Sunday, August 29, 2010

Hurricane Katrina - 5 Years Later

Hurricane Katrina 5th Anniversary - August 29, 2010 - Satellite

Hurricane Katrina 5th Anniversary - August 29, 2010 - Storm Path

Hurricane Katrina 5th Anniversary - August 29, 2010 - Flooding

Hurricane Katrina 5th Anniversary - August 29, 2010 - Flooding

Hurricane Katrina 5th Anniversary - August 29, 2010 - Flooding Satellite Image

The verse repeats again and again somewhere in the imagination, providing a soundtrack to this frozen documentary.

Frozen in the sense of standing still, not in the literal sense of below zero temperatures. Especially not during a Louisiana August.

And that verse keeps repeating in the background, something about 6 feet of water in the streets of Evangeline.

It fits, but the flood reference is wrong, because that song speaks of the Great Flood of 1927. The 6-foot waterline here filled the streets of New Orleans.

Make that 6-feet-plus, because the waterlines in Bette J. Kauffman’s photographs almost reach the rooftops of some houses. They reach only windows of others.

And still others show more than one waterline, marking houses the way parents mark their growing children’s heights on a door frame.

“That’s the thing that stood out to me, the thing that no one was photographing,” Kauffman said. “The waterlines told a story.”

Kauffman is an associate professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Louisiana at Monroe. She began taking photos of waterlines left behind by Hurricane Katrina’s aftermath in New Orleans in April 2006.

Her project is ongoing, but a big portion of it can be found in the Louisiana State Archives, strategically placed along the walls of the side hallway just off the main lobby, running along one side, then the other.

Looking much like, well, a waterline.

There’s that verse again, 6 feet of water. The remnants are here, as are handwritten memories.

This is an interactive exhibit, and people are invited to write their thoughts and memories on mattes above and below the photographs.

And yes, five years later, memories of this monster storm and its flooding of New Orleans are still vivid.

Which is why the Archives is featuring this exhibit through Tuesday, Aug. 31 – to commemorate the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina and its devastating aftermath in New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast.

Kauffman’s show specifically focuses on New Orleans, again, not showing flood damage or what’s become iconic images of displaced houses in the city’s Ninth Ward. Her subject is simple, yet profound.

The waterline is the storm’s trademark, one that many people in New Orleans have refused to remove.

“The people I’ve talked to say they’re survived this, and they’re rebuilding,” Kauffman said. “This is their badge of honor.”

Kauffman hosted New Orleans evacuees in her home in Monroe during and after the hurricane. She drove the evacuees home after the water receded.

“They wanted to see if there was anything they could salvage,” she said. “They didn’t get much.”

That’s when Kauffman noticed the waterlines. She knew she’d be carrying a camera on her return.

Which seems only natural, because Kauffman teaches a course in photography at ULM. There was no question about the photography project. She knew it was something she had to do.

She began photographing waterlines on houses, buildings, even stop signs.

“The photo of the stop sign usually generates the most comments,” Kauffman said. “There are so many meanings, but people recognize it as a symbol – the waterline comes and stops and leaves this telltale mark.”

Kauffman steps back to see if her waterline of photographs is straight and even on the wall. She’s installing the show on this particular day but will soon have to take it down to show in Florida.

The exhibit has traveled to cities in other states and has generated much interest. But what’s most interesting are comments left behind by displaced New Orleanians in other states.

“It’s amazing,” Kauffman said. “They live in other cities now, and they come to the exhibit. Their comments are so interesting.”

But there are other comments that aren’t as pleasing.

Kauffman travels with her exhibit, and she hears viewers speculating about New Orleans, why it stands below sea level and why, after Hurricane Katrina, would anyone want to rebuild there?

What can she say? She has a connection to the city. She’s been traveling there since her undergraduate days in the 1970s at the University of Iowa. She knows there’s something special about New Orleans and its culture.

And if anyone asks, Kauffman will say there is no question, that rebuilding the city is a necessity.

