WPSB is Hiring! Principal, Winnfield Middle School

Job Vacancy:                     Principal, Winnfield Middle School

Qualifications:                  Applicant must hold a Master’s degree or higher AND either

            1. Type A Certificate with endorsement as principal or
            2. Educational Leader Level 1, 2, or 3 or be eligible to receive Educational Leader 1 upon employment.                                   

Preferences:                      Five or more years of successful teaching experience

Term of
Employment: 
                    12 months

Deadline 
for Application:                Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 2:00 p.m.

 Remarks:                         

Copies of all credentials, including current Louisiana teaching certificate, MUST accompany application.

Selected applicants will be scheduled for interviews.

Submit letter of application and resume’ to:

Mrs. Aaron Durbin

Winn Parish School Board

Post Office Box 430

Winnfield, LA 71483

The Winn Parish School Board is an equal opportunity employer, and provides equal educational opportunities in all programs and activities.  No person is discriminated against because of race, color, national origin, sex, age, or disabling condition.


Put Hope Within Reach! Sponsor a Student at Louisiana Adult & Teen Challenge – Meet Britney S.

Meet Britney S. 

Louisiana Adult & Teen Challenge exists to provide men and women with an effective residential, biblically-based solution to life-controlling problems. Our purpose is to produce graduates who function responsibly and productively in society, and who have healthy relationships in the workplace, family, church and community.

Adult & Teen Challenge is one of the largest and most successful accredited programs of its kind with over 1000 residential locations worldwide. Louisiana Adult & Teen Challenge was founded by Greg and Abigail Dill in 1987. Over the last 35 years, we have grown to 8 campuses statewide, with the ability to accommodate men, women, and women with their children.

WHAT IS STUDENT SPONSORSHIP?

Students often come into Louisiana Adult & Teen Challenge with little or no hope in life. They have burned every bridge and lost almost everything due to drug abuse and other crimes. Most times, they have little outside help supporting them during this time; therefore, we do not charge a monthly tuition. If you would like to help offset these costs, you can sponsor a student for as little as $35 a month. You can also sponsor a child that is enrolled here with their mother for an additional $15 per child. Your sponsorship means that they have someone who cares and is invested in their success!

As a monthly sponsor, you can expect:

  • A packet with information about your student
  • Monthly updates
  • The opportunity to write letters to your student
  • The opportunity to send care packages to your student
  • You can pray for them
  • You will receive a personal invitation to attend their Graduation Ceremony

For more information about becoming a sponsor visit https://www.louisianateenchallenge.com/sponsorship/


River of Life Family Worship Center Ladies Prayer Breakfast

Morning of Hope – First Annual Ladies Prayer Breakfast

Goldonna, LA — River of Life Family Worship Center will host the First Annual “Morning of Hope” Ladies Prayer Breakfast on Saturday, July 9, 2022. The breakfast will be held at the church located at 3135 Highway 479, Goldonna, LA and starts at 9:00am.

“Women have a huge impact on the Kingdom of God and we want to use this breakfast to encourage them in their journey,” said organizer, Reba Phelps.

The breakfast will have a coffee bar that will be open at 8:30am. The event is free and open to the public. Mrs. Sondra Walker, Atlanta Baptist Church, will be the guest speaker. Mrs. Walker is a wife, mother and daughter of the King. She is a Sunday School Teacher for the class named, “Soul Sisters”. She is also a devotional writer who loves encouraging people.

“We could not be more excited to have Sondra participate in our first annual breakfast, she is overflowing with the joy of the Lord and I know people will see that!”

River of Life Family Worship Center is a Non-denominational Community Church that was founded in 1978. Reverend George Procell has been the Pastor since 1987.

