• ‘Our whole town is just gone’

    By Ron Mott, NBC News Correspondent

    Smithville, Mississippi will never be the same. It can't be. Not when at least 13 people here in this community of about 900 died Wednesday after a powerful tornado ripped through town, destroying nearly everything in its path.

    After surveying the damage from the tornados across the Southeast on Thursday, the National Weather Service upgraded its estimate of the storm's fury to a rare EF-5 rating. The winds at the twister’s peak are estimated to have reached 205 miles an hour – which rates it as an EF-5 on the Enhanced Fujita Scale. That is the highest level for tornado damage and the first EF-5 in Mississippi since March 3, 1966.

    Phillip Lockhart was in his recently opened pizzeria with two of his employees when he looked out the window and saw the funnel cloud headed right at them from a few football fields away.

    Thomas Wells / AP

    An aerial of a single block of Smithville Ms., on Thursday shows how much destruction the small town took on Wednesday leaving at least 13 dead and the town destroyed.

    Thinking there was no chance to survive inside the restaurant, they jumped in his truck and took off as fast as they could, with debris swirling all around them, slamming into the pickup.

    In about 10 seconds, it was all over. And, in many respects, so was Smithville. The old Smithville.

    "Never been so scared before," Lockhart said. "Our whole town is just gone."

    City Hall. Gone. The police department. Obliterated. Grocery store, funeral home, scores of houses. Mountains of rubble.

    The clean-up here will be extensive. Rebuilding will be a significant challenge, but one that residents are business owners like Lockhart say they're ready to tackle.

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  • Twitterverse declares birther issue 'worst episode of Celebrity Apprentice ever'

    By Elizabeth Chuck, msnbc.com

    Turns out Donald Trump can’t use his infamous “You’re fired” tagline on President Obama.

    “Obama’s long form birth certificate released so that America can move on to real issues that matter to our future,” tweeted @whitehouse on Tuesday morning with a link

    But the twitterverse wasn’t ready to move on, even after the “Apprentice” host and potential Republican presidential candidate got the document that he had been asking for proof of Obama’s citizenship. “This is the worst episode of Celebrity Apprentice ever,” one twitterer complainedAnother lamented, “If only baby Obama had had an iPhone 4; with its location tracking, we could easily put all this birther debate to rest.” Tweeted N.Y. Congressman @RepWeiner, “Trump now demands proof Hawaii is part of USA.”

    Politics can be a hairy issue, and today’s news was no exception. “At this point I think it’s only fair that Trump give us some proof that his hair is real,” proposed ESPN host Trey Wingo. Tweeted others, “Now that the ‘Birthers’ have been silenced, the ‘Combers’ are out to get the truth about Donald Trump’s hair,”  and, “I need to see the birth certificate for that hair of yours ‘cause you can’t tell me that thing was born in this country!’”

    Obama got his share of teasing, too. One Republican blogger pointed out, “President Obama this morning: We’ve got better stuff to do.’ Then he boarded a plane for Chicago and Oprah taping. No joke.’” “So stoked,” tweeted someone else. “Just got the new Obama Birth Certificate 7’’ White House GOP tour edition.” Added another, “Turns out he actually was born. Who’da thunk it.”

    One commenter on msnbc.com’s Tumblr blog summarized the release of Obama’s birth certificate with a Seinfeld reference: “It’s real and it’s spectacular.”

    For more real and spectacular reactions from the blogosphere, click here. 

  • Family flies flag found in twister's rubble

    Kerry Sanders / NBC News

    This flag was found in the wreckage of 90-year-old Helen White's destroyed home. It had been given to her late husband in recognition of his service during World War II. Her grandchildren hung the flag after they found it to show their spirit of survival.

    By Kerry Sanders NBC News Correspondent

    COLERAIN, N.C. – The family of 90-year-old Helen White picked through what remained of her once-proud home Monday when they discovered a couple of hidden treasures: an American flag given to White's late husband in recognition for his service during World War II and an old photo.


    Here in rural Colerain, where peanut farms dot the landscape, it’s hard to see Helen's former home, which was built almost 100 years ago and was flattened over the weekend by North Carolina’s devastating twisters.

    Kerry Sanders

    Morgan Barfield found a photo of her grandmother Helen White, 90, in the wreckage of her home in Colerain, N.C.

    The tornado that touched down here, estimated to have had 165-mile-per-hour winds, stole just about everything.

    It took her life.

    It also took the lives of her daughter and son-in-law.

    But in the debris that is scattered for miles, Helen White's granddaughter Morgan Barfield found a treasure – a photo of her grandmother in a frame.  The glass is smashed, the picture was weathered by the downpour that accompanied the storm, but its value brought Morgan to tears.

    "It's all I have to hold now.  She's gone."

    Morgan found one other priceless keepsake: the flag her long-since-gone grandfather was given in recognition of his service during World War II.

    Together, Morgan and her sister Madison carefully opened the flag from its folded triangle shape.

    They hoisted the flag on a tree in the front yard.

    The same tree these college students once climbed as children.

    The flag is blowing in the wind now, "a symbol that we will survive this," said Madison.

