Showing posts with label Oklahoma City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oklahoma City. Show all posts
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Oklahoma tornado victims astounded at how they survived
MOORE, Oklahoma - Tornado survivors thanked God, sturdy closets and luck in explaining how they lived through the colossal twister that devastated an Oklahoma town and killed 24 people, an astonishingly low toll given the extent of destruction.
At least one family took refuge in a bathtub and some people shut themselves in underground shelters built into their houses when the powerful storm tore through the Oklahoma City suburb of Moore on Monday.
While rescue workers and body-sniffing dogs sifted through the ruins on Wednesday, those who escaped told their stories of survival while trying to salvage what was left of their belongings.
"Yesterday I was numb. Today I cried a lot. Now I'm on the victory side of it," said Beth Vrooman, who hid in a shelter in her garage in Moore during the storm.
The tornado's winds exceeded 200 miles per hour, flattened entire blocks and demolished two schools and a hospital on the storm's 17-mile (27-km), 50-minute rampage through central Oklahoma.
Of the 24 people killed, 10 were children, including seven who died at Plaza Towers Elementary School. About 240 others were injured. The youngest victim was four months old. The oldest was 63.
Listed as the highest category of storm - an EF5 on the Enhanced Fujita Scale - the twister damaged or obliterated 12,000 to 13,000 homes and affected an estimated 33,000 people, said Oklahoma City Mayor Mick Cornett.
President Barack Obama was due to survey the damage himself on Sunday, a White House spokesman said.
After rescue workers pulled more than 100 survivors from the debris, authorities said six people remained unaccounted for in Moore, a town of 55,000 people.
"They're not sure if they've walked off or if they are in the rubble," Albert Ashwood, director of Oklahoma's Department of Emergency Management, told a news conference.
Experts explaining the low death toll cited a relatively long advance warning of 16 minutes for the tornado and high awareness of the dangers in a region known as Tornado Alley.
Even so, some survivors were astounded they made it.
Tonya Williams, 38, said she still felt in shock after surviving the tornado, as so many did, by taking shelter in a closet.
She put bicycle helmets on her 8-year-old daughter and 6-year-old son, collected her three dogs and pushed them all into a hall closet.
"We prayed. I could feel pressure, and being sucked. I put my body over them to try to protect them," Williams said.
Neighbors dug them out. The roof and upper story of the house had collapsed into and around the closet. Williams and her children suffered only minor injuries.
A large wooden cross that had been hanging on an upstairs wall was found on top of them, she said.
"If you weren't a religious person before, you are now," Williams said. "No word can describe it but a miracle."
Most of the victims died of blunt force injuries and five of the children died from mechanical asphyxiation, when a person's chest is compressed so that it cannot take in air, the state medical examiner said.
Jessica Parmenter, 26, and her three small dogs were at home and directly in the tornado's path. Neighbors rushed to a nearby storm shelter but she did not make it in time and took refuge in a closet. Afterward, a neighbor found Parmenter inside with her dogs. The rest of her home was gone.
"The only thing standing was the closet," said Parmenter's mother-in-law, Lori Blake. "There is a hole in the closet. It kept trying to suck her out and she kept holding on."
Tornado Alley
Some ascribed the relatively few deaths to "storm safe" shelters, but only 2.5 percent of homes in Oklahoma County were so equipped, officials said.
Moore, which has seen four tornadoes since 1998, had experienced the fury of the strongest category of tornado previously when an EF5 twister devastated the region on May 3, 1999, killing more than 40 people.
The National Weather Service had been issuing alerts for days ahead of the latest storm.
"As much as any place on earth, folks who live in Moore know what severe weather alerts mean," said Bill Bunting, chief of operations for the National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma.
Still, the largely conservative state so far has resisted government imposing requirements that new homes or schools come equipped with storm shelters.
"We're going to have that discussion as a state as well as a community," US Representative Tom Cole, a Republican whose district includes the area hit by the tornado, told MSNBC.
