logo
Minden Man of the Year: SAU grad earns community honors

Minden Man of the Year: SAU grad earns community honors

Yahoo10-06-2025
MAGNOLIA, Ark. (KTAL/KMSS)—Over the years, Tracy Campbell has carefully preserved the history of Minden's community through his antique collection. He became part of that history after being named Minden Man of the Year.
'It was very humbling,' Campbell said. 'When you think of some of the guys who have made a difference in this town, I don't feel that I'm worthy of that kind of recognition. It was really nice.'
Southern Arkansas University students excel in game development
Campbell graduated from Southern Arkansas University in 1999 with a degree in mass communications. Shortly after, he married his high school sweetheart, Jennifer. The two moved to Minden, where Tracy became editor of the Minden Press-Herald.
Tracy then led the marketing department at a community college in Hope, Arkansas, before moving back to Minden in 2003. Then, he decided to start his memorabilia collection, primarily vintage advertising signs and logos.
'I was at my uncle's house in Sarepta, and I noticed a sign lying on his carport under his truck,' Campbell said. 'I asked him what he was going to do with it.'
The sign was only being used by Tracy's uncle to catch oil as it leaked from his truck.
'He told me I could have it if I could find something to replace it with,' Campbell said. 'So I brought him another piece of scrap metal.'
Hope native Jacob Jones appointed to UAHT Board of Visitors
Tracy first became interested in memorabilia at the age of 12.
'It all started when I was a kid,' Campbell explained. 'I would ride my bike to garage sales, buy stuff, and put it in my closet. Then, I would sell it to make a profit.'
Tracy's Interest in older advertising signs and merchandise gradually increased while living in Minden.
'I started with like five pieces, then I had 10,' Campbell said. 'Now, I probably have around 300 different items. I just find it enjoyable, and it's therapeutic.'
Louisiana Public Broadcasting to honor six students across the state as young heroes
Tracy credited SAU for the guidance needed to navigate his career journey.
'SAU has 100 percent prepared me,' Campbell said. 'My time at SAU, especially in the journalism department, taught me how to communicate. One of the foundational things you have in life is to know how to communicate both in speaking and writing.
'My time in the Communications Center was beneficial. I got to hone my graphic design skills and my writing skills. Those skills carried me through every job I've ever had.'
When asked about items Tracy may bring home, his wife, Jennifer, said she is no longer surprised.
LSA Deputy of the Year awarded to Caddo Parish Sheriff's deputy
'My family thinks it's kind of funny,' said Campbell. 'They say, 'You never know what Tracy is going to bring home.' They know to expect the unexpected,' he laughed.
In what may be his most unique item yet, Tracy recently brought home a 17-foot sign for the former Minden Motel.
'They know I like saving and preserving the local history,' Campbell said. 'I'm kind of a caretaker for this stuff. I get to keep it and enjoy it for a little while, and then someone else can have it to enjoy it.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Skydiver entangled in power lines near Tracy rescued
Skydiver entangled in power lines near Tracy rescued

CBS News

time20-07-2025

  • CBS News

Skydiver entangled in power lines near Tracy rescued

A skydiver walked away with minor injuries after they were entangled in power lines near Tracy on Saturday afternoon. The South San Joaquin County Fire Authority responded to Lorenzen Road, where they found the skydiver entangled in high-tension power lines and suspended above the road. PG&E secured the power lines and fire crews were able to rescue the skydiver, who crews said appeared to have suffered minor injuries. People were urged to avoid the area while crews conducted the rescue.

Country's rattiest city? Chicago sees 311 rodent calls drop as some seek more ecologically friendly forms of rat control
Country's rattiest city? Chicago sees 311 rodent calls drop as some seek more ecologically friendly forms of rat control

Chicago Tribune

time12-07-2025

  • Chicago Tribune

Country's rattiest city? Chicago sees 311 rodent calls drop as some seek more ecologically friendly forms of rat control

Dragging the weighted black bait box out from the brush with his boots, Ryan Campbell wiped a few beads of sweat from his forehead. The 30-year-old service technician for Rose Pest Control was about halfway through his last rodent service call of the day in Ukrainian Village. He flicked the lid off the bait box, revealing an interior compartment containing dirt, dried leaves and, oddly enough, a blue Lindor chocolate truffle wrapper. Rats bring all sorts of treats into these boxes, which they sometimes use as shelter, he said. 'It's something about seeing all the nasty stuff that people don't see,' Campbell said of why he enjoys his job. 'And you just got stories.' Chicago has developed a reputation as one of America's rattiest cities, with one pest control company ranking it first for the last nine years. But recent 311 call data suggests Chicago might be making headway in reducing the city's rodent problems. While the number of rodent complaints to Chicago's 311 call center spiked in 2021 at almost 66,000, that number has decreased in the last three years, to less than 46,000 in 2024. In the first six months of 2025, the city has received about 19,000 rodent 311 complaints. Chicago's rodent control staff also seem to be taking less time to respond to 311 service calls, according to city data. The mean service request completion time decreased from about 11.5 days in 2021 to 5.3 days in 2024. The decrease in 311 calls shows the city's integrated pest management program is working, said Gloria Pittman, deputy commissioner of streets and sanitation. 'We've always used this type of process, but we've ramped things up because we weren't getting into many places,' Pittman said. The city provides baiting services to residents — putting out poison to kill off rats. It also sends teams to remove dead rats as well, Pittman added. The annual number of rodent service requests isn't a perfect measure of the city's progress in rodent control, said Maureen Murray, assistant director of the One Health Initiative at the Urban Wildlife Institute. At an individual level, many factors can influence who makes a 311 rodent call, and from where and when. Still, the data strongly correlates with other proxy measures of rat populations, especially at the neighborhood and community area levels, Murray said. Murray stressed that rodent populations can harm humans and wildlife. Rats often carry bacteria that can cause leptospirosis, a disease that can cause flu-like symptoms and organ damage, she said. And, rats can also affect mental health. Murray said her team found through surveys that people who report daily rat sightings are five times more likely to show signs of depression than other people, even when accounting for demographic factors like income and race. In Ukrainian Village, Campbell plucked the leaves and wrappers out of his bait box, and tapped the compartment a couple of times to shake off the grime. Then, he swapped out its rat poison, impaling 10 new packets on two metal rods before snapping the lid back on. 'Is it tedious? Yes,' Campbell said. 'But when it comes to a better method, my recommendation would be this: Pest control can't do it by themselves … For the maximum effort, the property owner and pest control have to work together.' Campbell's routine re-service of several residential and commercial units in the neighborhood is just one of the dozens of calls he fulfills every week. Campbell said he thinks the service area of which he's in charge, which covers parts of the West Town and Logan Square areas, have the rattiest neighborhoods. Based on total 311 rodent calls per community area between 2019 and 2024, he's spot on. West Town ranked first out of Chicago's 77 community areas, and Logan Square wasn't far behind at fourth place. They're also among the main sites where local organizations are looking for more ecologically friendly forms of rat control amid the constant struggle to tamp down Chicago's rat population. Special Service Area 33, the business improvement district for Bucktown and Wicker Park, launched a program in April to evaluate the efficacy of rodent contraceptives. It concludes at the end of the year, according to Alyssa Krueger, a spokesperson for Bucktown Wicker Park Chamber of Commerce. While preliminary results won't be available until the end of July, rodents in the area have been ingesting birth control bait, program manager Alice Howe said in an email statement. SSA 33's pilot uses Evolve, a soft bait about the size and shape of a miniature sausage. Its active ingredient is cottonseed oil, which decreases sperm production and ovarian follicle growth in rats, said Rochelle Paulet, marketing director for the company that manufactures Evolve. Paulet said using contraceptives addresses the 'other side of the equation' that traditional rat poisons, which are mainly anticoagulants that induce internal bleeding, don't. 'All of those survivors are breeding, and they're breeding constantly,' Paulet said. 'We address the reproductive side of it rather than the kill side of it.' Like with other forms of birth control, rats have to ingest Evolve regularly for it to work. The contraceptive's effects last for about six weeks at a time, Paulet said. One of the largest potential benefits of using birth control instead of rat poison is its lighter ecological footprint, Paulet said. 'Those poisons are so bad for the environment,' she said. 'Because if an owl were to come in and grab one of these rats that's consumed the poison, that anticoagulant is going to pass to the owl and cause the owl to bleed out as well.' Rat poison can have an outsized impact on urban wildlife food chains, researchers have found. Murray and her colleagues reported that 100% of the 93 raccoons, skunks and opossums they tested from Chicago were exposed to some sort of anticoagulant rodent-killer, according to a November 2024 study published in the journal . Field Museum study shows human impact on chipmunks and voles in ChicagoAt the same time, rat contraceptives probably won't be a 'silver bullet' for the rodent control industry, said Murray and Janelle Iaccino, marketing director at Rose Pest Control. For now, Iaccino said her business won't adopt the rodent contraceptives as part of their services, pointing to trials in other cities like New York where the method hasn't seen much success. 'They're not going to just bring this birth control and be like, 'Problem solved, now we won't have baby rats,'' Iaccino said. 'No, that's not realistic. Besides the products being used, it's about the knowledge. It's about reporting it — being diligent about preventing the attraction of them in the first place.' Other factors that could impede the success of rodent contraceptives include more attractive nearby food sources and how immediately people want rats to go away, Iaccino and Campbell said. Murray, who launched the Chicago Rat Project in 2018, said contraceptives need more rigorous, realistic study as a rodent control technique. While her research program first focused on tracking the microbes and diseases that Chicago's rats carry, it has zoomed out to examine the ecological impacts of rat control as well. Now, the project is in the planning stages of its own yearlong rat contraceptive pilot in partnership with Wisdom Good Works, an organization that studies humane animal control. Murray anticipates they'll get started in the fall and is hoping to see whether rat contraception might also affect the reproductive capacity of wildlife up the food chain. 'It's important to make sure that if we're putting these products out in the environment, that we exclude other animals and make sure that it's only the rats,' Murray said. And while Murray said she's excited to use new technologies to evaluate the safety and success of rat contraceptives, modifying habitats to be less rat-friendly is still the strongest form of rodent control. Those preventive measures include trimming overgrown yards and clearing out food that rats can easily access, Campbell said, gesturing at several green apples that had fallen from a nearby tree and were starting to rot. 'They got the apple trees,' he said of the neighborhood rats. 'So they don't have to eat my poison.' The city has also been trying to support these preventive measures, Pittman said. The Bureau of Rodent Control has been increasing collaboration with the Bureau of Sanitation to replace faulty garbage carts, which rats can exploit to obtain more food. And, the city is making more of an effort to service residential rat calls, she added. Between 2019 and 2024, Chicago has spent more than $80 million in rat control. In 2024 and 2025, the city earmarked more than $14 million annually toward its rodent bureau. The city's traditional rat control strategies can feel siloed off from private pest management, meaning at times, 'it's almost like we're fighting each other,' Iaccino said. Working more collaboratively could stop rats from ricocheting between private property and public alleyways, she added. Regardless of how much additional money Chicago spends on rat control or whether rodent contraceptives succeed, Campbell said from a bird's-eye view, Chicago's rats are here to stay. 'This ain't a war that anyone's gonna win,' he said after he finished pouring turquoise poison pellets down a rat burrow. 'None of us are going to eradicate rats.'

5 lottery near-misses where big prizes were almost lost forever
5 lottery near-misses where big prizes were almost lost forever

UPI

time27-06-2025

  • UPI

5 lottery near-misses where big prizes were almost lost forever

June 27 (UPI) -- Lottery players buy their tickets dreaming of the big one, but sometimes even tickets that earn big prizes can end up lost, forgotten or even thrown in the trash. Here are five times winning lottery tickets with major prizes nearly failed to find their way to a claims center. In a file container A Calvert County, Md., man bought a six-board ticket for the July 12, 2024, Bonus Match 5 drawing, but when he thought to check whether it was a winner, he discovered the ticket was nowhere to be found. He ended up locating the ticket in a file container months later, and discovered one of his lines had scored a $500,000 prize, and another had netted him an additional $400. He was able to claim his prize with just days to spare before it would have expired. In the car Another ticket that went missing for several months was an August 2024 Powerball ticket purchased by a Jonesboro, Ark., woman named Tracy H. The player told lottery officials the ticket went missing before she could even check if it was a winner. Tracy ended up finding the ticket in her vehicle in February, and was able to claim a $100,000 prize shortly before the 180-day expiration period. The ticket hoarder A Prince George's County, Md., man claimed a $50,000 Pick 5 prize with less than a week to spare before it expired, but he said the ticket hadn't been forgotten or misplaced, sharing how: "I just wanted to hold on to it. But, I'll tell you I sure was excited about it." The win even came as a surprise to the player's wife, who wasn't told of her husband's luck until the day before he claimed his prize in February. Under the furniture A Nottingham, Md., man told Maryland Lottery officials he was helping his mother move furniture at her house when he discovered a stack of scratch-off tickets that she had intended to give as stocking stuffers months earlier. The man's mother told him to go ahead and take the tickets home, with the understanding that they would split any winners. The duo ended up sharing a $50,000 prize from a $5 Holiday Luck Doubler ticket -- as well as smaller prizes of $6 and $15. In the trash Shepherdsville resident Pamela Howard-Thorton told Kentucky Lottery officials she bought four $5 Flamingo Bingo scratch-off tickets, but found after tossing out three non-winners that her fourth ticket was missing. "I looked in the trash and I was like, 'Oh, my gosh, I threw it away,'" she said, adding that the ticket rescued from the garbage can turned out to be an $80,000 winner.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store