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Thursday, September 02, 2010
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Thirteen Oil Rig Workers Survive Explosion
An oil platform exploded and burned off the Louisiana coast Thursday, the second such disaster in the Gulf of Mexico in less than five months.
Thursday, September 02, 2010 8:32 PM
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Louisiana Awarded With $170 Million Education Grant
The U.S. Department of Education awards a 170-million-dollar grant to a consortium of 26 states, including Louisiana, to develop new common assessments for public school students.
Thursday, September 02, 2010 9:33 PM
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DOTD Issues Labor Day Travel Advisory
The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (DOTD) today advised drivers of upcoming work schedules for interstate and major road projects throughout Louisiana for the Labor Day weekend (Saturday, September 4, through Monday, September 6).
Thursday, September 02, 2010 9:28 PM
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One Dead In Early Morning Shooting
Baton Rouge police report that officers responded to a shooting about 3:30 Thursday morning in the 1500 block of North Marque Ann Drive where they found a black male lying in a parking lot who had been shot.
Thursday, September 02, 2010 7:55 PM
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Tuesday, November 26th National Headlines
President-elect Barack Obama is expected to make more appointments to his administration team today. The "Chicago Tribune" reports Obama will name Congressional Budget Office Director Peter Orszag as his director of the Office of Management and Budget.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is expected to unveil a program today to boost the availability of auto and student loans and credit cards. The "Wall Street Journal" reports the idea is to make it easier for consumers to borrow money. The program will be operated by the Federal Reserve with an initial focus on consumer loans.
A California man wanted in connection with Sunday's deadly shooting at a New Jersey church has been caught. U.S. marshals reportedly took Joseph Pallipurath into custody late yesterday in Georgia where he apparently has relatives. The 27-year-old is the lone suspect in the triple-shooting that killed two people and left another in critical condition.
Several models of Audis and Hondas are among the safest cars on the highway. That's according to the latest information from the Insurance Institute For Highway Safety. Among the best rated of the 2008 models are the Audi RL and A6 models, the Cadillac CTS, and Ford's Taurus. Honda Acura models hold down two spots among midsize cars.
It's been a "Long and Winding Road" for Beatles fans hoping to get the Fab Four's tunes on iTunes. Paul McCartney says negotiations that could have ended with the entire Beatles' catalog being available online have stalled with Apple's iTunes online music store. The ex-Beatle says he's all for the deal.
Several hundred guests will need special glasses to watch an upcoming NFL game. Next week's contest between the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders will be broadcast in 3-D to theaters in Los Angeles, New York and Boston. The NFL calls it a glimpse at, quote, "what the future holds." Tuesday, November 25, 2008 7:37 AM
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Monday, November 25th National Headlines
President-elect Barack Obama will formally announce who his top economic advisors will be at a news conference set for noon Eastern time today. Timothy Geithner [[ GIHT-ner ]], who is president of the New York Federal Reserve, is expected to be named Treasury Secretary. Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers the expected choice for director of the White House National Economic Council.
There's some good news for holiday travelers this year. "USA Today" says information from the FlightStats data firm indicates flight delays are down this fall due in part to airlines cutting the number of scheduled flights. From September 1st through November 17th, flights arrived more than 15 minutes late 17-percent of the time compared with 21-percent for the same period a year ago.
Eryn Bloomfield, the mother of an eight-year-old murder suspect in Arizona, told ABC's "Good Morning America" today that her son is a normal, outgoing boy. Police in rural St. Johns claim he fatally shot his father, 29-year-old Vincent Romero, and another man who lived in their home on November 5th. Bloomfield is the boy's birth mother and lives in Mississippi.
A security guard at the Church of Scientology's Celebrity Centre in Hollywood fatally shot a man who was wielding a sword Sunday. The "Los Angeles Times" reports the guard claims he was acting in self-defense and was detained by investigators. Scientology is a belief system created in 1952 by science fiction author L. Ron Hubbard.
Astronauts aboard the International Space Station are still trying to get the new wastewater treatment system working properly. It was just delivered to the station by the Space Shuttle Endeavour. They have been working to figure out how to fix the device that transforms urine into drinking water.
It was 45 years ago today when JFK assassin Lee Harvey Oswald was shot and killed by nightclub owner Jack Ruby in Dallas, Texas. The whole event unfolded on national television as Oswald was being transferred from one Dallas jail to another. It happened just two days after Oswald fatally shot President John F. Kennedy. Monday, November 24, 2008 8:37 AM
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Thursday, November 20th National Headlines
It may be up to president-elect Barack Obama and the new Congress to deal with the proposed auto bailout. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid yesterday pulled the bill to lend the Big Three 25-billion-dollars after the measure didn't get enough support from Republicans. The issue is likely dead for the rest of the year.
