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Katrina Live Thread XII
Various ^
| 31 August 2005
| Various
Posted on 08/31/2005 4:00:15 PM PDT by NautiNurse
President Bush: "We are dealing with one of the worst national disasters in our nation's history." Push has appropriated vast federal resources to assist with the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
78,000 people are currently in shelters. New Orleans evacuation continues. 10,000 additional National Guard troops have been called to service.
Hospitals are running low on supplies, and public health concerns include water borne disease, poor sanitation, food and drinking water contamination and shortages, mosquitoes, carbon monixide poisoning from electricity generators, lack of childcare, and the special needs of the elderly.
Links to various news, local and state government websites:
WLOX TV Biloxi, Gulfport, Pascagula has link to locate family and friends (very slow load)
2theAdvocate - Baton Rouge Includes Slidell, St. John Parish, St. Bernard Parish updates, and other locations.
NOLA.com
Inside Houma Today includes shelter and volunteer updates
WLBT.com Jackson MS
WALA Channel 4 Mobile, AL Includes links to distribution centers, Emergency Ops, etc.
Sun-Herald Gulfport MS Includes link to town by town reports
Gulfport News via Topix.net
WAFB Baton Rouge
Mobile Register via al.com
Mississippi updates via Jackson Ledger
Lafayette LA Daily Advertiser
Pensacola News Journal
St Bernard Local Government
Alabama Homeland Security Volunteers can sign up online
Alabama DOT
Alabama.gov
Louisiana Homeland Security
Louisiana State Police road closure info
State of Mississippi Website has traffic alerts, emergency contact numbers
Streaming Video:
WWL-TV: http://www.khou.com/perl/common/video/wmPlayer.pl?title=beloint_khou&props=livenoad
WDSU-TV: http://mfile.akamai.com/12912/live/reflector:38843.asx"
WPMI-TV: http://www.wpmi.com/mediacenter/default.aspx?videoId=113739
WKRG-TV: mms://wmbcast.mgeneral.speedera.net/wmbcast.mgeneral/wmbcast_mgeneral_aug262005_1435_95518
WTOK-TV (follow the link on the home page): http://www.wtok.com/
WJTV-TV: mms://wmbcast.mgeneral.speedera.net/wmbcast.mgeneral/wmbcast_mgeneral_aug262005_1435_95563
Gulf Coast Storm Network (radio): http://www.stormalert.net/main.html#
Related FR Threads:
FYI: Hurricane Katrina Freeper SIGN IN Thread
Discussion Thread - Hurricane Katrina - What Went Wrong?!?
Post Hurricane Katrina IMAGES Here
Looting Begins In New Orleans
Martial Law Declared in New Orleans
Due to the number of requests to assist, the following list of some charities is provided.
This is not intended as an endorsement for any of the charities.
www.redcross.org or 1-800 HELP NOW - note: website is slow
Salvation Army - 1-800-SAL-ARMY or Salvation Army currently looking for in-state volunteers - (888)363-2769
Operation Blessing: (800) 436-6348.
America's Second Harvest: (800) 344-8070.
Catholic Charities USA: (800) 919-9338, or www.catholiccharitiesusa.org.
Christian Reformed World Relief Committee: (800) 848-5818.
Church World Service: (800) 297-1516 or online at www.churchworldservice. org.
Lutheran Disaster Response: (800) 638-3522.
Nazarene Disaster Response: (888) 256-5886.
Presbyterian Disaster Assistance: (800) 872-3283.
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is accepting donations at its 3,800 stores and Web site, www.walmart.com.
Previous Threads:
Katrina Live Thread, Part XI
Katrina Live Thread, Part X
Katrina Live Thread, Part IX
Hurricane Katrina Live Thread, Part VIII
Hurricane Katrina Live Thread, Part VII
Hurricane Katrina Live Thread, Part VI
Hurricane Katrina Live Thread, Part V
Hurricane Katrina, Live Thread, Part IV
Hurricane Katrina Live Thread, Part III
Katrina Live Thread, Part II
Hurricane Katrina Live Thread, Part I
Tropical Storm 12
TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Alabama; US: Louisiana; US: Mississippi
KEYWORDS: hurricane; katrina; tropical
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To: advance_copy
Well, it's pretty evident that all the lefties are watching CNN and that Wolf and Cafferty ONLY read emails from them.
