NameSilo

Tornados Kill Five

Spaceship Spaceship
Watch

dgridley

Top Member
Impact
614
Tornados Kill Twenty-Two

We went over to Best Buy in Joplin to hook up with a friend buying a laptop, then go to the movies after.

As we came out of Best Buy, I joked and said, "Oh, look! A tornado cloud!" because of the rain clouds. I had no idea how right I was however.

About 15 mins later, we bought our movie tickets and went to go in when the theater manager came up and said they were stopping the movies because there was a tornado warning. We had the option of either waiting in the theater til the warning had expired or refunding our tickets. We went out front to get a refund and all the cashiers had gone to the shelter so we decided to brave the rain (and high winds and HAIL) and head over to the Mall and the food court. (We got soaked and ended up eating at Garfield's. Bye-Bye, $40).

After we came out of the mall we decided to exchange our tickets for new ones for the next show. I exchanged mine and then discovered we'd misplaced the other tickets.

We drove back over to Garfield's and by then they'd found the tickets. Of course, it was too late to make the movie so we just got a refund.

A friend's son's trailer was blown off the supports in Granby by high winds and here's other news:

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—Tornadoes tore across the nation's heartland Saturday evening, killing at least five people, mangling buildings and trapping people in the rubble of their homes in areas still reeling from other recent bouts with severe weather.

At least four people died in southwestern Missouri after storms plowed through, the National Weather Service said. Three died after a tornado hit near Seneca in Newton County, said meteorologist Bill Davis.

A twister left a half-mile-wide path of destruction in Oklahoma, killing at least one person and devastating the northeastern towns of Picher, Peoria and Commerce, an official said.

"I know of one fatality at this time and I'm afraid there is going to be more. Things are looking pretty bad up here," said Picher Housing Authority Executive Director John Sparkman.

The Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management said the tornado caused an unspecified number of injuries and that first responders were working to free people trapped in the rubble.

In Arkansas, which has been beset by severe weather this year, a tornado damaged buildings and pulled down trees in Stuttgart. The Weather Service said that trees were down across a wide area of the southeast Arkansas city and that an elderly woman was reported trapped in her home.

BTW- Seneca is where I would normally go to the casino. :(
 
Last edited:
0
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
.US domains.US domains
There have been alot of tornados this year, it seems.

I'm currently watching a few dancing around St. Louis on and off the radar map on Wunderground
 
0
•••
What a saturday for you, you should have stayed at home, buying and selling domains!! :)

I am sorry for the families who lost someone/something....it looks like the GW is taking it's toll more and more....the tornado activity increases :(

Cheers,

Frank
 
0
•••
Ouch! That's a bad news. I saw it in news though.

Pity Them!
 
0
•••
I am sad about this events.
 
0
•••
Yeah, apparently they had baseball sized hail in Joplin while we were there tho the only hail we saw was dime sized.. 18 dead so far that they know of :(
 
0
•••
UPDATE:

SENECA, Mo. (AP) - Stunned survivors picked through the little that was left of their communities Sunday after tornadoes tore across the Plains and South, killing at least 22 people in three states and leaving behind a trail of destruction and stories of loss.
At least 15 people died in southwestern Missouri. In the fading mining town of Picher, Okla., at least six people were killed, and at least one person died in storms in Georgia.

Susan Roberts, 61, stared at the smashed remains of her classic 1985 Cadillac sitting on her living room floor—the only thing left of her Seneca home. A woman who had apparently sought shelter in the car died there, she said.

"That is what is tearing me up," Roberts said. She had warned the woman—who stopped to change a tire as Roberts and her 13-year-old grandson drove away from the rental house—to escape. The tornado hit just minutes later.

"I'm from Kansas. I grew up watching storms," she said as she walked through the debris. "If I didn't have my grandson with me, I probably wouldn't have left."

The same storm system earlier hit Oklahoma, where at least six people died and 150 people were injured in Picher.

The town, once a bustling mining center of 20,000 that dwindled to about 800 people as families fled lead pollution there, was a surreal scene of overturned cars, smashed homes and mattresses, and twisted metal high stuck in the canopy of trees.

"I swear I could see cars floating," said Herman Hernandez, 68. "And there was a roar, louder and louder."

Ed Keheley was headed to town to help out Saturday night when he heard a woman screaming. He looked over to see her hand reaching out of debris.

"She was sitting in the bathtub, she had curlers in her hair and she wanted out of there," said Keheley, who along with several others pulled her out.

The area is part of a Superfund site, and residents have been asked to take part in state and federal buyouts in recent years.

"From what I've been able to determine, that wouldn't have any bearing on whether a disaster declaration would come forth," said Federal Emergency Management Agency spokesman Earl Armstrong.

One storm victim's child was initially reported dead, but state emergency management spokeswoman Michelann Ooten later said the infant was actually alive at a Tulsa hospital.

As the system moved east on Sunday, one of at least six tornadoes in Georgia killed a person in Dublin, about 120 miles southeast of Atlanta, the National Weather Service said.

The small town of Kite was destroyed by the storm, said Caroline Pope, a spokeswoman for the Johnson County Sheriff's Department. Close to 1,000 people live in the community, she said.

"From what they're telling me, it's gone," she said from the dispatch center in the jail, which was operating on a generator because the power was out.

Storms later Sunday in North Carolina destroyed several mobile homes, but there was no word on injuries, said Patty McQuillan of the state police. And in South Carolina, a possible tornado damaged several homes, but no injuries were reported, said Charleston County spokeswoman Jennie Davis.

President Bush has talked with governors to express his condolences for the lives lost and to discuss needs for recovery, according to the White House.

"The federal government will be moving hard to help," Bush said.

In Missouri, the tornado hit the rural area about eight miles north of Seneca and continued east.

Jane Lant climbed over splintered wood to go through the mud-caked remains of her bridal shop.

"I just feel so awful, going through this rubble when they are out looking for bodies," she said as she motioned to the search dogs wandering the field behind her. An unidentified body lay under a blue tarp nearby.

Among the dead were five family members of her neighbor who had been going to a wedding when the tornado caught their vehicle in front of her store, she said.

Next door, her husband's feed store also lay in shambles. But one bright moment came Sunday when rescuers heard chirping from the mound and found a half-dozen chicks. They had rescued about 100 the night before.

Susie Stonner, spokeswoman for the state Emergency Management Agency, said it was unclear how many homes had been damaged. But she said officials in Newton County, which includes Seneca, had initial estimates of 50 homes damaged or destroyed there.

In storm-weary Arkansas, a tornado caused significant damage in Stuttgart, but no one was seriously injured, said Weather Service meteorologist Joe Goudsward.

Tornadoes killed 13 people in Arkansas on Feb. 5, and another seven were killed in an outbreak May 2. In between was freezing weather, persistent rain and river flooding that damaged homes and has slowed farmers in their planting.
 
0
•••
Im sorry to know these events.
we only have typhoons here not that strong but could wipe out an entire roof.
 
0
•••
Yeah, apparently this one wiped out one community (Kite) entirely.. the town of Picher didn't fare well either tho there really wasn't much there anyway as the town is being relocated due to lead pollution from mining.
 
0
•••
mother nature getting it's revenge.
 
0
•••
Dynadot — .com Registration $8.99Dynadot — .com Registration $8.99

We're social

Unstoppable Domains
Domain Recover
NameMaxi - Your Domain Has Buyers
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the page’s height.
Back