Tuesday, September 6, 2005

Wishing Them Safe Harbors

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Free plug for http://www.trinitychurchonline.net/, as the good people of AOL do their part to help out by giving some of SBL to a good cause in Louisiana.

One good plug deserves another....

http://sports.channel.aol.com/bloggerslive (also at top of screen)

 

 

http://www.familylinks.icrc.org/katrina/locate  (find lost family members)

If anyone knows the location of these people, feel free to contact me at this address or at the link above for more information. I thank everyone who tries to help......S

Danny Cargil & family and Kenny & Katie, Tiny and other friends of Doug Benson's

My heart goes out to you all. I am driving down there On Thursday 9/15 to deliver goods that were collected here in the state of MD. If anyone can tell me were I can drop of a truck load of good please let me know, I can be reached directly toll free 1-800-255-7770

Chuck Bolger
Tuesday, Sep 06, 2005 (10:09:38 am CDT)

HARRY MELMAN, he lives in Covington, rather Tchfuncte

Zenor family Covington

I'm looking for Joseph GLenn Cleary that lives in slidell- we danced 12 yrs ago at the vfw in magee when he was visiting cousins in mize ms & we lost contact & we had made plans to go out on a date butlost contact please help > Joseph you still owe me a dance !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


 

Looking for Dan and Sue Stone of Covington. I last heard from them a week ago.

Joe Bosley


Looking for Tammy, Tim & Amy Duncan. Last heard from on Friday whey they attempted to leave area Friday..no more word. Kristi is coming back between now and Friday. If anyone sees this that knows my Sister and her family please get word to them if possible. Our prayers are with everyone there

Looking for info on JUDY HAHN from Covington

NEED INFORMATION ABOUT SCHMITT/GONZALEZ, Amanda (Mandy)/Roxanne in Covington: Reportedly went to shelter at United Methodist before storm.

SOLAR family, Mr. Rocky, Ms. Sandy, Rocky Jr., Tina and Richie!

I just wanted to take this opportunity to say hello to all and to inform you that FORT HOOD,TX is praying for you all. We(army familes in my area) are getting supplies together to send directly to washington parish. My dad Terry Adams is busy working in Washington Parish through St. Tammany and into the hammond area)

Good evening, I am working with the Red Cross, at our location we are unable to access our online database as of yet and I'm trying to be creative in locating loved ones. We had a young man come in today trying to get information on his relative, Chief of Police Charles Biggers from Madisonville. For the family privacy I do not want to post anything more but please email me at vsalter1@yahoo.com if you can be of assistance. Thank you and our thoughts are with you!

Editor's Note:    "Chuck Bolger pretty much kicks ass. "

I just wanted that to be first thing to come up if anyone ever Google Searched that man's name.

Monday, September 5, 2005

God Shall Provide...

http://www.trinitychurchonline.net/

  Dear Pastor Sprague,

   I have an AOL Sports Journal (see the link at the bottom). I may have emailed your administrative assisstant. I'm assuming you didn't get all deaded on in the storm, as the church website has updated....

The reason I'm writing you is to get some links to help y'all out down there. I can't do much, but I can do this: This page has "adopted" the town of Covington.

   We're trying to find a link or a mailing address to an aid organization for Covington's storm victims. If you can come across one, please send it up here to Cape Cod, and we'll give it national exposure. We have a fairly powerful voice here(like 10-15 people read my page semi-regularly), and we only need something to shout about.

   God Bless...and let me know if there's anything I can do personally.

   Stacey      

PS.... Could you put in a good word for me with the Big Guy? I may or may not have threatened a newspaper editor if he tried to line his own pockets by giving my charity-helping friends a link to his bank account. I wasn't totally serious when I did it, but charities can't afford to mess around. Some people you beg, some people you bully, you know?  

Either way... I was trying to do God's work, and I'm hoping you can explain it to Him better than I can. Much obliged...    ************************************************************************

Friend,

Call me at 9****94 at home. We need all the help we can get in Covington.

Betting the farm on God ,
Pastor Michael
  **********************************************************************  

       Dear Pastor Sprague,

       I will call you on Sunday at some time. It's 11:30 PM here in Massachusetts, and you should get some rest. Those people need a perky, butt-kicking man of God...not one with baggy eyes who is nodding off when they try talk to him.

