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  • 13
    Oct
    2012
    8:02am, EDT

    Severe thunderstorms, tornadoes threaten central states

    The Weather Channel's Maria LaRosa takes a look at the nation's weekend forecast.

    By NBC News staff

    Severe thunderstorms with damaging winds, large hail and isolated tornadoes are threatening a swath of the central United States from Iowa to parts of Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, forecasters warned.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Chris Dolce and Jon Erdman, of weather.com, said the Midwest would be likely hit by storms and showers Saturday morning, but the “greatest concern for severe storms will be from the afternoon through evening.”


    “While the primary severe threats look to be damaging straight-line winds and large hail, the degree of low-level wind shear and instability may spawn isolated tornadoes in these areas,” they added.

    Weather.com said the storm system would continue moving eastward on Sunday.

    “Scattered severe storms may flare again along the cold front with spotty damaging wind gusts and possibly a tornado from the southern Great Lakes southwestward to the Ohio Valley, lower-Mississippi Valley and southeastern Texas,” Dolce and Erdman added.

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    86 comments

    I want to say it before someone else does, it's Obama's fault. Unless of course Romney gets elected, then it's his fault.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: texas, weather, oklahoma, iowa, kansas, missouri, tornado, hail, featured, thunderstorms
  • 8
    Sep
    2012
    11:58am, EDT

    2 tornadoes touch down in NYC neighborhoods

    A tornado is seen touching down in New York City on Saturday.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Updated at 7:50 p.m. ET: Two tornadoes touched down in New York City late Saturday morning, one in Queens and another in Brooklyn, causing damage and frightening startled residents.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Two possible tornadoes also were reported later Saturday in the Washington, D.C., area as strong winds and heavy rains plowed through the area, leaving tens of thousands without electricity as a severe weather cold front spanned much of the East Coast.

    An EF0 tornado made landfall in the Breezy Point section of the Rockaway peninsula in Queens at approximately 11 a.m., according to the National Weather Service. The 70 mile per hour winds hurled sand and debris in the air, downed multiple trees and power lines, moved cars and damaged property.


    About five minutes later, an EF1 tornado touched down in Canarsie, Brooklyn, the National Weather Service confirmed. The 110 mile per hour winds leveled trees and power lines and damaged homes.

    No injuries were reported from either tornado.

    Videos taken by bystanders showed a funnel cloud hurling sand and debris in the air, and possibly small pieces of buildings, as it moved through the Breezy Point section of the Rockaway peninsula in Queens.

    In Canarsie, where the tornado ripped off parts of roofs, Terrill Baden struggled to close his front door as the twister rolled in.

    "The wind was very stong," Baden said. "It was raining. A lot of debris was flying around."

    Linda Beal-Benigno was driving on the Belt Parkway near the Flatbush exit when she said a tornado traveled across the road.

    "At first I though it was dark smoke," she told NBCNewYork.com. "The entire belt felt like it was shaking. It was very frightening because you could see the funnel traveling and moving. It crossed the highway and just missed cars."

    She added, "I never saw anything like that in my life."

    View NBCNewYork.com's complete storm coverage

    courtesy Caitlin Walsh

    Debris strewn near the tip of Breezy Point, at the Breezy Point Surf Club.

    Thomas Sullivan, general manager of the Breezy Point Surf Club, said the twister ripped up cabanas and deck chairs.

    "A lot of rain, a lot of wind," he said. "It picked up picnic benches. It picked up Dumpsters."

    "It was crazy," neighborhood resident Joseph Mure told The Associated Press. He said he was in the shower when the storm hit, and went outside to snap a picture of the retreating funnel. "There were a lot of sirens going off. You could see it twisting."

    Near the nation's capital, tornado-like funnel clouds were reported Saturday afternoon in Chantilly, in Fairfax County, and in Prince George's County, Md. The weather service hadn't confirmed the reports as tornadoes by early Saturday evening.

    NBC Learn explains how tornadoes form. 

    Fairfax County officials said that a tornado was on the ground shortly before 4 p.m. Saturday. They reported three home cave-ins because of downed trees, a water rescue in the Potomac River and dozens of down electrical wires, Dan Schmidt, a fire department spokesman, told the Associated Press.

    View NBCWashington.com's complete storm coverage

    There were also reports of malfunctioning traffic lights and downed trees and power lines in the area as thunder, heavy rains and winds approaching 60 mph struck the region.

    Emergency officials were attending to about a dozen people who were injured during a panicked rush for the exit at the Show Place Arena, hosting Prince George's County Fair, in Upper Marlboro, said Mark Brady, a spokesman for the Prince George's County fire and emergency management agency. About 400 to 500 people were in attendance at the arena, officials said. Twelve were evaluated for injuries and four were transported to hospitals, NBCWashington.com reported.

    In the District of Coulmbia there were reports of about 10 downed trees, including one that came down on a southeast apartment building undergoing construction, NBCWashington.com reported.

    Al Bello / Getty Images

    Rain falls on center court in Arthur Ashe stadium to suspend play on Day 13 of the 2012 US Open at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City.

    In Connecticut, strong line of storms left damage in Kent, Ridgefield and Northfield, NBCConnecticut.com reported.

    Strong thunderstorms reached western Massachusetts Saturday evening, NBC station WWLP reported.

    NBCNewYork.com's Matthew R. Warren and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

    473 comments

    Can you say "Catastrophic Climatic Destabilization"? I can.

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    Explore related topics: weather, new-york, tornado
  • 30
    Jul
    2012
    4:54pm, EDT

    Tornado in Colorado mountains is 2nd highest on record

    Courtesy Josh Deere

    The tornado that touched down on Colorado's Mount Evans last weekend is the second-highest ever recorded by the National Weather Service.

