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CLawwwwwwdHammmmercy!!!! Do I need to go hit the slots???
Katrina Evacuee Wins $1.6 Million OPELOUSAS, La. - After more than a month of living with dozens of displaced relatives in Opelousas, Jacquelyn Sherman, an evacuee from New Orleans, told her niece she was depressed. That all changed when she won $1.6 million — before taxes — playing a slot machine at Evangeline Downs Racetrack and Casino. "When it happened, I didn't know what was going on," Sherman said. "I had just put in my $20 in the "Wheel of Fortune" machine when it hit. My feeling about this win is better than being blessed. Thank you, Lord.".... entire article: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051006/...na_millionaire GOOD FOR HER! Let me do my happy dance for her, 'cause I'm convinced - my blessing is on the WAY! http://www.websmileys.com/sm/cartoon/1244.gif ETA: changed my happy dance! |
In Atlanta, the local celebrites are throwing concerts, and letting everyone from the affected areas in free. I know a lot of people are taking advantage of some of the free stuff that is being offered to the real victims. Some people have graduated from those states but still have thier ids from those states and pretending to be a victim, just to get free stuff. That is horrible. :(
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Council of Presidents of the National Pan-Hellenic Council
A joint statement to President George W. Bush Members of Congress of the United States of America And our fellow Americans From the Council of Presidents of the National Pan-Hellenic Council Call for Independent Katrina Commission and "Marshall Plan" Inclusion of Minorities (Washington, D.C.) Oct. 17-On behalf of the nearly two-million members and their respective families we represent, we, the presidents of the nation's leading African-American Greek-Lettered organizations, are happy to see that the president took new steps after delivering his address from New Orleans to the nation. However, we believe it is time for the country to find out really what happened in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast. It is time that we put the very same effort in this query as we did in the 9/11 attack-with a truly bipartisan and independent commission. We know that Congress has oversight duties, but nowhere better was that performed when it used its authority to create the 9/11 Commission. The president, the governors of Mississippi and Louisiana, and the mayors of local towns have many answers to provide, but the questions and probe must be genuine with no stone left unturned. This is not a Democratic, Republican, or Independent problem; this is an American problem that rises above partisanship, cover-ups, and attempts to avoid what many expect to be embarrassment on all sides of the political spectrum. Every poll taken by legitimate and respected news and research agencies shows that approximately 75 percent of Americans (black and white; rich and poor; Democrat and Republican) want this 9/11-type commission. To provide a similar commission in this instance as in the 9/11 situation would go a long way in supporting the president's claim that the response and review of this country's worst natural disaster is truly color-blind. Most African Americans believe if the majority of the evacuees were white Americans, the response would have been quicker and there would have already been empanelled a 9/11-type commission. Whenever we have had national crises or emergencies, the will of the people of this great nation has always been respected. President Bush and the Congress should do no less this time. For example: -In the 60s, we had two major commissions: the Warren Commission (formally called the U.S. Commission to Report upon the Assassination of President John F. Kennedy), led by then Chief Justice of the United States Earl Warren, and the Kerner Commission (formally called the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders), led by then Illinois Governor Otto Kerner. President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed the Commission on July 28, 1967, while rioting was still underway, and charged it with analyzing the specific triggers for the 1965-67 riots in Los Angeles, Chicago, and Newark; with determining the deeper causes of the worsening racial climate; and with identifying potential remedies. -In the 70s, we had Watergate and all of the transparency that resulted from a public magnifying glass on that crisis with true bipartisan review. -In the 80s, we had the Iran-contra scandal which was at full steam when President Ronald Reagan took it upon himself to appoint the Tower Commission (formally called the Presidential Special Review Board) to investigate the scandal of illegal arms-for-hostages sales. -Most recently, of course, we had the 9/11 Commission (formally called The National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States), the most expansive independent, bipartisan commission created by congressional legislation and the signature of President George W. Bush in late 2002. It provided the most full and complete account of the circumstances surrounding the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, including preparedness for and the immediate response to the attacks, and provided recommendations designed to guard against future attacks. Even Republicans have wondered aloud why the White House and certain factions in Congress have resisted a 9/11-type commission. David Gergen, a top advisor to Presidents Nixon, Ford, Reagan and Bill Clinton, surmised on CNN after the president's live Jackson Square speech: ". frankly, there's very little accountability here about what happened. I mean looking . to a congressional investigation it doesn't come anywhere close to what the 9/11 commission did which was very bipartisan, very fair and as a result we got one of the best reports we've ever had about an investigation inside the -- what happened inside of government why we weren't ready. It's surprising to me the White House continues to resist something similar to a 9/11 Commission." It is surprising to all Americans who want a just and fair exercise in what happened and why. Many of our family members and friends have been terribly hurt and impacted by the storm and the aftermath in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and even some in Florida. Many have lost homes and many have had traumatic experiences while staying behind to help those who couldn't help themselves. Included among these are a dean of students who stayed with hundreds of students in a dorm while dodging floating bodies in high water and one of our members who is a nurse at Charity Hospital who had to watch patients suffer in the dark and feed fellow medical personnel intravenously to stay alive while awaiting food and water. Our organizations have always been at the forefront of national issues affecting mankind. Whether it was with Thurgood Marshall leading the effort in Brown v. Board of Education to eradicate racism and discrimination in American society, with