Pulse logo
Pulse Region
ADVERTISEMENT

Freezing Cold Settles In Over the Midwest, Bringing Life to a Standstill

CHICAGO — First came the days of snow. Then the fierce winds. Finally the temperatures plummeted to depths that stunned even Midwesterners, a group accustomed to shrugging off winter. The cold that the middle of the country woke up to on Wednesday was the sort that makes cars moan, that makes breathing hurt, that makes any bit of exposed skin sting.

Cities like Chicago had been preparing for the deep freeze for days, and by the time it arrived in earnest on Wednesday morning, much of life had come to a standstill. Colleges were closed in Illinois, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin, schools were closed all around, and even the U.S. Postal Service had stopped deliveries in some places. Workers were sent home, meetings canceled, parties called off.

Here are the latest developments:

— Temperatures plummeted and could break records. Minneapolis was minus 27, with a wind chill of minus 51, the National Weather Service said. Chicago was minus 20, with a windchill of minus 45. And Milwaukee was minus 19, with a wind chill of minus 46.

— At least four deaths have been connected to the Midwest’s dangerously cold weather system, according to The Associated Press, including a man hit by a snow plow in the Chicago region, a man believed to have frozen to death in a Milwaukee garage, and a couple killed in a vehicle accident on an Indiana road.

Recommended For You
Kenya The New York Times entertainment
2024-08-20T09:16:46+00:00
Mixing memories of his North African childhood with his day-to-day life as a husband and father in New Haven, Connecticut, Ficre Ghebreyesus conjured up an imaginary space of his own. He created this multilayered world in his studio, where, after his sudden death at 50 in 2012, he left behind more than 700 paintings and several hundred works on paper. And he performed a similar magic in the popular Caffe Adulis, where he earned his living by cooking hybrid recipes that drew on the culinary he...
The Inventive Chef Who Kept His 700 Paintings Hidden

— Officials throughout the region have declared states of emergency, warned of frostbite and hypothermia, and urged residents to heed guidelines that ultimately boiled down to two words: Stay inside.

ADVERTISEMENT

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Subscribe to receive daily news updates.