The #4-seeded Newington High School boys volleyball team (17-2) won its quarterfinal game against #5 Shelton today, 3-1 (23-25, 25-20, 28-26, 25-21). That sets up a state semifinal matchup with #1-seed Southington (19-0) — Newington’s traditional archrival in many sports, and my personal nemesis — on Tuesday. WOOHOO!! I could be wrong, but I believe this is the deepest into a state tournament that any NHS team has played Southington since the girls basketball team lost to SHS in the 1993 state title game. Anyway, Go Indians!!! Beat the Blue Knights!!!
Meanwhile, in baseball, the second-round game between #6 Newington and #11 Simsbury was postponed due to rain. It will be played tomorrow. That pushes the quarterfinal between the Newington-Simsbury winner and #3 Amity (actually ranked #1 in the state by the Hartford Courant), which was previously scheduled for tomorrow, back to Sunday.
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Categories: Connecticut & Newington
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Charles Fenwick at Eye of the Storm has a post about a new NOAA map that analyzes the percentage probability of tropical development, at any given time, in 4,000-square-mile blocks of the Atlantic and eastern Pacific basins. Pretty cool. Currently, the greatest threat area is due south of the Manzanillo area in Mexico, where The Storm Track says Tropical Depression 2E might soon form.
Meanwhile, the Houston Chronicle looks at hurricane forecasting: where it’s improved, and where it still struggles. Specifically, the article attempts to explain why it’s so much more difficult to predict a hurricane’s intensity than its track:
Track forecasting is relatively easy, [National Hurricane Center forecaster James] Franklin said, because large atmospheric features — such as the semi-permanent Bermuda High — steer hurricanes. Satellites and other tools can measure these features, and computers can adequately model them.
“The physics is pretty straightforward,” Franklin said. “Hurricanes will move where the tropical fronts push them.”
Better measurement of these features and refined computer models should continue to improve storms’ project paths.
Not so with a hurricane’s strength, which is controlled by many factors, not all of them well understood. Scientists simply don’t fully understand how thunderstorms coalesce into a tropical storm and form an eyewall within a hurricane.
There are more difficulties. Once a storm forms, forecasters aren’t looking at features hundreds or thousands of miles across, like the Bermuda High, but at things like rainbands tens of miles across. These can’t easily be measured by satellites. Numerous, mostly unanswered questions abound: is the air humid or dry? Is dry air getting sucked into the storm’s core? How quickly is the ocean transferring its heat into the atmosphere?
Answering such questions is essential for understanding if a hurricane will strengthen or weaken appreciably.
My major beef with the article is that it doesn’t even mention the term “eyewall replacement cycle.” The total unpredictability of those cycles is a huge part of the reason why, in particular, it is almost impossible to accurately predict the intensity fluctuations of major hurricanes. Anyway, according to the article, “forecasters say it will probably take another decade before they can reliably predict how a fickle hurricane’s intensity will change over time.”
In other news, yesterday’s opening day of hurricane season was also, appropriately/ironically enough, the first day of Ray Nagin’s second term as mayor of New Oreleans. The mayor who fiddled while his city drowned told his fellow residents to “get off your duffs,” an expression that would have been an excellent piece of advice for his office in the days before Katrina hit. But I digress…
Thursday’s big piece of Katrina-related news was actually this:
A contrite U.S. Army Corps of Engineers took responsibility Thursday for the flooding of New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina and said the levees failed because they were built in a disjointed fashion using outdated data.
“This is the first time that the Corps has had to stand up and say, ‘We’ve had a catastrophic failure,’” Lt. Gen. Carl Strock, the Corps chief, said as the agency issued a 6,000-page-plus report on the disaster on Day 1 of the new hurricane season.
The Corps said it will use the lessons it has learned to build better flood defenses. …
The Corps, Strock said, has undergone a period of intense introspection and is “deeply saddened and enormously troubled by the suffering of so many.” …
The much-anticipated report - prepared by the 150-member Interagency Performance Evaluation Task Force, assembled and headed by the Corps - is intended to serve as a road map for engineers as they seek to design and build better levees and floodwalls.
Serious work began on New Orleans’ hurricane protection system in the 1960s after Hurricane Betsy flooded the city in 1965. But over the decades, funding slackened and many parts of the system were not finished by the time Katrina hit.
The result was a disjointed system of levees, inconsistent in quality, materials and design, that left gaps exploited by the storm, the report said.
Also, engineers did not take into account the poor soil quality underneath New Orleans, the report said, and failed to account for the sinking of land, which caused some sections to be as much as 2 feet lower than other parts.Four breaches in canals that run through New Orleans were caused by foundation failures that were “not considered in the original design of these structures,” the report said. Those breaches caused two-thirds of the city’s flooding.
(Hat tip: WXNation.)
Also from WXNation, a defense of Max Mayfield:
As you may have seen on Drudge, some environmentalists are protesting today, calling for the heads of National Hurricane Center director Max Mayfield and other NOAA officials. Their claim? That federal hurricane scientists are covering up a link between climate change and hurricanes.
