Cities simmered with triple-digit temperatures Monday,
toppling records in a heat wave blamed for deaths in at
least five states.
Thermometers hit over 100 degrees in parts of Alabama,
Arkansas, Texas, Nebraska, Kansas and the western tip of
Tennessee, where Memphis hit a record 105 degrees, the
National Weather Service said.
Monday was the fourth consecutive day of triple-digit highs
in Memphis, where the heat was blamed for at least three
deaths since Wednesday, health authorities said.
The brutal temperatures come during one of the city's
biggest events: Elvis Week, when thousands of fans from
across the world turn out to mark the 30th anniversary of
the death of Elvis Presley.
Temperatures in Memphis will likely set records through
Thursday, with humidity climbing as the week goes on, so
organizers set up free water and ice stations for fans.
"There's not a lot we can do. It's just going to be hot,"
Graceland spokeswoman Regina Jackson said.
A truck driver who was working on his rig at a gas station
when he collapsed and died Monday was among the three
heat-related deaths in Arkansas, Pulaski County Coroner Mark
Malcolm said.
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"It's a dangerous time," Malcolm said. "I think sometimes
people don't realize that and don't understand the
consequences of spending time in this kind of heat."
Missouri and Kentucky have each reported one heat-related
death, while across the state line in Illinois, officials
blamed three deaths on the heat since Thursday.
Steve Nonn, the coroner in Madison County, Ill., said the
deaths illustrate the importance of checking on the welfare
of neighbors, especially the vulnerable elderly.
"This is a time of year when it is important to be a
busybody, knock on a door and ask, 'Are you OK?'" Noon said.
"It is an act of nosiness that just may save someone's
life."
In Alabama, Montgomery, broke a record Monday with an eighth
straight day of 100-plus heat, hitting 103 degrees. A day
earlier, the city's streets steamed at 106. The city had
seven-day hot streaks in 1990, 1954 and 1881. Pinson, Ala.,
hit a record high of 105, according to the weather service.
The average high in August in central Alabama is 92.
"Ninety-two. Hell, the way things have gone this week, 92 is
fall weather," Frank Matthews of Millbrook told the
Montgomery Advertiser.