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  • Recommended: In first public acknowledgement, Holder says 4 Americans died in US drone strikes
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  • 8
    hours
    ago

    Oklahoma at risk of more tornadoes as storms threaten much of US

    Dr. Scott M. Lieberman / AP

    A pair of lightning bolts are seen striking the ground as a line of thunderstorms passes over Tyler, Texas.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Thunderstorms -- bringing large hail and the chance of "a tornado or two" -- were expected to hit central and southwestern Oklahoma and parts of Texas Thursday as bad weather continued to hit the Plains.

    The National Weather Service published a map showing much of the U.S. had a “slight risk” of severe thunderstorms. The risk area extended from Texas and Florida to New England and the Great Lakes and from Texas up to Montana and Washington.

    “The activity is expected to be far less significant than the outbreak earlier this week, but hail could be particularly large in northwest Texas and western Oklahoma,” the weather service said.

    Slideshow: Tornadoes ravage Plains

    Tannen Maury / EPA

    A monster tornado hit Moore, Okla., Monday afternoon, leaving at least 24 dead.

    Launch slideshow

    Get more from weather.com

    In its outlook for Thursday posted at 1:52 a.m. ET, the weather service said that it expected that storms would develop early Thursday across northwestern Texas and into southwestern and central Oklahoma.

    “Primary threat will be very large hail. A tornado or two may also be possible especially during the early evening,” it added.

    In the Northeast, the weather service said “storms may undergo a gradual intensification” with a chance of “mainly isolated damaging wind.”

    “Any severe threat should diminish by early evening,” it said.

    Parts of Massachusetts were hit by severe storms on Wednesday evening that at one point prompted the weather service to issue a tornado warning. There were no reports of one touching down.

    Related:

    • Tornado birth: Mom endures labor as twister destroys hospital
    • Mother, infant who sought shelter in 7-Eleven among tornado victims identified
    • Oklahoma medical examiner: Cataloging the dead a 'horrific' task

    12 comments

    I hope there are no more tornados. The people in the midwest are stressed enough.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, oklahoma, tornado, featured, thunderstorms
  • 1
    day
    ago

    Chaos and courage as tornado wrecks elementary schools

    Sue Ogrocki / AP

    A child is pulled from the rubble of the Plaza Towers Elementary School in Moore, Okla., and passed along to rescuers on May 20.

    By Matthew DeLuca and Miranda Leitsinger, NBC News

    Rhonda Crosswhite, a sixth-grade math at Plaza Towers Elementary School in Moore, Okla., said the idea that school might be canceled Monday because of a looming tornado had never even crossed her mind.

    “We never think that’s an option,” Crosswhite told NBC News. “We live in Oklahoma. Tornadoes happen all the time.”

    The massive tornado that tore through Moore and killed 24 people bore down hard on Plaza Towers, where children sheltered inside from the roaring gusts, even as the building began to come apart around them.

    The seven students who were killed at Plaza Towers, a single-story cinder block building that was leveled in the storm, were found dead in a pool of water, authorities said. Another student died at Briarwood Elementary, less than two miles away.

    Richard Rowe / Reuters

    Rescue workers look through the rubble at Plaza Towers Elementary School in Moore, Okla., on May 21, after a devastating tornado ripped through the town on May 20.

    Tracy Stephan told NBC News that she went to Plaza Towers to pick up her daughter, who suffers from autism and epilepsy, before the tornado hit. She found the doors locked, with the tornado bearing down on her.

    “Eventually after five minutes after not getting through, I turned back home and I decided to put my faith and trust in God the school was going to be OK,” the mother of three told NBC News. She ran back to the school after the twister passed, and found her daughter outside in the parking lot with other kindergartners.

    “I grabbed her and wrapped her in my arms,” said Stephan.

    Levi Hendricks also sped toward the school as the tornado took aim, to pick up his eleven-year-old granddaughter Kimberly. The fourth-grader meanwhile was crouched with some of her classmates in a bathroom and then a hallway.

    After the tornado passed through, they found a way out of the demolished school.

    “She was already out,” when he arrived at the school, Hendricks said. “They had an organized area where all the kids gathered at.”

    Hendrick’s house, the back door of which once faced Plaza Towers’ busy playground, was flattened by the tornado.

    “The playground was always full of kids, always even after school the kids all went up there and hung out because the playground was such a nice place for them to play at,” Hendricks said. “It was a nice family school. People who went there, now their kids are going there.”

    Thirty-year-old working mother Janna Ketchie recounts the frantic journey into the heart of a tornado's destruction in order to find her three children, who were miles away at a daycare center. NBC News' Ann Curry reports.

    In the aftermath of the storm, the First Baptist Church of Moore, about three and half miles from Plaza Towers, became a gathering place for students from all of the city’s schools who had not found their guardians, church spokesman Joey Dean said.

    “We got word from the schools that they were going to bus all the kids who had not been picked up by their parents yet,” Dean said. Teachers and counselors shuttled over the students in their personal cars.

    “Most them went home, and those who didn’t have homes, they spent the night,” Dean said.

    Children in the city’s schools regularly prepare for the possibility of a tornado, district employees said.

    “We have tornado and fire drills periodically throughout the year,” said Noah Minton, a psychologist for the Moore Public School district.

    “They have drills, they have proposals they follow, but something this large, you get out of the way,” Minton said.

    U.S. Representative Tom Cole, a resident of Moore, said on MSNBC that Plaza Towers was one of the most structurally sound buildings in the area.

    “Yesterday our administrators, staff, teachers and students put our crisis plan into action immediately,” Moore Public Schools Superintendent Susan Pierce said at a press conference on Tuesday. “A tornado’s path is very unpredictable, but with little notice we implemented our tornado shelter procedures at every school site.”

    City disaster plans and school documents show that officials had thought through what to do in the event of a tornado. They also suggest, however, that officials did not anticipate a disaster of this scale.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    If a tornado came during the school day, teachers were instructed to have the students remain in their classrooms unless told to take them elsewhere, according to a cached version of the district’s 2012-2013 handbook for elementary school students and parents.

    “Sudden tornadoes are a common occurrence in Oklahoma, especially in the spring of the year. Each of our schools has a tornado procedure, and the faculty and students have storm drills periodically,” the handbook reads. “If severe weather is rapidly approaching at the time of dismissal, students will be held at the school until the danger is passed. If there is a tornado warning but no immediate danger, school will be dismissed on schedule.”

    The city of Moore does not have any community tornado shelters, according to the city’s department of emergency management website. The guidelines posted online also refer to the May 3, 1999 tornado outbreak that killed 36 others and injured 295 more.

    “If we are struck again, it will very likely be by a much less intense storm,” the website says. “Sheltering in your residence – assuming it is a reasonably well-constructed home – is the best option.”

    Hendricks said he thinks the instructions to shelter at Plaza Towers might have saved his granddaughter’s life.

    “I do know there was a lot of lost lives, but I think there would have been a lot more if they let them out,” Hendricks said.

    Related:

    • 'Always smiling': First tornado victim identified
    • 'The streets are just gone': Oklahoma rescue efforts continue
    • Officials: Grants to build 'safe rooms' delayed by red tape
    • 'The school just started coming apart': Trapped students had nowhere to hide
    • Full coverage of the Oklahoma tornado tragedy

     

    36 comments

    Good night little souls lost..with deepest sympathy to all, from across the Pacific...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: oklahoma, disaster, moore, tornado, public-schools, featured, tornado-shelters, briarwood, oklahoma-tornadoes, plaza-towers, susan-pierce
  • Updated
    2
    days
    ago

    More rough weather blanketed country on Tuesday

    Slideshow: Tornadoes ravage Plains

    Ed Zurga / EPA

    A monster tornado hit Moore, Okla., Monday afternoon, leaving at least 24 dead as the threat of further storms continues.

    Launch slideshow

    By Andrew Rafferty and Jason Cumming, NBC News

    Tornado warnings were in effect all over the map on Tuesday, with areas from the Midwest to the Northeast being advised to take precautions during what was another day of wild and severe weather.

    There were no significant tornado threats overnight, but parts of the country may be in danger of seeing twisters Wednesday afternoon, Weather Channel meteorologist Carl Parker said.  However it is unlikely that any potential tornadoes formed in the next 24 hours would be anywhere near the size of the one that ravaged Oklahoma on Monday, according to Parker.

    Ohio and areas near the Great Lakes are most at risk of damaging wind gusts, large hail and tornadoes on Wednesday, according to The Weather Channel.

    More from weather.com

    Michael Welch captures dramatic video of twister from a KFC parking lot in Newcastle, Oklahoma.

    It is better news than Tuesday, when 9.5 million people were in danger of experiencing "large and devastating" tornadoes as the deadly storm system moved east, forecasters warned.

    And it was not just contained to Tornado Alley. Areas of western Massachusetts and Connecticut as well as eastern New York State also were issued tornado warnings Tuesday evening.

    While many of these places have been experiencing strong winds and rain, none reported any twisters.

    Tornado watches were in effect for portions of Arkansas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Missouri and Tennessee until 11 p.m. ET. Eastern Texas, central Louisiana and Mississippi were issued a severe thunderstorm warning going into Wednesday morning.

    Severe rain and flooding caused havoc throughout the Dallas-Fort Worth area Tuesday afternoon. Area schools let out early and even the Dallas zoo closed to protect animals and visitors.

    Weather Channel forecaster Bill Karins said the upcoming holiday weekend may provide some relief.

