Date First Published February, 4, 1969

THE country faces a national disaster.

A complete shut­down of the electri­city supply which seems fated to hap­pen, is hardly con­ceivable in the mod­ern world. It af­fects everything, from cooking to storage of food to transportation to keeping businesses and emergency ser­vices going.

A society comes to a standstill.

This is, by any standards, an intol­erable state of af­fairs. Immune from natural disasters we are about to suffer from a man-made catastrophe.

There can be no excuse. The problem is over ten years’ old. There have been endless complaints. It ought to have been dealt with long ago as a national priority of the high­est order. Yet up to late last year we were told it was on the back burner. In the meantime, larger amounts have been wasted on fail­ed projects.

Even now, there seems to be no plan in place for dealing seriously with the problem. The gov­ernment appears to be relying exclusive­ly on foreign char­ity.

We feel the Presi­dent should take im­mediate steps to set up a national com­mission including opposition politi­cians and prominent businessmen to deal with this acute pro­blem which the gov­ernment has so sig­nally failed to solve over all these years. Citizens cannot bear this situation any longer.

 

Mashramani Calypso Show a Colossal Waste of Time

JOHN Milton wrote a famous line which, for a Christian (par­ticularly for a seventeenth century Puritan) is an unambiguous straightforward statement about servi­tude to the Lord:

“They also serve who only stand and wait.” But for others, it calls for some interpretation.

It should be interesting, for instance, to think how it should be interpreted for the commuters who have to stand and wait for several unproductive hours, morning and evening each day, in vain for public transportation. How do you apply it to the audience who waited hours for the Mashramani calypso show at the National Park last Saturday evening?

In several Countries, politicians, it seems, take it as given that people must expect to stand for several hours listening to several lengthy speeches whenever there is a rally or some national event. Schoolchildren and others are expected to stand along the streets and wait for hours to wave at visiting dignitaries.

It seems the norm, then, that mass events must be colossal in everything, including mass waste of time

And true to form, the grand opening of the Mashramani Calypso series last weekend was a colossal waste of time.

Fortunately, only a handful of people turned out to suffer, as the stands were deservedly deserted. The show was advertised for 5.00 p.m. but never got going until around 9.00 p.m. (!) It was not worth waiting for.

Some calypsonians seemed serious enough to come prepared to perform, including some with rehearsed choruses, who could not properly use them because they were given only one microphone. Continuously the microphones did not work.

Other performers were far too casual and not ready for a public appearance while the many deficiencies frustrated the better ones. The stage setting was untidy and disordered, bands spent several minutes tuning-up and warming-up, there were long gaps between items and the whole picture was more like a practice jam-session in the studio than a public performance.

The M.C., who talked too much, kept saying this was not the real thing, this was a warm-up, and he promised the audience a long night. He cannot be accused of not de­livering up his promises.

If it was only a rehearsal, why charge patrons $20 and $30? And the M.C. assur­ed us that “the real thing” will’ cost much more!!

The trouble is that I have seen other Mashramani shows in the past that started hours late and were badly stage-managed. The or­ganisers of last Saturday’s farce must understand that they owe the public a decent production and they cannot expect to throw them any ragged fiasco and claim to be celebrating a na­tional event which they will expect visitors to look at.

Just across the channel the Tri­nidadians are celebrating carnival. They take their shows much more seriously and even though they, too, start notoriously late, they al­ways attempt to put in some art­istry and polish.

Does Mashramani intend to earn a place as an event worth the national effort?  -(ALC)