Albuquerque Journal

Storm was ‘an explosion of glass’

Tornadoes blamed in 3 deaths across the central U.S.

- BY JIM SALTER

ST. LOUIS — A deadly spring-like storm that one Illinois resident described as sounding like “an explosion of glass” damaged or destroyed hundreds of homes in that state and others, blew cars off a major Missouri highway and forced people in an Arkansas town to huddle for safety in a high school.

Tornadoes were blamed in three deaths amid a large swath of destructio­n through the central U.S. before rumbling eastward. Forecaster­s said up to 95 million people are potentiall­y in the storm’s path as it moves toward the mid-Atlantic states and southern New England. Forecaster­s said cities including New York, Philadelph­ia, Baltimore, Atlanta and Washington, D.C., could be at risk.

Officials in Arkansas, Iowa, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Missouri were assessing damage after storms Tuesday night and early Wednesday.

In northern Illinois, an uprooted tree killed 76-year-old Wayne Tuntland of Ottawa. More than a dozen others were injured. In the small community of Naplate, next to Ottawa, about a quarter of the roughly 200 homes were damaged, Fire Chief John Nevins said.

Debbie Loughridge, 61, and her son were inside their Naplate home, riding out the storm in the bathtub. Firefighte­rs rescued them after the roof was torn off.

“All I heard was the wind and the breaking glass. Like an explosion of glass,” Loughridge said.

In southern Illinois, an apparent tornado near the town of Crossville killed a 71-year-old man and injured his wife, White County Coroner Chris Marsh said.

In Missouri, a twister touched down Tuesday night, blowing several vehicles off of Interstate 55 near Perryville, 65 miles southeast of St. Louis. A 24-yearold man from Perryville was thrown from one of the vehicles and died, Missouri State Highway Patrol Cpl. Juston Wheetley said. The wind was so strong that it lifted crumpled cars from a nearby salvage yard and tossed them along the highway.

Nearly 110 homes in the Perryville area were damaged or destroyed and 12 people suffered minor injuries, Perryville Fire Chief Jeremy Triller said.

“I feel we’re very blessed and fortunate we didn’t have a higher fatality number with this terrible disaster,” Triller said.

Meteorolog­ist Rick Shanklin of the National Weather Service said the Missouri twister was a “strong tornado,” but the actual wind speed has not been estimated. Officials believe it was on the ground for 13 to 15 miles, crossing the Mississipp­i River into Illinois.

National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center meteorolog­ist Patrick Marsh said crews are still determinin­g how many twisters touched down across the central U.S.

Marsh said a strong storm system moved from the Mountain West and collided with warm and humid air in the Midwest, which has enjoyed an unusually warm winter and where temperatur­es Tuesday were well into the 70s in many places.

“That’s why we saw storms more representa­tive of late March and April,” Marsh said. “The atmosphere doesn’t care what the calendar says.”

 ?? CHRIS YUCUS/NEWSTRIBUN­E ?? Jeremy Gossett, right, and Mathew McBee, center, help escort a woman and her dog to a firetruck following a tornado in Naplate, Ill., late Tuesday night.
CHRIS YUCUS/NEWSTRIBUN­E Jeremy Gossett, right, and Mathew McBee, center, help escort a woman and her dog to a firetruck following a tornado in Naplate, Ill., late Tuesday night.

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