    "An early look at Memorial Day weekend shows that most of the country should be quiet. The stormiest weather appears to be across the Plains and Midwest with scattered showers and thunderstorms," he said.

    • Full coverage of the Oklahoma tornadoes from NBC News
    • More news from weather.com

     

    This story was originally published on Wed May 22, 2013 12:03 AM EDT

    113 comments

    We need to regulate pollutants...global climate change is killing people! I assume you were trying to be cute, but there are things we can do. The other thing we need to ban are buildings without underground shelter in the hot zone.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, oklahoma, featured, dfw, updated, dallas-fort-worth, oklahoma-tornadoes, bill-karins
  • Updated
    2
    days
    ago

    'Deeply saddened': Pope, UK queen lead worldwide condolences after Oklahoma tornado

    Evening Standard

    London's Evening Standard newspaper reports on the tornado in Oklahoma.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Claudio Lavanga and Amna Nawaz, NBC News

    Pope Francis and Britain’s queen sent messages of condolence to those affected by the deadly Oklahoma tornado Tuesday, as news of the devastation spread around the world.

    "I am close to the families of all who died in the Oklahoma tornado, especially those who lost young children,” the pontiff posted on his Twitter feed. “Join me in praying for them."

    I am close to the families of all who died in the Oklahoma tornado, especially those who lost young children. Join me in praying for them.

    — Pope Francis (@Pontifex) May 21, 2013

    The U.S. Embassy in London thanked British well-wishers for their expressions of support.

    In a statement issued by Buckingham Palace officials, Queen Elizabeth said: "I was deeply saddened to hear of the loss of life and devastation caused by yesterday’s tornado in Oklahoma."

    HM: 'Our deepest sympathies go out to all those whose lives have been affected, as well as the American people' #Oklahoma #tornado

    — TheBritishMonarchy (@BritishMonarchy) May 21, 2013

    "Prince Philip joins me in offering our heartfelt condolences to the victims and their families at this difficult time. Our deepest sympathies go out to all those whose lives have been affected, as well as the American people," she added.

    Canada's foreign minister John Baird said he was "shocked and saddened" at the devastation.

    "Canada stands with those affected, ready to assist," he added.

    Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement that the government and people of the country were “deeply saddened and shocked at the humanitarian tragedy unleashed on the Oklahoma State by a devastating tornado.”

    “Our sympathies and prayers go out to the families of victims of this horrific incident that led to precious loss of life and property,” the statement said. “We are particularly grieved over the loss of innocent children and their teachers who were buried under the rubble.”

    “May God Almighty give courage and strength to the bereaved families to bear this irreparable loss. The people of Pakistan stand hand in hand with the people of Oklahoma at this difficult time,” it added.

    Full coverage of the Oklahoma tornadoes from NBC News

    This story was originally published on Tue May 21, 2013 9:01 AM EDT

    31 comments

    Amazingly we are getting statements of condolence, sympathy and support from other governments while Oklahoma's own senators are worried about money. It is legitimate to worry about the budget but it might be a little more classy to wait until all the bodies are recovered first.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: oklahoma, world, moore, queen, storms, obama, reaction, featured, updated, twister, oklahoma-tornadoes, pope-franciis
  • Updated
    3
    days
    ago

    Curse or coincidence? Scientists study Tornado Alley's past and future

    National Weather Service

    This map shows the track of a tornado on May 3, 1999, in green; and the track of Monday's tornado in red. The similarity of the paths is coincidental, but the larger patterns of storm activity in "Tornado Alley" are due in part to the region's geography.

    By Alan Boyle and John Roach, NBC News

    Do tornadoes follow well-worn tracks? Where do the deadliest twisters hit? Will climate change make such storms worse? Monday's devastating tornado in Oklahoma raises some questions for which scientists have ready answers, and others that could puzzle them for years to come:


    Was this tornado a repeat of a famous twister in 1999?

    For a time, Monday's storm followed a track that was similar to the path of a tornado with the fastest wind speed ever recorded, 318 mph (512 kilometers per hour), which occurred on May 3, 1999. That twister was one of 74 tornadoes that touched down in Oklahoma and Kansas in less than 21 hours, according to the National Severe Storms Laboratory. The 1999 outbreak of severe weather caused 46 deaths and nearly $1.5 billion in property damage.

    The tracks weren't all that similar, however: Monday's tornado took a more southerly route as it moved east. And there's nothing unique about the area's geography to make it a magnet for super-powerful twisters, according to Bob Henson, a tornado expert with the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo.

    "If there were geographic features, that would tend to cause multiple tornadoes every few years," the meteorologist and writer told NBC News. "Well, why has this been happening only since 1999?"

    The similarity in the tracks of these devastating storms is "a good example for how weather events can be clustered in ways that are striking yet ultimately coincidental," Henson said.

