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Part VI: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1490045/posts |
Posted on 09/22/2005 5:44:09 PM PDT by NautiNurse
Drive a stake next to it so you can tie it off. This way you will puncture the water line, have to turn the water off, and you can safely cut off the offending pipe.
The shot of the street looked like a foot high.
TV just reported an elderly woman had slept in a sleeping bag last night in a car wash - due to traffic gridlock. She got up this morning, slipped and fell, hitting her head. She died from injuries.
She was there with her family. Prayers for all her loved ones.
Or you can just use my cousin's technique and ram into it with your riding mower.
Snakes and turtles knew to evacuate, but Blanco and Nagin didn't. Just damn.
One of the helicopter shots show cars driving through fields to get around the bus.
I like your idea of cutting it off. If it's PVC it will be a no brainer to reconnect.
I remember someone commenting that they couldn't sleep because it was too quite. Then they figured out they didn't hear any birds.
My pond only has about 6 inches of water in it, here in Indiana.
In springtime it sometimes runs over, about 9 feet deep.
When the bus doors opened and we looked in, all we [teachers from the school where they're staying] could see in their faces were our own parents and grandparents. None of them were ambulatory. They had to be hauled from their bus seats, helped/drug down the very steep bus steps into wheelchairs into a gymnasium full of cots. They were all wearing depends that were well beyond any possible absorbancy. Volunteer teachers, nurses, and med students had to clean them up with zero privacy. And there was nothing we could do but try to make privacy shields from sheets of pegboard.
Two links, one Google map of storm via flhurricane.com
http://flhurricane.com/googlemap.php?2005s18
and tides
http://tidesonline.nos.noaa.gov/index.html
"Nice, but what does this have to do with rockets and space?"
It has to do with protecting rocket scientists that live in those areas, and making sure the Space Center is prepared.
Additionally, generating those types of simulations isn't that difficult. I believe the one you cited was originally created by the local emergency preparedness organization (not NASA), but was put on the JSC web site as part of their hurricane preparedness.
Sheila Nitwit-Lee is on KTRK talking to the reporter there...(click!)
Reread her post - she did not say "blessed to be . . .".
That would work too! LOL
Rep Sheila Jackson Lee getting camera time. Grrrreat.
Any news on the wind gusts in NO?
Enough of this junk. Knock it off.
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