Jump to content

LabattBlue

Community Member
  • Posts

    12,713
  • Joined

Everything posted by LabattBlue

  1. NEW ORLEANS - Four days after Hurricane Katrina struck, the National Guard arrived in force Friday with food, water and weapons, churning through the floodwaters in a vast truck convoy with orders to retake the streets and bring relief to the suffering. "The cavalry is and will continue to arrive," said Lt. Gen. Steven Blum of the National Guard. At the New Orleans Convention Center, some of the thousands of storm victims awaiting their deliverance applauded, threw their hands heavenward and screamed, "Thank you, Jesus!" as the camouflage-green trucks and hundreds of soldiers arrived in this increasingly desperate and lawless city. "Lord, I thank you for getting us out of here," said Leschia Radford. But there was also anger and profane catcalls. "Hell no, I'm not glad to see them. They should have been here days ago. I ain't glad to see 'em. I'll be glad when 100 buses show up," said 46-year-old Michael Levy, whose words were echoed by those around him yelling, "Hell, yeah! Hell yeah!" "We've been sleeping on the ... ground like rats," Levy said. "I say burn this whole ... city down."
  2. Excellent point and something that should have definitely been part of the city's disaster plan.
  3. Good thing they re-signed Hofher to a new contract. Either find a coach who can make this team competitive(a .500 record would be GREAT right about now) or shitcan the program and pickup 1A hockey and lacrosse.
  4. SDS...I think this is a good idea. I know a lot of people are opposed to sub-forums, but I think the baseball forum has worked out okay, along with several other small forums. Like everything else, when changes are made, they take time to get used to. The main benefit of this is that people who are opposed to these types of posting, never have to see them on the main forum.
  5. I didn't post this with a political agenda in mind. I posted it because of all the hundreds of things he could be reporting on and instead he chose this.
  6. He was on location and of course there had to be a shot of him with the corpse in the background. Hey Shep... you could have been a martyr and loaded up the corpse in your fox news truck and delivered it to the governors office demanding an explanation for why this body was lying alongside the interstate.
  7. He just did a report on fox news ranting about a dead man lying along the interstate and nobody is doing anything about it. Mr. Smith....YOU ARE A FUGGIN' MORON. There are people who are ALIVE still trapped in their houses, there are people ALIVE walking up and down that same interstate looking for help, there are thousands of people with short tempers who are ALIVE at the Superdome waiting to be evacuated... but you want somebody to take care of this person who died. You f***king sensationalist jerkoff, I'd like to come down there and toss you into the toxic waters head first.
  8. http://www.wwltv.com is streaming again and some of the video is unbelievable.
  9. The folks in the Superdome are heading to the Astrodome. I'm a little puzzled by the statement in bold... NEW ORLEANS - At least 25,000 of Hurricane Katrina's refugees, a majority of them at the New Orleans Superdome, will travel in a bus convoy to Houston and will be sheltered at the Astrodome, which hasn't been used for professional sporting events in years. ADVERTISEMENT click here Evacuees with special problems already have been evacuated to hospitals in other Louisiana cities, but the 23,000 people now confined to the stuffy, smelly Superdome, as well as some other refugees will go to Houston, about 350 miles away. The marathon bus convoy should take two days, officials said. "Our view is the move to the Astrodome is temporary," said William Lokey, chief coordinator for the Federal Emergency Management Agency. "We're buying time until we can figure something out." Ann Williamson, secretary of the Louisiana Department of Social Services who is working on the evacuation plans, said, "The remarkable offer from Texas did not have an end date." FEMA will provide 475 buses for the transfer, and the Astrodome's schedule has been cleared through December for housing evacuees, said Kathy Walt, a spokeswoman for Texas Gov. Rick Perry. I didn't realize the Astrodome was still being used?
  10. I didn't know there was such a thing in soccer as a game that "means something"?
  11. For those familiar with New Orleans, I know the French Quarter is not under water(yet), but what about the area around the convention center which I believe is known as the warehouse district?
