Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Daily Journal from Franklin, Indiana • A6

Publication:
The Daily Journali
Location:
Franklin, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
A6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WEATHER FIVE-DAY FORECAST FOR JOHNSON COUNTY REGIONAL SUMMARY STATE EXTREMES ALMANAC AIR QUALITY INDEX NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY WEEKLY TEMPERATURES WIND CHILL TODAY RIVER STAGES SUN AND MOON REGIONAL CITIES NATIONAL CITIES Today Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Mostly sunny Warmer with some sun, then clouds Mostly cloudy and cooler Partial sunshine More sun than clouds Statistics for Indianapolis through 1 p.m. yesterday. Temperature Precipitation Wind Humidity Heating Degree Days Station Fld Stage Chg White River White River (East Fork) Youngs Creek Index of energy consumption indicating how many de- grees the average temperature was below 65 degrees for the day with negative values counting as zero. Fld: ood stage. Stage: in feet at 7 a.m.

Sunday. Chg: change in previous 24 hours. Last New First Full Oct 21 Oct 27 Nov 4 Nov 12 Yest. Tues. City Indianapolis Yest.

Tues. Yest. Tues. City City High in Bloomington Low in Richmond Indiana yesterday: Indianapolis: Mostly sunny today. Mainly clear tonight.

Greenwood: Mostly sunny today. Mainly clear tonight. Edinburgh: Mostly sunny today. Mainly clear tonight. Franklin: Mostly sunny today.

Mainly clear tonight. Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow urries, sn-snow, i-ice. Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. dailyjournal.net Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Billings Birmingham Boston Cheyenne Columbus, OH Denver Des Moines Detroit Hilton Head Houston Kansas City, MO Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Omaha Orlando Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Portland, OR Rapid City Richmond St. Louis Salt Lake City San Francisco Seattle Tampa Washington, DC nr Edinburgh 7 1.65 Edinburgh 12 3.62 Mooresville 9 7.20 Anderson Bloomington Chicago Cincinnati Evansville Fort Wayne Gary Kokomo Lafayette Louisville Muncie South Bend Terre Haute Yesterday 16 Month to Season to average average Average SSW at 10.1 mph Highest speed 16 mph 24 hrs.

ending 1 p.m. yest. 0.00” Month to date 0.58” Normal month to date 1.35” Year to date 37.60” Normal year to date 33.80” High Low Normal high Normal low Record high in 1975 Record low in 1988 Sunrise today 7:53 a.m. Sunset tonight 7:07 p.m. Moonrise today 7:56 p.m.

Moonset today 8:24 a.m. How cold it feels based on temperature and wind speed. 8 a.m. Noon 4 p.m. Indianapolis Today Source: IDPW 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-151, Unhealthy (sens.

151-200; Unhealthy Th Sa Su Last Normal high Normal low Snow IceFlurriesRain T-stormsShowers Cold front Warm front Stationary front -10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s High: 63 Low: 39 High: 74 Low: 42 High: 53 Low: 36 High: 58 Low: 37 High: 67 Low: 53 Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. WEATHER HISTORY On Oct. 14, 1984, 42 separate accidents occurred on I-94 around Milwaukee, in dense fog. A cloak of fog combined with impatience on highways can be hazard- ous.

Daily Journal, Johnson County, inD.A6 MonDay, oCtober 14, 2019 Butler University seeks $250 million LOTTERIES Here are the winning num- bers selected Sunday: Daily Three Midday: 3-7-4 Daily Four Midday: 3-5-2-3 Quick Draw Midday: 3-4-6- 13-20-21-24-26-27-29-33-34- 35-51-56-61-66-70-77-80 Here are the winning num- bers selected Saturday: Daily Three Midday: 2-6-6 Daily Three Evening: 6-1-2 Daily Four Midday: 5-8-9-5 Daily Four Evening: 5-6-2-4 Cash 5: 12-13-20-22-33 Jackpot: $227,000 Quick Draw Midday: 10-11-13-17-19-21-25-26-36- 38-48-50-57-58-62-66-68-72- 73-77 Quick Draw Evening: 2-3- 6-8-11-12-23-27-29-30-39-45- 55-59-60-62-72-74-76-79 Hoosier Lotto: 8-16-23-29- 30-34 Jackpot: $5 million (no winner; new jackpot: $5.2 million) Powerball: 12-29-34-53-65 Powerball: 23 Jackpot: $90 million (no winner; new jackpot: $100 million.) Here are the winning num- bers selected Friday: Daily Three Evening: 4-9-8 Daily Four Evening: 7-7-2-2 Cash 5: 1-7-25-30-42 Jackpot: $209,000 Quick Draw Evening: 5-7- 8-10-11-12-17-18-20-27-28- 31-39-44-54-57-66-71-77-79 Mega Millions: 14-22- 30-37-60 Mega Ball: 8 Megaplier: 3 Jackpot: $60 million (no winner; new jackpot: $65 million) The AssociATed Press NEW ALBANY Southern Indiana officials are urging transportation department not to fully close down an Ohio River bridge during repairs to the span. Local leaders, members of busi- ness groups and local colleges shared their concerns Thursday about the Sherman Minton Bridge during a closed meeting with the Indiana Department of Transpor- commissioner. New Albany City Councilman Al Knable says local officials stressed during the meeting that the region cannot afford a full closure of the bridge, which links New Albany and Louisville, Kentucky. The News and Tribune reports that work on an estimated $90 million to $105 million in repairs is expected to begin in early 2021. Indiana urged not to close bridge over Ohio River during repairs The AssociATed Press BLOOMINGTON public access coun- selor has ruled that state police can withhold records in an Indiana University unsolved 1977 slaying because they remain part of an ongoing investigation.

