Mediation sets Pineville’s payout to former city employee at nearly $200k

By JIM BUTLER

It will cost Pineville $188,500 to be done with Brittany Poston Mechell.

The city’s attorney outlined for the City Council Tuesday evening the mediation process that led to that figure.

It represents payment to Mechell, a city employee at the time, for her discrimination claim following affairs with then-Mayor Rich Dupree and his Chief of Staff.

The payment includes her legal costs.

As that door closes, another opens.

The council heard a report on its annual audit that raises the issue of questionable credit card charges totaling about $25,000 during the audit year.

Those findings have been turned over to the proper authorities he said as he outlined a number of procedural changes necessary in the city’s system.

The audit report will be released by the Legislative Auditor Office in the near future.


Alexandria Museum of Art issues OPEN CALL for 38th annual September competition

The Alexandria Museum of Art is pleased to announce the call for entries for its 38th September Competition is officially open. Artists working in a variety of media are encouraged to apply.

About the September Competition: The 38th Annual September Competition at the Art Museum of Alexandria (AMoA) is a prestigious juried exhibition that showcases contemporary art practices across various media. Selected by a guest juror, the exhibition features works created in the last two years by outstanding artists in their respective fields. Each year, the guest juror not only curates the exhibition but also identifies three winners and three honorable mentions, which will be announced at the exhibition opening. For more details on the awards, please refer to the call for submissions.

This year’s guest juror, Erika Mei Chua Holum, serves as the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Associate Curator at the Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston. Holum is known for her innovative projects, including Makeshift Memorials, Small Revolutions in collaboration with KADIST San Francisco (2024), and solo exhibitions featuring artists Cian Dayrit (2024), Saif Azzuz (2025), and Ja’Tovia Gary (2026). Holum is also organizing Ecofictions and Understories (2023-24), a curatorial program exploring artistic practices focused on gathering, resistance, and regeneration, in conjunction with the Climate Migration exhibition at the Houston Climate Museum, supported by the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Center for the Arts. In 2024, she launched the Sahara Dust Season, an artist collective centered on knowledge-sharing influenced by Saharan dust clouds. Holum has contributed to global projects and exhibitions, including Majority Rule: Myth-making and survival strategies from AAPI artists at Sanman Studios (2023) and makibaka! Fifty Years of Filipino-American Youth Activism at Alief Art House (2021). She holds an MA in Museum and Exhibition Studies and a Master’s in Library and Information Science, and is currently completing a PhD in Art History at Rice University.

Additionally, the museum’s Collections Committee will select one work to be added to the museum’s collection. This year, a piece by local artist Laura Gates has been chosen.

Leaving the Refuge on a Winter Evening, oil on canvas, 2024
by Laura Gates
Gates’s paintings delve into landscape and place, capturing the essence of the original inspiration that drives her curiosity. Working both in the studio and en plein air, she interprets the specific context of each location. Gates employs a variety of tools, including knives, to manipulate the paint, resulting in a freer and more abstract quality in her work. Regarding this particular painting, Gates shares: “There is a national wildlife refuge in the Mississippi Delta where people hunt waterfowl, deer, small game, and other species in the winter. A remarkable experience occurs when you exit the refuge, quietly easing along the levee and watching evening transform into night.”
 
Important Dates
Call for Entries: Open until April 15, 2025
Exhibition Dates: July 8, 2025 to October 4, 2025
Opening Reception: Friday, July 11, 2025, at 6:00 p.m.
For more information, visit https://bit.ly/38thcompetition
 
Contact
Alexandria Museum of Art
Dana Lyles
Director of Operations and Outreach
318-443-3458

LDWF warns of potential fish kills due to freezing temperatures

The recent freezing temperatures that have moved across Louisiana have prompted the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries to warn the public of potential fish kills throughout coastal and potentially inland Louisiana due to freezing water temperatures.  

If fish kills do occur, evidence of such could be delayed as fish may not be visible for a week or more after a cold kill.   

Coastal species commonly impacted by low water temperatures are Sand Seatrout (a.k.a. White Trout), Red Drum, Black Drum, and Spotted Seatrout.

