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Prayer Request : New Orleans- Prayer for these
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Reply
 Message 1 of 16 in Discussion 
From: Isaiah  (Original Message)Sent: 8/29/2005 3:12 AM

NEW ORLEANS (Aug. 28) - A monstrous Hurricane Katrina barreled toward New Orleans on Sunday with 160-mph wind and a threat of a 28-foot storm surge, forcing a mandatory evacuation of the below-sea-level city and prayers for those who remained to face a doomsday scenario.

"Have God on your side, definitely have God on your side,'' Nancy Noble said as she sat with her puppy and three friends in six lanes of one-way traffic on gridlocked Interstate 10. "It's very frightening.''

Katrina intensified into a Category 5 giant over the warm water of the Gulf of Mexico, reaching top winds of 175 mph before weakening slightly on a path to hit New Orleans around sunrise Monday. That would make it the city's first direct hit in 40 years and the most powerful storm ever to slam the city.

Forecasters warned that Mississippi and Alabama were also in danger because Katrina was such a big storm - with hurricane-force winds extending up to 105 miles from the center. In addition to the winds, the storm packed the potential for a surge of 18 to 28 feet, 30-foot waves and as much as 15 inches of rain.

The conditions have to be absolutely perfect to have a hurricane become this strong,'' National Hurricane Center Director Max Mayfield, noting that Katrina may yet be more powerful than the last Category 5 storm, 1992's Hurricane Andrew, which at 165 mph leveled parts of South Florida, killed 43 people and caused $31 billion in damage.

"It's capable of causing catastrophic damage,'' Mayfield said. "Even well-built structures will have tremendous damage. Of course, what we're really worried about is the loss of lives.''

By evening, the first squalls, driving rains and lightning began hitting New Orleans. A grim Mayor C. Ray Nagin earlier ordered the mandatory evacuation for his city of 485,000 people, conceding Katrina's storm surge pushing up the Mississippi River would swamp the city's system of levees, flooding the bowl-shaped city and causing potentially months of misery.

"We are facing a storm that most of us have long feared,'' he said. "This is a once-in-a-lifetime event.''

Conceding that as many as 100,000 inner-city residents didn't have the means to leave and an untold number of tourists were stranded by the closing of the airport, the city arranged buses to take people to 10 last-resort shelters, including the Superdome.

Nagin also dispatched police and firefighters to rouse people out with sirens and bullhorns, and even gave them the authority to commandeer vehicles to aid in the evacuation.

For years, forecasters have warned of the nightmare flooding a big storm could bring to New Orleans, a bowl-shaped city bounded by the half-mile-wide Mississippi River and massive Lake Pontchartrain. As much as 10 feet below sea level in spots, the city is as the mercy of a network of levees, canals and pumps to keep dry.

Scientists predicted Katrina could easily overtake that levee system, swamping the city under a 30-feet cesspool of toxic chemicals, human waste and even coffins that could leave more than 1 million people homeless

"All indications are that this is absolutely worst-case scenario,'' Ivor van Heerden, deputy director of the Louisiana State University Hurricane Center, said Sunday afternoon.

Jefferson Parish President Aaron Broussard said some who have ridden out previous storms in the New Orleans area may not be so lucky this time.

"I'm expecting that some people who are die-hards will die hard,'' he said.

Katrina was a Category 1 storm with 80-mph wind when it hit South Florida with a soggy punch Thursday that flooded neighborhoods and left nine people dead. It reformed rapidly as it moved out over the warm waters of the Gulf Mexico.

By 8 p.m. EDT, Katrina's eye was about 130 miles south-southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River. The storm was moving toward the northwest at nearly 11 mph and was expected to turn toward the north. A hurricane warning was in effect for the north-central Gulf Coast from Morgan City, La., to the Alabama-Florida line.

Despite the dire predictions, a group of residents in a poor neighborhood of central New Orleans sat on a porch with no car, no way out and, surprisingly, no fear.

"We're not evacuating,'' said 57-year-old Julie Paul. "None of us have any place to go. We're counting on the Superdome. That's our lifesaver.''

