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Houston, we have a problem Frank McNally on Percy French’s forgotten collaborator Houston Collisson – The Irish Times

Everybody knows that Percy French wrote The Mountains of Mourne, probably still his best-known song. But it tends to be forgotten that he wrote only the lyrics. As was often the case, those were set to a traditional air, arranged by his now much less remembered musical partner, Houston Collisson.

A Dublin-born Anglican priest, Collisson also scored the operettas they jointly produced in the early 1890s when, as Bernadette Lowry writes in the book mentioned here yesterday (about Frenchs role in Finnegans Wake), they promised to become an Irish Gilbert & Sullivan.

Each also performed solo on occasion and Collisson was once well known in his own right as an impresario. But poignantly, they were to be reunited in death. Both expired in the last week of January 1920: French on the 24th, Collisson on the 31st.

Despite their successes, singly and together, they had both sometimes suffered from the culture wars of the period, In the early 1890s, as Lowry points out, their brand of humour was at odds with the politics of the Parnell split, when Irelands stocks of humour in general were running low.

But a perception that their songs perpetuated stage-Irish stereotypes was also problematic for some.

That was the case in November 1906 when, during a solo tour of Ireland, Collisson endured a long, dark night of the artistic soul in Birr, Co Offaly.

I shall never forget Birr, he wrote afterwards in a memoir. The hall [] was well filled, and my entertainment was going gaily until a gentleman in the gallery, who had evidently been indulging in a little too much John Jameson began to talk.

The talker was eventually removed with the help of a police constable. Then Collisson launched into a song called Wait for a while now, Mary, with lyrics by French, to a traditional air. This triggered an outbreak of hissing from five or six occupants of the gallery, which persisted for the rest of the show.

Hissing seems to have been as bad as it got, but Dr Collisson was nonetheless shocked. He had been completely in sympathy with the revival of Irish music and literature then afoot, he afterwards insisted, and detested the Stage Irishman himself. But he did not accept that he and French were complicit. He wondered if what the Birr protesters had really objected to was his singing with a Dublin accent. To that he pleaded guilty: I was born there, and I cant help it. But he also quoted in full the epic hatchet job on the concert published later in a local paper, which supplied more detail of the charges.

The unnamed reviewer began by summarising the show as one of vulgar insipidity. Then he digressed to deliver a damning critique of the majority in the audience, which had aristocratically graced the hall in opera cloaks and demi-toilettes and clearly enjoyed itself.

If the entertainer had been engaged in the task of amusing children who had not reached a reasonable intellectual standard, then he might have succeeded in his efforts, lectured the critic. That he was successful in pleasing the Castle satellites and shoneens of Birr speaks volumes for their intellectual abilities.

From there the piece went on to lambaste the third-rate one-man shoddy performance itself; the performers sleepy address, interspersed with antediluvian jokes and atrocious attempts at punning; and even his skills on the instrument of torture (the piano).

Apart from one song the reviewer generously declared right enough, the events only saving grace was said to be the hissing of a small section of the audience (described as Irishmen) that disturbed the laughter of the rest (described as the garrison).

This proved that Birr was not entirely shoneen. Summing up for the hissers, the review concluded: The day is gone when we pay our money to go and hear our nationality insulted, and our method of speaking the tongue of the alien ridiculed.

A night later, in Nenagh, Collisson was accosted outside concert by Irish-speaking youths who also hissed and hooted and called him Sassenach. Presumably they could not afford to attend the show, however. The audience there was entirely appreciative.

That Collisson recovered well from his midlands trauma is evidenced by an entry in his diary from two months later, when he attended the Abbey Theatre in Dublin to see a controversial new play.

The culture wars were still raging. And beforehand, he had assumed the audience protests at earlier performances of the Playboy of the Western World to be unfair. But he changed his mind mid-show: Before the second act had terminated I found myself joining loudly in the [] shouts of disapproval.

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Houston, we have a problem Frank McNally on Percy French's forgotten collaborator Houston Collisson - The Irish Times

LETTER: Articles on Rep. Matt Gaetz should have run in Opinion section – The Northwest Florida Daily News

Letters to editor| Northwest Florida Daily News

Once again USA Today Network Pensacola journalist Jim Littlewrote a piece in your Jan. 13 edition that you chose to put on your front page instead of your Opinion section. It is not news because it is nothing more than innuendo, insinuation, and wishful thinking masquerading as a legitimate news story attacking U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz.

Little bylined two similar pieces that you published last May using the same tactics. This time Mr. Little cited CNN and NBC News as sources who observed an ex-girlfriend (unidentified) entering the Federal Courthouse in Orlando, leading to a bunch of speculative bad things that could, might, perhaps, maybe happen to Gaetz if this woman testified before a federal grand jury, but offered no evidence that she actually did.

CNN and NBC (and its affiliates) have a long history of loathing Republicans and are on record of stating they will continue to try to hurt Gaetz specifically through their reporting capabilities.

Unless and until Gaetz is formerly charged with some sort of misdemeanor or felony, the speculative stories should be put in their proper place as only opinions. As a Libertarian, I cherish our constitutional right to a free press that is unbiased in its reporting and I am dismayed that you and your USA Today Network bosses are violating this principle.

R.W. Worth, Santa Rosa Beach

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LETTER: Articles on Rep. Matt Gaetz should have run in Opinion section - The Northwest Florida Daily News

‘Woke’ speed cameras and heat functions – delawarebusinessnow.com

Good afternoon,

Earlier in the month, a social media comment about the installation of speed cameras along an accident-prone section of the I-95 construction zone in Wilmington came with a couple of culture wars references.

Attn snowflakes HOW will this prevent accidents? Will it WOKE me?, he wrote.

Politics aside, there are ample reasons for using the cameras, which were briefly taken out of commission by vandals this month.

The number of accidents has skyrocketed in the construction zone and cleaning up the mishaps is difficult. Enforcement is dangerous for police, and more than one motorist has been stranded in pile-ups.

Granted, speed cameras may have been brought in as money-raising tools in some states. Their use has been confined to school and construction zones in our region.

Delaware tip-toed into speed cameras with last years General Assembly approving their use in the I-95 construction zone with fines are on the modest side (under $100).

In Virginia, motorists speeding through a construction zone can be slapped with a penalty of up to $500.

A strong case can be made for cameras in other Delaware construction zones and highways where speeding is a big problem (sections of Route 1 and I-495 come to mind).

For those tooling along at 90 miles an hour and menacing other motorists, a hefty fine via speed camera would be more than justified. If thats woke, Im OK with that description.

After all, more than one survey has listed the states roads as some of the most dangerous around.

A lapse in heat function

Finally, a note from the motor vehicle site in Georgetown announced on Friday a lapse in heat function. As the issue is being addressed, interior temperatures may be colder than usual. Ill toss that phrase around the next time the heat pump acts up.

Heres hoping you see no lapse in heat or other functions this weekend. Doug Rainey, chief content officer.

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'Woke' speed cameras and heat functions - delawarebusinessnow.com

Nuclear and fossil fuel advocates, wind foes among backers of right whale protection suits – Cape Cod Times

Entangled North Atlantic right whale known as Snow Cone gives birth to calf

The 17-year-old mom has been subject to numerous disentanglement attempts, but the stubborn rope remains stuck. Her first calf was killed by a boat

Georgia DNR/taken under NOAA permit 20556

When Nantucket Residents Against Turbines held a press conference in front of the Statehouse in Boston last August to announce it was suing the federal government for permitting a wind farm south of the island, media outlets noted the presence of David Stevenson, a former Trump transition team member and the director of energy and environment for a libertarian think tank.

They are seemingly oddallies: A group that has the stated goal of saving the highly endangered North Atlantic right whales from the impact of offshore wind farms standing shoulder-to-shoulder with someone who hadappeared before state legislaturesadvocating for the Trump administration's proposal to renew Atlantic offshore oil and gas drilling.

In November, the Nantucket group, known by the acronym ACKRAT, helpedannounce the formation of the Save Right Whales Coalition with the stated goal of stopping offshore wind farms. One of the groups in the coalition was led by pro-nuclear power activist Michael Shellenberger and his California-based group Environmental Progress. Shellenberger believes nuclear power is the only abundant, reliable and inexpensive energy source.

They are not part of our organization, Amy DiSibio, an ACKRAT board member, said of Environmental Progress and Stevensons group, the Caesar Rodney Institute.

There have been some coalitions formed where people interested in whales have some interests that go beyond the whales but our lawsuit is purely environmental and focused on the whale, she said in an interview last week.

ACKRAT'ssuit filed in U.S. District Court in Boston claims the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Managementthe lead agency in permitting VineyardWind 1, the 62-turbine offshore wind farm 14 miles south of Nantucket and the first utility-scale project in the country failedalong with other federal agenciesto do an adequate environmental review of its impact on the marine environment, particularly its affect on right whales.

DiSibio said Stevenson and the Delaware-based Caesar Rodney Institute, helped with publicity, advice and some money. Stevenson also recently founded the American Coalition for Ocean Protection, which is fundraising to create a permanent wind energy exclusion zone along the East Coast out to 33 miles.

Its a familiar tactic, said Michael Gerrard, a Columbia Law School professor of environmental law and the director of the Center for Climate Change Law.

We have a long history of industry opposition to environmental regulation and to clean energy projects. The lawyers bringing these cases always want to find the plaintiffs who are the most sympathetic and have standing to sue, Gerrard said. For that reason, its desirable to find groups like fishermen to be the face of the litigation.

The Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound, for instance, counted fishermen and wealthy waterfront landowners as supporters in multiple lawsuits against the Cape Wind project, and had backing from fossil fuel interests in William Koch, owner of Oxbow CarbonLLCand a member of the alliance'sboard of directors. He also owned a home in Osterville on Nantucket Sound.

Cape Windhad unsuccessfully proposed to build the nations first offshore wind farm with a 130-turbine project in Nantucket Sound. In 2017 it surrendered its federal lease on the project.

A recent lawsuit against Vineyard Wind, with similar claims tothe ACKRAT suit of violations of the Endangered Species Act, Marine Mammal Protection Actand the National Environmental Policy Act, was filed on behalf of six fishing groups from ports from Long Island to New Bedford by the Texas Public Policy Foundation.

Greenpeace, the Texas Observer and other sources cite Koch Industries, ExxonMobil and Chevron, coal companies and other fossil fuel companies and interests as foundation donors. In 2015, the foundation launched its Fueling Freedom Project to oppose the Obama administrations Clean Energy Plan with a mission to redefine the public conversation around fossil fuels, and especially their positive role in society.

The goal may not be to win a lawsuit.

There certainly have been numerous suits against wind and solar projects that have torpedoed them, not because of favorable court decisions, but because of delay and uncertainty, Gerrard said. It is often enough to derail a project. It can make people financing the project nervous and sometimes deadlines for tax subsidies are missed.

Gerrard pointed to the American Bird Conservancy, which has routinely spoken out against land-based and offshore wind projects on the basis that turbine blades kill birds.

In an October 2021 article on the nonprofit, the magazine Gristallegedthe conservancy was accepting money from fossil fuel interests and inflating claims of potential and existing mortality from wind turbines. In response,Mike Parr, the conservancys president, told the magazine thata significant portion of the American economy is derived from oil wealth and that most philanthropic ventures have some oil investment.

The conservancy allied itself with the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound in opposing Cape Wind, saying in a comment letter to the federal Environmental Protection Agency that the science was poor and studies showed that loons will likely abandon the area for years to come, and there may be significant impacts to endangered Roseate Terns. But in 2016, the Massachusetts Audubon Society concluded that after five years of review and three years of ornithological fieldwork, it found no discernible impact from the turbines.

And while they claim an interest in saving right whales, none of the groups involved in litigation have any history of activism, funding or research on their behalf.

For decades, the New England Aquarium and its Anderson Cabot Center for Ocean Life have been researching and advocating for ways to save North Atlantic right whales, who number around 366 individuals, from extinction. Senior scientist Jessica Redfern said shes not familiar with any of these groups as right whale advocates and knows of no grassroots efforts out of Nantucket to save right whales.

We havent been involved with or approached by any of those groups, she said.

While ACKRAT claims it will be the wind farms that will drive right whales into extinction, Redfern said the greatest threats to their continued existence come from collision with vessels and entanglement in fishing gear, particularly lobster pot buoy lines.

If youre really concerned about the fate of right whales, thats your focus, Redfern said. Another big factor is climate change and one of the ways we can minimize that is adopting clean energy (policies) and offshore wind is a great source of that.

Climate change is the greatest overall threat to all marine species, particularly in the Northeast where the Gulf of Maine is warming faster than nearly any other marine water body on Earth. Researchers believe that temperature increases have affected the distribution of the copepod species calanus finmarchicus, the right whales preferred prey. These zooplankton prefer cooler, subarctic waters and right whales have largely deserted their traditional feeding grounds in the Gulf of Maine in recent years and ventured offshore andinto cooler Canadian waters in search of food.