    By Vignesh Ramachandran

    A twister that touched down in Colorado's high-country on Saturday is estimated to be the second-highest tornado ever recorded in the U.S. by the National Weather Service.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    There were four different reported sightings of the high-altitude hit the northeast side of Mount Evans — a prominent mountain located about 60 miles west of Denver. The National Weather Service estimates the tornado's touched down at about  11,900 feet in elevation.


    Bob Glancy, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Boulder, Colo., told NBC News that this tornado above the treeline is "not unheard of," but "just unusual." Most tornadoes in high terrain are weak, he said.

    For the last two decades, Colorado has averaged 50 tornadoes a year. But Glancy said the "vast majority" occur on the plains east of Interstate 25.

    Colorado Springs resident Josh Deere told The Denver Post he saw the funnel as he was driving with his family to the top of Mount Evans.

    "As we drove past it, we were able to look back and had some spectacular views of it as it spun and then eventually broke up as it entered the mountain cove," Deere told the Post.

    The highest recorded tornado occurred in 2004, according to Glancy, over Rockwell Pass in California's Sequoia National Park. That twister was estimated to be at 12,000 to 12,500 feet.

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    18 comments

    It's kind of hilarious how most people STILL think tornadoes only occur in valleys and that hills or mountains prevent them from developing or progressing. I witnessed a tornado move up a 2,100 foot incline then back down it without even being effected. Then there is the losers who think tall skyscr …

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    Explore related topics: weather, colorado, denver, tornado, featured, mount-evans
  • 27
    Jul
    2012
    11:15am, EDT

    New storms topple trees after outbreak that killed 2, spawned twisters

    As powerful storms, with lightning and high winds, ripped through the Northeast, the Twittersphere thundered with users uploading pictures. TODAY's Natalie Morales reports.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    Severe winds knocked down trees in areas from Michigan to Georgia on Friday, a day after a line of severe storms tore through parts of the Midwest and Northeast, killing two people, cutting power to tens of thousands and spawning a tornado that damaged property in Elmira, N.Y. 

    A second tornado touched down near Montrose, Pa., on Thursday, but no major damage was reported there.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    With the new storms only getting started Friday afternoon, key cities in the danger area are Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Nashville, Washington D.C., Roanoke and Raleigh, the National Weather Service stated. While describing the risk as slight, it added that any storms could be strong enough to blast 60 mph gusts and dump large hail.

    Most of the initial reports of wind damage were in the Carolinas, Indiana and West Virginia, according to the Storm Prediction Center.

    In Washington, any rain would provide some relief to recent high temperatures. Thursday saw 100 degrees --the seventh day at 100 or above this month, and a record for the most days above 100 for any month in D.C., NBCWashington.com reported. 


    In Elmira, thousands were still without power Friday morning after a twister tore through the town Thursday around 4 p.m. ET, the Elmira Star Gazette reported.

    Trees fell on many homes and cars, while at least one business lost part of its second story to the tornado. The town was alerted to the possibility of a tornado a half hour before it hit, and no injuries were reported.

    Adam Fenster / Reuters

    Gary Dunning surveys the tornado damage to his business in Elmira, N.Y., on Thursday.

    More than 85,000 homes and businesses in Pennsylvania were still without power Friday morning after Thursday's storms, while about 34,000 in New York and 13,000 in Ohio also had no electricity -- and thus no air conditioning for the sweltering summer heat.

    In New York City, a 61-year-old man in Brooklyn's Cobble Hill neighborhood was killed when scaffolding at a church fell on him as the storm passed through around 8 p.m. ET, NBCNewYork.com reported. 

    "It's possible that lightning struck the top of the roof, causing some bricks to fall on top of the scaffolding," a police spokesman said. 

    In Genesee, Pa., a woman camping was killed when she took refuge in her car and a tree then fell on it. 

    The storms also disrupted air travel, forcing the cancellation of over 900 flights on Thursday, according to FlightAware.com, a flight tracking website. The highest number of cancellations was at New York's LaGuardia Airport. 

    Flight delays were also reported at airports in Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, New York City, Philadelphia and Washington D.C., according to the FAA flight monitoring website.

    As bad as it was, Thursday's outbreak was nowhere as damaging as the June 29 storms that tracked over 600 miles from Indiana to the Mid-Atlantic and left millions without power.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    24 comments

    I am in Elmira and feel blessed we don't see these kinda storms that bring tornado very often at all. My neighborhood looks like a war zone, my electric just got back on but we are all grateful no one was hurt or killed. God Bless our emergency and work crews who are out there taking care of us.

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    Explore related topics: weather, storms, tornado
  • 21
    May
    2012
    9:47pm, EDT

    President Obama's commencement address to Joplin High School, May 21, 2012

     

    Remarks of President Barack Obama - As Prepared for Delivery

    Joplin High School Commencement Address

    Missouri Southern State University

    Monday, May 21, 2012

    Joplin, Missouri

     

    Good evening Superintendent Huff, Principal Sachetta, faculty, parents, family, friends, the people of Joplin, and the class of 2012. Congratulations on your graduation, and thank you for allowing me the honor of playing a small part in this special day.

    The job of a commencement speaker - aside from keeping it short and sweet - is to inspire. But as I look out at this class, and across this city, what's clear is that you're the source of inspiration today. To me. To this state. To this country. And to people all over the world.

