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October 31, 2006

December-level chill remainder of the work week

Temperatures were at 62° just before 1 a.m. Tuesday morning and had crashed 25° to a reading of 37° at 8:30 a.m., just a little over 7 hours later. The same cold air mass will force temperatures to start out today in the 20s over much of the metro area and struggle to warm far into the 40s despite abundant sunshine this afternoon.

Thursday this cold air mass will be reinforced with an even colder surge of Arctic-source air with origins in the Canadian Nunavut Territory some 1200 miles to the north. Winds aloft at jet stream level from northwestern Canada into the central plains are steering cold high pressure all the way from the Arctic through central Canada into the Midwest. During the day Thursday even though the air is very dry, an upper air impulse may give snow flurries to the metro area, but 30° temperatures riding over the 50° waters of Lake Michigan could give lake effect snows in northwest and north-central Indiana.

-Paul Dailey, WGN-TV Meteorologist

Above normal temps ahead

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Pattern change early next week

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Sundown and weakening breeze

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October 30, 2006

Temps to plunge more than 30° by Thursday

Warmth returned to Chicago Monday, but just for one day. Aided by ample sunshine and gusty south winds, the mercury pushed to the 70º mark for the first time since Oct. 8, a welcome change in a month that has been characterized by cool, cloudy, and rainy weather here. That warmth will be long-gone as colder air moves into the area dropping highs about 20º here on Halloween (Tuesday) and another 10º by Thursday when sub-40º maximums are expected along with some snow showers. Readings should rebound a bit into the lower 50s by the weekend, and a suite of long-range computer models hint at a milder than normal temperature range next week. In the western Pacific, a weakened Typhoon Cimaron that left at least 15 dead as it struck Luzon in the Philippines on Sunday is expected to regain strength as it heads across the South China Sea on course to a Wednesday landfall in central Vietnam. -Steve Kahn WGN-TV Meteorologist

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