Caribbean RoundUp – Caribbean Life

Associated Press / Chris Brandis

Several tourists enjoy Rockley beach, in the resort town of Rockley, in the parish Church Christ, Barbados.

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The Group General Manager at Ocean Hotels in Barbados, Patricia Affonso-Dass is the new president of the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association at the Associations Annual General Meeting, held alongside the Caribbean Hospitality Industry Exchange Forum (CHIEF) and Taste of the Caribbean at the Hyatt Regency in Miami recently.

Affonso-Dass, a graduate of Florida International Universitys School of Hospitality and Tourism Management, serves as president-elect for the next year before taking over the presidency of the travel trade association next summer from current incumbent Karolin Troubetzkoy, executive director of the renowned Jade Mountain and Anse Chastanet resorts in St. Lucia.

He has been the president of both the Tourism and Hospitality Association of Guyana and the Barbados Hotel and Tourism Association and runs the Ocean Hotels group, a family-owned company located on the south coast of Barbados with three unique hotels.

Affonso-Dass will serve the association as president for two years after Troubetzkoys tenure ends next year.

Barbados

Hotels in Barbados have seen an increase in package demand with nearly a 15 percent growth in 2016.

This is according to the Expedia group, one of the worlds leading travel companies.

Package bookings, which combine components like flights and hotels, typically capture the attention of higher quality travelers that spend money, have longer lengths of stay, book further in advance.

Some destinations within Barbados that experienced increases in package demand in 2016 included Christ Church with nearly 30 percent year-on-year and St Peters with nearly 50 percent.

New data from the Expedia group also. Indicate that the United States remains the key feeder market for Barbados with a reported growth of more than 20 percent year-on-year in 2016, followed by Canada with more than 15 percent and Brazil with nearly 25 percent year-on-year.

According to the Barbados Hotel and Tourism Board, the destination welcomed more than 630,000 tourists in 2016- a 6.7 percent increase compared to 2015.

Expedia reported that the top source markets for Barbados came from the United States, followed by Canada, UK and other Caribbean markets.

An oil exploration campaign is set to begin in the coming months in Grenadian waters.

Prime Minister Dr. Keith Mitchell announced during a national address that a search for oil is expected to start within months.

He said the government of Grenada has granted the Global Petroleum Group (GPG) authorization to conduct a seismic survey on the island and the group has identified the most prospective geographical features offering greatest exploration and economic potential.

They have prepared all the engineering and logistical plans for the exploratory drilling campaign, engaged all the contractors, subcontractors and vendors necessary, and are on the verge of commencing the exploratory drilling campaign within the next month or two, Mitchell said.

At present, Grenada does not produce oil.

The prime minister said the achievements to date represent the furthest any company conducting petroleum exploration in Grenada has ever reached and the quest continues, with future prospects in sight.

Guyana government said it will be seeking advice before making any decision to set up an oil refinery in the South American country.

Minister of State Joseph Harmon said after the minister of natural resources receives the advice, he will bring a memorandum to Cabinet upon which we will cogitate and make a decision that is in the best interest of the people of Guyana.

Recently, Pedro Haas, director of Advisory Services at Hartree Partners of the USA who was tasked with carrying out a feasibility study for an oil refinery in Guyana revealed that the estimated cost to construct an oil refinery would be around $5 billion dollars.

The feasibility study found that it would be too costly for the government to invest in an oil refinery and the minister said that Cabinet is still to review the findings of the study.

The consultant, secured through the New Petroleum Producers Group by Chatham House, USA, said that the final results of the study showed that Guyana would be destroying over half of the value of your investment the day you commission your refinery.

The Jamaica government has passed the Plea Bargain Negotiations and Agreement Act, in the Senate, which provides for a system of plea bargaining for those who commit crimes.

Minister of Foreign Affairs Kamina Johnson Smith, explained that the act is intended to give accused people the opportunity to offer a guilty plea in exchange for a lighter sentence.

Smith, who is leader of Government Business in the Senate, said the legislation would assist in the delivery of justice in a timely manner and reduce the backlog of cases in the nations courts.

St. Vincent and the Grenadines Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves has praised CARICOM countries for acting with independence, courage and concerted action during the recent Permanent Council meeting of the Organization of American States (OAS) which was called to discuss the situation in Venezuela.

In a letter sent to CARICOM Secretary General Irwin Larocque, Gonsalves said the CARICOM stance is a tribute to our regions commitment to the highest ideals of our Caribbean civilization and of its institutional expression, politically, the independent and sovereign nation-state.

The prime minister said through its position at the OAS, CARICOM countries have honored the names of our revered leaders of yesteryear, including Errol Barrow of Barbados, Forbes Burnham of Guyana, Michael Manley of Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobagos Dr. Eric Williams, whose representative countries defied the edict of a hegemonic neighbor in their formal diplomatic recognition or revolutionary Cuba in 1972.

Police are hunting for three bandits who held up a prominent Roman Catholic priest, tied him up and robbed the St. Martin de Pores Church in Belmont, Port-of Spain around 5 am on June 12, 2017.

Police said Fr. Clive Harvey was outside the church when he was accosted by three armed men with guns.

They ordered the priest into the presbytery before they tied him up and threatened to abduct and kill him.

They left with only TT$1,000 in cash, a cellphone and some other items.

Fr. Harvey managed to untie himself and went to the home of a nearby parishioner, who called the police.

Religious leaders have condemned that attack on the well-known priest, who helps underprivileged children in communities in a crime hot spot in Laventille, Port of Spain.

In a response, Prime Minister Dr. Keith Rowley said the attack on Fr. Harvey by able-bodied, gun-toting men represents the worst that exist in our communities.

He said: Notwithstanding what difficulties one may be facing in life there are limits beneath which the human form should not sink.

compiled by Azad Ali

Posted 12:00 am, June 20, 2017

2017 Community News Group

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Caribbean RoundUp - Caribbean Life

Small Bites: Goat curry highlights Caribbean Delight’s Jamaican fare – STLtoday.com

The headline for last week's main review described El Toluco Taqueria & Grocery as bare-bones. I should have saved the adjective for today's Small Bites. Caribbean Delight, which opened in September by the intersection of Gravois Avenue and South Grand Boulevard, is as skeletal a restaurant as you'll find in town. Its single room features an ordering window at the far end, a few tables around the perimeter and a big empty space in the middle.

You'll probably get your food to go your food is served in a to-go container regardless (hence the photographs included here) but get it you should.

At Caribbean Delight, owner and chef Chrisanna Little is serving traditional dishes from her native Jamaica. As she told me during a phone interview, these are the recipes that have been passed down to her.

This is basically how they're cooked, she said.

There is jerk chicken, of course, grilled outside the restaurant, chopped into pieces and served over rice. The char-kissed chicken is appropriately spicy, but the real heat comes from the gravy ladled over the rice.

An order of goat curry from Caribbean Delight. Photo: Ian Froeb

Many of the other dishes on Caribbean Delight's menu Little stews and stews and stews. They cook for a really, really long time, she told me.

These include oxtails, their abundant meat not quite falling off the bone but yielding easily to your plastic to-go fork. A definite, but not searing heat tinges the rich beef flavor. A clear standout is the goat curry, the tender meat's strong natural flavor sharply accented by chiles but also enrobed by more complex, warming curry spices.

Your order should probably include a traditional Jamaican beef patty, an empanada-esque hand pie (though the patty's shell is larger and softer) with spicy minced beef.

An important caveat: Caribbean Delight is cash-only.

Not a caveat, though maybe an invitation: Every other weekend, Little said, Caribbean Delight stays open later than usual and plays music. That big empty space in the middle of the room might come in handy then.

Where Caribbean Delight, 3526 Gravois Avenue More Info 314-799-1463 Menu Traditional Jamaican fare Hours Lunch and dinner daily

A weekly treasure trove of tastiness, featuring reviews from restaurant critic Ian Froeb and how-to videos by food writer Dan Neman.

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Small Bites: Goat curry highlights Caribbean Delight's Jamaican fare - STLtoday.com

VIDEO: Talking skull returns to Pirates of the Caribbean at Walt Disney World for new on-ride photo – Inside the Magic


Inside the Magic
VIDEO: Talking skull returns to Pirates of the Caribbean at Walt Disney World for new on-ride photo
Inside the Magic
A classic piece of Pirates of the Caribbean history has returned in a new form at Walt Disney World. The talking skull that used to leave passengers with the infamous dead men tell no tales line is now back, but this time this speaking spirit serves ...

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VIDEO: Talking skull returns to Pirates of the Caribbean at Walt Disney World for new on-ride photo - Inside the Magic

The Bahamas, for Two – HuffPost

Where are you taking Amy for your 30th anniversary?

The Bahamas, I answered.

Oh my! Youre going to love Atlantis.

My mind suddenly filled with visions of turbocharged slides rocketing screaming kids under shark-filled pools, while sea turtles languidly swam through massive saltwater tanks tugging signs advertising the all you can eat conch fritters.

Uh...well, we wont be going to Atlantis.

Not us. Weve been to Disney World many times so why bother with a Bahamian version? We wanted to see the real Bahamas, up close and personal. For years weve seen the commercials and advertisements and often wondered; is the water really that blue, that clean, that amazing? Are the people really that friendly? Are the starfish really that big?

