Daily Archives: February 18, 2017

Protest Cabaret: Ithaca’s Resistance – Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun

Posted: February 18, 2017 at 4:40 am

Courtesy of Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images

Ithacas formidable history of activist theatre counters Trumpism with its own brand of resistance protest cabaret. Not My President, happening February 20th all over the country, is an international event hosted by the activist collective Bad and Nasty. Ithacas own cabaret rendition will play at the Kitchen Theatre Sunday at 6:30PM.

Co-producers Sara Warner in the Performing and Media Arts department and Ross Haarstad of Theater Incognita found space at the Kitchen Theatre and outreach progressed from there. Warner recounts, performers from Civic Ensemble, The Cherry Arts, Ithaca College, and Cornell immediately signed on, leading to a quirky but refreshing line-up of artists and academics.

The quantity and diversity of performers displayed on their Facebook event page signals a night of theatre that deliberately renounces conventional theatre norms. Radical inclusivity is a crucial component of this national initiative, which the production embraces as artists from across Ithacas often-disparate academic institutions and community organizations will collaborate. The tapestry of partners generates a performance list that is sure to represent a hodgepodge of resistance tactics and invent some new ones. The loose structure of the event is intended to amplify the variety and multitude of voices and forms and modes of expression that are rising up in response to the election, claims Lois Weaver, a trailblazer in the feminist theatre world and national organizer of the event.

The most vocal motive driving Not My President is embodied in the cut the bullshit disposition of Jayme Kilburn grad, a Cornell theatre graduate student: I am just plain fucking pissed off about this administration and need an outlet for my rage. Nourishing these vibes, Kilburn will be performing excerpts from SCUM (Society for Cutting Up Men). Prof. Rebekah Maggor, a new theatre professor at Cornell, woke up in Jerusalem the day of the election alongside a group of Palestinian theatre artists. She will share her experience with a performance piece entitled The View From Tahrir, about the Egyptian play Comedy of Sorrow, which questions how we react the day after a dictator falls. Godfrey L Simmons Jr. will perform Obamas famous speech on racial tensions, known as A More Perfect Union. Decontextualizing the moment, it becomes shockingly re-purposed as a critique of Trump era racism.

As energy and anxiety rapidly stockpile across the country, the performance event will provide a space to grieve and have fun at the same time, as well as invent and create with our bodies and minds. Maggor explains that When were in a situation where we are constantly putting out fires, we also have to find a space to devise alternatives. Performance space, and art in general, play a role in imagining an alternative future. Can we use performance space to invent a new what-if utopia in a political climate that toes a wobbly line between social stasis and political revolution? Not My Presidents diverse artists will take a jab this Sunday.

Sam Morrison is a senior in the College of Arts &Sciences. He can be reached at shm89@cornell.edu

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GHOST To Record "Darker" New Album This Summer, Tease Completely New Lineup – Metal Injection.net

Posted: at 4:40 am

Ghost are spending 2017 getting to work. Now that they've won a Grammyand toured the world, they are ready to settle down and record a new album.

In a new interview withMetal Wani,frontman Tobias Forge under the guise of being A Nameless Ghoul (spoiler: 99.9% of Ghost interviews are with Tobias, who portrays Papa Emeritus on stage) and he was not shy explaining the band's vision for the next record, hoping to go for a more darker sound:

"The ideas for the new record will be quote-unquote darker, because it's thematically set in a different in a darker setting. Meliorawas supposed to reflect some sort of utopia/dystopia in the modern society, whereas this new one is gonna be a little bit more apocalyptic, a little bit more back to the medieval times, which, obviously, is associated with darkness. "

He continued: "Obviously, in metal, in extreme metal, you have a myriad of records that are thematically in the Middle Ages, but the idea for this new album is to combine So where [other] records [covering similar lyrical themes are] drowned and surrounded and drenched in death, it's gonna be a record about survival. So that constantly working with those polar, sort of, elements is also a difference, I guess, between If you find a black metal record that is about the Plague and the death, you will have only death everything is just black and everything just ends black. Whereas one of my driving forces writing a record like that is to write a record about the survival of that and the prosperity."

"It's gonna be a darker record. Is it gonna be all through and through heavier? I don't know, obviously. But we do have melody and we do have songs that are not so heavy. From my point of view, from where I'm sitting, knowing a little bit of the material coming in, it's gonna be both. It's gonna have everything from heavy, crushing metal to big, ballady anthems."

