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Late winter snowstorm blankets South, Northeast

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More than 50 miles of Interstate 65 southbound in Kentucky is shut down from the weather Thursday in Mt. Washington, Ky.

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Mackenzie Bobbitt, left, Anslie Allen and Madison Bobbitt, right, got out early Thursday morning to use mats and plastic lids to slide down the side of the Lake Wichita dam in Wichita Falls, Texas.

PHILADELPHIA – A late winter storm blanketed the Northeast on Thursday after zipping across much of the South, leaving hundreds of drivers and their passengers stranded on highways in Kentucky and thousands without power in West Virginia.

By Thursday afternoon, a strong cold front moving across the eastern United States had dumped more than 20 inches of snow on parts of Kentucky, and conditions worsened in the Northeast as snow started to pile up, reaching 11.5 inches and counting in the northern Maryland community of Lineboro.

The massive snow in Kentucky left hundreds of people stranded on two major highways and National Guard members delivering them food or driving them to warming centers.

In New York, a flight from Atlanta carrying 125 people skidded off the runway at LaGuardia Airport while landing and crashed through a fence. Passengers carrying bags and bundled in heavy coats and scarves slid down an inflated chute to safety on the snowy pavement. No serious injuries were reported.

Schools, government offices and legislatures in the South and Northeast were shut down for what could be one of the last snow days at the end of a winter that’s been brutal for much of the country.

The National Weather Service had winter storm warnings in effect from Texas to Nantucket, Mass., and the forecast called for record cold temperatures in the same area today.

Here’s a look at what’s happening:

Authorities said hundreds of drivers were stuck on two major highways in Kentucky, where snow totals topped 2 feet in some places. Many had to spend the night in their vehicles.

The National Guard was sent out to check on the people who were stuck, deliver them food and water and, in some cases, take them to warming centers.

Officials said more than 400 vehicles were stuck along Interstate 24 between the western Kentucky towns of Cadiz and Eddyville. Gov. Steve Beshear said 200 were still stuck by midday Thursday. There was an even larger pileup involving some 200 tractor-trailers on Interstate 65 near Elizabethtown in central Kentucky.

In western Maryland, a tractor-trailer carrying 93 heads of cattle overturned Thursday on Interstate 81, which was already snarled by other accidents in the Hagerstown area.

Ryan Maue, a meteorologist at Weather Bell Analytics, said cities including Waco, Texas; Chicago; Memphis, Tenn.; and Cleveland should expect record cold this morning.

In some cases, the old records could be obliterated.

In Memphis, for example, the coldest temperature on record for March 6 is 20 degrees. The forecast is calling for a low of 11. And at northern Virginia’s Dulles Airport, a forecast low of 7 would shatter the record of 15.

“This is amazing for early March,” he said of the forecast Thursday-today, one-two punch of snow and cold.

For those awaiting spring, there’s a hint of good news: Unlike the persistent deep-freeze experienced by much of the country in February, this one shouldn’t hang around as long.

With the nation’s capital under a snow emergency, cab rides are more expensive.

The D.C. Taxicab Commission said snow emergency status is in effect from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday. That means cabs could add a $15 surcharge to the metered fare. It’s meant to entice drivers to keep working.

Washington came to a halt in other ways, too: Most of its food trucks turned off their grills for the day. But people in the city did have a few places to go as the Smithsonian’s Air and Space Museum and National Museum of American History stayed open.

The storm knocked out power to 85,000 homes and businesses in West Virginia Thursday. The northern and western parts of the state were hardest hit. Officials warned that restoring power could be difficult because of road closures from high water in many spots after heavy rains Wednesday.

Bostonians might not get the snow they need to break a record.

This winter, the city has received 105.5 inches of snow – more than 8 ½ feet, the National Weather Service said. The record is 107.6 inches recorded during the 1995-96 season. Records date to 1872.

But the current storm might not drop enough snow to reach the record, as little more than a dusting was expected in Boston.

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