    A classic example of this phenomenon, he noted, is Codell, Kan., which was hit by tornadoes on the same day — May 20 — in 1916, 1917, and 1918. The third tornado killed 10 people and destroyed a part of the community. "That's a good illustration of how sometimes things like this can just happen in clusters," he said.

    NOAA SPC

    The purple streaks on this map from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Storm Prediction Center stand for tornado tracks from 1950 to 2011. The dark blotches indicate population densities.

    But isn't Tornado Alley more prone to deadly twisters?

    On a wider scale, the geography of America's midsection makes it more prone to tornadoes than any other region on Earth. That's because the Rocky Mountains tend to impede the eastward flow of moist air, while the Great Plains allow frigid Arctic air to stream southward from Canada and meet up with warm, humid air from the Gulf of Mexico. It's the collision of that warm and cold air that breeds powerful twisters.

    "Tornado Alley" generally refers to the region centered in Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas and points north, where tornadoes are most frequent — but multiple studies indicate that the deadliest twisters occur to the east, in a region that's come to be known as "Dixie Alley." The reasons for that have to do with geography and demographics as well as meteorology in the southeastern United States: Storms tend to move faster, and they're more likely to strike at night. There are more trees and other obstructions to raise havoc. Population densities are generally higher, and the region has many manufactured homes that lack basements in which to take shelter.

    The United States has the highest incidence of tornadoes, with an average of more than 1,000 every year, according to the National Climatic Data Center. But other regions of the world have twisters as well. Canada is No. 2 with about 100 per year, followed by northern Europe, western Asia, Bangladesh, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, China, South Africa and Argentina. Britain has more tornadoes than any other country, relative to its land area. "Fortunately, most UK tornadoes are relatively weak," the data center says.

    Why do these tornadoes seem to be hitting all of a sudden?

    After a relatively quiet start to the tornado season, tornadoes have been erupting from Texas to Minnesota over the past week. A cold front advancing to the east appears to be to blame. That pocket of cold air has run into warm air from the Gulf, causing the warm air to rise and spawning powerful thunderstorms. "It's kind of like the perfect setup," Jeff Weber, a scientist with the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, told LiveScience.

    The earlier calm was due to the fact that jet stream had been dipping farther south than usual for this time of year. That kept the Gulf's warm, moist air from advancing into Tornado Alley. Now that warm air is pushing northward, and the cold front has moved on to Minnesota and Wisconsin. As a result, the storm system that created Monday's big tornado should soon weaken, Weber said.

    Will climate change make tornadoes worse? More frequent?

    "The short answer is, we have no idea," Michael Wehner, a climate researcher at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, told NBC News. For years, Wehner has been studying the climate models for extreme weather, and he's a lead author for the next report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change as well as the federal government's latest national assessment on climate change.

    One problem is that the observational record for tornadoes has not been uniform over time. "It has a bias to it, because more people are living where tornadoes occur, and more people are out looking for them," Wehner said. That contributes to the perception that tornadoes are happening more frequently than they used to.

    The other big problem is that current climate models don't have the resolution that's needed to simulate the localized, violent activity of a tornado. Currently, global models are built up from atmospheric interactions on a scale of 100 kilometers (62 miles). Improvements in computer power could soon bring that down to a scale of 25 kilometers (16 miles). That should make it possible for scientists to simulate the weather phenomena that give rise to tornadoes, but not the tornadoes themselves, Wehner said.

    On a larger scale, extreme weather events are expected to become more frequent in a warmer world, Wehner said. "The metric that I like to look at is the daily amount of rain for a storm that happens once every 20 years," he said. "That storm, in a much warmer world, would happen more frequently." For example, if the world follows a "business-as-usual" scenario, he projects that the average temperature would rise 11 degrees Fahrenheit (6 degrees Celsius) by the end of the century, and that a once-in-20-years rainstorm would come around every five to 10 years on average.

    That doesn't necessarily mean tornadoes would be more frequent, however. In fact, the current projection calls for wetter spring weather in the northern U.S., and drier weather in the Southwest — with Tornado Alley right in the middle. "There's some evidence that there might not be a change" in the character of a tornado season, Wehner observed.

    Wehner may sound a bit apologetic about the lack of clear answers in the short term, but in the long term, he's optimistic. "The reason I'm optimistic that we can get somewhere on this is that supercomputing technology is driving this very hard," he said. "We're just getting into the sweet spot for these kinds of issues, with the largest mainframes that money can buy."

    More about tornado science:

    • Why tornadoes seem as if they're on the rise
    • Flash interactive: What causes tornadoes?
    • Full coverage of the Oklahoma tornadoes

    Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with him by "liking" the NBC News Science Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding him to your Google+ circles.

    John Roach is a contributing writer for NBC News. To learn more about him, visit his website. 

