October 11, 2007

   
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A Jolt of Japanese Culture: This film, “Kite,” is playing at Calderón Guardia Museum, east of San José, as part of an international film festival running through Dec. 18. Call 222-6392 for more information.

Photo courtesy of Calderón Guardia Museum
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Working Toward Compromise: President Oscar Arias yesterday met with Citizen Action Party faction head Elizabeth Fonseca, the first step in reaching an agreement on the 12 laws required to implement the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA).

Mónica Quesada | Tico Times

Arias Brothers Meet with PAC Faction Head
President Oscar Arias and his brother, Presidency Minister Rodrigo Arias, met with Citizen Action Party (PAC) faction head Elizabeth Fonseca yesterday to discuss laws required to implement the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA).
See More...
Pacific Coast of Costa Rica Under Yellow Alert for Flooding
The steady rains that have washed over Costa Rica since Monday continued in earnest yesterday, brewing floods that damaged almost 300 houses in the central Pacific.
See More...
Gas Prices to Drop 15%
As of Saturday, drivers in Costa Rica will pay 15% less for their gasoline, thanks to a tariff reduction approved yesterday by the Public Services Regulatory Authority (ARESEP).

AMCHAM Donates to Communities Hit by Flooding

The Costa Rican-American Chamber of Commerce (AMCHAM) yesterday donated $23,500 worth of equipment to help communities in the northwestern Guanacaste province during emergencies.

Sculptor Finds Inspiration in
Female And Serpentine Forms

He's caked in white powder, but he keeps on grinding. With his trembling arthritic fingers, he thrusts his chisel into the marble again and again. Ashen dust floats up and assimilates into his white beard and hair.

 


Arias Brothers Meet with PAC Faction Head

By Gillian Gillers
Tico Times Staff | ggillers@ticotimes.net

President Oscar Arias and his brother, Presidency Minister Rodrigo Arias, met with Citizen Action Party (PAC) faction head Elizabeth Fonseca yesterday to discuss laws required to implement the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA).

PAC has long opposed CAFTA and the 12 laws required to implement it. Yesterday, Fonseca reiterated that the party would present motions to change the laws before voting against them. But the party will not block debate on these laws, as it has in the past, she said.

For its part, the government promised to listen to PAC's suggestions on the content of the laws and the timeline for discussing them. The government will also bring Citizen Action into the negotiation process for a free-trade agreement between Central America and the European Union, which begins Oct. 22.  

Fonseca said Citizen Action will propose alternative, less far-reaching bills that would still allow Costa Rica to comply with the free-trade agreement. Rodrigo Arias and National Liberation Party (PLN) faction head Mayí Antillón said they are open to suggestions.

Rodrigo Arias identified bills on development and security that the government and PAC agree should be pushed forward. These include reforms to the Immigration Law, reforms to the Transit Law, a law to create a development bank, a property tax law and a law to facilitate the concession of public works projects.

Still, Antillón said these bills should not be tackled until March 1, 2008, Costa Rica's deadline to implement CAFTA.


Pacific Coast of Costa Rica
Under Yellow Alert for Flooding

The steady rains that have washed over Costa Rica since Monday continued in earnest yesterday, brewing floods that damaged almost 300 houses in the central Pacific.

The National Emergency Commission (CNE) yesterday upped the green, preventive alert to a yellow alert for the Pacific slope. The Central Valley remains under a green alert, and steady rain is expected to continue in the area today, thanks to a low-pressure system over Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula that's blowing rain over Costa Rica, according to a statement from the commission.

Residents in the central Pacific towns of Quepos, Parrita, Puntarenas and Esparza should remain particularly alert since some of these areas have received rain for 48 hours straight, saturating the ground and creating prime conditions for landslides and floods. Families living near rivers or other bodies of water should identify shelters and head to them promptly should water levels rise significantly.

Some families in parts of Puntarenas and Esparza are already in shelters after about 150 homes in the area flooded yesterday. Flooding has also been reported in the northwestern Guanacaste town of Cañas, and a landslide occurred in Palmares, northwest of San José.

-Tico Times


Gas Prices to Drop 15%

As of Saturday, drivers in Costa Rica will pay 15% less for their gasoline, thanks to a tariff reduction approved yesterday by the Public Services Regulatory Authority (ARESEP).

However, users of diesel fuel will pay 7% more.

The price of one liter of super gasoline will drop from $1.20 to $1.04, while regular gas will drop from $1.13 to $1.01. One liter of diesel fuel will cost $0.88, up from $0.82.

These prices will go into effect as soon as they are published in the official government daily La Gaceta, expected for Saturday, according to ARESEP.

