Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/410423
Washington 72/57 New York 66/52 Miami 84/72 Atlanta 73/59 Detroit 56/42 Houston 73/57 Chicago 59/43 Minneapolis 49/32 Kansas City 66/40 El Paso 64/42 Denver 62/33 Billings 57/36 Los Angeles 87/60 San Fran cisc o 76/56 Seattle 59/54 AIRQUALITYFORECAST Whatitmeans: 0-50:Good; 51-100:Moderate; 101-150:Unhealthyforsensitivepeople; 151+:Unhealthyforall. Source: Airnow.gov City Today'sairquality City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W CALIFORNIA CITIES National and world forecast s-sunny,pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy,sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain,sf-snow flurries,sn-snow,i-ice City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Summary National Extremes World Extremes North and South America Asia, Australia Africa CarsonCity Hawthorne Reno Herlong Lovelock Sacramento Yuba City Napa Ukiah Chico Corning Lakeview Alturas Susanville Redding Red Bluff Laytonville Fort Bragg Point Arena Eureka Redway Mount Shasta Yreka Crescent City Ashland Shown is today's weather. Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows. Shown are today's noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. ALMANAC Precipitation Temperatures ALLERGY REPORT Pollenlevels Source: National Allergy Bureau TODAY'S UV INDEX (The higher the number, the faster skin damage will occur.) Extreme Very high High Moderate Low SUN SETTINGS, MOON PHASES Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset Hoursofsunlight River Levels SacramentoRiver Flood 7a.m. 24-hr Stage yest. chg. Lake Levels Elevation Yesterday Storage (acre-feet) Percent Capacity Q: A: THURSDAY 76° 51° FRIDAY 76° 51° Mostly sunn y and nic e Pa rtly sunn y SATURDAY 77° 51° Mostly sunn y and wa rm SUNDAY 79° 50° Plenty of sun TODAY 77° 49° Sunny to partly cloudy. Partly cloudy tonight. High ....................................................................... 70° Low ........................................................................ 46° Normal high ......................................................... 68° Normal low ........................................................... 45° Record high ............................................. 88° in 1949 Record low .............................................. 29° in 1935 Humidity noon today ........................................ 47% 24 hours through 2 p.m. yesterday ................. 0.00" Month to date ................................................... 0.22" Normal month to date ..................................... 0.33" Season to date .................................................. 3.97" Normal season to date .................................... 2.30" Red Bluff through 2 p.m. yesterday Chico .................................................................. Good Napa ........................................................... Moderate Red Bluff .............................................. Not available Redding ............................................... Not available Yuba City ................................................... Moderate Allergy, dust and dander today: Beneficial Grass .................. Absent Mold ............... Moderate Trees ....................... Low Weeds ................ Absent 3 Highest at 12 p.m. Today 6:43 a.m. 5:02 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 5:14 a.m. Thursday 6:44 a.m. 5:01 p.m. 5:11 p.m. 6:21 a.m. 10 hr., 19 min. Nov6 Full Nov14 Last New Nov22 First Nov29 aboveBendBridge......................27 ...........1.60 ......+0.10 atHamiltonCity.........................148 ......128.96 ....... -0.04 atOrdFerry................................114 ........96.58 ....... -0.02 atRedBluffDiversionDam.......253 ......238.30 .......none atTehamaBridge ......................213 ......200.60 .......none atVinaWoodsonBridge............183 ......166.55 ......