Forge added that he is still writing the band's new album, and they are hoping to begin recording in August when all of Ghost's touring commitments are over.

Blabbermouth, who transcribed the interview, touched on a rumor that at the end of the band's last tour, Forge fired all the other members of the band. Seeing as though they all perform under masks, and their identities are secret, most fans would likely not notice the change, even though there was some hoopla last year when the band added a female bassist.

Perhaps the most interesting part of the story, is Forge, under the guise of being A Nameless Ghoul, essentially confirmed there are changes, but noted that it shouldn't impact the band's sound, in the same way Queens of the Stone Age's sound remains consistent despite lineup changes because of founding frontman Josh Homme.

"From a practical point of view, you're interested in, on the one hand preserving the sound, or the elements that make up the sound, and you still wanna progress," he said. "I think one of the secrets behind our preserving ability is the fact that we don't necessarily have to have the same six people in the room to make that sound, which helps.

"It's always a blessing and a curse when you have some of these classic bands over the course of rock and roll history, where in order for them to sound like that exact band, you need those four individuals, and if one is missing, it does not sound like that," he continued. "And, fortunately, we don't have that problem. Because performing GHOST and recording GHOST has never really been the same thing. So that we can preserve our sound; we don't have to rely on if some people come and go, which is good.Queens of the Stone Age is the same thing. Everything goes through Josh's [Homme] hands, and therefore it sounds likeQueens of the Stone Age, regardless of who he brings in and out of the band, which is, I guess, a similar situation."

Here's the full interview audio. I'm excited to hear what Ghost have up their sleeves.

Here are our interviews with Ghost throughout the years:

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Lenkom Theater: From Soviet utopia to post-modern dystopia – Russia Beyond the Headlines

Posted: at 4:40 am

In February one of Moscow's most celebrated theaters marks 90 years of bringing some of the finest works to the stage. Lenkoms performances are almost always sold out, and it was here that the world-famous rock opera, Juno and Avos, was first staged.

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Besides Soviet authors, Lenkom staged Ibsen, Tolstoy, Dickens and Rostand, which communist officials were not particularly happy about. Photo: Mark Zakharov, 1987. Source: Andrey Soloviev/TASS

The Theater for the Working Youth was established in the USSR in 1927, riding the wave of leftist ideas and universal access to art. In the evenings after work, young men and women could stage plays here. This was a socialist utopia, which soon ended. The theater then became professional and received a new name: Lenin's Komsomol Theatre (Komsomol was the Communist Youth Organization), or Lenkom for short.

Lenkom was supposed to stage contemporary plays that accorded with Soviet propaganda, but the theater tried to step out of ideological boundaries. Besides Soviet authors, it staged Ibsen, Tolstoy, Dickens and Rostand, which communist officials were not particularly happy about.

The young theater director, Anatoly Efros, came to Lenkom in 1963 and raised particular concern among authorities. His poetical, frank and profound direction stood out from Soviet clichs, and clashed with the socialist realist mold, and so in 1967 he was dismissed. However, he went on to even greater success, in another Moscow theater - Malaya Bronnaya. Efros productions are now classics of Russian art. After Efros' departure, Lenkom went through a period of decline.

A new golden era began with the arrival of director Mark Zakharov. In 1974 he stagedTill, a rollicking musical comedy about the Middle Ages and the Inquisition, but which really meant about something else. The audience understood the Aesopian language it used.

Soviet censorship did not at first understand his pungent and subtle play, initially not picking up on the obvious allusions to the country's horrid state of affairs. After the premiere, however, officials were shocked and wanted to shut down the production and fire the director, but it was too late. The news of the brazen play had spread throughout Moscow, and the lead actor, Nikolai Karachentsov, woke up famous the following morning.

Two years laterthe theater stagedThe Star and Death of Joaquin Murrieta, one of the first rock operas in the USSR. Even though it was based on a work by Pablo Neruda, the Chilean poet and communist, the Soviet authorities didnt like the plays format. They thought the genre of a rock opera was strange and dangerous.

At this time, Andrew Lloyd Webber'sJesus Christ Superstarwas rocking the world, and Zakharov and composer Alexei Rybnikov clearly drew inspiration from it. The sympho-rock music and half-naked girls of The Star and Death of Joaquin Murrieta shocked Soviet censors. The production was banned but nevertheless the premiere took place, having the impact of a bomb going off. The first viewers thought, "That's it. Now they're going to arrest us all."

Soviet actor Nikolai Karachentsov (L) as Till Eulenspiegel and actress Inna Churikova as Nele perform in the play Till based on Belgian playwright Charles de Coster's 1867 novel and staged by Mark Zakharov at the Lenkom Theatre in 1983. Source: Yuri Lizunov/TASS

World fame came with Rybnikov's next rock opera, Juno and Avos, based on poems by Andrei Voznesensky, and which premiered in 1981. The sad love story between a Russian count and a young Spanish lady in California touched the hearts of people from various countries. Fashion designer Pierre Cardin fell in love with the play and brought it to Paris and then New York, where the theater had to remain for two months, so great was its success.

Zakharov remembers that, "Pierre Cardin did a courageous thing. He had received threats over the phone, letters saying that he should not get involved with Russians! But he wasn't afraid. I thought that going on tour in Paris was utopic. The play was considered anti-Soviet, shaking our moral and artistic foundations. We were allowed to stage it no more than once a month and in no way during communist party holidays."

The play toured half the globe, had more than 1,000 performances, and is still being staged. It became the theater's calling card, with its snappy, vivid, and audacious style.

World fame came with Rybnikov's next rock opera, Juno and Avos, based on poems by Andrei Voznesensky, and which premiered in 1981. Photo: Yelena Shanina as Konchita and Nikolai Karachentsov as Count Rezanov in Alexei Rybnikov's rock opera "Juno and Avos", Lenkom Theater. Source: Rybchinskiy/RIA Novosti

Zakharov was able to assemble an incredible troupe of stage and film stars - Alexander Abdulov, Oleg Yankovsky, Inna Churikova, and others. It was often impossible to get a ticket to Lenkoms plays.

In the early 1990s, the theater officially changed its name to Lenkom, as it had long been informally known among the public. The name of Lenkom sounded like an expensive cosmetics brand, which suited the theater very well. While the Taganka Theater was an open political party, and the Sovremennik Theater impressed audiences with its honest depiction of modernity, Lenkom enticed with the lights of Broadway, promising a show and a celebration.

In recent years the theater has suffered many losses, especially as many stars passed away, but Zakharov is still at the helm. He sometimes invites one of Russia's most radical young directors, Konstantin Bogomolov, and occasionally he himself stagesThe Day of the Oprichnik, based on the novel by Vladimir Sorokin. This modern-day masterpiece describes a dystopia that is a veiled criticism of today's political establishment. Once again Lenkom is pushing the boundaries of what is possible and causing a stir.

In recent years the theater has suffered many losses, especially as many stars passed away, but Zakharov is still at the helm. Source: Sergei Fadeichev/TASS

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Oceania’s Riviera — smooth sailing with glorious food – ConsumerAffairs

Posted: at 4:40 am

Oceania bills itself as the worlds largest upper premium cruise line and claims to offer the "finest cuisine at sea."After sailing Oceanias Riviera I must agree -- the food was divine. While the Riviera is a beautiful ship with superb service, the highlights of my ten days at sea all involve food.

It always takes a few days on a new cruise ship to find your way around. Whats the best place for morning coffee? What time do the breakfast venues open? Which lunch options to choose? Is one dinner setting better than another? Oceania offers many choices; the following, except the cooking school, at no extra charge.

I love early morning coffee and enjoy watching the sun rise. It took a few days to discover that the Terrace Caf, the ships buffet restaurant, has wicker tables outside with cushions and when the weather cooperates, its a lovely place to greet the morning. Some days I brought my book and stayed, eating breakfast al fresco.

When early port days necessitated a quick breakfast, room service, available 24 hours a day, provided the best alternative. On sea days, it was lovely to eat a multi-course breakfast in The Grand Dining Room.

Both the Terrace Caf and The Grand Dining Room offer unlimited lattes and cappuccinos and a wide variety of fresh fruit. I was particularly fond of their fruit salad; finely diced so small it resembles a mosaic.

Lunch options are so plentiful, why wait until noon? Once I found the Waves Grill, the ships answer to pool-side dining, I was hooked. Located in a glass enclosed shaded area, how to choose between an array of hamburgers, veggie burgers, salmon burger, paninis, and chicken? And dont forget the addictive French fries. Lighter options include hearty salads; this was my choice when indulging in dessert, such as gelato, ice cream sundaes, milkshakes, or fresh smoothies.

