more of these. people walking through the rubble of their homes, trying to pluck out anything to salvage. i want to bring back in jessica willingham, she s with the red cross. jessica, you and i have been talking on the air the past several hours now. how has your perspective of this devastation changed in the few short hours from what you ve been able to collect? well, we ve while we continue, the red cross, continues to provide shelter and food and clothing and basic need for folks, and that started last night, what we re seeing now is more and more people realizing the extent of the damage for their homes. so, the red cross is working with emergency responders and all the folks that you just heard on the press conference to make sure that everybody has a safe place to stay and that their emergency needs are met. we re teaming up with the emergency responders and the city and the county to do damage assessment and to help people move on to the next step. and as we continue to w
5 would be you would hardly see a trace of anything. we saw a week ago, t.j., ef-3s across north carolina and nu alabama, also mississippi. i m looking at these, i m guessing these are ef 1s and ef-2s and the lambert airport is shut down. last time it was shut down was back in 1982 and that was thanks to a blizzard. t.j., this time of year, right around easter, we almost always see the significant outbreak and yes, on the doppler radar, last night, they were looking at a tornadic super cell and i dare say, the investigators are going to say, this was, in fact, a tornado and this was, in fact, damage caused by a tornado. there you can see, the lambert field, the main terminal there looks like a lot of the windows have been blown out. and we were told and some cases 50% to maybe just about all, in one of the particular terminals there, windows had been blown out. these are newer daytime pictures