 4 stolen guns recovered
Approximately 13 pounds of marijuana
Approximately 2 pounds Methamphetamines
12 grams crack cocaine
30 assorted CDSII-III pills
3.5 grams of mushrooms
5 sheets of K-2 (synthetic marijuana) infused paper for smoking
$69,145 in cash seized
“We know the public and our media partners had a lot of questions last week when they saw our deputies in different areas conducting operations. This is what we were doing” said Sheriff Mark Wood. “We do not publicize or do releases until the end due to the fact this could jeopardize ongoing enforcement operations. We appreciate the public as well as our media partners patience.”
Both Rapides and Grant Parish now have a cell phone app where citizens can send information to RADE. Also RADE has a Facebook Page where information can be sent as well as receiving all Crime Stopper tips for the Central Louisiana area.
“We will continue to conduct these operations, concentrating on illegal narcotics activity and gun crimes in our area but we also need the public’s help. These arrests with the gun and drug seizures are a direct result of the citizens and their complaints. As I have said many times before, just point us in the right direction and we will go from there” said Sheriff Wood.
The Rapides Area Drug Enforcement (RADE) Unit is a multi-jurisdictional team comprised of the Alexandria Police Department, Ball Police Department, Boyce Police Department, Cheneyville Police Department, Forest Hill Police Department, Glenmora Police Department, Grant Parish Sheriff’s Office Lecompte Police Department, McNary Police Department, Pineville Police Department, Rapides Parish Sheriff’s Office, Woodworth Police Department, Grant Parish District Attorney’s Office, Rapides Parish District Attorney’s Office and the Louisiana Department of Probation and Parole.

Agents assigned to Rapides Area Drug Enforcement (RADE) Unit were at a local convenience store in Pineville when they observed multiple vehicles arrive where the occupants exited and appeared to be filming a video on July 17.
Agents observed several subjects got out of the vehicles smoking what appeared to be and smelled like marijuana. One male was observed waving a firearm while someone else filmed their actions. RADE agents, along with officers from the Pineville Police Department, made contact with group of males in the parking lot to investigate and they were detained pending further investigation.
During their investigation, agents located approximately 3 ounces of high grade marijuana along with three firearms.
Agents arrested Ishmael Elijah Bankston for Possession of CDS I (Marijuana) > 14 grams and Illegal Carrying of a Firearm with Drugs, Janarious Fisher for 2nd Offense Possession of CDS I (Marijuana) < 14 grams and Disturbing the Peace, and Aaron Darnell Allen was arrested for Possession of a Stolen Firearm.
Bankston was released on a $25,500.00 bond the following day. Fisher was released the same day on a $1000 bond. Allen was released the following day on a $25,000 bond.
Another subject was issued a criminal citation for Possession of CDS I (Marijuana) < 14 grams and was released at the scene.
RADE would like to thank the Pineville Police Department for their assistance in this investigation.
The Rapides Area Drug Enforcement (RADE) Unit is a multi-jurisdictional team comprised of the Alexandria Police Department, Ball Police Department, Boyce Police Department, Cheneyville Police Department, Forest Hill Police Department, Glenmora Police Department, Grant Parish Sheriff’s Office Lecompte Police Department, McNary Police Department, Pineville Police Department, Rapides Parish Sheriff’s Office, Woodworth Police Department, Grant Parish District Attorney’s Office, Rapides Parish District Attorney’s Office and the Louisiana Department of Probation and Parole.

Officers with the Alexandria Police Department responded to reports of gunfire near the South Traffic Circle on Saturday, July 12, at approximately 3:30pm. The investigation revealed that shots had been exchanged between the occupants of two vehicles. During the incident, a vehicle driven by an uninvolved motorist was also struck. Fortunately, no injuries were reported.
During the initial investigation, one suspect vehicle was identified as a blue Chevrolet Malibu. The following day, Sunday, July 13, detectives located a second vehicle believed to be involved—a white Ford Crown Victoria.
Alexandria Police arrested Austin Page, 24, and Joshua Henderson, 25, both of Alexandria, in connection with the July 12 shooting on Saturday, July 20, at approximately 2:30pm. Both individuals were booked into the Rapides Parish Jail on charges of Illegal Use of a Weapon. Bond for each suspect was set at $100,000.
These arrests were made possible through crucial information provided by a witness following the department’s public call for assistance.
Chief Chad Gremillion stated: “We are grateful to the community members who stepped forward with information. Every tip matters. When the public gets involved, it gives us the tools we need to hold violent offenders accountable and keep our neighborhoods safe.”
This is currently an ongoing investigation.
If anyone has any information about this incident or any other type of crime in the Alexandria area, contact the Alexandria Police Detective Division at the phone number 318-441-6416 or APD Dispatch 318-441-6559. Information can be emailed to detectives at APDDetectives@cityofalex.com.
For a cash reward, call Crime Stoppers of CenLa at 318-443-7867. The Crime Stoppers P3 Tipster App can also be downloaded to leave tips and get a claim number for a cash reward at www.p3tips.com/community/mobile.

Terrence was a troublemaker. As a teenager in the 1940s, he joined a gang and habitually stole hubcaps from vehicles which he then sold to people who were missing hubcaps. As a result of his troubled youth, his parents sent him to the California Junior Boys Republic in Chini Hills, California, a school for troubled boys.
In 1946, he joined the United States Merchant Marines and joined the United States Marine Corps the following year. Terrence was assigned to the 2nd Tank Battalion where he was trained to be a tank mechanic. That should have straightened Terrence out, but he had trouble with authority.
Terrence was in a constant cycle of promotion and demotion. He started as a private, would get promoted to private first class, then would thumb his nose at authority and get demoted back to private. On one occasion, he abandoned his fellow soldiers and spent two weeks with his girlfriend. For that infraction, he was demoted and spent 41 days in the brig.
Terrence recalled, “I was busted back down to private about seven times. The only way I could have been made corporal was if all the other privates in the Marines dropped dead.”
Following his stint in the brig, Terrence changed his attitude toward the Marines. He began to excel as a soldier and was put in command of his own tank despite his being a lowly private first class. During a training exercise, Terrence’s tank crew was among several sent to the Labrador Sea in the Arctic for an amphibious training exercise.
While en route, the transport ship from which they we preparing to disembark struck a sandbar with such force that it sent several tanks and their crews overboard. Without hesitation, Terrence dove into the icy water and saved five Marines from a sinking tank. His superiors regarded him as a hero, but Terrence considered himself anything but a hero because numerous other Marines drowned. He was unable to save them all.
Despite his poor service record, Terrence’s heroic act led to his being assigned to the honor guard aboard the USS Williamsburg, the presidential yacht for President Harry Truman. He served on the presidential yacht for the remainder of his time in the Marines and was honorably discharged in 1950.
Terrence considered his options in life after the Marines. In 1952, he used the G.I. Bill to pay for acting lessons at the Herbert Berghof Studio. In that same year, he appeared as Freddie in a TV movie called “Family Affair.” In 1953, he had a small uncredited part in his first film, “Girl on the Run.” In 1955, he made his Broadway debut in “A Hatful of Rain.” From 1952 until 1960, Terrence appeared in numerous Broadway plays, over a dozen TV productions, and half a dozen films.
During the 1960s and 1970s, Terrence became wildly popular for his roles in films such as “The Towering Inferno,” “The Magnificent Seven,” “Bullitt,” and “The Great Escape.” Although the Marines considered him a hero, Terrence became known around the world as an anti-hero, the “King of Cool.” Terrence the troublemaker was Terrence Steven “Steve” McQueen.
Sources:
1. “McQueen, Steven,” TogetherWeServed.com, accessed July 13, 2025, https://marines.
2. “Steve McQueen,” Veterans Benefits Network, accessed July 13, 2025, https://vetsbenefits.net/
3. “Steve McQueen,” VA News, accessed July 13, 2025, https://news.va.gov/114620/
4. “Steve McQueen,” Navy Log, accessed July 13, 2025, https://navylog.navymemorial.
5. “Steve McQueen,” IMDb.com, accessed July 13, 2025, https://www.imdb.com/name/

BOM Bank is proud to celebrate Corey Gallion, Dawson Howie, Shannon Frame, and Breanne George on their recent graduation from the Louisiana Bankers Association’s Leadership School!
Since its inception in 2010, over 600 bankers have completed this respected program. Held twice a year, the school offers an intensive five-month curriculum with monthly in-person sessions, online coursework, and readings in between. Class sizes are intentionally small to encourage one-on-one engagement with instructors and meaningful networking among peers.
Throughout the program, participants learn from some of LBA’s most respected instructors, gaining deep insight into the technical and leadership aspects of banking.

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Benny Dawain Gunter
April 6, 1954 – July 21, 2025
Service: Thursday, July 24, 2025, 11am at Pentecostals of Alexandria, Alexandria.
Martha Janice Deville
July 29, 1944 – July 19, 2025
Service: Wednesday, July 23, 2025, 11am at Hixson Brothers Funeral Home, Pineville.
Peggy Paul
May 9, 1923 – July 17, 2025
Service: Friday, July 25, 2025, 11am at Redeemer Lutheran Church, Alexandria.
Gerald Bordelon
October 31, 1950 – July 16, 2025
Service: Tuesday, July 22, 2025, 9am at Hixson Brothers Funeral Home, Pineville.
Pamela Ann Couvillion
October 21, 1967 – July 14, 2025
Service: Thursday, July 24, 2025, 10am at John Kramer & Son Funeral Home, Alexandria.
Mabel B. Foster
December 19, 1925 – July 14, 2025
Service: Saturday, July 26, 2025, 10am at First United Methodist Church, Lecompte.
Robbie Lee Setliff
March 11, 1966 – July 13, 2025
Service: Tuesday, July 22, 2025, 10am at Pine Coupee Pentecostal Church, Flatwoods.
Mary Lee Goldman
October 21, 1947 – July 10, 2025
Service: Saturday, July 26, 2025, 12pm at Magnolia Funeral Home Masonic Chapel, Alexandria.
Bruce Edward Van Zandt
January 13, 1948 – June 25, 2025
Service: Saturday, July 28, 2025, 10am at Greenwood Memorial Park Cemetery, Pineville.
The Rapides Parish Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $95. Contact your funeral provider or RPJNewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to RPJNewsla@gmail.com)



By JIM BUTLER
It’s three weeks until public schools reopen, and 10-month employees begin their new work year Thursday, followed on August 5 by teachers and August 11 by students.
A significant change for parents and teachers this year is use of a new vendor for mapping student progress.
The days of end-of-grading period surprises are long gone. Teacher-provided information is available on-line on a regular basis.
The parish has switched from PowerSchool to OnCourse for its student information system.
Downloading the OnCourse Connect app and establishing communication links allows parents and guardians to check grades, attendance, and reports.
The School Board website contains a tutorial for guidance in creating an account through the new portal.