CNN is playing the race card.
This time I'm done with them.
Back to MSNBC and Fox for me.
5,761
posted on
09/01/2005 2:40:27 PM PDT
by
Howlin
(Have you check in on this thread: FYI: Hurricane Katrina Freeper SIGN IN Thread)
To: stlnative
whats the link to the scanner please..
5,762
posted on
09/01/2005 2:40:28 PM PDT
by
pitinkie
(revenge will be sweet)
To: lugsoul
While things could probably be better, what is happening on the Gulf Coast is not the fault of any elected official. That simply cannot be. SOMEONE has to be to blame. You can't sue Mother Nature or God.
To: All
500 eggs, 60 men in blueThursday, 4:25 p.m.
By Eva Jacob Barkoff Staff writer
NEW IBERIA -- Around 5 a.m. today, Mary Tripeaux received a call that members of a search-and rescue-team from Phoenix, Ariz., were on their way for breakfast at Victor's Cafeteria on Main Street. Soon the crew arrived and filled themselves with coffee, grits, biscuits, bacon, potatoes and sausage -- and more than 500 eggs.
"There are 180 eggs in one case and we went through at least three cases," Tripeaux said. "And by around 9 a.m., we had run out of sausage. They had eaten it all."
After breakfast, about 60 men in blue uniforms from Phoenix's Urban Search and Rescue Team held a meeting under a gazebo across from Victor's to go over final details of their mission. They wouldn't discuss details with a reporter.
The men had arrived in several trucks and two 18-wheelers filled with equipment. Also along were three Labrador retrievers.
"We have a lot of equipment here to try and do what we can to help," one of the men said.
Before leaving for New Orleans, he reflected on breakfast at Victor's and concluded: "That was the best meal we have had in 48 hours."
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Volunteer dutyBy Deanna McLendon Staff writer
Nineteen-year-old Jacqueline Lively wants to go to medical school. While volunteering the past several nights at medical evacuation center established at LSUs Pete Maravich Assembly Center, her desire was tested as she changed bedpans, emptied catheters and encountered both the awful and the poignant.
Lively spent most of Tuesday night trying to locate 36-week premature infant Symphony Sotomayor Colon, who was airlifted out of Methodist Hospital in New Orleans earlier in the day.
The mother had no idea where the baby was, Lively said. Shed stayed behind in New Orleans because she had other children but eventually was evacuated to Baton Rouge with her young son. The woman had no ailments but was allowed in the evacuation center, Lively said, because they didnt want the little boy sleeping outside.
Lively called the Red Cross and all the hospitals in Baton Rouge fruitlessly searching for Symphony.
I never found the baby. I dont know if they ever found the baby I have no idea.
Lively said the PMAC was filled with elderly people, many of whom still had their feet wet from trying to get out. They were all really dehydrated.
Though many elderly were evacuated from nursing homes, others left residences behind.
They ask about their houses, Lively said. They havent seen any TV or news stories. I dont want to tell them that their home is probably gone.
But despite all the pain and worry Lively encountered, her time as a volunteer also produced lighter moments.
There was one all she has is her wig. I put lipstick on another lady. Another man tried to dance with me.
He sang me a song he wrote.
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Mississippi windstorm office opensThursday, 3:57 p.m.
The Mississippi Windstorm Underwriting Association has just opened. The office can be reached at 800-931-9548.
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City not safe for anyoneThursday, 3:45 p.m.
Across the city Thursday, the haunting fear of flooding was replaced by a raw fear for life and public safety.
Navigating the St. Thomas area of the Lower Garden District in an SUV, Times-Picayune reporter Gordon Russell, accompanied by a photographer from The New York Times, described a landscape of lawlessness where he feared for his life and felt his safety was threatened at nearly every turn.
At the Superdome and Ernest N. Morial Convention Center, Russell said throngs of hungry and desperate people displaced by the flood overwhelmed the few law enforcement or miliatary personnel present.
"There was no crowd control," Russell said. "People were swarming. It was a near riot situation. The authorities have got to get some military down here to get control of the situation."
Russell witnessed a shootout between police and citizens near the Convention Center that left one man dead in a pool of blood. Police, perhaps caught off guard by their sudden arrival on the scene, slammed Russell and the photographer against a wall and threw their gear on the ground as they exited their SUV to record the event.