The 70,000-seat Superdome, the home of football's Saints, opened at daybreak Sunday, giving first priority to frail, elderly people on walkers, some with oxygen tanks. They were told to bring enough food, water and medicine to last up to five days.

"They told us not to stay in our houses because it wasn't safe,'' said Victoria Young, 76, who sat amid plastic bags and a metal walker. "It's not safe anywhere when you're in the shape we're in.''

By nightfall, fitter residents seeking to get in lined up for blocks in the pouring rain, clutching meager belongings and crying children.

In the French Quarter, most bars that stayed open through the threat of past hurricanes were boarded up and the few people on the streets were battening down their businesses and getting out. But a few stragglers remained.

Tony Peterson leaned over a balcony above Bourbon Street, festooned with gold, purple and green wreathes as Katrina's first rains pelted his shaved head.

"I was going to the Superdome and then I saw the two-mile line,'' the 42-year-old musician said. "I figure if I'm going to die, I'm going to die with cold beer and my best buds.''

Airport Holiday Inn manager Joyce Tillis spent the morning calling her 140 guests to tell them about the evacuation order. Tillis, who lives inside the flood zone, also called her three daughters to tell them to get out.

"If I'm stuck, I'm stuck,'' Tillis said. "I'd rather save my second generation if I can.''

But the evacuation was slow going. Highways in Louisiana and Mississippi were jammed as people headed away from Katrina's expected landfall. All lanes were limited to northbound traffic on Interstates 55 and 59, and westbound on I-10.

"I'm expecting to come back to a slab,'' said Robert Friday, who didn't bother boarding up his home in suburban Slidell, La., before driving north to Mississippi. "We may not be coming back to anything, but at least we'll be coming back.''

Evacuation orders were also posted along the Mississippi and Alabama coast, and in barrier islands of the Florida Panhandle, where crashing waves swamped some coastal roads. Mississippi's floating casinos packed up their chips and closed.

New Orleans has not taken a major direct hit from a hurricane since Betsy blasted the Gulf Coast in 1965. Flood waters approached 20 feet in some areas, fishing villages were flattened, and the storm surge left almost half of New Orleans under water and 60,000 residents homeless. Seventy-four people died in Louisiana, Mississippi and Florida.

Tourists stranded by the shutdown of New Orleans' Louis Armstrong Airport and the lack of rental cars packed the lobbies of high-rise hotels, which were exempt from the evacuation order to give people a place for "vertical evacuation.''

Tina and Bryan Steven, of Forest Lake, Minn., sat glumly on the sidewalk outside their hotel in the French Quarter.

"We're choosing the best of two evils,'' said Bryan Steven. "It's either be stuck in the hotel or stuck on the road. ... We'll make it through it.''

His wife, wearing a Bourbon Street T-shirt with a lewd message, interjected: "I just don't want to die in this shirt.''

 



First  Previous  2-16 of 16  Next  Last 
Reply
 Message 2 of 16 in Discussion 
From: joieSent: 8/29/2005 3:19 AM
Larry, it shows you are not signed in.  Look, I was writting about this New Orleans trouble as you posted this message.
 
I read this same thing before coming here and started to copy it here.  My, how our minds do be together sometimes.  I read that thing about the woman wanting to die in her leud shirt.  and one man gonna die with his cold beer.  See, when their minds have not been on God, it does not get there in the time of death.  Satan has them bound up.
 
So sad!   I am just sad thinking of what is headed their wa;  what this country may be faced with by morning!   when will people wake up and turn from their sins to the true and Living God?   That city is totally steeped in idols.  They are in almost every single yard.   Idols of what they call Mary and such.  a lovely place totally given over to idols.
 
my it is so sad.

Reply
 Message 3 of 16 in Discussion 
From: joieSent: 8/29/2005 3:22 AM
Oh I just looked at the news thing again...she said I do NOT want to die in this shirt.   I read it wrong the first time.  Sorry.  Now think about that......wearing the thing.....yet when faced with death,,,she realized it was not nice.   So sad!!!!!

