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Record-low temperatures grip much of the nation

An NFL fan is bundled up during a game between the Chicago Bears and the Green Bay Packers at Soldier Field in Chicago on Sunday.
(Jonathan Daniel / Getty Images)
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Dangerous, record-low temperatures caused cancellations of some holiday festivities in the Plains and Midwest over the weekend before the cold front pushed into the Ohio Valley and the Eastern Seaboard on Sunday.

The National Weather Service forecast a warming trend to start early in the week in many spots as a quieter weather pattern was expected to develop.

On Sunday, temperatures plunged to minus 20 degrees and lower across much of the northern Plains with a fresh surge of bitter arctic air reaching into the Midwest.

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A church in Lincoln, Neb., canceled its living nativity scene. “In my opinion, this is too cold for anyone to be standing outside — bundled up or not,” Patti Crittenden, Trinity United Methodist Church’s director of youth ministries, told the Lincoln Journal Star.

In suburban Chicago, an arboretum canceled its holiday light show planned for Sunday night, and a holiday gift market was canceled in the Chicago suburb of Naperville.

Travelers were stranded and delayed as a blizzard shut down Interstate 90 in parts of Montana on Sunday. Authorities urged people to stay home to avoid endangering themselves and possible rescuers.

Weather-related delays at Indianapolis International Airport caused about 100 passengers to spend the night in the terminal, but most travelers were on their way Sunday morning.

Chicago police said a commercial plane slid off a runway early Sunday at O’Hare International Airport. No injuries were reported from the incident just after 1 a.m.

Bismarck, N.D., posted a new record low for the date of Dec. 17 with 31 degrees below zero on Saturday before midnight, said National Weather Service meteorologist Zachary Hargrove. Linton, N.D., was even colder at minus 33 degrees early Sunday.

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In South Dakota, the city of Huron set a new low for Sunday’s date of minus 31 degrees. Another record fell in Marshall, Minn., where it was 31 below zero. Spencer, Iowa’s negative 27 degrees was also a record-breaker.

Colorado residents were digging out after up to 16 inches of snow fell across the state Saturday, stranding motorists and leaving some areas of the state with subzero temperatures Sunday. The National Weather Service said the thermometer dipped to 27 degrees below zero in Limon. Breckenridge reported the most snow, with 16 inches, which gave skiers and snowboarders the heavy snow they have been hoping for all season.

Snow and freezing rain led to numerous highway accidents, some serious. Perhaps the biggest accident was in Baltimore, when a tanker carrying gasoline skidded off a highway and exploded, killing two people and causing a nearly 70-vehicle pileup on Interstate 95, authorities said.

Hospital officials said nearly two dozen people were treated for injuries, including broken bones and head trauma. A total of seven remained hospitalized Sunday with two in critical condition, two in serious condition and three in fair condition.

In southwestern Michigan, icy conditions appear to have played a role in a crash that killed a 73-year-old motorist. There were dozens of crashes in Indiana — two of them with fatalities — due to freezing rain and ice. The roads were so slick that authorities had to use a ladder to move motorists stranded on an overpass.

In Ohio, a Columbus woman died Saturday when her car skidded off a slick road, authorities said.

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In Virginia, a Fairfax County firetruck slid off an icy road while responding to a crash, but no one was injured.

In North Carolina, police and emergency workers reported more than 100 crashes in Raleigh and Charlotte as the drizzle combined with below-freezing temperatures to create dangerous icy patches.

In Missouri, Jared Leighton, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Pleasant Hill, said Sunday that the winter storm Saturday left 2 to 4 inches of snow in the state and was followed by subzero temperatures early Sunday.

Leighton said a “gentle warmup” is expected.

“It’s still going to be rather cold, but when you start with minus 9 anything is going to feel warm,” he said. “We’ll struggle to get out of the single digits,” he said Sunday. “We might get to 10 degrees today.”

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