Wednesday, May 1, 2013

12:04 PM 5/1/2013

12:04 PM 5/1/2013



Bhatia llamo Corruptos a la Policia de Puerto Rico
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El presidente del senado de Puerto Rico Eduardo Bhatia PPD llamo; los más Corruptos de la nación americana a la Policía de Puerto Rico, y alegó que no sabía ...
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Puerto Rico's AAA tenders US$2.7mn water treatment plant improvement works - Water World
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Puerto Rico's AAA tenders US$2.7mn water treatment plant improvement works
Water World
Puerto Rico's national water authority, AAA, has launched two tenders worth a total of US$2.7mn for water treatment plant improvement works, according to a tender notice published by AAA. The largest tender, at US$1.42mn, involves improving the ...

Cunningham, Dussard strike gold in Puerto Rico - Jamaica Gleaner
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Jamaica Gleaner

Cunningham, Dussard strike gold in Puerto Rico
Jamaica Gleaner
JAMAICA's pair of Sheckema Cunningham and Nicholas Dussard returned home last week with gold medals after tough bouts at the Puerto Rico Tae Kwon Do Open. Cunningham won the lightweight division to secure her second international victory for the ...

Puerto Rico's Law Schools Come Under Fire - Politic365
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Politic365

Puerto Rico's Law Schools Come Under Fire
Politic365
“For the first time in three years, the ABA was able to provide complete employment data for all three of Puerto Rico's nationally accredited law schools. The results are shocking: A scant 9 percent of the three schools' graduates were employed full ...

CAMBIO REAL PARA LA UNIVERSIDAD
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CAMBIO REAL PARA LA UNIVERSIDAD

Al firmar ayer la Ley 13, que sustituye la Junta de Síndicos de la Universidad de Puerto Rico por una Junta de Gobierno, el principal compromiso del Ejecutivo debe ser enfocarse en la transformación auténtica de la institución, alejando los fantasmas políticos que tanto daño le han hecho y que, con otros colores y matices, podrían seguir presentes con la “nueva” estructura de gobierno universitario.

Avatar presupuestario

ENRIQUE CRUZ
El escenario estaba preparado: llevaban ya más de 130 días diciendo lo mal que les habían dejado el gobierno, las amenazas de degradación de crédito, los múltiples viajes a Nueva Y

Que lástima y dolor tan grande siento en el alma al ver como se derrumba el prestigio de mi alma mater.
No soy solo exalumna, crecí con el inmenso orgullo de saber que mi padre fue parte de su facultad. Hoy, ver a esa gran institución desfalcada, desprestigiada y utilizada como monigote político me cala profundo. Los que la destruyen se nota que no la aman.
Marieuly González Sureda
Trujillo Alto
Una persona que narra cuentos en público es un cuentacuentos.
Ricky Martin es sin duda el artista puertorriqueño que más se ha destacado y sigue cosechando éxitos en el mundo entero. Su calidad artística se iguala a su calidad humana y ganas de no quedarse de brazos cruzados ante las necesidades del mundo. Es por ello que entiendo que su Fundación es digna de todo el respeto que podamos ofrecerle. Ahora bien, de ahí a que el gobierno de Puerto Rico le apruebe $1.5 millones es totalmente absurdo.
Por ese mismo reconocimiento que Martin tiene, estoy segura que en par de actividades de recaudación de fondos en y fuera de la Isla, podría alcanzar esa cantidad y aún más.
Aunque entiendo que celebridades cobran muchísimo por endosar compañías privadas, espero que la adjudicación de estos fondos no responda al endoso que Martin le ofreció al actual Gobernador durante el periodo previo a las elecciones.
Que recuerde el gobierno que aunque la Fundación Ricky Martin es digna también de recibir fondos, antes de esta, estaban muchas causas que así lo ameritan y que hacen lo que el gobierno no puede ni quiere.
Margarita Alvarez
Con un nuevo cuerpo rector que el gobierno se prepara a nombrar y más participación de los estudiantes, el futuro de la Universidad de Puerto Rico es nefasto.
Esto se esperaba, es una crónica de una muerte anunciada.
Ia Frau
Ponce
¿Saben cuándo va a mejorar la situación de Puerto Rico? La respuesta es la siguiente, cuando todos eso políticos trabajen por Puerto Rico y no para el partido al cual pertenecen.
Es tiempo de que todos trabajen por Puerto Rico y no defiendan lo indefendible.
José J. Rivera
Dorado