Martin Luther King Jr. working to end poverty and promote equal access to the ballot box, or whether it was sending African-American men and women off to fight for the "American Way" in every war since World War I through the current conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, our groups have never turned away from a crisis. That is why we step up and call for a Katrina Commission inquiry now and ask every similar organization to make the same plea to our Congressional representatives and the Executive Branch of our government. We also call for an inclusive rebuilding effort of the Gulf Coast and New Orleans. This will take time, a lot of money, and must include African-American and other minority groups participation at all levels: from the morticians used to prepare the deceased victims for dignified burials to construction companies who will build the "New New Orleans," to the telecommunications firms that will re-link the gulf coast towns to the rest of the world. In June of 1947, Europe was still devastated by war when Secretary of State George C. Marshall spoke at Harvard University and outlined what would become known as the "Marshall Plan." It took six years (to 1953) for the plan to work, and after the United States pumped in $13 billion, Europe was back on its feet again. No less of a commitment should be done here and now. Further, that the Katrina aftermath tore off the mask of poverty that still exists in poor and mostly colored communities, it is essential that these communities are a part of the rebuilding effort to help eradicate the poverty that claimed so many lives when the storm and the flooding happened. We should hire these citizens at prevailing wages, not slave wages. We should offer minority-owned businesses (small and large) real, meaningful contracts, not piecemeal work to satisfy the look of inclusion. Like the Marshall Plan, the rebuilding of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast will benefit the American economy. The $200 billion-plus dollars (some already appropriated by Congress) will be used to buy goods from all over the United States. We say, and rightfully demand, that those who need the work and the contracts get their share. We call on Congress and the president and the governors and local officials to ensure this happens. We call on the president and the Congress to quickly authorize a national independent commission just as it did in the 9/11 attack and a plan that authorizes full and equitable participation in the rebuilding of the storm-damaged communities. Anything less than that would be un-American. The leaders and their organizations undersigned hereon support and endorse this call for action: Linda M. White of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. Darryl R. Matthews, Sr. of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. Louise A. Rice of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. Barbara C. Moore of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. Steve T. Birdine of Iota Phi Theta Fraternity, Inc. Samuel C. Hamilton of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. Mynora J. Bryant of Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. Paul L. Griffin of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. George H. Grace of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. |
FEMA Officials to Discuss Big Easy Rebuilding at Rainbow/PUSH Confab
Wednesday, November 02, 2005 By: Sherrel Wheeler Stewart, BlackAmericaWeb.com Federal Emergency Management Agency representatives this week will discuss with Rainbow/PUSH the role of blacks and disadvantaged people in rebuilding the Gulf Coast, a region still struggling to recover from the devastation of Hurricane Katrina and her aftermath. The FEMA presentation will be part of a three-day Rainbow/PUSH Creating Opportunity Conference in Atlanta, salted for today through Friday, November 5th. The theme this year is “Leveling the Playing Field in Civic and Economic Life." read the rest here: http://www.blackamericaweb.com/site....wnews/fema1103 |
Spike Lee's When the Levees Broke
Will anyone be watching? I need to get HBO.:o I am looking forward to seeing it. Another article I read that interviewed New Orleans natives who saw it last night, one native said it was cleansing for her to see it. Premieres in 2 parts on August 21 and August 22 All 4 hours on August 29 |
From an email:
Many of you will watch Spike Lee's documentary on HBO tomorrow night. Please remember that for many, both the images and the experience was real. The rate of depression and suicide is at an all-time high in the City. Even those such as myself who suffered minor to no loss of personal property or employment are still affected in some manner. The upcoming period of continued observances is causing tremendous anxiety for all in some form or another, but there can be no "Katrina fatigue" here if there is to be a full recovery. On Aug. 29, bells will ring all over the Gulf Coast in remembrance of the tremendous loss of life and devastation to property. Thanks for remembering us in your own way. For Whom the Bell Tolls, is taken from "Meditation XVII" of Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions, by John Donne "No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. If a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if promontory were, as well as if a manor of thy friend's or of thine own were. Any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee." |
Let me get my tissue ready while I set the VCR because I KNOW that I will be crying harder than I did after watching the Notebook. Let me not forget my aspirin because my head gets to hurting when I cry too hard.
Katrina stories + Spike Lee joint = deep = RD crying like a baby.... |
I can't wait to see this as well. They were talking about it on the TJMS the onther day when they interviewed Spike, and they were all saying how good it was. I just have to remember that part 2 comes on tomorrow...I need to set a reminder. It is going to be hard to watch this, because it was hard watching it while it was happening, and I remembered that it got to a point where I just couldn't watch anymore.....but I know Spike did this justice.
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I gave away my ticket for last week's premiere. I'm DVRing the episodes. I am NOT ready to watch it.
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Watching it now...
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I'm only 25 minutes in and I'm crying already....
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And I thought I was sensitive...it's definitely educational... |
Educational yes, emotional yes but I'm ticked off. Please don't show the babies and bodies or I will flip out. :( :mad: (those are my thoughts for right now)
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Two sad stories...the son with the elderly mother who died in his presence...& the other one w/ the kids who's mom needed oxygen and who died and now they are motherless... |
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