“Typically, water temperatures below 40 degrees Fahrenheit for more than a day cause problems for Spotted Seatrout, whereas Red Drum are slightly more tolerant and will begin to experience problems when temperatures dip into the mid-30s,” explained LDWF fisheries biologist Jason Adriance. “The rate at which the water cools is also important. If fish have a chance to acclimate and move, the potential for survival is higher.”

Inland fisheries biologists are not expecting severe impacts to freshwater sport fishes, although fish kills may occur in inland waters.  There is the potential for small isolated mortality of shad due to the colder-than-normal water temperatures, but this should not pose a significant impact to the populations.

Should members of the public come across significant numbers of dead or dying fish, LDWF encourages them to contact the Department. Contact information and requested reporting specifics are available here: https://www.wlf.louisiana.gov/page/fish-kills.  Be prepared to provide name, phone number (in case additional information is needed), along with the location, including good directions to the fish kill site, the approximate quantity, and species of fish, and their condition (still dying, all dead, decomposing, etc.).

Anglers should be aware that creel and size limits remain in effect, as well as legal methods of take, and harvesting fish beyond those regulations is illegal.


Ponderings

It was one of those days.

The schedule for the day had me on I-20 headed west toward Shreveport. It was raining felines and canines.

Rain is not bothersome to me. I have been driving since telephones were attached to the wall. I became proficient by spending a summer driving on I-95 between Fort Lauderdale and Miami, Florida. I grew up in North Alabama, so I know about driving on ice and snow. While in Louisiana, I drove in tropical rainstorms and fog so dense the hood of your own vehicle disappeared. My adage is to slow down and be deliberate.

In all my years of driving, I have not one time used my emergency flashers while driving. When did the snowflakes take over our roads? Buck up, Paco! Even the truckers were using their flashers while driving on the Interstate. Where did you people learn about this abomination? Did you know it is illegal in Louisiana? Did you know it doesn’t help me see you better? Do you know it just affirms what most of us behind you already know, you can’t drive! So next time it is raining felines and canines, pull completely over to the shoulder of the road and turn on those emergency flashers to your heart’s content. I feel like Andy Rooney now! But I do feel better. Quit it!

I suppose those drivers are looking for a way to feel safe and in control in an environment in which they have little control. I have unwelcome news. There are only two things you can control. You can control your actions. You can control your attitude. That is about it.

Jesus said this, “So do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. Therefore, do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.”

The Greek word for worry can be translated as “anxiety or care.” I think Jesus just told me not to “care” so much about the emergency flashers during rainstorms. Yes, I can control my attitude. You too?


Pineville partners with United Way for MLK Day

The City of Pineville has partnered with the United Way of Central Louisiana to present MLK Volunteer Opportunities on Monday, Jan. 20, kicking off at 9am at 708 Main Street in Pineville. 

There will be several project opportunities for volunteers to choose from including:

  • Community clean-up day: come together to help beautify the community
  • Pantry of plenty: donate non-perishable food items to benefit local food pantries
  • Neighborhood scavenger hunt: gather family and friends to complete this scavenger hunt in a neighborhood of choice
  • Golden moments club: donate socks, boardgames, hair care, and/or nail products to local assisted living facility
  • Warm hearts drive: donate gloves or blankets for unhoused neighbors

Sign up using the QR in the image above. 


KICKOFF CONSIGNMENT & SURPLUS AUCTION

Lasyone’s Auction – Winnfield, LA.

WHEN: Saturday, January 18, 2025
TIME:  9 AM
WHERE: 7675 Hwy 167S, Winnfield, LA 71483

Selling for: City of Winnfield, City of Natchitoches, Local Rental Company, Contractors and Farmers
Construction Equipment, Tractors, Trucks, Trailers, Farm Equipment, 50+ Vehicles, Tools & Much More!

