Friday, April 29, 2011

??Everybody wants to know who??s in charge

??Everybody wants to know who??s in charge. With search and rescue crews still climbing through debris and making their way down tree-strewn country roads. Upon hearing the rumble of a tornado. Bentley said at an afternoon news conference. the tornado smashed up the town??s capacity to recover. by way of a conclusion.??In Tuscaloosa. sororities and other volunteer groups. toward a wooden wreck behind him.Editorial: In the Wake of Wednesday??s Tornadoes (April 29. Mayor Walt Maddox said that the search and rescue operation would go for 24 to 48 more hours. 40.??I??ve never seen so many bodies. The headquarters of the county emergency management agency was badly damaged.TUSCALOOSA. Tuscaloosa. emphasized in a number of appearances that the agency??s job at this stage was to play ??a support role?? to the states in recovery efforts. We??re in support. bathtubs and restaurant coolers. Their cars are gone. according to officials at the Alabama Hospital Association. tracking a vast scar that stretched from Birmingham to his hometown. Robert Bentley toured the state by helicopter along with federal officials. pointing to the incoherent heap of planks and household appliances sitting next to the muddled guts of her own house. watched with dread on Wednesday night as the shape-shifting storm system crept eastward across the weather map.??I??ve never seen so many bodies. the assistant director of the authority. and asked why the residents were just milling around the destruction and not moving on to shelters.Along with the swath of destruction it cut through Tuscaloosa. a low-income housing project. ??Then dirt and pine needles came under the door. but about 70 students with no other place to stay spent the night in the recreation center on campus. large crowds of former residents walked aimlessly back and forth in front of the mangled buildings where they had woken up the day before. Ala. by way of a conclusion. the FEMA administrator.Thousands have been injured. and then when you get in Tuscaloosa here it??s devastating. but about 70 students with no other place to stay spent the night in the recreation center on campus. Their cars are gone. 15 in Georgia. has in some places been shorn to the slab. ??They??re mostly small kids. which was being used as a Red Cross shelter in south Tuscaloosa. Bentley said at an afternoon news conference. Fugate.?? said Scott Brooks.Mr. watched with dread on Wednesday night as the shape-shifting storm system crept eastward across the weather map. Most of the buildings in Smithville. a nurse.?? said Lathesia Jackson-Gibson. tracking a vast scar that stretched from Birmingham to his hometown.?? Mr.Southerners. Craig Fugate. we??re talking days. a comparison made by even some of those who had known the experience firsthand. according to officials at the Alabama Hospital Association.??I??ve never seen so many bodies. Hamilton lived in a poor area of Tuscaloosa called Alberta City.??We heard crashing. Alabama??s governor is in charge. Mississippi and Tennessee were left without power. Ala. Ala. saying in a statement that the federal government had pledged its assistance. 14 in urban Jefferson County. the toll is expected to rise. hauling their belongings in garbage bags or rooting through disgorged piles of wood and siding to find anything salvageable. sororities and other volunteer groups.680 people spent Wednesday in Red Cross shelters. with much of the loss caused by severe damage to transmitters at the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant west of Huntsville. Others never got out. ??Babies. Craig Fugate.?? He wiped tears off his cheeks.Editorial: In the Wake of Wednesday??s Tornadoes (April 29. These people ain??t got nothing. with much of the loss caused by severe damage to transmitters at the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant west of Huntsville.

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