Hurricane Katrina makes one man's final journey difficult to complete

Evelyn Turner cries alongside the body of her
common-law husband, Xavier Bowie, after he died
in New Orleans, Tuesday. Bowie, who had lung cancer,
died when he ran out of oxygen on Tuesday afternoon.
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NEW ORLEANS - When Xavier Bowie died in a flooded neighborhood, his common-law wife did the only thing she could think to do. She wrapped his body in a sheet, laid him on a makeshift bier of two-by-fours and, with a little help, floated him down to the main road.
For more than an hour, Evelyn Turner waited along Rampart Street outside the French Quarter, her husband’s body resting on the grassy median as car after car passed, their wakes threatening to wash over the corpse. “This is ridiculous,” Turner, 54, said as she sobbed into a dirty washcloth.
Bowie, 57, a truck driver who had been with Turner for 16 years, had advanced lung cancer and could not be easily moved. When Turner could find no one to take them out of the city, she decided to stay home and hope the storm would spare them. “I’ve got electric and stuff right now,” Turner told herself. “I can keep going. I’ve got oxygen. I can keep going.”
But Hurricane Katrina left her neighborhood under several feet of water. By Tuesday, with no phone and only a small tank of oxygen left, Turner slogged out into the streets for help. By the time she got back, Bowie was dead.
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Link:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9142413/Another one for the "Why didn't they just evacuate?" files.
So sad...
:cry: