Guest guest Posted August 31, 2005 Report Share Posted August 31, 2005 'I heard people screaming' August 31, 2005 BY FRANK MAIN Staff Reporter NEW ORLEANS -- Sam Marconi drank a Bud Light on a French Quarter corner Tuesday morning, still dripping wet after trudging out of his flooded neighborhood. Cradled in his arms were two cartons of cigarettes that looters dropped outside a liquor store and a can of Chef Boyardee a good samaritan gave him. Marconi, a clown who goes by Turbo the Copper Mime, was wearing his trademark shoes spray-painted copper. His wet black jeans clung to his legs. " I'm a survivor, " he said. " Some of my neighbors weren't. " The day after Hurricane Katrina, helicopters hovered over New Orleans looking for looters and residents clinging to the roofs of their homes. Wal-Mart stores were giving free food and water to people, many of whom rode up on bicycles. Power was out in most of the city, and communication was next to impossible with most cell phones and land lines down. But Marconi, who recently performed as a clown at Taste of Chicago, and dozens of other New Orleans residents forgot their troubles briefly at 10 a.m. Tuesday at Johnn White's Bar, one of the few places serving drinks in the French Quarter. Marconi weathered Katrina in his brick home in Bywater, one of the most heavily flooded neighborhoods in the city. It is just outside the Quarter along the bend in the Mississippi River. Marconi was cooking a hamburger on his grill Monday afternoon, standing in four inches of water, when the flood came. " The next minute there was four feet of water covering the top of my grill, " he said. " I heard people screaming. " As Marconi waded through the water, he saw a man floating face down. " I saw dozens of people breaking out of the attic with their axes, " he said. " Hundreds of people were on their roofs. They were dropping ladders from helicopters to rescue them. " Brian Kornsey volunteered Monday night to rescue women and children from the roofs in Bywater. In his 9th Ward accent -- vaguely Brooklyn and vaguely Southern -- he described paddling his flat boat into the neighborhood in the pitch black. " We didn't have no flashlights, " Kornsey said. " I saw three dead people floating near Claiborne Street. " He started the rescues at 10 p.m. Monday and worked until 5:30 a.m. Tuesday. He estimated he pulled 80 people to safety. Some could not swim. " I jumped into the water to push everybody into the flat boat, " he said. Kornsey's own home near the Industrial Canal collapsed. Keith Price, a cardiac nurse, lost everything in his home in the Gentilly neighborhood. The water started rising at 10 a.m. Monday after the hurricane hit. Pumps that drain New Orleans, which is below sea level, were shut down near him and the water rose to neck level. " I just bought $6,000 worth of furniture. All gone, " Price said. " My car is under water. The airbag is deployed. " Price took photos of all his destroyed possessions. He carried his camera and wallet in a black bag, holding it over his head to keep it dry. He's waiting to file a claim with the federal disaster assistance fund. " I have to start all over again, " he said. As Price walked down Canal Street toward the French Quarter, he saw looters coming out of Walgreens and other stores with baskets of goods -- everything from electronic equipment to leather jackets. He saw the police make some arrests, but the level of thievery was overwhelming, he said. In the Uptown section of New Orleans, known for its grand antebellum mansions and a streetcar that runs up the middle of St. Charles Avenue, looters filled shopping carts with groceries and other items at Walgreens and Rite-Aid on Tuesday. Police cruised by, but looters didn't seem to be their No. 1 priority. Cops took a tougher stance in the French Quarter, where they walked around toting shotguns. Price and Kornsey said they heard gunfire Monday night. But neither thought it was malicious. Instead, they think it was people firing their guns for help, hoping to get rescued. 'I should have packed up and gone' The French Quarter, the high ground of New Orleans, was one of the few parts of the city with minimal flooding. But wind damage was everywhere. At St. Louis Cathedral, where the large outdoor clock was stopped at 6:25 a.m. Monday, an alabaster statue of Jesus with his arms upraised -- called Touchdown Jesus by some locals -- survived with only a broken thumb. Surrounding the statue were giant branches of live oak and magnolia trees uprooted by the hurricanes. " I am not a religious man. I am a pagan, actually. But seeing Jesus still standing was awesome, " said Ken Hallober, a Melrose Park native who works in New Orleans selling statues and making Mardi Gras beads. Hallober fled the city before the hurricane but came back after the storm, swimming through floodwaters under the Interstate 10 overpass to get back to his French Quarter apartment, which only lost its shutters. The Warehouse District near the French Quarter was another dry zone. Egberto J. Ramos Jr. and Richard Porter, who moved there from Miami, were sipping cocktails at Johnn White's Bar on Tuesday morning. " We moved from Miami because there were four hurricanes in five weeks. We packed up and left four times, " Ramos said. He and his partner brought Ramos' mother with them to New Orleans. " We persuaded her that New Orleans would not get hit by a hurricane, " he said. " My mother said to me this morning if she hears another hurricane coming, she's going back to Miami. " Their warehouse apartment, built in 1912, survived the storm with almost no damage. " The walls are one-foot thick, " Porter said. Evanston native Diane Chaine survived the storm with her 8-month-old daughter Kendra, and Kendra's father. They holed up in the French Quarter after deciding not to stay at a shelter the city set up at the Superdome. " I should have packed up and gone to the Greyhound station, " said Chaine, who moved to New Orleans seven years ago and works as a secretary for the Court of Two Sisters restaurant in the Quarter. " The climate, the food, the architecture drew me in, " she said. But Chaine said one hurricane like Katrina is enough. She plans to come home to Chicago. " I used to be afraid of snow up there, but this is crazy, " she said. Until she leaves, Chaine said, she will try to help the less fortunate. " We're not hurt. We don't even have a cut. Now I am worried about those people on those roofs, " she said. http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-hurrside31.html a blinding flash hotter than the sun dead bodies lie across the path the radiation colors the air finishing one by one Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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