Reply
 Message 4 of 16 in Discussion 
From: IsaiahSent: 8/29/2005 3:23 AM
Yea, I saw that and answered it on sign out  

Reply
 Message 5 of 16 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nicknameshdsofgray911Sent: 8/29/2005 5:17 AM
Living in Florida I know what damage a hurricane can do. A few years back Hurricane Andrew, a category 5, hit my part of the state. We only lost our fence and boat, but that didn't matter in the whole scheme of things. I pray for the safety of the Lousisiana people. As an EMT, emergency medical technician, I wish I could be there afterwards. I know what the EOC, emergency operation center, has estimated for total damages so to speak. I don't want to say the numbers hoping it won't be true, but all I'll say is they need all the prayers they can get. May God watch over them.
Jen

Reply
 Message 6 of 16 in Discussion 
From: joieSent: 8/29/2005 5:35 AM
Amen, to that Jen.  I had a sister-in-law living in Charleston, SC.  when Andrew went through.  She said it was like a war-zone there.  I was near Charleston as that huriricane was coming in.  but with the help of God, we made it back home before it hit.  Yes, we all need to be much in prayer this night.  I read the numbers too.  My heart is very sad about this.
 
Goodnight, everyone.  and thanks for being here.....may you all be greatly blessed.
 
Joie

Reply
The number of members that recommended this message. 0 recommendations  Message 7 of 16 in Discussion 
Sent: 8/29/2005 5:40 AM
This message has been deleted due to termination of membership.

Reply
 Message 8 of 16 in Discussion 
From: joieSent: 8/29/2005 5:50 AM
that is such a heartbreaking thing!  Goodnight everyone.  Love to you all.
 
Jo

Reply
 Message 9 of 16 in Discussion 
From: IsaiahSent: 9/1/2005 6:41 AM

NEW ORLEANS (Sept. 1) - With thousands feared drowned in what could be America's deadliest natural disaster in a century, New Orleans' leaders all but surrendered the streets to floodwaters Wednesday and began turning out the lights on the ruined city - perhaps for months.

Looting spiraled so out of control that Mayor Ray Nagin ordered virtually the entire police force to abandon search-and-rescue efforts and focus on the brazen packs of thieves who have turned increasingly hostile.

Nagin also called for an all-out evacuation of the city's remaining residents. Asked how many people died, he said: "Minimum, hundreds. Most likely, thousands."

With most of the city under water, Army engineers struggled to plug New Orleans' breached levees with giant sandbags and concrete barriers, and authorities drew up plans to clear out the tens of thousands of remaining people and practically abandon the below-sea-level city.

Nagin said there will be a "total evacuation of the city. We have to. The city will not be functional for two or three months." And he said people would not be allowed back into their homes for at least a month or two.

If the mayor's death-toll estimate holds true, it would make Katrina the worst natural disaster in the United States since at least the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire, which have blamed for anywhere from about 500 to 6,000 deaths. Katrina would also be the nation's deadliest hurricane since 1900, when a storm in Galveston, Texas, killed between 6,000 and 12,000 people.

An exodus from the Superdome began Wednesday as the first of nearly 25,000 refugees left the miserable surroundings of the football stadium to be transported in a caravan of buses to the Astrodome in Houston, 350 miles away. The conditions in the Superdome had become horrendous: There was no air conditioning, the toilets were backed up, and the stench was so bad that medical workers wore masks as they walked around.

In Mississippi, bodies are starting to pile up at the morgue in hard-hit Harrison County. Forty corpses have brought to the morgue already, and officials expect the death toll in the county to climb well above 100.

Tempers were beginning to flare. Police said a man fatally shot his sister in the head over a bag of ice in Hattiesburg, Miss.

President Bush flew over New Orleans and parts of Mississippi's hurricane-blasted coastline in Air Force One. Turning to his aides, he said: "It's totally wiped out. ... It's devastating, it's got to be doubly devastating on the ground."

"We're dealing with one of the worst national disasters in our nation's history," Bush said later in a televised address from the White House, which most victims could not see because power remains out to 1 million Gulf Coast residents.

The federal government dispatched helicopters, warships and elite SEAL water-rescue teams in one of the biggest relief operations in U.S. history, aimed at plucking residents from rooftops in the last of the "golden 72 hours" rescuers say is crucial to saving lives.

As fires burned from broken natural-gas mains, the skies above the city buzzed with National Guard and Coast Guard helicopters frantically dropping baskets to roofs where victims had been stranded since the storm roared in with a 145-mph fury Monday. Atop one apartment building, two children held up a giant sign scrawled with the words: "Help us!"

Looters used garbage cans and inflatable mattresses to float away with food, blue jeans, tennis shoes, TV sets - even guns. Outside one pharmacy, thieves commandeered a forklift and used it to push up the storm shutters and break through the glass. The driver of a nursing-home bus surrendered the vehicle to thugs after being threatened.

Police said their first priority remained saving lives, and mostly just stood by and watched the looting. But Nagin later said the looting had gotten so bad that stopping the thieves became the top priority for the police department.

The federal government dispatched helicopters, warships and elite SEAL water-rescue teams in one of the biggest relief operations in U.S. history, aimed at plucking residents from rooftops in the last of the "golden 72 hours" rescuers say is crucial to saving lives.

As fires burned from broken natural-gas mains, the skies above the city buzzed with National Guard and Coast Guard helicopters frantically dropping baskets to roofs where victims had been stranded since the storm roared in with a 145-mph fury Monday. Atop one apartment building, two children held up a giant sign scrawled with the words: "Help us!"

Looters used garbage cans and inflatable mattresses to float away with food, blue jeans, tennis shoes, TV sets - even guns. Outside one pharmacy, thieves commandeered a forklift and used it to push up the storm shutters and break through the glass. The driver of a nursing-home bus surrendered the vehicle to thugs after being threatened.

Police said their first priority remained saving lives, and mostly just stood by and watched the looting. But Nagin later said the looting had gotten so bad that stopping the thieves became the top priority for the police department.

We have to," Nagin said. "It's not living conditions."

He also expressed concern about people staying in the water: "People walking in that water with those dead bodies, it can get in your pores, you don't have to drink it."

In addition to the Astrodome solution, the Federal Emergency Management Agency was considering putting people on cruise ships, in tent cities, mobile home parks, and so-called floating dormitories.

The floodwaters streamed into the city's streets from two levee breaks near Lake Pontchartrain a day after New Orleans thought it had escaped catastrophic damage from Katrina . The floodwaters covered 80 percent of the city, in some areas 20 feet deep, in a reddish-brown soup of sewage, gasoline and garbage.

Around midday, officials with the state and the Army Corps of Engineers said the water levels between the city and Lake Pontchartrain had equalized, and water had stopped spilling into New Orleans, and even appeared to be falling. But the danger was far from over.

The Army Corps of of Engineers said it planned to use heavy-duty Chinook helicopters to drop 15,000-pound bags of sand and stone as early as Wednesday night into the 500-foot gap in the failed floodwall.

But the agency said it was having trouble getting the sandbags and dozens of 15-foot highway barriers to the site because the city's waterways were blocked by loose barges, boats and large debris.

In Washington, the Bush administration decided to release crude oil from the federal petroleum reserves after Katrina knocked out 95 percent of the Gulf of Mexico's output. But because of the disruptions and damage to the refineries, gasoline prices surged above $3 a gallon in many parts of the country.

The death toll has reached at least 110 in Mississippi alone. But the full magnitude of the disaster had been unclear for days - in part, because some areas in both coastal Mississippi and New Orleans are still unreachable, but also because authorities' first priority has been the living.

In Mississippi, for example, ambulances roamed through the passable streets of devastated places such as Biloxi, Gulfport, Waveland and Bay St. Louis, in some cases speeding past corpses in hopes of saving people trapped in flooded and crumbled buildings.

State officials said Nagin's guess of thousands dead seemed plausible.

