Heavy Snowfall Closes Schools, Disrupts Traffic in Plains States
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Heavy snow fell over parts of the southern Plains and Mississippi Valley on Tuesday, closing schools and blocking traffic, and lighter snow extended through the Ohio Valley into New England.
A foot of snow fell in northwestern Arkansas and the National Weather Service warned that up to 14 inches was possible by this morning.
At Mountain Home, Ark., 6-year-old Jonathan Maroon built his first snowman with two friends Tuesday. “It tastes like ice cream,” he said.
More than two dozen Arkansas school districts closed as a precaution and jackknifing tractor-trailer rigs temporarily closed U.S. 71 south of Fayetteville.
The storm had dropped up to a foot of snow on higher elevations of Colorado on Monday, setting off avalanches that killed a snowboarder and closed two mountain passes.
Weather advisories ranged from a heavy snow warning posted for much of southwestern Texas to winter storm warnings in Ohio and Pennsylvania and storm watches in effect in New England, where 6 inches of snow was possible overnight in New Hampshire and Maine. Glare ice in Connecticut set off a series of spinouts and fender-benders involving about 20 vehicles on Interstate 84.
In St. Louis, Trans World Airlines canceled more than 160 flights.
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