Central U.S. flooding claims more lives
By Michael Conlon
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A fresh round of thunderstorms battered parts of the central United States for a fifth day on Thursday as the region battled deadly floods that drove hundreds from their homes.
A wave of storms hit the Chicago area just before the evening rush hour, stranding children in schools, toppling dozens of trees, snarling rush hour train commutes and knocking flower boxes and barbecue grills off downtown high-rise balconies, according to various media reports.
O'Hare International Airport was closed for a time after its control tower was evacuated for 13 minutes when tornado warnings were issued for the area.
No deaths were reported, but damage was widespread.
About 40 people were injured in a roof collapse in an industrial area in the town of West Chicago, but none of the injuries was life-threatening, media reports said.
From Ohio to Nebraska, as many as 12 people have died directly or indirectly from the latest series of storms and resulting high water. Two adults and a child were electrocuted in Wisconsin when lightning struck a utility poll at a bus stop in Madison on Wednesday.
Earlier, heavy rainfall in Texas and Oklahoma related to a tropical storm killed more than two dozen people.
The area around Findlay, in northwest Ohio, was among the hardest hit, though the Blanchard River there was beginning to recede after cresting at near-record levels, more than 7 feet Continued...







