Tico Times Feb. 9, 2007 - appraisal-educ
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Tico Times Feb. 9, 2007 - appraisal-educ
¢600 www.ticotimes.net Friday, February 9, 2007 – San José, Costa Rica Since 1956 NEWS LOOK BOTH WAYS New Mayors Begin Tackling Priorities Photo by Mónica Quesada Some of the 81 municipal leaders who took office this week discussed their goals and priorities with The Tico Times. Page 8 First Charges Filed in Alcatel Corruption Case A former Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) board member has been charged with taking bribes from the multinational telecom firm Alcatel. Page 4 BUSINESS Legal Action Stalls Assembly’s CAFTA Debate Legislative deliberations on the controversial U.S. free-trade agreement have been delayed by a lawsuit filed by the opposition parties. Page 12 WEEKEND Costa Rica’s nearly 1 million students headed back to school Wednesday, and Transport Minister Karla González, above with 6th grade student Luis Marín of the Rincón Grande School in the western San José suburb of Pavas, turned out to tout the government’s new efforts to make sure they got there safely. The ministry plans to distribute 4,000 vests for crossing guards and 11,000 reflective stickers for students’ backpacks this year in hopes of reducing the number of traffic accidents involving minors. Love is on the Air With Dave and Margie DJs Dave “the Dude” Scott and Margie Flaum, recently married, are teaming up in the studio with a morning show to debut Valentine’s Day. Page W1 Fires Prompt Safety Overhaul By Leland Baxter-Neal Tico Times Staff In the wake of two fatal chemical fires in late 2006, the government has been scrambling to get a handle on chemical and fuel safety in Costa Rica. But as officials work to prepare new regulations and legislation, it appears that the problem of hazardous waste disposal will remain unresolved for the time being. Because Costa Rica’s government has no safe containment site for chemical waste, the disposal of such substances is often left to the discretion of the companies involved. Lax supervision means waste leaks into Costa Rica’s environment, and a lack of options has meant that when the government is forced to deal with hazardous materials after spills or other emergencies, it has resorted to sending them to landfills. Officials, however, say the Health Ministry is now shying away from this practice. Costa Rica’s most recent and possibly Japan’s Gifts Raise Eyebrows By Dave Sherwood Tico Times Staff Toshihisa Miyamoto bowed ever so slightly from the hip as he greeted Virgita Vargas, the principal of La California Elementary School, in the shadow of Juan Santamaría International Airport in Alajuela, west of San José. On the wall beside him, an engraved plaque detailed the generous donation of the Japanese Embassy to the school: new classrooms, a refrigerator for the kitchen, a fresh coat of paint for the walls, new roofs and ceramic tile floors to hold down dust in the dry months. “The children are so excited. Now there are enough rooms for all the students to attend school at once, and everything is so much cleaner. We have a new sense of pride in our school,” Vargas said. Miyamoto, undersecretary of economy Page 3 worst-ever chemical disaster erupted Dec. 13, 2006, when an explosion at a chemical storage plant outside the Caribbean port of Moín quickly became a raging fire with flames billowing stories high. A massive black cloud of toxic smoke was visible for miles around and across the country on special live news coverage. Two workers died from burns sustained during the inferno (TT, Dec. 15, 2006). Several weeks earlier, on Oct. 29, two siblings ages 5 and 13 burned to death in the backseat of their mother’s car after a gas spill at the Shell station where they were filling up Page 11 Onlookers Scarce At Villalobos Trial By Leland Baxter-Neal Tico Times Staff The anticipated trial of financier Osvaldo Villalobos got under way this week with thousands of affected investors not showing up. Of an estimated 6,000-plus people, mostly North Americans, Europeans and wealthy Costa Ricans, who say they lost between thousands and millions of dollars in the Page 2 THE NICA TIMES Tourism Director Envisions Future Nicaragua’s new director of tourism discuses his vision for the future in an exclusive interview with The Nica Times. EVERY WEEK Editorial 16 Letters 17 Cartoon 17 Classifieds 18 Weekend Horoscope W4 Exploring CR W8 Fishing Report W12 Movies W13 Calendar W14 Business & Real Estate 12 Crossword 23 Weather 23 48 PAGES 2 | NEWS | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 Defense Promises to Return Funds Trade Minister Announces Negotiators for E.U. Pact Page 1 Foreign Trade Minister Marco Vinicio Ruiz announced Wednesday that a team of three Costa Ricans, two of whom helped negotiate a controversial trade pact with the United States in 2003, has been chosen to represent the country in negotiations for a Central American-European Union Association Agreement. Chief negotiator Roberto Echandi – who is also Costa Rica’s ambassador to the European Union – as well as adjunct negotiators Cristian Guillermet, representing the Foreign Relations Ministry, and Fernando Ocampo, representing the Foreign Trade Ministry (COMEX), will work with representatives of other Central American countries in the coming months to prepare for the first E.U. meetings, expected to begin mid-year, Ruiz told reporters following President Oscar Arias’ weekly Cabinet meeting. Asked why he chose Echandi and Ocampo, who served on the often-criticized negotiating team of the Central American Free-Trade Agreement (CAFTA) – activists at anti-CAFTA marches often claim the pact was negotiated “behind the backs of Costa Ricans” and that negotiators ceded too much ground – Ruiz said they’re simply the most qualified people for the job. “It’s not a political team. It’s a technical team,” he said, adding later that, “we need the best people there, and these are the best people.” However, the government plans to “learn from the experiences we had (with CAFTA) and involve the ministries a great deal” in the negotiation process, as well as social groups, Ruiz said. The Foreign Ministry and COMEX will work with ministers to ensure the sectors under their leadership are represented, and will coordinate with the Planning Ministry to ensure that aid or cooperation the European Union offers during negotiations meets Costa Rica’s needs. –Katherine Stanley defunct investment operation known as “The Brothers” – allegedly run by Osvaldo and his fugitive brother Luis Enrique Villalobos – only a few were present at the start of the trial Monday. At least two fell asleep during the dry, initial proceedings. At its most crowded, a sprinkling of fewer than 20 onlookers peppered the 408seat, improvised courtroom in the Miguel Blanco Quirós auditorium in the Judicial Investigation Police (OIJ) building in downtown San José. The auditorium was outfitted for the trial in anticipation of a multitude of investors, many of whom had their life savings invested when the Villalobos brothers closed up shop in 2002. A tired-looking and soft-spoken Osvaldo was present at the trial this week, but will not testify until the end of proceedings, according to his defense team. He declined to talk to The Tico Times. Observers were nearly outnumbered by the judges and lawyers until the handful of attorneys representing private cases added to the public prosecution’s case (known as querellas) one by one announced they had come to an agreement with the defendant, dropped their charges against Osvaldo and left the building. By the end of the day, government prosecutors Walter Espinoza and Ilem Meléndez were joined only by Ewald Acuña – a well-known lawyer representing hundreds of investors in their claims against the Villalobos brothers. Whether the lawyers’ clients caved to the months of pressure exerted by Villalobos supporters on those who filed personal fraud claims (TT, Jan. 19) is unknown. But Osvaldo’s defense team announced it would not seek legal fees from anyone who drops their querellas, as is the right under Costa Rican law of any person who has a lawsuit filed against them that is later withdrawn. The defense also may have told the lawyers what it told The Tico Times this week: once Osvaldo is cleared, everybody will be paid back their original investments. “For us, the withdrawal of the querellas means that people have realized that there is no crime here, and when this ends, they will get their money back,” said Rodrigo Araya, one of Osvaldo’s attorneys. How? With what they say is $12 million in bank accounts currently frozen by the government – significantly larger than the figure of $7 million always maintained by Judicial Branch officials – and by going back to the same business as before. According to the defense, the government can only seize the frozen funds if they convict Osvaldo of money laundering. “When (the money) is unfrozen, these people who have been working legally are going to continue working to continue producing and to pay down to the last penny,” Araya said. He did not explain how Osvaldo would earn enough to pay the astronomically large outstanding debt, only that the Villalobos brothers had “many different businesses.” It has never been clear what The Brothers did with the money to produce the high returns paid out, and some have said there was no way a legitimate operation – which The Brothers claimed to be – could show such soaring profits. Empty Seats: The anticipated trial of Osvaldo Villalobos began this week with a smallerthan-expected audience. Officials opened the trial in an auditorium, but only a few investors showed up to see the proceedings. Mónica Quesada | Tico Times The Storied History Osvaldo is facing charges of money laundering, fraud and illegal financial intermediation – for which he could get up to 36 years in prison if convicted on all charges – in connection with The Brothers, which for more than 15 years paid monthly interest payments of 2.8-3% of investments, which in the later years were accepted only in sums of $10,000 or more. Though it was run out of the same office where Osvaldo operated a money exchange business, Ofinter S.A., Osvaldo’s defense insists their client had nothing to do with the investment service run by Luis Enrique. “We are going to prove that there is not one criminal act that has been committed by Osvaldo Villalobos. Osvaldo Villalobos’ business was always a legal, decent business, a business that always fulfilled its obligations with its clients. We believe the Prosecutor’s Office is mistaken,” Araya said. “Ofinter never received investor money. Its commercial operations were the purchase and sale of foreign exchange and changing checks.” The Costa Rican government began investigating The Brothers – which was not regulated by financial authorities – in 2002 and raided their offices in July of that year as part of a joint investigation with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, who believed a Canadian drug trafficking ring laundered at least $300,000 through the Villalobos operation (TT, July 12, 2002). The Brothers continued to operate after the raid, and accepted more deposits until October, when Enrique vanished, allegedly with as much as $1 billion of investors’ money (TT, Sept. 24, 2004). Osvaldo, who stayed behind, was arrested shortly after and held in prison and house arrest for nearly two years before being released (TT, April 1, 2005). Court Proceedings In the spacious auditorium, the trial began Monday morning with prosecutors Espinoza and Meléndez taking turns reading the government’s accusation in its entirety – a monotonous process that involved citing thousands of checks, check numbers, bank account numbers, dates, businesses and shell companies allegedly used by the Villalobos brothers in their financial operation. The reading took the entire first day of proceedings, and continued into the second. Contact Us While lead prosecutor Espinoza refused to comment on the case, the government’s accusation called The Brothers “a family business,” and a described a “circular system of receiving and paying” investor funds, similar to a pyramid or Ponzi scheme. The prosecution alleged Osvaldo and Luis Enrique used Ofinter and 22 other corporations allegedly linked to the Villalobos brothers to channel funds through different bank accounts and investments, hide the origin of the money and eventually use the same money to pay investors’ monthly interest. The Brothers’ investments did not produce nearly enough to account for the operation’s high returns, and investors were given supposed guarantee checks that in reality were linked to a bank account with less than $5,000 and which had been inactive since 1997, the prosecution alleged. The prosecutors’ accusation was followed by Acuña’s, which wrapped up Tuesday afternoon. José Miguel Villalobos (no relation), a former Justice Minister and attorney hired by the United Concerned Citizens and Residents (UCCR) – an association of Villalobos brothers’ supporters – was intermittently present at the trial, and said he was cooperating with the defense team but would have no part in the trial. The UCCR attorney was reportedly paid more than $100,000 from funds collected from UCCR members to look out for the group’s interests, according to a former UCCR member, and had initially talked of suing the Costa Rican government (TT, Feb. 7, 2003). Wednesday morning the defense made their opening statements, asserting Osvaldo’s innocence and insisting he had nothing to do with The Brothers. Defense lawyers also challenged the hundreds of civil suits and querellas filed by investors with Acuña, alleging procedural errors. According to defense lawyer Rodrigo Araya, many of the claimants incorrectly processed their power of attorney, and therefore their suits should be dismissed. Trial proceedings were suspended until today as judges considered the motions. The trial is presided over by lead judge Isabel Porras, and judges Carlos Pérez and Manuel Rojas, and Jeaneth Villareal serves as a supplementary reserve judge to replace any of the three if needed. The prosecution has called 57 witnesses, while the defense has called 60, and the trial is estimated to last between four and six months. Trucker License Requirements Tightened after Recent Deaths The freewheeling truck driving industry in Costa Rica, which has long recruited drivers with little or no experience on the road, may be coming to a screeching halt soon, according to a statement by the Ministry of Public Works and Transport. The Ministry announced that it will once again require prospective trailer truck drivers to have five years of experience or more before obtaining the necessary permits to handle the big rigs, according to a report in the daily La Nación. The process will also require a test that proves applicants capable of handling the trucks, which outweigh anything on the road and intimidate, and often endanger, other drivers. The recent announcement came after a number of highly publicized accidents involving young truck drivers on Costa Rica’s notoriously dangerous roads. Currently licensed truck drivers will also be required to take a test before they can renew their permits – allowing for a full “cleansing” of the system, according to the La Nación report. –Tico Times Apdo. 4632-1000 | San José, Costa Rica | Tel.: (506) 258-1558 | Fax. (506) 233-6378 U.S. Residents send mail to: The Tico Times SJO 717 | P.O. Box 025331 Miami, Fl. 33102-5331 | E-mail: info@ticotimes.net Advertising: display@ticotimes.net | classified@ticotimes.net | Subscriptions: subscriptions@ticotimes.net THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 | NEWS | 3 Critics Skeptical of Japanese Generosity Page 1 and aid for the Japanese Embassy in Costa Rica, blushed and smiled, then bowed again. On a recent press trip, this school was one stop of several in the Central Valley designed to demonstrate Japanese generosity to the people of Costa Rica. In San Isidro de Grecia, municipality water officials requested and received a grant of $77,000 from the Japanese Embassy, allowing them to build an aqueduct – known locally as the Tanque Japonesa – holding 500,000 cubic liters of water and ensuring hundreds of residents clean, safe drinking water. In Zarcero, Japanese support allowed local organic farmers to build a co-op that markets more than 30 varieties of fruits and vegetables from the region. Since 1989, the Japanese have donated more than $17 million in community aid projects, and more than $6.5 million in cultural projects – including the purchase of instruments for the Costa Rican symphony orchestra, high-tech Japanese equipment endoscopes for hospitals and even chemical pesticides to help fight the spread of dengue fever. During the past few months, Japanese generosity has reached an almost feverish pace, with press releases announcing new projects flowing from the embassy like river water in Costa Rica’s green season. Which begs the question: Why? Mauricio Álvarez, of the Costa Rican Federation for Environmental Conservation (FECON), is skeptical, especially since the recent upturn in aid projects seems to coincide with a critical juncture in the future of whaling in the world’s oceans – an upcoming vote of the International Whaling Commission in June on whether or not to resume commercial hunting. Though whaling is outlawed worldwide except for scientific purposes, the Japanese have long insisted “sustainable whaling,” causes no harm to global populations – much to the chagrin of international environmental group Greenpeace, which helped orchestrate the original ban in 1986. “Every time the issue of whale hunting comes up, investment in the country from Japan increases,” Álvarez said. COSMETIC PLASTIC SURGERY ROSENSTOCK LIEBERMAN Helping Out Communities: Japanese Embassy representative Toshihisa Miyamoto, left, inspects a water tank funded by his government. Last month, a week before the Japanese press tour, national and international environmental groups made headlines in downtown San José’s Culture Plaza, toting a lifesize inflatable whale and urging the government to oppose Japan’s plans to resume commercial whaling (TT, Jan. 26). Last week, Broad Front legislator José Merino filed a lawsuit against the Environment and Energy Ministry (MINAE) in hopes of forcing the government’s hand on the matter. Marine biologist Damián Martínez warned that Costa Rica has been behind on its dues to the whaling commission for 20 years, and must pay up in order to regain voting status and stop Japan from hunting whales. “There are towns in the Osa Peninsula that survive on the tourism whales bring to the area, and these migratory whales could become the victims of hunting if Japan’s plan goes through,” he said. Costa Rica is among the top destinations in the world for whale-watchers. Since the whaling commission declared the worldwide commercial whale-hunting ban, Japan has been intensely lobbying smaller countries – often with generous gifts Ministry, Japan’s generosity is nothing new or unusual – the country has granted millions of dollars in aid to both private and public institutions in the country since 1989. “Even after this region became less and less important strategically in the world, Japan’s program of support did not change. You can’t say the same for other countries,” said Circe Villanueva, director of international cooperation for the ministry. Villanueva said the ministry has yet to compile international cooperation statistics for 2006, but she said Japan’s program, while perhaps up a little, hasn’t wavered in years. Asked by The Tico Times to put Japan’s generosity in perspective, Villanueva pointed out that not all embassy aid programs are as well organized and publicized as that of Japan’s, and thus they often go uncounted, making country-by-country comparisons difficult. She did, however, affirm that Japan’s “program of cooperation is among the most important in our country.” According to Suzuki, the program – the same one which helped bring roofs and floor tiles to the school in Alajuela – will remain open to further applications from Costa Ricans, regardless of the outcome of any whaling commission vote. Last week, as the group of reporters and Japanese officials filed out of the newly remodeled school building, principal Vargas stopped in front of a freshly painted map of the world, another new edition to a school so desperately in need of attention. She pointed to Japan – a mere speck near the bottom right-hand corner of the big, colorful map – and smiled at Miyamoto and the delegates from the Japanese Embassy. “It’s a small country, but also very big,” Vargas said. Stay Downtown in the Heart of San José - Not 10 Miles Away! 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Álvarez said such gifts are not so subtle, influencing both politicians and public opinion. “These investments by the Japanese government are far more important than the influence that Greenpeace can have, or any other environmental group,” he said. “Obviously there has been some pressure – and it wouldn’t be the first time that’s happened.” Álvarez cites other cases in Central America, including Guatemala in 2005 and more recently Nicaragua, where a similar skirmish ensued last year when Greenpeace campaigner Milko Schvartzman accused that countries’ fisheries director, Miguel Marenco, of being “an employee of Japan” and using his influence to sway a Nicaraguan vote in favor of whale hunting (NT, April 7, 2006). While the allegations eventually fizzled and no such innuendos ever proven, Nicaragua did indeed vote against the whale ban, leaving international environmental groups fuming. Yasuhisa Suzuki, advisor to the Japanese Embassy in San José, acknowledged his country’s interest in whaling in international waters. “Yes, we are in favor of hunting whales. But we are not saying hunt them to extinction, we are in favor of sustainability,” he said, insisting that Japan’s intent is to fish only for abundant species of whales. He denied the issue has anything to do with his country’s well-known international aid program. “We owe much of the infrastructure of Japan to the United States. They don’t need the help, so we’re helping other countries to develop – we’re simply returning the favor paid to us after World War II. This is a longstanding program,” he said. According to Costa Rica’s Foreign Reservations 523-1000 Ext. 451 4 | NEWS | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 Alcatel Case Advances, Finland Case Delayed By Katherine Stanley Tico Times Staff After more than two years investigating various former public officials accused of receiving kickbacks in connection with a government telecommunications contract, prosecutors have made their first formal charges. Hernán Bravo, a former member of the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) board of directors, has been formally accused of accepting approximately $1.05 million from multinational telecommunications firm Alcatel in 2001, according to the daily Al Día. The charges were filed Jan. 23 before a judge from San José’s Second Circuit Court by the Adjunct Prosecutor’s Office for Economic Crimes. Additionally, Bravo has been ordered to pay the government $1.08 million, the daily reported. According to the Prosecutor’s Office, Alcatel’s regional representatives channeled funds to Bravo and other officials to ensure Alcatel would receive a $149 million contract to operate 400,000 GSM cellular lines to the state-run ICE, which has a monopoly on telecommunications. Other government officials under investigation in the case, which came to light in 2004 after the daily La Nación and other media published reports about the alleged kickbacks, include ex-President Miguel Angel Rodríguez (1998-2002). In total, former Alcatel officials are accused of distribut- U.S. INCOME TAX SPECIAL OFFER: $35 + tax Mon./Fri. $40 + tax Fri./Sun. David G. Housman, Attorney & C.P.A. Specializing in all matters and I.R.S. problems for U.S. Taxpayers residing abroad. 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Legal proceedings against Alcatel’s former senior vice-president for Latin America, Christian Sapsizian, are under way in the United States, where Alcatel – now AlcatelLucent – is a publicly traded company. Sapsizian is one of the former Alcatel officials accused of paying bribes to Costa Rican officials (TT, Dec. 8, 2006). Other news in the case came this week when ICE announced it has decided to end its contract with Alcatel two years early, assuming operation of the 400,000 lines – an option stipulated in the original contract in the case that ICE is not satisfied with Alcatel’s service. Though part of this decision stemmed from widespread problems with coverage in the areas for which Alcatel is responsible, the daily La Nación reported, ICE president Pedro Pablo Quirós said the corruption allegations “weighed heavily” in the final decision. The decision came days after the Ethics Branch of the Government Attorney’s Office asked the Second Circuit Court to increase an embargo on Alcatel’s services from $9 million to $17.81 million. The Government Attorney’s Office requested the $9 million embargo in December 2005, but Alcatel made an $8.7 million bank deposit last November to free itself from the restriction. ICE officials then began evaluating the possibility of purchasing 200,000 additional cellular lines from the company, a step the Attorney’s Office strongly opposes, according to La Nación. Costa Rica ran out of GSM lines last October. Meanwhile, the governments of Costa Rica and Finland have accused each other of delaying the other corruption investigation that involves ex-President Calderón. The case involves allegations that Calderón and other public officials received substantial “commissions” in connection with a $39.5 million purchase of medical equipment from Finnish company Instrumentarium by Costa Rica’s Social Security System (Caja). According to La Nación, Costa Rican Prosecutor Andrea Murillo says her Finnish counterparts have not responded to three requests sent more than a year ago for information about companies involved in the transaction. Poti Kari, administrative and consular attaché for the Finnish Embassy in Nicaragua, said the embassy received the requests and sent them to the appropriate authorities in early 2005, but has not received any response from Finland. The complaints go both ways. The daily reported that Finnish Police Chief Tapio Kalliokoski has said Finland’s investigation of Instrumentarium, now a holding of General Electric, has not advanced at all because the Costa Rican Prosecutor’s Office hasn’t sent crucial information Finnish authorities requested in early 2006. Murillo told La Nación the reason for that delay is that Finnish authorities did not authenticate the signatures properly, a step she called “indispensable.” •Have you lost your teeth? THEN YOU NEED DENTAL IMPLANTS DR. STEVEN KOGEL CLINICA GRUNHAUS San José downtown (TOTALLY RENOVATED) Periodontal and Implant Dentistry Dr. Ilan Grunhaus Z. D.D.S. •One of the 3 specialists in Implantology in C.R •Member of the American Academy of Osseointegration. •With modern dentistry, even if you lost one or all your teeth, it is possible to have again an excellent smile and chewing function. Ph: (506) 257-9145 257-8632 E-mail: igzdental@racsa.co.cr Ave. 2 – 4, Street 38 P.O. 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The airline now has seven flights weekly to Costa Rica from Spain: six with layovers in either Guatemala or Panama and one direct flight. In June, it will add three direct flights per week between Madrid and San José. These new flights will be serviced by Airbus A340-600 aircrafts with capacity for 232 passengers. Iberia announced this decision Feb. 2 at the International Tourism Fair (FITUR) in Madrid. Representatives from ICT, along with those from the National Tourism Chamber (CANATUR) attended the fair. Their goals included attracting European airlines to fly here to regain tourists lost when the Spanish airline Air Madrid shut down late last year (TT, Feb. 2). Tourism Minister Carlos Benavides expressed “enormous satisfaction” over Iberia’s decision, which he said, “demonstrates the enormous trust in the growth of European tourism to Costa Rica,” according to the statement. –Tico Times President Oscar Arias this week criticized Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega for claiming that this country has an army. On Saturday, Ortega, explaining why Nicaragua should not destroy its remaining SAM-7 missiles, said that “we have armies throughout Central America, including Costa Rica, which has a very powerful force they call the National Police, for which reason Nicaragua won’t keep disarming itself while neighboring countries have more powerful air forces,” according to wire service AFP. Arias called this suggestion “completely false.” Costa Rica officially abolished its army in 1948. “It makes no sense to confuse a civil police force for the protection of our citizens, with a military army,” Arias told the daily La Nación. The President, who received a Nobel Peace Prize in 1987 during his first presidency, said Central America should aim to become the world’s first demilitarized region. Ortega made his statement after Nicaraguan legislators from the opposition Liberal Constitutional Party (PLC) and – February 9, 2007 | NEWS | 5 Liberal Nicaraguan Alliance (ALN) introduced a bill that calls for the destruction of the weapons – something the United States has long requested as part of its war against terrorism. Ortega indicated that as long as other Central American countries continue expanding their armed forces, “the Sandinista government will buy new rockets,” AFP reported. –Tico Times James Brohl, C.P.A. & M.B.A. 5714 U.S. INCOME TAX U.S. GAAP Accounting & Business Consulting Providing U.S. Tax return preparation (including back reporting or other filing issues), Accounting Services and Business Consulting $ 39 Hotel Dunn Inn Monte Campana ROOM SPECIAL 36225 Friends • Food • Drink $20 T BESAS!! 