Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Fords Theatre Receives a Makeover






Fords Theatre in Washington D.C., the site of the assissination of Abraham Lincoln, is to open tomorrow for the bicentennial celebration of the death of President Abraham Lincoln. The theatre has been closed for eighteen months undergoing a complete renovation. The box where Lincoln was shot by John Wilkes Booth can clearly be seen in the left hand corner of the picture above. The American flags are draped in the same way with the picture hung in the middle of them as they were that night he was assassinated.
It is quite humbling and chilling to see the place where such a great man died. The theatres director Paul Tertrault says that more than one million visitors from all over the world come to look over the theatre every year. I wonder if anything is actaully original to the night Lincoln died, such as the flags, floorboards or wallpaper/paint? It is funny that as a people we feel closer to an individual if we walk in the same place they did, or sit on the same chair. Great men are very attracting and Lincoln, in the two hundreth year since his birth proves this.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial

Abraham Lincoln, Civil War





Abraham Lincoln 1846/7







White House 1861 Sentry on duty to protect the President






Abraham Lincoln was born almost 200 years ago. Ferbruay 12th, 1809.


In these diffiicult economic times I am reminded of the great man that he was and all that he achieved during his presidentcy. Above are a selection of my favourite pictures concerning Lincoln, his family or just the civil war in general.






Thursday, February 5, 2009

Old Pictures of New Orleans

Decatur

Camp St 1927




Bourbon 1963


Bienville 1960

Pictures from City Archives, New Orleans Public Library









Monday, February 2, 2009

Education is the Answer

I am afraid I am far too cynical when it comes to poverty in America. I read an article today about people on food stamps who couldn't get enough to eat. People who couldn't find jobs. In short, people who could not provide for themselves and so had to accept money (aid) from the government.

I am afraid there is a cycle that Americans have to break. If they ever want to live the American dream, instead of inhabiting poisonous neighborhoods and never having enough, they need to stay in school. I believe it is as simple as that.

Witnessestopoverty.org is a website with so many racial cliches, not even puropsefully. I read some of the stories of people on welfare today and I'm afraid it is the same story over and over bar a few. Black, hispanic women, two or three children, no father, zero education, no chance to get out. They are literally dying in this same cycle that is repeated generation after generation.

They themselves drop out of school before graduating (high school!!) and get pregnant. (Oh how cynical I am!) They have a couple of children, different fathers for each, and then have no way of supporting themselves or their offspring. They cannot break the cycle. They collect welfare checks and food stamps and life goes on. They barely scrape by and then get pregnant again. Life goes on. Thier children drop out of high school themselves as they have never had any real example of achievement and they either get pregnant themselves for the girls, or they father the children and sell drugs for the boys.

Is this cynical? Is this not happening right now in our cities across America? This deadly cycle is upon us. Only the strong can escape it. Only the people who stay in school, get an education and get a job have a chance.

I read a profile about a woman with three children who couldn't possibly work as she had to take care of them. They were living in poverty. This shouldn't be allowed! They should be forced to work to provide a better life for their children and an example of how to achieve something which is so important for their futures. The government helps with day care, the government will help you with education to get a job. The government will give you money for food. And the government will give you money to pay your bills. This money comes from me, and you and all Americans who do work. Who stayed in school, who got and education (through loans on my part!!) and made something of themselves. We then prop up a lifestyle with our taxes that encourages this terrible cycle.

Education is the answer. I truly believe this. Education to finish high school. Education not to have a baby until you are financially able to take care for one without the goverments help. Education to use contraception and education to get a good job to build a life for yourself.

EDUCATION IS THE ANSWER!!!!


Keep your kids in school. Encourage them. Help them with their homework and nurture them. Society is drowning in the section who have no education and cannot care for themselves. Lets not add to them.

Mardi Gras Photos







From NOLA.com



Thursday, January 29, 2009

Mardi Gras 2009

Mardi Gras is fast approaching!!

The Times Picayune has published some guidelines for all visitors to the French Quarter. Each is very helpful and all should be followed. Here is a list:

WHAT TO DO AND WHERE TO DO IT: There are several types of Mardi Gras celebrations. Uptown and in mid-city, there is a family atmosphere, although college students also stake out spots along the various routes.
The streetcar stops rolling down St. Charles Avenue at midnight as Monday gives way to Tuesday, and people begin grabbing their places along the route. Beginning with Zulu, the traditional black Carnival club, continuing through Rex and the hours-long truck parade, there will be nonstop throws from about 9 a.m. until dusk.

People bring tents, screen rooms, chairs, coolers, grills and just about everything else needed for comfort for the day. Many families and groups of friends have been meeting in the same spots for years. Kids whoop it up along the street while waiting for parades, popping firecrackers, shooting people with silly string, and begging for goodies from the roving vendors. Groups are friendly, ready to share and to help novices collect plenty of Carnival throws.

Watch for ladders. People set them up, sometimes three or four deep along the routes. They traditionally provide seats for small children through a special box that is attached to the top rung. But they can also block people from getting close enough to catch throws.

In the French Quarter the celebration is a lot rowdier. The crowd is heavy, frequently skimpily dressed and constantly exposing more flesh than most parents would like their children to see.
As the day goes on, the drinking begins to take a toll, and things can become even more X-rated.
Balconies are prime spots, which means expensive spots. People rent them for the day, some bars open them to customers, but at a high fee. People on the balconies drop beads to those below, usually as a reward for a great costume, or a glimpse of flesh.

If the French Quarter is your choice for the day, be sure and see the Forty-fifth Annual Bourbon Street Awards Show. The ultimate costume contest -- with elaborately costumed drag queens -- will be held at noon on Mardi Gras on the corner of St. Ann at 800 Bourbon St.

NOT EVERYTHING GOES: People find plenty of opportunity to lose their inhibitions during Mardi Gras, and New Orleans police are famous for their tolerance during the celebration. There are limits, however.

Drinking is common and you can carry your drink with you in New Orleans, where "go-cups" are used year-round. You may not have a glass container on the streets, however.
A degree of drunkenness is tolerated, police say, as long as you do not infringe on the rights of others, or cause a danger to yourself.

Although women showing their breasts is not out of the ordinary on Bourbon Street, if done along the family friendly St. Charles parade route, it can get you a trip to Central Lockup. The same is true for men dropping their trousers anywhere.

A necessity for Mardi Gras is finding a proper bathroom. Do not ask to use the bathrooms in businesses or restaurants where you are not spending money. The city puts portable toilets out in the French Quarter and some schools and other businesses allow their use for small fees. It is very important to use them or some other facility. Urinating in the streets is one of the main reasons for arrests during Mardi Gras.

Finally, if a police officer asks you to do something, do it.

GETTING AROUND: Bus and streetcar fare is $1.25 and correct change is required. A visiTOUR card is offered with unlimited rides on streetcar and buses at $5.00 for the day or $12 for a three-day pass. Note that all routes may be disrupted by parades, so be prepared to walk.

WHAT TO WEAR: A costume is the best choice. They run from the very elaborate to the very simple, but are the perfect way to get into the festivities.
Costumes allow people to live out a fantasy, make a satirical comment, or just have fun.
Also, be aware of the temperature. New Orleans is much warmer than much of the country on Feb. 24, but it can still be very cold.

WHERE TO STAY: Most people who live in New Orleans are happy to fill up extra bedrooms, couches, and floors with friends and relatives for Mardi Gras. If you don't have someone to stay with, you need to be creative. Hotels fill up fast for Mardi Gras and although some offer discounts for booking early, most are expensive. But New Orleans has at least a half dozen hostels, searchable on the HostelWorld.com Web site, and if you have transportation, the suburbs offer better deals on hotels.

WHERE TO EAT: Some restaurants close on Mardi Gras, choosing not to deal with the rowdy crowds. Others offer special deals that include food, drink and a viewing stand or balcony, but those deals are usually costly. Many people buy drinks, bread and sandwich fixings from stores and dine picnic style. There are also stands scattered along parade routes that sell sandwiches and other goodies relatively cheaply. On Canal Street, where all parades wind up and next to the French Quarter, there are several fast food restaurants.

WHEN TO LEAVE: At midnight the police roll down Bourbon Street announcing that Mardi Gras is over. To back the claim up, they have cops on horseback, walking and in cars. There are also street-sweepers behind them.

When the call comes, leave, or at least stay in a bar or on the sidewalk. Remember, police have been working 12-hour shifts. They are tired and by that time, revelers aren't nearly as cute, funny or interesting as they think they are.

All great advice!! Have a safe and fun Mardi Gras.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Review of hurricane Katrina Recovery Systems

Exciting news!!

New Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano has announced a complete review of Katrina Recovery systems.

"An "active directive" to "require specific department offices and components to work with state and local partners to review and assess current plans to respond to significant medical emergencies and address Hurricane Katrina's lingering impacts."" was today issued.

The four main areas of review will be:

1) Public Assistance Projects

2) Hazard Mitigation

3) Co-Location of FEMA and State efforts

4) Housing

I think the most exciting component will be on the issue of housing. The review will decide how well The Department of Public Housing and Urban Development played in providing aid to hurricane Katrina victims. But also how well would they function if a similar disaster would occur in the hurrican season of 2009.
Napolitano is also questioning how best to support those individuals still residing in FEMA housing.

An oral report is due February 10th, with a final report on February 24th.

I am very excited to read this report.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

A new day?

I read an intersting article today on the NOLA website. It was written by a man named Jarvis DeBerry. He is an Africna American gentleman living in New Orleans with his wife.

He begins his piece describing how on the night that Obama was elected President, he was returning from a friends home when he saw an African American gentleman being arrested by the New Orleans Police Department. The rest of this article is very interesting and discusses black peoples potential, etc. I'm interested in the very first part, however.

He wonders as he passes this man being handcuffed what he will be able say in years to come when asked to remember what he was up to on such a special night?

I remember thinking on that night, I hope no one is shot tonight in New Orleans. I hope black people stop killing each other. Please, on this special night, let there be some kind of understanding between brothers in the same boat. Let them realise they have come so far and to kill one another negates all that.

Crime continued...

Monday, January 26, 2009

Taco Cracker Spread

My friend Jen is a culinary genius. This is her Taco Cracker Spread recipe:

It is AWESOME!!!!!!!!!!

Ingredients:

1lb Ground Beef (or turkey is yummy too!)
1 Sachet of Taco Seasoning
1 Can Fat Free Refried Beans
8oz Light Sour Cream
5 1/2 oz Light Cream Cheese
Taco Sauce
Shredded Cheddar Cheese
Chilli Powder to garnish

1st Layer:Brown 1 pound ground beef (and hot pepper if want)
Drain, add taco seasoning (NO WATER)
Add can refried beans
Mix together and cool in 11X9 inch pan
2nd Layer:8 oz. sour cream and 5 1/2 oz cream cheese, mixed
3rd Layer:Taco Sauce
4th Layer:Shredded cheddar cheese
Chili powder on top

Serve with Ritz crackers

(You can add Onion and Jalepenos to the Refried Beans for an extra kick)

This is one of the best appetizers I have EVER had!!

So yummy!

Friday, January 23, 2009

Jefferson Parish Efforts

It seems that the State of Louisiana has one of the highest rates of high school drop-outs among it’s pupils. The majority of these ‘drop-outs’ occur when students fail their freshman year. The reasons given for these students dropping out ranges from the general problems teenagers face and also school issue can be a factor too. If these problems can be solved before the freshman year finishes, students are much more likely to finish high school.

Jefferson Parish has been conducting a scheme to try and keep high school students in class for the last two years. Students who fail classes are given the opportunity to make up the credits on computer based classes after school or during study hall. It seems that the school district is succeeding in keeping their students.

All students don’t learn in the same way. Many cannot do well in ‘lecture’ settings where they must take notes as a teacher speaks. These students are being given other opportunities to succeed in their school careers by taking a different kind of class. The ‘computer labs’ are overseen by a teacher and at the end of the course, the students take a nationally devised test.
These may also bring to educators attentions the fact that not all students are meant to go to college. We should be encouraging our students to achieve academic excellence, but this does not necessarily have to take place in a university. Many local vocational colleges are popping up which provide courses in plumbing, construction trades, cosmetology, massage therapy and many health care positions. Students can learn a ‘trade’ and be employable as soon as they graduate.

