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Tornado deaths prove danger of staying in cars



By ALAN SCHER ZAGIER
13 May 2008 @ 06:14 am EST

SENECA, Mo. (AP) - More than 25 years ago, a rash of deaths among tornado victims trapped in cars in Wichita Falls, Texas, led to what is now a basic tenet of storm safety: When a twister is on the horizon, stay out of your car.


Severe Weather
Craig Lant picks through the rubble of his parents businesses on Sunday morning, May 11, 2008 in Seneca, Mo. Craig's father, Bill Lant owned Lant's Feed Store and his mother, Jane, owned Lant's Bridal Garden located north of Seneca, Mo. Both businesses were destroyed by a tornado that swept through southwest Missouri late Saturday afternoon killing 12 people. (AP Photo/Mike Gullett)
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Authorities are echoing that same warning after a weekend tornado devastated several rural communities in southwest Missouri and across the state line in northeast Oklahoma.

Eight of the 23 victims in the two states died in cars, troubling experts who say the inside of a vehicle is one of the worst places to be during a twister.

"It's like taking a handful of Matchbox cars and rolling them across the kitchen floor," Sgt. Dan Bracker of the Missouri State Highway Patrol said, surveying the damage in and around Seneca, near the Oklahoma line. "This is devastating."

At least 26 people died in Missouri, Oklahoma, Georgia and Alabama when severe storms erupted Saturday over the Southern Plains and swept eastward. Sixteen people died in Missouri from the same storm that ravaged Picher, Okla., a town 32 miles away where seven were killed.

Officials from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which determines whether residents qualify for federal assistance, were in both states. FEMA Director David Paulison and Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff were scheduled to visit the hardest hit areas on Tuesday.

Scientists from the Environmental Protection Agency arrived in Oklahoma on Monday to check for high lead levels in Picher, a heavily polluted former mining town where lead-filled waste is piled into giant mounds.

Miles Tolbert, Oklahoma's secretary of the environment, said he did not believe there was any immediate hazard to the 800 residents. But he said more testing was needed.

Among those killed were three people in Oklahoma who were rushing to reach a relative's house in their car; a woman whose car was blown off a road near Seneca; and four family members -Rick Rountree, his wife, his 13-year-old son, and his 76-year-old mother-in-law -who were in a van on the way to a friend's wedding when a twister with winds of 170 mph struck the Seneca area on Saturday.

"They were on the road when the warnings came," said Rountree's brother-in-law, Larry Bilke.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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