Saturday, March 26, 2011
IN MEMORY OF GERALDINE FERRARO: AN EDITORIAL ABOUT WOMEN ELECTED TO FEDERAL OFFICE
The voters of the USA have been notoriously slow in electing women to government. Montana elected the first female rep in 1916.
Georgia appointed a woman senator for a full day in 1922.
Arkansas appointed a woman senator in 1931, then elected that woman the first female elected senator in 1932. Senator Hattie Caraway served in that seat from 1931 to 1944.
President Franklin Roosevelt appointed Frances Perkins as the first female cabinet secretary in 1933. In 1940, Wendell Willkie was the Republican sacrificial lamb against Roosevelt’s third term. Roosevelt was so popular that he could have and should have nominated Perkins for vice president in 1940. She would have, in the long view, probably proved less problematical politically to Roosevelt than his almost socialist Vice President Henry Wallace.
In 1944, the Democratic convention might have replaced her with Harry Truman anyway. The delegates that year assumed that the vice president nominee would soon become president either through the death of or resignation of Roosevelt: the typical political men of that era might have balked at a women vice president when she had an even chance of becoming president. Still Roosevelt could have made the historic selection in 1940.
Ike appointed the next female cabinet secretary in 1953.
In 1960 or in 1968, Nixon could have selected Senator Margaret Smith as his VP running mate. Johnson could have selected Senator Neuberger in 1964. But no. We got Humphrey and we got Agnew, and we find it hard to fathom how Smith or Neuberger could have been worse.
Gerald Ford appointed the third female cabinet secretary in 1975.
Walter Mondale became the Democratic sacrificial lamb candidate against Ronald Reagan’s reelection in 1984. He selected Geraldine Ferraro Zaccaro as his vice president running mate in 1984, despite her minimal experience as a representative from Queens, New York. He had few options for this gimmick. At that time, both women senators were Republican, and the one Democrat woman governor of Kentucky had less experience that Mrs. Zaccaro.
It took 24 full years for a presidential candidate to choose another female vice president candidate. This time, a Republican candidate selected a female vice presidential candidate. Heaven only knows if a female veep candidate would have really improved John McCain’s chances as a presidential candidate, especially if he had selected a female veep of substance, someone like Senators Kay Bailey-Hutchinson or Olympia Snowe or a Republican female governor with more than a year and a half of experience. Instead he decided to select a gimmick: she can be best described as a inexperienced loose canon from Alaska by the named Sarah Palin.
In 220 years, major parties selected only 2 women VP nominees. It’s a pathetic historical record.
Utah may have given the vote to women in 1870, and elected its first woman state senator in 1896, but its record of female office holders remains substandard in other ways.
A woman lieutenant governor assumed the governorship in November 2003, and the Republican old boys network went to some length to get rid of her. Years later when a male lieutenant governor named Gary Herbert assumed the governorship from retiring Jon Huntsman, he got renominated and reelected. Not Olene Walker. Wrong gender apparently for the Republican convention.
Utah elected a woman to the U S House of Representatives as early as 1948, but has in total elected only 3 women to the House since 1896. It has elected no female U S senator.
THE CALL TO ACTION
Utah should amend its state Constitution requiring one male U S senator and one female U S senator.
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
BYU BASKETBALL: FEET OF CLAY
Brandon Davies came as a bolt out of the blue, but the timing of his dereliction hardly comes as a real surprise.
Dick Harmon tried to justify BYU's official reaction to the Davies situation, but wound up making it sound as if Brandon had been caught wearing explosive underwear at an airport:
News of Brandon Davies' dismissal comes at dramatic time for Cougars
Deseret News
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/700114716/News-of-Brandon-Davies-dismissal-comes-at-dramatic-time-for-Cougars.html
Published: Wednesday, March 2, 2011 12:41 a.m. MST
Dick Harmon, Deseret News
PROVO — Brandon Davies and BYU basketball separated for the season Tuesday.
And it has been a dandy of a season.
The shocking news couldn't have come at a more dramatic time for Dave Rose and his basketball program. It came one day after the Cougars attained a lofty No. 3 national ranking and the week BYU could win the Mountain West Conference title outright. It comes just when the national media declared the Cougars are in the hunt for a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament — the Davies news landed like a bomb.
Tonight, when the Cougars host the only league team that has defeated them, New Mexico, we will see how Rose, his staff and the team respond, both emotionally and strategically.
Make no mistake about it; the loss of Davies is a huge blow. His skill set, the tremendous impact he's had this late in the season in rebounding, blocks and scoring points will be missed.
