Louisiana Union, Justice, and Confidence
 
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Louisiana Union, Justice, and Confidence

Louisiana: Hurricane Job Katrina Louisiana

FRIENDLY FOES UF's Chris Leak and LSU's JaMarcus Russell are friends off the field Football coaching staffs had changed at LSU. A new guy was going to give the pep talks, and that had Tigers quarterback JaMarcus Russell a bit freaked out. So he dialed up his friend at Florida, quarterback Chris Leak, who had faced a similar adjustment a few weeks before.
GAINESVILLE -- Football coaching staffs had changed at LSU. A new guy was going to give the pep talks, and that had Tigers quarterback JaMarcus Russell a bit freaked out. So he dialed up his friend at Florida, quarterback Chris Leak, who had faced a similar adjustment a few weeks before.
GAINESVILLE · Football coaching staffs had changed at LSU. A new guy was going to give the pep talks, and that had Tigers quarterback JaMarcus Russell a bit freaked out.
Fewer than 190,000 people are living in New Orleans a year after Hurricane Katrina, according to a door-to-door survey released Thursday...
September 15, 2005 Katrina, New Orleans, and Peak Oil - by Richard Heinberg With comment by Michael C. Ruppert (read this story) Crossing the Rubicon: An Interview with Michael Ruppert - by Rob Williams With comment by Michael C. Ruppert (read this story)
As the New Orleans Police Department battles a steady tide of crime in a repopulating city, its leaders also must deal with the reality of a diminished force, hampered by attrition after Hurricane Katrina.
Imagine having recently graduated from college and applying for job after job, month after month, when you're the only one in the newbie-graduate application pool who doesn't have a degree from an Ivy League school.
Despite last year's 25th anniversary Cajun Festival having been dampened by poor weather and hurricane Katrina's ravaging of the Gulf Coast, this year's CajunFest was one of the best yet, according to coordinator Bob Caswell.
Army Secretary Francis Harvey spent a week talking homeland security and the war on terrorism with U.S. soldiers and military leaders in Korea and Afghanistan before flying into south Louisiana on Monday for a closer look at the Army Corps of Engineers' battle to save New Orleans from the next big hurricane.
U.S. NEW ORLEANS – On Saturday, Louisiana voters wanting change after Hurricane Katrina, overwhelmingly voted to change the New Orleans levee system by passing a constitutional amendment that consolidates multiple levee systems into two.

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