5/19/2018 Asbury Park Press front page Tuesday, Feb. 17 2015
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Scan the QR code to see a video of how workers in
one Shore town deal with the cold, or go to APP.com.
Asbury Park Press APP.COM $1.00
TUESDAY 02.17.15
You dont need a weatherman to tell you this: The last few days have been brutal,with freezing temperatures interrupted only by several inches of snow. But getready, New Jersey: Forecasters say even more snow and bitter cold is onits way.
As Shore area residents deal with Mondays overnight snowstorm, they canexpect another, lighter snowfall Wednesday and a potentially hazardous wintry mixover the weekend. In between will be another arctic blast like the one this past week-end that made this the coldest February in nearly 20 years.
It seems like every few days, something else comes through, said Valerie Meola,a meteorologist at the Mount Holly office of the National Weather Service. It im-pacts our area, and in between you get maybe a day that warms up ... but it looks like
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ATLANTIC CITY
BROKE RECORD
NORMAL STATEWIDE
AVERAGE
LOW IN HOLMDEL
THOMAS P. COSTELLO/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
A man operates his metal detector on the frigid Seaside Heights shoreline Monday. The lowtemperature dipped to 0 degrees in other Ocean County locales, creating dangerous conditions.
BRRRRR!!!Bitter cold (and snow) to continue
throughout week at Shore
STEPH SOLIS @STEPHMSOLIS
SeeBRRRRR!!!, Page A10
TRENTON Democrats say they will position Gov.Chris Christies plunging poll numbers as a referendumon Republican candidates in this falls lawmaker elec-tions. But it may be for naught.
Republicans have their own campaign strategy, withall 80 Assembly seats on the ballot in November, but po-litical experts expect few seats, if any, to change partiesbecause of New Jerseys incumbent-favoring legisla-
tive map.Christies job rating among state voters has fallen to
52 percent disapproval and 42 percent approval, theworst showing the second-term governor has had inRutgers-Eagleton polling. The results were releasedFriday.
Democrats will be well-served to make the upcom-ing Assembly elections a referendum on Christiesfailed policies, including the governors assault on mid-dle-class families, said Democratic State CommitteeChairman John Currie.
Republican Assembly Leader Jon Bramnick has al-ready been on the campaign trail for his party, hosting amini-convention in Atlantic City two weeks ago and re-cording a campaign video that blamed Democrats foran exodus of residents fleeing the states high taxes.
Democrats have traditionally controlled the Assem-bly and have a current 48-32 edge.
The issue that will affect voters is that the Demo-crats have been in charge of the Legislature for over adecade, and if you ask the average voter if theyre hap-py with the results from having the same party in con-trol, I think theyll say no, Bramnick said. I dont thinkChris Christie plays a major role in that question, ex-cept reforms didnt happen until he became governor,and further reforms have been stopped because Demo-crats are no longer cooperating.
Monmouth University pollster Patrick Murray said
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Gov. Chris Christie addresses an audience Feb. 9 in West DesMoines, Iowa.
Govs dipin poll not
likely to hurtstate GOPBOB JORDAN @BOBJORDANAPP
SeeELECTIONS, PageA5
DANGEROUS
TRENDSmoking alcohol is the new fad. D1
ADVICE D7
CLASSIFIED D8
COMICS D6
HEALTHY LIVING D1
LOCAL A3
OBITUARIES A8
OPINION A11
SPORTS C1
TECH TUESDAY A6
WEATHER C8
VOLUME 136, NUMBER 41
SINCE1879
LANCE ARMSTRONG MUST PAY $10 MILLION FOR PERJURY, PANEL RULES PAGE 1B
TINTON FALLS Theirs is a friendship that has en-
dured longer than many marriages.It started in a legal aid office during the riots in As-
bury Park in 1970 and took them into the political arenaand on to the pinnacle of their profession.
Now, two of Monmouth Countys most prominent re-tired judges are back together again, working at one ofthe states largest law firms. They are helping clientsresolve disagreements without having to go to court.
Retired State Superior Court Judge Lawrence M.Lawson, who was assignment judge for MonmouthCounty for more than two decades, and retired Superi-
or Court Judge Thomas W. Cavanagh, Jr., who served asassignment judge in Lawsons absence while presidingover the courts Chancery Division in Monmouth Coun-
ty, are working together in the newly opened TintonFalls office of McElroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney & Carpen-ter, a Morristown-based law firm.
Lawson, 67, of Manalapan, joined the firm whichhas 300 lawyers in 11 offices in seven states upon re-tiring from the bench in Septemberafter more than 27years as a judge, more than 21 of them as assignmentjudge. Lawsons longtime friend, Cavanagh, 66, ofShrewsbury, had retired from the bench a year earlier
See JUDGES, PageA4
Two judges, longtime friends, reunitedKATHLEEN HOPKINS @KHOPKINSAPP
ON THE MIC
INTERVIEW
SHOW DEBUTS
APPs Chris Jordan
kicks off his new
series live in Asbury
Park tonight. And
you can check it out
in person. A3
KEEPING TABS
ON TABLETS
Whats the best
touchscreen
device for you?
TECH TUESDAY, A6
5/19/2018 Asbury Park Press front page Tuesday, Feb. 17 2015
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