I had an iconoclastic high-school history teacher, a Chilean named Diego Gonzalez-Grande, who discarded textbooks and taught four different, sophisticated, history classes, all from lectures and the occasional
Douglas Richard Hofstadter book, each more intense than any liberal arts class I took in college. Gonzalez also
coached the soccer team, and was perhaps the most successful swim-team coach who didn't swim: the team trained by practicing arm-strokes across the blacktop, since there was no swimming pool. He'd give simultaneous chess exhibitions during lunchtime (the building had no food service in the cafeteria, so students had autonomy for lunch, and only a few of the 18-year-old seniors bought a liquid lunch at the daquiri shop a couple of blocks away); that I beat him four times in three years felt like a significant accomplishment. Diego had no recollection of me when I returned to the school in the summer of 2001, but, still, I was concerned about him, single, living on a teacher's salary, doesn't drive. A popular t-shirt featured a student's rendition of Mount Rushmore with the faces of Diego and three other iconic teachers.
Ray, a class of '82er, has set up the
Ben Franklin Alumni Katrina Blog, which I was thinking of doing if no one else did. Another '82 correspondent (apparently only a few blocks from my AEI office) reports "Diego apparently is in Chicago," so that's good news.
Since I graduated, Franklin relocated from its crumbling 19th-century courthouse in Uptown to a much larger Taj Mahal of a facility on the University of New Orleans campus.
This blog reports that the nifty
Scipionus site (which I haven't been able to get to work consistently with my browser) reports the new building is underwater, which doesn't surprise me, given its location a few blocks from Lake Ponchartrain on the east side of town.
Wired story on Scipionus.
Update: You can see the water in the
Google satellite photo. Leon C. Simon Boulevard is completely underwater. If I recall correctly, the ground floor of the high school's new building was beneath street level. The top floor may be alright, but damage to the lower floors
may require razing. Most of the city's landmarks are in the older part of the city that was built
above sea level, on the natural levee created by the Mississippi, and they've
largely seemed to survive (hat tip:
Cowen), so if the arsonists can be stopped, there will still be a (considerably smaller) New Orleans.
Alas, satellite photos had a cloud covering Riverbend, so no telling what the status of the courthouse is. It should be dry; it was above street-level, and street-level was above sea level.