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"I was levitated and flew 15 feet over there to the back wall," he said. "The only reason I wasn't killed was the wall was still there. After I hit it, it collapsed." A steel fuel storage tank, about 10 feet long, was uprooted by the twister and rolled into the store, coming to rest against a freezer. Hiding on the other side of the freezer was Sullivan's wife. Across the street, the home of the parents of Houston Astros pitcher Roy Oswalt was reduced to rubble by the tornado. Oswalt himself was driving a bucket loader Sunday, trying to knock down a damaged tree on the property. The tornado went on to cut about a 10-mile path through the county, hacking off the tops of pine trees about eight feet above the ground before slamming into three mobile homes. Alphonzo Evans, 38, had been sleeping in one of the homes when he heard the wind come up. He had planned to take cover in a hole outside, but it was too late. He shut the door. "By the time I turned around, the wind came up and I went flying," Evans said. In Alabama, authorities attributed two deaths to severe weather. A 50-year-old woman was killed when she slipped and hit her head as she headed to a storm shelter Saturday, and a 32-year-old man was killed when the car he was riding in struck a tree that had blown down across a road. More than 30 other injuries were reported in the state, none serious. Alabama Gov. Bob Riley planned to visit Albertville on Monday in northern Alabama to look at storm damage in the area along with local legislators and Albertville Mayor Lindsey Lyons. South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford planned to tour Darlington County, where officials say at least three people were hurt. In Mississippi, Gov. Barbour estimated at least 100 houses in Yazoo County alone had severe damage but said his estimate could rise. Hundreds were without electricity while others were left homeless, sifting through what little remained of their homes and bulldozing the rest. Volunteers poured into the hardest-hit areas with four-wheelers, chain saws and heavy equipment to chop up downed trees and haul away the wreckage as the cleanup began. Despite the five deaths in Choctaw County, sheriff's Deputy Johnny Ellington said it could have been worse if the tornado chose a different path. "We lucked out because there are just not that many houses through here," Ellington said. "If it hadn't just been pine forests, it would have been really bad."
[Associated
Press;
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