61. Broken bands of showers and thunderstorms will continue to swirl around a low-pressure center as it moves gradually east from the Ohio Valley. 62. Broken bands of showers and thunderstorms will spiral counter-clockwise around the associated low pressure zone as far westward as the Tennessee Valley, especially after lunchtime. 63. Broken bands of showers will reach the coast from southern New England to North Carolina on Sunday as weak low pressure drifts near the Virginia Coast. 64. Broken bands of showers will cross the Ohio Valley and the southern Great Lakes as jet stream disturbances pass overhead. 65. Broken bands of strong thunderstorms will develop in the heat of the day from Missouri to Wisconsin. 66. Broken bands of thundershowers will accompany a cold front as it crosses the central and southern Appalachians. 67. Broken bands of thundershowers will develop near a fast-moving cold front as it sweeps east from the central parts of the Great Lakes and Mississippi Valley. 68. By midday, a broken band of potent thunderstorms will erupt over interior sections, nearing the Northeast seaboard by evening. 69. Clouds and a broken band of showers and thunderstorms will prevail from northern New England to the Ohio Valley. 70. Farther south, a broken band of strong thunderstorms may spawn a few tornadoes in the warmer and more humid air over central and eastern Texas. |