El Dorado News-Times

Storm system kills 3 in Midwest rumbles eastward

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ST. LOUIS — A springlike storm system spawned tornadoes that destroyed more than 100 homes and killed three people in the central U.S. before it rumbled eastward Wednesday, putting about 95 million people in its path, forecaster­s said.

The compact but strong storms, known as supercells, moved into the region on Tuesday and raked parts of Arkansas, Iowa, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Missouri before moving into Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia.

Forecaster­s with the Storm Prediction Center said the storm system appeared headed toward the mid-Atlantic states and southern New England, and that New York, Philadelph­ia, Baltimore, Atlanta and Washington, D.C., could be affected.

The National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma, received about two dozen reports of possible tornadoes late Tuesday and early Wednesday. Warning coordinati­on meteorolog­ist Patrick Marsh said crews are still determinin­g if damage was from tornadoes or straight-line winds, and how many twisters touched down.

Marsh said a strong storm system moved from the Mountain West and collided with warm and humid air in the central U.S., 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.”

In Illinois, an uprooted tree killed 76-year-old man, Wayne Tuntland, in Ottawa, which is 70 miles southwest of Chicago. More than a dozen people in the area were injured during the storm. In the small community of Naplate, next to Ottawa, about a quarter of the roughly 200 homes were damaged, Fire Chief John Nevins said. Gov. Bruce Rauner toured the area Wednesday.

Debbie Loughridge, 61, of Naplate, rode out the storm with her son in the bathtub of their rented house. Firefighte­rs helped them out of the home, which lost much of its roof.

“He heard the freight train sound and said ‘Here it comes,’” Loughridge said. “All I heard was the wind and the breaking glass. Like an explosion of glass.”

 ?? (Stephen B. Thornton/The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette via AP) ?? Path of Destructio­n: In this Tuesday photo, Jim Reed walks past an overturned car and a detached roof, left, at a home along Holiday Terrace in Higginson, Ark., after a storm passed through the White County town.
(Stephen B. Thornton/The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette via AP) Path of Destructio­n: In this Tuesday photo, Jim Reed walks past an overturned car and a detached roof, left, at a home along Holiday Terrace in Higginson, Ark., after a storm passed through the White County town.

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