Author: Serkadis

  • CBC’s 4th annual “Follow Your Dreams” banquet

    Published Jan. 21, 2010
    By Keith Leventhal, KEPR TV 

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    During January in each of the last 3 years, the CBC athletic department has put on a huge banquet.

    The goal of those events was to raise money for the department…and they’ve done a good job, collecting well over $60,000.

    Thursday night, it was the 4th annual “Follow Your Dreams” banquet over at CBC.

    The Hawks inducted 4 new members into their wall of fame…former coaches Dale Gier, Ed Maxwell, and Jim Rodgers and former baseball star and St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Ray Washburn.

    The special guest speaker was former CBC basketball player and Denver Nuggets star Byron Beck.

    And it turns out that some of these greats are a little star struck by one another.

    Byron Beck says, “Its fantastic…Ray’s sitting at my table here tonight and we’ve had some great conversations, I just told him how much I was in awe of what he has done, accomplished, pitching in the World Series and what not, and like I said, I always wanted to be a professional baseball player, so, its been really great.”

    There were a few other notable people at this year’s event, including Detroit Tigers pitcher Jeremy Bonderman, and most of the CBC coaches.

    As for money raised at this year’s banquet…we haven’t heard a dollar amount yet, but organizers seemed happy with the turn-out.

  • Brass quintet celebrates 30 years with free show

    Published Jan. 28, 2010
    By Dori O’Neal, Tri-City Herald staff writer

    For the Mid-Columbia Brass Quintet, playing music always has been a serious mission. But at the same time, they want it to be as fun as the fire bell polka.

    Here are five guys, three of them charter members, playing with brass — on just about anything an audience might want to hear from a tuba, trumpets, a trombone and a French horn.

    You can sample the quintet’s savvy sound at a concert celebrating its 30 years at 4 p.m. Jan. 31.

    Don Paul, John Owen and Randy Hubbs are the diehard 30-year veterans of the group. The other original members were trombonist George Konopek and tuba player Warren Hopkins, who eventually moved from the Tri-Cities. Several others have filled in over the years.

    Bob Swoboda settled in back in 1985, and Phillip Simpson joined in 2007.

    Hubbs, who was the baby of the group in 1980 as its 23-year-old trumpet player, remembers those early years.

    “I had just started my first teaching job at Pasco High School when the quintet formed 30 years ago,” he said. “I didn’t want to pass up the chance to play with Don and John because they were experienced band directors I could learn something from, and I know for a fact playing with them all these years has made me a better teacher.”

    Hubbs moved from Pasco High’s music department to become a music director at Columbia Basin College, where both Paul and Owen already were instructors.

    Besides finding time to play a quintet gig at least once a week, Hubbs and Owen collaborated on organizing the annual Cavalcade of Bands, now in its 29th year.

    Paul, a professor emeritus from CBC, also was key in organizing CBC’s annual Jazz Unlimited music competition, now in its 39th year.

    Owen, who plays French horn, is an instrumental music teacher in the Pasco School District. He’s been involved with several music groups since moving to the Tri-Cities in 1975 and was conductor of the now defunct Mid-Columbia Youth Symphony and founder/conductor of the wind chamber group Harmonie Columbia.

    Swoboda, on trombone, has a master’s in trombone performance and is an instructor in the Kennewick School District. Simpson, the band director at Southridge High School in Kennewick, is a composer as well as performer who has directed several instrumental and vocal groups.

    All five also are members of or have been members of the Mid-Columbia Symphony.

    “I have always enjoyed participating in groups of musicians, whether it’s a Dixieland band or a symphony orchestra,” Paul said. “Small groups have had a special appeal because of the musical interactions, the personal relationships and the fact they can perform in a lot more venues.”

    The variety of music the quintet can play also makes performing a lot more fun, he added.

    “We have a large library, some of which I have been fortunate to have written or arranged,” Paul said.

    For Owen, being a part of the quintet is much more than just a chance to play with four other fabulous musicians.

    “We’ve been together so long we’re even more than friends, we’re brothers,” Owen said. “And one of our missions has been music education, and it feels good that we’ve been able to help hundreds of kids during the last 30 years become more acquainted with music.”

    The guys also plan to spice up Sunday’s concert with a few female vocalists.

    Soprano Jan Paul, Don’s wife, will belt out a medley of Broadway show tunes while Simpson’s wife, soprano Carissa Simpson, will tackle a rendition of the hilarious Mom’s Song, sung to the music of William Tell Overture. And organist Kim Barney will assist the quintet with a classical piece by Handel.

    “There are many great brass quintets in the world today that have set examples for us to try and live up to,” Paul said.

    Additional news stories can be accessed online at the Tri-City Herald.

  • Victoria Beckham “The View” Co-Host Feb. 17

    Victoria Beckham will co-host The View next month, ABC said Friday. Beckham, who recently appeared as a guest judge on American Idol, will be a guest host on the Feb. 17 episode of the Emmy-winning morning talk show.The former Spice Girl has been invited to co-host The View for the second time. This is the second time in less than a year the designer and singing style icon has been asked to appear on The View; she made her first-ever guest appearance on the show last September.

    In 2007, The Beckhams were featured among Barbara Walters’ annual “10 Most Fascinating People” TV special.

    Also set to guest host next month? Meghan McCain, daughter of former Republican presidential candidate John McCain. Her episode airs Feb. 4.


  • Foothill residents in Duarte look for ways to keep bears out of trash cans

    Nita Norgard was popping popcorn in the kitchen of her Duarte Mesa home, the buttery fragrance wafting out through the backdoor left ajar, through the open garage, into the forested areas beyond.

    Still, she was surprised to find a 2-year-old bear sniffing around the front room when she turned around. Norgard screamed, and the bear bolted, said her husband, Bill Norgard.

    "Probably scared him just as much," he joked.

    The Norgards’ close encounter with a bear six months ago is one of many incidents that have led Duarte city officials to look for ways to keep bears from ripping into residents’ garbage cans.

    Some residents complained this week to the Duarte City Council that their bear-resistant trash bins are no match for increasingly aggressive bears. In response, officials with Burrtec Waste Industries, which hauls trash for the city, said they would soon offer a stronger alternative.

    The new bins, with three security latches instead of one, would cost participating residents $6 more a month.

    “Nothing is totally bear proof,” Mayor Margaret Finlay said today, “but I think it will be enough to discourage them enough so that berries might start looking pretty good again.”

    The bears have been creeping down from hillier areas into lower foothill neighborhoods over the last year as their habitats have been scarred by wildfires, residents said.

    "Anything the bear would like to eat, we put in the freezer — honey, peanut butter, cottage cheese, meat, food scraps, bread, they’re not real big on vegetables — and on trash day we put it in the trash can," said Bill Norgard, a 35-year resident of Duarte Mesa, a hilly neighborhood in Duarte.

    He said he had never seen a bear on his property until four years ago.

    Duarte Mesa residents are not allowed to put out their bins until 6 a.m. on trash day. City officials were considering expanding the rule to two lower foothill neighborhoods, but residents protested.

    In response, the idea was dropped, but Deputy City Manager Karen Herrera praised Burrtec’s efforts to build bear-resistant bins.

    "It’s all about minimizing that food source," she said. "Because that is what attracts the bears."

    In any case, enterprising bears can always find a way into a plastic bin, said Richard Nino, director of municipal services for Burrtec.

    "They just shatter the upper half of the container," he said. "They can hop on it; they may lean on it and pop off the lid, claw at it. They are very determined to get in there."