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(The reporter, Ronald Moya, was among the journalists who covered priest Ronald Vargas’ high-profile case.) A judge ordered Moya, along with fellow reporter Freddy Parrales and the newspaper, to pay damages of ¢5 million (approximately $9,615), Moya told The Tico Times this week. The reporters were convicted of the civil charges against them, though acquitted of criminal charges. The reason for their conviction? In a story published Dec. 17, 2005, Moya and Parrales attributed to then-Public Security Minister Rogelio Ramos a statement that “the police chief of San Vito de Coto Brus, of the last name Cruz…is object of an investigation” for alleged irregularities related to contraband liquor cases. Had they misquoted the minister? No, Moya said: the police chief apparently filed suit because Ramos, and subsequently the reporters, had incorrectly identified the Southern Zone canton in which he served. Though La Nación ran a retraction by Ramos, and Ramos himself appeared at the trial to admit that the error was his alone, the judge ruled that the reporters should have confirmed his statements with the Judicial Branch, and that the error caused the police chief “moral damage,” according to Moya. The Tico Times asked the San José Second Circuit Criminal Court and the Judicial Branch for a copy of the decision and more information about the case, but did not receive it by press time. “Obviously we’re going to present an 8401 Two cases involving Costa Rica’s laws governing freedom of expression yielded very different results this week. A Catholic priest – accused of libel because he’d allegedly claimed that La Cruz Mayor-elect Carlos Gonzaga, who took office this week, illegally acquired lands in the northwestern province and transferred them to President Oscar Arias – was acquit- • • • • appeal,” Moya added. “(Ramos) isn’t just any source – he’s an accredited source. It’s absolutely absurd.” An e-mail from reporter Hazel Feigenblatt distributed through the listserv of the Institute for Freedom of Press, Expression and Public Information (IPLEX) said the ruling against the La Nación reporters “sets a terrible precedent…if one publishes that an official is being investigated and he alleges that he’s ‘traumatized,’ etc. then there is a civil damage.” IPLEX and other press-freedom advocates have been working for more than six years to change the country’s Press Law, which is more than a century old and calls for prison sentences for reporters convicted on criminal charges of libel. A bill to change the law finally made it to the upper stratosphere of the Legislative Agenda in December, but has since been shoved aside to make room for other bills. In priest Vargas’ case, Guanacaste judge Rafael Saborío ruled that the witnesses who testified against the priest “don’t deserve credibility” and failed to prove Vargas had made “injurious statements,” La Nación reported. He also stated that the witnesses against Vargas shared “a direct line of friendship.” Vargas said his comments about Gonzaga’s alleged acquisition of land from the Agricultural Development Institute (IDA), and subsequent transferal of the land to President Arias, were based on TV news reports and a Comptroller General’s Office report. Mayor Gonzaga said he plans to appeal. Arias’ brother and spokesman, Rodrigo Arias, told wire service AFP that the President obtained the lands “without knowing their origin” and “had nothing to do with the complaint against the priest.” Rodizio completo Copa de champagne Postre Mouse de champagne Rosas para las damas 5671 Brindamos servicio de guardería SOLD 300 Inc Purchasing agent for all your construction needs We are specialists in kitchen cabinetry, granite and wood furniture 8188 24072 EVERYTHING in plumbing, refrigeration, granite, windows and doors. All is wholesale, no matter whether yours is a large or small project. Our store comes to you and we offer both English and Spanish service. Call us today for your building needs. Cell: 851-4107, 367-2057 E-mail: sold300@yahoo.com Web: www.sold300.com Rick Provost owner and operator 7647 8215 THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 | NEWS | 7 8 | NEWS | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 New Mayors Take Office, Explain Priorities By Katherine Stanley Tico Times Staff The 81 new mayors who took office Monday are a varied bunch. The National Liberation Party (PLN) certainly carried the day in December’s elections, winning 59 seats, but municipal leaders also include representatives of local parties; experienced politicians, as well as newcomers; 10 women; and a range of ages from 24 to 68. With the administration of President Oscar Arias touting plans to provide mayors with increased funding and introduce legal reforms that would give them more clout (TT, Jan. 26), these leaders may have a more prominent role than their predecessors. The Tico Times asked several mayors from around the country to explain their plans to address the biggest challenges facing their cantons. In selecting this group from the 81 new leaders, we attempted to represent various political parties and both genders, rich cantons and poor, areas of booming tourism development and those that historically have been neglected. The Institute for Municipal Development (IFAM) provided information on budget and territorial extension, showing the vast differences among the resources available to each mayor. Excerpts follow: SAN JOSÉ, San José Johnny Araya, 49 Agricultural engineer National Liberation Party (PLN) Second term Budget: ¢25.76 billion (approximately $49.5 million) Territorial extension (square kilometers): 44.62 Goals: This is Araya’s second term as a popularly elected mayor, but he’s been a municipal leader for 20 years. He served on the city’s Municipal Council from 1982-1986 and was appointed the Municipal Executive, then the mayor, from 1991-2002, when the first-ever popular municipal elections were held. This political longevity has made Araya a prominent figure on a national level, and also a hard man to interview, as two weeks of our unsuccessful attempts proved. In his lofty inauguration speech on Monday, however, Araya outlined some of his plans, foremost among them the urban renewal proposal “San José Posible,” which seeks to make the downtown area more pedestrian-friendly and reorganize traffic. He also pledged his support for the Tropical Architecture Institute’s proposal to plant trees and plants to make San José a greener place. Security-wise, Araya plans to create a Citizen Safety Council to coordinate the municipality’s efforts with the Public Security Ministry, Judicial Investigation Police (OIJ), Immigration and other organizations working to tackle the city’s crime problems. In the speech, he urged the Legislative Assembly and Executive Branch to push for reforms that would decentralize Costa Rica, Latin America’s most centralized nation, by giving mayors more funding and responsibility. ESCAZÚ, San José Marco Antonio Segura, 67 Economist, accountant PLN Second term Budget: ¢4.88 billion ($9.4 million) Territorial extension: 34.49 Goals: Segura told The Tico Times that his canton, which boasts the highest humandevelopment index in the country, nonetheless suffers a yawning gap between rich and poor, a problem he plans to address by making Escazú the country’s “most educated canton.” Building a home for the Escazú Technical High School, now open for two years but temporarily holding classes in elementary schools (TT, July 7, 2006), is a priority, as is continuing career classes offered through the National Training Institute (INA). Segura also plans to improve citizen safety – an area in which he said the canton “isn’t as bad as the rest of the country, but we’re not OK” – by installing five video surveillance cameras in highcrime areas this year and making mobile technology accessible to the Municipal Police. In addition, Segura plans to continue improving the local government’s online services, “taking the municipality to the park” by allowing residents to search files or pay municipal bills using their computers or cell phones. TIBÁS, San José Jorge Antonio Salas, 53 Lawyer Citizen Action Party (PAC) First term Budget: ¢1.73 billion ($3.3 million) Territorial extension: 8.15 Goals: Salas says his top priority will be trash collection, and that’s not surprising. His canton has become infamous for what was arguably the biggest municipal disaster in recent memory: the Tibás garbage crisis. For months, hundreds of tons of trash piled up on the streets of the northern San José suburb, causing the proliferation of odors, rats, and mosquitoes, as well as protests that drew national attention. The problem was solved only after the government declared a state of emergency in Tibás and the National Emergency Commission (CNE) took over trash collection (TT, May 19, 2006). Salas, who Roy Arguedas Arias | Tico Times was an advisor to the Municipal Council during the crisis and was elected as its president in February 2006, said the problem was that because of bad blood between the council and then-mayor Percy Rodríguez of the Social Christian Unity Party (PUSC). The council, which must authorize municipal spending, wouldn’t give Rodríguez the money for additional trash-collection equipment. Now, Salas says, the municipality has solved the problem by allotting funds to repair its trucks and rent two others. He said he expects to have better relations with his Municipal Council based on his past experience, and says he supports proposed reforms to give mayors a vote on the councils. Other priorities in Tibás will be instituting a recycling program through cooperation with a private foundation, road repair, and creating a zoning plan for the canton. MONTES DE OCA, San José Fernando Trejos, 52 Union for Change (UPC) Lawyer First term Budget: ¢2.12 billion ($4 million) Territorial extension: 15.16 Goals: The 48-year Montes de Oca resident has watched his canton, home to the University of Costa Rica (UCR) and Universidad Latina, become home to nightmare traffic and rising crime, with the infamous Calle de la Amargura – the “Street of Bitterness” and thumping nightclubs – drawing near-constant media attention. Trejos wants to revive the canton’s Municipal Police force, abandoned five years ago, in part by increasing municipal taxes. The canton’s roads take a beating because traffic from San José to eastern Central Valley towns such as Tres Ríos and Cartago must pass through small roads in San Pedro that weren’t intended for buses and trucks, according to Trejos, who served as Labor Minister during the administration of President Abel Pacheco (2002-2006). He plans to use municipal funds and solicit external aid to improve the roads. UPALA, Alajuela Juan Acevedo, 53 Businessman PLN Second term Budget: ¢503 million ($967,000) Territorial extension: 1,508.7 Goals: With one of the smallest municipal budgets in the country despite the canton’s ample size, Acevedo said his top priority during his second term will be finishing a project that began during his first: a canton-wide cadastre, or property mapping system, that will give the municipality a more accurate view of the property taxes its residents should be paying. The municipality has been working in conjunction with the National Cadastre Plan to update its data, hoping to reduce municipal tax evasion, which in Upala is approximately 61%, Acevedo said. Because Upala, one of the country’s poorest cantons, doesn’t have major tourism draws or multinational corporations to boost income, improving property assessment and tax collection is the only way to give the municipality more resources, he said. What would he do with increased funds? He’s working on improvements to the sewer network – a group of University of Costa Rica (UCR) students have been visiting Upala to help with preliminary studies – and creating a zoning plan for the canton. He said the Northern Zone Development Council, which the central government created last year to allow municipal leaders from Upala and neighboring cantons to meet with authorities from the Presidency Ministry and other central institutions, “will help a great deal because it provides more direct access to the government.” THE TICO TIMES FLORES, Heredia Jenny Alfaro Business administrator PAC First term Budget: ¢443 million ($852,903) Territorial extension: 6.96 Goals: Flores’ first priority is attending to a dilapidated aqueduct that has 20% of her canton’s population without water. She says it “hasn’t received any maintenance for years – they’ve been putting patches on it.” Second, she plans to find out what’s holding up Flores’ zoning plan, which was completed three years ago but since then has been awaiting approval by the National Institute for Housing and Urban Development (INVU). Once approved, the plan will allow the small canton to organize its development, restructure the municipality and make other changes. Improving the municipality’s treatment of its clients, creating a “preventive police force” to address rising crime, and coordinating with the central government to establish a daycare center so single moms with limited resources can hold down a job are among Alfaro’s other goals. For mayors’ universal priority – improving infrastructure – she plans to put power in the hands of neighborhood associations and district councils, granting them 25-50% of the infrastructure budget. “It’s the people from the barrio who know what the needs are,” Alfaro said. “Those councils were created on paper, but they haven’t had power.” AGUIRRE, Puntarenas Oscar Monge, 60 Author Aguirre Labor Organization First term Budget: ¢860 million ($1.7 million) Territorial Extension: 543.77 Goals: Monge – whose latest literary creation is “El Último Sello” (“The Last Seal”), loosely based on corruption in his central Pacific canton – says he’s going to follow the letter of the Maritime Zone Law when it comes to the area’s coveted beachfront spots. (In the past, demolitions of structures built within the protected zone have caused controversy and protests in Aguirre, as in other coastal cantons.) As mayor, Monge will let the Comptroller General’s Office dictate the municipality’s enforcement of the law, he said. He also plans to take a naturefriendly approach to stimulating tourism: in his canton’s hot spots such as Manuel Antonio and Quepos, tourism is growing out of control, damaging the environment but also providing employment to many families. To create a better balance, Monge will push eco-tourism projects and lobby for the Legislative Assembly to approve plans for the Central Pacific Technological Institute, to train people in Quepos and the surrounding area for better tourismindustry jobs. Finally, Monge plans to improve municipal tax collection to boost the budget to ¢3 billion (approximately $5.8 million) by 2009. GOLFITO, Puntarenas Jimmy José Cubillo, 45 Business advisor PLN Second term (served as Municipal Executive, 1996-1998) Budget: ¢591 million ($1.1 million). Territorial extension: 1,753.96 Goals: According to Cubillo, Golfito is a canton of terrible contrasts. Despite natural resources and a booming investment climate, it’s one of the country’s poorest cantons, with a 39% poverty rate. Its population is dropping, he says, though the opposite should be taking place, given the area’s potential. To address this problem, which Cubillo attributes to central government neglect and local failures, the mayor wants to offer simpler, speedier services to both local and foreign investors, and improve infrastructure. He hopes both steps will attract more businesses and create jobs. He also seeks to decentralize the government of the sprawling canton, where two sizeable towns – Puerto Jiménez and Pavones – lie approximately 170 km and 80 km from Golfito through circuitous land routes, making it next to impossible for their residents to access municipal services. By creating district councils in both towns and empowering them, rather than requiring that the mayor sign off on most decisions, Cubillo said living conditions will improve. Though many of his colleagues say mayors need more power, not less, Golfito’s new leader said, “I don’t think any authority is lost by decentralizing.” LIMÓN, Limón Eduardo Barboza, 43 Lawyer PLN First term Budget: ¢1.97 billion ($3.8 million) Territorial extension: 1,765.79 Goals: “Because Limón is the face of Costa Rica in the Caribbean, we need a privileged position,” Barboza told The Tico Times. He was referring to plans to build a megaport in his coastal canton, but he could have been speaking in general terms: over the years, Limón, plagued by unemployment and crime, has long been neglected by the central government. The ambitious Barboza plans to make Limón the most developed canton in the country, pinning his hopes on a new oil refinery that would provide 1,000 jobs; the mega-port, which President Oscar Arias threw his weight behind during a visit to Limón earlier this month; and increased cooperation between the municipality and private businesses. Coordination with the Arias administration “couldn’t be better” so far, said Barboza, who plans to install surveillance cameras on every street corner in central Limón within the first few months of his term in an effort to give citizens “the chance to walk calmly on the street again.” LIBERIA, Guanacaste Carlos Luis Marín, 43 Administrative assistant PLN First term Budget: ¢1.67 billion ($3.2 million) Territorial extension: 1,436.47 Goals: For Marín, it’s crucial that Liberia prepare its citizens to take advantage of the real estate and tourism boom that surrounds them – a theme other mayors of cantons with high levels of foreign investment, such as Aguirre and Escazú, echoed. The new mayor, who spoke to The Tico Times before a municipal conference at Casa Presidencial in San José last month, said he hopes to work closely with the central government to accomplish this goal. In particular, he plans to work with the Labor Ministry to create a Liberia employment directory that would allow businesses opening up shop in the canton to find local laborers and services to meet their needs. His other goals for his four-year term include improving infrastructure and opening a Guanacaste Museum in Liberia’s old police headquarters. SANTA CRUZ, Guanacaste Jorge Enrique Chavarría, 55 Administrator, veterinarian PLN First term Budget: ¢2.38 billion ($4.6 million) Territorial extension: 1,312.27 Goals: As the new mayor of Santa Cruz, Chavarría will be in charge of managing booming tourism destinations such as Tamarindo, where one of his predecessors ran into some trouble – Pastor Gómez was suspended last year by a San José criminal court investigating an allegedly shady concessions deal. Chavarría, unsurprisingly, asserts that “we’re going to ensure the laws are complied with… everything will be normal.” He said his top priorities include improving infrastructure and building a garbage facility near the town of Santa Cruz to improve sanitary conditions in the canton. He also hopes to give the town a Santa Cruz Theater for folkloric presentations and other cultural attractions, and a modern health clinic. Last but not least, Chavarría said he plans to work with the Public Security Ministry to expand the Municipal Police force from 13 officers to 98, improve training, and focus the new forces on Tamarindo. Though a first-time mayor, Chavarría said he has been involved in municipal politics in Santa Cruz for years. – February 9, 2007 | NEWS | 9 The New Mayors SAN JOSÉ Central Johnny Araya, National Liberation Party (PLN) Escazú Marco Antonio Segura, PLN Desamparados Maureen Fallas, PLN Puriscal Jorge Luis Chaves, PLN Tarrazú Iván Suárez, PLN Aserrí Mario Morales, PLN Mora Gilberto Monge, PLN Goicoechea Oscar Enrique Figueroa, PLN Santa Ana Gerardo Oviedo, PLN Alajuelita Tomás Poblador, PLN Vásquez de Coronado Leonardo Herrera, PLN Acosta Rónald Durán, PLN Tibás Jorge Antonio Salas, Citizen Action Party (PAC) Moravia Edgar Vargas, PAC Montes de Oca Fernando Trejos, Union for Change (UPC) Turrubares Rafael Vindas, Social Christian Unity Party (PUSC) Dota José Valverde, PLN Curridabat Edgar Mora, Curridabat 21st Century Party Pérez Zeledón Rosibel Ramos, PUSC León Cortés Leonardo Quesada, PLN ALAJUELA Central Joyce Zürcher, PLN San Ramón Raúl Antonio Gómez, PLN Grecia Giovanny Arguedas, PLN San Mateo Erwen Yanán Masis, PUSC Atenas Wilberth Martín Aguilar, PUSC Naranjo Eugenio Padilla, PLN Palmares Luis Carlos Castillo, PLN Poás José Joaquín Brenes, PLN Orotina Emilio Jesús Rodríguez, PLN San Carlos Alfredo Córdoba , PLN Alfaro Ruiz Marco Vinicio Rodríguez, PLN Valverde Vega Víctor Manuel Rojas, PUSC Upala Juan Acevedo, PLN Los Chiles Santiago Millón, PLN Guatuso Fidel Condega, PLN CARTAGO Cartago Rolando Alberto Brenes, PLN Paraíso Marvin Solano, Libertarian Movement (ML) La Unión Julio Antonio Rojas, PLN Jiménez Jorge Humberto Solano, PLN Turrialba Luis Alfonso Pérez, PLN Alvarado Angel Raquel López, PLN Oreamuno Marco Vinicio Redondo, PAC El Guarco William Adolfo Cerdas, PLN HEREDIA Heredia José Manuel Ulate, PLN Barva Mercedes Hernández, PLN Santo Domingo Raúl Isidro Bolaños, PLN Santa Bárbara Rolando Hidalgo, PLN San Rafael Alberto Vargas, PAC San Isidro Elvia Villalobos, PLN Belén Horacio Alvarado, PUSC Flores Jenny Alfaro, PAC San Pablo Aracelly Salas, PUSC Sarapiquí Pedro Rojas, PLN GUANACASTE Liberia Carlos Luis Marín, PLN Nicoya Lorenzo Rosales, PLN Santa Cruz Jorge Enrique Chavarría, PLN Bagaces Luis Angel Rojas, PLN Carrillo Carlos Gerardo Cantillo, PLN Cañas Katia María Solórzano, PLN Abangares Jorge Calvo, PLN Tilarán Jovel Arias, PUSC Nandayure Luis Rodríguez, National Union Party (PUN) La Cruz Carlos Matías Gonzaga, PLN Hojancha Juan Rafael Marín, PLN PUNTARENAS Puntarenas Agne Gómez, PLN Esparza Dagoberto Venegas, PUSC Buenos Aires Primo Feliciano Alvarez, PLN Montes de Oro Alvaro Jiménez, PLN Osa Jorge Alberto Cole, PLN Aguirre Oscar Monge Aguirre, Labor Organization Golfito Jimmy José Cubillo, PLN Coto Brus Rafael Angel Navarro, PUSC Parrita Gerardo Róger Acuña, PLN Corredores Gerardo Ramírez, PLN Garabito Marvin Elizondo, PLN LIMON Central Eduardo Barboza, PLN Pococí Enrique Alfaro Vargas, PLN Siquirres Edgar Cambronero, Communal Action Party Talamanca Rugeli Morales, PUSC Matina Lorenzo Colphan, PLN Guácimo Gerardo Fuentes, PLN Source: Institute for Municipal Development (IFAM) 8238 – February 9, 2007 2978 8358 10 | NEWS | THE TICO TIMES CENTRAL AMERICAÕS LEADING ENGLISH-LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 | NEWS | 11 Gov’t Plans to Regulate Chemical Waste Page 1 became an explosive blaze (TT, Nov. 3, 2006). In both cases, investigators have traced the causes of the accidents to workers ignoring safety procedures, and have found the disasters were made worse by a lack of proper or functioning safety equipment. The gas station, for example, lacked an emergency shutoff switch, while the chemical plant had containment dikes – meant to keep a fuel spill or fire from spreading – that were smaller than required and had deteriorated. The response has been public: last week, in front of a throng of journalists, Environment and Energy Minister Roberto Dobles announced the launch of a nationwide inspection of every gas station in Costa Rica (TT, Feb. 2). During the first week of inspections, officials shut down a gas station in Heredia, north of San José, for various violations. The station where the siblings died was also ordered to remain closed. Last month, officials with the Public Health Ministry began conducting a diagnostic of every business and industry that deals with possibly hazardous chemicals (including petroleum), evaluating their emergency preparedness and working on new legislation and safety regulations. According to Héctor Chaves, head of the National Insurance Institute’s Firefighters Corps, one serious problem Costa Rica faces is how to dispose of the waste and residue left after chemical accidents, as well as that which is produced in the standard operations of many industries. “This country does not have a center to deposit dangerous materials,” Chaves said. The disposal of chemical waste is left up to individual companies, he explained. And while many companies are responsible, and properly treat or store their materials, hazardous waste often ends up in Costa Rica’s conventional dumps or, even worse, in its rivers and even city streets, he said. On Jan. 16, children in the southern San José district of Desamparados discovered an abandoned barrel that, when opened, released toxic gases. Approximately 12 of the kids were hospitalized for symptoms including eye and throat irritation, dizziness and vomiting. “In this case, what do we do with this chemical product? We don’t even know what it is,” Chaves continued. The fire chief said his department responds to about 12 chemical emergencies a month, including minor incidents such as gas leaks. “They are few, but they can have a serious impact,” he said, adding that, while improperly disposing of chemical waste is against the law, he has never seen a company fined or otherwise punished for it. Arturo Navarro, an industrial chemist with the Public Health Ministry’s Department of Human Environment Protection, told The Tico Times that the supervision of chemical handling in Costa Rica is “absolutely not” sufficient, and the country “needs to improve a lot more.” Navarro confirmed that chemical waste disposal is left up to companies, which are monitored by regional Health Ministry offices. Private companies are expected to present an operations plan to the local authorities approximately twice per year that describes how they deal with their materials. However, the Health Ministry official said, “we need to be more aggressive with monitoring.” “Some companies have been burning (their chemical waste), which is not in accordance with international standards,” he added. Certain chemicals, especially those that contain chlorine, release dangerous byproducts into the air when burned, specifically dioxins and furans, which are carcinogens and neurotoxins. The Stockholm Convention, to which Costa Rica is a party, requires nations to curb production of dioxins and furans, he explained. In Costa Rica, chemical disposal falls into the government’s hands in cases of chemical accidents, Navarro said. In that case, officials have two options: store them in a landfill, or burn them in a giant oven at the Holcim cement factory in Cartago, east of San José. That’s what authorities did with the various chemicals left over from the Moín fire. Holcim, a Costa Rica subsidiary of the Swiss-based company of the same name, burns 10,000 tons of environmentally harmful waste, confiscated drugs and confidential documents yearly (TT, Dec. 16, 2005). Because the plant’s ovens must reach extremely high temperatures (between 900 and 2,200 degrees Celsius, or 1,652 and 3,992 degrees Fahrenheit) to manufacture cement, they are ideal for destroying waste because the elevated temperatures eliminate the nasty byproducts. However, Navarro said, not all chemicals can be disposed of at Holcim. “A lot” of chemical waste is sitting in Costa Rican landfills, he said. “We are trying to lessen the use of landfills. It is not a suitable option,” Navarro said. Currently, the La Carpio landfill in western San José run by EBI Berthier de Costa Rica, a subsidiary of EBI Berthier in Canada, is the only dump in the country authorized to take what is called “special waste,” such as chemical leftovers, which must be specially treated and stored in “an impenetrable cell,” Navarro explained. Costa Rica’s other landfills, Law firm specializing in: •Civil law •Commercial law •Offshore banking •Immigration affairs •Shoreline property concessions •Criminal law (economic infractions) •Real estate •Internet and Intellectual property law 7260 Tel: (506) 228-9755 E-mail: info@Berrocalasociados.com San Rafael de Escazú, south side of Plaza Rolex, San José, Costa Rica The Cigar of Costa Rica Ph: (506) 232-7755 Fax (506) 296-6229 8208 8452 www.purosdawa.com info@purosdawa.com however, are already overflowing and many are under orders to close, but can’t because of a lack of options (TT, Oct. 13, 2006). “There’s no more room,” Navarro said. While acknowledging Costa Rica’s shortcomings, Navarro was quick to point out the efforts being made in the current administration to improve the country’s handling of dangerous chemicals. In what appears to be a direct response to the Moín fire – though officials were vague – Navarro’s office is in the midst of a total overhaul of the supervision of all companies that deal with chemical substances, and classifying the materials according to a variety of attributes, such as whether they are flammable, corrosive or toxic, as well as examining the companies’ locations. The Moín disaster took on much larger proportions when it was discovered a spring that supplied water for 20,000 area residents was fewer than 75 meters from the plant. After daily monitoring, the National Water and Sewer Institute (AyA) declared the water suitable for human consumption more than a month later (TT, Jan. 26). Navarro said he had found “around 20 highly dangerous companies,” but did not provide further details. Each company is being asked to present a report on its management of chemicals as well as emergency response plans and safety infrastructure. That information will be compiled in a report to be presented within weeks to a new government committee. Officials from the Health and Environment ministries are also working to prepare a bill that would set new regulations and procedures for the handling of liquid, gas and solid chemical waste, and create both a regulatory agency and a monitoring agency to oversee and enforce the new rules. 