   Don't argue with me on this one- you may be a Pastor, but I'm a Mom.... and Mothers outrank Pastors when matters of physical well being are on the table. I'd tell God himself to take a bowl of chicken soup if he looked peaked, and I'd stare at him til He finished it.

       If you know Cynthia *******, tell her we'll come down and help her out personally if she needs it. She is also welcome to stay with us, if she can tolerate New England winters.She can reach Stephen or myself by calling collect at 508-*****. She can call 24-7. I'll swim through Pontchartrain myself to hand her $10000 if she's in any sort of trouble, and I'll fly her whole family to Massachusetts, as well.

       Covington, Kentucky- which has adopted Covington, Louisiana as a sister city- is sending food, firefighters, medicine, and clothing. Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts has also adopted you, and is sending help. We are also trying to put the squeeze on the tourists (Buzzards Bay is on Cape Cod in Massachusetts). I'll put links to your site (semi-legally) all over AOL, and like seventy billion people will be exposed to the chance to help Covington personally.

       I'm just a writer, and not that many people read my page.... but we can make something happen. I have a good feeling about this. I'll be honest- my Saturday nights are usually spent drinking, gambling, etc... but tonight, I'm writing a letter to a Pastor to help storm victims that I'll never meet. If the Bible doesn't have a part where someone Wicked gets a heart of gold and does something nice, it should. Maybe they can dig around harder in Israel, or something.

       We can kick that one around later.  I can't handle anymoney personally, though I will do everything in my power to get a Covington charity all over the bloody Internet. I have my Ways.

      What I need from you (as if you don't have enough to do, huh?) is for you to put some kind of address on your church's website where people can send money. While I hate to put a deadline on a Man of God, it'd be better for us all if you could get this done for me by... say... yesterday.

       I have a keen sense of what's  important, Pastor... and I have no aversion to taking the Low Road, if need be. God and I can discuss Ends and Means later, after we make sure all the babies are fed. In His infinite wisdom, I think he's already sort of pointed me in the right direction and turned me loose to do what I do well. Get an address up, and let me start helping you.

        So, again....go out right now and:  

A) Get an address on your website where I can have people send money. Even the mailing address of your church will be good, as long as you know what to do with incoming funds. I don't know anything legal about fundraising, but I'll get you the money first, and worry about getting sued later.A good lawsuit now and then is fashionable  in Massachusetts.  

B) Tell Cynthia M******* that we love her, and that we're here if she needs us.  

C) Avoid New Orleans like the Whore of Babylon herself. People are shooting at the Red Cross, which should tell you all you need to know. That whole pastor act won't get you 4 blocks in the Big Easy these days.  

D) Do all that other stuff you're already doing. God bless you all.  

E) Remember that as hard as it must be right now....people are counting on you. You need to be visible, my man...  

F) Send me an email when the address is up on your site.  

G) Nothing. There is no 7th thing.       

Contact me immediately if I can do  anything for you, no matter how large or how small. I'm not wealthy... but I'm utterly ruthless, I won't take no for an answer, and I don't really mess around at all when a job needs doing. I plan on helping so much, you'll forget that whole losing-the-Civil-War thing. I'll go out on Covington's behalf and kick so much butt that it really won't be safe to turn your back on me.

       Katrina is a sea breeze in Portugal, now. You guys are still standing, you're getting stronger every minute, and it's always darkest before the dawn.     

   Feel free to just read this letter to your crowd if all the flood stuff prevents you from sitting down and writing a truly Time of Crisis kind of sermon. It's not really an inspiring speech I wrote here, but they might get a laugh or two.... and they could use it. At least they'll know that Massachusetts loves them.

       Get the power back on, and I'll fly down there and buy you a fat steak this time next year. You can keep that jambalya stuff, though... I ty to avoid eating meat that I can't immediately identify. I expect you guys to have that town spotless  for my arrival.       

Love,       

Stacey      

*******************************************************

Friend, Stacey;

What a good day.  I met with Jim Snyder who is the head of Compassion Ministries for 1400 plus churches with the Evangelical Free Church.  Trinity Church will be used as a staging area for relief efforts throughout the North shore and New Orleans region.  Several staff with the Evangelical Free Church will join our staff over the next 6 to 9 months to coordinate these efforts.  Specific information is available on our website, www.trinitychurchonline.net on how people from across the country can get involved giving, sending supplies and manpower.