    — Amina Khan

  • Tesla files with the feds for IPO *UPDATED

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    Tesla Model S – click above for high-res image gallery

    For the first time in more than fifty years, a U.S. automaker is holding a public offering. Henry Ford made shares of Ford Motor Company public back in 1956. Tesla, the Elon Musk-owned Silicon Valley electric car company, filed to do so today. There’s no word as to when the shares will be available for public consumption, nor any word as to how much each share will cost.

    As for the timing of the filing, Telsa has sold nearly 1,000 (987 at last count) all-electric Roadsters in 18 different countries. Moreover, it has taken 2,000 reservations for its upcoming, more mainstream Model S, which is still at least a year away from production. With the production version of the Chevrolet Volt right around the corner, Tesla is looking to capitalize (quite literally) on the “growing interest in green technology and battery-powered vehicles.” Should you buy? Don’t ask us. However, King Midas-fingered whiz kids Sergey Brin and Larry Page (you know, the guys that founded Google) have already invested.

    UPDATE: Full IPO filing here.

    [Soruce: Reuters]

    Tesla files with the feds for IPO *UPDATED originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 29 Jan 2010 18:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Publishers Beginning To Recognize The Value Of Free… Even As They Fight $10 eBooks

    We’ve seen how various book publishers have freaked out about the growing popularity of ebooks, often with a price capped at $10 — arguing that it’s cannibalizing the higher margins found on hardcover books. And yet, at the same time, some of those very same publishers are perfectly happy to offer up free ebooks as promotional items. While some publishers are complaining that this is “devaluing” ebooks, others are recognizing that free can be quite useful in helping an author get past the obscurity barrier. We’ve already seen how many “top selling” Kindle books are actually free, and it’s good to see publishers looking to take advantage of that, even if they haven’t quite figured out that similar economic logic can apply to cheap ebooks as well. However, given the success of free ebooks, it seems likely that those publishers who are fighting against the tide will eventually come around to recognize the benefits of such things.

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  • Sweet civility in the new ballet season (if nowhere else)

    Art Scatter’s chief dance and decorum correspondent, Martha Ullman West, takes a look at Oregon Ballet Theatre’s upcoming season and discovers hope for artistic manners in the midst of a meltdown of civil rudeness.

    Yuka Iino and Ronnie Underwood, center, in 2007 OBT performance of "The Sleeping Beauty" Act III. Photo: Blaine Truitt Covert

    The ballet just might be the last bastion of civility in what used to be a civil society.

    Consider the evidence:

    • A certain Supreme Court Justice, in attendance at Wednesday night’s State of the Union address, mouthing a contradiction of the President on camera.
    • So-called Tea Party activists shouting loudly enough to shatter a bone china cup.
    • Drivers, discourteously at best, cutting in ahead of other drivers in traffic.
    • Bicyclists — righteously, oh, how righteously — taunting drivers in the same way.

    All of this occurred to me last night as I was watching Yuka Iino, a principal dancer at Oregon Ballet Theatre, balancing her way through the Rose Adagio from The Sleeping Beauty. The scene of this very tasty preview of the company’s first full-length production of the Tchaikovsky classic was OBT’s studio on the east side of the Willamette River in Portland. The occasion, complete with nibbles and name tags, was the ballet company’s announcement for press and supporters of its 2010-11 season. The Sleeping Beauty will open the season on October 9, accompanied by — oh, joy! — the live orchestra that has been mostly missing since the company’s financial disaster last spring.

    Artur Sultanov and Daniela DeLoe in a 2009 OBT performance of Nicolo Fonte's "Left Unsaid." Photo: Blaine Truitt CovertThe Rose Adagio, for those who have never seen Beauty, takes place at Princess Aurora’s birthday ball in the ballet’s first act, when she dances, briefly, with four suitors, portrayed Thursday night by Lucas Threefoot, Brian Simcoe, Christian Squires and Brennan Boyer, who were dressed in ordinary practice clothes, as was Iino.

    She, however, was so thoroughly steeped in the character of the young girl going through this aristocratic rite of passage — infusing her performance with the same shy charm and radiant smile that Margot Fonteyn had in 1949 — that she transported me to a place where decorum counted and manners mattered.