12 | BUSINESS & REAL ESTATE | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 Business Real Estate Lawsuit Delays CAFTA Discussion in Assembly By Blake Schmidt Tico Times Staff The longer until the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA) reaches a vote in the Legislative Assembly, the longer an emerging pro-CAFTA bloc will have to remain united, legislator Janina Del Vecchio said this week. After opponents slowed attempts to send CAFTA on a fast track last week, supporters of the controversial trade pact questioned whether the five-party pro-CAFTA coalition can endure the lengthy legislative process to come. “We have to maintain that block of 38 (legislators). It’s a tight block,” said Del Vecchio, president of the International Affairs commission that has spent the past year debating CAFTA. The bloc was created in recent weeks in a series of political negotiations in which the National Liberation Party (PLN), which brought pro-CAFTA President Oscar Arias to power last year, tried to scrape up some political capital by offering potential CAFTA allies support for their initiatives. CAFTA is on the agenda to be discussed on the assembly floor, but Liberation legislator Del Vecchio told The Tico Times lawmakers will wait to see whether a proposed fast-track legislative reform will make it past constitutional review before discussion on the pact begins. Besides Liberation, which has 25 of 57 legislators, the other parties in the bloc include the six-member Libertarian Movement, the five-member Social Christian Unity Party (PUSC), and one-member parties National Restoration and National Union. The parties have been politicking in recent weeks to agree on a complimentary and social agenda that would be passed with CAFTA (TT, Feb. 2) However, an opposition bloc has also emerged, composed of the 17 Citizen Action Party (PAC) legislators and two onemember parties: Broad Front and Access Without Exclusion. A proposed legislative reform that would put CAFTA on a fast track was slowed last week when the opposition bloc asked the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court (Sala IV) to weigh in on the proposal’s constitutionality. The court has a month to opine. The fast-track measure would reform the assembly’s regulations, allowing legislators to speed up CAFTA’s vote by limiting the number of sessions legislators can spend debating it to 22, according to Del Vecchio. The legislative trámite of CAFTA wasn’t the only battlefront in the free-trade debate this week. Former presidential candidate and opposition leader Ottón Solís used his recent trip to Washington D.C. to cast some shadows on the Arias administration’s CAFTA strategy; a group of indigenous people from the southern Caribbean region of Talamanca traveled to the capital to demand a fair say in CAFTA; and PAC made sure to bring to everyone’s attention potential conflicts of interest that CAFTA-bloc legislators may have in supporting the opening of the telecom market as required under CAFTA. A new round of free-trade verbal jousting began after PAC founder and presidential runner-up Solís returned from a trip to the United States last week, where he met with U.S. congressmen and aides (TT, Feb. 2). Solís pointed a finger at Arias for using what he called a “fear campaign” to push the CAFTA agenda. He said that during his U.S. visit he consulted members of the Democratic Party – which swept November elections and raised concerns worldwide over how protectionist the new Congress will be. Solís said everyone he consulted said the benefits of the Caribbean Basin Initiative (CBI) will not necessarily expire – statements that caused confusion back in Costa Rica. The CBI is a U.S. program aimed at promoting economic development in Central America and the Caribbean by diversifying CBI country economies and expanding their exports. The initiative refers to three different acts passed between 1983 and 2000 in the wake of regional disasters and civil wars, and guarantees duty-free treatment for most exports from the Caribbean Basin region to the U.S., according to the Economic U.S. Department of Commerce. In a Feb. 8 meeting between Solís and Arias, Arias confirmed Solís’ statement that the United States doesn’t plan to eliminate trade preferences of the initiative if Costa Rica doesn’t ratify CAFTA. Costa Rica is the only signatory yet to vote on CAFTA. “It’s true. At least they’ve never told me that they’re thinking about doing that,” Arias told the daily La Nación. Part of the initiative is set to expire, however. An act passed by President Bill Clinton in 2000, which allowed apparel manufactured in CBI countries using U.S. fabric, among other products (i.e. certain footwear, tuna, petroleum products, watches, and luggage) to be exported into the United States duty-free, will expire in September 2008. The 2000 act demanded that countries make progress in worker rights, intellectual property, environmental protections and support the U.S.-led war on drugs. Solís said CAFTA will bring Costa Rica few additional benefits beyond the existing CBI agreement, which is why he has been pushing for the renegotiation of CAFTA. Presidency Minister Rodrigo Arias fired back this week, saying, “it’s not the same to be granted a unilateral concession as to have a bilateral agreement.” Being a unilateral agreement, Minister Arias pointed out, the CBI can be modified, suspended or eliminated by the United States at anytime. Page 14 Indicators Feb. 1-7 | Current Values and Percentage Change BNV STOCK EXCHANGE U.S. DOLLAR EXCHANGE RATE* BUY: SELL: ¢517.17 ¢521.19 0.012% 0.27% *Wednesday’s Central Bank reference rate. See www.ticotimes.net for daily updates. ALL PRICES IN MILLIONS (¢ and U.S.$) VOLUME ¢378,756.56 26% COLONES US$ BY CURRENCY: ¢232,024 $279.79 23.72% 28.95% GOV’T PRIVATE BY ISSUER: ¢341,893 ¢36,862 24.54% 41.39% INFLATION LAST MONTH PAST 12 MONTHS 0.95% 9.19% ACCRUED ‘06 0.95% DEVALUATION ACCRUED ‘06 0.38% Atlas Eléctrica, S.A. (common) Corporación Improsa, S.A. Volume (Millions) ¢4.74 ¢2.56 Last Price ¢41.95 ¢4.11 Change -4.66% 2.49% 5333 LAST MONTH PAST 12 MONTHS 0.38% 4.07% MOST ACTIVE STOCKS Stock SOURCE: SC Consulting Group U.S. Tax And Accounting Contact us at 811-3398 or 625-8039 E-mail: cwhitehouse00@yahoo.com 288-2201 Over 10 years experiences in Costa Rica ustax@lawyer.com 8368 8364 8081 Don’t miss this excellent opportunity to rent one of the 3 spaces left available for food, souvenirs and clothes store. 7968 Located at Los Sueños Resort and Marina, main entrance Specializing in Tax Preparation for U.S Tax payers Living Abroad & To assist you with Costa Rican Taxes and other Business needs. Great Property and business opportunity in the Heredia Mountains, just 16 km from the International Airport. Beautiful panoramic views. It has a Restaurant and Bar with all permits up to date, main house with 4 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms, big kitchen and huge storage room, there's also a small cabin with 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen and living room with fireplace. 4 big dog cages, and 3 horse stables, the property is surrounded by beautiful gardens. Perfect for cabin development or small hotel. Total Area 5,600 m2, total construction 1,000 sqm aprox. Phone. (506) 810 4649 CENTRAL AMERICAÕS LEADING ENGLISH-LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER A R T | C U LT U R E | E N T E R TA I N M E N T | F E B R U A R Y 9 , 2 0 0 7 Love Is On The Air DJs, Newlyweds Margie and Dave Team Up By Dave Sherwood Tico Times Staff ll right, everyone relax: DJs Dave “the Dude” and Margie, of Costa Rican English-language radio fame, are coming back. But you’ll have to retune your dial to listen to them; their new venue is 99.5 FM Radio Dos. And by the way, they got married, too. “Everyone’s happy. It’s like a big love story,” said Dave Scott, who has been entertaining listeners with good music, good humor and his trademark English accent for 11 years. So what’s with all the changes? “New love, new station, new music,” Scott said. “We wanted to work together.” Getting married was step one. “I’ve been asking her to marry me every year since I met her. She finally said ‘yes’ last year. I was stunned,” he said. It’s quite the leap of faith for this freewheeling DJ, blues musician and veteran of the music industry, who went 64 years before tying the knot. Beginning next week, listeners can enjoy the newlyweds together – they’ve not only joined in marriage, but in radio, too. Their new show, “Buenos Días, Costa Rica,” will air for the first time on Valentine’s Day, Feb 14. The duo is thrilled at the opportunity. “She’s such a pro. She’s funny; I can bounce stuff off her. And besides, she’s got the perfect face for radio,” said Scott with a smirk and laugh over coffee last week. “We laugh all day. I wish everyone could feel like we do,” said the blonde, blue-eyed and boisterous Margie Flaum, who expects listeners will be laughing, too. One thing that won’t change is the hour; the new show will air from 6 to 9 a.m. weekday mornings. Evan Luck, former morningshow DJ at 99.5, has chosen to take the afternoon slot, a welcome change after six years of early rising. “It worked out perfectly; Evan is a night person – he was getting tired of waking up so early – and we can’t stay up late,” Scott said. The first show will feature Luck, Scott and Flaum together. After that, Luck moves to the evening slot, from 5 to 7 p.m., where he’ll pick up more live broadcasts from the A Chelcey Adami | Tico Times New Love, New Show: Radio DJs Dave “the Dude” Scott and Margie Flaum, recently married, will air their new show, “Buenos Días, Costa Rica,” on Radio Dos for the first time this Valentine’s Day. beaches, and restaurants and bars in the San José area. “I’m excited, too. It’ll give us all a chance to try something new,” Luck said. Together, the three will practically monopolize English-language radio in Costa Rica, providing listeners with good tunes and entertainment that many, Ticos and foreigners alike, have come to take for granted. Better still, their show will now be broadcast throughout the country – not just in the Central Valley as before – and even around the world through live-streaming Internet radio. “We get an amazing mix of people who listen to our radio show. A lot of Ticos listen to learn English. It’s great. I love the mix,” said Scott, who has never considered his work on the radio a “job.” “Music is our life,” Scott said. “Some people go to work, and do a job their whole lives and don’t like it. I think it’s so important to have a job you love, like we do.” The duo’s new show will air at the same time as Scott’s old one, and both confess it will be nice to have some company when the alarm sings at their home in the western suburb of Escazú. “It can be lonely that early in the morning, headed to work,” Flaum said. “Now we’ll have company.” Listeners will be able to enjoy the good company, too. INSIDE Alajuela Boasts New Municipal Theater Arenal Residents Live With Active Volcano Taste of the Tropics: Pejibaye and Palmito Director David King Returns to LTG Page W7 Page W8 Page W10 Page W16 W2 | WEEKEND | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 COMMUNITY Tamarindo Talk The first Tamarindo town meeting, hosted by the Tamarindo Improvement Association, drew a large, mixed group of community members to Hotel Pasatiempo. At the microphone, association vice-president Sandi May and director Jessica Del Rossi bilingually outlined the six areas of focus on which the previous administration had commenced work. The crowd was then guided toward various tables representing the new committees, taking up the mantle of the tasks at hand for the entire area of Tamarindo, including Villarreal, Santa Rosa, a portion of San José de Pinilla, Hernández, Cañafístula, Linderos, Cebadilla and more. These groups included: 1) enforcement of Costa Rican laws in the Tamarindo area, headed by Brock Menking, Francisco Saborio and Walter Hoevel; 2) work to pass a plan regulador for sustainable development that also includes clarification of the Green Zones and Adopt-a-Park programs, headed by Sandi, Janet Raftis and Jerry Smith; 3) Blue Flag program, headed by association president Jorge Calvo, which encompasses the Tamarindo Lifeguards and anything to do with the beaches; 4) blackwater treatment plans, headed by Bernal Navarro for Active Citizens for Tamarindo (ACT), Griet Depypere and José Sandoval; 5) crime prevention and security, headed by Grant McLean; and 6) infrastructure issues including roads and parking concerns, headed by ACT. Monthly meetings were set for the first Friday of every month; one took place last week at Las Baulas, and the next is set for March 2, once again at 4 p.m. at Hotel Pasatiempo. Everyone is invited to attend and participate. For more information, e-mail the association’s board of directors at bodapmt@tamarindocommunity.org. Banco Improsa, in partnership with Centro de Negocios Costa Rica, has opened an office in the Tamarindo Business Center, next to Azul Profundo on the main road of town. Most significantly, the group is offering financing and loans to foreigners, which may be used to buy homes or for construction and development. This is a significant new opportunity right here in town. For more info, call 653-2039 or 653-2041. Denis Herzog, owner of B-day Boy: Denis HerHigh Tide zog and daughter Gaelle. Adventures, had a great birthday party aboard the catamaran Marina del Rey, where he celebrated with his children, Luca and Gaelle, and guests, including the 80-foot boat’s new hostess Olivia Rich, Nicholas Petry, Nicole Loría, John Brown, Philine Nugteren, Andrés Marín, Alex Orias and many others. Alex will be DJing on that same boat Feb. 17, for the Maximal Crossfade Summer Tour 2007. He’s on a bill with his usual partner, Spain’s De Sostoa, opening for highly recognized DJs from Cancún Robbie + Barrack. There are two other DJs as well. For more information, call 653-0114. New yoga outfit Voice of Environmental Change (VOEC), at Suite 5, Galleria del Mar, is hosting a “green community forum” tomorrow. The idea is to teach participants how to become involved in environmental programs and initiatives that will help Tamarindo become a healthier and more sustainable community. The program, jointly hosted by the Barracuda Art Gallery, also in Galleria Del Mar, begins at 5:30 p.m. with music, circus acts, food, drinks and meditation. Meanwhile, pick up a yoga schedule at VOEC, which offers more than 24 classes a week, including hatha, anusara, ashtanga, flow, iyengar, sivananda and restorative yoga, as well as yoga for tots, kids, kinder and “Mommy and Me.” For info, call 6530852 or visit www.VOECretreats.com. Debbie Turner, who publishes The Shop and The Menu magazines, let me know that I missed out on announcing the opening of the big appliance store Importadora Monge at Villarreal Construcenter. A grand opening was held Feb. 2, including fireworks, dancers and live models. Happy birthday to Suzy Lawson and Sarah Pfeiffer on Jan. 31, Brooks Wilson on Feb. 5 and Francesco Sassi today. –Ellen Zoe Golden ellenzoe@aol.com Flamingo/Potrero News Welcome back, Max Chellimi! Max is the son of Melissa and Richard Chellimi of Potrero/Surfside, and has returned to Country Day School to finish out his high school education after taking a break and going to San Clemente High School in southern California for one quarter. Max flourished there, taking honor classes and academic prep classes. He was also selected to be a player on the school’s basketball team. After he completes his schooling here in Guanacaste, Max plans to return to the United States to continue with college plans. The Santa Cruz district recently held its weeklong National Folkloric Festival, which included bull-riding competitions, dancing, live music and a tope (horse parade). This year, several residents from the Potrero area participated in the parade, including Laurie and Dennis Schmeidge, owners of Surfside Properties, Don Burrows, a part-time Surfside resident from Canada, and Wendy and Wes Johnson and Doug and Barb Sawatsky, visitors from Canada. Kaye Dodge of Finca Casagua and her husband Esteban were the instigators in getting local riders to participate among about 1,200 riders. It must have been an amazing experience to be in the midst of all those riders and gorgeous horses. CONNECTION If you are looking for native Costa Rican souvenirs for family and friends when visiting here in Flamingo, take a few moments to stop by the Nativo Costa Rica shop on the second floor of the Flamingo Beach Hotel. Jose Elkin Gómez from Colombia has moved here to make a better life for himself. Check out his handmade wares and local crafts made of wood, shells and threads. For more information, call 6544410, extension 3147, or 815-1252. A new 2007 telephone directory is now available for the Tamarindo (primarily), Flamingo, Potrero, Playa Grande, Playa Negra and surrounding areas. It is a highquality, professionally photographed and bound book that is great for your home or office. It includes important and emergency phone numbers, small local maps of the beaches, business advertisements and of course many residential and business numbers. To have your name or business included for next year’s edition or to get a copy, email info@tamarindo-directory.com. The Playa Flamingo Improvement Association held a general assembly meeting Jan. 27 to report an update of the past year’s events. Rene Bount, treasurer, and Chantal Willemse, fiscal, have stepped down from their positions, and a midterm election was held for their replacements. Eugenio Vargas is now the new fiscal and Bill Brady the new treasurer. Craig Macklin was voted in as the new vocal to replace Bill Brady. –Babe Hopkins tbabehopkins@yahoo.com Arenal Report Citizen activism has put the brakes on the imposing new U.S.-style, multi-store gas station at the Cañas highway’s entrance to Tilarán, putting it out of business before gas ever filled its underground tanks, but not before approximately $900,000 had been invested by Tilarán businessman Carlos Adrián “Cayenne” Vargas. Tico residents of the neighborhood atop the hill behind the gas station objected to the location of the station and found that permits had not been obtained for the construction. Since the construction had been going on for months in this prominent location, we wonder why the municipal authorities did not act on their own to check the permitting. Gringo residents who continue to question the permitting and practices of Lake Arenal developers have had some success. Work on forest trails for hiking and horseback riding has been suspended at one of the larger developments. Longtime residents James and Tanya Hayward returned to Tronadora from the U.S. state of Colorado at the end of January to complete the sale of their house and its contents. The Haywards moved back to the United States to give their two sons, homeschooled here for several years, the typical North American high school experience. Meanwhile, the Arenal Country Club, where the Haywards used to play tennis, is reportedly on the block again and may have found a buyer. Remaining tennis players hope the courts – and perhaps the swimming pool and fitness room – will be open again before long. The Hotel Tilawa’s biggest art show yet is just five days away. On Valentine’s Day, local artists will be joined by artists from San José in exhibiting and selling their paintings, ceramics, sculptures and jewelry. The show opens at 2 p.m. Meanwhile, the hotel’s tennis court, swimming pool, spa and bar will be open to residents as usual on Wednesdays. –Alex Murray casamanana@msn.com Notes from Puerto Viejo De Talamanca Beto Torres of Legalize Surf School in Puerto Viejo is organizing the Legalize It Surf Tournament for Feb. 17 and 18. This is an annual event to promote surfing on the Caribbean coast. For info, contact Beto at 885-9688 or betolocks@hotmail.com. –Wendy Strebe reservations@cashewhilllodge.co.cr Manuel Antonio/ Quepos Tidings Good news! Banco Nacional in Quepos is now open Saturdays for teller transactions from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Congratulations to chef Cristian López, who has worked as a chef in Manuel Antonio for many years. He has just opened up his own restaurant in Playa Matapalo called Restaurante Vista del Mar, in front of the plaza de deportes with an ocean view. Karen Alpízar and family will also be working in the restaurant. If you want to take a break from Manuel Antonio and Quepos, take a drive to Matapalo and have a great meal at Restaurante Vista del Mar. For more information, call 787-5122 or 390-9541. We recently received the current edition of Explore Costa Rica, and it is beautiful. Harry Pariser is the author. Featuring extensive and thorough coverage of our area, the 648-page guide features numerous color photos, maps, charts, a bus guide, Spanish vocabulary and many useful tips. You can order it from any bookstore or directly from the publisher. Or, you can order it with a credit card from SCB Distributors at (800) 729-6423, or go to www.ecocostarica.com. Happy Valentine’s Day to all! On Feb. 14, Gaia Hotel and Reserve will be hosting a seven-course Prix Fix Dinner accompanied by classical music trio Tonos Finos. Guests are encouraged to reserve early, as the evening is expected to sell out. Call 7779797 for reservations. Rainmaker is now offering night tours to see reptiles and amphibians with a naturalist guide. For information, call 777-3565. –Jennifer Rice monoazul@racsa.co.cr & Anita Myketuk buennota@racsa.co.cr Community Connection welcomes reports from readers about happenings in their area of Costa Rica. Those interested in submitting reports can contact Weekend Editor Meg Yamamoto at myamamoto@ticotimes.net. We are also accepting photos of events or local happenings from readers. Please e-mail inquiries. THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 | WEEKEND | W3 Singer Johnny Dread Tours C.R. Special to The Tico Times t first glance, the K-9 municipal police circling through the young Tico crowd at Bar Roots in the eastern San José suburb of San Pedro seemed like an inevitable profiling prelude to the Johnny Dread concert scheduled that night. But soon after, the packed house began filing slowly out of the bar as a resigned-looking doorman peeled refunds off a thick stack of colones. Big police raids may be great for TV, but reggae concerts? Not so much. “I think it’s the music – they don’t understand what it is,” said the Miami-based singer in a telephone interview a few days after the cancelled show. “Sure, there might be a little marijuana, but it’s clean … It didn’t have to be an underage drinker – five (police) cars with dogs showed up – something was going to happen.” Yet, true to his laid-back Rasta roots, A Upcoming Concerts Feb. 9: Salon Monrio, Turrialba (Caribbean slope) Feb. 15: Bar Babylon, Tamarindo (Guanacaste) Feb. 17: Lizard Lounge, Playas del Coco (Guanacaste) Feb. 18: Monteverde Amphitheater (north-central region) Feb. 20: El Observatorio, San José Feb. 24: Rippers, Playa Hermosa (Central Pacific) Feb. 25: Afternoon show at Roca Verde, Dominical (Southern Zone) Schedule subject to change. 65 Days for Building Peace: 10th Season for Nonviolence For the 10th year, Costa Rica will celebrate the World Season for Nonviolence, a universal observance of peace actions and thought. The season began Jan. 30 and will last through April 4, spanning the anniversaries of the deaths of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr., both leading advocates of nonviolence to achieve social change. Building a culture of peace is this year’s theme. The season focuses on peace activities, which can be organized programs or individual actions, and can be public events or personal means of achieving Dread is taking this inauspicious kickoff to his Costa Rica tour in stride. “We’re now starting Round 2 – Revenge of the Dread,” he said with a laugh, referring to the remaining dates on the tour, but quickly added, “No, there must have been a reason we weren’t supposed to play.” Dread is no stranger to Costa Rica and the stumbling blocks it poses for touring musicians. But since 2001, when he first performed at a major concert as part of the oil-drilling protests in the southern Caribbean beach town of Puerto Viejo, he has pulled together a grassroots system that – for the most part – works. A local band, built up from previous visits to the country and featuring talent from groups such as Mekatelyu and Bamaselo Reggae, backs up his Caribbean, Afro-Cuban and rock-influenced sounds. “If you’re here to score big, this (reggae music) is not it,” he said. “It’s more about bringing the vibe.” The former college basketball star and hotel management student’s musical career includes a stint with Anthony Booker (Bob Marley’s stepbrother), Ras Bagga and other well-known reggae musicians. As Copacetic, the group recorded “Ghetto Rock,” which reached number seven on the Billboard Reggae Charts in 1990. The following year, Dread struck out solo. With nods to The Beatles, Bob Dylan, The Police and Bob Marley, Dread is largely about consciousness-raising lyrics. But he says playing in non-English-speaking countries is never a problem – the message truly becomes the medium. “We connect with the heart,” he said. “(Costa Rica) is a humble land, with no real strife … it’s a cool little place I like to come to.” Born Juan Carlos Guardiola to Cuban peace through meditation, prayer or discussion groups. Activities should be designed to promote and strengthen good values and attitudes such as respect for life and human dignity, justice, solidarity and tolerance within the family, the community, the country or the world. Everyone is invited to take some action for a nonviolent future. Various studies show that violence is the foundation for the biggest problems in the world, according to a statement by Dulce Umanzor, coordinator of this year’s season. “Here in Costa Rica, the usual solution given is more police and stiffer sentences, which are repressive answers to violence,” she said. “Yet much of the blame for a violent society is laid to a loss of values, and Discover the International Family! THE SAFEST CITY IN COSTA RICA Downtown Heredia NOW FIESTA CASINO AND BEACH BAR! 50 ROOMS, EACH WITH: • Bathroom • Solar-heated water • Direct-dial telephone • Fan • Cable TV • Laundry • Restaurant • Conference Room • Media Facilities • Free Parking Lot $40 Single / $50 Double / $60 Triple Tel. (506) 260-92-92 fax (506) 260-9293 Courtesy of Kuyata-Zito Entertainment / Fabrika Music 10 rooms each with: •Bathroom •Hot water •Cable TV •Fan •Restaurant and Bar •Free Parking Lot Bringing the Reggae: Singer Johnny Dread will be touring around the country through February. parents in the United States, the singer’s confident Spanish doubtlessly also goes a long way toward keeping up the onstage banter in Latino countries – and he has a lot to say. Dread does not expect any more showstopping glitches, and will be performing at several venues around the country this month (see box). For information about his music, go to www.johnnydreadmusic.com. For concert info, call 863-0395. $17 Single / $27 Double / $37 Triple (506) 262-26-28 TOTALLY RENEWED! We have apartments with monthly rates It is a colonial house with 12 rooms, each with private bathroom and solar hot water, and cable TV •Green areas to rest •Free Parking Lot Heredia, from the Post office 200 mts. north, 200 mts west and 50 mts. north. Tel: (506) 260-5649 the solution is in recuperating our values.” For this reason, the aim of the season’s activities is to create an awareness of the principals and practices of nonviolence as a way of recuperating values and reducing violence. Participating groups include government, religious, volunteer and nonaligned organizations and people. The World Season for Nonviolence is an