- 688 - 



DETECTION 



New State Records - A BARK BEETLE (Chaetophloeus heterodoxus ) NORTH DAKOTA - 

 McHenry County. A BARK BEETLE (Phlo"etribus dentif rons ) NORTH DAKOTA - McHenry 

 County, (p. 684). EASTERN PINESHOOT BORER (Eucosma Igloriola ) WEST VIRGINIA - 

 Mineral County, (p. 684). NORTHERN CORN ROOTWORM ( Diabrotlca longicornis ) 

 VIRGINIA - Floyd County, (p. 680). 



New County and Island Records - ALFALFA WEEVIL ( Hypera postica ) ARIZONA - 



Coconino (p. 6Sl) . ASIATIC OAK WEEVIL (Cyrtepistomus castaneus ) MISSOURI - 



Ste. Genevieve, Bollinger (p. 684). A BARK BEETLE ( Pseudopityophthorus pruinosus ) 



WEST VIRGINIA - Hampshire, Mineral, Grant, Hardy, Lincoln, Fayette, Wayne 



(p. 684). ELM LEAF BEETLE (Pyrrhalta luteola ) IOWA - Carroll, Story (p. 684). 



EUROPEAN CORN BORER (Ostrinia nubilalis ) KANSAS - Stanton, Scott (p. 680). 



FACE FLY (Musca autumnalis ) SOUTH DAKOTA - Lawrence (p. 685). UTAH - Millard 



(p. 685). A LACE BUG ( Stephanitis takeyai ) PENNSYLVANIA - Lehigh (p. 683). 



MIMOSA WEBWORM ( Homadaula anisocentra ) OKLAHOMA - McClain, Cleveland, Logan 



(p. 684). NORTHERN CORN ROOTWORM ( Diabrotica longicornis ) WEST VIRGINIA - Mason 



(p. 680). ORIENTAL FRUIT MOTH (Grapholitha moTesta ) IOWA - Polk (p. 683). A 



STINK BUG (Plautia stall ) HAWAII - Molokai (p, 687). 



CORRECTIONS 



CEIR 21(37) :656, 664 - EUROPEAN CORN BORER (Ostrinia nubilalis) - ALABAMA - 

 Delete note on page 656 and delete new county record on page 664. Specimens 

 misidentif ied, (McQueen). 



NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE'S 30- DAY OUTLOOK 



MID-SEPTEMBER TO MID-OCTOBER 1971 



The National Weather Service's 30-day outlook for mid-September to mid-October 

 is for temperatures to average below seasonal normals from the Rockies to the 

 Great Lakes and the southern Appalachians. Above normal averages are indicated 

 for the Northeast and also west of the Rockies. In unspecified areas near normal 

 temperatures are in prospect. Precipitation is expected to exceed normal over 

 the eastern quarter of the Nation and along the west gulf coast. Subnormal totals 

 are indicated west of the Divide and in portions of the central and southern 

 Plains. Elsewhere near normal precipitation is expected. 



Weather forecast 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. 



Weather of the week continued from page 678. 



TEMPERATURE : Hot summer weather prevailed over mid-America early in the week. 

 Polar air pushed into the northern Rocky Mountains and the northern Great Plains 

 dropping temperatures sharply. Valentine, Nebraska, warmed to 95° Monday, but no 

 higher than 65° Tuesday. By Thursday morning, subfreezing temperatures occurred 

 in spots from Oregon to the Dakotas and as far south as Alamosa, Colorado, where 

 28° occurred. Big Piney, Wyoming, registered 19° Thursday morning. The maximum 

 temperatures remained in the 50 's and 60 's from the Dakotas to Upper Michigan 

 Wednesday and Thursday. The Deep South had remained hot and humid until Wednesday, 

 when Jackson, Mississippi, registered 89° and the highest temperature at Jackson 

 Thursday was 72° . The Far Southwest continued hot with temperatures reaching 100° 

 or higher every afternoon. Imperial and Blythe in California recorded 113° 

 Tuesday afternoon. San Francisco, California, registered 103° Tuesday. This is 

 the warmest September temperature of record for San Francisco. A large high 

 centered over the northern Great Plains brought the coldest weather of the season 

 to much of the Great Plains. Temperature at Denver, Colorado, climbed to only 35 

 in the warmest part of the day Friday. On Sunday morning the mercury at Leadville, 

 Colorado, plunged to 90° . The weekly average temperatures over much of the Rocky 

 Mountains and central Great Plains were 10° to 15° below normal. In contrast, spots 

 in the San Joaquin Valley in California averaged 15° warmer than normal. 



