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Sept. 8, 2005
National guardsman Brunk Conley of the Army National Guard's 41st Brigade Combat Team talks about duty in Louisiana.
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Sept. 8, 2005
A report from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, about how makeshift hospitals are coping with a surge of patients.
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Sept. 8, 2005
After a background report on the thousands of Hurricane Katrina victims who evacuated to Houston, Texas, two panelists discuss sending displaced children back to school.
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Sept. 7, 2005
The director of the Congressional Budget Office and an economist from Louisiana discuss the vast economic impacts of Hurricane Katrina.
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Sept. 7, 2005
Authorities pressed the several thousand remaining holdouts to leave New Orleans or risk death and disease. Following an update on the ongoing search and rescue efforts, Capt. Marlon DeFillo, commander of the Public Affairs Department for the New Orleans Police Department, talks about the ongoing struggle to clear the city.
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Sept. 7, 2005
Excerpts from a teleconference featuring Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour describing the needs of his storm-ravaged coastline following Hurricane Katrina. Then, Tom Bearden reports on how Gulfport, Miss. residents are surviving on community help.
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Sept. 7, 2005
Dr. Julie Gerberding, head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, discusses the growing health threat to residents and rescue workers in New Orleans posed by floodwaters filled with toxins and bacteria.
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Sept. 6, 2005
A conversation with Louisiana Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu about his state's ongoing recovery efforts following Hurricane Katrina.
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Sept. 6, 2005
An update on the continuing recovery efforts along the Gulf Coast.
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Sept. 6, 2005
President Bush and congressional leaders each announced Tuesday that they would investigate the federal government's highly criticized response to Hurricane Katrina. A report on the political fallout as Congress returned to Washington Tuesday.
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Sept. 6, 2005
A report from Baton Rouge, La, looks at the gigantic task of relocating the hurricane victims who were left homeless after Hurricane Katrina. Baton Rouge became the largest city in Louisiana as residents from around the Gulf Coast look for shelter.
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Sept. 6, 2005
Essayist Richard Rodriguez reflects on Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath.
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Sept. 6, 2005
President Bush and Congress each announced on Tuesday that they would investigate the federal government's highly criticized response to Hurricane Katrina.
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Sept. 5, 2005
Thousands along the Gulf Coast remain missing and hundreds of thousands continue to be on the move a week after Hurricane Katrina decimated the area.
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Sept. 5, 2005
President Bush, who has faced withering criticism for the slow federal response to Hurricane Katrina, visited the storm-ravaged Gulf Coast as some activists and commentators continued to question the potential role race has played in the aid effort. Three experts give their perspectives.
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Sept. 5, 2005
Areas along the Gulf Coast ravaged by Hurrican Katrina continue to clean up after the devastating storm. Two reports from Gulfport, Miss and Bay St. Louis, Miss. focus on the efforts to rebuild and recover.
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Sept. 5, 2005
President Bush, who has faced withering criticism for the slow federal response to Hurricane Katrina, visited the storm-ravaged Gulf Coast for the second time in four days.
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Sept. 2, 2005
Evacuees in Houston, Texas begin the process of rebuilding and starting over amid confusion and fear. A reporter gives an update from Houston as residents from New Orleans arrive in the area seeking shelter.
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Sept. 2, 2005
Lt. Gen. Carl Strock, who commands the Army Corps of Engineers, the agency in charge of repairing the levees and draining the floodwaters in New Orleans, discusses the enormous tasks ahead in the submerged city.
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Sept. 2, 2005
Survivors of Hurricane Katrina continued to flee New Orleans on Friday seeking shelter in Texas as emergency convoys reached the city to assist remaining residents and try to halt criminal activity. A reporter provides an update from New Orleans.
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Sept. 2, 2005
Coastal residents desperate for water and food are facing long lines and deteriorating conditions as hundreds of National Guardsmen arrive to keep order in the hardest-hit areas of the Mississippi Gulf Coast. A reporter provides an update.
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Sept. 2, 2005
Survivors of Hurricane Katrina continued to flee New Orleans on Friday seeking shelter in Texas as emergency convoys reached the city to assist remaining residents and try to halt criminal activity.
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Sept. 2, 2005
Coastal residents desperate for water and food are facing long lines and deteriorating conditions as hundreds of National Guardsmen arrive to keep order in the hardest-hit areas of the Mississippi Gulf Coast.
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Sept. 1, 2005
Federal Emergency Management Agency Director Mike Brown called the hurricane and its aftermath a disaster of catastrophic proportions and that FEMA will use all necessary resources to aid emergency relief efforts.
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Sept. 1, 2005
A report from Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, where residents of New Orleans continue searching for shelter, emergency supplies and transportation. Then, a report from Houston as the first wave of New Orleans residents arrive seeking shelter in the Astrodome.
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Sept. 1, 2005
The military has ordered 22,000 more National Guard troops to the Gulf region to help communities devastated by Hurricane Katrina. A reporter in New Orleans gives an update.
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Sept. 1, 2005
Representatives from the Salvation Army and the Baton Rouge Area Foundation discuss the efforts to assist victims of Hurricane Katrina who were left without food, shelter or medicine.
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Sept. 1, 2005
Two experts discuss the violence and chaos that erupted in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina flooded the city and left many residents without food or shelter.
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Sept. 1, 2005
Some 22,000 National Guard troops will join forces already deployed along the Gulf Coast in an effort to bring security and calm to the region in what officials predict may be the largest military response to a natural disaster in U.S. history.
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Aug. 31, 2005
An Independent Television News report provides a look at the damage in Biloxi, Miss. from Hurricane Katrina.