tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6390631773223390410.post7454525918748447705..comments2024-03-29T05:14:39.115-04:00Comments on A POP CULTURE ADDICT - IN REHAB: January 24, 1943Matthew W. Turcottehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07480241304113540364noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6390631773223390410.post-74606478048840796302015-06-13T11:23:13.944-04:002015-06-13T11:23:13.944-04:00January 24, 1943, saw Cincinnati and a number of o...January 24, 1943, saw Cincinnati and a number of other localities in the region record their hottest January temperature on record.<br /><br />Powerful Föhn winds driven far away by a huge storm in Southern California (Hoegee Camp, fifteen miles inland from Los Angeles, had seen a whopping <i>thirty-six inches</i> of rain in the two previous days) drove over the eastern plains and gradually become hotter. At Cincinnati the temperature reached 77˚F or 25˚C – a full 39˚F or 22˚C above the normal maximum and only 2˚F shy of Ohio’s all-time January record.<br /><br />It must be confusing to get shorts weather when it’s normally freezing or thereabouts! Cincinnati returned to a more seasonal 24˚F (minus 5˚C) in just two days!jpbenneyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02664829103165280260noreply@blogger.com