  12. Here's a VERY small bit of good news for New Orleans. Very little rain over the next ten days. Hopefully this will help with the rescue efforts and not adding any more water to a situation that just doesn't need it... http://www.weather.com/activities/other/ot...pnav_undeclared
  13. To repair damage to one of the levees holding back Lake Pontchartrain, the Army Corps of Engineers said it planned to use heavy-duty Chinook helicopters to drop 3,000-pound sandbags Wednesday into the 500-foot gap in the failed floodwall. But the agency was having trouble getting the sandbags and dozens of 15-foot highway barriers to the site because the city's waterways were blocked by loose barges, boats and large debris. Officials said they were also looking at a more audacious plan: finding a barge to plug the 500-foot hole. It could take close to a month to get the water out of the city. If the water rises a few feet higher, it could also wipe out the water system for the whole city, said New Orleans' homeland security chief, Terry Ebbert. "The challenge is an engineering nightmare," Paul Accardo, a police spokesman. "We are looking at 12 to 16 weeks before people can come in," Mayor Ray Nagin said on ABC's "Good Morning America, "and the other issue that's concerning me is have dead bodies in the water. At some point in time the dead bodies are going to start to create a serious disease issue." ....I think it's safe to say that the Bills game versus New Orleans will not be happening in the Superdome on 10/2.
  14. How about stop his bitching and acknowledge the efforts of everyone trying to solve this problem working under extreme pressure.
  15. New Orleans mayor blasts away. I'm sure the engineers are doing the best they can. What exactly is he doing to help? http://www.cnn.com/2005/WEATHER/08/31/katr...vees/index.html
  16. Batron Rouge where LSU is located is about 80 miles away from New Orleans. It is an outdoor stadium.
  17. Look at the water covering the area around the Superdome... http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9063708/ I also saw a reference in a link earlier in this thread stating that the "twin spans have been destroyed". Anybody know what bridge this is referring too?
  18. Thanks! I try to help all...even Crap Throwing Monkeys!
  19. CTM...everything you ever wanted to know and more about the Superdome roof... SUPERDOME ROOF Contractors building the Superdome also found that it required efforts and techniques that were a bit out of the ordinary, especially in the construction of its roof. For this building, the largest clear span steel structure in the world (as attested to by the new Guinness Book of World Records) is literally held together by its roof. In its flying - saucer-shaped design , the walls of the Superdome literally hang (for want of more descriptive term) from the roof, with the force vectors at foundation level pointing away from the center. The uniqueness of the Superdome's roof, designed by Binkley Engineering Company of St. Louis (formerly Roof Structures, Incorporated) is its "lamella" configuration, which is nothing more than a series of overlapping triangles building out from a ring in the center. This gives stability against any downward forces. The Superdome's 75-ton, 124-foot-diameter (38 meters), gondola handing from the center of the roof, gives it a stability against upward forces as well. To build the 9.7 acre, 680-foot-diameter (205meters) clear span roof hanging (American Bridge Division of U.S. Steel Corporation was the contractor) required the use of 37 scaffolds in concentric circles, as well as mobile cranes. The entire Superdome was designed with the intention of making everything in it capable of contributing to the stability of the structure. Its superstructure has four main column lines as the perimeter of the building to support the building and the seat bents and meeting room spaces. The columns supporting the tension ring are on 22-foot (6.6 meters) centers, arranged in a perfect circle. The columns for support of the seat bents cantilevering 65 feet (21 meters) are set in two separate rows that make up the "Squircle" pattern (the interior of the building is slightly elliptical in shape). An outer row of columns frames the convention room area. Wind bracing is placed between the seat bent columns and Superdome columns, alternating between the three rows of columns and places where it doesn't interfere with the concourses or lobbies. The roof had to be analyzed