Daily Archives: August 6, 2017

New Found Glory Are Doing An In-Store Signing For Their Aussie Fans – Music Feeds

Posted: August 6, 2017 at 5:31 pm

News Written by Emmy Mack on August 6, 2017

SicknewsNew Found Glory fans!The band have just announced a brand new event ontheir forthcoming Aussie tour itinerary.

Theyll be getting up-close-and-personal with fans for an in-store signing at Sydneys Utopia Records in the midst oftheir 20 Years Of Pop Punk dates.

Its going down at the underground heavy music stalwart on Kent street from 5pm before the dudes show at The Metro this Friday, 11th August.

Thanks to the utterly wonderful people atUNFDtop shelf blokes and Soundwave Festival 2009 giantsNew Found Gloryare poppin in for a quick almost secret until now guerrilla signing before theirThe Metro Theatreshow this coming Friday, Utopia wrote on Facebook by way of the big announcement.

They have let us know they will sign just about anything, CDs, LPs, Soccer Trophies, Babies foreheads, you name it!!!

Please be here around 5 pm to avoid disappointment and an array of sadness.

Well, you heard em.

Check out the details below or catch NFGs full list of Aussie tour dates here.

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New Found Glory Are Doing An In-Store Signing For Their Aussie Fans - Music Feeds

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Carol seeded in Junior ITF tourney in Fiji – Saipan Tribune

Posted: at 5:30 pm

The CNMIs Carol Lee is among the three Pacific Oceania players who are seeded in the girls singles event of the 2017 Oceania Closed Junior Championships that will kick off today at the Regional Training Center in Lautoka, Fiji.

Lee is seeded fourth in the tournament that is part of the ITF Juniors Circuit. Siblings Violet and Patricia Apisah of Papua New Guinea are the other seeded players (No. 1 and 5) from Pacific Oceania. Australias Lisa Mays and Olivia Gadecki are seeded No. 2 and 3, respectively, while Amber Marshall, also of Australia, and New Zealands Valentina Ivanov and Oleksandra Kalachova complete the Top 8 seeding.

The seeded players will be paired against lower-ranked entries in the first round. The womens singles draw has yet to be posted on the events website as deadline for registration was set yesterday at 6pm (Fiji time).

The Oceania Closed is B2 tournament and the fourth highest in the ITF Juniors Circuit as far as the number of rankings points awarded is concerned. The highest is Grade A (Grand Slam events), which offers 250 points to the singles champions, and is followed by Grade 1 (150), and B1 (180). B3 gives 80 points to the singles winner, while Grades 2 to 5 events award 100, 60, 40, and 30, respectively.

Tomorrows competition will be Lees second highest this season after she competed in the Grade 1 Mediterrane Avenir in Morocco last May. In her return appearance to the Oceania Closed Junior Championships, the world ranked No. 240 Lee hopes for a better results after making an early exit in the Round of 16 of both the singles and doubles events last year.

Besides Lee, the unseeded Isabel Heras and Robbie will represent the Commonwealth in the B2 tournament. Completing the roster of Pacific Oceania players entered in this high-level competition are Solomon Islands Georjemah Row, Junior Benjamin, Graham Mani, and Vinda Teally, Fijis Vienna Kumar and Ruby Coffin, American Samoas Larry Magasin, Samoas Eleanor Schuster, Tahitis Naia Guitton and Jeremy Guines, Vanuatus Clement Mainguy, and Guams Mason Caldwell.

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Tahiti keep RWC 2019 dream alive – Rugby World Cup 2019 (press release) (blog)

Posted: at 5:30 pm

Regional focus: Oceania

Tahiti move onto the next stage of Rugby World Cup 2019 qualification after beating the Cook Islands for the first time to win the Oceania Rugby Cup 2017.

Tahiti remain in the hunt for a place in the Rugby World Cup 2019 repechage tournament after upsetting the Cook Islands 13-9 to win the Oceania Rugby Cup 2017 in Rarotonga on Friday.