    Last year, the road that led you here took a turn that no one could've imagined. Just hours after the class of 2011 walked across this stage, the most powerful tornado in six decades tore a path of devastation through Joplin that was nearly a mile wide and thirteen long. In only 32 minutes, it took thousands of homes, hundreds of businesses, and 161 of your neighbors, your friends, and your family members. It took Will Norton, who had just left this auditorium with a diploma in his hand. It took Lantz Hare, who should've received his diploma next year.

    By now, most of you have probably relived those 32 minutes again and again. Where you were. What you saw. When you knew for sure that it was over. The first contact you had with someone you love. The first day you woke up in a world that would never be the same.

    And yet, the story of Joplin is the story of what happened the next day. And the day after that. And all the days and weeks that followed. As your city manager, Mark Rohr, has said, the people here chose to define the tragedy "not by what happened to us, but by how we responded."

    That story is part of you now. You've grown up quickly over the last year. You've learned at a younger age than most that we can't always predict what life has in store for us. No matter how we might try to avoid it, life can bring heartache. Life involves struggle. Life will bring loss.

    But here in Joplin, you've also learned that we have the power to grow from these experiences. We can define our own lives not by what happens to us, but by how we respond. We can choose to carry on, and make a difference in the world. And in doing so, we can make true what's written in Scripture - that "tribulation produces perseverance, and perseverance, character, and character, hope."

    Of all that's come from this tragedy, let this be the central lesson that guides you and sustains you through whatever challenges lie ahead.

    I imagine that as you begin the next stage in your journey, you will encounter greed and selfishness; ignorance and cruelty. You will meet people who try to build themselves up by tearing others down; who believe looking after others is only for suckers.

    But you are from Joplin. So you will remember, you will know, just how many people there are who see life differently; those who are guided by kindness and generosity and quiet service.

    You'll always remember that in a town of 50,000 people, nearly 50,000 more came to help in the weeks after the tornado - perfect strangers who've never met you, and would never ask for anything in return. One of them was Mark Carr, who drove 600 miles from Rocky Ford, Colorado with a couple of chainsaws and his three little children. One man traveled all the way from Japan, because he remembered that Americans were there for his country after last year's tsunami, and he wanted the chance to pay it forward. Many were AmeriCorps volunteers who have chosen to leave their homes and stay here until Joplin is back on its feet.

    There was the day that Mizzou's football team rolled into town with an 18-wheeler full of donated supplies. Of all places, they were assigned to help out on Kansas Avenue. While they hauled away washing machines and refrigerators from the debris, they met Carol Mann, who had just lost the house she lived in for eighteen years. Carol, who works part-time at McDonald's even as she struggles with seizures, told the players that she had even lost the change purse that held her lunch money. So one of them went back to the house, dug through the rubble, and returned the purse with $5 inside.

    As Carol's sister said, "So much of the news you hear is so negative. But those boys renewed my faith that there are so many good people in the world."

    That's what you'll remember. Because you are from Joplin.

    You will remember the half million dollar donation that came from Angelina Jolie and Missouri native Brad Pitt. But you'll also remember the $360 that was delivered by a nine-year-old boy who organized his own car wash. You'll remember the school supplies donated by your neighboring towns, but also the brand new laptops that were sent from the United Arab Emirates - a small country on the other side of the world. When it came time for your prom, make-up artist Melissa Blayton organized an effort that collected over a 1,000 donated prom dresses, FedEx kicked in for the corsages, and Joplin's own Liz Easton, who lost her home and her bakery in the tornado, made 1,500 cupcakes for the occasion.

    There are so many good people in the world. There is such a decency, a bigness of spirit, in this country of ours. Remember that. Remember what people did here. And like the man from Japan who came to Joplin, make sure to pay it forward in your own life.

    Just as you have learned the goodness of people, so have you learned the power of community. As take on the roles of colleague and neighbor and citizen, you will encounter all kinds of divisions between groups - divisions of race, and religion, and ideology. You'll meet people who like to disagree just for the sake of being disagreeable; who prefer to play up their differences and instead of focusing on what they have in common, or where they can cooperate.

    But you are from Joplin. So you will know that it's always possible for a community to come together when it matters most.

    After all, a lot of you could've spent your senior year scattered throughout different schools, far from home. But Dr. Huff asked everyone to pitch in so that school started on time, right here in Joplin. He understood the power of this community, and the power of place. And so teachers worked extra hours, and coaches improvised. The mall was turned into classrooms, and the food court became a cafeteria - which sounds like a bit of an improvement. Sure, the arrangements might have been a little noisy, and a little improvised, but you hunkered down, and you made it work. Together.

    Together, you decided that this city wasn't about to spend the next year arguing over every detail of the recovery effort. At the very first town meeting, every citizen was handed a Post-It note, and asked to write down their goals and their hopes for Joplin's future. More than 1,000 notes covered an entire wall, and became the blueprint that architects are following to this day.

    Together, the businesses that were destroyed in the tornado decided that they weren't about to walk away from the community that made their success possible. Even if it would've been easier. Even if it would've been more profitable to go somewhere else. Today, more than half the stores that were damaged on the Range Line are up and running again. Eleven more are planning to join them. And every time a company re-opens its doors, people cheer the cutting of a ribbon that bears the town's new slogan: "Remember. Rejoice. Rebuild."

    I've been told that before the tornado, many of you couldn't wait to leave here once high school was finally over. Your student council president, Julia Lewis, said, "We never thought Joplin was anything special; but seeing how we responded to something that tore our community apart has brought us together. Everyone has a lot more pride in our town." It's no surprise, then, that many of you have decided to stick around, and go to colleges that aren't too far from home.

