A northeast Mississippi college district is restarting lessons on Tuesday after a March 24 twister broken the native highschool.
Lessons within the 1,500-student Amory district will resume, though officers say they will not run college buses Tuesday due to security hazards from roadside particles and heavy gear. The district says it would re-evaluate every day if it is protected to run buses.
The district says any scholar who cannot make it to high school Tuesday might be allowed to make up work.
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Amory Excessive Faculty college students held their promenade dance as scheduled on Saturday.
State officers reported 1,500 properties in Monroe County, which incorporates Amory, have been broken within the March 24 twister. The state counts 21 individuals who died in twisters that day, with injury stretching from Rolling Fork within the state’s Delta area northeastward by Amory and into Alabama. A 33-year-old man and his toddler daughter died in Wren, close to Amory, with different accidents reported in Monroe County.
The South Delta Faculty college district, which incorporates the severely broken city of Rolling Fork in Sharkey County, had not set a timeline final week on when it will reopen, WAPT-TV reported.