Saturday, August 23, 2008

Samedi



Forecasters downgraded Fay to a tropical depression

~NOAA Advisory
Click pics to enlarge

Parish officials keeping an eye on Fay

St. Bernard, St. Charles residents can get sandbags

Day 1092: Maitri Live Blog'd RT 3
Mo'bloggid~DotCalm RT3~NOLA-dishu

Special thanks Citizen K


“Excellence in Recovery”: the aftermath, and Robert Cerasoli ~Kevin Allman
~Update-24 Hour Partay Peoples

Nagin hero inside ~outside, he's a joke~Michelle Krupa, Frank Donz
~In a scene reminiscent of a satirical Carnival parade, about 75 protesters chanted and waved handmade signs outside a posh Canal Street hotel Friday evening while inside a gilded ballroom two stories above them Mayor Ray Nagin accepted the inaugural Award of Distinction for Recovery, Courage and Leadership from an honorary committee packed with his political allies.

How to Make it Play Even Better ~We Could Be Famous

Data on-line could jump-start activism ~Brian Denzer

Category 3-5-5: A better storm label ~Richard Campanella

DOD: Outside engineers to review post-Katrina pumps

New Orleans repeating deadly levee mistakes ~Cain Burdeau

Troubling pattern with New Orleans levees

What Comes Around: Homeland Security Capital Corporation Appoints Former Corps of Engineers Deputy Commander as Federal Programs Manager

Are You Responsible for Building Trust?~"While serving as an “aide-de-camp” to a corporate CEO and a Colonel for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, I saw members of the public become so incensed at public meetings that I had no alternative but to ensure the safety of my charges by exiting them through the back door of the meeting facility."~Dr. L. Darryl Armstrong,
certified aggression management trainer

Welcome to the Danger ZONE
Perhaps the largest issue is what the Secret Service likes to call the "Public Viewing Area,"
a 47,000 square foot lot surrounded by a fence on the grounds of the Pepsi Center that protesters call the "Freedom Cage."

WWOZ and Friends of New Orleans welcome national political convention delgates

Gloria Story Dittus, Chair of Friends of New Orleans


Developer breaks ground on first stage of homes~The houses near Orleans Avenue and North Dupre Street are part of the first stage of nonprofit developer Providence Community Partner's plans to provide new homes for former residents of the Lafitte public housing development, said Jim Kelly, president and chief executive officer of the organization.

Reply talks sex, ignores question - Did State Farm f#!% McIntosh or not? ~slabbed

New Orleans City Council Threatens Legal Action Against Entergy

Head, Chief lock horns
~Bruce Eggler


State bonds to help finance Borders bookstore chain on
St. Charles Avenue

~Editilla learned how to love books in New Orleans. The Alvar branch of the NO Public Library is where I first saw a copy of the USA Patriot Act, a dog-eared well read tome of the librarian's.
But while
particularly fond of her public libraries, the locally owned bookstores are where I learned how to enjoy browsing for books.
I walked into deVille Books on Carondelet in 1979 and saw a beautiful, hand-painted poster on the wall noticing a "Wake for W.B. Yeats" uptown at the Columns Hotel, picked up a copy of The Tower
and caught the street car.
I met a sacred lover in a real fight over possession of an old 1st Edition of Lafcadio Hearn ghosts stories in Kaboom over on Barracks before the storm.
(Love Lafcadio but had to let him go for that one!:)
In that little bookstore back of Sound Cafe,
I found my first post-Katrina stories published by'for other Nolafugees. In all of these places I always walked out with far more than I'd entered.
Alas, the lack of such places of refuge informs feelings amongst the deepest pain of loss and damn'nation
out here on the long road home, the back hand path.
It just sorta bothers me that the state is financing
Just Another Corporate Book Store Chain in the heart of the City. Such an investment injects unneeded hard dollar competition for our own stillpoints in the turning world of the city's recovering literati:
these little places of wonderful local writing and lovingly used books all over New Orleans...
--who now even more deserve our Book Dollars.


Amanda Boyden, Babylon Rolling

HELP! English girl from Hong Kong looking for good food $20 or under! ~Chowhound NOLA
~going to my in-laws wedding in october, have never been to New Orleans, never tasted french, cajun, or any combination of the two. would love to broaden my palate, and experience new orleans food at it's best.

AfroPop Shoutout New Orleans is Streaming Now ~Foxessa

Tito Puente's Self-Titled Masterwork Examined~NPR

Preservation Hall open mighty nightly once again!

Wielding a Lyrical Scalpel to Deliver a Pointed Political Message

2 comments:

Leigh C. said...

"It just sorta bothers me that the state is financing
Just Another Corporate Book Store Chain in the heart of the City. Such an investment injects unneeded hard dollar competition for our own stillpoints in the turning world of the city's recovering literati:
these little places of wonderful local writing and lovingly used books all over New Orleans...
--who now even more deserve our Book Dollars."

Good, good point, sir. Especially as it is right near the Garden District Book Shop. another of the city's independents. *sigh*

New Orleans Ladder said...

Yes. Thank you, Noble Liptrap.
I believe you speak of this vestibule of kindness and forethought up by the Cemetery:
http://www.gardendistrictbookshop.com/
They have truly come a long way. I had real difficulty riding my mountain bike up that far on Prytania a few days after the storm. There was at least a couple of feet of limbs in the street --and that had been compacted down by what few cars could roll over them.
Really, UpTown got its ass ripped too and the ghosts didn't like it one bit!
Fortunately those folks had the money without the standing water. From what I saw they needed and used every penny of it.
People often criticize the money'd of New Orleans, but I saw their hearts broken too. I also suspect we will see them treat Borders the same way New Orleanians treated Starbucks and Barns and Nobles. Who'dat?