    Kerry Sanders / NBC News

    Destruction left by the twister that touched down in Colerain, N.C.


    *Correction: This article originally misidentified the family's flag as being a "World War II era flag." Although, as many comments have pointed out, the flag has too many stars to be from World War II. Rather, it was given to the girls' grandfather in recognition of his service during the war. Thank you for your vigilance.

  • FDR: A date that will live in our memory

    National Archives / Getty Images file

    President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jan. 30, 1882, to April 12, 1945.

    NEW YORK -- The day Franklin Roosevelt died, America stood still.

    It was April 12, 1945 -- and the shock was universal.

    Here in New York people went to churches and prayed. The news of Roosevelt’s death was announced in theaters, schools and on the radio. The news spread in crowded subway and railroad platforms, through Times Square, in bars and restaurants.

    The Times wrote the next day: "In home communities -- Brooklyn, the Bronx, Harlem, Queens -- women left their dinners on the stoves to stand in neighborhood groups, passing the word, or discussing it with bated breath. Groups, small at first and ever-growing, assembled in silence wherever a shopkeeper had turned his radio speaker toward the street."

    I was not in New York. I was on a small ship, the USS PC 470, anchored off a small island thousands of miles away in the South Pacific. Our radio operator picked up the news. We had a crew of 60 enlisted men and five officers. I was the junior officer, in charge of communications.

    I rushed to the captain’s cabin with the news. "Captain," I asked. "Do you think we should have a memorial service?" He glowered at me: "I’m not a minister, and I don’t think I want to have a memorial service."


     

    Read the original story from WNBC

    I should explain that the skipper was a staunch Republican. I knew that because it came out during the three meals the five of us officers had every day in the tiny wardroom. We were divided: three Republicans against, I guess, two Democrats. And some of the Republicans harbored deep feelings against Roosevelt, the man who had been elected to four consecutive terms, two more than any man in American history. If they referred to him at all, it might be as "that man in the White House."

    To some of us on the other side FDR was like a god. The youngsters in the crew -- myself included -- couldn’t remember anyone else being in the White House. The three forbidden topics in Navy wardrooms were: politics, religion and women. But, somehow, the politics seeped out -- even though Franklin Roosevelt was our commander in chief, he had millions of detractors in addition to millions who loved him dearly.                

    Our ship was getting repaired. We had suffered damage during the battle for Leyte Gulf in the Philippines and the subsequent battle of Lingayen Gulf.

    I was only a kid, a lowly ensign of 21. I didn’t like the fact that our skipper was going to let this day pass without doing something about it.

    So I went into the communications shack, grabbed a typewriter -- they were manual in those days -- and typed out what I considered an "editorial." (Today we’d call it a blog!) It was titled simply: "FDR." And I was carried away. I wrote about how this man was one of the greatest leaders in American history, how he had rescued us after the great Depression and how he had led us to the brink of victory in World War II.

    I even hearkened back to what I had read in high school, in Shakespeare’s "Julius Caesar" the funeral oration by Mark Antony for Caesar. "When comes such another?!"

    Then I took my one-page essay and posted it with scotch tape on the stack in the stern. Soon many members of the crew gathered there to read what I wrote. In a sense I was mutinously conducting my own silent service for FDR. I knew, from conversations I had with many in the crew, that they were as upset as I was. We didn’t need an official service. We were mourning in our own way.

    My mother wrote to me from New York. She said that her father had observed that Moses wasn’t allowed to see the Promised Land either, even after leading the Israelites for 40 years through the desert. God let him go up on a mountain and view the land and then he died. For my grandfather, FDR had almost reached victory, but God just didn’t allow him to see it.

    Yank Magazine, read by soldiers and sailors throughout the world, reported: "Nowhere was grief so open as in the poorest neighborhoods of New York. In Old St. Patrick’s in the heart of the Italian district on the lower east side, bowed, shabby figures came and went and, by the day after the president died, hundreds of candles burned in front of the altar. "Never," said a priest, "have so many candles burned in this church."

    "A woman clasped her 8-year-old son and said: ‘Not in my lifetime or in yours will we again see such a man.’ "

    April, 1945, was quite a month -- three major leaders of World War II died. After FDR, on the 12th, Mussolini was executed April 28th and Hitler committed suicide on the 30th.

    What a month. The war was rapidly drawing to an end in Europe. In the Pacific hundreds of ships, including mine, were being readied for the invasion of the Japanese home islands. We didn’t know that such preparations would prove unnecessary, when, after the atomic bombs were dropped on Horoshima and Nagasaki, Japan sued for peace.

    But the death of FDR stirred us like almost nothing else. FDR’s last words, as he suffered a fatal cerebral hemorrhage, were: "I have a terrific headache."

    In Washington, Harry Truman, who immediately succeeded Roosevelt as President, told how the news of FDR’s death hit him. "I felt like the moon, the stars and all the planets had fallen on me." He told reporters: "Boys, if you ever pray, pray for me now."

    Sixty-six years have passed since the day FDR died. The world has moved on and so has the nation. Yet the sadness of that moment endures in history.

    Gabe Pressman is senior correspondent at WNBC in New York City.