They will face the Asia Rugby Championship 2018 champion in a home and away play-off with the winner progressing to the four-team global repechage tournament that will determine the 20th and final qualifier for Japan 2019.

Tahiti went into the match at the National Stadium in Rarotonga, the largest of the Cook Islands, sitting 43 places below their hosts in the World Rugby Rankings and never having tasted victory in the head to head.

"I am very proud of the guys, for us this is an historical victory, the first time winning the Oceania Rugby Cup made more beautiful as it was our first win against the Cook Islands."

Tahiti captain Tunui Anania

However, it was the 91st-ranked Tahiti, buoyed by their French club-based players, who took a second-minute lead through fly-half Andoni Jimenez's penalty, although this was cancelled out nine minutes later by centre Jamian Iroa's own kick.

The first try came on the half-hour mark when winger Vincent Perez crossed for Tahiti in a passage of play that would see Cooks fly-halfGreg Mullany sent to the sin-bin.

READ MORE ON RWC 2019 QUALIFICATION PROCESS >>

Two penalties from the boot of Iroa saw the Cooks take the lead for the first time, but on the stroke of half-time scrum-half Guilliaume Brouqui scored a try to send Tahiti in with a 13-9 advantage.

That would prove to be the final score in a match with Iroa missing a fourth penalty attempt midway through a half which saw five yellow cards and a player for each team sent off in Tahiti prop Martin Taeae and Cooks centre Samuela Longo Leuta.

Firstly I want to thank our hosts the Cook Islands for todays match and secondly I just wanted to say that I am very proud of the guys, for us this is an historical victory, the first time winning the Oceania Rugby Cup made more beautiful as it was our first win against the Cook Islands, saidTahiti captain Tunui Anania.

Tahiti coach Romi Ropati added: We are absolutely stoked with todays result, it has been very humbling. The boys are going to enjoy tonight and celebrate with friends and family when we return home tomorrow, after that we will look forward to our preparation on the next step for Rugby World Cup qualification.

Cook Islands captain Francis Smith paid tribute to their conquerors after seeing their RWC 2019 dream end at the first hurdle. Congratulations to Tahiti it was a well fought game. The boys were disappointed with the result but proud to be Cook Islanders and the team will come back from this loss.

The victory will lift Tahiti three places to 88th above the Bahamas, Cameroon and Swaziland when the World Rugby Rankings update at 12 noon UK time on Monday. The Cook Islands will drop eight places to 56th

Photo:Oceania Rugby/Ronnie Siulopa

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Tahiti keep RWC 2019 dream alive - Rugby World Cup 2019 (press release) (blog)

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Dark clouds over Air Seychelles: Former tourism minister concerned – eTurboNews

Posted: at 5:30 pm

Alain St. Ange was the former minister of tourism for the Republic the Seychelles. Seychelles lives and breathes tourism. St. Ange is now heard of his own Saint Ange Consultancy firm.

Dragged into dark clouds flying over Air Seychelles financial partner Etihad Airways, the national carrier Air Seychelles confirmed the discontinuation of its Victoria- Dusseldorf flight and a reduction of flights on its Paris run. This follows the suspension of its Durban route. The former minister Alain St. Ange worked hard to bring a new destination like Duesseldorf on board. His famous Carnival de Victoria attracted Duesseldorf Carnival officials and brought Seychelles on the tourism map in the largest outbound travel region in Germany.

Tour operators just got used and pitched to expand their reach to the Indian Ocean, when Air Seychelles abruptlypulled Duesseldorf from their network.

Alain says: Any loss of flights to a tourism destination is concerning, and more so when it touches key tourism source markets. Seychelles needs more than ever before to work in total unity to ensure that other airlines do not follow suit.

