Joseph Fehranbacher of Kansas Search & Rescue Dog Association walks past a Dodge Neon on its nose in a basement Sunday, April 22, 2001, in Hoisington, Kan., after Saturday's night's tornado. Officials estimated the tornado struck that 20 to 25 percent of the buildings in the town of 2,900 people. (AP Photo/The Hutchinson News, Amy Roh)
Link to image
AMY ROH / AP
A firefighter walks through a second-floor bedroom of a destroyed house Sunday, April 22, 2001, in Hoisington, Kan., after a tornado ripped through the town Saturday night. (AP Photo/The Hutchinson News, Amy Roh)
Link to image
AMY ROH / AP
A mattress is wrapped around a utility pole with a damaged street sign in Hoisington, Kan., Sunday, April 22, 2001, after a tornado damaged numerous houses and killed one person Saturday night. (AP Photo/The Hutchinson News, Amy Roh)
Link to image
AMY ROH / AP
Joyce Tauscher of Hoisington, Kan., looks down at a pile of debris from what's left of her house while trying to collect her personal belongings Sunday, April 22, 2001, after a tornado swept through Hoisington Saturday night. Her husband, Gerald Tauscher, was killed by the tornado. (AP Photo/The Salina Journal, Justin Hayworth)
Link to image
JUSTIN HAYWORTH / AP
Keith and Beverly Higgings dig through the remains of the third floor of their house in Hoisington, Kan., Sunday, April 22, 2001. Beverly, Keith and their daughter, Erin, 15, were all at the high school prom when a tornado hit Saturday. Greg Gardner, adjutant general for Kansas, said 200 buildings were destroyed by the twister, classified as an F-4, that hit this town of 2,900 people, 100 miles northwest of Wichita. Another 85 were severely damaged, and 200 more received minor to moderate damage. (AP Photo/The Salina Journal, Justin Hayworth)
Link to image
JUSTIN HAYWORTH / AP
Bill Lebert hands an antelope bust to a friend while removing valuables from his house in Hoisington, Kan., Sunday, April 22, 2001. Lebert's house was damaged after a tornado hit Hoisington Saturday evening. (AP Photo/The Wichita Eagle, Jaime Oppenheimer)
Link to image
JAIME OPPENHEIMER / AP
A vehicle thrown into a house is among the damage caused by Saturday's tornado in Hoisington, Kan., shown Monday, April 23, 2001. Officials estimate 200 homes were destroyed, 85 received major damaged and 200 minor damaged Saturday. Another 20 to 25 homes south of town may have also been flooded Sunday by rising water left over from the same storm system that spawned Saturday's tornado. (AP Photo/The Hutchinson News, Sandra J. Milburn)
Link to image
SANDRA J. MILBURN / AP
Ronna Duerson sticks her head through the window of her aunt's home, Monday, April 23, 2001, as she and her family talk about the car bumper, lower right, that was hurled into the mud splattered kitchen in Hoisington, Kan. Duerson's aunt and uncle were not injured Saturday night when a tornado destroyed their home. Family and friends from as far as Oklahoma came to help clean up. Officials estimate 200 homes were destroyed, 85 received major damaged and 200 minor damage in the storm. (AP Photo/The Hutchinson News, Sandra Milburn)
Link to image
SANDRA J. MILBURN / AP
Heather Nye, 17, stands next to her car in the basement of her home in Hoisington, Kan., Sunday afternoon, April 22, 2001, as her family tries to retrieve belongings from what was left of their house. Nye was at the prom when a tornado hit Saturday night and came home to find no house and her car in the basement. (AP Photo/The Salina Journal, Justin Hayworth)
Link to image
JUSTIN HAYWORTH / AP