Lt. Kevin Cowan of the state Office of Emergency Preparedness said it is too soon to say with any accuracy how many died. But he noted that since thousands of people had been rescued from roofs and attics, it could be assumed that there were lots of others who were not saved.

"You have a limited number of resources, for an unknown number of evacuees. It's already been several days. You've had reports there are casualties. You all can do the math," he said.

On the flooded streets of New Orleans, dozens of fishermen from up to 200 miles away floated in on caravans of boats to pull residents out.

One of those rescued was 40-year-old Kevin Montgomery, who spent three days shuttling between the attic of a one-story home and a canopy he built on the roof.

Every once in a while, Mongtomery would see a body float by. But he cannot swim and had to fight the urge to wade in and tie them down.

"It was terrible," he said. "All I could do was pass them by and hope that God takes care of the rest of that."

 


Reply
 Message 10 of 16 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nickname·SpiritwalkerSent: 9/1/2005 4:10 PM
Prayer is needed and help.  Looters?  The first ones I saw were stealing "pampers"...I almost cried.  
New Orleans has always had bad elements in the city who are the ones shooting and stealing guns, jewerly and such.  It is a dangerous place in good times.
Wal Mart has not withdrawn their contribution to New Orleans.  Don't you know they will write off the losses from their stores as will others?  Also, I have walked waist deep in Baton Rouge, always concerned the levy could break there.  Andrew passed over my house and I survived, but I also moved to Missouri...no more tidal wave concerns.
Looting?  I'd do it too.  A person must take care of themselves in times of a disaster.  If you were on the street, hungry and thirsty and your clothes are torn up...would you not go in the store and try to help yourself and others as well?  This is goods that will be written off and not good to be sold anyway.  Stealing?  Maybe, survival...yes.  I'd get bug spray too for one night with Louisiana mosquitoes is all a person can live through.
I think God would forgive a person for trying to maintain their life in a disaster such as this.  I'd be in front of the store passing out drinks and canned goods and pampers! 
The ones who are stealing guns and using them...that is another story.  God knows their hearts as He knows mine. 
The ones who have raped women and jumped to their deaths in the Super Dome.....how much can you take?  They have lost everything they ever had and the only hope they may have will come from above.  The Love of our Father will see many through this crisis.  In the meantime, I am glad I am not living in that State anymore.
My 85 yr old Daddy is in Mississippi cutting fallen trees and helping his neighbors.  One of his neighbors manages a grocery store.  I feel that he will get food from that grocery store and he should.  Why let steaks and fresh produce go to rotten junk when people can eat it?  Why not open the doors and pass it out?  At least no person  would have to go in and steal it!  It could be 3-4 months before my Daddy has electric again.  I pray he does not get hungry or has a heart attack from helping his neighbors.  But it is his will to help.  If I could get down there, I'd be right beside him helping him help others.  In fact, I am considering it pretty hard today. 
People are hurting all over the south.  As the Mississippi Govenor, Barbour, stated, "Let's not nit-pick."  I don't want to place blame on others when I can barely see myself in the same situation and what I would do to survive and help others to survive.  Just food for thought today.
"Spiritwalker"

Reply
 Message 11 of 16 in Discussion 
From: joieSent: 9/1/2005 4:33 PM
Might fine speech there, Spiritwalker.  Good morning to you.  So glad you could come in to see us today.
Yes it is a pityful situation in our world today.
 
I also can see looting for food and necessary things.  but some have stolen other things and guns, and are using them to interfer with the rescue of the hurt and sick.  That is bad.
 
You father is a great person.  and so are you.  I pray for all their safety and yours if you go.  God bless you.  This is certainly a sad time for the US.  so is the rest of the world in such a mess.  How I pray, Even so Come Lord Jesus.
 
That was a heartbreaking thing I read of yesterday......men stampeded about 800 women and children to death on a bridge, headed toward an idol shrine.  So sad.

