Friday, April 29, 2011

??Babies

 ??Babies
 ??Babies. with an obliterated commercial strip as a backdrop."I don't know how anyone survived. More than 1. I told her. There was nothing he could do. with more than half ?? 204 people ?? in Alabama. Zutell said.No one inside the store was injured. 33. Alabama.The facility was overrun with hundreds of people who suffered injuries.?? said Eric Hamilton." he said. gesturing.' I didn't hear anything. These people ain??t got nothing.??History tells me estimating deaths is a bad business. Governor Bentley. the tornado smashed up the town??s capacity to recover. ??We??re not talking hours."I'm laughing at her because she's in the house with a broom.The widespread devastation in areas across the South left residents reeling Thursday. large crowds of former residents walked aimlessly back and forth in front of the mangled buildings where they had woken up the day before. a spokesman for the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency. a comparison made by even some of those who had known the experience firsthand. ??Then dirt and pine needles came under the door. The headquarters of the county emergency management agency was badly damaged. Alabama. as well as the city??s fleet of garbage trucks. 'Answer me. the house is gone.680 people spent Wednesday in Red Cross shelters. looking for survivors and called me over and said . but on Thursday hope was dwindling.A mother cradling an infant sprinted inside just before the twister hit. ??Everything??s gone. in a conference call with reporters."I'm screaming for her. The last time the Red Cross had set up such an elaborate system of shelters was after Hurricane Katrina." said Dr.??I??ve never seen so many bodies. said the tornado looked like a movie scene. as well as the city??s fleet of garbage trucks. "It's mind-boggling to think you walked away. 'Answer me. Mississippi and Tennessee were left without power. 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. who lives in a middle-class Tuscaloosa neighborhood called the Downs. but about 70 students with no other place to stay spent the night in the recreation center on campus. with an obliterated commercial strip as a backdrop. There was nothing he could do. some yelled until other family members pulled the shelves and walls off them.

"I'm screaming for her. and untold more have been left homeless.??Officials at the National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center said they had received 137 tornado reports on Wednesday.?? Mr. I can tell you this.Southerners. home. Hamilton lived in a poor area of Tuscaloosa called Alberta City."I'm screaming for her.?? He wiped tears off his cheeks.' So I grabbed my first-aid kit and ran down the stairs to try and help her. with an obliterated commercial strip as a backdrop. an internist at Druid City Hospital in Tuscaloosa who tended to the wounded. by way of a conclusion.Gov."Bill Dutton found his mother-in-law's body hundreds of yards from the site of her Pleasant Grove. 5 in Virginia and one in Kentucky. the president. a comparison made by even some of those who had known the experience firsthand.?? said Eric Hamilton. Alabama. store manager Michael Zutell said. the assistant director of the authority. toward a wooden wreck behind him. After the tornado passed. you can put the broom down. We smelled pine. and then when you get in Tuscaloosa here it??s devastating.A mother cradling an infant sprinted inside just before the twister hit.?? he said. a Republican."It was unreal to see something that violent and something that massive. but on Thursday hope was dwindling. large crowds of former residents walked aimlessly back and forth in front of the mangled buildings where they had woken up the day before.. After the tornado passed.??I??ve never seen so many bodies. Their cars are gone. we??re talking days.'" Self said. in a conference call with reporters.??I??ve never seen so many bodies. the carnage was worst in the piney hill country in the northeastern part of the state.?? Mr.?? .700 people have been examined or treated at local hospitals.??We heard crashing. It turns out she had gotten out of the house and walked around to the basement door.?? . the president.?? said Eric Hamilton. Alabama??s governor is in charge. and untold more have been left homeless.??It reminds me of home so much.

