Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: FRIDAY, June 15, 1990 TAG: 9006150835 SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL PAGE: A/1 EDITION: EVENING SOURCE: Associated Press DATELINE: SHADYSIDE, OHIO LENGTH: Short
The worst destruction was around Shadyside, an Appalachian Mountain foothill town of about 4,000, where authorities said a raging Ohio River tributary knocked homes off their foundations and washed away a bar filled with people.
Temporary morgues were set up at Bellaire City Hospital and a funeral home in Shadyside. Four bodies were brought to the hospital from the Shadyside area, hospital spokesman Lawrence England said.
England said the four bodies were taken to the Bauknecht Funeral Home in Shadyside. Patty Valloric, director of the funeral home, said a total of seven bodies had been brought there.
The Shadyside Fire Department set up a command center at the Jefferson Elementary School to coordinate rescue efforts.
Command center spokeswoman Karen Bovek said officials had no estimate of the death toll. Authorities were searching for victims in rural areas.
"You're talking miles and miles of country roads that haven't been gotten to yet," she said. "It's a disaster here."
Shadyside is in Belmont County, a mostly hilly, rural area in eastern Ohio.
Belmont County Sheriff's Department spokeswoman Judy Phillips said a Shadyside bar full of people was washed away when water caved in the back wall. Two people were accounted for, she said.
Shadyside Fire Chief Mark Badia said rescuers pulled people from three cars in Wegee Creek, which flows through Shadyside and into the Ohio River.
by CNB