return this weekend to texas as well as to louisiana. jim? sara murray at the white house, thanks very much. tonight thousands of storm evacuees are finding shelter in cities well outside of houston, dallas, fort worth as well as san antonio. we are joined by texas congressman joaquin castro. he is in san antonio. i know your city has done a great deal to help take in the many evacuees from the houston area. how many are you seeing and how many more do you expect to see? well, over the course of the last several days we ve seen thousands, many of them were in the first wave that got hit from corpus christi and the gulf coast, victoria. so, they came over to san antonio. the challenge for a lot of people living in houston is that the storm originally was not supposed to go there. in fact, san antonio was supposed to get hit. and for the most part, we ve been spared a lot of or hardly any damage. and, so, a lot of folks in houston didn t evacuate and
terror attack. the second terror attack in a couple of months in london. plus last week s attack in manchester. london is an internet international city that has a lot of tours. finding shelter is a concern tonight. you can imagine how fearful people are. some reporters from scott determining how the fear is resulted in some people raising their hands and putting hands overhead as they walk out of the terrorist areas. they don t know why they put their hands on the heads just they thought it was the proper thing to do. having fear of what might on full. we have more from washington. the state department has advice for americans who are in london at this hour. in situations like these that one of the main concerns is to identify any americans that could be in that area. on these situations and in
couple hours. the rain was heavier about 45 minutes ago. the wind has sustained pretty strong and we expect tropical storm winds to happen this afternoon. the heavier stuff will come in later this evening but the big concern is those residents who have chosen not to evacuate. we had to change our position. we were on palm beach. we had to move to the safety of our crew where local residents are finding shelter. those that have evacuated have shown up here. the hotel is saying they have enough power in case power goes out. they have a generator and backup plans. the hope is that others who have decided to ride the storm out have their own backup plans but we sue eerie and ominous things yesterday. walking through the grocery stores there was no more bread, no more water, generators had been scooped up. nervous faces and families going through those aisles. those that decided to stick out the storm might be in for a bad day. brianna? this is not your run-of-the-mill storm that people h
it says that the potential for another u.s. budget battle among other things is a main source of concern. so this stock market in record territory could all be but a mirage. nonetheless, flat on wall street today, hitting record highs earlier this morning. jon: the unemployment situation in this country is a huge drag. huge problem. jon: thanks very much. good to see you. jenna: now to the fox news weather alert and a cleanup underway in several states following a devastating tornado outbreak that left eight people dead. illinois governor pat quinn says his biggest concern now is finding shelter for hundreds in his state whose homes were heavily damaged or destroyed. meteorologist maria molina joins us now. we can t forget we re a week away from thanksgiving with all the folks that lost their homes. a little unusual for all of this activity to be occuring this time of year. it is just heartbreaking. eight people were killed, well over 100 people were injured and some people now w
could take months. it could take several months before people can first of all remove all the debris and then start that process of rebuilding their homes. we do know that people are finding shelter in many different places. and it will be a long-term sort of situation because they can t go back into those neighborhoods. it s going to take some time. george howell reporting from moore. george, thanks very much. we re going to check in with george throughout the day. he s at the city hall. of the ten kids killed in the tornado, seven were inside the plaza towers elementary school. the school took a district hit. the tragedy s raised questions about why that school and others did not have tornado shelters. pamela brown joins us with more on that part of the story. there is a new push and a lot of folks around here would like to see more schools with tornado shelters. yeah, we re seeing a big push from politicians, parents, residents here not only in moore but throughout the state. a