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Joplin schools were ravaged by the twister and classes have been canceled the rest of the school year, but district officials are trying to locate both faculty and many of the school's 2,200 students. The effort has been crippled by downed phone lines. Some students have been located using Facebook. "We just want to be able to find who we can find and then as confirmation happens offer support to the families if we find out that a kid didn't make it," Joplin High Principal Kerry Sachetta said. "When a tragedy happens for a kid or a family, everybody tries to come together and console everybody and make up what we can whether it is food or emotional support or a place to stay. That's what we are trying to do a little piece at a time." The Joplin tornado was the deadliest single twister since the weather service began keeping official records in 1950 and the eighth-deadliest in U.S. history. Scientists said it appeared to be a rare "multivortex" tornado, with two or more small and intense centers of rotation orbiting the larger funnel.
Bill Davis, the lead forecaster on a National Weather Service survey
team, said he would need to look at video to try to confirm that. But he
said the strength of the tornado was evident from the many stout buildings
that were flattened: St. John's Regional Medical Center, Franklin Technology
Center, a bank gone except for its vault, a Pepsi bottling plant and
"numerous, and I underscore numerous, well-built residential homes that were
basically leveled. Davis' first thought on arriving in town to do the survey, he said, was: "Where do you start?"
[Associated
Press;
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