DALLAS (AP) — An area stretching from Texas to Tennessee braced Wednesday for ... prepared to go another round with the plunging polar vortex. Arkansas' capital, Little Rock, closed schools ...
Residents across the country from the Northern Plains to the tip of Maine are bracing for dangerously low temperatures
A dangerous and potentially life-threatening stretch of cold weather has much of the U.S. on alert as a lobe of the polar vortex invades the nation and sends temperatures tumbling to levels not seen in years.
A polar vortex could cause light snow over the weekend in Knoxville. A polar vortex is to blame for freezing temperatures.
A polar vortex is bringing cold temperatures to the U.S., impacting Utah as well. Utah will experience its coldest temperatures this winter, though less severe than areas east of the state. Emergency measures are in place, and energy usage may increase due to the cold.
The SEC will not win a national championship for a second consecutive season, and ESPN's Paul Finebaum shared a blunt take on the current state of the conference ahead of Ohio State versus Notre Dame in the title game.
The vast majority of Americans are about to get an extended taste of frigid Siberian weather. Another polar vortex disruption will stretch Arctic air across the top of the globe
Rain will kick off this weekend. Rain is expected on Saturday, especially in the morning. Highs will top out around 50 degrees. Sunday looks colder and mostly cloudy. A few flurries are possible, mainly in the Cumberland Plateau. Highs will only be in the lower 30s with temperatures dropping into the teens overnight.
The Montana and Wyoming mountains will see the heaviest snow, with up to 2 feet expected until 6 p.m. local time on Sunday.
A powerful winter storm that dumped heavy snow and glazed roads with ice across much of Texas and Oklahoma lumbered eastward into southern U.S. states Friday, prompting governors to declare states of emergency and shuttering schools across the region.
Another blast of winter storms is closing schools, snarling flights and putting millions of residents on alert across parts of the Deep South and south-central U.S.