+0.05 BlackButte ....................438.40..............28,861 .....20.1% LakeOroville..................655.07............943,352 .....25.2% LakeShasta ...................895.03.........1,109,079 .....24.4% LakeTrinity..................2195.15............559,317 .....21.1% Whiskeytown...............1198.42............205,446 .....85.2% Weather Trivia ™ What is the record low temperature for the lower 48 states in November? -53(F) Lincoln, Montana; Nov. 16, 1959. Today Thursday Anaheim 87/58/s 88/57/s Bakersfield 73/53/s 79/53/s Chula Vista 85/58/s 87/57/s Crescent City 64/55/c 63/51/r Death Valley 86/58/s 88/57/s Eureka 65/54/pc 64/50/r Fremont 77/52/s 73/50/s Fresno 75/51/s 80/53/s Glendale 85/60/s 86/59/s Huntington Beach 80/61/s 81/61/s Irvine 86/58/s 86/56/s Lake Tahoe 61/33/s 65/31/pc Long Beach 86/57/s 86/59/s Los Angeles 87/60/s 89/61/s Mammoth Mountain 62/26/s 66/29/s Modesto 72/45/s 76/49/pc Monterey 76/51/s 71/50/s Moreno Valley 84/51/s 86/53/s Napa 77/45/s 75/43/s Needles 81/57/s 83/55/s Oakland 74/51/s 70/49/s Oxnard 82/58/s 80/57/s Redding 79/50/s 74/49/pc Riverside 84/47/s 86/48/s Sacramento 75/47/s 78/48/s San Bernardino 85/49/s 86/51/s San Diego 84/60/s 85/61/s San Francisco 76/56/s 71/55/s San Jose 78/50/s 74/48/s San Luis Obispo 84/49/s 83/51/s Santa Ana 88/61/s 88/61/s Santa Barbara 79/51/s 79/51/s Santa Clarita 83/55/s 85/55/s Stockton 75/46/s 78/48/pc Ventura 80/58/s 79/57/s Yosemite Valley 70/39/s 71/38/s Today Thursday Albuquerque 61/37/s 62/38/s Atlanta 73/59/c 70/41/c Baltimore 68/51/pc 63/43/r Boston 63/47/pc 55/50/r Buffalo 53/41/c 52/39/r Chicago 59/43/pc 46/29/sh Cincinnati 58/46/r 52/35/c Dallas 59/45/r 70/41/s Denver 62/33/s 65/39/s Detroit 56/42/s 53/33/r El Paso 64/42/s 67/41/s Fargo 43/29/sn 44/28/s Honolulu 86/74/s 86/73/pc Houston 73/57/r 68/47/r Indianapolis 56/43/pc 48/33/sh Kansas City 66/40/s 55/31/s Las Vegas 76/54/s 76/53/s Louisville 59/48/r 54/37/c Miami 84/72/pc 84/67/pc Minneapolis 49/32/r 44/26/pc New Orleans 80/65/c 75/51/sh New York City 66/52/pc 61/47/r Oklahoma City 67/43/pc 67/39/s The Southeast will remain mild and warm today. Rain showers along a cold front will impact the Ohio Valley and the Northeast, as well as por- tions of the southern Plains and Gulf Coast. The heaviest rain is expected to fall in eastern Texas and Louisiana today, causing flooding in spots. A storm system will move southeastward across the Upper Midwest, with light accumulating snowfall falling in North Dakota and Minnesota. Another system is forecast to move into the Pacific North- west, bringing rain to western Washington. High ............................ 87° in Edinburg, TX Low ...................................... 10° in Loa, UT High ............. 110° in Wyndham, Australia Low ............... -43° in Shologontsy, Russia Bogota 65/50/t 66/48/r Buenos Aires 73/60/s 77/59/pc Caracas 89/77/t 88/77/t Ensenada 84/59/s 85/59/s Mexico City 75/48/pc 75/51/t Montreal 52/36/sh 49/36/r Rio de Janeiro 85/72/pc 81/72/t Tijuana 85/57/s 88/57/s Toronto 51/39/pc 50/36/r Vancouver 56/49/r 58/44/r Orlando 84/65/s 85/64/pc Philadelphia 68/54/pc 62/46/r Phoenix 82/57/s 84/58/s Pittsburgh 57/45/c 55/40/sh Portland, ME 61/42/pc 54/48/r Portland, OR 65/55/c 61/46/r St. Louis 62/44/pc 55/33/pc Salt Lake City 59/38/pc 65/41/s Seattle 59/54/c 60/46/r Tucson 78/52/s 80/52/s Washington, DC 72/57/pc 68/48/r Cairo 75/59/c 78/62/s Casablanca 66/51/pc 71/49/s Johannesburg 75/52/s 74/55/pc Kinshasa 89/73/t 86/73/r Lagos 86/76/t 88/76/t Nairobi 80/60/pc 80/58/pc Tripoli 86/69/s 87/54/sh Baghdad 69/49/s 72/49/s Beijing 63/35/s 50/31/s Hong Kong 82/74/pc 83/74/pc Jerusalem 64/50/s 67/48/s Kabul 56/42/r 52/40/r Manila 88/75/pc 87/74/c Melbourne 62/47/pc 74/51/pc New Delhi 86/64/pc 86/65/pc Seoul 63/47/pc 61/35/s Singapore 89/77/t 87/77/t Sydney 79/61/t 73/58/pc Tehran 49/36/sh 51/39/s Tokyo 64/59/pc 64/58/r Amsterdam 52/40/pc 51/42/sh Athens 67/61/s 70/61/pc Belgrade 66/52/pc 69/55/pc Berlin 56/45/pc 51/39/sh Budapest 61/47/pc 62/50/pc Dublin 49/41/pc 57/43/r London 51/34/pc 54/51/r Madrid 58/37/pc 60/46/s Moscow 44/33/s 45/36/pc Paris 51/39/sh 52/45/pc Rome 70/59/t 67/58/r Stockholm 43/35/c 43/38/sn Vienna 62/54/pc 58/49/pc Zurich 46/37/r 44/34/pc 66/36 68/39 67/37 65/36 64/28 75/47 75/48 77/45 80/49 75/49 77/50 62/34 67/36 65/37 79/50 77/49 72/47 64/54 66/54 65/54 74/49 68/44 68/43 64/55 69/46 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014 ByDavidEspo TheAssociatedPress WASHINGTON Riding a powerful wave of voter dis- content, resurgent Repub- licans captured control of the Senate and tightened their grip on the House Tuesday night in elections certain to complicate