For more information, call Rex at 318-648-8509 or 318-471-0962 or visit us online at: www.lasyoneauctions.com 

LIVE BIDS: www.proxibid.com/lasyone

There’s something for everyone!! We hope to see you there!!
Rex Lasyone, LA lic#:1549, TX lic#: 16267

  • Partial Listing: ∙ New 2024 IR LSU Golf Cart, 4 Seater, Electric, Loaded ∙ Kubota X1140 RTV, 4 Seater, Diesel ∙ Kubota RTV 500 w/bed, 4×4, Gas, 3871hrs ∙ Kubota RTV 900, Camo w/bed, 4×4, Diesel, 1407hrs ∙ Kawasaki Mule RTV, 4 Seater, 4×4, w/Bed, Diesel ∙ Several 4 Wheelers • Stratos Boat Trailer • 2007 Hummer SF97 Army Truck, 4×4, w/bed, Diesel • New Holland BR7070 Crop Cutter Round Hay Baler • New IRD25 Dump Buggy on tracks • New Holland LS160 Skidsteer • Ditch Witch 3610D Trencher w/Backhoe Attachment • Xtreme XR1045 Telescopic Forklift w/pipe clamps, 10k Capacity • John Deere 160C LC Excavator, cab/air, 6528hrs • Link-Belt LS3400 Excavator, long reach • 2022 Kubota SVL 75-2 Skid Steer on tracks, Cab/Air, 1100hrs • Barreto 401 Walk Behind Trencher • YanMar VIO 35 Excavator, Rubber Tracks, w/Hydraulic Thumb, 1200 hrs • 2007 Mack CHN613 Day Cab Truck, 320k mis • 2004 International 7300 Bucket Truck, 4×4 • 1985 Ford F-700 Dump Truck • 2010 Ford Mini Van XLT, Auto, Gas, 188033 mis • 2007 Toyota
    Tacoma Truck, 4×4, Auto, 185k mis, 4dr • 2007 Ford E-350 XLT • Passenger Van, 88k mis, one owner (from local church) • 2009 Nissan Altima • 2004 Ford Mustang Convertible • 2013 Freightliner Sleeper Truck • 2015 Ford Police Interceptor • 2016 Chevy Tahoe Police Car (2) 2016 Top Hat Bumper Trailer w/Ramps • Lowboy Trailer w/Dovetail & Ramps • 2007 Load Trail GN Car Hauler Trailer • 2011 Tiger Heavy Duty Bumper Trailer • 2000 HM Bumper Trailer, dual axle
    w/tailgate • Several Gooseneck & Bumper Trailers • Delco Steam Cleaner Pressure Washer, diesel
  • New & Used Containers • Set of Metal Tracks fits JD Dozer • Pipe Racks • 4 Snatch Blocks
  • Heavy Duty Spreader Chain • Bolsters for Log Trailer • 2 Dura Heat Shop Heaters • Boss Power 40KW Generator • Brush Bandit Model 150 Wood Chipper on Trailer • Detroit Diesel Engine • Terex RL4 Light Plant on Trailer, low hours • New AGT Quick Attach Forks • Genie GS-2632 Manlift • Fuel Tank on Skid • 7ft Grapple for Brush • 5ft & 6ft Bushogs • Bobcat Quick Attach Auger Attachment • Hobart Champion Generator • Truck Load 24ft Free Standing Cattle Panels • Detroit Diesel Power Unit on Trailer • Metal Shelves • 7ft Bionic Dirt Blade • Scaffolding • 3PH Cultivator • King Kutter 5ft Disk • Arts-Way 425-A Feed Mixer Grinder • Vermeer Accu-Bale Plus XL Series 605 Round Baler • Feed Troughs • Atlas Copco XAS 185 Air Compressor • 5ft Heavy Duty Disk • Vicon CM2400 Hay Cutter • Modern 6ft Quick Attach Brush Cutter • Tracks to fit Cat 262 Skid Steer • 50 joints 2 7/8 Pipe • Load of Priefert Gates & Panels • Miller Matic 35 Welder • Heavy Wall 4in & 6in Hose Pipe on Reel • 2 Approx 10,000 Gallon Steel Water Tanks on Skids • Cattle Feeder on Dual Wheels • Tools and lots more!!

LCU announces social work CEU series

Louisiana Christian University is excited to announce the Social Work CEU Series for Spring 2025 – a unique opportunity for social work professionals to expand their expertise and earn continuing education units (CEUs) in key areas essential to ethical and clinical practice.
 
