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Jerome Whittington looks around for items to salvage from his overturned car Friday in the small town of Tushka, Okla., after a tornado roared through before dawn, killing two people and injuring 25.
Jerome Whittington looks around for items to salvage from his overturned car Friday in the small town of Tushka, Okla., after a tornado roared through before dawn, killing two people and injuring 25.
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CRYSTAL SPRINGS, Ark. — Powerful spring storms roared through parts of the South on Friday, toppling trees, smashing buildings and killing at least 10 people, including two sets of parents and children who were huddled together as the winds raged outside their homes.

It was the deadliest storm of the season so far. At least one tornado accompanied the onslaught, but much of the damage was attributed to straight- line winds — sudden, violent downbursts that struck with hurricane force in the middle of the night.

As the storm howled through Crystal Springs, Eden Davis woke up, grabbed her young child and sat on the bed waiting to pull a mattress over both of them to shield the pair from flying debris.

“I’ve never been so nervous about a storm,” she said. “I was asleep, but my fiance called me and told me to wake up and that I needed to watch the news because the weather was getting real bad.”

The storms began late Thursday in Oklahoma, where at least five twisters touched down and two people died. The system then pushed into Arkansas, killing seven more. Dozens were injured.

By midday Friday, the storms marched into Tennessee, Louisiana and Mississippi and later into Georgia and Alabama, where one person was killed. At least three twisters touched down in Mississippi, where a state of emergency was declared in 14 counties, causing widespread damage but only one serious injury.

Unlike tornadoes, which develop from columns of rotating air, straight-line winds erupt from a thunderstorm in unpredictable downdrafts and spread across the landscape in all directions.

At Crystal Springs, lightning split a tree that fell into a home, killing an 18-month-old girl and her father as they slept. In Little Rock, winds knocked a tree into a home, killing a woman and her 8-year-old son in his bed.

In the Arkansas town of Bald Knob, 6-year-old Devon Adams died when the top of a tree crashed through his home while he was sleeping.

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