Teaching our children that working for the things we need or want not only builds character but gives us a sense of achievement. These courses can produce positive, productive members of society who contribute to the community rather than become a nuisance.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

French Quarter Murder

There are so many out there who feel that New Orleans is a lost cause. If you read the comments at the end of each news item, many, many of the writers suggest you move out of the city. It is so sad.
Over the last few days though, I have come to the conclusion that New Orleans really is not a lost cause. The reason I know this is because the murder of Wendy Byrne in the French Quarter has caused such an outcry. You cannot look anywhere on New Orleans websites and not see it displayed prominently. People are upset. People are shocked and people are angry.
These are not reactions of people who feel there is nothing left in New Orleans. If this were the case, there would be no reaction. People wouldn't say anything. They would carry on with their lives and not be shocked by it. But they are. There is still life in New Orleans. The reaction to Wendy Byrne's murder proves this.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Katrina and the Future of New Orleans





Last week I took a tour of http://www.whitehouse.gov/. I have been on the site before, researching former First Ladies and Presidents. There were a few tours of the various offices in the white house made by the then President George W. Bush and some pictures of the Laura Bush showing off the White House some Christmas a million years ago. I had seen these features a couple of years ago and was surprised they were still up.



Today I visited www.whitehouse.gov and things have certainly changed. President Obama has updated the site and has taken the time to write down exactly how he feels on each issue and how he will reform them.
The President, under ’Additional Issues’, conveys exactly how he feels about former President Bush’s failures concerning Katrina and how it was handled. Below is the text written on the website:



Katrina



President Obama will keep the broken promises made by President Bush to rebuild New Orleans and the Gulf Coast. He and Vice President Biden will take steps to ensure that the federal government will never again allow such catastrophic failures in emergency planning and response to occur.
President Obama swiftly responded to Hurricane Katrina. Citing the Bush Administration's "unconscionable ineptitude" in responding to Hurricane Katrina, then-Senator Obama introduced legislation requiring disaster planners to take into account the specific needs of low-income hurricane victims. Obama visited thousands of Hurricane survivors in the Houston Convention Center and later took three more trips to the region. He worked with members of the Congressional Black Caucus to introduce legislation to address the immediate income, employment, business, and housing needs of Gulf Coast communities.
President Barack Obama will partner with the people of the Gulf Coast to rebuild now, stronger than ever.

The President categorically says that he ‘will keep the broken promises made by President Bush to rebuild New Orleans and the Gulf Coast’.
During Hurricane Katrina, my husband and I were in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. We lost power almost immediately and with it air conditioning and water. Our cell phones didn’t work and we were basically miserable with the August heat. Like many of our neighbors we had underestimated the hurricane. I had already been through at least one ‘hurricane’ in Hattiesburg and it was a lot of fuss about nothing. This made me complacent. I will never again be complacent about a hurricane.
We stayed one night after the hurricane and due to over-heating and lack of water we decided to try and make it to Missouri where my husbands family live.
Making this decision was a gamble. We had ¾ of a tank of gas and there was none in the state of Mississippi to replenish us when we ran out. We were just hoping that when we got into to northern Louisiana they would have electricity and therefore gas. Luckily we found gas stations in Tallulah, Louisiana.
When we arrived at my In-laws, we both took showers and slept for about 12 hours. When we awoke we decided to go and watch the news. Looking back on it, it seemed so unfair that up in Missouri we were able to watch on T.V. exactly what was happening in Louisiana and Mississippi and they were completely unaware. We were saved from two weeks of no power or water or food. They were not so lucky.
We watched as people sat on roofs next to bed sheets with the words, ‘Help Us!! The Water is Rising’. We watched them look up at the helicopters and wonder why they were not being helped? It looked like they were in Africa, or India or somewhere in the developing world. It did not look like America.
President Bush claimed in an interview last week with CNN that he was proud of the way the Coast Guard and Law Enforcement had reacted after Katrina. He said they were out immediately rescuing people off roofs. He is right, they were. That had little or nothing to do with him though.
I saw pictures of old people slumped against walls or floating in river water. For them the Coast Guard was too late. And to me, even one death meant the response was not fast enough.
People say, “Why didn’t they evacuate when they could have, there were buses all over the city to take them to Houston, or the Superdome?”
Would you leave everything in the world that you had? Not knowing if it would be stolen while you were gone? It’s not an excuse but it’s my way of understanding. There are people all over America who would NEVER leave their homes, no matter the emergency.
Now we need to focus on rebuilding. There is a man in my neighborhood who rides around with a bumper sticker saying “Rebuild New Orleans, not Iraq”. It seems crazy. We are spending millions of dollars in Iraq every week when we could be spending that money to help pull the poorest residents in the ninth ward out of poverty. These are Americans right? The constitution is here to protect us. But what weapon do we have to protect us from a President with a warped sense of right and wrong?
I find it hard to sleep at night knowing there are children in New Orleans who aren’t getting the food they need or the basic educational skills they require because the funding is only slowly trickling in.
President Obama is right. We all need to help. We all have a responsibility to help rebuild New Orleans and our economy. Think of something you can do. Don’t delay, think right now. Something. Anything.