  - Last night I had dinner with a man whose brother-in-law fled to Houston with his family. On
the way they realized all their money was gone. Imagine no money, not knowing what's next for
their family. Of course, this puts a little stress on marital communication and in the midst
of an argument the man hits 75 in a 45 mph zone and sees flashing lights. The family pulls
over. The wife looks out of the back window and sees her husband sobbing and the policeman
patting him on the shoulder.
Shortly after her husband walks up the car carrying a wad of cash. The officer had emptied his
wallet into this man's life. Wow! My guess is that they didn't report this on television.



Work is progressing.  Most of the staff is back and we are getting mobilized.  One of the guys brought a team into a local town to clean up peoples homes. 

 The mayor was astounded at the generosity.  He said, “I used to think all Christians were hypocrites, but now I’m thinking otherwise.”  That’s what happens when work is done in the name of Jesus.
 
Pastor Michael

P.S.   A possible answer to prayer.  Since writing this letter God may have provided a 20,000 square foot warehouse.  Pray for the 8 am meeting tomorrow morning.  Prayer for a compassionate, generous CEO.

Also pray for the 12 police officers who are coming in momentarily to help wit relief efforts from Indiana
      

PPS. You need to get to church, young lady.

************************************************************************

 Dear Pastor,  

I've posted those links all over the Internet. Next to Jesus, the new Pope, and Moses, you are now the fourth most well-known person in Christianity. Hail Mary may pass you once football season gets rolling, but you have John The Baptist pretty much boxed out.

  I also gave your address to some Hell's Angels people I know, if you need someone to collect relief funds among the tighter-fisted people in your community. "K-Dog" is the one you'll have the best chance of communicating with. They tend to live off the land when they travel, so you may need to have some food ready by, say, Sunday or so.

   If that CEO guy is at all cheap with you tomorrow morning, give me his phone number- or better yet, his physical address- and I will go down there and give him a verbal beating that George Patton would be impressed by. I can also have K-Dog bust up his office, but I'd rather not have you implicated in what I guess would end up being an armed assault.... at best.

   Some things are better handled by Pastors, and some things are better handled by somone who has no problem at all with splashing this dude's name on the Internet with the term "Cheap SOB" written next to it... or with sending a huge biker over to put him through a wall.  I will also call his office personally, and I will call  the local papers wherever he lives until I find someone who despises him as much as I do. I think we each know our role in this particular equation.

   If not, I'll spell it out for you. I'll grab him by his figurative feet, turn him upside down,and shake him until money pours out of his ears in a torrent of $100 bills.....and you pray for him afterwards.

 God forgives... I give God stuff to  forgive.

   Call me the moment this guy hesitates, and I'll rip his liver out... in a figurative sense, of course. God works in many a strange and wondrous way... 

  Love,

   Stacey

NetworkForGood.Com Photo Essay

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The Adopt Covington Louisiana Command Center....with the self-customized BC Hockey shirt chair! Note the old Sea Dog off to the left... he kind of hangs out on my desk and maintains order.

 

 

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For long-time fans of this page, that's Sloppy Dog doing her part to aid the storm victims. Note that even during times of crisis, the people of Massachusetts are making sure that the cranberry crop will reach Louisiana on time for the Cape Codders I'd buy for every one of them if I could.

 

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These girls were kind enough to represent for Buzzards Bay when the hand of Charity came a knockin'....

 

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Beth flexes some skill at the easel....

 

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Donate, or I'll bust up the other kid, too...

 

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http://www.trinitychurchonline.net/,  , or we'll go all Rodney King that a$$....  

 

 

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"We had nothing to do with whatever brought the Po Po into the Village...."

 

-Hurricane Survival Fund
This is a fund for Trinity Church to simply stay afloat financially.  No offerings have been taken the last two weeks, and only a remnant remains here.  People are scattered throughout the south and it will be months before any semblance of normalcy returns.

-Hurricane Relief Fund:
This fund will be administered by Trinity Church to assist the displaced, poor and needy with help with food, clothing, housing, money, etc.  The needs are great and we are called to serve this community.  Ourintent is to preachthe gospel at all times, and if necessary use words.  Spiritual and material needs will be a priority.

