Daily Archives: August 10, 2017

CalArts Stages Three Productions at Edinburgh Festival Fringe – SCVNEWS.com

Posted: August 10, 2017 at 6:34 am

By Katie Dunham

A number of CalArtians are currently in Edinburgh, Scotland, for the 70th anniversary of The Edinburgh Festival Fringe, the largest arts festival in the world.

Marking CalArts 14th year partnering with the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama to stage plays from emerging Welsh and California artists, this years festival will once again see CalArts Festival Theater visiting Venue 13, the best little venue at the Fringe.

CalArts 2017 productionsall written by womeninvite audiences to venture inside the diverse and global community of Los Angeles. Two of the three shows, Gunshot Medley and The End, The End, The End, have been longlisted for the Festivals 2017 Amnesty International Freedom of Expression Award. The End, The End, The End is also longlisted for the Festivals Eddies Award.

Made possible by the CalArts Office of Advancement, this year marks the first ever Friends of CalArts Edinburgh Tour, during which a group of CalArts fans and supporters will join Travis Preston, Dean of the School of Theater, in Edinburgh for a week of shows and activities.

Running the entirety of the Festival Fringe, the following productions have all been workshopped at CalArts:

Gunshot Medley In playwright Dionna Michelle Daniels (Theater BFA 17) Gunshot Medley, past and present meet in a haunted North Carolina graveyard to explore the deep-seated racial tensions in the United States. Set to classic Appalachian folk music and gospel spirituals, the play stretches across the Antebellum American south through present day to weave a rich history of the Black American experience, the historical expendability of Black bodies and the lives lost to hatred, racism and police brutality.

Three slavesBetty, Alvis, and George, played by Morgan Camper (Theater MFA 18), Derek Jackson (Theater BFA 20), and Darius Booker (Theater MFA 17), respectivelyare stuck in a state of limbo, perpetually tasked with cleaning up the wreckage of systemic racism purveying contemporary America. An ever-present fourth character, the High Priestess of Souls (played by Daniel), an incarnate of the Yoruban goddess Oya, awakens each character to their condition, inciting action and social change.

A combination of spoken word and live music, the production pays homage to the real Betty, Alvis and George, three historically documented slaves that died in North Carolina before the emancipation proclamation was signed. It also seeks to respond to the insensitive usage of the Confederate Flag in the wake of the Charleston Church massacre.

Gunshot Medley features lighting design by Jesse Fryery (Theater MFA 17), set design by Alex Grover (Theater MFA 18), music from Kris Rahamad (Music BFA 17), sound design by Sam Sewell (Theater MFA 17), and costume design by Chardonnay Tobar (Theater MFA 18). It is stage managed by Samantha Brounstein (Theater BFA 19).

Gunshot Medley opened at Venue 13 on Saturday, Aug. 6, and runs through Saturday, Aug. 26.

Love Gasoline! Bessie Award-winning artist and CalArts instructor Stacy Dawson Stearns goes inside Marcel Duchamps imagination in Love Gasoline!. Inspired by the artists famously unfinished work, The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even (The Large Glass), the play presents Duchamps iconic Nude, who guides the audience into the glass to witness elaborate and unconventional acts of desire.

Featuring cyclical episodes of bizarre human behavior, occasional gambling, shots of music and psychologically graphic film sequences, Stearns innovative dance play seeks to strip down its own form to expose the possible plays within the glass and the hilarity of human desire.

Love Gasoline! stars both Stearns and Brian Ehst (Theater BFA 18) as Nudes, Billy Lawrence (Theater MFA 17) as The Nine Bachelors, and Tyree Marshall as The Bride (Theater BFA 17), and features lighting design by Jesse Fryery (Theater MFA 17), sound design by Sam Sewell (Theater MFA 17), music by Ian Stahl (Music MFA 18), and video design by Jonathan Stearns, CalArts Videographer. Rocky Hood (Theater BFA 19) is Production Stage Manager.

Love Gasoline! opened at Venue 13 on Saturday, Aug. 5 and runs through Saturday, Aug. 26. Recommended for mature audiences only.

The End, The End, The End The End, The End, The End focuses on an international ensembleself-described outsiders in a land of outsidersas they ritualize, remember and perform their exile experience in the United States.

Drowning in media and facing end-of-the-world paranoia and identity crisis in America, the exiles must constantly revise their personal histories and ideologies as the alleged other to survive.

Mixing pop iconography, intimate storytelling, motion-sensor video, real-time light art, operatic manifestos of political prophets, athletic and sensual performance, and more, the result is a defiant theatrical collage seeking to debunk myths of otherness and enlist audience members in a revolution for a new utopia.

Conceived and directed by Scarlett Kim (Theater MFA 18), The End, The End, The End stars Brian Ehst (Theater BFA 19), Gabriel Eduardo Jimenez (Theater MFA 18), Jinglin Liao (Dance MFA 18), Tyler Riggin (Theater MFA 18), Henita Telo (Theater BFA 18) and Carolina Vargas (Theater MFA 18). Produced by Changling Lu (Theater MFA 19), it features scenic design by Alex Grover (Theater MFA 18), costume design by Chardonnay Tobar (Theater MFA 18), lighting design by Dylan Phillips (Theater MFA 18) and Josephine Wang (Theater BFA 18), sound design by Sam Sewell (Theater MFA 17), and video design by Shih-lien Eugene Yen (Theater MFA 18). Samantha Brounstein (Theater BFA 19) serves as stage manager.