The journalists retreated to Russell's home Uptown where they hid in fear. They planned to flee the city later today.
Almost everywhere Russell went Uptown, one of the few relatively dry areas in Orleans Parish, he said he felt the threat of violence.
"There is a totally different feeling here than there was yesterday (Wednesday)," said Russell, who has reported on the aftermatch of Hurricane Katrina since the storm devastated the city on Monday. "I'm scared. I'm not afraid to admit it. I'm getting out of here."
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SisterhoodI am a 30-year-old sorority girl. Homeless courtesy of Katrina and evacuated from the Times-Picayune office with one cubic foot of belongings, Im the newest and other than the house mom, oldest resident of the Delta Zeta sorority house at LSU. For the next month, Ill be living in a room surrounded by photos of pledge classes and formals, fraternity mixers and sisterhood retreats just like I did a decade ago as a Delta Zeta at the University of South Carolina. Eleven years after I pledged, Im still witnessing and unbelievably grateful for -- true sisterhood. Wonder if Ill be invited to a fraternity party? -- Deanna McLendon, copy editor
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Refugee restaurateursBy Brett Anderson Restaurant critic
On Sunday, Ralph Brennan was headed with his wife, two children and 91-year-old mother-in-law to Florida, where his sister Cindy Brennan, owner of Mr. B's Bistro in the French Quarter, had evacuated.
Crossing the Twin Spans they discovered I-10 east had been closed. Plan B -- to head to Ralph's brother's farm in Tuscaloosa, Ala. -- didn't pan out either. At 12:30 Monday morning, 12 hours after leaving New Orleans, Brennan and his family landed at the home Bill and Besty Latham, fellow restaurateurs in Jackson, Miss.
They didn't stay long. The heat in Jackson, which lost power soon after Brennan arrived, was too much for his elderly mother-in-law. That's how Brennan, the owner of the New Orleans restaurants Bacco, Redfish Grill and Ralphs on the Park, found himself in Oxford, Miss., which since Monday has seen its population swell with evacuees, many of them from New Orleans' professional class.
Duke Eversmeyer, a Metairie internist, escaped to his Oxford condominium. He's looking around for work, thinking about making it a permanent home. Billy Sothern, a New Orleans lawyer, is searching for an apartment, preferably a two bedroom, so his wife Nikki Page, an artist, can set up a studio. Last night he was at the bar above City Grocery, a restaurant owned by New Orleans native John Currence. "Now that I'm living here, I'm dedicating myself to drinking them out of Abita Amber" he said as he ordered another bottle of the Louisiana-brewed beer.
Under normal circumstances, the tree-lined town of 12,000 residents is well equipped to handle visitors. Its restaurants, among the best in the deep south, are an attraction, as is Ole Miss. William Faulkner called Oxford home, and the town boasts a fertile literary community. Richard Howorth, Oxford's mayor, is also the owner of Square Books, the town's well-regarded book seller.
Howorth figures that Oxford has absorbed 2,000 to 3,000 evacuees from New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast. The first ones were mostly friends and family members of Oxford residents. Yesterday saw the arrival of what he called "bonafied refugees" like Brennan, and he expects their number to swell in the next couple of days. He met today with officials from the Red Cross and other relief agencies "to try to get our heads around what our capacity is, what we can reasonably deal with, and what our possibilities are for receiving these people, because they're not just visiting."
Howorth said that the University of Mississippi was extending its enrollment a week to accommodate displaced students from Tulane and LSU.
Armed with his laptop and cell phone, Brennan was trying to assess the damage to his restaurants and figure out a way to take care of his roughly 400 employees. He said staffers can check in with his restaurants' Web sites to report their whereabouts and retrieve other information. "Unfortunately, I'm thinking maybe only half (of the employees) have Internet capability. We have paychecks for them. Today is payday, and our comptroller is in Houston."
Brennan's restaurants are far from his only worry. His mother-in-law is ailing, and he needs to find schools for his 16-year-old daughter and 18-year-old son. He'd heard about every other member of the Brennan restaurant family save for his cousin Dickie Brennan, who's set up a temporary office in Baton Rouge. Dickie Brennan hopes to marshal the resources of his New Orleans restaurants -- Palace Cafe, Bourbon House, Dickie Brennan's Steakhouse -- to help in the relief effort, much as restaurants in Manhattan became defacto soup kitchens in the wake of 9-11.
