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THIS IS WHAT WAS HEADING OUR WAY YESTERDAY AND HOVERED OVER HEAD FOR HOURS WITHOUT TOUCHING DOWN. IT UNFORTUNATELY DECIDED TO TAKE A DIFFERENT TURN ENDING DOWN IN KANSAS AND DESTROYING THE TOWN OF GREENSBURG. PLEASE SAY A PRAYER FOR ALL THOSE WHO HAVE LOST SO MUCH IN THIS. ALL THEIR CHURCHES HAVE BEEN DESTROYED. SO THE LEAST WE CAN DO IS PRAY FOR THEM. I'm Back off for the day as we have more warnings. Will be back as soon as I'm able. Thank you to all of you who have continued to send me comments. I will return the love when I can.
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TO ALL MY FRIENDS
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Debris is strewn in Greensburg, Kan., Saturday, May 5, 2007, after a tornado struck late Friday. The tornado damaged about 95 percent of the town about 110 miles west of Wichita and 50 miles north of the Oklahoma state line, City Administrator Steve Hewitt said Saturday. GREENSBURG, Kan. (AP) Searchers went back to work after daylight Sunday, looking for anyone who might have been trapped since a tornado wiped most of this south-central Kansas town off the map. "At this point, it's still a search and rescue mission," Kansas state trooper Ronald Knoefel said. "We don't want to give up hope." At least nine people were known dead from the Friday night storm - eight in the Greensburg area and one in a nearby county. The town remained off limits to its residents Sunday morning. Knoefel said a new storm that went through the area late Saturday blew debris from Friday night's tornado back into the streets. "We'll let people back in when it's safe," Knoefel said. That second round of severe weather late Saturday brought another wave of tornadoes across the Plains, with numerous tornadoes reported from South Dakota south into Oklahoma. The National Weather Service said it had reports "well into the double digits" of twisters touching down late Saturday in six southwest Kansas counties. President Bush declared parts of Kansas a disaster area, freeing up federal money to aid in recovery. "It's going to take a long time for the community to recover," Bush said Sunday, referring to Greensburg, after attending a morning service at a church in Washington. "And so we'll help in any way we can." "There's a certain spirit in the Midwest of our country, a pioneer spirit that still exists, and I'm confident this community will be rebuilt," Bush said. U.S. Sen. Sam Brownback and Gov. Kathleen Sebelius planned to tour the storm-damaged area Sunday. "We need support," said Greensburg Administrator Steve Hewitt. "We want everybody to know this is a huge catastrophe." Kansas Adjutant Gen. Tod Bunting told CNN on Sunday that in some places searchers looking for survivors have to deal with rubble that is 20 to 30 feet deep. "We're not going to rest until we know for sure," he said. Among the few structures that survived was the Bar H Tavern. It was briefly converted into a morgue. Command operations for rescue efforts were moved into the town's courthouse, which was damaged but also still standing. The massive concrete silos of a grain elevator still towered over what was left of the town. All the churches were destroyed. Every business on main street was demolished. The town's fire engines were crushed and other crumpled vehicles were thrown around. Tree trunks stood bare, stripped of most of their branches. The fate of the town's claim to fame - the world's biggest hand dug well - was unknown because it was buried under a mountain of debris; the gift store at the well had disappeared. For decades, meteorite hunters from throughout the world have been drawn here to hunt for meteorites. The town's extensive meteorite collection, including one weighing 1,000 pound, was one of the casualties of the storm. "It is very scary right now," said Hewitt, who lost his home in the storm. 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. "This is one of the most devastating tornadoes we have had in Kansas," said U.S. Rep. Jerry Moran. At a shelter in neighboring Haviland, Cheryll Behm said her home in Greensburg is probably repairable, unlike the rest of the town. "I am concerned Greensburg never will be built," said Behm, a nurse's aide at the Greensburg hospital. "There is no place to go back to work to. All of Main Street is gone." Scores of injured people were sent to hospitals as far away as Wichita, 110 miles away. The twister that struck Greensburg late Friday 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. The tornadoes that came with the second round of storms late Saturday in Kansas damaged outbuildings and homes and downed power lines. Those storms also brought heavy rain that caused flooding concerns in some areas, said Sharon Watson, spokeswoman for the Kansas Adjutant General's Department. A tornado Saturday in Oklahoma caused at least one injury in the small town of Sweetwater and damaged the high school, authorities said.
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