20 point double digits, and could a poll change your vote . And also, the saturday night live issatire is not funny to donald trump and what he said made him so upset. And now, how the pulse, and welcome back to pulse of Francis Rivera is here to break it down. And easy chance for you to do it, and you have the laptop or america. We are asking you the second pulse question of the day and it the phone close by for sure, and you only have to go to is a good one for the political junkies here as we go to pulse. Msnbc. Com america and there you will see the question that we are asking appear and election day. Agree or disagree, the final debate could change my vote. And three days left here before there you can select your response. This is an ongoing conversation clinton and trump faceoff in and you can vote as often as you las vegas. Want based on the discussions and clinton has more than twice the debates bounce that trump here. And you can vote for every has seen heading into the last
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Blanchard Youngblood went home to be with Jesus late Wednesday night after a long battle with Parkinson’s Disease. He was 90.
Blanchard was born in Hurricane, Louisiana in the summer of 1930. A barefoot country boy, he helped support his family by picking cotton and taking care of the farm. He moved to Minden in 1943, remaining there for the entirety of his life.
After serving 6 years in the National Guard, he served the community of Minden well. He was City Clerk and Treasurer for 17 years, while also serving as long-time Assistant Fire Chief. He was a deacon and Sunday School teacher at First Baptist Church for many years. Blanchard and his friend, T.C. Bloxom, ran YB Farms as a hobby and side business. Through that, they became mentors to a whole generation of young men, teaching them life lessons through hauling hay. Upon his retirement from the City, he became Vice-President of (then) Webster Bank until fully retiring in 1997. He spent his later years wit