Storm pounds parts of North Texas
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Storms and tornadoes continue to ravage central US
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The National Weather Service said a “multitude of hazardous weather” would impact the U.S. over the next several days — from thunderstorms and potentially baseball-sized hail on the Plains, to heavy mountain snow in the West and dangerous heat in the South.
At least 31 million people are at risk for severe storms from central Texas to Iowa on Monday, with hazards including large hail, damaging winds and several possibly strong tornadoes.
The intense thunderstorms that swept through New Jersey on Friday spawned an EF-1 tornado in parts of Atlantic and Gloucester counties and a rare “gustnado” in Gloucester County that packed winds as high as 100 to 105 mph,
A relentless stretch of severe weather that left 28 dead and unleashed destruction across the central and eastern United States in recent days isn’t letting up yet, with millions more in the path of dangerous weather this week.
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Baltimore and the surrounding areas are still recovering from an EF-1 tornado on Friday, leaving a wake of destruction.
Severe storms are expected to erupt across a wide swath of Texas late Monday — from the Dallas-Fort Worth area to East Texas.
The metro area, as well as counties to the north and northeast, will face the greatest likelihood of severe weather threats developing.
Western Iowa counties warned to conserve water as their utility's supply reaches critically low levels are getting some possible relief as rain moves across Iowa.
The UConn baseball team, with 23 wins in its last 25 games, weathered a storm start to reach the Big East tournament in good position.