Tornadoes Kill 4 People In 3 States
Mother Dies When Colorado Family Is Thrown Into Trees; Three People Killed In Oklahoma And Texas
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Play CBS Video Video Twister In Silverton, Texas CBS News RAW: A twister touching down in the small town of Silverton, Texas, on March 28, 2007, is seen here as captured on video by storm chaser Reed Timmer.
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Video Tornadoes Kill 3 In Midwest At least three people have been killed by tornadoes that ripped through Oklahoma and Colorado. KKTV's Lauri Martin reports from Holly, Colo., one of the hardest-hit areas.
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Video Tornadoes Ruin Central Plains Tornadoes triggered by a deadly storm system sweeping through the Rockies to the Central Plains killed four people in three states. Hari Sreenivasan reports.
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A tornado crosses U.S. 270 east of the Northern Natural Gas Plant in Beaver County, Okla., on March 28, 2007. (AP Photo)
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Interactive Funnels Of Fury Explore how and where tornadoes are formed and witness their destructive power.
Sixty-five tornadoes were reported in Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas, Colorado and Nebraska on Wednesday, the National Weather Service said. By early Thursday, the storm system stretched from South Dakota to Texas.
In Holly, Colo., eleven people were injured and one died, reports CBS News correspondent Hari Sreenivasan. A 29-year-old woman was thrown from her mobile home into a tree. While her husband and three-year-old daughter miraculously survived the devastation, Rosemary Puga died hours later at a hospital.
In Oklahoma, a twister killed a couple as it blew their home to pieces. In Texas, a man was found dead in the tangled debris of his trailer.
At least seven other people were hurt when the tornado skipped for a mile-and-a-half through Holly and surrounding areas.
"All they heard was this big ugly noise, and they didn't have no time to run," said Victoria Rosales, the victim's sister. She said the woman and her husband, Gustavo Puga, were in the kitchen and their 3-year-old daughter, Noelia, was sleeping in a front room when the tornado hit.
Puga was holding onto the little girl when rescuers found them, said his brother, Oscar Puga. The two were in fair condition Thursday at a Colorado Springs hospital.See a twister touching down in Silverton, Texas
As residents sifted through their scattered belongings, the streets were littered with utility poles, power lines, tree limbs and debris. One woman whose house was destroyed wept as she searched for a wedding ring.
"Homes were there and now they're gone," Prowers County Administrator Linda Fairbairn said. "Many, if not all, the structures in town suffered some degree of damage."
At least 11 tornadoes were reported throughout western Nebraska, destroying or damaging three homes and at least 10 miles of power lines. Two twisters touched down in far northwest Kansas, severely damaging three homes, authorities said.
In Oklahoma, Vance and Barbra Woodbury were killed when the storm blew apart their home near the Panhandle community of Elmwood.
"We set off the tornado sirens, but they live too far out to hear them," said Dixie Parker, Beaver County's emergency management director. "The house was just flattened, the out buildings are gone. All that's left is debris."
Warning sirens went off in Oklahoma City on Thursday afternoon, but authorities could not immediately confirm whether a tornado had touched down. There were reports of minor damage but no injuries.
Tornadoes in the Texas Panhandle uprooted trees, overturned trucks and injured at least three people. The region also got baseball-sized hail.
Monte Ford, 53, was killed near Amarillo when he was thrown about 15 feet from his oilfield trailer, which was rolled by the wind.
The Colorado tornado killed dozens of cattle and injured others so severely they have to be shot.
"It's better than letting them suffer," said rancher Bill Lowe, who had about 800 cattle in his feedlot when the tornado hit. He lost at least 35 animals in the storm.
Just three months ago, back-to-back blizzards and subzero temperatures killed more than 10,000 livestock on farms across southeastern Colorado.
Neighbors and residents from surrounding towns comforted each other Thursday as they began cleaning up.
"They're mostly hugging one another, asking, 'Is your house standing, is your family OK?"' said Betty Vipman, who manages JR's Country Store and Video.
The same storm system dumped snow on Wyoming, causing highway pileups and closing large portions of three interstates. In the Wind River Mountains, 58 inches of snow had fallen by Thursday morning.
At least 800 homes in north-central Wyoming were without heat and electricity Thursday, down from about 2,200 the day before.
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
See a twister touching down in Silverton, Texas
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





The theory of evolution does not address the origins or creation of life, but how it changes, alters, or mutates depending upon environmental pressures in order to survive.
Unlike creation [intelligent design] addresses the origins of life, the earth and the universe.
Two entirely different concepts covering different agendas.
I don't know why those favoring the evolutionary theory juxtapose it with creationism, when they address different agendas.
I for one don't criticize people of faith and I'm happy that it makes you happy. The only problem I have is with people like singingrick who prosthletize here and try to force their faith on others by trying to force intelligent design to be taught as science and to throw out evolution, etc. They give all people of faith a bad name.
Posted by superchez1 at 05:22 PM : Mar 29, 2007
If you choose to have no faith, that is your decision, but PLEASE (I am saying that only once) do not criticize my faith or choice of religion merely because you do not choose to believe it. I am not forcing anyone to have the same faith, so leave the sarcastic comments out of it. And, by the way, my uncle and cousins are Jewish and lost several family members in the holocaust, so think twice before you start on that subject as well.
"See to it that no one takes you captive through hollow and deceptive philosophy which depends on human tradition rather than on Christ".
Now, there is one that we could all follow. Human tradition and beliefs are different than a faith in the Holy Trinity. Humans have free will to act and behave as they will, whether it is want God wants us to or not and the weather is a natural occurrence outside of anyone's scope. God created Earth and all of its wonders, but just as we create things, they don't always do as we like. That is just life. Politics has nothing to do with natural disasters. Again, I pray for those who were injured, killed, or lost their homes in those storms.
I have grown up around tornado producing storms my whole life and have lived through them. They are a wonderful example of how awesome and how superior Mother Nature is to ourselves, but also a reminder of how dangerous she can turn.
Be ralectiic and realex kkcbs. Not erevyone is as birllanit as you, but, tehy are stlil eitnletd to eprxses teihr onipoins in a fere sioctey.
Dont get me wrong, the entire country we live in is beautiful. I will just stay in the North East and wait for the oceans to rise with global warming before i move north with the coastline...
So, you people out there, get off of your butts and quit thinking there needs to be someone blamed for everything that happens in the world.
Posted by patriotic9 at 08:38 AM : Mar 29, 2007
It is beyond the scope of my imagination how Bush has anything to do with tornados or Jesus! There is a theory that the whole reason the America continents were as uninhabited as they were when "discovered" is because the landscape and positioning makes a perfect playground, if you will, for nasty weather. Research back please and you will discover that bad weather has been around in the USA long before it ever was the USA.
Now, instead of arguing politics in this section, why not think about, for just a moment, that there is a world outside of your own little world and believe that there are people out there who have now having nothing. My heart and prayers go out to all the people that suffered in that storm and I hope that Americans will step up, once again, and do what needs to be done to help each other. Americans will do what we do best...stand up, brush off, and rebuild.
- by randalds March 29, 2007 5:57 AM EDT
- I have friends in Weatherford OK. I hope they're alright. Though I do hope the hotel I used to work at as the General Manager gets blown down. With no injuries of course. ;-)
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