Help them.


Scott's Lasagna Recipe Cajun Style

This is a recipe originally from The River Road Recipe Book, out of Baton Rouge. The book was first published by the Junior League of Baton Rouge in September of 1959. Many of the recipes call for ingredients I had never heard of but my mother in law, having been a Louisiana resident for about 20 years, enlightened me.

So far I have made four recipes from River Road and they have all turned out really well. I have, however, modified all the recipes. This has been for a few reasons. Some recipes, I felt, needed more vegetables, more cayenne pepper, less salt, less shortening (lard)-you get the idea. I’m trying to make food as authentically Louisianan as possible without all the fat that generally goes with them.

Here is the ingredient list and prep. for Scott’s Lasagna: (I named is after my husband who loves it!!)

Tomato sauce:
1lb Ground Beef
1 Clove of Garlic
1 t-spoon fresh Parsley
1 tablespoon Italian seasoning
1 ½ t-spoons of Salt (I use the salt free alternative but any salt will do!!)
3 small Tomatoes chopped
2 6oz cans of Tomato Paste
1 medium Red Onion
1 green Bell Pepper
1 ½ T-spoon Cayenne Pepper (less or more depending on how spicy you want it)
1 Jalapeno (optional)

Cheese mixture:
1 6oz carton of Ricotta Cheese
1 6oz carton Cottage Cheese (large curd)
2 beaten Eggs
½ T-spoon of Salt
½ T-spoon of pepper
2 Tablespoons fresh Parsley chopped
Topping between layers:
1lb Skim Mozzarella Cheese (cut into thin slices)
1 tub Parmesan Cheese

1 10 oz package lasagna pasta that does not require pre-boiling

Brown meat in skillet. Drain then place in French Oven or crock pot. Add all tomato sauce ingredients.
Simmer uncovered for 2 hours or until sauce is thick.

**(If you have purchased lasagna pasta that has to be cooked before baking, do so per package instructions.(Once pasta is cooked run under cold tap to cool)**
Combine ingredients for cheese mixture.

Place thin layer of tomato sauce at bottom of 13”x9”x2” pan. On top cover with pasta. Place layer of cheese mixture. Place layer of Mozzarella cheese on top. Sprinkle some Parmesan cheese on top of that. Repeat layers.
Cover with baking foil.
Bake at 375° for 25 minutes. Remove baking foil and continue baking for 10 mins unil top is brown (how brown you want the top to be is of personal taste, so if you want it crispier take the foil off sooner and for less crispy, leave the foil on longer)
Serves 6-8

Yum.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Two boys arrested for French Quarter murder.

Further from my post this morning, it seems the two boys who committed the senseless murder in the French Quarter on Saturday night have turned themselves in to the New Orleans Police Department. It is said that their own mothers recognized their mug shots but does not say if they turned their sons in, or if the teens turned themselves in. It is odd that my thoughts of the crime centered on what their mothers must think of the situation, and then to be so prominently mentioned in their arrest. Maybe there is hope for New Orleans after all. There must have been mistakes made in their childhoods but it seems that their mothers are indeed able to co-operate with the laws of the land.
Perhaps education is the answer after all. Maybe parents aren't able to 'control' or 'guide' their children, even if they try.
I think we need to figure out a way to educate children early on with not just Maths and English but with life lessons, and ways to feel like they have achieved something.
Whatever happens, something needs to be done and quickly as New Orleans is descending into a city no one will want to live in, or indeed visit with their tourist dollars.

Crime in New Orleans

What can be done about crime in New Orleans right now? Everything I read in the Times Picayune makes me feel like things are getting out of control.

There was an armed robbery in the French Quarter this weekend. A local woman was walking to a car and was accosted by two youths who demanded money. Within seconds the woman had been shot in the torso. She was taken to University Hospital but she died there, police said.

I have no idea how New Orleans is supposed to approach this problem, let alone solve it. How can one react to this kind of thing. Shock? Anger? All these reactions are natural but isn't it time was had a better reaction? Some way of curtailing this terrible road that New Orleans is on?

