Tinker:
In our heart of hearts we must admit that we are but a speck of dust compared to the enormous universe that we live in. Stretch out before us is a galaxy of stars and space that looks so vast that we can't even really understand it.
The will of god as compared to our own feeling is like trying to capture the flashing pulse of magic coming from gods mind that has created this glorious life we see.
You and I are a living wonder that is maid from the chemical of stardust that we see. So just think about all of the other things that we still don't understand.
Please just the word itself ( God ) shakes me to my very soul. Asking me to imagine God will is like asking me to ride the impulse of lighting striking across the heavens. How can I do that and stay healthy, sane and alive?
Think of that, if I really knew of what god wanted from what he was thinking, wow are you kidding me. Because that would mean that I really understand god.
I feel blessed over the way
that it stands right now in what I do understand, just look around you
at this magnificent wonder of abundant life everywhere we look.
That I have my hands full with my own life so I can get by well enough to stay alive from day to day, enjoying the things that make our life worth living.
That I have my hands full with my own life so I can get by well enough to stay alive from day to day, enjoying the things that make our life worth living.
To be able to see gods mystery also would of course simply puts my light out, just how much beauty can a person stand.
So in the deepest sense then Pope Francis is
of course right, God wants the people to simply bring to him your soul
and leave their worthily behavior behind, after all we are talking about
God here and not us.
Am I really more good than you?
Pope Francis is telling the people that he is talking about
how the church has been wasting its time talking about human behavior in
the narrow restrictions of our points of view and that is just
a unnecessary distraction to people away from what awaits us in heaven.Am I really more good than you?
Because I suspect that God is not as limited as you or I.
Imagine that, the creator who made all thing, God. Somehow life keep appearing out of the void of darkness making death impossible to see clearly. I can only guess that death is without feeling, or life. And that make me even more curious about the deeper secret of life itself. God secret that is still hidden somewhere in the life around us. In the light that was created from nothing.
Who is God?
"God is like a mystery that we keep tying to solve, or just maybe we already feel but simply can't prove.
All of our scientist are now trying to study the dark matter that we suspect is all around us, but as of yet simply don't understand. Light travels at light speed and matter at that speed pushes the laws of physics we know about. And then this matter of light goes into a Black Holes and becomes squeeze into a singularly.
The empty space around all of this is just a mystery that our humankind hasn't the ability to understand so far. Matter both big and small traveling at light speed going into black holes changing into a physics that we can't understand.
Dimensions of nature hidden or visible from all of what make us alive, breathing and awake. Seeing everything with our five senses.
When I first opened up a book that said, "Who is God?" I thought wait a minuet, I am still trying to find out who I am, and where did I come from, and why?
God! I am nothing but a speck of life that somehow developed a pair of eyes, and mouth, legs and arms, and somewhat of a brain, and you are asking me who is God. Are you kidding Me?"
-----------------------
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ 2013/09/19/pope-francis-gay_n_ 3954776.html
Pope Francis faulted the Roman Catholic church for focusing
too much on gays and abortion, saying the church has become "obsessed"
with those issues to the detriment of its larger mission to be "home for
all," according to an extensive new interview published Thursday.
The church can share its views on homosexuality, abortion and other issues, but should not "interfere spiritually" with the lives gays and lesbians, the pope added in the interview, which was published in La Civilta Cattolica, a Rome-based Jesuit journal.
--------
“We have to find a new balance, otherwise even the moral edifice of the church is likely to fall like a house of cards, losing the freshness and fragrance of the Gospel," Francis said in the interview.
"The church has sometimes locked itself up in small things, in small-minded rules,' Francis said. "The people of God want pastors, not clergy acting like bureaucrats or government officials."
The 12,000-word interview ranges widely, touching upon the pope's personal faith, the role of women and nuns in the church, Latin Mass and even the pope's favorite artists.
"He's very open honest and candid like we have not seen in a pope before. He critiques people who focus too much on tradition, who want to go to time in the past that does not exist anymore," said Fr. James Martin of America Magazine, which published an English translation of the interview. "He reminds people that thinking with the church, in obedience, does not just mean thinking with the hierarchy, that church is a lot bigger than its hierarchy."
