Fire kills 6-year-old |
Police and fire briefs for April 19, 2008 |
Chemical released at Honeywell plant |
Plaquemine firefighters battle furniture-store blaze |
Deputies arrest 2 teen escapees in BR |
Police and fire briefs for April 18, 2008 |
Deputies nab two in scrap-metal theft |
Thibodaux student booked in gun case |
Police and fire briefs for April 17, 2008 |
2 teen girls escape youth official’s custody |
Jetson closure pushed |
State to bid on Superdome bonds |
Critics call bill effort to teach creationism |
Early voting set for May 3 election |
Labor fix to take time |
Chamber backs work-force package |
Panel kills bill to block more storage caverns |
Legislative briefs for April 18, 2008 |
DHH chief offers ideas |
Bond panel delays Entergy vote |
K-9 teams win top honors |
Arrest made in morning shooting standoff |
Police and Fire Briefs for April 21 |
Man, 33, sought in Ascension club shooting |
Weekend violence claims 6 lives in N.O. |
Texas man booked with drug possession |
Police and Fire Briefs for April 20 |
Caucus for BR area on the rise |
Landrieu to meet with La. officials |
Labor Dept. revamp a shared goal |
Today at the State Legislature |
AP: Dirty campaign tactics decried |
Washington Watch for April 21 |
Evolution talk cut from bill |
Political Briefs for April 20 |
A look at the last week at the state Capitol |
Political Horizons for April 20 |
Authorities arrest fugitive in Holden U.S. Marshals along with Livingston Parish deputies caught a fugitive who was on the run for six years late Sunday night. Joseph Stephens, 25, was arrested in Holden after being on the run since 2002, when he never showed up for his trial. |
Sgt. Michael Simon dies |
Weekend violence claims four lives |
Man arrested in shooting spree; woman hit |
Franklinton man dies in La. 10 crash |
Police and fire briefs for April 22, 2008 |
Three arrested in gun, knife fight |
I-55 pile-ups result in fatality |
Denham Springs’s DWI arrests up 71 percent in ’07 |
House committee approves tuition bill Tuition at most Louisiana colleges could be going up. A House committee approved a bill Tuesday that would allow most universities to call for tuition hikes of up to 5 percent. Higher education leaders say a tuition hike is needed to keep campuses from falling even more behind the Southern states' average. |
Panel blocks anti-droopy pants bill |
House panel approves college tuition hike |
Bush pushes free trade |
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