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Garcia said his family plans to keep cool by hunkering down in the one bedroom with air-conditioning. They've already moved their TV, games and necessities into that room and have been eating meals there. Darren Wilson, 38, a concrete finisher from Puyallup, Wash., started his Seattle street paving job at 5:30 a.m., three hours earlier than usual, to beat the heat. "I'm drinking lots of water," he said. Shirley Markstaller, 71, parked herself in front of a fan and read the morning paper at a cooling center in downtown Portland. "I just thought,
'Where's the coolest place?'" she said. In Oregon's Willamette Valley, the thermometer hit 106 at the capital in Salem, and Eugene hit 105, shattering a record 101 for the calendar day in both cities. In southern Oregon, Medford inched past its record of 108 to reach 109 on Wednesday. The previous records for all those cities were from 2003. At the Tails-A-Wagging doggie day care in Bellingham, Wash., owner Angi Lenz and her staff kept dogs comfortable with special cooling fans, air conditioning, ice toys and water slides. "We have a waiting list to get in this week because of the heat," Lenz said. Bellingham hit 96, an all-time record, on Wednesday, breaking the old mark of 94, set in 1960. Records there date back to the 1930s. Not everyone was avoiding the outdoors. Enes Parker, manager of the Lacey Senior Center, said she found indoor air conditioning too cold. Lacey is in Washington, near Olympia. "I'm one of the few who like the heat," Parker said. "I go outside every so often to warm up. I love the heat. It's always too cold here."
[Associated
Press;
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