C10
WEATHER
Washington area today
The Capital Weather Gang’s forecast
At least partial sunshine returns as weak high pressure moves over the region. Temperatures head sharply upward, reaching the mid-to-upper 80s in the afternoon. This warmth will be accompanied by moderate humidity levels and light winds from the northwest.
For the latest updates, visit the Capital Weather Gang blog:
washingtonpost.com/capitalweathergang
The Region Today
Today’s Pollen Index
Mold Trees Weeds Grass
Moderate Moderate
Low
Harrisburg Hagerstown
89/62 87/65
Baltimore
91/68
Washington
90/71
Richmond Charlottesville
90/63 92/72
Norfolk
85/72
Blue Ridge
•Today, mostly sunny, very warm, humid. High 85-88. Wind northwest 5- 10 mph. •Tonight, mostly clear, warm. Low 64-68. Wind light, variable. •Monday, mostly sunny, very warm, humid. High 86-89. Wind southwest 6-12 mph.
Boating Forecast »
Virginia Beach
86/71
Recreational Forecast
Atlantic beaches
•Today, mostly sunny, warmer, more humid. High 82-86. Wind south- west 6-12 mph. •Tonight, mostly clear, mild. Low 62-66. Wind southwest 3- 6 mph. •Monday, mostly sunny, very warm, humid. High 85-89. Wind south- west 6-12 mph.
Upper Potomac River: Today, mostly
sunny, hot. Wind northwest 5-10 knots. Waves less than 1 foot.
Visibility unrestricted. Lower Potomac and Chesapeake Bay:
Today, mostly sunny, hot. Wind west 6-12 knots. Waves 1 foot on the lower Potomac, Chesapeake Bay. Visibility unrestricted. River Stages: The river stage at Little Falls will be 4.0 feet today, remaining 4.0 feet Monday. Flood stage at Little Falls is 10 feet.
ON YOUR MOBILE DEVICE
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Annapolis
86/69
Ocean City
80/69
Dover
88/68
High
Ultra-Violet Index Air Quality Index
8 out of 11+, Very High
Yesterday’s main offender:
Today: Good
Ozone, 63
The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
Philadelphia
90/70
North
KEY»
Temperature
100s°+ 90s° 80s° 70s° 60s° 50s° 40s° 30s° 20s° 10s° 0s° -0s°
-10s°+
Precipitation
Showers Rain T-Storms Flurries Snow Ice
Nation
City Today
Albany, NY
Albuquerque 88/58/s Anchorage 68/51/s Atlanta 80/66/t Austin 94/66/s Baltimore 91/68/s Billings, MT
Birmingham 84/68/t
84/59/s 86/66/s 88/60/s 71/51/s 80/67/t
Tomorrow City Today
Little Rock
Los Angeles
93/67/pc 92/69/s
66/46/pc 68/45/c 84/69/t
Bismarck, ND 70/47/c 69/43/pc Boise 73/52/pc 77/54/pc Boston 85/58/s Buffalo 82/62/s
74/60/s 87/62/t
Burlington, VT 76/50/t 84/65/t Charleston, SC 86/69/t 87/69/t Charleston, WV 90/64/pc 87/67/t Charlotte 90/65/t
85/65/t
Cheyenne, WY 68/41/s 77/46/pc Chicago 88/64/s Cincinnati 90/66/t Cleveland 85/65/s Dallas 96/73/s Denver 70/45/s Des Moines
76/55/t 84/66/t 86/64/t
