Categories
International News

Shooting in Tunisia Museum

On Wednesday, March 16, gunmen entered and open fired on The Bardo Museum in Tunisia killing 19 people and injuring at least 20 more.

The museum, according to CNN, is housed in a 19th century palace, and calls itself “a jewel of Tunisian heritage.” The museum hosts exhibits featuring art, culture and history, marble sculptures, furniture, jewels, and mosaics dating from the back to the Roman and Carthaginian era, including one of the widely known poet, Virgil.

imgresAccording to Reuters, a London based news agency, the gunmen, dressed in military uniforms, stepped off of a bus and began open firing on tourists. Two of the gunmen then fled inside the museum with hostages.The two gunmen inside the building were later killed and are believed to be Tunisians, while the other three gunmen are still believed to be at large. Their identities, as well as their motives remain unclear.

Among the dead were five Japanese tourists and visitors from Poland, Germany, Italy, and Spain, as well as at least one Tunisian native, according to Reuters. In addition to the deaths, there were another 20 tourists and two Tunisians wounded in the attack.

While there is no solid evidence linking ISIS to the attack, many factors are forming suspicion of the influence of the Islamic State. The biggest factor causing suspicion, according to The New York Times, was the celebration of the attacks by ISIS supporters via social media which cited a video released by supporters in December that claimed there were ‘more attacks to come.’ Boubakr Hakim, a Tunisian militant, urged for the support of the Islamic state and claimed responsibility for the assassinations of two liberal Tunisian politicians and warned authorities, “You will not live in safety as long as Tunisia is not ruled by Islam.”

Another one of the largest indicators of the Islamic State’s involvement with the shooting is, according to New York Times, it’s emergence as one of the largest sources of foreign fighters joining ISIS. According to The International Centre for the Study of Radicalization in London, “Up to 3,000 Tunisians are believed to have traveled to Iraq and Syria to fight as jihadists, more than any other country.” While the country has not experienced as much violence as other nations that were part of the Arab Spring, it has experienced its share of outbreaks and protests. The Arab Spring, which took place in Tunisia, sparked protests throughout North Africa and the Middle East and was a revolutionary wave of non-violent and violent demonstrations, protests, and civil wars that took place in the Arab world.

Despite Tunisia’s transition from dictatorship to dictatorship, it’s recent completion of presidential and parliamentary elections, and “ a peaceful handover of political power from one governing party to another,” authorities have struggled to handle periodic attacks by Islamic extremists. According to CNN, in February 2015, Tunisia’s Interior Ministry announced the arrests of about 100 alleged extremists, and “published a video allegedly showing that the group possessed a formula for making explosives and a photograph of ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.”

Categories
Stories In Focus

Cold Creek: Popular Local Band

Two Saturdays ago, on August 30st, the Fillmore Hotel was packed with over a hundred people, the audience of the up and coming local band, Cold Creek. This group is comprised of two Houghton seniors, Holden Potter and Evan Castle. The two began playing music together during their sophomore year, when they both lived on the second floor of Shenawana Hall. As they were the only two guitarists in their hall, they started writing jazz and blues songs together. The next year, they went on to perform at the Homecoming Coffeehouse. Since it was their first time playing live, the performance did not go as well as they had hoped, but the two continued developing their musical style over the next year.

Though their Facebook page refers to their music as being in the genre of “Country Rock Awesomeness”, Castle and Potter characterize their sound as “hip-hop, pop, and country”. They model their songwriting after the artist Sam Hunt, the prominent American country singer. They write their songs as “just a chance to tell a story.” Many of their songs are romantic. Their writing reflects the small-town America rural culture in which they both grew up, in the tradition of country, down-home music. Potter states that “the town of Fillmore had a huge influence…lyrically.” Castle plays the six-string banjo – or ganjo – lead guitar, acoustic, and sings harmonies, while Potter sings lead vocals and plays acoustic guitar. Occasionally, they have a percussionist accompany them.

coldcreekThe group considers themselves to be outside the norm of Houghton bands, since they usually play outside the college and are not a worship band. Most of their following is also outside of the college, since there is a large audience for country music in the surrounding area. The band has done very well recently. They claim that this is due to the fact that there are not many local country bands in the area, and so there is a higher demand for their sound. Their Facebook page has over 350 likes and counting, they have played live gigs in Rushford, Olean and many other nearby towns, and they even competed this past summer in the Country Showdown in Olean and won second place.

This past semester, Cold Creek recorded several tracks with the help of fellow senior, Jordan Sloat. These tracks are available on their Facebook and Soundcloud pages, and they expect to put out an EP within the next month. This EP will be a chance for them to showcase their abilities, featuring pop acoustic songs, southern rock styled songs, and piano ballads, maintaining their common acoustic sound. After Potter graduates in December, he is moving down to Nashville to pursue music, where Castle will follow him after walking in May. From there, the group plans on putting out mixtapes to send to record producers. Cold Creek expects that their music will evolve with the Nashville style – more pop and more creative hooks. They hope that this will add more soul to their sound, bringing their many diverse influences together to create songs that are unique, but accessible.

Their next gig is on September 19th, at 9:00pm in Don’s Semi-Friendly Tavern in Olean. They hope to draw a large crowd and add to their supporters as they move on to the professional world of music production.