If you don't designate a fund, we will trust God to lead us as to where to distribute the funds.



CHECKS CAN BE SENT TO TRINITY CHURCH, 19380 N. 10th STREET, COVINGTON, LA  70433



For all of you financially savvy people who would like to wire money these are the instructions:

First National Bankers Bank
5551 Corporate Boulevard
Suite 3-R
Baton Rouge, LA  70898
ABA/Routing #065403370

for credit to:
Resource Bank
2190 N. Causeway Boulevard
Mandeville, LA  70471
ABA/Routing #065405242

for further credit to:
Trinity Evangelical Free Church
19380 N. 10th Street
Covington, LA  70433

Hurricane Relief Fund #3029543
Hurricane Survival Fund #3029535


Just another day in Buzzards Bay...

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Sunday, September 4, 2005

A Letter From Pastor Sprague

 

 

Friends,

There is nothing like meeting for church with a remnant of 50 people who ar simply glad to be alive.  The simplicity of life and the gratefulness of people is breathtakingly good.  The stories of God's goodness in the storm are inspiring.

-A young Mexican man bicycled out of Slidell in the middle of the hurricane and survived.  One of our people found him having not eaten since the storm, and took care of his needs.

- Last night I had dinner with a man whose brother-in-law fled to Houston with his family.  On the way they realized all their money was gone.  Imagine no money, not knowing what's next for their family.  Of course, this puts a little stress on marital communication and in the midst of an argument the man hits 75 in a 45 mph zone and sees flashing lights.  The family pulls over.  The wife looks out of the back window and sees her husband sobbing and the policeman patting him on the shoulder. 
Shortly after her husband walks up the car carrying a wad of cash.  The officer had emptied his wallet into this man's life.  Wow!  My guess is that they didn't report this on television.

-As I write, two huge military helicopters landed a stories throw from where I am standing.  Thank God for the military, police, fire, electrical, FEMA, Red Cross, etc. who are starting to pour into our area.  Some electricity was restored along the highway today.

Please pray:

1.  Jo Swan found out her uncle drowned today.  Two city officials committed suicide from the stress, many, many families are dispersed, paychecks are jeopardized, and everyone is trying to make it up as they go along.  Pray for comfort, wisdom, peace, creativity, ingenuity, and everything else.

2.  Pray for a 9:00 a.m. meeting with Jim from the EFCA tomorrow morning who can help us coordinate the efforts of 1400 plus churches across the country.  Trinity is in an extremely strategic location to be used as a staging ground over the year.

3.  Pray for resources.  Trinity Church has opened up two emergency accounts in response to the hurricane disaster.

-Hurricane Survival Fund
This is a fund for Trinity Church to simply stay afloat financially.  No offerings have been taken the last two weeks, and only a remnant remains here.  People are scattered throughout the south and it will be months before any semblance of normalcy returns.

-Hurricane Relief Fund:
This fund will be administered by Trinity Church to assist the displaced, poor and needy with help with food, clothing, housing, money, etc.  The needs are great and we are called to serve this community.  Ourintent is to preach the gospel at all times, and if necessary use words.  Spiritual and material needs will be a priority.

If you don't designate a fund, we will trust God to lead us as to where to distribute the funds.



CHECKS CAN BE SENT TO TRINITY CHURCH, 19380 N. 10th STREET, COVINGTON, LA  70433



For all of you financially savvy people who would like to wire money these are the instructions:

First National Bankers Bank
5551 Corporate Boulevard
Suite 3-R
Baton Rouge, LA  70898
ABA/Routing #065403370

for credit to:
Resource Bank
2190 N. Causeway Boulevard
Mandeville, LA  70471
ABA/Routing #065405242

for further credit to:
Trinity Evangelical Free Church
19380 N. 10th Street
Covington, LA  70433

Hurricane Relief Fund #3029543
Hurricane Survival Fund #3029535


The outpouring of letters I am getting by e-mail is life-giving and encouraging.  The expressions of generosity is extraordinary.  When I shared with with people this morning, there were tears of delight and smiles of hope.  We are trusting God and partnering with you.  Thank you.

Still Betting the Farm on God,
Michael

Saturday, September 3, 2005

Adopting Covington, LA II

from Cincinnati.com

http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050903/NEWS0103/509030384/1077/NEWS01

 

Covington, Ky., aiding Covington, La.

