RALEIGH, N.C.(AP)
Amber Parker watched on television as the storm near her home
grew into a tornado threat. Then, when the roaring wind outside
suddenly fell silent, she grabbed her two toddlers and rushed to
get under the stairwell.
"We just got inside the door frame when I was pushed inside
... then everything went," said Parker, tears welling in her
eyes as she described the chaotic scene during a brief discussion
with reporters near her demolished home in central North
Carolina.
Neighbors helped the 36-year-old Parker and her two children _ a
2-year-old and a 3-year-old _ out of the ruins that used to be
their home, and the three survived with barely a scratch.
"We're blessed," she said.
The powerful storm system that swept through the Southeast and
the mid-Atlantic states late Thursday and into early Friday
produced two tornadoes. In North Carolina, the storm left one
person dead, several injured and scores of homes and businesses
damaged.
Donald Ray Needham, 51, of Jackson Springs, died when his truck
overturned in a parking lot just west of Greensboro, authorities
said. They said three others were injured, one when the storm
knocked down a wall at a distributing business, and two others when
their vehicles flipped off the road.
In Greensboro, some homes and businesses on the outskirts of
town were damaged, and two FedEx airplanes were pitched off the
tarmac and into an airport construction site. No one was injured at
the airport.
And while officials scoured through wreckage when daylight
arrived Friday, they found no new injuries or fatalities.
"I thought we were going to come back to something a lot
worse than what we have out there," said David Douglas,
assistant chief for the Greensboro Fire Department. "It could
have been much worse than it was."
The National Weather Service reported preliminary indications
that the Greensboro tornado clocked in as a category EF2 on the
Enhanced Fujita scale, meaning the funnel was packing winds between
111 and 135 mph.
Julia Jarema, a spokeswoman with the North Carolina Department
of Crime Control and Public Safety, said the storm blew three
tractor-trailers off Interstate 40. Michelle Brock, assistant
coordinator for Forsyth County emergency management, said
firefighters rescued five people because of flooding in
Winston-Salem. She said high water had displaced about 10
people.
Earlier Thursday, an apparent tornado wrecked a shopping area in
Mississippi and strong winds flipped a mobile home in Alabama. In
south-central Tennessee, at least four homes and a few barns were
reported damaged.
The storm made its way to Virginia and Maryland late Thursday
and early Friday, leaving between 75 and 100 homes in northeastern
Virginia damaged, about 30 of them severely, said Stafford County
spokeswoman Cathy Riddle. She said two people were injured; one of
them was taken to a hospital and later released. The National
Weather Service confirmed later Friday that a tornado was
responsible.
Dozens of residents were taken to a temporary shelter at a
middle school.
Weather service officials confirmed Friday that a tornado also
touched down Thursday night in Franklin and Henry counties in
western Virginia. The EF1 twister, with winds of 86 to 95 mph,
downed trees and damaged homes in a mile-long path, officials
said.
Portions of northern and central Virginia and southern Maryland
remained under a flood warning Friday morning.
___
Associated Press writers Chris Talbott in Jackson, Miss., and
Jack Jones in Columbia, S.C., contributed to this report.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.