This series will offer two specialized sessions on Friday, Jan. 31, at the Granberry Conference Center on the Campus of LCU:
 
1. Ethics for Everyday Practice: 9am – 12pm

Delve into complex ethical challenges facing today’s social workers, with a focus on practical decision-making frameworks, ethical standards, and the latest updates to ethical codes. This session provides guidance on navigating real-world ethical dilemmas to uphold professional integrity and foster client trust.
 
2. Anxiety Disorders and Self Care: 1pm – 4pm

Enhance the clinical toolkit with advanced knowledge and skills tailored for effective client interventions. Covering several evidence-based practices, this session is designed to strengthen therapeutic impact and address the dynamic needs of today’s clients.
 
This series offers an invaluable chance for social workers to gain insights from experienced educators and practitioners, network with fellow professionals, and further their commitment to excellence in the field. Join us to stay at the forefront of ethical and clinical practices in social work.
 
Registration includes lunch, generously provided by St. Joseph Hospice.
 
Special discounts are available for LCU alumni and field supervisors. Contact maggie.bridges@lcuniversity.edu or vanessa.graves@lcuniversity.edu for more information.
 

Welcome: Randy Deaton to BOM

BOM Bank would like to welcome Randy Deaton to our BOM team! Randy graduated in 1993 from Louisiana State University with a Bachelor of Science in Quantitative Business Analysis-Computer Science.

Randy retired as a Special Agen with the Federal Bureau of Investigation in July 2024 with over 25 years of service. Randy’s duty assignments included the FBI’s New York Office, New Orleans Field office, and FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C.

Randy enjoys the outdoors, woodworking, traveling, and spending time with his wife and three children.

Welcome, Randy!

Continue your article here…


Crowning Glory: The Timeless Appeal of Hats in Fashion

National Hat Day, celebrated every January 15, shines a spotlight on one of the most versatile and enduring accessories in fashion history. From functional headgear to bold fashion statements, hats have played a significant role across cultures and centuries.

“Hats are more than just protection from the elements; they’re an expression of personality and style,” says fashion historian Dr. Elena Rivera. Iconic styles such as fedoras, berets, and baseball caps each carry their own legacy. Notably, the classic Stetson cowboy hat remains a symbol of rugged American individuality.

Modern trends show a resurgence of hats as fashion-forward pieces. Social media influencers have embraced bucket hats and wide-brim fedoras, proving that headwear can be both functional and chic.

Celebrate National Hat Day by trying a new style or researching the fascinating history of this timeless accessory. From the streets of Paris to the ranches of Texas, hats continue to crown our heads with style and substance.


Pineville council mulling settlement with former employee’s EEOC claim that ousted mayor

By JIM BUTLER

The City Council tonight will consider settling with Brittany Poston Meshell, putting las Dupree affaire to bed. 

Her EEOC complaint over alleged on-job recriminations following trysts with then-Mayor Rich Dupree and his chief of staff while she was a city employee rocked the city last summer.

Dupree eventually resigned and Joe Bishop, then parish president, was appointed his successor by the council. 

The agenda for tonight’s session includes introducing for publication an ordinance to appropriate and pay funds to resolve Meshell’s claims. 

How much is under consideration is not included in the agenda posting. 

Prior council discussion of the matter’s details has been in executive session, not the case tonight, according to the posting. 


Family feud comes to Menard gym Thursday

It’ll be brother against brother when Class 2A Menard hosts Class 4A St. Thomas More in boys basketball Thursday night.

Briggs Carbo, 25, is in his first season as the boys head coach at Menard – it’s his first season coaching anywhere as a head coach – and he’s got a young, inexperienced team that has won just five of 21 games. His Eagles will be playing at home against a St. Thomas More team that is 13-3 and includes Briggs’ youngest brother, LG, a 16-year-old sophomore.

LG’s real first name is David, but he doesn’t answer to David, only ‘LG,’ which is a nickname is father, Michael, gave him at an early age.

“I was large as a baby, and my dad just started calling me LG, and it stuck, and people have been calling me that ever since,” said LG, who’s looking forward to the blood duel Thursday (beginning around 7:30 p.m. after the 6 p.m. girls game). “It’ll bring back all the memories of when we used to play on a court in our back yard. He would always beat me. I based my game after his.”