COVINGTON - Two cities named Covington have bound themselves in an informal sister agreement to send water and other provisions to Louisiana.

And refugees from Greater New Orleans can use up to 30 housing units available across Kenton County, Covington has told federal officials. The refugees will have "nothing more than literally the clothes they will be wearing," said City Manager Jay Fossett.

"We probably will know Tuesday" how many, if any, will come, Fossett said. "There's a strong likelihood we'll be asked to participate."

Aside from their names, both Covingtons have one big thing in common: They are linked by bridge to major cities, Cincinnati and New Orleans.

"We consider them one of our sister cities," Mayor Butch Callery said. "We've talked to them on different things before. They're not officially a sister city but we feel they've been hit so hard by this hurricane and everything else.

"They've asked us for water, Gatorade, Powerade, any kind of sports drinks, granola bars, chips, all kinds of snack foods," Callery said about the city of 8,500 residents. "That would really help them, they said."

Callery's city will pay for a rental truck to transport the supplies Wednesday. In the meantime, people can drop them off in the lobby of Covington's police station at Madison Avenue and 20th Street. The lobby is open around the clock.

"We're hoping people will bring it up there this weekend, so we can get it all together," Callery said. "They really got beat up on this. So we said, 'We want to help you out. What do you need?' "

According to a voice-mail message at the Covington, La., City Hall, the building is closed. Residents are told to boil water for drinking, and told that it may be days before power is restored.

"We're encouraging people who have left to stay away in comfortable areas," and city employees should call back Monday for instructions about returning to work, the message said.

The Northern Kentucky Water District already has contributed 275 cases of water to the relief effort, but may give more, Fossett said.

Other assistance also is being considered:

A music fund-raiser is being organized at Covington's MainStrasse in two weeks, with proceeds divided between Covington, La.; and New Orleans. Fossett has been working with city Commissioner Jerry Bamburger, who also is executive director of the MainStrasse Village Association, to organize the event.

Two Covington firefighters may travel to hurricane-torn areas in answer to a national request for firefighter help.

Housing for refugees? "We've also been working with the housing authority and some other areas to try to get some housing provided" in Kentucky, Callery said. "We don't have that all finalized yet."

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development asked the city to look into it, Callery said. HUD officials weren't available to comment late Friday afternoon, but HUD's Web site said the department is identifying "vacant multifamily housing, public housing units, and HUD-owned homes in a 500-mile radius of the affected areas that could be used as temporary housing."

In Newport, most of the 202 public-housing units near where the Licking and Ohio rivers meet are empty because the city has plans to redevelop the area.

Newport Housing Authority Executive Director Joe Condit was not available to comment Friday evening. Newport City Manager Phil Ciafardini, whose city government works closely with the Newport Housing Authority, said he had not heard about the request.

Gov. Ernie Fletcher's office late Friday announced it is working with the Federal Emergency Management Agency and housing officials to house refugees. But Fletcher's press secretary, Jodi Whitaker, was unable to provide details about Northern Kentucky's part.

"Given this emergency, the federal government has waived certain program requirements," Fletcher's news release said.

 

 

Friday, September 2, 2005

Covington, Louisiana

 

Statement From Parish President Kevin Davis

St. Tammany Parish has been heavily impacted by Hurricane Katrina. There is no electricity or water service anywhere in the parish. Gas leaks have been reported parish-wide. Hospitals are running on generators and are at capacity. Ambulance services are only responding to life-threatening emergencies.

Many of our residents evacuated. They need to stay where they are.

DO NOT RETURN TO ST. TAMMANY PARISH.


There is no fuel available in St. Tammany. Returning evacuees and those attempting to pass through St. Tammany are running out of gas and finding themselves in need of shelter, further straining parish government and aid organizations.

It is important to public safety that our population remain at a minimum. I have asked those in the parish who have the means to please evacuate now to the west or north, going beyond Baton Rouge or Jackson, MS. Public schools will be closed until at least Oct. 1.

The Causeway is open only to emergency traffic and the I-10 Twin Spans are heavily damaged and closed for the foreseeable future. There is no access to Orleans, Jefferson, St. Bernard or Plaquemines -- or any other south shore parish -- through St. Tammany.