For more information:
Reba Phelps
318-332-4260
Jreba.phelps@gmail.com


Medical Minute – Human Genome Project

By: Dr. James Lee

Do you remember “Mission Accomplished”?  No, not the one George W Bush uttered from the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln on May 1, 2003.  This one occurred 17 days earlier, but they may share a common characteristic.  On April 14, 2003, scientists announced that the Human Genome Project was complete.  The Human Genome Project was an international scientific collaboration with the goal to completely map and understand all the human genes (or genome).  This was first conceived in the 1980’s and started in earnest in 1990 with a specific plan and goals for joint research.  Specifically, the three goals were to determine the order of the genes (sequence) made up of just four base pairs; mapping the location of genes for all the chromosomes; and creating linkage maps of genes to allow inherited traits, including genetic diseases, to be tracked over generations.  More than twenty laboratories, companies, and institutions, in six different countries, collaborated to complete this.

The actual completion of these goals took just over 30 years.  Now, those of you paying attention may wonder how it took 30 years when the announcement was made 13 years after the project started in 1990.  The fact is that when the completion of the project was announced in 2003, only about 85% of the genome was mapped.  The rest of the mapping would require recent advances in sequencing to unravel some of the largest, most repetitive, and complex pieces of DNA.  This was accomplished earlier this year in March, to noticeably less fanfare than in 2003. 

This is an amazing advancement, considering it was not until 1944 that we even knew that DNA was a hereditary material.  It was in 1953 that Watson and Crick described the double-helix structure of DNA, for which they won the 1962 Nobel Prize.  In 1977, the methods used to sequence DNA were first developed (just 26 years before 85% of the genome was mapped).  The first human disease gene was mapped in 1983, which was Huntington’s disease, prompting the discussion of genomic sequencing which first occurred in 1984.

The Project has had widespread implications worldwide.  In addition to the technological advancements in instruments and techniques that allowed the completion of the project, advances in biology, medicine, and society have also been made.

The technological advancements of the Human Genome Project include the development of novel technologies and instruments that will help us use and further study genomic sequences.  The Project also brought together biologists with engineers, mathematicians, ad computer scientists and demonstrated the power and possibilities of large, integrated, cross-disciplinary endeavors.  It also paved the way for a new open approach to science with data-sharing and open-source software.  Prior to this, research was often done individually, and even secretively so researchers could take credit and profit either directly or indirectly from their discoveries. 

Biologically, HGP has allowed scientists to begin to understand complex biologic systems, their connection to each other, and how their dynamics relate to their function.  New fields including proteomics which are identifying new proteins, have been developed.  Genomic sequencing of bacteria and other species including plants may lead to advancements in medicine and food supplies. 

Medically, the advancements due to the HGP are just beginning to be realized.  Identification of diseases and variants, including cancers.  Genes for how humans metabolize drugs, too fast or too slow, have been identified which help personalize current medical therapy.  Targeted drug therapies for various diseases are beginning to be possible based on the genetics of tumors and individuals with currently available drugs.  The HGP has allowed blood protein diagnostics to generate new diagnostic panels which will lead to early detection of diseases, the ability to follow disease progression and responses to treatments, and further subtype diseases for better treatments. 

Socially, the HGP has had social, ethical, and legal implications.  Initially, it was feared that the Human Genome Program would provide a basis for discrimination.  There was fear that employers or insurance companies could refuse to hire individuals or refuse to provide insurance based on genetic information.   The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPPA) was passed in 1996 which provided protection against this.  Legally, the advances from the Human Genome Project have revolutionized the field of forensics by allowing the identification of individuals from tiny amounts of biologic material.  Banking convicted criminals’ DNA has facilitated the identification of perpetrators of future crimes.  Conversely, innocent men and women have been exonerated based on DNA evidence and their convictions overturned. 

Remarkably, 99.9% of all human beings share identical make-up.  An individual’s DNA reveals their ancestral lineage, which is a function of migrations and interbreeding of different population groups.  There are no race specific genes.  This supports a single race, the human race, of which we are all part.  Focusing on the similarities among us rather than the differences allows us to honor each other, address the issues that concern us all, and treat each other accordingly.

Dr. James Lee serves as the Coroner of Winn Parish. He is a General Surgeon and Surgical Oncologist who has been practicing in Winnfield for over ten years. Dr. Lee attended the University of Colorado for his medical degree. He completed his residency in Surgery at the University of Oklahoma before completing a fellowship in Surgical Oncology and Endoscopy at Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, NY. Dr. Lee and his wife Scarlett live in Winnfield with their son and are active in the community.


