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Joplin, Missouri Tornado Single Deadliest In U.S. Since 1950 (VIDEO)

Joplin Missouri Tornado

AP/The Huffington Post   First Posted: 05/24/11 11:47 AM ET Updated: 07/24/11 06:12 AM ET

JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) -- Emergency crews drilled through concrete at a ruined Home Depot, making peepholes in the rubble in hopes of finding lost shoppers and employees. A dog clambered through the shattered remains of a house, sniffing for any sign of the woman and infant who lived there.

Across devastated Joplin, searchers moved from one enormous debris pile to another Tuesday, racing to respond to any report of a possible survivor.

The human toll rose to at least 122 dead and 750 people hurt. But just nine had been pulled alive from the aftermath. Searchers fought the clock because anybody still alive after the deadliest single tornado in 60 years was losing precious strength two days after the disaster. And another round of storms was closing in.

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For Milissa Burns, hope was fading that her 16-month-old grandson, whose parents were both hospitalized after the tornado hit their home, would be found.

She showed up Tuesday at a demolished dental office near the child's home to watch a search team. At one point, a dog identified possible human remains, prompting eight searchers to dig frantically, but they came away with nothing. Burns was weary but composed. Her daughter - the boy's aunt - sobbed next to her.

"We've already checked out the morgue," Burns said. "I've called 911 a million times. I've done everything I can do. He was so light and little. He could be anywhere."

Also Tuesday, the National Weather Service announced that the twister that crippled Joplin was an EF-5, the strongest rating assigned to tornadoes, with winds of more than 200 mph. Scientists said it appeared to be a rare "multivortex" tornado, with two or more small and intense centers of rotation orbiting the larger funnel.

(CLICK HERE to see photos of the Joplin tornado's devastating aftermath.)

It was the deadliest single twister since the weather service began keeping official records in 1950 and the eighth-deadliest in U.S. history.

A short time later, severe thunderstorms spawned a tornado that killed two people during the evening rush hour in suburban Oklahoma City.

Another top job was testing the city's tornado sirens to make sure they were operable ahead of another round of potentially violent weather starting Tuesday evening and expected to last into Wednesday in some places. Emergency officials warned jittery residents well in advance of the test.

David Imy, a meteorologist at the federal government's Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., said conditions were ripe for severe thunderstorms, including tornadoes, in parts of Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, Texas, Kentucky and Tennessee, as well as nearly all of Oklahoma.

Throughout the search efforts, new reports emerged of clusters of victims: 11 people dead in a nursing home, three bodies found in an Elks Lodge.

The tornado tossed three vehicles into the Greenbriar nursing home and left nothing more than a 10-foot section of an interior wall standing. On the night of the twister, the Joplin Elks lodge had been scheduled to host its weekly bingo game.

"If that had been two hours later, there could have been 40 or 50 people in there," said Chris Moreno, a hospital lab technician coordinating an outdoor triage center.

Jasper County Emergency Director Keith Stammer said the scope of the destruction was making it difficult to account for people affected by the storm. He suggested that many survivors, with nowhere to go, left Joplin for Kansas, Arkansas, Oklahoma or other parts of Missouri.

"There's a lot of confusion, a lot of inability for folks to communicate," he said.

Authorities also announced a curfew from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m., with only residents and emergency workers allowed inside the disaster zone.

People in the Joplin area and beyond have turned to online social networks to find family members missing since the tornado or to learn about the plight of survivors.

Multiple Facebook pages created since the tornado are filled with requests for information about specific people who have not been heard from since Sunday. Some pages include photos of the missing. Other posts share the news about Joplin residents who are alive and well.

Several social-networking efforts specifically focused on finding information about Will Norton, a teenager who vanished on his way home from his high school graduation ceremony. More than 10,000 people have supported the "Help Find Will Norton" community page on Facebook, and Twitter users were tweeting heavily about the missing teen.