FEMA, the National Guard and the American Red Cross have provided thousands of workers. FEMA has opened three sites for emergency supply distribution. The Red Cross is providing shelter and food. The National Guard is assisting with security and in a variety of other capacities.

Telephone and Internet service are sporadic. We have had tremendous difficulty communicating with our citizens through the media. Please be patient and know that we are working around the clock to keep you informed and restore order.

I have declared a parish-wide curfew from 9 p.m. to 7 a.m. in the interest of public safety. Debris still clutters many roadways, and driving or walking the streets at night is unsafe. We have a State of Emergency in St. Tammany Parish, and we are exercising all civil authority to maintain order and public safety.

Your Parish Government, Sheriff's Office, and every public agency are working with hospitals, ambulance service providers, the School Board and every other service organization and system in the parish to restore order. Cleco and WST are working diligently to restore power. It will be AT LEAST one month before our power system is fully operational, and potentially much longer in the Slidell area. Parish Public Works crews are working with utility companies to clear streets. We need your assistance in staying out of the parish until it is safe to return. Tell other citizens and evacuees with whom you may have contact. Urge them to stay away if they evacuated and to evacuate now if they are able.

St. Tammany will again be the destination of choice for people wanting to raise their families in a safe, natural environment with good schools and quality law enforcement. Please help us serve you by staying at a safe distance. We will continue to work with available media to keep you informed, and will update this website as we are able.

May God bless us all


There are some more links that might be of use to anyone looking for info:

http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2005/katrina/ (CNN's Katrina page)

http://www.nola.com/ (Louisiana page)

http://www.louisiana.gov/wps/portal/ (official state of LA page)

http://www.katrina.louisiana.gov/price_gouging.htm  (report price gouging)

http://www.familylinks.icrc.org/katrina/locate  (find lost family members)

 

 

   Now, I'm in a nice house on Cape Cod....high and dry, you might say. I'm trying to help out a little Louisiana town, but it's not like I'm throwing sandbags or gunning down looters. There are guys trying to fix power lines in Covington that are doing more good just by being seen than I will writing this column all damn day.

   Still, I can do some good. I have the gift of your attention. You, the reader- for whatever reasons you may have- have allowed me to wander around in your head. It's a privilege, and believe me when I tell you that I think about this fact every single time I sit down at the keyboard.

   What you do after you read HAC is your own business, but while you're here.... you dance to my tune. I usually strive to entertain you, but tonight my aim is deeper.

   For starters, I'd love it if someone read this and managed to donate some money to the good people of Covington. If a Covington-specific link doesn't surface, don't let that stop you...the Red Cross will be gladto help you, and they've saved Monponsett's bacon before... in 1991, to be exact- when I had my own difficulties with the Old Man of the Sea.

 

 

 

 

Thursday, September 1, 2005

Adopting Covington, Louisiana

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map

   I woke up early this morning, as the remnants of Hurricane Katrina threw a pile of rain onto Buzzards Bay. We also had a fairly heavy wind, which outlasted the rain as I got out of bed. As I enjoyed a smoke on my porch at 3:45 AM, I thought that things could be quite different here if Katrina had hit us with a punch like it hit the Gulf Coast with.

   I went through a storm in 1991- the Perfect Storm that gave us the Clooney/Marky Mark movie about the doomed Gloucester fishermen. That was a Category 1 kind of storm, and was about half as bad as this beast that smashed the Gulf Coast last week. And let me tell you, I thought I was dead about 56456465 times in a 6 hour span in the teeth of that storm.

   I managed to get trapped in my house with a friend on a futile mission to reach my schnauzer, who I wrongly believed had been left in our old house on Duxbury Beach (the schnauzer had been taken by a neighbor, and was high and dry while we were trapped like rats).

  

   What's a genuinely hellacious Nor'easter like from a oceanfront house on a small stretch of beach that is 75 yards wide and made entirely of sand.... especially when you are really nice on the Harvest?

   Basically, itis a constant state of OHMYGODI'MGOINGTODIE with fits of even worse panic as waves slam into the house every 15 seconds or so. You make your peace with whatever God you follow when the house 2 over from you is torn in half, and when there's 50 yards of raging sea between you and the modest little hill that is the only ground in the neighborhood that is not completely submerged. You are on the top floor of the house, and water is coming up the stairs. Snooping around after the storm was like walking through Hiroshima, and Hell probably has a neighborhood or two like it in the coastal regions.

