Deadly storms pound the South and head east

Two people died in storms that generated about 30 tornadoes and caused widespread damage in the South. A blizzard warning stretches from Texas to Maine. FULL STORY
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    Southern storms to continue after damaging tornadoes

    By CNN Staff
    updated 6:05 AM EST, Wed December 26, 2012
    Watch this video

    Deadly holiday storms strike the South

    STORY HIGHLIGHTS
    • NEW: Blizzard warnings are up from Arkansas to Ohio
    • More than 190,000 people without power in several states
    • Man describes seeing tornado on the side of the road in Alabama
    • Preliminary reports show close to 30 tornadoes reported
    (CNN) -- The powerful storms that pounded the South will continue Wednesday, a day after tornadoes ripped through several states.
    The dangerous thunderstorms that packed house-shaking winds and left two people dead on Christmas were expected to move eastward Wednesday hitting Georgia, the Carolinas, Florida and much of the Eastern seaboard, the National Weather Service said.
    Wednesday's expected severe storms are "capable of producing more widespread damaging wind gusts and have the potential for tornadoes," the weather service said.
    Many in the South know all too well about tornadoes, as a slew of them turned Christmas into a fright fest.
    Watch tornado strike Mobile, Alabama
    Funnel cloud sweeps over Louisiana lake
    Tornado blows transformer in Alabama
    Freezing rain triggers 21-vehicle wreck
    David Saraceno spotted something ominous forming Tuesday as he sped down I-165 in Mobile County in Alabama. He was traveling with his wife and 1-year-old daughter to visit family when he saw the twister on the side of the road. His wife videotaped it.
    "It looked like it was about two miles away from us," said Saraceno. "I put the pedal to the floor to try and get out of harm's way, but it seemed to be getting closer and closer."
    Panicked, Saraceno got off the interstate near the town of Chickasaw, drove in a different direction and then turned around to go home. He couldn't go see family in that weather.
    "We drove right back into a path of destruction," said Saraceno. "It appeared that the tornado turned and came over the interstate about three minutes away from where we would have been if I did not get off the interstate. We saw a roof that must have blown off a house. Cars were pulled to the side of the road. There was a lady whose windows were shattered. It was too close for comfort."
    Saraceno was not alone. There were close to 30 tornadoes reported on Christmas, according to preliminary reports by the National Weather Service.
    The severe storms left more than 190,000 people in the dark Tuesday, power companies said.
    At one point nearly 21,500 customers in Mobile were without power, Alabama Power said on its Twitter feed Tuesday. Statewide, there were 26,600 homes and business in the dark. More than 161,000 customers in Arkansas and about 4,000 in Louisiana were without power late Tuesday, officials said.
    A 25-year-old man in Texas was killed after a tree fell on his pickup as he was driving on the northwest side of Houston, Harris County Sheriff's Deputy Thomas Gilliland said. Officials suspected high winds knocked the tree down.
    A 28-year-old woman from Woodward, Oklahoma, was killed in an accident on a snow-covered two-lane highway.
    Amanda Goodman was ejected from the SUV she was riding in after the driver lost control and struck an oncoming big rig, the Oklahoma Highway Patrol said. Goodman died at the scene while the driver and a 4-year-old passenger were taken to a hospital. They were listed in stable condition. The truck driver was not injured.
    The storms also left a trail of damage in Mississippi.
    Gov. Phil Bryant declared a state of emergency for several counties battered by the storm, a declaration that helps get support to victims.
    "At least eight Mississippi counties have reported damages and some injures," Bryant said.
    And those who would not have to brave severe thunderstorms would deal with heavy snow and bone-chilling cold Wednesday.
    The National Weather Service issued blizzard or winter storm warnings stretching from the Deep South to the New England area.
    There were blizzard warnings for parts of Arkansas, Kentucky, Ohio, Illinois, Indiana and Tennessee, the weather service said.
    Ohio was expected to get hit hard with as much as 15 inches of snow coating parts of the northern county of Erie.
    CNN's Cristy Lenz, Sarah Dillingham, Carma Hassan, Mariano Castillo, Joe Sutton and Steve Brusk contributed to this report. COPY http://edition.cnn.com/

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