    That's the power of community. That's the power of shared effort. Some of life's strongest bonds are the ones we forge when everything around us seems broken. And even though I expect some of you will ultimately end up leaving Joplin, I'm convinced that Joplin will never leave you. The people who went through this with you; the people you once thought of as simply neighbors or acquaintances; classmates or even friends - the people in this auditorium tonight - they are family now. They are family.

    In fact, my deepest hope for all of you is that as you begin this new chapter in your life, you will bring that spirit of Joplin to every place you travel and everything you do. You can serve as a reminder that we're not meant to walk this road alone; that we're not expected to face down adversity by ourselves. We need each other. We're important to each other. We're stronger together than we are on our own.

    It is this spirit that's allowing all of you to rebuild this city. It's the same spirit we need right now to help rebuild America. And you, class of 2012, will help lead this effort. You're the ones who will help build an economy where every child can count on a good education; where everyone who is willing to put in the effort can find a job that supports a family; where we control our own energy future and we lead the world in science and technology and innovation. America will only succeed if we all pitch in and pull together - and I'm counting on you to be leaders in that effort.

    Because you are from Joplin. And you've already defied the odds.

    In a city with countless stories of unthinkable courage and resilience over the last year, there are some that still stand out - especially on this day. By now, most of you know Joplin High senior Quinton Anderson, who's probably embarrassed that someone's talking about him again. But I'm going to talk about him anyways, because in a lot of ways, Quinton's journey has been Joplin's journey.

    When the tornado struck, Quinton was thrown across the street from his house. The young man who found him couldn't imagine that Quinton would survive such injuries. Quinton woke up in a hospital bed three days later. It was then that his sister Grace told him that both their parents had been lost to the storm.

    Quinton went on to face over five weeks of treatment, including emergency surgery. But he left that hospital determined to carry on; to live his life, and to be there for his sister. Over the past year, he's been a football captain who cheered from the sidelines when he wasn't able to play. He worked that much harder so he could be ready for baseball in the spring. He won a national scholarship as a finalist for the High School Football Rudy Awards, and he plans to study molecular biology at Harding University this fall.

    Quinton has said that his motto in life is "Always take that extra step." Today, after a long and improbable journey for Quinton, for Joplin, and for the entire class of 2012, that extra step is about to take you towards whatever future you hope for; toward whatever dreams you hold in your hearts.

    Yes, you will encounter obstacles along the way. Yes, you will face setbacks and disappointments.

    But you are from Joplin. And you are from America. No matter how tough times get, you will be tougher. No matter what life throws at you, you will be ready. You will not be defined by the difficulties you face, but how you respond - with strength, and grace, and a commitment to others.

    Langston Hughes, the poet and civil rights activist who knew some tough times, was born here in Joplin. In a poem called "Youth," he wrote,

     

    We have tomorrow

    Bright before us

    Like a flame.

    Yesterday

    A night-gone thing,

    A sun-down name.

    And dawn-today. Broad arch above the road we came.

    We march.

     

    To the people of Joplin, and the class of 2012:

    The road has been hard. The day has been long. But we have tomorrow, and so we march. We march, together, and you are leading the way. Congratulations. May God bless you, and may God bless the United States of America.

    9 comments

    Good comment, DV's Mom. What an inspiring speech. I just hope the haters can find it in their hearts to avoid attacking our President for once.

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  • 21
    May
    2012
    9:39pm, EDT

    Obama to tornado-ravaged Joplin: 'You've grown up quickly'

    Nearly one year after the tornado that devastated Joplin, Mo., President Obama delivers the commencement speech for Joplin's high school graduation ceremony.

    By Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

    A year after a deadly tornado flattened the city of Joplin, Mo., in 32 minutes, taking with it 161 residents and thousands of homes, President Barack Obama told the city's graduating high school seniors Monday night that the country can learn from their persevering spirit.  


    Follow @msnbc_us

    “That story is part of you now,” Obama said at Joplin High School's commencement ceremony at Missouri Southern State University. “You've grown up quickly over the last year. You've learned at a younger age than most that we can't always predict what life has in store for us. No matter how we might try to avoid it, life can bring heartache. Life involves struggle. Life will bring loss.”

    On May 22, 2011, an EF-5 tornado – the strongest ever measured – ripped through Joplin, claiming among its victims one graduating senior returning home from commencement and six other public school students. It also destroyed 7,500 buildings, including Joplin High School.


    When Obama last visited, one week after the tornado a year ago, the area was declared a federal disaster area. It was the deadliest tornado in six decades.

    Joplin: Before and after tornado cleanup

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    Joplin High School was destroyed in a tornado a year ago Tuesday that claimed 161 residents. President Barack Obama gave the keynote address to the 428 graduating seniors on Monday night.

    "It's bittersweet," senior student Taylor Camden told Reuters after the seniors finished a commencement practice on Friday. "It's going to be a sad, emotional day for a lot of people just to be at graduation. We all lost something, and everyone here lost their high school."

    After the tornado, every high school student received a MacBook laptop, courtesy in part to a $500,000 donation from the United Arab Emirates. Singer Katy Perry sponsored the prom in part and someone else organized a prom dress drive. The girls received free makeup. One woman who lost her home and business, made 1,500 cupcakes for the prom.

    Read President Barack Obama's remarks

    “I imagine that as you begin the next stage in your journey, you will encounter greed and selfishness; ignorance and cruelty.  You will meet people who try to build themselves up by tearing others down; who believe looking after others is only for suckers," Obama said.

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    President Barack Obama with Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon, left, and Superintendent C.J. Huff, right, applaud the Class of 2012 at the Joplin High School commencement ceremony on Monday.

    “But you are from Joplin. So you will remember, you will know, just how many people there are who see life differently; those who are guided by kindness and generosity and quiet service.”