Kraig Boozier, 47, took to his own small shelter in Oklahoma City and watched in shock as a fan in the wall was ripped out.
"I looked up and saw the tornado above me," he said.
In Oklahoma City, Jackie Raper, 73, and her daughter, sought shelter in the bathtub.
"The house fell on top of her," said Caylin Burgett, 16, who says Raper is like a grandmother to her. Raper suffered a broken arm and leg as well as bruised lungs, Burgett said. (Additional reporting by Alice Mannette, Lindsay Morris, Nick Carey, Brendan O'Brien, Greg McCune, Jane Sutton and Susan Heavey)
source: interaksyon.com
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Storm brings white Christmas, tornado threat to central US
WASHINGTON - A major winter storm brought a rare white Christmas to the southern US plains on Tuesday, contributing to a 21-vehicle pile-up that shut down a major highway in Oklahoma.
The storm system surging east from Kansas and the Texas Panhandle includes the threat of tornados and severe thunderstorms along its southern fringe, from southeast Texas to Alabama, the National Weather Service said.
The storm is expected to bring blizzard conditions and 6 to 8 inches of snow as it strengthens and moves northeast into the upper Ohio River valley through southern Missouri and Illinois, it said.
Freezing drizzle overnight led to 10 separate collisions on Interstate 40 at Oklahoma City just before 3 a.m., said Trooper Betsy Randolph, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma Highway Patrol.
The 21-vehicle pile-up included three tractor-trailers and shut down the westbound lanes for about five hours, she said. Twelve people were taken to hospitals, and troopers are checking on the severity of their injuries.
In a rare taste of Christmas snow, Oklahoma City is forecast to get 3 to 6 inches of the white stuff on Tuesday. The city's biggest Christmas snowfall was 6.5 inches in 1914, and measurable amounts have been recorded only a handful of times on the date.
Several flights were canceled at Oklahoma City's Will Rogers World Airport on Monday ahead of the storm, but conditions on Tuesday morning were good, the airport said in a statement.
Ahead of the storm's path, parts of eastern West Virginia are under a winter storm warning. Ice accumulations of up to half an inch are expected in higher elevations, the National Weather Service said.
source: interaksyon.com
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
NBA: Thunder roll late, snatch game one from the Heat
OKLAHOMA CITY - Kevin Durant won the opening round of his highly anticipated duel with LeBron James, scoring 36 points to lead the Oklahoma City Thunder to a 105-94 victory over the Miami Heat in the opening game of the NBA Finals on Tuesday (Wednesday, PHL time).
The NBA scoring champion hit 12-of-20 shots and added eight rebounds to help the Western Conference champions outscore the Heat by 18 points in the second half to draw first blood in the best-of-seven series.
"You know, this is a tough series," said Durant, whose 17 fourth-quarter points slammed the door shut on Miami.
"This level of basketball is the hardest we play, and we just want to take it slow and take it a possession at a time.
"Guys got to just continue to believe in themselves. If we do that as a group, we'll be all right. It took us a couple minutes to get the nervousness out of us."
James, a three-time MVP, scored 30 points on 11-of-24 shooting, while adding nine rebounds, but it was Durant who triggered the Thunder's turnaround.
"They didn't make many mistakes in the fourth quarter," James said of the Thunder's 31-21 advantage in the final period. "I don't think we made many mistakes in the fourth quarter, it's just they made more plays, especially offensively.
"They made more shots. Russell [Westbrook] made some big-time shots, KD [Durant] made some big-time shots. So I think that's what it's about."
Durant's tussle with James is widely regarded as a barometer for determining the league's best player, with both also seeking a first championship.
Thunder point guard Russell Westbrook scored 18 of his 27 points in the second half, while adding eight rebounds and 11 assists overall. The only other player scoring in double figures for Oklahoma City was forward Serge Ibaka, who netted 10.
"He's a terrific player. We want him to score," Thunder coach Scott Brooks said of Westbrook. "When he gets to those spots that he can knock those shots down, those are great shots for him.
