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| Class of 2007: Costa Rica's one-year-old Tourist Police graduated its second class of 97 officers yesterday, augmenting the present 122-member force. The new officers will be deployed to the central and southern Pacific regions, covering the coast from Montezuma and Malpaís to Dominical. |
| Harmony Reforma | Tico Times |
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| New Cell Phone Lines Available |
It took a while, but the long wait is finally over: New cellular phone lines are available. The Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) started offering the 340,000 lines on Monday. |
| See More... |
| Nicaraguan Appeals Court Finds Volz Innocent |
By a split vote of two to one, the Granada Appeals Court on Dec. 14 overturned a guilty murder verdict for U.S. citizen Eric Volz, who is expected to be released from jail today, according to Armando Mejia, secretary of the court's penal chamber. |
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| U.S. Raises Visa Fees |
The cost for foreign tourists, students and business travelers aiming to enter the United States is on the rise. Starting Jan. 1, the application process for nonimmigrant visas will cost $131, up from the present $100 fee, the U.S. State Department announced. |
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| Bridge Work Slows Beachgoers |
Vacationers traveling to north Pacific beach communities such as Papagayo or Playas del Coco might have noticed since Friday that passing between cantons Carrillo and Liberia could take up to two hours longer than usual. That's because of the construction work on the bridge over river Tempisque, the daily La Nación reported. |
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2007-08 National Surf
Circuit Kicks Off in Jacó |
More than 180 surfers signed up to compete in last weekend's Copa Man-go, the first date of the eighth annual National Surf Circuit, held in the central Pacific beach community of Jacó. And according to José Ureña, president of the Costa Rican Surf Federation, it's because they all want to be like powerhouse Tico surfer Diego Naranjo. Or Gilbert Brown. Or Federico Pilurzu. Or Jairo Pérez.
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| New Cell Phone Lines Available |
It took a while, but the long wait is finally over: New cellular phone lines are available. The Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) started offering the 340,000 lines on Monday.
The lines, however, come with restrictions.
For one thing, only people with state-issued ID cards – obtained through residency or a registered company – can get one, and each person is limited to a single line (company ID cards can have two lines).
Also, the lines cannot be used “to change technologies,” according to an ICE press release. That is, if you already have one of the lines with the old TDMA technology that only works on a limited number of phones, tough luck.
Walk-ins are not welcome. To avoid the long lines and longer waits during previous offerings of cellular phone lines, ICE is using a system of reservations to ration out the lines.
Those interested must call 193 to make a reservation.
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-Tico Times
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| Nicaraguan Appeals Court Finds Volz Innocent |
By Tim Rogers
Nica Times Staff | trogers@ticotimes.net
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By a split vote of two to one, the Granada Appeals Court on Dec. 14 overturned a guilty murder verdict for U.S. citizen Eric Volz, who is expected to be released from jail today, according to Armando Mejia, secretary of the court's penal chamber.
Mejia told The Nica Times today that the Appeals Court ordered that Volz be freed from jail and that he is now free to leave the country. The plaintiff will now have 10 days to appeal the ruling.
Volz, a 28-year old real estate agent and magazine publisher, was found guilty last February of murdering his Nicaraguan ex-girlfriend, Doris Ivania Jiménez, in San Juan del Sur on Nov. 21, 2006. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison along with another Nicaraguan man, Julio Martín Chamorro, better known as “Rosita.”
The same Granada Appeals Court ruled to uphold the sentence against Chamorro.
Volz, who always maintained his innocence, became the center of an international media storm this year, as his story was covered extensively by more than a dozen major U.S. news outlets.
Read this Friday's print edition of The Nica Times, an eight-page publication of The Tico Times. |
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| U.S. Raises Visa Fees |
The cost for foreign tourists, students and business travelers aiming to enter the United States is on the rise. Starting Jan. 1, the application process for nonimmigrant visas will cost $131, up from the present $100 fee, the U.S. State Department announced.
“Because of new security-related costs, new information technology systems, and inflation, the $100... fee is lower than the actual cost of processing nonimmigrant visas," it said in a statement.
It's the first time since November 2002 that the United States has increased the fee, which according to the State Department is largely necessary to cover enhanced technology, such as complete fingerprinting.
“We are now collecting 10 fingerprints from each applicant, and the cost charged by the FBI to review those fingerprints no longer allows us to do this,” the statement said.
The price hike will not apply to immigrant visa applicants or to citizens of the 27 countries in the U.S. Visa Waiver Program, unless they seek permission to enter the United States for longer than 90 days.
For more information check the Web site for U.S. Embassy in Costa Rica, http://sanjose.usembassy.gov, or for an embassy nearest you, http://usembassy.state.gov.
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-Tico Times
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| Bridge Work Slows Beachgoers |
Vacationers traveling to north Pacific beach communities such as Papagayo or Playas del Coco might have noticed since Friday that passing between cantons Carrillo and Liberia could take up to two hours longer than usual. That's because of the construction work on the bridge over river Tempisque, the daily La Nación reported.