More from the Associated Press:
VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis, the first Jesuit pope, reflected on his style, influences and priorities as pope in an interview with La Civilta Cattolica, the Jesuit journal in Rome, which published the remarks Thursday. Here are some highlights:
___ ON FINDING GOD IN EVERYONE
_
"God is in everyone's life. Even if the life of a person has been a disaster, even if it is destroyed by vices, drugs or anything else_God is in this person's life."
___
ON FAITH AND DOUBT:
_"If one has the answers to all the questions_that is the proof that God is not with him. It means that he is a false prophet using religion for himself. The great leaders of the people of God, like Moses, have always left room for doubt. You must leave room for the Lord, not for our certainties; we must be humble."
___
WHAT ABOUT THE ROLE OF WOMEN?
Pope Francis has previously called for greater study of the role of women in the church, although he has ruled out women's ordination. He went further in this interview, saying women must be involved in top decision-making matters.
_
"The feminine genius is needed wherever we make important decisions. The challenge today is this: to think about the specific place of women also in those places where the authority of the church is exercised."
___
ON BEING ARGENTINA'S JESUIT LEADER
_"I found myself provincial (the Jesuit leader) when I was still very young. I was only 36 years old. That was crazy. ... It was my authoritarian way of making decisions that created problems."
___
HOW DO YOU LIKE TO PRAY?
_ "What I really prefer is adoration in the evening, even when I get distracted and think of other things, or even fall asleep praying. In the evening then, between seven and eight o'clock, I stay in front of the Blessed Sacrament for an hour in adoration. But I pray mentally even when I am waiting at the dentist or at other times of the day."
__
WHAT ABOUT THE OLD LATIN MASS?
Pope Benedict XVI opened up the Latin Mass for wider use among traditionalists who were opposed to the modern liturgy:
_
"I think the decision of Pope Benedict was prudent and motivated by the desire to help people who have this sensitivity. What is worrying, though, is the risk of the ideologization of the (Old Mass), its exploitation."
___
HOW GREAT ARE THOSE NUNS?
Nuns working in hospitals took care of Francis when he lost most of one lung to an infection in his early 20s.
_
"I am alive because of one of them. When I went through my lung disease at the hospital, the doctor gave me penicillin and streptomycin in certain doses. The sister who was on duty tripled my doses because she was daringly astute; she knew what to do because she was with ill people all day. The doctor, who really was a good one, lived in his laboratory; the sister lived on the frontier and was in dialogue with it every day."
__
AND WHO ARE HIS FAVORITE ARTISTS?
_
"`La Strada,' by Fellini, is the movie that perhaps I loved the most. I identify with this movie, in which there is an implicit reference to St. Francis."
_
"I have read The Betrothed, by Alessandro Manzoni, three times, and I have it now on my table because I want to read it again. Manzoni gave me so much. When I was a child, my grandmother taught me by heart the beginning of The Betrothed: `That branch of Lake Como that turns off to the south between two unbroken chains of mountains...'"
_
"Among the great painters, I admire Caravaggio; his paintings speak to me. But also Chagall, with his `White Crucifixion.' Among musicians I love Mozart, of course. The `Et incarnatus est' from his Mass in C minor is matchless; it lifts you to God!"
___
Source: English translation by America magazine.
-----------------------
-----------------------
http://www.theblaze.com/ stories/2013/09/20/house- votes-to-defund-obamacare- keep-govt-running/
---------------------
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ 2013/09/19/obama-carbon- limits_n_3958693.html
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration will press ahead
Friday with tough requirements for new coal-fired power plants, moving
to impose for the first time strict limits on the pollution blamed for
global warming.
The proposal would help reshape where Americans get electricity, away from a coal-dependent past into a future fired by cleaner sources of energy. It's also a key step in President Barack Obama's global warming plans, because it would help end what he called "the limitless dumping of carbon pollution" from power plants.
Although the proposed rule won't immediately affect plants already operating, it eventually would force the government to limit emissions from the existing power plant fleet, which accounts for a third of all U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. Obama has given the Environmental Protection Agency until next summer to propose those regulations.
