National Weather Service, Kansas City metropolitan area

For fans headed to the AFC Championship football game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Buffalo Bills at Arrowhead ...
The National Weather Service says several locations in Kansas saw record-breaking cold temperatures on Tuesday.
Tuesday brought Topeka its lowest temperatures in almost four years, with the mercury plunging to minus 12 degrees.
As much as 10.5 inches of snow fell late Thursday and early Friday in Kansas, the National Weather Service said.
The coldest air of the season will begin filtering into the area Friday night, according to the National Weather Service.
It should be cold, but nothing like the current arctic chill, when the Bills play in the AFC Championship Game on Sunday.
Anyone heading outside Tuesday should bundle up due to dangerous wind chill values, the National Weather Service said.