July 4th Home Town Celebration
Bayou Plaquemine Waterfront Park
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One Nation Under God
First Baptist Church of Baton Rouge - Downtown
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The Phoenix Mars Lander
Highland Road Park Observatory
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Scratch and Sniff Live from the Pastime
Pastime
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Confetti and Fireworks
LSU Museum of Art
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40th Anniversary of the West Baton Rouge Museum
West Baton Rouge Museum
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Star-Spangled Celebration
USS Kidd Veterans Memorial & Museum
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Josh Garrett & The Bottomline
Boudreaux & Thibodeaux
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The Scrambled States of America
Barnes and Noble
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J.D. Blake
Monjunis Italian
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Cajun Dances
American Legion Hall
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Storytime at Barnes and Noble
Barnes and Noble
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Comments
Posted by ceseifert on November 10, 2006 at 2:28 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Well as a younger expat of Baton Rouge now living in DC, I love this magazine. I read about every issue and appreciate you aiding in the change. It makes me that much more interested in coming back to Baton Rouge knowing that there is something ...ahem...interesting for me to come back to. Keep up the good work and in a couple of years, I too will be back to help out with the change for the better. I love 225.
Posted by jamesfree on November 21, 2006 at 4:33 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I'm a middle-aged Baton Rouge ex-pat -- born there, raised there, educated there . . . and gone for good since 1988.
I now live in Omaha, Neb., where government generally works and people generally care. This gives an ex-pat a certain perspective on Louisiana (and Baton Rouge).
That perspective is that all of the hopes and dreams of the "movers and shakers" -- those pie-in-the-sky visions Baton Rougeans are subjected to every few years -- will continue to be stillborn until PEOPLE GENERALLY CARE and insist that GOVERNMENT GENERALLY WORK.
Why, oh WHY, would any major corporation ever move into BR and subject its employees, and its bottom line, to Baton Rouge's and Louisiana's broken civic culture, broken public education and crumbling infrastructure?
Every time I go home for a visit, it strikes me how all of my old haunts look just a little bit more like something found in greater Port-au-Prince, as opposed to something in greater Omaha. Omaha is decidedly a First World city; Baton Rouge now strikes me as high-functioning Third World.
And it breaks my heart to see, via the Internet, what has become of my alma mater, Baton Rouge Magnet High. If the crumbling facilities I see is the "flagship" high school of the area, Lord spare me from seeing the rest.
For a view, go to:
http://revolution-21.blogspot.com/2006/1...
Also:
http://www.brhsalumniassoc.org/photos.ht...
Today, it came to me what the difference between living up here and living down there is.
Living up here and looking back on Louisiana is like watching a loved one holding a pistol to his head but not being able to stop him from pulling the trigger. Living in Louisiana is like having your loved one hold the pistol to YOUR head but not being able to stop him from pulling the trigger.
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