time. we will be through every damaged piece of property in this city at least three times before we re done. and we hope to be done by dark tonight. and i want to thank everyone that has come in to help from all over oklahoma and all over the nation to help the city of moore. thank you. jerry stilings, chief of police here in moore, again, i want to thank the other agencies, we just could not have done this without them and continued to do this without them. we have 75 static posts that we have officers stationed at and we obviously couldn t do that on our own without these other agencies. the one thing i just want to emphasize is that we have to have people out of those affected areas so we can do our work and get it done sooner so that we can shrink that perimeter and let people back in. and the other issue is
it s okay when your time comes to ride it out in the coat closet and close the door, not so with an ef-4 or an ef-5 when everything is ripped to pieces and strewn for miles. you know, bill karins talks about a lot of these homes don t have basements. we saw that one shelter, how many of these homes are equipped with that kind of safety dynamic where they can find that kind of shelter if they have to? well, here s an interesting fact about 1999, it struck down the road before it hit moore. that was a much older town that was built of solid brick and they usually, most of them had storm cellars. that town was decimated about 95% destroyed. no one died because they had shelters to go into underground. it moved up the road and went through moore. moore is a newer city. and they re not built with basements and here s why. when you look at the funnel cloud, you can see in many of these pictures an explosion of red at the bottom. that red is the natural red clay that is covered all over
through yesterday, we will make it through today for sure. and the send and third time. we will be through every damaged piece of property in this city at least three times before we re done. and we hope to be done by dark tonight. and i want to thank everyone that has come in to help from all over oklahoma and all over the nation to help the city of norm. thank you. jerry stillings, chief of police in moore. i want to thank the other agencies, we could not have done this without them and continue to do this without them. we have 75 static posts that we have officers stationed at. and we obviously couldn t do that on our own without these other agencies. the one thing i just want to emphasize is that we have to have people out of those affected areas so that we can do our work and get it done sooner. so that we can shrink that perimeter and let people back in.
for you. that s the height of self-centeredness to think the kids are better off dead than growing up without this depressed, suicidal father. depression and anger were also characteristics co-workers noticed in patrick sherrill, a mail carrier in edmond, oklahoma. many of patrick sherrill s co-workers called him crazy pat. but they certainly did not see him as a ticking time bomb. just after dawn on august 20th, 1986, sherrill reported as usual to the post office in uniform and carrying a mail bag filled with guns. two days earlier, his supervisor at the post office had threatened to fire him, and he decided he was going to get even. in the end, patrick sherrill killed 14 co-workers before killing himself. like patrick sherrill, mark barton was never formally diagnosed with a mental
texas tech all over oklahoma and led it 31-7 after that touchdown. looked like a blowout. back came jones and the sooners. 31-17. they get within 7. and tech, just too much at norman. 41-38 because ou could not recover the on sidekick and their home winning streak stopped at 39 straight games so it looks like lsu, alabama, i think the top two teams in the country. lsu, folks, unbelievable, they destroyed auburn. clayton: forget the conference switcharoos, get them to stop putting the games on at 8:30 at night. please for us. pleading with you. ainsley: didn t watch. clayton: no, stel asleep. dave: let s check in with maria molina in for rick with the forecast. it s a cool one this new york city and feels cooler this morning than yesterday morning at this same time.