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B8 Thursday, July 16, 2009

R

Weather

Washington Area Forecast

Today, partly sunny, strong thunderstorms. High 91. Wind west-southwest 8-16 mph. Tonight, partly cloudy, thunderstorm. Low 72. Wind west-south- west 5-10 mph. Friday, partly sunny, spotty thunderstorms. High 90. Wind west-southwest 6-12 mph. Saturday, partly sunny, thunderstorms. High 83. Wind southwest 8-16 mph. Sunday, partly sunny. High 82. Wind west-north- west 8-16 mph. Monday, partly sunny, breezy. High 80. Wind east-northeast 10-20 mph. Tuesday, mostly cloudy, shower, thunderstorm. High 85.

For additional information: www.washingtonpost.com

Long range regional forecasts, Chesapeake Bay boating forecast, recreational and traveler’s forecast, 703-996- 2200. Air Quality Index, 202-962-3299.

BLUE RIDGE MOUNTAINS

Recreational Forecasts

Today, partly sunny, more humid, strong thunderstorm. High 74-88. Wind southwest 4-8 mph. Tonight, partly cloudy, t-storm. Low 60-65. Wind light, variable. Friday, partly sunny, shower, t-storm. High 77-92.

BOATING

Upper Potomac River: Today,

partly sunny, more humid, thunder- storm. High 88. Wind west-south- west 8-16 knots. Waves 1-3 feet.

Lower Potomac and Chesapeake

Bay: Today, partly sunny, shower, thunderstorm. Wind west-southwest 8-16 knots. Waves 2-3 feet. Tonight, partly cloudy.

Air Quality Index (AQI)

Today: Moderate

0 50 100

Yesterday’s main offender:

Ozone, 67

The Nation

City Today

Albany, NY Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Austin

Baltimore

Billings, MT Birmingham Bismarck, ND Boise

Boston Buffalo

Burlington, VT

Tomorrow Next day

80/63 t 80/60 pc 78/62 t 95/68 t 98/70 t 96/69 s 75/58 s 75/57 s 71/56 pc 90/71 t 84/70 t 84/63 pc 100/74 s 101/73 t 94/71 s 90/68 t 88/66 pc 82/64 t 87/58 s 88/59 s 95/63 s 90/71 t 88/69 t 83/62 pc 74/46 s 81/51 s 83/55 s 97/66 s 100/68 s 101/66 s 82/67 t 83/65 pc 79/66 sh 78/60 t 75/58 t 70/58 c 77/58 t 81/61 t 77/61 c

Charleston, SC 90/76 t 93/74 t 93/71 t Charleston, WV 84/61 t 85/60 t 74/56 c Charlotte

Cheyenne, WY 85/54 t 82/53 s 81/56 s Chicago

Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver

Des Moines Detroit

Fairbanks, AK Fargo, ND

Hartford, CT Honolulu Houston

Indianapolis Jackson, MS

92/70 t 88/68 t 85/62 pc 81/61 t 70/56 pc 72/57 pc

86/62 pc 80/59 t 71/54 pc 82/60 pc 75/57 t 69/57 c 103/77 s 102/76 s 92/70 pc 92/57 t 88/55 pc 86/59 s 85/58 t 74/55 s 73/57 s 84/59 pc 77/56 t 72/56 c 75/52 s 81/55 pc 78/56 pc 68/51 s 70/53 s 75/57 s 83/63 t 85/62 pc 82/65 t 88/75 s 89/77 s 88/77 s 96/76 s 95/76 t 94/74 t 86/63 pc 78/57 pc 71/54 pc 94/74 t 91/72 t 86/64 pc

Jacksonville, FL 94/72 t 93/74 t 91/72 pc Kansas City, MO 88/65 t 80/57 s 78/58 s Las Vegas Little Rock

110/83 pc 111/89 pc 110/87 s 96/73 t 93/69 t 86/64 pc

150

ATLANTIC BEACHES

Today, partly sunny, humid, shower, thunderstorm. High 82-92. Wind south-southwest 8-16 mph. Tonight, shower, thunderstorm. Low 70-75. Wind west-southwest 6-12 mph. Friday, party sunny, afternoon thun- derstorm.

River Stages: The river stage on the Potomac River at Little Falls will be 3.0 feet today, holding steady into Friday. Flood stage at Little Falls is 10 feet.

ª Ultra-violet Index (UV)

Today: 6 out of 11+, High

The higher the UV Index number (for solar noon), the greater the need for eye and skin protection.

Pollen Index

Yesterday

Cause Rating

Trees Low Grasses Moderate Weeds Low Molds Low

Louisville Memphis Miami

Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville

New Orleans New York City Norfolk

Philadelphia Phoenix

Pittsburgh

Portland, ME Portland, OR Providence, RI Raleigh, NC Reno, NV Richmond

Sacramento St. Louis

San Francisco San Juan, PR Seattle

Spokane, WA Syracuse Tampa Wichita

High: Low:

Main Offender

Pine, Cedar All

Plantain n/a

Source: Walter Reed Army Medical Center

Los Angeles

86/66 pc 86/66 pc 86/64 pc 84/67 t 85/62 t 76/60 pc 90/75 t 90/68 t 83/64 s 90/81 t 91/81 t 94/81 pc 76/61 s 66/56 pc 70/57 pc 74/55 s 69/56 pc 74/60 s 84/69 t 86/65 t 79/58 s 92/77 t 89/76 t 89/74 t 86/72 t 86/70 pc 79/69 t 92/75 t 86/72 t 86/72 t

Oklahoma City 98/73 t 96/67 s 87/62 pc Omaha Orlando

88/60 t 78/57 s 78/59 s 92/75 t 92/75 t 93/75 pc 88/72 t 88/70 pc 81/66 t 112/90 pc 112/88 pc 114/90 s 84/60 t 78/59 t 72/56 c 77/61 c 79/62 sh 74/62 sh 86/60 pc 89/61 pc 84/59 s 82/67 t 88/67 pc 83/66 sh 92/74 t 89/72 t 89/68 t 98/64 s 98/68 s 98/62 s 90/72 t 90/69 pc 86/64 t 99/61 s 99/61 s 98/60 s 88/69 t 81/59 pc 77/59 s

St. Thomas, VI 91/81 pc 91/79 r 89/79 sh Salt Lake City San Diego

96/66 s 97/69 s 99/71 s 77/68 pc 76/67 pc 76/66 pc 76/57 pc 74/57 pc 72/56 pc 91/79 pc 91/79 pc 89/77 pc 81/56 s 82/58 s 79/56 s 92/60 pc 94/60 s 94/60 s 82/59 t 77/58 t 74/61 t 91/79 t 91/79 t 90/77 pc 94/70 t 88/61 s 88/61 s

Yesterday’s extremes:

(excluding Alaska, Hawaii and the U.S. Territories)

110° Needles, Calif. 30° Stanley, Idaho

90/71 84/58

PARTLY SUNNY

SHOWER OR THUNDERSTORM

78/60 85/66 92/75

STRONG P.M. THUNDERSTORM

82/76 92/74

North American Forecast FOR NOON TODAY

TEMPERATURE RANGE

PRECIPITATION

Showers

Calga

T-storms Rain

Flurries Snow Ice

Seattle Portland Portland

Salt La

San Francisco San Francisco Los Angeles

Honolulu Honolulu Anchorage Anchorage Anchorage JuneaJuneau Juneau

Los Angeles DalDallaslas Phoenix Phoenix Houston MonterreyMonterrey Monterrey HoustonHouston Atlanta New Orleans OrleansOrleans New ew Tampa Tampa MiamiMiami

SOURCES: AccuWeather, Inc.; Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments; American Lung Association; National Weather Service.

Atlanta Charleston Charleston Charleston

Salt City

Lake City

Lake Ci

ke CincinnatCincinnati Denver Denver St. Louis St. Louis Cincinnati Seattle Helena Helena

Rapid City

City

Rapid Ci

Calgary

Calgary Winnipeg Winnipeg Ottawa Ottawa ttawa MplMpls.- St. Paul

St. Paul Mpls.-

s.- Chicago Chicago Chicago Boston

Washington Washington

Boston New York New York ew York Philadelphia Philadelphia

PRESSURE CENTERS

Low

High

FRONTS

Cold Warm Stationary

90/73

n

The Capital Weather Gang blogs about all things weather in the Washington area, on washingtonpost.com/capitalweathergang

Today Friday Saturday Sunday Monday

Official Weather Data

Recorded at local airports through 5 p.m. yesterday

ª Reagan National ª Dulles

Thunderstorms Thunderstorms Thunderstorms Partly sunny

High Low

91° 72°

Today’s Forecast

84/60 82/56 88/64 86/65 90/68 88/64

91/72

86/65 90/72

Annapolis

84/72

86/70

THUNDERSTORMS STRONG

86/71 86/69 88/72

90° 69°

83° 67°

82° 65°

Partly sunny

80° 67°

For current weather conditions, go to www.washingtonpost.com

86/72

Apparent Temp.

Comfort index combines temperature and humidity .... 87°

Cooling Degree Days

An index of fuel con- sumption indicating how many degrees the aver- age temperature rose above 65 for the day. If a day’s average tem- perature were 75, there would be 10 ‘degree days’ for the date.

Wednesday ..........12 This month .........148 This season ........548 Normal to yesterday ..........651 Last season ........709

40° 60° 80° 100° 120°

PAST TEN DAYS

Precipitation almanac

Previous twelve months

10"

0" 2" 4" 6" 8"

TEN-DAY FORECAST Actual Normal

Temperature

High Low

Normal Records

88° at 3:04 p.m. 65° at 6:00 a.m. 88°/70°

High: 100° in 1988 Low: 56° in 1895

Precipitation

Past 24 hours Total this month Normal month to date Total this year Normal to date

Relative humidity

Max. Min.

None 0.13” 1.75” 23.26” 20.91”

68% at 8:00 a.m. 33% at 1:00 p.m.

Barometric pressure

High Low

Temperature trend

Actual and forecast

30.17” 30.04”

Normal

89° at 3:29 p.m. 59° at 6:00 a.m. 87°/64° 98° in 1995 53° in 1981

None 0.05” 1.79” 26.52” 22.67”

83% at 6:00 a.m. 30% at 1:00 p.m.

30.17” 30.04”

Record

ª BWI

88° at 2:10 p.m. 58° at 5:33 a.m. 87°/66°

102° in 1995 57° in 1999

None 0.37” 1.84” 25.17” 22.58”

80% at 5:00 a.m. 30% at 2:00 p.m.

30.17” 30.03”

Solar system

Sun

Moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Rise 5:56 a.m. Set 8:32 p.m. Rise 12:29 a.m. Set 3:06 p.m. Rise 6:08 a.m. Set 8:49 p.m. Rise 3:03 a.m. Set 5:27 p.m. Rise 2:22 a.m. Set 4:47 p.m. Rise 10:07 p.m. Set 8:41 a.m. Rise 10:23 a.m. Set 11:12 p.m. Rise 11:23 p.m. Set 11:15 a.m.

Moon phases

July 21

New

J A S O N D J

Washington Annapolis Ocean City Norfolk

Today’s tides High tides are in bold face 10:01 a.m.

2:36 a.m. 4:03 a.m.

Point Lookout 3:29 a.m.

The World

City Today

Addis Ababa

Amsterdam Athens

Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Berlin

Brussels

Buenos Aires Cairo

Caracas

Copenhagen Dakar Dublin

Edinburgh Frankfurt Geneva

F M A M J

12:17 a.m. 7:21 a.m. 11:51 a.m. 5:48 p.m. 2:10 a.m. 8:26 a.m. 10:09 a.m.

4:41 p.m.

7:55 a.m. 1:56 p.m.

Tomorrow Next day

67/58 t 63/59 r 62/59 r 75/64 s 66/57 r 64/57 sh 93/79 s 97/77 s 97/77 s 63/52 sh 57/47 r 53/50 sh 103/71 s 110/73 s 113/76 s 90/79 t 90/79 t 91/80 t 95/72 s 79/69 r 90/73 s 81/63 pc 88/63 pc 66/54 r 79/64 pc 65/53 t 63/49 sh 55/43 pc 61/46 s 61/50 pc 98/74 s 98/76 s 101/76 s 82/71 t 82/71 t 83/71 t 75/62 s 78/67 pc 69/61 r 85/73 c 88/80 s 89/82 s 63/52 r 63/50 pc 64/52 sh 66/53 c 62/49 r 66/50 s 84/66 pc 75/53 r 61/51 r 87/62 s 63/54 t 67/51 r

Ham., Bermuda 82/75 t 82/75 t 84/77 s Helsinki

Ho Chi Minh City 85/75 r 87/75 t 87/76 r Hong Kong Islamabad Istanbul

Jerusalem

Johannesburg Kabul

75/54 pc 73/54 s 75/57 pc 87/82 sh 87/82 sh 91/82 sh

106/84 t 103/84 pc 104/82 s 82/75 sh 91/75 s 93/75 s 80/61 s 84/62 s 86/63 s 56/30 s 58/32 s 58/34 s 103/62 s 103/63 s 102/65 s

Kingston, Jam. 88/77 pc 91/79 sh 89/78 s Kolkata Lagos Lima

94/81 pc

Lisbon London Madrid Manila

96/82 sh 100/87 t

83/74 r 82/75 r 80/73 r 73/60 s 72/60 s 74/60 s 79/61 s 82/63 s 84/66 s 73/57 pc 66/54 r 70/59 s 95/64 s 88/61 s 90/61 s 83/78 r 83/77 t 83/77 r

Mexico City Montreal Moscow Mumbai Nairobi

New Delhi Oslo

Ottawa Paris

Prague

Rio de Janeiro Riyadh Rome

Santiago

San Salvador Sarajevo Seoul

Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei Tehran Tokyo

Toronto Vienna

Warsaw

High: Low:

11:17 p.m.

9:15 p.m.

84/78 r

3:10 p.m. 9:36 p.m. 2:56 p.m. 9:23 p.m.

First Quarter

July 28

Aug 5

Full

Last Quarter

Aug 13

79/55 t 79/54 t 74/53 t 73/61 t 72/59 t 72/61 sh 80/59 s 81/58 pc 82/63 s 83/79 r

89/82 r

77/53 c 78/52 c 78/52 pc 98/82 t 100/84 s 95/82 t 72/56 sh 73/63 pc 70/61 sh 77/58 t 75/59 t 72/60 pc 84/64 s 70/52 sh 73/55 c 84/59 pc 86/59 s 63/55 r 76/67 pc 80/70 pc 80/66 s 104/79 s 101/79 pc 101/80 pc 91/70 s 90/68 s 81/63 s 68/43 s 64/39 pc 57/36 c 90/70 s 89/74 s 88/74 t 85/54 t 87/53 t 81/41 sh 83/64 pc 82/72 r 88/68 r 89/79 c 90/79 pc 95/82 pc 85/79 t 88/77 t 86/79 t 73/59 pc 75/63 pc 77/66 pc 61/46 sh 62/44 s 63/42 s 90/79 c 90/80 pc 91/79 sh 101/84 s 102/85 s 101/84 s 86/77 pc 85/76 pc 84/73 c 78/57 pc 76/55 t 70/57 c 89/69 s 92/65 s 68/53 r 82/61 pc 84/59 pc 88/57 r

Yesterday’s extremes (excluding Antarctica):

118° Adam, Oman -1° Summit Station, Greenland

NOTE: These are the predicted high/low temperatures and forecasts, through 5 p.m. Eastern time.

Weather abbreviations are: s-Sunny, pc-Partly

Cloudy, c-Cloudy, r-Rain, sh-Showers, t-Thunderstorms, sf-Snow Flurries, sn-Snow, i-Ice. All temperatures are given in degrees Fahrenheit.

The Washington Post

The Region

EPISCOPAL CHURCH

Move to Allow Ordination Of Gay Bishops Stirs Debate

By William Wan

Washington Post Staff Writer

Anglicans in Northern Virginia

were divided yesterday over a deci- sion by the U.S. wing of the church to allow for the ordination of gay bishops.

The Rev. Martyn Minns of Fair- fax City, the leader of a group of conservative congregations that broke three years ago from the U.S. Episcopal Church, said he has been talking to church leaders who have remained in the fold but are struggling with the decision about ordination.

“I think the number of churches leaving could very well change be- cause of this,” Minns said. The Rt. Rev. Shannon S. John- ston, who will become bishop of the Diocese of Virginia on Oct. 1, disagrees.

Those inclined to leave the church have done so, Johnston said. “Things are the same now as it was a week ago. Our church’s witness is the same now as be- fore.”

The resolution passed over- whelmingly Tuesday night at the church’s national convention in Anaheim, Calif. The wording ad- dresses “gays and lesbians in life- long committed relationships,” saying that “God has called and may call such individuals to any or- dained ministry in the Episcopal Church.”

The decision replaces a resolu- tion from 2006 that urged Episco- pal leaders not to elect gay bishops in an attempt to defuse tensions. Bishop Peter J. Lee, whom Johnston is replacing in Virginia, voted for the resolution. So did the diocese’s suffragan bishop, David C. Jones. Johnston voted no — not because he disagreed with the res- olution, he said, but because of concerns that it would further roil the rocky relationship between the U.S. Episcopal Church and its An- glican brethren in other countries. Since the openly gay V. Gene Robinson was elected bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hamp- shire in 2003, the issue of ordain- ing homosexuals has divided the Anglican Communion, a loose affil-

iation of 77 million people. A num- ber of parishes and dioceses have left the 2.3 million member Episco- pal Church and have become affili- ated with overseas branches of the Anglican Communion. Last month, some conservatives who left the Episcopal Church over issues of Scripture and sexuality formed the Anglican Church in North America. Northern Virginia has been one of the most contentious battle- grounds. Several churches have be- come mired in legal issues after congregations that voted to break from the Episcopal Church sought to keep church properties worth tens of millions of dollars. Archbishop of Canterbury Row-

an Williams, the preeminent Angli- can clergyman, has said that legis- lation rehashing the issue of or- daining gay clergy could put the communion in “grave peril.” Church representatives at the Ana- heim convention, which ends to- morrow, are debating whether to create liturgical rites to bless same-sex unions. But it is hard to say what effect the controversy will have on the typical churchgoer.

“I think for many in the local churches, they don’t like or under- stand the conflict,” said William Sachs, an Episcopal scholar and author in Richmond. “For them, the local church is supposed to be a place of sanity. So what may hap- pen is simply the diminishing pow- er of the national church as people lose interest in its continued fights.” For Sandra Kirkpatrick, whose church in Heathsville, Va., was torn apart over the conflict, the vote in Anaheim probably won’t change much. Since her congrega- tion split, members sympathetic to having gay clergy created a Sunday worship service. Congregants met in borrowed space at a nearby Methodist church and later moved to a member’s home.

“It’s been a tough issue for

many,” she said. “I think there are a lot of people out there who want a resolution, but it doesn’t seem like it’s going to come anytime soon.”

Regional Briefing

EDUCATION

Virginia Home-Schoolers Can Seek State Aid

Home-schoolers in Virginia are now eligible for state financial aid that they were previously not allowed to receive. The Virginia Guaranteed Assistance Program, which provides need-based scholarships for tuition, fees and books at the state’s two- and four-year public institutions, required recipients to have graduated from high school with at least a 2.5 grade-point aver- age.

The state’s approximately 30,000 home-schoolers were ineligi- ble for the aid, which offered an average grant of $3,671 in the 2007-08 school year.

Under rules the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia

approved this week, home-schoolers may qualify by submitting SAT scores of at least 900 and ACT scores of at least 19. The rules were mandated by SB-1547, a bill sponsored by state

Sen. Ken Cuccinelli II (R-Fairfax) that became law in May. Cucci- nelli, whose children are home-schooled, is running for state attor- ney general.

State officials do not expect significantly more students to seek aid as a result of the rule change, said Lee Andes, associate direc- tor of financial aid for the council. Students who receive a GED instead of a high school diploma are still not eligible for the program, he said.

— Emma Brown

TRANSPORTATION

Takoma Station to Close Today, Saturday

Metro announced last night that the Takoma Station will close

from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. today and from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday. The closures will allow the National Transportation Safety Board to conduct site-distance tests on the section of Red Line track between Fort Totten and Takoma where a June 22 crash killed nine people and injured 80.

During the closure, Metro will shuttle passengers by bus among Takoma, Fort Totten and Silver Spring.

— James Hohmann

Regional Board Endorses Bus System Request

An ambitious proposal to seek nearly $276 million in federal stimulus to create a regional bus way system yesterday won the support of the National Capital Region Transportation Planning Board, a panel of elected officials from Virginia, Maryland and the District that coordinates transit initiatives.

The board authorized staff members to refine and submit a bid for some of the $1.5 billion available as part of the stimulus spend- ing on transportation. The plan must be submitted by September, and the funding is reserved for projects that can be completed by 2012.

More than $400 million would have to come from local, state and other federal sources to complete a system that would allow buses to move swiftly from a revamped K Street corridor and out into the suburbs using HOV lanes, dedicated bus lanes, electronics to switch traffic lights in their favor and various other ways to by- pass congestion. The federal stimulus request was pared down from $412 million yesterday, and staff members said they expect to make further adjustments as evaluate each component of the plan.

— Ashley Halsey III

AAA: Don’t Close Virginia Rest Stops

The American Automobile Association weighed in yesterday on the delicate but controversial issue of how far is too far to go with- out a bathroom break, urging Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine (D) to abandon plans to close 19 of the state’s highway rest stops to save money.

In announcing the plan this month, state officials said they had concluded that one rest stop every 120 miles was just about right. AAA issued a statement yesterday saying that was nonsense and could be dangerous if drivers stop on shoulders or seek to relieve themselves in a bottle while driving, a practice the group said was becoming increasingly common. “Talk about distracted and dangerous driving. I would not want to share the road with an overtired driver who is trying to relieve themselves in a bottle while driving 65 miles per hour,” said Mar- tha M. Meade, manager of public and government affairs for AAA Mid-Atlantic.

Eighteen rest stops are scheduled to close next week. The last, on Interstate 66 in Manassas, is to close Sept. 16. “This wasn’t an easy decision. We’re facing a $2.9 million budg- et gap,” said Jeff Caldwell of the Virginia Department of Transpor- tation.

— Ashley Halsey III

LAW ENFORCEMENT

Montgomery Rescuers Search for Swimmer

Montgomery County rescue crews were expected to continue their search this morning for a 32-year-old man last seen in the Po- tomac River on Tuesday afternoon. Rescue workers were called to the riverbank near the Old An- gler’s Inn at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday. A man told them that he and a friend had tried to swim across the Potomac but that he last saw his friend in the water about 3:15 p.m., said Assistant Chief Scott Graham, spokesman for the Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Service. It was unclear why the friend waited so long to call 911, said Graham, who declined to identify the missing swimmer. Graham warned people not to swim in the area, even when the current looks safe. Large rocks can trap swimmers under water. “It’s dan- gerous. It’s deadly,” Graham said.

— Dan Morse

GOVERNMENT

WSSC Commissioners Elect Chairman

Gene Counihan, a Montgomery County representative on the

Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission’s board of commis- sioners, was elected chairman of the panel yesterday, the agency said.

Counihan, a state delegate from 1983 to 1995, has served as a commissioner since 2007. He was selected unanimously by the WSSC board, which is made up of three members each from Mont- gomery and Prince George’s County. The WSSC provides water and sewer services to 1.8 million customers in the counties. Counihan said finding money to replace the agency’s aging underground pipes will be a top priority. The water pipes have been breaking in record numbers in recent years.

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