A Merciless Cold Lingers in the Midwest

    A merciless cold crippled the Midwest on Wednesday, halting planes and trains, shuttering schools and prompting officials in Detroit, Minneapolis and Chicago to open emergency warming centers for the homeless and vulnerable.
    The bitter weather was believed to be tied to the deaths of at least eight people, including a man thought to have collapsed after shoveling snow and frozen to death in his Milwaukee garage. Hospitals saw a steady stream of patients reporting symptoms of frostbite.
    Temperatures in Minneapolis dipped as low as minus 28, with the wind chill reaching minus 53, the National Weather Service said. Fargo, N.D., reached minus 33; Milwaukee, minus 20. The worst of the cold was feared overnight into Thursday, when meteorologists predicted that temperatures could dip to minus 27 in Chicago, a record for the city. The Midwest was expected to see miserable temperatures through Thursday, and the cold air was moving east.
    Across the Midwest on Wednesday, residents who are used to carrying on with life’s routines despite bad weather had little choice but to shiver, stay indoors and make the best of it, even as the insides of their windows became ominously lined with ice. Office workers were stuck at home. Parents scrambled for last-minute child care. In Michigan, a gas company asked customers to use less natural gas to heat their houses after a fire at a compressor station.
    Visits with prisoners in the Stearns County, Minn., jail were canceled. In Fort Wayne, Ind., garbage and recycling collection was delayed. In Wisconsin, the unthinkable: Distributors grounded their trucks, fearing that the beer would freeze solid.
    Even the United States Postal Service — despite its unofficial vow that couriers cannot be stopped by “snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night” — was forced to suspend deliveries in some particularly frigid places.
    Health officials, urging people to go outside only if necessary, warned that exposing skin to the air could lead to frostbite. They were not exaggerating: Going gloveless for only a minute or two, in double-digit negative temperatures, left hands feeling numb, then clumsy and flipper-like, then white-hot with pain.

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