New
Orleans gathers the moxie to party on
Driving across the wetlands from the westward approach to New Orleans
drains some of an unwary visitor's eager anticipation of visiting
the "crazy Crescent City," so called for its development
along a major bend in the Mississippi River.
It used to be the city that care forgot, in the old slogan, but
that's no longer the case.
Jagged lines of trees broken in the fierce gales of Hurricane Katrina
rise in their woundedness along marsh edges beyond the highway.
Near the Interstate 10 exit to Chalmette, more than a year after
the hurricane's landfall, the evidence of destruction lingers in
the decaying piles of debris yet to be removed and in the occasional
corpse of a swamped boat.
Giants-Saints game
respectfully should be in New Orleans
NEW
YORK. The Giants are a lousy home team this season, losing more
games than they win before an increasingly impatient and gloomy
audience. If the NFL were an equitable association, that wouldn't
be a problem on Sunday, because they would be playing at the Louisiana
Superdome.
This game against the Saints, a big one for both teams, belongs
in hurricane-ravaged New Orleans, payback for last season's famous
"road opener" for the Giants at the Meadowlands. But for
some reason, this issue was never discussed by the league, despite
the positive economic impact it might have had on the star-crossed
Southern city.
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