This show plays on most NPR stations, here's a link to the station list: <
http://www.npr.org/stations/>
The Audio is already available on line, if you don't want to wait for the show to air in your area, here's a link: <
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5281495> Their is also a excerpt from his new book at the link above also.
Listen to this story...(at link above)
by Terry Gross
Fresh Air from WHYY, March 15, 2006 · Louisiana State medical examiner Louis Cataldie was the coroner for the East Baton Rouge Parish in Louisiana from 1998 to 2003. He was also a small-town general practitioner and emergency room doctor in Baton Rouge.
When Hurricane Katrina hit, Dr. Cataldie helped to evacuate patients and set up field hospitals. He also aided the injured and investigated deaths. That task is ongoing, as Cataldie is working to identify the dead from Katrina. His new book is Coroner s Journal: Stalking Death in Louisiana.
Also on todays show:
Katrina & Recovery
Listen to this story...(at link above)
by Terry Gross
Fresh Air from WHYY, March 15, 2006 · When Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast, it also disrupted the education of thousands of students. While many schools remain closed, Benjamin Franklin High School is one of the few operating charter schools in New Orleans.
Teachers Colleen Fiegel and Cathy Hightower have persevered, along with their students, through evacuating, returning, and picking up the pieces of their lives. Fiegel teaches biology and Hightower and Hightower teaches AP English at Benjamin Franklin High School.