Tornadoes strike Tennessee, kill 10

Tornadoes battered the southeastern United States, killing 10 people in Tennessee in the second deadly tornado strike in the…

Tornadoes battered the southeastern United States, killing 10 people in Tennessee in the second deadly tornado strike in the state this week, officials said today.

The 10 confirmed deaths were in communities near Nashville, including seven fatalities northeast of the city in the outskirts of Gallatin in Sumner County, according to officials from the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency.

Randy Harris, of the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency, said the toll dropped from 11 to 10 because a missing person in Sumner County who had been thought to be dead was found to be alive.

What had been stately brick homes near Gallatin were heavily damaged, and rubble was strewn across upscale neighborhoods. Several people were rescued after being trapped in their cars by storm debris.

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In Warren County, where the other three deaths occurred, authorities said some mobile homes were destroyed and a truck overturned.

The winds knocked over walls at Volunteer State Community College in Gallatin where some 200 students huddled inside a building as the storm approached. Despite the heavy damage to the campus, the injuries were mostly minor cuts and bruises.

A series of tornadoes on Sunday across the central United States left 28 people dead, including 24 in west Tennessee where a huge twister obliterated homes in its path.

The National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center reported 42 tornadoes were sighted on Friday in Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Indiana and Kentucky. The violent weather grew out of a powerful storm system working its way across the nation.

Warning sirens sounded across central Tennessee on Friday as dark funnel clouds sent tornadoes spinning to the ground, accompanied by heavy rain and hail, some as big as baseballs, witnesses said.

"Cars were tossed around" in Nashville's suburbs, said Mayor Bill Purcell, although the city itself appeared to have been spared.

A tornado damaged a hospital in Ashland City, though no one was hurt. Patients had to be transferred to another facility.

A pylon carrying power lines collapsed on a home in Ashland City. The storm uprooted trees and downed power lines, knocking out power to thousands, authorities said.

Ironically, authorities were holding emergency response drills in Nashville to prepare in the event several disasters struck simultaneously. Earlier yesterday, volunteers simulated a plague outbreak, a skyscraper collapse and a bomb blast at a popular venue.

"We were all highly mobilized because of this exercise," Purcell said.