UL Football Survival Guide

TOP 5 REASONS TO GET TO CAJUN FIELD EARLY

With success comes greater interest, which translates into more people attending UL games.

 

Parent Trap

coverA dysfunctional system designed to protect children from abuse throws an Acadiana mom and her 7-year-old daughter into a nightmarish legal limbo.

Heather Miller  |  Photos by Robin May
Aug. 8, 2012

Laney Wyble spent the first two years of her daughter’s life at her hospital bedside, watching, holding, nurturing her baby as doctors in New Orleans and Lafayette worked to stabilize a rare genetic disorder that nearly killed her “little angel.”

 

Absent-minded

Cover1August 1, 2012
By Heather Miller • Photos by Robin May

Inaccessible and ill-informed, District 9 School Board rep Rae Trahan’s tenure is best characterized by two words: Missing. Inaction.

“By the way, it’s nice to meet you. I think you’re the only board member I’ve never seen.”

 

2012 Annual Manual

CoverNeed To Know
Your go-to guide for living, working, playing and raising a family in Lafayette.

Roads and oil. If anything set Lafayette to becoming the vibrant, bustling city it is today, it’s roads and oil.

 

 

In Abstract

CoverLafayette native Mallory Page is swiftly ascending the contemporary art world.
By Lisa LeBlanc-Berry ~ Photos by Robin May
July 11, 2012

The 29-year-old has recently emerged in the vibrant New Orleans contemporary art scene as a noteworthy abstract expressionist. Page began painting only seven years ago — and has already gained national acclaim.

 

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  • Atlanta radio station makes fun of Gleason

    JUNE 17 If anyone ever wonders why Saints fans hate Atlanta with a capital H, here's a good indication. Radio "professionals" at an Atlanta station created an entire segment around making fun of former Saints player Steve Gleason, who is now paralyzed by ALS. Listen, nobody's ever accused DJs of being rocket scientists. But how could someone think it is amusing to pretend to ask a man with a degenerative, fatal disease if he will be alive next week? The DJs have been fired, and are now whining about how gutless their former bosses are. Wow.

  • Livingston School Board prez arrested over fatal accident

    JUNE 18 Here's the latest from the Advocate on the fatal hit-and-run accident allegedly involving the president of the Livingston Parish School Board. He's accused by police of hitting a 21-year-old man on a highway early Sunday and driving away. The man died at a hospital later. On Monday, police seized the president's truck and towed it away. But he's available for board meetings: apparently a $500 bond is sufficient for this type of thing over in St. Helena Parish.

  • Griffin Scott asking for legal fund help

    JUNE 18 Former broadcast journalist Griffin Scott has posted this plea on his blog for financial assistance from his readers. Scott, who says he was fired after he wrote something fairly innocuous (for Facebook) on his wall, is suing a media giant for his job back. He's framed himself as David going after a bloated media giant, and he's probably not far off.

  • A DIG post about hurricane names

    JUNE 18 Here's a fairly absurd column posted on DIG Magazine about the completely absurd practice of naming killer storms. Tornadoes don't have names. Blizzards don't have names. But hurricanes do, and there's a big process to bestow them, Jacques Cormery writes. He's right about the crazy assemblage of names -- this year, there's everything from Tanya to Humberto -- and his idea that we don't waste good names on killer storms is a good one.

  • GOP needs to do some soul-searching

    JUNE 17 Political columnist John Maginnis has some advice for Louisiana Republicans: grow up. After the schism that occurred in this past session - fiscal hawks teaming up with Democrats to spank the Republican "majority" and hand Gov. Jindal his, er, aspirations for continued solon control -- they need to figure out how to get along with each other, Maginnis writes.

  • Miss Dot now making poboys in heaven

    JUNE 17 Here's the Picayune's obit story for Dorothy 'Miss Dot' Domilise, the lady who made poboys at the uptown restaurant that bears her name. Miss Dot moved to New Orleans during World War II, where she met and married her husband Sam. When she passed away Friday she was 90, and had spent more than 60 of those years working at the restaurant on Annunciation Street.

  • Advocate weighs in on NOLA law enforcement

    JUNE 17 This editorial in the Advocate speaks in favor of the consent decrees that have federal judges overseeing police operations and the sheriff's parish prison in New Orleans. Mayor Landrieu and Sheriff Gusman can't get along, so outside forces, like the Inspector General and the judges, are needed to make sure things run right, the editorial opines.

  • Fox news is killing the GOP!

    JUNE 18 Here's a post from Manny Schewitz on Forward Progressives that is good for a chuckle. Manny had an epiphany back in November, and is sharing it with us today: he believes that Fox "News" is killing the GOP by pandering to right wing nuts. Now, don't get it twisted: Manny's not broke up about it. He says he enjoys watching the downward spiral with a shot of whiskey and "a schadenfreude chaser."

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  • Glenn Stewart convicted
    In rendering his ruling, District Judge John Trahan all but called the real estate developer a liar for inconsistencies in his accounts of what prompted him to punch a school teacher unconscious.
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    Frank’s Casing Crew, now doing business as Frank’s International, will make its final appearance on ABiz’s list of the Top 50 Privately Held Companies in Acadiana this year, and once again, it will likely be at the top with more than $1 billion in annual revenues. The 75-year-old company specializing in tubular fabrication and installation services to the oil and gas industry plans to go public this year.
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