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Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Tunica-Biloxi open doors to hurricane refugees

From Pechanga.net   Tunica-Biloxi open doors to hurricane refugees
(LOUISIANA) -- The Tunica-Biloxi Indian Tribe in central Louisiana responded to the victims of Hurricane Katrina by opening the Paragon Casino Resort convention center as a refuge for families.    Casino Owners Look Toward Rebuilding
(MISSISSIPPI) -- As Hurricane Katrina blew a destructive path through Biloxi, Miss., on Monday, the Grand Casino Biloxi, owned by Harrah's Entertainment, came unmoored and washed across U.S. 90. The giant casino, with its 134,200 square feet of gambling space, is probably a total loss, the company said.
  Where to Donate  Red Cross safest?
(USA) -- A variety of government and private agencies are en route to assist victims of Hurricane Katrina, and federal officials said people wanting to help should not head to the affected area unless directed by an agency.
  Isle of Capri officials check on employees from Gulf Coast area
(IOWA) -- With television and newspaper images providing some of their only clues to Hurricane Katrina's devastation in Biloxi, Miss., Isle of Capri officials turned their attention Tuesday to the top priority: accounting for their company's 1,650 employees in the Gulf Coast region.
  Native Times news Helping Katrina's victims

Tribe opens casino to evacuees, Kiowa woman travels to disaster site
Read [More...]
 

Indian Country Today    Seminole Tribe of Florida sends emergency crew to Mississippi Choctaw by: Brenda Norrell / Indian Country Today CHOCTAW, Miss. - The Mississippi Choctaw were hit by Hurricane Katrina as it became a tropical depression, knocking down trees and power lines and cutting off roads as it tore through the central part of Mississippi. The Seminole Tribe of Florida responded immediately and had an emergency team, including emergency vehicles, police officers and firemen, at the scene, said Gilbert Thompson, executive assistant to Mississippi Choctaw Chairman Phillip Martin. more >>

     NNN Headlines for Today   National Native News

To our listeners: If you or any Native person you know has been impacted by Hurricane Katrina please contact National Native News.

Our office number is 505-277-9180. Our e-mail address is amcconkey@nativenews.net

Wednesday, August 31, 2005

A Tribe in Louisiana is Helping Evacuees of
Hurricane Katrina

Tribal Officers Will Have Authority in Whiteclay, Nebraska

Tribes Bring Their Education Concerns to the
Office of Indian Education Programs


                Understanding the present, by honoring our past...

Wednesday, August 31, 2005

On this day in 1862, Cherokee people chose which side to fight on in the American Civil War. Three-thousand Cherokees signed up to serve with the Confederacy
and one-thousand aligned with the Union.


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To our listeners: If you or any Native person you know has been impacted by Hurricane Katrina please contact National Native News.

Our office number is 505-277-9180. Our e-mail address is amcconkey@nativenews.net

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  ... Turtle hatchlings hit hard by Katrina. 140+ aftermath photos ... 130+ South Florida aftermath photos. Monster storm approaching NEW ... www.palmbeachpost.com/     
UPDATE New Orleans sinks into crisis as two levees break, send water rushing in; about 80 percent city under water up to 20 feet deep.
Mississippi apartments left as rubble

REPORTS FROM NEW ORLEANS
Residents battle rising watersOne man swam 200 yards to get to an area where he could walk neck-deep.
New Orleans hospital still operating

Floridians helping storm victimsMore than 100 from faith-based organizations join convoy to Mississippi and Alabama. NEW

Storm 2005• Aftermath coverage | Tropical outlook
Video More than 20 video clips of damage
Photos Your Katrina photos | How to submit
    Aftermath photos UPDATE
Photos New Orleans, Gulf Coast damage | Florida Panhandle

 

 Crews pass dead to reach survivors
Video image
New Orleans flooding NEW Mississippi hit hard NEW
Gulf Coast ravaged
NEWS 12: Gas to jump
NEWS 12: More waves
NEWS 12: Couple escapes
Driver rescued after Katrina

How you can help
Send your donations to
 American Red Cross
via this online form, or call (800) 435-7669

Interactive maps
Map of hardest hit areas
Hardest hit areas
See Katrina's path

    (In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is
distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest
in receiving the included information for research and educational
purposes. We/I/Whomever have no affiliation whatsoever with the
originator of this article nor are I/We/Whomever endorsed or sponsored
by the originator.)

They Say it looks like A Tsunami in Mississippi and on other beaches.

  They said it may be 4 months before trhey can return! They Say it looks like A Tsunami in Mississippi and on other beaches.


  AP PhotoGovernor: Everyone Must Leave New Orleans






Floodwaters from Hurricane Katrina cover a portion of New Orleans, La., Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2005, a day after Katrina passed through the city. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
       


Red Cross:1-800-HELP-NOW


   http://www.cnn.com/  <This link         RSS  

Updated: 1:03 p.m. EDT (17:03 GMT), August 31, 2005 'NIGHTMARE'


Rescuers, residents struggle

David Keifer, leads his sister and son through flooded streets in New Orleans today. Rescuers, residents struggle

  • Katrina death toll estimated to be at least 120
  • Water still rising in New Orleans
  • Louisiana governor: "Logistical nightmare" at Superdome
  • Mississippi governor: More damage than Camille

    FULL STORY

    • Watch: Looters take to streets | Dome must be evacuated


  • • Watch: Saved from gators | Horses to get help


  • • Storm Roundup: Katrina's effects at a glance


  • • Special Report: Trail of destruction | Gallery | Levee system


  • • Citizen journalist: Your e-mails | Gallery | Share your story


  • • Hotlines: Emergency info |Red Cross

  • • Superdome refugees moving to Texas | WATCH
      • Feds fan out for storm recovery efforts | WATCH
      • Wife makes desperate trip with husband's body
      • Watch: Wife searches for missing husband
      • 'It's like being in a Third World country' | WATCH
      • Biloxi: We swam among floating cars | WATCH
      • Mayor blasts failure to patch levees | WATCH



      WorldChanging: Another World Is Here

     Foresight in the Age of the Storm

    To Know It for the First Time – Place, Environment and Ecology Jamais Cascio
     

    katrina0829.jpgIn the age of climate disruption, clear-eyed foresight is a necessity -- but hurricane Katrina was a reminder that foresight means more than imagining the worst and preparing for it.

    Katrina came as a surprise to few of its victims. The storm, which had been just a Category 1 when it crossed Florida, grewstronger over the warm ocean as it drew towards the Gulf Coast; in the age of real time satellites and doppler radar, residents of the region had ample warning that danger was coming. Nor was Katrina's arrival a surprise to meteorologists at the National Weather Service, who had earlier this month predicted that this hurricane season would be a strong one. Katrina's strength was certainly no surprise to climate scientists such as Kerry Emanuel or Kevin Trenberth, each of whom had published recent articles in top-notch journals arguing that greater hurricane intensity is the inevitable effect of global warming.

    No, climate foresight means recognizing the signs that the game has changed, and that simply doing more of the same, but better, won't suffice.

    Continue reading "Foresight in the Age of the Storm"
    Posted at 06:01 PM on August 30, 2005 | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack (1)


     

    Katrina and the Levees To Know It for the First Time – Place, Environment and Ecology Emily Gertz

    Check out "After Centuries of 'Controlling' Land, Gulf Learns Who's the Boss," a thorough, readable, straight talking, and slightly arch article in today's New York Times on the suite of environmental factors that have contributed to Katrina's enormously devatating impact on the Gulf Coast.

    Reporters Cornelia Dean and Andrew C. Revkin chart development and depletion of coastal ecologies in the region since the 18th century, "when French colonial administrators required land claimants to establish ownership by building levees along bayous, streams and rivers":

    As long as people could control floods, they could do business. But, as people learned too late, the landscape of South Louisiana depends on floods: it is made of loose Mississippi River silt, and the ground subsides as this silt consolidates. Only regular floods of muddy water can replenish the sediment and keep the landscape above water. But flood control projects channel the river's nourishing sediment to the end of the birdfoot delta and out into the deep water of the Gulf of Mexico.
    Continue reading "Katrina and the Levees"
    Posted at 02:12 PM on August 30, 2005 | Permalink | Comments (2)


     (In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is
    distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest
    in receiving the included information for research and educational
    purposes. We/I/Whomever have no affiliation whatsoever with the
    originator of this article nor are I/We/Whomever endorsed or sponsored
    by the originator.)

    __________________

    Tuesday, August 30, 2005

    Aftermath Katrina

    Levees break; New Orleans to evacuate refugees Hundreds believed dead across Gulf Coast states in Katrina's wake

    Tuesday August 30, 09:28 PM


    Hundreds feared dead on storm-ravaged U.S. coast

    Heaven Girod is handed over to a National Guardsman as she is being evacuated from a flooded area in New OrleansClick to enlarge photo

    BILOXI, Mississippi (Reuters) - Helicopters plucked frantic survivors from rooftops of inundated homes on Tuesday and hundreds were feared dead along the U.S. Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina sent a wall of water into Mississippi and flooded New Orleans.



    An aerial view of the devastation caused by high winds and heavy flooding in the greater New Orleans area Click to enlarge photo

    Rachel and Cory Gregs of Biloxi, Mississippi stand in front of what used to be their apartment in Biloxi, Mississippi Click to enlarge photo Full Coverage hurricane coverage Hurricane Katrina

    Latest news, features, photos, video and more.

    Video


    » More Full Coverage New Orleans residents walk through floodwaters that continue to rise in the Crescent City on Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2005. (AP Photo/Bill Haber) AP Photo: New Orleans residents walk through floodwaters that continue to rise in the Crescent City on... 


    VIDEO: Hurricane Katrina | More Gulf Coast devastation
    WLBT TV reporter Coyt Bailey narrates a 26-minute helicopter flight showing the wide swath of the Mississippi coast destroyed by Hurricane Katrina.



    Monday, August 29, 2005

    Hurricane Katrina now landfall

    hurricane dennis

    ADVISORY TIME...................August 29th 1:00PM ET
    NAME.................Hurricane Katrina
    POSITION..........30.8N x 89.6W
    LOCATION.........40 Miles SSW of Hattiesburg,Mississippi.
    MPH - PRES.......105mph / 27.76
    MOVEMENT.......North @ 17mph
    120 HRS............ In Canada absorbed after hitting SE Louisiana and Mississippi as a cat 4 Hurricane .

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    Sunday, August 28, 2005

    Video on Katrina

     

     


    ·
    485,000 Residents Told to Flee New Orleans
    · Katrina Reaches Powerful Category 5 Status
    · Expected to Hit the Gulf Coast Early Monday
    · South Florida Reeling After Storm [Details]
    · Live Video: ABC News Hurricane Coverage
    · Weather Maps: Track the Storm | Projected Path
    · Jump Below: Prepare | Season Photos | Video
     

    Big Easy Braces for 'Once-in-a-Lifetime' Storm
    By ALLEN G. BREED, AP