CHICAGO (AP) — The Latest on a major snowstorm and frigid weather in the Midwest (all times local):
12 p.m.
Police say at least two people in the Detroit area have died in the extremely cold weather , including a former member of the City Council in the town of Ecorse, Michigan.
Ecorse detective Tim Sassak tells TV station WDIV that the man was discovered Wednesday. Sassak says the man wasn't wearing a hat or gloves and wasn't dressed for below-zero temperatures.
Sassak says police believe the man was disoriented. He was found across the street, near a neighbor's house.
Ecorse is about 15 miles (24 kilometers) southwest of Detroit.
In Detroit, a 70-year-old man was found dead in front of a neighbor's home Wednesday. No names were released.
The deaths bring to at least six the number of fatalities linked to the extremely cold temperatures in the Midwest.
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11:35 a.m.
Temperatures in parts of the frigid Midwest are beating even the most frigid areas in the world.
The National Weather Service shows the temperature in Fargo, North Dakota, dropped Wednesday to negative 31 degrees (negative 35 Celsius). In Antarctica, the balmy forecast at the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station was negative 25 degrees (negative 31.7 Celsius).
That's also warmer than Minneapolis, where temperatures plunged to negative 27 degrees (negative 32 Celsius). In Sioux Falls, South Dakota, the temperature hit minus 25 degrees (minus 31 Celsius), while Chicago and Milwaukee both recorded temperatures at or below negative 20 degrees (negative 28 Celsius).
The weather service shows that's also colder than that the minus 5 degrees (negative 20 Celsius) recorded in Barrow, Alaska, the most northern town in the United States.
And that doesn't include wind chill, which in northern Illinois made the air feel as cold as negative 57 degrees (negative 49.4 Celsius).
Meteorologists say warmer weather is on the way for the weekend.
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10:35 a.m.
More than 1,600 flights have been canceled at Chicago's airports as double-digit subzero temperatures envelope parts of the Midwest.
About 1,300 of Wednesday's canceled flights were at O'Hare International Airport, one of the nation's busiest airports. The temperature at the airport early Wednesday was negative 23 degrees (negative 30.5 Celsius), but wind chills in northern Illinois made it feel as cold as negative 57 degrees (negative 49.4 Celsius).
United Airlines spokesman Charlie Hobart says "everything tends to slow down" during severely cold weather, including manpower, fueling and equipment. Hobart calls the temperatures "dangerous." He says United is bringing in extra workers to help and has provided heated tents for employees.
Officials have warned against venturing outside amid the dangerously cold weather, which is also affecting train travel in the Chicago area. Amtrak has canceled all trains into and out of Chicago on Wednesday, as well as most services Thursday.
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9:10 a.m.
Duke Energy crews are working to restore power to thousands of central Indiana residents who lost power amid dangerously low temperatures.
About 4,000 Duke Energy customers were without power Wednesday morning on Indianapolis' north side and adjacent areas of Hamilton County. The utility is investigating the cause of the outages, which come during the coldest weather in years in much of the Midwest.
The National Weather Service says the temperature fell to minus 11 degrees (negative 23 Celsius) shortly after sunrise Wednesday in Indianapolis, tying the record low for the date set in 1966.
The U.S. Postal Service has suspended mail delivery in parts or all of several Midwest states, including Indiana.
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7:45 a.m.
The Minnesota Department of Transportation pulled snowplows off the roads in nearly a dozen southeastern counties because of the extreme cold, while Wisconsin added state offices and agencies to its long list of closures.
Minnesota transportation officials say some snowplows were experiencing mechanical problems because of subzero temperatures Tuesday, so officials decided to idle all plows overnight. Officials say they didn't want to put drivers in danger if the plows malfunctioned.
Operations resumed early Wednesday, after overnight temperatures in the area dropped to negative 29 degrees (negative 34 Celsius).
In Wisconsin, Gov. Tony Evers issued an executive order closing all non-essential state offices Wednesday, when the wind chill was forecast to be as cold as minus 55 degrees (negative 48 Celsius).
Scores of schools, courthouses and businesses are closed across the Midwest as a deadly arctic deep freeze envelopes the region.
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7 a.m.
Plummeting temperatures in Chicago are disrupting area transit as officials warn against venturing out into the dangerously cold weather.
The National Weather service says the temperature dropped early Wednesday to minus 19 degrees (negative 28 degrees Celsius). That breaks the previous record low for the day that was set in 1966.
But the weather service says temperatures are expected drop even more as the day progresses.
Extreme weather conditions have prompted Amtrak to cancel all trains into and out of Chicago on Wednesday and most services to or from Chicago on Thursday.
Some major Chicago attractions weren't opening Wednesday and schools are closed due to the cold.
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6:30 a.m.
Among the things the arctic cold is freezing up temporarily in Illinois are the wheels of justice.
Along with numerous schools and businesses, many federal and state courthouses are closed in Illinois on Wednesday as dangerously cold weather hits parts of the Midwest.
Kane County courts are among those closing. The chief judge for the circuit courts in suburban Chicago cited the "dangerous cold" for the decision to close both Wednesday and Thursday.
The chief judge of the Circuit Court of Cook County, home to Chicago, also ordered its courts closed both days. He says he wants to ensure "nobody is placed in danger while traveling to and from court" in "anticipated historic cold temperatures."
The federal judicial district for northern Illinois is closing its courthouses in Chicago and Rockford on Wednesday.
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12 a.m.
A deadly arctic deep freeze has enveloped the Midwest, forcing widespread closure of schools, businesses, government offices, and prompting the U.S. Postal Service to take the rare step of suspending mail delivery to a wide swath of the region.
Many normal activities are shutting down and residents are huddled inside as the National Weather Service forecast plunging temperatures from one of the coldest air masses in years. The bitter cold is the result of a split in the polar vortex that allowed temperatures to plunge much further south in North America than normal.
Officials throughout the region are focused on protecting vulnerable people from the cold, including the homeless, seniors and those living in substandard housing.
At least four deaths have been linked to the weather system.