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Louis Vuitton Outletbe respectful. These are people's lives." KZRG radio in Joplin focused its broadcasting all day on finding missing persons. One weeping woman called to say, "We are desperately trying to find our neighbor. We just want to find her for her children." View Full Image.Newton County Coroner Mark Bridges predicted the death toll would continue to rise. "We're getting more bodies," Mr. Bridges said in an interview. "We've been running calls (to pick up bodies) all morning." Houses marked with Xs on the front indicated a search-and-rescue team had been there. But teams also focused on the ruins of buildings where many people could be trapped, such as apartment houses and big-box stores, including a Walmart Supercenter and a Home Depot store that sustained severe damage. A Walmart spokesman said Monday customers had been injured and killed at the store, but declined to elaborate. All store employees working at the time had been accounted for, he said. One Home Depot employee died in the tornado, but a spokesman wouldn't comment further Tuesday. At the Home Depot late Tuesday, search teams looking for people used equipment to lift away concrete slabs. Local officials said as many as 1,500 people were unaccounted for, but cautioned that the total included people
Louis Vuitton Bags who hadn't yet checked in with friends and family due to spotty cellphone service. Clear weather made search efforts easier, but rescuers had to navigate around broken glass, fires resulting from punctured gas lines and damaged structures at risk of collapse. Meanwhile, Joplin, with a population of about 50,000, was bracing for the possibility of more dangerous weather late Tuesday. The Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., issued a "high risk" warning of tornadoes across parts of Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri. AP reported at least four people died when several tornadoes hit the Oklahoma City area. At least two died near St. John, Kan., according to the AP. .Bill Davis, of the National Weather Service's Springfield, Mo., office said a new line of heavy storms was expected to barrel through the area between 8 p.m. Tuesday and 2 a.m. Wednesday. He said the possibility of tornadoes from the storms was high. Several tornadoes touched down in Oklahoma, with injuries in Piedmont and suburban El Reno,
Louis Vuitton Handbags outside Oklahoma City, the Associated Press reported. The twister that raged through Joplin on Sunday evening is the single deadliest tornado since the National Weather Service began tracking such information in 1950. The storm's death toll exceeds the 116 killed in Flint, Mich., in 1953, according to the National Weather Service. The tornado, roaring at wind speeds above 200 mph, destroyed about 2,000 buildings and damaged roughly a third of the city, including a major hospital, St. John's Regional Medical Center. On Tuesday morning, five refrigerated tractor-trailer trucks waited across the street from the sheriff's office north of Duquesne, Mo. Each trailer held the bodies of people killed in the tornado. A 25,000-square-foot building on the property served as a temporary morgue. Inside, a federal team worked to identify the victims. WSJ's Ilan Brat reports from Louis Vuitton handbagsMr. Bridges, the coroner, said he was called out early Tuesday to claim the body of a 54-year-old woman who had come into Freeman West Medical Center with cardiac arrest. When the woman learned her father had been killed in the tornado, she had a heart attack and died, too, Mr. Bridges said. Stories of horror and heroism emerged from the collapse of the Walmart Supercenter on Range Line Road. Tommy Carpenter, 41 years old, took shelter in the Walmart and wound up clutching a three-month-old boy named Greyson. When the tornado hit, "I glanced up to see the ceiling tiles flapping up and down," Mr. Carpenter said. "Then I saw daylight." He and others began sliding down the aisle, being sucked into the tornado's pull. People were screaming. As he held onto the boy, Mr. Carpenter said he asked God not to take them. "It sounded like hell had opened up," he said. He and the boy were unhurt. Doctors and nurses at Freeman West Medical Center struggled to keep up with a flood of injured people and patients from St. John's hospital, which had its roof sheared off by the tornado. Allen Overturf, a registered nurse and director of critical care at Freeman, said scores of injured people arrived in trucks—some private and some police-department vehicles. He witnessed horrific wounds. People were brought in with "brains exposed, vertebrae exposed, amputations," he said. "It was awful." Freeman officials said the center treated about 465
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