initiative of the United Nations. In Costa Rica, the season concludes with an awards ceremony for “builders of peace,” people or organizations that practice or promote positive values. To participate or find out more, contact Umanzor at 258-6133 or temporadano violencia@gmail.com. –Mitzi Stark $14 Single / $19 Double / $26 Triple 200 mts north of the Post Office •17 rooms each with bathroom •Solar-heated water •Monthly rates •Apartments fully furnished/unfurnished •Special deal for retired people •Cable TV •Fan •Parking lot Tel. (506) 237-30-36 $15 Single $25 Double $30 Triple Start Your Day Informed International Baptist Church welcomes you every Sunday Guachipelín de Escazú, west of Multiplaza on the north side of the Santa Ana Highway 8:30 am - Worship 9:45 am - Sunday Morning We offer you kind attention! E-mail: info@hamerica.net Web site: www.hamerica.net Bible Study. www.ticotimes.net/daily.htm For reservations in Hotel América, Hotel Ceos and Hotel Heredia call: Tel (506) 260-92-92 Fax:(506) 260-92-93 6170 Church Office: 215-2117 Pastor Paul’s Cell: 365-1005 E-mail: paul_dina@hotmail.com Read The Tico Times Daily News page at 7231 8221 11:00 am - Worship Free bus service in front of tha Gran Hotel at 9:00 am. 100 mts north, 100 mts west of the Post Office ✂ By Suzanna Starcevic IN HEREDIA, DISCOUNT ON MEALS AND RATES PRESENTING THIS AD 5% W4 | WEEKEND | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 Seven Day Star Forecast Gibson Returns; Crow Visits Uvita T By Licda. Ana Luisa Monge Naranjo The conjunction of the sun and Neptune in Aquarius suggests a very eventful time for Aquarians when vitally important decisions can be made. Libras and Geminis can see the positive side of events, but some of you may go through drastic and unpleasant changes, especially those born Feb. 8-11, May 9-12, Aug. 9-12 and Nov. 10-14. ARIES (March 21 to April 20) Organize your life to ensure two sources of income, since one may not be stable. A steadying influence might be needed to keep up with challenges. TAURUS (April 21 to May 21) You may be feeling very practical about money. Don’t let emotions interfere with decisions related to a business partner. GEMINI (May 22 to June 21) Patience is not one of your strengths, but you need it now. Faulty decisions, perhaps too hastily made, can result in financial disaster. CANCER (June 22 to July 23) Your vivid imagination may be enhanced this week. You can be very efficient when working with families and children. Connecting to the past may also be appealing to you. LEO (July 24 to August 23) Your powers of leadership may be difficult to muster this week. Employees or co-workers may resent your toohigh expectations. Make adjustments. Katherine Stanley he world’s leading bum-bum shaker passes up a presidential meeting, a U.S. rocker soaks up the sun, and Mad Max plays with spoons in the latest edition of Star Watch: Mel Gibson, fresh off the December release of his epic “Apocalypto,” is becoming a real Costa Rican regular. He visited in November 2004 to scout movie locations and again last April, when he stayed at the Four Seasons in the northwestern province of Guanacaste and reportedly visited Arenal Volcano. This time, according to the daily La Nación, he hung out in the Southern Zone’s Punta Dominical Jan. 18, chowing down on fish and drinking a diet soda in La Parcela restaurant. The daily reported that although Gibson was immediately recognized, people hung back, taking photos from a distance – perhaps intimidated by the story of the antiSemitic tirade he allegedly delivered when arrested for drunk driving last July – until two kids approached Gibson for an autograph. When the Australian-born actor and director gave them a warm welcome, even teaching them some sort of spoon trick, other guests and even waiters started asking for his John Hancock. Where will the Oscarwinner pop up next? Sheryl Crow visited the Southern Zone as cancer and former relationship with Tour de France champion Lance Armstrong – spent five days at the hotel with a group of friends who arrived before her. Crow, who traveled alone, was greeted at the airport by a driver with a sign bearing a false name she’d assumed to protect her privacy, Krogulec said in an e-mail. Photo courtesy of Paola Sánchez Hangin’ in the Southern Zone: Sheryl Crow, right, with Hotel Rancho Pacífico owners Garrison Krause and Silvia Jiménez. The singer stayed at the hotel on a recent visit to Uvita on the southern Pacific coast. well last month, staying at the Hotel Rancho Pacífico in Uvita, according to hotel spokeswoman Hanna Krogulec. The Grammy-winning singer – known for her album “Tuesday Night Music Club” and hits such as “All I Wanna Do,” as well as her battle with breast Next up on the star circuit is U.S.-Puerto Rican crooner Ricky Martin, who’s scheduled to sing at Saprissa Stadium in Tibás, north of San José, Feb. 19. Tickets for some areas, such as the VIP zone, are already sold out, according to the daily Al Día, and one fan in particular may want a private audience: President Oscar Arias. Lina Barrantes of the Arias Foundation for Peace and Human Progress told the daily that Arias, who founded the organization with the money from the Nobel Peace Prize he received in 1987, has known Martin for some time through collaboration with the singer’s Ricky Martin Foundation, which works to combat the trafficking and exploitation of minors. The President apparently suggested the two schedule a meeting while Martin is in Costa Rica. However, Barrantes said the Ricky Martin Foundation indicated the singer wouldn’t be able to make it since he is leaving the country the day after the concert (though concert producer Evenpro stated that Martin won’t be leaving until Feb. 22). One thing Martin will have time for, the daily reported: a preshow massage, one of the requests he made to organizers. VIRGO (August 24 to September 22) Though your popularity is not at its peak this week, you’ll get along with others thanks to your ability to follow instructions. Watch your tendency to carp. LIBRA (September 23 to October 23) To offset a feeling of tiredness, look for an environment of beauty and harmony, both physical and emotional. It will make a big difference. Lebanese Cuisine SCORPIO (October 24 to November 22) You like to push your limits, but don’t go around making unnecessary messes. Intimate involvement with a co-worker can bring undesirable results. Hommus, Falafel, and a great Lamb. Enjoy the best Lebanese food in Costa Rica. After eating visit our bar. SAGITTARIUS (November 23 to December 21) Seeing your decisions bear fruit is crucial for your personal satisfaction. Participate in an event in which people profit directly from your good work. AQUARIUS (January 21 to February 18) Despite your independent tendencies, you may feel a strong need of companionship this week. Be generous, but avoid wasting your money on trendy fripperies. 7306 Specializing in Middle East and International Cuisine On the way to Irazú Volcano Best Costa Rican and International food. • Houmos, Baba Ghanooj Tabule, Chawarma, Falafel, Lamb chops, The best baked lamb in town. Try our great fresh sea bass and enjoy our chef ’s specialties. We have 100 photos and info about the earthquake of Cartago. SUNDAY BUFFET SERVICE. PISCES (February 19 to March 20) Though you may have two jobs at the same time – one to survive and another to fulfill your dreams – you can find a lot of rewards in your job for survival. Enjoy it. What others do Well We do it with Excellence Reservations 536-6063 rest1910@costarricense.cr 300 mts. north from the white statue of Christ, on the road to Irazú Volcano. Open every day from 10 a.m. till 9 p.m. Breakfast starting 9 a.m. Fri.-Sat 10 a.m. 11 p.m. SHOWS!! www.restaurante1910.com 5083 S AY ID USIC R F M EST E B LIVTHE EF & F CH ’S O CK E JA SIN I CU 7135 Ana Luisa Monge is an astrologer member of the International Society for Astrological Research. For appointments, call 203-3439 or e-mail analu_mn@yahoo.com. Thursdays: Belly Dance 9 pm. 5001 Paseo Colón in front of Mercedes-Benz. Tel: 257-6071 7791 CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 20) Failure to see immediate results can undermine your self-confidence. Keep steadily climbing the ladder to success, but don’t try to scale several rungs at once. Visit us in Panamá too. (507) 225-7844 Open Tuesday to Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. 5 p.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. In Sabana Norte, from Rosti Pollos, 200 mts. North in front of Casa España. Tel: 296-9622 • 384-2710 8010 THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 | WEEKEND | W5 Leather Worker Produces Fine Goods in Atenas Bernard Giossi, a Swiss fashion designer, who asked her to make the accessories for his next showing. Until the successful show in Geneva in 1984, Barrette had been selftaught. While working with different kinds of materials, she discovered the potential of leather and wanted to make a living out of it. She decided to go back to Canada to learn the craft at Centre des Metiers du Cuir de Montréal, a leatherworking center in the province of Quebec. Barrette, who later taught at the center for six years, continued to work for the fashion industry. She set up her own workshop in Montreal and took part in exhibitions and competitions. “To me, working with leather is like building something,” the craftswoman says. “It allows me to play with materials and colors.” After going back and forth between Canada and Costa Rica for 10 years, Barrette and her husband, Andrés Studer, a Swiss painter and designer, decided to settle in Atenas permanently (TT, Feb. 10, 2006). The couple’s latest joint project is entitled “Molusco” (“Mollusk”), a three-dimensional sitting object designed by Studer and manufactured by Barrette, who is currently developing the prototype. “‘Mollusk’ first appeared in one of my husband’s paintings,” Barrette says. “It can be used as a chair, stool or sculpture. There are many ways to move it, and you can still sit on it. We’re using our ‘Mollusks’ every day to relax, read or watch TV.” For more information about Barrette’s fine leather goods, or to place an order, contact the leather worker at gya91@hotmail.com. By Gaby Kyriss Special to The Tico Times rom buffalo to ostrich and snake, there is no type of leather with which Canadian native Guylaine Barrette has not worked in the past 20 years. Based in Atenas, a coffee town northwest of San José, the certified leather worker and teacher designs and creates fine handmade leather goods. Barrette manufactures everything from stylish totes, handy backpacks and elegant belts to sophisticated briefcases, useful accessories, purses, wallets and colorful leather bindings. Inspired by the Bauhaus and art nouveau styles, her customized products exude her dedication to the highest quality standards and her passion for the craft. “Leather is luxurious, precious and noble. It is the skin of an animal, a demanding material that ages with style. To make something of good quality, you have to have a lot of experience, and you need to know your craft well,” says the vivacious 47-year-old, who markets her products under the pseudonym Gya Barra. Humans have used leather for thousands of years as an important material with unlimited possibilities. It is a renewable resource, created through the tanning of animal hides, pelts or skins. The best-quality leathers are gained from the uppermost layer of the hide or skin, where the hair of the animal was. “Calfskin is my favorite because it is flexible and young, providing the pieces with a perfect look,” Barrette says. For leather care in the tropics, she recommends keeping the pieces in a ventilated F Gaby Kyriss | Tico Times place, checking them regularly. Leather should be stored away from heat, and not needlessly exposed to sunlight. Mold must be removed with a slightly damp cloth. If desired, leather cream can be used once or twice a year. Barrette began her career as a craftswoman at the age of 19. The handmade cloth bag she had given her sister for Christmas was such a success that she began to produce handcrafted items for family and friends. She started selling her products and experimenting with all kinds of handicrafts, from batik to ceramics. On a trip to Europe, the avid traveler met Exportable Orchids Ask for your export permit Species Flask Exportable Ecological Carefree Get them at the best souvenir stores costaricanorchids.com orders@costaricanorchids.com THE LITTLE THEATRE GROUP Dreaming of Bamboo Blanche Brown Theatre, Escazú Custom Designs by Brian Erickson 8223 8068 Located in Plaza Itskatzu, below Hooters Phone 289-9860 * San Rafael, Escazu Locales 129, 130 Visit us for a free tour or call for hotel delivery Meets USDA requierments Tel:232-14-66 Cel:305-55-23 Presents Strawberries in January A ROMANTIC COMEDY Feb. 23-March 11 7:30 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 2:30 p.m., Sun. CALL: 355-1623 ONLINE RESERVATION www.littletheatregroup.org 15009 Exotic Bamboo plants also Tel. 710-1958 E-mail: Brian@brieri.com 7959 Guest Director David Allan King 7885 8355 2 international chefs making fusion fare, who have a nice extensive wine menu and a passion for making people happy. Join us for lunch & dinner. We also have nice tapas, desserts and aperitifs. Or just lounge out with our full bar and cocktail menu. Mention this ad and get a free glass of wine. We also offer catering services. Photo courtesy of Guylaine Barrette Photo courtesy of Guylaine Barrette Working with Leather: Based in Atenas, French Canadian Guylaine Barrette, shown at left using a leather finishing tool, produces handmade leather goods such as the red calfskin bag with crocodile button and Bauhaus leather and wood bag above. W6 | WEEKEND | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 Two’s Company: Where to Celebrate Valentine’s Day By Tyler Pearce Tico Times Staff o just who started Valentine’s Day? And exactly when did it start? A few different legends try to explain it. St. Valentine may have been one of several different figures, most of whom were martyrs. The bottom line is that no one really seems to be sure exactly who deserves the credit. While the history of this special day may be cloudy, what seems to work for many to woo their lovers is pretty clear: chocolates, flowers and dinner for two. This recipe has been followed by couples of all ages across the globe. Here are some suggestions to keep the recipe fresh. White House hotel, restaurant, casino and spa will be staging an elegant Valentine’s Day affair with a view, at its location in the hills of San Antonio de Escazú, west of San José. Though specifics were not available at press time, The Capitol Grill restaurant will be offering a choice of three menus, “Valentine’s,”“Passion” and “Love.” For info or reservations, call 288-6362. For more about the hotel, visit www.whitehousecostarica.com. Down in Bello Horizonte de Escazú, Big Mike’s has prepared an impressive menu to dazzle your loved one on Feb. 14. Owner Michael Forbes says Valentine’s dinner will include an appetizer, salad, entrée, dessert and a glass of house wine for about ¢12,000 ($23) per person. Lovers can choose from filet mignon à la béarnaise, salmon fillet with shrimp filling, sautéed rainbow trout almondine, shish kabob with rice pilaf or skewered jumbo shrimp with bourbon molasses. Call 289-6087 to reserve. For more about Big Mike’s restaurant, cooking classes and other culinary adventures, visit www. S Maisie Crow | Tico Times Vicky Longland | Tico Times Restaurants for Romance: Clockwise from above, Olio restaurant in Barrio Escalante; Heredia’s Baalbeck; The Capitol Grill at White House hotel in Escazú; and Park Café in Sabana Norte. culinaryadventurescostarica.com. Also in Escazú, Sebastian restaurant will be offering its regular international menu, including dishes such as tenderloin with cilantro sauce (¢6,200/$12), pasta in a black squid sauce (¢4,800/$9), and pasta in white wine sauce with cayenne pepper and shrimp (¢5,500/$11), accompanied by a string and percussion duo that will entertain diners at their tables. To reserve, call 289-8208. For romance in the hills of Heredia, Baalbeck restaurant will be offering some deli- Blooms and Sweets Flowers and chocolates are, of course, standard tokens of love on Valentine’s Day. Here’s an abbreviated list of options: Biosfera Flores y Más in the western suburb of Escazú (2896529) offers roses by the dozen in red, white and pink, as well as varied floral arrangements. A dozen roses wrapped in paper and tied with ribbon run ¢6,500 ($12.50). The shop also offers greeting cards and other small gifts. Floristería Embrujos (2286365) in Escazú features a large Chelcey Adami | Tico Times selection of roses as well. You can choose from red, white or pink varieties, as well as other bouquets of flowers. A dozen red roses sells for ¢12,000 ($23). Delivery is available at an additional cost. Flor de Oro in the eastern suburb of Curridabat (280-0810) offers a dozen roses wrapped with a ribbon for ¢10,000 ($19), as well as a selection of varied arrangements starting at ¢8,000 ($15). If you’d like chocolates or a bottle of wine to accompany your flowers, Flor de Oro will pick these up for you and deliver them, for an additional cost. Florist Julieta León recommends you place your order at least one to three days ahead of time to guarantee delivery. La Gardenia, with locations in San José (223-3232) and the eastern suburb of San Pedro (224-4527), offers plenty of rose and varied floral arrangements. A vase of a dozen roses runs ¢12,000 ($23) and a rose bunch with fruit costs ¢15,000 ($29). You can view floral arrangements online at www.lagardeniacr.com. Floristería Marvin has four locations in the Central Valley: Paseo Colón, downtown San José (256-1056); the northeastern suburb of Moravia (240-4150); Curridabat (272-9098); and Heredia (237-5011). A dozen roses costs ¢10,000-12,000 ($19-23); delivery is extra. Another floral option is to visit www.flowersdelmundo.com. With Flowers of the World, you can choose from many floral arrangements, as well as cakes and chocolates, and have them sent anywhere around the globe. This is a great option for those in long-distance love. The site www.chocolatesdelmundo.com specializes in gourmet chocolates by Giacomín chocolate factory in Escazú. An assortment box including milk and dark chocolate, macadamia nut, marzipan, caramel and praline goes for about $24. For something with a little more kick, try the liqueur box of truffles filled with whiskey, rum, Cointreau or cognac, for $21. –Tyler Pearce cious options to strike your fancy. Choose between three main dishes of Middle Eastern fare, followed by a dessert choice of either coconut flan or tres leches. A glass of white or red wine is included in the fixed meal, which will cost $26 per person. After dinner, stay around to enjoy a mix of Caribbean music, salsa and merengue by Grupo Marfil, starting at 9 p.m. Baalbeck is in Los Angeles de San Rafael in Heredia. For reservations, call 267-6683. For a truly unique, ultra-romantic experience, Park Café in the western San José neighborhood of Sabana Norte is a choice you won’t forget. With several Michelin restaurants under his belt, chef Richard Neat opened Park Café just a few weeks ago to complement his partner Louise’s existing antique shop. The open-air dining area surrounds a courtyard complete with tinkling fountain, intimate lighting and a gorgeous selection of antiques providing elegant decor. The menu for the evening is a set meal of five tapas, including soup of leek with ham, ravioli of mushrooms with asparagus, tataki of tuna with aubergine puree, brochette of shrimp with a Thai mango salad and millefeuille of chicken and bacon with guacamole. A sampling of five exquisite dessert items follows, lined on a long platter for an intimate, shared dessert experience. The cost for this set meal is ¢15,000 ($29) per person. To reserve, call 290-6324. In nearby Sabana Sur, popular Spanish restaurant Casa Luisa will be featuring two guitarists playing romantic music and trova to serenade lovers while they dine, as well as complimentary champagne. The restaurant’s menu includes Spanish paella and exotic items such as rabbit, lamb and tepezcuintle (paca). For reservations, call 296-1917. The Aurola Holiday Inn in downtown San José will be offering a fixed menu including appetizers, main dish and dessert. Start with canapé mushrooms with an avocado dip, follow with a fresh caprese salad, and then choose between fish Florentine or pork loin for your entrée. A single-servingsize bottle of red or white wine is included in the meal, which will cost ¢7,000 ($13) per person. To turn up the charm, each party will be given a complimentary rose. For information or reservations, call 523-1000. Photo courtesy of White House Photo courtesy of Park Café In eastern San José’s trendy Barrio Escalante, Mediterranean restaurant Olio has its own special Valentine’s night prepared. For starters, diners can choose between cream of pumpkin soup or salad with smoked salmon, followed by an entrée of fish fillet with seafood salsa, chicken Florentine, steak in Cajun sauce or vegetarian pasta with tomato and olives. For dessert, lovers may choose between almond cassata and passionfruit mousse. To add some romance to the air, a jazz saxophonist will play throughout the evening. The set menu is priced at ¢7,500 ($14). For info, call 838-8266. If all you have is a sweet tooth, Mara’s Pastelería, in downtown San José’s court district, offers a sinful selection of homemade cakes and pies for ¢9,000 ($17) each. As a Valentine’s Day special, Mara’s will be offering specialty cakes with a personal message of your choice to show your love. For information, call 221-5930. If you’re looking for something different to enjoy with your partner, Broadway Beauty in Escazú offers a couple’s massage with aromatherapy for ¢35,000 ($67) per person. Guys can be treated to a little more sugar with a chocolate facial lasting one hour and women are offered a collagen or vitamin C facial for ¢25,000 ($48) each. Or go deluxe with the spa’s third option of full-body exfoliation, massage, manicure and pedicure for ¢65,500 ($126) per person. Appointments can be made at 282-0232. THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 | WEEKEND | W7 New Municipal Theater Sets Stage in Alajuela Special to The Tico Times hough Alajuela is the second largest city in Costa Rica, it has never been a serious theater town. A few theater workshops or troupes and some short-lived theater groups have made the circuit sporadically, but now, with a permanent theater resurrected by the municipality, a permanent dramatist directing and two theater groups waiting in the wings, the city northwest of San José is ready for the shows to begin. Directing this new era for Alajuela is playwright Jorge Arroyo, an alajuelense whose plays and books have won national and international awards and whose ambitious work, “Tertulia de los Espantos,” opened the theater’s premier season. Situated in the center of town, one block from the Central Park and facing Juan Santamaría Plaza, the theater was built in 1956 to replace an earlier theater and ballroom built on the site in the early 1900s that once housed plays, orchestras and balls from the glamorous art deco period. But for most of the past 50 years the building has been idle and boarded up, used occasionally for programs or as dressing rooms for street activities. Now totally refurbished and dressed up as part of the civic program Alajuela 2010, the building has been restructured to meet modern building codes and to provide comfortable seating and elegant lobbies for theater patrons – 21st-century elegance with a 19th-century touch. A European-style café will soon enhance theater evenings. T During last week’s grand opening for an invitation-only audience, the theater’s lights went on for the first performance of “Tertulia de los Espantos” (“Gathering of Ghosts”), an original drama that brings together the legends and lore, much of it scary, of each of the provinces of Costa Rica. This gathering of the cart without oxen, the headless priest, El Cadejos (the man turned dog) and other spirits that haunt Tico lore makes up a multifaceted work tied together with narration and marionettes. Featured are 29 actors from two drama groups, Teatro Carpe Diem, directed by Marcos Araya, and Grupo Sombrero Rojo, led by Rodolfo Oreamuno. One of the stars on opening night, Jan. 30, was President Oscar Arias, who praised the city of Alajuela for its vision in recuperating not only the building but also the Costa Rican “culture and history formed by our ancestors,” adding that this may spur the recuperation of a dispersed and isolated society by encouraging people to come together in town centers to enjoy their culture. Regular performances of “Tertulia” begin at 7:30 p.m. Friday to Sunday through next weekend. Admission is ¢2,000 ($3.80), ¢1,500 ($2.90) for students with school ID and ¢1,000 ($1.90) for older adults. Tickets are available at the ticket booth from 4 to 7 p.m. on performance days. Advance reservations may be made by calling 436-2362. Matinee children’s programs and “Golden Wednesday” performances for senior citizens are scheduled for later in the season. Future programs will feature local, national and international artists. Chelcey Adami | Tico Times A Permanent Home for Theater in Alajuela: Dramatic lighting enhances a scene from the opening night of Jorge Arroyo’s “Tertulia de los Espantos,” the inaugural play at Alajuela’s new municipal theater. 