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Damon Krukowski Will Change How You Listen – The New Yorker

Posted: at 6:34 am

Damon Krukowskis new six-episode podcast, Ways of Hearing , begins with an exciting analog sound: that of a needle descending on a record. Krukowski, the musician and writer best known for his work in Galaxie 500 and Damon & Naomi, tells us, The first record I made was all analog. It was 1987, and making a record didnt require numbers or data. The tape decks, mixing board, and microphones were mechanical; music was recorded in a shared common moment. And so my bandmates and I set up our instruments in the studio, we counted off, and we played our songs, he says. We hear sublime music: Dean Warehams guitar, Naomi Yangs bass, and Krukowskis drums, beginning Galaxie 500s funny, heavenly Tugboat . Audio technology, whether analog or digital, conveys wonderfully human sounds: emotion, music, art. But the shift to digital has transformed recording, listening, and even the way we experience time and space, in ways we might not fully comprehend.

One of these transformations is the rise of the podcast. Today I begin a weekly column, Podcast Dept. , in which Ill be talking to podcast creators, listening to podcasts with a critical ear, reviewing the popular and the obscure, and paying attention to the form of podcasting as it evolves. Krukowskis Ways of Hearing is the first show in the Radiotopia networks new podcast, Showcase, which will highlight a succession of short-run podcasts. I chose to begin with Ways of Hearing both because it offers the immediate pleasures of a great podcastinteresting ideas presented in a sound-rich, thoughtfully produced narrative formatand because it makes us think about the act of listening itself, in ways that feel timely and vital.

Ways of Hearing evolved out of Krukowskis recently published book, The New Analog: Listening and Reconnecting in a Digital World , about how the way we listen has changed with the shift from analog to digital. The books objective is not uncritical nostalgia, he writesits to identify the good things that this shift imperils and to get us to think about how to preserve them, in the spirit of Jane Jacobss writing about urban spaces. Krukowski worries that digital listening, in all its ubiquity and convenience, threatens the quality of our listening and attention. He wants us to become more careful and aware, and he wants to encourage harmony between the analog and digital worlds.

In the book, he does this through explorations of mono and stereo, signal and noise, The Dark Side of the Moon, loudness, the CD revolution, and so on, with wit and verve; we learn the Victrola-based origin of the saying Put a sock in it and see a photograph of Nigel Tufnels custom volume knob . The aural particularities of headphone listening, he tells us, make us experience what we hear inside our head. The headphone album of the 1970s was meant to take you elsewherenot into the street, but certainly out of your bedroom, where you were tethered to the stereo by a coiled cord like an astronaut tied to an orbiting spaceship, he writes. Close your eyes, turn up the volume, and fly into headspace. Cut the cable, as we now have, and we risk confusing the external world with the internal one. We all understand this: I once turned off Invisibilia for fear of falling through a sidewalk hatch.

Krukowski narrates Ways of Hearing in a smooth, patient, sound-focussed style, augmented with clips of music, street noise, and field recordings. (The sound of what used to be CBGBs will make your blood run cold.) On the page or in your headphones, Krukowski is present, engaged, and eager to share ideas.

I talked with Krukowski and Yang in a back garden at their home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, near Harvard Square. Their two cats, Chickpea and Lentil, a.k.a. Caetano Veloso and Maria Bethnia, milled around among the flowers. The concept for my project was based on John Bergers Ways of Seeing , Krukowski saidnot the book but the TV series, which came first. It was a BBC series, just a few episodes, made in the early seventies. Berger was a Marxist. And hes using this medium thats obviously extremely popular and thats reaching into every English home, and he is quoting Walter Benjamin and giving this different view of what our visual culture might mean. Its fantastic. Hes so generous of spirita quality that I really admire. He really wants to share the information, but he doesnt talk down. Its clearly meant for every household. In the first shot of that series, Berger, dressed respectably but casually, with curly seventies hair, walks up to Botticellis Venus and Mars and cuts the face out of it. Its a reproduction, we realize. With this provocative gesture, Berger plunges us immediately into ideas about art in the age of mechanical reproduction.

I was thinking about podcasting and digital sound in general, how everybodys walking around with earbuds, Krukowski went on. And its a moment thats very similar to the TV in the late sixties, early seventies, where this hypervisual culture is happening. Suddenly you have this visual medium in every home, and people are just consuming it. But Berger was making you aware of it. To me, the success of Ways of Seeing is that hes making the viewer aware of the television as well. And so it becomes a critique of television itself. Today, he said, everybody is surprisingly unquestioning about audio. He wants to help change that. Without passing judgment, necessarily. I just think theres a strange lack of questioning.

Each episode of Ways of Hearing focusses on a different aspect of the analog-digital audio shift: Time, Space, Love, Money, and Power. (The sixth has not yet been named; a seventh, bonus episode, Ways of Song Exploding, is a collaboration with the forensic music podcast Song Exploder.) Time is full of fascinating observations about how digital technology has altered our relationship to time: if youve ever wanted to hit Undo on something in real life, you understand. He approaches the question musically at first, by talking about analog tempo in music performance and how it can often be variable, even among professionals.

Musicians know time is flexible, he tells us. You steal a bit here, give a bit back there. We hear a solo cello, some jazz, some funk, a hand-cranked Victrola. Hip-hop d.j.s used speed controls on a record to match it to another and keep the groove going, or, in the studio, to pile up samples from older records and make a new one, he says. We hear the beginning of Can I Kick It? and the voice of Ali Shaheed Muhammad on the NPR show Microphone Check , talking about how he and the other members of A Tribe Called Quest noticed that the analog-based musicians they were sampling sped up and slowed down, sometimes even within a two-bar phrase. Galaxie 500 did this, too, Krukowski says: We were nervous and excited, and we sped up at the chorus. In analog time, we make up for imperfections as we do elsewherewith improvisation and moxie.