Burton Boys Turn Raising Worms into Brisk Business

By: Glynn Harris

What do you do when you build an earthworm bed so you can have worms for fish bait, and the numbers start growing rapidly? According to Clay Burton, you start selling them.

“We started growing worms for us to fish with and they started multiplying so fast we decided maybe we ought to try and sell some,” Clay said.

With that declaration, Burton Boys Worms business was launched this past December and it has started growing rapidly.

So, who are the Burton Boys? I learned about them and their enterprise while sharing lunch with Carl Burton, their grandfather and a long-time friend. What Carl told me smacked of a good story so I set out to learn more, meeting the boys and their parents recently at the Ruston Farmer’s Market where they had set up shop with their fishing worms.

The dad is Dusty Burton; mom is Kristy and the family lives near Quitman in north Jackson Parish.

“We got to thinking about what we might want to get the boys as an extra special Christmas gift,” Kristy explained. “We love to fish and had ordered some European night crawlers, worms that are different from the Canadian night crawlers. The Canadian variety requires refrigeration; otherwise, they don’t survive. Not so for the Europeans, which can tolerate temperatures between 50 and 80 degrees.

“Our fishing worm supply started growing so fast there was no way we could use them all so we decided to introduce the boys to the business world by setting them up in a business of growing, marketing and selling the earthworms. We have business meetings every week in order to plan and discuss how to turn the business into a profitable venture,” she added.

Clay has a vision problem, amblyopia, commonly known as “lazy eye.” It was his idea to use some of the profits of the business to help others with similar problems.

“I have to wear special glasses for my eye condition. I want to use some of what we make by selling worms to help other kids who have the same condition and may need some help to get glasses,” Clay said.

How do you raise enough earthworms to satisfy your fishing needs with enough extra to put on the market?

“Our worm nursery consists mainly of peat moss with some dirt added, We feed the worms such things as banana peels, egg shells, cardboard and grain,” Clay explained.

Kristy came up with the idea that in order to attract potential customers, there has to be an attractive presentation of the product.

“We found someone who came up with the design for the containers that are attached to each box of worms. The design features the two boys – one wearing glasses – in a circle surrounded by the logo “Burton Boys Worms.”

The young growing business has already attracted the attention of at least one tackle shop owner, K&M Bait Shop in Farmerville, where the products are available to sell. Hopefully, other bait shops will soon follow suit. A tip ‘o the hat is in order for Dusty and Kristy Burton for inspiring their sons to want to launch a business.

Oh, one other thing of interest is the ages of these two budding entrepreneurs. Clay is 7; Cole is 5.

Contact Glynn at GlynnHarris37@gmail.com


Angler’s Perspective – A Rising Local Bass Fishing Star

By Steve Graf

Some athletes are just born to be great, and some must work hard to develop their skills in order to be great. The great ones do things that are unexplainable and sometimes there’s no logical reason for what they do or why they do it. They’re blessed with natural talent and abilities that help them make “in the moment” decisions that seem to always work out. The great ones have unmatched character and determination, that in layman’s terms means….they hate to lose!

In the bass fishing world, there are anglers who fit the definition of a “natural,” like Kevin Van Dam, Rick Clunn, Larry Nixon, and Skeet Reece. These are just a few of the guys who, at one time or another, have made and continue to make a good living as touring professionals and have dominated tournament trails for many years. But every now and then, another one comes along that just seems to fish on another level with unmatched instinct and abilities that other anglers just don’t have…a guy who is totally committed to the process of catching bass. The latest angler to possess these God given talents is Nick Lebrun of Bossier City, Louisiana. He is a guy who has worked hard for years, through commitment and dedication, to refine his skills in order to compete at the highest level.

There’s a saying that I’ve heard for a long time and I’m not sure who really said it first…”Good things come to those who wait.” Well for Nick, the wait is over with his two latest ($100,000 each) tournament wins on the MLF Tackle Warehouse Pro Tour. Nick became only the third person in MLF history to ever win back-to-back events. To win one time is a major accomplishment, but to win back-to-back events is the stuff legends are made of. His hard work, sacrifices, and years of tournament experience is starting to pay dividends.