The quickness to which BYU officials reacted to its investigation of Davies and his issue with the school's honor code means this wasn't a trivial issue. It wasn't probation; it was not an item that could be put off for a few weeks; it was a violation that required decisive and immediate action.
Yet again, the Honor Code Office has taken a major public stand against sloppy morals at BYU at the worst possible moment for all concerned.
The Cougar boys found themselves playing a major game on the very day the bombshell dropped. They rose to the occasion by falling apart. Completely. Even the Deseret News had trouble gilding the fast fading lily:
BYU basketball:
Lobos thrash Cougars, 82-64
Deseret News
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/700115004/BYU-basketball-Lobos-thrash-Cougars-82-64.html
Jeff Call Deseret News
Published: Wednesday, March 2, 2011 10:05 p.m. MST
BYU-UNM boxscore
PROVO — This wasn't the way BYU wanted to show the NCAA Selection Committee how it plays without Brandon Davies.
In the No. 3 Cougars' first game without their sophomore forward, who was suspended for the remainder of the season on Tuesday, they were trounced by New Mexico, 82-64, Wednesday night at the Marriott Center.
PROVO — This wasn't the way BYU wanted to show the NCAA Selection Committee how it could play without Brandon Davies.
In the No. 3 Cougars' first game without their sophomore forward, who was suspended for the remainder of the season on Tuesday for violating the University's Honor Code, they were trounced by New Mexico, 82-64, Wednesday night at the Marriott Center.
BYU (27-3, 13-2) opened the week as a strong contender to receive a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament while earning its highest ranking in 23 years.
Since losing Davies for the season, BYU is 0-1. Against the hot-shooting Lobos, the Cougars looked nothing like a third-ranked team in the nation and nothing like a No. 1 seed.
The Cougars, who have lost for straight to the Lobos, also squandered an opportunity to clinch a share of the Mountain West Conference championship.
BYU and San Diego State, which defeated Wyoming Tuesday, are tied for first-place once again in the league standings, just days after the Cougars knocked off the Aztecs in San Diego.
BYU was never really in the game Wednesday, shooting a miserable 26 percent in the first half. The Lobos came out on fire, grabbing an early 15-4 advantage. They led by as many as 19 in the first half and took a 42-26 lead at the half.
In the second half, UNM didn't let up and built a 24-point lead.
Jimmer Fredette scored a game-high 33 points for BYU, while UNM's Phillip McDonald poured in a team-high 26 points.
© 2011 Deseret News Publishing Company | All rights reserved
As a result of the 2 March developments, the coaches, the boosters, the dyed-in-the-wool Cougars will now heap up more pressure on The Jimmer's broad shoulders. He must uphold the image of clean-cut, virtuous Mormon youth and to restore the Cougar-brand winning streak. Now. It will be fascinating to see what will happen first.
Will the Cougar season end first?
Or will The Jimmer snap emotionally and start ranting -- Charlie-Sheen-like -- on radio talk shows that he is a an F-15E?
The BYU Honor Code claims another victim. The Cougar Basketball Community -- not so much Brandon -- will suffer the most in the final analysis.
I suspect BYU authorities and administration believe it is in the best interest of their power for the BYU teams to have losing seasons. After all, BYU administrators, coaches, bishops, and stake presidents cannot exhort us that sterling character comes from enduring tribulation and losing gracefully like gentlemen --- if we win consistently and to the triumphant end.
Speculation for a stormy night: if Jimmer had warned his coaches and his team that he would resign from the team if the Honor bureaucracy removed any of his basketball star teammates -- Brandon's troubles would have been miraculously discovered after the season. If at all. However, that sort of determination and honor hardly gets a mention in the BYU Honor Code.
Sunday, February 27, 2011
AN EDITORIAL ABOUT WHAT CENSUS POPULATION FIGURES SUGGEST ABOUT "STATE'S RIGHTS" AND INTERNAL BOUNDARIES
I worked for the 2010 Census Local Census Office 3147 Provo last year. I have studied with interest the latest census information released on 24 February. I am writing this editorial to report some of the facts and make some recommendations based on them.
NATIONALITY
13 percent of Utah is Hispanic. KUER News reported on 25 February that when we add those Hispanics who describe themselves as white, the percentage is 20. That does not surprise me. At LCO 3147, I did a lot of double checking of documents, and the south of the border names lay pretty thick on the tables no matter what people listed as nationalistic or racial distinctions. This should give the Republicans pause in enacting any heavy handed immigration legislation. The US - Mexico boundary was drawn back in 1853 and hardly reflects current demographic reality any more. But that's another editorial.