    PhotoBlog: Rebuilding Joplin

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    From left, Morgan Osburn, David Hoosier and Kim Hoosier spend a quiet moment together in front of a memorial built for their friend Lance Hare who was killed by a tornado that hit Joplin, Mo. a year ago.

    Rachel Berryhill, who took shelter in a bathroom with her family when the tornado tore the roof off their house, already lives that mantra. She told Reuters that she no longer stresses about the small things in life, like the style of clothes she wears.

    "I've become more caring, more attached to people," she said. "I'm trying to live my life in a better way."

    On Monday evening, Deborah Allen watched her eldest grandson graduate with a happy but also heavy heart.

    “This day is joyful," she said. "Tomorrow will probably be a time of sadness for a lot of people."

    Melissa Rogers, whose twins Devin and Danielle were graduating, said she watched Joplin grow stronger over the last year.

    “It wasn’t that we didn’t know it before, we didn’t really have the opportunity, but since the tornado we’ve just all really come together,” she said. For Rogers, too, the event stirred up emotions. She lost two loved ones in the storm.

    Teachers and students told the St. Louis Dispatch that fights and disciplinary violations declined dramatically.

    Throughout the prepared speech, Obama wove in stories of the city’s efforts to rebuild, noting that at the first town hall meeting, residents were handed Post-It notes and asked to write down their hopes for the city’s future. More than 1,000 notes covered a wall, inspiring the city’s planners today.

    In the last year, two-thirds of the destroyed homes have received building permits to rebuild, according to Reuters, and the city has rebuilt with help from thousands of volunteers.

    The president praised those volunteers, telling of a man from Japan who flew in because Americans had helped after the tsunami, of a busload of football players who drove in to dig through the rubble, and of a 9-year-old boy who donated $360 from a car wash he had organized. He praised the schools superintendent, who decided to keep students in Joplin, fashioning a school out of a vacant box store at the mall, according to the St. Louis-Dispatch. A food court doubled as the cafeteria.

    “There are so many good people in the world,” Obama said to the 428 graduating seniors. “There is such a decency, a bigness of spirit, in this country of ours. Remember that.  Remember what people did here. And like the man from Japan who came to Joplin, make sure to pay it forward in your own life.”   

    Joplin, Mo., marks the anniversary of the deadly tornado that ripped the town part. WCNC's Jinah Kim reports.

    Reuters and NBC's Ali Weinberg contributed to this report.

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    380 comments

    Great speech, Mr. President. To the rest of you, your nastier side is showing. PS - I'm being kind to you fools who never, ever have anything to say but vitriol.

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    Explore related topics: weather, barack-obama, tornado, joplin
  • 11
    May
    2012
    7:14am, EDT

    Tornado hits high school, topples train in Weimar, Texas

    By KPRC, KXAN and msnbc.com staff

    WEIMAR, Texas -- Eight people were hospitalized after a Texas high school was hit by a tornado on Thursday, according to the National Weather Service.

    The tornado briefly touched down at Weimar High School at about 5:25 p.m. local time, NBC station KPRC reported. Weimar is about 88 miles west of downtown Houston.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    School district officials said a fundraiser was going on at the school at the time of the storm. A Papa John's pizza truck that was in the parking lot as part of the event was turned over. Eight people who were inside the truck were taken to the hospital.

    Superintendent Jon Wunderlich told NBC station KXAN that none of the injuries were life-threatening.

    No students were injured, KPRC reported.

    A scoreboard at the high school was damaged, NWS officials told KPRC. School officials said part of the roof was ripped off and the football and softball fields sustained the most damage.

    About two-thirds of the people in Weimar were without power Thursday night.

    NWS officials said a train was also knocked off its tracks in Weimar. 

    According to the Fayette County Sheriff's Office, a tornado peeled back the roof of Colorado-Fayette Medical Center. No injuries were reported there.

    NBC stations KPRC, KXAN and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

    60 comments

    I was standing there when it came down and hit land, I am just now getting back home from beaumont texas, what a hell of a ride! Whew, no more of that for me! I seen Dorthy and the dog on the way back here!

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    Explore related topics: texas, weather, school, tornado, featured, national-weather-service, kprc, weimar, kxan
  • 16
    Apr
    2012
    6:34am, EDT

    'He was a good daddy': Father, daughters among 6 killed by tornadoes

    By Adam Mertz, NBC affiliate KFOR, and Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    A father and his two young daughters were among six killed when dozens of tornadoes ripped across the Central and Southern Plains in the early hours of Sunday.

    Relatives told NBC affiliate KFOR TV that Frank Hobbie and his daughters, Faith, 5, and Kelley, 7, were killed when a powerful tornado destroyed their mobile home park in Woodward, Okla.

    “They were grandma and grandpa’s girls and it’s just going to be hard without them and their daddy; he was a good daddy,” said Shelly Hobbie, Frank Hobbie’s stepmother.


    She said her grandson, Ty, was the only one who survived. The infant suffered serious injuries and was airlifted to Texas.

    “We’re all devastated,” Hobbie said.

    One of the first to search the area was a man who found one of the girls under a destroyed trailer. "She was still holding her baby doll," Courtney Glitch told KFOR.

    Some storm sirens in the town failed to sound after a tower used to activate the warning system was damaged by lightning. But others near the mobile home park said they had heard a siren.

    However, residents and officials in at least one of the affected states credited days of urgent warnings from forecasters for saving lives.

    Two other victims in the nearby town of Tangiers – a man named by the Oklahoma state medical examiner's office as Darren Juul, and an unidentified 10-year-old girl – were also killed in the storm.