Nick joined the Tackle Warehouse Pro Tour full time in 2019 after winning the 2018 FLW All-American event on his home waters of Cross Lake and has quickly made a name for himself, both as a very versatile angler and as a person. A devout Christian, Nick never takes full credit for his good fortunes. He gives all the praise and glory to his Lord and Savior Jesus Christ for putting him in position to be successful. The next person he gives praise to is his wife, Jolene, who has stood by his side with support and encouragement even when things weren’t going well. Like any professional bass fisherman, there are high and lows that can really strain a relationship, but Jolene has been the glue and the support that has allowed Nick to fulfill his dreams. Like they say, ”Behind every successful man is a supportive wife.” Jolene Lebrun is the perfect example of this quote.

The life of a professional bass fisherman is a tough way to make a living and is not attainable by everyone. Just like any other professional sport, many have tried and failed. There’s a very small percentage of anglers nationwide with dreams of fishing for a living that have actually made it to the highest level. A lot of anglers have gone broke and ended up in divorce court trying to achieve this dream. But if you are an up-and-coming angler and are looking for a great example of a person to follow, make it Nick Lebrun! Till next time, good luck, good fishing and don’t forget to set the hook!

Steve Graf – Owner/Co-host
Hook’N Up & Track’N Down Show &
Tackle Talk Live


Notice of Death – July 7, 2022

WINN:
Richard Wayne Skains 
July 04, 1925 – July 06, 2022
Service: Monday, July 11 at 10 am at East Winnfield Baptist Church

Memory Hollon French Jr.
April 6, 1948 – July 4, 2022
Service: Saturday, July 9 at 2 pm at Old Union Cemetery in Joyce

Zagan Johnson
July 7, 2021 – July 4, 2022
Service: Friday, July 8 at 10 am in the Chapel of Kinner & Stevens Funeral Home

Thelma L Bumpurs
February 9, 1940 – July 4, 2022
Arrangements TBA

Charles “Chuck” Tilden Johnson, Jr.
September 22, 1963 – July 3, 2022
Service: Friday, July 8 at 10 am at First Assembly of God

Sarah Lynn King Jones
February 22, 1950 – July 3, 2022
Service: Saturday, July 9 at 10 am at Cypress Creek Cemetery

Johnnie Little
July 4, 2022
Arrangements TBA

NATCHITOCHES:
Herbert Dewey Dalme
August 2, 1954 – July 5, 2022
Service: Saturday, July 9 at 1 pm at Blanchard St. Denis Funeral Home in Natchitoches

Dorothy Ruth Brown Haymon
August 21, 1930 – July 3, 2022
Service: Friday, July 8 at 11 am at First Baptist Church of Natchitoches

Carmen Delores Holland
September 22, 1959 – July 4, 2022
Service: Monday, July 11 at 10 am at Friendship Cemetery

Linda Apponey Sandefur
June 16, 1950 – July 4, 2022
Service: Saturday, July 9 at 11 am at Blanchard-St. Denis Funeral Home

Donna Airhart
January 13, 1952 – July 3, 2022
Service: Friday, July 8 at 11 am at Immaculate Conception Church in Natchitoches

Laura Hope Harlan Boles
March 24, 1960 – June 28, 2022
Service: Saturday, July 23 at 1 pm at First Baptist Church of Natchitoches

SABINE:
Samuel Bracey Branch
March 3, 1951 – July 5, 2022
A visitation will be held Friday, July 8 from 12:30 – 1:30 at Warren Meadows Funeral Home in Many. Burial will follow at Mt. Carmel Cemetery in Florien.


City of Winnfield Elected Officials are Sworn In

On Friday, July 1, 2022, a feeling of unity was felt by all at the Winnfield Civic Center as the Winnfield community gathered to witness the inauguration of the City of Winnfield elected officials.

