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"We're getting absolutely hammered," Fire Capt. Jim Hemwall of Monroe County's Frenchtown Township said Thursday night. "We have funnel clouds spotted all around us." Hemwall said a house in the town of Exeter was struck by lightning and debris swirled around another in Monroe County's Dundee. A third possible tornado was reported in northwest Lapeer County, near Columbiaville. Authorities reported damage in a three mile area there. The storm ripped a two-story home from its foundation, damaged barns and vehicles, and knocked down trees. It packed wind gusts up to 70 mph in Lapeer County and 2-inch hail, the weather service said. Survey teams from the weather service planned to be in Washtenaw, Monroe and Lapeer counties on Friday to examine the damage. All roads into the village of Dexter were closed as darkness fell, with police diverting traffic. Area police and fire agencies were going door-to-door searching for any injured, said Jackson, the Washtenaw sheriff's spokesman. People needing shelter for the night were directed to a local school. Bill Marx, head baker at Dexter Bakery, said he was closing up shop when he noticed the change in the weather and heard storm sirens. "I stepped outside and saw the clouds turning around," Marx said. "It was coming toward us. After it went by, it really started raining and hailing." Eastern Michigan University in nearby Ypsilanti also was buckling down for the storm. "We put out an all-campus notice to students to take cover, and a tornado warning is in effect," school spokesman Walter Kraft said. The notices were sent out via text messages and emails, Kraft said. University of Michigan Health System spokeswoman Kara Gavin said patients were moved into hallways and window blinds were closed in rooms. Gavin said there were no reports of damage in or around the Ann Arbor hospitals. The American Red Cross of Washtenaw and Lenawee counties expected to open a shelter at Mill Creek Middle School in Dexter and provide shelter, food, water, other basic needs and mental health services, spokeswoman Jenni Hawes said. "I'm sure a lot of people are pretty distraught," she said. "If you know people affected, encourage them to the shelter and get assistance." Hawes said a second shelter opened nearby in Ann Arbor, where significant flooding forced the evacuation of an apartment complex.
[Associated
Press;
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