Home | News & Events | U.S. Again Partners with Bahamas to Distribute COVID-19 Vaccines to Family Islands
On Monday, June 21, the Rhode Island National Guard (RING) begAN its second mission to partner with The Bahamas Ministry of Health and the National COVID-19 Vaccine Consultative Committee to distribute 7,000 COVID-19 vaccine doses eight Family Islands, with deliveries again planned for Mayaguana, Acklins Island, Crooked Island, Cat Island, Long Island, Inagua, Bimini, and Eleuthera. This mission is another part of the United States Government’s continued support of The Bahamas in the shared fight against COVID-19, one of many areas of strategic partnership between both countries.
US donates $5 9 million in boats and comms equipment to RBDF
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Ministry of Health assisted by United States in deploying second set of COVID-19 vaccines to Family Islands
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U S Donates Additional $500K towards COVID-19 Response in The Bahamas
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Legendary Satyricon club offered sex, drugs and rock ’n’ roll, epitomized a Portland that is gone forever
Updated Mar 16, 2021;
Posted Mar 16, 2021
Hard rock of various kinds thrived at Satyricon in the 1980s and 90s. (Brent Wojahn/The Oregonian)
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Satyricon was easy to overlook. Its storefront, shoved next to a rundown grocery, faded into the grittiest part of Old Town.
Its reputation, however, glowed like the White Stag sign. Portlanders of every age and outlook knew what went on behind its narrow front door or thought they did.
The club opened late in 1983 and quickly became the unofficial headquarters of the city’s punk scene. It had a reputation for being a dangerous place, but it wasn’t as simple as that. Satyricon also offered whimsy. One night you might stumble upon a band that dressed “like space-alien aborigines,” as one habitué put it; on another you’d find yourself participating in an earnest Poetry Night.