Hi dear friends , Here is a story from the Hutchinson Paper, It is a very nice article, There are several stories and I will try and share them all with you, This has been nice to finally get the chance to get back to you all, and inform you where I have been, It is great to know you all have been concerned I have also been worrying about letting you know, and hoping everyone is well. I am so lucky to have found such a wonderful place to be a part of, I do hope we can try and reach out to the victims of the terrible disaster, their are so many that lost loved ones @ 12 now, and a whole community broken gone, blown off the map, I am extremely proud of the american people for stepping up and coming to the aid of Kansas, Our govener has been a great hero herself, she has most definelty gained the respect of this state I am sure, Hope that all my friends are doing good, and looking so forward to hearing from each and everyone, You are the greatest, Much love Sharla
Injured Macksville officer taken off life support
By Roxana Hegeman
The Associated Press
GREENSBURG - Macksville police officer Robert Tim Buckman was rushing to warn rural residents Friday night of the approaching storm that had just destroyed this neighboring town when the tornado got him first.
Buckman, 46, critically injured when a twister crushed his squad car east of Macksville in Stafford County and flung it 300 yards into a field, was declared dead shortly before 8 a.m. Tuesday, his son, Derick Buckman, told AP.
"He died being a hero," Derick Buckman said. "He was sworn to protect people and that's what he was doing the night he got picked up by a tornado."
His death pushed the weekend storms' death toll to 12 and added more heartbreak for Greensburg residents as they continued to salvage what's left of their flattened town after one of the strongest tornadoes to hit the U.S. in the past eight years.
During his final hours, the elder Buckman was able to symbolically give away his 18-year-old daughter in an unofficial, "promise" wedding at his bedside, Derick Buckman said. The family's hometown preacher presided over the ceremony for Kylee Buckman and her boyfriend, Josh Mondello, 22, Derick's best friend. Though the couple exchanged vows and "promise" rings, an official wedding is scheduled for August.
"He was there with his daughter to give her away," said Derick Buckman, a 25-year-old firefighter.
The elder Buckman's death caused some anxious hours half a continent away as his son-in-law, Army Pfc. Seth Cole, was told by his commanders at Fort Stewart in southeast Georgia that he would not be allowed to return home to console his wife and children but instead would be deployed to Iraq as scheduled on Tuesday.
But military officials changed their minds Tuesday afternoon as Cole and his unit were about to board buses to their deployment planes in Savannah.
"The battalion commander came over and sat down with me and said, 'Where do you need to be?"' Cole told The Associated Press
in a phone interview. "I said, 'I need to be home with my wife's family.' And he said, 'OK, you're going."'
Fort Stewart spokesman Rich Olson confirmed that Cole had been granted emergency leave.
Cole, 22, said he doesn't know how much time he'll have in Kansas before he has to deploy to Iraq, but said he will at least have time to attend his father-in-law's funeral with his wife, December, and their three young girls.
"I'm ecstatic," he said. "I just called my wife and she's jumping for joy."
Robert Buckman had worked for tiny Macksville - population 514 - since March 2002, serving as one of the city's three full-time employees, providing everything from law enforcement to water/sewer service, said City Clerk Janet Hudson.
"The men are everything," Hudson said.
Derick Buckman said he last talked with his father by phone Friday evening after hearing about Greensburg's destruction and asked his father, a fellow volunteer firefighter in Stafford County, if they would need help with search and rescue efforts.
"He said, 'I don't know yet, but if you can get here, get here. We'll probably need you here first,"' Derick Buckman said.
En route to meet his father, Buckman had to dodge numerous tornadoes himself. His father wasn't as lucky.
Robert Buckman was traveling east of Macksville on U.S. 50 to warn residents in two rural houses to get to safety when he tried to call his youngest son, who was staying with his grandparents in Great Bend.
"I'm guessing he just pushed a button on the phone," Derick Buckman said. "The last words out of his mouth that anybody heard of him before he was found were, 'I can't get away from it. It's too big. I'm screwed.' And then his phone and his police radio went dead."
A passerby noticed the crushed police car when a bolt of lightning illuminated it in a field and stopped to help.
The person heard Buckman groaning and called 911, Derick Buckman said.
"All I can tell you is the car was crushed like it was put in an actual crusher at a junkyard," he said. "It was that flat."
The rural residents Robert Buckman was trying to warn were unharmed, his son said.
Buckman was taken to Via Christi St. Francis Medical Center in Wichita in critical condition. Through a mix-up, state officials said an unnamed Stafford County law enforcement officer had been killed, leading many to think it was Robert Buckman.
On Saturday, still optimistic for his father's chances, Derick Buckman called radio stations and other media outlets, trying to clear up the confusion. In particular, he was afraid the news would disrupt a chain of people he said were praying for both his father and all of Greensburg.
By Tuesday, Buckman said he and his exhausted family just wanted to remember his father's sacrifice.
"The night he died, he was doing what he had to do," he said. "He died a hero, and I can't be more proud."
That is a wonderful article, and it says it all. He died a hero!!! What a brave man to be out in that storm trying to let people know about the tornado. I'm sorry for your family's loss! Hugs, Kimmy
painful
OMG I am so sorry about this horrible tragedy . I am so glad you are Ok I have been so worried about you! Thank God you and yours are alive. But so sad about the whole thing. What can we do to help? They are saying in Calif to send money to american red cross? Or can you think of a better place. We don't have alot of extra cash but a little from everyone might help. Praying for everyone my dear friend Love Diane
dcorcoran