The EPA provided The Associated Press with details of the proposal prior to the official announcement, which was expected Friday morning. The public will have a chance to comment on the rule before it becomes final.
Despite some tweaks, the rule packs the same punch as one announced last year, which was widely criticized by industry and Republicans as effectively banning any new coal projects in the U.S.
That's because to meet the standard, new coal-fired power plants would need to install expensive technology to capture carbon dioxide and bury it underground. No coal-fired power plant has done that yet, in large part because of the cost. And those plants that the EPA points to as potential models, such as a coal plant being built in Kemper County, Miss., by Southern Co., have received hundreds of millions of dollars in federal grants and tax credits.
Coal, which is already struggling to compete with cheap natural gas, accounts for 40 percent of U.S. electricity, a share that was already shrinking. And natural gas would need no additional pollution controls to comply.
"For power producers and coal mining companies that reject these standards, they have no reason to complain, and every excuse to innovate," said Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., the author of a 2009 bill to limit global warming. The legislation, backed by the White House, passed the House, but died in the Senate.
Read more...http://www. huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/19/ obama-carbon-limits_n_3958693. html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/
Pope Francis: Gays, Abortion Too Much Of Catholic Church's Obsession
Posted: 09/19/2013 11:51 am EDT
The church can share its views on homosexuality, abortion and other issues, but should not "interfere spiritually" with the lives gays and lesbians, the pope added in the interview, which was published in La Civilta Cattolica, a Rome-based Jesuit journal.
--------
“We have to find a new balance, otherwise even the moral edifice of the church is likely to fall like a house of cards, losing the freshness and fragrance of the Gospel," Francis said in the interview.
"The church has sometimes locked itself up in small things, in small-minded rules,' Francis said. "The people of God want pastors, not clergy acting like bureaucrats or government officials."
The 12,000-word interview ranges widely, touching upon the pope's personal faith, the role of women and nuns in the church, Latin Mass and even the pope's favorite artists.
"He's very open honest and candid like we have not seen in a pope before. He critiques people who focus too much on tradition, who want to go to time in the past that does not exist anymore," said Fr. James Martin of America Magazine, which published an English translation of the interview. "He reminds people that thinking with the church, in obedience, does not just mean thinking with the hierarchy, that church is a lot bigger than its hierarchy."
More from the Associated Press:
VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis, the first Jesuit pope, reflected on his style, influences and priorities as pope in an interview with La Civilta Cattolica, the Jesuit journal in Rome, which published the remarks Thursday. Here are some highlights:
___ ON FINDING GOD IN EVERYONE
_
"God is in everyone's life. Even if the life of a person has been a disaster, even if it is destroyed by vices, drugs or anything else_God is in this person's life."
___
ON FAITH AND DOUBT:
_"If one has the answers to all the questions_that is the proof that God is not with him. It means that he is a false prophet using religion for himself. The great leaders of the people of God, like Moses, have always left room for doubt. You must leave room for the Lord, not for our certainties; we must be humble."
___
WHAT ABOUT THE ROLE OF WOMEN?
Pope Francis has previously called for greater study of the role of women in the church, although he has ruled out women's ordination. He went further in this interview, saying women must be involved in top decision-making matters.
_
"The feminine genius is needed wherever we make important decisions. The challenge today is this: to think about the specific place of women also in those places where the authority of the church is exercised."
___
ON BEING ARGENTINA'S JESUIT LEADER
_"I found myself provincial (the Jesuit leader) when I was still very young. I was only 36 years old. That was crazy. ... It was my authoritarian way of making decisions that created problems."
___
HOW DO YOU LIKE TO PRAY?
_ "What I really prefer is adoration in the evening, even when I get distracted and think of other things, or even fall asleep praying. In the evening then, between seven and eight o'clock, I stay in front of the Blessed Sacrament for an hour in adoration. But I pray mentally even when I am waiting at the dentist or at other times of the day."
__
WHAT ABOUT THE OLD LATIN MASS?
Pope Benedict XVI opened up the Latin Mass for wider use among traditionalists who were opposed to the modern liturgy:
_
"I think the decision of Pope Benedict was prudent and motivated by the desire to help people who have this sensitivity. What is worrying, though, is the risk of the ideologization of the (Old Mass), its exploitation."