    This story was originally published on Mon May 20, 2013 8:20 PM EDT

    120 comments

    I can't decide whether to pity or just plain ol despise some of the people who make comments and will make on here.... You are some really sick people.

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    Explore related topics: weather, oklahoma, moore, science, storms, oklahoma-city, tornado, featured, meteorology, updated, oklahoma-tornadoes
  • Updated
    1
    day
    ago

    7 children found dead at Oklahoma school wrecked by tornado, officials say

    Sue Ogrocki / AP

    A child is pulled from the rubble of the Plaza Towers Elementary School in Moore, Okla., and passed along to rescuers after Monday's tornado.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Seven children were found drowned at a tornado-flattened elementary school where rescuers were searching through the night for survivors as parents kept a heart-breaking vigil, officials said.

    The students killed at Plaza Towers Elementary School were among at least 24 lives claimed by the monster twister that laid to Moore, Okla.

    Several children and staffers were pulled alive from the ruins of Plaza Towers in Moore after the building took a direct hit Monday afternoon.

    A little girl was lifted out by rescuers, while a small boy was carried to a triage area by a woman whose face was streaked with dirt and etched with worry.

    Sue Ogrocki / AP

    A woman carries an injured child to a triage center near the Plaza Towers Elementary School in Moore, Okla.,

    In another image captured by an Associated Press photographer, a crowd of firefighters worked to remove a woman — her hair and clothes covered in dust and bits of debris — from the pile.

    Those hopeful scenes were soon followed by devastating news as the Oklahoma City Medical Examiner's Office confirmed seven students were found dead in a pool of water.

    It was unclear if any other children were killed or trapped alive.

    Hysterical parents who had converged on the sprawling pile of broken concrete and twisted metal were later taken to a church to await word on the fate of their youngsters.

    “Our hearts are just broken for the parents,” Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin said at the briefing.

    “Our prayers are with you. We are working as quickly as we can to get through the debris and answer some questions about where loved ones are.”

    The funnel cloud slammed two schools — Plaza Towers and Briarwood Elementary. There were no reports of casualties from Briarwood, although the building was heavily damaged.

    At Plaza Towers, the fourth, fifth and sixth grades were evacuated to a church about a quarter-mile away from the 440-student school before the tornado touched down.

    Students in kindergarten through third grade sheltered in place, according to NBC station KFOR. Some of those students had been in a hallway when the twister struck, others in bathrooms.

    BING / Microsoft Corp., Steve Gooch / AP

    Plaza Towers Elementary School in Moore, Okla., before and after Monday's tornado hit.

    "I had to hold on to the wall to keep myself safe because I didn't want to fly away in the tornado," one girl told the station.

    James Rushing, who lives across the street, ran to the school to take shelter, thinking the building would be safer than his own home.

    "About two minutes after I got there, the school started coming apart," he told The Associated Press.

    The twister — deemed at least an EF4, the second-highest strength, by the National Weather Service — tore the roof off the building and knocked down its walls.

    A truck that was tossed through the air landed in the spot where the school's main office would have been, KFOR reported. Books were scattered across pancaked slabs of concrete.

    A crying man described to a reporter how he and others pulled a car off a teacher in the front of the building and found three children she had shielded with her body.

    "Good job, teach," the man said, his voice choked with emotion.

    A sixth-grade teacher told KFOR she laid on top of several children in a restroom to protect them from winds that may have topped 200 mph, and all survived.

    Officials said search and rescue efforts would continue through the night.

    Related:

    • Monster tornado deals death, destruction in Oklahoma
    • Video: Timelapse – nightmare in the suburbs
    • Slideshow: Tornadoes ravage Plains
    • 'Oh my God!': KFC cook records dramatic footage of monster tornado
    • What you're seeing: Videos, images from ground
    • Six of the worst twisters in U.S. history
    • Curse or coincidence? Scientists study Tornado Alley’s past, future
    • How to help tornado victims

    KFOR television reporter Jesse Wells reports Plaza Towers Elementary school was totally destroyed. Most of the walls of the school have collapsed, and cars were thrown into the front of the building. Emergency crews continue to look for kids who may still be inside.

    This story was originally published on Mon May 20, 2013 7:02 PM EDT

    366 comments

    Prayers go out to all those affected by this tragic weather. I can't imagine how those poor parents feel. I hope they find all of the children alive and as well as can be.

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    Explore related topics: weather, oklahoma, moore, tornado, featured, updated, oklahoma-tornadoes, plaza-towers
  • 3
    days
    ago

    Tornadoes ravage Plains states; 1 killed, 21 hurt; More severe storms likely

    Slideshow: Tornadoes ravage Plains

    Bill Waugh / Reuters

    Leah Hill, of Shawnee, Okla., is hugged by a friend as they look through Hill's scattered belongings from her home which was destroyed by a tornado, west of Shawnee, on May 19.