Six months ago, with our 30th anniversary on the horizon, we started to plan our trip and we knocked around a multitude of ideas and destinations; and we both kept coming back to the tropics. Weve never been to the Caribbean and the thought of sinking our toes into a place that keeps time with the tides, where the sea is the clock, where we could relax and enjoy the peace and serenity that only a natural setting offers, was just too intriguing. And as we looked around, we were captivated by the Instagram account of Katie Storr. Shes a dive master for Stuart Coves Dive Bahamas and her underwater photos sold us on the Bahamas. Yeah, we wanted to do that.

Katie Storr

So we made our plans and blocked off our calendars. We would stay at Sandyport Beach Resort, go bird watching with Scott Johnson, Science Officer with the Bahamas National Trust, snorkel on Sandyports beach, take a cooking class at the Graycliff Hotel, find the best bar in Nassau, seek out Bahamian cuisine, take in the Bahamas Art Gallery, take a seaplane ride to Carriearl Hotel on Great Harbor, jump into a blue hole, snorkel some more, and finally go diving with the folks at Stuart Coves. After wed made our plans and were counting the days until our trip, the owners of Carriearl reached out to us and asked if wed mind being their guest chefs on our first night there.

Are you freakin kidding me!?

So how did it all go and what did we learn that would be of assistance to those planning their own Bahamas adventure? Well for one we brought too many pairs of underwear. Ill explain later.

We arrived at Lynden Pindling airport via American Airlines. We flew out of Charlotte, NC, on a day filled with rotten weather across the southeast and we had a relatively bumpy flight dodging thunderheads until we were a few miles off the coast of Florida. The weather broke and the clouds and turbulence gave way to a gorgeous blue sky and water that turned slowly from almost black to a shimmering turquoise. Bahamas means shallow sea, a name given by Christopher Columbus (yeah, that guy), and if youve never been to the Bahamas, the sight of that water can really bring out the child in an adult. As we eased below ten thousand feet and the vista opened up, animated voices filled the aircraft.

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Now to find an Uber. Uh...first lesson learned, Uber hasnt made it to the Bahamas, and there are no taxi services, only private taxis. Each taxi is independent so if youre staying at a hotel, or an AirBnb, the manager will have a few taxis he or she prefers. As the Bahamas are surrounded by 20 mph salt-laden air, the cars tend to look like outcasts of the latest Transformers movie. And they drive on the wrong side of the road so our first impression of the Bahamas was a bit of culture shock.

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We drive on the proper side of the road, John. So claims our friend Serena Williams. If you dont know, this group of islands was a British territory until 1973 and apparently the British left behind so many right-hand drive vehicles and wrong-side-of-the-road drivers, it made sense to continue driving on the wrong side of the road.

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Just enjoy the ride and marvel at the scenery.

photo courtesy Sandyport Resort

Our first three days were spent at Sandyport Beach Resort. If youre looking for a shimmering steel and glass hotel where a bucket of ice costs $5.00 ($6.50 with tip), look elsewhere. Sandyport is about five miles from downtown and an equal distance from the airport. Their rooms are tailored for those of us a little more self-sufficient. Theres a laundry, fully stocked kitchenettes and three or four restaurants within walking distance. Many more if you dont mind a miles walk. And the beach is but a very short walk away. Prior to check-in, Serena brought us to a local market and we grabbed a few necessities and some spectacular fresh grouper steaks for dinner, or breakfast.

Aaahhh, Mr. and Mrs. Malik, welcome to Sandyport.

Vernon Moss welcomed us with a disarming smile and a beefy handshake. The hotels General Manager, he was also our concierge and de facto guide during our stay. Hes a native Bahamian and happy to share the ins, outs and quirks of the Bahamas. Our second day we were scheduled to fly to Andros via a local airline with a 6:45 am departure. He wisely recommended arriving an hour prior to departure. As it was, we departed 25 minutes early. Why? Because all the passengers were there. Thanks, Vernon.

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Check in, had a quick look around, then into shorts and off to the beach.

And its breathtaking. The water is, well, see for yourself. This is about six feet of water beneath our Keens and we could count the scales on the yellowtail Snappers swimming beneath us.

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Two hours into our vacation and this is our first view from the beach. The bartender actually said its a bit hazy today, maybe tomorrow its going to be really beautiful.

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Sandyport is more than a hotel. Theres condos, apartments, shops and businesses and theyre all connected by a small harbor. The view from the balcony is worth the price of admission. From here we saw a multitude of fish, rays, birds, and even sea turtles. We were told a manatee and her calf were in the harbor but we didnt see them.

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After lunch at the Blue Sail, also right on the beach, the staff at Sandyport offered us snorkeling gear and we were off to the water. If youve never snorkeled, the Bahamas are a great place to learn. The water is clean enough that when you gulp down a quart, you wont become ill. Try doing that on an Atlantic beach and you might end up in ICU. And because the water is so shallow, theres very little in the form of waves, so you wont be dodging surf boards. The small rock jetty at Sandyport provided a haven for all manner of sea life including snappers, grunt, angelfish, sea stars, barracudas, porcupine fish...I could keep going. Complimentary snorkel gear, a three minute walk to the beach and after a few minutes in the water, and we were swimming through a massive saltwater aquarium.

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Wed been in the Bahamas less than three hours and we were already on sensory overload. It was time for a drink and we didnt have to go far, The Blue Sail Cafe, owned by Chef Jacques Carlino, a Frenchman with a penchant for turning out amazing pastries, is right there. And with this view, why get into a taxi?

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The lunch menu looked familiar to anyone thats dined at a country club in the states. A variety of sandwiches, burgers, cold salads and macaroni & cheese. Wait a minute...I thought I was in the Caribbean? Where were the mangos, papayas, pineapples, etc?

Sorry, Chef. This is the West Indies, not the Caribbean, and theres very little agriculture so not much locally grown fruits and vegetables. So we settled on the wood fired pizza and to our surprise, it was pretty damn good. And who knew that the local brew, Kalik, would pair so well with sunshine and pizza?

photo by the author

Soon we were back in the water for another swim because we wanted to earn our massage. We dont do yoga poses or juice cleanses, but were all about a real massage. And Sandyport has a great masseuse and an amazing setting for that massage.

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Eventually we did make it to downtown Nassau for a tour and a visit to the Graycliff Hotel and a cooking class with their chef, Elijah Bowe. Many years ago, Chef Bowe spent time in south Louisiana working for Chef John Folse, so we had plenty to talk about. Like myself, he is a disciple of Chef Paul Prudhomme. Chef Bowe is a natural showman, he engaged with us readily and entertained us with vignettes of his career and life in the Bahamas. He provided a station for each of us to join in on making conch chowder, snapper en papilotte, Caribbean slaw, and macaroni & cheese. The Graycliff is perhaps the most well-known restaurant in the Tropics due to their 200K+ bottle wine list.

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Murray Sweeting

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Our class was a three plus hour affair and if youre one for cooking classes and having fun in a professional kitchen, youll certainly enjoy this. After our class it was time for a walk around downtown Nassau.

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That evening, Vernon Moss and his wife took us to the Fish Fry neighborhood for Bahamian cuisine. Finally were going to have something local and authentic. And the menu is closer to a Calabash, NC fish house than what I was expecting. Fried fish, and shrimp, and conch, and wings, and burgers. French fries, slaw, and again macaroni & cheese. Vernon senses my disappointment and explains how everything on the islands, save for the two local beers and rums, must come in on a boat or barge. Theres very little industry in the Bahamas, and thats one of the reasons why the water is so clear. Tourism is the main industry and the Atlantis resort is the second largest employer, second only to the government.

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Alright I understand the limitations of transportation. However, if were going to stuff a barge full of french fries and hot house tomatoes, we could just as easily be sailing in tropical fruit and vegetables. For the life of me I was dumbfounded as to why someone wasnt serving or at least trying to create Bahamian cuisine. Sure we had delicious conch dishes but I couldnt see a distinct cuisine. Macaroni & cheese? Sorry my friends but theres nothing about that dish that can lay any sort of geographical stamp to the Bahamas, or the West Indies. Yet it was everywhere. Yes we had delicious food at the Graycliff and the conch chowder, conch salad, poached snapper en papillote, and guava duff felt very Bahamian/Caribbean but that was it as far as local dishes. Everywhere we went we were greeted with burgers, fries, pizza, etc. The place that several Bahamians recommended to us, Oh Andros, served us a mountain of fries, rice, Cole slaw, and macaroni and cheese with some amazingly fresh grilled snapper. Alright, I understand its tough to grow anything and most of the tourist clientele are Americans but how come some Bahamian chef hasnt stepped up and defined a true Bahamian cuisine?

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So if youre looking for a fine meal in the Bahamas, youll end up at an Italian or French themed restaurant. On one of our evening forays into Nassau, we spent a pastoral hour at the bar at Cafe Matisse. BJ Ramsay, their bartender, has the perfect antidote for a hectic afternoon downtown. Hes the bartender that every fine restaurant should have, a knowledgeable and engaging soul with an appreciation for spirits. After asking me if I prefer Scotch or Bourbon, (Bourbon) he poured me a glass of locally produced, wood-aged Jab sugar cane rum. And damn was it good. Notes of dried fig, fresh apricot, hints of white pepper and vanilla bean, and that sweetness of cane. Ive now got a small bottle in my personal bar.

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When we left Cafe Matisse, it was about 6:00 pm. And downtown Nassau had rolled up the sidewalks. We learned that when the cruise ships are docked, Nassau can be teeming with activity. When the ships whistle blows at 4:00 pm, most of the shops close up, too. So other than dining, theres not much going on by 5:00 pm.

