AP/South Bend Tribune, Jim Rider
Huddled in a phone booth, Mike Patrick, 33, of South Bend, Indiana checks to see if the bus schedule for Wednesday January 2, 2008, has been changed because of severe weather. Heavy snows caused problems from the Midwest to New England and temperatures had also dropped from the high teens in the early morning hours to 2 degrees by around 10 a.m.
AP/Orland Vol. FD/Angola H-R
An Indiana State Police trooper looks at a damaged van on the Indiana Toll Road, Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2007, near Orland, Ind. The van carrying students from Bowling Green State University in Ohio overturned in snowy conditions early Wednesday, killing two women.
AP Photo/Amy Sancetta
An outdoor barbeque scene complete with a tiki torch and grill, sit under a blanket of snow in a backyard in Chagrin Falls, Ohio, after another storm hit the state Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2008.
AP/Ledger Independent, T. Prather
Cattle seek shelter from blowing snow Wednesday, January 2, 2008, near Maysville, Ky., after a winter storm hit most of the state. Temperatures fell to freezing levels as far south as the Florida Panhandle, and wind chill readings were below zero in parts of northern Kentucky.
AP Photo/John Amis
Sky Valley resort maintenance worker Francisco Olvera shovels snow away from time-share units after a light dusting, Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2007, in Sky Valley, Ga. Temperatures fell to freezing levels as far south as the Florida Panhandle, and wind chill readings were below zero in parts of northern Kentucky.
AP/Detroit News/Todd McInturf
From left, Scott Hagen, John Dolzynski, and his son, John Dolzynski, II, push a car out of a ditch in Lake Orion, Mich. on Tuesday Jan. 1, 2008. A fast-moving New Year's Day storm dumped more than a foot of snow on southeastern Michigan, a record blast that made driving hazardous and snarled flights. The storm dumped up to 16 inches in some areas.
AP/Detroit News/Brandy Baker
Alli Norman, 14, of Brighton, Mich., squeals as she hits a bump while sledding at Kensington Metropark west of Detroit Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2008. The fourth biggest snowfall in southern Michigan history dumped up to 16 inches, making travel treacherous and leaving an estimated 30,000 without power.
AP Photo/Carlos Osorio
Jill Sickels of Beverly Hills, Mich., clears her sidewalk, Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2008. A fast-moving, hard-hitting and record-breaking New Year's Day storm moved through southeastern Michigan Tuesday, leaving more than a foot of snow in some areas and hazardous traveling on roads and freeways. Authorities reported no deaths or serious injuries from the six-hour blast that started around midnight.
AP/Detroit News/Brandy Baker
Marc Siwak teaches his son Max, 4, how to build a snow fort in front of their home in Clawson, Mich., after several inches of snow blanket the Detroit metro area on Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2008.
AP/Detroit Free Press, W.Archie
Gerran Ferrey, of Plymouth, Mich., removes snow in front of his home Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2008, Southeastern Michigan began the new year buried under several inches of snow.