December 11, 2009 8:36 PM

Week of Wintry Weather Leaves U.S. Frozen

(CBS/AP)  Last updated at 6:39 p.m. EST

A deadly, windy storm that has paralyzed a wide swath of the nation for days left bitter cold behind as it finally made its exit Thursday, with temperatures below freezing in several states and gusts that made it feel as cold as minus 25.

Power failures in the Midwest, dozens of lost hunters in the West and howling winds that helped blow over a bus in New York provided just a few lingering miseries from the first major storm of the season.

And all along the Great Lakes a lingering deposit of lake effect snow added hardship. The Buffalo area could get three feet, CBS News correspondent Dean Reynolds reports.

Emergency rooms took in people who had slipped and fallen, overdone shoveling or reached their hands into clogged snowblowers, while tow trucks freed drivers from the sides of icy roads and everyday residents simply struggled to get around in the frigid winds.

"Like I stuck my face in the freezer," was how Bincy Mathew described the feeling in Chicago on Thursday, complaining about his watering eyes: "I think they are going to freeze up."

On its path East, the storm produced a record low in Seattle of 16 degrees, reports CBS News correspondent Jim Axelrod. It got down to 27 below zero in Big Piney, Wy., -3 degrees in Minneapolis and -5 in Green Bay, Wis.

Aileen Azares, 42, of Dallas, spent part of the day taking photos in Chicago's Millennium Park, where sculptures sported snow hats and icicle beards. Azares wore a pink scarf but was still cold.

"Right now my ears are hurting," Azares said.

The days-old storm made its first punch in the West before plowing across two-thirds of the country with heavy snow, icy winds, and even lightning and thunder before preparing to blow out to sea off Maine.

In northern Arizona, 25 to 30 elk hunters remained stranded for a fourth day in below-freezing weather, and searchers feared the parties would run out of food and heating fuel before the next storm hit, possibly over the weekend.

The Coconino County Sheriff's Office said the hunters were trapped by the 2 to 3 feet of snow that fell Monday. Authorities received several reports of stranded or overdue hunting parties but expected to get more calls as the elk hunting season drew to an end Thursday.

"The storm just hit when everyone was out in the field," said sheriff's spokesman Gerry Blair.

Michigan residents hunkered down under a blizzard warning as the coldest air of the season crossed Lake Michigan. More than 120,000 people lost power in the state, in the middle of a swath from Iowa to West Virginia and up to Maine where residents were in the dark at some point.

High snow totals, fueled by winds blowing over lakes Erie and Ontario, were possible for parts of New York through Saturday, including south of Buffalo and north of Syracuse.

While less than three inches of snow fell on Buffalo, winds gusting between 50 mph and 60 mph blinded drivers, grounded flights and forced most schools to close. Frequent thunder and lightning lit up the sky before dawn.

A double-decker bus carrying 12 passengers from New York City to Toronto overturned on the New York State Thruway near Buffalo when the driver made an unsafe lane change during the worst of the storm early Thursday, state police said. Nine on board were taken to hospitals with injuries not considered life threatening.

"The winds were just whipping the snow back across the road, and you couldn't get a lane or two cleared or kept cleared," State Police Capt. Michael Nigrelli said.

In Rochester, where a blustery 28-degree day finally dispatched an unseasonably mild fall in upstate New York, Mike Hartman said he was getting in shape for ski season with a lunchtime jog around Cobbs Hill Park with his Chinese shar-pei dog and a friend.

"I did enjoy the mild weather, but I'd rather have snow than sleet and rain and a temperature in between freezing and not freezing," he said.

At least 17 people have died in the meandering storm, including a man found Wednesday outside his pickup truck in central Iowa and a North Carolina driver killed when a tree was blown onto his pickup.

Wisconsin hospitals dealt with an influx of patients, including Lloyd Gleason, who lost a finger and fractured two others in a snowblower. He was one of six victims of snowblower accidents who went to St. Mary's Hospital in Madison on Wednesday.

"I just didn't think the thing was working, and it was," he told WISC-TV.

The Upper Midwest was left under a dome of arctic air that forecasters said would linger into the weekend. As often, the coldest spot was International Falls, a small city along the Canadian border that has proclaimed itself the "Icebox of the Nation."

Jake Haney, who fuels planes at the International Falls Airport, said it was 13 below zero with a steady wind when he got to work at 6:30 Thursday morning. He expected to spend about four hours of his 10-hour shift outside but said he'd be fine as long as he left no exposed skin.

"I enjoy it, kind of," Haney said. "I've lived here my whole life, so I'm used to it at least. It's fresh air. It's better than being trapped inside."

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by barbaram99 December 12, 2009 4:08 AM EST
It is partly human and nature..I am older and member years ago..They were fewer cars on the roads. Today the air is so dirty. The weather is chaging..I am Maine born and raised..We had snow on the ground all winter. It rearly snows there..In 84 it snowed all over Maine..I went back in 98 and there was no snow in the winter. I have kin there and never lift.. I am Seattle..We have no snow but at this writing it is very cold. It rearly goes below 32 in the winter. We have a cold snap.
Reply to this comment
by Brokennews December 11, 2009 5:10 PM EST
I'm doing what I can folks! I went out, started the car & left it running.
You should feel the extra heat here any minute!
Reply to this comment
by debinok1 December 11, 2009 10:22 AM EST
While I do not buy into the Man made global warming hype, I do believe that the climate is changing, shifting would be more accurate. The U.S. needs to focus on getting things ready for a very cold future, moving power lines under ground, moving water and sewer lines below the standard frost lines, stocking up on food supplies. Before we focus on helping other nations adjust, we better do it for ourselves first. This is just my opinion, but it is what I have suspected was coming for several years.
Reply to this comment
by fo_sho_yo December 11, 2009 10:40 AM EST
Right. The recent cooling trend of the last century is probably responsible for the melting of every glacier in the lower 48, as well.
by debinok1 December 11, 2009 10:50 AM EST
If my suspicions are correct we will start to see those glaciers reforming in other areas soon, very unlikely areas at that. If the Climate is shifting, then the climate from the arctic will move to another area, just as a warmer climate has shifted into the arctic region. I stated I do not doubt the climate is changing(shifting), I just do not think it is man made.
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