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And heres the reason theres little agriculture on the Bahamas. Unlike the volcanic islands of the Caribbean, the Bahamas are limestone and the topsoil is rather shallow. Theres plenty of elevation on New Providence (the island thats home to Nassau) and in some places, one can walk or drive through small rises of it.

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On our fourth day we headed out to Carriearl Hotel on Great Harbor Cay courtesy Tropic Ocean Airways. When we first thought about a tropical vacation, Carriearl was what we had in mind. A small hotel (four rooms) on a small, quiet island with little distraction save for the water and adult beverages. So when the opportunity to stay at Carriearl came around, we were all in.

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On a trip of many firsts for us, perhaps my favorite was the seaplane flight. Our pilots were professional and courteous and entertained all of my questions on our ride, while Amy and Serena enjoyed the ride from the cheap seats. During our thirty minute ride, the visual majesty of the Bahamas was on full display. Shades of turquoise, sapphire, crystal, and indigo floated across our field of vision. In every direction, stretched out to the horizon, the water shimmered and glistened like a Monet in motion. Soon we were over Great Harbor. We flew parallel to the island, spotted our hosts on the beach, then cut across the island and landed perpendicular to the beach. When we touched, the water dispersed by the floats sparkled like diamonds in the sun.

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We taxied up to the beach, the engine was cut then Kent and Jack tugged the Cessna in backwards while Marty and his son Oliver helped us off. Seriously this may be perhaps the coolest thing Ive done.

From there it was a short walk up the beach to Carriearl.

So how do I accurately describe a visit to Carriearl? Again, if youre looking for Disney-style vacation, then Carriearl is not for you. Great Harbor Cay is sparsely populated, theres not really any night life, no theaters, no museums or attractions to speak of.

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However, if youve fantasized of spending real downtime, with 48 hours or more to do as little as possible and do it on the prettiest, quietest beach in this hemisphere, then Carriearl is waiting for you. Their restaurant is open six days a week and the bar is open seven, of course. Go for a swim, then grab a book off their shelf, a beer or rum at the bar then disappear into the luxury that only solitude can supply.

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While our bedroom had an excellent air-conditioner, we spent a lot of time in their common room, which was anything but. In the morning, Marty would open up the expansive glass doors and the dining room/sitting area became an extension of the beach. Of our three days there, the highs were in the mid 80s with a steady sea breeze.

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Angie & Marty have owned Carriearl for 12 years and only turned it into a hotel in 2012. Built in 1965 by Earl Blackwell, New Yorks Mr. Celebrity and the publisher of the Celebrity Register. Named after his parents, Carrie and Earl, its easily the most memorable hotel weve visited. Since we arrived on a Saturday and we were their guest chefs for the evening, we didnt have much time for lounging. We had a busy night in front of us, two appetizers, two entrees, and two desserts had to be prepped. When we agreed to do this, we didnt ask for anything special in the kitchen. Great Harbor is no different than the rest of the Bahamas, plenty of great seafood but very little locally grown anything. So along with chef Edison Lightbourne, we went to work on the nights menu.

Amy Malik

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Chef had some local shrimp, lots of sweet and spicy red peppers, garlic, onions, and romaine lettuce and that became grilled romaine lettuce with pickled shrimp and a spicy rouille. The loaves of whole wheat bread, English peas, lemon, fresh mozzarella, and pea shoots were turned into Welsh Rarebit with an English pea and lemon puree. And my bride turned almonds, eggs, and fresh mint into Almond macaroons with mint buttercream and vanilla ice cream. By 7:00 pm their dining room had filled with that happy sound of satisfied diners. Its a combination of forks on plates, of glasses being hoisted, of bread being buttered and wine being opened and for those of us behind the scenes, we often judge the satisfaction level of our guests just by the tempo of the dining rooms melody.

The next morning one of our guests, Steve Johnson, the local harbormaster, took us (and his friends Jay and Karen Campbell) on a trip across the sea to Hoffmans Cay where we snorkeled through spectacular water and caught enough conch for us to make a heavenly lunch of conch salad. As conch are over fished by commercial operators, Steve was careful to make sure we only used the larger conch, and we only used what we needed.

Jay Campbell

Jay Campbell

Jay Campbell

Jay Campbell

After a long day of boating and fishing and swimming, we were grateful for the comfort of Carriearl, the cold beer and the hospitality of Angie & Marty. Did I mention theyre British? On Sunday evenings, Chef Lightbourne prepares a classic English Sunday dinner of roast beef, Yorkshire pudding (popovers to you and me), and roasted vegetables. Sure it feels out of place, but so what? It was an amazing dinner, expertly prepared and graciously served.

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Remember how I mentioned taking too much underwear? Well on this leg of our Bahamian adventure, we admitted to bringing too much clothing. If youre headed to the Bahamas, its likely you wont need but one pair of dressy clothes. A nice pair of pants and shirt for the gents, a black dress for the ladies. Its warm and a bit humid in the Bahamas so keep it casual, dress loose and light. Shorts, loose clothing, walking shoes and a swimsuit. And a wide brimmed hat, too. The sun is relentless and theres plenty of shallow water and shiny sand for the suns rays to bounce off of, so bring your sunscreen. Keep in mind that snorkeling is a great way to fry ones scalp so lube up that head as well. Our hotels had a solid supply of snorkeling gear and likely the other ones do as well so we didnt bother bringing any, even though friends offered to loan it.

Seriously though, when youre hanging out at a bar with this view, youre not going to care what youre wearing.

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Carriearl harkens back to a different time. Its an oasis in the middle of the sea; a simple, rustic retreat thats delightfully luxurious and properly British. Even though theres WiFi, we tried to stay off it. Because one can always get on Facebook, but a view like this was only going to be ours for a few days. And in those few days, we swam and danced across the prettiest, most secluded beach weve seen, swam with an amazing collection of fish and sea life including a barracuda, jumped into the deepest blue hole, enjoyed wonderful meals, and made friends for life.

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Enjoy this video I made to showcase our flight and stay at Carriearl.

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The Bahamas, for Two - HuffPost

Messages, maps point to missing teens’ trip to Bahamas before storm – Palm Beach Post

JUPITER

The day before Austin Stephanos and Perry Cohen rode out from the Jupiter Inlet to the Atlantic Ocean in July 2015 for what would be the last time, the boys messaged at least one friend to ask if the friend wanted to come along fishing the following day.

Me and Austin r (siq) crossing to the Bahamas tomorrow come with us, Cohen wrote in an Instagram message to a friend, according to court documents.

Another friend of Austin Stephanos told investigators that same day the 14-year-old boys had been talking about heading out to the Bahamas, but decided it was too rough that day.

The interviews, accounts and messages are part of a December court filing in the civil-court proceeding over Austin Stephanoss recovered cellphone, which was found when the 18-foot boat was recovered near Bermuda nearly eight months after the Tequesta teens disappeared. The documents were intended to compel a judge to let Cohens family have access to any information on Austin Stephanoss cellphone, though Apple was not able to recover anything from the iPhone. The case remains open.

The new details come after recent developments in the case and nearly two years after the pair steered into a storm on the Atlantic. Though the boat and their life vests were eventually found, the boys were never seen again.

On Monday, Cohens family said it was considering a civil lawsuit days after a Florida Department of Law Enforcement investigative report was released stating the agency found Stephanoss mother, Carly Black, had been negligent and recommended charges. The State Attorney did not go forward with charges.

A Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission report released Thursday said a weather-related incident was to blame in the boys disappearance. Originally it was speculated that something may have happened to the boats engine, but investigators discovered the engine was still working when the boat took on water.

Throughout interviews and documents, Cohens family insists the Stephanos family knew their son was not allowed to go out to the ocean without another adult present. The Stephanos family said he couldnt have tried to go out there because he knew that there had to be two boats or two engines to head out that far.

But the boys actions and their conversations the day before their journey seem to show otherwise.

On July 23, 2015, Stephanos and Cohen were preparing for a trip. Though they wanted to go out to the Bahamas that day, Stephanos told at least one friend, who was later interviewed by investigators, that it was too rough that day, so theyd try the next, according to the document. When he talked about a fishing trip to his grandfather, who gifted him the 1977, single-engine boat, the man asked him how much gas he needed, then left him a $100 bill. Investigators would later find out the pair bought $122 worth of fuel.

Perry, meanwhile, asked another friend if he wanted to join over Instagram, saying they wouldnt check in, referring to skipping customs to get to the Bahamas. A map given to investigators by one of the boys friends detailed a path the teens might have tried to take that day.

That night, Perry asked his stepfather, Nicholas Korniloff, if he could use his GPS on the boat because Stephanos was looking to buy one. Though Korniloff protested at first, saying there wasnt a mount for it in the boat, he eventually said they could have it.

Its not going to work. But if (you) need to satisfy your curiosity, go ahead, Korniloff remembered telling him, according to the report.

The following day, July 24, after the boys stopped by the home of Stephanos grandmother to pick up supplies, filled up with gas and headed out of the inlet into a brewing storm, Stephanos shared a photo on Snapchat: three fishing roads stick out the back of a boat with the words Peace Out Jup written across it.

Another friend of the teens told investigators that when someone said, Peace out Jup, it usually meant they were headed to the Bahamas.

Staff researcher Melanie Mena contributed to this story.