"Defensively he was solid. When you guard [Dwyane] Wade or LeBron, you have to really exert a lot of effort defensively, and he did that. And he also had enough to finish around the basket."
Miami led by as many as 13 in the opening half but fell apart in the third quarter, and when Westbrook made a three-point play late in the closing seconds to give the Thunder their first lead at 74-73, the Chesapeake Energy Arena erupted.
"They got out in transition and that's their bread and butter, especially here at home," said Heat forward Shane Battier, who scored 17 points but only four in the second half.
"They run so well. For a while we contained them. Second half we made too many careless turnovers."
Game Two is also in Oklahoma City on Thursday (Friday, PHL time) before the series shifts to Miami for the next two contests.
"This one is behind us now," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "About halfway through the fourth quarter, we were thinking we were putting ourselves in a position to win.
"And then they just went away. That's what they do, they keep on coming. They're relentless. They beat us at their game and beat us in a game that's very similar to us when we're playing well."
Wade conceded the Thunder "did a great job of turning up defensive pressure" in the second half.
"They just made more plays than us," said Wade, an eight-time All-Star who had 19 points. "They got a couple offensive rebounds that kind of hurt us. They got a couple open shots.
"And then from that point, we were kind of playing behind." - Reuters
source: gmanetwork.com
The NBA scoring champion hit 12-of-20 shots and added eight rebounds to help the Western Conference champions outscore the Heat by 18 points in the second half to draw first blood in the best-of-seven series.
"You know, this is a tough series," said Durant, whose 17 fourth-quarter points slammed the door shut on Miami.
"This level of basketball is the hardest we play, and we just want to take it slow and take it a possession at a time.
"Guys got to just continue to believe in themselves. If we do that as a group, we'll be all right. It took us a couple minutes to get the nervousness out of us."
James, a three-time MVP, scored 30 points on 11-of-24 shooting, while adding nine rebounds, but it was Durant who triggered the Thunder's turnaround.
"They didn't make many mistakes in the fourth quarter," James said of the Thunder's 31-21 advantage in the final period. "I don't think we made many mistakes in the fourth quarter, it's just they made more plays, especially offensively.
"They made more shots. Russell [Westbrook] made some big-time shots, KD [Durant] made some big-time shots. So I think that's what it's about."
Durant's tussle with James is widely regarded as a barometer for determining the league's best player, with both also seeking a first championship.
Thunder point guard Russell Westbrook scored 18 of his 27 points in the second half, while adding eight rebounds and 11 assists overall. The only other player scoring in double figures for Oklahoma City was forward Serge Ibaka, who netted 10.
"He's a terrific player. We want him to score," Thunder coach Scott Brooks said of Westbrook. "When he gets to those spots that he can knock those shots down, those are great shots for him.
"Defensively he was solid. When you guard [Dwyane] Wade or LeBron, you have to really exert a lot of effort defensively, and he did that. And he also had enough to finish around the basket."
Miami led by as many as 13 in the opening half but fell apart in the third quarter, and when Westbrook made a three-point play late in the closing seconds to give the Thunder their first lead at 74-73, the Chesapeake Energy Arena erupted.
"They got out in transition and that's their bread and butter, especially here at home," said Heat forward Shane Battier, who scored 17 points but only four in the second half.
"They run so well. For a while we contained them. Second half we made too many careless turnovers."
Game Two is also in Oklahoma City on Thursday (Friday, PHL time) before the series shifts to Miami for the next two contests.
"This one is behind us now," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "About halfway through the fourth quarter, we were thinking we were putting ourselves in a position to win.
"And then they just went away. That's what they do, they keep on coming. They're relentless. They beat us at their game and beat us in a game that's very similar to us when we're playing well."
Wade conceded the Thunder "did a great job of turning up defensive pressure" in the second half.
"They just made more plays than us," said Wade, an eight-time All-Star who had 19 points. "They got a couple offensive rebounds that kind of hurt us. They got a couple open shots.
"And then from that point, we were kind of playing behind." - Reuters
source: gmanetwork.com
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