Deadly tornadoes strike campus in Iowa; one killed outside town

Tornadoes tore across the University of Iowa campus, ripped walls off a downtown church and killed a woman in a mobile home outside of town.

The National Weather Service said five tornadoes touched down Thursday night in Johnson County, the most destructive carving a 3 1/2-mile path of damage through downtown and the university. High winds, hail and at least one tornado hit Illinois as well.

“There was debris flying everywhere inside the house,” said Melissa Fortman, an Iowa sophomore who huddled with friends in the basement of the Alpha Chi Omega house as the sirens sounded.

She then decided to run upstairs for her homework just as the tornado hit.

“I couldn’t go downstairs because there was debris and glass flying up the stairs, so I just hid in a telephone booth we have in our house and I just hid there crying,” she told ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

Entire walls of the sorority house were gone and the interiors of several rooms were visible from the street. Two cars had been tossed into a nearby ravine, and glass, debris and tree limbs littered the neighborhood.

A car smashed by falling bricks and trees sits in the middle of Iowa Avenue in Iowa City, Iowa., Friday, April 14, 2006, following tornadoes that ripped through the area Thursday night.

The twisters swept across eastern Iowa, with the worst damage from Iowa City southeast through Nichols, about 20 miles away, the National Weather Service said.

“We have a path in the Nichols area that’s four to five miles long,” said Maj. Dave White, of the Muscatine County sheriff’s office.

He said the tornado hit farms and a mobile home with a man and woman inside.

“It blew it off the foundation and the trailer rolled and basically disintegrated,” White said. The woman, whose identity was not released, died in the storm.

Gov. Tom Vilsack declared a state of emergency for Johnson, Jones and Muscatine counties.

In Iowa City, 30 people were reported treated at hospitals for storm-related injuries.