Why is New Orleans such a dangerous place? Why are there so many people who feel like they can live their lives stealing from others, weilding guns and shooting innocent people? Why has that become so normal and accepted? I wonder, please tell me.

What do the criminals mothers feel? Are they uncaring, uneducated, scum? Do they care if their sons spend their lives in crime? Did they receive the example from family members? Is this a problem generations old?

What is the solution? How can this be solved? Is education the answer? I asked my husband why he thinks people steal, sell drugs and behave in many criminal ways? He said quite simply, "Because it is quick." Not easy, but quick. Lets not confuse those two words. Does it really come down to speed? If I rob this woman in the Quarter, I may walk away $20 richer. It will take, from start to finish, probably 20 seconds to complete the whole operation. $20 for 20 seconds work. Of course, the spoils couold be even higher, depending on how thick her wallet is.

I wonder if these men have ever been involved in any activity in their entire lives where they have acheived something and it did not cost anything? Helping an elderly lady with her shopping? Studying for a test and getting an A? Painting a garage door and admiring it afterward? I wonder if their problems really stem from never acheiving anything and never feeling that wonderful feeling of acheivement.

Barack Obama said in his inaugural speech that parents should take the time to nuture their children. Does this have to be asked of parents? To take the time to nurture their own children? To read with them, to bake cookies together, to attend a sports game together, in short to do something positive together. Are our children even deprived of these small, insignificant activites with parents, that really are character forming and remembered always? And ultimately very significant.

Maybe all is lost? How can we teach parents to love and give time to their children? Does that come from education?
I am almost at a loss of how human nature has become so dire. How do we change things?

Monday, August 11, 2008

Change of post

I have been thinking about my blog for the past couple of days. It is really hard for me to write about New Orleans right now as I'm living a few hours away. There will more than likely be a move to Louisiana before Christmas so I intend to resume writing about it then. For now I think I will just relate what is going on around here and my opinion of it.


This is where Scott and I live, Panama City Beach, Florida. It's a fairly small town except during the summer time when the population explodes due to the tourists.


USBRIT

Friday, August 8, 2008

NOLA Pictures of the weekend


Jon McLaughlin plays the House of Blues Friday, August 8, 2008.

Freedom

Fabulous


Homage to Ignatius

Tradition


Scott's heaven.

Amen, USBRIT

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Music News

Lynyrd Skynyrd to play the New Orleans Arena Friday.

Friday night in New Orleans is going to rock! Kid Rock and Lynyrd Skynyrd will be kicking off their tour in the Crescent City. After almost forty years and a whopping 65 albums, Lynyrd Skynyrd will still be playing the old favorites that their fans love to hear. Many of the band members are original. Of course, Johnny Van Zant replaced Ronnie Van Zant, the lead singer who died in an airplane crash over Mississippi in 1977. The band are still firm favorites, especially in the South. It should be an awesome night.



Lynyrd Skynyrd then, 1970's

Lynyrd Skynyrd today, 2008.

Gulf Restoration Project

Musicians from Louisiana and beyond have written an open letter to this years presidential candidates urging them not to forget the Big Easy. The crux of the letter explains the urgent need for commitment to rebuilding and maintaining the Louisiana wetlands. Twenty five square miles of wetlands disappear every year, equivalent to a football field size area gone every 30 minutes. This is a vital and worthwhile cause. I'm sure the candidates will be eager to get behind it.



Photo courtesy of Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries.


USBRIT

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

The Arts

Louisiana's Arts Conservatory

Are you looking for a positive, fun and safe outlet for your middle schooler? Louisiana's arts conservatory is offering dance auditions on Saturday, August 23rd. The students that are accepted get tuition-free dance lessons after school and/or on Saturdays. What an amazing opportunity. Here is the appropriate info for those interested:

• Come dressed in dance clothes (girls: black leotards, pink tights; boys: black tights, white T-shirt). Girls should bring pink ballet slippers. Boys should bring black ballet slippers. Those not appropriately dressed, will not be allowed to audition.

• You will be judged on your demonstration of the following skills: mental ability; energy within the classes; flexibility of back, legs and hip sockets; feet and foot articulation; musicality and phrasing; rhythmic accuracy; quick recall of combinations; presence and carriage; and ability to perform given combinations with style and grace. Since this program is not for basic beginners, you will be assessed on your acquired skills in all areas of dance and personal fitness for dance.