Unfortunately, that put them in the path of heavier lobster gear that requires stronger lines to withstand the currents and depths of fishing far from shore. Until recently, Canadian waters saw relatively few right whales and Canada didnt have the regulations now common in the U.S. requiring gear that whales could more easily break or shed, or procedures to detect and shut down areas to fishing and vessel traffic where the whales were congregating.

The result has been 34 dead right whales due to entanglement or vessel strikes since 2017, with another 16 with injuries serious enough to be deemed life-threatening, according to NOAA. This in the face of research showing that less than one right whale a year can die from human causes if they are to avoid extinction.

Redfern is in charge of the Anderson Cabot program that monitors and maps human impacts on whales including ship strikes, chronic noise, entanglementand minimizing impacts of wind energy. While initial survey work used to establish wind energy lease areas showed little right whale activity there, recent aerial and ship survey work has documented their presence year-round south of Nantucket and in the lease area.

Its something that has caused concern among whale researchers and conservation groups about the impact of wind farms on right whales.

A 2021 study by researchers from Anderson Cabot, NOAA and Center for Coastal Studies in Provincetown found that, on average, a quarter of the right whale population including half the remaining breeding femaleswas using an area south of Nantucket and occasionally portions of the state wind energy lease areas. Researchers believed that with a median residency time of 13 days it was likely to be a transition area and not a major feeding or breeding ground.

Two years ago, Vineyard Wind signed an agreement with the Natural Resources Defense Council, the National Wildlife Federationand the Conservation Law Foundation that included seasonal restrictions on pile driving employed during the construction phase and a ban from January to April when right whales were more likely to be present. The agreement also called for increased monitoring by ship and aerial surveys as well as stationed observers on vessels, acoustic monitoring, restrictions on sound surveying, underwater noise reduction measures, reporting requirements and vessel speed restrictions.

The agreement could be revisited if the proposed plan didnt reduce impacts to close to zero. Vineyard Wind said findings from the 2021 study would be incorporated into its mitigation plan.

Redfern agreed with the study's conclusion that there was little science demonstrating the effects of wind farm construction and operation on right whales. Because wind energy has not been developed in our EEZ (ExclusiveEconomic Zone, the so-called 200-mile territorial limit claimed by the U.S.), theres still a lot that were going to learn as development occurs, Redfern said.

In 2019, a workshop convened by the Anderson Cabot Center and the Centre for Research into Ecological and Environmental Modelling developed a framework for studying the effects of offshore wind development on marine mammals and turtles. They postulated there was a high likelihood of short-term effects of displacement, and behavior disruption, but that it was also relatively easy to test for those impacts. A change in distribution whales and turtles either avoiding or being attracted to wind farm areas was considered a long-term impact of high probability that was also relatively easy to evaluate.

Along with other researchers, Redfern feltthe construction and operation of the nations first offshore industrial sized wind farm, Vineyard Wind 1, would provide researchers with the test area and research opportunities that could inform mitigation on succeeding projects.

I do think well learn a lot from Vineyard Wind as a model for development along the East Coast, she said.

Follow Doug Fraser on Twitter:@dougfrasercct

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Nuclear and fossil fuel advocates, wind foes among backers of right whale protection suits - Cape Cod Times

Gap widens in Oklahoma between number of Republicans and Democrats – Oklahoman.com

Two high-profile defections from the Oklahoma Republican Party last year don't appear to have hurt GOP voter registration.

The number of registered Republicans in Oklahoma increased by 114,013 in the last two years, according to the State Election Board's annual voter registration report.

The number of registered Democrats decreased by 41,533duringthe same time period.

More: Oklahoma schools Superintendent Hofmeister to challenge Stitt for governor as a Democrat

The number of registeredindependents is up48,977 and the Libertarian Party gained nearly 7,000 new voters.

Of registered voters in Oklahoma, 50.6% are Republicans, 31.4% are Democrats, 17.2% are independents and less than 1% are Libertarians.

The latest voter registration numbers show the Republican Party, which became Oklahoma'smajority party in 2020, remains thedominant political force in the state.

Last year, state schools Superintendent Joy Hofmeister, a longtime Republican, renounced the party and registered as a Democrat to challenge Gov. Kevin Stitt in this year's gubernatorial election. Gubernatorial candidate and former state Sen. Ervin Yen, once a registered Democrat,left the Republican Party to become anindependent.

All told, Oklahoma has 128,267 more registered voters than it did two years ago for a total of 2,218,374 people registered to vote.

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Gap widens in Oklahoma between number of Republicans and Democrats - Oklahoman.com