Tornado Emergency Declared In Oklahoma City

Credit Brett Deering / Getty Images
Volunteers help clean out Jean McAdams' mobile home after it was overturned by a tornado today near Shawnee, Oklahoma.
(This post was last updated at 6:24 p.m. ET.)

A massive tornado ripped through the southern suburbs of Oklahoma City, Monday afternoon.

Helicopter images showed large tracts of Moore, Okla., completely leveled by what the National Weather Service says was at least an EF-4 tornado with winds in excess of 166 mph. On video aired by KFOR-TV, emergency personelle could be seen sifting through rubble, walking over mounds of twisted debris.

Joe Jolly, a Moore resident, told our Newscast unit that his neighborhood looked like a "war zone."

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Religion
11:04 am
Thu February 28, 2013

Benedict XVI Leaves The Vatican, Headed To Retirement

Transcript

RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:

We're hearing this morning that Pope Benedict has left the Vatican. NPR's Sylvia Poggioli is covering the first papal retirement in 600 years, and she joins us now from Rome. And Sylvia, describe the scene for us there.

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Krulwich Wonders...
10:53 am
Thu February 28, 2013

MIT Invents A Machine That Can Look At Batman's Face And See His Heart Beating

Credit The New York Times / YouTube

My pal Erik Olsen at The New York Times has just described an extraordinary new way to look at people. You point a camera at someone, record the image and then, using an "amplifier," you can discover things you've never seen before.

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Book Reviews
10:52 am
Thu February 28, 2013

Dorothea Lange's 'Migrant Mother' Inspires The Story Of 'Mary Coin'

Credit

Originally published on Thu February 28, 2013 12:00 pm

I shied away from Marisa Silver's new novel because of its book jacket: a reproduction of Dorothea Lange's iconic Depression-era photograph called "Migrant Mother." You know it: the woman's strong face is worn and worried; her children lean protectively into her. Lange took the photo at a pea-pickers' camp in California in 1936; the name of the destitute mother of seven, who wasn't identified till the 1970s, is Florence Owens Thompson. The photo on Silver's book jacket is colorized.

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It's All Politics
10:35 am
Thu February 28, 2013

How Washington Chose Not To Be Careful With Spending Cuts

Credit Tatiana Popova / iStockphoto.com
Under sequestration, federal agencies don't have the flexibility to choose to spare popular programs or services by making administrative cuts elsewhere.

Inconveniencing the public is part of the plan.

It may never have been intended to play out in quite this way, but the automatic spending cuts set to take effect for most federal programs Friday leave little room for preserving the most visible and popular programs.

"The law basically says the cuts have to be across-the-board by 'project, program and activity,' " says Stan Collender, a federal budget expert with the communications firm Qorvis. "That was specifically written to take away flexibility from the administration."

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The Two-Way
10:23 am
Thu February 28, 2013

Mastermind Of Great Train Robbery Dies

Credit Michael Fresco / Getty Images
The Great Train Robbers (from left): Buster Edwards, Tom Wisbey, Jim White, Bruce Reynolds, Roger Cordrey, Charlie Wilson and Jim Hussey, with copies of their book The Train Robbers in 1979.

Originally published on Thu February 28, 2013 11:26 am

Bruce Reynolds, the brains behind the Great Train Robbery of 1963, has died at the age of 81, nearly five decades after he and his partners in crime made off with 2.6 million pounds at Ledburn, Buckinghamshire, England.

Reynolds was part of the gang that executed an elaborate scheme to swipe the cash from the Glasgow-to-Euston mail train. The clockwork nature of the crime, along with the fact that the bulk of the loot was never recovered and some of the robbers never captured, has made it a favorite subject of television and films, as well as popular music.

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The Salt
10:22 am
Thu February 28, 2013

China's Horses May End Up In Russia's Kabobs

Credit via The Australian Institute of Food Safety
The great horse meat scandal infographic.

Originally published on Thu February 28, 2013 11:15 am

China isn't a good place to be a horse, if your goal is to avoid ending up as the Russian kabobs known as shashlik.

China exports the most horse meat to the global market, while Russia has the biggest appetite for horseflesh, according to a new infographic on the continuing European scandal over horse meat sold as beef.

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StateImpact Oklahoma
10:10 am
Thu February 28, 2013

How Native American Tribes Are Easing Small Town Water Worries in Oklahoma

Credit Logan Layden / StateImpact Oklahoma
Duane Smith, water consultant for the Chickasaw Tribe, in front of Hillside Spring at the Chickasaw National Recreation Area in Sulphur, Okla.

Oklahoma’s water infrastructure needs are daunting, and replacing wastewater treatment plants, filtration systems, and pipelines is expensive.

That’s especially for smaller communities with just a few thousand residents to cover millions of dollars in costs.

There is federal and state aid available, but for some, turning to tribal governments is also an option.

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Shots - Health News
9:17 am
Thu February 28, 2013

New York Medical School Widens Nontraditional Path For Admissions

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Should students who want to attend medical school have to slog through a year of physics, memorize the structures of dozens of cellular chemicals or spend months studying for the MCAT? Not necessarily.

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Krulwich Wonders...
9:16 am
Thu February 28, 2013

Go Away! I Want You As Far Away From Me As Possible. (How Big Is The Universe?)

Credit Minute Physics / YouTube

Originally published on Thu February 28, 2013 1:13 pm

The Two-Way
8:34 am
Thu February 28, 2013

The Meaning Of 'Regret': Journalist Bob Woodward, White House Disagree

Credit Alex Brandon / AP
Bob Woodward speaks during an event to commemorate the 40th anniversary of Watergate in Washington in June.

Originally published on Thu February 28, 2013 9:39 am

It all depends on how you interpret the phrase "you will regret doing this." That piece of advice coming from a parent might be taken far differently than it would as a line from a Joe Pesci movie.

Where it falls on a spectrum from friendly advice to outright threat is apparently a matter of opinion. Bob Woodward, The Washington Post reporter of Watergate fame, and the Obama White House disagree on more than just the sequester story.

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