“It haunts me when people say these things,” Kauffman said.

But the waterline is even more haunting. It’s a symbol of devastation, but it’s also the beginning of the story of restoration.

And Kauffman hopes to add to that story by one day having her work published in a book.

“I would also want the comments to be published along with the photos,” Kauffman said. “The comments in the people’s handwriting is just as powerful as the photographs.

Photographs of a continuous waterline. All marking 6 feet — or more – of water in the streets of New Orleans.

Check out the article at The Advocate.

Be sure to check out The Advocate's Katrina Retrospective

Interesting photos, I'd like to go check out that exhibit and will probably pick up the book when it comes out.

Bette J. Kauffman’s Katrina waterline photographs

Monday, August 09, 2010

New Orleans Saints visit the White House!

Obama Meets New Orleans Saints - Super Bowl 44 Champions!

Obama Meets New Orleans Saints - Super Bowl 44 Champions!

WHO DAT? - New Orleans Saints - Super Bowl 44 Championship Ring!

Obama Meets New Orleans Saints - Super Bowl 44 Champions!

Washington D.C. – It took one shout of ''Who Dat!'' to get the celebration started in the White House on Monday as President Barack Obama saluted the Super Bowl champion New Orleans Saints.

The band played ''When the Saints Go Marching In'' as team members came in smiling to cheers and shouts for quarterback Drew Brees. Team owner Tom Benson pumped his fist in the air, flashing a Super Bowl yellow-gold diamond ring.

Obama congratulated the team, owner and coaches in an East Room ceremony. He said the team lifted up ''the hopes and the dreams of a shattered city'' in the wake of the ravages of Hurricane Katrina.

The Saints beat the Indianapolis Colts, 31-17, in Super Bowl XLIV in Miami.

Obama said the Saints' Super Bowl win was huge for New Orleans and for the country. He noted that after Katrina, the Saints had to play an entire season on the road because their home stadium, the Superdome, was ruined in the storm.

''Back then people didn't even know if the team was coming back. People didn't even know if the city was coming back,'' Obama said.

Now, the president said, the Saints proved their team and city are here to stay.

Brees presented the 44th president with a No. 44 Saints jersey. The Chicago Bears fan joked he couldn't get away with wearing it in Chicago.

Coach Sean Payton is also from Chicago.

''You've got to be tough to be a Chicago guy. I make some tough decisions every day, but I never decided on an onside kick in the second half of the Super Bowl,'' Obama said.

The Saints took a risk using an onside kick - called ambush - against the Colts to open the second half of the championship game.

''I'm glad that thing went alright,'' Obama said. Players and members of Congress and Obama's Cabinet laughed.

Brees, in a previous White House visit, filmed a public service announcement to encourage kids to exercise for 60 minutes each day. The team spent the morning in Washington playing football with kids from the Boys and Girls Club. Later, they visited wounded troops and their families at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

''These are big guys with big hearts, and shoulders big enough to carry the hopes and dreams of an entire city with them,'' Obama said.

Obama also talked about the BP oil spill, the latest disaster to hit the Gulf. He was optimistic about the battle to stop the flow of oil now that the leak appears to be plugged. His administration, he said, remains committed to the Gulf's recovery.

The president said seafood from the Gulf is now safe to eat, and the White House served some this week. Team members showed off some of New Orleans' famous cuisine. They served some shrimp to the White House press corps and were sharing recipes with White House staff, including, according to Obama, a 30-foot po-boy that was to be served at lunch.

But before lunch, there were autographs, silent cameraphone clicks and more cheers. Players standing on bleachers in the East Room snapped pictures of the president as he made his way around to shake their hands.

Then the Saints left the same way the came in - to claps, chants of ''Who dat!'' and the band playing their song.

Check out the article at Fox Sports.

Well, I won't claim to be Obummer's biggest fan, but it's cool to see our Saints finally get some presidential kudos!

WHO DAT?!?!?

Wednesday, August 04, 2010

2010 Jamboree Daily Patch

BSA 2010 National Jamboree Daily Patch #1 - 100 Years of Scouting!