Ann Harmeier was a 20-year- old IU sophomore when she was abducted, raped and killed in Morgan County in September 1977 after her car broke down along State Road 37 near Martinsville. Forty-two years later, no arrests have ever been made. Indiana State Police have twice denied requests by cousin, Scott Burnham, to release their case records. The Herald-Times reports state public access counselor Luke Britt sided with police in an opinion Thursday, finding that the records can be withheld be- cause part of an ongoing investigation. Ruling: Records can be withheld in IU 1977 killing By KhAlil hAmlo And rAmAdAn Al-FATAsh Tribune News Service DAMASCUS, Hundreds of family mem- bers linked to Islamic State militants escaped from a camp in northern Syria where fighting between Kurdish mili- tias and Turkish-backed rebels is escalating, Kurdish officials and a war monitor reported.

About 785 foreigners af- filiated with the Islamic State broke free on Sunday from the Ain Issa camp, near the northern city of al-Raqqa, a Kurdish autonomous adminis- tration in northeastern Syria. escape comes after shelling by (Turkish-allied) mercenaries hit the camp. This represents support for the resurgence of the Kurdish authority said, using an Arabic acronym for Islamic State. Turkey started in incur- sion into northern Syria on Wednesday, saying it is targeting Islamic State ex- tremists and Kurdish militias. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan dismissed the accounts of fleeing pris- oners as state news agency Anadolu reported.

Ankara considers the Kurdish militias to be linked to the outlawed Kurdistan Party (PKK), which is waging an insurgency within the country. Thousands of Islamic State families have been held in the Ain Issa camp that the Kurdish-led Syrian Demo- cratic Forces (SDF) set up in 2016. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a war monitor, reported that around 800 foreign members of Islamic State families fled the camp to unknown whereabouts after Kurdish guards abandoned the site due to nearby fighting. Residents in the area told dpa that some of the es- capees were going to a nearby countryside while others were heading to al-Raqqa, a one- time stronghold of Islamic State. Supported by air and artil- lery strikes, allied fighters were Sunday ad- vancing against the Kurds in Ain Issa, according to the observatory.

Adding to the chaotic picture, U.S. Secretary of Defence Mark Esper said around 1,000 U.S. troops would be withdrawn from northern Syria due to mounting security concerns as Turkish forces push south. have American forces likely caught between two opposing advancing armies, and a very untenable situ- Esper told broadcaster CBS. Meanwhile, the official Syrian news agency SANA reported Sunday night that Syrian army units were moving north to confront the Turkish offensive, without giving further details.

The observatory said that a deal was reached between Kurdish forces and Russia to allow Syrian government forces to enter the Kurdish towns of Manbij and Kobane. The Turkish incursion has raised fears of reviving Is- lamic State in Syria where the radical group has experienced territorial losses in recent months. Syrian Kurds played a major role in fighting Islamic State in the war-torn country. Turkish-backed rebels said Sunday they had captured the Syrian border town of Tal Abyad from SDF forces, which had seized it from Islamic State in 2015. A commander in the Turkish-allied National Army told dpa that its fighters were carrying out a mop-up operation in Tal Abyad after Kurdish fighters pulled out of it.

The observatory, meanwhile, reported that the Turkish forces and allied rebels have retaken almost complete con- trol of Tal Abyad after fierce fighting against the SDF militia. The Turkish campaign has triggered condemnations from Western allies amid fears of a severe humanitarian crisis. German Chancellor Angela Merkel demanded an mediate termination of the military in Syria during a telephone call Sunday with Erdogan, a government spokeswoman said. Despite legitimate security interests, the opera- tion is threatening to displace large parts of the local popula- tion, destabilize the region and revive the Islamic State extremist organization, the spokeswoman added. About 130,000 people have been displaced due to the escalating violence in north- eastern Syria, a UN agency said.

The water situation in the northeastern city of al-Has- sakeh and its surroundings is rapidly deteriorating, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) added. Fighting was Sunday raging inside Ras al-Ain, another border town, hours after the SDF forces retook it from the Turkish-backed rebels fol- lowing a counter-attack, the observatory said. At least 14 people, including 10 civilians, were killed in strikes by Turkish warplanes on an aid convoy heading to Ras al-Ain, the watchdog added. The most recent deaths bring the number of civilians killed since the start of the Turkish incursion into north- eastern Syria to at least 64. Islamic State affiliates escape from Syrian camp during Turkish assault the AssociAted press Smoke billows from fires on targets Sunday in Ras al-Ayn, Syria, caused by bombardment by Turkish forces.

leader has rejected offers for mediation with Syrian Kurdish fighters as the Turkish military continues its offensive against them in northern Syria. The AssociATed Press INDIANAPOLIS Butler University is aiming to raise $250 mil- lion to invest in science education, increase its en- rollment beyond resident undergraduates and boost community outreach. The private Indianap- olis university has raised $171 million so far from more than 27,000 donors during its largest fund- raising campaign, which runs through May. Uni- versity president James Danko said the campaign will help shift the educational landscape. go into the future prepared for he said.

really looking at diversifying our student population expanding beyond a heavy reliance on under- graduate The undergraduate popu- lation has increased from nearly 4,000 in the fall of 2009 to more than 4,880 in the fall of 2018, an India- napolis paper reported. Danko noted that he wants the university to enroll more nontradi- tional adult learners over the next 10 years. It has been trying to determine how to work with In- dianapolis Public Schools to offer students dual degree credits. And the university is considering partnerships with local companies to provide education for employees, said Melissa Beckwith, vice president of strategy and innovation..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Daily Journal
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Daily Journal Archive

Pages Available:
402,368
Years Available:
1963-2024