
In Focus
Hurricane Florence: Residents prepare for storm's punch
Florence could batter parts of coastal North and South Carolina with hurricane conditions for 24 hours or more.

Heavy surf pounds the Avalon Fishing Pier in Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina, on Sept. 13.
Hurricane Florence could bring peak wind gusts at over 100 mph and substantial storm surges of up to 13 feet.




Marge Brown, 65, says goodbye to her father, George Brown, 90, before he is evacuated from a healthcare home in Morehead City, North Carolina.
"I'd like to stay and see what happens. I'm 90 plus," said Brown, a WWII veteran who says he's survived a plane crash and severe burns from a laboratory fire where he once worked.
Evacuate or stay? For nursing homes in storm's path, the decision isn't easy








Mark Lewis, left, conservator, and Alisa Reynolds, associate registrar, secure the painting "The Shoppers" by William James Glackens at the Chrysler Museum of Art on Sept. 11 in Norfolk, Virginia.
As Hurricane Florence approached, staff members pulled priceless paintings off the walls near windows and skylights. Later, the entrance to the museum will be sandbagged.





Kevin Orth loads sandbags into cars on Milford Street as he helps residents prepare on Sept. 10 in Charleston, South Carolina.