   To be honest, not too much has scared me since.

   And that was an 85mph storm hitting Duxbury Beach, Massachusetts. This nightmare that smashed into Louisiana and Mississppi was just about  twice as bad. I am a pretty cold person, and I am simply full of pity when I see those poor SOBs standing on their roofs screaming at the news copter. Roving bands of freaks attack city hospitals for Oxycontin, bodies float down the streets like some sort of nightmare Venice, and the local domed stadium is a seething slum of panic. People have drowned in their attics, and the whole southern third of the state is "closed."

   A pretty huge American city is now a Septic Lake, and the countryside is even worse. People are dying by the thousands. The system in place to help these people is overtaxed. It may be weeks before they get to everybody who needs help. There will be arguments that New Orleans and Slidell should not be rebuilt at all. It's essentially 1870 in many parts of the Gulf Coast at the moment. Osama bin Laden couldn't have done worse... even if he had gotten his fiendish hands on a low-yield nuclear weapon.

   No person can see all this and not want to help. So, what can we do? The Red Cross is always a good place to start, and I hope many of you visit them and do what you can.

   Myself... I'm country folk, and I have a personal interest in Covington, Louisiana.

   Therefore, I'm adopting it. High Above Courtside adopts Covington, Louisiana.... and we'll do our best to get some help down to them.

   This site will feature a lot of links in the next few weeks, and they will all be aimed at sending help to these poor people on the Northshore of Lake Pontchartrain. You won't see Covington on the news- to be honest, there wasn't much there BEFORE the  storm, and with people firing at the Red Cross on the other side of the lake.....well, that's where I'd send my cameras, too.

   If you know someone in Covington and want to send them a holla....well, the guy you see in the pic below may have a better chance of being heard than I will at the helm of this forum.... but I will turn down no request to serve as an intermediary to finding someone's lost Mom. Send me your info, or the name of the people you're looking for, and I'll post it here. I'd be careful about things like phone numbers, though.... the Internet is a crazy place.

 

    Covington absorbed a frightful, Special Delivery Jones-style beating at the hands of Ma Nature....so it's natural that the charity apparatus there may not be up and running yet. I've snooped around online all day, and here's what i have:

 

Covington

Welcometo Covington, Louisiana (the town's home page)

 

Welcome Home (Trinity Church in Covington)

 

Covington News Banner Online (the local paper)

 

http://newsbanner.com/guestbook  (The News Banner now has a message board)

 

   I've written to all 3 of these links, asking for a more direct means of making a donation to the local cLake Ponchartrainitizenry. As of September 1st, they have no links up to help the people of Covington...the News Banner just got something online yesterday for the first time in a week, and it may take them a while to get their ducks in a row insofar as accepting donations and such..

   I was my usual charming self in these dealings, and I threatened to put $20,000 on the head of anyone who tried to fatten their own purse with any charity money we send their way.  I only  intend to post links, and I will never see a dime of this money- even as it changes hands. I play clean... until someone tries to steal from a charity, at which point I release a starved wolverine into their bedroom. 

   You can't mince words when people are living like tsunami victims, and I'm sure that- given time- all three media outlets will forgive me for any threats I made against them..... at least I hope the Trinity Church people do, although I'm pretty sure I was the first person to ever threaten to put a blood money contract on a secretary who takes the email at a church in a one-horse Bayou town.

   As long as she keeps her hands out of the kitty, she should be a-ight. Her God has His ways.... I have Mine.

 

 

Editor's Note:  If anyone knows Paul B. and his wife Teri M. in Covington and sees them before we do, tell them that Kevin in Idaho is very worried about them, and to call- when possible.  Feel free to contact us here for additional details.

I am wondering about Jean and Wayne R., Internet friends I once met.  Their address is Covington.
Comment from mosie1944

John Manale   Ginger & Sharon Grimes   Patricia B. an old friend from the Navy...from friends in Vermont, Jack and Barbara G.

 

 

 

 

Knight Ridder photo by SMILEY N. POOL/DALLAS MORNING NEWS Boats, homes and debris are seen in an aerial view of damage from Hurricane Katrina in Slidell, Louisiana, Tuesday morning, Aug. 30, 2005.