98/71/pc 83/50/pc
Detroit 86/67/s El Paso
84/58/t 82/62/s 85/62/t
95/68/s 95/68/pc
Fairbanks, AK 80/54/pc 81/54/pc Fargo, ND
69/49/t 72/43/t
Hartford, CT 88/56/s 83/65/s Honolulu 86/73/s Houston 93/72/t Indianapolis 88/68/t Jackson, MS
90/69/t 87/68/t
Jacksonville, FL 85/68/t 87/69/pc Kansas City, MO 86/64/t 84/65/t Las Vegas
94/64/s 97/71/s
86/73/s 92/72/pc 83/62/t
Tomorrow
Louisville 90/71/t Memphis 90/71/t Miami 88/75/t Milwaukee 80/62/s Minneapolis 75/54/t Nashville 86/68/t
92/69/t 92/71/t 85/60/s 78/60/s 84/70/t 91/72/t 87/77/t 71/55/t
81/57/pc 87/68/t
New Orleans 88/72/t 87/72/t New York City 86/69/s 88/71/s Norfolk 85/72/t
90/71/s
Oklahoma City 92/67/pc 89/68/t Omaha 80/56/t Orlando 88/71/t Philadelphia 90/70/s Phoenix 99/70/s Pittsburgh 88/64/s
83/62/s 88/70/t 92/70/s 100/72/s 84/66/t
Portland, ME 75/49/pc 69/54/s Portland, OR
65/54/r 64/54/sh
Providence, RI 88/59/s 78/61/s Raleigh, NC Reno, NV
Richmond 92/72/pc Sacramento 86/53/s St. Louis
90/69/t 89/66/t
St. Thomas, VI 87/80/sh 87/80/sh Salt Lake City 70/52/s 82/58/pc San Diego
64/52/sh 77/60/s 68/60/pc
San Francisco 69/55/s 67/54/pc San Juan, PR 91/77/t 91/77/t Seattle 63/50/r
Spokane, WA 65/49/pc 62/47/c Syracuse 84/57/s Tampa 89/74/t Wichita 86/65/t
88/64/t 90/74/t
84/66/pc
NOTE: These are the predicted high/low temperatures and forecasts, through 5 p.m. Eastern time.
90/68/pc 93/68/s 78/51/s 78/52/pc 93/70/s 81/54/pc
S
KLMNO
Today
Mostly sunny
90°
71°
Wind northwest 4-8 mph
American Forecast
FOR NOON TODAY
Seattle
Portlan
SeattlSeattle Portland San Francisc
Fronts
Cold
Warm Stationary
Pressure Centers
High Low
Key » s-Sunny, pc-Partly Cloudy, c-Cloudy, r-Rain, sh-Showers, t-Thunderstorms, sf-Snow Flurries, sn-Snow, i-Ice.
World
City Today
Addis Ababa 78/57/pc 78/57/pc Amsterdam 59/51/r Athens 86/70/pc Auckland 59/46/pc Baghdad 108/79/s Bangkok 91/80/t Beijing 84/61/pc Berlin 63/50/sh Bogota 65/50/r Brussels 62/43/r
64/49/sh 84/67/s 57/51/r 109/74/s 93/81/t 81/59/s 56/47/sh 67/50/t 65/44/r
Buenos Aires 59/45/r 58/39/s Cairo 95/71/s Caracas 83/73/t Copenhagen 58/54/r Dakar 84/71/s Dublin 61/47/r Edinburgh 55/39/pc Frankfurt 70/44/r Geneva
62/59/sh
Ham., Bermuda 73/62/s 80/67/s Helsinki 54/40/sh
Ho Chi Minh City 92/79/sh 95/81/t Hong Kong
88/81/t 86/77/t
Islamabad 112/73/s Istanbul 85/68/s Jerusalem 80/59/s Johannesburg 60/40/r Kabul 93/49/s
100/84/pc Lagos 87/76/t
Yesterday’s extremes
(Continental U.S. only)
High: 100° Pecos, Texas Low: 13° Bodie State Park, Calif.
SOURCES:
AccuWeather.com; Walter Reed Army Medical Center (pollen data) ; Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments; American Lung Association; National Weather Service.
