Monster Winter Storm Moves Into Plains
Denver Finally Sees Sun, Other States Hit With Snow, Thunderstorms, Tornadoes
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Play CBS Video Video Another Blizzard Blasts Denver Denver has been hit with its second snowstorm in one week. The city remains blanketed under two feet of snow and more is expected. Kelly Cobiella reports.
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David Ritchey skis along a snow-covered road, following his wife, Barb Miller, and his daughter Jena Ritchey, Saturday, Dec. 30, 2006, in Albuquerque, N.M. (AP/Albuquerque Journal/D. Lienemann)
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Steve Bott struggles through the snow-clogged Newport Street in east Denver on Friday, Dec. 29, 2006, to reach his truck to continue making deliveries. Residents are digging out from the second snowstorm in a week to hit foothills of Denver. (AP PHOTO)
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Frances Purcell, 10, tosses a ball for her dogs at a dog park in Louisville, Colo., Dec. 28, 2006. (GETTY)
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An abandoned car on a side street in Denver, Dec. 28. 2006. (AP)
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Randi Colberg and daughter Journey, 6, left, and Tamara Borrmann and son Parker, 6, at the Winterskate outdoor skating rink in Louisville, Colo., Dec. 28, 2006. (GETTY)
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Photo Essay Let It Snow, Man! It causes hazards, disrupts travel and makes a big mess, but some revel in the fun of it all
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Photo Essay Ho-Ho-Holiday Travel Who needs the Grinch when you've got snow?
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News Tools U.S. Airport Tracker Up-to-the-minute reports on delays and closures.
Denver had expected a foot or more of additional snow through Sunday, but the storm trudged northeast from New Mexico into the Texas panhandle. Parts of eastern Colorado still expected up to 2 feet, along with high winds.
"It's still a very powerful storm," said meteorologist Jim Kalina of the National Weather Service.
National Guard troops in tracked vehicles crawled through whiteout conditions to rescue motorists who became stranded in the region's second blizzard during the busy holiday travel season.
"They're telling me it's zero visibility," said Maj. Gen. Mason Whitney, the state adjutant general. "They'll kind of bump into something and it'll turn out to be a car with people in it."
The storm, which hampered air travel through Denver on Thursday and Friday, spread snow from New Mexico to the Dakotas and generated strong thunderstorms in the lower Mississippi Valley.
Conditions were so bad that some snowplows had to stay off the roads.
In Denver, the sun emerged Saturday for the first time in several days, helping street crews clearing snow and ice left from the pre-Christmas blizzard. Major carriers at Denver International Airport resumed flying regular schedules after canceling 20 percent of flights during the storm.
The weather service reported 30 inches in the foothills west of Denver, with more than 9 inches in the city.
Parts of Interstate 70 from the Rockies to Kansas remained closed Saturday, along with several other major east-west highways. In New Mexico, Interstate 25 from Pueblo to Santa Fe was also closed.
A Kansas Highway Patrol dispatcher said most major roads from Kansas into Colorado would remain closed until Colorado officials reopen their routes.
Ice and strong winds knocked out power to at least 14,000 people in Kansas, where up to 18 inches of snow had fallen by Saturday in some areas. The snow later turned to rain in many areas. Up to a foot fell in southwestern and central Nebraska.
One traffic death was blamed on the storm in Colorado and a tornado killed one person Friday in Texas. The storm also created severe thunderstorms in the South. A possible tornado was reported Saturday in southern Louisiana.
On Friday, tornadoes generated by the storm in Texas destroyed as many as 50 homes and forced President Bush and his wife into an armored vehicle on his Crawford ranch.
Residents of an assisted living center for military veterans in Texas had little time to react Friday before a tornado struck, killing one person.
More than 15 inches of snow fell at Albuquerque's airport by noon Saturday, setting records.
In North Dakota, transportation officials pulled snowplows off many roads late Saturday because of reduced visibility. Bismarck reported more than 7 inches of snow, and areas south could get 14 inches by Sunday.
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- When I was stationed at a SAC Air Base in North Dakota in 1974-75 we got 41 inches of snow in less then 48 hours, plus high winds. What a sight! The snow was piled up to the 2nd floor windows of the barracks and the cars in the parking lot were completely hidden. A few guys UI knew had their cars crushed by the tractor vehicles that were patrolling the base. Fortunately we had enough waring the snow was coming and had power, heat and lots and lots and lots of beer. Good times!
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




