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Pastor Dale Morgan  
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(1 user)  More options Jan 19 2007, 9:26 pm
From: Pastor Dale Morgan <dgrmor...@telus.net>
Date: Fri, 19 Jan 2007 18:26:06 -0800
Local: Fri, Jan 19 2007 9:26 pm
Subject: New Winter Storm Stalks Southern Plains
*Perilous Times

New Winter Storm Stalks Southern Plains*

Saturday January 20, 2007 2:01 AM

By ALICIA A. CALDWELL

Associated Press Writer

EL PASO, Texas (AP) - A storm carrying the threat of more snow and ice
moved across the Southern Plains on Friday as more than 100,000 homes
and businesses remained in the dark from earlier blasts of cold, wet
weather.

Winter storm warnings covered much of New Mexico and parts of Texas and
Oklahoma, with a half-foot to more than a foot of snow and sleet
expected. In Texas, 90 National Guard members were activated.

At a plaza in El Paso, where large crowds usually gather near bus stops
and restaurants, only a few people braved the biting wind.

``We prepared, getting all our winter clothes out, but it's difficult
because the bus is late,'' said Alicia Lozano, 62, who wrapped a purple
scarf around her head.

In tiny Oaks in northeastern Oklahoma, carpenter and rancher Garland
Whorton has been without power for a week. He spent three days using a
chain saw to cut a path through the ice to his barn so he could reach
his horses and mules.

``When that snow hits, it's going to finish us off,'' said Whorton, 59.

The latest winter blast has led to reports of at least 74 deaths in nine
states in the past week, including 25 in Oklahoma, 14 in Missouri and 12
in Texas. Many of the deaths were caused by car wrecks or carbon
monoxide poisoning from portable generators.

More than 77,000 Missouri homes and businesses remained without power,
mainly in the state's southwestern section.

Eastern Oklahoma, including the hard-hit cities of McAlester and
Muskogee, still had nearly 60,000 homes in the dark after ice snapped
hundreds of power poles and transmission lines.

About 1,000 people remained in shelters set up by the American Red
Cross, and at homeless shelters. Gloves and blankets were already in
short supply after the first ice storm.

``We're packed to the gills,'' said the Rev. Steve Whitaker, executive
director of the John 3:16 Mission in Tulsa. ``This has been a tough ride
for the homeless.''

Along with the fatalities in Oklahoma, Texas and Missouri, the wave of
storms was blamed for eight deaths in Iowa, four each in New York and
Michigan, three in Arkansas, two in North Carolina and one each in Maine
and Indiana.

---

Associated Press writers Justin Juozapavicius in Muskogee, Okla., and
Marcus Kabel in Springfield, Mo., contributed to this report.


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