___
HOW GREAT ARE THOSE NUNS?
Nuns working in hospitals took care of Francis when he lost most of one lung to an infection in his early 20s.
_
"I am alive because of one of them. When I went through my lung disease at the hospital, the doctor gave me penicillin and streptomycin in certain doses. The sister who was on duty tripled my doses because she was daringly astute; she knew what to do because she was with ill people all day. The doctor, who really was a good one, lived in his laboratory; the sister lived on the frontier and was in dialogue with it every day."
__
AND WHO ARE HIS FAVORITE ARTISTS?
_
"`La Strada,' by Fellini, is the movie that perhaps I loved the most. I identify with this movie, in which there is an implicit reference to St. Francis."
_
"I have read The Betrothed, by Alessandro Manzoni, three times, and I have it now on my table because I want to read it again. Manzoni gave me so much. When I was a child, my grandmother taught me by heart the beginning of The Betrothed: `That branch of Lake Como that turns off to the south between two unbroken chains of mountains...'"
_
"Among the great painters, I admire Caravaggio; his paintings speak to me. But also Chagall, with his `White Crucifixion.' Among musicians I love Mozart, of course. The `Et incarnatus est' from his Mass in C minor is matchless; it lifts you to God!"
___
Source: English translation by America magazine.
-----------------------
http://www3.blogs.rollcall. com/wgdb/filibuster-the-house- cr-some-conservatives-say-yes/
OBAMA: Republicans 'trying to mess with me'...
'We are not some Banana Republic'...

SHOWDOWN: CRUZ TO FILIBUSTER OBAMACARE?
OBAMA: Republicans 'trying to mess with me'...
'We are not some Banana Republic'...
SHOWDOWN: CRUZ TO FILIBUSTER OBAMACARE?
http://www.theblaze.com/
---------------------
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/
Obama Takes On Coal With First-Ever Carbon Limits
By DINA CAPPIELLO
09/19/13 11:26 PM ET EDT
The proposal would help reshape where Americans get electricity, away from a coal-dependent past into a future fired by cleaner sources of energy. It's also a key step in President Barack Obama's global warming plans, because it would help end what he called "the limitless dumping of carbon pollution" from power plants.
Although the proposed rule won't immediately affect plants already operating, it eventually would force the government to limit emissions from the existing power plant fleet, which accounts for a third of all U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. Obama has given the Environmental Protection Agency until next summer to propose those regulations.
The EPA provided The Associated Press with details of the proposal prior to the official announcement, which was expected Friday morning. The public will have a chance to comment on the rule before it becomes final.
Despite some tweaks, the rule packs the same punch as one announced last year, which was widely criticized by industry and Republicans as effectively banning any new coal projects in the U.S.
That's because to meet the standard, new coal-fired power plants would need to install expensive technology to capture carbon dioxide and bury it underground. No coal-fired power plant has done that yet, in large part because of the cost. And those plants that the EPA points to as potential models, such as a coal plant being built in Kemper County, Miss., by Southern Co., have received hundreds of millions of dollars in federal grants and tax credits.
Coal, which is already struggling to compete with cheap natural gas, accounts for 40 percent of U.S. electricity, a share that was already shrinking. And natural gas would need no additional pollution controls to comply.
"For power producers and coal mining companies that reject these standards, they have no reason to complain, and every excuse to innovate," said Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., the author of a 2009 bill to limit global warming. The legislation, backed by the White House, passed the House, but died in the Senate.
Read more...http://www.
---------------------
There's been another mass shooting by a crazy person, and
liberals still refuse to consider institutionalizing the dangerous
mentally ill.
The man who shot up the Washington Navy Yard on Monday, Aaron Alexis, heard voices speaking to him through the walls. He thought people were following him. He believed microwave ovens were sending vibrations through his body. There are also reports that Alexis believed the Obamacare exchanges were ready to go.
Anyone see any bright red flags of paranoid schizophrenia? (Either that, or Obama's NSA is way better than we thought!)