108/76/s 90/70/pc 83/61/s 58/41/t 88/51/s
Kingston, Jam. 87/79/s 87/80/s Kolkata
99/78/s 83/73/t 65/53/r 83/71/s 59/57/c 61/49/pc 67/47/sh 62/49/r
61/47/pc
Tomorrow City Today
Lisbon 77/64/s
London 63/48/pc Madrid 84/57/s Manila 91/82/t Mexico City
Montreal 75/54/t
Tomorrow
86/66/s
66/52/pc 88/61/s 90/81/t
82/50/s 83/50/pc 77/64/t
Moscow 69/59/sh 70/61/sh Mumbai 95/86/s Nairobi 81/57/r New Delhi
92/81/s 80/61/c
Oslo 63/46/r Ottawa
68/54/t
111/85/s 110/84/s 67/44/c 79/62/t
Paris 67/48/c Prague 63/52/t
67/51/pc 54/46/r
Rio de Janeiro 83/69/pc 73/61/sh Riyadh 109/84/s 105/80/s Rome 73/55/s Santiago 63/38/s
73/57/c 69/39/s
San Salvador 83/73/r 85/73/t Sarajevo
77/46/t
Seoul 66/52/sh Shanghai 79/63/s Singapore 91/81/t Stockholm 63/41/pc
58/39/r
75/50/pc 77/64/pc 93/81/t
59/46/pc
Sydney 64/54/sh 63/55/r Taipei 77/71/r Tehran 90/72/s
83/59/t
102/80/pc Vienna 70/56/pc 86/76/t
Lima 75/59/pc 73/58/pc
82/72/pc 89/72/s
Tokyo 63/55/sh 70/57/pc Toronto 84/65/s
61/52/sh
Warsaw 67/51/sh 68/54/r Yerevan 89/58/pc 92/60/pc
The world (excluding Antarctica)
High: 118° Mitribah, Kuwait Low: 3° Summit Station, Greenland
Rise Set
San Francisco
San Francisco
Los Angele
Portland
Calga Calgary
Calgary
Helena Rapid St. Pau City
Helena
Salt
City
Salt La
Los Angeles
Los Angeles
Phoenix Phoenix Dalla
Houston
Mo
HoustoHouston Monterre
Monterrey
nterrey Dallas
Dallas
Lake Ci
Lake City
ke
Denver
Denve Denver Columbus
Columbus
St. LouiSt. Louis
St. Louis
Atlanta Atlant New OrleanOrleans
New Orleans
ew
Atlanta
CharlCharlesto Tampa
Miami
Miami
Charleston
Tamp
eston
Tampa
Rapid Ci
City
Mpls.-Mpls.- Winnipeg
Winnipeg
Winnipe
St. Paul
Mpls.-
St. Paul
Ottaw ChiChicag
Chicago
cago
Ottawa
ttawa Bosto Boston
Boston
New Yor
Washingto Washington
Washington
New York
ew York Philadelphia Philadelphia
Monday
Partly sunny
92°
71°
Wind south 6-12 mph
Tuesday
Storms possible
87°
67°
Wind southwest 3-6 mph
Wednesday
Mostly sunny
86°
66°
Wind northwest 8-16 mph
Thursday
Mostly sunny
86°
68°
Wind south 12-25 mph
Official weather data
Reagan
Temperature
High Low
Normal Record high Record low
79° at 3:59 p.m. 66° at 6:00 a.m. 79°/60°
97° in 1991 41° in 1894
Precipitation
Past 24 hours Total this month
Normal month to date
Total this year Normal to date
Relative humidity
Max. Min.
0.29” 2.40” 3.58” 11.73” 15.79”
84% at 2:00 a.m. 59% at 5:00 p.m.
Barometric pressure
High Low
Temperature trend
20° 40° 60° 80° 100°
PAST TEN DAYS
0" 1" 2" 3" 4" 5" 6" 7" 8"
TODAY
Normal
TEN-DAY FORECAST
Precipitation almanac, 2009 - 2010
Actual
29.97” 29.90”
Actual and f or ecast
THROUGH 5 P.M. YESTERDAY
BWI
Dulles
80° at 5:00 p.m. 67° at 2:00 a.m. 78°/54°
97° in 1969 40° in 1997
None 5.42” 3.94” 16.71” 16.53”
86% at 2:00 a.m. 61% at 5:00 p.m.
