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June 18, 2009
   
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Between flags: China's chief negotiator, Zhu Hong, during the final day Wednesday of the third round of free-trade talks with Costa Rica in San José. Next stop: Beijing, where bilateral negotiations are set to continue on Sept. 15.

Jeffrey Arguedas | EFE

| Previous Daily News

Virtuosa: Renowned Japanese violinist Midori Goto Arrives in the country this week to promote musical education and perform with the National Symphony Orchestra next weekend.

Photo courtesy
of Culture Ministry

U.S. ambassador takes last bow with $4 million anti-drug initiative
In his final move as U.S. ambassador to Costa Rica, Peter Cianchette signed the Merida Initiative on Wednesday, releasing $4.3 million in anti-drug trafficking funding to the Central American country.
Costa Rica’s Arenal Volcano reopens after landslide
Park officials reopened Arenal Volcano National Park in north-central Costa Rica on Wednesday morning after landslides prompted emergency workers to evacuate the area on Tuesday afternoon.
Costa Rican courtship of U.S. tourists to be turned up a notch
As the tourism industry confronts its first real crisis of the decade, Costa Rican authorities announced an initiative Wednesday they hope will reclaim the attention of the U.S. tourists, who account for more than 50 percent of its visitors.
Renowned Japanese violinist visits
Costa Rica to promote music education
World-renowned Japanese violinist Midori Goto will be stringing along Costa Rican music aficionados this month when she comes to the country for a week to promote musical education.
The Random Element

I left home on my 21st birthday, with a shiny new diploma in my pocket and a firm determination to break into the burgeoning new world of electronics. That was before transistors and lasers, even before public television, but there was a kind of roiling of the waters, as if a mighty giant were about to emerge, and I wanted to be a part of it.

 

U.S. ambassador takes last bow
with $4 million anti-drug initiative
By Chrissie Long
Tico Times Staff | clong@ticotimes.net

In his final move as U.S. ambassador to Costa Rica, Peter Cianchette signed the Merida Initiative on Wednesday, releasing $4.3 million in anti-drug trafficking funding to the Central American country.

The money will be divided among Costa Rica's public safety agencies and used as part of a “joint effort” to stem the flow of drugs north to the United States.

“We understand that the best way to tackle the current challenges is by working together in partnership. This is not the Merida Initiative for Costa Rica. This is the Merida Initiative with Costa Rica,” Cianchette said.

The former state representative and Republican candidate for governor of Maine was appointed last spring by President George W. Bush. With a new administration in office in Washington D.C., Cianchette is exiting from his post on Friday and is slated to be replaced in the coming months.

In the meantime, Deputy Chief Peter M. Brennan will assume the duties of ambassador.

“I want to take advantage of this opportunity to say thanks (to the Arias administration) for its advice and support,” Cianchette said in broken Spanish to the Costa Rican press corps on Wednesday. He added that he appreciates “the quality of hospitality of the Costa Rican people.”

Cianchette was appointed in May 2008 and during his short time in the western San José offices of the U.S. Embassy, he oversaw the development of initiatives to improve English language learning in Costa Rica, helped in the early stages of implementing the Central America Free-Trade Agreement with the United States and aided recovery efforts after the Jan. 8 earthquake.

The ambassador declined to give an exit interview to The Tico Times, but indicated that he will be returning to Maine, where he previously served as a partner in a private investment firm and as the owner and president for The Cianchette Group, a public affairs management and business consulting firm.

“We are disappointed that he will return (to the United States) and not continue with the change in government in Washington,” said President Oscar Arias Wednesday, offering a few parting words. “He has been a good friend to Costa Rica.”

Click here for Ambassador Cianchette's departure message to the press and Costa Rican public.

Costa Rica’s Arenal Volcano reopens after landslide
By Mike McDonald
Tico Times Staff | mmcdonald@ticotimes.net

Park officials reopened Arenal Volcano National Park in north-central Costa Rica on Wednesday morning after landslides prompted emergency workers to evacuate the area on Tuesday afternoon.

Reinaldo Carballo, a spokesman for the National Emergency Commission (CNE), said the volcano has not demonstrated any more signs of disruptive activity and park officials believe it to be safe to re-enter the park.

Carballo confirmed that the volcano produced two pyroclastic flows on Tuesday, but noted that no emergency alert level was necessary for La Fortuna or the surrounding areas.

“The volcano is obviously showing signs of activity, but there is no reason right now to issue an emergency alert,” he said. “We closed the park as a precaution for the people in the area, but there have been no signs of further problems. People can enjoy the park as they did before.”

Jorge Brenes, a volcanologist with the Vulcanological and Seismological Observatory of Costa Rica, based at the National University (UNA) in Heredia, north of San José, said scientists with the institute began conducting studies Wednesday morning to determine the cause of the landslide, but did not have results as of Wednesday afternoon.

The landslide forced the evacuation of 25 visitors in the park. No injuries were reported.

Last week, University of Costa Rica scientists reported an increase of vapor eruptions at Arenal, which led them to raise the 4-level States of Volcanic Alert Scale to Level 3, which warns of strong changes in eruption patterns.

