Schools remained shut as a result of the cold snap, which
claimed four lives over the long New Year weekend.
The National Weather Service issued wind chill warnings for
Tuesday as dangerously low temperatures were possible from
eastern Montana across the Midwest, into the Atlantic Coast and
the Northeast and down through the deep south.
School districts in Iowa, Massachusetts, Indianapolis and
Northeast Ohio canceled or delayed the start of classes on
Tuesday as bitterly cold temperatures 20 to 30 degrees
Fahrenheit (11 to 17 degrees Celsius) below normal were expected
across the eastern half of the United States.
"Just the bitter cold which is just too dangerous to put kids
out on the street waiting for a bus that may not come," said
Herb Levine, superintendent of the Peabody School District,
north of Boston, to a local CBS affiliate television station.
The bitter cold was blamed on the deaths of two men in separate
incidents in Milwaukee, according to the Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel. Another man was found frozen to death outside a church
in Detroit while a homeless man was found dead on a porch in
Charleston, West Virginia, local news reported.
Many places across the United States saw record low temperatures
over the last few days. Omaha, Nebraska, posted a low of minus
20 F (minus 29 C), breaking a 130-year-old record, and Aberdeen,
South Dakota, shattered a record set in 1919 with a temperature
of minus 32 F (minus 36 C).
The cold should ease across most of the United States after
Tuesday, but the northeastern quarter of the country will see a
repeat of the frigid temperatures from Thursday to Friday as
another arctic blast hits the area.
The private AccuWeather forecaster said the cold snap could
combine with a storm brewing off the Bahamas to bring snow and
high winds to much of the Eastern Seaboard as it heads north on
Wednesday and Thursday.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Raissa
Kasolowsky)
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