# Tornado warnings issued Saturday for parts of central, southeast Ohio
# About 100,000 in northern Illinois remained without power Saturday
# Flooding from Minnesota to Ohio has been blamed for at least 18 deaths
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Beleaguered residents of the flood-ravaged Midwest found fresh damage Sunday from a batch of tornado-bearing thunderstorms that knocked out power to hundreds of thousands of customers.
The floor is ripped up Saturday in a beauty salon damaged by flooding in downtown Ottawa, Ohio
Tornado warnings were issued Saturday afternoon for parts of central and southeast Ohio. Downed trees and power lines were reported in the southern part of the state, said National Weather Service meteorologist Andy Hatzos.
Flooding this week spread across an 80-mile swath through the northwest and north central parts of the state. Gov. Ted Strickland was to tour more of the damaged areas Sunday. "What I've tried to do and what we've all tried to do is let these folks know ... that we are working to get assistance to them as rapidly as possible," Strickland said Saturday.
Powerful storms rolling through the Upper Midwest during most of the past week caused disastrous floods from southeastern Minnesota to Ohio that were blamed for at least 18 deaths.
Residents in DeKalb, Illinois, work on a pump to clear knee-deep water from the basement of a home Friday.
In southern Michigan, about 42,000 customers still lacked power Sunday, utilities said. The National Weather Service confirmed tornadoes touched down Friday in at least four areas, including a single 26-mile stretch. One of the twisters cut a path a quarter-mile wide, snapping and uprooting hundreds of trees, the weather service said.
Damage in Fenton was extensive, Mayor Sue Osborn said Saturday. "I have seen houses that have trees go right through them," she said. Only residents were being allowed into the city, she said. Matt McClanahan's Cohoctah Township home was among at least 17 destroyed by a twister. "I've seen devastation and I've helped clean up, but I've never seen it be me," he said. "I bought a bottle of Jim Beam and it's in the house. I could really use a sip of that right now." See tips for surviving floods » Power had been restored to nearly 600,000 customers in northern Illinois since Thursday's storm, but it could take days to restore power to tens of thousands more, officials said. The storms in Illinois were responsible for at least one death, a man struck by a wind-toppled tree, officials said.
A large tree lies across a small car in Chicago, Illinois, after strong storms and heavy rain Friday.
The storms in Illinois were responsible for at least one death, a man struck by a wind-toppled tree, officials said.
In Wisconsin, flooding destroyed 44 homes and damaged more than 1,400, most of them in the southwestern part of the state. Officials in Vernon County lifted evacuation orders Saturday evening, allowing the return of 140 residents displaced after torrential rainfall strained a number of nearby dams.
About 1,500 homes were damaged around Minnesota. Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator R. David said FEMA recovery centers should be running early this week in the three counties where President Bush declared disasters.
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# Flash-flood warning issued for southwestern Wisconsin Monday
# President Bush declared north-central Ohio a disaster area following flooding
# Storms and flooding were blamed for at least 18 deaths across upper Midwest
# Electricity back for most customers who lost power last week
Lester Flores and his sister Beth Flores drain the basement of his Ottawa, Ohio, home on Sunday.
BURLINGTON, Wisconsin (AP) -- Another round of thunderstorms brought more rain and a flash-flood warning to an already deluged southwestern Wisconsin on Monday, forcing residents [below four dams to evacuate.
Strong wind knocked out power to parts of Vilas and Oneida counties, and the National Weather Service briefly issued a flash flood warning for Vernon County as up to 3.5 inches of rain drenched the area.
Elsewhere, cleanup and recovery were under way in parts of the Great Lakes region hit hard by last week's storms. President Bush declared north-central Ohio a disaster area, clearing the way for residents of the heavily flooded region to apply for grants for temporary housing and home repairs.
Storms and flooding were blamed for at least 18 deaths across the upper Midwest.
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