Workers are fixing a hole that appeared in the 20-year-old bridge when one of its support blocks gave way from wear and tear by overloaded vehicles. To fix it, they are building a new support beam almost 50 meters long and reinforcing the system that holds the bridge's arches in place.
Motorists can take an alternate route, crossing the Guardia Bridge nearby instead, although its narrow road only allows one vehicle to pass at a time.
Construction could continue through February, according to the Ministry of Public Works.
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-Tico Times
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2007-08 National Surf Circuit Kicks Off in Jacó |
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More than 180 surfers signed up to compete in last weekend's Copa Man-go, the first date of the eighth annual National Surf Circuit, held in the central Pacific beach community of Jacó. And according to José Ureña, president of the Costa Rican Surf Federation, it's because they all want to be like powerhouse Tico surfer Diego Naranjo. Or Gilbert Brown. Or Federico Pilurzu. Or Jairo Pérez.
Or Nino Myrie, who from his first heat Saturday morning in front of Hotel Copacabana was hungry to win the trophy. The 23-year-old surfer from the southern Caribbean coast's Puerto Viejo did indeed take the top spot after all was said and done on Sunday afternoon.
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| Winners' Podium: Nino Myrie (second from left) shares his winner's trophy with son Ziggy, flanked by second-place Jason Torres (second from left), third-place Gilbert Brown (far right) and fourth-place Diego Naranjo (far left). |
Photo by Shifi Surf Shots |
“It's been quite a year for the circuit veterans,” Ureña said, referring to some recent big wins among circuit old-timers.
Jacó's Naranjo, 26, after winning the 2007 National Surf Circuit championship, placed third in the Mexpipe Vans Pro in Mexico. Also from Jacó, Luis Vindas, 21, winner of the country's first Triple Crown competition, had some top Latin American Surf Association (ALAS) wins this year. Federico Pilurzu, 24, of Tamarindo, on the northern Pacific coast, was in the top 100 on the Association of Surfing Professionals World Qualifying Series and made it to the Hawaiian North Shore's Triple Crown. Puerto Viejo's Gilbert Brown, 25, scored a bronze medal at the Pan American Surfing Games in Chile to become the third best surfer in all of Latin America. And 17-year-old Jairo Pérez of Jacó won the ALAS Reef Classic Latin Pro earlier this month, beating both Mexican National Champion Diego Cadena and three-time ALAS Pro Junior Champion Manuel Selman of Chile.
“Costa Rica is maintaining a very high international reputation in surfing right now, and that's because of the circuit system,” Ureña added. “With the start of the 2007-08 season, the young kids starting out are looking at the contest and thinking that they can one day become like these veterans and do what they are doing. They can also compete now against these champions. And that's exciting to them.”
And that's exactly what happened last weekend in Jacó, with competitors coming from all over the country to compete in the circuit's 13 categories, from “open” to “novice.” Interestingly, the categories that grew the most in numbers were “boys” and “mini-grommet girls.”
Naranjo said he was very impressed with the amount of young surfers he saw out paddling in waves of four to six feet – sometimes barrels – particularly those kids between the ages of 8 and 10, who “charged the field, even though the waves this weekend were big,” he said. “They pushed their level.”
Myrie, looking to take advantage of the circuit for himself, was on fire from start to finish during the Copa Mango. His focus was noticed by circuit announcer Carlos Brenes in the tower, who shouted, “Myrie is hungry!” during his semifinal heat, while the surfer smacked the lip backside once, twice, then three times.
But it was during the open finals, which also featured Naranjo, Brown and Jason Torres of Jacó, that Myrie pushed himself the hardest. Not satisfied with his 360 front-side spin, which wowed the crowd, he came back shortly after with a back-side 360 air and landed perfectly. The result: Myrie – the 2002-03 national surf champion – won first place, followed by Torres in second, Brown in third and Naranjo in fourth.
“I did all my heats whole and full force,” Myrie said after the final, sharing the winner's podium with his young son Ziggy. “I feel really good about that final heat. I'm really content.”
In the women's category, returning to the spotlight was five-time National Surf Circuit Women's Champion Lisbeth Vindas of Jacó. The 26-year-old veteran scored the women's trophy from reigning champion Nataly Bernold, 14, who placed second this year. Vindas, who on Sunday rushed from university exams to the water, making her heats with about three minutes to spare, thanked Bernold for challenging her, and keeping her own level of competition high. Look for these two to battle it out back and forth this year in the water.
One happy surprise last weekend was when shortboard aerialist Luis Vindas won first place in the longboard category. Vindas said he had been watching his brother-in-law Naranjo's efforts on the big stick and got curious about it, but “never practiced,” though he knew the national team needed some help in that department. Earlier last week, Vindas shaped his own longboard and started riding, performing airs and receiving loud applause from those on the shore.
“I'm surprised I won,” Vindas said, looking at his trophy. “I didn't expect this, but I got good waves.”
“Luis is super-talented,” Naranjo acknowledged. “Everything he does, he does perfectly.”
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