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Tornadoes rip through South, killing 48
#1
By ANTONIO GONZALEZ, Associated Press Writer 1 hour, 33 minutes ago

Daybreak revealed a battered landscape across the South on Wednesday, as crews searching communities hit by a violent line of tornadoes fought through downed power lines, crumpled mobile homes and snapped trees to find victims. At least 48 people were dead.

The storms swept across Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi and Arkansas as Super Tuesday primaries were ending, ripping the roof from a shopping mall, blowing apart warehouses and crumpling a campus' dormitory buildings as students huddled inside.

Seavia Dixon, whose Atkins, Ark. 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."

As the extent of the damage quickly became clear, candidates including Hillary Rodham Clinton, Barack Obama and Mike Huckabee paused in their victory speeches to remember the victims.

Twenty-four people were killed in Tennesee, 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, about 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."

The system moved eastward to Alabama Wednesday, bringing heavy rains and gusty winds, causing several injuries in counties northwest of Birmingham. There were at least two reports of tornadoes, and the National Weather Service posted tornado watches for parts of southern Alabama, the Florida Panhandle and western Georgia.

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 winds, 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 northeast of Nashville. 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 completely sheared off the second story of the home.

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

Eight students were trapped in a battered dormitory at Union University in Jackson, Tenn., until they were finally freed. Tornadoes had hit the campus in the past, and students knew the drill when they heard sirens, said Union University President David S. Dockery. At least two dormitories were destroyed.

"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 the 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."

Well after nightfall Tuesday, residents went through shattered homes in Atkins, a town of 3,000 near the Arkansas River. Around them, power lines snaked along streets and a deep-orange pickup truck rested on its side. A navy blue Mustang with a demolished front end was marked with spray paint to show it had been searched.

Outside one damaged home, horses whinnied in the darkness, looking up only when a flashlight reached their eyes. A ranch home stood unscathed across the street from a concrete slab that had supported the house where the family of three died.

In Memphis, high winds 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, but they were pulled out of the Wolf River with only scrapes, said Steve Cole of the Memphis Police Department.

In Mississippi, Desoto County Sheriff's Department Cmdr. Steve Atkinson said a twister shredded warehouses in an industrial park in the city of Southaven, just south of Memphis.

"It ripped the warehouses apart. The best way to describe it is it looks like a bomb went off," Atkinson said.

Winter tornadoes are not uncommon. The peak tornado season is late winter through mid-summer, but the storms can happen at any time of the year with the right conditions.

The tornadoes could be due to La Nina, the cooling of the tropical Pacific Ocean that can cause changes in weather patterns around the world. It is the opposite of the better-known El Nino, a periodic warming of the same region.

Recent studies have found an increase in tornadoes in parts of the southern U.S. during the winter during a La Nina. On Jan. 8, tornadoes were reported in Arkansas, Illinois, Missouri, Oklahoma and Wisconsin. Two died in the Missouri storms.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080206/ap_on_re_us/severe_weather&printer=1;_ylt=AsFAuMI00WsF_LiwWlQYXhVH2ocA
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#2
This was one heck of a storm front which swept across a large part of this country.  There were fierce upper level winds.
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#3
It’s interesting that we got all these tornados on Super Tuesday.
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#4
And now Bush is going to view the carnage on Friday.
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#5
This is a very sad event, a total devastation for all involved and their loved ones.
I just want to cover some key notes-
On this day the Sun, moon, mercury, Neptune and the node are all in the sign of Aquarius, which is a fixed ‘Air’ sign and often sends out energy of inflexibility, a gentle natured sign with a fierce alter, with the help of Capricorn/Pluto and mars/Gemini retrograde this devastation was an easy process, this is a storm that had purpose and no doubt was intentional.
I certainly do not want to take away the sadness of those who lost their life, home and family.
The main thing I want to highlight here is the higher universal frequency we are entering, destruction will be part of this change which I have mentioned more than once.
What I am trying to focus on is the ‘miracle stories’ that will surface form such events like this, and this type of destruction will increase around the globe. I just ask everyone here to focus on the survivors, those who surely should have died but survived and it is the ‘miracles’ that show all of us that are awake to this reality, the core message that we all hold during the process of reaching the higher consciousness, the strength within all of us.
Richard, please find us as many miracle stories as possible.
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#6
One of the miracle tornado stories:

A remarkable story of survival has emerged from the tornadoes that ripped through Tennessee after an 11-month-old baby was found alive 150 yards from where his home once stood.

[Image: 1644513.jpg]
Tornado survivor Kyson Stowell
Rescuers had ignored the body of Kyson Stowell, lying face down in the mud surrounded by splintered wood and bricks, believing it to be a doll.

By chance, a firefighter was looking in the right direction when the child made the slightest of movements.
 
"It looked like a baby doll," said David Harmon, of the Wilson County Emergency Management Agency who had already combed the field once looking for survivors.

Then he checked for a pulse.

"He was laying there motionless ... I said 'look it looks like a baby doll', but before I could finish speaking I seen the baby move."

The body of the boy's mother, 23-year old Kerri Stowell, was found in the same field, where houses were reduced to concrete slabs and a brick post office was blown to bits.

But, apart from a few scrapes and gashes on his cheek and by his eyes, Kyson was fine.

He was discharged from a hospital and is now in the care of his grandparents.

 
President Bush meets tornado victims in Tennessee
The baby's great grandmother, Joyce Carter, said she received the news of Kyson with "mixed feelings."

"It's sadness that one's gone and one was saved, so it's kind of mixed."

Kerri Stowell's fiance, 22-year-old Charles Scott, believed she tried to keep her son safe as the storm closed in.

"I'm happy the baby is okay. I'd rather them both be here," Scott said.

The tornadoes that hit Tennessee, Kentucky, Mississippi, Alabama and Arkansas claimed 59 lives.

President Bush visited Tennessee, surveying some of the damage by helicopter before speaking to victims of the storms.

He declared five Tennessee counties disaster areas and said national government money would be spent on rebuilding them.
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#7
Astrojewels Wrote:Richard, please find us as many miracle stories as possible.
I keep my eyes open for miracle stories but I haven’t seen many of them yet. I’ll post them as I see them. :)
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#8
AstroJewels,

 I've been through 3 or 4 tornadoes including the ones that previous to this last bunch held the record for devastation in the US. That was 1974 in the same general areas.

 It's a miracle anyone survives these things. So in my opinion there are many miracles in strong tornadic touchdown. This little guys story is a happy one too.

When my mother was @ 4 a tornado touched down where they lived. It was in the same general area as this last bunch...Central Kentucky. A friend and neighbor of hers was blown away and feared dead. She was 2. They found her the next night high up in a tree. She had a badly damaged leg and walked with a limp for the rest of her life .
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#9
DT, thanks for that story and what a miracle, there will be more we just have to find them.
MN, I have never experienced a tornado, and I feel it would be the worst all storms; all elements have an extreme force within, but Air is somewhat different, I personally do not like strong wind, it does something internally to you, it has this power that can not be challenged like the other elements. I think that the miracles are the collective energy of all of us and represent that only a small minority have internal faith and hope, but it is the miracle stories that give us the will to keep going.
That is an amazing story of your mother’s friend, thanks for sharing.
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#10
I know exactly what you mean by wind AstroJewels.It makes me nervous . Physically I can't handle much wind at all without becoming very ill. I always felt like a dufus :D because of that.Good to know someone else has the same issue. Especially someone I don't consider a dufus.;)
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