    And a man who had been hospitalized with critical injuries died early Monday.

    Multiple injured residents were also transported to area hospitals.

    The storms also left thousands without power in Kansas, hit an aircraft fuselage production facility, and damaged up to 90 percent of homes and buildings in a small Iowa town. The governors of Kansas and Oklahoma declared states of emergency.

    The National Weather Service website listed only one tornado warning on Monday morning, for southeastern San Patricio county in south-central Texas, however there were high wind warnings in effect for parts of South Dakota, with gusts of up to 45 mph.

    The weekend storms were part of an exceptionally strong system tracked by the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., which specializes in tornado forecasting. Before the weekend, the center took the unusual step of warning people more than 24 hours in advance of a possible "high-end, life-threatening event."

    "We can't do this with every event," said the center's Ken Miller, noting that many storm systems are not as easy to predict.

    Miller said he was pleased the warnings were heeded.

    "We measure our success by how the public reacts," he said. "Do they take precautions seriously and act on them?"

    Dire language of warnings
    In south-central Kansas, Sedgwick County Emergency Management Director Randy Duncan credited the dire language of the warnings with saving lives.

    "People become used to those warnings. That is a dangerous complacency," Duncan said. "We need to break through the clutter of everyday noise to get people's attention."

    Woodward city manager Alan Riffel told CNN that all the missing people had been accounted for, but 89 homes and 13 businesses had been destroyed.

    "It's remarkable we didn't have more loss of life," Governor Mary Fallin told a news conference, saying many Woodward residents had either gone to sleep or dropped their guard after an earlier series of storms swept through the area.

    She spoke to several whose homes were struck, including a man who said he was asleep on his sofa with his dog when the tornado hit, depositing them unhurt in the backyard.

    Slideshow: Tornadoes rake Midwest

    Orlin Wagner / AP

    Storms spawned dangerous twisters from northern Nebraska through southern Oklahoma.

    Launch slideshow

    A tornado that struck Woodward in April 1947 still ranks as the deadliest in Oklahoma history, with 116 people killed, according to the National Weather Service.

    In tiny Thurman, Iowa, population 250, some 75 to 90 percent of the town's buildings and homes were damaged or destroyed by the storm, Fremont County Emergency Management Coordinator Mike Crecelius said. Only minor injuries were reported.

    The U.S. tornado season started early this year, with twisters already blamed for 62 deaths in 2012 in the Midwest and South, raising concerns that this year would be a repeat of 2011, the deadliest tornado year in nearly a century.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    164 comments

    Bad things happen. The rain falls on the just and the unjust alike. Everyday is a gift, do not waste it and be thankful for what you have.

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    Explore related topics: weather, oklahoma, storm, nebraska, tornado, woodward, featured
  • 14
    Apr
    2012
    5:51am, EDT

    At least five dead as tornadoes hit Midwest and Plains

    The National Weather Service warns that fast-moving, life-threatening tornadoes will potentially touch down after dark. The Weather Channel's Jim Cantore, Mike Seidel and Eric Fisher report.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 7:06 a.m. Sunday ET:  At least five people have been killed in Oklahoma and a disaster emergency has been declared in Kansas after a severe storm system moving through the Midwest spawned a number of strong tornadoes.

    Oklahoma Dept. of Emergency Management information officer Keli Cain confirmed there were five deaths in the Woodward area of north-west Oklahoma.

    At least 29 people were injured across Oklahoma and neighbouring states.


    Two of the dead are children, according to NBC News affiliate in Oklahoma, KFOR.

    In Kansas, governor Sam Brownback issued a declaration of disaster emergency to help speed relief to areas affected by the storms. "We are continuing to assess all the damages across the state," said Brownback, "and signing this declaration clears the way for making state aid available to those counties that need help with clean-up and recovery."

    Dozens of tornadoes were reported Saturday as baseball-size hail shattered windows and tore the siding off homes in northeast Nebraska and one twister damaged a hospital in Creston, Iowa. Several homes were wrecked in Kansas.

    NBC News reported there were 112 recorded tornadoes in Kansas, Nebraska, Indiana and Oklahoma.

    Forecasters had warned of "life-threatening" storms in the nation's midsection. No serious injuries from Saturday were immediately reported.

    A tornado was reported on the ground near Wichita, Kan., late Saturday and power in the city was going out, NBC station KSN reported. Homes were reported damaged on the city's south side, but details were not immediately available.

    Slideshow: Tornadoes rake Midwest

    KSN also reported that one building at airplane-maker Spirit Aerosystem collapsed in the storm. At the Wichita airport, winds gusting to 84 mph blew open hangars and overturned luggage carts, The Weather Channel reported. McConnell Air Force Base, which relocated aircraft to other bases before the storms moved in, reported hangar and housing damage, KSN said.

    The National Weather Service office in Wichita temporarily turned over operations to the Topeka office Saturday as storms threatened to destroy its building.

    A tornado was spotted in Langley, Kan., earlier Saturday evening.

    Orlin Wagner / AP

    A tornado moves on the ground north of Soloman, Kan., Saturday, April 14, 2012. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner)

    One tornado narrowly missing Salina after being on the ground for about 30 miles.

    Three farmsteads sustained damage in Rush County, Kan. and a home was destroyed near Langley, NBC News reported. Trees were downed and power lines were down for other rural customers.

    One tornado damaged the roof and blew out windows at the Greater Regional Medical Center in Creston, Iowa, but no injuries were reported, officials said. Power was out in much of the city of 7,600 population about 75 miles southwest of Des Moines.

