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Shun
February 6th, 2008, 01:11 PM
One of several videos: http://www.weather.com/multimedia/videoplayer.html?clip=2907&from=hp_news

Tornadoes tear across South

1:45 p.m. ET 2/6/2008
The Associated Press

LAFAYETTE, Tenn. (AP) -- Residents in five Southern states tried to salvage what they could Wednesday from homes reduced to piles of debris, a day after the deadliest cluster of tornadoes in nearly a decade tore through the region, snapping trees and crumpling homes. At least 50 people were dead.


Rescue crews, some with the help of the National Guard, went door-to-door looking for more victims. Dozens of twisters were reported as the storms swept through Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Arkansas and Alabama.



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Atkins, Ark., resident Seavia Dixon being comforted over the destruction of her home (AP PHOTO)


Seavia Dixon, whose Atkins, Ark., home was shattered, stood Wednesday morning in her yard, holding muddy baby pictures of her son, who is now a 20-year-old soldier in Iraq. Only a concrete slab was left from the home.
The family's brand new white pickup truck was upside-down, about 150 yards from where it was parked before the storm. Another pickup truck the family owned sat crumpled about 50 feet from the slab.


"You know, it's just material things," Dixon said, her voice breaking. "We can replace them. We were just lucky to survive."


In many places, the storms struck as Super Tuesday primaries were ending. As the extent of the damage quickly became clear, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Barack Obama and Mike Huckabee paused in their victory speeches to remember the victims.


Twenty-six people were killed in Tennessee, 13 killed in Arkansas, seven killed in Kentucky and four killed in Alabama, emergency officials said. Among the victims were Arkansas parents who died with their 11-year-old daughter in Atkins when they stayed behind to calm their horses. The community, one of the hardest hit, is a town of about 3,000 approximately 60 miles northwest of Little Rock.


Ray Story tried to get his 70-year-old brother, Bill Clark, to a hospital after the storms leveled his mobile home in Macon County, about 60 miles northeast of Nashville. Clark died as Story and his wife tried to navigate debris-strewn roads in their pickup truck, they said.


"He never had a chance," Story's wife, Nova, said. "I looked him right in the eye and he died right there in front of me."


President Bush said he called the governors of Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee and assured them the administration was ready to help and to deal with any emergency requests.
"Loss of life, loss of property - prayers can help and so can the government," Bush said. "I do want the people in those states to know the American people are standing with them."


The system moved eastward to Alabama Wednesday, bringing heavy rain and gusty wind, causing several injuries in counties northwest of Birmingham.


An apparent tornado damaged eight homes in Walker County, Ala., and a pregnant woman suffered a broken arm when a trailer home was tossed by the wind, said county emergency management director Johnny Burnette.
"I was there before daylight and it looked like a war zone," he said.


Northeast of Nashville, a spectacular fire erupted at a natural gas pumping station. The station took a direct hit from the storm, but no deaths connected to the fire were reported.


About 200 yards from the edge of the plant, Bonnie and Frank Brawner picked through the rubble of their home for photographs and other personal items. The storm sheared off the second story of the home.


"We had a beautiful neighborhood, now it's hell," said Bonnie Brawner, 80.



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Heavy equipment clears the rubble of a dorm at Union University in Jackson, Tenn., Tuesday night (AP PHOTO)


More than 20 students were stuck behind wreckage and jammed doors, mostly for short periods, in battered dormitories at Union University in Jackson, Tenn. Tornadoes had hit the campus in the past, and students knew the drill when they heard sirens, said Union University President David S. Dockery.


"When the sirens went off the entire process went into place quickly," Dockery said. Students "were ushered into rooms, into the bathrooms, interior spaces."


He said about 50 students were taken to a hospital and nine stayed through the night. But all would be fine, he said. The students "demonstrated who they are and I'm so proud of them."


In Memphis, high wind collapsed the roof of a Sears store at a mall. Debris that included bricks and air conditioning units was scattered on the parking lot, where about two dozen vehicles were damaged.


A few people north of the mall took shelter under a bridge and were washed away in the Wolf River, but they were pulled out with only scrapes, said Steve Cole of the Memphis Police Department.


Winter tornadoes are not uncommon. The peak tornado season is late winter through midsummer, but the storms can happen at any time of the year with the right conditions.
Source: http://www.weather.com/newscenter/topstories/020508_tornadoes.html?from=hp_news



The death numbers have gone up throughout the length of the storms, up six from the last time I checked just a couple of hours ago. Weather.com (http://www.weather.com) is keeping on top of everything, but that's just the news.. It doesn't tell of how Internet friends of mine are doing in those areas, and I'm growing a bit concerned on the whole matter, to be honest.



SEAN?.. SEANN!??!

Rinoa
February 6th, 2008, 02:19 PM
While I was at work today, every news station was talking about this. It's really awful..And it's crazy how strong the winds were. I hope not too many more people die because of it.

Crimson
February 6th, 2008, 03:34 PM
We saw the headline in my History class today, and my friend was telling me about the dorms. I couldn't believe it.
I guess that's the price to pay if you want to live in an area where there's less snow, but you get tornadoes and hurricanes.

Solitary Seraph
February 6th, 2008, 05:58 PM
Sorry guys, went on a road tri-too tastless? Uhh.

Yeah, it's a horrible thing that's going on. It was supposed to hail and sleet and tornado across my state, but we dodged the bullet this time.

lol edit: In other words, I'm fine, u gais.

Shun
February 6th, 2008, 08:25 PM
All right! We didn't lose an active memb--lol too tasteless, myself. But I have nothing to cover that with.. sooo... *clicks post*

Roxas
February 7th, 2008, 12:38 PM
I've heard nothing about this. :( We've had the whole US presidency thing going on in our news as the main story...IN THE UNITED KINGDOM! Pfft...