-ACAN-EFE


AMCHAM Donates to Communities Hit by Flooding

The Costa Rican-American Chamber of Commerce (AMCHAM) yesterday donated $23,500 worth of equipment to help communities in the northwestern Guanacaste province during emergencies.

At a ceremony held at the National Emergency Commission (CNE) headquarters in the western suburb of Pavas, rescue teams in the Guanacaste areas of La Cruz and Santa Cecilia received walkie-talkies, radios, life jackets, reflective vests, helmets, flashlights, ropes and other equipment necessary in disaster situations such as floods, according to a statement from the CNE.

Present at the ceremony were AMCHAM Executive Director Lynda Solar, Flora Gutiérrez of the fruit company Del Oro and CNE president Daniel Gallardo.

Gallardo praised the donation as an effort by the private sector to help mitigate the effects of floods during the rainy season.

“This equipment, among other things, will allow closer contact between community emergency committees in the coordination of preventive networks, emergency alerts and more,” he said.

AMCHAM has also been training businesses in Guanacaste on first-aid, the management of dangerous substances and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) among other skills, in coordination with the CNE. These trainings were financed by Del Oro and the Pan-American Foundation for Development.

Del Oro has also helped repair bridges damaged by floodwaters over the Colón, Sapóa and Animas Rivers in La Cruz and to build a bridge over Versais River, the statement said.

-Tico Times


Sculptor Finds Inspiration in
Female And Serpentine Forms

By Blake Schmidt
Tico Times Staff | bschmidt@ticotimes.net
Sculptor at Work: José Sancho works on a marble sculpture at his Escazú home and workshop.
Blake Schmidt | Tico Times

He's caked in white powder, but he keeps on grinding. With his trembling arthritic fingers, he thrusts his chisel into the marble again and again. Ashen dust floats up and assimilates into his white beard and hair.

José Sancho is in the zone. I imagine he doesn't feel much like talking, so I wait for his age to catch up with him, causing him to rest from his toiling, before I ask the artist my first question: If he could be an animal, what would it be?

“That doesn't exist. I'm a human being and I can't be anything else. Though I wouldn't mind being a snake,” he blurts out, pauses, and then slips back into his world of smooth marble and hovering dust.

Strolling around in the yard outside the house the carpenter and sculptor built in the western San José suburb of Escazú, it's easy to pinpoint his inspiration: nature and women.

They are, he admits, the two most important things in his life, which is surely why his studio and lawn are littered with sculptures of wooden sloths, nude marble women, and, in his “serpentario,” a collection of granite snakes.

The female form features strongly in Sancho's work.

At least that's what they look like to me. Of course, he's reluctant to claim that he ever created a sloth, snake or woman.

“It's whatever you want. I never say what I'm doing so everyone can interpret (the pieces) for themselves,” says the divorced 72-year-old.

Sancho rubs the soft marble curves of his sculpture-in-the-making, which looks to me like the female form. He refuses to confirm my suspicion. Nor will he tell me what the 10-ton chunk of granite he shipped across the Atlantic Ocean and plopped in his yard is. He bought the granite in Italy and then carved it here. It looks something like a snake coiled up in the form of a vagina. It's his favorite sculpture.

He's never taken a sculpting class. Inspired by Picasso and Roman sculptor Constantine Brancusi, as much as by pre-Hispanic art, he just kind of taught himself, he says.

Once a career economist who studied at the University of Costa Rica (UCR) and in Italy, Sancho, at the age of 40, had an epiphany.

Granite snake sculpture from Sancho's “serpentario.”

“I was born for this,” he says laconically but cordially, looking up from his marble piece.

The Costa Rican grew up on the beach before coming here and living in the woods.

“In Puntarenas (the Central Pacific port city), I lived next to the sea, next to the birds and fish. And now I have been here 40 years living in the country. The insects, the birds, the snakes, they inspire me,” he says.

The son of a flutist makes his music with wood and rock, and has traveled halfway around the world and back, seeking inspiration for his work.

I feel like a tourist as the sculptor shows me his front yard, which is decorated with his art. Here I discover a colony of red tropical penguins.

“It's a penguin colony,” he says, laughing and pointing to a cluster of pointy, bright-red metallic forms in his yard, “to increase the biodiversity.”

He has been to Antarctica, he adds. Twice.

The penguins are red because it is his favorite color, and it complements the green forest that surrounds his home. His house, which he built from the ground up, then painted, is also red. So is his pickup truck.

After he finishes our tour of his yard art, I take the tour again by myself, while Sancho goes back to sculpting his piece of marble on a table he created, outside the house he created, surrounded by all the other things he created.

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