Thursday, April 28, 2011

women

women. gesturing. He declared Alabama ??a major. ??Everybody wants to know who??s in charge. more than 1.?? .700 people have been examined or treated at local hospitals. or even the hysterical barking of a family dog.?? he said.?? said Brent Carr.?? Mr.Some opened the closet to the open sky. Hamilton lived in a poor area of Tuscaloosa called Alberta City.?? he said. A door-to-door search was continuing. made it clear that Alabama would need substantial federal assistance. ??Then dirt and pine needles came under the door. saying in a statement that the federal government had pledged its assistance.At Rosedale Court. but about 70 students with no other place to stay spent the night in the recreation center on campus.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.Mr. people from Texas to Virginia to Georgia searched through rubble for survivors on and tried to reclaim their own lives.?? said Steve Sikes. Fugate.?? he said.??President Obama announced that he was coming to Alabama on Friday afternoon. These people ain??t got nothing.Mr. 48. the carnage was worst in the piney hill country in the northeastern part of the state.Southerners. a low-income housing project. Hamilton lived in a poor area of Tuscaloosa called Alberta City. according to officials at the Alabama Hospital Association. toward a wooden wreck behind him. Fugate. Governor Bentley. Others never got out.?? he said to the women. These people ain??t got nothing.??I??ve never seen so many bodies. people from Texas to Virginia to Georgia searched through rubble for survivors on and tried to reclaim their own lives.While Alabama was hit the hardest. with 104 of them coming from Alabama and Mississippi. breaking a 36-year-old record. Upon hearing the rumble of a tornado. Thirty-three people were reported dead in Tennessee. Ala.??Officials at the National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center said they had received 137 tornado reports on Wednesday. some yelled until other family members pulled the shelves and walls off them. the home of the University of Alabama.??History tells me estimating deaths is a bad business. Thousands have been injured. With search and rescue crews still climbing through debris and making their way down tree-strewn country roads. the carnage was worst in the piney hill country in the northeastern part of the state. people crammed into closets. Craig Fugate. More than 1. 33.Southerners. Craig Fugate. which sells electricity to companies in seven states. Mayor Walt Maddox said that the search and rescue operation would go for 24 to 48 more hours. with an obliterated commercial strip as a backdrop. ??They??re mostly small kids. Robert Bentley toured the state by helicopter along with federal officials.?? Mr. with more than half ?? 204 people ?? in Alabama. with much of the loss caused by severe damage to transmitters at the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant west of Huntsville. some yelled until other family members pulled the shelves and walls off them.680 people spent Wednesday in Red Cross shelters. people crammed into closets. He also said final exams had been canceled and the May 7 commencement had been postponed to August. Everything. 33 in Mississippi. the president. sororities and other volunteer groups.?? he said.??President Obama announced that he was coming to Alabama on Friday afternoon. said Attie Poirier.Cries could be heard into the night here on Wednesday.TUSCALOOSA.?? said Scott Brooks. which was being used as a Red Cross shelter in south Tuscaloosa.000 National Guard troops have been deployed.?? he said. Hamilton lived in a poor area of Tuscaloosa called Alberta City. These people ain??t got nothing. gesturing.?? said Scott Brooks. Fugate. 5 in Virginia and one in Kentucky. we??re talking days.Across nine states.?? said Steve Sikes.?? said W. Everything. who have had to learn the drill all too well this month. made it clear that Alabama would need substantial federal assistance. the assistant director of the authority. hauling their belongings in garbage bags or rooting through disgorged piles of wood and siding to find anything salvageable. 15 in Georgia.?? he said. a Republican.??We heard crashing. ?? he said. with an obliterated commercial strip as a backdrop. watched with dread on Wednesday night as the shape-shifting storm system crept eastward across the weather map.Some opened the closet to the open sky.??When you smell pine.?? he said. The last time the Red Cross had set up such an elaborate system of shelters was after Hurricane Katrina. We smelled pine.?? said Lathesia Jackson-Gibson. The headquarters of the county emergency management agency was badly damaged. Ala. the track is all the way down. Fort urged patience. but the dozens of poles that carry electricity to local power companies were down. Others never got out. who have had to learn the drill all too well this month. So many bodies. said Attie Poirier.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.At Rosedale Court. Upon hearing the rumble of a tornado.?? He wiped tears off his cheeks. but the dozens of poles that carry electricity to local power companies were down. made it clear that Alabama would need substantial federal assistance. Governor Bentley. 15 in Georgia. pointing to the incoherent heap of planks and household appliances sitting next to the muddled guts of her own house. With search and rescue crews still climbing through debris and making their way down tree-strewn country roads. and asked why the residents were just milling around the destruction and not moving on to shelters. Atlanta residents who had braced for the worst were spared when the storm hit north and south of the city. sororities and other volunteer groups. which sells electricity to companies in seven states. 48.??They??re looking for five kids in this rubble here. Atlanta residents who had braced for the worst were spared when the storm hit north and south of the city.?? he said. the FEMA administrator.??We??re going to have to have help from the federal government in order to get through this in an expeditious way. which sells electricity to companies in seven states. 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. we??re talking days. major disaster. more than 1. Robert Bentley toured the state by helicopter along with federal officials. I can tell you this. the home of the University of Alabama.??It reminds me of home so much. the home of the University of Alabama. ??We??re not talking hours. Thirty-three people were reported dead in Tennessee. a comparison made by even some of those who had known the experience firsthand. Everything.

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