Tornadoes torment central Iowa, damaging homes, other buildings
WOODWARD, Iowa (AP) -- Tornadoes swept across central Iowa Saturday, damaging homes in several towns, ripping up farms and chasing college football fans from an open stadium and into a nearby basketball arena for shelter.
No injuries were immediately reported, but authorities Saturday evening were evacuating Stratford, a town of about 746 residents 23 miles northwest of Ames.
"They're evacuating the whole town. Part of it was damaged by a tornado -- a good portion of it," said Officer Luke Field of the Ellsworth-Jewell-Stanhope Police Department.
National Weather Service meteorologist Craig Cogil said it appeared that at least three tornadoes touched down.
In Ames, football fans awaiting the start of the Iowa State Cyclones' game against the University of Colorado were cleared from the stands and moved into Hilton Coliseum as the tornado sirens sounded.
Ames Police dispatcher Pam Litchfield said there were reports of a building blown apart in the city, but it wasn't clear if it was a home.
A Boone County dispatcher confirmed that at least two tornadoes hit there, with major damage in the Boxholm and Pilot Mound areas, a few miles south of Stratford.
Richard Albracht, 59, had headed for his basement in Woodward when he saw shingles start to fly and heard the sirens.
He said he went outside after the storm passed and found several homes damaged and an empty restaurant with only one wall left standing.
"It's pretty bad. There's houses destroyed and roofs off of houses," he said.
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