- 500 - 



DETECTION 



New County and Island Records - A BOMBYLIID FLY ( Anthrax distigma ) HAWAII - Lanai 

 (p. 459). BROWN RECLUSE SPIDER ( Loxosceles reclusa ) TENNESSEE - Hardin (p. 496). 

 AN ENCYRTID WASP ( Holcencyrtus physokermis ) OREGON - Multnomah (p. 496) . FACE 

 FLY ( Musca autumnalis ) CALlf'ORNIA - Santa Cruz, Placer (p. 495). A GEOMETRID MOTH 

 (SemiotTTisa santaremaria ) HAWAII - Molokai, Lanai (p. 499). HOLLYHOCK WEEVIL 

 (Apion lonjirostre ) MISSOURI - Morgan; KANSAS - Lyon, Osage, Chase, Marion; 

 NEVADA - Lander (p. 493). A LONGHORNED GRASSHOPPER ( Euconocephalus nasutus ) 

 HAWAII - Hawaii (p. 499). MAPLE BLADDERGALL MITE ( Vasates quadripedes ) OHIO - 

 Montgomery, Stark (p. 495). A PHYLLOXERA ( Phylloxera caryaecaulis l~OHIO - 

 Marion, Medina, Stark, Trumbull (p. 495). A SCENOPINID FLY ( Scenopinus 

 adventicia) HAWAII - Molokai (p. 499). 



Weather continued from page 484. 



pushed onto northern border States Wednesday which was sunny and mild from the 

 northern and central Pacific to the upper Mississippi River Valley. Hot weather 

 continued across the South from southern California to the Atlantic Ocean. 

 Southerly winds swept hot, humid air northward over the eastern half of the 

 Nation. Sultry weather persisted from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico and 

 eastward to the Atlantic Ocean. By Wednesday, the heat wave over the central 

 Great Plains was broken. Norfolk, Nebraska, registered 93° Tuesday but no higher 

 than 82° Wednesday. Ag the weekend approached, drier air was moving southward 

 over the North-Central and Northeastern States. Afternoon temperatures in the 

 80's were common over the weekend in those sections. High humidity persisted in 

 the Southeast. Weekend maximums exceeded 100° over the Far Southwest in south- 

 eastern New Mexico and north-central Texas. Elsewhere across the South from 

 northern New Mexico to Mississippi afternoon temperatures over the weekend were 

 generally in the 90's. Weekly average temperatures exceeded the normals from 

 Minnesota and Iowa to the Atlantic Ocean and as far south as the Ohio River and 

 from southern New Mexico to northeastern Texas and in southeastern Texas. Else- 

 where, temperatures averaged cooler than normal for late June and early July. 



NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE'S 30-DAY OUTLOOK 

 JULY 1971 



The National Weatiier Service's 30-day outlook for July is for temperatures to 

 average above seasonal normals in central and southern portions of the 

 intermountain region and over the northern half of the Nation east of the Divide. 

 Subnormal temperatures are indicated for the Pacific coast and the Rio Grande 

 Valley. In unspecified areas near normal temperatures are in prospect. Rainfall 

 is expected to exceed normal over the north Pacific coast, the Rio Grande Valley, 

 and portions of the southern Plateau. Subnormal totals are indicated for the 

 Ohio Valley, the middle Atlantic Coast States, the northern Plains, the northern 

 intermountain region, and the central and south Pacific coast. Elsewhere near 

 normal rainfall is expected. 



Weathfc.- Torecast given here is based on the official 30-day "Resume and Outlook" 

 published twice a month by the National Weather Service. You can subscribe 

 through the Superintendent of Documents, Washington, D.C. 20250. Price $5.00 

 a year. 