Reply
 Message 12 of 16 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nickname·SpiritwalkerSent: 9/1/2005 11:28 PM
It is typical behaviour that I would expect after this many days of having disrupted lives and a short temper.  We have not seen the half of it yet.  My prayers are with the ones who are attempting to help the helpless and may God's ever watchful eyes be upon them.  My home State of Mississippi was hit very badly.  I could not believe a gambling boat would fly upon the top of a hotel like it did.  When Camille hit in 1969, there wasn't any gambling boats, but she hurled many a boat blocks within the cities along the coast.  Death and destruction. 
Today, death and destruction.
Folks, keep your eyes Heavenward.  Keep your faith and know that God loves us all. 
Good to hear from you Larry.
Love,
"Spiritwalker"

Reply
 Message 13 of 16 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nickname·SpiritwalkerSent: 9/2/2005 12:36 AM
Whoops!  Major Boo-Boo.....(at least I do it right when I make one)
Correction:  Good to hear from you Joie!!
Love you!
Please forgive...I've not had a clear mind since before the hurricane struck.  I am just barely functioning...nothing new! HA!
 Love,
"Spiritwalker

Reply
 Message 14 of 16 in Discussion 
From: joieSent: 9/2/2005 1:23 AM
Nothing to forgive, dear one.  If you never do anything worse than call me Larry, you are very good shape.  It is an honour to me to be called Larry.  He is a good man.
 
Love to you,
Jo

Reply
 Message 15 of 16 in Discussion 
From: IsaiahSent: 9/3/2005 10:38 AM
Well thank you joie and I think the same of you.
Hello, spiritwalker, good to see you here gurl. Long time no seeSpiritwalker, I guess joie has been called worse. lol.

Reply
 Message 16 of 16 in Discussion 
From: IsaiahSent: 9/3/2005 10:39 AM

NEW ORLEANS (Sept. 3) - To cries of "Thank you, Jesus!" and catcalls of "What took you so long?," a National Guard convoy packed with food, water and medicine rolled through axle-deep floodwaters Friday into what remained of New Orleans and descended into a maelstrom of fires and floating corpses.

"Lord, I thank you for getting us out of here!" Leschia Radford shrieked amid a throng of tens of thousands of storm victims outside the New Orleans Convention Center.

More than four days after the storm hit, the caravan of at least three-dozen camouflage-green troop vehicles and supply trucks arrived along with dozens of air-conditioned buses to take refugees out of the city. President Bush also took an aerial tour of the ruined city, and answered complaints about a sluggish government response by saying, "We're going to make it right."

In what looked like a scene from a Third World country, some people threw their arms heavenward and others nearly fainted with joy as the trucks and hundreds of soldiers arrived in the punishing midday heat.

But there were also profane jeers from many in the crowd of nearly 20,000 outside the convention center, which a day earlier seemed on the verge of a riot, with desperate people seething with anger over the lack of anything to eat or drink.

"They should have been here days ago," said 46-year-old Michael Levy, whose words were echoed by those around him yelling, "Hell, yeah!"

"We've been sleeping on the ... ground like rats," Levy added. "I say burn this whole ... city down."

The soldiers' arrival-in-force came amid angry complaints from the mayor and others that the federal government had bungled the relief effort and let people die in the streets for lack of food, water or medicine.

"The people of our city are holding on by a thread," Mayor Ray Nagin warned in a statement to CNN. "Time has run out. Can we survive another night? And who can we depend on? Only God knows."

By nightfall Friday, the mayor's tone had changed. Nagin returned from a meeting with President Bush a picture of calm.

"I feel much better. I feel like we've gotten everyone's attention, and hopefully they'll continue to do what they're doing," he said Friday, leaning against a railing in lobby of a hotel that houses his temporary lodgings and command post.

A day earlier, the mayor erupted in tears during a radio interview and told the government to "get off your asses and let's do something."

The president took a land and air tour of hard-hit areas of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, and admitted of the relief effort: "The results are not enough." Congress passed a $10.5 billion disaster aid package, and Bush quickly signed the measure.

What were perhaps the first signs of real hope for recovery came on a day that was ushered in with a thunderous explosion before daybreak and scattered downtown building fires that only confirmed the sense that New Orleans was a city in utter collapse.