    And of course the plot of this ballet is driven by an act of discourtesy by Aurora’s father’s Major Domo, who fails to invite one of the fairies, Carabosse, to the celebration.  Carabosse then crashes the party and gives Aurora a spindle to play with, which punctures her finger so that she dies.  Only it’s a fairy tale, and the Lilac Fairy mitigates this rudeness by having everyone fall asleep for 100 years instead.  Y’all know the rest, I’m sure.

    The rest of OBT’s 2010-11 season is more reflective of today’s society, with Trey McIntyre’s Speak, to rap music, on one program. Stowell’s and Anne Mueller’s Rite of Spring will be reprised on an all-Stravinsky program that also includes collaborative works by Ashley Roland and Jamey Hampton of BodyVox, Mueller, and Rumpus Room’s Rachel Tess. There’s decorum on that program too, with a revival of Yuri Possokhov’s staging of Firebird.

    Stowell’s programming also includes an alternative to The Nutcracker in the form of a holiday revue that will run concurrently with it at the Keller Auditorium. And the season closer reprises Nicolo Fonte’s terrific Left Unsaid and Stowell’s own Eyes on You (like the Rose Adagio, it’s all about balance) — works that are fun, or thoughtful, or serious, that take us out of the present or into the future, or remind us of our better selves.

    *

    Photos, both by Blaine Truitt Covert:

    Top: Yuka Iino and Ronnie Underwood, center, in OBT’s 2007 performance of Act 3 from “The Sleeping Beauty.”

    Inset: Artur Sultanov and Daniela DeLoe in a 2009 OBT performance of Nicolo Fonte’s “Left Unsaid.”

  • BMW announces pricing for 2011 range, 3 Series MSRP unchanged

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    2011 BMW 3 Series – Click above for high-res image gallery

    This either proves the point that BMWs are expensive enough for now or the company is trying to aggressively hold the line on pricing for existing models. 2011 pricing and equipment for the complete BMW North American model range has been released, and the company is adding a revised Value Package and keeping prices the same. New models, such as the 2011 5 Series with which we scooted about in Portugal, will see some attendant bottom-line juggling, but the base MSRP for your dream 3 Series remains the same, even if you choose the updated coupe and convertible models.

    The biggest news is that the single-turbo N55 is muscling the twin-huffer N54 out of some Bayerische engine bays. 135s, 335s, 535s, the 535i Gran Turismo and X6 xDrive35i all get the new single-turbo N55 between the fenders. The N54 still appears in the Z4, new 335is and the 740i, as well as some others.

    There’s new package deals going on as well. 1 and 3 Series vehicles get a new Value Package, building on the popularity of the no-cost iPod interface and leather seat upgrade BMW has been offering. The 335 model misses out, however, as this is a 128-, 135- or 328-only affair. Don’t fret, as there’s a new Convenience Package, too. Costing between $1,000 and $2,350, the Convenience Package is different depending on the car, but it’s again a 1 and 3 Series upgrade. The package includes an alarm system, Comfort Access, some flavor of PDC, sunshades and, sometimes, xenon headlamps. There’s a press release as long as your arm detailing the panoply of infinitesimal and near-monumental changes among the 2011 BMW lineup available for your perusal after the jump.

    [Source: BMW]

    Continue reading BMW announces pricing for 2011 range, 3 Series MSRP unchanged

    BMW announces pricing for 2011 range, 3 Series MSRP unchanged originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 29 Jan 2010 18:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Pauly D Dating “Teen Mom” Farrah Abraham

    Pauly D, the spiky-haired, heavily-tanned star of MTV’s breakout hit Jersey Shore, is reportedly keeping it in the MTV Family after he was spotted snuggling up to Farrah Abraham, an 18-year-old single mother featured on the first season of the network’s cautionary docu-soap Teen Mom.

