d Thursday, May 5.1977 5 n going to un- ame vein, when female and female signing women's hand for those rare knight figures—6 wrist and 32 we'll probably in all shapes Twiggly types to of Ma West, cute little like turnover-hear- like turnover-hear- woman, half of literally litterally lies on top, will lift. But they will like slightly perpetuating the fashion into talk to. She ther I was going the next night and be there at 8:30. I night I had back in Lawrence Spears. But, like ded to sacrifice blonde. the next night and I'm not shown up. If I lawrence then I bought a couple of shoes, but we are I could leave.耐受 will stay. to travel with. pieces of pitchersversation flowed on me, my shoulder, my shoulder, and waved ?! I don't know, the clock and it looks like it was just on my bed. I beached once anyway. tending for a solution in my for- mation. I could start by away from my getting a smaller the best solution a coach who student manage Y August during Holiday Hotel or $18 offer or $20 areas are activity fee al Editor t Brann la Smith in Cobb Rosewicz in Wierce Hampson Milleren Mauritin Vobolov Vojobil l Luman Baldwin, Baldwin, Loech, Semit Addison, Addison, Sluffen n O'Shea Jarsille v Higbee Thornton O'Connor Gruender enstrand 12 spots damaged or destroyed by the tornado in Douglas County Tornado . . . From page one the funnels veered southeast and struck a mobile home owned by Francis Dean about 20 minutes before the crash. Deay was in the kitchen of his mobile home when the tornado lifted it off the foundation over a small garden and dropped it upside down 23 feet away. After the storm passed, a small dog sat on the ceiling inside the house. Another dog lay stunned, apparently electrically shocked by downed power lines strewn across the wreckage from the house. Only a storm door was missing from a nearby house owned by Clarise and Harry Newall. Two trees in front of the Newall house were broken, but a third tree between the two was intact. "I HAPPENED too fast." Deay said. "I didn't know what was going on. I was just heading to the basement of the house next door when it hit." Joe and Ada Bell Helfell avoided injury by hudding in the basement of their sevenroom house a quarter of a mile east of Deay's. The Helfrich house and surrounding farm buildings were destroyed. The house of Leroy Parsons, east of the Harich home, was also reportedly detached. Although their home was destroyed next, Max Kepple and his wife escaped injury by riding out the storm in the basement of their daughter's nearby house. The Kepples' roof lay in their front yard after the storm and trees had crushed the roof of the house. Their home was visible under a pile of broken tree limbs, and a propane tank was overturned. THE TORNADO continued eastward, destroying a vacant farm home and three outbuildings, an abandoned stone church and three detached locations of the buildings couldn't be determined last night because downed cars had roads in the area made travel hazardous. But Jim Corti, who lived near the vacant farm house, said he was photographing the funnel and it destroyed the vacant house "It was like a pile of flour," he said of the house. "You blow on it and it's gone." At about the same time, a separate fumel) apparently struck a barn owned by Delbert Green on Pleasant Hill, five miles north of St. Louis, on the closest corner of the barn was left standing. The downed plane that prompted the helicopter search was reported by Harry Cox, who lives about 10 miles southeast of Lawrence. Cox said he watched the tornado pass his mobile home from west east and east and south on a plane falling tail-fast toward the ground. The Topeka police helicopter began searching the area by spotlight at 9 p.m. but stopped about 11 p.m. The Highwayman said they had not seen anyone have been found if it had been in an exposed LARRYCOSGROVE, Lawrence graduate student and director of the KU weather service, watched last night as the tornado-producing thunderstorm developed. He said the storm cloud developed in Osage County southwest of Lawrence. area, but that one could be in a rock quarry which will be searched today. The cloud split in half in Osage County, Cosgrove said. The half containing the tornado activity moved east through rural Douglas County and the half containing the tornado. "We were saved by the fact that it turned to the east as it matured," he said. Cogrove said the storm appeared to stall as it approached the city. Seib and Frazier were helped in gathering information by Chuck Wilson, Rob Rains, Gary Vice, Courtney Thompson and Jim Bates. Tornadoes trap attendant For several minutes last night, Dee Pondhunter was trapped between two tor- oms. The strong wind had died down a few minutes before, but it began to blow again. The hot, humid air cooled as the tornado, which Poindexter said looked like a long, black snake, came closer and closer to the station. At what Pointdeker thought was the last possible moment, he and the employee jumped into a pickup and tried to escape by driving north toward Lawrence. Pointeexer, manager of the Quality Oil Station at the intersection of Highway 59 surrounded by an employeener well watched about. The service dropped from the black sky and approached the service station from the southwest and brought the new Lebanon Shrable home in its path. "They (the tornadoes) took my truck and we twisting it all over the road," Pointdexter said. "Everything was flying in every direction." One funnel swung in front of the truck, and the other turned south, leaving the two momentarily trapped on the highway between them. As the two funnels roared by, Poindexter realized he had done the wrong thing. Pointexter was ari he would be killed by the tornado. But the tornadoes disappeared, and Pointexter was back on his run. One funnel continued toward Lawrence, finally wearing itself out. The other leveled three houses within a half-mile area east of Highway 59. Jazz Jazz Jazz only at PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE 926 Mass. upstairs TONITE: Jam Session with the River City Jazz Band FRIDAY: Claude Williams, the world's premier jazz fiddler playing with Tom Montgomery's Trio SATURDAY: Claude Williams & Ray Ehrhart, nationally acclaimed [aazz pianist since the 1930's] Both playing with the award winning Gasilo Gang Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for reservations. 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