separately because of its unique construction. First of all at the building's perimeter, K bracing extends out from the Dome columns to provide additional wind bracing and also to accommodate the rain gutters surrounding the Superdome' s 2,200 foot (660 meters) perimeter. The upper arms of the K's support the 96 sections of the gutter, each 22 feet (6.6 meters) long by 10 feet (3.1 meters) by 4 feet (1.25 meters) deep. Atop the 96 Superdome supporting columns rests the tension ring on 4-inch diameter (10 centimeters) rocker bearings. The bearings allow movement of the entire ring due to temperature contraction and expansion of about 3 inches (7.7 centimeters) in either direction from the column center ring. The 9-foot (2.8 meters) ring consists of top and bottom chords and diagonals of 14 inch wide (36 centimeters) flanges. Principal framing of the roof consists of 12 main rings at 30 degree intervals spanning from the 5-foot (1.5 meters) crown block to the tension ring. The ribs are connected by five concentric interior rings about 56 feet (17 meters) apart. Secondary trusses fill in and span from the intersection of main ribs and interior rings to the perimeter tension ring. American Bridge Division's efforts were crowned on June 12, 1973, a time that was referred to as the "most dramatic phase" in the Superdome's construction. It got underway at 6 o'clock in the morning, and was considered completed at 3:20 p.m. that afternoon, the Superdome's 680-foot roof (210 meters), the largest steel dome in the world was in place standing without support. But in the words of Thomas M. Sutter, resident manager for the Superdome's design team of architects and engineers, it wasn't quite that simple. As he put it later, "We didn't know for sure whether the roof would stand on its own until that moment." There were two men on top of each of the 37 towers used, and on top of these towers were hugh jacks. One by one, the jacks were lowered, inch by inch, until at last there were none supporting the roof. Much of the ribbed steel roof deck was raised from the ground by helicopter which often make modern builders wonder how they did it when the dome of St. Peter's in Rome was built. Of course, that took more than 150 years, whereas, the Superdome, begun on August 11, 1971, was opened on August 3, 1975. Topping the steel roof deck of the Superdome is an inch thick layer of polyurethane, and topping that is a thin layer of hypalon, which is a synthetic waterproof covering. The hypalon is a Dupont product and technically the name for it is chlorosulfonated polyethylene. A good description of the material would be that it's "elastomeric," which means that it has the capability of elongating under a load and recovering quickly from release of that load, much like a carpet. The hypalon covering, actually a liquid which has to be sprayed under pressure and then let dry because it is extremely sticky, was sprayed on the Superdome's roof under protection of special nylon bubbles (cocoons) which were erected to protect the spray from wind and the sun's ultra-violet rays as well. This entire roof covering procedure took 162 days. The cocoons were 110 feet (34 meters) wide by 200 feet (61 meters) long by 50 feet (16 meters) high. They were also used to apply the polyurethene. For those workers who must fix the stadium's field lighting and hoist TV gondola equipment, all of which are in the eight foot space between the roof and the top of the steel lamellas, there are four catwalks, each about three feet (.6 meters) wide, so that the workers can get close to the necessary fixtures.
  20. It looks like this site would probably contain the info you are looking for, but it is either no longer available or is temporarily down(maybe it is hosted in New Orleans). http://www.superdome.com/site.php
  21. Talk about pissing away draft picks...Miami gave up a #2 for Feeley and a #3 for Gordon last year.
  22. I don't know if this applies to you but....Stop making pretend you are part of the NASCAR circuit when driving on the thruway(especially when you already have a gas guzzling SUV)!
  23. Don't know anything about this place. Found it while doing a search for "traverse city sports bars"... http://www.mytraversecity.com/restaurants/...restaurantID=13
  24. I'm probably in the minority, but I could care less what color the uniforms are, the design, the logo, etc. Ditto for all Sabre fans who yearn for the blue & gold. The only thing I care about in this regard, is the talent & effort of the players wearing the uniforms.
×
×
  • Create New...