But Alexis couldn't be institutionalized because the left has officially certified the mentally ill as "victims," and once you're a victim, all that matters is that you not be "stigmatized."
But here's the problem: Coddling the mentally ill isn't even helping the mentally ill. Ask the sisters of crazy homeless woman "Billie Boggs" how grateful they were to the ACLU for keeping Boggs living on the streets of New York City. Ask the parents of Aaron Alexis, James Holmes (Aurora, Colo., movie theater shooter), Jared Loughner (Tucson, Ariz., mall shooter) or Seung-Hui Cho (Virginia Tech shooter) how happy they are that their sons weren't institutionalized.
Tellingly, throughout the last three decades, the overall homicide rate has been in free fall, thanks to Republican crime policies, from 10 per 100,000 in 1980 to 4 per 100,00 today. (You might even call them "common sense" crime policies.) But the number of mass shootings has skyrocketed from 4 per year, between 1900 and 1970, to 29 per year since then.
Something seems to have gone horribly wrong right around 1970. What could it be? Was it the introduction of bell-bottoms?
That date happens to correlate precisely with when the country began throwing the mentally ill out of institutions in 1969. Your memory of there not being as many mass murders a few decades ago is correct. Your memory of there not being as many homeless people a few decades ago is also correct. Read More »
-------------------
http://bigstory.ap.org/ article/putin-says-he-may- seek-4th-presidential-term

PUTIN LOOKS TO TOP STALIN
-------------------
http://www.nationalreview.com/ corner/358947/anti-euro-party- may-block-germanys-merkel- victory-john-fund

POLL: Anti-Euro Party May Block Merkel from Victory...
--------------------
http://www.kvue.com/news/ state/224406971.html
Tom DeLay verdict overturned by TX court...
---------------------
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ opinions/president-of-iran- hassan-rouhani-time-to-engage/ 2013/09/19/4d2da564-213e-11e3- 966c-9c4293c47ebe_story.html

'GONE IS THE AGE OF BLOOD FEUDS'...
http://www.anncoulter.com/
Ann CoulterCRAZIER THAN LIBERALS
September 18, 2013
The man who shot up the Washington Navy Yard on Monday, Aaron Alexis, heard voices speaking to him through the walls. He thought people were following him. He believed microwave ovens were sending vibrations through his body. There are also reports that Alexis believed the Obamacare exchanges were ready to go.
Anyone see any bright red flags of paranoid schizophrenia? (Either that, or Obama's NSA is way better than we thought!)
But Alexis couldn't be institutionalized because the left has officially certified the mentally ill as "victims," and once you're a victim, all that matters is that you not be "stigmatized."
But here's the problem: Coddling the mentally ill isn't even helping the mentally ill. Ask the sisters of crazy homeless woman "Billie Boggs" how grateful they were to the ACLU for keeping Boggs living on the streets of New York City. Ask the parents of Aaron Alexis, James Holmes (Aurora, Colo., movie theater shooter), Jared Loughner (Tucson, Ariz., mall shooter) or Seung-Hui Cho (Virginia Tech shooter) how happy they are that their sons weren't institutionalized.
Tellingly, throughout the last three decades, the overall homicide rate has been in free fall, thanks to Republican crime policies, from 10 per 100,000 in 1980 to 4 per 100,00 today. (You might even call them "common sense" crime policies.) But the number of mass shootings has skyrocketed from 4 per year, between 1900 and 1970, to 29 per year since then.
Something seems to have gone horribly wrong right around 1970. What could it be? Was it the introduction of bell-bottoms?
That date happens to correlate precisely with when the country began throwing the mentally ill out of institutions in 1969. Your memory of there not being as many mass murders a few decades ago is correct. Your memory of there not being as many homeless people a few decades ago is also correct. Read More »
-------------------
http://bigstory.ap.org/
PUTIN LOOKS TO TOP STALIN
-------------------
http://www.nationalreview.com/
POLL: Anti-Euro Party May Block Merkel from Victory...
--------------------
http://www.kvue.com/news/
Tom DeLay verdict overturned by TX court...
---------------------
http://www.washingtonpost.com/
'GONE IS THE AGE OF BLOOD FEUDS'...