Acting as master of ceremonies was 8th JDC Judge, Anastacia Wiley. Facilitating the Oath of Office to city elected officials was Winnfield City Judge Keith Gates. City of Winnfield Fire Department Asst. Chief Cassidy Martin lead attendants in the pledge of allegiance. The New Zion MBC of Winnfield Choir blessed everyone with beautiful songs of praise and worship. Words of encouragement and prayers offered by community pastors; Tomell Hamms, Dr. Gavin Hamms, Joel Hines and Dr. Jerry Pipes, added to the ceremony’s spirit of unity.

Sworn into office:
City of Winnfield District 1 – Erikia Breda
City of Winnfield District 2 – Ada Hall
City of Winnfield District 3 – Chiquita Caldwell
City of Winnfield District 4 – Matt Miller
City of Winnfield District 5 – Teresa Phillips
City of Winnfield Chief of Police – Johnny Ray Carpenter
City of Winnfield Mayor – Gerald Hamms


Winn Parish Sheriff’s Office Arrest Report

Date: 6-30-22
Name: Steven Allen Dunn
Address: Winnfield, LA
Race: White
Sex: Male
Age: 48
Charge: Forgery (x3)


Date: 6-30-22
Name: Nicholas Jordan
Address: Winnfield, LA
Race: White
Sex: Male
Age: 22
Charge: Cruelty to persons with infirmaries


Date: 6-30-22
Name: Stephanie Mercer
Address: Tullos, LA
Race: White
Sex: Female
Age: 42
Charge: Cruelty to juvenile


Date: 7-1-22
Name: Stephen Riggs
Address: Georgetown, LA
Race: White
Sex: Male
Age: 45
Charge: DWI, Carless operation of a motor vehicle

This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named or shown in photographs or video as suspects in a criminal investigation, or arrested and charged with a crime, have not been convicted of any criminal offense and are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.


Remember This? Roy’s Attractiveness

By: Brad Dison

Roy Sullivan was born in 1912 in Greene County, Virginia.  Beginning in 1936, Roy spent his whole working life as a park ranger in Shenandoah National Park in Virginia.  Friends described Roy as being “as gentle and upright as a person can be.  He pays his bills, loves his family, goes to church, has never harmed a soul.” 

In April of 1942, a thunderstorm blew into the national park.  Roy took refuge in a newly-built fire tower.  Unbeknownst to Roy, the fire tower’s lightning rods had not been installed.  Lightning struck the tower up to eight times and set it on fire.  Roy said, “fire was jumping all over the place.”  Roy ran from the burning tower when… BOOM!!!  The lightning struck Roy and traveled down his right leg.  The powerful strike left a burn mark down his leg, blew his big toe nail off, and left a hole in his shoe.  For 27 years, Roy thought that getting struck by lightning was a once in a lifetime sort of thing. 

In July 1969, Roy was driving his truck with the windows down in the mountains during a lightning storm.  Roy felt safe because the body of the truck and its rubber tires would normally have provided protection against a lightning strike.  A bolt of lightning struck a nearby tree and deflected into the truck’s open window.  Roy was momentarily knocked unconscious and, luckily, the truck slowed and eventually stopped safely.  The heat from the strike singed off his eyebrows and eyelashes, and caught his hair on fire.

In July 1970, Roy was in his front yard when a bolt of lightning struck an electrical transformer and deflected to Roy’s left side.  The heat from the lightning bolt seared his left shoulder. 

On April 16, 1972, Roy was working in a ranger station when a bolt of lightning struck a fuse box and arced onto him, which set his hair on fire.  Roy used a wet towel to douse the fire in his hair. 

After getting struck by lightning four times, Roy kept a can of water with him just in case his hair caught on fire as it had twice before.  He also got into the habit of pulling over and getting down into the floorboard of his truck if a storm came up while he was driving.

On August 7, 1973, Roy was driving in the park when he saw a storm cloud forming.  He quickly drove in the opposite direction to what he thought was a safe distance.  He got out of his truck and … BOOM!!!  He was struck by lightning again.  The lightning traveled down his left side and blew his left shoe off.  Once again, Roy’s hair caught fire.  He retrieved his water can from his truck and doused his hair. 