Family members told The Associated Press that Norton and his father were still on the road when the storm hit. Mark Norton urged his son to pull over, but the teen's Hummer H3 flipped several times, throwing the young man from the vehicle, likely through the sunroof.

The elder Norton was hospitalized.

Confusion clouded the number of dead and survivors. A spokesman for Gov. Jay Nixon said 117 bodies had been found, along with 17 survivors pulled from the rubble. The fire chief said he only knew of 116 bodies and seven survivors.

From the air, the difficulty of the search was apparent.

The tornado damage was "like taking a mower through tall grass. That's what it looks like," said state Sen. Ron Richard of Joplin, who flew over the area with Nixon and Sen. Claire McCaskill. He described the devastation as "down to the ground."

The Home Depot was identifiable only by the prevalence of the store's signature orange color in the corrugated roofing and metal framing that looked almost as if it had been melted.

Jackhammers pounded against heavy concrete slabs that once held up the store. Crews were desperate to punch through so dogs could sniff for any scent of people below. A day earlier, rescuers found one person alive in the store's wreckage but also recovered seven bodies under the concrete.

In the waiting room of Freeman Hospital, Debbie McMurry and Dan Perry sat waiting for any news about their 76-year-old mother, Mary Joyce Perry. She was chatting online Sunday afternoon with McMurry when the lights began to flicker in her home, two streets away from the now-destroyed Joplin High School, McMurry said Tuesday.

When McMurry arrived that night to check on her mother, Perry's home had been flattened. Someone had left a cardboard sign near the wreckage: "Joyce Hospital?" A neighbor had seen someone carry Perry out of the house and take her away.

Dozens of relatives and friends have called hospitals throughout the region, and Dan Perry's son was trying to get into a makeshift morgue for tornado victims to look for her body. Meanwhile, her family members continued to wait at Freeman, where more than 500 storm victims have been treated and 11 have died.

"Who knows?" Dan Perry said Tuesday. "She could be anywhere."

Some searches that looked bleak ended in joy.

Near the hospital, in what was once a neighborhood overlooking a park, John DeGraff and a friend were picking through the remains of DeGraff's home when his neighbor, Larry Allen, walked up. Tears welled in DeGraff's eyes and he hurried to embrace Allen.

"Larry, where you been, man?" DeGraff asked. "We've been looking for you. We've been digging through here since Sunday."

"God bless you," Allen said. "Have you seen the cats?" DeGraff had not.

Allen said he tried to get to the basement when the tornado hit, but got his foot caught on a step heading downstairs and waited it out there. Good thing: The entire upstairs fell into the basement.

Allen, who lives alone, was able to walk out and stayed with friends before returning Tuesday to see what was left of his house.

Like DeGraff's, it was destroyed. DeGraff recovered a few old record albums. He smiled when he found a small football, a memento from his days on the 1980 team at Joplin High School. As DeGraff yelled to other neighbors that Allen was alive and well, another neighbor brought him pictures and other personal items she found for him.

"I didn't know people cared about me so much," Allen said.

About a mile to the east, Robin Ross sobbed as she held her 21-year-old son, John.

For 36 hours, Ross hadn't heard from her son, who doesn't have a cellphone. The morning after the storm, she raced the 12 miles from her Carl Junction home to Joplin and found the home where he was living in ruins. She couldn't reach his friends, and drove the neighborhood in search of him.

Ross said neighbors told her they had seen her son after the storm hit, but didn't know his location. Finally, on Tuesday, a friend was able to find the young man and direct his mother to him. He had climbed out of the wreckage and started helping with cleanup.

"I've been crying since Sunday," she said. "And it wasn't just for my family. It was for everyone."

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JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) -- Emergency crews drilled through concrete at a ruined Home Depot, making peepholes in the rubble in hopes of finding lost shoppers and employees. A dog clambered through the shatter...
JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) -- Emergency crews drilled through concrete at a ruined Home Depot, making peepholes in the rubble in hopes of finding lost shoppers and employees. A dog clambered through the shatter...
 