    Launch slideshow

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A vast area of the central U.S. was warned to prepare for storms on Monday, after tornadoes killed one and injured 21 in Oklahoma and also hit Iowa and Kansas.

    “After over 300 reports of severe weather on Sunday, another round of dangerous severe weather is expected Monday with the greatest threat once again in the southern Plains targeting Oklahoma and parts of Kansas, Missouri and Arkansas,” the National Weather Service said. “However, severe weather is possible much further north towards Chicago and Madison as well."

    The weather service issued maps showing the risk of severe storms and tornadoes.

    A trailer park near Oklahoma City was turned into “splinters and rubble,” weather.com reported, as multiple twisters sent people running for cover along a 100-mile corridor.

    James Hoke, who lives with his wife and two children in the Steelman Estates Mobile Home Park in Shawnee, Okla., told the Associated Press that they went into their storm cellar as the storm approached. When they came out, their mobile home had vanished.  "It took a dead hit," Hoke said.

    Shalyn Phillips / TVNweather.com

    A tornado is captured on camera near Viola, Kansas, on Sunday.

    Read more from weather.com

    "You can see where there's absolutely nothing, then there are places where you have mobile home frames on top of each other, debris piled up," Pottawatomie County Sheriff Mike Booth told the AP. "It looks like there's been heavy equipment in there on a demolition tour.

    "It's pretty bad. It's pretty much wiped out," he added.

    Elsewhere In Oklahoma, tornadoes were also reported at Edmond, Arcadia and near Wellston to the north and northeast of Oklahoma City, weather.com said.

    Don Lynch, of Pottawaomie County Sheriff’s Office, said a 79-year-old man had been killed.

    Twenty-one people across the state were injured, according to Keli Cain, an Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management spokeswoman.

    The Norman, Oklahoma, office posted a Twitter alert warning of a tornado about to strike Pink, a town not far from Shawnee, at around 6:15 p.m. local time (7:15 p.m. ET).

    Trucks near Shawnee, Oklahoma, are tipped over and homes are damaged after a tornado touched down late Sunday.

    "Large tornado west of Pink!" the post read. "Take cover RIGHT NOW in Pink! DO NOT WAIT!"

    "You could be killed if not underground or in a tornado shelter," it added. "Complete destruction of neighborhoods, businesses and vehicles will occur. Flying debris will be deadly to people and animals."

    Randy Grau told weather.com of the moment he realized it was time to take cover in his Edmond home. He said he looked out a window as the weather worsened and believed he saw a flock of birds heading down the street.

    "Then I realized it was swirling debris. That's when we shut the door of the safe room," said Grau, adding that he, his wife and two children remained in the room for 10 minutes.

    The storm prompted an unusually blunt warning from the central region of the National Weather Service, which covers 14 states.

    Authorities are telling people from Iowa to Oklahoma to prepare for powerful storms. NBC's Janet Shamlian reports.

    Oklahoma’s Governor Mary Fallin on Sunday declared a State of Emergency for 16 Oklahoma counties because of tornadoes, severe storms, straight-line winds and flooding.

    "Our hearts and prayers are with those Oklahomans who have been affected by today's severe weather," Fallin said in a statement.

    Carla Tollett, an information officer for St. Anthony Shawnee Hospital, said it was treating one patient who was in a critical condition and had also seen 10 other less seriously injured people.

    Various power companies reported more than 57,000 outages related to the storms.

    KFOR in Oklahoma reports that there is damage after an apparent tornado hit the ground near Shawnee, Oklahoma on Sunday.

    In Wichita, Kansas, a tornado touched down near Mid-Continent Airport shortly before 4 p.m., weather.com reported. Thousands of homes and businesses lost power, but the twister missed the most populated areas of the city.

    Sedgwick County Emergency Management Director Randy Duncan told weather.com there were no reports of fatalities or injuries in Kansas.

    In Iowa, two tornadoes were reported touching down on Sunday night -- one near Huxley, about 20 miles north of Des Moines, and one in Grundy County, northeast of Des Moines.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.


    155 comments

    Hey rigthies, so should we cut food stamps to all these people that have lost everything ???? Think, for once ! People do not become poor because they are lazy, but when everything is taken from them especially when they are in their fifties or sixties, how can you rebuilt your life at these ages ?? …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, oklahoma, iowa, kansas, storms, tornado, plain
  • 5
    days
    ago

    Plains states on edge under tornado watches

    Tornado watches are already in effect until late Saturday for parts of Nebraska, Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. And forecasters say this violent storm system could stretch into the Midwest Sunday. The Weather Channel's Kim Cunningham reports.

    By Gil Aegerter, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Large sections of the Plains states came under tornado watches Saturday as a wave of storms swept through.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The greatest threat late Saturday was in eastern Kansas and Oklahoma, weather.com reported, with central Oklahoma seeing a spike on Sunday.

