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To: Wharf Rat who wrote (191781)7/17/2006 3:05:44 PM
From: sylvester80  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
NEWS: Extreme heat across most of U.S.
Nearly every state will see temperatures above 90
The Associated Press
URL: msnbc.msn.com
Updated: 8:58 a.m. MT July 17, 2006

Extreme heat built up early Monday across the nation, with temperatures reaching into the 100s across the southern Plains and pockets of the Northeast.

Heat advisories were posted for the entire state of New Jersey most of eastern Pennsylvania and southern New York, as well as throughout the central Mississippi Valley and the South.

Highs at least in the 90s were expected to be seen in almost every state from coast to coast.

A cold front dropping into the eastern Plains was expected to spark thunderstorms across Iowa and Illinois — a welcome relief from the relentless heat.

A few thunderstorms were possible throughout the Southwest and southern California. These storms were forecast to pass near some of the wildfires burning throughout the region.

One area predicted to escape the heat plaguing the rest of the nation was to be the Northwest as cooler temperatures spread down the Pacific coast.

Temperatures in the Lower 48 states on Sunday ranged from a low of 38 degrees at Stanley, Idaho, to a high of 126 degrees at Death Valley, Calif.

Emergency actions
Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich said Sunday the state would make more than 130 office buildings available as cooling centers beginning Monday. Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty had ordered the National Guard out to help firefighters as temperatures even in the normally cool northern part of the state pushed 100 degrees amid very dry conditions.

The National Weather Service issued excessive heat warnings for Las Vegas, Chicago, St. Louis, Philadelphia, Tulsa, Okla., and parts of New Jersey, where thermometers made it into the 90s Sunday and were expected to reach 100 degrees Monday.

“I could use a pool out here,” Doreen Venick, 36, said Sunday as she took shelter in the shade of a small tree with her two children and her sister at a children’s festival in Brick, N.J.

Officials in Chicago, where a 1995 heat wave killed 700 people, opened 24-hour cooling centers and pleaded with people to check on elderly neighbors. No heat-related deaths were reported in the city by Sunday afternoon as temperatures approached 100 in parts of the state Sunday.

Organizers of Gay Games VII, a sporting event that has drawn about 12,000 gay and lesbian athletes to Chicago, said outdoor events were going ahead as planned with hydration stations, tents and medical teams. Two triathletes were treated for heat-related illnesses.

Chicago hit 94 by 3 p.m. Sunday, but it didn’t bother Frank Lee of Manoa, Hawaii, who was competing in the event’s tennis matches and planned to drink plenty of water and eat bananas.

“Oh, I love it balmy,” Lee said. “But maybe it’s a little too hot.”

Hot air from Mexico
A large high pressure area centered over much of the mountain states and extending into the Midwest was pumping hot air from Mexico across the desert Southwest and into the Midwest, said Rob Handel, a weather service meteorologist in Chicago.

Even the Colorado mountain town of Frazier, which sits at 8,550 feet and likes to claim that it is the nation’s ice box, was in the upper 80s during the weekend.

“It’s not supposed to be hot like this. Lately there have been evenings when you could sit outside at 10 p.m. without a coat. All my life I couldn’t do that,” said Connie Clayton, 58, a lifelong resident of Frazier.

The mile-high city of Denver had two straight days of record highs, hitting 103 on Sunday and 101 Saturday.

South Dakota posted some of the nation’s highest temperatures with a reading Saturday of 115 at Pierre, the state capital, and an unofficial report of 120 outside the town of Usta in the state’s northwest corner.

“There’s a lot of records that are falling across the state,” said Todd Heitkamp, a weather service meteorologist in Sioux Falls.

The mercury again topped 100 degrees Sunday across much of South Dakota, and in North Dakota, the temperature hit 106 degrees in Bismarck and 100 in Dickinson.

In Arizona, Sunday’s high was 109, not enough to rate an extreme heat advisory in the desert metropolis.

Oklahoma, Ohio, Calif. temps
In Oklahoma, where temperatures also have been rising above 100, officials were investigating a possible heat-related death and reported more than 40 heat-related calls to emergency medical services in Oklahoma City and Tulsa.

Southwest Oklahoma caught the worst of the heat Sunday: Lawton had a high temperature of 106 and Hobart and Frederick topped out at 104 degrees. The state’s weeklong forecast calls for highs ranging from the mid 90s up to 106 degrees.

In Toledo, Ohio, several people were treated for heat-related illnesses Saturday at the St. Vincent Medical Center, said Dr. Greg Hymel, an emergency room physician. The National Weather Service issued a heat advisory for the area Sunday, with temperatures reaching 91.

Officials with Middletown City Schools, halfway between Cincinnati and Dayton, Ohio, canceled the last week of elementary classes for the summer because of the heat. The two buildings where those classes are held lack air conditioning, district spokeswoman Debbie Alberico said.