    Last week, Pauly, whose real name is Paul Delvecchio, DJed at a Houston nightclub with Abraham by his side, a source told Fox411.com Friday.

    Farrah, a native of Iowa, was recently in the news after her mother, Debra Danielson, was arrested for allegedly choking and hitting the teen.


  • Metro Gold Line strikes car on tracks in Pasadena

    The Metro Gold Line in Pasadena is closed after a northbound train struck a car that was apparently stuck on the tracks, a fire official said.

    A train carrying about 100 passengers slammed into the compact car about 1 p.m. on Glenarm Street between Raymond Avenue and Arroyo Parkway, shoving the car onto its side. The vehicle came to a stop when it slammed into one of the train system’s electrical towers, said Lisa Derderian of the Pasadena Fire Department.

    The car’s single occupant, a 40-year-old man, was extricated after 20 minutes and was being treated at a hospital for serious injuries, she said.

    Passengers on the train were evaluated for injuries, but none wanted to be taken to a hospital, Derderian said. Metro passengers were being bused around the crash site.

    The circumstances of the accident were still under investigation, Derderian said.

    — Amina Khan

  • Google CEO Eric Schmidt Is Not Impressed With Your iPad [Blockquote]

    Google’s CEO rarely comments publicly on the competition. When asked directly today about the iPad, though, he couldn’t resist a minor jab in Apple’s direction.

    Schmidt was fielding questions from reporters at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland when he made is opinion—such as it is—of tablets known. Of course, Google also has a vested interest in the space, with more than a few upcoming slates set to run Android. Still! It’s actually a pretty good point. [Guardian via Business Insider]






  • Report: Toyota considering ‘G’ performance division for its vehicles

    Finally, time for some good news from Toyota. At the 2010 Tokyo Auto Salon, Toyota showed a range of sporty looking, performance enhanced special-edition models with a G logo, most notably the Toyota FT-86 G Sports Concept. According to Straightline, the concept models hint at a feature sub-brand from Toyota that it will gradually roll out in its cars in mid-2010.

    In simple words, the G lineup will be Toyota’s in-house tuning division. The G department will be responsible for enhancing Toyota vehicle’s exterior, interior, mechanical components and the suspension.

    We’re guessing the first Toyota to get the G treatment will be the upcoming FT-86 due out in the later part of next year.

    Volkswagen is also planning a in-house tuning division called R GmbH.

    Click here for more news on the Toyota FT-86 Concept.

    Toyota FT-86 G Sports Concept:

    Toyota FT-86 G Sports Concept Toyota FT-86 G Sports Concept Toyota FT-86 G Sports Concept Toyota FT-86 G Sports Concept

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: Straightline


  • Poll Technica: do you want Flash on the iPad?

    Reactions around the Web to the lack of Flash support on the iPad are extremely polarized. The most common complaint is that Flash is necessary for a larger percentage of the Web to work properly. Popular video sites like Hulu, FunnyOrDie, and others are effectively shut out of the iPad browsing experience. This also includes many casual games, a majority of which are written and deployed online using Adobe Flash.

    Of course, Apple has its own reasons for excluding Flash from the iPhone OS (which also runs on the iPad). Apple also offers its own alternatives—for which you’ll have to pay—but those aren’t always up to par with the unbridled selection you find online.

    We’d like to know your position on the absence of Flash on the iPad. We realize that this is a random sampling and not authoritative, but we’re still interested in what you guys think about this issue. Our readers skew highly to the educated, high-income, IT, and otherwise professional market segment, and we know that many of you like to tinker with your gadgets or are software developers.

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  • Candy Dish: Bye Bye, Ugly Betty

    Oh no! Ugly Betty got cancelled?!

    Is Leo gonna put a ring on it?

    Is Kelis trying to pull a Gaga on us?

    This is an interesting model spread…

    9 glamorous hairstyles to try.

    Nick Cannon wants babies.

