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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=93TT0137>
<title>
July 12, 1993: Mississippi Rising
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
July 12, 1993 Reno:The Real Thing
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
DISASTERS, Page 36
Mississippi Rising
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Its waters swollen by weeks of rain, the Mississippi overflows
its banks and inundates five states
</p>
<p>By HOWARD G. CHUA-EOAN--With reporting by Elizabeth Taylor/Chicago
</p>
<p> No prophecies were uttered when it all began, when the wind
blew and the rain descended on the plains. No dire predictions
augured the disaster; no omens hinted at a catastrophe of epic
proportions. But for a month, the sky has fallen, bit by bit
and drop by drop, and the waters have gathered on the face of
the earth to flow into the river; and now it has risen up and
rolled onward like an ocean on the march, capturing farmland
and township, bridge and barge.
</p>
<p> The flood does not discriminate. Among its detritus are picnic
tables and automobiles, tree stumps and deer. At least two children.
Even the barges that usually command the waterway as they move
the river basin's produce to the rest of the world have been
rendered helpless. They are inert and tethered to a vanished
shore. The high waters have made the river unnavigable; there
is no longer enough clearance for large ships to pass under
the Mississippi's bridges.
</p>
<p> Crops are submerged under inches of water--and the entire
planting season may be ruined if the fall freeze comes early
or even on time. Bob Plathe, who farms 800 acres of soybean
and corn in Lu Verne, Iowa, echoes the region's lament. "There
aren't a lot of farmers around anymore who can take a hit like
this and survive. It's pretty hard for a third-generation farmer
to lose his grandpa's farm."
</p>
<p> The Governors of Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin, Illinois and Missouri,
the states along the 500 miles of the river most affected by
the swelling waters, have appealed for assistance. And last
week Agriculture Secretary Mike Espy made an inspection tour
of the region. In some places, there was no land to see. "Fields
look like mirrors," said Espy. In Washington the President said
help would have to come from Congress. "We don't have enough
money in the emergency discretionary fund to meet the rather
massive losses these farmers are facing."
</p>
<p> No one yet knows what the real numbers will be. There are many
being cast about, but they swirl like the river. The first estimates
run to $1.2 billion in flood damage. Barge owners claim $1 million
a day in lost business. Meanwhile, the river's height is nearing
the records set in 1965. In Davenport, Iowa, the waters were
7 ft. above flood level. In St. Louis they were 10 ft. above.
There the precipitation over the past six months has been more
than twice the amount in the same period in 1992. The past eight
months have been the wettest in Iowa in 121 years of record-keeping.
And the forecast calls for more rain.
</p>
<p> The river has its romance. Explorers once thought it could provide
a quick path to China. Walt Whitman said the Mediterranean was
its only rival in grandeur. T.S. Eliot, who was born in St.
Louis, was surely inspired by the Mississippi when he referred
to a river in his poem The Dry Salvages as "a big strong brown
god." But poetry isn't appropriate at times like these. "You
can't say the river is very charitable," says a tract attributed
to Mark Twain, perhaps the Mississippi's most famous observer.
"Except for the fact that the streets are quiet..., there's
really nothing good to say about a flood."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>