"At one point Friday, the evacuation was interrupted briefly when
school buses pulled up so some 700 guests and employees from the Hyatt
Hotel could move to the head of the evacuation line — much to the
amazement of those who had been crammed in the Superdome since last
Sunday.

"How does this work? They (are) clean, they are dry, they get out
ahead of us?" exclaimed Howard Blue, 22, who tried to get in their
line. The National Guard blocked him as other guardsmen helped the
well-dressed guests with their luggage."

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050903/ap_on_re_us/katrina_superdome_hk1

Superdome Evacuations Temporarily Halted

By MARY FOSTER, Associated Press Writer Sat Sep 3, 9:56 AM ET

NEW ORLEANS - Buses taking Hurricane Katrina victims far from the
squalor of the Superdome stopped rolling early Saturday. As many as
5,000 people remained in the stadium and could be there until Sunday,
according to the Texas Air National Guard.

Officials had hoped to evacuate the last of the crowd before dawn
Saturday. Guard members said they were told only that the buses had
stopped coming and to shut down the area where the vehicles were being
loaded.

"We were rolling," Capt. Jean Clark said. "If the buses had kept
coming, we would have this whole place cleaned out already or pretty
close to it."

Those left behind early Saturday were orderly, sitting down after
hearing news that evacuations were temporarily stalled.

Guard members reported that the massive evacuation operation for the
most part had gone smoothly Friday, coming after days of uncertainty,
violence and despair.

Capt. John Pollard of the Texas Air Force National Guard said 20,000
people were in the dome when evacuation efforts began. That number
swelled as people poured into the Superdome because they believed it
was the best place to get a ride out of town.

He estimated Saturday morning that between 2,000 and 5,000 people were
left at the Superdome. But it remained a mystery why the buses stopped
coming to pick up refugees and shuttle them away.

Tina Miller, 47, had no shoes and cried with relief and exhaustion as
she left the Superdome and walked toward a bus. "I never thought I'd
make it. Oh, God, I thought I'd die in there. I've never been through
anything this awful."

The arena's second-story concourse looked like a dump, with more than
a foot of trash except in the occasional area where people were
working to keep things as tidy as possible.

Bathrooms had no lights, making people afraid to enter, and the stench
from backed-up toilets inside killed any inclination toward bravery.

"When we have to go to the bathroom we just get a box. That's all you
can do now," said Sandra Jones of eastern New Orleans.

Her newborn baby was running a fever, and all the small children in
her area had rashes, she said.

"This was the worst night of my life. We were really scared. We're
getting no help. I know the military police are trying. But they're
outnumbered," Jones said.

At one point Friday, the evacuation was interrupted briefly when
school buses pulled up so some 700 guests and employees from the Hyatt
Hotel could move to the head of the evacuation line — much to the
amazement of those who had been crammed in the Superdome since last
Sunday.

"How does this work? They (are) clean, they are dry, they get out
ahead of us?" exclaimed Howard Blue, 22, who tried to get in their
line. The National Guard blocked him as other guardsmen helped the
well-dressed guests with their luggage.

The 700 had been trapped in the hotel, near the Superdome, but
conditions were considerably cleaner, even without running water, than
the unsanitary crush inside the dome. The Hyatt was severely damaged
by the storm. Every pane of glass on the riverside wall was blown out.

Mayor Ray Nagin has used the hotel as a base since it sits across the
street from city hall, and there were reports the hotel was cleared
with priority to make room for police, firefighters and other officials.

Conditions in the Superdome remained unbearable even as the crowd
shrank after buses ferried thousands to Houston a day earlier. Much of
the medical staff that had been working in the "special needs" arena
had been evacuated.

Dr. Kenneth Stephens Sr., head of the medical operations, said he was
told they would be moved to help in other medical areas.

Those who wanted food were waiting in line for hours to get it, said
Becky Larue, of Des Moines, Iowa.

Larue and her husband arrived in the area last week for a vacation but
their hotel soon told them they had to leave and directed them to the
Superdome. No directions were provided, she said.

"I'm really scared. I think people are going into a survival mode. I
look for people to start injuring themselves just to get out of here,"
she said.

Larue said she was down to her last blood pressure pill and had no
idea of when they'll get out or where to get help.

James LeFlere, 56, was trying to remain optimistic.

"They're going to get us out of here. It's just hard to hang on at
this point," he said.

Janice Singleton, a worker at the Superdome, said she got stuck in the
stadium when the storm hit. She said she was robbed of everything she
had with her, including her shoes.

"They tore that dome apart," she said sadly. "They tore it down. They
taking everything out of there they can take."

Then she said, "I don't want to go to no Astrodome. I've been domed
almost to death."




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