On June 5, 1976, Roy was checking a campground when he noticed a storm cloud above him.  He tried to run to his truck but was struck by lightning.  As before, his hair caught fire and he doused it with his water can. 

When asked why lightning was attracted to him, Roy responded, “Lordy, I wish I knew.  It’s awful.  I don’t believe God is after me.  If He was, the first bolt would have been enough…  Best I can figure is that I have some chemical, some mineral, in my body that draws lightning.  I just wish I knew.”

Roy pointed out that he “wasn’t right in the storm all those times.  Once I was a good 10 miles away.  But if there is a single dark cloud in the sky, out will come a bolt and get me.”

Roy said, “Just before it strikes, I smell a certain smell, like sulfur, and my hair bristles all over.  That’s the signal.  In about two seconds, no longer than three, it hits.”  By the time Roy recognized the signals, it was never enough time to hide.  “Ever been shocked real bad?” Roy asked one reporter.  “It’s worse.  Ever been scalded? It’s much worse.  It’s like being cooked inside your skin.”

News of Roy’s unfortunate ability to attract lightning spread through the region.  While walking with the chief ranger at the park one day, lightning struck way in the distance.  The chief ranger said, “I’ll see you later, Roy,” and quickly distanced himself from Roy.  Some local restaurants were off limits to Roy, especially during storms, and some of them refused to let him enter if the sky was overcast.  “I can’t blame them,” Roy said.  “Who wants to be near somebody that’s all the time getting hit by lightning?”

In 1976, Roy Sullivan retired from his beloved job at Shenandoah National Park.  While working as a park ranger, Roy lived within the park itself, one of the many perks of the job.  Once he retired, Roy had to move out of the park.  He and his family bought a house trailer and a little piece of land near the park. 

Roy took precautions to protect himself and his family from lightning strikes.  He installed a lightning rod on all four corners of his trailer house.  He attached lightning rods to each of the six tall trees on his property.  He even attached a lightning rod to his electric meter pole and his television antenna.  Each of the twelve lightning rods was connected to a heavy-duty large-diameter pure copper wire which Roy drove seven feet into the ground.  He kept the ground on his property wet.  During storms, Roy’s wife and three children stayed in the living room while Roy sat in the kitchen.     

On June 25, 1977, Roy fished from the bank at a pond near his home.  There were no storm clouds in the sky and Roy felt safe.  BOOM!!!  Lightning struck his head, traveled down his body and burned his chest and stomach.  Once again, Roy’s hair caught fire.

Roy Sullivan was struck by lightning seven times and holds the Guinness World Record for surviving the most lightning strikes.  Many of us would have taken the name of the small town Roy moved to in Virginia following his retirement as a bad omen.  It was called Dooms. 

Sources:

  1. Most Lightning Strikes Survived, GuinnessWorldRecords.com, accessed June 20, 2022, https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/most-lightning-strikes-survived.
  2. The Tennessean (Nashville, Tennessee), October 23, 1977, p.16.

In Latest Episode, Odd Couple Wins the Big One

By: Teddy Allen

Most things considered — like where they were a few months ago, without football — this past weekend could not have ended much better for Skip Holtz and J’Mar Smith, the coach and quarterback, respectively, of the USFL’s inaugural champions.

These past few months while most of us weren’t caring much about football since there was grass to mow, golf to play and springtime to enjoy, something weird was going on, something just curious enough that a few of us had to pay attention to, of all places, Birmingham.

Former Louisiana Tech football personnel kept showing up on Birmingham’s USFL roster.
By the time it was over, six former Bulldogs were Stallions. Plus there was Holtz, the coach and general manager. Even Bill Johnson, former Tech assistant and former player and assistant at Northwestern State, coached the defensive line.

Birmingham had a Winnfield East feel to it.

If anyone around here cared, it was probably because the two Stallions you kept wondering about most were Holtz, the former Tech head coach, and Smith, his three-year starter at quarterback. To see how this latest chapter between them would turn out, their head-shaking history demanded your attention — even though caring at all was sort of like holding a lit firecracker.

Be careful…

If you saw it up close, you can attest that it was a history both heartbreaking and happy, misunderstood and mystical. One of those “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times” deals.

