Red Bluff Daily News

July 23, 2015

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Washington 87/70 New York 84/69 Miami 90/78 Atlanta 84/72 Detroit 84/64 Houston 97/78 Chicago 83/65 Minneapolis 84/70 Kansas City 84/71 El Paso 95/73 Denver 94/61 Billings 82/59 Los Angeles 80/65 San Francisco 70/59 Seattle 77/57 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: FRIDAY 92° 62° SATURDAY 94° 67° Plenty of sun Plenty of sunshine SUNDAY 95° 69° Plenty of sun MONDAY 100° 72° Sunn y and seasonably warm TODAY 88° 61° Sunny. Clear tonight. High ....................................................................... 89° Low ........................................................................ 68° Normal high ......................................................... 98° Normal low ........................................................... 66° Record high ........................................... 112° in 2006 Record low .............................................. 51° in 1987 Humidity noon today ........................................ 39% 24 hours through 2 p.m. yesterday ................. 0.00" Month to date ................................................... 0.03" Normal month to date ..................................... 0.08" Season to date .................................................. 0.03" Normal season to date .................................... 0.08" Red Bluff through 2 p.m. yesterday Chico .................................................................. Good Napa ................................................................... Good Red Bluff .............................................. Not available Redding ............................................... Not available Yuba City ............................................. Not available Allergy, dust and dander today: Beneficial Grass ....................... Low Mold .........................Low Trees .................. Absent Weeds ..................... Low 8 Highest at 1 p.m. Today 5:59 a.m. 8:32 p.m. 1:16 p.m. 12:01 a.m. Friday 5:59 a.m. 8:31 p.m. 2:13 p.m. 12:33 a.m. 14 hr., 33 min. Jul23 First Jul31 Full Last Aug6 New Aug14 aboveBendBridge......................27 ...........2.30 .......none atHamiltonCity.........................148 ......128.81 ....... -0.03 atOrdFerry................................114 ........96.37 ....... -0.02 atRedBluffDiversionDam.......253 ......238.50 .......none atTehamaBridge ......................213 ......201.10 ....... -0.10 atVinaWoodsonBridge............183 ......166.95 ....... -0.03 BlackButte ....................454.67..............66,678 .....46.4% LakeOroville..................697.79.........1,237,847 .....33.1% LakeShasta ...................960.34.........2,052,764 .....45.1% LakeTrinity..................2238.90............862,818 .....32.6% Whiskeytown...............1209.48............239,431 .....99.3% Weather Trivia ™ When does the Atlantic hurricane season start to get into full swing? August. Today Friday Anaheim 83/64/pc 84/63/pc Bakersfield 93/68/s 94/68/s Chula Vista 78/64/pc 78/64/pc Crescent City 63/53/pc 64/54/pc Death Valley 105/75/s 105/74/s Eureka 63/52/pc 64/54/pc Fremont 73/59/pc 76/59/pc Fresno 94/66/s 94/66/s Glendale 82/63/pc 84/62/pc Huntington Beach 77/66/pc 77/66/pc Irvine 80/66/pc 80/65/pc Lake Tahoe 72/43/t 74/43/s Long Beach 82/67/pc 84/67/pc Los Angeles 80/65/pc 82/66/pc Mammoth Mountain 73/43/t 75/43/s Modesto 89/59/s 91/61/s Monterey 68/56/pc 69/57/pc Moreno Valley 85/60/pc 89/58/pc Napa 74/54/pc 77/55/pc Needles 104/82/s 105/81/s Oakland 71/59/pc 72/59/pc Oxnard 74/62/pc 74/62/pc Redding 90/64/s 94/65/s Riverside 85/60/pc 89/59/pc Sacramento 85/57/s 89/59/s San Bernardino 85/59/pc 90/58/pc San Diego 78/67/pc 77/68/pc San Francisco 70/59/pc 72/59/pc San Jose 74/57/pc 77/57/pc San Luis Obispo 74/56/pc 79/56/pc Santa Ana 79/66/pc 80/67/pc Santa Barbara 76/59/pc 77/60/pc Santa Clarita 84/61/pc 87/60/pc Stockton 87/56/s 90/58/s Ventura 76/62/pc 76/61/pc Yosemite Valley 81/44/t 83/47/s Today Friday Albuquerque 90/65/pc 92/66/pc Atlanta 84/72/t 87/73/t Baltimore 84/63/s 86/63/s Boston 80/64/s 77/63/pc Buffalo 77/57/s 79/63/s Chicago 83/65/s 85/68/s Cincinnati 82/63/pc 85/64/s Dallas 99/80/s 99/81/s Denver 94/61/s 91/61/pc Detroit 84/64/pc 86/67/s El Paso 95/73/t 98/75/s Fargo 89/70/s 84/62/t Honolulu 90/76/pc 88/77/pc Houston 97/78/s 98/77/s Indianapolis 81/62/pc 84/64/s Kansas City 84/71/pc 93/76/pc Las Vegas 98/74/s 100/75/s Louisville 83/66/r 88/67/s Miami 90/78/t 90/78/t Minneapolis 84/70/s 88/69/t New Orleans 94/78/pc 94/79/pc New York City 84/69/s 84/70/s Oklahoma City 97/74/pc 97/73/s Much of the area from the central Great Lakes and the upper part of the Ohio Valley to the mid- Atlantic and New England will be sunny with low humidity today. Very spotty showers are forecast for northernmost New England. The area from the middle and lower Mississippi Valley to the Gulf and southern Atlantic coasts will be unsettled. Heavy showers and locally gusty thunderstorms are in the offing for this swath with the risk of lo- calized flash flooding. As hot air holds over Texas, warmth and humidity will build over the Plains. A few storms will drench the Dakotas. High ........................... 105° in Needles, CA Low ......................... 37° in Angel Fire, NM High ........................... 119° in Basrah, Iraq Low ..... -6° in Summit Station, Greenland Bogota 65/47/r 65/46/c Buenos Aires 61/42/s 62/49/s Caracas 87/76/t 87/76/s Ensenada 81/63/pc 84/61/pc Mexico City 73/56/t 72/54/t Montreal 74/60/pc 74/57/c Rio de Janeiro 75/67/pc 80/69/s Tijuana 80/63/pc 81/63/pc Toronto 79/54/s 81/62/s Vancouver 71/58/s 65/56/sh Orlando 92/76/t 89/75/t Philadelphia 84/68/s 87/68/s Phoenix 103/83/pc 102/84/pc Pittsburgh 80/61/s 82/63/s Portland, ME 77/58/pc 73/58/sh Portland, OR 81/58/pc 82/62/s St. Louis 85/68/pc 88/74/pc Salt Lake City 88/67/pc 88/66/s Seattle 77/57/pc 69/58/sh Tucson 96/75/t 95/75/pc Washington, DC 87/70/s 89/71/s Cairo 99/80/s 102/78/s Casablanca 90/67/s 83/69/s Johannesburg 63/47/t 61/48/r Kinshasa 86/69/s 86/68/s Lagos 83/75/t 81/74/sh Nairobi 74/55/c 74/55/pc Tripoli 95/75/s 94/78/s Baghdad 114/85/s 116/88/s Beijing 88/71/t 88/71/t Hong Kong 88/81/r 89/81/t Jerusalem 92/71/s 95/72/s Kabul 94/66/pc 95/64/s Manila 89/78/pc 88/77/t Melbourne 57/48/pc 55/46/pc New Delhi 91/80/t 92/79/r Seoul 85/76/t 80/75/r Singapore 89/79/t 89/79/t Sydney 62/48/sh 66/49/pc Tehran 93/69/pc 92/71/pc Tokyo 85/78/t 85/79/t Amsterdam 69/54/pc 71/58/pc Athens 90/75/s 92/71/s Belgrade 99/69/s 97/68/pc Berlin 76/61/pc 77/65/pc Budapest 94/69/t 92/70/t Dublin 63/45/pc 61/45/sh London 70/54/pc 67/54/r Madrid 97/69/s 97/69/s Moscow 69/57/pc 72/54/sh Paris 77/59/pc 77/58/c Rome 92/74/s 90/73/s Stockholm 67/54/sh 69/52/pc Vienna 90/69/t 91/69/pc Zurich 78/59/t 86/62/t 80/47 83/50 84/56 84/41 86/54 85/57 87/55 74/54 83/54 86/61 86/60 78/41 81/40 80/42 90/64 88/61 77/55 65/56 67/55 63/52 79/50 81/47 85/57 63/53 85/58 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015 beenabsentfromtwoFIFA events. The Swiss native missed handing over the trophy in New Zealand for the under-20s World Cup and presenting the Wom- en's World Cup in Canada. Blatter confirmed re- cently: "Until everything is clarified, I won't take any travel risks." He is returning to the global stage alongside a similarly polarizing leader with American adversar- ies: Russian President Vladimir Putin. In jetting to Russia, Blat- ter is being reunited at the draw ceremony with a close ally in Putin, and a country where he will not fear be- ing detained, given its lack of extradition treaty with the United States. "We always counted on President Blatter's partici- pation in the show," World Cup organizing commit- tee chief executive Alexei Sorokin told The Associ- ated Press on Wednesday. "We will welcome him here as president of FIFA, as a guest of our country, as a friend of our country. "It'sthefirsteventforusin terms of the World Cup and we are trying to organize it in the most ... welcoming fashion for everyone." Blatter and Putin are ex- pected to address the visit- ing national team coaches and officials at the Kon- stantinovsky Palace be- fore the draw determines the qualifying path to the finals in Russia in June- July 2018. Blatter last left Swit- zerland in mid-May when he flew, as always by pri- vate jet, to Israel for talks in Jerusalem and the West Bank. Blatter said Monday that his work since then had been unaffected by remaining around Zurich, grappling with the extent of the gravest scandal in FIFA's 111 years. "FIFA was not stuck be- cause the president was not moving," said Blatter, whose successor is due to be elected in February. Just hours before being voted in for a fifth term on May 29, two days after the dualcriminalinvestigations erupted in public view, Blat- ter told the FIFA Congress that the crisis stemmed from the 2010 vote that saw Russia voted 2018 host and Qatar awarded the 2022 World Cup. "If two other countries had emerged from the en- velope, I think we would not have these problems today," Blatter told dele- gates in Zurich. Although Qatar's con- duct has attracted greater suspicion, Russia's bid is also being investigated by the Swiss federal prosecu- tors. Blatter FROMPAGE1 the treacherous Allos Pass. Germany's Simon Ge- schke won the stage by surging out of a break- away bunch and keeping at bay Andrew Talansky of