GPS News  
Tornados ravage US, Scouts among six dead

by Staff Writers
Blencoe, Iowa (AFP) June 12, 2008
President George W. Bush paid tribute Thursday to the victims of harsh weather that has swept the United States, including six killed by tornadoes, four of them young Scouts on a camping trip.

"My thoughts and prayers are with the victims of the terrible tornadoes and flooding, especially those who lost loved ones," Bush said.

"We've been inspired by the stories of heroism, neighbors helping neighbors and communities coming together... They'll have the prayers of the American people, and we'll help them recover."

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff toured this small Iowa town Thursday to survey the damage left by the bad weather and see the site where four teenage Scouts died Wednesday when a tornado hit their camp.

"It's a really terrible tragedy," he said. "I think everybody will be particularly touched by the thought of the finest young people in this region being caught up in a tornado which struck them like a bowling ball."

The Little Sioux Scout Ranch in Iowa's remote western hills was "virtually destroyed" when the twister touched down late Wednesday, the president of the Boy Scouts Mid-American Council, Lloyd Roitstein, said.

About 100 staff and boys aged 13 to 17 were in the middle of a week-long leadership training course when the tornado hit, ripping tents off the ground and snapping trees at the 1,800-acre (730-hectare) compound, he said.

State emergency officials named the four victims as Aaron Eilerts, 14, of Iowa, Josh Fennen, 13, Sam Thomsen, 13, and Ben Petrzilka, 14, all three from Nebraska. Another 40 people at the camp were reportedly injured.

It sounded "like freight trains coming at us," one of the scout leaders, 14-year-old Zach Jessen said, after surviving with little more than bruises.

Jessen grabbed his best friend at the camp and lay on top of him to shield him from the flying debris. "When it hit, it felt like I was getting shot at -- there was rocks, dirt, grass, trees, everything," he said.

The scouts had a weather radio with them and had carried out an emergency tornado drill the day before so "they knew what to do," Roitstein said.

As the weather worsened they retreated into the camp's bunkhouse and when it was hit they set up their own mini-triage unit to help the injured, Iowa Governor Chet Culver said here.

Their actions "literally saved lives" as they waited for emergency services to cut their way through fallen trees to reach the camp, about a mile from the nearest road, he said.

Officials said a man and a woman also died in separate incidents after several twisters swept through northeast Kansas on Wednesday causing "significant damage" to homes, business and buildings.

Iowa was already struggling after the east of the state was hit by flooding earlier this week leaving some 20,000 people in Mason County without clean water after a treatment plant flooded.

Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Wisconsin have all been hit by extreme weather, with flooding causing widespread damage.

A bridge on the flood-swollen Mississippi was closed indefinitely after a three barges slammed into it, while bridges have been closed in several other states to combat rising river levels which could hit new records.

Residents in the town of Cedar Falls, Iowa, were told to evacuate on Tuesday, as part of a railroad bridge was swept away at Waterloo.

"This is been a remarkable onslaught of weather, everything from flooding, unbelievable rain and of course tornados all descending at once," Chertoff said in Blencoe.

He vowed the US administration stood "shoulder-to-shoulder" with communities as they prepared to rebuild.

Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels has asked the government to declare farm disasters in 44 counties because of crop damage and livestock losses, with estimates of the damage reaching 126 million dollars.

Across the country in California, meanwhile, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency in a coastal county south of San Francisco as wildfires threatened thousands of homes in the state's rain-starved north.

The Santa Cruz fire has already ravaged 280 hectares (700 acres) and an unspecified number of buildings, he said. In Butte County, two brush and forest fires have scorched some 10,000 hectares and destroyed 21 homes.

Related Links
Weather News at TerraDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Eight killed by tornadoes in US Midwest: report
Washington (AFP) May 26, 2008
At least eight people were killed in the midwestern United States Sunday as a series of tornadoes swept through the region leaving behind a wake of destruction, CNN television reported.







  • The Tu-144: The Future That Never Was
  • China's new jumbo-jet firm no threat to Airbus, Boeing: state media
  • China unveils new jumbo jet company: report
  • NASA And JAXA To Conduct Joint Research On Sonic Boom Modeling

  • German coalition agrees on green car tax
  • New Apartment Building Lets You Drive Your Car All The Way Home
  • Analysis: Hybrid trucks lag behind cars
  • Chinese hands help push Americans into small, diesel cars: IEA

  • Northrop Grumman And DHS Systems Receive Contract For Mobile Command Posts
  • LockMart Completes Major Hardware Integration Milestone On Second Advanced EHF Satellite
  • Lockheed Martin To Upgrade Battle Management System For USAF
  • Harris To Supply Navy Broadband Satellite Terminals

  • US to press NATO allies on missile defence options
  • Rice expected to sign Czech radar deal at start of July: report
  • Poland would let Russia inspect missile site: report
  • Aegis Destroys Ballistic Missile In Terminal Phase

  • Different Production Methods For Rice Fortification In Developing Nations
  • China consuming twice what its ecosystems can supply: WWF
  • Scientists warn G8 of climate peril to food
  • China to import grain as economy grows: environmentalist

  • China's quake homeless endure with stoicism
  • China quake lake runoff contaminates towns' water: Xinhua
  • Reporters kicked out of China city where schools collapsed
  • China's 'quake lake' shrinks further: report

  • Microsoft Surface computers hit Las Vegas party scene
  • Measuring How Much Information There Is In The World
  • Paralysed man takes a walk in virtual world
  • Study finds best times for radio signals

  • Energy ministers get 'buddy' humanoids
  • TU Delft Robot Flame Walks Like A Human
  • A Biomimetic Jumping Microrobot
  • Robot conducts Detroit orchestra

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement