Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Russian astronauts take spacewalk at space station

(AP) ? Two space station astronauts are taking care of a little maintenance outside their orbiting home.

Russian flight engineers Fyodor Yurchikhin and Alexander Misurkin floated out of the International Space Station on Monday morning. The spacewalkers will replace valves, install clamps and retrieve science experiments. Some of the work will pave the way for the arrival of a new Russian compartment later this year.

This is the third spacewalk conducted so far this year. Monday's excursion is under the direction of Russian Mission Control outside Moscow.

The four other space station residents monitored the action from inside.

Yurchikhin arrived at the space station just a few weeks ago. Misurkin has been on board since March.

The crew includes three Russians, two Americans and one Italian.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-06-24-Space%20Station/id-68b5a3841f9e411c882420c53648f4b9

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Monica Lewinsky Negligee, Other Items Up For Auction

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/monica-lewinsky-negligee-other-items-up-for-auction/

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Dead Birds Test Positive for West Nile | KTXL FOX40

Mosquito Population is Up, Campers Urged to Spray

File photo

MODESTO-

Two dead birds in Modesto have tested positive for West Nile Virus, the Stanislaus County Health Services Agency said Monday.

This marks 2013?s first appearance of the virus in the county.

In all of California, West Nile has been found in 17 dead birds and 39 mosquitoes. The virus has also been confirmed to have killed on human.

Health officials ask the public to report dead birds, particularly crows, ravens, magpies, jays, hawks and eagles. You can do so by calling 1-877-968-2473 or clicking here.

Aside from reporting dead birds, residents are asked to get rid of any standing water because they can serve as mosquito breeding grounds. Pets? water dishes and bird baths should be changed frequently.

Source: http://fox40.com/2013/06/24/dead-birds-test-positive-for-west-nile/

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BMW 4 series coupe sets benchmark for ... - Automotive News

BMW's 4 series: Priced $3,000 above rivals.

DIANA T. KURYLKO

June 24, 2013 - 12:01 am ET

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When BMW decided to rethink and reposition the venerable 3 series coupe, it set several ambitious goals: Rename it the 4 series, style it and equip it with an even more sporty and premium feel than the 3-series sedan, and charge more for it. We now know how much of a price premium the new 4 series will command.

When it goes on sale in late summer, BMW's 4 series, the renamed and redesigned successor to the 3-series coupe, will have a base price of $41,425, with shipping -- nearly $3,000 more than two key competitors.

The rear-wheel-drive 428i will be equipped with a twin-turbo 2.0-liter four-cylinder. The 435i, with a base price of $46,925, including shipping, will have a twin-turbo 3.0-liter inline six-cylinder. Both engines will be teamed with an eight-speed automatic or a six-speed manual. All-wheel drive is optional.

The 2013 Mercedes-Benz C250 starts at $38,705, and the 2014 Cadillac CTS coupe starts at $38,905. The prices include shipping. The current entry-level BMW 328i coupe starts at $39,625. The 4 series is 2 inches longer than the outgoing 3-series coupe at 110.6 inches and is 1.7 inches wider at 72 inches. It is also about an inch lower, giving it a sportier appearance.

A convertible version of the 4 series convertible will debut next year.

Source: http://www.autonews.com/article/20130624/BLOG06/306259999/bmw-4-series-coupe-sets-benchmark-for-segment-price

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Take the Best of Portland 2013 Survey and Win $250, $50 Gift Cards -

Timberline LodgeThe 2013 Portland food and drink survey is now open. Since we already covered coffee, those questions have been removed, along with a few others. There is one new question ? ?Best outdoor dining space?.

I have purchased a $250 gift card to Timberline Lodge as an incentive. One lucky person will be awarded the card in a random drawing, so if you want to be eligible, be sure to leave your email address (it will never be given out, but just used to notify the winner). The gift card can be used for any purchase at Timberline Lodge or the Ice Axe Grill, lift tickets, rentals, lessons etc. A $50 gift certificate to a restaurant of your choice will be given out as a second prize. The survey will close after we have at least 1,000 responses.

In case you want to think about it for a bit, here are the winners of the last survey. The questions this year are as follows:

  • Best Pizza
  • Best Burger
  • Best Bakery
  • Best Vietnamese
  • Best Chinese
  • Best Vegetarian
  • Best Thai
  • Best Steak
  • Best Sushi
  • Best Mexican
  • Best BBQ
  • Best Italian
  • Best Seafood
  • Best Lebanese
  • Best Indian
  • Best Brunch/Breakfast
  • Best late night snack
  • Best Desserts
  • Best Beer Bar
  • Best Bar
  • Best Happy Hour
  • Best Business Lunch
  • Best Lunch (excluding food carts)
  • Best place to dine with a large group
  • Best New Restaurant
  • Of the restaurants that closed in 2012 ? 2013, I will miss this one the most
  • Most Family Friendly
  • I had to break up with this restaurant in 2012-2013 ? it went downhill
  • Most Romantic Restaurant
  • Best First Date Restaurant
  • This Restaurant is Coasting on its Reputation
  • Lousy service in a restaurant that is pretty darn good otherwise
  • I thought this restaurant would be great, but I didn?t like it!
  • Best Cheesemonger
  • Best Butcher/Meat Counter
  • Best Fishmonger
  • Best Gourmet Food Store
  • Best Wine Shop
  • If I want quiet conversation, I go to:
  • Best outdoor dining ? patio/deck/etc.

You favorite six restaurants in Portland are:

Take the survey by clicking here!

"I have a wide-range of food experience - working in the restaurant industry on both sides of the house, later in the wine industry, and finally traveling/tasting my way around the world. Whether you agree or disagree, you can always count on my unbiased opinion. I don't take free meals, and the restaurants don't know when, or if, I am coming."

Source: http://portlandfoodanddrink.com/take-the-best-of-portland2013-survey-win-250-50-gift-cards/

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Hemisphere Factor

Natalie Martinez and Josh Carter in Under the Dome.

Natalie Martinez and Josh Carter in Under the Dome

Courtesy of CBS Broadcasting Inc.

The 2009 Stephen King novel Under the Dome concerns a small town abruptly sundered from the rest of America by a transparent hemispherical membrane of seeming supernatural origin. To visualize this, imagine the surface of the Earth as the flat surface of a footed cake plate and the dome as the thingie atop it. Does the phrase Glass Cloche Encounters capture the spirit of the book? Would an invocation of The Simpsons? Trappuccino be more apt? These questions are not rhetorical; really, I?m asking, for in describing the premise of this thousand-page novel, I also have defined the only circumstances under which I would read it.

Sorry, but I haven?t even gotten to The Stand yet, and the pilot episode of Brian K. Vaughan?s television adaptation of Under the Dome (CBS) is a very good advertisement for seeing what else is on TV this Monday at 10 p.m.

The series does itself no favors with an introductory sequence that wanly recalls Twin Peaks as it introduces the characters and their situations. Highly skeptical, eyebrows growling, I witnessed an eerie close-up of a bird on a limb, a bit of music recalling Angelo Badalamenti, a waitress post-coitally slipping into a mint-green diner dress to work a shift at a failing restaurant. ? ?My notes say I saw a corpse wrapped in plastic, but that might just have a figment of hypnotic suggestion, a vision conjured by the other sounds and images?genre-markers saying, ?Welcome to the Superficially Cozy Small Town Harboring Dark Secrets.?

In the novel, this town goes by the name of Chester?s Mill, Maine. In the pilot, the location of Chester?s Mill remains unidentified. The series hints that the town could exist Down East; among the people trapped under the dome are an artsy-fartsy interracial lesbian couple from California, who are passing through town on their way to drop off their surly teenage daughter at summer camp. But the series was shot in North Carolina, with the apparent aim of sucking enough charm out of Wilmington to allow it to pass for a generic Everytown, and the series was cast with a cynical eye for demographic balance, such that it never welcomes the viewer to the state of suspended belief.

Thus has an opportunity been missed. An Under the Dome that crackled with realistic rural Maine flavor?with subtitles to translate the accents and everything?could be a lot of fun. I?m imagining the natives? self-reliance coming in handy as they endure their sci-fi confinement?and also their libertarian streaks clashing with the reflexive attack on civil liberties described in the plot. (On CBS, Breaking Bad?s Dean Norris juicily plays Big Jim Rennie, a selectman who, faster than you can say exigent circumstance, uses the dome crisis to solidify his big-time plans for small-town domination.) And in my version, the characters would include a clutch of Bowdoin sophomores who found themselves in the wrong place at the wrong time while heading to Stowe in a 325i.

