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Snow hits Midwest again today Would you believe up to a minus 24? *~^ • Teaay's i a • leaaeralar. e was Im mfegrect, c—hfct"*-a * _Mwifk e serverMnur, windtariatiias onfKuf a toK a «ilmileus pesurr hokuw» buffetetu.l/^udt thIk*e count^.... y •y The Associate* Press fertilizer to melt It. throughout the day. By afternoon the temperature dropped The new storm was expected to dump 4 inches of heavy, Ike «kMVdsH (acttr H auae far ta effective teaspemart nUtopooce in Iowa rode in sand trucks to reach victims ttatoM II la ahsn 14, depending ISM* wtad gists, aeear*- 10 the mid teens, which produced a wind chill factor wet snow on Chicago, and Illinois authorities feared it ranging from 17 to H degrees below ten o( auto accidents today as (reeling rain, sleet and snow would lead to a rash of collapsed roofs — 220 have been a|UW weather staerver. •want into the Midwest only daya after a storm that has The mercury ran true to form an it was eipected to fall reported in the state already Biting winds and dropping temperatures combined to to between J and II during the early morning noun Croft claimed 17 lives. Meanwhile, tempers flared as the nation's second- "Every kind of precipitation Imaginable is falling.' nuke yesterday one of the coldest days we've had this said he did not expect winds to be quite u strong as largest city struggled to dig out from one of its worst winter. yesterday and the mercury to get inio the Mi. reported the slate Highway Patrol Police were called out storms Milwaukee residents sought refuge in warmer to round up a load of hogs "running all over the place" on The wind wilt gusts up to in miles per hour and climates. temperatures which dropped from 34 degrees at 7 a.m. to EXTENDED LOCAL FORECAST interstate tt Police were cslled to settle an unruly crowd In a transit Power transformers burst into flames Thursday as the the low teens by II p.m., produced a wind chin factor at station when a passenger illness delayed a Chicago Transit times of II degrees below tero. Sanaa? rani along CMM in* im cfemaftag la rain storm passed through Kansas, leaving many homes without Authority subway train for nearly in hour . Meatay ana Tuesday amll; ekwey wtth Chun of electricity Flooding was reported in Kansas and Missouri Temperaturewise, however, Jan. 4 ranks as the coldest And authorities reported a Chicago man shoveled snow day when the mercury dropped to a low of II degrees above Harries Inland and rain skewers « IMW mrriei near dw The Nebraska State Patrol said up to an inch of ice on a car, turned on a garden hose sod encased the auto in mat Tensptrntares averaging a Uttle akeve aomal watt glued highways and power lines across the state, and tero. ice after a stranger took a parking space he'd labored to According to Paul Croft, the Register's weather ob- daytime ksgks In the taper tttto low 4»s snd (veralghl lews officials at the Lee Byrd Airfield in North PlaUe used clear MlaU. The Daily VOL 101 NO. 175 SHREWSBURY, N.J. FRIDAY, JANUARY T9, 1979 15 CENTS Monmouth cancer deaths soared r One of 3 highest in Mid-Atlantic states By MARK MAGYAR Department of Environmental York City and its suburbs, Greenberg attributed largely tus and Italian ethnicity. Slalekmse Carrespsndeal Protection cancer study team, eastern Pennsylvania, and to "the rather bulky Polish Dr. Peter W. Preuss. direc- TRENTON - Monmouth declined to speculate on specif- several counties in Northern diet." tor of DEP's program on County and two other "newer ic reasons for the high in- Delaware and southwestern — The leading cause of cancer and toxic substances, suburban counties" showed crease in Monmouth County's Connecticut i he stud) cancer In women in the 49- noted that the urban-industrial the highest increases In cancer cancer mortality rate, except focused on cancer deaths county area was breast corridor between New York death rates out of 49 Middle to note that the increase coin- among white people because cancer, which was statistically City and Philadelphia had a 20 Atlantic counties! .surveyed cided with the county's growth data on blacks wastoo scanty linked by the study with higher percent higher cancer death from l«50 to 1972, a Rutgers from a mostly rural to a most- to be useful, Dr Greenberg socio-economic status; Rus- rale than the national average University professor revealed ly suburban area said sian. Italian. Polish and Ger- between 1950 and 1969 yesterday. The DEP study statistically Major findings in the 209- man ethnicity; manufacturing "I don't know where the But despite the high rate of linked cancer deaths between page