BSA 2010 National Jamboree Daily Patch #2 - 100 Years of Scouting!

BSA 2010 National Jamboree Daily Patch #3 - 100 Years of Scouting!

BSA 2010 National Jamboree Daily Patch #4 - 100 Years of Scouting!

BSA 2010 National Jamboree Daily Patch #5 - 100 Years of Scouting!

BSA 2010 National Jamboree Daily Patch #6 - 100 Years of Scouting!

BSA 2010 National Jamboree Daily Patch #7 - 100 Years of Scouting!

BSA 2010 National Jamboree Daily Patch #8 - 100 Years of Scouting!

BSA 2010 National Jamboree Daily Patch #9 - 100 Years of Scouting!

BSA 2010 National Jamboree Daily Patch #10 - 100 Years of Scouting!

For Scouts and Scouters able to snare the limited-edition patch of the day each morning at the 2010 National Scout Jamboree's three trading posts, glee may be the feeling they have after they walk away from the cash register.

Each day for 10 days the BSA is selling a different red-bordered patch for $5. The 10 form a unique set that, with a total of only 2,010 of the patches offered each day among the three outlets, has become the envy of collectors and commoners alike.

The first day's patch said "National Scout Jamboree or Bust!" It featured a bus and was entitled "Arrival Day." The second was for "General Program Day" and showed a leaping blue fish, and the third offered the face of President Obama and the words "Opening Show, July 28th, 2010."

For those who want a patch of the day but walk away empty-handed, the agony of disappointment—even annoyance—can sink in. After all, that's slightly less than 4.5 patches per 100 Scouts, or .0446666666667 patches per Scout.

Douglas Harms, 53, who works day security at Trading Post C, e-mailed Jamboree Today, saying, "Providing only 2,010 patches each day is not nearly enough to meet the demands of over 45,000 jamboree attendees, and participants who are not able to purchase one are understandably upset.

"I know this because I am on staff at trading post C and have to be the bearer of bad news to customers who want a patch after it's sold out," wrote Harms of Greencastle, Ind., a member of the Crossroads of America Council. "I strongly encourage National to reconsider this policy immediately and find a way to make the availability fair to all participants."

Contacted later, Harms said, "I wrote it (the e-mail) because I felt passionate about that. It's not about traders making money."

Unfortunately for Harms and others, the daily number of patches of the day will remain the same, said Larry Knapp, director of merchandise for the trading posts.

And Knapp said the only complaints he has received have come from staffers, not participants. He confirmed that the first two patches of the day were sold out, and he expected the third day's numbers to follow suit.

K. Burns, 12, Star, Troop 448, Greater Pittsburgh Council, and a resident of Canonsburg, Pa., said he bought the Day 2 patch, but said he was unable to get to the trading post for Day 1. Still, he stood patiently in line for the Day 3 patch, only to be disappointed a few minutes later. "It is pretty late in the day," he said in line at 4:45 P.M., almost resigned to not getting one. But, after striking out, he said, "It's a little unfair for those who don't get there first."

C. Morante, 14, First Class, of Troop 730, Cascade Pacific Council, who lives in Portland, Ore., was more matter of fact about the situation. While he wanted the patches of the day, he admitted that, "They're just hard to get. It's early morning when a lot of Scouts get there."

The patches, Morante said, "are really cool," but added that he is "not so disappointed" that he hadn't latched onto any.

"In a lot of ways, patch trading is like life," said Subcamp 9 Chaplain Todd Moody of Las Vegas, who serves on the Western Region Executive Board. Moody, of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, said he counseled one Scout in particular about a big disappointment. "Sometimes you get what you want, and sometimes, despite your best efforts, you don't."

Moody's advice: A Scout unable to buy a patch of the day one day could arrive earlier the next day to boost his chances. Or he could trade with someone lucky enough to get a Day 1 patch.

