Yet, some totally destroyed. Youll see some trailers in front of the homes where people are working on them, but youre not going to see the vibrant community it once was. More from the tenth anniversary programming on hurricane katrina, including this entire hearing, and more from people on the ground about the storm. Tonight at 8 00 p. M. Eastern time on cspan. A group of reporters discuss their jobs covering the white house and the changing relationship between president ial administrations and the press corps. Correspondents peter baker of the New York Times, jim avila of abc news, ap Reporter Josh Lederman and Scott Horsley of npr, participate in this National Journal event. Everyone else is going back to work. I hope that doesnt make your competitive anxiety set in. This is a great group. Thank you all for coming and taking time out of your news day to be part of this conversation. This is, of course, our annual scholarship panel. We have our 17 scholarship winners sitting in the
Secret service, there was something going on. Now, those of us that are spend a lot of time at the white house know that lockdowns at the white house are relatively routine. Even fence jumpers happen, you know, three, four times a year. It is an event, but not a particularly remarkable one. But there seem to be there seem to be something a level of alarm that the secret service was displaying that suggested that this may have been a little bit something out of the ordinary. I headed into into the press area of the white house which is sort of at the entrance to the west wing for those of you who havent spent a lot of time there to try and figure out if i could figure out what was going on. And nobody had any they said no, everythings fine we would have gotten an email if something happened. If something happened. Right about that Moment Secret Service agents came stormed in from the west wing with these really large, like semiautomatic weapons that, you know, youve seen the secret Serv