Ga. Storms Kill 2 After Atlanta Twister
ATLANTA (AP) - Tens of thousands of basketball fans at two
arenas were perfectly safe, officials insisted Saturday, even
though the crowds apparently weren't warned about an approaching
tornado - one that would ravage skyscrapers and injure dozens.
About 18,000 people were watching the Southeastern Conference
men's tournament Friday night at the Georgia Dome when its fabric
roof began rippling, the catwalks above the court started swaying
and chunks of insulation rained onto the players.
The National Weather Service issued a tornado warning about
eight minutes before the twister hit, but it wasn't clear when or
if that alert was passed on to fans, said Katy Pando, a dome
spokeswoman. Fans claimed they never heard or saw one.
Another 16,000 fans watching an NBA game at Philips Arena, in
the same complex as the dome, weren't told of the weather, either.
The arena apparently sustained little damage, Atlanta Hawks
spokesman Arthur Triche said.
The tornado, with wind up to 130 mph, cut a 6-mile path through
downtown Atlanta, smashing hundreds of windows in and around the
CNN Center, blowing furniture and luggage out of hotel rooms and
crumbling part of an apartment building. At least 27 people were
hurt, though no injuries was believed to be life-threatening, and
no injuries were reported at the arenas.
``I thought it was a tornado or a terrorist attack,'' said
Mississippi State guard Ben Hansbrough, whose team beat Alabama
69-67 after an hourlong delay under a roof with at least two
visible tears.
``Ironically, the guy behind me got a phone call saying there
was a tornado warning,'' fan Lisa Lynn said. ``And in two seconds,
we heard the noise and things started to shake. It was creepy.''
Elsewhere in Georgia on Saturday, storms killed one person in
Polk County and another in Floyd County, both near the Alabama
line, emergency management officials said.
Crews hauled broken glass and furniture out of streets in
downtown Atlanta, where all events scheduled for Saturday were
canceled, including the St. Patrick's Day parade.
Local and state officials were reluctant to weigh in on whether
public venues and businesses are responsible for alerting patrons
of imminent weather danger. Georgia Insurance and Safety Fire
Commissioner John Oxendine said his office would look into whether
people at the Georgia Dome got a timely tornado warning, though he
considered the question premature.
Dome officials were monitoring the weather throughout the
evening, Pando said.
Several calls to Philips Arena on Saturday were not immediately
returned.
``There wasn't much time to tell anybody anything'' before the
storm hit, said Catherine Woodling, a spokeswoman for Mayor Shirley
Franklin.
A warning from the weather service gave residents in nearby
neighborhoods about eight minutes to seek cover. Guests at the Omni
Hotel were quickly ushered into hallways, away from glass and
flying furniture, and the only injuries were ``some cuts and
scrapes and no major issues as far as we know,'' hotel spokesman
Mike Sullivan said.
``It was crazy. There was a lot of windows breaking and stuff
falling,'' said Terrence Evans, a valet who was about to park a car
at the hotel when the twister hit.
The 1,000-room hotel was fully booked, though many guests were
out at the arenas when the storm hit.
More thunderstorms headed toward the city Saturday. ``We're
bracing for another round of whatever mother nature throws at us,''
said Lisa Janak of the state emergency management agency.
Oxendine estimated damage from Friday night's storm at $150
million to $200 million, most of it at the Georgia World Congress
Center, a state convention facility near the CNN Center and the
Georgia Dome.
CNN said its headquarters building suffered ceiling damage that
allowed water to pour into the atrium, and windows were shattered
in the CNN.com newsroom and the company's library.
A loft apartment building had severe damage to one corner and
appeared to have major roof damage. Property manager Darlys Walker
said there was one minor injury. A vacant building also collapsed,
with no apparent injuries, Fire Capt. Bill May said.
Grady Memorial Hospital, the city's large public hospital where
many of the injured were taken, had broken windows but was
operating as usual.
Melody and Brad Sorrells were home in their living room with
their two children when the storm hit, and the huge pine in their
front yard crash into their east Atlanta house.
``I saw it falling and we ran into the back bedrooms in the
closet,'' Melody Sorrels said. ``I feel sick.''
The tornado was the first on record in downtown Atlanta, said
Vaughn Smith, another weather service meteorologist. The last
tornado to strike inside the city was in 1975, and it hit the
governor's mansion north of downtown, he said.
Associated Press writers Dorie Turner and Daniel Yee and AP
Sports Writer Paul Newberry contributed to this report.
03/15/08 17:23
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