The New York Times
Issue:3976 26th March 2021
Hurricane Sally
Mr. Shah is a shopkeeper of Shah's butcher store. Hurricane Sally
swooped in and broke Mr. Shah's glass window. Mr. Shah explained to
us how the shop flooded and all the meat and all the other foods
were ruined. He explained how all the shops in the same street
were flooded too.
Mrs. Franks described her fear with us. She described how while she was driving home in her car the wind was slightly tilting the car until the wind flipped it upside down. Luckily enough she was not badly injured. She only had just a few bruises and scratches. She had to walk home through hurricane which was not easy at all.
Mr. Parks the headmaster of the school told this newspaper
that when he heard the sirens of the hurricane he opened the gym of
the school so that he would give roof to the homeless people and to
those people who ended up with wrecked houses.
The New York Times spoke to Sally Downs the nurse that works in the state hospital. Sally told us, "I am tired from having double shifts. There are too many injured people. Lots of doctors and nurses are falling apart with tiredness."
Hurricane Sally left Florida in a disasterous way. It left people severely
injured and the toll of dead people is still on the rise. More updates in the
next issue.
Hurricane Sally started to move offshore on Friday, leaving a trail of destruction across Florida. More than 400,000 people in Florida were still without power. Flood and wind damage reshaped the scenery along Florida. Homes that were not half-submerged but were shredded, leaving them standing like cutaway diagrams.