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Storm humor on signs in evacuated New Orleans

NEW ORLEANS
Mon Sep 1, 2008 5:09pm EDT
Chris Munster of New Orleans laughs as he stands outside a French Quarter bar in the rain in New Orleans, Louisiana September 1, 2008. REUTERS/Dave Martin

NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) - As Hurricane Gustav blew through nearly deserted streets in New Orleans on Monday, messages left by fleeing residents on the shuttered homes bore silent testimony to the city's sense of humor.

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Three years after Hurricane Katrina's waters flooded 80 percent of the city, a weaker Gustav appeared to have listened to the evacuees' tongue-in-cheek appeals for mercy.

"Be Good Gustav, Not Like That Bitch Katrina!," read a sign in the city's historic Garden District, while another on a shop front nearby said "New Orleans: Proud to Swim Home!"

"It's New Orleans' way of dealing with it. Just leave a message saying no matter what it does, we're still coming back," said Carol Silverton, a life-long resident.

National Guard troops and police had a strong presence on the streets to deter the kind of looting that followed Katrina, but owners also left fair warning.

"Don't try. I'm sleeping inside with a .357, a pit bull, and six big snakes!" read one message brushed on the plywood shutters of a rug shop close to the city center.

A shuttered home in the historic Garden District declared: "Two dawgs and one ex-husband. Beware!"

(Reporting by Tim Gaynor, editing by Mary Milliken)



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