“Some people find Kansas boring, flat and featureless,” says The New York Times’ Frugal Traveler (Matt Gross), who is traveling the country in a 1989 Volvo station wagon. “But not me. I love how oil derricks dot the cornfields and how sometimes out of nowhere you’ll drive into something truly shocking. This is Greensburg. Or rather, this was Greensburg…”
That comes from a Times video taken as Gross visited Greensburg recently and got a plate of gumbo from Gulf Coast volunteers, a tour of the city and a chance to see some teenagers smash a tornado-ravaged, one-string acoustic guitar on a cement slab. The five minute video is on the Times’ web site.
For comprehensive coverage of Greensburg’s recovery, see The Eagle’s special web section.
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The nurse stood in the middle of the street as the steady and strong breeze pulled her curly hair around her head. Her flowery nurse’s shirt and blue pants fluttered like a flag in the wind. She had what has become known as “the stare.” She told photographer G. Marc Benavidez and I that she could hardly recognize the faceless and crumbling businesses that stood next to her on Main Street. She said she had helped splint someone’s compound fractures in the back of a pickup. She said her family was OK. She said the hospital and clinic were destroyed, but that all the patients were moved to the basement in time. She had heard the last patient got in at the last second and that the first destructive gust of wind to hit the building slammed the door of the basement in the face of another nurse.