- Sellers and Rantanen are among the NHL trade deadline winners. Hurricanes and Boeser are some losers
- Hurricane forecasters express concern over NOAA job cuts impact
- FEMA deadline for Hurricane Helene recovery aid extended again
- Tornado drills to take place at schools across North Carolina Friday morning
- Hays County emergency alerts cause confusion during Tuesday's wildfires
Crews try to tame California wildfire as heat wave arrives

The fire exploded in size within hours after it broke out in dense forest on Wednesday afternoon, sending up a towering plume visible for hundreds of miles around.
Flames raced across ridges and steep slopes, including in some areas that had not burned since 1968, fire officials said. By Thursday night, the blaze still threatened more than 5,400 homes and had charged through 17 square miles (44.5 square kilometers) of brush and forest land.
The blaze was only 5% contained.
Light winds and scattered thundershowers early in the day helped firefighters tame the flames somewhat but Friday’s forecast called for hot, dry weather with “near critical” fire conditions because of possible gusty winds, a fire update said Thursday night.
“This will be a major fire for several days,” said Chief Robert Garcia with the U.S. Forest Service.
About 100 rural homes were evacuated in the Lake Hughes area of the Angeles National Forest, some 60 miles (97 kilometers) north of downtown Los Angeles.
Preliminary damage assessments found that at least three structures burned, but authorities warned the toll would likely be higher.
Kenny Reynolds lost his home.
The fire came down the hill and across the street, “engulfing on both sides,” he told KABC-TV.
Reynolds and others retreated “and then it just kind of rolled in,” he said. “It was taking everything as it kind of went down.”
Evacuation centers were designated for residents and animals, but because of COVID-19 concerns, people were told to stay in their cars in the parking lots.
The cause of the blaze, dubbed the Lake Fire, is under investigation. It’s one of several wildfires burning in the region.
Several new fires erupted Thursday. The largest was near the Los Angeles suburb of Azusa. It burned nearly 4 square miles (10.13 square kilometers) of brush but was moving away from homes. However, some evacuations were ordered.
Another blaze came dangerously close to some homes in Corona, east of Los Angeles, and another fire in eastern Sacramento County burned about 500 acres (202 hectares) before firefighters stopped its forward spread.
The heat wave was expected to last through the weekend, bringing triple-digit temperatures and extreme fire danger to large parts of California.
Copyright © 2020 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.