report released yester- zones; degraded air quality; term 'Cancer Alley' came increase. Monmouth County's 1950 and 1969 with urban-in- day, the first of three and the use of surface water from, but what we have shown cancer mortality rale re- dustrial areas, ethnic eating statistical cancer studies being for drinking is an urban-industrial corridor mained lower than older ur habits, manufacturing zones, conducted by Dr. Greenberg — Male bladder cancer whose cancer* death rate is lian industrial counties like water supply systems and so- for the DEP. included: deaths, which are 35 percent very high," Dr. Preuss said Hudson and Kssex Counties, cio-economic status, as well as — High rates of stomach higher in the region than the "And that corridor could N.J , and New York City other factors cancer occurred where there national average, were probably be extended to the Dr Michael II Greenberg The study covered all 21 were large population groups statistically linked to other urban-industrial counties of Rutgers, who heads a state New Jersey counties. New of Polish descent, which Dr chemicals, socio-economic sta- See Cancer, page 1 Red Bank, teachers stalemated By STEVEN L. LliBETKIN School without negotiating it." the more lime students spend make any recommendation as ter the fact-finder's report was RED BANK - Nego- he said "We stopped her at with their teachers, the more lo its length received. tiations between the Board of that, and apparently she has they will learn, Mrs Cadman The board rejected four The board offered addi- Education and the Red Bank not forgiven us." asserted counterproposals by the un- tional concessions on salary Teachers' Association The board has offered to "Increased instructional ion, Mr. Dyer asserted. and benefit demands, in an at- (HBTA) broke down shortly Increase the amount of time time was recommended by the Increasing the Primary tempt lo break the stalemate, after 8 p.m. yesterday, with aUoted to teachers each day fact-finder in his report, which School's Instructional time Mrs. Cadman said. the Board's demand for a long- for class planning purposes, was received by the Board would result in 3,000 additional Mrs. Cadman criticized the er teaching day at the Primary but the proposal has been re- Nov 15. 1978," Mrs. Cadman leaching hours per year, he teachers for their sick-out on School the apparent source of jected by the union. Mrs Cad- said "The board accepted the charged Wednesday, in which an esti- the dispute man said report in ITecember. The "For the salary figures mated 'two-thirds of the New negotiating sessions "The only demand of the Teachers' Association did we're talking, which are only borough's teachers stayed will not be scheduled until a board still on the table was for not." six percent, you're nol going to home to protest remarks at- new finding of fact is issued by a small increase In the amount "The teachers have recom- ask employees to put in 3,000 tributed lo Dr. Joan D. Ijwrence 1 Hammer, a con- of instructional time for pupils mended a uniform day of m extra hours without more mon- Abrams, superintendent of ciliator for the slate Public in the Primary School," Mrs hours and 30 minutes for both ey," he said. "And frankly, the schools. Employment Relations Com- Cadman said in a prepared schools," Mr Dyer said, "and teachers do not consider it Dr. Abrams was quoted by mission (PERC). according to statement last night. "The this has been repeatedly re- educationally sound for the, teachers as saying, "My, I Catherine Cadman. the Board's principal concern is to jected by the board " children." guess this is the biggest thing board's vice president and provide the best education per Mr Dyer pointed out that Mrs. Cadman charged that for them since the main street chief negotiator sible for the children of Red 1 the November fact-finder's re- the teachers were unfair in flooded," an alleged reference The teachers will meet at 3 Bank port recommended a uniform their negotiations by pres- to a noisy sit-in in the board's p.m. today lo determine their Research has shown that day al both schools, but did not enting additional demands af- See Red Baak, page 1! next move, according to Allan O Dyer, union president "I can't anticipate what their reaction will be." Mr Riverview and planners still at it Dr. Creenberg ge»turen in front of cancer research map Dyer said "From what they have demonstrated so far. they By DAVID TURNER <"e, resigned from the planning lions, that he should have ex- "I live in Red Bank now," are 100 percent behind the ne- RED BANK - After slug- board and termed II a "two- cused himself." Mr Erving said.