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Another winter wallop: Cold, snow, ice again for much of US

A wide swath of the country was shivering in freezing, record-breaking temperatures while other areas were expecting more winter precipitation Tuesday.

A mix of snow, sleet, rain and freezing rain was expected in parts of the southern Plains and the South, where school districts in more than a half-dozen states from Texas eastward canceled or delayed classes. Even parts of the coastal Carolinas were bracing for some precipitation.

Much of the precipitation was expected to turn to heavy rain by Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the East Coast was enduring colder-than-usual weather. Here's a look at what's happening:

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DEEP FREEZE IN THE EAST

The Weather Service said temperatures would be 15 to 25 degrees below average for most of the East Coast west to the Great Lakes and lower Mississippi River Valley.

Massachusetts residents faced temperatures well below zero Tuesday morning, and ferry service from one Boston suburb was canceled because the harbor was iced in. The National Weather Service reported that as of 6 a.m. Tuesday, it was minus 18 in Orange and Springfield, and minus 13 in Bedford and Norwood.

Boston was 2 degrees with a wind chill of minus 12.

In upstate New York, most places from Buffalo to the Hudson Valley had below-zero temperatures Tuesday morning. New Hampshire also got off to a frigid start. Subzero temperatures were reported across the state overnight, with temperatures as low as 33 below zero in Whitefield.

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SNOW, ICE IN THE SOUTH

Snow was blowing across roads and highways in the north Georgia mountains early Tuesday and ice coated cars in some of metro's Atlanta's northern suburbs. In the north Georgia mountains, crews were plowing roads and driveways in state parks, which were open to visitors Tuesday.

National Weather Service forecasters in Jackson, Mississippi, said freezing drizzle continued early Tuesday over much of central Mississippi and some ice could form on some bridges and overpasses. A fatality was reported when a driver lost control of his car after hitting a patch of icy highway.

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SNOW FOR SALE

A Massachusetts man found a way to profit from the several feet of snow in his yard: Shipping it to people in warmer climates for the bargain price of $89 for six pounds.

Kyle Waring, of Manchester-by-the-Sea, got the idea while shoveling snow. He's launched ShipSnowYo.com.

At first, he shipped 16.9-ounce snow-filled bottles for $19.99, but he found the snow melted by the time it arrived at its destination.

So he came up with a new plan, selling six pounds at a time. He tells The Boston Globe that even if the snow melts a little by the time it arrives, the package can still make 10 to 15 snowballs.

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SALT SHORTAGE

As snow and frigid temperatures continue in Ohio, communities in parts of the state are running short on road salt, city officials said.

Some cities like Chagrin Falls and North Ridgeville have waited weeks for hundreds of tons of ordered salt, the Northeast Ohio Media Group reported.

The region has recorded nearly 60 inches of snow since November. Lower-than average temperatures have made snow harder to melt and roads more difficult to clear.

For some cities, a serious salt problem is just one more snowfall away.

"We have enough to last this next week, but if it keeps consistently snowing it's going to be difficult," Middleburg Heights Service Director Jim Herron told the media group.

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BRIDGE CLOSED

Blowing snow and a multivehicle crash prompted officials to close the Mackinac Bridge, which links Michigan's upper and lower peninsulas.

Executive Secretary Bob Sweeney of the Mackinac Bridge Authority said the crash happened around 9:30 a.m. Tuesday on the causeway near the toll booths on the bridge's north side.

It appears about eight cars were involved, he said. There was no immediate word of injuries.

Winds gusting up to 50 mph were blowing snow off the frozen Straits of Mackinac, making visibility poor, Sweeney said.

Sweeney says officers were rerouting traffic and hundreds of vehicles were waiting to cross the nearly 5-mile-long bridge.

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SCHOOL'S OUT, SLEDDING'S IN

In North Carolina, Nicole Kincaid of Wake Forest has a 15-year-old who's a high school freshman and a 5th-grader who's 10. The teenager was getting ready to leave the house Tuesday morning when he got a Twitter notification of the two-hour school delay.

He was waiting at the house with friends when they learned school was canceled. Being a teenager, he went back to bed, Kincaid said.

"My 10-year-old is just waking up and going outside," Kincaid said. "We have good sledding hills in our neighborhood. And I may join him for some of that sledding."

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HIKERS BEWARE

At the Top of Georgia Hostel & Hiking Center, a shelter for hikers on the Appalachian Trail, the branches of pine trees were dipping low with the weight of about 4 inches of snow, proprietor Bob Gabrielsen said Tuesday morning.

About 16 hikers spent the night Monday, Gabrielsen said, and all of them hiked out Tuesday morning on the trail, which was transformed into a bright white snowscape in the north Georgia mountains east of Hiawassee. This time of year, some hikers camp on the trail itself.

Gabrielsen warned that inexperienced hikers could find themselves in trouble, because weather forecasts aren't always accurate, cellphone coverage can be spotty or nonexistent, and roads can be several miles away.

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JET SLIPS OFF RUNWAY

Nobody was hurt after an American Airlines jet slid off a taxiway and got stuck in the grass during wintry conditions at the Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, officials said.

The MD-80 plane's front nose gear slipped off the taxiway as the airplane turned a corner Monday night, Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Lynn Lunsford said.

Airline officials say 63 passengers and five crew members were onboard Flight 296 from San Antonio. All passengers safely exited the plane and were taken by a bus to an airport terminal.

Airline officials haven't confirmed what caused the plane to slip off the taxiway.

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