LG is 6-foot-2 and plays point guard, the same position Briggs played at Menard and for one year at LSUA. He ended his playing career when he transferred to LSU, but ultimately finished college at LSUA in ’21 with a business degree. Since then he has been working in his father’s fast-food restaurant business, with his work requiring travel to Kentucky, Missouri and Arkansas. This coaching gig is his second job.

Meanwhile, he and his wife, Tara, are expecting a son in March.

An assistant to Brian “Twig” Terwilliger for two playoff seasons at Menard, Briggs said one of the main reasons he took the Menard job was for the challenge. Of the 22 players on the roster, 13 are freshmen, and none are seniors.

“It reminds me of when I played here – same thing, we won four games, then four games, then 15 and then we won 22 in 2017 when I was a senior,” said Briggs. “I play all freshmen and spell them with a few juniors.” He scheduled Class 4A powerhouse Peabody, Alexandria Senior High (5A) and St. Thomas More this season “so we could see good basketball and have a grow-up year. I like to think we’re better than a 5-16 team. Even though the record doesn’t show it, I can see the improvement.”

Michael and Holly Carbo, Briggs’ and LG’s parents, are both Menard graduates, but they moved a few years ago to Lafayette. “They wanted a different scene,” said Briggs, noting the move led to LG’s playing for Hub City Hoops, a Lafayette travel team, during the summer before his freshman year.

“At first he didn’t want to leave Menard (Junior High),” said Briggs, “but after playing for that team in the summer, he made friends and was ready to play (for STM).”

LG said he remembers Briggs competing in one-on-one games against both him and their other brother, Ben, while wearing high heels to make the games more competitive.

“I smoked ’em both,” boasted Briggs, while acknowledging he had an age advantage. “I was tired of all their smack talk and told ’em I’d still whip ’em while wearing my mom’s high heels. We’re very, very close as brothers, but we’re very, very competitive in everything. There were many broken fence poles. All three of us, whatever we do, we’re in to win.”

Ben, 18, is at UL-Lafayette, and although he quit playing basketball at Menard after his junior year, he concentrated on soccer and helped the Eagles as center back advance to the state finals in ’23.

Briggs took over a Menard team that won just one game last year with only a handful of players on the roster by the end of the season.

“At first I was a little nervous,” he said about the job, “but I really enjoy it. It’s fun to see the progress.”

A businessman, he said he tries to run his team “like a business,” which means he demands discipline and teamwork and hustle and good grades. Each player must get all A’s and B’s, allowing one subject to fall to a C or D, or the student won’t play. The players have evidently bought in, turning in a 3.6 GPA at the end of the last nine-week session. Only “one or two” have been suspended for academic reasons, and those suspensions were brief, Briggs said.

“I wear them out for the first 30 minutes of practice,” he said, “and when you do that, they are so much better focused on listening.” He and his two assistants – David “Dae-Dae” Brevelle and current LSUA basketball player Jakemin Abney — also require the players to clean the gym and even the gym’s bathrooms.

With such a young team, Brooks sees a bright future. “Our freshmen are 2-0 against the ASH freshmen,” he said. “We won a tournament in Lafayette, beating St. Thomas More, Acadiana (5A), Northside (of Lafayette) (5A) and ASH, with ASH in the finals,’ he said, adding they’ll be playing in a Class 2A state freshman tournament in New Orleans this weekend.

Meanwhile, as for Thursday night’s family feud game, you can figure all those involved, especially Briggs and LG, will have a high-heeled time.


Alexandria Zen Fellowship Offers Introduction to Zen in February

Alexandria, LA –  The Zen Fellowship of Alexandria invites individuals interested in Zen practice to join them on February 1, 2025, at 10:30 AM for an introduction to Zazen (seated Zen meditation), a profound practice that is the direct path to living here now.

Zazen is a practice that transcends the intellectual study of Zen. It involves engaging the body and mind in a state of dignified non-action, with no reason, purpose, or personal gain. Through sitting in the posture of Zazen, practitioners allow themselves to return to a state of mental and physical equanimity, automatically, spontaneously, and naturally. This introduction will provide an opportunity for individuals to experience this practice firsthand.