Israel calls Iranian president's comments deceptive...
Obama 'willing' to meet Rouhani at UN...
Sen. Lindsey Graham to Seek Authorization for Attack...
REPORT: U.S. pilots scare off warplanes...
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-
REPORT: Supremes to Consider New Obamacare Case over Abortion Coverage...
---------------------
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/
Hillary 'Could Be Our First Lesbian President'
---------------------http://www.theblaze.com/
Scientists ‘Very, Very Confident’ They’ve Found Extraterrestrial Life – See What It Looks Like
Scientists at a British university say they are confident they found evidence of life that originated in space.Researchers at the University of Sheffield sent a scientific balloon into the stratosphere — often described as the edge of space — during a Perseid meteor shower, which collected small organisms they believe are not from Earth.
“Most people will assume that these biological particles must have just drifted up to the stratosphere from Earth, but it is generally accepted that a particle of the size found cannot be lifted from Earth to heights of, for example, 27km. The only known exception is by a violent volcanic eruption, none of which occurred within three years of the sampling trip,” professor Milton Wainwright said in a statement.
If this is in fact the case, Wainwright said it would “change our view of biology and evolution.”
“New textbooks will have to be written!” he added.
Read more...http://www.theblaze.
---------------------
Sports
---------------------
http://espn.go.com/college- football/
Getty Images
---------------------
---------------------
MRTigerFan
Southeastern LA Fan
Baton Rouge
Member since Sep 2008
819 posts

For the "ESPN hates LSU" crowd.... y'all should check out the Clemson/NC State game because the anouncers keep yapping about how good LSU is this year. Specifically how much better our offense is under Cam and how much Mett has improved. I'm not a "ESPN hates LSU" guy and even I'm surprised at how much love they're giving us. It's almost like they forgot that Nick Saban doesn't coach here anymore. It literally sounds like they're talking about USCw circa 2005 or present day BAMA.
---------------------
Jim Rockford
LSU Fan
Member since May 2011
26217 posts

LINK
--------------------
TygerTyger
LSU Fan
Houston
Member since Oct 2010
2806 posts

NEVER!
--------------------
Vanilla Coke
LSU Fan
Member since Jan 2013
464 posts


--------------------
http://tigerrag.com/football/ sec-power-rankings-nic-cage- edition
http://espn.go.com/college-
Long Way Around
Auburn's Nick Marshall and LSU's Zach Mettenberger both took winding paths to finding redemption in the SEC. Chris Low »Sherman: LSU eager to open SEC slate »Top 25 overview »SEC blog »Getty Images
- Horns regent talked to Saban's agent
| Low
- No. 3 Clemson holds off NC State
| Adelson
- Slive: NCAA agent rules 'part of the problem'
- Seminoles suspend LB Jones, DT Goldman
- Sources: At least 4 cities eye '16 title game
- Seminoles want to pick up pace even more
- NCAA: Irish transfer Badger eligible for BYU
- Coach writes get-well note to rivals' QB
- Longhorns QB Ash (head) back at practice
- Report: ASU extends Graham through 2018
- Nebraska officials: Pelini deserves support
- Texas A&M gets record $740M in donations
- Edwards: Is Pac-12 top league?
| ASU's rise
MRTigerFan
Southeastern LA Fan
Baton Rouge
Member since Sep 2008
819 posts
ESPN loves LSU!!! (Posted on 9/19/13 at 9:49 pm)
For the "ESPN hates LSU" crowd.... y'all should check out the Clemson/NC State game because the anouncers keep yapping about how good LSU is this year. Specifically how much better our offense is under Cam and how much Mett has improved. I'm not a "ESPN hates LSU" guy and even I'm surprised at how much love they're giving us. It's almost like they forgot that Nick Saban doesn't coach here anymore. It literally sounds like they're talking about USCw circa 2005 or present day BAMA.
---------------------
Jim Rockford
LSU Fan
Member since May 2011
26217 posts
Chance of rain: 70% (Posted on 9/17/13 at 10:14 am)
LINK
--------------------
TygerTyger
LSU Fan
Houston
Member since Oct 2010
2806 posts
re: Chance of rain: 70% (Posted on 9/17/13 at 10:15 am to Jim Rockford)
quote:
Chance of rain:
NEVER!