Retiro de maestros
Debido a la incertidumbre del retiro para maestros, el cual no se ha dicho nada al respecto, un gran número de compañeros están afectados en el plano emocional, por ende, en su salud física. Esta situación afecta directamente el proceso de enseñanza y aprendizaje.
Queremos saber la realidad nuestra ya que de esto depende en gran medida nuestro futuro.
María Rodríguez
74ºF
624
684
2694
3134

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Puerto Rico Worst-to-First Returns Turning on April: Muni Credit - Bloomberg
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Puerto Rico Worst-to-First Returns Turning on April: Muni Credit
Bloomberg
Puerto Rico debt has soared from worst to first in the $3.7 trillion municipal market as Governor Alejandro Garcia Padilla proposes steps to raise revenue after seven years of budget deficits. Amid the best month for U.S. local debt since November ...
Puerto RicoProposes Sales Tax Rate Cut - Tax-News.comTax-news.com 

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#Vieques in limbo 10 years after #Navy exit. Read: http://ow.ly/kBoxH #caribbe...
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#Vieques in limbo 10 years after #Navy exit. Read:
http://ow.ly/kBoxH #caribbeanbusiness

This Week Editorial: Big job-creation ideas balance #budgets. Read: http://ow.ly...
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This Week Editorial: Big job-creation ideas balance #budgets. Read: http://ow.ly/kuZG0 #caribbeanbusiness

Leftist priests: Francis can fix church ‘in ruins’
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Leftist priests: Francis can fix church ‘in ruins’

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — A new pope from Latin America known for ministering to ...

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Show en La Puerto Rico - Flamenco
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Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Obama meets with Latino groups before Mexico trip - MiamiHerald.com | Latinos Are the Engine of Small Business in America - Fox News Latino | Latino News Review: Dame Margot Fonteyn and the Panama coup 29/04/13 19:27 from BBC News - Latin America & Caribbean

Photo: Check out Levi Ponce's beautiful murals http://huff.to/15V6vJ9
Courtesy of Levi Ponce

Check out Levi Ponce's beautiful murals http://huff.to/15V6vJ9
Courtesy of Levi Ponce

______________________________________________


» Obama meets with Latino groups before Mexico trip - MiamiHerald.com
29/04/13 20:27 from latino - Google News
Politic365 Obama meets with Latino groups before Mexico trip MiamiHerald.com WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama has met with Latino leaders ahead of an upcoming trip to Mexico and Costa Rica. Obama met Monday at the White House with lead..

» Obama meets with Latino groups before heading to Mexico, Costa Rica
30/04/13 07:26 from NBC Latino
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama has met with Latino leaders ahead of an upcoming trip to Mexico and Costa Rica. Obama met Monday at the White House with leaders from National Council of La Raza, the National Hispanic Council..


» Obama meets with Latino groups before Mexico trip - MiamiHerald.com
29/04/13 20:27 from latino - Google News
Politic365 Obama meets with Latino groups before Mexico trip MiamiHerald.com WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama has met with Latino leaders ahead of an upcoming trip to Mexico and Costa Rica. Obama met Monday at the White House with lead..


» Latinos Are the Engine of Small Business in America - Fox News Latino
29/04/13 16:34 from latino - Google News
Latinos Are the Engine of Small Business in America Fox News Latino This week, small business owners from around the nation will come together for The Latino Coalition and U.S. Chamber of Commerce 2013 America's Small Business Summit i..


» As America's Latino population grows, will Spanish thrive in the US? - 89.3 KPCC
29/04/13 15:27 from latino - Google News
89.3 KPCC As America's Latino population grows, will Spanish thrive in the US? 89.3 KPCC The acknowledgment is that many Latinos born or raised in the U-S struggle to read, speak and write Spanish. The hope, as far as Telemundo is conc..