The introduction will be held at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Alexandria, located at 1245 Elliott Street in Alexandria, LA. Attendees are asked to arrive 15 minutes early for preparation, as is customary for the dojo’s twice-weekly sittings.

In addition to the introduction on February 1st, the Zen Fellowship of Alexandria holds regular sessions, including:

  • Formal: Sunday mornings at 9:00 AM, which includes sutra chanting and formal ritual.

  • Mid-week Sitting: A less formal sit every Wednesday evening at 5:00 PM.

A $10 donation is requested from attendees of the introduction to support the mission of the dojo in facilitating this and other Zen practice opportunities in Central Louisiana.

About the Zen Fellowship of Alexandria: The Zen Fellowship of Alexandria (ZFA) is a local dojo in the Japanese Soto Zen tradition, following the lineage of Zen Masters Kodo Sawaki, Taisen Deshimaru, and Robert Livingston. The ZFA is affiliated with the New Orleans Zen Temple and the Zen Fellowship of Bakersfield, California, under the guidance of NOZT Abbot Richard Collins. The ZFA offers authentic immersion into the Zen lifestyle in Central Louisiana.

For questions/more information please email info@zenalexandria.org.


City Park Players presents “Jeeves Takes a Bow”

The City Park Players will present the comedy “Jeeves Takes a Bow,” adapted by Margaret Raether, directed by Jill Dupant, from Jan. 30 to Feb. 9, Hearn Stage at Kress Theatre. 

Bertie Wooster inflicts his charming ineptitude on America when he adventures across the pond armed only with his handsome fortune, talent for trouble, and his remarkable manservant Jeeves. But when a childhood friend gets Bertie mixed up with a vengeful thug named “Knuckles” McCann, he ends up mistakenly engaged to the meddling Vivienne Duckworth. Even the illustrious Jeeves may not be up to the task.

Show dates:
Thursday, Jan 30 – 7:30pm
Friday, Jan 31 – 7:30pm
Saturday, Feb 1 – 7:30pm
Sunday, Feb 2 – 2:30pm

Thursday, Feb 6 – 7:30pm
Friday, Feb 7 – 7:30pm
Saturday, Feb 8 – 7:30pm
Sunday, Feb 9 – 2:30pm

Tickets:
Thursday : $5
General : $15
Senior (>60) & Military : $12
Students : $7

Tickets are available now – click here


City of Alexandria host community events in honor of MLK Day

The City of Alexandria invites the public to honor the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. with a series of impactful community events at the MLK Day Citywide Interdenominational Revival “Pressing Forward”:
 
Sunday, Jan. 19: 5:30 PM – MLK Musical at Alexandria Convention Hall
 
Monday, Jan. 20: 6:30 AM – Prayer Breakfast featuring Rev. Bart Walker at the Alexandria Convention Hall
                           10:00 AM – Parade starting at Bolton Avenue, traveling down Jackson, Third Street, and                                                  ending at the Convention Hall
                           12:00 PM – Noon Day Service featuring Coach Charles Smith at the Alexandria                                                                Convention Hall
 
The City invites participants to join together as a community to reflect, remember, and renew commitment to the values of justice, equality, and service.

Tioga DYB opens spring 2025 registration

Tioga’s Diamond Youth Baseball has opened its spring 2025 registration.
 
Registration will be online only with 1 walk-up day in February. If unsure of the age group, check out the DYB age group chart.
 
Click the link to register: https://app.teampass.com/Tioga_Ward_10_DYB/
 
Registration closes on Feb. 7. Cost for 6 years old and up is $100; Wee-Tee is $75.

Trial date set for Pineville PD officer arrested for domestic abuse battery

Lacy Ann Fields

A trial date has been set for for the Pineville Police Department officer Lacy Ann Fields, who was arrested as a result of domestic disturbance back in Oct. 2024. The trial has been set for Mar. 20. 

She was was arrested for domestic abuse battery and aggravated assault with a firearm at the time of the incident. She pleaded not guilty to all charges in court on Jan. 9. 

Pineville PD confirmed that Fields resigned prior to her court appearance on Jan. 9. She is no longer an employee of the City of Pineville.


