BIRMINGHAM, Ala.(AP)
A line of severe storms swept across the Southeast on Thursday,
damaging homes and businesses in at least four states. No injuries
were reported.
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 damaged, and an
apparent tornado blews cars off the road in North Carolina.
In Alabama, at least 15 school systems released students early,
while others held students late as squalls passed. Winds blew a
piece of metal roofing off Hamilton High School, about 90 miles
northwest of Birmingham.
"For 10 minutes, it was pretty good wind with lightning and
thunder and rain blowing sideways," said Todd Page, who works
at a car dealership in Hamilton.
There were no confirmed reports of tornadoes in Alabama but
winds gusting up to 60 mph flipped a mobile home, said George
Grabryan, emergency management director in Lauderdale County. A
house and a building in the rural county were also damaged.
In Tupelo, Miss., an apparent tornado wrecked a furniture store
where William Felks and Allan Jackson had to brace themselves
during the storm.
"Me and Allan hid behind a door, and I was holding on to
his belt as tight as I could. Then in seconds it stopped,"
Felks told the Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal. "It took
less than a minute to mess this whole building up. Man, I was
scared."
A home improvement store and a farm supply retailer near Tupelo
were also damaged, said Paul Harkins, Lee County's director of
emergency communications. "There were power lines and trees
down around it and a car was lifted off the ground and pushed into
a tree," Harkins said.
In North Carolina, the National Weather Service reported that
cars were blown off Interstate 40 near Greensboro late Thursday
from what police called a tornado. It wasn't immediately clear
if there were injuries.
A house was damaged in Clemmons, but it wasn't clear what
caused the damage. Portions of north-central North Carolina were
under a tornado watch into early Friday morning.
The same weather system struck Oklahoma a day earlier.
Severe weather experts there picked through debris and damage
Thursday to determine whether tornadoes touched down after severe
storms moved through the state, toppling trees and knocking out
power to thousands of people.
A tornado reported near the southern Oklahoma town of Paoli
apparently picked up a mobile home off the ground with a woman and
her son inside, said Garvin County Emergency Management Director
Buck Pearson.
The woman, Cindy Ward, suffered some broken toes and was
bruised, but the boy was not hurt. Ward managed to get her son into
an interior closet just before the storm hit the home.
"There was no shaking, no rattling, no sound like a freight
train," Ward told the Pauls Valley Daily Democrat. "It
wasn't a calm before the storm. It just pickled it up and
slammed it down. The only noise we heard was 'kaboom' when
the house landed."
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Associated Press writers Sean Murphy in Oklahoma City and Chris
Talbott in Jackson, Miss., contributed to this report.
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