THE CALL TO ACTION
The only difference between you and me and an “illegal alien” happens to be bureaucratic paper work. the federal government make acquiring that paperwork too complicated and too expensive. Congress should reform that particular process and quickly.
2010 POPULATION NUMBERS
Utah has 2,764,000 residents.
1,030,000 people reside in Salt Lake County.
516,564 reside in Utah County.
306,500 reside in Davis County, that narrow strip of land between the Wasatch, the Great Salt Lake, Salt Lake City, and Ogden.
232,000 reside in Weber County.
138,000 residents call Washington County their first home, not including the people who have second homes in the county. The Census did not count second-home owners in Washington County. Nearly 185,000 reside in Washington-Iron Counties.
Barely a 1000 people live in Daggett County. 1500 residents live in Piute County. Not quite 2800 people reside in Wayne County.
ANOTHER CALL TO ACTION
These numbers suggest to me the Utah legislature should address these items next year -- if not this year.
1) Utah now has 4 representatives to the United State House of Representatives. One district should be a completely rural district centering on Logan and Saint George. One district should center on Utah County. One district should center on an undivided Salt Lake City. The legislature should not divide West Jordan and West Valley City into multiple districts.
The legislature will have to divide Salt Lake County between 2 house districts – but it should not divide it between more than 2 districts. All of Salt Lake City should be in one house district. All of West Valley City should be in one house district. All of West Jordan should be in one house district.
Dividing Salt Lake City and Salt Lake County into three or four districts - - again - - will not do. If Republicans cannot defeat Jim Matheson on the issues, they should not try to defeat him by drawing Gerrymandering lines on the Utah map.
2) The population of Utah’s counties suggest to me that Utah’s internal boundaries have become completely outdated. Utah subdivides 2,764,000 Utahns among 29 counties. Not 25. Not 30. 29. The population is not srpread out evenly among the counties. The legislature should modernize the county structure by creating 10 to 15 counties with populations of 150,000 to 300,000. 10 - 15 counties of roughly comparable population would have larger tax bases to fund and do more services currently done federally or by Utah state.
THE PROBLEM OF OUTDATED INTERNAL BOUNDARIES IS NOT EXCLUSIVE TO UTAH
Utah is not alone in having internal boundaries that are now completely out of date with modern demographics.
Nevada
The Census website illustrates with population facts that Nevada’s counties lines hardly reflect current reality. Nevada has over 2,700,000 residents, which means Nevada and Utah now have roughly the same population. However, almost 2,000,000 of Nevada’s residents live in one county – Clark County – at the very southern tip of Nevada. Over 400,000 people live at the very western end of Nevada. And that leaves the remaining 300,000 citizens plus or minus spread out through the middle of rural Nevada. Clark County has nearly 2,000,000 residents and nearly Esmeralda County has just under 800 residents. Esmeralda County is somewhat smaller than Clark County, but it is not a small county.
Colorado
Colorado also has an internal structure that does not reflect current reality. Metropolitan Denver is divided up among 5 counties, ranging in populations from 400,000 to 600,000. Colorado also has two adjoining counties in San Juan mountain country that both have under 900 residents each.
Texas
Texas illustrates better than most states how Americans have let most of our internal boundaries become obsolete. For starters, Texas is the second largest state both in terms of population and in size. It also has the most counties of any state in the union as well – 254. 4,000,000 people live in Harris County. And no fewer than 5 counties have less than a thousand residents: A little more than 900 people live in Roberts County. 700 residents live in McMullen County, 416 people live in Kennedy County, whopping 286 people live in King County. A whopping 82 people live in Loving County, Texas – the least populated county anywhere in the USA.
Texas has 25,000,000 million residents – represented in Washington by just two senators. What we now call "Texas" would have better representation and would be more efficiently managed if it were multiple states of say 5,000,000 to 7,000,000 residents.
Houston-Harris County and a few counties around it should be a city-state.
Dallas - Fort Worth - Arlington - and some of the counties surrounding that metroplex should be another city state.
San Antonio and surrounding counties should be a state of 7,000,000 population.
El Paso-Cuidad Juarez, the biggest double city along the Mexican-Texas boundary, should be some sort of consolidated city state, affiliated either with Mexico or the USA. The boundary running through the two lobes of the city only encourages crime to festering and flourish.