29.96” 29.90”
Normal Record
81° at 3:47 p.m. 67° at 6:00 a.m. 78°/56°
97° in 1969 41° in 1997
0.01” 3.49” 3.65” 17.61” 17.07”
86% at 6:00 a.m. 59% at 5:00 p.m.
29.96” 29.89”
Apparent Temperature:
80°
(Comfort index com- bines temperature and humidity.)
Cooling
M J J A S O N D J F M A
Today’s tides High tides are in bold face
Washington Annapolis Ocean City Norfolk
degree days
An index of fuel con- sumption indicating how many degrees the average tempera- ture rose above 65 for the day. If a day’s average temperature were 75, there would be 10 ‘degree days’ for the date. Saturday ..............8 This month....... 171 This season ...... 211 Normal to yesterday ........ 100 Last season ...... 121
SUNDAY,MAY 30, 2010
4:54 a.m. 10:19 a.m. 5:47 p.m. 10:58 p.m. 12:28 a.m. 7:35 a.m. 2:45 p.m. 7:54 p.m. 4:03 a.m. 9:50 a.m. 3:49 p.m. 10:15 p.m.
5:53 a.m. 11:51 a.m. 5:50 p.m.
none
Point Lookout 3:39 a.m. 10:53 a.m. 3:58 p.m. 9:24 p.m.
Moon phases
June 4 Last Quarter
June 12 New
June 19 First Quarter
Solar system
Sun Moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus
5:45 a.m.
8:26 p.m.
11:03 p.m. 7:54 a.m.
4:42 a.m. 6:15 p.m.
8:01 a.m. 11:02 p.m.
11:41 a.m. 1:21 a.m.
2:36 a.m. 2:33 p.m.
2:22 p.m. 2:48 a.m.
2:37 a.m. 2:39 p.m.
June 26 Full
Head injury altered Fairfax woman’s accent
accent from C1
German accent. Fellow Norwe- gians ostracized her as a result, according to the medical litera- ture. Fewer than 60 cases have since been reported worldwide. Puz- zled doctors have studied a Loui- siana woman who, after a brain injury, suddenly began speaking with a Cajun dialect; a woman from the Newcastle region of England who speaks like a Ja- maican; and a Boston man who developed what sounded like a Scottish burr. There are Amer- icans who have developed Brit- ish-sounding accents, Britons who sound French, a Japanese stroke patient with a Korean ac- cent, and a Spanish-speaker who acquired a thick Hungarian ac- cent.
‘Somebody’s joke’
“The first time I heard about
Foreign Accent Syndrome, I thought, ‘This is not true; this is somebody’s joke,’ ” said Julius Fridriksson, who has studied brain images of patients suffer- ing from the malady at the Uni- versity of South Carolina and who, as a native of Iceland,
SKYWATCH
On those hot summer nights, Saturn, Mars and Venus form a trio to tear up the dance floor
by Blaine P. Friedlander jr.
Special to The Washington Post
In the waning days of spring, we look forward to some sum- mer planetary folk dancing: Sat- urn, Mars and Venus form a trio of ever-changing configuration. These planets spend the month of June getting close. In July and August, the planets change formation radically. As dusk falls now, find the ringed planet Saturn very high in the south-southwest, Mars hangs lower to the west and Venus — in the west — stays closest to the horizon. Venus, as usual, re- mains effervescent at a negative fourth magnitude (very bright) throughout the month. Saturn and Mars are substantially dim- mer than Venus, as both planets are first magnitude.