  • Paris Hilton As Marilyn Monroe

    Paris did her best Marilyn on the set of photo shoot for her upcoming fragrance campaign on Friday.

    “On set today at my new fragrance campaign photo shoot — a la Marilyn Monroe,” the heiress wrote. Paris, 28, already has nine different scents for men and women on the market.


  • Report: Hyundai nearly quadruples profits in fourth quarter

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    2011 Hyundai Sonata – Click above for high-res image gallery

    2009 was a tough year for nearly every automaker doing business in the U.S., but somehow Hyundai made the near total collapse of auto sales look like no big deal. Actually, we know how Hyundai pulled a Houdini-style miracle: Improved product and quality. And after taking a look at the Korean automaker’s fourth quarter earnings report it appears that all that hard work paid off.

    The New York Times reports that Hyundai made 945 billion won ($819 million), nearly four times the 243 billion won ($210 million) it made in Q4 2008. Hyundai essentially matched the $845 million that it made in Q3 2009 in part because of sales revenue that rose 9.3 percent year over year. Even more impressive is the fact that Hyundai pulled off a very solid profit in a down market while the Korean won increased by 35 percent versus the U.S. dollar.

    Hyundai is likely pretty happy with its 2009 performance, yet the Korean automaker wants more in 2010. Hyundai is forecasting a sales increase of 11 percent versus 2009, with predicted sales of 3.46 million cars, trucks and commercial vehicles – not unreasonable when you consider the potential for the U.S. auto industry to improve a bit in 2010 combined with compelling new product like the 2011 Sonata.

    Mitsuru Kurokawa at IHS Global Insight in Tokyo thinks Hyundai will make gains due to Toyota’s recent problems, adding “they’ve got a lot going for them: a broad compact-car lineup, attractive prices for the quality they offer and clever marketing.”

    [Source: The New York Times]

    Report: Hyundai nearly quadruples profits in fourth quarter originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 29 Jan 2010 17:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Windows Mobile Foursquare app now in open beta

    foursquare

    We last wrote about this app nearly 6 months ago, and it certainly took its time getting to market (and is in fact not quite here yet.) 

    WinMoSquare is now in open beta and allows most of the functions of the FourSquare location-based game to be accessed.

    To get into the beta e-mail the developer or leave your e-mail at Touchality, who did some work on the app, here.

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  • The iPad: a revolution in Apple mockery

    “And these jokes come so naturally that you don’t even have to think about it. You just… mock.”


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  • Steam steams ahead to 25 million users, 205 percent increase in sales

    Steam, Valve’s digital distribution for video games (as well as a kind of “social network” for gamers, though the phrase “social network” makes me nauseous), is really quite successful. In 2009, its fifth year of operation, sales were up 205 percent over the previous year. The service has more than 25 million users, of which 10 million have full profiles. (I’m one of them, by the way.) That means you’re looking at a core user group, or “hardcore” in the gamer lexicon, of 10 million people. That’s a lot of people.

    Steam, for the unawares, is an application that runs on Windows PCs. Users use it to download video games directly to their computer, as well as create a profile, join groups, and other social network trivialities. The main focus, though, is the downloading: rather than go to the local Best Buy or Wal-Mart, and deal with all of that, you download the game right then and there. Prices are reasonable—Steam typically has pretty fantastic sales at different points during the year—and, well, who wants to deal with dirty, dirty discs?

    Oh, and you can play these games from wherever you have an Internet connection.

    It’s pretty cool that the founder of Good Old Games hates Steam. Good Old Games is a similar service, but one that deals exclusively with old video games. You probably guessed that. All of its games are DRM-free, too, which is pretty nifty. (Nobody likes DRM on PC games, and the sooner it’s gone, the better.) Anyhow, the founder, Marcin Iwiński, describedto a Polish video game Web site the nightmare he had trying to uninstall the application.

    Steam isn’t universally loved, that is to say.

    Universally successful? Yeah, sure.


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