» Queen Maxima: A royal love story
30/04/13 06:14 from BBC News - Latin America & Caribbean
How the Dutch fell in love with their future queen from Argentina


» VIDEO: Police occupy favelas in Rio
29/04/13 23:21 from BBC News - Latin America & Caribbean
Police in Brazil have occupied three shanty towns around Rio de Janeiro's famous Christ the Redeemer statue, ahead of a visit by Pope Francis.


» Mexico probes 'abuse of power' raid
29/04/13 20:40 from BBC News - Latin America & Caribbean
Mexican authorities investigate allegations that an official's daughter used her influence to close a restaurant, amid outrage on social media.



» Voices from Spain's jobless millions
29/04/13 20:12 from BBC News - Latin America & Caribbean
How unemployment is affecting Spaniards and immigrants


» Dame Margot Fonteyn and the Panama coup
29/04/13 19:27 from BBC News - Latin America & Caribbean
Ballerina Margot Fonteyn and the failed Panama coup




Dame Margot Fonteyn and the Panama sanitary towel coup


Margot Fonteyn exits BOAC plane on her return from Panama


It was one of the world's stranger coup plots, described by British diplomats as a "slapdash comedy", with the famous prima ballerina Dame Margot Fonteyn and her Panamanian husband trying to topple the government of Panama with the help of a flighty British model, Judy Tatham.

"It was all so amateur. She did it for a lark," says Tatham, about the escapade more than 50 years ago.

"Margot thought that [her husband] would end up as head of the country, and that she would be Queen of Panama. Her role was a romantic one. Mine was to help a friend."

Sitting at her home in the picturesque Tuscany countryside, Tatham, now 87, is keen to share her memories of her famous friend and of the almost comical coup.


Margot Fonteyn plays it cool answering reporters' questions
Tatham has rarely spoken before about what were clearly thrilling though slightly terrifying times for the well-spoken daughter of a solicitor from north London. Her "sense of good manners", she admits, prevented her from asking too many questions.

It was early April 1959, and Tatham - by her own admission "flighty and rather naive" - was working in New York, having landed a modelling job thanks to Dame Margot's contacts. The ballerina was in town with her husband Roberto "Tito" Arias, the son of a former president of Panama, whose liberal-leaning family opposed the authoritarian rule of the then president, Ernesto de la Guardia.
The three of them met for breakfast one morning at New York's Plaza Hotel. And it was then that Dame Margot and Arias made a rather strange request. "They said, 'can you get me some shirts?' I said yes, of course, thrilled at having the chance to do something for Margot.
"'How many?', I asked, thinking perhaps two or three. 'About 500,' Tito replied."
Taken aback, but not wanting to seem rude, Tatham then asked about sizes. "Small, medium and large," he replied. The conversation was getting odder every minute. "And what colours?" Tatham inquired. Dame Margot thought for a moment, then, looking down at the hotel's bright green carpet, said quickly: "Like this, Kelly-green. On no account khaki."

That was not all. Tito and Margot also wanted Tatham to use her connections with the New York rag trade to get them a similar number of armbands to be used over the shirts.
Now it was Tatham's turn to ask for something. Neither Dame Margot nor Arias had offered any explanation of what they were up to, but a clearer idea was beginning to dawn on her.
"No revolution was mentioned and I was too polite to ask. But at that point I said to Tito, 'If you are planning something, I have an Easter holiday coming up and I'm not going to be out of it. I want to be part of it'"
"'All right,' he said almost immediately. 'You can bring the armbands with you.'"