    But Weather Channel meteorologist Michael Palmer said the storms on Sunday afternoon and evening were likely to carry a greater chance of tornadoes and the danger will be present into Monday.

    The National Weather Service issued a tornado watch for most of western and central Kansas until 11 p.m. CDT, NBC station KSNW of Wichita reported. Early Saturday evening, a Weather Service tornado warning was in effect for an area north of Dodge City, Kansas, that included Ellis, Ness, Rush and Trego counties.


    The storms are being generated by a dip in the jet stream combined with moisture moving north from the Gulf of Mexico, Kim Cunningham of The Weather Channel reported on NBC Nightly News (see the video above).

    The danger follows a series of tornadoes that struck northern Texas on Wednesday night, leaving six people dead and dozens injured. One of the twisters was preliminarily classified EF-4 by the National Weather Service, meaning it could have had winds up to 200 miles per hour.

    Overall, tornadic activity has been slow this May, typically a bad month for twisters, said the Weather Channel’s Tom Moore.

    NBC News staff writer Matthew DeLuca contributed to this report.

    Related story: Storm warning: Weekend could turn nasty 

    8 comments

    lets hope everyone stays safe

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  • 18
    Apr
    2013
    3:57pm, EDT

    Oklahoma pol says he regrets 'Jew' insult

    okhouse.gov

    Oklahoma State Rep. Dennis Johnson

    An Oklahoma lawmaker says an insulting comment he made about Jews "came out of the wrinkles of my brain" and he regrets it.

    State Rep. Dennis Johnson was talking about bill on sale-pricing at retail outlets on the House floor on Wednesday when used a derogatory turn that refers to bargaining down a price, the Associated Press reported.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Several of his colleagues objected and Johnson offered an apology, albeit tin-eared, saying, "Jews run good small businesses, too."

    Johnson told the AP he later apologized to the House speaker and offered to apologize again on the floor.

    "I made an offhand reference that was inappropriate, and I know that it hurt some folks. I acknowledge that. I regret that. I apologize for it," he said. "I'm almost 60 years old, and it's a phrase that was used when I was kid, and it was used often.

    "It was just something that came out from the wrinkles of my brain. I certainly did not mean to offend anyone, and I apologize to the folks that I did offend."

    Rabbi Vered Harris of the Temple B'Nai Israel in Oklahoma City said the term Johnson used is hurtful because it suggests Jews are cheap.

    "I'm very grateful that he realized he said something hurtful and was willing to apologize," the rabbi said.

     

    637 comments

    People who don't think that way don't accidentally say things like "jew me down." That phrase has never just flown out of my mouth-the same as the n-word has never just come out. Why? I don't have to worry about censoring my thoughts-as my thoughts do not contain such things. Of course he regrets hi …

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  • Updated
    9
    Apr
    2013
    10:25pm, EDT

    Plains brace for more wild weather

    A big storm is moving across the US – on one side of the system it's snowy and windy with temperatures below average. Meanwhile, warm air in parts of the Midwest leaves the region bracing for tornadoes. The East Coast, however, experienced record-highs. Weather Channel meteorologist Mike Seidel reports from Aurora, Colo.

    By Erin McClam and John Newland, NBC News

    The storm that dumped snow across parts of the Rockies and northern Plains on Tuesday was expected to bring more severe weather on Wednesday.

    Storm chasers move into Colorado just ahead of wild spring weather as others are fleeing. KUSA's Kevin Torres reports.

    The central and southern Plains areas were at risk for severe weather, according to the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center.

    Swaths of land from New Mexico to Wisconsin were under winter storm warnings,while parts of Utah were under blizzard warnings.

    According to the National Weather Service, Oklahoma City and Wichita Falls, Texas, were at risk for tornadoes and possible hailstorms Tuesday night and into Wednesday.

    Earlier Tuesday, blizzard warnings were in effect in Colorado, where the temperature plunged more than 50 degrees in less than 24 hours and the wind chill approached zero. Wyoming got more than a foot of snow.


    The culprit is a deep dip in the jet stream that swung west and pulled arctic air far into the country. As it collides with warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico, strong storms and tornadoes are possible in the Great Plains and Texas.

    “It’s just brutal to be outside,” said Eric Fisher, a meteorologist for The Weather Channel.

    Full coverage from Weather.com

    In Denver, the temperature plummeted from 71 degrees at 2 p.m. Monday to 16 degrees at 7 a.m. Tuesday, with a wind chill of 1. More than 250 flights were canceled into and out of Denver on Tuesday alone.

    In Wyoming, authorities closed two stretches of interstate more than 100 miles long — I-25 between Cheyenne and Douglas and I-80 between Laramie and Rawlins. More than a foot of snow fell by midmorning in the city of Lander, and one town near the Nebraska state line reported 2-foot snow drifts.

