HURRICANE GEORGES The Michigan Daily - Wednesday. September 30, 1998 - 7 OGimme shelter ..- _ , tw « slowly fades away I dfi PASCAGOULA, Miss. (AP) - The whirlwind that was Georges began to disappear from the weather map yesterday, but its story was still being written: Rains drenched Alabama and the Florida Panhandle, and evacuees slowly returned to find out what happened to their homes. "I had waterfront property, water- back property, waterside property, watereverywhere property," said 43- year-old postal worker Jayne Howell, who found her brick ranch house in Pascagoula awash in sewage, sea- weed and branches. Downgraded to just a tropical depression, Georges and its down- pours moved northeast, into Georgia and South Carolina. The hurricane wind that ripped through the coast with gusts as high - as 174 mph had dropped to 35 mph. President Clinton declared the entire storm-damaged swath a disas- ter area and planned to visit as soon as recovery operations allowed. Power remained out to about 400,000 customers from Louisiana to Florida. Rivers continued to overflow. The Pascagoula River at Merrill rose from 3.4 feet on Monday to 20.8 feet yesterday and was expected to swell to more than 26.5 feet later in the day, nearly 5 feet over flood stage. Along the river, sheriff's boats had to rescue residents trapped by the PHOTO storm. rts Some parts of the Alabama coast had received 2 1/2 feet of rain in addition to damaging wind. At the Dog River south of Mobile, where more than 100 boats capsized or were damaged, crews raked broken wood and other debris from the water. After killing more than 370 people in the Caribbean, Georges was blamed for four deaths in the United States: an elderly woman who died in the heat while being evacuated from New Orleans; two people who were killed in Louisiana and Florida in APnPHOTO With friends and relatives encouraging her, Jodie Hamilton runs across the partially sub- mnerged walkway of their home in the Pecan Subdivision of Pascagoula, Miss yesterday. AP P Stranded residents wait to be picked up by boat, as they got a view of Perdido Bay from both sides of their home. Residei on the island became cut off in the wake of bay flooding from Hurricane Georges yesterday HuneneGeorges neOar~l1y hits Michigan missionarie s fires caused by candles; and one per- son who died in an accident on a slick highway near Crestview, Fla. Along the Gulf Coast, it will be awhile before the damage is added up. Some places suffered greatly, but overall, Georges was not a catastro- phe. Still, the effects of the enormous, slow-moving storm were immense. "We just serve such a mighty God. He's so awesome," said Betty Murray, who owns Pas-Point Glass in Pascagoula, where workers were fil- ing a 40-by-100-foot patch of ropf that had blown a half-mile away, "Can you hear the wind, and nut know who sends it? He can sta and he can stop it." Most interstates reopened, though there was some flooding. Traffic lights were down and military police directed traffic. Utility crews worked to restore power. FLINT, Mich. (AP) - A mission from a Michigan church had a close call when Hurricane Georges hit the Caribbean island nation of Haiti, killing at least 147 people: Members hope to return at a calmer time. Erma Welch of Flint had considered the Caribbean *Sea, which stood just 20 feet from her hotel, the most beautiful part of her stay in Haiti. But then came Georges "That ni t and the tropical visit, made with four other area resi- dents to start a Bible school in Haiti, was not quite the m nster" same. "That night, the ocean turned into a monster, and * he was shakin' and shakin' the hotel," Welch, told The Flint Journal for a story yesterday. Welch returned home Saturday. She was part of the last team of theology teachers sent by Flint Faith Tech International Bible School to start a chapter in a small town about 15 miles from Port-au-Prince, Haiti's capital. In Haiti since Sept. 10, the group of five teachers wit- nessed Hurricane Georges on Sept. 22, most of them from the beach-side hotel. A sixth person - a minister who had left the United States on July 1 to supervise the project - was staying in the church where classes were i taught. Despite Hurricane Georges, which killed at least 147 people and left 60 others missing in Haiti, the group graduated its class of 25 students Friday before flying home. The hurricane killed at least 372 people in all. Living through the hurricane was an unexpected part of the trip. Because English-language news broadcasts were unavailable, the group had little idea of what was com- ing its way. Patricia Crews of Flint said the group watched as waves grew high enough to reach the third story of the hotel. "They would hit the cement barrier like a giant fist," Crews said. "Four minutes later, it would do it again, Dominican Republic left in shambles after Georges gpasses over and over again." The giant waves started about 5 r Je Ocan p.m. About 8 p.m., Crews said, the storm reached a point "where you felt like it was going to get violent." About 2 a.m., the electricity in the group's hotel flickered out, leaving occupants to listen to the roar of the - Erma Welch storm. Flint resident "You couldn't see it, but you could hear it," Crews said. "It sounded like five or six freight trains coming at you" Bill Bennett of Flint heard the full force of the storm from his small room in a church - including "the biggest boom I ever heard" about 3 a.m. Finally, at 5:30 a.m., he opened the door to look out- side. Mud covered everything in sight, he said. Not a trace remained of the 5 1/2-foot-tall, 30-foot-long con- crete wall that was supposed to protect the church. "It was just gone," Bennett said. "There was no rubble - it was just gone. Where I was sleeping was about eight feet from that wall." Crews said she never worried about her safety. But she said her family in Flint was frantic. Having no informa- tion about her welfare, her husband contacted the American Red Cross to request a search. The church group finally reached a working phone Thursday night to contact family members. Crews said she plans to return to Haiti. "Hopefully, in a calmer time," she said. SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic - Just a few hours before Hurricane Georges blasted this Caribbean nation last week, the country's civil defense chief appeared on televi- sion to reassure an anxious nation. As the storm approached, newly appointed Civil Defense Director Elpidio Baez discounted scientific projections that it was likely to rip through the heart of the nation and its capital, Santo Domingo. Sophisticated computers at the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami that were predicting just such a route, Baez said, were just plain wrong. They had misread Georges' course before, he explained. Forty minutes later, a trembling Baez again appeared on tele- vision and gave the location of the government's emergency hurricane shelters for the first time since the storm began bear- ing down on the island: "I want to tell all the inhabitants of Santo Domingo to immediately evacuate their homes and go to the shelters.... Take cover." But for many, it was too late. Millions of Dominicans-and their government - were sit- ting ducks for a monstrous storm that wrought such havoc on this already impoverished nation that Dominican President Leonel Fernandez announced Monday night his government must now renegotiate its foreign debt to finance even the basics of life for its 8 million citizens in the months ahead. A full week after Georges demolished bridges, wiped out entire barrios, ripped apart hotels and decimated crops, nearly 300,000 Dominicans remain homeless. At least 213 people are confirmed dead, and nearly 100 are still missing - most of whom disappeared when the government opened a dam that was about to burst without first evacuating the villages down- river, relief officials said. It was a disaster, many here say, that was compounded by the government's response to it. Cardinal Nicolas de Jesus Lopez Rodriguez, the prelate of this predominantly Catholic nation, spoke for most Dominicans when he indicated to reporters last weekend that the government could-- and should- have bet- ter prepared its citizens for their worst natural disaster in 20 years. "I believe that lives can always be saved when precautions are taken,"he said."And, in this case, it would have been preferable, with more time, to take people to shelters, where they could have been properly cared for." The Dominican toll is the highest in the Caribbean, where a total of 370 deaths --- most of the remainder in neighboring Haiti - now are blamed on the storm. By contrast, only five' died in Puerto Rico, which was devastated the day before. And just three were killed in Cuba, where authorities evacuated- 200,000 people in advance of the storm. "Today, we are much poorer even than we were before Dominican economist Felix Calvo concluded in an essay pub- lished today. "It is as ifa massive napalm attack had leveled he country." "Now we must discover a new Dominican Republic." r Added Paolo Oberti, the U.N. representative here:"Thisds- aster is definitely going to worsen the situation. The poor-will become miserable, and the miserable will become sub-miser able" Economist Calvo estimated the total cost of the storm at near- ly 40 percent of the country's $15 billion gross national product: The government's damage estimate is much lower: $1.2 billion. But even the official figures testify to the potet- tial long-term impact of the storm. At least 10 percent of the hotel rooms in the republic's vital tourism sector were damaged. So were most factories and power plants in a countfy where chronic electricity shortages have triggered strikes and social unrest even before the storm. In President Fernandez's nationally televised speech Monday night - apparently timed to pre-empt the first inning of the Chicago Cubs' playoff game featuring Dominican national hero Sammy Sosa - he unveiled' plans to raise $650 million to rebuild the country. Much of the money, he said, will be diverted from the gov- ernment's foreign debt repayments after it reschedules them. Tens of millions more will be deducted from the paychecks of the government's highest-paid civil servants - officials Who earn $12,000 a year or more. And Fernandez said still more will come from foreign aid. A delegation of U.S. Cabinet officials and legislators is scheduled to arrive today to assess those longer-term needs. Another U.S. congressional group here last Sunday indicated Congress may appropriate as much as $30 million, for Dominican relief in its upcoming budget. * DON'T WORRY IF YOU MISSED THE MASS MEETINGS. WE STILL HAVE SPOTS OPEN ON OUR STAFF. 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