Ralph Brennan hasn't gotten that far yet. He's having trouble keeping track of what day it is.
"I live on my calendar," he said, holding up his PDA. "And now there's no calendar."
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5,764
posted on
09/01/2005 2:41:14 PM PDT
by
cgk
(We'll have to deal w/ the networks. One way to do that is to drain the swamp they live in - Rumsfeld)
To: oceanview
Well, the hype-the-violence angle is only going to go so far. So CNN's gotta play the race card. And, by golly, they can't forget their old classic, class envy. It's all Bush's fault you know.
5,765
posted on
09/01/2005 2:41:23 PM PDT
by
advance_copy
(Stand for life, or nothing at all)
To: duffi
Turned from FOX to CNN for 30 seconds, heard some blond say capitalism is to blame for all those left in NO>
Totally crazy!
5,766
posted on
09/01/2005 2:42:23 PM PDT
by
Yellow Rose of Texas
(War, 33% yes, 33% no, 33% undecided, so began the American Revolution.)
To: Howlin
They just can't help themselves can they? Did Okay for a while, but it proved to be more than they could bare. As soon as I heard Cafferty was comin gon again, I switched back to FOX.
5,767
posted on
09/01/2005 2:42:26 PM PDT
by
conservativebabe
(God Bless Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida)
To: Smogger
5,768
posted on
09/01/2005 2:42:29 PM PDT
by
cgk
(We'll have to deal w/ the networks. One way to do that is to drain the swamp they live in - Rumsfeld)
To: oceanview
Unbelievable, no mention of the FACTS that these citizens of NO had no civil gov to help them get out if they choose too.
To: advance_copy
This woman on CNN right now proves it's not just the poor and disadvantaged in the superdome
5,770
posted on
09/01/2005 2:43:12 PM PDT
by
RDTF
To: conservativebabe
I ain't going back. MY BP just can't take it.
5,771
posted on
09/01/2005 2:43:12 PM PDT
by
Howlin
(Have you check in on this thread: FYI: Hurricane Katrina Freeper SIGN IN Thread)
To: oceanview
It is unreal. Liberals at CNN are ALWAYS FIRST to play the race card, and from the emails Cafferty read on the air, save for one, of course back their pathetic Bush-hating position. I'm on vacation this week, and have watched coverage on Katrina on all three cable nets... CNN is doing its damndest to blame Bush, fault bush, GET BUSH. Like I said earlier, I threw a pillow at my TV screen when that idiot Jack Rafferty came on... My daughter told me to calm down. LOL
To: pitinkie
5,773
posted on
09/01/2005 2:43:35 PM PDT
by
Woodstock
(Unionize China)
To: Yellow Rose of Texas
CNN: Workers of the world unite!
5,774
posted on
09/01/2005 2:44:00 PM PDT
by
advance_copy
(Stand for life, or nothing at all)
To: Howlin
I hope someone is taping them. If race riots start we will have proof of who is to blame.
5,775
posted on
09/01/2005 2:44:08 PM PDT
by
hipaatwo
(Nazis Love Mother Sheehan)
To: oceanview
I know. This is ridiculous. Why the rush to assign blame for everything. Why is the Governor getting by with no accountability?
To: Howlin
Nope, FOX also mentioned the SOS from the mayor, so maybe some here will believe it now?
Oh and just so you know, I switched over to FOX as I did not want to listen to some newscaster's opinion of the situation on CNN, I instead am surfing just to see the news pics and the interviews with the victims. Personally I would like to see all the stations include more coverage of Mississippi, and I I type this FOX switched over to that state...YEAH!
To: STFrancis
Vincent Fox
Yeah I'm sure he offered to send a few more "guest workers" to do the jobs even "black" Americans wouldn't do..
To: Howlin
I ain't going back. My BP just can't take it. Don't want anyone stroking out! When the veins in my neck start pulsing, it's time for a walk around the block - AWAY from media!
5,779
posted on
09/01/2005 2:45:31 PM PDT
by
Knute
(W- Yep, He's STILL the President!)
To: Ovation_girl
You sure do seem to be the CNN apologist.
5,780
posted on
09/01/2005 2:45:37 PM PDT
by
Howlin
(Have you check in on this thread: FYI: Hurricane Katrina Freeper SIGN IN Thread)
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