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LOUISVILLE,
Miss. (AP) — Ruth Bennett died clutching the last child left at her day
care center as a tornado wiped the building off its foundation. A
firefighter who came upon the body gently pulled the toddler from her
arms.
"It makes you just take a breath now," said next-door
neighbor Kenneth Billingsley, who witnessed the scene at what was left
of Ruth's Child Care Center in this logging town of 6,600. "It makes you
pay attention to life."
Widespread Damage And Casualties After Tornadoes Rip Through South
VILONIA,
AR - APRIL 29: A passerby stops to look at damage caused by a tornado
on Sunday evening, on April 29, 2014 in Vilonia, Arkansas. After deadly
tornadoes ripped through the region leaving more than a dozen dead,
Mississippi, Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana and Tennessee are all under
watch as multiple storms are expected over the next few days. (Photo by
Mark Wilson/Getty Images)
...
Bennett,
53, was among at least 34 people killed in a two-day outbreak of
twisters and other violent weather that pulverized homes in half a dozen
states from Iowa to Tennessee. The child's fate was not immediately
known.
As crews in Mississippi and Alabama turned from
search-and-rescue efforts to cleanup, the South braced for a third round
of potentially deadly weather Tuesday. Tornadoes usually strike in the
late afternoon and evening.
One of the hardest-hit areas in Monday
evening's barrage of twisters was Tupelo, Miss., where a gas station
looked as if it had been stepped on by a giant.
Francis Gonzalez,
who also owns a convenience store and Mexican restaurant attached to the
service station, took cover with her three children and two employees
in the store's cooler as the roof over the gas pumps was reduced to
aluminum shards.
"My Lord, how can all this happen in just one second?" she said in Spanish.
On
Tuesday, the whine of chain saws cut through the otherwise still, hazy
morning in Tupelo. Massive oak trees, knocked over like toys, blocked
roads. Neighbors helped one another cut away limbs.
"This does not
even look like a place that I'm familiar with right now," said Pam
Montgomery, walking her dog in her neighborhood. "You look down some of
the streets, and it doesn't even look like there is a street."
AP
Tornado hits Mayflower, Ark.
Travel
trailers and motor homes are piled on top of each other at Mayflower RV
in Mayflower, Ark., Sunday, April 27, 2014.A powerful storm system
rumbled through the central and southern United States on Sunday,
spawning tornadoes.
UPDATE 4-U.S. storm system that killed 16 causes tornado in Mississippi
Tue Apr 29, 2014 3:35am IST
* Tornado touches down in Mississippi
* More than 100 injured
* Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia at risk (Adds Mississippi governor)
By Colin Sims
VILONIA,
Ark., April 28 (Reuters) - A ferocious storm system caused a twister in
Mississippi and threatened tens of millions of people across the U.S.
Southeast on Monday, a day after it spawned tornadoes that killed 16
people and tossed cars like toys in Arkansas and other states.
A
tornado went through Tupelo, Mississippi in the northern part of the
state at about 3 p.m. (1800 GMT), damaging hundreds of homes, downing
power lines and toppling trees, Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant told
CNN.
There were no immediate reports of deaths or injuries after six instances of tornadoes touching down in the state.
"It is not over. This is going to be a prolonged storm," Bryant said.
Parts
of Alabama, western Georgia and Tennessee also were at risk as the
storm system that produced the series of tornadoes headed east toward
the Mid-Atlantic states.
Rescue workers, volunteers and victims
have been sifting through the rubble in the hardest-hit state of
Arkansas, looking for survivors in central Faulkner County where a
tornado reduced homes to splinters, snapped power lines and mangled
trees.
Arkansas Governor Mike Beebe said at least 14 people died
statewide in the storm that authorities said produced the first
fatalities of this year's U.S. tornado season. He previously told a news
conference 16 had been killed but later said there was a mistake in
calculation.
Nine of the victims came from the same street
in the town of Vilonia, with a population of about 4,100, where a new
intermediate school set to open in August was heavily damaged by a
tractor trailer blown into its roof. A steel farm shop anchored to
concrete was erased from the landscape.
Beebe told reporters of
the capricious nature of tornadoes. He said a woman died when the door
of her home's reinforced safe room collapsed, while a father and three
daughters survived by seeking shelter in a bathtub that was flipped over
in winds that leveled the house.
One person was killed in neighboring Oklahoma and another in Iowa, state authorities said.
'LONG ROAD TO HEALING'
"Everything is just leveled to the ground," Vilonia resident Matt Rothacher said. "It cut a zig-zag right through town."
Rothacher
was at home with his wife and four children when the tornado passed
through. While his home survived, The Valley Church where he serves as
pastor was flattened.
| by By MELISSA NELSON-GABRIEL and MICHAEL KUNZELMAN
Posted: Updated:
PENSACOLA
BEACH, Fla. (AP) — People were plucked off rooftops or climbed into
their attics to get away from fast-rising waters when nearly 2 feet of
rain fell on the Florida Panhandle and Alabama coast in the span of
about 24 hours, the latest bout of severe weather that began with
tornadoes in the Midwest.
On Wednesday, roads were
chewed up into pieces or wiped out entirely and neighborhoods were
inundated, making rescues difficult for hundreds of people who called
for help when they were caught off guard by the single rainiest day ever
recorded in Pensacola.
Boats and Humvees zigzagged
through the flooded streets to help stranded residents. A car and truck
plummeted 25 feet when portions of a scenic highway collapsed, and one
Florida woman died when she drove her car into high water, officials
said.
Near the Alabama-Florida line, water started
creeping into Brandi McCoon's mobile home, so her fiance, Jonathan
Brown, wrapped up her nearly 2-year-old son Noah in a blanket and they
swam in neck-deep water to their car about 50 feet away.
Then, the car was flooded.
"Every which way we turned, there was a big ol' pile of water," she said.
Brown called 911 and eventually a military vehicle picked them up and took them to a shelter.
Kyle
Schmitz was at his Pensacola home with his 18-month-old son Oliver on
Tuesday night when heavy rain dropped during a 45-minute span. He
gathered up his son, his computer and important papers and left.
Heavy rain from the Nashville metro area eastward has triggered
flash flooding. Water running down city streets swamped cars
windshield-deep in some low spots and flooded some ground floor
apartments. Nashville firefighters waded waist-deep water to lead some
residents of Parkwood Villa Apartments, along Ewing Creek, to higher
ground. Video shown by WTVF-TV showed other residents sitting on
second-story balconies. In the area of the Gaylord Opryland Resort &
Convention Center, traffic was stopped by high water on Briley Parkway
for a time. The water began receding as the rain moved east, out of the
metro area. Estimates of more than 5 inches of rain were common from the
center of the city northeastward across the Madison neighborhood. There
have been no reports of injury.
Torrential rains shortly before dawn Thursday triggered widespread
street flooding across Wichita, authorities said. The National Weather
Service reported 1.59 inches of rain fell in about an hour, starting
shortly after 4 a.m. "It just came down so fast our drainage systems
couldn't handle it," said Scott Smith, a meteorologist at the Wichita
branch of the weather service. Flooded streets were reported throughout
downtown Wichita as well as numerous locations around the city, a
Sedgwick County dispatch supervisor said. While no water rescues were
necessary, several cars became stranded at flooded intersections -
including a reported five at 13th and St. Paul in west Wichita alone.
Westar Energy reported more than 1,300 customers without power just
before 7:30 a.m., most of them small clusters scattered across west
Wichita north of Kellogg. Much of south-central and southern Kansas
received at least 1 1/2 inches overnight, Smith said, which will only
aggravate flooding in the saturated region. Light rain is projected to
fall across Wichita and much of the area the rest of the morning, Smith
said. A lull will set in until tonight, when another round of heavy rain
is expected to move through.
Cars stall out in flood waters on Brick Church Pike August 8, 2013 in Nashville, Tenn.
(ST. LOUIS) — Torrential rains continued across the nation’s
midsection on Thursday, causing flash flooding that killed a woman,
damaged homes and forced multiple water rescues.
Up to 10 inches of rain pounded southern Missouri early Thursday. A
woman died near Jane, Mo., in the far southwestern corner of the state
when creek water washed over a highway, sweeping away her car.
“Early this morning it just unleashed,” said Greg Sweeten, emergency management director in McDonald County, Mo.
Authorities in the south-central Missouri town of Waynesville
continued to search for 23-year-old Jessica D. Lee, whose car was swept
up in a flash flood early Tuesday. The body of her 4-year-old son,
Elyjah, was found Tuesday, hours after his mother made a distress call
from her cell phone.
Flash flood warnings were common in Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas,
Oklahoma and Tennessee. And things could get worse: Heavy rain is in the
forecast into the weekend.
ST. LOUIS (AP) -- A southwest Missouri woman died after another
round of torrential downpours caused flash flooding that swept away her
car, authorities said Thursday.
McDonald County emergency management director Greg Sweeten said the
woman died early Thursday when water from normally dry Brush Creek
suddenly overwhelmed Route 90 near the town of Jane, Mo., flooding the
road up to 6 feet deep.
The victim's name has not been released.
National Weather Service meteorologist Drew Albert said parts of
southwest Missouri got 10 inches of rain overnight. McDonald County in
the far southwest corner of the state was inundated with rain that
seemingly came all at once.
"Early this morning it just unleashed," Sweeten said.
Fifteen people camping on an island on the Elk River near Noel had to
be rescued. In fact, the county boat rescuing them broke down, and the
rescuers themselves had to be saved by a boat from the Missouri State
Highway Patrol, Sweeten said. Two women were rescued from their homes in
Powell, Mo.
The town of Hollister also was hard hit, with about 100 buildings
damaged when Turkey Creek came up suddenly, said Melissa Duckworth,
assistant emergency management director in Taney County. More than two
dozen people had to be rescued from homes, mostly mobile homes, in
Hollister, which is near Branson. Two of the mobile homes were washed
away. Another 50 or so residents were evacuated, and several trucks
parked at a strip mall were washed down the creek.
1 dead as flooding washes over 12 Midwestern, Eastern states
Posted on: 3:20 pm, August 8, 2013, by Matt Knight
(CNN) — A Missouri woman was killed in the state’s flash flooding
Thursday as inclement weather hammers several states in what forecasters
predict will be a particularly nasty storm season.
As rescue teams were performing 18 “swift water rescues” in McDonald
County, Missouri, Thursday morning, the woman — thought to be in her 60s
— was driving over a bridge when she was caught up in “rapidly rising
waters,” said Gregg Sweeten, the county’s emergency management director.
Sweeten said he was hopeful the Elk River, which runs through this
county on the Arkansas state line, about 80 miles southwest of
Springfield, Missouri, would crest late Thursday night.
South of the capital, Jefferson City, Interstate 44 was shut down because of high water. It’s since been reopened.
Forecasters warn that areas along the Gasconade River could see
record water levels, and widespread flooding is expected to continue in
Missouri and Kansas into the weekend.
Southern Missouri has witnessed widespread flash flooding as parts of
12 Midwestern and Eastern states experienced some sort of flood watch
or warning Thursday.