By mid-June the planets will be noticeably closer, yet still in the familiar pecking order of ear- ly June. An interloper appears — that is a young moon — on June 14, turning the trio into a quartet. Over the next week, the moon appears to follow along the ecliptic, wedged between Venus and Mars (June 15/16) and then Mars and Saturn (June 17/18). This trio spends the rest of
June getting closer, and then dancing through July and Au- gust. Jupiter rises before 3 a.m. ear-
ly in June, in the east-southeast, and remains up until the sunrise light washes the planet away. It should be easy to spot, because it is a negative second magnitude (very bright) object. By mid- month, the planet rises about 45 minutes earlier, and when June ends, this large gassy planet rises around 1 a.m.
From the Eastern time zone of
the United States, you will not be able to see the partial lunar eclipse on the morning of June 26, since by the time of the eclipse, the moon will have set. If you wish to see it, make plans to go west. Welcome the season of the hot and humid: Summer officially ar- rives in Washington on June 21 at 7:28 a.m., according to the U.S. Naval Observatory.
Down-to-earth events:
June 3 — Peter Smith of the University of Arizona discusses the exploits of the Phoenix space- craft on Mars in his lecture, “Phoenix’s Arctic Adventure,” at the Lockheed Martin Imax Thea- ter, National Air and Space Mu- seum. Free showing of an Imax film at 6:30 p.m.; meet the lec- turer at 7:30 p.m.; lecture at 8 p.m. Free admission, but tickets
are required. Information,
www.nasm.si.edu/.
June 5 — Get a heavenly tour led by astronomer Sean O’Brien of the National Air and Space Museum at Sky Meadows State Park near Paris, Va. Parking: $4. Arrive before dark. 8:30 to 11 p.m. 540-592-3556.
www.nasm.si.edu /events/skywatching.
June 5 — “Black Holes as Multitaskers of the Universe,” with astronomer Tamara Bog- danovic, open house at the Uni- versity of Maryland Observatory, College Park. Night sky viewing afterward, weather permitting. 9 p.m. 301-405-6555;
www.astro.umd.edu/openhouse.
June 5 — Star party, hosted by the Astronomical Society of Greenbelt, the observatory at Northway Fields Park in Green- belt. 9 p.m. and on July 19 at 8:45 p.m.
www.greenbeltastro.org.
June 19 — On the eve of sol- stice, see the summer stars: “Ex- ploring the Sky,” Rock Creek Park, hosted by the National Park Service and the National Capital Astronomers. Meet near the Na- ture Center in the field south of Military and Glover roads NW. 9 p.m.
www.nps.gov/rocr/
planyourvisit/
expsky.htm.
June 20 — “Sidewalk Astrono- my,” hosted by the Astronomical Society of Greenbelt, Roosevelt Center in Greenbelt, near Cres- cent Road and Centerway. 9 p.m.
www.greenbeltastro.org.
June 20 — Astronomer Rodri- go Herrera Camus discusses “The Invisible Universe/El Uni- verso Invisible” in English (at 8 p.m.) and Spanish (at 9 p.m.), at the open house, University of Maryland observatory, College Park. See the night sky through a large telescope, weather permit- ting. Information: 301-405-6555;
www.astro.umd.edu/openhouse/,
http://uinvisible.blogspot.com/.
“Just Imagine,” seeing the sky from different perspectives. Da- vid M. Brown Planetarium, 1426 N. Quincy St., Arlington, near Washington-Lee High School. 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays; 1:30 and 3 p.m. Sundays. $3 for adults; $2 for seniors and chil- dren. Now through June 20. 703- 228-6070;
www.apsva.us/
planetarium.
“Learn the Sky Nights,” the
University of Maryland observa- tory’s six-week summer program that teaches about the night sky begins July 7. Beginners meet at 7 p.m., while the advanced section meets at 9. Information and reg- istration,
www.astro.umd.edu/
openhouse/ amateur/
Learn_the_sky10.html.
