The Columbus Dispatch

Storms roll east after slamming Texas, La.

-

A storm system marched eastward Friday, threatenin­g heavy snow in the Midwest and Northeast after spawning likely tornadoes in Texas and Louisiana that damaged homes, businesses, a university campus and left thousands without power.

The storms will threaten the Tennessee and Ohio Valleys with tornadoes as they move toward New England, the Storm Prediction Center said.

No deaths or injuries have been reported from the storms that struck Texas and Louisiana on Thursday night after slamming California earlier in the week with as much as 7 feet of snow.

The National Weather Service in Fort Worth planned Friday to survey damage near Pickton, Texas, about 80 miles east of Dallas, where it said a confirmed tornado struck.

Winds of nearly 80 mph were recorded near the Fort Worth suburb of Blue Mound. The roof of an apartment building in the suburb of Hurst was blown away, resident Michael Roberts told KDFW-TV.

“The whole building started shaking . ... The whole ceiling is gone,” Roberts

said. “It got really crazy.”

The Dallas suburb of Richardson asked residents to stop using water after the storm knocked out power to pumping stations. The city said in a statement early Friday that electricit­y and water service had been restored.

North of Dallas, winds brought down trees, ripped the roof off a grocery store in Little Elm and overturned four 18-wheelers along U.S. 75. Minor injuries were reported, police said.

Buildings at Louisiana State University-shreveport were damaged, and trees were toppled, said spokespers­on Erin Smith, but the campus was reopening Friday after being shut down overnight.

More than 80,000 Texas customers and nearly 11,000 in Louisiana lacked electricit­y Friday morning, according to Poweroutag­e.us.

Heavy rain was reported in northern Arkansas and southern Missouri, causing flooding in both states.

Police in Hardy, Arkansas, about 115 miles north of Little Rock, asked residents along the Spring River to leave their homes because of flooding, while hail and strong winds were reported in Oklahoma.

 ?? TOM FOX/THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS VIA AP ?? The roof of a grocery store was peeled off as a line of powerful storms on Thursday rolled through Little Elm, Texas.
TOM FOX/THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS VIA AP The roof of a grocery store was peeled off as a line of powerful storms on Thursday rolled through Little Elm, Texas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States