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Heat grips half the nation, schools close early

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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Allie Marsinko, 5, of Connellsville Pa., cools off from the simmering heat running through a water sprinkler at the National Mall in Washington, Wednesday, June 8, 2011. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
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Lightning and a forming rainbow are seen over the state agency buildings at the Empire State Plaza in Albany, N.Y., on Wednesday, June 8, 2011. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)
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Ron Krajewski of San Diego, Calif., pushes his son on a stroller Ron Krajewski Jr. through a water sprinkler to cool off from the simmering heat at the National Mall in Washington, Wednesday, June 8, 2011. The mercury climbed into the 90s across half the country Wednesday in a record-breaking blast of August-like heat, forcing schools with no air conditioning to let kids go home early and cities to open cooling centers. And scientists say we had better get used to it. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

WASHINGTON >> Sweltering temperatures across half the country had people doing what they could to stay cool Thursday. While relief was in sight after one more day of misery in the Northeast, the South was forecast to stay hotter than usual at least through the end of the week.

Some schools in the Northeast planned to close early for a second day Thursday so students would not have to suffer in buildings with no air conditioning. Others canceled classes altogether.

"A lot of people were complaining," said Stephanie Poff, 12, a sixth-grader at an elementary school about 70 miles north of Philadelphia that sent students home early Wednesday. "It is hard to study when it’s hot out because all you’re thinking about is, ‘I wish I could be in air conditioning."

In Tennessee, where temperatures in many cities have set records over the past few days, tens of thousands of music fans attending two different festivals were feeling the heat.

"I wasn’t prepared for this at all," said Alberta Kelly of New Brunswick, Canada, who got sunburned and had to go shopping for sunglasses when she arrived in Nashville for her first CMA Music Festival, a major country music event. People also began arriving Thursday at a farm 60 miles southeast of Nashville for the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival, which runs through Sunday.

"We have more free water than we’ve ever had and we’ve put up shade structures," said Rick Farman, one of the founders of Bonnaroo, which messaged attendees ahead of time about what to wear and drink and has set up air conditioned medical tents.

The six-to-10-day outlook from the federal Climate Prediction Center calls for continued above-average readings centered on the mid-South, including Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.

In the Northeast, the scorching heat was forecast to subside by Friday as a cold front sweeps in with cooler, drier air. High temperatures across the region are expected to stay in the low 80s through the weekend.

Meanwhile, "I’m staying in my house. I’m going to watch TV and have a cold beer," said 84-year-old Harvey Milliman of Manchester, N.J. "You got a better idea than that, I’d love to hear it."

Cooling centers opened in Chicago, Memphis, Tenn., and Newark, N.J., as a refuge for those without air conditioning.

"It will be a very dramatic change," said Charlie Foley, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Taunton, Mass. "Even though the temperature will go down, the big difference that people will appreciate will be the lower humidity."

Authorities say hot weather was so intense in southwestern Michigan that it buckled pavement on an interstate, forcing the roadway to close for a few hours Wednesday, according to the Battle Creek Enquirer.

If scientists are right, we’d better get used to the heat. A new study from Stanford University predicts that global climate change will lead permanently to unusually hot summers by the middle of the century.

Temperatures in the 90s were recorded across much of the South, the East and the Midwest on Wednesday. Baltimore and Washington hit 99 degrees, breaking high-temperature records for the date that were set in 1999, according to the National Weather Service. The normal high for the date is about 82.

Philadelphia hit 97 degrees, breaking a 2008 record of 95, and Atlantic City, N.J., tied a record of 98 set in 1999. Chicago reached 94 by midafternoon Wednesday, though highs were only forecast to be in the low 60s by Thursday.

Forecasters said it felt even hotter because of the high humidity, yet several southern states were also experiencing drought. The ridge of high pressure that brought the broiling weather is expected to remain parked over the region through Thursday.

In Oklahoma, where temperatures have reached 104 four times so far this month, the Salvation Army said more people are seeking help with high utility bills earlier in the season, and paramedics responded to more heat-related illnesses.

Authorities blamed the heat for deaths of five elderly people in Tennessee, Maryland and Wisconsin in recent days. Two men died in Wisconsin after they jumped into a river to cool off and got pulled underwater. Officials in Long Island, N.Y., reminded people to check on their relatives and friends, especially the elderly.

That is likely to continue in the coming month, with the hot weather extending west into New Mexico and Arizona. The three-month outlook shows excessive heat focused on Arizona and extending east along the Gulf Coast. Cooler-than-normal readings are forecast from Tennessee into the Great Lakes states.

At Stanford, Noah S. Diffenbaugh and Martin Scherer analyzed global climate computer models and concluded that by midcentury, large areas of the world could face unprecedented heat. They said the coolest summers will be hotter than the hottest ones of the 1900s.

Global warming in recent years has been blamed on increasing concentrations of gases such as carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The permanent shift to extreme heat would occur first in the tropics and reach North America, South America and Eurasia by 2060, the scientist report in a paper that will be published in the journal Climatic Change Letters.

It’s hard to stay cool at a baseball game, but Reds and Cubs fans were trying at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati, which had issued a heat emergency.

Kathryn Burke, of Pikeville, Ky., wore a straw hat, brought two bottles of frozen water, and a portable mister.

"And I brought the knowledge to leave when I’ve had enough of the heat," she said.

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Associated Press Writers Jessica Gresko and Randolph E. Schmid in Washington, Randall Dickerson and Joe Edwards in Nashville, Tenn., Michael Rubinkam in Easton, Pa., Michael Melia in Hartford, Conn., Murray Evans in Oklahoma City, Bruce Shipkowski in Toms River, N.J., and Dan Sewell in Cincinnati contributed to this report.

 

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