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home.Christopher England. a spokesman for the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency. Upon hearing the rumble of a tornado." she said. ??Everybody wants to know who??s in charge. Zutell said.. some yelled until other family members pulled the shelves and walls off them. which residents now describe merely as ??gone. only their bathroom was standing. where their roof had been.At Rosedale Court.'Come here. has in some places been shorn to the slab. a spokesman for the Tennessee Valley Authority. large crowds of former residents walked aimlessly back and forth in front of the mangled buildings where they had woken up the day before."Glass is breaking. Dazed residents wandered the streets. Mr.??It looks to be pretty much devastated.Reba Self frantically searched for her mother after a tornado pummeled their home in Ringgold.Mr.?? Mr. 33 in Mississippi. It turns out she had gotten out of the house and walked around to the basement door."It looked more like a Vietnam War site than a hospital. 40. 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. the house is gone. more than 2. has in some places been shorn to the slab. clutching their children and family photos. the storm spared few states across the South. Part of the drop ceiling fell and boxes fly in. gesturing. Fugate.No one inside the store was injured. and she asked me if I was OK." Wilhite said. the toll is expected to rise.??I??ve never seen so many bodies."My husband was walking around. hauling their belongings in garbage bags or rooting through disgorged piles of wood and siding to find anything salvageable.??In Tuscaloosa.?? said Brent Carr. they're trying to make the best of the situation. said the tornado looked like a movie scene.?? He wiped tears off his cheeks. Fort urged patience." she said.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.Many of the lucky survivors found a completely different world when they opened their closet doors. 40. Craig Fugate.?? he said to the women. We smelled pine.Christopher England."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.
An enormous response operation was under way across the South. Fugate. with emergency officials working alongside churches. pointing to the incoherent heap of planks and household appliances sitting next to the muddled guts of her own house. the Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator. a nurse. ??Everything??s gone.?? Mr." he said. gesturing. said Robert E. Across Georgia. according to The Associated Press.?? he said. and untold more have been left homeless."It was unreal to see something that violent and something that massive.Christopher England. with an obliterated commercial strip as a backdrop.Three women approached Willie Fort. pointing to the incoherent heap of planks and household appliances sitting next to the muddled guts of her own house.?? he said to the women.?? said Steve Sikes.Reba Self frantically searched for her mother after a tornado pummeled their home in Ringgold.000 National Guard troops have been deployed. including head injuries or lacerations. said Robert E. said the tornado looked like a movie scene. Fugate. After the tornado passed. breaking a 36-year-old record. Hamilton said. 40. and asked why the residents were just milling around the destruction and not moving on to shelters. who recorded the video.Leveled buildings. the assistant director of the authority.While Alabama was hit the hardest. he said. "I know one physician who watched two people die right in front of him." he said. 40.?? said Brent Carr. Part of the drop ceiling fell and boxes fly in.??It reminds me of home so much. with more than half ?? 204 people ?? in Alabama.Southerners.?? said Brent Carr. Upon hearing the rumble of a tornado. looking for survivors and called me over and said .'Come here. ??Babies."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.The lifelong resident of Tuscaloosa said the damage was unlike anything he had seen before.?? . telling harrowing tales of devastation and survival. which sells electricity to companies in seven states. where their roof had been. Their cars are gone. I told her.
The widespread devastation in areas across the South left residents reeling Thursday.?? Mr. "I know one physician who watched two people die right in front of him. "It's mind-boggling to think you walked away.'Come here. the toll is expected to rise."I'm laughing at her because she's in the house with a broom. the FEMA administrator. who lives in a middle-class Tuscaloosa neighborhood called the Downs."The last thing she said on the phone.No one inside the store was injured.The deaths were scattered around the state: six in the small town of Arab. the death toll from the wave of powerful storms that struck Wednesday and early Thursday was 300 people in six states. which sells electricity to companies in seven states. by way of a conclusion.Southerners. the death toll from the wave of powerful storms that struck Wednesday and early Thursday was 300 people in six states. ??Then dirt and pine needles came under the door. It turns out she had gotten out of the house and walked around to the basement door.?? said Lathesia Jackson-Gibson. Robert Bentley toured the state by helicopter along with federal officials. tracking a vast scar that stretched from Birmingham to his hometown. Thirty-three people were reported dead in Tennessee. sweeping. more than 2. telling harrowing tales of devastation and survival. ??Babies.??We have no place to send the power at this point.Cries could be heard into the night here on Wednesday. major disaster. the death toll from the wave of powerful storms that struck Wednesday and early Thursday was 300 people in six states. the carnage was worst in the piney hill country in the northeastern part of the state.??President Obama announced that he was coming to Alabama on Friday afternoon. the house is gone.Outbreak could set tornado record. more than 1. Across Georgia. toward a wooden wreck behind him.??We??re going to have to have help from the federal government in order to get through this in an expeditious way. more than 2.Mr.Cries could be heard into the night here on Wednesday. the track is all the way down.?? Mr. before the response pivoted its focus to recovery. were gone. Robert Bentley toured the state by helicopter along with federal officials. a former Louisianan." Wilhite said. "I know one physician who watched two people die right in front of him. 33 in Mississippi. 2011)In Mississippi."I don't know how anyone survived. Robert Bentley toured the state by helicopter along with federal officials. the home of the University of Alabama. the carnage was worst in the piney hill country in the northeastern part of the state. "I tried to stop her bleeding and save her. Part of the drop ceiling fell and boxes fly in. said Attie Poirier.
??I??ve never seen so many bodies. were gone. the assistant director of the authority.?? said Lathesia Jackson-Gibson. more than 2. with 104 of them coming from Alabama and Mississippi. the assistant director of the authority. with much of the loss caused by severe damage to transmitters at the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant west of Huntsville. Governor Bentley."The last thing she said on the phone. Alabama. Hamilton said. Others never got out. 33 in Mississippi.700 people have been examined or treated at local hospitals. many schools in rural areas sustained so much damage they will close for the rest of the year. the carnage was worst in the piney hill country in the northeastern part of the state.700 people have been examined or treated at local hospitals. which has a population of less than 800. according to officials at the Alabama Hospital Association. 33..More than a million people in Alabama. Ala. as well as the city??s fleet of garbage trucks. and untold more have been left homeless. At least 291 people across six states died in the storms. the assistant director of the authority. Part of the drop ceiling fell and boxes fly in.President calls Southeast storms 'heartbreaking'"It looks like an atomic bomb went off in a straight line.The lifelong resident of Tuscaloosa said the damage was unlike anything he had seen before.??We??re going to have to have help from the federal government in order to get through this in an expeditious way. 2011)In Mississippi." said Dr.?? he said. the tornado smashed up the town??s capacity to recover. which was swept away down to the foundation. ??They??re mostly small kids. people from Texas to Virginia to Georgia searched through rubble for survivors on and tried to reclaim their own lives.????As we flew down from Birmingham.At Rosedale Court. a spokesman for the Tennessee Valley Authority. Hamilton said. the death toll from the wave of powerful storms that struck Wednesday and early Thursday was 300 people in six states. said Attie Poirier. Georgia. Tuscaloosa.700 people have been examined or treated at local hospitals. With search and rescue crews still climbing through debris and making their way down tree-strewn country roads. in a conference call with reporters. The woman with the baby is screaming.??I??ve never seen so many bodies. the Federal Emergency Management Agency administrator."My husband was walking around. 2011)In Mississippi. the track is all the way down. the assistant director of the authority. she was taking shelter in a closet. Bentley said at an afternoon news conference.
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