you were recruited, you go into the army. the second world war, in combat, you were there. you re in a high risk. a lot of ducking, i can tell you. a lot of ducking. you were clearing up landmines and things. yes, i was in normandy and they taught us about booby traps. don t pull the chain, look in the water closet, see if there is water and not dynamite. pull the chain, you could go to heaven. teller mines 45 degree angles with your bayonet, as soon as you hear, ting, tink, tink, yell, sergeant! it was big and it could disarm it and it could blow up a tank so you could imagine what it would do to a jew from brooklyn. so anyway, when anything like that was captured, we would rush in and strip it of all kinds of booby traps and minds.
don t pull the chain, look in the water closet, see if there is water and not dynamite. pull the chain, you could go to heaven. mines 45 degree angles with your bayonet, as soon as you hear, ting, tink, tink, yell sergeant! it was big and he could disarm it and it could blow up a tent, so you could imagine what it would do to a jew from brooklyn. so when anything like that was captured, we would rush in and strip it of all kinds of booby traps and minds. that s quite. it scary. it s a scary, tough job. and you ve still got this ambition in you to be in show business. oh, yeah. your career in comedy started in the mountains. would you please. ?
taught us about booby traps. don t pull the chain, look in the water closet, see if there is water and not dynamite. pull the chain, you could go to heaven. mines 45 degree angles with your bayonet, as soon as you hear, ting, tink, tink, yell sergeant! it was big and it could disarm it and it could blow up a tank so you could imagine what it would do to a jew from brooklyn. so when anything like that was captured, we would rush in and strip it of all kinds of booby traps and minds. that s quite. it scary. it s a scary, tough job. and you ve still got this ambition in you to be in show business. oh, yeah. your career in comedy started in the mountains. would you please. ? other people like to
we have our reporters covering every angle of this across the region. want to start with sam brock. 24 hours ago you and i were talking about hundreds of people trapped, needing to be rescued. please tell me they re safe. reporter: largely from what we can gather they are, stephanie, amazingly. you said the name of the town correctly. laplace, la feet, two areas that saw so many rescues going on. we got mixed signals whether there needs to be hundreds of folks rescued, then we saw it with our own eyes that there were high water vehicles coming through communities. this spot, the big issue is when. the power lines are strewn in the yard. this is a microcosm of what you ll see on highway 61. there are power poles turned like this, 45 degree angles, barely hovering above the
cell service and power restored since yesterday is helping to bring numbers down. ferocity of floods look like something you may see in a tornado or hurricane aftermath, but it is not. check out the foundation. a house that used to be on the foundation is there, it has been twirled around. if you follow the line of sight and continue this direction, you see what looks like one or two homes compressed together. that s three different houses with two cars chris crossed in the side of it, 45 degree angles. takes about a foot of water to move cars more than that, move large suvs. we have seen them coming up and down the street, that s what neighbors are reporting. all that is going on. hundreds of homes, uninhabitable, according to humphreys county. there have been 21 confirmed deaths so far. the vast majority of those in waverly where i am now in humphreys county, and we know there are at least amongst those two seven month old twins