| 
              
                
				 The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration cooperative 
				weather observer at Mt. Carroll in northeastern Illinois 
				reported a temperature of -38 degrees on the morning of Jan. 31. 
 “The temperature in Mt. Carroll may be a new state record, if 
				officially confirmed,” said Brian Kerschner, spokesperson for 
				the Illinois State Climatologist’s Office at the Illinois State 
				Water Survey.
 
 When it appears that a state record temperature may have been 
				broken, a state climate extremes committee reviews the 
				observations to assess its validity. This team typically 
				includes the State Climatologist’s Office, the Midwestern 
				Regional Climate Center, and federal climate experts, such as 
				from the National Weather Service and the National Center for 
				Environmental Information.
 
 Most of Illinois has been in the deep freeze for the past two 
				days. With a recording of -31 degrees, Rockford broke their 
				all-time low temperature, which was previously -27 degrees on 
				Jan. 10, 1982, the National Weather Service Forecast Office in 
				Chicago reports.
 
 During the mornings of Jan. 30 and 31, numerous locations in 
				northern Illinois reported temperatures in the -20s and some 
				locations going below -30 degrees.
 
              
                
				 
              
				[to top of second column] | 
              
 
			Minimum temperatures were below 0 degrees throughout 
			most of the state, except for the southern regions. Daily mean 
			temperatures were generally 15 to 20 degrees lower than the 30-year 
			average temperature. 
			
			 
			  
			Some other notable temperatures included -35 degrees 
			at Elizabeth, -32 at Galena, -30 at Rochelle, -33 at Aledo, -26 at 
			DeKalb, -22 at Joliet, -21 at Galesburg, -17 in Champaign, and -16 
			in Decatur.
 In the southern counties, Cairo reached 12 degrees and Carbondale 
			and Rosiclare saw 4 degrees.
 
 Numerous schools, businesses, and government offices were closed 
			throughout the state because of the dangerously cold wind chills.
 
			[Lisa Sheppard] |