Pres- ident Barack Obama's final two years in office. The Republican Senate leader, Mitch McConnell, dispatched Democratic challenger Alison Lunder- gan Grimes in Kentucky af- ter a $78 million campaign of unrelieved negativity. Voters are "hungry for new leadership. They want a reason to be hopeful," said the man now in line to be- come majority leader and set the Senate agenda. Two-term incumbent Mark Pryor of Arkansas was the first Democrat to fall, defeated by freshman Rep. Tom Cotton. Sen. Mark Udall of Colorado was next, defeated by Rep. Cory Gardner. Sen. Kay Hagan also lost, in North Carolina, to Thom Tillis, the speaker of the state House. Republicans also picked up seats in West Virginia, South Dakota and Mon- tana, where Democrats re- tired. They needed a net gain of six seats in all to end a Democratic majority in place since 2006. With dozens of House races uncalled, Republi- cans had picked up nine seats in Democratic hands, and given up only one. Obama was at the White House as voters remade Congress for the final two years of his tenure. With lawmakers set to convene next week for a postelec- tion session, he invited the leadership to a meeting on Friday. A shift in control of the Senate would likely result in a strong GOP assault on budget deficits, additional pressure on Democrats to accept sweeping changes to the health care law that stands as Obama's signal domestic accomplishment and a bid to reduce federal regulations. There were 36 guberna- torial elections on the bal- lot, and several incumbents struggled against challeng- ers. Tom Wolf captured the Pennsylvania statehouse for the Democrats, defeat- ing Republican Gov. Tom Corbett. In a footnote to one of the year's biggest political surprises, college profes- sor Dave Brat was elected to the House from Virginia, several months after he de- feated Majority Leader Eric Cantor in a Republican pri- mary. House Republicans de- feated 19-term Democratic Rep. Nick Rahall in West Virginia, beat Rep. John Barrow in Georgia and picked up a seat vacated by a lawmaker in North Car- olina. Speaker John Boehner of Ohio had little opposition in coasting to a 13th term and is likely to retain his top leadership post. After years of a sluggish economic recovery and for- eign crises aplenty, the vot- ers' mood was sour. Nearly two-thirds of vot- ers interviewed after cast- ing ballots said the country was seriously on the wrong track. Only about 30 per- cent said it was generally going in the right direction. More than four in ten voters disapproved of both Obama and Congress, ac- cording to the exit polls conducted for The Associ- ated Press and the televi- sion networks. Still, a majority of those polled supported sev- eral positions associated with Democrats or Obama rather than Republicans — saying immigrants in the country illegally should be able to work, backing U.S. military involvement against Islamic State fight- ers, and agreeing that cli- mate change is a serious problem. No matter which party emerged with control of the Senate, a new chap- ter in divided government was inevitable in a nation marked by profound un- ease over the future and dissatisfaction with its po- litical leaders. Several Senate races were close, a list that — surprisingly — included Virginia. There, Democratic Sen. Mark Warner held a nar- row lead over former Re- publican Party chairman and Bush administration official Ed Gillespie. There was a little good news for Democrats in New Hampshire, where Sen. Jeanne Shaheen was re-elected after a difficult race against former Massa- chusetts Sen. Scott Brown. But in Georgia, Michelle Nunn lost to businessman David Perdue, depriving the Democrats of their last best chance to take away a Republican seat. In Kansas, 78-year-old Sen. Pat Rob- erts fended off a challenge from independent Greg Or- man, shutting off another avenue for the Democrats — their last. Competitive races were yet uncalled in Iowa and Alaska. There were 36 Senate races on the ballot, al- though most of the atten- tion went to fewer than a dozen. They drew hundreds of millions of dollars in at- tack ads in a campaign sea- son estimated to cost more than $4 billion — just for the races for Congress. 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