"I think (disappointment is) a lot like life," the chaplain said. "We have our ups and downs, and with those things we have some control over, we do our very best to move forward and achieve our goals the next time around. Any boy who had his heart set on collecting all of the limited, day-only patches has plenty of other opportunities to trade for other patches."

Moody confided that he had had to speak with his own son, 13, Life, Troop 9250, of the Las Vegas Area Council about a great disappointment involving patches here at the jamboree. Sam had brought a clear plastic container with patches, some of them from his brother's 2007 World Scout Jamboree visit, to trade. Sam later was horrified to discover his treasure trove was missing.

"He was devastated," Moody said, but then he reassured his son, "I brought a lot of patches. We can get you back into shape."

His Scoutmaster, Dick Wimmer, even gave Sam a couple of patch sets to replenish his stock.

However, seven to eight hours after the patch box was presumed lost forever, the unimaginable occurred. An unidentified woman jamboree staffer at the BMX track found the unmarked box, examined the contents, most of which were Las Vegas patches, and began searching for the owner.

Sam had ridden BMX, but set his patch box down to get his book stamped, "and I guess I left 'em."

The woman hit the jackpot when she visited the Las Vegas Area Council campsite. Sam didn't meet her then because he was asleep in his tent, but said he sought her out later to thank her.

Fortunately for Sam, who has since written his name on his patch box, this story had a Hollywood ending.

Check out the article at the BSA Jamboree website.

Cool patches! Don't think my boy got any, tho. Check out the full patch set here

Check out these Jamboree links:

Sunday, August 01, 2010

"A Shining Light Across America" Simulcast Across U.S.

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

A Shining Light Across America - BSA 2010 National Jamboree - 100 Years of Scouting!

As part of the Boy Scouts of America’s 100th Anniversary, Istrouma Area Council Scouts watched a broadcast Saturday night of the Centennial Celebration Show from the 2010 National Scout Jamboree at LSU at the Bo Campbell Auditorium. The broadcast took place simultaneaously across the country.

During the event called "A Shining Light Across America" Lt. General Russel L. Honoré, U.S. Army (Ret.) shared his experiences with Scouting throughout his years in the Army and with his own sons, especially recalling the two National Jamborees he coordinated in 2001 and 2005, said Cathie Louis, Council Activities Chair.

Honoré stressed that the qualities that Scouts learn today will help them through the rest of their lives.

He also shared some important steps towards preparedness that he covers in his book, "SURVIVAL: How Being Prepared Can Keep You and Your Family Safe."

The event marks the first time in BSA history that the entire Scouting community joined together in an interactive jamboree arena show. The show was broadcast via satellite to locations nationwide and Webcast worldwide on the Internet.

“We’re thrilled to bring this incredible experience to the Istrouma Area Council," said Louis. "It promises to build pride in our current membership, and also to spark fond memories in former Scouts and alumni who will join us for the broadcast. I hope it will also interest those who may be interested in learning more about our organization.”

Hundreds of “Shining Light” events took place across the country on July 31 as part of the organization’s historic nationwide broadcast of the Centennial Celebration Show. The show was performed live in front of an estimated 60,000 Scouts, Scouters, and visitors at the 2010 National Scout Jamboree at Fort A. P. Hill, Virginia.

"A Shining Light Across America” is a major program the Boy Scouts of America is undertaking as part of its 100th Anniversary Celebration. For a century, the organization has brought families and communities together to prepare America’s youth to live, work, and play with character and integrity. The 100-year activities, activated at the local level, aim to drive engagement, recruit new members and volunteers, and enhance the awareness of the value of Scouting in an inspiring, purpose-driven celebration.

More information about 100 Years of Scouting can be found at http://www.scouting.org/100years

Check out the article at the The Advocate.

Well, it was a great show! I'm sure that it was that much more impressive for my boy and the other 40,000+ Scouts who were in attendance!

If you missed the show, you can watch it online at: http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/8639388. The actual nationwide broadcast actually begins around the 2:33:00 mark - everything before that is lagniappe.

Check out these Jamboree links: