Monday, March 26, 2012

12:18 PM 3/26/2012

Puerto Rico News

"Puerto Rico News" bundle created by Mike Nova

A bundle is a collection of blogs and websites hand-selected by your friend on a particular topic or interest. You can keep up to date with them all in one place by subscribing in Google Reader.

There are

30 feeds included in this bundle

  • Caribbean Journal
  • YouTube Videos matching query: puerto rico
  • YouTube Videos matching query: puerto rico news
  • YouTube Videos matching query: puerto rico news tv
  • Google News
  • Gov. Louis Fortuño - Google News
  • puerto rico - Google News
  • puerto rico business - Google News
  • puerto rico politics - Google News
  • puerto rico sports - Google News
  • Puerto Rico News - El Nuevo Día
  • The San Juan Star
  • Puerto Rico Daily Sun - Timely news about Puerto Rico, the Caribbean and the world
  • Opinión - El Nuevo Día
  • caribbeanbusiness.pr
  • Puerto Rico News
  • "Puerto Rico: A Paradise Lost?" Blog
  • Gov. Louis Fortuño - Google Blog Search
  • puerto rico - Google Blog Search
  • puerto rico business - Google Blog Search
  • puerto rico politics - Google Blog Search
  • puerto rico sports - Google Blog Search
  • Puerto Rico Daily Sun
  • Puerto Rico latest and breaking national news and regional news from Puerto Rico
  • Puerto Rico Newswire
  • Puerto Rico News
  • CARIBBEAN BUSINESS's Facebook Wall
  • Puerto Rico: Isla del Encanto's Facebook Wall
  • Puerto Rico Business News's Facebook Wall
  • Puerto Rico Videos & Songs's Facebook Wall

Subscribe

Link | 10:50 AM 3/26/2012 | Jack Delano's Photos–NYT | Puerto Rico News - Archive Links | Puerto Rico News

via Puerto Rico News by Mike Nova on 3/26/12

Mike Nova - 10:54 AM -

+1'd on prnewslinks.blogspot.com

10:50 AM 3/26/2012 | Jack Delano's Photos–NYT | Puerto Rico News - Archive Links

Puerto Rico News - Archive Links. Jack Delano's Photos - NYT. Share · Puerto Rico News - Archive Links shared a link. A Masterwork Spanning 40 Years and One Island. lens.blogs.nytimes.com. The Far...

Mike Nova likes a link.

10:50 AM 3/26/2012 | Jack Delano's Photos–NYT | Puerto Rico News - Archive Links | Puerto Rico News

The Farm Security Administration sent Jack Delano on a side trip to Puerto Rico. A visit of "a few days" turned into a life's work.

SBA now says CNMI ineligible for STEP grant

via Puerto Rico Newswire on 3/26/12

... defines "State" as any of the several States of the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, any territory or possession of the United States. The letter further stated that since the Northern Mariana Islands fit ...

Columnist

via Puerto Rico Newswire on 3/19/12

... giant strip malls with a Home Depot on one end and a Target on the other. Thursday, March 22, 2012 SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) - At El Sendero De La Cruz evangelical church, Rick Santorum sought prayers along with votes. Wednesday, March 21, 2012 ...

Del Rio & Rodriguez Team Up, Brodus vs. Miz, More

via Puerto Rico Newswire on 3/17/12

- Alberto Del Rio and Ricardo Rodriguez teamed up at Saturday night's WWE RAW live event in San Juan, Puerto Rico. They lost to WWE Tag Team Champions Primo & Epico plus the team of Zack Ryder & Mason Ryan in an Elimination Match. After Ryan and ...

10:50 AM 3/26/2012 | Jack Delano's Photos–NYT | Puerto Rico News - Archive Links

via Puerto Rico News by Mike Nova on 3/26/12

State Farm Glorification of Bullying is Shameful - Fox News

via puerto rico sports - Google News on 3/26/12

State Farm Glorification of Bullying is Shameful
Fox News
Coach Knight mocked the incident and was quoted in Sports Illustrated making harsh racist comments. He said of Puerto Ricans: "F-'em, f-'em all....They only thing they know how to do is grow bananas." • In February 1985, Knight threw a chair across the ...

Burnaby club sending three wrestlers to London Olympics - Victoria Times Colonist

via puerto rico sports - Google News on 3/26/12

Burnaby club sending three wrestlers to London Olympics
Victoria Times Colonist
In this case, we're talking amateur sport - freestyle wrestling, to be specific. And three guys who were born elsewhere but now proudly wave the Canadian Maple Leaf qualified Sunday for the London Olympics, hoping they might be this generation's Daniel ...
and more »

Report: American Eagle plans to end operations in Puerto Rico next year - Washington Post

via puerto rico business - Google News on 3/25/12

Report: American Eagle plans to end operations in Puerto Rico next year
Washington Post
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — A Puerto Rican newspaper says the regional affiliate of American Airlines is planning to suspend its operations in Puerto Rico next year as it tries to shave $75 million per year from labor costs. El Vocero reported Sunday that ...
and more »

Boxer fights for abandoned dogs - Sydney Morning Herald

via puerto rico business - Google News on 3/26/12

Boxer fights for abandoned dogs
Sydney Morning Herald
Then she wiped her eyes, thanked her white-shirted entourage and got down to business: keeping tabs on the procession of crates streaming into the arrival hall. Inside were 17 satos — Puerto Rican slang for mongrels — 16 of which Christina Beckles ...
and more »

Williams & Williams Launches New Sell Your Home Solution for Homeowners Nationwide - SYS-CON Media (press release)

via puerto rico business - Google News on 3/26/12

Williams & Williams Launches New Sell Your Home Solution for Homeowners Nationwide
SYS-CON Media (press release)
Williams & Williams has auctioned more than 65000 properties valued at over $7 Billion across all 50 states, DC and Puerto Rico. It's the only auction company to combine the proven effectiveness of live, at-the-property auctions with the global reach ...

Affordable Care Partners with Viva Learning™ For New Dental CE Website - PR Web (press release)

via puerto rico business - Google News on 3/26/12


PR Web (press release)

Affordable Care Partners with Viva Learning™ For New Dental CE Website
PR Web (press release)
Built on the Viva e-learning platform, the new website will deliver live and on-demand CE webinars and product training to more than 180 affiliated practices operating in 38 states and Puerto Rico. I am confident that this program will deliver clinical ...

Puerto Rico: “National Day of Salsa” in the Conservatory - Global Voices Online

via puerto rico - Google News on 3/26/12

Puerto Rico: “National Day of Salsa” in the Conservatory
Global Voices Online
Every year, on the third Sunday of March, the National Day of Salsa takes place in Puerto Rico. However during the entire month there are a variety of events related to this important celebration. This was the case on Sunday, March 11th at the Puerto ...

The Universal Notebook: Wave a flag for the state of Puerto Rico - The Forecaster

via puerto rico - Google News on 3/26/12


The Forecaster

The Universal Notebook: Wave a flag for the state of Puerto Rico
The Forecaster
The other day my Uncle Bill asked me what I thought of statehood for Puerto Rico. I had to tell him I'd never really thought about. After giving the matter some thought, I guess, like President Obama, I'd leave it up the people of Puerto Rico to decide ...

Boxer fights for abandoned dogs - Sydney Morning Herald

via puerto rico - Google News on 3/26/12

Boxer fights for abandoned dogs
Sydney Morning Herald
But when American Airlines Flight 648 from San Juan, Puerto Rico, touched down and a small, tanned woman wearing a white fedora and blue sweat pants emerged from customs, the group snapped to attention. Christina Beckles, 39, a former Golden Gloves ...
and more »

Affordable Care Partners with Viva Learning™ For New Dental CE Website - San Francisco Chronicle (press release)

via puerto rico - Google News on 3/26/12

Affordable Care Partners with Viva Learning™ For New Dental CE Website
San Francisco Chronicle (press release)
Built on the Viva e-learning platform, the new website will deliver live and on-demand CE webinars and product training to more than 180 affiliated practices operating in 38 states and Puerto Rico. (PRWEB) March 26, 2012 Learn HealthSci Inc. announced ...
and more »

Link | 9:39 AM 3/26/2012 | Fotos de Hoy | Mike Nova's starred items

via Puerto Rico News by Mike Nova on 3/26/12

Mike Nova - 9:48 AM -

+1'd on prnewslinks.blogspot.com

9:39 AM 3/26/2012 | Fotos de Hoy | Mike Nova's starred items

Dentro de los temas que publico en su mayoría son fotos casuales donde la foto me encuentra a mí en vez de yo buscarla y bien pueden ser fotos de la ciudad, de mi casa o donde quiera que me encuentre ...

Mike Nova likes a link.

9:39 AM 3/26/2012 | Fotos de Hoy | Mike Nova's starred items | Puerto Rico News

The artist and producer Jose Marti (@Jose_Marti) has shot one picture a day for the past two years as part of his online project “Fotos de Hoy” (Photos of Today).

Romney, Santorum head to Ill., next battleground - Houston Chronicle

via Gov. Louis Fortuño - Google News on 3/17/12


CBC.ca

Romney, Santorum head to Ill., next battleground
Houston Chronicle
Photo: Evan Vucci / AP Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks during a campaign stop on Saturday, March 17, 2012, in Bayamon, Puerto Rico. At left is Puerto Rican Gov. Luis Fortuno, and at right is Ann Romney.
Mitt Romney, Rick Santorum Head To Illinois Ahead Of State's Critical 2012 GOP ...Huffington Post
Puerto Rico votes Sunday, but Romney, Santorum head to Ill., Tuesday's big ...Newser
all 12,335 news articles »

9:39 AM 3/26/2012 | Fotos de Hoy | Mike Nova's starred items

via Puerto Rico News by Mike Nova on 3/26/12

Mike Nova's starred items - 9:39 AM 3/26/2012

Taken with Instagram at Dos Hermanos Bridge

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/24/12

Taken with Instagram at Dos Hermanos Bridge

Puerto Rico: Life One Photo a Day

via Global Voices » Puerto Rico (U.S.) by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle on 2/10/12

The artist and producer Jose Marti (@Jose_Marti) has shot one picture a day for the past two years as part of his online project “Fotos de Hoy” (Photos of Today).

He explains:

Dentro de los temas que publico en su mayoría son fotos casuales donde la foto me encuentra a mí en vez de yo buscarla y bien pueden ser fotos de la ciudad, de mi casa o donde quiera que me encuentre por que en realidad lo importante es expresar algo sobre el momento, donde estoy, que estoy haciendo, etc. Ese es el elemento que me ha llevado ha constantemente publicar en Fotos de Hoy, el poder visualmente resumir semanas y diversas experiencias en un compilado accesible por internet.

They are mostly casual photos, where the photograph finds me instead of me looking for the photograph, and they may well be pictures of the city, my home or wherever it finds me because what is really important is to express something about the moment, where I am, what I'm doing, etc.. That is the element that has led me to constantly publish in “Photos of Today,” to be able to visually summarize weeks and diverse experiences that are accessible online.

I have selected some of his pictures of Old San Juan, the colonial city of the capital of San Juan, Puerto Rico (all photos are republished with his permission). You can follow his visual life daily at Fotos de Hoy.

City with a View.

San José Church.

The window.

Beach El Escambrón.

Fort El Morro.

Bar El Batey.

Luna Street.

Written by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle · comments (0)
Share: Donate · facebook · twitter · reddit · StumbleUpon · delicious · Instapaper

Taken with Instagram at Cuartel De Ballaja

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/12/12

Taken with Instagram at Cuartel De Ballaja

#minimal (Taken with Instagram at Froyo World)

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/24/12

#minimal (Taken with Instagram at Froyo World)

Taken with Instagram at La Catedral De San Juan

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/25/12

Taken with Instagram at La Catedral De San Juan

5:30am cndo salí a correr (Taken with Instagram at Viejo San...

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/17/12

5:30am cndo salí a correr (Taken with Instagram at Viejo San Juan)

Taken with instagram

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/17/12

Taken with instagram

@ar0n :) (Taken with instagram)

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/19/12

@ar0n :) (Taken with instagram)

Taken with Instagram at Calle San Sebastian

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/22/12

Taken with Instagram at Calle San Sebastian

See more of Mike Nova's starred items ...

Get started with Google Reader

Atom Feed

Mike Nova's starred items

Taken with Instagram at Iglesia San Jose

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/23/12

Taken with Instagram at Iglesia San Jose

*

Puerto Rico: 365 Photographs

via Global Voices » Puerto Rico (U.S.) by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle on 2/25/12

The photographer José Rodrigo Madera [es] shot one photograph a day during two years, as part of his project “365.” His photos were only visible to his friends on Facebook, until the magazine Revista Cruce [es] published 20 of them for everyone to enjoy.

José Rodrigo Madera describes himself as:

…fotógrafo de profesión y nunca estudió Artes. Estudió Comunicaciones en la Universidad Interamericana y quiere enseñar fotografía. Cree en el matrimonio y se considera de izquierda. Dedica todo su trabajo al hombre de su vida, Emil Alejandro, y a la mujer de su vida, Penelope.

…a professional photographer who never studied Art. Studied Communications at the Universidad Interamericana, and wants to teach photography. Believes in marriage and considers himself a Leftist. Dedicates all of his work to the man of his life, Emil Alejandro, and the woman who is the love of his life, Penelope.

Here is a selection of some of his beautiful photographs.*

Pitcher: 1. Individual who, for one reason or another, does not follow through with an obligation or commitment proposed by himself. 2. Person who does not return calls.

Watch.

Child in red pants.

Breakfast.

Agostini prepares for a shot.

Ghost cloud.

Sorely laughs.

Spiral.

Eye.

The mother of "azul."

*All photographs are republished with the permission of the photographer and Revista Cruce. The captions have been translated from the original (except some that were English).

Written by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle · comments (0)
Share: Donate · facebook · twitter · reddit · StumbleUpon · delicious · Instapaper

Puerto Rico: “Ilegal” death of Filiberto Ojeda Ríos

via Global Voices » Puerto Rico (U.S.) by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle on 3/6/12

The Center for Investigative Journalism has posted the Civil Rights Commission's report [es] on the death of the pro-independence leader Filiberto Ojeda Ríos, killed by the Federal Investigation Bureau (FBI) on September 23, 2005.

Written by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle · comments (0)
Share: Donate · facebook · twitter · reddit · StumbleUpon · delicious · Instapaper

Puerto Rico: Gender and Causality

via Global Voices » Puerto Rico (U.S.) by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle on 3/6/12

Guillermo Rebollo Gil offers a legal analysis [es] on the media framing of the murder of women victims of intimate partner violence.

Written by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle · comments (0)
Share: Donate · facebook · twitter · reddit · StumbleUpon · delicious · Instapaper

Op-Ed: Political Suspense in Jamaica

via Caribbean Journal by admin on 3/25/12

By Ramesh Sujanani
Op-Ed Contributor

It is now the eve of parish council elections in Jamaica. This time it is concurrent with the General Elections in which the PNP (People’s National Party) surprisingly won a mandate over the JLP (Jamaica Labour Party) with skill and political management.

The new government is headed by Prime Minister Portia Simpson-Miller, a seasoned leader and experienced member of Parliament, ably assisted by Peter Philips the new Minister of Finance..

As the Government has just completed a review with the IMF for new banking arrangements, the results and effects of which have not yet been put to the people, it is expected that there will be stringent economic measures placed on life in Jamaica. It is clear that these measures will not be announced until after elections, when it would not make any serious changes to the balance of power. Announcements before would easily upset the status quo.

The state of the economic ratings of the country will decline, and we expect the exchange rate of the Jamaican dollar to erode.

But it is not unusual for many countries to be in financial problems at this time. In fact, many large countries are carrying serious budget and cash deficits, and it is up to their trading partners to work this out with them.

As for smaller countries, they have to pull in their belt and work solutions, with a tourism product among other solutions, possibly with a mentor: Jamaica has to rely on its neighbor the United States.

But some good seems to have happened to Jamaica lately, as is evident by conversations with the State Department. Its relationship with Jamaica now is very sound and positive.

In the recent past, Jamaica’s Security Positions, Police, Military and other Authorized Security apparatus were in confrontation mode over the “Dudus” affair, with Christopher “Dudus” Coke being the head of criminal activities in Kingston’s Tivoli Gardens and around Jamaica.

The crime situation in Jamaica, with the influence of drug trafficking, arms imports, human trafficking, and consequent criminal activity, was very serious; the Authorities in the US wanted Dudus to be extradited and stand trial in America on drug and other felonies.

Jamaica, on the other hand, under the JLP government of the past, did not want to let him go, for whatever reason.

This led to a growing mistrust between Jamaica and the USA, and the relationship became cool.

The new positive relations between the two entities promise support for the security administration, training for security personnel and control of arms supplied and exported. It involves support for energy projects solar and wind, led by the US business sectors with Governmental backing.

It augurs well for the financial future of Jamaica, and the success of the new PNP Administration.

Note: the opinions expressed in Caribbean Journal Op-Eds are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Caribbean Journal.

Panama and Costa Rica’s Presidents Talk Drug Fight in Guatemala

via Caribbean Journal by admin on 3/25/12

Above: The meeting in Antigua (Photo: OP)

By the Caribbean Journal staff

Panama President Ricardo Martinelli and Costa Rica President Laura Chinchilla met in Antigua, Guatemala Saturday to analyze strategies on the fight against drug trafficking in the region.

The two leaders were joined by representatives from Honduras, Belize, El Salvador and Nicaragua at the meeting, which was hosted by Guatemalan President Otto Perez Molina.

A major point of discussion was Molina’s recent proposal to decriminalize drugs in a bit to reduce drug-related crime.

In a speech, Martinelli said Molina’s proposal was one that had opened a large debate that deserved discussion and analysis.

He also said it was important the Central America’s countries must discuss strategies to combat drug trafficking, with Panama continuing to invest resources in the fight.

Panama’s delegation included Foreign Minister Roberto Henriquez, Vice Minister of Security Alexander Garuz and Panamanian Ambassador to Guatemala Irving Centeno.

Op-Ed: Kathie Klarreich: Investigative Reporting on Haiti, by Haitians

via Caribbean Journal by admin on 3/25/12

By Kathie Klarreich
Op-Ed Contributor

For nearly two years, the battle cry over what is happening to the billions of dollars of aid money earmarked for Haiti’s reconstruction has resounded on the front pages of some of the world’s most prestigious papers — and on the airwaves — attempting to delineate where things went wrong.

These stories are important, and they need to be told. But not just by the foreign press, which is, at best, fickle – stories run at the whim and convenience of the editors. These stories need to be reported by Haitian journalists, who inherently understand what it means when aid money is misappropriated, squandered, or even worse — disappears.

Investigative reporting, however, is an anomaly in a country where transparency is anything but. Access to information, sources, statistics and, at times, seemingly banal information hinders daily reporting. These factors are exponentially more difficult for a reporter asking anything but the basics.

Over the past few decades, when reporters have investigated political and economic corruption, they’ve been targeted and killed, their assassins still at large. Older career reporters with the skill, education and experience to do hard-hitting investigations have either left the country, opened their own media, or opted for a higher-paying salary with an international non-governmental organization (NGO), the UN or the Haitian government.

The new crop of journalists is all but married to a daily routine which looks something like this: in the morning, a newsroom meeting (if there is one), where the editor (if there is one) leafs through a stack of press releases and decides who is going where and for how long (one reporter may be assigned to two or three stories). By mid-afternoon, the reporter returns and has just a few hours to write and record a script (often in both French and Creole) and insert the sound bites for the late afternoon/evening news. There is no time to do research, supporting or opposing interviews, or even to fact check.

The next day is a repeat. Reporters rarely have a chance to dig deeper, and when they do, it’s usually in the form of an interview, which limits the listener’s perspective. The vast majority of news in Haiti is delivered by radio (50 stations in the capital alone); there is only one daily newspaper, Le Nouvelliste, and the circulation is almost exclusively in the capital.

This is the environment I began working in when I started to teach investigative journalism as part of my Knight Fellowship in Haiti in July 2010. But now, 20 months later, reporters are beginning to understand what an investigation means, and are making a case to their newsroom editors to be allowed the time and resources they need to do investigations.

Knowing that these are two serious limiting factors, I reached out and got financial support from several non-profit organizations (the International Center for Journalists and International Media Support), and, along with colleague Jane Regan (Haiti Grassroots Watch), launched the Fund for Investigative Journalism in Haiti.

FIJH provides financial support and coaching to reporters whose investigations are accepted by a three-panel jury. Just this month, the first of the seven investigations by 13 journalists hit the airwaves. We’re hoping this has set a new bar for reporting.

An article by two Le Nouvelliste reporters (and reprinted in Caribbean Journal) explored the overall sanitation situation for the displaced.

Some 11,000 portable latrines were installed by the international community in tent camps after the earthquake.

Because there were so many NGOs financing the cleaning of these latrines, and each had its own budget, it was next to impossible to discern how much has been spent. What the journalists did discover, however, was that as these NGOs began to wind down their programs in Haiti, and as the number of displaced in camps dropped from 1.5 million to less than half a million, the funds for cleaning the latrines dried up. That still leaves more than 400,000 people without a place “to go.”

An investigation by Haiti Grassroots Watch reported on an Irish NGO, Concern Worldwide, which built 534 homes in a metropolitan suburb, each with an ecological toilet. Residents not only rejected these Urinary Diversion Toilets on the grounds that they were smelly and invited all kinds of unwelcome creatures, but they tore them up and dug holes to install flush toilets. The byproduct risks contaminating the ground water table.

Yet another investigation was done by three journalists who examined housing donated to residents in an area south of the capital which revealed that many of the $3,000 homes were either uninhabited, had been given to someone who had already received a home or were being rented.

These stories demonstrate that Haitians can, and should, take the lead in investigations. They know these stories better than anyone else, and are the best ones to tell them. They hope it will make organizations more accountable. They also hope that, eventually, investigative reporting will spread beyond the capital, and then beyond its own borders, to become the catalyst for an investigative fund in the Caribbean.

Kathie Klarreich developed the Fund for Investigative Journalism in Haiti. She has covered Haiti for major media organizations including the New York Times, National Public Radio and Time Magazine. She is also the author of a Haiti-based memoir: Madame Dread: A Tale of Love, Vodou and Civil Strife.

Note: the opinions expressed in Caribbean Journal Op-Eds are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Caribbean Journal.

Operation paws

via Puerto Rico News on 3/26/12

NEW YORK >> On a Sunday morning in March, the cavernous arrival hall at Terminal 8 at Kennedy International Airport was virtually deserted save for a cluster of people wearing white T-shirts with black "Sato Project" logos huddled near the cargo entrance.

Operation paws

via Puerto Rico Newswire on 3/26/12

... black "Sato Project" logos huddled near the cargo entrance. But when American Airlines Flight 648 from San Juan, Puerto Rico, touched down and a small, tanned woman wearing a white fedora and blue sweat pants emerged from customs, the group snapped ...

See more of Mike Nova's starred items ...

Get started with Google Reader

Atom Feed

Williams & Williams Launches New Sell Your Home Solution for Homeowners Nationwi...

via Puerto Rico Business News's Facebook Wall by Puerto Rico Business News on 3/26/12

Williams & Williams Launches New Sell Your Home Solution for Homeowners Nationwide - SYS-CON Media (press release)
Williams & Williams Launches New Sell Your Home Solution for Homeowners Nationwide - SYS-CON Media (press release)
Williams & Williams Launches New Sell Your Home Solution for Homeowners NationwideSYS-CON Media (press release)Williams & Williams has auctioned more than 65000 properties valued at over $7 Billion across all 50 states, DC and Puerto Rico. It's the only auction company to combine the proven effectiveness of live, at-the-property auctions with the global reach ...

Operation paws - Honolulu Star-Advertiser

via Puerto Rico Business News's Facebook Wall by Puerto Rico Business News on 3/26/12

Operation paws - Honolulu Star-Advertiser
Operation paws - Honolulu Star-Advertiser
Operation pawsHonolulu Star-AdvertiserThen she wiped her eyes, thanked her white-shirted entourage and got down to business: keeping tabs on the procession of crates streaming into the arrival hall. Inside were 17 satos — Puerto Rican slang for mongrels — 16 of which Christina Beckles ...

Get started with Google Reader

Atom feed

OPML file

Link | 10:50 AM 3/26/2012 | Jack Delano's Photos–NYT | Puerto Rico News - Archive Links | Puerto Rico News

Mike Nova - 10:54 AM -

+1'd on prnewslinks.blogspot.com

10:50 AM 3/26/2012 | Jack Delano's Photos–NYT | Puerto Rico News - Archive Links

Puerto Rico News - Archive Links. Jack Delano's Photos - NYT. Share · Puerto Rico News - Archive Links shared a link. A Masterwork Spanning 40 Years and One Island. lens.blogs.nytimes.com. The Far...

Mike Nova likes a link.

10:50 AM 3/26/2012 | Jack Delano's Photos–NYT | Puerto Rico News - Archive Links | Puerto Rico News

The Farm Security Administration sent Jack Delano on a side trip to Puerto Rico. A visit of "a few days" turned into a life's work.

10:50 AM 3/26/2012 | Jack Delano's Photos–NYT | Puerto Rico News - Archive Links

Link | 9:39 AM 3/26/2012 | Fotos de Hoy | Mike Nova's starred items

Mike Nova - 9:48 AM -

+1'd on prnewslinks.blogspot.com

9:39 AM 3/26/2012 | Fotos de Hoy | Mike Nova's starred items

Dentro de los temas que publico en su mayoría son fotos casuales donde la foto me encuentra a mí en vez de yo buscarla y bien pueden ser fotos de la ciudad, de mi casa o donde quiera que me encuentre ...

Mike Nova likes a link.

9:39 AM 3/26/2012 | Fotos de Hoy | Mike Nova's starred items | Puerto Rico News

The artist and producer Jose Marti (@Jose_Marti) has shot one picture a day for the past two years as part of his online project “Fotos de Hoy” (Photos of Today).

9:39 AM 3/26/2012 | Fotos de Hoy | Mike Nova's starred items

Mike Nova's starred items - 9:39 AM 3/26/2012

 

Taken with Instagram at Dos Hermanos Bridge

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/24/12

Taken with Instagram at Dos Hermanos Bridge

Puerto Rico: Life One Photo a Day

via Global Voices » Puerto Rico (U.S.) by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle on 2/10/12

The artist and producer Jose Marti (@Jose_Marti) has shot one picture a day for the past two years as part of his online project “Fotos de Hoy” (Photos of Today).

He explains:

Dentro de los temas que publico en su mayoría son fotos casuales donde la foto me encuentra a mí en vez de yo buscarla y bien pueden ser fotos de la ciudad, de mi casa o donde quiera que me encuentre por que en realidad lo importante es expresar algo sobre el momento, donde estoy, que estoy haciendo, etc. Ese es el elemento que me ha llevado ha constantemente publicar en Fotos de Hoy, el poder visualmente resumir semanas y diversas experiencias en un compilado accesible por internet.

They are mostly casual photos, where the photograph finds me instead of me looking for the photograph, and they may well be pictures of the city, my home or wherever it finds me because what is really important is to express something about the moment, where I am, what I'm doing, etc.. That is the element that has led me to constantly publish in “Photos of Today,” to be able to visually summarize weeks and diverse experiences that are accessible online.

I have selected some of his pictures of Old San Juan, the colonial city of the capital of San Juan, Puerto Rico (all photos are republished with his permission). You can follow his visual life daily at Fotos de Hoy.

City with a View.

San José Church.

The window.

Beach El Escambrón.

Fort El Morro.

Bar El Batey.

Luna Street.

Written by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle · comments (0)
Share: Donate · facebook · twitter · reddit · StumbleUpon · delicious · Instapaper

Taken with Instagram at Cuartel De Ballaja

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/12/12

Taken with Instagram at Cuartel De Ballaja

#minimal (Taken with Instagram at Froyo World)

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/24/12

#minimal (Taken with Instagram at Froyo World)

Taken with Instagram at La Catedral De San Juan

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/25/12

Taken with Instagram at La Catedral De San Juan

5:30am cndo salí a correr (Taken with Instagram at Viejo San...

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/17/12

5:30am cndo salí a correr (Taken with Instagram at Viejo San Juan)

Taken with instagram

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/17/12

Taken with instagram

@ar0n :) (Taken with instagram)

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/19/12

@ar0n :) (Taken with instagram)

Taken with Instagram at Calle San Sebastian

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/22/12

Taken with Instagram at Calle San Sebastian

See more of Mike Nova's starred items ...

Get started with Google Reader

Atom Feed

Mike Nova's starred items

Taken with Instagram at Iglesia San Jose

via Fotos de Hoy on 3/23/12

Taken with Instagram at Iglesia San Jose

*

 

Puerto Rico: 365 Photographs

via Global Voices » Puerto Rico (U.S.) by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle on 2/25/12

The photographer José Rodrigo Madera [es] shot one photograph a day during two years, as part of his project “365.” His photos were only visible to his friends on Facebook, until the magazine Revista Cruce [es] published 20 of them for everyone to enjoy.

José Rodrigo Madera describes himself as:

…fotógrafo de profesión y nunca estudió Artes. Estudió Comunicaciones en la Universidad Interamericana y quiere enseñar fotografía. Cree en el matrimonio y se considera de izquierda. Dedica todo su trabajo al hombre de su vida, Emil Alejandro, y a la mujer de su vida, Penelope.

…a professional photographer who never studied Art. Studied Communications at the Universidad Interamericana, and wants to teach photography. Believes in marriage and considers himself a Leftist. Dedicates all of his work to the man of his life, Emil Alejandro, and the woman who is the love of his life, Penelope.

Here is a selection of some of his beautiful photographs.*

Pitcher: 1. Individual who, for one reason or another, does not follow through with an obligation or commitment proposed by himself. 2. Person who does not return calls.

Watch.

Child in red pants.

Breakfast.

Agostini prepares for a shot.

Ghost cloud.

Sorely laughs.

Spiral.

Eye.

The mother of "azul."

*All photographs are republished with the permission of the photographer and Revista Cruce. The captions have been translated from the original (except some that were English).

Written by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle · comments (0)
Share: Donate · facebook · twitter · reddit · StumbleUpon · delicious · Instapaper

Puerto Rico: “Ilegal” death of Filiberto Ojeda Ríos

via Global Voices » Puerto Rico (U.S.) by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle on 3/6/12

The Center for Investigative Journalism has posted the Civil Rights Commission's report [es] on the death of the pro-independence leader Filiberto Ojeda Ríos, killed by the Federal Investigation Bureau (FBI) on September 23, 2005.

Written by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle · comments (0)
Share: Donate · facebook · twitter · reddit · StumbleUpon · delicious · Instapaper

Puerto Rico: Gender and Causality

via Global Voices » Puerto Rico (U.S.) by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle on 3/6/12

Guillermo Rebollo Gil offers a legal analysis [es] on the media framing of the murder of women victims of intimate partner violence.

Written by Firuzeh Shokooh Valle · comments (0)
Share: Donate · facebook · twitter · reddit · StumbleUpon · delicious · Instapaper

Op-Ed: Political Suspense in Jamaica

via Caribbean Journal by admin on 3/25/12

By Ramesh Sujanani
Op-Ed Contributor

It is now the eve of parish council elections in Jamaica. This time it is concurrent with the General Elections in which the PNP (People’s National Party) surprisingly won a mandate over the JLP (Jamaica Labour Party) with skill and political management.

The new government is headed by Prime Minister Portia Simpson-Miller, a seasoned leader and experienced member of Parliament, ably assisted by Peter Philips the new Minister of Finance..

As the Government has just completed a review with the IMF for new banking arrangements, the results and effects of which have not yet been put to the people, it is expected that there will be stringent economic measures placed on life in Jamaica. It is clear that these measures will not be announced until after elections, when it would not make any serious changes to the balance of power. Announcements before would easily upset the status quo.

The state of the economic ratings of the country will decline, and we expect the exchange rate of the Jamaican dollar to erode.

But it is not unusual for many countries to be in financial problems at this time. In fact, many large countries are carrying serious budget and cash deficits, and it is up to their trading partners to work this out with them.

As for smaller countries, they have to pull in their belt and work solutions, with a tourism product among other solutions, possibly with a mentor: Jamaica has to rely on its neighbor the United States.

But some good seems to have happened to Jamaica lately, as is evident by conversations with the State Department. Its relationship with Jamaica now is very sound and positive.

In the recent past, Jamaica’s Security Positions, Police, Military and other Authorized Security apparatus were in confrontation mode over the “Dudus” affair, with Christopher “Dudus” Coke being the head of criminal activities in Kingston’s Tivoli Gardens and around Jamaica.

The crime situation in Jamaica, with the influence of drug trafficking, arms imports, human trafficking, and consequent criminal activity, was very serious; the Authorities in the US wanted Dudus to be extradited and stand trial in America on drug and other felonies.

Jamaica, on the other hand, under the JLP government of the past, did not want to let him go, for whatever reason.

This led to a growing mistrust between Jamaica and the USA, and the relationship became cool.

The new positive relations between the two entities promise support for the security administration, training for security personnel and control of arms supplied and exported. It involves support for energy projects solar and wind, led by the US business sectors with Governmental backing.

It augurs well for the financial future of Jamaica, and the success of the new PNP Administration.

Note: the opinions expressed in Caribbean Journal Op-Eds are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Caribbean Journal.

Panama and Costa Rica’s Presidents Talk Drug Fight in Guatemala

via Caribbean Journal by admin on 3/25/12

Above: The meeting in Antigua (Photo: OP)

By the Caribbean Journal staff

Panama President Ricardo Martinelli and Costa Rica President Laura Chinchilla met in Antigua, Guatemala Saturday to analyze strategies on the fight against drug trafficking in the region.

The two leaders were joined by representatives from Honduras, Belize, El Salvador and Nicaragua at the meeting, which was hosted by Guatemalan President Otto Perez Molina.

A major point of discussion was Molina’s recent proposal to decriminalize drugs in a bit to reduce drug-related crime.

In a speech, Martinelli said Molina’s proposal was one that had opened a large debate that deserved discussion and analysis.

He also said it was important the Central America’s countries must discuss strategies to combat drug trafficking, with Panama continuing to invest resources in the fight.

Panama’s delegation included Foreign Minister Roberto Henriquez, Vice Minister of Security Alexander Garuz and Panamanian Ambassador to Guatemala Irving Centeno.

Op-Ed: Kathie Klarreich: Investigative Reporting on Haiti, by Haitians

via Caribbean Journal by admin on 3/25/12

By Kathie Klarreich
Op-Ed Contributor

For nearly two years, the battle cry over what is happening to the billions of dollars of aid money earmarked for Haiti’s reconstruction has resounded on the front pages of some of the world’s most prestigious papers — and on the airwaves — attempting to delineate where things went wrong.

