Saturday, April 14, 2012

National weather service

  • SAN DIEGO, April 14, 2012 – The National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center is forecasting the development of several strong to violent, long-track tornadoes over parts of the central and southern Plains Saturday through the evening.
  • (Washington Times)
  • OKLAHOMA CITY — In an unusually early and strong warning, national weather forecasters cautioned Friday that conditions are ripe for violent tornadoes to rip through the nation from Texas to Minnesota this weekend.
  • (Tyler Morning Telegraph)
  • But the most dangerous weather was expected to come Saturday night into Sunday morning. National Weather Service officials issued a stern warning for residents across a wide area to prepare for active overnight storms that could spawn fast-moving tornadoes.
  • (Oregonian)
  • But improvements in storm modeling and technology let forecasters predict storms earlier and with greater confidence, the National Weather Service says. The Storm Prediction Center is part of the service.
  • (msnbc.com)
  • The National Weather Service forecast for Outagamie, Brown, Winnebago and Calumet counties calls for a chance of showers and thunderstorms late into Saturday evening. It will be cloudy with showers and thunderstorms after midnight.
  • (Post-Crescent)
  • Those irritating warnings that disrupt the TV and radio are usually followed by this is just a test of the Emergency Broadcast System. Today those warnings are not just tests for some people in the mid-section of the country.
  • (Examiner)
  • "We saw supercells and tornadoes develop in northwest Oklahoma by mid afternoon, and those storms persisted all afternoon and into the evening. This is where we had expected the most volatile air mass would be.
  • (Daily Oklahoman)
  • Look out the window, Sacramento. What you see - mild and dry - is what youll get until at least Wednesday, according to National Weather Service meteorologist Drew Peterson.
  • (Sacramento Bee)
  • MUSKEGON, MI – Grab an umbrella and expect a few April showers this weekend, according to the National Weather Service. Today will be cloudy, with a high near 60 degrees, according to the weather service.
  • (MLive.com)
  • ST. LOUIS • Rain dominates the weekend forecast from the National Weather Service, and wet weather already has affected some events tied to the GO! St. Louis Marathon.
  • (St. Louis Post-Dispatch)

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