So she ordered the 500 Kelly-green shirts, handed them over to Arias, and then went to the workshop of "a rather grubby man somewhere in east New York" to get the arm-bands made. But as Judy packed her bags in preparation for her trip to Central America, she still had to work out how she would smuggle her cargo through customs.
She is still clearly very pleased at her own resourcefulness and she laughs loudly before continuing the tale: "I was walking through [the New York department store] Macy's when I saw some large boxes containing sanitary towels. So I bought one."
Leaving the contents back at her flat, she stuffed the armbands into the box and headed for the airport. No-one thought to stop the pretty young model - or ask why she needed so many sanitary towels in her luggage - as she swept through the airport in Panama City and headed for the Arias family home.
For the next week, with Dame Margot nowhere to be seen, Arias showed Tatham around his native Panama.
"It seemed very primitive," she recalls. They ate out at "very rough restaurants in the jungle" and went to parties. But there was never any mention of the coup.

"I thought it bad manners to ask," Tatham says. Eventually however, Arias's sister, Rosario brought up the subject, much to Tatham's relief. But Rosario just told her not to worry - "overthrowing presidents is what our family does". Tatham returned to New York none the wiser.
Strange as it might appear, Tatham says she did not find out about the extent of Dame Margot's involvement in events in Panama - or what happened to the uniforms and armbands - until many years later.
Confidential British government files from 1959,released in 2010, describe "a slapdash comedy" brought to the attention of the then British Ambassador to Panama, Sir Ian Henderson, in the early hours of 21 April 1959. That was when he first received news of Dame Margot's shock arrest in Panama city.
She and Arias, aboard their luxury yacht in the bay of Panama, had been supposed to land and collect ammunition and men to seize a major highway. But they were given away by local fishermen and forced to flee. When Dame Margot was arrested, Arias was still on the run. A group of students had been supposed to rise up in the capital, but gave themselves away before the agreed time, alerting the authorities. And rebels supplied by Cuba's Fidel Castro, meant to land on the Atlantic coast, never arrived.

Henderson wrote in an official telegram that he was not impressed by Dame Margot's behaviour and did not regard her conduct "as fitting in any British subject". With the help of embassy staff, the ballerina was freed from custody and put on a plane to the US. She called Tatham from the airport. She was characteristically tight-lipped about what she had just been up to. And once again, Tatham says she did not want to intrude.
On the insistence of British diplomats in New York, the pair were soon on a flight back to London.
"I was shovelled out of the plane by the pilot's door, while she went out to face the press," Tatham recalls. News footage of the time shows the composed ballerina laughing off the journalists' insistent questions about her or her husband's role in the foreign coup.
"Did you carry a gun in Panama," one reporter asks. "I won't answer that, because you can guess whether I carried a gun or not!" Fonteyn replies.
Tatham has never been back to the US, where she had left behind friends, a flat and a job. She and Dame Margot fell out shortly after their arrival back home and never saw each other again. Dame Margot and Arias did eventually return to settle in Panama, where the dancer died in 1991.
More than five decades on, Judy is reluctant to judge her one-time friend too harshly. "Margot had no imagination whatsoever. She couldn't imagine that anything could actually go wrong," she says. "For her it was a lark, a bit of an adventure. She thought it was exciting… so did I."
Mike Lanchin interviewed Judy Tatham for the BBC World Service programme Witness. Listen to the programme via BBC iPlayer Radio, ordownload a podcast.
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Judy Tatham and Dame Margot Fonteyn

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Judy Tatham (L) and Dame Margot in London, a week after the failed coup

"No revolution was mentioned and I was too polite to ask”
Judy Tatham

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Judy Tatham
Mike Lanchin interviewed Judy Tatham for the BBC World Service programme Witness



From swan to duck

Fonteyn in Swan Lake, 1951
In a statement to the House of Commons in London, shadow foreign secretary Aneurin Bevan welcomed her release from Panama.
"The British public did not appreciate having seen her in the role of the swan, then seeing her in the role of a decoy duck," he said.


What happened next?

Margot Fonteyn and her husband, 1965
  • In 1964, after Roberto Arias won a seat in elections for Panama's National Assembly, he was shot by a former political associate. Treated at Stoke Mandeville hospital in the UK, he resumed his political career in Panama in 1967
  • Dame Margot, meanwhile, had revived her career by forming a partnership with Rudolf Nureyev - 20 years her junior
  • She gave her last performance in the early 1970s before retiring to Panama to live with her husband
  • She died of cancer in 1991