An afternoon tea lovers dream is available daily from 4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Its a formal affair with beautifully set tables, warm scones with cream and preserves, and an amazing array of tea sandwiches, pastries, and cakes.

Dinner choices were so plentiful. There are four specialty restaurants on the Riviera. Toscana is an elegant Italian restaurant and the Polo Grill a classic steakhouse. Both are like special occasion restaurants you might visit at home.

Stellar choices are Jacques, the first restaurant to bear Jacques Pepins name and Red Ginger, a unique take on Asian classics in a stunning setting. The Grand Dining Room is beautiful and offers different selections daily.

For a casual dinner, I enjoyed the Terrace Caf. The tables are set with tablecloths at dinnertime, making it a lovely, casual option. Weather permitting, how special to dine al fresco under the stars.

The Riviera boasts a cooking school, fee required, offering hands-on instruction. I took the two-hour Fish Master Class where I learned to prepare five types of fish. I not only picked up new cooking techniques, but got to eat the fruits of my labor.

Id be remiss if I did not mention the bread. They bake it all day long and I have never had such delicious bread.

While the Oceania has many merits, their unique food venues and meals are a stand-out. I cant wait to be back onboard.

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Oceania Cruises Reveals New 2017 Voyages To Cuba – Caribbean360.com (subscription)

Posted: at 4:40 am

FLORIDA, United States, Friday February 17, 2017 Oceania Cruises, the worlds leading culinary- and destination-focused cruise line, has announced an additional series of journeys to Cuba in November and December this year.

Ranging in length from six to 13 days with departures from Miami in November and December, these voyages include the lines first calls to Cienfuegos and Santiago de Cuba, in addition to Havana.

The fall cruises will be offered on Insignia which caters to 684 passengers, with the first trip departing Miami on November 14.

There is tremendous demand from consumers for voyages to Cuba and our inaugural voyages to the island have been a sell-out success, stated Bob Binder, President and CEO of Oceania Cruises.

An Oceania Cruises voyage is the best way to experience all Cuba has to offer with nine UNESCO World Heritage Sites, warm and welcoming people, and a burgeoning culinary scene.

All voyages and excursions will fully comply with existing US Federal Regulations.

Destination Highlights:

Havana, Cuba

The door to Cubas soul, Havana captivates with its larger-than-life culture, sultry rhythms and weathered beauty. Take a relaxing stroll along the evocative Malecn, the quintessentially Cuban thoroughfare and get lost among the Baroque facades and colonial cobblestone alleys of Old Havana. Visit the grandiose Capitolio Nacional and explore the world-class Cuban art collection at Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, which showcases everything from colonial-era paintings to countless masterpieces from Cubas famed Vanguard Period. Enjoy memorable explorations such as touring one of Havanas venerable old cigar factories for an inside look at the birthplace of these world-famous cigars and the centuries-old process of how they are made.

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Situated in a beautiful bay in the heart of Cubas fertile agricultural region on the southern coast, Cienfuegos will quietly charm you with its French spirit, tranquil seaside setting and neoclassical architecture. Known as La Perla del Sur (the Pearl of the South), Cienfuegos was originally founded by French settlers and its city center is recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage site. Rich in educationally engaging diversions, its historic center features well-preserved 19th-century structures, gorgeous plazas and a layout inspired by the Spanish Enlightenment. Discover the ornate and eclectic Palacio de Valle and take in the stunning views as you explore Punta Gorda, the perfect spot to enjoy the sunset. Step back in time at Teatro Terry with a performance by local artists or discover nearby Trinidad, a remarkably well-preserved colonial town recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage site and anchored by its impressive Plaza Mayor, an open-air museum of Spanish colonial architecture.

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Oceania Adds More Cuba Cruises for Late 2017 | Travel Agent Central – Travel Agent

Posted: at 4:40 am

Oceania Cruises has announced an additional series of journeys to Cuba in November and December 2017. Ranging in length from six to thirteen days with departures from Miami, these voyages include the lines first calls to Cienfuegos and Santiago de Cuba, in addition to Havana. These new itineraries are now open for reservations.

All voyages and excursions will fully comply with existing U.S. Federal Regulations and the most recent pronouncements from the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) of the U.S. Department of the Treasury.

The cruises will take place onboard the Insignia, which will offer dining based on the tastes of Cuba and lectures on Cuban history, art, and music. 70 percent of the ships 342 staterooms have their own private teak veranda.