As to what the 2010 Census reveals about Texas counties: 4,000,000 plus in a county on the high end. 82 on the other. If Texans are serious about “states rights,” Texas for a start should consolidate the remaining counties into roughly equal units of 200,000 to 300,000, so they all have a solid tax base to fund county services.
THE CALL TO ACTION
I discussed in this editorial the outdated boundaries of Utah because I live in Utah. I discussed the outdated boundaries of Nevada, Colorado, and Texas because the Census 2010 released demographic and population facts about those states.
These days, many politicians who resent federal “intrusion” and federal taxation tout respecting the states rights of the 50 internal divisions of the USA. However, leadership both state and federal have not updated the internal boundaries to reflect current reality, and thus many of the counties are either too big or too small to provide services efficiently. The legislatures should act to divide up their citizens into better counties of about 150,000, 200,000 or 300,000 populations.
Monday, February 7, 2011
OPEN LETTER TO LOCAL LEADERS ON THE SUBJECT OF THE SECOND AMENDMENT AND WEAPONS CONTROL
We all have the right to hunt and to self-defense, but the Second Amendment never did address those issues. English common law did.
Here I reproduce an open letter I sent to various Utah leaders and federal Utah representatives on the subject of the Second Amendment and weapons control.
INTRODUCTION RATIONALE
After the Tucson killing outrage, certain Utah leaders talked about increasing gun availability and wearing concealed weapons when they met with constituents. What a pretty picture of civility that paints.
It did not seem to occur to any of them to promote the use and research-improvement of non-lethal weaponry. I suspect their fascination with guns must have something to do with the sexiness or violence of them.
BACKGROUND
Currently, The Second Amendment guarantees the right of a citizen to stop a person from shedding the citizen’s blood by giving the citizen the means to kill or disable the person. Instead of the person bearing responsibility for shedding the citizen’s blood, the citizen gets to take responsibility for killing the person. This really does not open up much by way of a choice.
The Second Amendment guarantees the exercise of power and dominion in militias.
The Amendment barely made sense in the 1790s when police forces did not exist, and many citizens lived in insolation or small villages. In those days the weapons were primitive. One had to load the powder, then the shot, and maybe the weapon would fire correctly and maybe hit someone if one was a good shot under pressure. And maybe not.
Now the military industrial complex builds bigger, more sophisticated, and deadly weapons. One person can do a lot of mayhem without much effort. Unfortunately, many merchants happily sell automatic weapons to just anyone who has the money. Thus the atrocity that occurred in the Tucson Safeway parking lot is not one of those things that just happens. There are cause and effects; there are reasons why.
The Second Amendment is not about hunting. English common law addressed that topic in 1791.
The Second Amendment is not about self defense. English common law covered that as well. English common law has no bearing on American life anymore.
As a result, gun enthusiasts hang their rights on an amendment that has nothing relevant about twenty-first century conditions.
THE CALL TO ACTION
1 Both the Utah Legislature and Congress should encourage research-improvement on non-lethal weaponry.
2 Congress and The States really should replace the outdated Second Amendment with two new amendments.
One should address the limits of American military power, including limits on soldiers’ minimum ages and on conscription.
The other should guarantee the right of citizens to self defense with non-lethal weaponry.
3 I urge you to help create and pass a new local law requiring gun owners to buy insurance for their guns. The gun owners, not the governments, then pay for cleaning up messes caused by misuse of guns.
4 I urge you to help create and pass another new local law requiring people who want to buy guns and/or concealed weapons to submit four notarized affidavits. Those documents should specifically endorse, for the public record, prospective gun owners as law-abiding, mentally, emotionally, physically competent to own and use a gun. Government should charge people with perjury if they lie. All four should have to agree.
Your reply for the record will be appreciated by
NEW RIGHT ASCENSION
RUTH HARDY FUNK IN MEMORIAM
Former LDS Young Women president Ruth Funk dies at home
Deseret News
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/705366067/Former-LDS-Young-Women-president-Ruth-Funk-dies-at-home.html
Wendy Leonard Deseret News
Published: Sunday, Feb. 6, 2011 11:14 p.m. MST
SALT LAKE CITY — Avid pianist, choir leader, high school music teacher and former LDS Young Women General President Ruth Hardy Funk, died at her home on Saturday, nearly a week before her 94th birthday.
Funk, who led the young women of the LDS Church from 1972 to 1978, was an esteemed pianist who taught lessons and accompanied many throughout her years. She also led hundreds in choirs and classes at East High School from 1969 to 1972.
