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Posted on 08/28/2005 9:35:34 AM PDT by NautiNurse
What is Shep's plans anyways? Choppers won't be flying before to long.
How nice of Fox News to put on the VP of an energy TRADING company to fuel market hysteria on Monday. No vested interest on his part, no siree...
That and security checks?
As noted above, it's a change in the estimate, not necessarily an actual drop.
Tourists on Bourbon St only have a short walk to high rise hotels. They'll hang out till the bars close.
Yes. I think so . . . http://www.nola.com
Just punched up the rivercam & bridgecam, and they're working . . .
http://www.nola.com/bourbocam/
No, it's the best of an awful situation.
It's the no-win scenario. You have to pick something; the devil is in the details...
http://www.nola.com/bourbocam/
TV interview with two poor women with kids, no transportation, no money, nowhere to go. They're stoic, going to ride out the storm. No panic, no concept of what they faced. They were pushing their kids on swings in a nearby park. Hopeless. I felt like screaming. Authorities said they'd go through neighborhoods with buses to get people out and take them to area shelters. God, I hope so.
Bet the folks at Fox are worried about a FCC fine right now.
I told him to check in tomorrow if at all possible.
Along the river where I live some people open all doors and windows on floors reached by the flood so as to equalize pressures and keep them from beng staved-in.
Image #1
Image #2
I believe Shep said he is staying on the third floor of a hotel in NO.
Actually no, it's the wind.
Even with the windows closed, most houses and commercial buildings have enough openings to vent the pressure difference in the time that it takes for a tornado to pass. The engineering team at Texas Tech's Institute for Disaster Research (Minor et al., 1977) point out that the pressure drop inside a tornado with 260 mph winds is only about 10%, or just 1.4 pounds per square inch. Most buildings can vent this difference through its normal openings in about three seconds. That is sufficient time even if the tornado is moving forward at a very rapid 60 mph. In the real world, the discussion is pointless. That violent a tornado would totally blow apart a house before the central low pressure ever arrived. Venting of air to relieve pressure would not be an issue.
"I seldom cry, but I've been crying today.... thinking of what so many are about to endure... and so many of them children."
Those pictures that hole_n_one posted - you can see children in line. We're just at a loss for words.
Oh..good...did he say the trough out west could really cause it to lose a lot more strength before it hits..or alter its trajectory?
The local homeland security director was on earlier and he said everyone and everything must be checked before entering the building. It is crazy.
right - that would be me if I was stuck. Misery loves company.
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