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Posts Tagged ‘Haiti’

Horror in Haiti

Perhaps thousands are killed as Haiti is struck by a powerful earthquake

THE capital of Haiti, Port-au-Prince, suffered a devastating earthquake measuring 7.0 magnitude on Tuesday January 12th. Much of the city was flattened and at least hundreds-and probably thousands-of people have been killed. The country is desperately poor and densely populated. Most of the 2m residents of the capital city are squeezed into tin-roof shacks that are perched on steep ravines, which are extremely vulnerable to collapse.

Little reliable information was immediately available, in part because phone systems were knocked out. The UN reported that many of its staff in the country were missing and that much of the mission’s building, five storeys high, was destroyed. The initial tremor struck for some 35-40 seconds shortly before five in the afternoon, with an epicentre 10 miles (16km) south-west of the capital and a mere 6 miles underground, leading to particularly severe shaking at the surface. The tremor was the strongest in the Hispaniola region since 1946 and was felt as far away as eastern Cuba. A series of powerful aftershocks followed the first tremor. …

Hundreds feared dead in Haiti quake, as world gears up to help

Hundreds of people are feared dead after a massive earthquake struck the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince on Tuesday, a local doctor told an AFP reporter in the city. “When we get an idea of the toll it will be measured in the hundreds,” said the doctor, who was covered in blood and nursing an

Zach Deputy Tour Dates

ZACH DEPUTY HITS THE ROAD FOR FLORIDA AND CARIBBEAN TOUR

Zach Deputy

Having been added to Jam Cruise 8 as a result of a fan-generated campaign, guitarist and songwriter Zach Deputy will kick off the new year on a luxury cruise liner leaving Ft. Lauderdale, sailing between Cuba and Haiti then hitting Jamaica, Grand Cayman Island, back past Cuba and then – back on land – through Florida for over a week of dates in the sunshine state.

Zach Deputy is touring in support of his new album, Sunshine, released in summer 2009 on new model indie label United For Opportunity. In late January and February Zach will then head into Texas and Colorado, among other stops.

From his base in Hilton Head, Zach Deputy has been performing 250-300 shows a year for the last four years, and has rapidly developed a strong following from the Mississippi to the Atlantic coast. The pace of growth has been startling. Zach Deputy now basically lives and works from a small box truck, playing almost every night of the week. The tireless work ethic is paying off, as audiences are reacting with genuine joy and passion, spreading the word to friends and fellow music lovers.

Zach Deputy is a songwriter, guitarist, soulful singer, and a master of the live looping technique. He creates a “one man band” feel by laying down live tracks and looping them over one another to become his own accompaniment. The sound, influenced by family heritage in Puerto Rico and St. Croix, is essentially roots rock, but in this case the roots are in soul, calypso, and dancehall, underpinned by driving hip-hop, rock steady, Motown and Stax backbeats.

Zach Deputy 2010 Tour Dates

01/03/10 Sun Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/04/10 Mon Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/05/10 Tue Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/06/10 Wed Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/07/10 Thu Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/08/10 Fri Jam Cruise Fort Lauderdale, FL

01/09/10 Sat Beachside Tavern New Smyrna Beach, FL

01/10/10 Sun Skipper’s Smokehouse Tampa, FL

01/12/10 Tue Filthy McNastys Vero Beach, FL

01/13/10 Wed Jack Rabbits Jacksonville, FL

01/14/10 Thu Common Grounds Gainesville, FL

01/15/10 Fri The Plaza Theatre Orlando, FL

01/16/10 Sat The Engine Room (Formerly Beta Bar) Tallahassee, FL

01/18/10 Mon Pandora’s Grayton Beach, FL

Complete Zach Deputy tour dates available here.


Feeding the world: If words were food, nobody would go hungry

Investment in agriculture is soaring. So, worryingly, is distrust of markets and trade

“THE world’s attention is back on your cause.” That was Bill Gates talking to agricultural scientists gathered recently to honour the late Norman Borlaug, father of the Green Revolution. The tycoon-turned-philanthropist was right. This week, the world—in the guise of 60-odd heads of state including the pope—held the first United Nations food summit since 2002. As the world’s attention turns from the receding financial crisis, it is switching to one emerging in agriculture.