She was born in Chicago and raised in Salt Lake City, her father often encouraging her to learn tough pieces to play on the piano. According to a 2010 interview with The Mormon Women Project, Funk said she mastered Mendelssohn's Rondo Capriccioso at age 14, and it became her "signature piece."
She later played in her home for esteemed guests like Helen Keller, and took lessons from Leopold Godowsky.
Funk served as a student-body officer at both East High School, when she was a student there, and at the University of Utah, where she graduated with a degree in music in 1938. After marrying Marcus C. Funk in the Salt Lake Temple that same year, the couple moved to Chicago where he attended dental school at Northwestern University.
Upon returning to Salt Lake City, then-LDS Church President Harold B. Lee asked Funk to head the general board of the young women's Mutual Improvement Association. It was under her direction that the organization became an auxiliary to the priesthood for a time and changed its name to the Young Women program of the Church.
Funk was also instrumental in rewriting many lesson manuals and developing the YW's Personal Progress program. She served with Hortense Hogan Child Smith as her first counselor and Ardeth Greene Kapp, as second counselor in the presidency.
In 2009, President Thomas S. Monson honored Funk for her service at a special Church luncheon. Mary N. Cook, first counselor in the Young Women general presidency, said this about Funk: "Always an optimist and with an incredible zest for living, she has shared that zeal with countless children and youth. She is known for her love of music and youth and those two loves were often combined during her service."
Funk was also a member of the Utah State Board of Education from 1985 to 1992, where she served as chairman for a year. She also served as the chairman of the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women in Utah and as a board member for Bonneville International Corporation.
Funk was preceded in death by her husband, parents, three brothers and a grandson, and is survived by her four children, 19 grandchildren and 39 great-grandchildren.
A funeral will be held Friday, Feb. 18, at 11 a.m., at the Parley's 3rd Ward, 2625 Stringham Ave. A viewing will be held Feb. 17, from 6 to 8 p.m., at Larkin Sunset Mortuary, 2350 E. 1300 South.
© 2011 Deseret News Publishing Company
Ruth Funk was and did a great deal more than this – as explained by these paragraphs from Robert Gottlieb and Peter Wiley’s 1984 LDS history book: America’s Saints (pp. 195-197)
[In the 1960s], “most church members missed Correlation’s fundamental ideological character, which centered on the role of woman, the family , and their relation to the overall leadership structures and politics of the church.
“That ideological character was understood at the outset by Harold B. Lee.
“Harold B Lee had this sense of social breakdown, declared Ruth Funk, one of Lee’s key female assistants in the Correlation movement and later president of the YMMIA-AP during the Lee presidency. “He saw the breakdown of the nuclear family. Television wa also coming into play, and he could see how that might undermine traditional family roles and the danger that television might take us away from the gospel. His premise from the start was that Correlation strengthens the family." . . .
{concerning the priesthood taking direct correlation oversight-leadership of female auxiliaries in the 1960s} -- drs
“For so many years,” Ruth Funk declared, “the auxiliaries had maintained this attitude of possessiveness. Funk recalled that even while program activities were being restructured, auxiliary leaders such as Relief Society president Belle Spafford, literally would say about Funk, the emissary of the Correlation Committee, ‘Who’s that little young punk telling me what to do.”
. . .
{Ruth Funk, Harold B Lee’s correlation emissary during the 1960s, president of the YMMIA / YM-AP in the 1970s, got caught in the mid-1970s in a growing interest in “consciousness-raising” that primarily centered around a minority group of educated professional women in the church.
After Harold B. Lee died, her position became suddenly insecure; here’s why} – drs
“An informal gathering of about 25 women, most connected in one way or another with the Young Women’s group, began meeting, initially to discuss the work of that organization. Those meetings soon became kind of consciousness-raising sessions.
[a member who belonged to a “prominent Mormon family” described it: ]
“Less than a third of the people there would have called themselves feminists. They had open and honest talks. There was some griping about the way some General Authorities treated women, and they also talked about the overall relations of men and women in the church.”
When word of the meetings drifted back to the General Authorities, the reaction was swift. The meetings were immediately terminated, and Funk’s position became less secure, despite the fact that she had always remained a loyal defender of the church line on women. Not too long after, Funk was released from her position, primarily for other reasons. Nevertheless, it was clear that even such tentative, informal, unofficial gatherings as those threatened the church authorities, compounding their fears about they perceived to be attacks on church authority and the priesthood.”
Thursday, January 27, 2011
THE OFFICIAL UTAH STATE WEAPON -- AN OPEN LETTER TO SENATORS WADDOUPS, BUTTARS, AND DAYTON
Dear Senators Waddoups, Buttars and Dayton:
I will try to express my indignation politely.
