Day Three of a sweltering heat wave took a toll across the Twin Cities on Tuesday, testing everyone's ability to stay cool and keep their cool and even keeping people away from the Minnesota State Fair.
After two days of record-breaking heat, the temp reached 96 Tuesday, three degrees shy of the record. Little relief is in sight, with temps in the low and mid-90s expected through the end of the week.
Frustration mounted at schools without air conditioning, such as north Minneapolis' Patrick Henry High School, where students said the heat is making it hard to study. It's one of 18 Minneapolis public schools without air conditioning; 11 are partly cooled.
Senior Francisco Velez said it's hard to concentrate, and only one of his seven classrooms had fans, forcing students to fan themselves with folders to keep a breeze going. But fans also create noise and disputes among students about where to direct the breeze, senior Todd Riser said.
"A lot of kids are drowsy and don't want to talk as much," Riser said at a news conference after school to call attention to the hot classrooms. "They're quieter."
The heat apparently kept people away from the fair. Monday's fair attendance numbers, released Tuesday afternoon, showed a dramatic drop in attendance over last year. Numbers were down Sunday as well.
But Twin Cities residents seemed to have found ways to adjust to their suddenly tropical climate. They were drinking lots of water (and more water). They were wearing lighter clothes. They were simply moving less. And they were living, working and playing in it.
Hot days = longer days
Movers Sean Erickson, Lomas Matadeen and Ron Erickson had each soaked through a T-shirt while loading a van under the noon sun along S. 2nd Street in Minneapolis.