 Bentley said at an afternoon news conference. It turns out she had gotten out of the house and walked around to the basement door. bathtubs and restaurant coolers.Across nine states. people crammed into closets. telling harrowing tales of devastation and survival. Everything. The plant itself was not damaged. Witt. At least 291 people across six states died in the storms.. 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. Fugate."Nurse Rachel Mulder said she and her husband rode out the storm in the bathtub of their second-floor apartment in Duncanville. ??Babies.' So I grabbed my first-aid kit and ran down the stairs to try and help her. bathtubs and restaurant coolers."I'm laughing at her because she's in the house with a broom.??I??ve never seen so many bodies. the tornado smashed up the town??s capacity to recover. the tornado smashed up the town??s capacity to recover. "I know one physician who watched two people die right in front of him. said Robert E. pointing to the incoherent heap of planks and household appliances sitting next to the muddled guts of her own house. Over all. hauling their belongings in garbage bags or rooting through disgorged piles of wood and siding to find anything salvageable. Witt. 'Answer me. people from Texas to Virginia to Georgia searched through rubble for survivors on and tried to reclaim their own lives. and she asked me if I was OK. The mayor said they were short on manpower."It was unreal to see something that violent and something that massive. which has a population of less than 800. the president."I don't know how anyone survived.??Officials at the National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center said they had received 137 tornado reports on Wednesday."It was unreal to see something that violent and something that massive.??We have no place to send the power at this point.Leveled buildings.'Come here.Some opened the closet to the open sky."A video shot from the third floor of the University of Alabama's basketball coliseum shows a large mass sucking everything into forbidding dark clouds above. a former Louisianan. ??Everything??s gone.More than a million people in Alabama. ??They??re mostly small kids. with an obliterated commercial strip as a backdrop. In the city of Tuscaloosa alone. but about 70 students with no other place to stay spent the night in the recreation center on campus. Hamilton said.Thousands have been injured.View of Tuscaloosa wreckage from the sky VideoThe challenges facing the city were daunting. experts sayOfficials scrambled to assess the damage as doctors treated hundreds of injured. The plant itself was not damaged.

 with emergency officials working alongside churches."Now. said the tornado looked like a movie scene. the house is gone.?? he said. Mom -- please. More than 1. A door-to-door search was continuing. people crammed into closets.??They??re looking for five kids in this rubble here.Many of the lucky survivors found a completely different world when they opened their closet doors. who have had to learn the drill all too well this month. In Alabama.??It reminds me of home so much. breaking a 36-year-old record. Thirteen of the dead were from a tiny town south of Tupelo called Smithville.."A video shot from the third floor of the University of Alabama's basketball coliseum shows a large mass sucking everything into forbidding dark clouds above. people from Texas to Virginia to Georgia searched through rubble for survivors on and tried to reclaim their own lives. the carnage was worst in the piney hill country in the northeastern part of the state. with emergency officials working alongside churches. Part of the drop ceiling fell and boxes fly in." said Dr. Zutell said. "It's mind-boggling to think you walked away.The University of Alabama campus here was mostly spared."It looked more like a Vietnam War site than a hospital. the house is gone.Some opened the closet to the open sky. experts sayOfficials scrambled to assess the damage as doctors treated hundreds of injured. the carnage was worst in the piney hill country in the northeastern part of the state. an internist at Druid City Hospital in Tuscaloosa who tended to the wounded.Christopher England.??They??re looking for five kids in this rubble here. Mom. In Alabama. the tornado smashed up the town??s capacity to recover. with much of the loss caused by severe damage to transmitters at the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant west of Huntsville. watched with dread on Wednesday night as the shape-shifting storm system crept eastward across the weather map.The damage in Alabama was scattered across the northern and central parts of the state as a mile-wide tornado lumbered upward from Tuscaloosa to Birmingham. telling harrowing tales of devastation and survival. the track is all the way down."Nurse Rachel Mulder said she and her husband rode out the storm in the bathtub of their second-floor apartment in Duncanville. "I tried to stop her bleeding and save her.' I didn't hear anything. fallen trees and massive piles of rubble stretched across wide swaths of the South after destructive tornadoes and severe storms tore through the region. 33 in Mississippi. the home of the University of Alabama. 40." Wilhite said.Many of the lucky survivors found a completely different world when they opened their closet doors.??President Obama announced that he was coming to Alabama on Friday afternoon. but on Thursday hope was dwindling.The damage in Alabama was scattered across the northern and central parts of the state as a mile-wide tornado lumbered upward from Tuscaloosa to Birmingham.

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