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WHIT PISTOL
We’re not sure of the exact details, but we think it's some kind of winterstorm Stand By Me.
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“This is a terrible tragedy, the worst thing that’s ever happened to us,” said Raleigh, North Carolina security guard Cindy Macon. “We’ve lost power and had to leave our home. The whole family’s been staying in a shelter and I can’t afford to miss work, but they’ve closed everything. We’re broke and destitute.”
“Hooray!” said Evansville, Indiana schoolboy Ricky Teegan. “Snow’s everywhere and they closed school! I hear they’re probably going to be closed tomorrow, too. This is the best thing that ever happened to us!”
1.2 million homes in the Carolinas were left without power, and power companies are projecting days will be needed to make repairs. Sledding and snowball fights were also rampant in the area, as well as other snowed-in areas throughout the United States.
“We were going to go ice skating at the lake, but the ice was too weak,” said Lakewood, Tennessee teen-ager Jamie Farnsworth. “No luck at all!”
“Our son was killed when his car broke through the guard rail and landed on the frozen lake,” said Naomi Marquette of Toquin, Ohio, through thick tears. “The police said he survived the crash, but… he broke through and drowned in the water. The ice was too weak.”
Greenville, South Carolina police chief Jim Walters said of the snowstorm, “Several houses in the area have lost power, and there have been at least twenty-five car wrecks at last count. But even worse, I hate to think of the impoverished and elderly people in town who can’t afford to heat their homes. Once the roads are cleared and everything starts back up like normal I imagine the calls to pick up frozen bodies will start pouring in.”
“It’s fantastic,” said Washington, D.C. college student Mitch Kursky. “I woke up at eight and just turned the radio on. School’s closed! I turned up the thermostat, wrapped myself up in the blanket, and went back to sleep.”
Initial snowfalls Tuesday and Wednesday covered much of the east coast, and though the snowfall ceased and the snow began to melt by Wednesday evening, extreme temperatures turned the melting snow into ice, creating even more road hazards and danger for travelers, as well as ice balls for snowball fights.
Echoing city officials across the country, Albertville, Illinois mayor Jean Harper advised residents, “Please stay at home if you can, if you are unessential at work or are sanctioned by employers. The storms may have lessened, but the roads are still extremely hazardous in some areas.”
“I’m so glad I have the day off,” said Caton, West Virginia middle school teacher Ned Murphy. “I’m looking forward to a nice, quiet day all to myself. A quick drive out to rent some videos ought to give me some entertainment. I think I’ll order some pizza, too. If they take longer than an hour to get it to me, I get it at half-price.”
the commune news is bursting at the seams today—looks like it wasn’t really a good idea to perform our own hernia surgery. Ivan Nacutchacokov is our foreign correspondent, and when we can’t endanger him with any overseas news we send him in to cover weather catastrophes and natural disasters.
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