The
Louisiana Leadership Institute Marching Band
Anne Rolfes,
founder and executive director of the New Orleans-based Louisiana Bucket Brigade,
has won a prestigious two-year fellowship from the Environmental Leadership
Program. The national group chose Rolfes for the extensive training based on
her grassroots work with communities to hold industrial plants accountable for
toxic pollution and accidents. Rolfes is the first Louisiana resident to win
this honor.
Greater New Orleans Inc.,
fulfilling a pledge to turn promising local research into economic development,
has awarded its first two research grants. Paul Schilling of the University
of New Orleans College of Engineering received $8,500 to create epoxy coatings
for marine use, and Zhijun Liu and Eugene Woltering, researchers in the Louisiana
State University system, received a $10,000 grant to develop a cancer-fighting
drug.
Sen. Sherri Cheek, R-Shreveport,
claims that state police's game-day relay of Sugar Bowl tickets from Shreveport
to New Orleans was just another public service provided by troopers. When Cheek's
husband left his tickets at home, the senator-elect got state police to quickly
ferry them across the state. Cheek, sworn in Jan. 12, didn't violate state ethics
rules since she was not yet in office. Still, she shouldn't use her position
to treat troopers as a courier service.