Blaine Friedlander can be reached at
PostSkyWatch@gmail.com.
speaks English with a slight ac- cent. Then he began working with a
patient who had spoken with a Southern U.S. accent all his life but woke from a stroke sounding like a proper British gent. “This was an accent he could not con- trol.”
Scientists are quick to point
out that these are not bona-fide accents. (And none of the pa- tients has spontaneously learned a foreign language.) Rather, in a way no one quite understands, the damage to the brain disrupts speech formation.
Shelia Blumstein, a Brown
University linguist who has writ- ten extensively on Foreign Ac- cent Syndrome, said sufferers typically produce grammatically correct language, unlike many stroke or brain-injury victims. But subtle changes in intonation and melody make syndrome suf- ferers sound foreign. No amount of therapy, she said, seems to re- verse that. “I did have one patient who had a stroke and developed For- eign Accent Syndrome, then had another stroke and it disap- peared. Do dee do do. Do dee do doo,” she said, imitating the “Twi-
light Zone” theme song. “There is still so much we don’t know.” Two days after her fall, Vander-
lip awoke unable to speak. A friend called 911, and Vanderlip was rushed to Fair Oaks Hospi- tal, where an MRI showed she’d had a stroke. Working with a speech therapist, she could make rudimentary sounds and slowly relearn how to speak — but with a Russian-sounding accent. When the accent remained even after Vanderlip regained speak- ing ability, a neurologist diag- nosed Foreign Accent Syndrome.
Other changes
Since the fall, it’s not only Van-
derlip’s accent that has changed. She has become forgetful and tires easily. Formerly loquacious and eloquent, even, friends say, she has become introverted, can’t speak coherently for more than 35 minutes at a time and has lost her job as a regional manager for the nonprofit Operation Hope. A single mother of two, she lives off savings and disability payments. Andrew Uscher, a longtime friend, said many of Vanderlip’s friends have drifted away as she has struggled with her injury, fi- nancial issues and depression.
“When we go out, people just assume she’s from another coun- try,” he said. “It bothers her — not that people think she’s foreign in- stead of American, but that it doesn’t sound like her. It’s not her normal speech pattern. And we all like to be true to who we are.” Nearly three years after she slipped on stairs at the National 4-H Council building in Chevy Chase, grabbed for a handrail, hurtled backward, hit her head and screamed for help, Vanderlip filed suit in Montgomery County Circuit Court against the 4-H, al- leging that the stairs were unsafe and seeking at least $1 million in damages. The 4-H Council did not respond to a request to com- ment.
On her home answering ma- chine, Vanderlip has preserved her old voice as a greeting. “Please leave your message and we’ll get back to you as soon as we can.” She sounds confident, articulate. And American. Her eyes redden when she hears it. “When I sound different, peo- ple think that I’m different,” she said. “To this day, my daughter is nervous about me going on field trips or working in the class-
SARAH L. VOISIN — THE WASHINGTON POST
Doctors say Robin Jenks Vanderlip, a native-born American, has developed a rare condition called Foreign Accent Syndrome.
room, because she’s a little em- barrassed about how I sound.” Vanderlip, who is studying brain- injury education George Wash- ington University, said the in- credulous looks she gets when she explains that she’s a native- born American can get wearing. She said she was devastated as
she watched a Fox News Channel report on her lawsuit, with an- chor Megyn Kelly repeatedly re- ferring to her as “Inga from Sve- den” and commentator Lis Wiehl saying: “She says she’s going to
be damaged because now some people think she has this nice, sexy Danish accent? I don’t think so!”
Since she began speaking like
a foreigner, Vanderlip sometimes wants to be anywhere but here. She and her children have start- ed taking vacations abroad, where she can lose herself in a polyglot of accents. “I feel there’s no one to judge me in a foreign country,” she said. “I don’t feel so out of place.”
schulteb@washpost.com
LOCAL NEWS, TRAFFIC & WEATHER.
washingtonpost.com/
local
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