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Messages, maps point to missing teens' trip to Bahamas before storm - Palm Beach Post

Commonwealth Partnership to Inspire Young Sporting Citizens at Bahamas Commonwealth Youth Games – Around the Rings (subscription)

With just four weeks to go to the Opening Ceremony of the VIth edition of the Commonwealth Youth Games, the Commonwealth Games Federation (CGF), the Commonwealth Secretariat, The Royal Commonwealth Society (RCS) and the United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF), today (Tuesday 20 June) announce a dynamic and inclusive programme of athlete engagement activities at the upcoming Bahamas 2017 Commonwealth Youth Games to provide support and inspiration to tackle the issues facing the next generation of global sporting citizens.

Taking place on the Caribbean island nation of The Bahamas from 18-23 July 2017, the Commonwealth Youth Games will be the largest international sporting event ever held in the Bahamas, bringing together over 1000 young athletes aged 14-18, who will represent their country and compete in 9 sports over 6 days.

The Commonwealth Youth Games Athlete Impact Labs are an official part of the Bahamas 2017 Cultural and Personal Development Programme, helping fulfil the Games core ambition to strengthen the link between sporting competition, personal development and Commonwealth peace-building.

Welcoming the initiatives, CGF President and Chair of CABOS (the Commonwealth Advisory Body on Sport) Louise Martin CBE said: Now more than ever, athletes are inspiring us on and off the field of play as global role models so were thrilled to be working with the Commonwealth Secretariat, RCS and UNICEF to engage, inspire and support our young Commonwealth athletes and young Caribbean hosts. These CYG Athlete Impact Labs recognise and support our young athletes as essential to delivering on the Commonwealths values and achieving the UN sustainable development goals through sport.

The Commonwealth Secretariat, Royal Commonwealth Society and United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF) have worked closely with the CGF and the local Bahamas 2017 Organising Committee in Nassau to deliver a series of fun and interactive workshops, covering topics including youth empowerment, integrity and personal values, youth participation in sport governance and how young role models can contribute to human rights and sustainable development. The aim is to help young athletes and officials understand and explore how sport can be used to contribute to society and the rights of young people participating in and around sport.

The workshops will take place on rotation on the last three days of the Games, enabling athletes and officials to attend on an optional basis, and will be delivered by representatives from UNICEF, The Royal Commonwealth Society and the Commonwealth Youth Sport for Development and Peace (CYDSP) working group - a collaborative network of young sport and development leaders supported by the Commonwealth Secretariat and endorsed as the Commonwealths leading youth voice on Sport for Development and Peace.

Welcoming the partnership, Janine Thornhill, from Trinidad and Tobago, and Chair of the CYSDP Working Group said: This is a huge team effort as we join forces with our friends and colleagues at the RCS, UNICEF, Commonwealth Secretariat, the CGF and the local Organising Committee to use the Youth Games as a powerful sporting stage to connect with young people from every nation, culture and background.

We look forward to meeting athletes and officials to support, inspire and learn more about the issues and opportunities facing young athletes across the Commonwealth. We all passionately believe that sport can be used as a tool for development and peace and the CYG Athlete Impact Labs are another example of the important role the Commonwealth Sports Movement can play promoting the Commonwealth and our shared values.

Launched in 2000 and now in its 6th edition, the Youth Games are a sustainable opportunity for smaller cities and nations to benefit from hosting a major sporting event, using predominantly preexisting venues (in Nassaus case, most events take place at the Queen Elizabeth Sports Centre) whilst also promoting an inclusive and positive youth and sustainable development agenda.

With 50% of Commonwealth citizens aged 25 and under, the Youth Games play an important part in the Commonwealths mission to advance democracy, development and respect for diversity through sport.

For more information, please contact:

For Commonwealth Games Federation: Martin Reynolds Tel: +44 7789 772619 Email: m.reynolds@thecgf.com

For Commonwealth Secretariat: Will Henley Tel: +44 20 7747 6379 Email: w.henley@commonwealth.int

For Royal Commonwealth Society: Annette Prandzioch Tel: +44 20 3727 4300 Email: communications@thercs.org

As a service to our readers, Around the Rings will provide verbatim texts of selected press releases issued by Olympic-related organizations, federations, businesses and sponsors.

These press releases appear as sent to Around the Rings and are not edited for spelling, grammar or punctuation.

25 Years at #1: Your best source of news about the Olympics iswww.aroundtherings.com, for subscribers only

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Exxon Moves Forward With Offshore Guyana Project – OilPrice.com

Phase 1 will produce 450 MMBO

ExxonMobil (ticker: XOM), Hess (ticker: HES) and CNOOC today announced FID for Phase 1 development of the Liza field in offshore Guyana.

Initially discovered in May 2015, the Liza field is located about 120 miles offshore from Guyana, in about 5,700 feet of water. Liza is in the Stabroek Area, a large offshore lease block owned by the three partner companies. Hess reports that Stabroek is 6.6 million acres in size, or 1,150 times the size of a standard GOM block.

(Click to enlarge)

Source: Hess

120 MBOPD peak production planned

Phase 1 of development of the Liza field will involve a total of 17 wells, drilled from four drill centers. Eight wells will produce oil, while six will inject water into the reservoir and three will inject gas. A floating production, storage and offloading vessel will process production. ExxonMobil estimates Phase 1 will have peak production around 120 MBOPD. In total, the operation will recover about 450 MMBO. ExxonMobil reports that Phase 1 will cost just over $4.4 billion, including $1.2 billion for the FPSO.

Based on Hess reports of its share of development costs (not including the FPSO cost), the companies will spend about $370 million this year, $830 million in 2018 and $1.1 billion in 2019. The remaining $900 million will be spent in 2020 and 2021, but the timing is less certain. First oil is expected in 2020, less than five years after initial discovery.

Further discoveries support more development

Additional exploratory work is in progress, as the Stabroek block is large enough to hold many different plays. ExxonMobil reports that the recently-drilled Liza-4 well encountered nearly 200 feet of high-quality, oil-bearing sandstone reservoirs." While the area explored by Liza-4 will not be developed in Phase 1, the successful result will be a major factor in considering Phase 2. With the success of Liza-4, Hess estimates gross discovered recoverable resource for the Stabroek block is between 2 and 2.5 billion barrels.

ExxonMobil is the operator of the Stabroek block, and holds a 45 percent interest. Hess owns a 30 percent stake, while CNOOC owns 25 percent.

By Oil and Gas 360

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The agony of waiting for an offshore rebound – WorkBoat (blog)

In two recent blogs, I have looked toward the impending inflection point in the offshore drilling cycle, first exploring an uptick in the number of offshore vessel support company bankruptcy filings as the industry enters the last stage of the downturn.

Last week, Hornbeck Offshore announced a new financing arrangement to improve the companys liquidity, removing at least temporarily the impending doom it faced from the upcoming maturity of its long-term debt. The news was positive for the companys shareholders, but it doesnt erase the problem of too many vessels chasingtoo few jobs, which confronts all offshore service vessel operators.

More recently, we highlighted the news that offshore drillers are starting to receive more inquiries and tenders for work, although the market remains as competitive as it has been for the last two years. The prospect of more offshore work on the horizon is good news, especially with oil companies figuring out how to reduce their well breakeven costs below $50 a barrel.

These trends and improvements were all underway before the recent retreat of global oil prices as OPECs production cut deal does not appear to be producing the desired results. Global inventories are falling much too slowly to encourage traders to bid up oil prices. Instead, prices have dropped.

The reality is that global oil inventories are falling, but itsbeen too slow for those investors seeking instant corrections.

Traders are now concerned that oil demand growth will slow and/or OPEC members will opt to cheat on their lower production quotas, thus preventing the oil market from improving to the point that it would support sharply higher prices.

The slow decline in inventories in the first half of this year has been caused somewhat by increased output from OPEC members Nigeria and Libya, who were exempt from the organizations production cuts. North American oil output is also growing in response to higher drilling activity in the U.S. and Canada.

Predicting cycle tops and bottoms is virtually impossible to do. They are only seen in hindsight. The current offshore fundamentals are consistent with a cycle bottom and an inflection point that will bring an improvement in business. The current weakness in global oil prices is influenced by extremely pessimistic near-term sentiment about industry fundamentals. That sentiment can just as quickly shift to the positive without an obvious event.

Waiting for that shift to occur is frustrating because its timing cannot be influenced. There are no signs that industry fundamentals are suddenly deteriorating. Rather, they continue to improve, albeit slowly. A year from now, the industry will look back and reflect on how the cycles inflection point was reached this summer, even though it is not currently evident. Hopefully, the offshore sectors recovery will be similar to that of the onshore sector where the U.S. rig count has risen for 22 consecutive weeks.

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Virginia Beach City Council votes to oppose offshore drilling | WTKR … – wtkr.com


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Virginia Beach City Council votes to oppose offshore drilling | WTKR ...
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City council members are expected to come out in opposition to offshore drilling during a vote on Tuesday night.
Va. Beach city council to vote to oppose offshore drilling - WVEC-TV13newsnow.com

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Aberdeen Bay offshore wind research projects announced – BBC News


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Aberdeen Bay offshore wind research projects announced
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The economic and environmental impact of offshore wind is to be studied as part of a multi-million pound research programme based in Aberdeen Bay. Other projects being funded by the European Offshore Wind Deployment Centre (EOWDC) will examine ...
North-east Scotland poised to become centre of offshore wind scientific researchYour Renewable News (press release)
Aberdeen funds R&D quartetreNews

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Saudi Arabia claims arrest of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard – ABC News

Saudi Arabia said Monday its forces had captured and were questioning three members of Iran's Revolutionary Guard who were intending to carry out an attack on a major offshore oilfield in the Persian Gulf.

Saudi Arabia's Information Ministry said in a statement the three were onboard a boat carrying a large number of explosives headed toward the Marjan oil field, located off the kingdom's eastern shores between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

The statement said the three were detained on Friday and accused them of intending to carry out a terrorist operation in Saudi territorial waters.

Earlier in the day, a statement published on the state-run Saudi Press Agency said Saudi naval forces had disrupted a planned attack by three boats "bearing red and white flags" that raced toward its Marjan offshore oil field. It said sailors fired warning shots and captured one of the boats while two others escaped in the assault. It said the captured boat "was loaded with weapons for (a) subversive purpose."

The announcement comes after Iranian state television accused Saudi Arabia's coast guard of killing an Iranian fisherman on Friday. Several Iranian news websites also reported that two Iranian boats were shot at over the weekend as they approached a Saudi oil rig.

Majid Aghababaei, an Interior Ministry official in Iran, said the three men detained are fishermen from Iran's port city of Bushehr and blamed choppy Gulf waters for the boat's divergence. In remarks to Iran's ILNA news agency, he said there is no proof they are military personnel.

Relations between Saudi Arabia and Iran have long been strained with each country backing opposing sides of the war in Syria and other conflicts in the region.

Saudi Arabia and Iran broke off diplomatic ties with one another last year after the kingdom executed a prominent Saudi Shiite cleric, sparking backlash among Iranians who ransacked the Saudi Embassy in Tehran.

More recently, a pair of deadly attacks in Tehran claimed by the Islamic State group further inflamed tensions between the regional rivals. Iran has indirectly blamed Saudi Arabia for the attacks and has vowed revenge. On Sunday evening, Iran's Revolutionary Guard launched ballistic missiles at IS targets in Syria for the first time in that country's six-year-long war.

Batrawy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

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Spectacle on the high seas: The best boat races in the Caribbean – USA TODAY

Melanie Reffes, Special for USA TODAY 7:58 a.m. ET June 20, 2017

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First held in 1936 when five trading schooners competed for bragging rights and small prizes, Mount Gay Round Barbados Race is one of the most anticipated of the racing season.(Photo: Peter Marshall)

Welcome to boat racing in the Caribbean, where top-notch crews vie for top honors as they race their super-fast yachts and large sailboats in some of the most prestigious regattas in the world. As thrilling for spectators as it is for the competitive crews, cool parties after hot races are hosted by bars on the beach and seaside resorts. Check out our boat racing calendar and get ready to feel the wind in your sails.

Anguilla

Its biggest party of the year on the small island across the sea from St. Martin, and the busiest time of the year for boat racing. For 12 days (Aug. 2 - 13) Anguillas Summer Festival is the hot ticket for soca raves, calypso concerts, parades, pageants, the wildly popular August Monday J'ouvert blowout beach party that starts at 5 a.m. and continues through the next morning, and schooner races that honor the islands national sport. Dating back to the early 1900s when the first organized race marked the end of World War I,boat racing is a time-honored tradition and a sight to behold for fans of the sport. The Super Bowl of races, Champion of Champions on Aug. 13 is the most important on the calendar. Thousands of die-hard fans line the sun-baked shores as the boats with giant white sails take to the high sea.

Grenada

One of the prettiest races in the Caribbean, Carriacou Regatta on Grenadas little sister isleis a watery wonderland Aug. 4 -7, when crews from around the world show off their work boats, sailboats and yachts. Also a good bet for landlubbers, the three-day summer party invites with a roster of fun stuff like donkey racing and beauty pageants. For sailing fans who like to plan ahead, Grenada Sailing Week from Jan. 29 to Feb. 3 is all about spiffy boats, spirited skippers and fans snapping photos from the beach.

Aruba

Three days of parties and two days of racing markthe Aruba International Regatta, Aug. 18 - 20. At Surfside Beach close to the airport in the capital city of Oranjestad, the summer sailing fetefeaturesraces on yachts, beach cats and sunfishes and plenty of beach barbecues, concerts on the sand, windsurfing competitions and all-day happy hours.

British Virgin Islands

One of the longest-running races on the Royal BVI Yacht Club calendar, Willy T Virgins Cup, or the Virgin's Race as many call it, is also one of the more unique in the Caribbean.Slated for Oct. 21, rules stipulate that all boats entered must have a female skipper. Racing around Tortola the largest island in the British Virgin chain and finishing at Nanny Cay on the south side between Road Town and West End,BVI Spring Regatta and Sailing Festivalfrom March 26 to April 1 is the most-anticipated event of the season. Now in its 46th year, the seven-day regatta is a challenging 31-nautical-mile competition with more than 150 international crews trying to break existing race records.Prizes up for grabs include dinner for a crew of 15, pricey bottles of bubbly and the all-important boating bragging rights.Hosted by the Nanny Cay Resort and Marina, Regatta Village is family-friendly for sailors and spectators who come to cheer on their favorite crew.

Barbados

First held in 1936 when five trading schooners competed for bragging rights and small prizes, Mount Gay Round Barbados Race is one of the most anticipated of the racing season. Organised by the Barbados Cruising Club in association with Mount Gay Rum and Barbados Tourism Marketing Inc., the 70-mile race around the island gets underway on Jan. 16 and continues through Jan. 24. While most boats sail for the honor of the fastest time, the consolation prize of a barrel of Mount Gay Rum for the slowest time was discontinued after two boats remained out at sea for days stalling to take the prize. Today, there are no prizes for coming in last, although trophies for the fastest boats are highly coveted.

St. Maarten

Named for the island and the sponsor,St. Maarten Heineken Regattastarted in 1980 with a modest 12 entries but today can boast that itis one of the largest sailing races in the Caribbean. Hosting 300 competitors from 36 countries, its all hands on deck for the worlds top sailors racing on the world's fastest boats.From March 1 to 4, thousands of fans party hard at beach concerts and at aprs-racing parties, fueled by an endless supply of icy green bottles courtesy of the long-time beer sponsor.

St. Barths

Now in its third decade,St. Barths Bucket Regatta(March 15-18) is a three-day contest on the water with a crowd of top-speed yachts all looking to take home the Bucket Trophy.The race attractsthe worlds most luxuriousyachts many approaching 200 feet in length to the Port of Gustavia.The invitational race started in 1995 with a fleet of four and today it is a hot ticket on the Caribbean regatta circuit, featuring the worlds finest(and largest) super yachts charging for the finish line.

Antigua

Amongthe worlds premier racing events,Antigua Sailing Weekis the granddaddy of Caribbean regattas.From April 28 to May 5, races on the south coast attract 5,000 spectators and 1,500 participants from the Caribbean, Europe, North and South America, Australia and Japan competing in smaller contests. For half a century, English Harbour, Jolly Harbour, Dickenson Bay and Nelsons Dockyard are the places to be to see 100 racing yachts measuring up to 100 feet in length.For non-racers, shore-side partying and after-racing drinking is non-stop, with special events that include beer parties at the Antigua Yacht Club and breakfast at Shirley Heights Lookout.For families who like racing, charter a spectator yacht for up-close views of the action.

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Raise up your voice and sing with the community – Iowa City Press Citizen

Andy Douglas, Writers' Group 1:08 p.m. CT June 20, 2017

Andy Douglas(Photo: Special to the Press-Citizen)

For the second year in a row, I drove up last week to Decorah to take part in the five-day singing/dancing/playing/connecting/heart-opening gathering that is the Village Fire Singing Festival, set in the valleys of the enchanted Driftless area.

Oh, morning, what a joy, walking through you in the sun.

Village Fire offers a dynamic window on Community Sing, a movement that is growing nationwide, renewing oral traditional ways of building connection and nourishing the soul through song. Singing offers so many benefits oxygenating the blood, lifting the spirits, bringing "bonding" hormones to the brain. But Village Fire is about more than just singing. The festival offers a chance to embody a deeper sense of community, something many of us long for.

There was much interest at VF in ways that singing can serve, minister to, facilitate transitionand heal. I gave a talk about the Oakdale Community Choir (which joins people in prison with community volunteers in song in the Iowa City area). And I was delighted to share that space with former Iowa Citian Maggie McKnight who spoke about leading a Threshold Choir in her new home in California. Threshold choirs gather at the bedsides of those who are ill or close to dying to sing songs of comfort and passage.

Love prepare me to be a sanctuary. Open-hearted, tried and true.

Although most of the offerings focused on sharing various types of songs (songs for healing, kids songs, songs for empowerment, gospel songs, songwriting, silly songs), there were also non-singing events. Among the highlights this year: A contra dance with 10-foot tall puppets! A workshop on white privilege utilizing theater exercises. And a powerful workshop on grief led by Laurence Cole. The core idea here was that we all hold grief, not just for the loss of dear ones, but sometimes due to early emotional wounding, and working through that grief can free us up to live more fully. Several people shared their stories. These were then turned into short songs on the spot, which we as a group sang back to the person. Imagine how powerful it was to hear ones story sung back to you by the community.

You gotta put one foot in front of the other and lead with love.

Some of the song circles featured songs with many moving parts harmonies that wove in and out of the melody, different parts layered on top of each other, "zipper" songs that kept going as people called out new lyrics. I was impressed with the leadership ability of many of the song circle facilitators, including many young adults, who held the space for teaching these songs, making sure everyone was on board and able to participate.

Our circle was a diverse group. People from intentional communities, people working in the fields of organizing, health, teaching, and ecology, men, women and gender spectrum folks, babies and elders, people with disabilities, people from various ethnicities. Learning about all their commitments, and raising our voices together, I felt energized, ready to return to my local community and do some work.

Lots of folks from Iowa City were there. They are part of our local Community Sing group. We meet on second and fourth Thursdays, in living rooms or backyards. We come to support each other and to harmonize. If you werent able to attend Village Fire, these local gatherings can give you a taste of what Community Singing is all about. Youre welcome to join your voice with ours. For info about time and place: adinajoylevitt@gmail.com.

Beauty before me, Beauty behind me, beauty above and below and all around.

Writers' Group member Andy Douglas is author of "The Curve of the World: Into the Spiritual Heart of Yoga."

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How This ‘Founder Astronaut’ Is Prepping for Space Travel – PCMag

Loretta Hidalgo Whitesides talks to PCMag about floating in Zero Gs, preparing for Virgin Galactic's first suborbital flight, and how The Force informs her space travel philosophy.

Loretta Hidalgo Whitesides has had her share of adventures. She's floated in Zero G hundreds of times; traveled to the bottom of the ocean with Titanic director James Cameron; expanded her Yuri's Night world space parties to seven continents; and will be onboard a Virgin Galactic space plane when it takes to the skies at Mach 3.

Until then, Whitesides will spend her summer in Ireland as a visiting lecturer at the International Space University, where she'll train graduate students as part of the organization's Space Studies Program. We caught up with the LA-based Whitesides before her journey across the pond.

You did 85 weightless flights while a member of the crew at the Zero Gravity Corporation. Can you describe what that's like? It's amazing. What I love about it, as a physics geek, is your basic understanding of the world no longer applies. Thingswater, pens, hairfloat around [and] you become hyper-aware. What you're seeing doesn't follow the rules anymore; it's like being a little kid again.

What inspired you to study astrobiology [undergrad at Stanford and Masters at Caltech] in the first place? I was always interested in space exploration as the next step in human evolution, and I knew that astrobiologists would be needed in space; whereas other scientists and engineers were ground-based. I wanted to work on bioregenerative life support systems that grew our food and recycled our air and water.

My initial passion, however, was physics. I had a great physics teacher when I was at high school, who inspired me, and made physics magical and beautiful, climbing up on the physics bench, reading us a reflection from the mystic Thomas Merton before we started the day's lessons. So cool. I wanted to find the Grand Unified Theory.

But then, as I got older, there was more calculus and less Merton, the romance had gone. Initially at Stanford, I studied a wide range of things, including Earth systems and international relations, because I wanted to use space to bring the world together. But then I interned on [Capitol] Hill in Washington D.C., on the space subcommittee of the House, and the advice I got there was to get a technical degree. So I returned to Stanford, and got a degree in biology, and eventually went on to Caltech and got my Masters.

Was there a Sheldon Cooper in your crew at Caltech? (Laughs) I felt like I lived in an enchanted bubble in the biology department and in the sub-basement of the Geological and Planetary Sciences building, a world away from the experimental physicists. So no, my Caltech years weren't The Big Bang Theory. I had an awesome crew who were as good with people as they were with research.

What are you most proud of concerning Yuri's Night, the World Space Party you co-founded in 2001? That we put the magic and romance back into spaceflight. I came of age in the 90s, and was worried because it felt like space had gone out of fashion. There was pressure to make it strictly business, just about the scientific return, and I was crushed. So we started Yuri's Night [named after Yuri Gagarin, the first person to travel to outer space] to return the humanity into space exploration. It's grown to 234 events, in 56 countries, on seven continents.

As a lecturer, training future astronauts at the International Space University, how do you inspire the next generation of space leaders? Is it true you like to quote Yoda? As Yoda says: 'Anger, Fear, Aggression, the Dark Side of the Force are they.' So, in order to be extraordinary, you have to face everything and walk through it; burying it doesn't work, it will resurface. This is why I wrote my book, The New Right Stuff, I strive to become a better person every day and to help all of us become the people we want to be.

It's really the sacredness of the Jedi which appeals most to me. The Force is a way for secular societies, particularly in our tech community, to be able to talk about the infinite in a way that isn't divisive, as we work towards a future where any of us would be proud to send our species to the nearest star system.

Finally, you're a Founder Astronaut and will be on one of Virgin Galactic's first suborbital flights. How are you preparing for that trip: both physically and philosophically? There are 3Gs on boost while the rocket is firing, which feels like having three people on top of you, for about 10 seconds. It's not too bad; like a carnival ride. But, on the way back, for re-entry, there'll be a transient 6Gs coming back through the atmosphere. We'll take that lying downthe seats move in the spacecraftso you take the force in the chest at that point because you don't want the G-forces pulling the blood down out of your head. I've done the centrifuge training6G is not funbut you can handle it, especially when it's for less than a second.

I'm profoundly excited for the experience and have been preparing for years. But at the same time, you can't ever really be prepared to see the Earth from space for the first time. I can't wait.

Sophia Stuart is an award-winning digital strategist and technology columnist. Voted one of the "Top 21 Social Media Superstars" by Min Online in 2009, Sophia was an executive at Hearst from 2006 - 2013, winning a Webby Award for Cosmo Mobile and an MVA for Cosmo International Digital Strategy. Sophia now lives in Los Angeles and runs TheDigitalCheckUp.com consultancy. She was a judge for both the SheSays global awards (2014) and the Bookmarks, South Africa (2013). She has written for many publications including Esquire Mexico, Harpers... More

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Private space travel could soon be a reality – Raconteur

When Elon Musks company SpaceX successfully launched a Falcon 9 rocket on March 30 this year, it made history. It was the first time the same rocket had been propelled into orbit, returned to Earth and been launched again. It also landed safely for a second time, and provided further support for Musks thesis that the combination of reusable rockets and private companies will be at the heart of the new spaceindustry.

I think its an amazing day for space, he said after the launch. It means you can fly and re-fly an orbit-class booster, which is the most expensive part of the rocket. This is going to be, hopefully, a huge revolution in spaceflight.

Of course, he would say that. Its his company, which faces competition from several others, including Jeff Bezos Blue Origin, and wobbles with his other ventures, such as Tesla and Solar City, have illustrated just how important public opinion can be when youre chasing ambitious goals.

SpaceX faced a severe setback in September 2016 when another Falcon 9 rocket exploded during a test. On board was a $200-million satellite that was intended to provide internet connectivity to parts of Africa in Facebooks Internet.org project. Facebook boss Mark Zuckerberg issued a statement that made one thing clear he was notamused.

A busy calendar brings a different dynamic and some new project management challenges

But others at the forefront of the new space industry agree with Musks assessment. Its a great technical milestone, says Mike Lawton, chief executive of Oxford Space Systems. Its an incredible achievement, especially when you consider that when SpaceX started talking about the vision and the timeframe, lots of people dismissed it. One large US space contractor said to us, We got thatwrong.

For Musk and SpaceX, though, proving that reusable rockets work is only one step on a longer journey. Now, they have to work out how to turn it into a profitable business, says MrLawton.

If everything goes to plan, this will partly be achieved thanks to an increase in the number of launches and missions. Company president Gwynne Shotwell said there would be one launch every two or three weeks from early this year thanks to the completion of a third launch site in Florida; there were only eight launches in the whole of 2016. A fourth launch site in Texas is currently under construction and should further increase the frequency offlights.

But thats easier said than done. A busy calendar brings a different dynamic and some new project management challenges. SpaceX does a lot of activity in-house, which is helpful from a project management perspective, says Dr Renaud Durand, managing consultant and aerospace specialist at supply chain firm Vendigital. But, as operations grow, it will become less efficient to invest in in-house capabilities. There will be a strong push to outsource or the company will have to create an additional layer of management, which could slow down the decisionloop.

As the company launches more and more reused rockets, it will also need to manage a shift from production to MRO [maintenance, repair and operations] activities, which requires a different set of skills and operational know-how.

But, in Mr Lawtons view, the project management challenges that SpaceX faces are not so different from the ones that confront other companies in the new space industry. And the answer is to go as fast and hard as you can, hesays.

Musk has been open about the fact that SpaceXs overarching aim is to make humanity an interplanetary species, something that he hopes will be achieved by sending people to Mars by 2022. However, undertaking manned missions should give him pause to reassess the way projects are managed. Its one thing to destroy a fellow billionaires $200-million satellite, but the equation changes when theres human life atrisk.

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Deep Learning at the Speed of Light on Nanophotonic Chips – Singularity Hub

Deep learning has transformed the field of artificial intelligence, but the limitations of conventional computer hardware are already hindering progress. Researchers at MIT think their new nanophotonic processor could be the answer by carrying out deep learning at the speed of light.

In the 1980s, scientists and engineers hailed optical computing as the next great revolution in information technology, but it turned out that bulky components like fiber optic cables and lenses didnt make for particularly robust or compact computers.

In particular, they found it extremely challenging to make scalable optical logic gates, and therefore impractical to make general optical computers, according to MIT physics post-doc Yichen Shen. One thing light is good at, though, is multiplying matricesarrays of numbers arranged in columns and rows. You can actually mathematically explain the way a lens acts on a beam of light in terms of matrix multiplications.

This also happens to be a core component of the calculations involved in deep learning. Combined with advances in nanophotonicsthe study of lights behavior at the nanometer scalethis has led to a resurgence in interest in optical computing.

Deep learning is mainly matrix multiplications, so it works very well with the nature of light, says Shen. With light you can make deep learning computing much faster and thousands of times more energy-efficient.

