http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=514&u=/ap/20060403/ap_on_re_us/severe_storms_23Newbern (NC) alderman Robert Hart said witnesses described the tornado that hit his town as being "almost a mile wide."
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"We stood in the parking lot and watched the clouds spin, coming from two different directions," Rollings told The Jonesboro Sun. "Then, we could hear the roaring sound. As we stood in the door, the winds picked up debris, and we saw the other one come in another direction within minutes."
Hail 4 inches in diameter slammed right through the roof of one mobile home in Arkansas, weather service meteorologist Newton Skiles said.
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"We've got a damage path (in a Missouri town) about a half mile wide," Pippins said.
One Kentucky county declared a state of emergency early Monday as rescue workers struggled to get to rural areas where roads were blocked by power lines and trees.
I know we've had bad tornadoes in these states for years, but looking at the entirety of the planet these days, these storms seem particularly violent and ominous. Not that I'm surprised. My Environmental Science prof was saying this all was coming down the pike 15 years ago in class.
*Edited for typo.