These stories are important, and they need to be told. But not just by the foreign press, which is, at best, fickle – stories run at the whim and convenience of the editors. These stories need to be reported by Haitian journalists, who inherently understand what it means when aid money is misappropriated, squandered, or even worse — disappears.

Investigative reporting, however, is an anomaly in a country where transparency is anything but. Access to information, sources, statistics and, at times, seemingly banal information hinders daily reporting. These factors are exponentially more difficult for a reporter asking anything but the basics.

Over the past few decades, when reporters have investigated political and economic corruption, they’ve been targeted and killed, their assassins still at large. Older career reporters with the skill, education and experience to do hard-hitting investigations have either left the country, opened their own media, or opted for a higher-paying salary with an international non-governmental organization (NGO), the UN or the Haitian government.

The new crop of journalists is all but married to a daily routine which looks something like this: in the morning, a newsroom meeting (if there is one), where the editor (if there is one) leafs through a stack of press releases and decides who is going where and for how long (one reporter may be assigned to two or three stories). By mid-afternoon, the reporter returns and has just a few hours to write and record a script (often in both French and Creole) and insert the sound bites for the late afternoon/evening news. There is no time to do research, supporting or opposing interviews, or even to fact check.

The next day is a repeat. Reporters rarely have a chance to dig deeper, and when they do, it’s usually in the form of an interview, which limits the listener’s perspective. The vast majority of news in Haiti is delivered by radio (50 stations in the capital alone); there is only one daily newspaper, Le Nouvelliste, and the circulation is almost exclusively in the capital.

This is the environment I began working in when I started to teach investigative journalism as part of my Knight Fellowship in Haiti in July 2010. But now, 20 months later, reporters are beginning to understand what an investigation means, and are making a case to their newsroom editors to be allowed the time and resources they need to do investigations.

Knowing that these are two serious limiting factors, I reached out and got financial support from several non-profit organizations (the International Center for Journalists and International Media Support), and, along with colleague Jane Regan (Haiti Grassroots Watch), launched the Fund for Investigative Journalism in Haiti.

FIJH provides financial support and coaching to reporters whose investigations are accepted by a three-panel jury. Just this month, the first of the seven investigations by 13 journalists hit the airwaves. We’re hoping this has set a new bar for reporting.

An article by two Le Nouvelliste reporters (and reprinted in Caribbean Journal) explored the overall sanitation situation for the displaced.

Some 11,000 portable latrines were installed by the international community in tent camps after the earthquake.

Because there were so many NGOs financing the cleaning of these latrines, and each had its own budget, it was next to impossible to discern how much has been spent. What the journalists did discover, however, was that as these NGOs began to wind down their programs in Haiti, and as the number of displaced in camps dropped from 1.5 million to less than half a million, the funds for cleaning the latrines dried up. That still leaves more than 400,000 people without a place “to go.”

An investigation by Haiti Grassroots Watch reported on an Irish NGO, Concern Worldwide, which built 534 homes in a metropolitan suburb, each with an ecological toilet. Residents not only rejected these Urinary Diversion Toilets on the grounds that they were smelly and invited all kinds of unwelcome creatures, but they tore them up and dug holes to install flush toilets. The byproduct risks contaminating the ground water table.

Yet another investigation was done by three journalists who examined housing donated to residents in an area south of the capital which revealed that many of the $3,000 homes were either uninhabited, had been given to someone who had already received a home or were being rented.

These stories demonstrate that Haitians can, and should, take the lead in investigations. They know these stories better than anyone else, and are the best ones to tell them. They hope it will make organizations more accountable. They also hope that, eventually, investigative reporting will spread beyond the capital, and then beyond its own borders, to become the catalyst for an investigative fund in the Caribbean.

Kathie Klarreich developed the Fund for Investigative Journalism in Haiti. She has covered Haiti for major media organizations including the New York Times, National Public Radio and Time Magazine. She is also the author of a Haiti-based memoir: Madame Dread: A Tale of Love, Vodou and Civil Strife.

Note: the opinions expressed in Caribbean Journal Op-Eds are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Caribbean Journal.

Operation paws

via Puerto Rico News on 3/26/12

NEW YORK >> On a Sunday morning in March, the cavernous arrival hall at Terminal 8 at Kennedy International Airport was virtually deserted save for a cluster of people wearing white T-shirts with black "Sato Project" logos huddled near the cargo entrance.

Operation paws

via Puerto Rico Newswire on 3/26/12

... black "Sato Project" logos huddled near the cargo entrance. But when American Airlines Flight 648 from San Juan, Puerto Rico, touched down and a small, tanned woman wearing a white fedora and blue sweat pants emerged from customs, the group snapped ...

See more of Mike Nova's starred items ...

Get started with Google Reader

Atom Feed

Link | 3:02 AM 3/26/2012

3:02 AM 3/26/2012

Puerto Rico News. "Puerto Rico News" bundle created by Mike Nova. A bundle is a collection of blogs and websites hand-selected by your friend on a particular topic or interest. You can keep ...