The explosion at a warehouse along the Mississippi River about 15 blocks from the French Quarter jostled storm refugees awake and sent a pillar of acrid gray smoke over a city that the mayor has said could be awash with thousands of corpses. Other large fires fire erupted downtown.

With a cigar-chomping general in the convoy's lead vehicle, the trucks rolled through muddy water to reach the convention center. Flatbed trucks carried huge crates, pallets and bags of relief supplies, including Meals Ready to Eat. Soldiers in fatigues sat in the backs of open-top trucks, their rifles pointing skyward.

Gov. Kathleen Blanco said the military presence helped calm a jittery city.

"They brought a sense of order and peace, and it was a beautiful sight to see that we're ramping up," she said.

"We are seeing a show of force. It's putting confidence back in our hearts and in the minds of our people. We're going to make it through."

The governor also said refugees in the convention center should be evacuated Saturday.

Guardsmen carrying rifles also arrived at the Louisiana Superdome, where a vast crowd of bedraggled people - many of them trapped there since the weekend - stretched around the entire perimeter of the building, waiting for their deliverance from the heat, the filth and the gagging stench inside the stadium.

"The cavalry is and will continue to arrive," said Lt. Gen. Steven Blum, commander of the National Guard. He said 7,000 Guardsmen would be in the city by Saturday

But another commander warned it may yet be days more before evacuations from the convention center begin, because the first priority is bringing in food and water.

"As fast as we can, we'll move them out," said Army Lt. Gen. Russel Honore said. "Worse things have happened to America," he added. "We're going to overcome this, too. It's not our fault. The storm came and flooded the city."

Within minutes of the soldiers' arrival at the convention center, they set up six food and water lines. The crowd was for the most part orderly and grateful for the first major supply convoy to reach the arena.

Diane Sylvester, 49, was the first person through the line, and she emerged with two bottles of water and a pork rib meal. "Something is better than nothing," she said as she mopped sweat from her brow. "I feel great to see the military here. I know I'm saved."

Angela Jones, 24, began guzzling her water before she even cleared the line.

"Like steak and potatoes!" she said of the cool water. "I didn't think I was going to make it through that."

A rag shielding her from the searing heat and a cart holding her only belongings, 70-year-old Nellie Washington asked: "What took you so long? I'm extremely happy, but I cannot let it be at that. They did not take the lead to do this. They had to be pushed to do it."

With Houston's Astrodome already full with 15,000 storm refugees, that city opened two more giant centers to accommodate an additional 10,000. Dallas and San Antonio also had agreed to take refugees.

One group of Katrina's victims lurched from one tragedy to another: A bus carrying evacuees from the Superdome overturned on a Louisiana highway, killing at least one person and injuring many others.

At the broken levee along Lake Pontchartrain that swamped nearly 80 percent of New Orleans, helicopters dropped 3,000-pound sandbags into the breach and pilings were being pounded into place to seal off the waters. Engineers also were developing a plan to create new breaches in the levees so that a combination of gravity and pumping and would drain the water out of the city, a process that could take weeks.

Law and order all but broke down in New Orleans over the past few days. Storm refugees reported being raped, shot and robbed, gangs of teenagers hijacked boats meant to rescue them, and frustrated hurricane victims menaced outmanned law officers. Police Chief Eddie Compass admitted even his own officers had taken food and water from stores. Officers were walking off the job by the dozens.

Some of New Orleans' hospitals, facing dwindling supplies of food, water and medicine, resumed evacuations Friday. Rescuers finally made it into Charity Hospital, the city's largest public hospital, where gunfire had earlier thwarted efforts to evacuate more than 250 patients.

Behind, they left a flooded morgue where residents had been dropping off bodies. After it reached its capacity of 12, five more corpses were stacked in a stairwell. Other bodies were elsewhere in the hospital.

Administrator Don Smithburg said his numbed staff was forced to subsist on intravenous sugar solutions.

"Some of them are on the brink of unable to cope any longer," he said.

 

 

 


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