In Jesus name I pray: I see a violent evil black wind in the seas headed for the land. I see this wind will wreck a whole lot of havoc where it passes. It is preparing itself. I see this wind crashing houses, cars and coming fast. I see this wind breaking nature and violently passing by and headed to the north. Fast and Pray for this country. Fast and Pray that God will save His people. I see trees over houses, I see its an array of disaster. Pray and may God protect His loved ones.
On 17th November 2010, CNN reports that rescue crews went door to door early Monday morning to check on people injured or trapped after severe storms/heavy winds blew through parts of Baltimore, Maryland, damaging cars, blowing roofs off buildings and plunging about 20,000 customers in darkness. Several people came to a command post the fire department set up to report injuries, but none were hospitalized, said Kevin Clark, director of communications for the Baltimore Office of Emergency Management. With the area without electricity, rescue crews were having trouble determine how much damage the storm caused. Several buildings lost their roof, Clark said. Debris littered the streets and trees lay uprooted, he said. Residents reported a small tornado but the National Weather Service did not confirm a touchdown, Clark said.
TORNADOES IN MISSISIPI AND MID-ATLANTIC STATES:
A system that was pushing ferocious storm cells in a track from Mississippi to the mid-Atlantic states brought reports of tornado sightings and delays at several large airports on Wednesday.
TORNADOES IN NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA:
Tornadoes had been reported Wednesday in North Carolina, and Maryland, the National Weather Service said, though it had not yet confirmed the sightings. Tornado watches were in effect Wednesday afternoon in arc extending from Mississippi to New Jersey. A pair of apparent tornadoes had been spotted in eastern Virginia's Hanover County on Wednesday night, dispatch supervisor Nancy Langley told CNN.
IN ORANGE COUNTY TORNADOES DAMAGE A CHURCH:
Local authorities have not received reports of injuries or calls for rescue, but fire crews and EMS workers are combing the area for victims, she said. In northern North Carolina's Orange County, an eyewitness saw a tornado damage a church and reported downed trees and power lines, the National Weather Service said.
IN HENRICO COUNTY POWER LINES AND FLIGHTS DELAYED:
In Henrico County in southeastern Virginia, a dispatcher said that trees and power lines were felled Wednesday and that there was a widespread power outage. Flights heading into Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport were delayed an average of more than three hours, the Federal Aviation Administration said Wednesday evening. Planes into New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport were delayed an average of two hours and 39 minutes, according to the FAA.
Similar and shorter delays also were reported at Chicago O'Hare International Airport; Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, New York's LaGuardia Airport, Philadelphia International Airport, and Newark International Airport.
TWISTER & TORNADOES IN TEXAS:
At least one tornado ripped through northeast Texas Sunday evening, destroying homes, turning over vehicles and knocking train cars off tracks, local authorities said. A tornado struck Rice Texas at 5:30 p.m., Navarro County Chief Deputy Mike Cox said. The twister destroyed three homes, damaged at least two more, turned over an 18-wheeler truck onto a passenger car and knocked cars from a freight train off their tracks, he said. It also caused extensive damage to Rice Elementary School.
Four people were transported to the hospital with minor injuries, Cox said. In addition to "significant damage" from a tornado moving through Navarro County, witnesses have also spotted possible tornados in other parts of northeast Texas, the National Weather Service said. Betty Montgomery of the Lone Oak Fire Department said callers had reported a debris cloud and structural damage to homes, but authorities had not confirmed whether a tornado had touched down.
At least one home in Lone Oak was destroyed, Red Cross spokeswoman Anita Foster said.
Joey Romero, 24, said he and his girlfriend rode out the storm in the freezer of a Sonic restaurant at a service station in Rice. They were driving from Dallas to Houston when it started to hail, he said. "We pulled over under some covering. Hail the size of golf balls started falling. Then, we saw hail the size of baseballs," he said. Someone screamed when they saw the tornado forming behind Sonic, he said. The wind roared and the station lost power. "The first few seconds it was all sort of surreal. I couldn't really believe it was happening...We all walked back in the freezer. It was cold in there and there wasn't light and people were starting to cry," he said.
The hail shattered car windows, Romero said. The second-year medical student at University of Texas, Houston, said he helped treat injuries. A police officer told him a truck and a car had flipped over on the highway. After several hours inside Sonic, Romero was on the road back to Houston late Sunday."Even now, we can see the storm off to the east of us. The sky is pitch black," he said.
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