California joined in the heat wave, with temperatures forecast to rise above 100 degrees Monday from the Mexican border to as far north as Redding and near the coast. State highs are expected to be 115 degrees near Barstow and 112 near Parkfield, said meteorologist Will Pi.

Power grid managers asked California residents to conserve electricity, predicting demand will spike for air conditioners.

Hot, sticky air also covered parts of the Southeast. In Georgia, temperatures have soared to near-record highs, with six cities posting temperatures of 100 degrees or higher on Saturday.

URL: msnbc.msn.com



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (191781)7/17/2006 5:32:13 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
That was the bill the oil company execs told Congress was a wash for them.



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (191781)7/19/2006 6:37:30 PM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 281500
 
NEWS: Britain has hottest July day ever!
Europe swelters; officials enact plans fearing repeat of deadly ’03 summer
The Associated Press
URL: msnbc.msn.com
Updated: 3:22 p.m. MT July 19, 2006

LONDON - Lions licked blood-flavored ice blocks in the zoo, judges went wigless in court and guards at Buckingham Palace ducked into the shade.

Britain faced the hottest day ever recorded in July on Wednesday as a heat wave swept much of Europe. Temperatures hit 96.6 degrees south of London — so hot some road surfaces melted.

Two people died in Spain as temperatures climbed above 104 degrees, while officials in France said as many as nine people who died recently were believed to be victims of the heat.

But with its aging buildings and infrequent brushes with sweltering temperatures, Britain was particularly ill-equipped for the heat wave.

London’s Underground has no air conditioning and the Evening Standard newspaper measured temperatures in the train system at 117 degrees. Operator Transport for London takes no measurements but did not dispute the figure.

“I don’t even want to talk about it,” said Jean Thurgood of east London, fanning herself frantically on a stuffy bus. “It feels like the hottest day of the century.”

Construction workers in northwest England, meanwhile, dumped crushed rocks on highways because the liquefying pavement was sticking to vehicles, Cumbria’s county council said.

Across Europe, health officials warned people to stay out of the sun and to drink plenty of water.

Paris when it sizzles
In France, several days of dry heat and high temperatures — which reached 97 degrees in Paris on Wednesday and 102 degrees in Bordeaux a day earlier — recalled a heat wave in 2003, when 15,000 people died from dehydration and heat-related disorders. Many were elderly and were in some cases left alone while families vacationed.

Since then, France’s government has adopted measures to avoid a repeat of the disaster. On Wednesday, French Health Minister Xavier Bertrand and Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin visited a retirement home to check on the prevention plan.

In Paris, heat-busters included four giant humidifiers placed around the Eiffel Tower, one at each foot, that sprayed passers-by with water vapor as they tried to escape the sun’s punishing rays.

This week’s victims of the heat in France likely included two people in their 80s who died Tuesday in the Bordeaux region, and a 53-year-old construction worker who collapsed in the central city of Macon.

Boiling in Berlin
Elsewhere in Europe, temperatures at 4 p.m., when daytime measurements generally peak, registered 95 degrees in Berlin, 93.9 in Brussels, Belgium, and 95.5 in the Dutch city of Utrecht.

In the Netherlands, the Nijmegen 4-Day March was canceled after two participants died in the heat. Some 300 people taking part in the popular walk became ill Tuesday in temperatures that reached 95 degrees and 30 were hospitalized.

In Britain, many people simply sought shelter indoors as the mercury rose. By mid-afternoon Wednesday, the temperature at Charlwood, near London’s Gatwick Airport, hit 97.3 degrees — the hottest temperature ever recorded in Britain in July.

The average temperature in southeastern England in July is 70 degrees — and that figure has been the nighttime temperature the past few days.

Sancha Lancaster, spokeswoman for Britain’s primary weather forecaster the Meteorological Office, said as the heat hangs on, temperatures could eclipse the record of 101 degrees in Faversham, Kent, on Aug. 10, 2003.

“There’s no air conditioning anywhere, it seems,” said 24-year-old Australian Mark Jones, who is living in London this summer. “In Australia, we’re used to this, but here, a lot of people don’t even have fans.”

London officials advised people to carry a bottle of water.

Andrei Danilov, 32, dutifully cradled mineral water on a London bus. “It gets worse and worse every year,” he said. “I can’t stand it.”

At the historic Royal Courts of Justice, judges were allowed to remove their traditional wigs for court proceedings. One of Britain’s largest trade union federations, the Trades Union Congress, issued a statement urging people to wear shorts to work.

Even Buckingham Palace guards get a break
And in a rare move, the two-hour shifts of the royal guards who stand outside Buckingham Palace were reduced to one hour at the beginning of the week in preparation for the heat, said the London headquarters spokesman, Col. David Sievwright.

At the Colchester Zoo, zookeepers gave lions ice blocks flavored with blood, and monkeys got blocks containing fruit.

But the heat failed to dash one of Queen Elizabeth II’s annual garden parties. Nearly 8,000 people lined up to enter Buckingham Palace.

URL: msnbc.msn.com