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  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Workers rebuild the facing of a home in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city.  Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana089.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: A statue of the Virgin Mary and Baby Jesus in front of the Holy Family Spiritualist Church on LaManche Street in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city.  Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana084.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: A mule pulls a Handsome Cab up Chartres Street in New Orleans. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana110.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Architectural detail of a historic building in New Orleans, LA.  Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana108.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: KASS ROBINSON cleans out his home in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Robinson said he was evacuated first to Pensacola, FL and then to Atlanta, GA after the storm but that he was going to move back into the Lower 9th Ward. He said the only way the city would come back was if the people who lived there before came back. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana098.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Demolition crews tear down abandoned homes in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana090.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Abandoned homes on Tennessee St. in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city.  Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana083.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Abandoned homes on Tennessee St. in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city.  Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana082.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: A house on top of pickup truck on Tennessee Street in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana080.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Men walk by strip clubs on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana077.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Tourists on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana073.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Tourists walk past a strip club on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana071.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: St. Louis Cathedral on Jackson Square in New Orleans, LA. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana070.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: A window in a voodoo store in New Orleans, LA. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana068.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: A display window in New Orleans, LA. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana066.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: A man plays a stand up bass on Jackson Square in New Orleans. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana109.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: St. Louis Cathedral on Jackson Square in New Orleans, LA.  Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana107.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: St. Louis Cathedral on Jackson Square in New Orleans, LA.  Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana106.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA:  An empty tanker sails up the Mississippi River towards the port of New Orleans. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana105.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Tourist brochures including tours of the destruction wrought by Hurricane Katrina in a hotel in New Orleans. Many neighborhoods were abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city.  Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana104.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Garbage in front of a home in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana103.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Homes in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana102.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: A man cleans out his home in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana101.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: KASS ROBINSON cleans out his home in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Robinson said he was evacuated first to Pensacola, FL and then to Atlanta, GA after the storm but that he was going to move back into the Lower 9th Ward. He said the only way the city would come back was if the people who lived there before came back. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana100.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: KASS ROBINSON cleans out his home in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Robinson said he was evacuated first to Pensacola, FL and then to Atlanta, GA after the storm but that he was going to move back into the Lower 9th Ward. He said the only way the city would come back was if the people who lived there before came back. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana099.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: KASS ROBINSON cleans out his home in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Robinson said he was evacuated first to Pensacola, FL and then to Atlanta, GA after the storm but that he was going to move back into the Lower 9th Ward. He said the only way the city would come back was if the people who lived there before came back. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana097.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Demolition crews tear down abandoned homes in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana096.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Demolition crews tear down abandoned homes in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana095.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Demolition crews tear down abandoned homes in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana094.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: ROGER MCCLARY, a construction worker from Slidell, LA, works on restoring a home in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana093.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: ROGER MCCLARY, a construction worker from Slidell, LA, works on restoring a home in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana092.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Demolition crews tear down abandoned homes in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana091.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Demolition crews tear down abandoned homes in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana087.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: A statue of the Virgin Mary and Baby Jesus in front of the Holy Family Spiritualist Church on LaManche Street in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city.  Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana085.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Abandoned homes on Tennessee St. in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city.  Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana081.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA:  Grass growing out of the hood of an abandoned car in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans, LA. The neighborhood was abandoned after flooding from nearby canals after Hurricane Katrina inundated this part of the city. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana079.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Men walk by strip clubs on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana078.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: MIREYA GROS, right, and LIZ ABADIE, center, from the Vieux Carre Assembly of God Church in the French Quarter pray with a passerby on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana076.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: MIREYA GROS, from the Vieux Carre Assembly of God Church in the French Quarter prays with a passerby on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana075.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: PAUL GROS, from the Vieux Carre Assembly of God Church in the French Quarter preaches on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana074.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: A shill for a bar works Bourbon Street in New Orleans. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana072.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: A door hinge on an old building in New Orleans, LA. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana069.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: The Pontabla Building, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, with skyscrapers in the background in New Orleans, LA. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana067.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: St. Louis Cathedral on Jackson Square in New Orleans, LA. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana065.jpg