Here are some highlights of the new itineraries:

Panoramic Caribbean 10 days from Miami visiting Havana (two days), Roatan, Santo Tomas, Harvest Caye, Costa Maya, and Nassau. Departs 14 November.

Hemingways Hideaways Seven days from Miami visiting Key West, Havana, Cienfuegos, and Santiago de Cuba. Departs 24 November.

Timeless Cuba Seven days from Miami visiting Havana (two days), Cienfuegos, and Santiago de Cuba. Departs 1 & 8 December.

Vibrant Vistas Six days from Miami visiting Key West, Havana, Cozumel, and Great Stirrup Cay. Departs 15 December.

Holidays in the Tropics 13 days from Miami visiting Key West, Havana (two days), Roatan, Santo Tomas, Harvest Caye, Costa Maya, Cozumel (two days), and Nassau. Departs 21 December.

In Havana, guests will have the chance to take a relaxing stroll along the evocative Malecn and get lost among the Baroque facades and colonial cobblestone alleys of Old Havana. The trip will also visit the Capitolio Nacional and explore the world-class Cuban art collection at Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, which showcases everything from colonial-era paintings to masterpieces from Cubas Vanguard Period. There will also be the chance to tour one of Havanas old cigar factories.

Known as La Perla del Sur (the Pearl of the South), Cienfuegos was originally founded by French settlers and its city center is recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage site. The citys historic center has well-preserved 19th-century structures and a layout inspired by the Spanish Enlightenment. The trip here will visit the Palacio de Valle and explore Punta Gorda, a spot to enjoy the sunset. At Teatro Terry guests will take in a performance by local artists. There will also be the chance to explore nearby Trinidad, a colonial town recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage site and anchored by its Plaza Mayor, an open-air museum of Spanish colonial architecture.

Santiago de Cuba is the countrys second largest city and has played an instrumental role in the evolution of Cuban music, literature and architecture. Guests will have the chance to discover the citys history at Castillo de San Pedro de la Roca and the Cementerio Santa Ifigenia, where Cuban hero Jos Mart and Emilio Bacard Moreau of the famed rum dynasty are both buried. Countless musicians have emerged from Santiago de Cuba including Miguel Matamoros of Tro Matamoros and Sindo Garay, and many say the heart of this thriving city lives in its music scene.

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SAA adds new codeshare route with Air Seychelles | Traveller24 – News24

Posted: at 4:39 am

2017-02-17 14:32 - Unathi Nkanjeni

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Cape Town - The South African Airways (SAA) withAir Seychelles have announce another code-share routeservicefrom Seychellesto one of South Africa's largest city, Durban,starting from March 30, 2017.

The new service is scheduled to operate twice a week, Thursdays andSaturdays and is already open for sale,offering a greater travel choice to guests travelling between South Africa and Seychelles.

The code-share partnership between South African Airways and Air Seychellesdates back to October 2013 with SAA as a marketing carrier between Johannesburg and Seychelles - with a five weekly services between Johannesburg and Praslin Island operated by Air Seychelles.

Added to this, Air Seychelles has already been the marketing domestic services operator for by South African Airways on its Cape Town, Port Elizabeth and East London routes.

SEE:WATCH: Forget driverless cars, Dubai has built a taxi drone

Chief Executive Officer of Air Seychelles, Roy Kinnear, saysthe ties between South Africa and Seychelles are strong and evident for everyone to see.

"Building on these strong ties and the existing five weekly services between Seychelles and Johannesburg, Air Seychelles has taken the commitment to start the twice weekly operation to Durban on 30 March, 2017."

"We are confident these air links will bring our countries closer and contribute to the development of our respective economies and tourism industries, says Kinnear.

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Why the United States is no longer turning up its nose at Caribbean medical schools – STAT

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M

ORENO VALLEY, Calif. Its easy to dismiss the for-profit medical schools that dot many a Caribbean island as scams, set up to woo unqualified students who rack up huge debts, drop out in staggering numbers, and if they make it to graduation end up with an all but worthless degree. Thats been the rap against them for years.

But the schools are determined to change that image. Many are quietly churning out doctors who are eager to work in poor, rural, and underserved communities. Their graduates embrace primary care and family practice, in part because theyre often shut out of training slots for more lucrative specialties.

And they just might help solve an urgent physician shortage in California and beyond.