    Fremont County, Iowa, Emergency Management Director Mike Crecelius told The Associated Press about 75 percent of the town of Thurman was destroyed. He said there were no injuries and no deaths in the town of about 250 people. Crecelius said the town was on lockdown and some residents took refuge in City Hall, which still had power. Officials and residents expect to start cleaning up Sunday.

    Stormchasers early Sunday reported major damage from a significant tornado in Woodward, Okla. Significant sructural damage and possible injuries were reported, The Weather Channel reported.

    An apparent tornado took down barns, outbuildings and large trees in southeast Nebraska, and Johnson County emergency director Clint Strayhorn said he was still trying to determine how long the twister was on the ground and how much damage it did.

    "I'm on a 2-mile stretch that this thing is on the ground and I haven't even gotten to the end of it yet," he said as he walked the path of destruction near the Johnson-Nemaha county line. He described a line of downed trees and a barn that was destroyed. He didn't immediately know of any injuries.

    “What is now under way is potentially a very serious situation,” Bill Bunting, chief of operations for the Storm Prediction Center said earlier Saturday. Officials warned that other areas at risk were parts of Illinois, Missouri and Texas.

    The last time the National Weather Service issued such a high-risk warning was last April, Bunting said.

    Comments from the targeted region started to stream onto msnbc.com’s Facebook page Saturday evening. Their comments and their Facebook IDs:

    "Oklahoma is get'n shaken up jus a bit. If they weren't ALL Around. I woulda left state! But gonna pray & ride it out here in Okie.” -- Kimberly Dawn.

    “Partly cloudy and very windy in S.E. Kansas with potential for severe storms after 10 pm. You pray and keep your eyes on the weather reports.” -- Valori Richardson

    “I'm east of Wichita, KS. Very muggy here. Very windy. Waiting for the storms to pop here. The local weather people are warning everyone to be prepared to take shelter even into the overnight hours. This is the real deal.” -- Diane Lowery.

    Nebraska canceled its spring scrimmage football game as heavy rain, hail and lightning moved through the area an hour and a half before kickoff, The Associated Press reported. Records show the spring game has been played every year since at least 1950. In northeast Nebraska, baseball-sized hail rained down, Bunting said.

    The Weather Channel's Dr. Greg Forbes takes a look at the night's forecast.

    He advised the nearly 5 million residents who live in the high-risk area to listen to their NOAA weather radio, a nationwide network of radio stations that broadcast from the National Weather Service.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    He expects fast-moving tornadoes to touch down after dark, a dangerous time as people may not be able to see the warning signs. The storm threat continues Sunday, he said, as storms move east through Texas, Arkansas and into the Great Lakes region and Wisconsin.

    Local officials should notify residents via outdoor sirens, phone calls and social media, Bunting said.

    Tornado sirens already sounded across Oklahoma City hours before dawn on Saturday. Department of Emergency Management official Michelann Ooten said one of the possible tornadoes was spotted near Piedmont, a small town near Oklahoma City where a twister killed several people last May.

    Weather Service meteorologist Kevin Brown told The Associated Press that the storms Saturday morning were fairly weak but still damaged some homes.

    A tornado that touched down Friday afternoon sent 10 people to the hospital with "bumps and bruises" and ripped through southwest Norman, ripping up telephone poles, shredding trees and ripping off rooftops, according to the Oklahoman. The AP reported that 100 people were staying at a Red Cross shelter that had been established.

    The Weather Channel's Eric Fisher reports on the latest in Oklahoma City.

    On Friday, Norman, Okla., home to the University of Oklahoma campus, got a preview of the potential destruction when a twister whizzed by the nation's tornado forecasting headquarters but caused little damage.

    Tornado hits Norman, Okla.

    The Storm Prediction Center, which is part of the National Weather Service, gave the sobering warning that the outbreak could be a "high-end, life-threatening event." 

    Historic warning
    Director Russ Schneider said it was just the second time in U.S. history that the center issued a high-risk warning more than 24 hours in advance. The first was in April 2006, when nearly 100 tornadoes tore across the southeastern U.S., killing a dozen people and damaging more than 1,000 homes in Tennessee.

    It's possible to issue earlier warnings because improvements in storm modeling and technology are letting forecasters predict storms earlier and with greater confidence, said Chris Vaccaro, a spokesman for the National Weather Service. In the past, people often have had only minutes of warning when a siren went off.

    The strongly worded message came after the National Weather Service announced last month that it would start using terms like "mass devastation," "unsurvivable" and "catastrophic" in warnings in an effort to get more people to take heed.

    This article includes reporting by The Weather Channel and The Associated Press.

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    310 comments

    I hope things turn out well for everyone in the affected area. Best of luck.

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    Explore related topics: weather, oklahoma, kansas, storms, tornado, featured, life-threatening
  • 4
    Apr
    2012
    5:01am, EDT

    800 homes hit in Dallas area during 'very unusual' tornado season

    Massive tornadoes ripped through the Dallas-Fort Worth area Tuesday, sending 18-wheelers into the air and damaging about 650 homes. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    As experts assessed reports that up to 18 tornadoes hit the Dallas area on Tuesday, the cleanup and rebuilding began Wednesday for -thousands of residents from the more than 800 homes destroyed or damaged.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Among the hardest cities hit were the Dallas suburbs of Arlington, where more than 400 homes were damaged, and Lancaster, where some 300 structures were damaged and 10 people were injured, two seriously, according to NBCDFW.com. 


    The National Weather Service was investigating reports that up to 18 tornadoes touched down during a relatively short time frame.

    "We're at just the beginning of a very unusual" tornado season, NBC weather anchor Al Roker said on TODAY. April 2011 saw a record 758 tornadoes, he added, "hopefully we're not on track for that this year."

