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Snowstorm Lashes Plains, Midwest; 9 Dead, Numerous Injured on Roads; Thousands Lose Power

Carrie Antlfinger

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MILWAUKEE — Highways were hazardous for holiday travelers Sunday and thousands of homes and businesses had no electricity in the Midwest as a storm blustered through the region with heavy snow and howling wind.

Photo: Vicki Reed tries to push a snowbound car out of a drift on Kellogg Saturday Dec. 22, 2007 in Wichita, Kan., near the downtown exit. A fierce blizzard left a mess of Wichita as it passed through three days before Christmas. (Travis Heying / AP)

Winter storm warnings were posted for parts of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan on Sunday as the core of the storm headed north across the Great Lakes. Parts of Wisconsin already had a foot of snow, and up to a foot was forecast Sunday in northeastern Minnesota, the National Weather Service said.

Photo: Luke Seavey stands next to his car that slid off the road leaving him stranded on the Interstate 35 after a snow storm with blizzard like conditions hit Wichita, Kansas, USA, 22 December 2007 (Larry W. Smith / EPA)

Radar showed snow falling across much of Wisconsin and eastern Minnesota on Sunday and moving into parts of Michigan and Indiana.

"Everything is just an ice rink out there," Rock County Sheriff's Sergeant Steve Selby said Sunday morning.

The weather system also spread locally heavy rain on Sunday from the Southeast to the lower Great Lakes.

The storm rolled through Colorado and Wyoming on Friday, then spread snow and ice on Saturday from the Texas Panhandle to Minnesota. Multi-car pileups closed parts of several major highways Saturday in the Plains states.

Photo: Stranded motorists wait for a tow truck along Interstate 84 in East Hartford, Conn., Thursday, Dec. 13, 2007. Connecticut is expecting up to 10 inches of snow in the first storm of the season. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

The area of Madison, Wis., got three to four hours of freezing rain early Sunday, said weather service meteorologist intern Bill Borghoff at Sullivan. The combination of icy pavement and gusty wind made driving treacherous, he said.

"It's quite a mess out there," Borghoff said.

Wind gusting to more than 50 mph uprooted trees in parts of Michigan. "I can see the snow moving basically sideways," meteorologist Wayne Hoepner said in Grand Rapids.

At Chicago's Midway Airport, winds reached 68 mph Sunday morning, said weather service meteorologist Bill Nelson. They were blowing at 50 mph across the region, he said.

Because of the wind, airlines canceled 150 flights Sunday at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport, the city Aviation Department said. Municipal officials said the wind had knocked out almost 60 traffic signals, and there were nearly 500 reports of fallen trees and limbs.

More than 11,000 homes and businesses were without power at some point Saturday in Wisconsin because of the freezing rain, ice, gusty wind and heavy snow, utilities said. Michigan utilities reported some 92,000 customers were still without power Sunday afternoon, and in Illinois about 46,000 customers were blacked out.

Photo: Greg Weakland, 19, secures a tow hook to a stranded passenger's car to help it up an inclined street as snow blows in Topeka, Kan., Saturday. (By Mike Burley, Topeka Capital-Journal via AP)

At least three people in Minnesota, three in Wyoming and one person each in Texas, Kansas and Wisconsin were killed in traffic accidents that authorities said stemmed from the storm.

The fatality in Texas came in a chain-reaction pileup involving more than 50 vehicles, including several tractor-trailer rigs, on Interstate 40, police said. At least 16 people were taken to hospitals, Sgt. Michael Poston said.

"We're not really sure how many cars, probably in excess of 40 cars and in excess of 20 semitrailers," Amarillo police Sgt. Greg Fisher said Sunday.

Many were holiday travelers, including families with small children not dressed for the weather, Sgt. Shawn McLeland said. Other drivers opened their own Christmas presents to provide warmer clothing for the children.

Authorities believe the pileup, which shut down the highway for most of the day, was caused by near zero visibility in blowing snow and slippery pavement. Multi-vehicle wrecks on Saturday also blocked sections of I-70 in Kansas and I-29 in Missouri.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press.

http://www.usatoday.com/weather/storms/winter/2007-12-22-storm-midwest_N.htm

www.standeyo.com/NEWS/07_Earth_Changes/071223.snow.Plains.html