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NewsJanuary 3, 2002

ATLANTA -- A storm glazed the South with snow and sleet Wednesday, delighting children but knocking out power and making roads treacherously slick from Louisiana to the Carolinas. Forecasters predicted up to 8 inches of snow for parts of the region and warned that a hard freeze overnight would make the morning commute even more dangerous. Up to a foot of snow was possible in North Carolina...

By Erin McClam, The Associated Press

ATLANTA -- A storm glazed the South with snow and sleet Wednesday, delighting children but knocking out power and making roads treacherously slick from Louisiana to the Carolinas.

Forecasters predicted up to 8 inches of snow for parts of the region and warned that a hard freeze overnight would make the morning commute even more dangerous. Up to a foot of snow was possible in North Carolina.

Three deaths were blamed on icy roads in Mississippi and airlines canceled dozens of flights in Atlanta. In South Carolina, state workers were sent home early and told not to report to work today.

S.C. Gov. Jim Hodges called up the National Guard on Wednesday night to aid stranded motorists. Some 15,000 utility customers had lost power, and outages could worsen overnight as snow or ice accumulated, said Mary Green Brown, spokeswoman for South Carolina Electric & Gas.

"If we stick with snow, we'll be OK," she said. "We could have major problems if ice and sleet fall on that snow."

Pat Logan headed to a Sumter, S.C., supermarket to grab provisions for her family.

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"You don't want to be out of milk, basically you need the staples," she said. "I'm going to get lighter fluid and charcoal because I remember the lights going out before."

In a region where people were golfing and playing tennis in 70-degree weather just last month, Southerners turned out to build modest snowmen and go sledding down hills where snow covered still-green grass. Temperatures dropped into the 20s.

More than 170 people crammed into a Tallahassee, Fla., shelter to escape the cold.

"They're on the floor, they're in the dining room in sleeping bags, on mats," shelter director Mel Eby said. "We're putting them in any nook and cranny we can find."

Some businesses closed for the day, extending the New Year's holiday, and South Carolina state employees in Columbia were sent home around noon.

Southern Mississippi recorded 3 inches of snow, and Montgomery, Ala., got 4 inches -- the most in that city since a blizzard nine years ago dumped half a foot. Snow and sleet in Alabama fell to within about 100 miles of the beaches on the Gulf of Mexico, and a freeze warning was posted along the coast for Thursday.

In Montgomery, the Carter family and a neighbor fashioned a distinctively Southern snowman with a Mardi Gras hat, a carrot nose, Oreo cookies for eyes and pecans for buttons.

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