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25 new of 119 responses total.
bhoward
response 25 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 15 03:14 UTC 2006

I used to stay at a place on the ground level of an old merchants
mansion on Prytania Street during the Jazz & Heritage festival every
year, maybe a 10-12 minute walk from the quarter.

It was quite cheap because the owner was trying to restore the whole
building and had only finished off the rooms in the part of the
building where we were staying.
tod
response 26 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 15 05:41 UTC 2006

re #24
Shortage of women for what?
bru
response 27 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 15 05:52 UTC 2006

the touro hospital is on prytania.  a lot of very nice houses on 
prytania.
cross
response 28 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 15 05:59 UTC 2006

This response has been erased.

tod
response 29 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 15 06:01 UTC 2006

How juvenile
cross
response 30 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 15 17:48 UTC 2006

This response has been erased.

tsty
response 31 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 15 21:23 UTC 2006

bru - guess that  puts yo on the othe side of hte mississippi now. but
event he french quarter is high/dry ground, in'nit?
  
bru
response 32 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 16 05:17 UTC 2006

most of the french quarter, and most of the garden district were free 
of water, but the areas around them had some damage.
mcnally
response 33 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 16 06:44 UTC 2006

 Do you mean damage from the flood?  Because the areas around the edges of
 the French Quarter and Garden District were pretty hard-hit looking when
 I was last in New Orleans and that was several years *before* Katrina..
 :-|

 It sounds like the neighborhood Cathy lived in ("Uptown", off of Carrollton,
 kind of near Tulane) was spared from the flooding, which I was glad to hear,
 as that neighborhood was friendly and the people around her looked after
 each other.  It would be sad to think that it was destroyed and the people
 scattered, though I'm sure that's the case in many parts of the city.
klg
response 34 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 16 11:39 UTC 2006

(Bru's experience has improved his spelling.)
aruba
response 35 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 16 18:01 UTC 2006

Re #33: I believe Tulane itself was flooded.
mcnally
response 36 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 16 19:06 UTC 2006

re #35:  Big parts of it, from what I understand.  Apparently they're
not even going to re-open their engineering school, having decided to
concentrate their limited resources on other academic programs.
albaugh
response 37 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 16 19:30 UTC 2006

> One of the things that might not be obvious is that armed security has 
> long been a big business in New Orleans.

If you go overseas (e.g. Asia e.g. Philippines) you will see armed guards all
over the place, including drug stores, grocery stores, you name it.
mcnally
response 38 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 16 19:33 UTC 2006

 Yes, and no doubt for good reason in many places.  It's still a bit 
 jarring (to me, anyway) to see it in the USA.
albaugh
response 39 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 16 19:49 UTC 2006

Agreed.  But then I have never visited a devestated area that has been turned
into essentially 3rd world...
mcnally
response 40 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 17 03:20 UTC 2006

 My point was that, to a lesser extent, New Orleans was like that even
 before Katrina.
klg
response 41 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 17 11:41 UTC 2006

Did I hear a news report that Mayor Nagin stated NO will again be a 
black-majority city because that is "God's will?"
klg
response 42 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 17 12:23 UTC 2006

And this morning I hear that Nagin is saying the hurricanes were God's 
retribution agains the US for being in Iraq.

(Now. someone explain to me how is this different from Pat Robertson's 
recent statements about Ariel Sharon - other than the fact that while 
Robertson is a private citizen, Nagin is an elected public official??)

Go get 'im, Richard!!  Your country is calling.
jep
response 43 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 17 14:14 UTC 2006

The mayor of New Orleans  said that the numerous hurricanes this year 
were a sign of God's feelings about America and the war in Iraq, and 
also about God's dismay over black activist infighting.  I think he 
should be excused.  He had a hard year last year.
rcurl
response 44 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 17 17:20 UTC 2006

Bringing up this god stuff, by either Robertson or Nagin, does nothing to 
explain or improve the situations. They are wasting breath and lowering 
the discussion from the real problems.
mcnally
response 45 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 17 17:27 UTC 2006

 re #42:  Yes, Nagin made a public statement that was pretty stupid.  And?
tod
response 46 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 17 17:35 UTC 2006

Nagin is using GW tactics by dumbing down disaster preparedness to "Noah was
a bad boy."
fitz
response 47 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 18 08:05 UTC 2006

It's extremely stupid.  By the time I caught his comments on CNN, he already
elaborated further about his New Orleans qua "Chocolate City" comments.  I
think that he's neither explained nor retracted the hurricane and war
connection.  It must be a miracle, an absolute miracle.

So, if God punishes New Orleans in such old Testament fashion, should Nagin
be making a sacrifice at the temple?

MLK day has been just about the worst ever for other politictians blathering
beyond the expectations of the public.  Hillary Clinton compared the White
House to a plantation.  Although her statement was applauded by the audience,
the comparison only exposes her penchant for politicizing a day set aside for
commemoration.  It strikes me as rude:  Attacking the White House could wait
a day, couldn't it?

Furthermore, Bush himself reportedly wrapped his MLK address around Lincon,
not King.  Eh, I suppose that the future of the MLK holiday will be to alter
the football season so that the Super Bowel can be played on it.
bru
response 48 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 18 09:41 UTC 2006

damn! lost a response.

anyway, it looks like thingsa re going to be heting up down here as 
more and more residents return.  Three shootings during the MLK day 
parade. 

Our company lost the contract at Touro because they want armed guards, 
and FEMA will not let us be armed.  They offered to hire some of us at 
$8 plus room amd board.

FEMA may be coming around after reading after action reports from 
security officers unable to defend themselves from youths throwing 
rocks and telling them they don't car if they are there to protect the 
residents, the youths have guns, and the guards do not.

the hotels want a minimum of 5 armed guards around the clock for mardi 
gras.

The city has okayed over 80 trailer park sites.  with an average of 7 
guards per shift at 1200 per week, and with the company operational 
costs fo these contracts at 3 times the salary, you are looking at 
contrats worth over $5,000,000 per week.  And that is just from FEMA 
contracts.  The private security down here begins to look almost as 
complicted and expensive as the situation in Iraq.

I also heard a report that 1/4 of all U.S. gun sales for the last 
quarter took place in ... wait for it... Louisiana.  Private security 
is rivaling the local police and sheriff offices down here.
klg
response 49 of 119: Mark Unseen   Jan 18 11:54 UTC 2006

(Fitz:  "Super Bowel"??  Handles hard to digest foods with ease??)

Anyway, good point about MLK day.  Rather than using it as a positive 
opportunity to teach the values the Reverend King preached to improve 
our society, Demos have taken it as open season on Republicans.  It's a 
shame.
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