GREENSBURG, Kan. - A fresh wave of tornadoes ripped through southwest Kansas
on Saturday evening, a day after a tornado all but destroyed this town, killing
nine and injuring dozens more.
 Kevin Hillhouse, left, and his wife,
Melissa, push a hand truck with their daughter Alexis, 5, and their
belongings as they make their way down Main Street in downtown Greensburg,
Kan., Saturday, May 5, 2007, after a tornado struck Friday. The family was
evacuating to shelters. The Hillhouse's moved here a week ago from
Berryville, Ark. [AP]
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The National Weather Service said
it had received reports "well into the double digits" of twisters touching down
in six counties.
Among them were a series of half-mile wide "wedge" tornadoes - similar
to the one that devastated Greensburg on Friday night, meteorologist Mike
Umscheid said.
"We're going to expect quite a lot of damage," he said.
Earlier, emergency crews called off the search for more victims of
a tornado that killed eight people and devastated this southwest Kansas town
Friday as fresh rounds of severe weather threatened the area Saturday evening.
The National Weather Service said
it had three reports of tornadoes making brief touchdowns in nearby counties as
a slow-moving storm system moved through, although only minor damage was
reported.
"It looks like it's going to be another long night," meteorologist Mike
Umscheid said.
Rescuers had spent the day hurrying through the wreckage from Friday's giant
tornado, which left little standing beyond the local pub.
Friday's weather was blamed for nine deaths in the region, a figure
authorities feared could rise even before the latest twisters.
City Administrator Steve Hewitt estimated 95 percent of the town of 1,500 was
destroyed and predicted rescue efforts could take days as survivors could be
trapped in basements and under rubble.
Among the only structures that survived was the Bar H Tavern, the town's lone
bar. It was briefly converted into a morgue.
Survivors of the storm picked over the remnants of their homes and
possessions, still dazed by the twister's strength and scope.
Jackie Robertson and her family collected wedding photos, a wallet and other
belongings from the debris that had been her home.
Robertson, her husband and a friend stayed in a cellar Friday night when the
storms struck.
"My heart just aches for everyone," she said. "It is so surreal. This is
where I live."
The town, previously best known as the home of the world's largest hand-dug
well - 32 feet in diameter, 109 feet deep when it was finished in 1888 - was a
nightmare of splintered homes and smashed vehicles, the air redolent with the
smell of sap from trees stripped of bark.
"We want everybody to know, and I plead to the American people as well as the
people here in Kansas, this is a huge catastrophe that has happened to our small
town," Hewitt said. "All my downtown is gone. My home is gone. My staff's homes
are gone. And we've got to find a way to get this to work and come to work every
day and get this thing back on its feet. It's going to be tough."
Residents said they heard the tornado warning sirens - a common feature of
towns in "Tornado Alley" - about 20 minutes before Friday's storm hit.
National Weather Service meteorologist Larry Ruthi said the path of damage
was 1.4 miles wide, estimating it would be classified a "upper F-4 or an F-5"
tornado, the strongest possible.
Jose Peraza said he was driving his oil rig into town when he heard the siren
and driving hail started pounding the area. He pulled over and hid with several
other people in a convenience store freezer.
He said the storm ripped the side off the freezer, and when he came out he
found the twister had thrown his truck - weighed down by 40,000 pounds of oil -
"like nothing."
The dead included eight in Kiowa County, where Greensburg is located, and one
in nearby Stafford County, said Sharon Watson, a spokeswoman for the Kansas
Adjutant General's Department.
"We continue to find folks and this will go on for a good couple days - the
rescue itself," Hewitt said. "I mean, the debris is just unbelievable. Even if
you are in a basement, I mean your home is collapsed, and we've got to find a
way to get to you."
State Rep. Dennis McKinney, the Kansas House minority leader, said he and his
daughter kid in the basement while the storm destroyed his home. Then he helped
search homes for survivors but noted "the inspections didn't take that long
because in the western part of town, there weren't many homes left to inspect."
A mandatory evacuation was ordered, he said. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius declared
a disaster emergency for Kiowa County, said her spokeswoman, Nicole Corcoran.
The state sent 40 National Guard soldiers to help.
The White House said President Bush was briefed on the situation. Federal
Emergency Management Agency spokeswoman Dawn Kinsey said FEMA was preparing to
help once Kansas officials request assistance. "We've been in contact with them
since the beginning," Kinsey said.
Scores of injured people were sent to hospitals as far away as Wichita, 110
miles away. More than 70 went to Pratt Regional Medical Center about 30 minutes
away, with all but 14 treated and released, said hospital spokeswoman Kim
Stivers.
Rescuers pulled about 30 people from the basement of a partially collapsed
hospital early Saturday, but most of them had minor injuries, Watson said.
The twister was part of a storm front that spawned tornadoes along a line
stretching northeast from Greensburg through central Kansas. At least seven more
tornadoes were reported late Friday and Saturday in Illinois, Oklahoma, South
Dakota and Nebraska, though damage was minimal, officials said.
No injuries were reported in any of those states.