What we get instead are a plucky Latina sheriff?s deputy, a ruggedly handsome and doggedly mysterious Army vet, a newspaper editor with an investigative background and a Rebekah Brooks tonsure, and a local DJ who may yet develop into an amalgam of Samuel L. Jackson?s Mister Se?or Love Daddy and John Corbett?s Chris Stevens. There?s also a set of unsupervised teenage siblings; when the dome landed, their mother was eating at a chain restaurant in the next town over, and the kids? discussion of that meal occasions a sentence never heretofore uttered in the history of the American language: ?Mom?s having brunch with Uncle Steve at Denny?s.? No one brunches at Denny?s, of course. That would be like domiciling at an EconoLodge.

The dialogue tends in that fashion toward florid improbabilities of vernacular speech. When a small aircraft collides with the dome, one character says to another, ?Call the FAA!?? Reply: ?The feds?!?

Vaughan, writing and directing these lines, is hauling the Stephen King brand into risky territory. The risk is boredom?the half-puzzled, half-irritated sort of boredom elicited by later seasons of Lost. Under the Dome?s showrunner, in addition to writing addictive comic book series, was indeed a producer of late-season Lost, and CBS?s effort to explore current trends in semi-existential speculative fiction is almost charming in its awkwardness. So far, the main philosophical riddle it inspires is: Why don?t these guys try digging their way out?

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/television/2013/06/stephen_king_miniseries_under_the_dome_on_cbs_reviewed.html

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Blues great Bobby 'Blue' Bland dies at age 83

TodayEntertainment

2 hours ago

GRENADA, Miss. -- Bobby "Blue" Bland, a distinguished singer who blended Southern blues and soul in songs such as "Turn on Your Love Light" and "Further On Up the Road," died Sunday. He was 83.

Rodd Bland said his father died due to complications from an ongoing illness at his Memphis, Tenn., home. He was surrounded by relatives.

On Jan. 15, 1992, Bobby "Blue" Bland, left, receives his award for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame from B.B. King during induction ceremonies in New York.

Mark Lennihan / AP file

On Jan. 15, 1992, Bobby "Blue" Bland, left, receives his award for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame from B.B. King during induction ceremonies in New York.

Bland was known as the "the Sinatra of the blues" and was heavily influenced by Nat King Cole, often recording with lavish arrangements to accompany his smooth vocals. He even openly imitated Frank Sinatra on the "Two Steps From the Blues" album cover, standing in front of a building with a coat thrown over his shoulder.

"He brought a certain level of class to the blues genre," said Lawrence "Boo" Mitchell, son of legendary musician and producer Willie Mitchell.

Bland was a contemporary of B.B. King's, serving as the blues great's valet and chauffeur at one point, and was one of the last of the living connections to the roots of the genre. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1992 and was an influence on scores of young rock 'n' rollers.

Born in Rosemark, Tenn., he moved to nearby Memphis as a teenager and became a founding member of the Beale Streeters, a group that also included King and Johnny Ace. Upon his induction, the Rock Hall of Fame noted Bland was "second in stature only to B.B. King as a product of Memphis' Beale Street blues scene."

After a stint in the Army, he recorded with producer Sam Phillips, who helped launch the careers of Elvis Presley and Johnny Cash, in the early 1950s with little to show for it. It wasn't until later that decade Bland began to find success.

He scored his first No. 1 on the R&B charts with "Further On Up the Road" in 1957 and it was around this time he got his nickname, taken from his song "Little Boy Blue" because his repertoire focused so closely on lovelorn subject matter. Beginning with "I'll Take Care of You" in early 1960, Bland released a dozen R&B hits in a row. That string included "Turn On Your Love Light" in 1961.

Some of his best-known songs included "Call on Me" and "That's the Way Love Is," both released in 1963, and "Ain't Nothing You Can Do" in 1964.

"Lead Me On," another well-known song, breaks the listener's heart with the opening lines: "You know how it feels, you understand/What it is to be a stranger, in this unfriendly land."

Bland wasn't as well known as some of his contemporaries, but was no less an influential figure for early rock 'n' roll stars. Many of his songs, especially "Further On Up the Road" and "I Pity the Fool," were recorded by young rockers, including David Bowie and Eric Clapton.

"He's always been the type of guy that if he could help you in any way, form or fashion, he would," Rodd Bland said.

AP Music Writer Chris Talbott contributed to this report.

? 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/blues-great-bobby-bluebland-dies-age-83-6C10423620

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