• Do not prepare choreography for this audition. You will take instructions from dance faculty.

The NOCCA Institute 2800 Chartres Street New Orleans, LA 70117 504 940 2840 (t) 504 940 2870 (f)

Ogden Museum of Southern Art

This museum is definitely worth a visit. Current exhibitions include
"Ed McGowin: Name Change (One Artist, Twelve Personas, Thirty-Five Years)"; "Art and Paradise: Self-Taught Art Selections from the Permanent Collections of Ed McGowin and Claudia DeMonte"; "Richard Sexton: Terra Incognita," works by the well-known New Orleans photographer; and "Letters From My Father: Photographs by David Rae Morris and Letters from Willie Morris- from 1976 through 1999."
Exhibits are staying put until December and it is also just $10 to get in!
925 Camp Street
New Orleans, Louisiana 70130

Here are the best reasons of all:




Ida Kohlmeyer: Cityscape New Orleans





Ellsworth, Woodward: Cabildo Courtyard, 1935

Cafe Maspero

If all that art makes you hungry, head for the French Quarter. Cafe Maspero is a great local restaurant which boasts the biggest sandwiches in the Quarter. The prices are so low you'll be doing double takes until you decide upon a huge deli sandwich, including Muffulettas and roast beef with gravy. There are plenty of beers, wines and cocktails to choose from too, so there is no reason to end the party early!

Happy evening,

USBRIT



Tuesday, August 5, 2008

The Freedom Within

When John Kennedy Toole wrote his novel 'A Confederacy of Dunces' in the early 1960's, I wonder if he knew how prophetic his words would be. Toole committed suicide in 1969, long before his novel was published. He was posthumously awarded the Pulitzer prize for fiction in 1981. It is said that Toole was devastated that his 'masterpiece' was not to be published and his health began to deteriorate because of it.
Both Toole's autobiographers Rene Pol Nevils and Deborah George Handy, alluded to the issue of his sexuality and believed it contributed to his suicide. They both believe that Toole was confused about his apparent homosexuality and was unable to cope. I'm not sure it is as simple as that. There is no doubting that homosexuality plays a huge part in the novel (among other sexual themes). It must be noted, however, that this novel is set in New Orleans. Ignatius is accosted at the beginning of the novel by a policeman. Our anti-hero is flabbergasted that the policeman should pay him any attention at all when he city is rife with sin and wrongdoing all around them.
"Is it the part of the police department to harass me when this city is a flagrant vice capital of the civilized world?"
Ignatius goes on to list all manner of undesirable citizens he would not wish to associate with, including "sodomites and.... lesbians". My point being that in a city like New Orleans with it's rich acceptance of everyone and at the same time acceptance of no-one ( I know, bear with me), it would be hard not to write of gay people. Dorian, a homosexual character in the novel, makes a point which is incredibly true of the city. Dorian grew up in a small town in Nebraska. His family send him checks each month to stay away. We must remember that the early 1960's saw a time of great change in American society. People were able to express themselves as they had not been able to before. However, this may have been centered upon big cities like New York, San Fransisco and New Orleans. Nebraska probably would not have been such a place.
What we learn from Dorian is that in New Orleans he can be himself.
"Oh, New Orleans is such freedom."
The freedom of the city of New Orleans still stands today. Toole's words ring true and are relevant to current French Quarter events. My first trip to New Orleans was to Southern Decadence, a festival where one can truly express ones self.
I will not pretend that every single New Orleans resident is accepting of gay parades, pornographers or even daiquiris-to-go. What I will say though, is that the city is confident enough in itself to embrace 'vice' or indeed people who are merely being themselves, to not worry about those who do have a problem with it. New Orleans is where you may certainly find true freedom.
Now, is Ignatius a gay character? As far as I can tell, Ignatius is asexual. He is not really attracted to any single character in the novel. Certainly not Myrna, and especially no gentleman characters. He has a fleeting attraction to Lorna Lee's pornographic pose but I think that says more about his book that she's holding than of her physical attributes. As far as the apparent incident of masturbation over the memory of his pet dog, I feel Ignatius' sexuality is supposed to be ambiguous, and this event solidifies that theme. Maybe Toole is making his reader's work a little harder, or merely allowing us to make up our minds.
Read the book-you'll love it!