Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Baby I'm A Saints Fan!
That's why I say WHO'DAT?

When the Patriots took the field, Saints fans responded with mostly boos ... at 99 decibels.
And when the Saints came roaring out of the tunnel to start the game, the fans roared right back: at 105 decibels.
And they sustained that noise level through the kickoff.
But that apparently was just the beginning.
The decibels increased with the Saints' first touchdown, up to 110 decibels. The second touchdown measured 111 decibels. And the third, shortly before the end of the half, measured 108 decibels. The fourth Saints touchdown set up by the Brees-Colston show: 111 decibels.
When the Patriots attempted to make that fourth-down conversion in the third quarter, the Dome responded at 119 decibels before the snap. The Patriots failed to convert.
Darren Sharper's interception in the fourth quarter garnered 106decibels. The Sacre'dome is OUR HOUSE!

New Orleans Saints tribute songs

Katrina/Corps Flood Lawsuit Raises Broader Questions About Levee Safety~Matthew Cardinale
~In response to a request under the Freedom of Information Act, Levees.org obtained data from FEMA revealing that 55 percent of the U.S. population lives in counties protected by levees, up significantly from the 43 percent figure reported to Congress in June 2008.
Levees.org commissioned researcher Ezra Boyd to translate the many pages of data tables provided by FEMA into an easy-to-read map much more accessible to interested citizens (click map or here for larger image). Boyd also included a table highlighting the 46 major cities with populations in access of 300,000 located in counties protected by levees.
"The graphic and accompanying table shows that living by levees is not a distinctly New Orleans phenomenon," says Sandy Rosenthal, founder of Levees.org.
~Corps should be held accountable for its work



Hurricanes Come and Go but Attorney Joesph Bruno Is Here to Stay~Brenda Craig
~“My home was spared,” he says. “But all around me it was like—” He pauses for a long moment. “It was like Beirut!
You couldn’t go anywhere. There wasn’t a soul around. The worst time was at night. I was in my house watching television while people were drowning. I made me sick to my stomach.”

In the weeks and months that followed, the residents of New Orleans were repeatedly told they what had happened would happen again, and that they were crazy for living in a flood plane.
But somewhere deep down, Bruno believed there was another reason that New Orleans was dragged under water.
He began looking at the levies that the Army Corps of Engineers had built to withstand just such an event.
“The channel is 650 feet wide and 35 feet deep. The Army Corps of Engineers said it would not enhance waves, it would not enhance surge and it would not enhance conveyance—by conveyance I mean the movement of the water.”

Appeals Court Rules Contractors Not Liable for Katrina Flooding
~Taryn Luntz
~"The court said the private contractors who carried out the Army Corps of Engineers' wishes shouldn't be held liable," said Stephanie Showalter, director of the Mississippi-based Sea Grant Law Center. "It kind of sends it back to the Army Corps of Engineers. It says, 'It was your decision, it was your funding, it's your responsibility.'"

Steven Edwards: U.S. Army engineers fail at Good Walls 101
~Editilla gotta toll'ya~ We even have to protect our Soldiers from the Corps of Engineers! Interesting how some things cycle around as other things twist in the spin.

Commercial use of sediments from SW Pass? ~LaCoastPost

While Waiting for Corps' Report on Calatrava Bridge, a View from the Collapsed Levee
~Jim Schutze


Levee scrutiny gives neighbors nothing but bills~redding.com

Mean old levee plugs
~Science Codex


The Scarlet K ~slabbed

Jewish group persuades graduates to stay in New Orleans
~Bruce Nolan


Archdiocese of New Orleans contributed $2000 of tax-exempt collection plate donations to Maine referendum on same-sex marriage

Taking the Fall in Crashergate ~Harry Shearer

US DOT announces $280 million for streetcars, trolleys
~Michael Lindenberger


Calling for Lil Wayne's freedom, six charged with spray-painting graffiti in the French Quarter
~Richard Thompson



Bonerama
Hard Times (High Steppin')
~Alex Rawls

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