The UN conference on food security took place at a point of relative calm between two storms. The first occurred in 2007-08, when world food prices experienced their sharpest rise for 30 years. Food riots swept through three dozen countries and two governments (Haiti’s and Madagascar’s) were overthrown by the events that the price rises set in train. …

All about Cuban cuisine

The East Caribbean island of Cuba has a rich cultural heritage from which has arisen culinary traditions that are as vibrant and varied as the variety of cultures that have contributed to the development of this distinct and delicious cuisine. In addition to the ancient influence of the native peoples of Cuba, the Spaniards brought [...]

Dozens lost as Haiti boat sinks

breaking news

A boat carrying up to 200 migrants from Haiti has capsized off the coast of the Caribbean islands of Turks and Caicos, the US Coast Guard says.

It said at least four bodies had been recovered and many more were feared dead.

About 70 people stranded on reefs were rescued – many were then taken to hospital on the Turks and Caicos.

Haitians often travel through the islands in overcrowded boats, hoping to find work in the Bahamas or Florida. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Carol Felsenthal: Should Obama Put Bill Clinton to Work on Swinging Votes for Health Care Bill?

Here’s an idea for President Obama. How about naming the former president and Arkansas governor special envoy to Arkansas Congressman Mike Ross?

Welcome to the cool club

It is the college that gave the world Damien Hirst. Are today’s Goldsmiths graduates aiming to shake up the world?

The atmosphere is hot and still. The only noise is the sound of examiners’ footsteps as they pad from one exhibition space to another – looking, absorbing, assessing. I’m in the studios of Goldsmiths College in London, where MA art students have just installed their degree shows and are nervously waiting to see what grades they will get. For them, education is over. Look out world, here they come.

A good degree isn’t everything, of course. A tutor here tells me that, contrary to popular belief, Damien Hirst does not have a close relationship with his former college because he has never forgiven them for awarding his work a 2.2 (lower second class). Still, Hirst’s name is synonymous with Goldsmiths. In 1988, while still a student here, he curated Freeze, a seminal show in a Docklands warehouse that, as well as his own work, featured pieces by Angus Fairhurst, Mat Collishaw and other fledgling YBAs. Goldsmiths and its then professor, Michael Craig-Martin (creator of the Tate’s infamous glass of water on a shelf), were credited with giving these students their go-getting attitude.

That was then. I’ve come to Goldsmiths to see how final-year MA students are feeling about their futures now, in the shadow of recession. Four budding artists from the class of 2009 meet me in a lecture room and I quickly sense that everything has changed for this generation. Their idea of a life in art has little in common with the fiercely ambitious artists the college was turning out in the early 1990s. Is it the economy? Is it the sheer number of artists competing for attention in today’s Britain? Have tutors’ attitudes changed here since the retirement of Craig-Martin? Whatever it is, these students seem to have no illusions at all about their chances of making it big.

Jason Underhill, a tall, bearded 26-year-old from California, has the studied air of an independent film-maker. And that’s what he is, albeit one who is just finishing a fine art MA. His graduation piece is a film called Howlin’, about aimless young people in an American city. It features bodies turning up in a supermarket freezer, and two characters looking down on a town they see as a scar on the beautiful wilderness.

There’s clearly an ambition here to say something as well as to make something, but Underhill – whose work featured in last year’s prestigious New Contemporaries exhibition in Liverpool – does not seem in any danger of getting overexcited about success. “I chose Goldsmiths because I needed to reconsider my position,” he says. “My ideas felt half-formed, possibly because I didn’t know how to address a place like California. I thought that some distance could help me articulate things.”

Annie Hémond Hotte, born in Montreal in 1980, is a painter. Although she started out on a musical path, she now can’t imagine life without painting: “My family are not very artistic so I had to fight a bit when I decided I wanted to paint. I didn’t want to do anything else.” Like the others, she’s on the fine art MA and her degree show features large-scale paintings of Pinocchio-like characters. They drip with thick, waxy colour.

Tina Hage, a photographer born in Haiti, studied media arts in Cologne before moving to London. At first, the photographs in her degree show seem to zoom in on moments of crisis in crowd scenes; then you realise that Hage, in her early 30s, plays all the parts. She is the quietest of the group and reticent about her art, preferring to let her digitally manipulated fictions speak for themselves – which they do, rather well.

Jon Moscow, also in his 30s, feels art is his vocation and he’s not too bothered what the world makes of him and his fellow students: “We consider that we are artists already – I became an artist for the art, not for the art world.” Moscow, from Cleethorpes, used to be a chartered accountant. But, during the 1990s, when Hirst’s generation were becoming famous, he quit to follow his artistic urge. He has exhibited in Düsseldorf and London. His room in the degree show is filled with sculptures and significant objects, arranged in a surreal style. “I make rooms,” he says of his work, before highlighting one of its drawbacks: “How do you sell a room?”

Much may have changed in art schools, but one thing seems to have stayed the same: the cool demeanour of the students. You could almost imagine this lot in a band together, with Moscow as the Jarvis Cocker figure. Goldsmiths is renowned for equipping its charges for the reality of a career in art: if charm is part of what it takes, they have plenty. However, while all four are determined to put art at the centre of their lives, they are sceptical about actually making a living from it, especially during a recession. “There’s nothing we can do about it,” says Hotte. “But you can’t say, ‘the art market looks bad so I’ll stop producing work.’ It wouldn’t make sense.”

Their response is to look forward to lives as artists, with the intention of supporting themselves by other means. “There are statistics from the Arts and Humanities Research Council,” says Moscow. “They make depressing reading if you’re interested in making a living from your art. A tiny proportion of artists do that, so I don’t even go there.”

This approach – passionate about the work, doubtful of economic reward – has always been the best attitude for an artist to have throughout history. It costs money to be a student and they expect it to cost money to be an artist: making films, printing photographs, buying canvases. But it’s something they have to do. They are what you might call hardheaded dreamers. Art, says Underhill, “is a strange relationship that you have with yourself”.

“We want to keep in touch,” says Hotte. “Not just in terms of showing our art, but in terms of making it, and having discussions. It’s a big part of the Goldsmiths thing, to meet people who push you.” This is perhaps the most important thing they’ve got out of their time here. You get the impression that the friendships forged at Goldsmiths will play a part in their lives for years to come, as they go out into a world they seem well-armoured for. “My biggest hope in the next couple years is to develop a practice as an artist making feature films,” says Underhill. “My biggest fear is that it will take longer than a couple years to do it.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Thom Hartmann: Obama Drinks Friedman’s Kool-Aid

If President Obama and our Congress don’t soon learn the lessons Alexander Hamilton taught us in 1791, we’ll continue to see American industry slowly die.

Passenger boat capsizes off Haiti

BBC map

At least six people are dead and dozens are missing after a passenger boat capsized off the coast of Haiti, officials say.

Rescuers managed to save 16 people and a search is continuing for the others aboard the vessel, details of which were not given.

The boat was reportedly en route from Anse a Pitre to the southern city of Jacmel when it overturned.

Survivors were taken to a hospital in Jacmel, AFP news agency reports.

Alta Jean-Baptiste, director of Haiti’s civil protection agency, said some 60 people had been aboard the boat when the accident happened between the towns of Belle-Anse and Marigot.

Local authorities and the UN mission in Haiti are helping with the search and have requested help from local fisherman, AFP adds.

No theories for the cause of the accident were being reported in the immediate aftermath. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

First Entry In The “I Am The Future Of Journalism” Contest: Daniel Bachhuber

The “I Am The Future Of Journalism Contest” has its first entry, and it’s awesome. Daniel Bachhuber is a journalism student at the University of Oregon, a photographer, web developer, member of CoPress, and a journalist with a compelling vision of the future:

Here’s the text of Daniel’s entry:

There are three important themes I’d like to [...]