Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
April 6, 2009
   
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Palm Sunday: Catholic believers celebrate Palm Sunday in a procession down the main streets of downtown San José.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

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World gone mad: Mellow Mark, Pyro Merz and The Ruffcats, from Berlin, Germany, perform Saturday in La Guácima at the Fifth Mundoloco Festival, which also included performances by the “Remix King” DJ Karim and dub legend Mad Professor.

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

Gunshot fired at photographers at
Tom and Gisele’s Costa Rica wedding
Two photographers claim that a private security guard shot at them Saturday at the wedding of Brazilian supermodel Gisele Bündchen and U.S. football player Tom Brady at the Costa Rican beach town of Santa Teresa on the Nicoya Peninsula. No injuries were reported.
FC Dallas signs Costa Rica midfielder Alvaro Sánchez
Costa Rican forward/midfielder Alvaro Sánchez will head off to Texas after U.S. soccer team FC Dallas signed him in a loan deal from Asociación Deportiva San Carlos, Dallas General Manager Michael Hitchcock said Friday.
Vicente Fernández show canceled for lack of permits
Costa Rica health authorities on Saturday ordered the cancellation of the eagerly awaited performance of legendary Mexican singer Vicente Fernández, the same night the show was set to take place.
Emergency officials urge caution around Arenal Volcano
Costa Rican emergency officials and scientists have been closely monitoring Arenal Volcano since last month ahead of the busy travel week of Semana Santa (Holy Week), the National Emergency Commission (CNE) said.
Coffee-Table Book
Paints Portrait of Guanacaste

Many cameras find themselves pointed west from Costa Rica's renowned northern Pacific coast, capturing fiery sunsets over the azure sea.

 

Gunshot fired at photographers at
Tom and Gisele’s Costa Rica wedding

Picture perfect wedding? A police officer inspects the damages caused by gunfire in the car used by AFP photographer Yuri Cortez and Al Día photographer Rolando Aviles while covering of the wedding of supermodel Gisele Bündchen and U.S. football star Tom Brady in Santa Teresa. The photographers claim that one of the newlyweds' bodyguards shot at the photojournalists, who managed to escape unscathed.

Yuri Cortez | AFP

Two photographers claim that a private security guard shot at them Saturday at the wedding of Brazilian supermodel Gisele Bündchen and U.S. football player Tom Brady at the Costa Rican beach town of Santa Teresa on the Nicoya Peninsula. No injuries were reported.

Rolando Avilés, photographer for Costa Rican daily Al Día, told newswire EFE the incident occurred after he and photographer Yuri Cortez, of French newswire AFP, refused to hand over their photography equipment to the security guards.

Whereupon, one of the guards pulled out a gun and opened fire at the photographers' vehicle, shattering the back window, Avilés said, adding that the bullet whizzed “by the head” of Salvadoran photojournalist Cortez. “It was really scary,” Avilés said.

According to the Al Día photographer, neither he nor Cortez had entered the property of Bündchen's mansion, where the wedding took place, and were snapping shots from a nearby hill “outside the private property.”

The news became the buzz this weekend on celebrity blogs.

According to INF Daily, Bündchen had made an exclusive deal with a Brazilian magazine to cover the wedding, which may have prompted the guards to demand the Tico and Salvadoran photographers turn over their material. Avilés told INF he was in disbelief, saying, “ I could have lost my life for the sake of some pictures that Gisele didn't want published. Are they insane?"

-EFE and Tico Times
FC Dallas signs Costa Rica
midfielder Alvaro Sánchez

Costa Rican forward/midfielder Alvaro Sánchez will head off to Texas after U.S. soccer team FC Dallas signed him in a loan deal from Asociación Deportiva San Carlos, Dallas General Manager Michael Hitchcock said Friday.

A 24-year-old left-footed midfielder from Ciudad Quesada, in north-central Costa Rica, Sánchez has scored 10 goals and added 14 assists in 44 appearances with AD San Carlos, where he has played since 2007, according to the Dallas team's press release announcing the deal.

-Tico Times
Vicente Fernández show canceled for lack of permits

Costa Rica health authorities on Saturday ordered the cancellation of the eagerly awaited performance of legendary Mexican singer Vicente Fernández, the same night the show was set to take place.

The concert, scheduled for Ricardo Saprissa Stadium in Tibás, north of San José, lacked health and other permits, according to press reports.

A star of ranchera and mariachi music, Fernández told the daily La Nación he has never seen anything like this. “Why if the sound, the stage, the lights, everything is all ready, did they close off the stage?” he asked.

Thousands of fans waited outside the stadium hoping the doors would finally open.

The concert has been rescheduled for April 28, La Nación reported Sunday.

-EFE
Emergency officials urge
caution around Arenal Volcano

Costa Rican emergency officials and scientists have been closely monitoring Arenal Volcano since last month ahead of the busy travel week of Semana Santa (Holy Week), the National Emergency Commission (CNE) said.

Scientists have observed a “slight change in (the volcano's) behavior,” the commission said in a statement, citing low-level seismic activity.

The CNE said residents and tourists near the volcano should remain outside of restricted areas near the volcano, and communicate any anomaly or observation about the behavior of the volcano to the local authorities or by calling 911.

-Tico Times
Please send us your letters, 500 words or fewer, to letters@ticotimes.net for Costa Rica issues or letters@nicatimes.net for Nicaragua and the Central American and Caribbean region. Thanks!
Coffee-Table Book Paints Portrait of Guanacaste

Many cameras find themselves pointed west from Costa Rica's renowned northern Pacific coast, capturing fiery sunsets over the azure sea.

In “Guanacaste: Life Portraits,” a book of photographs published last year, photographer Zoraida Díaz turns around and trains her lens on the landscape and people found inland from the “Gold Coast.”

“I found that Guanacaste was like a secret. Everybody knows Costa Rica because of its natural beauty, and that includes the beautiful beaches of the northern Pacific and the volcanoes,” Díaz said. “But I felt that nobody really knows how amazing and diverse the culture of Guanacaste is, and nobody had really taken a look at these people and done a cohesive body of work on that.”

Throughout the book, Díaz presents a rich and textured vision of the province she has called home for the past several years, capturing the fiestas, traditions, towns, characters and natural settings of Guanacaste.

Díaz, a Colombian-born photojournalist who spent much of her professional life covering South America for the news agency Reuters, draws many of her photos from the pages of The Beach Times, a newspaper she co-founded in 2004 with former husband Ralph Nicholson in Playa Potrero.

“The project was born of the last five years of work at The Beach Times. At the end of 2007, I just had so many images, I didn't know where to put them,” Díaz said.

Habitual readers of the paper, now online only, may recognize some of the images, which anchored the paper's front page and illustrated its stories on development, politics and life in the northwestern province. Other photos came from the archives of unpublished images, and many more were added as Díaz worked on the book, looking to fill in areas she felt were missing.

The images tell of the often simple life of the region, traditionally built around cattle and farming and now adapting to an unforeseen boom of tourism and construction.

A young girl peers out from the coffee bushes where she works harvesting beans. Three men – one mounted on horseback – sip beers outside the town store. Baby turtles push up through black sand. A doorman in a jacket a few sizes too large waits for tickets outside a circus called Chicharrón y sus Estrellas (Pork Rind and his Superstars). Page after page shows both the daily rituals and special occasions that make up life here, set to the backdrop of Guanacaste's landscapes.

The book is split into sections touching on the people, the sea, the festivals and other themes in Díaz's photography. These sections are prefaced with short essays, presented in Spanish and English, by some of the region's most knowledgeable and authoritative voices, including folk singers Guadalupe Urbina and Eduardo “Balo” Gómez, journalist José Manuel Peña and marine biologist Giovanni Bassey.

“Being a photographer, I always thought that you don't need words if you have good pictures,” Díaz said. “But in the end, it seemed like there was something missing.”

“(The words) really added to the book. It was like the voice of Guanacaste made my pictures stronger,” she said. “The collaboration was amazing.”

“Guanacaste: Life Portraits” is available for about $43 at Universal department stores, Librería Internacional bookstores, Café Britt souvenir shops, Jaime Peligro bookstore in Tamarindo and Marie's restaurant in Flamingo.

In addition, some 13,000 copies of the book were donated to the nonprofit after-school center CEPIA, based in Tamarindo, which is selling them in several coastal towns in Guanacaste. Proceeds will help fund the group's programs.

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