HURRRICANE  KATRINA  LANDFALL August 29, 2005
NEW ORLEANS COVERED WITH FLOOD WATERS
AUGUST 30, 2005
LEVY BREAKS NEW ORLEANS
AUGUST 30, 2005
Floodwaters now block the Superdome, where some 20,000 refugees took shelter. Authorities  move them to Houston's Astrodome .  Cots are set up with food and water  August 31, 2005
BILOXI, MISSISSIPI
Carried by the waves
The hurricane carried this casino barge across Highway 90. The Missisippi Gulf Coast casinos all sat atop barges in the water.

Isle of Capri
The Isle of Capri Casino and Resort in Biloxi shows extensive damage. Hurricane Katrina picked up several Gulf Coast casinos and hurled them hundreds of yards inland.
Slots on the highway
Casino slot machines sit amid a tree and other debris on Highway 90 in Biloxi.
HELP ARRIVES
September 2, 2005
RESCUE THWARTED AT SUPERDOME AS HELICOPTERS FIRED ON BY SNIPERS
September 1, 2005
Troops help an injured woman at the convention center in New Orleans September 2, 2005
SUPERDOME EVACUATED Sept. 3, 2005
WAREHOUSES BURN Sept. 1, 20o5
TROOPS PUSH CROWDS BACK FOR CONTROL
PRESIDENT BUSH TOURS BILOXI
AERIAL VIEW OF HOMES UNDER WATER
EVENING FALLS ON NEW ORLEANS
AS RESIDENTS EVACUATE
August 28, 2005
Waiting game: Growing despair outside of the convention center in New Orleans
PRESIDENT BUSH TOURS AREA
SEPTEMBER 2, 2005
MAYOR ORDERS LOOTING CRACKDOWN
A FEW RESIDENTS RE-ENTER AREA Sept. 5, 2005
SUPERDOME EVACUATED Sept. 3, 2005
Updated: 7:38 p.m. ET Sept. 3, 2005
NEW ORLEANS - The last 300 refugees in the Superdome climbed aboard buses Saturday bound for new temporary shelter, leaving behind a darkened and stinking arena strewn with trash.

The sight of the last person — an elderly man wearing a Houston Rockets cap — prompted cheers from members of the Texas National Guard who were guarding the facility.

“I feel like I’ve been here 40 years,” said Louis Dalmas Sr., one of the last people out. “Any bus going anywhere — that’s all I want.

Inside and outside the Superdome — including the concourse around it and a 50-yard bridge that connects it to a shopping center — was a sea of trash up to 5 feet deep.

Evacuations of the last remaining refugees at the arena were halted before dawn Saturday as authorities diverted buses to help some 25,000 refugees at the New Orleans Convention Center, where officials said people had been waiting longer.

The Texas Air National Guard estimated that between 2,000 and 5,000 people remained at the Superdome early on Saturday amid a frightening scene of filth, violence and despair. Lt. Kevin Cowan of the state Office of Emergency Preparedness put the figure at 2,000, and said they had recently begun flocking there not for shelter, but to escape New Orleans after they heard buses were arriving.

Those left behind were orderly, sitting down after being told that evacuations were temporarily stalled. Cleanup crews raked away the piles of abandoned goods to discourage rats, and the scene was calm as the exhausted refugees patiently waited in five lines for their place on a bus.

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.”

RELIEF COMES TO NEW ORLEANS
Sept. 2, 2005
THOUSANDS BUSED AND AIR LIFTED FROM NEW ORLEANS  Sept. 4, 2005
NEW ORLEANS IS LIKE A THIRD WORLD
GULF PORT,  BILOXI MOVIE
Four-year-old Frances Gibson waits in a shopping cart while her mother collected supplies at a Red Cross shelter in D'Iberville, Miss., on Saturday Sept 10th.
ASSESSMENT OF SITUATION
Sept. 11, 2005
Support the Hurricane Katrina Relief Effort
Support the Hurricane Katrina Relief Effort
STORY OF SURVIVOR LIVING ON BOAT
HIT BY KATRINA