I’ve previously stated my thoughts on this topic here, but let me say that I believe people looking for a conspiracy here are misguided.
Based upon my discussions with hurricane researchers — some of which have been at length — there is no general consensus on this question. Yes, more and stronger hurricanes tend to form when sea surface temperatures are warmer, but there are many more ingredients that go into a powerful hurricane, not all of which would be strengthened by a warmer Earth.
Even Kerry Emanuel, probably the most prominent advocate of a link between climate change and hurricanes, has acknowledged no scientific consensus has emerged on this issue. (He believes, however, that one will in a couple of years as forecasters like Mayfield become more comfortable with the science.)
But the bottom line is that the science on this subject simply isn’t settled yet. The hurricane record is poor for all but the last 30 years, and only then is it truly reliable in the Atlantic basin, where only about 10 percent of the world’s storms form. Moreover, scientists can’t even describe the physics of a strengthening hurricane with confidence.
The denigration of Mayfield and other NOAA officials who are participating in a legitimate debate is bad, bad policy, and it’s not good for science either.
I concur. If there’s one single official in our whole entire government who has actually done a good job in the past 12 months, it’s Max Mayfield. Calling for him, of all people, to resign or be fired is downright idiotic.
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Categories: 2006 Hurricane Season
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This is one of the most awesome pieces of feedback I’ve ever received. On my 9/11 anthem, I just got the following comment from a soldier:
I just wanted to say that this work of yours is great. I am a solider due to deploy over there and I wanted to make a CD of 9/11 songs. I added your tribute to the CD and brought it in to my unit and played it there. It was enjoyed by all that heard it. Thank you, from an American Soldier.
My “Battle Hymn of the War on Terror” — over which I slaved away for weeks, and of which I’m very proud — was played to an audience of U.S. soldiers? And they liked it? Dude, that is totally more awesome than being in the New York Times or the Washington Post or anything else. Earning Tucker Carlson’s praise is nice, but earning Ron the soldier’s praise is way better. Thank you, Ron, and I’m glad you liked my song!
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Categories: Website News
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The sexual assault case against USC’s backup quarterback, Mark Sanchez, has fizzled:
Los Angeles County prosecutors have declined to file charges against USC freshman quarterback Mark Sanchez, who was arrested in April in connection with an alleged sexual assault.
Prosecutors cited insufficient evidence against the 19-year-old athlete.
UPDATE: L.A. Daily News USC beat reporter Scott Wolf says, “This is consistent with everything we’ve heard for several weeks that case against Sanchez was considered weak by the DA’s office.”
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Categories: USC, College Football
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Current Alert from The Drudge Report: sent by DrudgeSiren.com |
A military investigation of Iraqi civilian deaths in a March air and ground assault has concluded that U.S. troops used appropriate force; allegations of intentional killings were unfounded, two defense officials said… Developing… ![]() REPORT: IRAQI CIVILIAN DEATHS NOT INTENTIONAL |
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Categories: Email News Alerts
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Unlike at my last two jobs, I won’t generally be doing “lunch-break updates” this summer; I’ll generally be using my lunch break to meet people, network, work, and/or (gasp) eat, rather than using it to blog. But I just had to share this!
There were some interesting doings at Newington High School today, caused by a severe thunderstorm yesterday that left thousands without power in the Greater Hartford area — the high school included. An anonymous source sends along this account:
You would have loved this day at NHS!!!!! 1st thing this morning we had a call for a one hour delay at NHS. Arrived there about 7:30 and was greeted at front of building by principal, Dr. Collins, who let me know the delay had been changed to 2 hours. The culprit, no power since the really awesome t-storm last night knocked the power out. Students started arriving by 9 - we directed freshmen to Cafeteria, sophomores to gym and juniors and seniors to the tennis courts. By 10:30 this was getting old and some students left, many parents started arriving to pick their children up and bring them home. The buses returned about 11 and the students left. As you can guess . . . the power was restored by 11:20! I could see you with a camera, phone and mini recorder taking in the scene! … It really was pretty interesting to watch the crowd and to be part of it all. Newington’s finest weren’t called in until a few kids peeling out of the parking lot almost took out a couple cafeteria workers. You really would have been in your 17 year old element.
Heh.
Alas, while yesterday’s thunderstorms may have meant good news (in the form of an unexpected three-day weekend) for most NHS students, they meant bad news for members of the Newington baseball team, which is 18-3 and the #6 seed in the Class LL state tournament. The Indians’ game against #11 Simsbury (16-5) was postponed until today at 4:00 PM. Indeed, fully half of the second-round games in Class LL were postponed. But #3-seeded, #1-ranked Amity (20-2) played and won yesterday, and it’s the Spartans who await the winner of Newington-Simsbury in a quarterfinal matchup at Amity’s home field tomorrow afternoon! So, if they win today, the NHS boys get to play on zero days’ rest against the best team in the state! Not like those rich kids from Woodbridge needed any extra advantages anyway… harumph!! :)
CORRECTION: The game between Amity and the Newington-Simsbury winner will be at a neutral site.
But still.
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Categories: Connecticut & Newington
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Categories: Website News
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