Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Mardi~NOLA Sinn Féin!

Charity Hospital arbitration process becomes clearer~T-P

Hospital Appears Clean After Storm~SaveCharityHospital.com

Tropical Storm Erika
~Hurricane Jimena

Belle Chasse firm wins $12 million contract to raise Lake Cataouatche levee

Protecting Coastal Communities:
The Dutch Say Yes, We Do
- In America, We Can, Too
~Levees.org
~Levees.org has created a video documentary using footage captured by an Amsterdam-based filmmaker while in The Netherlands this past May as part of US Senator Mary Landrieu's Second Congressional Delegation (CoDel) excursion to Holland. Unlike the first CoDel, which studied peripheral barriers (floodgates), the goal of the Second CoDel was to see how the Dutch live with - and manage - water in urban settings.
~More from Corrente on this and Honoré

Levee leaders fire back over Morganza questions
~Daily Comet


An analysis of four years since America's biggest engineering disaster~Chris Dier

Stephanie Grace: Obama pushes New Orleans' Katrina recovery from a distance

Katrina Flood Recovery:
Bush vs Obama~Deon Roberts


Four years on, Mississippi's misplaced priorities hamper recovery ~Desiree Evans

Petition to Save Alligator Bayou
~Red Stick Irene


Levees Not War, New Layout!

The Murder of New Orleans

Caught, in an E-maelstrom
~We Could Be Famous


'American Zombie' blogger outs himself while facing libel suit from City Hall employee
~Molly Reid

~More from Library Chronicles

Oh to Remember
the slabbed of September


Disingenuous~CenLamar

How Could They Have Stayed Behind?~Lee Drutman

California Fire Situation Today

All those ships that never sailed
~Odd Bits of Life in New Orleans


The Day Before the Day After
As regards the bug'out with Editilla the Pun...

The day before Katrina made landfall, almost 12 hrs exactly, the Math Shopper and I were walking dog Flora on the neutral ground (what we in New Orleans call the grassy median) between Elysian Fields, smoking a nice joint beneath the trees and kicking logic theorems around like they'z jail-house punks, when I spied a dozen fat trademark New Orleans Nightcrawler cock roaches lined up on a tree end to end, nose to tail, completely still but for their long antennae that wriggled about either side like fishing poles off a parade of longboats.
These legendary beasts usually stand about 3 1/2 inches long
by 2 inches wide. Though rarely seen in broad daylight, you can actually hear them walk across a street. When you do see them (and you will see them) at night, crawlin' across the banquette in the Quarters you must stop, look & listen. More often than not the roach will stop too, as if...considering you.
If you somehow find the need, gonads or ova to mount one when it charges, or even manage to Pop It under both feet, every person within a block will duck as from the sound of gunfire.
{Perhaps I embellish juuuust a bit:)
But there they were, lined up and down the side of a Live Oak tree. "What the fuck?!?", we wondered. What if they notice us? Should we run now or just back away slowly, no sudden movements? Can they even see in broad sunlight? Aren't they blind, like so many in this city who find themselves somehow awake in the middle of the day? And hey! Why that particular side of the tree anyway and why nearly six feet off the ground? Duuuuherah...it turned out.
In the aftermath, we realized from the various & sundry debris nailed into the tree's windward side that the roaches had aligned themselves aerodynamically on the tree's leeward side to ride out the storm's approach, exactly. Bugs know...or at least next time we see nature going so oddly with her own grain perchance we should, errra, pay more attention? Ya' t'ink?
~Editilla Sew'tellas~
For me there was freak-out in the 2 weeks leading up to this year's Anniversary. It is so every year. Bad weirdness.
But then I come home to the City for the Commemorations and Commiserations, and now everyt'ing is way'mo'betta. I did miss some hanging out da'Ladda, which makes Editilla a bit dinked.
But the weather was sublime and the locals lapped it up.
I really want everyone to know, there is no stopping Nola.
Hence, I may try to "post" some of the "other" "memories" of each day from the 29th until I excaped the city in a pick-up truck with dog Flora, guitar, backpack and bicycle. No lie, like in a long line of fleeing refugees in a frickin'damn Apocalypse NO movie, over the bridge with civilization burning to the ground behind.
Everyone will Note the Day Our Heart Stood Still.
But then the Levees Failed, and Life took on several new meanings in the valley of the shadow of Death.

And me, I think about this stuff every morning, all day, into the night, still in my dreams on the long road home the back hand path... just the way it is and will be until it ain't I suppose.
I'm in no hurry never was, as such, so thus began to realize harsh differences in Marking such an unending scenario as the flood of New Orleans, as if it has merely happened and is past, after the Deluge so to speak, since for me it will remain 2 separate stories, to wit: The Storm and The Flood. The Storm, Katrina, was a truly bad-ass extravaganza to be sure. It lifted me, literally and physically, to a new appreciation of my own place within the bosom of our Earth Mother. Suffice to say, had She taken me that day in August, I would have at least understood the passing.

However, what came after our levees failed is The Never Ending Story, to which I have devoted the past 4 years (and every day of Your New Orleans Ladder) to figuring out, with and without therapy and no proper endings. Frankly, what I saw then sorta freaked out my therapists. What I see now in New Orleans leaves me sufficiently breathless and never alone.

Shake the Devil Off~Gambit

Actress Sandra Bullock purchases home in New Orleans' Garden District
~Rebecca Mowbray


Upper Arlington Labor Day Arts Festival

St. Francis student worries about loss of music in
New Orleans


Playing For Change Announces Nationwide Tour and PBS Special~Dirty Linen

The International Music Festival Conference Announces 2009 Agenda and Panelists

Detroit International Jazz Fest
Complete schedule


9th Ward, I Ain’t Looking Back
~Hip Hop Galaxy


CSNO hosts evening of jazz and history Thursday

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