DENVER, Feb. 24, 2007

Winter Storm Whips Across The Heartland

Seven Killed in Wisconsin Traffic Accidents; Dumps More Than 12 Inches Of Snow

  • Play CBS Video Video Kansas: Old Man Winter Strikes

    Snow storms and tornadoes hit the Midwest and the South of the country heavily today. Highways have been closed down and the harsh winds are blowing away roofs. Jennifer Miller reports.

  • Video Weather Expert On Storms

    Senior meteorologist from Accuweather.com, Joe Bastardi, tells Thalia Assuras this is one of the coldest Februaries the country has ever seen with tornadoes, storms and a great deal of snow.

    • Jo Fuhrman, of the Colorado State Patrol, takes notes at the scene where more than two dozen cars were involved in a pile-up on Interstate 70, early Saturday morning, Feb. 24, 2007, in Aurora, Colo.

      Jo Fuhrman, of the Colorado State Patrol, takes notes at the scene where more than two dozen cars were involved in a pile-up on Interstate 70, early Saturday morning, Feb. 24, 2007, in Aurora, Colo.  (AP/The Denver Post)

    • Matt Swanson and his mom, Deb Swanson, clear ice from the driveway of their home, Feb. 24, 2007, in Austin, Minn.

      Matt Swanson and his mom, Deb Swanson, clear ice from the driveway of their home, Feb. 24, 2007, in Austin, Minn.  (AP/Austin Daily Herald, E. Johnson)

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(CBS/AP)  A large, fast-moving snowstorm that closed sections of major highways on the Plains on Saturday was blamed for seven traffic deaths, while strong winds in Arkansas cut a 5-mile-long swath of damage, destroying buildings and leaving several people injured.

"This is going to be a monster in the northern plains tonight and into the western Great Lakes," Accuweather meteorologist Joe Bastardi told CBS News' Thalia Assuras. "We're going to see six to 12 inches of wind-whipped snow."

The storms in the Plains knocked out power to more than 145,000 customers and dumped more than a foot of snow on the Upper Midwest. The seven deaths all occurred on slippery Wisconsin roads.

Meanwhile, some residents in the southeastern Arkansas city of Dumas were unaccounted for after winds, and possibly a series of tornadoes, blew through and police were making a door-to-door search, authorities said. Emergency crews summoned ambulances from a neighboring county.

A Fred's Dollar Store just south of Dumas was left in a tangle of twisted metal and crumbled concrete blocks, and an overturned tractor-trailer rested in its parking lot. A power substation was destroyed and electricity was out in the area.

Forecasters said the damage could have been done by a tornado or by straight-line winds that could have exceeded 70 mph. Several people were injured, some seriously, authorities said.

In Colorado, Interstate 70, a major cross-country route, was closed for about 400 miles in both directions from just east of Denver to Salina, Kan., because of blowing snow and slippery pavement, Colorado and Kansas highway officials said.

CBS News correspondent Jennifer Miller reports that between Denver and the Kansas border, about 35 cars collided in a pileup in whiteout conditions Saturday morning on an icy section of I-70. No major injuries were reported.

The weather service reported wind gusts of 68 mph in the Denver area. In Kansas, winds whipped about 3 inches of snowfall into 7-foot drifts.

A number of other highways also were closed in the two states, Wyoming and Nebraska. But many roads reopened later Saturday, including most of Interstate 80 in Nebraska, of which more than 270 miles had been closed.

Power was knocked out to 135,000 customers in Iowa, where freezing rain coated trees, power lines and utility lines with ice. Outages were also reported in Oklahoma and Nebraska.

“The snow is so wet it's sticking to power poles and power lines,” said Bill Taylor of the National Weather Service office in North Platte, Neb. About 8 inches of snow had fallen in the north-central town of Ainsworth.

The weather service posted blizzard and winter storm warnings for parts of Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, Iowa, Minnesota, northern Illinois and Wisconsin.

Between 15 inches to 18 inches of snow had fallen between Winona, Minn., and La Crosse, Wis., by Saturday evening, the National Weather Service reported.

Winds reaching 60 mph helped fuel dozens of grass fires across Texas, destroying three homes near Midland and forcing evacuations at Fort Hood, authorities said. No injuries were reported.

Airlines canceled 230 arrivals and departures at Chicago's O'Hare International and 40 at Midway in anticipation of snow, sleet and freezing rain, said Wendy Abrams, Chicago's aviation department spokeswoman. United Airlines planned to cancel all flights at O'Hare after 7 p.m., spokeswoman Robin Urbanski said.

© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by tcoleman12 February 25, 2007 1:27 PM EST
It must be Global Warming....Severe snow and ice during what, the winter time? What are we going to have in the summer time? Heat, maybe some dryness?

Tonights Breaking News:

"Well, the sun went down today in the west and the darkness follow....will it rise tomorrow? Tune in at 6:00am to find out!"

Give me a break!
Reply to this comment
by jdweymouth February 25, 2007 7:10 AM EST
However, I will make the sarcastic remark...

SO MUCH FOR GLOBAL WARMING!
Reply to this comment
by randalds February 25, 2007 2:30 AM EST
Now the snow is headed to my homeland of southwest Michigan. Every time I read about the massive lake effect snow back in good old Allegan county I'm glad I moved west to AZ and CA. One of the greatest things about this country is that instead of just complaining about the weather you can go where it's better. 80 degrees and sunny here in L.A. today. Nice and warm.
Reply to this comment
by hollyt2-2009 February 25, 2007 2:01 AM EST
LOL cbsben. don't start it.
Reply to this comment
by bsg February 24, 2007 11:33 PM EST
funny, how you made the remark anyway...i dread the real sarcastic remark though...it must be G W [Bush? - and all the wars he's waging?]
Reply to this comment
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