8214 By Mitzi Stark W8 | WEEKEND | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 | WEEKEND | W9 EXPLORING COSTA RICA Arenal Residents Live in Harmony with Active Volcano Arenal Area Resident Recalls 1968 Eruption By Kate Roff Special to The Tico Times By Kate Roff estled at the base of one of the world’s most active volcanoes, in the north-central region of Costa Rica, lies the aptly named town of La Fortuna – “fortune” or “luck,” in English. Arenal Volcano’s violent July 1968 eruption destroyed three small villages, killed 87 people and wiped out 232 square kilometers of crops and livestock, but La Fortuna was spared. Since then, its 8,000 residents have made their peace with the consistently active volcano to form a delicate harmony. Each year, Arenal Volcano National Park receives approximately 60,000 visitors, and infrastructure in the area is increasing to support the constant flow of tourists. Most La Fortuna residents have become accustomed to the frequent rumblings of Arenal Volcano, and have begun to recognize their dependence on the booming tourism industry drawn by its regular, aweinspiring activity. The volcano has become the star attraction in a long list of tourist activities La Fortuna has to offer, including hot springs, horseback riding and adventure tours ranging from zipline canopy tours to white-water rafting. N Not Scared Since the tragic deaths of an 8-year-old U.S. tourist and a Costa Rican tour guide after an August 2000 eruption (TT, Aug. 25, 2000), and the resulting risk-area zoning established around Arenal Volcano by the National Emergencies Commission (TT, Feb. 23, 2001), tour operators have settled into a respectful coexistence with the volcano. Local tour manager Vanessa Willing of Wave Expeditions said she has lived in La Fortuna for two years and is not overly concerned about living in the shadow of Arenal. “I’m not really scared,” she said. “No one has completely forgotten about the volcano. They can’t; it’s a part of all our lives, and most of our work depends on the tourism received from it.” She said as long as it stays slowly active, no one is concerned. “When it goes quiet, that’s when I’ll Special to The Tico Times n 1968, Jorge Eduardo Solórzano lived six kilometers from north-central Costa Rica’s Arenal Volcano, near the town of La Fortuna, then a basic village that supplied necessities to area farmers and cattle ranchers. The 10-year-old boy attended fifth grade at the school in La Fortuna. “I had to walk a few kilometers every day to get to school, on a dirt road that formed part of the forest, which scared me because wild animals and snakes often crossed there,” recalled Solórzano, now 49. Back then, the looming figure of Arenal Volcano was just another mountain, called Cerro Arenal, dormant for more than 400 years and thought to be extinct. According to area residents, some people even slept in the crater; the fertile land surrounding it was an ideal place to grow crops, and the crater offered farmers protection from the elements at night. Two days before the fateful eruption, residents say, strange warning signs became evident. The temperature of the water in the river rose, and minor earthquakes began to shake the town. Solórzano recalls that he and his family were terrified of the earthquakes on that Sunday evening. “The rumbling noises sounded like airplanes taking off,” he said. “But we thought it had to do with the severe storms that were common around that time of year.” Villagers living near the volcano did not realize the danger of these signs until it was far too late. On the morning of Monday, July 29, 1968, Solórzano arrived at school, only to be sent home by an informed teacher who announced that Cerro Arenal had become a volcano. Safe on their distant property, Solórzano and his family watched the volcano explode. “Nothing could be seen between the colossal roars that sent ash columns tumbling down; it seemed like a giant, black cauliflower and the tremors did not stop,” he recalled. I Constant Rumbler: North-central Costa Rica’s Arenal Volcano, left, the most active volcano in Central America, is a constantly rumbling presence looming over the town of La Fortuna, right. Photos by Kate Roff | Tico Times worry,” she said. La Fortuna Hotel owner José Soro said the town almost entirely revolves around tourism. “Ninety percent of La Fortuna depends on the tourism industry; the rest is agriculture and dairy farms,” he said. “Most of that 90% are local business owners, which means the money we produce stays in the region. This is very important for us and the country.” Soro doesn’t feel concerned about living next to the volcano; on the contrary, he is excited about the energy it brings to the town. “I feel completely comfortable and have great expectations for La Fortuna,” he said. Besides adventure tourism, one very successful area of business has been the devel- opment of hot springs. Using rainwater and water heated by the magma of the volcano, hot springs resorts such as Tabacón and Baldi have become trademarks of the Arenal experience. Tabacón Grand Spa Thermal Resort opened in 1993 and is considered the most luxurious, and expensive. Since then it has flourished as a resort, with the tourism industry pushing it to renovate and expand over the past few years to include 114 guest rooms. The resort was recently awarded fivestar status from the Costa Rican Tourism Institute (ICT). Active Volcano Protected within a national park of the same name, Arenal Volcano erupts approximately every 10 minutes, according to park guide Oscar Artanla. With a permanent seismic station constantly measuring tremors and eruptions, residents such as Artanla are confident that another eruption would not be as devastating as the one in 1968. “The volcano is constantly monitored; that information gets beamed back to stations in Florida (in the United States), where they have experts looking at the material and statistics,” Artanla said. “I think La Fortuna is safe because it’s on the east side of the volcano,” he added. “I do think we have to respect the volcano and take responsibility to make sure all the visitors are safe on the tours in Arenal.” Despite confidence that a serious eruption remains unlikely, opinions vary on whether or not the town is prepared. Area resident Warner Baltodano said the city recently executed an evacuation drill and that he was comfortable with the way the test evacuations were carried out. “They got everyone out of the town in a test run about four months ago. That worked well,” he said. However, other residents feel an eruption could take residents off guard. Willing said she was not so confident in evacuation plans. She was not informed of the practice evacuation and was not aware of many emergency plans. “I think if it’s going to blow, then we wouldn’t have much warning,” she said. Arenal Volcano La ke Ar en al La Fortuna Tilarán Arenal Volcano San José N Pacific Ocean W E S Roy Arguedas Arias | Tico Times You never have enough space unless you call BODEGAS AMERICA MODERN SELFSTORAGE CONCEPT ut abo k s A our s cial spe YES! ✓Six sizes of units ✓Full-time guard ✓Access seven days a week ✓Best prices in San José ✓Two convenient locations, in Santa Ana, next to Forum and San Joaquín de Flores, Heredia, near the airport DENTAL CLINIC We carry: •Glock •Colt •Smith & Wesson •Heckler & Koch •Beretta •Sigarms •Walther •Springfield-Armory EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORS: Remington Arms Co. •Gamo Air Pistols and Rifles •Leatherman Tool •Sog Tactical Knives •Petzl Headlamps •Photon Led Microlights •Digilight Tactical Flashlights Tel. (506) 392-1921 Santa Ana (506) 282-1579 San Joaquín (506) 265-0445 Dentavac (since 1988) 7581 7236 5331 El Trabuco Gunshop Multiplaza Mall Multiplaza Mall Escazú, San José Zapote, San José Tel: 201-6205 fax: 201-6429 Tel: 280-7211 fax: 280-7219 For English please call 201-6205 E-mail: krometal@yahoo.com All lab work done on premises; English spoken, Fala-se Portuguese Our doctors and specialists, who graduated and trained in the United States and other countries, maintain the strictest sanitary and sterilization techniques. P LEASE SEND US YOUR PHONE NUMBER FOR A FASTER REPLY •Telefax: (506) 289-9618 / 289-4670 •Emergency phone: 383-1635 / 871-9801 USA/Canada: (305) 728-6241 •E-mail: info@dentavac.com •Home page: www.dentavac.com P.O. Box 906-1250, Escazú, Costa Rica Paco Shopping Center, 800 meters west old road to Santa Ana 8356 Storage, Storage, Storage! COSMETIC & GENERAL DENTISTRY You can be a foreigner and legally own a firearm in Costa Rica Photo courtesy of Jorge Solórzano Survivor: La Fortuna resident Jorge Solórzano remembers Arenal Volcano’s 1968 eruption, which killed 87 people. According to Arenal park guides, 87 people were killed that day in settlements closer to the volcano, but La Fortuna was spared. Solórzano and his family retreated to the Central Valley coffee town of Palmares, northwest of San José, for a month before returning to their property. The eruption marked a huge change in the lives of all area residents, Solórzano said. “Everyone immediately wanted to know what had happened and why; we were all uncertain,” he recalled. “But as time passed, little by little people began to return to the volcano.” Now Solórzano agrees that Arenal Volcano has become a huge tourist attraction that the people of La Fortuna have learned to use to their advantage. “I am a commercial retailer and have devoted my life to tourism,” he said. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ ❤ ❤ Romantic Getaway for 2 thru February ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ $99 per night with breakfast ❤ ❤ Candlelight Dinner available ❤ ❤ •Feel Cared For and Care-Free ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ •Private Casitas ❤ ❤ •Delicious, healthy food ❤ ❤ ❤ •Yoga & Massage ❤ ❤ •Authentic Costa Rican Ambience ❤ ❤ ❤ •Bird watching, hiking & ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ horseback tours ❤ ❤ Reserve now (506) 419-0110 ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ TOLL FREE ❤ ❤ ❤ from U.S. 1-866-659-3805 ❤ ❤ ❤ Don’t miss: Santiago de Puriscal ❤ ❤ Festival Days Feb. 23- March 4 ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ www.AmaTierra.com ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ C$20 www.nicatimes.net Friday, February 9, 2007 – Granada, Nicaragua An 8-Page Publication of The Tico Times NEWS IN BRIEF DIVER DOWN U.S. Denies Supplying Fighter Jets to Honduras Photo by Eric Sabo No Crowds: The remote Corn Islands, off the Atlantic Coast, are a diver’s paradise, offering great underwater sights without all the people that crowd other Caribbean dive spots. Story Page 5 Law Student Gets ‘101’ in Libel By Eric Sabo Nica Times Staff MANAGUA – A recent college graduate from the U.S. state of Ohio received a crash course last week in Nicaragua’s strict libel laws, narrowly avoiding a ruling that would have left the 23year-old writer to defend her reporting against one of the country’s most powerful coffee families. A municipal judge threw out the charges of slander brought by coffee producer José Esteban McEwan, but defendant Caroline Nagy, an aspiring law student who has worked in Nicaragua for the past year, could still face additional legal challenges over an article she wrote last year for an academic journal in Managua. The libel suit stems from Nagy’s portrayal of a long-standing and sometimes-violent land dispute on the Santa Emilia Estates, a sprawling coffee farm owned by McEwan on the outskirts of Matagalpa. Calling it a “David-versus-Goliath battle,” Nagy detailed the accusations made by a former Sandinista soldier, Vicente Padilla, who alleges that he was roughed up and kicked off his small plot of land by McEwan’s armed guards. The story was published last August in Envio, an academic journal associated with the University of Central America (UCA). Nagy claimed in her article that Padilla’s land dispute had been “complicated” by alleged corruption involving McEwan and local authorities – an accusation denied by McEwan and his lawyer, Orietta Benavides. During the Feb. 1 hearing in Managua, Benavides argued that Nagy had slandered a respected Nicaraguan family, whose holdings include various coffee brands marketed in the United States. “This article was of malicious intent simply to get publicity,” Benavides said. Benavides requested that the judge hold Page 2 New Tourism Director Draws Future By Tim Rogers Nica Times Staff MANAGUA – Mario Salinas, the new director of the Nicaraguan Tourism Institute (INTUR), is in the business of visualizing things that don’t exist, and then building them. That’s his training as an architect educated in Italy, and that’s what he has done for the past 16 years as the head of a development company that plans, designs and builds residential and commercial projects in Nicaragua. His company, Grupo Sooner, has built or is constructing seven urban development projects in Nicaragua to the tune of $150 million. Now, the 63-year-old Salinas, who is a lifelong Sandinista and personal friend of President Daniel Ortega, is putting his architectural and development background to use as the head of INTUR. “As an architect, I have been trained to imagine things in my head that later become a reality,” Salinas told The Nica Times during an interview this week in his Managua office. “This is the training I bring to INTUR. This is my machete, as we say in Nicaragua.” Salinas, who helped to head construction of the Sandinista government’s ambitious $30 million Montelimar tourism complex in the late 1980s, took over the top seat at INTUR last month, replacing the young and energetic Maria Nelly Rivas, who has gone into the private sector. Salinas says the change of government Page 3 MANAGUA – The U.S. Embassy released a statement Feb. 4 denying allegations by President Daniel Ortega that the United States had “approved the renewal of Honduras’ fleet of fighter jets.” Ortega, in comments to the local press Feb. 3, said that it would be “absurd” for Nicaragua to destroy its remaining SAM-7 shoulder-launch missiles if the United States was going to rearm Honduras’ Air Force. The United States said in its statement that it is not supplying Honduras with any fighter jets, but acknowledged that the Honduran government is in the process of buying eight “Storm Rally” jets from the United States for the purpose of detecting drug-trafficking and conducting searchand-rescue missions. “More than a month ago, the government of Honduras decided to use funds donated by the U.S. government to buy eight planes known as ‘Storm Rally,’ which are small planes for one or two persons,” the embassy said in its release. The embassy stressed that the Strom Rally jets, “don’t have any offensive capabilities and have not yet been given to the Honduran government.” Historic tensions between Honduras and Nicaragua were at an all-time high during the first Ortega government in the 1980s, when the U.S.-backed Contras trained and launched attacks against Nicaragua out of bases along Honduras’ southern border. Suspicions were again raised last year, when Honduras announced that it was building a military base near its disputed Caribbean border with Nicaragua. The International Court of Justice at The Hague is set to rule next month on the HonduranNicaraguan border dispute, filed by Nicaragua in 1999. The United States concluded its statement by again urging Nicaragua to continue with the process of destroying its SAM-7 missiles, which the Sandinista government bought in the 1980s to protect itself from possible air attacks out of Honduras. At the behest of former U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell in 2005, Nicaragua has destroyed a majority of its 2,100 stockpiled missiles, leaving 400 for “national security purposes.” Former Defense Minister Avil Ramírez told The Nica Times last year that the SAM7s could be used only against helicopters or other slower-flying aircraft, but not fighter jets. The United States is worried the missiles will fall into terrorist hands and be used to down a commercial airliner. –Nica Times CENTRAL AMERICAÕS LEADING ENGLISH-LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER Inside 2 | NEWS | THE NICA TIMES – February 9, 2007 Libel Law Protects ‘Honor’ of Offended Page 1 Nagy on a 5,000-córdoba ($278) bond and restrict her from traveling outside of Nicaragua until another trial date was set. The judge, however, dismissed the case and said that Nagy is free to return home at any point. Benavides said her client could still pursue the case if he chooses. “This was just a preliminary hearing,” she told The Nica Times. “We can return and present the charges again.” Living with Libel The libel accusation has left an unusual legal cloud over Nagy, who had to list the pending charges on her recent law-school applications to Georgetown and Harvard. Nagy said that the whole Padilla story has become a serious “detour” from her work at the Casa Ben Linder in Managua, where she helps bring together other activists to network on various social causes. “Honestly, I’d be happy if I never talked about this case again,” she said. Nicaragua’s libel laws can bring stiff penalties to anyone who damages a person’s reputation, especially if it involves a domestic or private matter. The truth of the allegations, lawyers explain, is less important than the perceived damage that is inflicted upon the person suing for libel. “In Nicaragua, it’s all about protecting someone’s reputation or honor,” said Almicar Navarro, a lawyer with the Managua Day in Court: Caroline Nagy (left), who plans to attend law school in the United States, confers with her attorney outside a Managua courtroom. Eric Sabo | Nica Times firm Garcia & Bodan. Judy Butler, one of the editors of Envio, said that this is the first time her magazine has been sued for libel. She said that Nagy’s story was different from the usual articles that run in the now two-and a-half-decade old publication, which is geared toward academic articles with a leftist bent. “We don’t do much street journalism,” Butler said. But the editor said she became convinced about running the story after Nagy spent two months in Matagalpa, where the young reporter poured over court documents and interviewed eye witnesses who were quoted as backing Padilla’s claims. “This was the most thoroughly researched article we have ever published,” Butler said. According to Nagy, the Santa Emilia Estates had been confiscated by the revolutionary Sandinista government in the 1980s and then given to a series of cooperatives after President Violeta Chamorro was elected in 1990. A McEwan family member was allegedly compensated $1 million for the confiscated land in 1994, according to the article. Yet José Esteban McEwan was “unwilling to see the family estate remain in the hands of mere peasants,” Nagy wrote, and so made plans to “reacquire it.” Although Nagy admits that her article clearly sides with the poor farmer fighting McEwan, she said that she was careful to shy away from anything she couldn’t substantiate – Padilla’s land title claims, she wrote, are “unclear and complicated,” much “like many things in Nicaragua.” But Benavides, who complained in court that Nagy never interviewed her client, McEwan, says that the article could be enough to cause serious harm to the family’s coffee business. “If a stranger reads this article, how will they be able to interpret this information?” she asks. “We can’t calculate the extent of the damage.” Private Investors Give Ortega Another Vote of Confidence MANAGUA – The head of the country’s main business chamber, COSEP, called on local businessmen to invest in Nicaragua and to trust the new government headed by President Daniel Ortega. “I tell all businessmen, ‘let’s go, these years that are coming are very good ones’,” said COSEP president Erwin Krüger after emerging from a meeting Jan. 31 with Nicaragua Vice-President Jaime Morales Carazo. “We’re starting off on a good footing in the government.” Krüger said that “this government is opening doors and we want to keep them open. “We’re the second-poorest country in Latin America and to be able to get out of that situation, we have to all agree to push the cart in the same direction together.” COSEP groups Nicaragua’s 15 leading industry chambers and trade associations. Krüger’s enthusiastic endorsement for the Ortega government was followed by similar reinforcement the following day by Mexican telecom mogul Carlos Slim, considered the wealthiest businessman in Latin America. Slim met with Ortega and Nicaragua’s leading business leaders Feb. 1 to announce an increase in investment here in areas of energy, telecommunications and infrastructure. “We have confidence in the country, in its government, in its business class and in its economic possibilities,” Slim said. Slim, a Mexican of Lebanese origin, said he is interested in geothermal and hydroelectric energy projects here because “they are the most efficient and abundant sources of energy Nicaragua has.” Sealed with a Handshake: Mexican business mogul Carlos Slim (left) met with President Daniel Ortega last week to promise more investment in Nicaragua. Mario López | EFE Along those same lines, Canadian investment group Polaris Geothermal announced Feb. 1 that it is going to invest another $68 million in Nicaragua to increase energy production to 31 megawatts at its geothermal plant in León. Slim, meanwhile, said he is also interested in Contact Us Vol. III Nº 107 increasing his telecom investment in Nicaragua, especially in rural and semi-urban areas. As president of the Mexican business group Grupo Carso, Slim already owns Teléfonos de México (Telmex), which indirectly controls the Nicaraguan telephone companies Enitel and Aló PCS. Publisher Dery Dyer General Manager Abby Daniell Editor Tim Rogers Reporter Eric Sabo Circulation Ivette Sánchez Production Mayra Sojo Published Every Friday by THE TICO TIMES S.A. Apdo. 4632-1000, San José, Costa Rica Phone (506) 258-1558 | Fax (506) 233-6378 Nicaragua address Apdo. 73 Granada Phone (505) 841-1643 E-mail trogers@ticotimes.net “When we started in Nicaragua, just a very short time ago, only three of every 100 Nicaraguans had a cell phone. Now 35 out of 100 have cell phones and we hope to get that to one of every two Nicaraguans with cell phones very soon,” Slim said. –EFE Advertising Vanessa Marenco vmarenco@ticotimes.net Tel. (505) 838-7848 Circulation Nicaragua Ivette Sánchez isanchez@jetbox.com Tel. (505) 250-1100 Costa Rica Subscriptions subscriptions@ticotimes.net www.nicatimes.net Copyright Convention: unauthorized reproduction in whole or in part is strictly prohibited. THE NICA TIMES – February 9, 2007 | NEWS | 3 Tourism Director Confident about Future Page 1 markets, and give special new attention to promoting the country as a tourism destination within Central America, particularly in Costa Rica and El Salvador. does not mean a change in the policy of prioritizing tourism as a principal engine to power the country’s economy. In fact, he said, the new government will be working even harder to strengthen tourism. “Undoubtedly, the government of President Ortega is clear about the important role that the tourism sector plays in generating money and jobs,” Salinas said. Ortega Appeal Confusion over Law 290 The new tourism director claims that the recent government restructuring under Law 290, which will pass INTUR from the auspices of the Ministry of Finance to that of the Presidency, is a sign that tourism will continue to be prioritized by the new administration. “Now we will answer directly to the Presidency. This gives a clear signal that the country is giving great value to tourism,” the new INTUR director said. Salinas downplayed concerns that the restructuring under Law 290 will debilitate INTUR’s ability to spend money on publicity to promote Nicaragua – an element that is considered crucial to the institute’s ability to sell the country as a tourism destination abroad. But not everyone at INTUR shares Salinas’ confidence. The debate and confusion over Law 290, passed Jan. 24 (NT, Feb. 2), involves a controversial reform that apparently will reallocate some $5.5 million in budget funding earmarked for government promotion and publicity for the various ministries and government institutes to the newly created presidential Council of Communication and Citizenship, headed by First Lady Rosario Murillo. Opposition lawmakers claim the measure is illegal because it will be usurping funds from the ministries and giving them to a non-elected office held by Ortega’s wife. And the national media, much of which survives on government advertising, argues that the reform will be a way for the Sandinista administration to “reward” the loyal media with large advertising contracts, and “punish” opposition media by starving them of government advertising revenue. Murillo claims the measure is about creating a coordinated strategy for government austerity to prioritize limited funding for needed social programs. That’s the line repeated by Salinas, who doesn’t think the reform will effect INTUR’s ability to promote Nicaragua as a Tim Rogers | Nica Times Visionary: INTUR director Mario Salinas says the first step toward building the future is to imagine what can be built. tourism destination. “INTUR manages its budget and it will continue to manage it,” Salinas said. “No one is talking about freezing funds, they are only talking about coordinating the government’s message. INTUR will always have its $1.5 million for promotion.” Others in INTUR say they think the press office’s budget for national advertising will now be controlled by the Council of Communication and Citizenship, but that the larger budget for foreign promotion, which is largely generated by separate taxes and income from outside of the national budget, will not be affected. But overall, most people are still confused about the implications of Law 290. Challenges Ahead Despite sustained 10%-plus growth over the past several years, the tourism industry in Nicaragua, with 773,000 visitors last year and $239 million in income, still lags behind that of other Central American countries. Only Panama and Belize have fewer annual visitors, but Panama’s duty-free shopping generates close to $1 billion annually in tourism-related revenue. Nicaragua also spends a lot less than its neighbors on international promotion. INTUR’s budget last year was around $1.2 million, compared to the Honduran Tourism Institute’s $3 million, Panama’s $5 million, Costa Rica’s $6 million, El Salvador’s $7 million and Guatemala’s $9.2 million, according to the Central American Integration System (SICA). Salinas said INTUR has to work to bring more tourists to Nicaragua in the coming years, and to convince them to stay longer once they are here. The INTUR director noted that the average tourist’s stay in Nicaragua is less than four days, while the average stay in Costa Rica is 12 days. Salinas hesitated to speak in terms of specific projects or goals that INTUR has planned for the next five years, claiming that the tourism institute is still finalizing a set of concrete goals and numbers that will be announced in the near future. But in general terms, he said, INTUR will work in these coming years to diversify its product, improve the quality of attention to tourists and work to increase the amount of money tourism generates for the economy and social spending. He said INTUR will continue to work to promote Nicaragua in U.S. and European Salinas says he thinks Ortega’s return to power will also have a positive secondary effect on tourism promotion. “Ortega is a figure who attracts a lot of attention; he doesn’t go unnoticed anywhere, so this assures that Nicaragua will be making the international news,” Salinas said. “And if the news out of Nicaragua continues to be reported in the same positive way it has been recently, I think it will be positive for us.” Salinas said that the new Sandinista government has already shown that it is willing to cooperate with the private sector to build a better country. And that cooperation between the government and the private sector is making international headlines – something that wouldn’t necessarily be news if one of the other presidential candidates had won the election last year. “People are paying attention to what is happening in Nicaragua,” Salinas said. “The left wing has returned to power and people are interested in how the left is managing development with the private sector. This is getting people’s attention and getting people to think about Nicaragua.” As for Ortega’s relationship with Latin America’s more radical, anti-U.S. left-wing element, Salinas said each President speaks on behalf of his own country. And in the case of Nicaragua, he added, “I haven’t heard any message from President Ortega that could scare away any investor or tourist.” Presenting International Gourmet Flavors From Custom Roasted Nicaraguan Beans Café El Coche Offering Nicaragua’s finest gourmet hot or cold COFFEE beverages. Also smoothies, sodas, hot and cold teas, delicious baked goods and desserts. NOW at three convenient locations! • PriceSmart, Managua • South Highway km 8.5, Managua • Del Papa “Q”, 75 mts. al sur, Granada Tel: (505) 552-1220 MANAGUA – In a move that could either further unite the Catholic Church with the Sandinista government, or divide the Catholic faithful, Cardinal and former Archbishop of Managua, Miguel Obando, is considering taking a government post as the coordinator of the newly created Council of Peace and Reconciliation. While Obando deliberates on whether to take the post offered by President Daniel Ortega, some other leaders in the church are urging him not to. “It would be a catastrophe for the faith of many Nicaraguans,” Monseñor Sócrates René Sándigo, secretary general of the Nicaraguan Episcopal Conference, told the daily La Prensa this week. “We urge our government to not involve such honorable people as the Cardinal in internal conflicts that could compromise (relations) with the people.” Obando served as a coordinator of the peace talks in the 1980s, but it was a non-governmental post at the time. Sándigo said that under 1983 canon law, members of the church hierarchy are pro- Cardinal Obando hibited from participating in government posts. He also reminded the Cardinal of what happened to Ernesto Cardenal, who served as the Sandinistas’ Minister of Culture in the 1980s and was publicly rebuked by Pope John Paul II. Others in the church have said the decision is a personal one for Obando. Managua Archbishop Leopoldo Brenes said that if Obando decides to take the post, he will be doing so as a private citizen, and not in any representation of the Catholic Church. Obando, an outspoken critic of the Sandinista government in the 1980s, has had a very visible reconciliation with Ortega in recent years, often appearing alongside him at public events. The Cardinal said a mass for the fallen Sandinistas during the 25th anniversary of the revolution on July 19, 2004. The following year he married Ortega and his wife, Rosario Murillo, before the Catholic Church. Many attribute Ortega’s presidential victory, in large part, to Obando’s apparent support for his candidacy last year. –Nica Times Enjoy indoor (air conditioned) or patio seating. We also offer a fine selection of See’s and other imported candies, brewing equipment for the home, coffee mugs and gift items. Experience the Café El Coche difference… one cup at a time. www.CafeElCoche.com Share the best part of your day with friends! Buy TWO delicious Café El Coche beverages and get ONE FREE*! 7675 Cardinal Obando Offered Gov’t Post *of equal or lesser value, upon presentation of this coupon. Good until May 31, 2007. 4 | CENTRAL AMERICA & CARIBBEAN NEWS | THE NICA TIMES – February 9, 2007 Central America Caribbean Update U.S., El Salvador Launch Anti-Gang Effort SAN SALVADOR – U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales this week announced an intensified joint effort between the United States and El Salvador to combat brutal street gangs that have roots in both countries and strong international criminal connections. Gonzales, on his first stop of a swing through three Latin American nations, said the offensive “targets the transnational gangs responsible for the most barbaric violence.” Two of the most powerful and far-reaching street gangs operating in major U.S. cities, Mexico and Central America are the Mara Salvatrucha (MS) and the Mara 18. Both were formed around nuclei of Salvadoran-born young immigrants in Los Angeles, California, in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and expanded rapidly both geographically and in terms of criminal activity. Hundreds of members were arrested and prosecuted in the United States for murder, assault, extortion and trafficking in drugs, humans and weapons. They later were deported to El Salvador, which despite being their birthplace was a land little known to most of them, having left as infants or toddlers with their emigrant parents. Once “back home,” they continued their criminal activity, forming extremely violent organizations including many Salvadoran youths who had never emigrated. The influence of the maras, as the gangs are known in Central America, spread throughout the isthmus and into Mexico, with many members sneaking into the United States to extend the power of the Teaming Up: U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales (right) and Salvadoran President Tony Saca announce new joint efforts to crack down on gangs. Roberto Escobar | EFE growing transnational phenomenon. Gonzales, after meeting Monday with Salvadoran President Tony Saca, said the new bilateral offensive will focus on more efficient detention of gang suspects in both nations, better exchange of information and increased U.S. training programs for Salvadoran police officers. Also among the initiatives is creation of a fingerprint archive intended to help authorities better track gang leaders and members. Gonzales announced formation of an elite U.S.-funded anti-gang unit to be composed of FBI agents and officers from El Salvador's National Police. Official Salvadoran data puts the number of gang members in this small Central American nation at about 10,000. Nearly one-third of those people are currently in jail, swept up in anti-gang offensives known as “Hard Hand” and “Super Hard Hand” that in recent years have sought to get offenders off the streets. So far this year, U.S. authorities have deported 1,700 Salvadoran citizens, 341 of whom have criminal records. The remainder were undocumented immigrants. “International cooperation and coordination is critical to combating these gangs that know no borders,” said Gonzales, who is Mexican-American. Saca, for his part, said he requested increased U.S. financial and technological aid to augment the National Police’s investigative capacities and to re-enforce security at the prisons with large gangster populations. –EFE ‘Angel of the Dump’s’ Legacy Lives on in Guatemala By Katherine Stanley Tico Times Staff Hanley Denning was only 36 when a car crash outside Guatemala City ended her extraordinary life last month. According to those she left behind at her innovative brainchild, Camino Seguro (Safe Passage), a program that’s helping hundreds of children who live at Guatemala City’s largest garbage dump, the work she began will far outlast her too-brief life. “Before, the kids would say, ‘I want to be a cardboard collector (when I grow up). I want to work on the truck with my dad. I want to be a policeman,’ because that’s all they saw,” Lety Méndez, one of the program’s leaders, told The Nica Times in a phone conversation this week. “Now, they say: ‘I want to be a doctor.’” Coming from children who, a short time ago, were forced to drop out of school to help their families sort garbage at the dump, aspiring to become a doctor is no small dream. But Denning, a teacher from the U.S. state of Maine whose efforts earned her the nickname “The Angel of the Dump,” helped inspire hope in many kids and families in just eight years of working in Guatemala. This year, Safe Passage is serving 580 students, with approximately 500 more on the waiting list. The program offers before- and after-school support, vocational training, and even a hotel service school. The organization relies on volunteers, earnings from its Posada Lazos Fuertes hotel in Antigua, and donors, including people or groups who “adopt” a child or classroom. Denning, who first went to Guatemala in 1999 to study Spanish for three months, visited the massive dump one week before she was scheduled to return home. At the dump, where approximately 4,000 people live in shanty homes on its outskirts and work over new garbage each day, Denning talked to kids who wanted to go to school but couldn’t afford the $20 fees. Determined to change this, Denning immediately sold her car and computer and used the funds to help get 40 students enrolled in school. “She had so much faith,” Méndez said. Denning’s commitment was much deeper than providing some money. Because the students often worked until the wee hours of the morning sorting trash, they weren’t used to getting up at 6 a.m. to go to school. So Denning went to each home to make sure they made it to the classroom on time, sometimes with a backpack full of bread and jam. She also had to convince public school teachers that the children were worth the effort. “In many schools, she found an attitude of, ‘We can’t do anything with these kids,’ but she was so insistent,” Méndez said. “She convinced the teachers to accept them.” Having students in school meant a loss of income for their impoverished families, so Safe Passage also began providing a monthly basket of basic food items as a reward for students who attended school and other programs, including homework sessions, English classes, art courses and other activities. Denning, who through the years accumulated staff support, a team of social workers, and volunteers from overseas who came to work with the kids, also worked to get highschool scholarships for students who successfully completed primary school. She also began vocational training centers in baking, carpentry, tourism and other fields. Participants in the vocational courses receive practical training, then an apprenticeship, with the goal of starting a small business. At Posada Lazos Fuertes (www.posadala zosfuertes.com), where 100% of the profits go to Safe Passage, a team of 21 young people from the program is learning about hotel management – and also getting a chance to experience a touristy section of Guatemala that is foreign to those who live in the dump. Through it all, Denning’s work ethic inspired – and sometimes worried – her coworkers. “She didn’t sleep,” Mendez said. “We’d get really concerned, asking, when did she last eat?” On Jan. 18, a bus struck the car in which Denning was traveling from Guatemala City to Antigua, killing her and her driver and injuring two program volunteers in the backseat, according to a Portland Press Herald article on Denning’s funeral in her hometown of Yarmouth, Maine. Parents, children and coworkers mourned her passing in Guatemala City on Jan. 20, followed by a service Jan. 23 at Yarmouth High School, where both Guatemalan and U.S. flags were draped over Denning’s coffin. She Read Us Online: www.nicatimes.net is survived by her parents and three brothers. Méndez, 34, who traveled to Maine for the service, said that she, like the rest of the Safe Passage staff, is determined to carry on Denning’s work. She’s a believer in the Safe Passage mission, though she admits it wasn’t always that way. “I was working for (Denning) as a secretary in Antigua – I had never been to the dump,” she said. Méndez said she made her first trip to the dump with Denning in 2000 and was shocked by the children working, the baby she saw in a cardboard box, the story of another baby who’d died the week before because a garbage truck threw trash on top of her. Méndez said, “My first impression with Hanley was to tell her, this can’t be. People aren’t going to change.” But, she added, “not even a year went by before I changed my way of thinking. Normally, people in Guatemala, we try two or three times, but she tried 1,000 times. She showed it really could be done. And now, more than ever, I believe it.” For more information about how to help Safe Passage by participating in volunteer projects; donating to the Hanley Denning Memorial Fund; sponsoring a child or classroom; staying at Posada Lazos Fuertes; and other means of supporting the program, visit www.safepassage.org. THE NICA TIMES – February 9, 2007 | WEEKEND| 5 EXPLORING NICARAGUA Divers Find Natural Treasures off Corn Islands By Eric Sabo Nica Times Staff Photo courtesy of Nautilus Exploring the Reef: Divers check out the sights off the shore of Big Corn Island, including a colorful trigger fish (at right). Despite the wealthier clientele, Herzog has kept her prices the same. A two-tank dive with instructor and equipment still costs only $75. A range of spots can be enjoyed by divers of all levels. But the must-see spot for more experienced divers is “Blowing Rock,” a jagged formation that sits a few kilometers off Big Corn. The large, underwater cliff climbs 150 feet from the ocean floor, making it an attractive spot for all types of sea life. Off Little Corn, there are a series of small, underwater caves that have become dive favorites there. While the tourists who dive here go away pleased, few seem as happy as the Nautilus owners. Chema and Regine are both avid musicians who, after a day of diving, open their restaurant on weekends to local performers. They sometimes join in on the music act themselves. “It’s a great way of life out here,” says Chema. For more information, contact Nautilus at 575-5077, www.divebigcorn.com. You can contact Dive Little Corn by e-mail at: info@divelittlecorn.com. Look for The Nica Times special edition on Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast in next week’s paper. 7855 And don’t miss the upcoming special editions throughout the year on other topics of interest such as Real Estate, Trade and other tourist destinations. CARIBE NICA07 BIG CORN ISLAND – Hugging Nicaragua’s largely untouched Atlantic Coast, the Corn Islands are more removed from the mainland than the quick plane ride from Managua would suggest. Separated from the rest of the country by history and geography, the two islands lack the same Spanish influences that dominate other popular tourist spots. The result is a distinctly Caribbean feel just 50 miles off the Nicaraguan coast. What you hear on the islands is mostly Creole English and reggae music. The waters are turquoise blue and the beaches are tranquil. It’s a hard-to-beat combination that feels all the more remarkable once you realize you’re still in Nicaragua. Just a few kilometers off the Corn Islands is an even greater treasure for underwater enthusiasts: a coral reef that stretches down from Belize and offers some of the best diving in Central America. The islands remain relatively undiscovered by tourists, and the surrounding waters are teaming with colorful marine life. The two islands – Big Corn Island and Little Corn Island – offer an impressive array of diving options, each equipped with its own professional dive shop. Two popular dive companies are Nautilus on Big Corn, and, across the 15-kilometer stretch of blue ocean separating the two islands, Dive Little Corn. As with anywhere, the two shops require special dive certification before they will take you down. They both offer professional lessons that can get you underwater and exploring relatively quickly. They also offer snorkeling tours, which for a trip that can run as short as two hours, puts you in close range to spotted sea rays, nurse sharks and giant turtles. Regine Herzog, who runs the Nautilus dive store with her husband, Chema, explains that the relatively small number of visitors has kept the natural habit of the dive spots intact, whereas, divers complain, popular spots off the Virgin Islands and other Caribbean destinations have become overrun with tourists. Hurricanes have chipped away at some of the reef near the Corn Islands, but there are a number of submerged shipwrecks that add to the marine habitat. Those who dive or snorkel here can expect to see anything from small, bright trigger fish to menacing-looking barracudas. A recent snorkeling excursion by two tourists reported spotting a ray and a variety of colorful tropical fish. The main attraction of their snorkeling was seeing an olive ridley sea turtle, which swooped by like an underwater cargo plane. The main thing keeping the bigger crowds away, Herzog says, is the price of the plane ticket from Managua to Big Corn Island, which has nearly doubled in recent years. But the island’s growing reputation and sprinkling of fancier, new hotels is starting to draw higher-end tourists with more money in their pockets. “It’s a different group now,” Herzog says, adding that no one goes away unhappy. Photo courtesy of Nautilus 6 | WEEKEND | THE NICA TIMES – February 9, 2007 COMMUNITY CONNECTION Those interested in contributing reports or photos to Community Connection are welcome to e-mail Eric Sabo at esabo@ticotimes.net. Granada Gossip Casa Limón, the eclectically designed and furnished home of Lemon Groves and Troy Díaz in barrio La Otra Banda, was magically transformed into the Infusion Confusion Lounge and Meeting Place, with a grand opening the end of January. Thirty-two rum infusions and happy-hour kabobs were offered to the grand-opening celebrants, along with down-tempo lounge music. Some of those present were Ben Wheatley, Sharon Danley, Tavid Dobson, Ruggiero Salvadori, whose wife Galia was home with baby Gisele, Sheryl Woodward, Nadene Holmes, Camilo Calderon, Doris Lucero, Tanya Ortega, Thalia Drori, Tom and Kelli Bardner, Frank and Vanita Gallo. Infusion Confusion is open Friday and Saturday evenings, other nights by reservation. Jackson Pollack-style paintings adorn the walls of Casa Limón, artfully composed by Troy himself. A dinner for American Legion Nicaragua Post 1 members was held at Casa Gallo, catered by Pasta Pasta. On hand for this social get-together were Post Commander Leonel Poveda and his wife Maria Auxiladora, Vice-Commander Fred Belland and wife, Jaime and Nena Valle, Richard and Celeste Johnson and Celeste’s sister Marina, Carl and Karolina Currier, Sandy and Kathy Perkoff, Joe Brown and Gillian Lythgoe, and hosts the Gallos. Maverick Coffee Shop and Reading Lounge celebrated its third anniversary Feb. 2, with a dinner of a variety of sausages, chicken filets and pasta salad. A packed house helped Nadene, Camilo and kids celebrate. We received an e-mail from occasional visitor to Granada, Noel Montagno, who has lived in Alajuela, Costa Rica, for a number of years. Noel has finally made the move and can be found at Casa Miramar at Playa La Boquita. Madeline Alpert is working on a Granada calendar to be updated frequently and e-mailed. If you have an item or want to be on the e-mail list, you can call her at 682-9444. by young local artist Clara Grun at the Casa de Los Mejía Godoy. Another important nightlife event is the inauguration of The Reef, the anticipated surfer bar in Zona Viva, with music spun by DJ Revuelta Sonora. Wrapping up the week of partying, the best Saturday night options are Hipa Hipa, with their JIPA Hour from 8-12 p.m., with 10 córdoba ($0.55) vodkas and 5 córdoba rum and national beer. Cover for Hora JIPA is 100 córdobas ($5.50) for the guys, and 50 ($2.70) for girls. And don’t forget that if you were at Arribas last Saturday night, you can present your bar receipt this Saturday and drink the same amount for free. Bueno muchachos, have a good time partying. And remember, if any of the bars close too early for you, you can always head to Karaoke Star City and its dico Matrix, located across from the Hotel Princess, to party until the sun comes up. –Xochitl Ruiz tutti00@hotmail.com Tim Rogers | Nica Times Celebrating Another Year: Nadene Holmes, owner of Granada’s popular Maverick Reading Lounge, celebrated the business’ third anniversary with a cookout and party Feb. 2. Been to Lacayo Super or Lugo Ferretería lately? Both are well stocked, and we hear the 92-year-old Lugo Ferretería is having its best business in years. We also hear that Henry, the cat who owns John and Linda Sauter, may not be the biggest house cat in the world, but he weighs in at 23 pounds, and somehow fits under the seat on the American Airlines flights. –Frank Gallo gallovf@aol.com Managua Nights The week is full of nightlife in Managua. Starting Wednesday with Ladies’ Night at Hipa Hipa, in Plaza Familiar, ladies pay only a 5 córdoba cover with open bar for vodka, rum and national beers. Guys pay 150 córdoba cover ($8.30) for Ladies’ Night. If we don’t go to Hipa Hipa, we can be found at Moods, the new disco in Zona Viva, at the Mall Galeria Santo Domingo. The recently opened disco has a slightly more formal environment, and on Wednesdays there is no cover for men or women. Thursday nights the crowd is at Arribas, with 2x1 deals on national beers. If you’re looking for a little more movement and dancing, nearby Broder has Ladies’ Night on Thursday, where girls get in for free and guys pay 150 córdoba entrance. This Friday, Feb. 9, don’t miss the concert Masaya Moments A good way to get connected with the community of Masaya is by visiting the Web page vivamasaya.com, which will keep you up to date on what is going on in the city, both with nightlife and special cultural events. The page is continuously updated. The Web page has a large database of photos from Masaya, including natural attractions, horse parades, cultural festivals and events, and nightlife pictures from bars Aha Bar, Ático, Chapo´s, and Rock Arena. The page is a fun way for tourists to learn about what is going on here, as well as for native Masayas who now live in other cities or countries to stay connected with their hometown. There are also photographs from other neighboring cities, such as Granada, San Juan del Sur and Managua, among others. –Cecilia Espinoza cep_ts2k@yahoo.com CALENDAR *First time in Calendar. Listings are in chronological order. E-mail Calendar submissions to esabo@ticotimes.net by 11 a.m. Monday, five days prior to date of publication. Managua *Anniversary Party: DJ Linux plays at second anniversary celebration for popular night spot, Feb. 9, 8 p.m., Fresh Hill Bar, next to Hospital Militar. *Live Music: Performance by local artist Clara Gun at the family restaurant/bar of Carlos Mejía Godoy, Feb. 9, 8 p.m., Casa de Los Mejía Godoy, in front of Hotel Crowne Plaza, 362-6110. *Valentine’s Day Drinks: A “love party,” Feb. 14, at Disco Chaman, Carretera Masaya one block past Sandy’s, 278-6111. *Love and Peace: Norma Helena Gadea and other musicians play tribute to the spirit of Valentine’s Day, Feb. 14, 8 p.m., Ruta Maya. *Movie: The film, Tinta Roja, Feb. 14, 8 p.m., Justo Rufino Garay Theater, near Las Palmas Park, 266-3714. *Magic Show: Fernando Keops, the “angel of magic,” Feb. 11, 5 p.m., Rubén Darío Theater, 222-7426. *Night of Boleros: Various artists play percussion and strings, Feb. 13, 7:30 p.m., Rubén Darío Theater. Lady’s Night: Drink specials every Wednesday for women at trendy bar HipaHipa, Km. 7.5 on the highway to Masaya, 278-8504. Live Music: Songs from the 1960s and 1970s, Feb. 9, 8 p.m., Ruta Maya, near National Stadium, 268-0698. Latin American Music: Live music weekends, restaurant Intermezzo del Bosque, outside of Managua, 883-0071. Granada *Anti-poetry: As part of the III International Poetry Festival, a group of “anti-poets” offer their own recital, Feb. 9, 7 p.m., the Bar Casa Bohemia, calle Corrales, next to fire station. *Film Screening: Premier of local production, ‘The Condom Squad,’ Feb. 10, 5:30 p.m., Casa de la Mujer, Calle Calzada. *Concert: Carlos Mejía Godoy closes last night of poetry festival, Feb. 10, 6:30 p.m., at Independence Plaza, in front of Cathedral. Live Music: The group Clave de Sol, weekends at Café Nuit, Calle Libertad, 612-6721. Live Music: Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Hotel Casa San Francisco, next to Convento, 552-8235. Tim Rogers | Nica Times The Big Screen: Local film “The Condom Squad,” written, directed and acted by local teens, will premier 5:30 p.m. Feb. 10 at Granada’s Casa de la Mujer. THE NICA TIMES – February 9, 2007 | OPINION | 7 Send your Letters by e-mail (trogers@ticotimes.net), regular mail or fax (see Page 2). Please don’t forget to sign your name and include your return address and phone number.Thank you. Letters Thank You for Article On ‘The Condom Squad’ Dear Nica Times: Thank you for “The Condom Squad” article (NT, Feb. 2). It takes courage and a bit of diplomacy to get such an important and controversial story out to the masses. It is a crime of a generation that the information is readily available yet sequestered so often. Programs like The Condom Squad are essential because it is apparent parents don’t always provide this information. The angle of shaking one’s reality through art is self-evident, if one chooses to pay attention. Faith can be a healthy addition to one’s reality, but to lay the religion thing on an adolescent, without any other information about healthy sexuality, is really abuse when one ponders it. How dare any society throw sex and violence at teens (at all of us) and then pull the plug on people asking thoughtful questions and getting honest answers! Thank you for real journalism. May you continue to expand the frame of the conversation on many issues. Scott Douglas Toronja Marina, California, USA *** Dear Nica Times: I just wanted to tell you, as a journalist, what a great job you did with the story about Thalia Drori and her crew, Cineastas de Granada (NT, Feb. 2). It was clear, comprehensive and fun to read. It helps that Thalia is my lifelong friend and I am enormously proud of her, but that also allows me to say that I think you did a fantastic job capturing the true spirit in which she works and lives. She is one of the few people I know who really “walks the talk.” And you conveyed that well in the story about “The Condom Squad.” Thanks for writing it! Susan Gaines Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA Cockfighting is a Sign of Psychosis Dear Nica Times: Cockfighting is not sport, it is psychosis. See the faces of the spectators, grim, detached, guilty (NT, Jan. 26). I place it in the same class as bear baiting. A caged or securely tethered bear is pricked with needles on the end of long canes mercilessly until he is driven mad with pain and frustration while cowardly imbeciles enjoy his misery. A sane person cannot relate to this behavior. The social or professional position of the participant does not validate the activity but degrades the individual. Sucking blood from the neck of a rooster does not prove a man’s virility. At one time carnivals had a performer called a geek who bit off the head of a live chicken and ate the chicken raw for the edification of the audience. He was usually a starving retarded person. In old Mexico, men had a way of proving their mettle and settling disputes: each man took the end of a bandana in his teeth and they fought with knives, the one to let go the bandana lost. That, to me, is true machismo. If the devotees of cockfighting want to prove themselves they might strip naked, arm themselves with razor blades and have at it – no question of guts there and we would have the satisfaction of seeing as least one imbecile removed from the gene pool. George Prosser Golfito, Costa Rica *** Dear Nica Times: I generally enjoy Tim Rogers’ articles. The article about cockfighting (NT, Jan. 26), however, really threw me off. To give enough attention to make it front page and such a long article I find unnecessary. To even refer to this barbaric way of treating animals as a sport is, to me, deplorable. When I see the majority of a society accept such cruelty to animals, it tends to reflect the views of the society in general. It is just one of many components to why Nicaragua has had such a bloody past, with dictators and fighting amongst themselves. For someone to think it is OK to suck the blood from the throat of an animal just to keep it alive to continue to fight, is appalling. I could say much more but will leave it at that. Henry Kantrowitz Quebrada Ganado, Costa Rica Cockfighting Tournament Provided Fun Night Out Dear Nica Times: Rarely am I inspired to venture out of my small world and give myself a chance to experience something totally new. However, Georgia. Denning made the “no child left behind” concept a reality rather than a platitude. At the memorial service for her held in Maine, her casket was draped with the flags of Guatemala and the United States. Given her service to Guatemala and the way she represented the United States abroad, this was a well-deserved tribute to an extraordinary individual. the article that Tim Rogers wrote on cockfighting (NT, Jan. 26) did just that. As I was reading the article, another tourist and I started discussing this sport and decided that we should both go. We had an experience we wouldn’t have had otherwise, and I plan to go again. This is coming from someone who hasn’t eaten chicken or red meat in 20 years! More importantly, we were very impressed that Tim Rogers had the courage to write about a subject that is taboo to so many Gringos. David Stanley Paris, Maine, USA Tanya Ortega de Chamberlin Granada History will Prove Value of Free Trade U.S. Activist Was Powerful Role Model Dear Nica Times: As of Jan. 31, I concluded my mission as Ambassador of Nicaragua to the United States and Canada, after more than three years of having the honor and satisfaction of serving my country in this capacity. Our Nicaraguan communities and their members in the United States and Canada fill me with pride. These are healthy, hardworking communities that never forget their homeland. I arrived to my post in Washington, D.C. in November 2003 with a mission: to contribute our share of work on the part of Nicaragua so that the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United Staes (CAFTA) would become a reality. In our own way, we had the honor to share in some of the great efforts of so many people from the seven participating nations. This agreement became a reality due to a fortunate coming together of the wills of the Presidents and citizens of our countries. Thank you to the Ambassadors of Central America and the Dominican Republic for your sense of brotherhood. Thank you to each and every one of the participants in the small and great battles for the CAFTA accord, including the dedicated officials of the U.S. government and members of U.S. private enterprise. The legacy of this fight will be ratified by history. My most profound desire is that the relations between the United States and Nicaragua continue to be strengthened for the mutual benefit of both our peoples. I wish the same for our cordial relations with Canada. Dear Nica Times: The untimely death of Hanley Denning in a traffic accident in Guatemala Jan. 18 gives us pause to reflect on the extraordinary accomplishments of this young woman. Her life served as a role model for those working in Nicaragua and other Central American countries regarding how to implement the United Nations Millennium Development Goals. Her enormous success in helping hundreds of children at the dump in Guatemala City provides tangible proof of what one person can accomplish if she is willing to act. Safe Passage (www.safepassage.org), the organization that Denning founded and of which she was the guiding light, has successfully focused on addressing the goals of eliminating extreme poverty and achieving universal primary education. The support provided to approximately 500 children includes a pre-school program, as well as moving school-age children from scavenging in the dump to the classroom by funding their school fees. The program also obtains parental support for keeping the children in school by giving food as an attendance bonus. In doing all this, Safe Passage has given hope to the whole community. In addition, many volunteers providing hands-on support have realized that their individual efforts make a big difference to those in great need. I submit that Denning did more to help the people of Central America than the hundreds of millions of dollars in weapons sent to the region by the United States. The educational experience provided to the children in the dump stands in stark contrast to the devastating effect on the poor resulting from the training given to the officer corps of armies in Latin America at the School of the Americas in Salvador Stadthagen Washington, D.C., USA SHUTTLE TO GRANADA AIRPORT Fixed rates, no surprises U.S.$15 per person each way. Only service leaving Granada in time for first departing flight we are the only one with a counter in the airport • Door-to-door service • Punctual pick up and delivery • Courteous service Get Connected with The Nica Times Community Pages Read Us Online: www.nicatimes.net 7671 Whether you are new to Nicaragua, or have been here for years, The Nica Times community and opinion pages are a good way to get connected and express your thoughts on different issues going on around the country. Readers are encouraged to send letters to the editor, “Perspective” articles and calendar events to: esabo@ticotimes.net, or trogers@ticotimes.net New vehicles with: A/C, CD/DVD/MP3, Video Screens Fully insured in accordance with the laws of Nicaragua. Complimentary bottle of water. INTUR and EAAI approved RESERVATIONS (505) 552-8291 • 831-9879 (305) 831-4611 E-mail: reserves@paxeos.com WE E V www.paxeos.com SERLL A TS* Granada, Nicaragua H We accept credit cards. FLIG *For our departure schedules check with us. 8 | BUSINESS | THE NICA TIMES – February 9, 2007 Security Transparency Peace of Mind 8174 Tel. + 506-258-5600 U.S.: 713-589-6474 www.stewartcr.com WHERE YOU CAN FIND THE NICA TIMES! CLASSIFIEDS Buying and selling is easy and effective with a classified ad in The Tico Times. Faxing it to (country code 506) 233-6378, by mail to The Tico Times, Apdo. 4632-1000, San José, Costa Rica (U.S. residents send orders to SJO 717, P.O. Box 025331, Miami, FL 33102-5331) or by phone to (country code 506) 258-1558. Visit us online www.ticotimes.net and fill out the classified order form or send an e-mail to classified@ticotimes.net. Rates for the print-edition classifieds are as follows: Minimum 2 lines for 2 weeks. US $2.50 per line including letters, punctuation and spaces. For symbols (star, arrow, check mark) or graphics, contact the Classified Department. For yellow shading add an additional 40% charge. Finally, add 13% advertising tax to the total of the ad. Minimum 2 publications. We accept VISA, MASTERCARD and AMEX or make checks payable to The Tico Times. Payment must be made in U.S. dollars. Do not send cash. SPECIAL OFFER FREE Online Ad with Classified Ad Purchase e-mail: classified@ ticotimes.net BEACHFRONT – Nicaragua, $129,000. Nice, newly remodeled house. Deeded property. US (731) 986-9837 NIC (505) 612-9000 www.bestchoicenicaragua. com MAIL Boxes Etc. 