To demonstrate this, Shen and his MIT colleagues have designed an all-optical chip that can implement artificial neural networksthe brain-inspired algorithms at the heart of deep learning.

In a recent paper in Nature, the group describes a chip made up of 56 interferometerscomponents that allow the researchers to control how beams of light interfere with each other to carry out mathematical operations.

The processor can be reprogrammed by applying a small voltage to the waveguides that direct beams of light around the processor, which heats them and causes them to change shape.

The chip is best suited to inference tasks, the researchers say, where the algorithm is put to practical use by applying a learned model to analyze new data, for instance to detect objects in an image.

It isnt great at learning, because heating the waveguides is relatively slow compared to how electronic systems are reprogrammed. So, in their study, the researchers trained the algorithm on a computer before transferring the learned model to the nanophotonic processor to carry out the inference task.

Thats not a major issue. For many practical applications its not necessary to carry out learning and inference on the same chip. Google recently made headlines for designing its own deep learning chip, the TPU, which is also specifically designed for inference and most companies that use a lot of machine learning split the two jobs.

In many cases they update these models once every couple of months and the rest of the time the fixed model is just doing inference, says Shen. People usually separate these tasks. They typically have a server just doing training and another just doing inference, so I dont see a big problem making a chip focused on inference.

Once the model has been programmed into the chip, it can then carry out computations at the speed of light using less than one-thousandth the energy per operation compared to conventional electronic chips.

There are limitations, though. Because the chip deals with light waves that operate on the scale of a few microns, there are fundamental limits to how small these chips can get.

"The wavelength really sets the limit of how small the waveguides can be. We wont be able to make devices significantly smaller. Maybe by a factor of four, but physics will ultimately stop us, says MIT graduate student Nicholas Harris, who co-authored the paper.

That means it would be difficult to implement neural nets much larger than a few thousand neurons. However, the vast majority of current deep learning algorithms are well within that limit.

The system did achieve a significantly lower accuracy on the task than a standard computer implementing the same deep learning model, correctly identifying 76.7 percent of vowels compared to 91.7 percent.

But Harris says they think this was largely due to interference between the various heating elements used to program the waveguides, and that it should be easy to fix by using thermal isolation trenches or extra calibration steps.

Importantly, the chips are also built using the same fabrication technology as conventional computer chips, so scaling up production should be easy. Shen said the group has already had interest in their technology from prominent chipmakers.

Pierre-Alexandre Blanche, a professor of optics at the University of Arizona, said hes very excited by the paper, which he said complements his own work. But he cautioned against getting too carried away.

This is another milestone in the progress toward useful optical computing. But we are still far away to be competitive with electronics, he told Singularity Hub in an email. The argumentation about scalability, power consumption, speed etc. [in the paper] use a lot of conditional tense and assumptions which demonstrate that, if there is potential indeed, there is still a lot of research to be done.

In particular, he pointed out that the system was only a partial solution to the problem. While the vast majority of neuronal computation involves multiplication of matrices, there is another component: calculating a non-linear response.

In the current paper this aspect of the computation was simulated on a regular computer. The researchers say in future models this function could be carried out by a so-called saturable absorber integrated into the waveguides that absorbs less light as the intensity increases.

But Blanche notes that this is not a trivial problem and something his group is actually currently working on. It is not like you can buy one at the drug store, he says. Bhavin Shastri, a post-doc at Princeton whose group is also working on nanophotonic chips for implementing neural networks, said the research was important, as enabling matrix multiplications is a key step to enabling full-fledged photonic neural networks.

Overall, this area of research is poised to usher in an exciting and promising field, he added. Neural networks implemented in photonic hardware could revolutionize how machines interact with ultrafast physical phenomena. Silicon photonics combines the analog device performance of photonics with the cost and scalability of silicon manufacturing.

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Where Gravity Is Weak and Naked Singularities Are Verboten – Quanta Magazine

Physicists have wondered for decades whether infinitely dense points known as singularities can ever exist outside black holes, which would expose the mysteries of quantum gravity for all to see. Singularities snags in the otherwise smooth fabric of space and time where Albert Einsteins classical gravity theory breaks down and the unknown quantum theory of gravity is needed seem to always come cloaked in darkness, hiding from view behind the event horizons of black holes. The British physicist and mathematician Sir Roger Penrose conjectured in 1969 that visible or naked singularities are actually forbidden from forming in nature, in a kind of cosmic censorship. But why should quantum gravity censor itself?

Now, new theoretical calculations provide a possible explanation for why naked singularities do not exist in a particular model universe, at least. The findings indicate that a second, newer conjecture about gravity, if it is true, reinforces Penroses cosmic censorship conjecture by preventing naked singularities from forming in this model universe. Some experts say the mutually supportive relationship between the two conjectures increases the chances that both are correct. And while this would mean singularities do stay frustratingly hidden, it would also reveal an important feature of the quantum gravity theory that eludes us.

Its pleasing that theres a connection between the two conjectures, said John Preskill of the California Institute of Technology, who in 1991 bet Stephen Hawking that the cosmic censorship conjecture would fail (though he actually thinks its probably true).

The new work, reported in May in Physical Review Letters by Jorge Santos and his student Toby Crisford at the University of Cambridge and relying on a key insight by Cumrun Vafa of Harvard University, unexpectedly ties cosmic censorship to the 2006 weak gravity conjecture, which asserts that gravity must always be the weakest force in any viable universe, as it is in ours. (Gravity is by far the weakest of the four fundamental forces; two electrons electrically repel each other 1 million trillion trillion trillion times more strongly than they gravitationally attract each other.) Santos and Crisford were able to simulate the formation of a naked singularity in a four-dimensional universe with a different space-time geometry than ours. But they found that if another force exists in that universe that affects particles more strongly than gravity, the singularity becomes cloaked in a black hole. In other words, where a perverse pinprick would otherwise form in the space-time fabric, naked for all the world to see, the relative weakness of gravity prevents it.

Santos and Crisford are running simulations now to test whether cosmic censorship is saved at exactly the limit where gravity becomes the weakest force in the model universe, as initial calculations suggest. Such an alliance with the better-established cosmic censorship conjecture would reflect very well on the weak gravity conjecture. And if weak gravity is right, it points to a deep relationship between gravity and the other quantum forces, potentially lending support to string theory over a rival theory called loop quantum gravity. The unification of the forces happens naturally in string theory, where gravity is one vibrational mode of strings and forces like electromagnetism are other modes. But unification is less obvious in loop quantum gravity, where space-time is quantized in tiny volumetric packets that bear no direct connection to the other particles and forces. If the weak gravity conjecture is right, loop quantum gravity is definitely wrong, said Nima Arkani-Hamed, a professor at the Institute for Advanced Study who co-discovered the weak gravity conjecture.

The new work does tell us about quantum gravity, said Gary Horowitz, a theoretical physicist at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

In 1991, Preskill and Kip Thorne, both theoretical physicists at Caltech, visited Stephen Hawking at Cambridge. Hawking had spent decades exploring the possibilities packed into the Einstein equation, which defines how space-time bends in the presence of matter, giving rise to gravity. Like Penrose and everyone else, he had yet to find a mechanism by which a naked singularity could form in a universe like ours. Always, singularities lay at the centers of black holes sinkholes in space-time that are so steep that no light can climb out. He told his visitors that he believed in cosmic censorship. Preskill and Thorne, both experts in quantum gravity and black holes (Thorne was one of three physicists who founded the black-hole-detecting LIGO experiment), said they felt it might be possible to detect naked singularities and quantum gravity effects. There was a long pause, Preskill recalled. Then Stephen said, You want to bet?

The bet had to be settled on a technicality and renegotiated in 1997, after the first ambiguous exception cropped up. Matt Choptuik, a physicist at the University of British Columbia who uses numerical simulations to study Einsteins theory, showed that a naked singularity can form in a four-dimensional universe like ours when you perfectly fine-tune its initial conditions. Nudge the initial data by any amount, and you lose it a black hole forms around the singularity, censoring the scene. This exceptional case doesnt disprove cosmic censorship as Penrose meant it, because it doesnt suggest naked singularities might actually form. Nonetheless, Hawking conceded the original bet and paid his debt per the stipulations, with clothing to cover the winners nakedness. He embarrassed Preskill by making him wear a T-shirt featuring a nearly-naked lady while giving a talk to 1,000 people at Caltech. The clothing was supposed to be embroidered with a suitable concessionary message, but Hawkings read like a challenge: Nature Abhors a Naked Singularity.

The physicists posted a new bet online, with language to clarify that only non-exceptional counterexamples to cosmic censorship would count. And this time, they agreed, The clothing is to be embroidered with a suitable, truly concessionary message.

The wager still stands 20 years later, but not without coming under threat. In 2010, the physicists Frans Pretorius and Luis Lehner discovered a mechanism for producing naked singularities in hypothetical universes with five or more dimensions. And in their May paper, Santos and Crisford reported a naked singularity in a classical universe with four space-time dimensions, like our own, but with a radically different geometry. This latest one is in between the technical counterexample of the 1990s and a true counterexample, Horowitz said. Preskill agrees that it doesnt settle the bet. But it does change the story.

The new discovery began to unfold in 2014, when Horowitz, Santos and Benson Way found that naked singularities could exist in a pretend 4-D universe called anti-de Sitter (AdS) space whose space-time geometry is shaped like a tin can. This universe has a boundary the cans side which makes it a convenient testing ground for ideas about quantum gravity: Physicists can treat bendy space-time in the cans interior like a hologram that projects off of the cans surface, where there is no gravity. In universes like our own, which is closer to a de Sitter (dS) geometry, the only boundary is the infinite future, essentially the end of time. Timeless infinity doesnt make a very good surface for projecting a hologram of a living, breathing universe.

Despite their differences, the interiors of both AdS and dS universes obey Einsteins classical gravity theory everywhere outside singularities, that is. If cosmic censorship holds in one of the two arenas, some experts say you might expect it to hold up in both.

Horowitz, Santos and Way were studying what happens when an electric field and a gravitational field coexist in an AdS universe. Their calculations suggested that cranking up the energy of the electric field on the surface of the tin can universe will cause space-time to curve more and more sharply around a corresponding point inside, eventually forming a naked singularity. In their recent paper, Santos and Crisford verified the earlier calculations with numerical simulations.

But why would naked singularities exist in 5-D and in 4-D when you change the geometry, but never in a flat 4-D universe like ours? Its like, what the heck! Santos said. Its so weird you should work on it, right? There has to be something here.

In 2015, Horowitz mentioned the evidence for a naked singularity in 4-D AdS space to Cumrun Vafa, a Harvard string theorist and quantum gravity theorist who stopped by Horowitzs office. Vafa had been working to rule out large swaths of the 10500 different possible universes that string theory naively allows. He did this by identifying swamplands: failed universes that are too logically inconsistent to exist. By understanding patterns of land and swamp, he hoped to get an overall picture of quantum gravity.

Working with Arkani-Hamed, Lubo Motl and Alberto Nicolis in 2006, Vafa proposed the weak gravity conjecture as a swamplands test. The researchers found that universes only seemed to make sense when particles were affected by gravity less than they were by at least one other force. Dial down the other forces of nature too much, and violations of causality and other problems arise. Things were going wrong just when you started violating gravity as the weakest force, Arkani-Hamed said.The weak-gravity requirement drowns huge regions of the quantum gravity landscape in swamplands.

Weak gravity and cosmic censorship seem to describe different things, but in chatting with Horowitz that day in 2015, Vafa realized that they might be linked. Horowitz had explained Santos and Crisfords simulated naked singularity: When the researchers cranked up the strength of the electric field on the boundary of their tin-can universe, they assumed that the interior was classical perfectly smooth, with no particles quantum mechanically fluctuating in and out of existence. But Vafa reasoned that, if such particles existed, and if, in accordance with the weak gravity conjecture, they were more strongly coupled to the electric field than to gravity, then cranking up the electric field on the AdS boundary would cause sufficient numbers of particles to arise in the corresponding region in the interior to gravitationally collapse the region into a black hole, preventing the naked singularity.

Subsequent calculations by Santos and Crisford supported Vafas hunch; the simulations theyre running now could verify that naked singularities become cloaked in black holes right at the point where gravity becomes the weakest force. We dont know exactly why, but it seems to be true, Vafa said. These two reinforce each other.

The full implications of the new work, and of the two conjectures, will take time to sink in. Cosmic censorship imposes an odd disconnect between quantum gravity at the centers of black holes and classical gravity throughout the rest of the universe. Weak gravity appears to bridge the gap, linking quantum gravity to the other quantum forces that govern particles in the universe, and possibly favoring a stringy approach over a loopy one. Preskill said, I think its something you would put on your list of arguments or reasons for believing in unification of the forces.

However, Lee Smolin of the Perimeter Institute, one of the developers of loop quantum gravity, has pushed back, arguing that if weak gravity is true, there might be a loopy reason for it. And he contends that there is a path to unification of the forces within his theory a path that would need to be pursued all the more vigorously if the weak gravity conjecture holds.

Given the apparent absence of naked singularities in our universe, physicists will take hints about quantum gravity wherever they can find them. Theyre as lost now in the endless landscape of possible quantum gravity theories as they were in the 1990s, with no prospects for determining through experiments which underlying theory describes our world. It is thus paramount to find generic properties that such quantum gravity theories must have in order to be viable, Santos said, echoing the swamplands philosophy.

Weak gravity might be one such property a necessary condition for quantum gravitys consistency that spills out and affects the world beyond black holes. These may be some of the only clues available to help researchers feel their way into the darkness.

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Where Gravity Is Weak and Naked Singularities Are Verboten - Quanta Magazine

Inaugural Singularity University Summit to be held in SA – Disrupt Africa

Singularity University, a global community using exponential technologies to tackle the worlds greatest challenges, has announced it will hold its first international summit on the African continent in Johannesburg, South Africa on August 23-24.

The two-day SingularityU South Africa Summit is being hosted in collaboration with Standard Bank, and with key strategic partners such as Deloitte, MTN and SAP.

The event will convene exponential thought leaders, Singularity University faculty, and organisations from around the world to provide participants with insights into emerging exponential technologies and how they can be used to create positive change and economic growth in the region.

Singularity University is proud to be working with Standard Bank and Mann Made Media to host this first-ever SingularityU South Africa Summit, and to connect with Africas leaders and organizations shaping the future, said Rob Nail, associate founder and chief executive officer (CEO) of Singularity University.

South Africa represents a microcosm of the challenges facing humanity worldwide and is fast gaining a solid reputation as a global centre. Through this Summit, we hope to connect and inspire leaders in the region to effect global impact.

Mic Mann, organiser of the SingularityU South Africa Summit, said South Africa has a unique opportunity to play a vital role in shaping an abundant future for all Africans.

Our ability to leverage and develop accelerating technologies in the coming years, will allow us to leapfrog legacy systems and compete in the global economy and have a massive impact on our growth and economic health. It is of the utmost importance for us to bring Singularity University to South Africa to educate, empower and inspire leaders and future leaders in Africa, he said.

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Inaugural Singularity University Summit to be held in SA - Disrupt Africa

Ascension’s Dancing for a Cause set for July 8 – The Advocate

The Arc of East Ascension 2017 Dancing for a Cause extravaganza will be held July 8, when 10 Star Dancers will take the stage to perform their professional ballroom dance numbers at the Lamar-Dixon 4-H Building.

The event raises funds and awareness for The Arc of East Ascension, a nonprofit organization whose mission is to enhance the quality of life for those with disabilities and their families through services and advocacy that support choice, independence and dignity.

Star dancers are Jackie Baumann, the city's chief engineer; Trevor Gautreaux, assistant vice president branch manager of Neighbors Federal Credit Union; Kyle Rogers, general manager of Lamar-Dixon; Jackie Tisdell, public information officer for Ascension Parish Public Schools; Terri Kaaihue, community liaison for Life Source Hospice; Tasheba York Leblanc, owner/manager of Triple Threat Dance Studio; Cheryl Mercedes, WAFB anchor and reporter; Malcolm Carter, plant manager for The Scotts Co.; Craig A. Severs, owner of Genesis 360 Construction; and Dr. Louis LeFebvre II, owner of DDS Main Street Dental Care.

Doors open at 6 p.m. with food and refreshment. The event starts at 7 p.m. General admission is $30; VIP tickets are $75. Tickets are available at The Arc of East Ascension Office, 1122 S.E. Ascension Complex Blvd., Gonzales, (225) 621-2000 or (225) 621-2005; Gonzales City Hall, 120 S. Irma Blvd., Gonzales, (225) 647-2841; Main Street Dental Care, 6473 La. 44, Suite 202, Gonzales, (225) 963-9493; and through All Star Dancers. Tickets will also available at the door general admission $35, VIP $80.

Sheriff Jeff Wiley is honorary chairman. Judges are River Parish Community College Chancellor Dale Doty; Gaylynne Mack, executive director of Baton Rouge's Big Buddy Program; Debbie Traylor, owner of Debbie's Bridal; Anita Cann, of Affordable Printing and APSB, and technical judge Larry Schexnaydre, director and owner of Center Stage.

Emcees are Ascension Parish Clerk of CourtBridget Hanna and David Alexander, superintendent of Ascension Parish Public Schools. Event officials include dance coordinator Allison Hudson, project manager Norma Dukes and event organizer Sharon Morris.

VIP sponsorships are available. For more information, contact the Arc of East Ascension at (225) 621-2000 or (225) 621-2005 or email Sharonm@eatel.net.

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Ascension's Dancing for a Cause set for July 8 - The Advocate

Ascension Parish collects tons of household hazardous materials – Donaldsonville Chief

Ascension Parish Household Hazardous Materials Collection Day was held Saturday, May 20 at the Lamar-Dixon Expo Center and was, by all measures, a huge success.

According to Parish officials, 405 vehicles dropped off more than 39 tons of materials. The Parish Council appropriated $50,000 for this years program.

I want to commend my staff for this success. They put in a lot of work to make this happen, Matassa said. And I especially want to thank our sponsors and volunteers for their participation. We could not have done this without them.

Matassa noted that dozens of volunteers from BASF and DEQ were on hand, as well as trustees from the Ascension Parish Sheriffs Office. Dumpsters were provided by Allied Waste/Republic Waste Services, and pallets by Ascension Storage. Lunch was served by Wally Taillon and the Jambalaya Festival Association. Also contributing were Wal-Mart, Ralphs Market, Lowes, Home Depot, Ascension Fire District #1, Battery Doctor, Environmental Industries Recycling, LA Scrap Metal Recycling, Winn Dixie, PSC, and the Capital Area Recycling Center.

The next Household Hazardous Materials Collection is planned for Spring 2018.

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Ascension Parish collects tons of household hazardous materials - Donaldsonville Chief