The deans of two of the Caribbeans medical schools Ross University School of Medicine in Dominica and American University of the Caribbean in St. Maarten are on an aggressive campaign to improve their image. Theyve published a series of editorials and letterswith titles like Why malign overseas medical students? and hired public relations giant Edelman to make the case that their humble, hard-working, and compassionate students may be precisely the kinds of physicians America needs most.

Our students have persevered. They havent had all the opportunities in life and they still want to help people, said Dr. Heidi Chumley, dean of American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine. Absolutely we want to get our story out.

That story is unfolding on the ground in places like Moreno Valley, a city ofabout 200,000 in Californias Inland Empire, a former agricultural region just east of Los Angeles that grew explosively in the 80s but has since fallen on harder times.

Here, the Riverside University Health System Medical Centerrises from a stretch of largely undeveloped land once slated for luxury housing developments. The health system acts as the countys public safety net for an ethnically diverse, mostly low-income population including patients like retired carpenter Jos Luis Garcia.

On a recent clinic visit, Garcia, 69, came in to follow up on a urinary tract infection and his high blood sugar. He saw Dr. Moazzum Bajwa, 30, a second-year resident and graduate of Ross.

In a crisp white coat and bow tie, Bajwa entered the examining room and pulled up a low stool. Sitting eye to eye with Garcia, he spoke in a steady stream of fluent Spanish. The visit lasted nearly an hour.

In an attempt to keep his patient off insulin, Bajwa had asked Garcia to improve his diet and track blood sugar levels after meals. Nmeros fantsticos!, Bajwa exclaimed, looking at the folded sheet of carefully written numbers Garcia had brought to show him.

This is a very great doctor. Normally, I dont feel important.

Jos Luis Garcia, patient

Bajwa, a former middle school science teacher, then spent 10minutes drawing a careful diagram complete with neurons, intestinal walls, and red blood cells, orclulas rojas to explain to a rapt Garcia exactly why certain foods raised his blood sugar. He then examined Garcia noting he had a harmless but interesting muscle wall abnormality and checked his medical records. Was there a colonoscopy report on file? Retinal photos?

As the visit was ending, Bajwa asked Garcia about stress. Garcia said his wife had recently had surgery for glioblastoma multiforme, one of the most malignant of brain tumors. Wow, Bajwa said quietly as he quickly scanned the medical summary Garcia handed him. Wow. He sat down again on his low stool.

Lo siento mucho, seor, Bajwa said, clearly moved.

Then he gave Garcia a hug.

This is a very great doctor, Garcia said later, through a translator. Normally, I dont feel important.

Bajwa, an American citizen raised inMichigan and North Carolina, is the grandson of Pakistani Nobel physics laureate Abdus Salam and holds two advanced degrees, one in neuroanatomy and one in public health. But he couldnt get into an American medical school. So he attended Ross University in Dominica.

It was the only school that gave me an opportunity, he said.

There are some 70 medical schools throughout the Caribbean, most of them established in recent decades and run by for-profit businesses thatcater to Americans.

These so-called second chance schools accept students with poorer grades and lower MCAT scores, or sometimes no MCAT score at all. Compared to Americanmedical schools, their tuition and dropout rates are higher and their class sizes large: Ross enrolls more than 900 students per year.

Graduates can practice medicine in the United States after passing their Americanmedical licensing exams and completing a residency. But the schools have come under fire for generating a stream of students who dont end up as physicians, but do end up with crushing medical school debt because they flunk out or dont win residency spots after graduating.

Heartbreaking stories abound: One graduate of St. Georges University School of Medicine took a poor-paying job drawing blood to help pay off $400,000 in medical school loans. Another graduate of AUC entered nursing school after failing to get a residency.

Are Caribbean medical schools promising something they cannot fulfill? asked Dr. Glenn Tung, an associate dean at Brown Universitys Warren Alpert Medical School who has studied the schools. What Im concerned about is the cost to the students who dont make it and the cost to the American taxpayer when loans arent repaid.

Illinois Senator Richard Durbin, also concerned, has repeatedly introducedbipartisan legislation to strip the schools of Title IV federal funding for student loans. Three Caribbean medical schools Ross, AUC and St. Georges took in $450 million federal funding via student loans in 2012, Durbin said.

These for-profit Caribbean medical schools need to be accountable to their students and to U.S. taxpayers, he said in a statement.

Dean Chumley and Dr. Joseph Flaherty, the dean of Ross, take strong exception to such criticism.