The remarkable success of our fragile tourism industry in recent years mustnot be taken for granted. Though we as Seychelloisbelieve that wehave the most stunning beaches and array of islands on the planet, every other similar touristic destination shares the same belief. This means that we are fishing from the same pond, and solelyrelying on our countrys beauty to fill up hotel beds year after year is an unrealistic expectation.

Visibility is integraland it alone remains the key to success. Visibility keeps tourism destinations relevant and

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International fugitive who bilked $130K out of elderly people arrested in SC – The State

Posted: at 5:29 pm


The State
International fugitive who bilked $130K out of elderly people arrested in SC
The State
Hainsley DaCosta Browne, who also goes by Barbados, was arrested Friday in Fairfield County, according to a news release Sunday. Brown fled the Caribbean island of Barbados to escape law enforcement for operating a phone scam ring in which he ...

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"Talking the Tropics With Mike": Tropical disturbance in Caribbean – Aug. 6th – ActionNewsJax.com

Posted: at 5:29 pm

by: Michael Buresh Updated: Aug 6, 2017 - 9:59 AM

Aug. 6, 2017 - The Atlantic Basin seems destined for at least one new named tropical cyclone during the upcoming week... possibly two......

(1)The Western Caribbean & SW Gulf of Mexico/Bay of Campeche - a strong tropical wave - '90L' continues to roll west with persistent convection. There's a chance the wave could be a tropical depression or storm as early as Mon. upon approach to Belize & nearby areas. Land interaction would then disrupt the system before emerging over the Bay of Campeche where several forecast models show explosive development over what is often a "hot bed" for tropical development this time of year.

As for the modeling... The European model continues to be the strongest taking a hurricane into Mexico well south of Brownsville, Texas ... developing the storm as early as upon approach to Central America....the GFS model holds off development a little longer longer but develops a hurricane in about the same area affecting Mexico midweek well south of Texas. The UKMET model still shows little or no development keeping the low pressure farther south & therefore more over the land mass of Mexico & Central America.

This system will stay far to the southwest & west of Florida so no impacts locally or on any of Florida.

(2) Eastern & Central Atlantic where an active tropical wave ('99-L') has a chance to still develop into a tropical cyclone but is showing no signs of organization for the moment. The GFS model has trended weaker taking little more than an open wave to just east of Florida by next weekend. The European model has suddenly become the stronger model (a flip-flop from most of the last several days)... developing a tropical cylone east of the Bahamas in about 10 days... the UKMET model is generally somewhere inbetween & has a weak tropical disturbance approaching the Lesser Antilles & Puerto Rico by the end of the week.

It's most likely the a faster/stronger developing system would end up farther north (poleward) while a weaker system would go farther west largely steered by the low level trade winds. For the moment.... I favor a weaker system that ends up farther west - at least initially. The problem could be in the longer term when conditions could be more favorable for stronger development (next weekend, following week - ish).

Other tropical waves are now marching west from Africa as we enter the 6-8 week period when deep Cape (Cabo) Verde tropical systems become more common.

SE U.S.:

Imagery below courtesy CIMMS continues shows the persistent stream of African Saharan dust (orange & red) breaking up a little but beginning to amass itself again off the NW coast of Africa:

Water vapor imagery shows moisure returning to Florida....

Surface analysis centered on the tropical Atlantic shows the strong Bermuda high remains anchored over the Central Atlantic...

Surface analysis of the Gulf:

Caribbean:

Wind shear analysis (red is stronger shear). '90L' is moving into an area of lower shear near Central America/SW Gulf of Mexico....

The W. Pacific...... "Noru" is hitting Japan as a Cat. 1 typhoon & will weaken to a tropical storm by Monday as the storm dumps heavy rain throughout Japan (could be cause for concern on wave '99L' now in the E. Atlantic using possible teleconnection):

"Noru":

Dr. Phil Klotzbach, Colorado State University updated his seasonal forecast Friday. He increased the total storm number by 1 with an active season still anticipated. If the forecast is accurate, we are in for an awfully active 2-3 months.

2017 Cox Media Group.

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Puerto Rican island is a Caribbean paradise without the frills [column] – LancasterOnline

Posted: at 5:29 pm

VIEQUES, Puerto Rico Our family wanted a Caribbean island with the white sand, secluded beaches, aqua water, palm trees, vivid sunsets and great snorkeling, but without wall-to-wall resorts.

Yes, such a place still exists, and it is Vieques, a small island 8 miles off the eastern coast of the Puerto Rican mainland.

We encountered the laid-back vibe as soon as we landed in the eight-seat puddle jumper from San Juan. Exiting the one-room terminal, we walked out the door, suitcases in tow, and were startled to see two wild horses sparring over a mare and foal in the parking lot.

There are some 4,000 free-range horses on the island, and they go everywhere and anywhere, including the main streets in the islands two modest small seaside towns.

The wild horses of Vieques are usually shadowed by cattle egrets, which savor the insects the horses flush when they walk. Sometimes, the egrets perch on the horses back, eating bugs.

A mongoose on Vieques island. The predator from India has played havoc with native wildlife

The remains of the Puerto Ferro lighthouse.

A 300-year-old ceiba tree.

Lounging dogs are part of the open-air restaurant scene in Esperanza on Vieques island.

Clashing clouds during a Vieques sunset.

The wild horses of Vieques are usually shadowed by cattle egrets, which savor the insects the horses flush when they walk. Sometimes, the egrets perch on the horses back, eating bugs.

A mongoose on Vieques island. The predator from India has played havoc with native wildlife

The remains of the Puerto Ferro lighthouse.

A 300-year-old ceiba tree.

Lounging dogs are part of the open-air restaurant scene in Esperanza on Vieques island.

Clashing clouds during a Vieques sunset.

Youll also see dates clip-clopping around town, texting in the saddle. Many of the open-air restaurants in the quaint fishing village of Esperanza have fixtures of dogs on the floor.

Add the unpenned dogs, cats and chickens that also roam as they please, and you may see more animals than the islands 9,000 residents.

The Vieques experience is not for the resort crowd there is only one on the island.

But get yourself a Jeep almost all rentals are Jeeps bounce down lumpy dirt roads, and you have your pick of about two-dozen iconic beaches as found in one of those Corona Find your Beach ads.

The island is a mere 5 miles wide and 21 miles long so youre never far from a new cove, each with its own flavor, color of sand, height of waves and coral reefs.

And then theres Mosquito Bay, the worlds best bioluminescent water where microscopic organisms when disturbed turn each paddle stroke into a silvery streak.

Under a new moon one night in a glass-bottom kayak, we oohed and aahed as a fish zig-zagged away in a shimmering dart.

Its like chasing Tinkerbell, my nephew exclaimed under a sky festooned by the arc of the Milky Way. It looked like shooting stars passing under the glass in our skimming boats. Even the waves were tipped with phosphorescence.

Snorkeling day after day, we lost ourselves in watery worlds following fingers of coral. Reef madness.

Underwater plants bowed to the pulse of currents and sea turtles glided effortlessly through grass beds. I felt like I was floating through a dream.

From our hilltop rental bungalow, we watched daily spectacles where billowy dark storm clouds sailed over outbursts from sunrises and sunsets.

Sunsets on Vieques are spectacular.

All these wonders on Vieques came at a price.

Beginning in World War II, the U.S. military seized the island for bombing practice and to simulate beach invasions. Barbed wire was strung between palm trees and beaches bulldozed. Bombs containing napalm, Agent Orange and radioactive plutonium were dropped over the next 50 years.

After the U.S. bought most of the island from owners of former sugar cane plantations, thousands of self-sufficient islanders with farms and orchards were forced to squeeze into the middle of the island without compensation.

After decades of protests that attracted increasing worldwide sympathy, the island was returned to Puerto Rican control in 2003.

More than half the island was made a national wildlife refuge. No other island in the Caribbean has as much land under conservation.

Though parts of the island still contain unexploded ordnance and are off-limits, the military rule did keep some of the best beaches in the Caribbean from being developed and are now open to the public for free. One morning, we had an entire beach to ourselves.

Environmental degradation goes even further back.

A mongoose on Vieques island. The predator from India has played havoc with native wildlife

Foreign plantation owners brought the mongoose, a predator from India, to control the rat population. The animal controlled ground rats, but not tree rats. With no natural predators of their own, the out-of-control mongoose population has killed many native birds and virtually wiped out snakes.

Yet islanders do not appear to hold a grudge. Several times, locals stopped to offer guidance when I stopped in uncertainty in our Jeep.

There are no friendlier people on the planet, maintains E. Martin Walker, a New York psychologist whose search for an alternative to overdeveloped Mexican beach resorts led him to Vieques 21 years ago.

He arrived sight unseen in a puddle jumper that landed in a field with a cargo container for a terminal. He slept behind a bar his first night.

Now, he spends part of the year in a small house tending to 15 varieties of tropical fruit trees, whose bounty he gives away to neighbors.

I love driving the rough roads that go nowhere because it is impossible to get lost on a tiny island, and breathtaking views are around every corner, he says.

Adds the Rev. Don Bradley, 68, who visited the island from his home in Massachusetts four years ago and has felt the pull ever since, Its just one great place after another.

One morning, on U-shaped Playa Media Luna beach, I spied an islander, face pasted with sunscreen, slowly walking along the beach, picking up flotsam washed in by the sea and stuffing it into a bag.

He walked a long way and when he got close I asked him why he was doing it.

In broken English, he said he does it so that the beach is as it should be.

Panoramic view of a Vieques beach.

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Puerto Rican island is a Caribbean paradise without the frills [column] - LancasterOnline

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Royal Caribbean Post Round-Up: August 6, 2017 – Royal Caribbean Blog (blog)

Posted: at 5:29 pm


Royal Caribbean Blog (blog)
Royal Caribbean Post Round-Up: August 6, 2017
Royal Caribbean Blog (blog)
The 209th episode of the Royal Caribbean Blog Podcast is now available, where we talk about how to use credit cards to save money on a Royal Caribbean cruise. In this episode, Matt and John discuss the Royal Caribbean credit card as well as other ...
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Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. - Receive News & Ratings DailyThe Cerbat Gem
Week Herald -Chaffey Breeze
all 274 news articles »

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COO Goldstein Sells Over $14000000 in Royal Caribbean Stock – Cruise Law News

Posted: at 5:29 pm

Royal Caribbean President and Chief Operating Officer (COO) Adam Goldstein (photo, to the right) sold 120,000 shares of his company's cruise stock on August 2 and 3, 2017. The stock was sold at an average price of $118.21 for a total sale of $14,185,200.00, according to the SEC.

This follows the sale of RCL stock by CEO Richard Fain earlier in the week, where he collected$24,406,075.98. Cruise executives Goldstein and Fain, who often sell big blocks of company stock in tandem like this, together sold over $38,500,000 in RCL stock last week.

Following the sale, COO Goldstein still owns 191,252 shares of RCL stock, valued at $22,607,898.92. The sale was disclosed in a document filed with the SEC.

After the sales last week, Mr. Goldstein and Mr. Fain now own over $134,000,000 of RCL stock.

Have a thought, please leave a comment below or join the discussion on our Facebook page.

Photo credit: Royal Caribbeanpress center.

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The conch is mostly gone from Florida. Can the Bahamas save the Queen? – Miami Herald

Posted: at 5:28 pm


Miami Herald
The conch is mostly gone from Florida. Can the Bahamas save the Queen?
Miami Herald
The queen of the sea, a monster mollusk that inspired its own republic in Florida but now is likely to be found in a frying pan or a gift shop as the ocean floor, is in trouble. A marine preserve in the Bahamas famed for its abundance of Queen conchs ...

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