Dr. Arthur’s Practice

Beginning a career as a physician in the 1880s was difficult.  For Dr. Arthur, it was more difficult than for many other of his former classmates because Dr. Arthur was from a poor family.  By the time he entered medical school in Edinburgh, Scotland, Arthur’s father had died and left behind a widow and ten children.  The only way Arthur was able to enroll in medical school in the first place was from the generosity of one of his uncles.  While in school, Arthur apprenticed for a couple of different doctors who made so little money in their profession that rather than earning a salary, Arthur received room and board.  At that time, doctors made and sold a lot of their own medicines.  One of the doctors under whom Arthur apprenticed charged no consultation fee.  His only source of income came from the sale of his medicines. 

In the spring of 1882, Dr. Arthur was invited to join the practice of one of his classmates in Plymouth, England.  Dr. Arthur readily agreed and began seeing patients in the little room his former classmate had set up for him.  Mostly, he dealt with cases that his former classmate did not want to handle.  Within a couple of months, Dr. Arthur’s former classmate’s attitude inexplicably changed toward him.  Finally, Dr. Arthur decided to leave the practice and to open his own practice in the town of Portsmouth with the little money he had saved up. 

By the time he rented an apartment that doubled as a doctor’s office, which he furnished with what he referred to as not second-hand but tenth-hand furniture, Dr. Arthur was nearly broke.  His only reserve consisted of the 10 gold pieces withheld for his upcoming rent.  His doctor’s office was furnished with only a table for surgery and two stools.  His trunk served as his dining table and his pantry.  For months, he survived on bread, bacon, and tea, and on the rare occasion, a piece of sausage.  From the beginning, he received only a few stray patients of the poorest class, most of whom owed money to other doctors.  Like one of the doctors he apprenticed for, Dr. Arthur charged no fee for consultations, only for his medicines.  At times, Dr. Arthur had to wait to mail a letter because he could not afford a stamp.  After several months, Dr. Arthur had built up his practice, but money was still somewhat scarce.  Some of his patients were tradespeople who, rather than paying in cash, paid with their trade.  For example, Dr. Arthur treated one grocer who suffered from epileptic fits who paid him in butter and tea.  Dr. Arthur’s practice was far from being financially successful. 

Dr. Arthur was a voracious reader, mainly out of necessity.  At the expense of a couple of meals, Dr. Arthur became a member of the local circulating library.  While waiting for the occasional poor stray patient to come in need of his services, Dr. Arthur read a plethora of books.  Beginning in medical school, Dr. Arthur wrote short stories for extra pocket money.  Eventually, the work he did for extra pocket money outshone his work as a medical doctor.  It is to our benefit that Dr. Arthur’s practice was not more successful.  Had Dr. Arthur been content with his wages as a physician, we may never have heard of his most famous creation, Sherlock Holmes.  Dr. Arthur was Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Source:  Memories and Adventures by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, (Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1924), p.57-69, https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/66991/pg66991-images.html.


Remembering Randy Reppert Cole

Randy Reppert Cole, age 74, left for his eternal home on January 11, 2025 at Houston Methodist Hospital after a sudden unexpected illness.

A visitation will be held on Tuesday, January 14th at First Baptist Church Winnfield, Louisiana from 5:30 to 8:30. A funeral service will be held at 1:00 on Wednesday, January 15th also at First Baptist. After the service, he will be laid to rest at Kitchens Creek Baptist Church in Ball, Louisiana. Not only is this place special to Randy because of the ties it holds to family, but also because it is where he rededicated his life to the Lord in his early adulthood.

Randy was born in Monroe, Louisiana on September 9, 1950. He was a proud graduate of West Monroe High School class of 1968. While there, he played football and pitched for the Rebel baseball team. After that, he attended Louisiana Tech University where he earned an undergraduate degree in Zoology in 1972. While at Louisiana Tech he commuted to class with the “Wild Bunch Transit System.” However, the highlight of his college years was a date to the State Fair football game with a girl who had graduated from West Monroe with one of his sisters.