They allow that many for-profit medical schools which have proliferated in the past few decadesbecause they are proven money makers arent doing a good job training and developing students. But they argue that AUC and Ross, two of the oldest Caribbean schools both owned by for-profit educational juggernaut DeVry Inc. are creating successful doctors.

They say they are also giving a shot to students with humble backgrounds, often minorities, who cant get near American medical schools that focus so heavily on test scores and grades.

Obviously brains help, but judgement, empathy, intuition, thats all part of it, Flaherty said. Our students are gung-ho. They want to practice medicine. Thats their dream.

Just 54 percent of American medical graduates who trained overseas are matched with a residency program for further training in their first year of eligibility. Thats an abysmal record, compared to the 94 percent of graduates of US schools who get residencies. But Ross and AUC say they have a match rates higher than 86 percent. And they say a vast majority of students pass their step 1 licensing exams on the first try.

Obviously brains help, but judgement, empathy, intuition, thats all part of it Our students are gung-ho.

Dr. Joseph Flaherty, dean of a Caribbean medical school

(Critics say the schools manipulate the statistics by dismissing weak students shortly before they are allowed to take the exams. Chumley said the schools do weed out poor students early on to prevent their accumulating debt, but in no way encourage poor students to stay for five semesters and then prevent them from taking the exam. I think thats ethically wrong, she said.)

The schools are also controversial because of their practice of buying their way into hospitals to train students. In 2012, Ross inked a contract beating out rival St. Georges University School of Medicine of Grenada to pay $35 million over a decadeto the cash strapped Kern Medical Center in Bakersfield in exchange for the lions share of the hospitals roughly 100 rotation spots for third-year medical students.

Some critics fear such deals will squeeze American-trained students out of rotations; disputes have flared in New York, where St. George paid $100 million for rotation spots, and in Texas, where lawmakers attempted to entirely ban Caribbean students from training in the state.

But Flaherty, Rosss dean, says the such deals are a win-win. A struggling hospital gets funds. His school, which has no teaching hospital, gets a place to train students. And he gets to show skeptical doctors how good his students really are.

The doctors get to know our students and say, These guys are good, he said. Our students get there early. They stay late and do extra work. They value any opportunity.

And they seize those opportunities where they can find them.

While their numbers are up, its still harder for international medical grads known as IMGs to get residency positions. Theyveheard all the jokes about studying anatomy on the beach with Mai Tais in hand. But when it comes to residency positions, they are deadly serious. For there is no practicing medicine without one.

You have to apply very widely. Theres always a stigma that IMGs dont get as good an education. said Rina Seerke-Teper, 31, a second-year resident who has wanted to be a doctor since she was six, graduated from the University of California at Berkeley and worked in stem cell research before attending AUC.

Many Caribbean graduates dont even apply to residency programs that are filled only with American trained students. Instead, they look for IMG friendly programs like the family practice residency here, run in a busy clinic housed within the county hospital. The program is highly competitive receiving about 800 applications for 12 positions each year and of the three dozen current residents, 29 studied in a medical school outside the US.

Competition for the coveted slots is likely to grow even more as California, which just got one newmedical schools and is slated to soon add another, starts spitting out more locally trained grads.

More doctors are desperately needed: California will need an estimated 8,000 additional primary care doctors by 2030. The United States as a whole is projected to need some 30,000 additional primary care physicians in coming decades.

Dr. Michelle Quiogue works in one of the areas hit hardest by the shortage rural Kern County. A graduate of a prestigious medical school at Brown University Quiogue says shes worked alongside many foreign-trained doctors and would never know what college they graduated from.

Inher mind, the problem is not a lack of medical students but a lack of residency programs to train them. The governor has proposedcutting $100 million for primary care residency training, and her organization, the California Academy of Family Physicians, is scrambling to get it replaced.

Medical school hasnt changed much in a century. Here are 5 ways to fix that

Those who do win residency spots say it seems to matter less and less where they went to school as they climb up the medical training ladder. And it seems to matter not at all in clinics where patients are grateful for any medical care they receive.

I have never heard a patient ask where a physician is trained, said Carly Barruga, a third year medical student at nearby Loma Linda University who said she is getting excellent training in her rotation here from Caribbean-trained doctors like Dr. Tavinder Singh.

Singh, 30, is chief resident here and also a graduate of Ross. While he traces his interest in medicine to the open heart surgery his grandmother had when he was a boy, Singh didnt apply to American medical schools because his MCATs werent as strong as they should have been. He didnt want to wait a year to retake them.

