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In Arkansas, communities anticipated lesser snow totals, but the weather service warned severe thunderstorms could generate freezing rain, hail and isolated tornadoes. If the forecasts for Chicago hold true, it would be the city's third-biggest snowstorm, overshadowed only by the 21.6 inches in 1999 and the mother of all Chicago snowstorms, the 23 inches of snow that fell in 1967. Paula Lawson, a 59-year-old community organizer from suburban Glencoe, said she remembered the big storm in 1967, which "really did stop the world for days." Will the latest storm do the same? "If we get 20 inches, maybe," Lawson said at a downtown rail station. "But around here, 12 inches, it doesn't stop us." Sue Carroll, a retired mail carrier from northern Illinois, was looking forward to a big snowfall and said she planned to stay indoors by the fireplace. "I'm retired. I used to work outside. I'm all for it," the 56-year-old from Polo, Ill., said. "Winter used to mean something different. Now I smile when it's white outside." But in South Bend, Ind., where nearly 75 inches of snow already has fallen this winter, the prospect of a huge storm left people more resigned than pleased. "My back is still recovering from shoveling out from the last one," said retiree Mel Goralski. After burying the Midwest, the storm was expected to sweep into the Northeast, parts of which already are on track for record snowfall this winter.
[Associated
Press;
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