Snow spread across the Midwest on Sunday while heavy rainfall in the Northwest caused scattered
Torrential rains drenched the Midwest today, sending an Oklahoma river swirling through 100 homes
Electric companies throughout the Midwest reached peak energy demands today, swapping megawatts
design contracts for two construction projects in the Midwest.
Frigid arctic air stung the Midwest and Northeast with temperatures as low as 38 below zero, while
Detroit's airport as thunderstorms raced across the Upper Midwest, quickly drenching several communities with heavy rain.
Snowstorms on Friday spread as much as five inches of snow across the Midwest and East, causing
temperatures plunged to record-breaking lows in 17 cities in the Midwest.
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Hail, tornadoes and lightning wreaked havoc across the Midwest, uprooting trees and downing power lines.
Tornadoes and heavy thunderstorms ripped across the nation's midsection Saturday, uprooting trees and damaging buildings, and lightning injured six players on a baseball team in Minnesota.
Thunderstorms that pummeled Wisconsin and Michigan spawned tornadoes that killed three persons and left dozens homeless, officials said Sunday.
Snow whipped by wind that made it feel as cold as 60 below zero spread across the northern Plains and Great Lakes on Friday as a fast-moving storm called the Alberta Clipper blew out of Canada.
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Tornadoes and thunderstorms packing "hurricane-force winds" raked the nation's midsection from Illinois to the Deep South on Friday, destroying buildings and homes, toppling trees and towers and killing four persons.
For most of this century the Midwest's industrial cities turned their backs to the water, lining the Great Lakes and river shores with soot-spewing factories, dreary warehouses and the clutter of ship docks.