Monday, September 12, 2005

Katrina tick-tock, pt. 6

Sept. 8: Ambra Nykol asked what would people take from home if given 15 minutes' advance warning. Keto at The Colorblind Society said pretenses had been washed away. Ray Garraud spoke of amateur radio efforts to reopen regional communications.  

Sept. 9: Farai Chideya was having a tough time locating her uncle. Larry D. Lyons passed along an eyewitness report from the previous week. James Lamb Jr. spit riffs that curled whimsical one moment and white-hot furious the next. No4Real4Real was surprised by aftereffects within part of the black-blogging community. Whitewashing the Black Storm: We Are Watching continued their coverage of life for evacuees inside Houston's Astrodome.

"Elsewhere/otherwhen": Things that Go Bump in the Night's "Umoja" looked back on life in Kenya.  The Ragamuffin Diva had thoughts on magic and stories and change. The Brutha Code departed, marking the end of an era. Ndesanjo Macha rounded out a busy day with the end of a conference in Helsinki. Rethabile Manso offered a lesson on a rather useful Sesotho-language phrase. Negrorage considered the minority-within-minority plight of black conservatives. Writing is Fighting offered moving and brave personal testimony on a difficult decision. Sleepless in Sudan continued her indispensable slice-of-Darfur-life posts. Queen Esther got a guitar lesson from James Blood Ulmer (and I tried not to turn inside out with envy). Tee at Urbanflower enjoyed her sons' first day of school. Harold M. Clemens republished an old post to mark September 11th.

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