The Federal Reserve is cutting its growth forecast through 2009 and some officials say even deeper interest rate cuts may be needed if growth slows any more. The lowered forecast from the central bank suggests the economy could shrink by zero-point-two percent in 2009.
[[ NOTE NATURE OF FOLLOWING ]]
Osama bin Laden's second-in-command is calling President-elect Barack Obama a, quote, "house Negro." In a new audio recording, Ayman al Zawahri [[ EYE-mun ahl-zuh-WAHR-ee ]] says, quote, "You represent the direct opposite of honorable black Americans like Malcolm X."
Three of the nation's busiest airports get major upgrades today. Chicago's O'Hare, Seattle-Tacoma and Washington Dulles International airports are opening new runways. FAA acting chief Bobby Sturgell says the new runway at O'Hare, the second busiest airport in the nation, will help smooth air traffic flow nationwide.
Lack of oversight is being blamed for the crash of a Brazilian airliner that left 199 people dead last year. The BBC says the official report on the incident blames government agencies for their failure to provide a safe runway and the TAM airline, for lack of pilot training.
Pop superstar Michael Jackson will defend himself in court next week after all. The singer originally had his lawyer insist he was too sick to travel to a British court where he's being sued by a Bahrain prince. The 50-year-old King of Pop is being sued over allegedly reneging on a contract to record a new album and write an autobiography. Thursday, November 20, 2008 7:43 AM
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Wednesday, November 19th National Headlines
The heads of the Big Three automakers will be back on Capitol Hill this morning, looking for financial help for their troubled industry. General Motors, Ford and Chrysler are asking the government to give them 25-billion-dollars from the 700-billion-dollar Wall Street bailout.
Alaska is getting a new U.S. Senator. Anchorage mayor Mark Begich [[BEG-itch]] beat incumbent Ted Stevens, who last month was convicted on seven felony counts of lying on Senate financial disclosure forms. Stevens is the longest-serving Republican in the Senate.
The next attorney general could be a former Clinton Administration official. If he's confirmed by the Senate, Eric Holder would be the first African-American to serve as attorney general. He was a former deputy attorney general in the Clinton administration and reportedly will be nominated by President-elect Barack Obama to head the Justice Department.
The head of Interpol in Mexico is under arrest for alleged ties to a drug trafficking organization. Prosecutors say Ricardo Gutierrez took bribes from the Beltran Leyva crime group, which recently split from Mexico's infamous Sinaloa drug cartel.
A new biotech drug that zaps cancer by choking its blood supply also increases the risk of dangerous blood clots. That's the finding in a new study out from New York's Stoney Brook University, and reported in "USA Today." Researchers found 12-percent of patients who took Avastin developed blood clots in their veins, a rate that's 30-percent higher than among other cancer patients.
John Mayer, the Foo Fighters and B.B. King are on the bill for this year's Grammy Nominations Concert. Billboard.com reports Mariah Carey, LL Cool J and Taylor Swift are co-hosts for the event. The Grammy Nominations Concert takes place at L.A.'s Nokia Theatre on December 3rd and will air on CBS. Wednesday, November 19, 2008 7:36 AM
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Tuesday, November 18th National Headlines
The federal bailout is the focus of two separate hearings today on Capitol Hill. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson will be testifying about how the federal Wall Street bailout is working. Meanwhile, the Senate Banking Committee is holding a hearing on the troubled U.S. auto industry.
Gas prices are at their lowest level since March of 2005. The Energy Department says the average price fell another 15 cents this past week. The average price nationwide is two-dollars-seven-cents a gallon, a drop of more than a dollar from prices this time last year. Triple-A says there are now 17 states with average prices under two-dollars a gallon.
Joe Lieberman apparently won't be kicked out of the Senate Democratic caucus, despite campaigning for Republican presidential nominee John McCain. Lieberman will also reportedly keep his chairmanship of the Homeland Security Committee, but may be asked to step down as head of one subcommittee.
Minnesota launches a state-mandated recount today in one of the nation's most closely-watched election races. Republican Minnesota Senator Norm Coleman has seen his lead over Democratic challenger Al Franken shrink to just 206 votes since the November 4th election.
California's Tea Fire is now fully contained. The blaze burned more than 19-hundred acres and destroyed 210 homes on just over three square miles of some of the most expensive property in America. Some residents in Montecito are still under an evacuation order while others are being allowed to return home.
Japan's newest baseball sensation is five-feet tall, 114 pounds and a female. MLB.com reports 16-year-old Eri Yoshida is bidding to become the first female pro baseball player in Japan. The right-handed knuckleballer was drafted on Sunday by a pro team in the country's new independent Japanese League. Tuesday, November 18, 2008 7:46 AM
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