Costa Rican courtship of U.S.
tourists to be turned up a notch
By Daniel Shea
Tico Times Staff | editorial@ticotimes.net

As the tourism industry confronts its first real crisis of the decade, Costa Rican authorities announced an initiative Wednesday they hope will reclaim the attention of the U.S. tourists, who account for more than 50 percent of its visitors.

The campaign, “Costa Rica Plus,” will be a full-throttle ad initiative, inundating the pages of the U.S. news industry, said the Costa Rican Tourism Institute (ICT). With an announced budget of $500,000, the idea is to hit newsstands with coupons, travel deals and information about the tropical beauty and biodiversity that defines Costa Rica in the minds of gringos.

According to the ICT, four major U.S. dailies – The New York Times, USA Today, San Francisco Chronicle and Los Angeles Times – as well as Travel Weekly magazine will all get a chunk of the ad revenue, which will be focused in the weekend travel sections.

The advertising will begin Friday and run through Aug. 9, and will consist of everything from coupons redeemable at hotels and tourist sites to travel combos between hotels and rent-a-car agencies.

The local tourism sector has been hit especially hard this year, as the global recession has found its way to Costa Rica. Unofficial numbers from early May claimed the country saw tourism numbers decrease by 13 percent in the first quarter 2009, compared to the first quarter of last year. That represents a big hit to a country where the tourism industry makes up 8 percent of the gross domestic product.

Renowned Japanese violinist visits
Costa Rica to promote music education
By Daniel Shea
Tico Times Staff | editorial@ticotimes.net

World-renowned Japanese violinist Midori Goto will be stringing along Costa Rican music aficionados this month when she comes to the country for a week to promote musical education.

In addition to meeting with organizers of music programs and giving lessons to some fortunate gifted students, Midori, as she is known in the classical music world, will be performing with the National Symphony Orchestra in two concerts at the National Theater next weekend. Both will feature Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto, Beethoven's Symphony No. 5 and Brahms' Academic Festival Overture.

Midori's visit is the result of a renewed investment in Costa Rica's music education programs, said Culture Minister María Elena Carballo.

“There is talent everywhere,” Carballo said, adding that music and art instruction are important for the development of intelligence and competence. “This is a way to develop the human capital of the people.”

Midori arrives June 22. Her itinerary involves visiting a number of National Music Education System (SINEM) programs around San José and attending a concert put on by children in the surrounding schools.

Five Costa Rican students will be given the privilege of being instructed by Midori on June 25.

“To bring a famous talent here to work with our kids … that is invaluable,” Carballo said. Midori has played with some of the most distinguished orchestras in the world, and was named by United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon as a U.N. messenger of peace in 2007 for her work to promote peace through music.

She will perform with the National Symphony Orchestra June 26 at 8 p.m. and June 28 at 10:30 a.m. at the National Theater. Tickets range in price from ¢3,000 to ¢15,000 and are available at the theater's box office or by calling 2221-5341.

Midori is also scheduled to perform with the Youth Symphony Orchestra in a concert for SINEM program parents and students, June 27 at 2 p.m., also at the National Theater.

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!
The Random Element

I left home on my 21st birthday, with a shiny new diploma in my pocket and a firm determination to break into the burgeoning new world of electronics. That was before transistors and lasers, even before public television, but there was a kind of roiling of the waters, as if a mighty giant were about to emerge, and I wanted to be a part of it.

Minutes before I left, my father emerged from his study and beckoned me in. He was then about 60, a Victorian to his fingertips, who occupied the chair of natural sciences at Kings, and who was always so wholly engrossed in developing the field of statistical inference that he had little time for his family. But evidently my mother had told him he would probably never see me again, and now he was prepared to give me five minutes of his time.

“My boy,” he said, “the study of mathematics is not conducive to the establishment of a fortune, so you will have to await your patrimony until I am gone. But I will give you now a piece of advice that I have found useful and that I trust will help you find your way in the world. It is: ‘When anything happens that cannot be undone, it is always attributable to the introduction of a random element, akin to that introduced by shuffling.'”

With that, he rested his hand briefly on my shoulder and then turned back to his desk. I didn't bother to say good-bye, as I knew his attention was already elsewhere, and I still regret that I slammed the front door as I left, muttering under my breath about parsimonious prigs.

I spent the next couple of years learning my trade, only to find that the field was developing so fast it looked like I would never be able to draw breath, and I began to realize the best I could do was to master a small part of it. For the first time, I recalled my father's last words to me and began to wonder what they meant. Eventually, I figured he was recommending the study of statistics, so, if only to save something from the wreck of our relationship, I started to read up on the subject.

Fortunately, his real gift to me was what I can only call a friendship with math. I could see how the new Boolean algebra could be used to make computers undertake the endless calculations needed to utilize complex mathematical models: of fluid flow in oil reservoirs, of the flow of air over airplane wings and a thousand other hitherto incalculable processes.

Right at that time, my father died and I inherited his notes on statistical inference. He had demonstrated that the huge body of mathematics developed to describe random processes could be applied, within limits, to virtually any causal relationship. Bingo! I never looked back, and was soon advising a hundred corporations how to predict performance, of ships and cars, airplanes and dams, without ever spending a dime on construction.

So I take back what I said about Dad; he gave me the world, though he never knew it.

 
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