In a football throne room in some alternate universe where futures are formed from circumstances that mere mortals could never have dreamed up, some pigskin wise guy had to think it would be fun to take a football lifer in this 50s and, for a few spasmodic years, join him to the hip of a wildly athletic, happy-go-lucky teenager from Mississippi.

There’s no other way to explain the long relationship between these two. Seems they’ve been together longer than the Rolling Stones.

Football makes strange bedfellows.

Holtz began recruiting Smith when he was in high school in Meridian. The two teamed to help the Bulldogs win bowl games in 2017, 2018, and 2019, when Smith was Conference USA’s Offensive Player of the Year.

No conference titles, though. Holtz really couldn’t let Smith run much as a sophomore and junior because the backup spot was thin. And when Smith was a senior, he missed two late-in-the-season conference games due to breaking a team rule. Tech lost both — although in defense of the team, the Bulldogs dropped a pass on a late bomb against UAB that likely would have won the game. And the Division. And a spot in the title game.

Tech shut out Miami, 14-0, in the Independence Bowl and finished a “what if?” 10-3.

Goodbye J’Mar, hello pandemic. In 2020, Tech stopped and started its way to a 5-5 record, including a 38-3 loss to Georgia Southern in the New Orleans Bowl. In 2021, Tech lost last-play games to Mississippi State, SMU, and N.C. State and limped in at 3-9.

Holtz was fired in late November before the final game of the 2021 season.

Two months later, he was named coach and GM at Birmingham. And in the USFL draft in the 12th round, Holtz selected J’Mar Smith, who’d had no success with New England as a free agent and with Hamilton in the CFL. Six months after he was cut by the Tiger-Cats, Smith was in Birmingham and, finally, a pro football player.

Six weeks later when the 2022 season opened, probably the best thing that could have happened for Holtz, Smith, and Birmingham, did. Starting quarterback Ale McGough left in the second half with a minor injury and Smith, who majors in the unrehearsed, helped bring the Stallions back from trailing three times, including scrambling for a 2-yard touchdown on a drawn-in-the-sand play with :29 left that gave Birmingham a 28-24 win, the first of eight straight victories.

The Stallions needed a guy who could wing it on the fly with Holtz’s direction; J’Mar is the blueprint for that.

Sunday it was McGough’s turn to spell a cramping Smith and complete a couple of key passes late as Birmingham beat Philadelphia, 33-30, to win it all.

With a different cast and almost entirely different circumstances, what didn’t quite happen in Ruston for the Odd Couple happened in Birmingham. Afterward a smiling and blunt Holtz, for the first time the coach of an 11-win team, said he’d “really enjoyed coaching professional football, every minute of it,” emphasizing the “professional.” And Smith was all near-tears smiles when he said he “owed” this one to his coach.

Funny how ball does that sort of thing. Puts people together at just the right or wrong time in just the right or wrong situation. For some, the time never comes, or comes too late. For Holtz and J’Mar, maybe too late for Tech was, in a future no one knows, right on time for them.

Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu


Supreme Court Strikes Several Blows for Liberty

Included in the historic and dizzying litany of U.S. Supreme Court decisions the last ten days are rulings on 2nd Amendment rights and free exercise of religion.

These decisions, when analyzed in conjunction with landmark pro-democracy decisions defending the rights ‘of the people’ through their elected representatives to choose to protect pre-born human life and requiring that the U.S. Congress determine major environmental policy—not unelected bureaucrats unaccountable to the people—the Supreme Court has returned “We the People” to a constitutional republic and a ‘government by consent of the governed.’

Let’s begin with the 2nd Amendment case.

The Supreme Court held that New York’s handgun licensing regime was unconstitutional. Why? Because NY was forcing its citizens who wished to apply for and receive a permit to carry a handgun to prove that they had “proper cause” to carry the handgun and that the applicant had demonstrated a “special need for self-defense.”

The Supreme Court flatly said “no.” What was the Court’s reasoning?

