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Bush Tours Hurricane Areas, Two Former Presidents Seek Aid
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Large-scale evacuations from New Orleans have been completed, federal
officials are urging those still left in city to leave, while
continuing to search for those who may need to be rescued





President Bush hugs a little girl at the Bethany World Prayer Center,
in Baton Rouge, now a shelter for victims of Hurricane Katrina

President Bush has gone on another inspection tour of areas devastated
by Hurricane Katrina.  With the death toll still climbing, thousands
of rescue and relief workers have gone to the region to help the
survivors. 

Large-scale evacuations from New Orleans have been completed, and
federal officials are urging those still in the city to leave.  At the
same time, authorities continue to search for any remaining survivors
who may be trapped in buildings.

New Orleans Deputy Police Chief Warren Riley says law enforcement
authorities are making more progress in the city, as the flood waters
recede.

"Obviously, the first three days, we focused on rescues, because of
the thousands of people that were stranded in houses, in attics and
tree limbs that were surrounded by water," Mr. Riley says. "We have
gotten more into a law enforcement mode now.  We are targeting
looters.  We are targeting people who want to create mayhem in the
city." 

Officials say they expect the final death toll to be in the
thousands.  Bodies are everywhere in the city, floating in canals,
abandoned on highways and hidden in attics.

President Bush toured hurricane-ravaged areas again Monday, meeting
with state and local officials to discuss relief efforts. This is his
second such visit since last week's storm.

In Louisiana, he said the first mission is to save lives.  In
Mississippi, he emphasized his government's commitment to the region.

"I understand the damage.  I understand the devastation," Mr. Bush
says.  "I understand the destruction.  I understand how long it's
going to take.  And we're with you.  That's what I want you to know."

Meantime, the U.S. government has been sending troops to the Gulf
Coast to help with relief efforts and maintain order. 

The head of the U.S. Northern Command, Admiral Thomas Keating says,
"We've got almost 13,000 active duty forces in theater right now.  In
theater, that's the Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi area, we call our
joint operations area."

He added that there are already 38,000 National Guard troops in the
area, as well as more than 7,000 Army and Marine troops on their way.







Former Presidents Bill Clinton, left, and George H.W. Bush during a
press conference in Houston

Meanwhile, former presidents George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton are
spearheading a private effort to raise money for hurricane recovery.
The two former presidents are heading up a fund that will provide
money directly to the governors of the three most-affected states -
Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi.

President Bush asked the two men to help with the task. 

President Clinton said the two former presidents were inspired by
their efforts helping raise money for tsunami relief in Asia earlier
this year.

"One of the reasons George and I agreed to do this is because we saw
something halfway around the world in the tsunami, and all of a
sudden, here it was in our backyard.  And a lot of the people have a
lot in common," Mr. Clinton says.

New Orleans residents, among others, have sharply criticized the Bush
administration for responding too slowly to the disaster.  Former
President Bush said he thinks the current president, his son, is tough
enough to, in his words, "take it."

"What do I think as a father?  I don't like it," former President Bush
says. "But what do you think as one who was president, and I expect
President Clinton feels the same way?  It goes with the territory."







President Bush with Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco, left, talks with
victims of Hurricane Katrina at the Bethany World Prayer Center in
Baton Rouge, La.

At the center of the disaster are the tens-of-thousands of people who
have lost everything.  Psychologist Phil McGraw, who hosts a
television talk show, told NBC's "Today" show, many of the evacuees he
talked to in Houston lack a sense of direction.

"So often, we've seen disasters where people have had to pull back for
as much as a couple of weeks, and then go back in, do the clean up and
start over," Mr. McGraw says.  "These people know they may never go
home.  In fact, in their town hall meeting in Houston yesterday,
probably 80 percent of the participants said they had no intention of
ever returning to the New Orleans area, because they know there's just
nothing left for them.  They're aimless at this point and don't know
where they're headed."

The American Red Cross is caring for 135,000 survivors in more than
470 shelters.  The relief agency is also trying to help reunite
thousands of hurricane victims, who were split up from or lost contact
with their friends or family.