Utah's House remains immune to facts and good taste.
Exhibit: the House’s designation on 26 January of an official Utah state Browning firearm.
This act is an embarrassment, but why stop here? Utah's legislature could designate an official Utah state assault weapon or an official Utah state bomb.
I suspect some of our more manly conservatives want an official Utah firearm to counterbalance the Utah state flower: we don’t want to give the impression we are pansies.
A veteran friend with medic experience in Iraq tells me the legislature should have selected the M2 50 caliber heavy machine gun. Browning designed in during and after The First World War, and it is still used today. If the legislature plans to embarrass Utah, at least go big.
I write sarcastically, of course. Sort of.
THE CALL TO ACTION
The Second Amendment is an out of date problem. We should be encouraging the federal Congress to replace it with two updated defense amendments. The legislature should not ennoble the Second Amendment with an official Utah firearm. I urge you and the state senators not to vote in favor of an official Utah firearm.
Friday, January 7, 2011
WEATHER SUMMARY AT MY HOUSE ON GRANDVIEW HILL PROVO
Second Half of 2010
July 2010
Lowest overnight temperature: 49 (unusual 40ish July low temperature) on 3 July
Highest daytime temperature: 101 (only 100+high temperature in 2010) on 16 July
Fourth week -- 58 > 97
Fifth week -- 59 > 96
August 2010
Low overnight temperature: 48 on 24 August
High daytime temperature: 95 on 2 - 3 Aug
Warmest low overnight temperature: 68 on 18 Aug
Coolest daytime high temperature: 73 on 30 Aug
First week -- 61 > 95
Second week -- 53 > 89
Third week -- 54 > 94
Fourth week -- 48 > 94
September 2010
Low overnight temperature: 41 -- 6-7 September
Highest daytime temperature: 91 --19 Sep
Warmest low overnight temperature (unclear in record) :
61? -- 20 Sep
59 -- 22 Sep
Coolest daytime high temperature: 70 -- 6 Sep
29 Aug- 4 Sep -- 48 > 90
Second week -- 41 > 84
Third week -- 46? > 87
Fourth week -- 61? 59 > 91
October 2010
Low overnight temperature: 29 -- 30 October
High daytime temperature: 83 -- 2 Oct
Warmest low overnight temperature: 54 -- 6 Oct
Coolest daytime high temperature: 45 -- 27 Oct
26 Sep - 2 Oct -- 45 > 85
Second week -- 44 > 82
Third week -- 36 > 75
Fourth week -- 39 > 71
Fifth week -- 29 > 68
November 2010
Low overnight temperature: 07 -- Thanksgiving
high daytime temperature: 68 -- 6 Nov
Warmest low overnight temperature: 43 -- 7, 20 Nov
Coolest daytime high temperature: 23 -- 24, 25 Nov
31 Oct - 6 Nov -- 43 > 68
Second week -- 27 > 61
Third week -- 28 > 65
Fourth week -- 7 > 41
December 2010
Lowest overnight temperature: 09 -- 31 December 11:59
Highest daytime temperature: 53 -- 13 Dec
Warmest low overnight temperature: 40 -- 19 Dec
Coolest daytime high temperature: 23 -- 30, 31 Dec
2 - 4 Dec -- 27 > 47
Second week -- 27 > 53? 52
Third week -- 17 > 53
Fourth week -- 26 > 51
26 Dec - 1 January 2011 -- 3 (1-1-11) > 41
2010 EXTREMES RECORDS
Highest temperature of the year: 101 on 16 July
coldest temperature of the years 07 on Thanksgiving
Last daytime high temperature in 90s: 91 on 19 Sep
Last daytime high temperature in 80s: 82 on 3 Oct
Last daytime high temperature in 70s: 71 on 17 Oct
Last daytime high temperatures in 60s: 65 on 18 Nov
Last daytime high temperature in 50s: 51 on 19 Dec
First overnight low temperature in 30s: 37 on 13 Oct
First overnight low temperature below freezing: 31 on 27 Oct
First overnight low temperature in 20s: 29 on 30 Oct
First overnight low temperature in the 10s: 14 on 24 Nov
First overnight low temperature in single digit: 07 on 25 Nov
Last overnight low temperature in 60s:
62 (likely) on 28 Aug
61? (unclear record) on 20 Sep
Last overnight low temperature in 50s: 50 on 18 Oct
Last overnight low temperature in 40s 40 on 19 Dec