The Court refused to leave in the hands of NY state bureaucrats the discretion to determine to grant or disallow a citizen’s 2nd Amendment right ‘to keep and bear arms’ based on what the bureaucrat deems to qualify as a “special need” for self-defense.

The Court held that “the Second and Fourteenth Amendments protect an individual’s right to carry a handgun for self-defense outside the home.” The Court underscored this point adding that “individual self-defense is the central component of the Second Amendment right.”

Why is this important? At a time when the Lunatic Left are defunding and disrespecting the police, and police coverage and response times are negatively impacted; when bail to keep dangerous criminals off the streets is being reduced and ended in many jurisdictions; and prisons are being emptied of lethal threats to society; this Supreme Court decision reaffirms the principle that the right to keep and bear arms is an individual right.

The cry for “gun control” after these mass shootings (and these shootings are primarily a heart problem not a gun problem) is an easy solution for politicians with a desire to “do something,” but it is deeply misplaced. What we need is criminal control.

Law-abiding gun owners everywhere already obey our gun laws but criminals—by their nature—are never going to comply. The result is that the good guys are disarmed while the bad guys are, free and unopposed, able to inflict their violence and death on the innocent. This is societal insanity.

The second important Supreme Court decision I address today is one involving free exercise of religion and the “praying football coach.”
What are the facts? Coach Joseph Kennedy was fired from his job as a high school football coach in the Bremerton School District after he knelt at midfield after games to offer a quiet, personal prayer of thanks. The high school is a public high school—making him a government employee—in Washington state.

The Bremerton School District argued that as an employee at work Coach Kennedy’s prayer was “state speech” and thereby violated the Constitution’s promise of no government “establishment of religion.” However, the Supreme Court held that in firing Coach Kennedy it had unconstitutionally punished him “for engaging in a brief, quiet, personal religious observance” after each game.

The Court held that Coach Kennedy’s ritual after football games is private conduct. The Court noted that Coach Kennedy never attempted to pressure or coerce his players or spectators to join him. He had also never offered his prayers while acting within the scope of his duties as a coach or conditioned playing time based upon participation in his prayer. He merely engaged, for approximately 3o seconds after each game, in his own brief and personal religious observance.

The Court reasoned that finding this private conduct unconstitutional would be to discriminate against religion. That’s right, of course, because as any fair reading of American history makes clear, what the Framers of our Constitution were concerned about was the establishment of a state religion of the kind they fled when the Pilgrims came to America in the first place. That is why the Framers would not recognize the hostility to religion that is so common in America today.

For citizen patriots loyal to our Constitution, these last 10 days have marked a thrilling return to constitutional principles, to the rubric that the responsibility of a Supreme Court Justice is to interpret the law, not make it.

Royal Alexander is an attorney, writer, and former politician in his native Shreveport, Louisiana. In 2007, he was the Republican candidate for Louisiana Attorney General. In addition to his law practice, Alexander is an opinion writer, a guest lecturer at public events and education forums, and a frequent guest on various TV and radio outlets.

The views and opinions expressed in the My Opinion article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of The Winn Parish Journal. Any content provided by the authors is of their opinion and is not intended to malign any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, individual or anyone or anything.


WPSB is Hiring! Principal, Winnfield Middle School

Job Vacancy:                     Principal, Winnfield Middle School

Qualifications:                  Applicant must hold a Master’s degree or higher AND either

            1. Type A Certificate with endorsement as principal or
            2. Educational Leader Level 1, 2, or 3 or be eligible to receive Educational Leader 1 upon employment.                                   

Preferences:                      Five or more years of successful teaching experience

Term of
Employment: 
                    12 months

Deadline 
for Application:                Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 2:00 p.m.

 Remarks:                         

Copies of all credentials, including current Louisiana teaching certificate, MUST accompany application.

Selected applicants will be scheduled for interviews.

Submit letter of application and resume’ to:

Mrs. Aaron Durbin

Winn Parish School Board

Post Office Box 430

Winnfield, LA 71483

The Winn Parish School Board is an equal opportunity employer, and provides equal educational opportunities in all programs and activities.  No person is discriminated against because of race, color, national origin, sex, age, or disabling condition.