|
|
|
Red Cross rally: Fernando Pérez, left, and Fernando Rodríguez demonstrated yesterday in front of the Legislative Assembly in San José with other paramedics, who blasted their sirens through downtown to pressure legislators to approve a law that will better equip Costa Rica's Red Cross. |
Ronald Reyes | Tico Times |
 |
| Cuba's comandante of 'nueva trova' sings in Nicaragua |
While outside observers continue to speculate about Cuba's lilting revolution, inside there's at least one voice that still recalls the days of “Che.” Not just Fidel Castro or his brother Raúl, the newly anointed leader of the island nation, but a folk singer, Silvio Rodríguez. |
| See More... |
| FARC takes aim at Panama |
Colombia's FARC saga continued this week – but now the rebel force might be taking aim at the Panamanian government. |
| See More... |
| Emergency landing at San José airport |
Passengers on a flight to the U.S. city of Newark, New Jersey, had a scare Thursday morning when a burning smell emerged from the plane's cockpit. Continental Airlines flight 1797 made an emergency landing at San José's Juan Santamaría International Airport at 10:22 a.m., over an hour after its take-off, according to Diego Gutiérrez, head of the accidents department at the Civil Aviation Authority. |
|
| Cell phone lines down Saturday night for testing |
Cell phone users, do not be alarmed to find that you cannot be reached in the wee hours of Saturday night – the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) will be running tests on its lines. |
|
| Turrialba Volcano passing gases |
Authorities are warning tourists not to get too close to Turrialba Volcano because of toxic gas emissions. |
|
 |
|
|
| The Secret of Life |
Shelby, my science adviser, came racing down from his hilltop laboratory yesterday to boast that he had discovered the “secret of life.” Reluctantly, because I hate to discourage enthusiasm, I pointed out that there is no secret to life.
|
|
| |
|
|

|
|
Cuba's comandante of
'nueva trova' sings in Nicaragua |
By Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net |
While outside observers continue to speculate about Cuba's lilting revolution, inside there's at least one voice that still recalls the days of “Che.” Not just Fidel Castro or his brother Raúl, the newly anointed leader of the island nation, but a folk singer, Silvio Rodríguez.
Rodríguez, forerunner among Latin America's nueva trova troubadours, will bring the song revolution back to Nicaragua on Sunday, at Pharaoh's Casino, in a concert that could be one of his last.
Rodríguez announced the end to his more than 40 years of live gigs is near, preferring to dedicate his time to composing, “which is what I like most,” newswire EFE quoted him saying at a press conference in Guatemala.
Two decades have passed since his last Nicaraguan jam – in the days of President Daniel Ortega's first run at ruling the country with a Sandinista program. By then the contagious romantic rebel songs of nueva trova had already swept Latin America several times over since their inception in the 1960s, taking cues from North American folk icons Bob Dylan and Joan Baez. Later, Baez would reciprocate, famously rendering Carlos Puebla's ode to a revolutionary, “Hasta Siempre Comandante Che Guevara,” a Marxist hymn that is also a proud part of Rodríguez's repertoire.
Another song Rodríguez became famous for, “Ojalá ” (“I Wish”), also became an anthem for the genre and is heard to this day in smoky music clubs throughout the Spanish-speaking world. “Ojalá they'd wipe you out suddenly, not to see you any more, not to see you ever again” – harsh words sung tenderly by the Cuban troubadour, along with sweet, measured guitar picking. Fans will tell you he sings those lyrics in defiance of Cuba's enemies such as the United States.
During the Guatemala leg of his tour, Rodríguez said he couldn't bow out from performing without a proper farewell to his fans in Central America. “I didn't want my foray on the stage, which has carried me along for 40 years, without visiting those countries that for me are a cultural, historical and fraternal reference point,” EFE quoted him saying.
Accompanying Rodríguez will be fellow Cuban trovador Vicente Feliú, according to the daily El Nuevo Diario. |
|
FARC takes aim at Panama |
Colombia's FARC saga continued this week – but now the rebel force might be taking aim at the Panamanian government.
Front 57 of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, which operates in the frontier province of Choco, gave the Panamanian government until March 1 to release six rebel fighters arrested by the local police last weekend. However, Panama's justice minister questioned the authenticity of the communiqué that bears the FARC's letterhead and the signature of Comandante Bercerro.
The letter, distributed Wednesday to Panamanian media, threatens the government “to release the kidnapped comrades in perfect health.”
The message continues, “If this is not done, we have instructions to take the necessary hostages, (including) members of the National Police, local officials or politicians to force an exchange.” It noted that the FARC chief is authorized to use force if necessary.
Justice Minister Daniel Delgado yesterday said the alleged communiqué “is of doubtful origin,” adding that his office is investigating the matter.
The supposed FARC statement came just as rebels in southern Colombia were freeing four lawmakers abducted more than six years ago, according to the Bogota office of the Red Cross.
Bárbara Hintermann, Gloria Polanco de Lozada, Orlando Beltrán, Luis Eladio and Jorge Eduardo Gechem were turned over to Venezuelan Interior Minister Ramón Rodríguez, Colombian Sen. Piedad Cordoba and Red Cross personnel. |
-EFE |
|
| Emergency landing at San José airport |
By Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net
|
Passengers on a flight to the U.S. city of Newark, New Jersey, had a scare Thursday morning when a burning smell emerged from the plane's cockpit. Continental Airlines flight 1797 made an emergency landing at San José's Juan Santamaría International Airport at 10:22 a.m., over an hour after its take-off, according to Diego Gutiérrez, head of the accidents department at the Civil Aviation Authority.
“The landing was company procedure,” he said, adding that the pilots were wearing oxygen masks when the plane arrived.
The aircraft, a Boeing 737-800, and its 144 passengers landed safely and unharmed, according to the Red Cross. |
|
| Cell phone lines down Saturday night for testing |
Cell phone users, do not be alarmed to find that you cannot be reached in the wee hours of Saturday night – the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) will be running tests on its lines.
From Saturday midnight to 6 a.m. Sunday, ICE will be testing out its new eight-digit phone number system, according to the daily La Nación. During that time landlines cannot be used to call mobile phones, and vice versa.
Between cell phones, however, callers will be able to reach each other dialing 8 before the phone number.
The 911 emergency number will still be reachable without interruption.
The telephone company is scheduled to add an extra number – 8 to mobiles and 2 to landlines – starting March 20, La Nación quoted ICE's Manuel Córdoba saying at a press conference yesterday. |
-Tico Times |
|
| Turrialba Volcano passing gases |
By Nick Wilkinson
Tico Times Staff | nwilkinson@ticotimes.net |
Authorities are warning tourists not to get too close to Turrialba Volcano because of toxic gas emissions.
Last Friday, a gas cloud formed above the volcano, which straddles both Limón and Cartago provinces.
National Emergency Commission spokesman Reinaldo Carballo said people shouldn't panic, and regular visits to the volcano, which sees 50 to 60 people a day, are still encouraged.
But he said people, especially those with respiratory problems such as asthma, should keep their distance from the volcano to avoid breathing the gases. |
 |
|
| The Secret of Life |
 |
Shelby, my science adviser, came racing down from his hilltop laboratory yesterday to boast that he had discovered the “secret of life.” Reluctantly, because I hate to discourage enthusiasm, I pointed out that there is no secret to life.
A few common organic chemicals found in every puddle and a bolt of lightning to get things started creates the necessary nucleotides after every thunderstorm, and from then on it's simply a matter of luck whether they hit on the double helix and start reproducing. Aristotle was right, in a sense, though 23 centuries ago he couldn't possibly have known it. Shelby looked so crestfallen that I tried to soften the blow by asking his advice on how to create a frog, but it seems he hadn't got that far, so I shut up.
To me it seems a bit weird that anyone would want to create life in a laboratory, when the time-tested procedure can so easily be enjoyed in the comfort of your own home. And anyway, if you'll just try planting late in the day when the gnats are biting, there's too darned much life around here already.
But no doubt Shelby's aim was to create artificial soldiers to fight our wars without having to resort to the immensely unpopular draft. My own view is that we should quit declaring war as a means of reviving a listless economy, and think of some other way to make people start spending money again.
Which raises the question of why they aren't spending at the required rate, and the answer, of course, is that for people, unlike governments, there comes a level of debt at which they hesitate to acquire more, thereby automatically setting the stage for a recession. But the Keynesian solution is now old hat, and we must try something else.
So my daring contribution is not to just keep reducing interest rates so as to encourage more borrowing, but to declare a moratorium on all personal debt, reimbursing creditors out of tax funds that would otherwise go to prosecuting war. If, instead of worrying about how in the world you're going to pay off your debts, you get told that come Monday you don't have any, I guarantee you'll be off to the super the same day.
The reasoning behind this seemingly absurd proposition is that the current arrangements for creating wealth benefit the wrong people: the manufacturers of material intentionally scheduled for destruction, who are not the ones who keep the economy humming. We need to benefit the ordinary consumer who isn't pulling his weight for the reason stated.
I am aware that the concept of debt forgiveness runs counter to the principles of nonconformist morality, not to mention those of creditors who would hate to be paid off in government funds, but now is the time to strike, while the opposition is at its weakest. Anyway, have a go at it on a small scale at first, and if it doesn't work, I'll think of something else.
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
Tired of Taxistas? |
Have you had a bad experience with Costa Rica’s taxi drivers?
If so, please tell us about it. And don’t leave anything out.
Send your tales of taxista woe to Tico Times reporter Sophia Kelley, skelley@ticotimes.net.
Deadline for submissions is Friday, Feb. 29.
Please remember to include your full name, e-mail address and phone number. |
| |
|
|
|
|