 
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02:06 PM on 06/23/2011
Here's a story about a woman from Wisconsin collecting teddy bears to send to help the kids in Joplin: http://patch.com/A-j8cJ
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08:30 PM on 05/25/2011
https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&ik=0b56f9eb09&view=audio&msgs=130246b976e2d1f5&attid=0.1&zw

I wrote this song in regard to all that can come against our faith and love in this life experience .
I would like to dedicate it to those in Joplin Missouri

God Bless those children and families
Mickey
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kome Chris-ukoko
02:22 PM on 05/25/2011
The people affected by the storms are in my prayers.

http://scienceray.com/earth-sciences/meteorology/tornado-in-joplin/

great article on the tornado, its effects, the neew death toll and a video of the storm captured by storm chasers.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Bubba Gump
Christian, Liberal, Former NCO -- US Army Reserve
01:26 PM on 05/25/2011
God bless all the people and animals dealing with the violent storms.
Oklahoma, Kansas, and Arkansas really took a beating.
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JWebberPhoto
Ain't skeered
01:17 PM on 05/25/2011
Here is a map of the restricted area of Joplin. Authorized personnel only. Spontaneous volunteers are being kept out.
http://www.joplinmo.org/pdf/tornado_traffic_small.pdf
01:14 PM on 05/25/2011
Ok so I googled how to build a storm shelter?... seems the days of digging a hole in the ground with dirt floors and walls is something of the past..which growing up in nebraska on my grandparents farm is all we had? and it doubled as my grandmothers canning room to boot?. now you have to buy or rent.a backhoe, brick, block, concrete,wood or metal? .. or pay to have it done at a huge cost?...I wonder do you get a homeonwners insurance break on putting one of these in?..and one forum since all these weather events talks about the cost of storm shelter installations have suddenly trippled?.. the American way?.. take advantage of peoples fears and charge them out the a$$ for it... One more question?.. has anyone read that the oil company's have donated any money towards the help in any of these distasters?.. after all they are raising the price again daily for the upcoming holiday weekend.. gas in my state has gone up 6cents already in the last two days.. let me know if anyone knows the answer to that oil company question?
12:47 PM on 05/25/2011
God bless the Emergency crews
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Chaucea
Think of the otters!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
melobster78
12:32 PM on 05/25/2011
F+F BarbaraDezan!! There are people on this site I am truly embaressed to share the planet with ! Alot of them visit this site!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Bubba Gump
Christian, Liberal, Former NCO -- US Army Reserve
12:31 PM on 05/25/2011
Although Joplin, Missouri is part of "tornado alley" and some people can't understand why citizens live in such a region, the truth is that tornadoes don't strike that often.  Joplin has only been struck twice since the city was incorporated in 1873.  A tornado struck the center of Joplin and cut across to the northeast on May 6, 1971, killing one person and injuring 45.

"Sheriff's deputies said it was the first time Joplin had been hit by a tornado."
http://digital.library.umsystem.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=joh;cc=joh;g=umtc;rgn=full%20text;idno=joh000003;view=image;seq=1
[page 11]

The second tornado was the EF-5 of May 22, 2011.  That's two tornadoes in a 138 year span.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Tornado_Alley.gif
12:29 PM on 05/25/2011
Tornado sirens are being sounded now in the Kansas City metro area. This is something we're used to around here but recent events make us more mindful
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
11:58 AM on 05/25/2011
Cantor says no help for thses folks...
12:30 PM on 05/25/2011
Lie
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Bubba Gump
Christian, Liberal, Former NCO -- US Army Reserve
01:03 PM on 05/25/2011
Truth.