--------------------
Vanilla Coke
LSU Fan
Member since Jan 2013
464 posts
re: Chance of rain: 70% (Posted on 9/17/13 at 10:16 am to Jim Rockford)
quote:How dare you, sir...
Chance of rain: 70%
--------------------
http://tigerrag.com/football/
Tiger Rag
bleacher report
http://lsufootball.net/
LSU Football - Geaux Tigers!!!
--------------------| Friday, September 20, 2013 | |
|---|---|
| Louisiana Gannett News | Guilbeau: LSU ready for first test of season vs. Auburn |
| LSU Sports | Parking advisory for LSU vs. Auburn gameday |
| Geaux 247 | LSU vs. Auburn: Another close call? |
| Tiger Rag | LSU vs. Auburn: Gametime preview |
| LSU Sports | Video (91 sec): Catching up with Les Miles pre-Auburn game |
| Bayou Bengals Insider | LSU vs. Auburn: Defensive Breakdown |
| Bayou Bengals Insider | LSU vs. Auburn: Offensive Breakdown |
| Bayou Bengals Insider | LSU vs. Auburn: Coach's Take |
| Bayou Bengals Insider | LSU vs. Auburn: Players' Take |
| Times Picayune | LSU players expecting a different atmosphere in SEC opener vs. Auburn |
| Everything Alabama | Cam Cameron brings an NFL attitude to LSU's offense |
| The Advocate | LSU notebook: With Craig Loston back in the mix, Tigers defense opens it up |
| Times Picayune | Auburn at LSU: Breaking it down |
| Fox Sports Southwest | Athletic ability runs deep in LSU WR Beckham's family |
| Louisiana Daily | Why the LSU - Auburn rivalry reigns supreme |
| LSU Reveille | New-look LSU offense ready to begin SEC play against Auburn |
| LSU Reveille | Speed Trap: Auburn's up-tempo offense poses threat for LSU |
| Shreveport Times *1 | Guilbeau: Zach Mettenberger solid through 3 weeks |
| Les Miles | Video (3 min): Week 3 highlights - Kent State |
| Louisiana Daily | Audio (13 min, 37 sec): Hanagriff, Ott, Ponamsky preview the Auburn game | .mp3 |
| Associated Press | Tyrann Mathieu’s back where it all began |
| LSU Sports | In Focus: 25 years after Tiger Stadium shook |
| The Advocate | The day the Earth trembled in Tiger Stadium's temblor |
| Times Picayune | There's more to LSU's Earthquake Game than Hodson to Fuller | Video |
| LSU Sports | Video (49 sec): LSU vs. Auburn 1988 - the Earthquake Game |
| LSU Sports | Video (14 min): Verge Ausberry and Ronnie Haliburton on the 1988 "Earthquake Game" |
| LSU Sports | Video (78 sec): Flynn-to-Byrd with :01 Left (2007) |
| LSU Sports | Video (48 sec): Troy Twillie INT vs. Auburn (1995) |
| Everything Alabama | Todd Blackledge: Auburn needs to take chances, be aggressive to beat LSU |
| Everything Alabama | Matching Up: Auburn vs. LSU |
| Auburn Athletics | Gus Malzahn showing trust in Auburn defense |
| ESPN Blog | Mettenberger, Marshall faced hurdles |
| Sports Business Daily | How StubHub built a home in sports |
| Everything Alabama | Confidence is back at Auburn, but LSU atmosphere will be tough to block out |
| Tiger Sports Digest | Scouting Report: Auburn defense |
| Columbus Ledger, GA | To beat LSU, a confident Nick Marshall must take to the air |
| Columbus Ledger, GA | Auburn's Uzomah grows into receiver position |
| The Advocate | At Auburn, the Marshall plan is paying dividends |
| Associated Press | Slive: NCAA rules on agents 'part of the problem' |
| Football Foundation | Week 4 broadcast teams for all Division I games |
http://www.youtube.com/watch?

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