
Here’s just one example of the destructive power of Camille — the Richelieu Apartments before and after the storm:

Before

After
To view more photos of the destruction, go here.
Images taken from Wikipedia
The greatest homage to truth is using it. -- Emerson

Here’s just one example of the destructive power of Camille — the Richelieu Apartments before and after the storm:

Before

After
To view more photos of the destruction, go here.
Images taken from Wikipedia
Good morning, all. The wife and I were up at the crack of dawn this morning (my normal time of getting up — around 5:30 a.m.) to get ready for her Praxis II test. We left the house around 6:30 this morning and drove over to the University of South Alabama in Mobile. After I dropped her off, I headed over to the Shell station across from campus. The price there was $3.799 per gallon, but lo and behold they were out of 87 octane. Since I was running on vapor, I had to go somewhere close.
The next station down the street was a BP. It was a quarter of a mile down the road, and the price was $3.899 per gallon!! I suppose this is all the supply-demand thing since Hurricane Ike has shut down a good portion of the oil rigs offshore of Texas and Louisiana as well as the refineries in the Houston/Pasadena area. Still, I couldn’t believe the jump in price in that short of a distance. But it’s better than most areas that are starting to see the price spike above $4.00 a gallon — some places even nearing $5.00. Crazy.
If you want some interesting reading this weekend, here’s some links of the news stories that broke yesterday and today. They’re broken down by area of interest.
U.S. News:
Hurricane Ike Slams into Houston and Galveston
Fifteen people killed when commuter and freight trains collide in Los Angeles
Science and Technology:
Anti-Spam Law Overturned; Spammer Walks
Google buys Korean blogging software company — Oh Nos!
Politics:
Obama Regrets Not Picking Hillary — Biden even dissed himself and lifted Hillary up.
Obama Backers Jittery, Obama starts getting desperate and calls McCain ‘Out of Touch’
Sports:
Brandon Webb hits 20 wins as the D’backs beat Reds 3–2.
Titans’ Vince Young was suicidal?
Alright, folks. Enjoy the reading. It’s time for me to head over to Barnes & Noble and see if I can find some PHP/MySQL/Wordpress books…Time to start developing my hobby! Have a good rest of your Saturday and a great Sunday!


Message for Ike from Port Aransas Texas (Courtesy: AP)
It looks like, from the latest track this morning, that anyone from Corpus Christi to Houston could really feel the punch from Hurricane Ike. As of 4 AM CDT this morning, the winds were at 100 mph — a strong Category 2. They are predicting that Ike may become a Category 3, even a Category 4, by the time it makes landfall.

Continuing blog coverage of Hurricane Gustav’s impacts on the Mississippi Gulf Coast…
Update 2:05 p.m. — And another tornado warning just south of us in Jackson County. This particular cell is moving at about 29 mph. Take cover, people!
Update 1:30 p.m. — I just shot another video in our front yard of Hurricane Gustav’s feeder bands. Not too dramatic, but hopefully it gives a sense of the rain and wind we’re getting (not as much as I thought it would be).
Update 12:25 p.m. Here’s a video of a neighbor in Vancleave of the effects of Gustav…Quite entertaining.
Update 12:10 p.m. Just got another tornado warning for the Ocean Springs area. This is our biggest threat right now. So far no reports of damage from these. I’ll keep you updated.
Update 11:35 p.m. Just got a Tornado warning for eastern Harrison County and western Jackson County. A tornado was spotted near Ocean Springs headed northwest at 48 mph. Had a warning earlier for northwest Jackson Co. of a tornado heading northwest at 51 mph.
Good morning, folks. It’s 10:30 a.m. here on the Gulf Coast of Mississippi and we’re currently getting some heavy rain from Hurricane Gustav. We haven’t lost power at all, which is great. We have really been blessed so far with this storm — no heavy winds really or tornadoes — and our prayers are with our neighbors in Louisiana.
Here’s a picture I took yesterday when the outer bands of Gustav were moving into the area.
Here’s a video I just shot of the bands of Gustav moving over our house. Nothing like what Louisiana is getting, but I wanted to show everyone what we are experiencing.
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