I had the goal in mind I was going to be a doctor, said Singh, a California native. Nothing was going to stop me. Hes loved his residency, especially the chance to work in needy communities where medical zebras unlikely and rare diagnoses can be common. You see chronic disease that have never been treated, he said. You see rare diseases like Zika.

While Singh was once the one begging for a chance, the tables have turned. In a state hungry for family practice physicians, hes now fielding numerous job offers.

Bajwas future is bright as well.

For now, though, hes just happy to be practicing medicine, thrilled to be delivering babies and focusing on preventative care. He loves helping patients like Wendy Ocampo, a 19-year-old with limb girdle muscular dystrophy. During an appointment this month, Ocampo came in to see Bajwa with respiratory symptoms.

New medical schools aim to fix Americas broken health care system

It was supposed to be a quick visit, but he ended up spending a half hour with her once he discovered bureaucratic hurdles had left her waiting seven months for the wheelchair she needs for her job and college. (Bajwa credits his clinic staff and nurses for working through lunch and juggling his schedule so he can offer longer visits.) Ocampo also hasnt been able to get the physical therapy she needs for her ankle.

It burns me up that these things are falling through the cracks, said Bajwa, after taking a few minutes to compliment Ocampos impressive new shoes and ask if she was growing out her hair.

Though sick, Ocampo beamed. Honestly, hes great, she said. He calls me to check on me. I have, like, 30 doctors and none of them have ever done that.

Correction: A previous version of this story misstated the population for Moreno Valley and the status of a proposed funding cut for residency training.

Usha Lee McFarling can be reached at usha.mcfarling@gmail.com Follow Usha Lee on Twitter @ushamcfarling

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Why the United States is no longer turning up its nose at Caribbean medical schools - STAT

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Blast of Caribbean heat destined for UK – The Guardian

Posted: at 4:39 am

After snow and freezing temperatures, the UK will feel more like the Caribbean next week. Photograph: Greg Johnston/Getty Images/Lonely Planet Images

A blast of Caribbean hot air could push UK temperatures above those of Menorca, Mallorca and Sardinia next week, and continue the unseasonable warmth of the past few days, as parts of the UK prepare for highs of 17C (63F) on Monday.

The warm cloud is making its way over the Atlantic Ocean from Florida and parts of the Caribbean, and is expected to reach the UK over the weekend, the Met Office said.

Aberdeen, Wattisham in Suffolk and London are all likely locations for the highest temperatures, with the east of the country broadly enjoying the best of the warmth.

The UK could be among the hottest locations in Europe, after bouts of snow and freezing temperatures earlier this month.

Despite British temperatures being above the average 4C to 7C for this time of year, the higher temperatures are not likely to break official records.

The Met Office spokesman Oli Claydon said: In terms of temperatures, it is going to be about 16C to 17C, and more broadly, it will be mild across the east and north-east of the country.

Although obviously above average, its not necessarily unusual. In February 2012, about 50 stations recorded temperatures of 15C and over and were not expecting that many to record the same next week.

Claydon said the warm spell is expected to last into the middle of next week, before turning cooler into next weekend.

It should be continuing through next week, but not necessarily through to the temperatures seen on Monday, he said.

MeteoGroup said temperatures may reach highs of only 15C, although this is likely to be enough to push the UK above parts of southern Europe, including the Balearic Islands and Sardinia.

The MeteoGroup forecaster Tom Whittaker said: Generally speaking, its going to be close, but we may see temperatures of 15C, which could be higher than places such as Palma in Mallorca, and parts of southern France.

Its likely to be warmest in the east, south-east and eastern parts of Scotland, to the east of the Highlands.

The hottest February on record was in 1998, when temperatures reached 19.7C.

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Silver Airways adds more non-stop flights to the Bahamas – WFLA

Posted: at 4:39 am

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (WFLA) Silver Airways is making it easier (and cheaper) to fly to the Bahamas. The largest US carrier to the Bahamas has rolled out additional non-stop trips from Florida to the Bahamas, adding nearly 25 percent more flights to their schedule.

Travelers in Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach and Tampa will also see increased number of trips to Bimini, Eleuthera, Marsh Harbour (Abacos) and Treasure Cay (Abacos).

The airline is offering fares from $69 at silverairways.com today through February 27, 2017, for travel on or before May 3, 2017.

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Silver Airways adds more non-stop flights to the Bahamas - WFLA

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