Next, he attended LSU School of Dentistry where he earned his Doctor of Dental Surgery in 1976. On December 28, 1974, while on a break from dental school, he married that West Monroe girl from the State Fair game, the love of his life Melanie Ann Read. They were a devoted couple and God richly blessed their marriage over 50 years.

In the summer of 1976, the community of Winn Parish was in need of a dentist and Melanie had fond memories of her early childhood there, so the couple moved to Winnfield where Randy established his dental practice. From that point on around town he became affectionately known as “Dr. Cole.” Randy’s philosophy of dental care centered around compassionate treatment of each and every patient and that care was not just reserved for business hours. He was always willing to attend to dental emergencies that would arise. Over his 45 year career, Dr. Cole helped thousands of patients in a practice that ended up spanning not just Winn Parish but the entire surrounding area.

In addition to being a devoted family man, Randy was an active member of the Winnfield Lions Club for almost forty years and twice served as President. He was honored to be named a Melvin Jones Fellow for being dedicated to humanitarian services for Lions Club International. He has also served as the Winn Parish Republican National Committee chair and the President of the Winn Parish chapter of the Louisiana Tech Alumni Association.

Thursday afternoons and on weekends you would likely find Dr. Cole and friends on the golf course. He loved the time outside and never minded a hot summer day, but you can be sure if it was below fifty-five degrees he would be indoors. To him yard work was not a chore, but joyful work in which he took pride. He was an avid bridge player his whole life and was a member of numerous card playing groups through the years. Although he holds degrees from both Louisiana Tech and LSU, Randy was an “Ever Loyal Be” Bulldog. He enjoyed supporting both the College of Applied and Natural Sciences and Bulldog Athletics with his family and friends.

Of all the places Randy loved and spent time, none were more dear to him than First Baptist Church Winnfield. He loved the Biblical teachings he learned from the pulpit, the music ministry that always touched his heart and his Sunday School class where they studied God’s word together and strengthened each others’ faith as iron sharpens iron.

Randy was preceded in death by his parents, Pat Phillips Cole and Bonnie Lee Reppert Cole.

Randy is survived by his loving wife of 50 years, Melanie Ann Read Cole; daughters Shelley Cole Parker (Jeff) of Choudrant, LA and Kendal Cole Singh (Kevin) of Ruston, LA; grandchildren Preston Luke Parker, John Cole Parker and Patrick Woodgate Singh; siblings Karen Cole Ballenger (Grady) of DeLand, FL and Kristy Cole Farr (Doug) of Monroe, LA and his beloved nieces and nephews.

Serving as pallbearers will be Lyn Bankston, Steve Bates, Curtis Crenshaw, Rick Hanna, Mervin Parker, Billy Thurmon, Tommy Harrel and Jimmy Walker with honorary pallbearers being the members of Joe Kelley’s Sunday School class.

To celebrate his life, memorials may be made to First Baptist Church in Winnfield, LA 201 E. Court Street, 71483; Louisiana Baptist Children’s Home P.O. Box 4196 Monroe, LA 71211; or Samaritan’s Purse P.O. Box 3000, Boone, NC 28607.


BOM breaking ground in Woodworth

BOM has announced that it has officially broken ground on their new permanent location in Woodworth. This new facility will allow the company to better serve the customers and community. They can’t wait to update the community with the progress throughout the construction process.


Decluttering for Success: How a Tidy Desk Boosts Productivity

In the fast-paced world of work and school, a cluttered desk can be more than just an eyesore; it can actively hinder productivity and mental clarity. Observed annually on the second Monday of January, National Clean Off Your Desk Day offers a fresh start for your workspace and your mind.

Research shows that an organized workspace can lead to improved focus, reduced stress, and increased efficiency. A survey conducted by the National Association of Professional Organizers found that 27% of workers feel disorganized, and nearly half claim clutter hampers their performance.

“When your desk is cluttered, it’s harder to prioritize tasks and think clearly,” says organizational expert Sarah Mitchell. “By dedicating just 15 minutes to tidying up, you can transform your environment and set a positive tone for your day.”

Experts recommend a three-step approach: remove unnecessary items, designate zones for specific tools and tasks, and commit to daily maintenance. Whether you’re at home, in an office, or a classroom, cleaning off your desk can be the first step toward a more productive year.