Top News Stories –
Madonna compares herself to Pablo Picasso –
Madonna thinks artists deep into their careers should stop if they do not have anything more to say. But at 56, the singer says she wants to keep going – and feels like Pablo Picasso. “I like to compare myself to other kinds of artists like Picasso. He kept painting and painting until the day he died. Why? Because I guess he felt inspired to do so,” she said. “Life inspired him, so he had to keep expressing himself, and that’s how I feel.” Madonna released her self-titled debut album in 1983, and her latest album, “Rebel Heart,” earlier this year. She said the key to sticking around is her continual desire to inspire others. “I don’t think there’s a time, a date, an expiration date for being creative,” she said. “I think you go until you don’t have any more to say.” [Daily Telegraph] Madonna launched her latest video on June 17, 2015
Madonna
Taylor Swift Chinese clothing line with ‘TS’ and ‘1989’ touches Tiananmen Square nerve –
Taylor Swift has accidentally touched a political nerve in the lead up to her China tour by promoting merchandise with the letters ‘TS’ and the date ‘1989’ — shared by the Tiananmen Square massacre, which remains heavily censored in mainland China. The American star was due to launch her new range of clothing on China’s biggest retailer platforms, Taobao and Jing Dong (JD.com), in the run up to her forthcoming China tour. However, the tour slated for November, could be jeopardised given the sensitive nature of the cack-handed reference. Both the tour and album were named after Swift’s date of birth, 1989, but also allude to the year in which reportedly thousands of innocent civilians were mown down by government forces in Beijing among student protests. [Daily Telegraph]
Taylor Swift
A $7 Billion Charge at Microsoft Leads to Its Largest Loss Ever –
An accounting charge wiped out Microsoft’s profit for the quarter, leading to its largest loss ever, the company said on Tuesday, making clear the cost of its missteps in the mobile business. The $7.5 billion accounting charge, stemming from Microsoft’s troubled acquisition of Nokia’s cellphone business, was disclosed by the company earlier this month, along with plans to eliminate 7,800 jobs, mostly in the company’s phone operations. While the accounting charge was on paper and will not diminish the company’s huge cash hoard, it was a psychic blow to Microsoft, one of the biggest money makers in tech. [NY Times]
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SPECTRE – James Bond trailer
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Other News Stories –
- Armed conflicts and attacks
- A suicide bomb attack kills at least 15 people in northern Afghanistan. (CNN)
- Two explosions in the Nigerian city of Gombe killed at least 29 people. (Reuters)
- Arts and Culture
- The University of Oxford has radiocarbon dated fragments, of what apparently is the world’s oldest Quran, to between 568 A.D. and 645 A.D. The animal skin parchment was found hidden inside the pages of another book in England’s University of Birmingham library. (Daily Mail) (Deutsche Welle)
- Business and economy
- The European Central Bank provides an extra 900 million euros to the Greek banks. (The Independent)
- Disasters and accidents
- 2015 Studénka train crash
- Three people die in a collision between a Pendolino train and a lorry that occurred near Studénka, north Moravia, in the Czech Republic.(Yahoo news) (ABC news) (ČTK)
- Law and crime
- Charleston church shooting
- Dylann Roof, the suspect in the murder of nine people in the American city of Charleston, South Carolina, is indicted on dozens of federal offenses including hate crimes. (The Guardian)
- The former prime minister of Egypt, Ahmed Nazif, is sentenced to five years in prison after losing appeal against 3-year prison sentence forcorruption. (Cairo Post)
- Science and technology
- The finals of the robot football World Cup are held. A Chinese team defeats the Netherlands in the finals of the middle-weight non-humanoid league, while another lost in the final of the small humanoid class to a team from Japan. (DutchNews) (BBC)
- Health and medicine
- Scientists, led by study leader Jeff Taubenberger, at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), one of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), expose mice to non-infectious H proteins (hemagglutinins; 18 types known): one of two protein classes, along with N proteins (neuraminidases; 9 types known), that line influenza (flu) viruses. They then later exposed the mice to species of the flu they hadn’t experienced before, and the mice were protected. This approach toward finding a new universal flu vaccine works better than the current approach of using live or weakened infectious whole flu strains, especially because of the virus’s capability to mutate successfully easily, such as when a person is infected with more than one strain of it at a time. Human trials could start in 2016. (NIAID)
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