A big shift came, Krukowski tells us, when bands started recording to a digital metronomethe click track. Machine time is precise. (To illustrate this, he cues up the Human Leagues Dont You Want Me synthesizer and staccato, peppery beats.) The precision and control afforded by digital time can allow for other kinds of variability, in ways that can mess with our head. Krukowski talks about podcast listening speed, speeding himself up to 1.25x, like Im manic, and slowing down to .75x, like Im drunk. Latency, the lag between real time and computer-processed time, messes with us, too. It used to be, he tells us, that in Boston, when the Red Sox scored at Fenway, you could hear simultaneous cheering from open windows in cars and apartments all over the city. But after June 12, 2009, when United States TV stations switched from analog to digital, people watching on TV and listening on the radio were no longer experiencing the same moment. Now the sound of cheering in Boston is staggered. Its observations like this, enhanced with sound clipsand, here, a great interview with the Red Sox radio announcer Joe Castiglionethat make Ways of Hearing such enjoyable listening. It continually gives you a feeling of Ah, yes, thats whats been going on.

Krukowski and Yang live in an analog utopia with digital enhancements: a sunny space in an ivy-covered building, with high ceilings, a piano, and media galore (a book called The Revenge of Analog; a button that said ASK ME ABOUT MY PODCAST ). Krukowski showed me the living room, where he and Yang record music, and the mixing room, where he mixes music on an old analog mixing board after importing a digital file. Galaxie 500 were on a sixteen-track, but Kramerthe legendary musician and producerhad one broken channel, so we had fifteen, he said, looking pleased.

Recording with people long-distance is the new status quo, Krukowski said. The ubiquity of digital recording, coupled with the ease of sending large sound files in recent years, has dramatically altered the songwriting and collaboration process for many musicians. Krukowski mentioned his recent collaboration with the British avant-garde folk musician Richard Youngs , in which Youngs requested a drum track, Krukowski recorded one and sent it, and Youngs, instead of using it on one song, used it on the whole album. Krukowski laughed, delightedly. When Galaxie 500 recorded, and when Damon & Naomi record, the focus is on a shared moment; digital technology can inhibit such shared moments, but it also opens up what a shared moment can mean.

Ways of Hearing makes you highly attuned to such shifts, and to the complexity and variety of aurally connecting. The second episode, Space, out later this week, takes us to Astor Place, Radio City Music Hall, and beyond. In Tokyo, people on crowded trains pretend to be asleep to avoid eye contact, he says. But here, with all these headphones, its like were avoiding ear contact. The act of listening, we realizenot just in conversation but in our headphones and in the worldis significant. How we control sound, how we use it to insulate ourselves, to transport ourselves, to educate ourselves, to provoke thoughts and to distract ourselves from thoughts, to connect, to escape, can have social, even political, ramifications. And listening to podcaststhese intimate, sophisticated constructions of sound and ideascan connect us intensely to other people and isolate us from our surroundings at the same time.

Krukowski is especially convincing, even poetic, about the artistic and social value of noisewhich headphone listening and digital audio often shut out. Space ends with a lovely story about a visit he paid to the composer John Cage in the early nineties, at the apartment that Cage shared with Merce Cunningham, on Sixth Avenue. When I arrived, he was sitting at a table by the window, composing music on paper, and the windows were open, Krukowski says. The roar of the city was vivid: buses, shouting, honking. (We hear a little Cage, a little noise.) But John Cage said he never closed the window, Krukowski says. Why would he? There was so much to listen to, all the time.

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New traffic features will make daily trips safer for kids at a Bayside public school – QNS.com

Posted: at 6:34 am

When students return to school at M.S. 74 in Baysidethis September, they will be greeted with brand-new safety features along Oceania Street and 210th Street that will make their trips to and from school safer for everyone.

For years, staff at M.S. 74 raised concerns over traffic safety in front of and near the middle school where drivers were known to speed, make illegal U-turns, drive on the painted median, double and sometimes triple park, and get into accidents. These conditions often pose threats to the safety of students, parents, pedestrians, and drivers around that area.

In order to remedy the dangerous situation, Councilman Barry Grodenchik wrote a letter to the citys Department of Transportation (DOT), which came out to survey the conditions. Once the agencys survey was completed, DOT proposed the new safety features aimed at calming traffic, protecting students during drop-off and pick-up times at M.S. 74, and keeping cyclists safe who bike along Oceania Street.

The safety features DOT proposed include a two-way protected bicycle lane along Oceania Street and 210thStreet; buffered bicycle lanes on Oceania Street over the Long Island Expressway; increased space for drop-off and pick-up in front of M.S. 74; a one-way conversion of a small portion of 210thStreet where it meets Oceania Street; new crosswalks and a painted curb extension on 210thStreet; a high visibility crosswalk on 210thStreet at 64thAvenue; and a speed bump on 210thStreet south of 64thAvenue.

This is a perfect example of how the school, the park, [and] the community in general have really come together for a really tangible safety benefit, said Albert Silvestri, DOT deputy Queens commissioner.

To create the two-way protected bike lane, DOT simply shifted the parking out a few feet which will not only protect cyclists from traffic, but also slow down cars on a roadway known for speeding vehicles and cut back on aggressive U-turning in front of the school, Silverstri explained.

This really helps improve the quality of life here in the neighborhood and will literally go to save lives, said Congresswoman Grace Meng. In Congress weve co-founded a bipartisan kids safety caucus, so as someone whos part of the caucus, and as a parent of two young kids, Im really thankful to the city for making this happen.

Community Board 11 unanimously approved the plan back in March. Since then, DOT has begun work at the location and plans to have all the safety measures complete before the start of the new school year.

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Oceania Capital Partners Ltd (OCP.AX) Chaikin Money Flow in Positive Territory – Rockville Register

Posted: at 6:34 am

Oceania Capital Partners Ltd (OCP.AX) is seeing positive money flow as the Chalkin (CMF) indicator is holding above the zero line. The Chaikin Money Flow Indicator is an oscillator developed by Marc Chaikin. An oscillator is an indicator that is used as a counter trend showing when the market is overbought or oversold. The CMF is based largely on the Accumulation Distribution Line; it compares the close value with the high and the low for that same day.

A buy signal occurs when the CMF value crosses from below the 0 line to above the 0 line. A sell signal occurs when the CMF value crosses from above the 0 line to below the 0 line.

Turning to some additional technicals, at the time of writing, the 14-day ADX for Oceania Capital Partners Ltd (OCP.AX) is 33.59. Many technical chart analysts believe that an ADX value over 25 would suggest a strong trend. A reading under 20 would indicate no trend, and a reading from 20-25 would suggest that there is no clear trend signal. The ADX is typically plotted along with two other directional movement indicator lines, the Plus Directional Indicator (+DI) and Minus Directional Indicator (-DI). Some analysts believe that the ADX is one of the best trend strength indicators available.

Investors may be trying to define which trends will prevail in the second half of the year. As the markets continue to chug along, investors may be trying to maximize gains and become better positioned for success. Technical analysts may be studying different historical price and volume data in order to help uncover where the momentum is headed. Coming up with a solid strategy may take some time, but it might be well worth it in the long run. As we move deeper into the year, investors will be closely tracking the next few earnings periods. They may be trying to project which companies will post positive surprises.

Some investors may find the Williams Percent Range or Williams %R as a helpful technical indicator. Presently, Oceania Capital Partners Ltd (OCP.AX)s Williams Percent Range or 14 day Williams %R is resting at -10.34. Values can range from 0 to -100. A reading between -80 to -100 may be typically viewed as strong oversold territory. A value between 0 to -20 would represent a strong overbought condition. As a momentum indicator, the Williams R% may be used with other technicals to help define a specific trend.

When performing stock analysis, investors and traders may opt to view technical levels. Oceania Capital Partners Ltd (OCP.AX) presently has a 14-day Commodity Channel Index (CCI) of 66.51. Investors and traders may use this indicator to help spot price reversals, price extremes, and the strength of a trend. Many investors will use the CCI in conjunction with other indicators when evaluating a trade. The CCI may be used to spot if a stock is entering overbought (+100) and oversold (-100) territory.

Checking in on moving averages, the 200-day is at 1.94, the 50-day is 2.30, and the 7-day is sitting at 2.54. Moving averages may be used by investors and traders to shed some light on trading patterns for a specific stock. Moving averages can be used to help smooth information in order to provide a clearer picture of what is going on with the stock. Technical stock analysts may use a combination of different time periods in order to figure out the history of the equity and where it may be headed in the future. MAs can be calculated for any time period, but two very popular time frames are the 50-day and 200-day moving averages.

Shifting gears to the Relative Strength Index, the 14-day RSI is currently sitting at 63.89, the 7-day is 64.53, and the 3-day is currently at 69.38 for Oceania Capital Partners Ltd (OCP.AX). The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is a highly popular momentum indicator used for technical analysis. The RSI can help display whether the bulls or the bears are currently strongest in the market. The RSI may be used to help spot points of reversals more accurately. The RSI was developed by J. Welles Wilder. As a general rule, an RSI reading over 70 would signal overbought conditions. A reading under 30 would indicate oversold conditions. As always, the values may need to be adjusted based on the specific stock and market. RSI can also be a valuable tool for trying to spot larger market turns.

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When an Air India Plane was Hijacked by Mercenaries in Seychelles – The Wire

Posted: at 6:33 am

Books An excerpt fromRicochets: From Gordonstoun to Africas Wars: The Life of Mercenary Soldier Peter Duffy.

In November 1981, Capt Umesh Saxena, piloting an Air India plane, landed in Seychelles in the middle of a counter coup attempt to overthrow President Albert Rene. The plane had come from Zimbabwe and was on its way to Bombay. The airport was locked down due to a battle between the security forces and the mercenaries. A simple plan to enter the country through immigration had gone horribly wrong.

The mercenaries, under the command of Col Mad Mike Hoare and his second in command Peter Duffy, entered the plane and got Capt Saxena to fly to South Africa, which had no diplomatic relations with India. Duffy continued to insist for years afterwards that there was no hijacking; the Natal Supreme Court did not agree with him and sentenced him to five years, though he was out after 21 months. A colourful character who had been to one of Britains premier public schools Gordonstoun and had been working in South Africa as a press photographer when he got involved in the counter coup plot, Duffy continued to live in Durban after being released. In October 2006, Duffyvisited Saxena in his Mumbai home.

A new book on Duffy by South African journalist Graham Linscott has just been published, but even as plans were being made to launch it, news came on August 4 that Duffy had suddenly died.

In this exclusive excerpt from Ricochets: From Gordonstoun to Africas Wars: The Life of Mercenary Soldier Peter Duffy, Linscott describes how a simple plan to enter Seychelles went awry.

All was going according to plan. The Air Swaziland Fokker Friendship had landed without incident about midday. The Frothblowers had been through immigration without any problem. Now it was customs, and they passed in loose groups through the nothing to declare green gate. Their bags were already being stacked on mini-buses outside the terminal building, in batches depending which hotel they were booked for. The few passengers who were not part of the Frothblowers mission also made their way through.

One was a Seychellois Creole who had boarded in the Comores. He was returning from a holiday, resplendent in cream linen slacks and brightly coloured shirt. He seemed prett y pleased with himself. One of the customs officers signalled him to open his bag. The man protested, then complied. Reaching in, the customs officer pulled out a bunch of litchis, a tropical fruit the passenger had bought in the Comores but which it was illegal to bring into the Seychelles for reasons of plant disease control. The exchange between the passenger and the customs officer became heated. The customs man produced a copy of the regulations and began preparing some kind of document for a fine. The Seychellois exploded with rage.

You do this to me because I am a Creole! You dont do it to these other people! He indicated the Frothblowers who were filing through.

At which another customs officer stopped Johan Fritz and asked him to open his bag. Duffy was next in line and went cold. Reaching into his own bag, he pulled out a rubber bathtub duck and squeaked it at the customs officer, hoping to distract him and disarm him. The officer ignored it as he felt around in the bag and found it obviously had a false bottom. He began pulling the bag apart. Duffy ran to the exit to where the bags were being piled on the minibuses.

Get the bags down! I think weve been rumbled!

He ran back, to see a customs officer rushing out of an office with an AK-47 with a wooden butt. The Frothblowers were all of them pulling out their weapons by now, clipping in the ammunition. All hell broke loose as they opened up and the customs officer with the rifle went down, wounded though not fatally. Duffy dived for cover as the shooting broke out. Beside him Fritz dropped stone dead, shot through the heart by a stray bullet from one of his own men. The firing quietened. The Frothblowers fanned out and took control of the entire terminal, which was barely defended. Seychellois airport staff were herded together and told to sit tight. Two Frothblowers went into the control tower and took over. The airport was secure but the danger came from the military barracks, not far away near the end of the airport runway, which were known to contain about two hundred Tanzanian troops. The alarm would certainly have been raised by now, by radio or telephone.

All this threatened disaster. The plan had been for the Frothblowers to infiltrate, settle in and only days later give cutting-edge support when the Seychellois themselves went into rebellion. Hoare decided on an immediate attack on the barracks, to seize the armoury and hopefully neutralise the Tanzanians as a force.

The advance party had come to the airport as incognito back-up, and when things went wrong Hoare ordered them into the mini-moke tourist vehicles they had brought with them for a full frontal attack on the barracks, the sooner the better. They set off and a brisk exchange of fire ensued at the gates of the barracks. But a nasty surprise lay in store. None of the advance party had noticed a 7.62mm anti-aircraft gun mounted just inside the barracks perimeter and this opened up on them to terrifying effect. They had to fall back for cover in the surrounding bush and Aubrey Brookes, a special forces man originally from Rhodesia, was badly wounded in the thigh. (He lost contact with his comrades and was eventually captured by the Seychellois).

The afternoon wore on. The light began to fail. The Frothblowers were in the stickiest of situations. They had the airport but nothing else. The well-armed Tanzanian force and the Seychellois army would soon move in. As darkness fell an armoured vehicle trundled down the road toward the terminal building. But the Frothblowers had anticipated such a thing and had strung a roadblock of civilian vehicles across the road. The armoured cars occupants tried to smash their way through, to ride across the blockage but ended up seesawing on top of it, unable to move forward or backward or train the machinegun. At least that threat was neutralised. Then mortars began to whistle and crunch about the airfield, coming from the direction of the army barracks. Vehicles were moving on the airfield and the terminal and control tower came under sporadic fire. The Air Swaziland De Havilland, still parked there, was riddled with bullets and shrapnel, though it never caught fire.

Then another heavy vehicle was heard on the approach road. It turned out to be an armoured car, this time approaching just off-road. But it fared no better than the first. Its wheels started spinning in the soft sand, it was on its chassis, unable to move forward or back. The Frothblowers surrounded it. They slapped mud over its periscope, stood on top and rapped on the closed turret.

Come out with your hands up! They said it in English, French and Swahili. There was no response. Come out or well burn you out with petrol! Still no response.

A bottle was found and filled with petrol. An improvised wick was inserted. The Molotov cocktail. They repeated the warning, rapping on the turret. There was still no response. Right, said Duffy. Somebody give me a light.

But nobody in the group smoked. Nobody had matches or a lighter. They rapped on the turret again. Hang on a bit. Were going to fetch some matches.

Graham Linscott Ricochets: From Gordonstoun to Africas Wars: The Life of Mercenary Soldier Peter Duffy Nomapix, June 2017

If there was a vestige of grim humour in this situation, it evaporated when the matches were brought. The Molotov cocktail was flung at the armoured car, which was instantly enveloped in flame. It was burning inside as well, as the petrol seeped in and next thing the hatch burst open and an armed Tanzanian appeared and was cut down by automatic fire before he had the chance to even aim his weapon. Then two Seychellois came out slowly, hands in the air. They were terrified.

Duffy had them marched to the area of the terminal where Hoare had set up command HQ. They were interrogated at length, through an interpreter, as to the disposition of the Tanzanian troops, their numbers and their armaments. The Frothblowers still hoped to fight their way out of this one, igniting the rebellion which they had come to support. Eventually Hoare was satisfied that his prisoners had told him all they could.

Thank you, he said. You may go now. Go? They were absolutely astonished.

Yes, go home. Tell everyone we are not here to attack the Seychellois people, we are here to liberate them.

Unable to believe their luck, the two prisoners ran off into the night. The mortar fire and heavy machinegun fire were building up. Frontal attack seemed imminent. The Frothblowers were indeed in a sticky situation.

In the control tower, Vernon Prinsloo, an ex-Rhodesian who had been national light-heavyweight boxing champion, sat with the Seychellois flight controller as mortar shell bursts and gunfire punctuated the night about the airfield. The controller had a serious attack of the jitters and spent much of the time beneath his desk. Then suddenly the radio crackled into life. It was an Air India flight from Harare, Zimbabwe, bound for Bombay, seeking permission to land. Mahe was a refuelling stop. This raised a moral problem. The aircraft could hardly be encouraged to land in the midst of a battle for control of the airport. Yet Prinsloo could not be totally explicit about the problem; it would have been radioed instantly about the world and the counter-coup attempt already severely compromised would be condemned internationally. Prinsloo advised against landing. The Air India flight should go on to Mauritius instead.

Then the Air India captain did something Duffy and his companions find puzzling to this day. He put the aircraft into a holding pattern for a good 50 minutes, burning up fuel while he discussed the position with the control tower, until eventually he had no option other than to land. Meanwhile, the Tanzanians and Seychellois army naturally presumed the mystery aircraft to be carrying reinforcements for the invaders and were ready to shoot at it with everything they had. In fact the aircraft carried civilians, including several VIPs in the Zimbabwean government, who were no doubt alarmed by the delay in landing but had no idea quite how precarious their position was. Nor did the Air India captain, Irmish (sic) Saxena or Colonel Hoare and the Frothblowers for that matter know that at least one truck was standing on the runway.

Captain Saxena decided to land. As he approached, the Tanzanians did have the decency to fire two red flares, warning him to abort. But he came in anyway, tracers arcing wildly but inaccurately after his aircraft as it touched down in the night. There was a sickening bang as a parked truck caught a trim baffle near the undercarriage and tore it off, but the lurching aircraft managed to stay on course and slow, the engines screeching in reverse thrust. Three feet closer to the undercarriage and the aircraft would certainly have cartwheeled, killing everyone on board.

As Colonel Hoare watched from the terminal, he said to Duffy: If anything happens to that plane, well get the blame. But the gods were on the side of the passengers and aircrew. The Boeing 707 taxied into position, engines still screaming, and one of the Frothblowers drove Duffy out to it on the mobile gangway. A door opened and a figure appeared. Duffy was at the top of the steps, his AK-47 slung over his shoulder.

Are you the captain? He had to cup his hands and yell above the still-screaming engines.

Im the first officer.

I need to speak to the captain.

Come in.

Duffy was led to the flight deck where he was introduced to Saxena. He explained the situation. The Air India flight had flown into an attempted counter-coup. Control of the airport was still being contested. Saxena, who had once been an officer in the Indian Air Force, asked if he could meet Hoare. He, the first officer and the navigator were driven to the terminal.

Why did you land the aircraft? Hoare asked as they were introduced. He never did get a satisfactory answer. They discussed the options, which were precious few. Saxena said he wanted to leave first thing next morning after refuelling. But the mortar barrage was intensifying. He changed his mind. He would refuel right away and take off as soon as possible.

But how could he take a passenger aircraft through the hell of tracer bullets and shrapnel that was developing outside? Could a cease-fire be negotiated? Dozens of Seychellois airport officials were still there under guard, and somebody was found to telephone the presidency and put Captain Saxena on the line. An astonishing dialogue followed between President Albert Rene and Saxena, who explained that this was a civilian flight that carried some senior Zimbabwean political figures. It had absolutely no connection with the coup attempt, of which he had only just been informed.

Rene considered and hedged. Then he agreed to order the troops to cease hostilities until the Air India flight had taken off. But this should happen as soon as possible. And, he insisted, nobody else should be taken. Saxena agreed.

The barrage went quiet. Duffy got hold of two Seychellois airport operatives to set up the complicated refuelling process. He drove them out to the fuel tanks for the first step in the operation, using an airport runabout vehicle but with the lights switched off just in case, leaning out and shining the way with a torch. But all remained quiet. The fuel line was connected up to the Boeings tanks and the fuel started pumping. Duffy got into conversation with the two technicians, who were friendly and totally co-operative. He got the impression they rather approved of any attempt to oust Rene. The tanks were now full. One of the technicians thrust a requisition book at him.

Can you sign for the fuel, please?

Oh, certainly. Duffy signed with a flourish: Lieutenant-General Mickey Mouse.

Elsewhere, Captain Saxena and his officers had been busy. They took a drive down the runway to make sure it was clear. They dragged out of the way the truck that had torn off the stabiliser trim. The Tanzanians were observing the truce. The aircraft was now ready to fly. The stabiliser trim was not essential to take-off and flight.

Back in the terminal, Saxena spoke to Hoare. I dont want to know how many men are in your group. Thats your business. But I can carry an extra 50 passengers.

This was a way out. Hoare and Duffy considered. But the flight was to Bombay. South Africa at that stage had no diplomatic relations with India because of apartheid. Many of the Frothblowers were former Rhodesian special forces and current South African special forces personnel. They had South African travel documents. They would not be welcome in Bombay. South Africa was another option, in spite of the lack of diplomatic relations. Saxena agreed to fly them there.

This is, of course, Duffys account of what happened. In the subsequent air piracy trial the Natal Supreme Court was to take a different view: that the aircraft had been diverted to Durban under duress. Duffy is adamant that no weapon was ever pointed at anyone; no threat was ever made. Saxena made the offer out of humanitarian recognition of the Frothblowers predicament. In Duffys support, one of Saxenas officers did tell a radio station that the incident had been not so much a hijacking as a commandeering (though a court of law would probably see no distinction). Saxena and Duffy are firm friends to this day. Duffy flew to India (at great personal risk) to support and promote Saxena when he wrote his own account of the incident. Every Christmas he gets a telephone call from Saxena. Every Diwali Saxena gets a telephone call from him. Could it be that (perfectly understandable) international strictures against air piracy in this case overrode some human sympathy and decency?

Whatever the case, about 1 am next morning the Air India flight took off, the body of Johan Fritz in the cargo hold, the Frothblowers weapons tied up on the floor in a blanket. The Tanzanians held their fire, yet at one stage Duffy thought he heard the sound of bullets slapping the fuselage. But it was only the Frothblowers exultantly giving the parabat clap; many passengers joined in, relieved to be out of it. Drinks were served; the stewardesses refused payment. During the flight, a blonde girl from Zimbabwe and one of the mercenaries struck up such a rapport that they ended up joining the mile-high club. If this was a hijacking, it was a most strange one.

Excerpted from Ricochets: From Gordonstoun to Africas Wars by Graham Linscott. With permission from the author

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Feasting Through the Western Caribbean on Carnival’s Vista – The Daily Meal

Posted: at 6:33 am

Cruises are definitely a smart vacation solution for the traveler with wanderlust and a big appetite. Carnival Cruise Lines newest ship, Vista, aims to offer both astounding travel excursions and an extensive variety of dining options to suit all tastes. The Daily Meal recently joined Carnival aboard the Vista for 7 days of eating and drinking through the Western Caribbean.

Carnivals Vista launched in 2016 as the first of three vessels in the company's Vista-class series, and this vessel offers some unique features, including an IMAX theater, the SkyRide in-air attraction, and exclusive food collaborations Pig & Anchor and Guys Burger Joint (both from none other than Guy Fieri himself). Departing from the Port of Miami, this voyage included stops in Ocho Rios, Grand Cayman, and Cozumel.

Serving nearly 4,000 passengers over seven days, the Vista boasts a selection of 17 onboard restaurants, ranging from upscale to casual, ethnic to all-American, and all-inclusive to paid. Deciding where to start and what to try can be a bit overwhelming. We narrowed it down to the top five.

Plan ahead and make reservations, especially for a seat at The Chefs Table and JiJi Asian Kitchen. Although neither are a part of Carnivals all-inclusive dining option, the surcharge is well worth the experience.

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Critically endangered staghorn corals are benefiting from coral gardening in the Caribbean – Mongabay.com

Posted: at 6:33 am

Its not just the Great Barrier Reef coral reefs around the globe are in decline due to climate change, ocean pollution, and a number of other impacts of human activities on marine environments.

But new research finds that coral gardening, which involves planting fragments of nursery-raised coral on reefs in the wild to replenish depleted coral colonies, is playing a key role in the restoration of staghorn coral reef systems in the Caribbean and might just help inform strategies to ensure the long-term survival of the worlds coral reefs in the future.

A study published in the journal Coral Reefs in June looks at how successful restoration efforts have been at several sites in Florida and Puerto Rico over the first two years of a staghorn coral (Acropora cervicornis) gardening program. The researchers behind the study a team led by scientists with the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science at the University of Miami (UM) say they found that current restoration methods do not cause excessive damage to donor colonies (from which coral tissue is taken and propagated in a nursery), and that once the coral fragments are planted back out in the wild, known as being outplanted, they behave just like wild colonies.

Particularly susceptible to bleaching, staghorn coral populations have declined more than 80 percent over the past 30 years due to higher incidence of disease and the impacts of global warming, especially higher ocean temperatures and ocean acidification, according to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN). The species was listed as threatened under the U.S. Endangered Species Act in 2006 and is currently listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List.

There have been efforts to propagate and reintroduce A. cervicornis in waters near the Dominican Republic, Florida, Honduras, Jamaica, and Puerto Rico, the IUCN reports.

Coral reefs are declining at an alarming rate and coral restoration programs are now considered an essential component to coral conservation and management [planning], Diego Lirman, a professor of marine biology and ecology at UM and co-author of the study, said in a statement.

Lirman and the rest of the team collected data on the survival and productivity of thousands of individual A. cervicornis colonies within six different geographical regions in order to develop benchmarks that can be used to assess coral reef restoration efforts and their impacts on the overall ecosystem. Our findings provide the necessary scientific benchmarks to evaluate restoration progress moving forward, Lirman added.

We propose that up to 10% of the biomass can be collected from healthy, large A. cervicornis donor colonies for nursery propagation, the researchers write in the study. They also propose a number of benchmarks for the first year of staghorn coral restoration efforts: greater than 75 percent live tissue cover remaining on donor colonies; greater than 80 percent survival of nursery corals; and greater than 70 percent survival of outplanted corals.

The worlds wild coral reef systems provide habitat for fisheries, supply food for humans and numerous marine species, and help protect shorelines against hurricanes and other extreme weather events. Thats why coral restoration is coming to be seen as an effective means of ensuring coral reef systems are still capable of providing those ecosystem services as well as for mitigating the impacts of rising sea levels and storm surges on coastlines, according to UM coral biologist Stephanie Schopmeyer, lead author of the study.

Our study showed that current restoration methods are very effective, Schopmeyer said in a statement. Healthy coral reefs are essential to our everyday life and successful coral restoration has been proven as a recovery tool for lost coastal resources.

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UPDATE: Disturbance over the Bahamas could bring heavy rain to Florida – MyPalmBeachPost (blog)

Posted: at 6:32 am

Update 8 p.m.: The trough of low pressure over the Bahamas continues to produce disorganized shower activity with a 10 percent chance of becoming a tropical system. But it could bring heavy rain to portions of the Bahamas and Florida during the next day or two, according to the National Hurricane Center.

Meanwhile, another low-pressure system east-northeast of the northern Leeward Islands has become a little better organized. Theres a 50 percent chance of development over the next five days.

Check the latest tropical outlook

RELATED: Franklin hits 85 mph, aims at Mexico coast First 2017 hurricane forms as forecasters predict busier storm season

Update 2 p.m.: A small area of showers over the Bahamas was given a 10 percent chance of becoming a tropical system at the 2 p.m. advisory from the National Hurricane Center.

Although development appears unlikely, this system could bring areas of heavy rain to portions of the Bahamas and Florida during the next day or two, forecasters wrote.

Previous story: National Hurricane Center forecasters are keeping an eye on an area of disorganized showers that could become a tropical system during the weekend.

As of the 8 a.m. advisory, the center gave it a 40 percent chance of developing over the next five days. If the system gains tropical storm strength, it would be named Gert.

But first the trough of low pressure needs to clear an area of dry air and wind shear before it can emerge into conditions somewhat more conducive for development late this week.

Check The Palm Beach Post live storm tracking map.

This disturbance, dubbed Invest 99L, is about 600 miles east of the Leeward Islands and confusing computer models as far as where its headed and how strong it will get.

Designating a disturbance as an invest, short for investigation, is no indication of what the hurricane center thinks it will do, but does allow it to begin gathering more data on it.

Bob Henson, a meteorologist and blogger for Weather Underground called 99L tenacious.

In spite of relentlessly dry air and moderate wind shear, the wave has persisted, and it could yet gather strength once it moves into a zone with lesser wind shear near or just north of the Lesser Antilles late this week, he said.

Four hurricane graphics you should know before the next storm.

Henson said if a system does develop, it would likely be more of a threat to areas from Florida to North Carolina, rather than Virginia north.

The picture could easily change this far out, thoughespecially given the models recent flip-floppingand we have plenty of time to monitor the situation, Henson said.

Invest 99L has a 40 percent chance of development over the next five days.

Weather Channel expert Jim Cantore reminded viewers yesterday of the last time an invest designated 99L wandered in this area of the Atlantic.

It would become 2016s Hurricane Hermine the first storm to make landfall in Florida since Hurricane Wilma in 2005.

Hermine developed in the Florida Straits and zipped through the Gulf of Mexico to make landfall in the big bend area of Florida as a Category 1 storm.

Hurricane Hermine in 2016 was the first hurricane to hit Florida since 2005s Hurricane Wilma.

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Look: Lee Smith in the Bahamas with Shaq during this offseason – Silver and Black Pride

Posted: at 6:32 am

Tight ends are large men. Lee Smith is a large man among large men. When he stands with the other large tight ends, he makes them look small. Thats what former NBA center Shaquille ONeil usually does to those around him. But when he stands next to Lee Smith, they dont look all that different a size.

Smith spent some time in the Bahamas this offseason where he met Shaq. He tweeted out a pic of the two chillin in the water.

Real recognize real.

Smith is the Raiders bully at the tight end position. They missed him last season, lost to a broken leg. They had to replace his blocking services with an offensive lineman in a jumbo package.

The offseason ended a couple weeks ago. Smith has been spending his time since then in Raiders training camp in Napa. He even recently restructured his contract to a 1-year incentive laden deal.

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Bahamas All-Stars Victory Is A Local First At Summer Of Thunder – Bahamas Tribune

Posted: at 6:32 am

Michael Carey, Eugene Bain and Kino Burrows.

The shortest player on the floor made the biggest play of the game and lifted a local team to their first win over a visiting NCAA team in the 2017 Summer of Thunder exhibition series.

Shakwon Lewis made a turnaround jumper as time expired to give the Bahamas All-Stars a 100-98 win over the Colorado State Rams Tuesday afternoon at the Kendal Isaacs Gymnasium.

Lewis finished with 10 points and five assists with his lone field goal of the fourth quarter turning out to be the game winner.

Torrington Cox led the Bahamas All-Stars with 25 points and eight rebounds, Eugene Bain had 27 points and seven rebounds, Michael Carey had 18 points and seven assists, and Kino Burrows finished with nine points, five rebounds and four assists.

Nico Carvacho led the Rams with 23 points and 11 rebounds, Che Bob and Deion James each scored 16 and grabbed nine rebounds and Lorenzo Jenkins scored 12.

It was easily the best shooting performance of the series so far for any local team as the All-Stars made 14 three point field goals. They shot 47 per cent from the field, 40 per cent from long range and 73 per cent from the line.

Cox led the attack from beyond the arch and shot 7-14. Carey shot 3-6 and Lewis was 2-4.

Colorado State dominated the boards with a 53-36 rebounding advantage, which led to a 20-point advantage on points in the paint

The Bahamas All-Stars sharpshooting started from the opening quarter and they made six of their eight seven three pointers to pull away early. A Cox three gave them their first double digit lead, 24-13 with just under three minutes left to play and Lewis buzzer beating three gave them a 38-21 lead at the end of the first quarter.

The Bahamas built a 17 point lead on 54 per cent shooting from the field, 57 per cent from three (8-14).

The Rams made a run in the second quarter and outscored the Bahamas by 18 in the period to erase the deficit by the half. A suddenly turnover prone All-Stars teams also regressed toward the mean in their shooting numbers and the Rams size advantage was apparent on the boards. The Bahamas was in the midst of drought that stretched to nearly three minutes before Roosevelt Whylly banked in a jumper for three of his nine points. The Rams rallied and ended the quarter on a 9-0 run. James made a long range two pointer from the corner and a buzzer beating baseline jumper from Raquan Mitchell gave the Rams a 49-48 lead at the half. The Bahamas was limited to just 10 points.

The Rams opened up a five point lead in the second quarter, but Bain scored six consecutive points to regain a 64-63 lead and spark a run for the All-Stars. Following a Rams turnover, Bain dished an assist to Burrows who finished a layup and Carey made a pair of free throws for a 10-0 run and a 68-63 lead.

Cox hit a three pointer and finished a layup of a no look assist from Whylly, to put them ahead 76-67, a lead they took into the fourth quarter.

Bain converted a three point play on the Bahamas first possession of the quarter for a double digit lead for the first time since the first quarter. Just as the Rams were making a run Carey got a shooters bounce on a three to rescue a stagnant offence and JR Cadot layup pushed lead back to 11 with just under six minutes left to play.

The Rams had one final run and eventually tied the game with just seconds left to play.

Bob made a three pointer from the wing to tie the game at 98 with 23 seconds left to play, setting the stage for Lewis late game heroics. The series of exhibitions between local teams and visiting NCAA programmes began August 4 and continues through August 21.

Visiting programmes this summer will include the Nicholls State Colonels, Penn State Nittany Lions, Southern University Jaguars, Colorado State Rams, Rhode Island Rams, Southern Mississippi Golden Eagles, Chicago State Cougars and Boston College Eagles.

The showcase is designed to expose local talent to an international style of basketball, as well as give those players an opportunity to compete against some of the top collegiate basketball players the NCAA has to offer.

The event also allows young Bahamian athletes to familiarise themselves with potential tertiary level institutions which they could possibly attend.

Local teams include the Bahamas All-Stars, New Providence Basketball Association All-Stars, IBA Elite, CTG Knights and the Providence Storm.

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