the U.S., who was sec- ond, by 32 seconds at the end of the 100-mile ride from Digne-Les-Bains to Pra Loup ski resort. Fellow American Tejay van Garderen, who was third overall as the stage began, pulled out of the race with a headache and a lack of energy after fight- ing a respiratory infection for several days. "It almost feels like I just want to disappear right now," said a despondent Van Garderen. "It was hard to look my teammates in the eyes (and) it was hard to call my wife and explain to her what was going on." Froome, meanwhile, emerged unscathed in the first of four punishing days in the Alps, staving off multiple attacks from his top rivals. He showed great bike-handling skill on the Allos descent, where he whizzed in single-file with three of them, each kick- ing out knees on the twist- ing, narrow bends. Geschke was first down the slope, having ridden off ahead with 30 miles still to go. Pinot hit the deck when his wheels slipped from under him on a left- hand bend. "It was really challeng- ing," said Geschke, whose stage victory was the fifth by a German on this Tour, and ideal for an event that is back on public TV in Germany after a hiatus of several years because of doping scandals that tar- nished the sport's image. "The best day of my life as a rider," he said of his win. Contador hit a hole and crashed in the downhill section, tearing his shorts. The 2007 and 2009 cham- pion was forced to swap bikes with teammate Pe- ter Sagan, and rode in more than two minutes after Froome. "My wheel slipped and I fell. We tried to fix my bike but it wasn't working and I took Peter's bike," Con- tador said. "I tried to de- scend as well as I could, but at the bottom of the climb I had to change back to one of my own bikes to minimize the losses." While the Spaniard stays in fifth place, the Tinkoff-Saxo leader who was hoping to add the Tour to his Giro d'Italia win in May is now a sub- stantial 6 minutes and 40 seconds behind the Team Sky rider overall — and all but out of contention. Froome and Nairo Quin- tana sprinted together for the line. Cycling FROM PAGE 1 he's ready to pitch in this league. We're not in a posi- tion we can get a guy ready up here." Cain (2-2) allowed a home run to Jedd Gyorko in the second inning but had the stuff and smarts to win the next confrontation, strik- ing him out to strand two runners in scoring position in the third. He exited after holding the Padres to just the lone run on five hits and a walk while striking out six. He had better command and appeared focused two hours before the first pitch, when he sat stern-faced at his locker. "I think that's coming back," said Cain, asked about the mental side. "You're jumping in and out of cities with the rehab part of it. I think that's key for me, to get back on the rou- tine I've always done." The routine at Petco Park is for Cain to take a hard- luck, low-scoring loss. He entered 4-8 here despite a 2.33 ERA in 17 starts. And he was heading for an- other 1-0 loss Wednesday as James Shields threw five shutout innings, striking out Matt Duffy three times — just the second three- strikeout game of Duffy's career, both times in games started by Shields. But the Giants made Shields throw 96 pitches and the Padres lifted him for a pinch hitter in the fifth. With Joaquin Benoit and Craig Kimbrel holding scythes in the Padres bull- pen, the Giants had to treat the sixth and seventh as if they were the eighth and ninth. They put up runs at the right time, as Belt con- nected for a tying, 422-foot shot off right-hander Mar- cus Mateo in the sixth and the Giants rallied for two more runs off Brandon Maurer in the seventh. Belt's shot was his 10th of the season and first in more than a month. He hadn't gone deep since June 20 at Dodger Stadium, a span of 82 at-bats. Angel Pagan singled in the seventh, then Duffy set aside a frustrating day by drawing a two-out walk that impressed Bochy and extended the inning for Posey. He scored them both when Matt Kemp couldn't cut off his line drive down the right field line for a dou- ble. "I feel like all you've got to do is get on base and you're going to score," Duffy said. "Right now, the men- tality is just get on base for him, because he's coming through quite often." To quantify "quite often," Posey is batting .394 with runners in scoring position this season, and a ridicu- lous .476 (20 for 42) in those situations with two outs. Giants FROM PAGE 1 Smog Check (MOST CARS & PICK-UPS) 527-9841 • 195 S. Main St. starting at $ 29 95 + $ 8 25 certificate All makes and models. We perform dealer recommened 30K 60K 90K Service At Lower Prices. Areyoumelting? 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