    Weather.com meteorologist Greg Forbes told TODAY that the season is already "running about 50 percent above average for the number of tornadoes."

    "We've had record heat," he added, and "that warmth is a big ingredient that provides the instability for the storms."

    On Tuesday, one twister was seen on video tossing semi-trailers from an operations yard into the air with ease. Schneider National, the trucking company that owns the yard, said Wednesday that no one was hurt but that dozens of trailers were destroyed or damaged.

    Mom recounts saving daughters from 'terrifying' tornado
    Videos show flying semi-trailers, golf ball-sized hail
    Flights still disrupted at DFW airport

    Despite the intensity of the slow-moving storms, no fatalities were reported.

    In Arlington, a twister tore through part of a nursing home, injuring two residents.

    "The windows were flying out, and my sister is paralyzed, so I had to get someone to help me get her in a wheelchair to get her out of the room," NBCDFW.com quoted Joy Johnston as saying. "It was terribly loud."

    Johnston said her 79-year-old sister, whom she was visiting, was taken to the hospital because of her delicate health.

    "The hallways were all jammed," Johnston said. "Everyone was trying to help each other to make a path for others. I'd say everybody was out of their rooms within 20 minutes."

    Lisa Rebstock, who hid in her bathroom with her two young daughters when a tornado ripped through their Texas home Tuesday, tell TODAY's Ann Curry it was the "most terrifying thing" she's ever been through.

    The storm system moved into the Southeast on Wednesday and the weather.com published a map showing the danger area for thunderstorms and possibly tornadoes there.

    The danger zone stretched from the Texas coast and parts of East Texas to northern Florida, and from Kansas to Virginia.

    Slideshow: Tornadoes rip through Dallas area

    Larry W. Smith / EPA

    Launch slideshow

    The greatest chances of a severe storm Wednesday were in Nashville, Memphis, Jackson, Mobile and Lake Charles.

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    112 comments

    My heart and best wishes go out to those who were along the storms path. We are indeed fortunate there have yet been no reports of death in these areas.

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    Explore related topics: texas, weather, storms, tornado, featured, dfw, tractor-trailer
  • 3
    Apr
    2012
    8:04pm, EDT

    Texas tornado videos show flying semi-trailers, golf ball-sized hail

    By Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

    Here are several video highlights from the storm that smashed across north Texas, including two reports from NBC Nightly News and a now-viral video of the tornado picking up and throwing 18-wheelers through the black sky.

    Severe weather specialist Dr. Greg Forbes explains why the slow-moving tornadoes dwelled over the Dallas region.

     


     

    The strong winds lifted tractor trailers, hurling them through the air. After the wave of storms subsided, damage spanned several counties near Dallas. NBC's Gabe Gutierrez reports.

    An aerial video captured by KXAS shows two tornadoes touching down south of Dallas, catapulting 18-wheelers across the area. It's difficult to discern at first, as the sky is black, but the semi-trailers are hurled nearly 100 feet in the air.

     

    Images, although powerful, do not capture how loud storms can be. Here, a YouTube user captured the sound of golf ball-sized hail crashing down on a parking lot.

    Watch on YouTube

     

    Msnbc's Tamron Hall reports as a helicopter video catches a tornado tearing through neighborhoods. She also provides updates on her family, who live in the area.

    More tornado coverage from msnbc.com:

    'Tremendous damage' as twisters tear through areas near Dallas

    Where are those tornadoes anyway? Texans crowdsource the news

    Tractor trailers fly as tornado strikes

    16 comments

    I believe that those 18 wheelers were from the Flying J truck stop in Lancaster. All of the local reports that I have seen, there are no reported deaths, only injuries. As far as the trucks in the air, in 1972, I was on I 20 near Marshall, TX, my way to Georgia when we had to pull over because of st …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: texas, weather, video, tornado
  • 3
    Apr
    2012
    6:44pm, EDT

    Tractor trailers fly as tornado strikes Schneider National's Dallas hub

    Two tornadoes touched down south of Dallas catapulting 18-wheelers across the area. Aerials from KXAS.

    By msnbc.com staff

    A tornado that struck a national trucking company's south Dallas hub Tuesday sent huge trailers flying hundreds of feet into the air and caused “massive” damage, company officials said.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Schneider National was still accounting for all employees at its operations center, the Green Bay, Wis.-based company said in a statement.


    Reuters

    Damaged trucks and trailers are seen at the Schneider National trucking hub after a tornado past through the Dallas-Fort Worth area on Tuesday.

    The company’s main building did not sustain major damage, the firm said.

    Television video showed a tornado tossing Schneider’s distinctive orange trucks into the sky and slamming back to the ground.

    The company-operated truck stop has fueling stations as well as truck maintenance bays, showers, laundry facilities, exercise equipment and cafeteria services, Janet Bonkowski told the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel.

    Tornadoes pound through Dallas suburbs

    Texans crowdsource tornadoes' paths

    About 65 office and maintenance people work at the center, about 10 miles south of downtown Dallas, but 200 to 300 drivers are in and out each day, the company said.

    There were 254 tractors and 204 trailers in the truck yard when the tornado hit, the company said.

    Trailers typically are 53 feet long and weigh about 13,500 pounds empty, officials told the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel.

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    21 comments

    That must have been one very strong tornado to pick up those trailers and throw them around like that. Amazing to see the power of mother nature taking something that weighs close to 7 tons and throwing it around like a childs toy.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, dallas, tornado, featured
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I'm the environment and weather editor for msnbc.com, and hope to discuss issues and events with the newsvine community as well as to invite experts into those discussions.

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