    Snow was also falling at midday Tuesday in Colorado, Utah, the Dakotas and Minnesota.

    Brennan Linsley / AP

    A man crosses the street during a winter storm that brought snow and a fast plunge in temperature overnight to downtown Denver on Tuesday.

    The calendar may say spring, but April is the second-snowiest month of the year in Denver. The city has averaged 9 inches in April since 1882, second only to the 11.5 inches it gets in an average March, according to the National Weather Service.

    The weather pattern threatened to bring damaging wind, large hail and perhaps tornadoes to parts of Texas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Iowa, and weaker storms later in the day in the Ohio Valley.

    “We’re looking at the gamut today for severe weather,” Weather Channel meteorologist Kevin Roth said.

    As the system moves east, severe storms are possible Wednesday across a boomerang-shaped swath of the country from the Texas Gulf Coast north through Indiana and into western Pennsylvania.

    Severe storms could move into Georgia, West Virginia and the Carolinas on Thursday.

    NBC News' Becky Bratu and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    This story was originally published on Tue Apr 9, 2013 4:59 AM EDT

    402 comments

    Baseball size hail. Well it is the begining of baseball season. Hope everyone stays safe.

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    Explore related topics: texas, weather, oklahoma, minnesota, colorado, west, storms, midwest, tornado, hail, featured, blizzard, southeast, updated
  • 30
    Mar
    2013
    9:50am, EDT

    Oklahoma to allow horses to be slaughtered for meat

    By Steve Olafson, Barbara Goldberg and Philip Barbara, Reuters

    OKLAHOMA CITY -- Oklahoma took a step toward allowing livestock owners to slaughter horses for food on Friday when the governor signed a bill that permits the practice, but processing plants must first be authorized by the federal government.

    Governor Mary Fallin's action legalized the slaughter of horses so that their meat may be prepared and packaged for export. But slaughterhouses must get U.S. Department of Agriculture authorization, Fallin said.

    The slaughter of horses for food had been illegal in Oklahoma since 1963 and was carried out only in Texas and Illinois until Congress stopped it in 2006. The congressional ban was lifted in 2011.

    Fallin said horse slaughterhouses in Oklahoma would use more humane practices than those in Mexico because they would be inspected by federal authorities.

    Horse meat was at the center of a scandal that erupted in Europe in January, when testing in Ireland revealed that some beef products also contained equine DNA.

    The United States Humane Society and animal rights activists opposed the new law in Oklahoma, while livestock interests said the change preserves their private property rights and will benefit horse owners.

    Related:

    'Fraud on a massive scale': Europe's horse meat scandal keeps on growing

    Why we don't eat horse meat: It's economics

    Horse meat in the US? Unlikely, but tests are rare

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    325 comments

    I am disgusted......Oklahoma, it figures!

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    Explore related topics: featured, oklahoma, agriculture, horse, farming, meat, usda, butcher
  • 20
    Mar
    2013
    5:45pm, EDT

    Oklahoma highway accident highlights growing danger of feral hogs

    Feral pigs are now affecting the ecosystem, agriculture and human health. Steven Luke of NBC station KNSD of San Diego reports.

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    An Oklahoma woman was recovering Wednesday from injuries she suffered when the pickup truck she was riding in struck a pack of feral hogs in the road this week — again raising the danger posed by the nation's rapidly growing population of wild pigs.

    Carolyn Martin, 63, of Ryan, Okla., was upgraded to serious condition at Oklahoma University Medical Center after initially having been listed as critical, NBC station KFDX of Wichita Falls, Texas, reported.


    The state Highway Patrol said the accident occurred Monday night when the driver of the truck swerved to avoid the hogs, who were meandering along U.S. 81 in Waurika, near the Texas border.

    Martin's injuries weren't specified. The truck's driver was treated and released from a Waurika hospital.

    Feral hogs — which are descended from domestic pigs that once escaped or were set loose in the wild for hunting — have become an increasing concern in Oklahoma and other parts of the southwestern United States.

    The Oklahoma Agriculture Department has declared them an "invasive species" whose population density is growing in 77 counties.

    "Feral swine have proven their ability to adapt and multiply, and it is unlikely they will ever be eradicated," it says.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Because hogs are among the most intelligent animal species, wild hogs "learn to avoid danger very quickly" and "attempts to control them just make them less susceptible to future control efforts," according to the Texas A&M University Extension Service.

    The extension service cited estimates that feral swine cause as much as $1.5 billion in damage to property and crops in the U.S. each year.

    Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    Watch the top videos on NBCNews.com

    84 comments

    Sounds like a good idea for the Middle East. Bring the troops home a ship over a million hogs.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: environment, featured, accident, oklahoma, feral-hogs
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