  • 19 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA: Jackson Square in New Orleans. Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana064.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA:  Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana088.jpg
  • 20 SEPTEMBER 2006 - NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA:  Photo by Jack Kurtz / ZUMA Press
    Louisiana086.jpg
  • 15 NOVEMBER 2005 - FRANKLIN, LA: JOSEPH AUGUST checks on raw sugar in the warehouse at the St. Mary Sugar Co-Op Mill near Franklin, Louisiana during the 2005 sugar cane harvest. Sugar mills across Louisiana are being forced to warehouse tens of millions pounds of raw sugar because the sugar refineries in New Orleans are closed because of damage from Hurricane Katrina. The refineries are scheduled to reopen in late 2005. Louisiana is one of the leading sugar cane producing states in the US and the economy in southern Louisiana, especially St. Mary and Iberia Parishes, is built around the cultivation of sugar. The mill employs about 180 people. The two mills near Franklin contribute about $150 million (US) to the local economy. Sugar growers in the area are concerned that trade officials will eliminate sugar price supports during upcoming trade talks for the proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). They say elimination of price supports will devastate sugar growers in the US and the local economies of sugar growing areas. They also say it will ultimately lead to higher sugar prices for US consumers. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SugarCaneHarvest021.jpg
  • 15 NOVEMBER 2005 - FRANKLIN, LA:  Raw sugar is blown into the warehouse at the St. Mary Sugar Co-Op Mill near Franklin, Louisiana during the 2005 sugar cane harvest. Sugar mills across Louisiana are being forced to warehouse tens of millions pounds of raw sugar because the sugar refineries in New Orleans are closed because of damage from Hurricane Katrina. The refineries are scheduled to reopen in late 2005. Louisiana is one of the leading sugar cane producing states in the US and the economy in southern Louisiana, especially St. Mary and Iberia Parishes, is built around the cultivation of sugar. The mill employs about 180 people. The two mills near Franklin contribute about $150 million (US) to the local economy. Sugar growers in the area are concerned that trade officials will eliminate sugar price supports during upcoming trade talks for the proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). They say elimination of price supports will devastate sugar growers in the US and the local economies of sugar growing areas. They also say it will ultimately lead to higher sugar prices for US consumers. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SugarCaneHarvest023.jpg
  • 15 NOVEMBER 2005 - FRANKLIN, LA: JOSEPH AUGUST checks on raw sugar in the warehouse at the St. Mary Sugar Co-Op Mill near Franklin, Louisiana during the 2005 sugar cane harvest. Sugar mills across Louisiana are being forced to warehouse tens of millions pounds of raw sugar because the sugar refineries in New Orleans are closed because of damage from Hurricane Katrina. The refineries are scheduled to reopen in late 2005. Louisiana is one of the leading sugar cane producing states in the US and the economy in southern Louisiana, especially St. Mary and Iberia Parishes, is built around the cultivation of sugar. The mill employs about 180 people. The two mills near Franklin contribute about $150 million (US) to the local economy. Sugar growers in the area are concerned that trade officials will eliminate sugar price supports during upcoming trade talks for the proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). They say elimination of price supports will devastate sugar growers in the US and the local economies of sugar growing areas. They also say it will ultimately lead to higher sugar prices for US consumers. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SugarCaneHarvest022.jpg
  • 15 NOVEMBER 2005 - FRANKLIN, LA: Raw sugar in the warehouse at the St. Mary Sugar Co-Op Mill near Franklin, Louisiana during the 2005 sugar cane harvest. Sugar mills across Louisiana are being forced to warehouse tens of millions pounds of raw sugar because the sugar refineries in New Orleans are closed because of damage from Hurricane Katrina. The refineries are scheduled to reopen in late 2005. Louisiana is one of the leading sugar cane producing states in the US and the economy in southern Louisiana, especially St. Mary and Iberia Parishes, is built around the cultivation of sugar. The mill employs about 180 people. The two mills near Franklin contribute about $150 million (US) to the local economy. Sugar growers in the area are concerned that trade officials will eliminate sugar price supports during upcoming trade talks for the proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). They say elimination of price supports will devastate sugar growers in the US and the local economies of sugar growing areas. They also say it will ultimately lead to higher sugar prices for US consumers.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SugarCaneHarvest020.jpg
  • 15 NOVEMBER 2005 - FRANKLIN, LA: REGGIE HEBERT, the warehouse foreman at the St. Mary Sugar Co-Op Mill checks raw sugar coming into the warehouse near Franklin, Louisiana during the 2005 sugar cane harvest. Sugar mills across Louisiana are being forced to warehouse tens of millions pounds of raw sugar because the sugar refineries in New Orleans are closed because of damage from Hurricane Katrina. The refineries are scheduled to reopen in late 2005. Louisiana is one of the leading sugar cane producing states in the US and the economy in southern Louisiana, especially St. Mary and Iberia Parishes, is built around the cultivation of sugar. The mill employs about 180 people. The two mills near Franklin contribute about $150 million (US) to the local economy. Sugar growers in the area are concerned that trade officials will eliminate sugar price supports during upcoming trade talks for the proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). They say elimination of price supports will devastate sugar growers in the US and the local economies of sugar growing areas. They also say it will ultimately lead to higher sugar prices for US consumers. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SugarCaneHarvest019.jpg
  • 15 NOVEMBER 2005 - FRANKLIN, LA: Raw sugar in the warehouse at the St. Mary Sugar Co-Op Mill near Franklin, Louisiana during the 2005 sugar cane harvest. Sugar mills across Louisiana are being forced to warehouse tens of millions pounds of raw sugar because the sugar refineries in New Orleans are closed because of damage from Hurricane Katrina. The refineries are scheduled to reopen in late 2005. Louisiana is one of the leading sugar cane producing states in the US and the economy in southern Louisiana, especially St. Mary and Iberia Parishes, is built around the cultivation of sugar. The mill employs about 180 people. The two mills near Franklin contribute about $150 million (US) to the local economy. Sugar growers in the area are concerned that trade officials will eliminate sugar price supports during upcoming trade talks for the proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). They say elimination of price supports will devastate sugar growers in the US and the local economies of sugar growing areas. They also say it will ultimately lead to higher sugar prices for US consumers.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    SugarCaneHarvest018.jpg
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Jack Kurtz, Photojournalist & Travel Photographer

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