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Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Winter storm intercepts Indiana drivers, moves to the East (PA) (yahoo.com)

LAPORTE, Ind. - Kate Ergang was not worried when two semi-tractors "jackknife" trapped him and a friend on a highway in Indiana in a snowstorm. They ate dinner already have blankets and pillows in the car. They talked about, listening to their iPods and asleep.

But the Graduate College may a few minutes from panic Monday morning when she was awakened and realized that almost 12 hours later, they were in the same location.

More than 100 vehicles were blocked on snowy roads Indiana Monday. Winds and blowing snow hampered efforts to snow plough operators to release, but all motorists were rescued safely by Monday evening, said Amy Bluhm, a dispatcher with LaPorte County 911.

Wind and snow heavy Lake effect were part of a slow storm who was rampant in the Midwest since Friday evening. At least 16 deaths were attributed to the storm that dumped near to 2 feet of snow in parts of Minnesota and Wisconsin to move in Michigan and Indiana. Monday, he stretched over to the East, with snow in parts of Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York.

Up to 16 inches of snow fell in Northwest Indiana, where 70 drivers is stuck in the galleries on a section of the Indiana 2 Valparaíso region. Ergang and his friend, Frank, Allison were among an unknown number trapped on 30 USD.

They drove home on the edge of the Crown Sunday after visiting friends at the Indiana. Everything was going well until they reached Wanatah, about 35 km southwest of South Bend.

"It was a white veil." "It was like a tornado of snow", said Ergang.

Unable to see if a car was in front of him, Frank reposition its 2000 Ford Focus slowly forward, stop, before 7 p.m. stalled because the semi tractors were jackknifed Exchange traffic is of Valparaiso. Frank turned the car and the two fact beds in their seats with blankets and pillows.

In the morning, they reported by a reverse directed police officer, who has said a stretch of 7 mile road has been closed. Wanatah road opened later, around 6: 30 pm and they were headed back there. And dozens of other motorists spent the next three hours at a convenience store, gas station, where they could use the bathroom and purchased food.

"It was certainly a relief to get out of the car and recover in the heat and talk with someone else happening", Ergang said when reached later by telephone at home.

Police Lt. Lou Brown said Indiana State some people worse from driving on the roads were closed or abandoned vehicles that is blocked.

"People would get in a snowbank and could not go anywhere while leaving the vehicle out of the weather", he said. "Caps just things and then failed to get the Snowplow snow around them."

Also, the people out of their cars are likely to be hit by other vehicles or ploughs. The best thing for people to make Brown said, stay home.

At least nine people were killed in four States, including Indiana, in road accidents in the storm, and a 79 year old man blowing snow through its entry in the West of Wisconsin was killed by a plough supported him.

Five more dead after shoveling or blowing snow, and Kenneth Swanson, 58, the rural River Falls, Wisconsin, died when a metal shed collapsed, abundant snow pinning under debris and about 3 feet of snow.

With the wind and snow, the upper Midwest was gripped by the cold cooling bone introduced by Arctic air that swept in behind the storm. Wind chills were below zero in many places Monday and close schools in Indiana, Michigan, Wisconsin and other States.

Katie Muratore, a 20-year major biology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, wearing a calf-length coat with a hood doubled fur and hidden his face behind a thick scarf she hurried on a bridge between the campus and the State Capitol. It usually takes the bus to the class, but everyone got the idea even on Monday and could not find any room.

It's like sardines on a bus today", said Muratore.

In Dearborn, Michigan), Jeff Smith dug his car out of the aisle Monday morning - without gloves or hat.

Gloves make it difficult to shovel and my hair is still wet. This is why it's either you get a cold or you mess of your hair, so I might cold, "said Smith, 57, an employee of Ford Motor Co. 30-more-year who was happy that his job is close to home."

The temperature of 12 degrees has not prevented hundreds of fans you align hours before free Monday night between the Minnesota Vikings football match tickets and New York Giants became available at 9 pm at Ford Field. The game has been moved to Detroit, after that inflated Minneapolis Metrodome roof collapsed under the weight of snow Sunday. Said about lions 30,000 tickets were distributed before 11 am.

Minneapolis, stadium officials tried to repair the roof in time for next match home the Vikings, December 20, against Chicago.

Back in Indiana, truck drivers stopped at Junction City Restaurant nearby rolling at the intersection of 20 USD and Indiana 2 for lunch, Prairie hoping the conditions to improve. They said conduct was particularly difficult in areas where wind was blowing on agricultural lands open, sweeping snow on motorways and makes it difficult to see.

Bill Sullivan, 73, Rolling Prairie, lives in the region and led to wire for lunch with two friends. He said that even their travel 2 miles is difficult.

"We couldn't even see on the way of", said Sullivan. "He was blind. You cannot see anything. "We're going home and out of this shit."

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Associated press Ken Kusmer and Tom Davies in Indianapolis, Todd Richmond in Madison, Wisconsin, writers Jeff Karoub Dearborn, Michigan, and Larry Lage in Detroit contributed to this report.

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