VOLUME 3 ISSUE 29
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2018
Inside Passing on a hunting tradition, Sports
DRONEBASE VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS
In this Monday afternoon, Sept. 10, 2018 photo waves crash along Avon, N.C., in the Outer Banks ahead of Hurricane Florence. Hurricane Florence churned Tuesday, Sept. 11, toward the Eastern Seaboard as a storm of “staggering” size, forcing a million people to evacuate the coast.
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NEWS BRIEFING
Nation readies to help after Florence Los Angeles Southern California firefighters and swift water rescue teams from Tennessee left for a staging area in Virginia as Hurricane Florence takes aim at the North and South Carolina. The task forces from the Los Angeles area are specialists in urban search and swift-water rescue. Vermont Emergency Management is also sending one of the state’s rescue teams at the request of the N.C. Division of Emergency Management. That team will be staged in Raleigh for 10 days to help with any emergency evacuations from dangerous flooding.
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JOURNaL ELEVATE THE CONVERSATION
Tree falls on house in Greensboro, kills woman inside Greensboro A man says a tree fell on his Greensboro home and killed his wife. On Sunday, 30-yearold Erin Beebe was killed while she and her husband slept in their bedroom. Her husband Charlie Beebe tells WGHP-TV he heard a crash and realized branches surrounded him. Beebe says he tried to save his wife after wiggling his arms free. He says that before jumping out a second-story to escape he reached for his wife’s hand but it was limp. Police spokesman Ron Glenn tells the WinstonSalem Journal that Beebe died at the scene. He says what caused the tree to fall is unclear.
Amazon to sell freshcut Christmas trees online New York The online retailer says that the trees, garland and wreaths will start selling in November and will arrive bound in a box. A 7-foot Frasier Fir from North Carolina will go for around $115. However, the National Christmas Tree Association says that only about 1 to 2 percent of the 27 million real Christmas trees purchased last year were bought online, mostly from grower’s own sites, and they’re skeptical that consumers will give up the experience of hand-picking their favorite tree.
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS | ASSOCIATED PRESS
Vice President Mike Pence, center, speaks during the September 11th Pentagon Memorial Observance at the Pentagon on the 17th anniversary of the September 11th attacks, Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2018.
9/11 memories are as clear as the sky was that day While an impending hurricane darkened East Coast skies, mourners remember a clear, blue Tuesday morning 17 years ago By Donna King North State Journal RALEIGH — Gen. Hugh Shelton’s memories of Sept. 11, 2001, are vivid and firsthand. Originally from Tarboro, and a graduate of NC State, Shelton was the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on that day. He lost friends and colleagues at the Pentagon, but also made history as one of the initial architects of the resulting global war on terror and “Operation Enduring Freedom.” “It was a horrific day,” said Shelton in an interview on WPTF radio. “I had taken off that day to
“I hear you, the rest of the world hears you, and the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon.” President George W. Bush, Sept. 14, 2001 go to a NATO meeting overseas in Europe. I was about two hours out when I got the call that a civilian plane had crashed into the World Trade Center. That caused the hair on the back of my neck to rise because I knew the weather up and down the coast was great. “I told the Air Force pilot to turn around and go back and he See 9/11, page A2
‘Big and vicious’ Hurricane Florence closes in on Carolinas The impending hurricane is likely to reach historic proportions as schools cancel class and residents batten down the hatches
By Jonathan Drew The Associated Press WILMINGTON — Motorists streamed inland on highways converted into one-way routes Tuesday as more than 1 million people in three states were ordered to get out of the way of Hurricane Florence, a hair-raising storm taking dead aim at the Carolinas with 130 mph winds and potentially ruinous rains. Florence was expected to blow ashore late Thursday or early Friday, then slow down and wring itself out for days, unloading 1 to 2½ feet of rain that could cause flooding well inland and wreak environmental havoc by washing over industrial waste sites and hog farms. Forecasters and politicians pleaded with the public to take the warnings seriously and minced no words in describing the threat. “This storm is a monster. It’s big and it’s vicious. It is an extremely, dangerous, life-threatening, historic hurricane,” North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper said. “The waves and the wind this storm may bring is nothing like you’ve ever seen,” he added. “Even if you’ve ridden out storms before, this one is different. Don’t bet your life on riding out a monster.” North and South Carolina and Virginia ordered mass evacuations along the coast. But getting out of harm’s way could prove difficult. Florence is so wide that a life-threatening storm surge was being pushed 300 miles ahead of its eye, and so rainy that a swath of states from South Carolina to Ohio and Pennsylvania could get deluged. People across the region rushed to buy bottled water and other supplies, board up their homes or get out of town. A line of heavy traffic moved away from the coast on Interstate 40, the main route between the port city of Wilmington and inland Raleigh, the few vehicle heading the other way only carried building supplies. Between the two cities, about two hours apart, the traffic flowed smoothly in places and became gridlocked in others because of fender-benders. Tuesday afternoon, the storm was southeast of Cape Fear, moving at 17 mph. It was a potentially catastrophic Category 4 storm but was expected to keep drawing energy from the warm water and intensify to near Category 5, which means winds of 157 mph or higher. “This one really scares me,” National Hurricane Center Director Ken Graham said. See FLORENCE, page A3
INSIDE In Jones and Blount the NC DOI cracks down on insurance fraud Jones & Blount
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“This one really scares me.” National Hurricane Center Director Ken Graham