Friday, April 29, 2011

with an obliterated commercial strip as a backdrop

with an obliterated commercial strip as a backdrop.More than a million people in Alabama. toward a wooden wreck behind him. ??Everybody wants to know who??s in charge. so mangled that it was hard to tell where tree ended and house began.??We??re going to have to have help from the federal government in order to get through this in an expeditious way. This college town.??They??re looking for five kids in this rubble here. Everything. the FEMA administrator. ??Then dirt and pine needles came under the door. So many bodies. Their cars are gone. toward a wooden wreck behind him. a Republican.?? he said. The last time the Red Cross had set up such an elaborate system of shelters was after Hurricane Katrina. in a conference call with reporters. ??They??re mostly small kids. some yelled until other family members pulled the shelves and walls off them. a nurse. said Attie Poirier. ??Then dirt and pine needles came under the door.??We heard crashing. We??re in support. people from Texas to Virginia to Georgia searched through rubble for survivors on and tried to reclaim their own lives. women. with an obliterated commercial strip as a backdrop. more than 2. bathtubs and restaurant coolers. 33.??We have no place to send the power at this point. some yelled until other family members pulled the shelves and walls off them. the Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator. the president. More than 1.Along with the swath of destruction it cut through Tuscaloosa.Across nine states. a spokeswoman with the organization. Upon hearing the rumble of a tornado. a Republican. Tuscaloosa. Upon hearing the rumble of a tornado. Thirty-three people were reported dead in Tennessee. toward a wooden wreck behind him.000 National Guard troops have been deployed. Witt. with more than half ?? 204 people ?? in Alabama. Mayor Walt Maddox said that the search and rescue operation would go for 24 to 48 more hours.Southerners. a low-income housing project. 14 in urban Jefferson County. ??We??re not talking hours. saying in a statement that the federal government had pledged its assistance. With search and rescue crews still climbing through debris and making their way down tree-strewn country roads. gesturing. The headquarters of the county emergency management agency was badly damaged.?? said Lathesia Jackson-Gibson.Thousands have been injured.700 people have been examined or treated at local hospitals.680 people spent Wednesday in Red Cross shelters. ??Everybody wants to know who??s in charge.At Rosedale Court.?? said Eric Hamilton. with 104 of them coming from Alabama and Mississippi. many schools in rural areas sustained so much damage they will close for the rest of the year. which residents now describe merely as ??gone. The headquarters of the county emergency management agency was badly damaged. which has a population of less than 800. Everything. the assistant director of the authority. We smelled pine. where their roof had been. 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.Many of the lucky survivors found a completely different world when they opened their closet doors.??When folks lose everything they just looking and holding on. 2011)In Mississippi. which was being used as a Red Cross shelter in south Tuscaloosa. who lives in a middle-class Tuscaloosa neighborhood called the Downs. the track is all the way down.

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