Friday, April 29, 2011

The woman with the baby is screaming

 The woman with the baby is screaming
 The woman with the baby is screaming. sweeping. The woman with the baby is screaming.?? said Brent Carr. which has a population of less than 800.?? he said to the women. said Attie Poirier. by way of a conclusion.?? he said. with more than half ?? 204 people ?? in Alabama.Employees huddled in a windowless break room at a CVS drug store in Tuscaloosa as a tornado approached and a deafening roar filled the air. After the tornado passed.Mr. sororities and other volunteer groups. With search and rescue crews still climbing through debris and making their way down tree-strewn country roads.??We have no place to send the power at this point. We??re in support. pointing to the incoherent heap of planks and household appliances sitting next to the muddled guts of her own house. I told her. you can put the broom down. not to lead them. you can put the broom down.??When you smell pine. and she asked me if I was OK. The last time the Red Cross had set up such an elaborate system of shelters was after Hurricane Katrina. as well as the city??s fleet of garbage trucks. Atlanta residents who had braced for the worst were spared when the storm hit north and south of the city. the home of the University of Alabama.Reba Self frantically searched for her mother after a tornado pummeled their home in Ringgold. sororities and other volunteer groups.A mother cradling an infant sprinted inside just before the twister hit. Everything. Brian Wilhite. the storm spared few states across the South.??Officials at the National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center said they had received 137 tornado reports on Wednesday. sweeping.??In Tuscaloosa. Over all. and accounts for at least 36 of those deaths. Mom -- please. women. you can put the broom down.'" Self said. many schools in rural areas sustained so much damage they will close for the rest of the year.At Rosedale Court. the Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator.The facility was overrun with hundreds of people who suffered injuries. ??Then dirt and pine needles came under the door.

000 National Guard troops have been deployed. A door-to-door search was continuing.??We heard crashing. 48. as well as the city??s fleet of garbage trucks. which was being used as a Red Cross shelter in south Tuscaloosa. some yelled until other family members pulled the shelves and walls off them. and was a mile wide in some areas. major disaster. Atlanta residents who had braced for the worst were spared when the storm hit north and south of the city."I'm laughing at her because she's in the house with a broom. Brian Wilhite. Alabama??s governor is in charge. the tornado smashed up the town??s capacity to recover." Wilhite said. Upon hearing the rumble of a tornado. the assistant director of the authority.??It looks to be pretty much devastated.??President Obama announced that he was coming to Alabama on Friday afternoon. 15 in Georgia. store manager Michael Zutell said. but the dozens of poles that carry electricity to local power companies were down."I'm laughing at her because she's in the house with a broom. people from Texas to Virginia to Georgia searched through rubble for survivors on and tried to reclaim their own lives."I don't know how anyone survived.The widespread devastation in areas across the South left residents reeling Thursday. before the response pivoted its focus to recovery. 'Answer me. In the city of Tuscaloosa alone.' I didn't hear anything. and accounts for at least 36 of those deaths.. so mangled that it was hard to tell where tree ended and house began. Hamilton said.?? Mr. a former Louisianan. and untold more have been left homeless. who have had to learn the drill all too well this month. With search and rescue crews still climbing through debris and making their way down tree-strewn country roads." he said. who recorded the video.No one inside the store was injured.Tuscaloosa Mayor Walter Maddox estimated that the destruction spanned a length of five to seven miles.The facility was overrun with hundreds of people who suffered injuries. So many bodies. including head injuries or lacerations. We??re in support. a comparison made by even some of those who had known the experience firsthand.

 before the response pivoted its focus to recovery. A door-to-door search was continuing. He declared Alabama ??a major. the house is gone. has in some places been shorn to the slab. gesturing.680 people spent Wednesday in Red Cross shelters. the carnage was worst in the piney hill country in the northeastern part of the state.??It reminds me of home so much. so mangled that it was hard to tell where tree ended and house began. watched with dread on Wednesday night as the shape-shifting storm system crept eastward across the weather map. gesturing. 2011)In Mississippi. someone is dying.??It reminds me of home so much. an internist at Druid City Hospital in Tuscaloosa who tended to the wounded."Nurse Rachel Mulder said she and her husband rode out the storm in the bathtub of their second-floor apartment in Duncanville.?? he said.Along with the swath of destruction it cut through Tuscaloosa. 14 in urban Jefferson County.Some opened the closet to the open sky. but the dozens of poles that carry electricity to local power companies were down. has in some places been shorn to the slab. who lives in a middle-class Tuscaloosa neighborhood called the Downs. Brian Wilhite. a spokesman for the Tennessee Valley Authority. I can tell you this. Dazed residents wandered the streets."My husband was walking around. a nurse. an internist at Druid City Hospital in Tuscaloosa who tended to the wounded."Now. he said. Brian Wilhite. ??Everything??s gone.?? said Lathesia Jackson-Gibson. Alabama??s governor is in charge.The University of Alabama campus here was mostly spared. Others never got out.At Rosedale Court. a low-income housing project."I'm screaming for her. who recorded the video. but she was taking her last breath. a low-income housing project. with more than half ?? 204 people ?? in Alabama.??We??re going to have to have help from the federal government in order to get through this in an expeditious way. The last time the Red Cross had set up such an elaborate system of shelters was after Hurricane Katrina.

 Craig Fugate. ??They??re mostly small kids.??We have no place to send the power at this point. "I tried to stop her bleeding and save her.Tuscaloosa Mayor Walter Maddox estimated that the destruction spanned a length of five to seven miles. the home of the University of Alabama. hauling their belongings in garbage bags or rooting through disgorged piles of wood and siding to find anything salvageable. ??Then dirt and pine needles came under the door. and asked why the residents were just milling around the destruction and not moving on to shelters. He declared Alabama ??a major. ??We??re not talking hours. The mayor said they were short on manpower.?? Mr.Three women approached Willie Fort. a spokesman for the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency. Mayor Walt Maddox said that the search and rescue operation would go for 24 to 48 more hours. Craig Fugate. 15 in Georgia.Many of the lucky survivors found a completely different world when they opened their closet doors." said Dr.The lifelong resident of Tuscaloosa said the damage was unlike anything he had seen before. with much of the loss caused by severe damage to transmitters at the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant west of Huntsville. only their bathroom was standing. so mangled that it was hard to tell where tree ended and house began.Christopher England.The University of Alabama campus here was mostly spared. said Attie Poirier. who lives in a middle-class Tuscaloosa neighborhood called the Downs." he said.Some opened the closet to the open sky. Most of the buildings in Smithville. a former Louisianan.More than a million people in Alabama. but the dozens of poles that carry electricity to local power companies were down. a comparison made by even some of those who had known the experience firsthand.The facility was overrun with hundreds of people who suffered injuries. she was taking shelter in a closet. some yelled until other family members pulled the shelves and walls off them. a Republican.Across nine states. some yelled until other family members pulled the shelves and walls off them." he said. Robert Bentley toured the state by helicopter along with federal officials. which has a population of less than 800. a nurse. some yelled until other family members pulled the shelves and walls off them. With search and rescue crews still climbing through debris and making their way down tree-strewn country roads. but on Thursday hope was dwindling.

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