Sunday, March 2, 2008

Dimanche

USS NewYork Christened, with special note of the Louisiana shipbuilders who returned from the flood to finish the job.
AVONDALE, La. (Mar. 1, 2008) Mrs. Dottty England, wife of Deputy Secretary of Defense The Hon. Gordon England, christens the amphibious transport dock Pre-Commissioning Unit New York (LPD 21) at Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding New Orleans. U. S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Tiffini M. Jones

Katrina Evacuees Could Impact Texas Primary Outcome~Karen Dalton-Beninato

Thanks Jack
~While you made millions of dollars and established your big mouthpiece--with the hand of union labor
--Hillary Clinton
was a member on the Board of Directors at Walmart while they stomped their own workers' basic human rights.
Geaux Grrrls
NOLA Radfem!


How to evacuate a psychiatric hospital: a Hurricane Katrina success story

Deadline arrives for FEMA evacuation trailer evacuations in Jefferson

HUD considers stronger rules on air safety in trailers...ya' t'ink?


Recovery School District increases per-pupil spending


Michelle Goes the Extra Mile of Asshole~First Draft

Culture Project's Emancipate Brings Hope to New Orleans~Playbill News
Editor's note~also from yesterday's Ladder, scooped by the casa de Charlotte della luna

Get Down! Get Back Up Again! 1000s come to Philly to hang with New Orleans for the 179th Philadelphia Flower Show

~Giant arching piano keys with waterfalls, flanked by a cello and saxophone radiating orchids, grace the entrance to the exhibits. Elaborate stone walkways cutting a path through tropical florals lead to swanky interiors, complete with gold candelabras on formal tables, and ramshackle shacks purportedly on the Mississippi River.
About 1,600 bromeliads in 13 varieties—native to New Orleans—are part of the show. Magnolias, azaleas, crepe myrtles, lilacs and camelias peek out from cast-iron balconies and courtyards while orchids, heliconias, cannas and crotons bloom in Mardi Gras colors of purple, gold and green.
Sam Lemheney, director of design for the flower show, said he came up with the jazz theme after recognizing that jazz musicians often put their individual stamps on pieces of music. Gardeners create horticultural pieces of art that suit their personal tastes as well, whether they're reminiscent of a cool English garden or the humid tropics in the Amazon. "It's really about inspiring people to do something new, something creative," he said. "It's taking the garden to the next level."
Is that not just...COOL AS ALL GETOUT?

Tennessee Williams Festival has something for everyone


Julian Beaver Brings Art To New Orleans Sidewalk~Via da'casa de Charlotte della luna

Craftsman carries on Creole family trade~Barthe plasterwork in New Orleans' historic homes~"My father was a plasterer, his father was a plasterer, his uncles and everybody else were plasterers," says Earl Barthe, "The Barthe children knew they had to be plasterers. Daddy didn't want me to be a doctor, a lawyer or an Indian chief."

Beat goes on in New Orleans, but more help is needed~
Jim Welte

Area Rochester(farians?) (Rochesterarians?)...Good People hope to help New Orleans~"The conditions just seem so impossible," said Jean Whitney, 73, a retired teacher of Brighton. "I really hope I can be of some use."

Maine teen feels debt of gratitude toward New Orleans~Chris Rose


Elysian trumpet tells tale of Katrina victims


Johnny Vidacovich, nice long interview: The Foundation of a Musician~tipboy

WWOZ~GAMBIT

No comments: