The
Times-Picayune
Hurricane katrina editions
COLLECTION
(Mss 331)
Inventory
Earl K. Long Library
September 2006
Contents
Contents
Summary
Historical Note
Series, Subseries, and
Descriptions
Container
List
Index
Terms
Procedures for Requesting Special Collections Materials
Summary
Size: 3 linear feet
Geographic
locations:
Inclusive
dates: August 28, 2005 – September 17, 2005
Summary: Issues of the
Related
collections: “Writing Katrina” (Spring 2006) Collection
(Mss 332)
Source: Gift, October 2006
Citation: The
Times-Picayune Hurricane Katrina Editions Collection, Earl K. Long Library,
Historical Note
Hurricane
Katrina was the sixth-strongest Atlantic hurricane on record and the
third-strongest to strike the
More
than eighty percent of area residents evacuated in advance of Katrina’s
arrival, many did not. As the world
watched in growing horror, rising floodwaters forced many to flee for their
lives or to await long-delayed rescue in attics or on rooftops. The disaster had significant and enduring economic
and political implications on local, state, and national levels, as well as an uncalculable personal toll on the hundreds of thousands of
lives it touched.
For its reporting of Hurricane Katrina, The Times-Picayune won the 2006 Pulitzer
Prize—journalism’s highest honor—for distinguished coverage of breaking news
and shared with the Mississippi Sun-Herald
the Pulitzer for public service. The
latter citation recognized the staff’s “courageous and aggressive coverage of
Hurricane Katrina, overcoming desperate conditions facing the city and the
newspaper."
“In the aftermath of Katrina, rising floodwaters from
collapsed seawalls forced 240 Times-Picayune
staff and their family members to flee the paper's downtown offices in delivery
trucks on August 30. But photographers,
reporters, and editors stayed in the area continuously, and the newspaper never
ceased publishing, posting online editions for three days, then
returning to print editions as well on September 2.” Other journalists worked out of the Manship School of Mass Communications at
Sources include:
James O’Byrne, “TP Wins
Two Pulitzers, in Public Service, Breaking News,”
Container List
Issues
of The Times-Picayune:
331-1
Sunday, August
28, 2005. Headline: “Katrina Takes Aim.”
331-2
Monday, August
29, 2005. Headline: “Ground Zero.”
331-3
Tuesday, August
30, 2005. Headline: “Catastrophic.” (Printout)
331-4
Wednesday,
August 31, 2005. Headline: “Under
Water.” (Printout)
331-5
Thursday,
September 1, 2005. Headline: “Hitting
Bottom.” (Printout)
331-6
Friday,
September 2, 2005. Headline: “‘Help Us,
Please.’”
331-7
Saturday,
September 3, 2005. Headline: “First
Water, Now Fire.”
331-8
Sunday,
September 4, 2005. Headline: “Help at
Last.”
331-9
Monday,
September 5, 2005. Headline: “7th Day of
Hell.”
331-10
Tuesday,
September 6, 2005. Headline: “Coming
Home.”
331-11
Wednesday,
September 7, 2005. Headline: “Disease,
Fire Threaten City.”
331-12
Thursday,
September 8, 2005. Headline: “Clear Out
or Else.”
331-13
Friday,
September 9, 2005. Headline: “After hell,
high water holdouts pried loose.”
331-14
Saturday,
September 10, 2005. Headline: “Death
Toll May Not Be As High As Feared.”
331-15
Sunday,
September 11, 2005. Headline: “Glimmers
of hope emerge as water slowly recedes.”
331-16
Monday,
September 12, 2005. Headline: “Some return
to Plaquemines; death toll in
331-17
Tuesday,
September 13, 2005. Headline: “City
Needs to Control Recovery, Bush Says.”
331-18
Wednesday,
September 14, 2005. Headline: “Some parts
of
331-19
Thursday,
September 15, 2005. Headline: “The Bill
Comes Due.”
331-20
Friday,
September 16, 2005. Headline: “‘There is
no way to imagine
331-21
Saturday,
September 17, 2005. Headline: “After the
Water, Utter Emptiness.”
331-22
Sunday,
September 18, 2005. Headline: “Empty
Hands, Broken Hearts.”
331-23
Monday,
September 19, 2005. Headline: “Keeping
the Faith.”
Index Terms
Hurricane Katrina, 2005
Times-Picayune