"On Monday [May 23, 2011], House Majority Leader Eric Cantor said that Congress would not approve funds for disaster relief without budget cuts elsewhere. "If there is support for a supplemental, it would be accompanied by support for having pay-fors to that supplemental," he said."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/05/24/joplin-missouri-tornado-h_n_866242.html?ir=Green
[paragraph 4]

That's blackmail during an emergency and is totally unacceptable.  Imagine if someone haggled the price of water you would pay for before they'd allow the fire department to put out the fire in your home.  How would you feel about being gouged like that during an emergency?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patriot86
Compassion is the basis of all morality.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bubba10
11:11 AM on 05/25/2011
I read Eric Cantor is holding up funds for relief for Joplin until he can get cuts somewhere else. Typical Republican compassion.
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lisaman
I am a liberal American so get over it
12:42 PM on 05/25/2011
As a citizen of Missouri, I can tell you that the people who live in that area are mostly republicans. I wonder what they will think when they realize how much they actually mean to the people they put in office.
01:55 PM on 05/25/2011
Your statement is acceptable while including the most important part that most are conveniently leaving out. What he's doing is obviously a wise thing to do. I seem to remember Obama trying to initiate a pay go system. That lasted all of what? Two days? It's not an easy thing to do when you have this tragedy to exploit for political reasons. It least he has the grapes to use a system that Barack could not stomach. Do you honestly think the people won't get all the help they need? The community is united and these petty arguments are the furthest thing from their minds. Family of mine lives there and nobody is screaming for tax dollars. Just a meal, a helping hand and maybe a few prayers.

Does it look good to those who sell out to poltical drama? No. Neither did the issue with the first responders bill. Sometimes the GOP needs to give in just to not look like DB's. That's not an easy thing to do when too many people think we have an endless supply of funds.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
swancj
07:53 AM on 05/26/2011
The thing is, taxation on the uber-wealthy is lower than it has been in a long time - why is that off the table, when it comes to paying for disaster relief for the people in Joplin and elsewhere? Certainly funds are limited - but in reality it is about priorities and valuation. And hopefully we can stop pretending that the government has no place in our lives - local governments cannot budget for disasters, residents will never maintain a budget 'just in case' -- the federal government has the resources and ability to do this work. It is easy to cry for small government, a few years after a disaster, when you start forgetting.
And to answer your question, no, people will not get all the help they need, and a meal, a helping hand will cost tax dollars. Many of the destroyed homes have lost value, and will cost more than can be recovered to rebuild. Local governments don't have the means to secure loans on this scale. This will cost a chunk of change, and if Republicans hold taxation hostage, while simultaneously insisting on pay as you go - no, your family will not get the relief they need.
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lisaman
I am a liberal American so get over it
08:40 AM on 05/26/2011
Why were the "cuts" to the oil companies not acceptable? They made billions and then we give them billions more so why do the cuts have to be to programs that help the everyday American and not to the billionaires or the corporations?

I don't think either you or our family can speak for evey man, woman, and child in Joplin. Maybe they don't need or want help but that doesn't mean nobody does.
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JWebberPhoto
Ain't skeered
11:01 AM on 05/25/2011
Two years ago, I cut a doorway into a wall accessing an under-stair space on the lowest level of my house to use as a tornado shelter. I keep a hand-crank weather radio, a flashlight, bottled water, and tools for escape in the shelter.

I did this after a good friend of mine and his son in Columbus, Georgia sheltered in a similar space and narrowly escaped with their lives when a tornado hit their home directly. After the tornado passed, the closet they were in was the only part of the house not destroyed. When he rebuilt, he had a reinforced safe room built as a walk-in closet for protection against the next storm.
11:19 AM on 05/25/2011
Sounds like a smart idea.
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JWebberPhoto
Ain't skeered
10:54 AM on 05/25/2011
An acquaintance on the ground in Joplin reports: "The AmeriCorps/Red Cross people were taking out volunteers with crowbars, leaving medics behind in the building."

Not a good sign for the possibility of survivors.
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lisaman
I am a liberal American so get over it
12:43 PM on 05/25/2011
HUH?
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JWebberPhoto
Ain't skeered
01:15 PM on 05/25/2011
I would have been shocked, too, but I know people encountered the same issue in Tuscaloosa--trained medics being left idle or turned away. I'm waiting for his after-action "lessons learned" report.