Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

INSIDE: Nationwide freeze kills at least a dozen; in New York, ferry service halted.

- By Tammy Webber

INDIANAPOL­IS — Bitterly cold temperatur­es gripped much of the nation on Tuesday, testing the mettle of even winter-wise northerner­s and delivering a shock to those accustomed to far milder weather in the South.

The cold has been blamed for at least a dozen deaths, prompted officials to open warming centers in the Deep South and triggered pleas from government officials to check on neighbors, especially those who are elderly, sick or who live alone.

In St. Louis, where temperatur­es dipped 30 degrees below normal, Mayor Lyda Krewson warned it was “dangerousl­y cold.”

“It’s important that people look out for anyone in need of shelter,” she said.

The National Weather Service issued wind chill advisories and freeze warnings covering a vast area, from South Texas to Canada and from Montana to Maine. The arctic blast was blamed for freezing a water tower in Iowa, halting a ferry service in New York and even trapping a swan in a Virginia pond.

At the same time, a heatwave swept into the country’s northernmo­st state: Anchorage, Alaska, hit a record high on Tuesday of 45 degrees — at the same time Jacksonvil­le, Fla., was a mere 38 degrees.

Indianapol­is Public Schools canceled classes after the city tied a record low for the day — set in 1887 — of minus 12 degrees. The northwest Indiana city of Lafayette got down to minus 19, shattering the previous record set in 1979. Although temperatur­es have been lower in Indiana — the all-time low was minus 36 in 1994 — the current frigid weather is unusual because of how long it has lasted, experts said.

“It has just been relentless­ly cold since Christmas,” said Jeff Masters, meteorolog­y director of the private Weather Undergroun­d.

And it’s nothing to trifle with, forecaster­s warned.

The cold has been blamed in at least 12 deaths in the past week. Police in St. Louis said a 54-year-old homeless man found dead in a trash bin Monday evening apparently froze to death as the temperatur­e dropped to negative 6 degrees.

Two other suspected coldrelate­d deaths occurred in Wisconsin: a 27-year-old woman’s body was found Monday evening on the shore of Lake Winnebago, and a 57-year-old man was found dead Sunday in a parking structure in Madison.

In Tennessee, correction­s officials at a maximum security prison used portable heaters and extra blankets to keep inmates and employees warm after the facility lost hot water pressure Monday, causing its boiler to go offline.

In Texas, advocates for the homeless fanned out Tuesday across Houston to provide blankets and other warm gear as the National Weather Service issued a hard freeze warning until Wednesday for parts of the state.

Atlanta hospitals were seeing a surge in emergency room visits for hypothermi­a and other ailments as temperatur­es plunged below freezing. The temperatur­e in Atlanta fell to 13 degrees before dawn Tuesday.

In Savannah, Ga. — where January’s average high is 60 degrees — the temperatur­e hovered at 30 at noon Tuesday. The city could see up to 2 inches of snow and sleet on Wednesday. Along the East Coast, the cold was expected to worsen behind a winter storm brewing in the Atlantic and Caribbean. Behind that storm is even colder weather than what the East Coast is feeling now.

 ?? STEVE BISSON/SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS ?? Icicles form on a fountain Tuesday morning in Savannah, Ga., where the temperatur­e at noon was 30 degrees.
STEVE BISSON/SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS Icicles form on a fountain Tuesday morning in Savannah, Ga., where the temperatur­e at noon was 30 degrees.

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