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Read us Online www. nicatimes.net LISTA DE PUESTOS NICA 851 Managua MANAGUA • La Colonia Supermercado Hiper Santo Domingo • La Colonia Supermercado Plaza España • Hotel Las Mercedes • Hotel Camino Real • Hotel Crowne Plaza • Hotel Inter-Metrocentro • Hotel Hilton Princess • Hotel Holiday Inn • INTUR • Casa del Café Airport, Altamira, Metrocentro & Santo Domingo • Ola Verde • Stop & Go Santo Domingo & Carretera Sur • Hospital Metropolitano • Casa de Las Revistas Airport GRANADA • Maverick Reading Room • Lacayo Supermercado • El Club • Kathy’s Waffles • Hotel Alhambra • Casa San Francisco LEON • Hotel El Convento SAN JUAN DEL SUR • Distribuidora Calderón • Bar Y Restaurant El Timón • El Gato Negro • Elixir Center • Restaurant El Velero • Big Wave Dave’s Bar & Restaurant For more information about distribution contact Ivette Sánchez in Managua at 250-1100 or by e-mail: isanchez@jetbox.com W10 | WEEKEND | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 The Perfect Palm Combo: Pejibaye and Palmito F ew plant species can be considered a marvelous discovery that has transformed human culture. Bactris gasipaes is definitely one of those rare cases in which a plant provides a wide variety of products for different uses. The peach palm supplies Marco González two of the most delicate and exquisite vegetable products Costa Rica exports to the world: peach palm (pejibaye) and heart of palm (palmito). It is thought that plantations already existed by the time Columbus arrived on Costa Rica’s Caribbean island of Uvita in 1502, which was appropriately named La Huerta (The Vegetable Garden). It wasn’t until 1541 to 1546 that the first reference to the peach palm appeared in official colonial records, when Spanish settlers entered the southern hills of the Coaza Cacique territory in today’s Talamancas, an area in which a tree locals called “pijibay” (pronounced pe-heeBYE) was more than prominent and utilized by the locals in many ways. Conquerors discovered how not only the fruit but also the core of the palm was consumed, and that the palm fronds were used for thatch and the tree trunks for timber. At that time, the peach palm was cultivated throughout southern Mexico and Central America to the Peruvian and Brazilian Amazon regions. Although today the peach palm grows in most tropical areas of the globe, its potential production scale is still in its infancy. Costa Rica and Brazil are the leading exporters of peach palm products. Pejibaye and palmito are considered delicacies sent abroad to gourmet markets in the industrialized world. The pejibaye itself is so unique in taste that it has been described as somewhere between a sweet potato and a water chestnut, with a unique bright orange color and nutty texture. It is a versatile ingredient Pejibaye and Palmito in Mocha Mexicali Sauce with Cumin Rice TASTE OF THE TROPICS Marco González | Tico Times Mixing Palm Products: Pejibaye and palmito in Chef Marco’s “Mocha Mexicali Sauce” with cumin rice. that can be cooked in many ways, either savory or sweet. Flour, starch and oil are extracted from the flesh for both industrial and domestic uses. Palmito is one of the crispiest and delicious of the edible palms; its rich aroma and consistency are comparable to those of tender bamboo shoots. Chefs from around the globe continue to be inspired by these two ingredients, creating a melting pot of techniques, recipes and ideas. Their versatility means they are adaptable to almost any kind of cuisine, style, technique or flavors. Commonly found in gourmet markets of New York, London and Tokyo, their prices in these far-off locales certainly categorize them as “elite” ingredients, deserving of regal treatment. Many Costa Rican and Brazilian scientists are dedicated to the collection, distribution and expansion of knowledge of this “perfect palm.” Costa Rica is the largest exporter of Steamed Cumin Rice Ingredients: 2 cups long-grain white rice 2 tbs cumin seeds 2 garlic cloves, minced 1 tbs vegetable oil 1/2 tsp salt 3 cups water Directions: In a medium-sized pot, cook garlic and cumin seeds in oil over medium heat for two minutes. Add rice, stirring constantly for one minute. Incorporate water and salt, and bring to a boil. Reduce to a simmer, cover and cook for exactly 15 minutes. Remove from heat, fluff with a fork and put aside. and palmito, and are quite discerning when it comes to quality. Surprisingly, however, the use of pejibaye in local gastronomy is rather shy, and it is usually served simply as boiled peach palm with mayonnaise or in soup or bread. The same goes for heart of palm, usually appearing in salads and in the quintessential Tico pie, pastel de arroz con palmito, a creamy, buttery, cheesy baked dish with simple flavor but lots of character. For this recipe, I chose to combine the two amazing products from this versatile tree into one recipe, fusing their flavor and providing a Caribbean twist. ¡Buen provecho! CHINESE CUISINE Give a fish to a person and you feed him for a day; teach him to fish and he feeds himself ever after. (Chinese proverb) HOME DELIVERY APARTOTEL LA SABANA Rooms and apartments fully furnished with daily maid service in a quiet residential area. Only minutes away from airport and downtown. lso We ave ha sh i Spanses clas CHEF’S SPECIALTIES: UNIVERSAL DE IDIOMAS Tel: (506) 220-2422 Fax: (506) 231-7386 www.apartotel-lasabana.com Tel: 228-8105, 228-8091 Free Breakfast Address: From Centro Comercial Paco, 90 mts. Northwest, Escazú Valid for 1 person 6072 7221 Fax (506) 223-9917 P.O. Box 751-2150 Moravia, San José, Costa Rica http://www.universal-edu.com www.ingles.co.cr “English Department’’ E-mail: info@universal-edu.com Just three blocks east from the National Theater, 2nd Ave., 9th Street (corner) 2nd floor Special weekly and monthly rates •Peking Duck •Neptune’s Harvest •Abalone with Chinese Vegetables Ph. (506) 257-0441 5734 peach palms in the world, and one of the top exporters of heart of palm, thanks largely to the effort of Jorge Mora and his colleagues at the University of Costa Rica, whose dedication and hard work are the backbone of the Pejibaye Research and Technology Transfer Program. Gathering all information available, they have created a database of all things peach palm. From seed banking to general information, their efforts to utilize the palm in different ways is finally paying off as peach palm is put to use in new ways, such as animal fodder and industrial raw materials. Costa Ricans have a keen taste for pejibaye Directions: In a large pan over medium heat, sauté onions in the olive oil for five minutes. Add meat, ginger and garlic, and brown for two minutes. Incorporate all remaining ingredients and bring to a boil. Lower heat to a minimum and simmer for a few minutes until most of the liquid has evaporated and the vegetables are soft. Adjust flavors and serve accompanied with steamed cumin rice. (Makes five servings.) RESTAURANTE RESTAURANTE SPONSOR A TICO TO LEARN ENGLISH 15% off our regular rates* *4-month payments Classes start the 1st week of every month Ingredients: 12 pejibayes, cooked, peeled and sliced 1 lb mixed peeled and chopped tubers (cassava or manioc, taro, sweet potato, etc.) 200 g chopped chicken, pork, beef or soy substitute 1 onion, finely chopped 1 cup sliced palmito 3 tbs olive oil 1 garlic clove, minced 1 tsp grated ginger 1 tsp tomato paste 1/2 cup chopped tomatoes 1 tsp chipotle pepper sauce 2 tbs lemon juice 2/3 cup strong coffee 1/2 cup stock or water 1/3 cup brown sugar 2 tbs Worcestershire sauce 1/4 tsp grated nutmeg 1 tsp cinnamon 1/2 tsp ground cardamom 1 tsp ground cinnamon 1/2 tsp ground allspice 2 tsp cocoa powder 1/2 tsp salt Pepper to taste RESTRICTIONS APPLY Sabana Norte, San José Burger King, 50 m. west, 150 m. north 7848 THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 | WEEKEND | W11 Do Kids Today Have More Fun? In Brief… T oday’s children have an unlimited range of toys and games. Not only that, but new s s s s toys are capable of doing much more than those of years past. Dolls talk, sing, Mitzi Stark eat, burp and creep. Barbie has careers, drives cars, swims, owns her own real estate and gets pregnant. Cars that operate on remote control spin, speed, hurl ramps and crash at the push of a thumb. Computer games allow kids to pitch major-league baseball, score goals in the World Cup, win the Indy 500 or mow down terrorists. We of yesterday’s generation had to imagine, invent and rely on the games passed down from older siblings. Does having more toys mean more fun? Or did we kids of long ago have good times too, deprived as we were of television and videos and tons of toys? A totally unscientific but revealing survey of the over-50 crowd, which included North Americans and Costa Ricans, showed that everyone played hide-and-seek. Called escondido in Spanish, the game is the same. The goal was whatever tree, light post or part of the house was convenient, and in the great outdoors there were plenty of places to hide: behind trees, sheds and corners of the house, lying flat on the ground or inside drainage canals. “Summer was one long game of hide-andseek,” said one respondent. Second in importance was playing with mud. Whether it was making mud pies or throwing mud balls, there was something wonderful about squishy, wet mud. Both men and women made mud pies, but women were more inclined to add berries and flower petals. “We played restaurant and used leaves for money and served mud pies,” said a Tica. Others mentioned mud fights and dirt-clod battles. The game of statues was remembered by North Americans, with a Tico version called congelado, or “frozen.” In variations of this game, you “froze” in position when the designated “it” tagged you or yelled, “Freeze!” The game most mentioned by men was marbles, or canicas or bolinchas. Marbles are cheap, and the game requires only a circle in the dust. The rules of the game varied depending on where you lived or how rich you were in marbles, and, according to one respondent, could be so complicated it was es, and fútbol or soccer among Costa Ricans. Field hockey was also mentioned by a few North Americans. Historian Guillermo Villegas said a game called “sticks” was played here, a version of baseball using big sticks for bats and small sticks for balls. Tops, or trompas, for boys, and jacks, or jackses, for girls were mentioned by all Costa Ricans. Cromos is still a popular pastime for young Ticas; colorful pictures on thin paper are spread on the ground or table and picked up by slapping a flat hand on them. Some girls collected them and bookstores still sell them. Sports and table games, yo-yos, sliding down hills on cardboard cartons stretched flat, making forts, making stilts out of tin cans tied to feet, having treasure hunts, riding bikes and stealing apples were more ways of having fun. Sometimes games were invented. In the coffee town of Grecia, west of San José, they played a game called cuartel between two light posts with five boys on each team, who could tag their opponents and jail them at their team’s light post. They could also help team members escape from their opponents’ jail. “London Bridge is Falling Down” has its counterpart in “Jirón, Jirón, Jirón, Donde Vive Tanta Gente,” in which two kids form an arch to capture those passing under and have them choose a side. Both games end with a big tug-of-war. Several people mentioned the lack of supervision. “We just went out and played,” explained one woman. She added that mothers were usually around somewhere. Today’s children may have more toys and games and organized activities, but one little Tica discovered the joy of inventing games when she visited relatives on a farm. “It’s fun to throw tomatoes,” she reported. A totally unscientific but revealing survey of the over-50 crowd, which included Canadians, Unitedstatesians and Costa Ricans, showed that everyone played hide-and-seek. Called escondido in Spanish, the game is the same. The goal was whatever tree, light post or part of the house was convenient, and in the great outdoors there were plenty of places to hide… a math test figuring out the scores. Big, colorful marbles were treasured and were worth more than dinky glass ones. In Costa Rica, if you didn’t have marbles you could use round chumico seeds. Though none of the women mentioned playing marbles, some collected them. Among women, playing house, or casita, ranked high, but only two women mentioned playing with dolls. Dressing up was part of the game, and one Tica said they stuck flower petals on their nails for nail polish. Another who came from a large family in the Southern Zone said they had dolls made of corncobs. Baseball was popular among U.S. respons- Beachwear and Gifts • Info Center • Souvenirs • New and Used Books • International Newspapers and Magazines • Vacation Rentals Manuel Antonio between Karahé & Piscis 8186 18979 8036 Tel. 777-1002, Fax: 777-1946 Volunteer Association Recruiting for Park Work The Protected Area Volunteer Association (ASVO) will be recruiting volunteers Feb. 13, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., at the Costa Rican-North American Cultural Center in the eastern San José neighborhood of Barrio Dent. The nonprofit group, founded in 1989, states its mission is to provide Costa Rica’s national parks with volunteers – Ticos and foreigners alike – to help preserve the country’s wild places. The popular program boasts more than 1,500 participants per year. Opportunities include working with sea turtles, ecotourism projects, trail work, environmental patrols and all manner of maintenance programs in national parks and wildlife refuges. Activities most often take place on weekends, allowing those with busy weekday schedules to participate. Volunteers elect to serve in one of three different categories – occasional, international or permanent – each of which is designed to accommodate work or vacation schedules. Thus far, the group has donated the equivalent of ¢102 million (almost $200,000) in man hours to the Ministry of Environment and Energy (MINAE), according to the association’s Web site, www.asvocr.org. For more information, attend the meeting Feb. 13 or contact ASVO directly at 258-4430 or reclutamiento@ asvocr.org. –Tico Times Tico Director to Film Movie on Isla San Lucas Isla San Lucas, a natural reserve and former prison island in the Gulf of Nicoya on the Pacific coast, will soon be the site of a movie by Costa Rican director Douglas Martin. Martin recently told the daily Al Día he plans to film a movie based on the book “La Isla de los Hombres Solos” (“The Island of Lonely Men”) by Costa Rican author José León Sánchez, which tells his story as a prisoner on the island who was later declared innocent (TT, Aug. 26, 2005). Filming is set to begin in December, Al Día reported. “We’re not basing the movie just on the literary work, but also on the life of José León Sánchez, who remained in San Lucas until his innocence was proven,” said Martin, a five-time winner of the National Prize for Literature. Sánchez returned recently to the island where he was incarcerated and called the experience “painful” but said he had to confront his experiences “so that new generations don’t experience the horrors that were experienced there,” including torture. Sánchez was sentenced to jail in 1950 for committing murder while robbing jewels from the Los Angeles Basilica in Cartago, east of San José. He got out of prison in 1969 but was not declared innocent by the Penal Branch of the Supreme Court (Sala III) until 1999. –Tico Times W12 | WEEKEND | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 CONTACT LENSES •Aspherics •Torics •Color ALL SIZES Cheaper than U.S. prices Immediate delivery CENTRAL AMERICAÕS LEADING ENGLISH-LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER We ship worldwide Read Us Online: www.ticotimes.net 7572 800-266-3678 Costa Rica +1 (336) 510-5615 USA 800lentes@gmail.com Simple. . . WE ARE SPINE EXPERTS Before with free jumpers and surface swimmers everywhere. Most of the fish are from 14 to 30 miles out. Fortney said Rhode Island angler and skipper Lynn Smith released a large sail after a number of raises, and Lou Remado from New York also scored. “This week so far we have raised six to eight every day and released five … and while dorado fishing is good, the people want the sails,” he added. Capt. Mark Corn of Southern Costa Rica Sportfishing writes via e-mail that on Jan. 24 he and Keith Kelly had an experience that he had never seen in 13 years chartering off the southern Pacific coast. “We were three miles off the rock of Matapalo and had four big marlin in the spread at once,” he said. “We managed to hook three, and in one hour released one that would have run 400 pounds, another 300 pounds, and broke the leader on the third.” He added that they also released three sails and were back at the docks by 1 p.m. For more information, contact Corn at 735-5292 or osacapt@hotmail.com, or go to his Web site at www.costaricasportsman.com. I had an e-mail from a gentleman who wants to know if anyone here in Costa Rica offers kayak fishing. I am not aware of any, but if anyone does, please let me know and also contact joewinston@mac.com. For information on fishing or assistance planning a trip to Costa Rica, call Jerry at 2826743 or e-mail jruhlow@racsa.co.cr. Skippers, lodge operators and anglers are invited to contact Jerry with fishing reports by noon Monday of each week. ADVANCED DENTISTRY COSTA RICA After or complex. . . Dr. Eloy Mora Agüero CENTRO NEUROLOGICO Before D.D.S. After Dr. Carlos Suarez Mastache 2nd Floor, First Medical Tower CIMA San José Hospital Escazú, Costa Rica •Specialist in Prosthodontics and Cosmetic Dentistry Cosmetic, Restorative and General dentistry Universidad de Costa Rica Rosenthal Institute for Aesthetic Dentistry, New York University Tel: (506) 241-5652 / (506) 240-9733 American Dental Association International Affiliate Member 8021 Call us if you have experienced neck, back or sciatic pain Karl Angersbach and his gang of six from New Jersey were back in Costa Rica on their annual visit last week, fishing again with my son Rick Ruhlow on the Kingfisher, the Flamingo II and Permit III out of Playa Carrillo, and their timing couldn’t have been better. Angersbach fished on the Kingfisher, taking top honors with five marlin, a bunch of sails and, of course, the ever-plentiful dorado. “I have landed a number of striped marlin in the past few years, but on day one of this trip, I finally caught my first blue marlin and added another on the last day, with both taken on the Kingfisher,” he said. They even asked my granddaughter Kerry along on the last day in an effort to get her her first marlin. The two anglers nailed a striped and a blue, with Kerry up next, but unfortunately the bite died in the afternoon and they didn’t see another fish. Sounds like Kerry doesn’t have any better luck than her grandpa. Must run in the family. Reports indicate the fishing continues at a torrid pace all along the Pacific coast. Kent Maliowski reports that about a week ago his Los Sueños-based skipper and boat in the middle of the night rescued a sinking U.S.-owned boat 30 miles offshore out of Los Sueños Marina on the central Pacific coast. I tried to contact him for more details, but was unable to reach him by press time. I never did get the final results of the Harry Grey Fly Fishing Tournament out of Quepos or the other tournament scheduled last week out of Los Sueños Marina. From Dominical, on the southern coast, Nick Fortney of Costa Rica Hooksetters said they are raising four to eight sails a day, www.suarezsmilemakeover.com Freses, Curridabat Cima, Escazú (506) 234-6707 208-8610 www.advancedentistrycr.com 7463 Located in Plaza Itskatzu, below Hooters Phone 289-9860 * San Rafael, Escazu Locales 129, 130 here are plenty of tarpon on the northern Caribbean coast, and judging from reports the Pacific is seeing all the action you can handle most any place you can get a Jerry Ruhlow line in the water. On the Caribbean, Dan Wise reports from Río Colorado Lodge that Carrie Minnick and Rob Gollahon, from Virginia, in two days of fishing jumped four tarpon, and the largest to the boat exceeded 100 pounds. Texas anglers Edward and Bo Badouh had three in the air but none to the boat on a oneday trip, while Walley Lebrun and wife Aurora boated nine snook, the largest 22 pounds, in three days at the lodge, along with a cubera snapper and a bunch of big jack crevalle. Wise said Jeanine and Michael Freitz, from New Jersey, in two three-hour afternoon sessions jumped 10 tarpon and boated three, while a Mississippi angler in one day jumped three tarpon and boated two. And the action on the Pacific seems to be improving every day. 8113 8360 Simply Romantic - A lovely meal. Food is love. Who says Valentine’s Day is just for the two of you? We cook up an indulgent dinner at Mundo that’s worth sharing with friends. LIVE ACOUSTIC MUSIC Action on Pacific Hotter by the Day T If you live far, we can arrange for same-day evaluation imaging and care ALL ABOARD Mon – Fri 9 AM – 7 PM BENEFITS (506) 208-1211 (506) 208-1363 INTERNATIONAL MEDICAL TRAVEL INSURANCE or e-mail us to: info@neuroespinal.com Real TexMex food Pool table 22 elegant hotel rooms, starting at $49 Attractive and service-oriented staff Spinal Neurosurgeon 7344 7948 www.NeuroEspinal.com Kidnap + Ransom Coverage “Don’t leave home without it” www.allaboardbenefits.com 7571 EDUARDO HUERTAS, M.D. On-line Quotes *Individuals *Groups THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 | WEEKEND | W13 THIS WEEK’S MOVIES *New this week. In general, movies in English have Spanish subtitles; children’s movies are dubbed in Spanish with no subtitles and foreign-language films have Spanish subtitles. Because movie times change frequently, we publish only movie names, descriptions and theaters. Please call theaters (see box at right) for schedule information. Note: Theaters that fail to send us their schedules by deadline may not be listed; we apologize for any inconvenience. *11:14 (Hora de Morir): Five different but connected storylines converge one tragic evening at 11:14 p.m. Starring Hilary Swank, Henry Thomas, Patrick Swayze. Directed by Greg Marcks. Cinemark del Este, Cinemark Escazú, Cinépolis, Internacional, San Pedro. es its currency to euros. Starring Alex Etel, Lewis McGibbon, James Nesbitt. Directed by Danny Boyle. Internacional, Liberia, San Pedro. Night at the Museum (Una Noche en el Museo): A bumbling security guard at the American Museum of Natural History accidentally lets loose an ancient curse that brings the animals and exhibits on display to life and mayhem. Starring Ben Stiller, Robin Williams, Dick Van Dyke. Directed by Shawn Levy. Cariari, Cinemark del Este, Cinemark Escazú, Cinépolis, Liberia, Pérez Zeledón, San Carlos, San Pedro. An Inconvenient Truth (Una Verdad Incómoda): A documentary on former U.S. Vice-President Al Gore’s campaign to make the issue of global warming a recognized problem worldwide. Directed by Davis Guggenheim. Outlet Mall. Babel (Babel): Based on the theme of communication breakdowns, four interlocking, tragic storylines take place in Morocco, Mexico and Japan. Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama, and nominated for seven Academy Awards. Starring Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett, Gael García Bernal. Directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu. Cariari, Cinemark del Este, Cinemark Escazú, Cinépolis, Flores, Magaly, Plaza Mayor, San Pedro. *Blood Diamond (Diamante de Sangre): The fates of a South African mercenary and a Mende fisherman become entwined in a quest to recover a priceless diamond that could transform their lives. Starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Djimon Hounsou, Jennifer Connelly. Directed by Edward Zwick. Cariari, Cinemark del Este, Cinemark Escazú, Cinépolis, Flores, Internacional, Liberia, Pérez Zeledón, San Pedro, San Ramón. Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan (Borat): A mockumentary comedy about the outrageous adventures of a Kazakh TV journalist who journeys to the United States to make a documentary about the greatest country in the world. Starring Sacha Baron Cohen, Ken Davitian. Directed by Larry Charles. Cinemark del Este, Cinemark Escazú, Cinépolis, Flores, Internacional, San Pedro. Charlotte’s Web (La Telaraña de Charlotte): Based on the classic children’s book by E.B. White. Charlotte the spider and Wilbur the pig hatch a plan to keep Wilbur from ending up on Farmer Arable’s dinner table. Starring Dakota Fanning. Directed by Gary Winick. Cinemark del Este, Cinemark Escazú, Cinépolis, San Pedro. Children of Men (Niños del Hombre): In the year 2027, with humans suffering a massive infertility crisis and the world’s youngest citizen dead at 18, a disillusioned former activist must deliver a miraculously pregnant woman to safety and protect humankind’s last hope. Starring Clive Owen, Julianne Moore, Michael Courtesy Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc., Virtual Studios Set in Africa: Leonardo DiCaprio and Djimon Hounsou star in “Blood Diamond,” now in theaters. Caine. Directed by Alfonso Cuarón. Cinemark del Este, Cinemark Escazú, Colonial, Flores, Outlet Mall, Pérez Zeledón, San Carlos, San Pedro. Déjà Vu (Déjà Vu): A law enforcement officer travels back in time to prevent a bombing and the murder of a woman with whom he has fallen in love. Starring Denzel Washington, Paula Patton, Val Kilmer. Directed by Tony Scott. Cariari, Cinemark del Este, Cinemark Escazú, Cinépolis, Liberia. *French Film Festival: Sueños de Orquesta, Feb. 9, 19, 22; Peligro Hombres Trabajando, Feb. 10, 14, 18; Kirikou y Las Bestias Salvajes, Feb. 11, 17; La Comedia del Poder, Feb. 12, 16; Hacia el Sur, Feb. 13, 21; La Ex Mujer de mi Vida, Feb. 15, 20, all in French with subtitles in Spanish, Outlet Mall. Hoodwinked! (Buza Caperuza): An animated, modern version of Little Red Riding Hood. Directed by Cory Edwards and Todd Edwards. Cariari, Cinemark del Este, Cinépolis, Flores, Grecia, Internacional, San Pedro, San Ramón. Little Miss Sunshine (Pequeña Miss Sunshine): Dysfunction takes a road trip when the Hoover family piles into its VW bus to escort young Olive to a beauty pageant in far-off California. Starring Greg Kinnear, Alan Arkin, Toni Collette, Steve Carell. Directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris. Cariari, Cinemark del Este, Cinemark Escazú, Cinépolis, Plaza Mayor, San Carlos, San Pedro. Millions (Millonarios): A 5-year-old boy finds a bag of pounds only a few days before England switch- Reconstruction (Reconstrucción de un Amor): In Danish with Spanish subtitles. A young man abandons his girlfriend one evening to follow a beautiful stranger, and finds he cannot turn back. Starring Nikolaj Lie Kaas, Maria Bonnevie. Directed by Christoffer Boe. Sala Garbo. The Illusionist (El Ilusionista): Set in Vienna in the early 1900s. A magician in love with an unattainable woman uses his powers to get what he wants. Starring Edward Norton, Paul Giamatti, Jessica Biel. Directed by Neil Burger. Cinépolis, Colonial, Internacional, Liberia, Outlet Mall, Pérez Zeledón, San Ramón. The White Masai (La Princesa Masai): In English and German with Spanish subtitles. A European woman falls in love with a man of the Masai in Kenya and must adapt to the tribe’s way of life. Based on the autobiographical novel by Swiss author Corinne Hofmann. Starring Nina Hoss, Jacky Ido. Directed by Hermine Huntgeburth. Outlet Mall. *They (Habitantes de la Oscuridad): After witnessing a traumatic, horrifying event, a woman gradually comes to the realization that the nightmares she had as a child could be real. Starring Laura Regan, Marc Blucas, Ethan Embry. Directed by Robert Harmon and Rick Bota. Cariari, Cinépolis, Flores, San Pedro, San Ramón. Toolbox Murders (Hotel del Terror): A young couple moves into an historic Hollywood apartment block and starts renovating the building, only to unleash a supernatural evil. Starring Angela Bettis, Brent Roam. Directed by Tobe Hooper. Cariari, Cinépolis, Internacional, San Pedro. Una Película de Huevos: In Spanish. A little egg named Toto embarks on an adventure to save himself from the frying pan and live to become a chicken. Directed by Gabriel and Rodolfo Riva Palacio Alatriste. Liberia, San Pedro. Cinemas ALLIANCE FRANÇAISE | Barrio Amón, Av. 7, Ca. 5, 222-2283 CARIARI 1-6 | Plaza Real Cariari, Barreal de Heredia, 293-3300 CENTRO DE CINE | Barrio Otoya, Av. 9, Ca. 11, 223-2127, 223-0610 CINEMARK DEL ESTE | Multiplaza del Este, Curridabat, 280-0490 CINEMARK ESCAZÚ | Multiplaza, Escazú, 201-5050, www.cinemarkca.com CINÉPOLIS 1-15 | Terramall, Tres Ríos, 278-3631, 518-0002 (reservations available) COLONIAL 1-2 | Plaza Colonial, Escazú, 289-9000 FLORES 1-5 | Paseo de las Flores Mall, Heredia, 237-6263 GRECIA | Fábrica Entertainment Center, 800 m west of Shell station, Grecia, 495-6000 INTERNACIONAL 1-4 | Mall Internacional, Alajuela, 442-6100 LIBERIA 1-4 | Centro Plaza Liberia, 1 km before Liberia, 665-2335 MAGALY | Ca. 23, Av. Ctrl./1, 905-246-3722 (for schedules in CCM), 223-0085, 221-6272 OUTLET MALL | San Pedro, 234-8868, 283-2146 PARAÍSO 1-3 | Mall Paraíso, Paraíso, Cartago, 592-3133 PÉREZ ZELEDÓN | Monte General Shopping Center, 772-6780 PLAZA MAYOR 1-2 | Rohrmoser, 232-0621 (reservations available) SALA GARBO | Av. 2, Ca. 28, 222-1034, 223-1960 SAN CARLOS 1-3 | Ciudad Quesada, 460-6202 SAN PEDRO 1-10 | Mall San Pedro, 283-5716, 280-9585 SAN RAMÓN 1-3 | Alajuela, 447-7120 VARIEDADES | Ca. 5, Av. Ctrl./1, 222-6108 ‘Borat’ Worth Seeing, but No More than Once hen you w a t c h c o m e d y, you’re really not expecting much. After REEL all, any fool can make TALK you laugh. How else could Hollywood get Hugo Marenco away with crappy comedies such as the recent “The Cleaner” (which hasn’t hit theaters here, and let’s hope it doesn’t) or Rob Schneider flicks such as “Animal” and “Hot Chick”? We could also talk about Will Ferrel and his collaborations. Entertaining? Maybe. Worth a second look? Not likely. Movies like these just need to survive for a couple of weeks at the box office and then, after they’ve made their profit, they’re gone. Does “Borat” fall within this category? No. Let’s see why. It’s impossible to talk about “Borat” without explaining a little about Sacha Baron Cohen. The Jewish Englishman and Cam- W bridge graduate is considered a comedic genius in many respects. Those of us who have seen skits from his TV program “Da Ali G Show” know the man has talent. Not only does he have a chameleonic approach to acting (only approach, in my humble opinion), but also his show’s subject matter is controversial and relevant on a social level. He wants to make you think and laugh at the same time. A key ingredient to this is how he invites real-life professionals, social workers and drug experts onto the show, interviews them and asks them what would seem to be ridiculous questions but in fact touch upon issues that merit reflection and thought. Upon realizing they really don’t have an answer, the guests are ridiculed live onstage, while Cohen brilliantly plays his Ali G part. In “Borat,” Cohen plays, well, Borat, a Kazakh reporter on a mission: to gather “cultural learnings of America for make benefit glorious nation of Kazakhstan.” The “guest” in the show this time around is the United States. Explaining more on this point would Reel Talk Movie Rating “Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan” be either giving away the movie or criticizing the United States, both of which I’m sure you could probably do without. I guess I could tell you that he falls in love with a magazine photo of Pamela Anderson. This is a movie you should see, at most, once, if only for the renowned naked fight scene – and that’s all I’m going to say about that. There are dull moments that really disconnect you from the experience, and it’s filmed documentary style so it’s got a documentary lag to it. But in the end, it’s worth seeing at the theater or as a rental for the sheer enjoyment of watching people ridicule themselves. And it’s definitely not your usual slapstick comedy – there’s some substance to it. Photo courtesy of DISCINE S.A. Quite the Character: British comedian Sacha Baron Cohen is Borat. W14 | WEEKEND | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 CALENDAR *First time in Calendar. Listings are in chronological order. E-mail Calendar submissions to weekend@ticotimes.net by 11 a.m. Monday, five days prior to date of publication. What to Do This Weekend TODAY Orange Fair: Dance, theater, marimba music, Feb. 9-11, 16-18, Ciudad Colón, 249-1050. Kabbalah Seminar: Led by by Soizic Aureli, Feb. 9-11, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., at a private residence in Pozos de Santa Ana, reserve at 2491856, soizic2006@yahoo.fr. *International Suzuki Festival: Feb. 9, 6 p.m., Parque Sendas, Guadalupe, 232-3999. Kantera in Concert: Feb. 9, 7:30 p.m., Café de Playa, Playas del Coco, Guanacaste, 900 m east of Calle Chorrera, 670-1471. “Oleanna”: Written by David Mamet, play about sexual harrassment, Feb. 9-10, 8 p.m., Eugene O’Neill Theater, Costa Rica-North American Cultural Center, 205-4104. Johnny Dread and Bamaselo in Concert: Feb. 9, 9 p.m., Salón Monrio, Turrialba, 863-0395. Playas del Coco Blues Fest: John Swan, Feb. 9; with Blues Devils, Feb. 11, both at 9 p.m., Bar La Vida Loca, Playas del Coco, Guanacaste, 670-0181. *Mario Ulloa in Concert: Classical and Latin music, Feb. 9, 10 p.m., Jazz Café. SATURDAY *Exchange Day: Feb. 10, including a mask workshop for Children, 11 a.m.; carnival, 2 p.m.; popular dance show, 3 p.m.; book exchange all day, Spanish Cultural Center. Specials Summer Tango Class: Including meals, lodging, guide, T-shirt, transportation, entrance fees, through March 13, Tuesdays, 6-7:30 p.m., Fantasía Tango, San Pedro de Montes de Oca, 50 m north of Il Pomodoro, 285-4143. *Cultural Shows: Storytelling, poetry, theater, dance, music, Feb. 12, 6 p.m., Teatro Alterarte, Liberia; Feb. 19, 7 p.m., Casa de la Cultura, Nicoya, Guanacaste. Conferences for Health Professionals: Human Relationships in the Medical Field, by Dr. Kristen Swanson, Feb. 12, 7 p.m.; Ethics and Health, by Dr. Sarah Shannon, Feb. 19, 7 p.m., both at the Clínica Bíblica auditorium, 4th floor, 685-0843. Film Festival: Feb. 13; “Acción Mutante” (Spain, 1993), Feb. 20; “Wild at Heart” (U.S., 1990), Feb. 27, all at 6:30 p.m., Contemporary Art and Design Museum. 7th Annual “Have a Heart” Charity Golf Tournament: All proceeds benefit area education, Feb. 14, Hacienda Pinilla Golf Course, Guanacaste, 653-0270. www.puntarenas.com/carnavales/programa.html. *Piano Concert: By Jorge Erick Alfaro, Feb. 10, 5 p.m., José Figueres Ferrer Cultural Center. *Green Community Forum: Art, meditation, live music, circus acts, drinks, appetizers, Feb. 10, 5:30 p.m., Barracuda Art Gallery, Tamarindo, Guanacaste, ingrid@voecretreats.com. *Son de Tiquizia in Concert: Salsa, Feb. 10, 10 p.m., Jazz Café. Photo courtesy of La Vida Loca Blues guitarist John Swan gets down in Guanacaste tonight and Sunday at Bar La Vida Loca in Playas del Coco. Directing Workshop: In English, directed by David King, Feb. 10, 1-5 p.m., Blanche Brown Theatre, Bello Horizonte, Escazú, 355-1623. Música en las Gradas: Liverpool, Feb. 10, 3 p.m., Gold Museum amphitheater, underneath Plaza de la Cultura. *Cultural Encounter: Folkloric dances by Nandayure Dance Group, food sales, Feb. 10, 4 p.m.; Feb. 11, 10 a.m., Carmona de Nandayure, Guanacaste, 665-2996. *Puntarenas Carnival: Food sales, rides, dances, sports, parades, through Feb. 18; horse parade, Feb. 10, 4 p.m.; carnival, Feb. 17, 5 p.m., Paseo de los Turistas, Puntarenas, Women’s Club of Costa Rica Tea: Feb. 14, 2 p.m., Barrio 7 (Rohrmoser, Pavas, Sabana, La Uruca). Call 268-6130, 268-7367 or 244-3669 for directions. *Film Festival: “Yerma,” Feb. 14; “Planta,” Feb. 28, 7 p.m., Spanish Cultural Center. Workshop on How to Give a Speech: Feb. 1516, 5-9 p.m., Costa Rican Chamber of Commerce, 221-0005. Hike to Maderas Volcano on Ometepe Island, Nicaragua: Organized by Aventuras Rurales, Feb. 16-18, 223-8509, 248-9470. *La Fortuna Fair: Cattle shows, food, horse parade, Feb. 16-18, 479-9185. Tango Show: Feb. 16-17, 8 p.m., Melico Salazar Theater, tickets at www.mundoticket.com. *Expoferia Orosi Colonial: Contests, crafts, food, Feb. 17-18, in front of the Colonial Church, Orosi. *Legalize It Surf Tournament: Feb. 17-18, Puerto Viejo, Limón, 885-9688, betolocks@ hotmail.com. *World Family Yoga Annual Retreat: With Peggy Profant, Christine McArdle-Oquendo, Feb. 17-24, Feb. 25-March 4, Guaria de Osa, Osa Peninsula, www.guariadeosa.com. Venue Information Alliance Française, Barrio Amón, Av. 7, Ca. 5, 2222283. Calderón Guardia Museum, Barrio Escalante, 2226392. CENAC (FANAL), Av. 3/5, Ca. 11/15, 221-2154. Centro de Cine, Barrio Amón, 223-2127, 223-0610. Centro Cultural del Este, Guadalupe, 234-2926. Children’s Museum, end Ca. 4, 258-4929. Contemporary Art and Design Museum, Av. 3, Ca. 15/17, 257-9370. Costa Rican Art Museum, east side of La Sabana Park, 222-7932. Costa Rican-North American Cultural Center, Barrio Dent, 207-7554. Jazz Café, San Pedro, 253-8933. José Figueres Ferrer Cultural Center, San Ramón, Alajuela, 447-2178. José Figueres Ferrer Cultural House, Barrio Escalante, 224-0010. Juan Santamaría Museum, Alajuela, 447-2178. Melico Salazar Theater, Av. 2, Ca. Ctrl./2, 257-6005. Mexico Institute, Ca. 41, Av. 10, 283-2333. Museum of Forms, Spaces and Sounds, Av. 3, Ca. 21, 256-1281. National Museum, Ca. 17, Av. Ctrl./2, 257-1433. National Theater, Av. 2, Ca. 3/5, 221-9417. Parque de Diversiones, La Uruca, 2 km west of Hospital México, parallel road to highway, 290-3035. Spanish Cultural Center, Barrio Escalante, Av. 13, Ca. 31, 257-2919. SUNDAY *Singles in the Saddle: Feb. 11, 1-5 p.m., Finca Caballo Loco, El Rodeo, Ciudad Colón, 386-4586, 386-4586. *Casting for Spring Show: Auditions for singers, musicians and dancers, Feb.11-13, 3 p.m.; performance dates April 13-15, 20-22, Villas Río Mar Conference Center, Dominical, 787-8007, 850-7477. Camerata Académica Bach Summer Concert: Albinoni, Mozart, Handel, Feb. 11, 6 p.m., INBioparque, Santo Domingo, Heredia, 5078132, 507-8107. “The Diary of Anne Frank”: Performed by a local theater group, Feb. 11, 8 p.m., Melico Salazar Theater. *Allan Guzmán in Concert: Trova, Feb. 11, 9:30 p.m., Jazz Café. Initiation in Shaolin Qi Gong: Nine-hour training with Pragata, Feb. 17, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Feb. 18, 10 a.m.-1 p.m., Janine Yoga Studio, San Rafael de Escazú, 289-7524, janineyoga@racsa.co.cr. *Mardi Gras Celebration: Feb. 18, 10 a.m., Las Candelillas, Higuito, San Mateo, road to Esparza, 428-9157, 428-8434. *Da Vinci Code and the Divine Feminine: Session 1, Feb.18, 1-2 pm; session 2, Feb. 25, 2-3 p.m., presented by international guest lecturer Garrett Riegg, Unity, Piedades, Santa Ana, 203-4411. *Tennis Friendship Tournament: Feb. 19-24, Costa Rica Country Club, Escazú, 892-9097. National Surf Circuit Competitions: Trofeo Freestyle (Open, Juniors), Feb. 24-25, Nosara, Guanacaste; Trofeo Playa del Carmen (Open, Juniors), March 17-18, Playa Santa Teresa, Puntarenas; Grand Final, April (date TBA), Playa Hermosa, Puntarenas, www.surfingcr.net. *Sun Fair: Exhibit, food made in “sun ovens,” Feb. 24, 7 a.m., Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz, Guanacaste, 681-1015. Organic Fair: Including workshops on planting and fertilization, Feb. 24, 10 a.m., El Brujo, Río Nuevo, Pérez Zeledón, 884-6560. *Brazilian Carnival: Feb. 24, 8 p.m., San José Palacio Hotel, La Uruca, 222-5753. *Zarcero Fair: Exhibits, rodeo, bullfights, cultural events, March 2-12, fairground in Zarcero, Alajuela, 854-3480. *Healing Sleep Retreat: Led by Michael Krugman, March 3-10, Guaria de Osa, Peninsula de Osa, www.guariadeosa.com. *Newcomers Monthly Meeting: With guest speaker Dr. Maida Farnell Wimberly, discussing “what you do or don’t want to know about dengue and parasites of Costa Rica,” March 6, 9:30 a.m., Cuidad Colón, 416-6165, newcomerscr@yahoo.com. *Construction Fair: Talks, exhibits of construction and decoration items, March 7-11, Herradura Hotel, Ciudad Cariari, 253-5757. *Madre Tierra, Terra Nostra Film Festival: March 7-11, Cine Variedades, Ca. 5, Av. Ctrl./1, 222-6108. *Expoempleo Job Fair: March 9-11, Hotel San José Palacio, La Uruca, www.expoempleo.net. *Craft Fair: Including cultural events, March 10-11, 9 a.m.-8 p.m., Parque España, Parque Morazán and Jardín de Paz (in front of Escuela Metálica), Ca.9/11, Av. 3/7, 295-6275. *Coast to Coast Challenge: Competitors cross towns, mountains, rivers, on foot, riding bikes, paddling, 450 km, March 11-17, 280-8054, ext. 20. *Women’s Club of Costa Rica Luncheon: March 14, 11:30 a.m., Ramada Plaza Herradura, Ciudad Cariari, 282-6801, 4305322. *National Orchid Show: 1,500 local, foreign species, hybrids on display March 16-18, 8 a.m.-6 p.m., Cariari Country Club, Ciudad Cariari, Heredia, 240-4269. *Health Fair: March 21-22, University of Costa Rica, San Pedro campus, 207-4025. Art Guillermo Trejos Cob: Watercolors, Galería Woods, Monteverde center, next to Supermercado La Esperanza. Judith Fernández Vílchez: Sculptures, through Feb. 15, Fine Art Gallery of the University of Costa Rica, San Pedro campus. *Marta Eugenia Yglesias Piza: Painting, through Feb. 15, Mexico Institute. Verónica Navarro: “Contorsiones,” through Feb. 15, Dau al Set Gallery, 75 m west of Más x Menos, Cuesta de Moras, downtown San José, 221-2484. *Collective Art Exhibits: “Límites, Rutas Intangibles and Noticias del Filibustero,” sculptures, painting, installations, through Feb. 17, Contemporary Art and Design Museum, 2577202, 257-9370. “Estrecho Dudoso – Doubtful Strait”: Visual arts event organized by TEOR/éTica, featuring 70 artists from 28 countries, sculpture, installations, paintings, through Feb. 18, Contemporary Art Museum (CENAC), Costa Rican Art Museum, National Museum, Juan Santamaría Museum, Gold Museum (underneath Plaza de la Cultura), 233-4881. Lucinda Tosi: Watercolors, through Feb. 18, El Señor de Sipán, old road to Tres Ríos, 300 m west of the cemetery, 278-2978. Tamara Ávalos: Ceramics, through Feb. 23, Sophia Wanamaker Galería, Costa Rican-North American Cultural Center, Barrio Dent. “Hanging Music”: Interactive sculptures by Erika Stanley, through Feb. 26, Galería Valanti, Marina Village, Los Sueños, Playa Herradura, Puntarenas, 637-8412, 637-8421. “Casa de Cuatro Pisos” Collective Art Show: Installations and engravings, through Feb. 28, Taller del Artista, old road to Tres Ríos, 2783594. Franco Mungía: Cartoons, through Feb. 28, José Figueres Ferrer Cultural Center. Grace Herrera Amighetti: Handmade paper, through Feb. 28, Sophia Wanamaker Galería, La Sabana. *John Dessarzin: Nature photography, through Feb. 28, National Gallery, Children’s Museum. Ricardo Rodríguez: Watercolors, through Feb. 28, José Figueres Ferrer Cultural Center. Gilmar Maccagnan: Brazilian photographer, through March 1, Multiplaza Escazú, 8929097, 377-9097. “El Urbanismo en el Nuevo Mundo”: Exhibit of Spanish colonial maps, plans and drawings, through April 28, León Fernández exhibit hall, National Archives, Zapote, 234-7689, 283-1400. THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 | WEEKEND | W15 CALENDAR B.M. McMullen: Acid on stainless steel, through May 15, Galería Klaus Steinmetz, 25 m east of Plaza Rolex, Escazú, 289-5403; romantic bronze and marble sculptures, through May 31, Kandinsky Galería, Centro Comercial de la Calle Real, #20, San Pedro, 234-0478. Dinorah Bolandi: Drawings, textiles, oils, through June 15, Gold Museum, beneath Plaza de la Cultura, 243-4219. Kids Activities at Santa Ana Conservation Center: Frogs and Toads, kids 3-12, Feb. 9, 9 a.m., registration at 256-0012, 233-6701. “Tío Conejo”: Children’s play, Sat.-Sun., 11 a.m., 3 p.m., Teatro Tío Conejo, Pueblo Antigüo, Parque de Diversiones, La Uruca, 253-5518. Music *Jean Pierre Allaire in Concert: Greatest hits of the ’60s and ’70s, Feb. 11, 13, 16, 18, 20, 23, 25, 27, Villa del Sueño hotel and restaurant, Playa Hermosa, Guanacaste. Concerts at Café de Playa: Feb. 14, Ray Tico, with Fidel Gamboa and Manuel Obregón; Feb. 16, Sasha Campbell; Feb. 23, Calypso Limón Legends, March 2, Editus and Marta Fonseca; all at 7:30 p.m., Café de Playa, Playas del Coco, Guanacaste, 900 m east of Calle Chorrera, 670-1471. *Francisco Céspedes in Concert: Ballads celebrating Valentine’s Day, Feb. 14, 8 p.m., Herradura Hotel, Ciudad Cariari, 223-2321. Johnny Dread and Bamaselo in Concert: Feb. 15, Babylon, Tamarindo; Feb. 17, Lizard Lounge, Playas del Coco; Feb. 18, Monteverde Amphitheater, Monteverde; Feb. 20, El Observatorio, Barrio La California; Feb. 24, Rippers, Playa Hermosa, Puntarenas; Feb. 25, afternoon show, Roca Verde, Dominical, 863-0395. *Andrés Saborío in Concert: Trova, Feb. 16, 7 p.m., Spanish Cultural Center. *Valentine’s Concert: By Rabito and George Hernández, Feb. 17, 6 p.m., Villa Olímpica gymnasium, Desamparados, 221-6520, 2232913. *Swing en 4 in Concert: Ballads, Feb. 17, 8 p.m., INBioparque, Santo Domingo, Heredia, 278-4004. Ricky Martin in Concert: Feb. 19, 8 p.m., Ricardo Saprissa Stadium, Tibás, tickets on sale at Megasuper, www.specialticket.net, 206-7770. Música en las Gradas: Sasha Campbell, Feb. 24, 3 p.m.; Escats, March 3, 11 a.m.; Chocolate, March 17, 11 a.m., all at Gold Museum amphitheater, underneath Plaza de la Cultura. Camerata Académica Bach Summer Concerts: Feb. 25, Handel, Haydn, Bach, Andriessen; March 11, Sammartini, Mozart, Vivaldi; March 25, Pachelbel, Handel, Neruda, Barber, all at 6 p.m., INBioparque, Santo Domingo, Heredia, 507-8132, 507-8107. Religious Services (Call for days, times, directions.) Anglican Episcopal Church, 222-1560, English mass, Sun., 8:30 a.m., north of Colegio de Señoritas, San José. Bahá’i Faith Firesides, 249-1231 (McKinney family, English or Spanish), Central Valley. Beach Community Church, 654-4446, Country Day School, Brasilito, Guanacaste. Beit Tikvah Egalitarian Minyan, 301-3867, Cañafístula, Guanacaste. B’nai Israel, 231-5243, La Sabana. Chabad Lubavitch, 296-6565, Rohrmoser. Christian Center, 494-0970, Grecia. Church of Christ, English 834-8825, Spanish 839-4331, Cartago. El Shaddai Christian Church, 846-7208, Santa Ana. English Roman Catholic Mass, 221-3820, Sat., 4 p.m., cathedral, Ca. Ctrl./1, Av. 2/4, San José. Episcopal Church, 225-0209, Zapote. Escazú Christian Fellowship (interdenominational), 395-9653, Escazú. Guadalupe Missionary Baptist Temple, 2244258, Guadalupe. Hare Krishna Center Gaudiya Math, 2568650, Cuesta de Núñez, #1331. Iglesia Sion de Costa Rica (Korean spoken), 236-9959, Santo Domingo, Heredia. International Baptist Church, 365-1005, Escazú. International Christian Youth Group, 2796781, San Francisco de Dos Ríos. International Church El Gran Rebaño, 2899920, Escazú. Jehovah’s Witnesses English Group, 3983657. Liberia Community Church, 654-4446, Ciudad Blanca Christian School, Liberia. Ministries to the English-Speaking, 2261314, San Francisco de Dos Ríos. Our Father’s House, 377-6123. Quaker Meeting at Friends Peace Center, 222-1400, Ca. 15, Av. 6/8. Reformed Baptist Church of Los Lagos, 4822335, English service, Sun., 4 p.m., Heredia. San Pedro Christian Fellowship, 267-6038, 235-6052. St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Chapel, 2390033, mass, Sun., 4 p.m., Herradura Hotel, Ciudad Cariari, Heredia. The Well Worship Service Tamarindo, 6531864, 868-0871, www.tamarindochurch.com. Union Church, 235-6709, Moravia. Unity Center, 203-4411, Piedades, Santa Ana. Vineyard Christian Fellowship, 289-6782, 291-4383, La Sabana. Theater (All plays in Spanish unless otherwise noted.) “Cabaret”: Musical, Thurs.-Sun., 8 p.m., Lucho Barahona Theater, Ca. 11, Av. 6/8, 2235972. “Chingos o Nada”: Comedy, Thurs.-Sun., 8 p.m., Molière Theater, Av. 2, Ca. 13, 255-2694. “Dos Arriba y Una Abajo”: Comedy, Thurs.Sun., 8 p.m., Arlequín, Ca. 15, Av. 2, 2215485. “Orgasmos”: Comedy, Thurs.-Sun., 8 p.m., Teatro Torres, Av. 8, Ca. 11/13, 258-6078. “Apartamento de Soltero”: Comedy, Fri.-Sun., 8 p.m., La Máscara Theater, Av. 2/4, Ca. 13, 222-4574, 365-5368. “Chico Loco”: Comedy, Fri.-Sun., 8 p.m., Calle 15 Theater, Av. 2, Ca. 15, in front of Plaza de la Democracia, 390-1780. “El Efímero Secreto de las Estrellas”: Drama, Fri.-Sat., 8 p.m., Teatro San José, Av. 8, Ca. 13, 256-5752. “La Tertulia de los Espantos”: Based on traditional Costa Rican tales, Fri.-Sun., 8 p.m., through Feb. 18, Alajuela Municipal Theater, northwest side of Juan Santamaría Park, 4362362. “Sexolorrisas”: Comedy, Fri.-Sun., 8 p.m., Teatro Chaplin, 100 m south, 125 m east of AyA, Paseo de los Estudiantes, 221-0812, 8322516. “Suegras Bárbaras”: Comedy, Fri.-Sun., 8 p.m., La Comedia Theater, Av. Ctrl., Ca. 13/15, 233-2170. “Teta que Mano No Cubre No Es Teta, Es Ubre”: Comedy, Fri.-Sun., 8 p.m., La Esquina Theater, Av. 1, Ca., 21, 257-0223. “VIP Zona Roja”: Drama about life in marginal areas, Fri.-Sun., 8 p.m., Teatro de San José, Ca. 15, Av. 8/10, 256-5752. “DUDA”: Drama by J.P. Shanley, through April 1, Sat., 8 p.m., Sun., 5 p.m., Teatro Dionisio, Café Britt, Heredia, 500 m north, 400 m west of AutoMercado, road to Barva, 385-0955. Directing Workshop: In English, directed by David King, Feb. 10, 1-5 p.m., Blanche Brown Theatre, Bello Horizonte, Escazú, 355-1623. *“Strawberries in January”: A romantic comedy in English, with guest director David King from Canada, Feb. 23-March 11, Fri.-Sat. 7:30 p.m., Sun. 2:30 p.m., Blanche Brown Theatre, Bello Horizonte, Escazú, 355-1623, www.little theatregroup.org. Fundraiser to benefit the Canadian Club, Feb. 25, 2 p.m., 888-7089, 289-9831. Photo courtesy of Central Bank Museums A variety of works including drawings, textiles and oils by renowned Costa Rican artist Dinorah Bolandi go on exhibit today in the temporary exhibit hall of Central Bank Museums in downtown San José. The exhibit will be in place through June 15. CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS The following groups meet regularly and welcome visitors: Alcoholics Anonymous, groups meet daily throughout the country; times and places change frequently, call for up-to-date information. In San José, 2221880 (Anchor Club, also serves Narcotics Anonymous), Av. 6, Ca. 1, 2nd floor, Maryland Building; Heredia, Laura, 267-7466; Atenas, Tom, 373-3629, 446-3383; Puerto Viejo, Limón, 750-0080; Zancudo, 776-0012; Tamarindo, 653-0897; Flamingo, Don, 654-4902; Playa Hermosa, Gte., John, 672-1163, or Leslie, 672-1157; Manuel Antonio, Jennifer, 7771548; Jacó, Nancy, 637-8824; Zoo Group, Escazú, 293-4322, Victor, 840-9312, info, 249-2886, Monika, 831-7305. Al-Anon Meetings, Sabana Vigilance Club, Sandy, 288-4836, or Martha, 483-1275, 840-4658 (Spanish). American Legion Post 10, Escazú, 228-6014. American Legion Post 16, Heredia, 889-0545, 5911695, 259-8928. Association for Animal Protection, 255-3757, Diana, 228-2397, 267-7158. Association of Residents of Costa Rica, 233-8068, arcr@casacanada.net. Badminton Association, 381-8284, 250-6537. Birding Club, costaricabirding@hotmail.com. Bridge, John Goold, 229-1839, presidente@arnbcr.org, www.arnbcr.org. Bridge Clubs: La Amistad, Sun., 3 p.m., Ian McLennan, 835-0575; Club Los Fiebres, Tue. evenings, Sidney Ferencz, 288-0698; Quepos Bridge Club, Don Hanks, 777-5002; San José Bridge Club, Mon., 1:30 p.m., Amalia Melter, 296-7569; Tres sin Triunfo, Wed., 7:30 p.m., Fri., 1:30 p.m., Sat., 2 p.m. (teams), John MacGregor, 231-1097. Canadian Club, 282-1146, www.canadianclubcr.com. Center of the Enlighted Mind Circle of Meditation and Movement, Alajuela, 443-6460. Central Valley Golf Association, plays every Tuesday, David, 254-0140, 392-8595, www.TheCVGA.com. Coffee-Pickin’ Squares Dance Club, 249-1208. Computer Club, Bill Lawrence, 228-0190. Costa Rica Gardening Club, Mariel, 203-4964. Democrats Abroad, meets the last Saturday of every month, Ruth Dixon, 494-6260. Emergency Help for People Robbed in Costa Rica, 289-7486 (24 hours). Feed Single Mothers Mission, 374-8849, www.feedsinglemothers.org. Flag Football, Thursdays, 10 a.m., La Sabana Park, 373-8720, www.flagmag.com. Friends of Ansche Chesed (NY) and Beyt Tikkun (CA), Atenas, 446-5768. Full Gospel Businessmen’s Fellowship International, 245-4592. Hash House Harriers, Millard Farmer, 282-6010. Health Club, Dianne Rowley, 266-0123, d@dear betty.com, Escazú. Herbalife and Weight Control Support Group, tovcaire@hotmail.com. The International Gay and Lesbian Assocation, Rick, 280-3548. La Leche League (for nursing moms), Nancy, 2280941. Language Exchange: Universal de Idiomas, Av. 2, Ca. 9, 257-0441. Little Theatre Group, 355-1623, www.littletheatregroup.org. Michigan State University Alumni International Costa Rica Chapter, Michael Forbes, 289-6087, calchef2002@yahoo.com. Narcotics Anonymous, 256-8140, 248-0545. Network of Spiritual Progressives, 446-5768 (Atenas). Newcomers Club (for women), 416-6165, 302-5620, newcomerscr@yahoo.com. Overeaters Anonymous, Roger, 232-0001, ext. 3001, Cinthia 254-9001, computador_hombre@yahoo.com. *Peace Army of Costa Rica, 282-6576 (bilingual). Quilt Guild of Costa Rica, meets first Tuesday of month, 6:30 p.m., Catholic Church, San Pedro, Montes de Oca, 225-9534. Readers Theater Club, 207-7578. Readers Theater (script reading), Wednesday afternoons, drkamayani@yahoo.com. Republicans Abroad Costa Rica, Frances Radics, 203-6131, 820-1231. Rotary Clubs, 255-1001 (English). Tambor Gringos and Important Friends, Ann Leonard Coyle, annleon2@hotmail.com, 683-0686. Tibetan-Costa Rican Cultural Association, 258-0254, fax 255-2783. Truth Behind the News Discussion Club, Mondays, 10 a.m., Lofa Plaza, 2nd floor, Don Getzman, 2413493. Ultimate Frisbee, 337-5249, 391-6980, 825-8967. Union Church Women’s Fellowship, 235-6709. Unity Center, 203-4411, Piedades, Santa Ana. University of Tennessee Association, 446-5403. V.F.W. Post 11207, San José, 255-2806, 231-2948. Wine Club, meets for lunch the last Sunday of every month, 1 p.m., 279-8927. Women’s Aglow Fellowship, 231-2350. Women’s Auxiliary of the Salvation Army, 221-8266. Women’s Club of Costa Rica, 268-6130, 282-6801, www.wccr.org. Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, English/Spanish, Heredia, 433-7078. Young Life Youth Club, 232-2350. Young Expats of Costa Rica (for expatriates under 40), www.youngexpatsofcostarica.org. W16 | WEEKEND | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 SPOTLIGHT ON THE ARTS Crazy Little Thing Called Love: LTG Celebrates Valentine’s with ‘Strawberries in January’ By David King Special to The Tico Times fter acting as guest director on the Little Theatre Group’s (LTG) “The Good Body” in 2005, I couldn’t help but return to work with this little theater group in the western San José suburb of Bello Horizonte de Escazú. As a minority Anglophone in Canada’s francophone province of Quebec, this intercultural experience is particularly enriching, considering that LTG is Central America’s oldest English-language theater company, with a vibrant group of passionate members from all walks of life. With support from LTG and the Quebec City-based Office Québec-Amériques pour la jeunesse, which provides entrepreneurial and cultural exchanges for Quebecois youth throughout the Americas, my visit provides the opportunity to present a Quebec play, teach workshops and discuss contemporary “Canuck” theater with Costa Ricans. Evelyne de la Chenelière’s “Strawberries in January” (“Des fraises en janvier”) is a great example of Canadian theater’s blend of North American realism and Quebec’s more European, physical and imagistic styles. With A a topnotch English translation by Toronto-based Morwyn Brebner, this romantic comedy is not your usual “rom-com” fare. Featuring four Montreal singletons in pursuit of love, happiness and fulfillment, the play tosses around all the crazy, mixedup lies we tell for love, David King even when it’s right under our noses. Montreal café owner and budding screenwriter François (played by Theodore Hope) imagines, much like the playwright herself, what life would be like if we were all living in a movie, where we can all call “Cut!” and start over again if things aren’t working out. Hope, a computer scientist, co-founder of San José’s InterNexo and a teacher at the Technology Institute of Costa Rica in Cartago, east of the capital, says he is having fun in his challenging and goofy role as the daydreamer François. “Like François,” Hope muses, “I imagine my own movie-like, fantasy scenarios that involve people who surround me, but never going to François’ extremes of lying.” Hope’s character, in love with his obsessive-compulsive ex-girlfriend and roommate Sophie (who’s always dreaming of finding the right Valentino-esque “package”), decides to test out Hollywood romance by setting up Sophie with French literature professor Robert (played by Ron Boston), a regular at his café. As Sophie, Chiquita Brands executive Sheila Morrison admits to her own idiosyncrasies. “I actually thought I was pretty neurotic until I met my character Sophie,” Morrison laughs, “so I’m feeling pretty good about myself these days. Sophie’s desperate pursuit of the perfect man is actually hard for me to understand, as I was one of those lucky ones, who, at 28, really wasn’t looking for love, when my future husband walked in the door and I just knew.” Throw in the zany innkeeper and Sophie’s childhood friend Léa (played by the delightful Sally O’Boyle), and the fine line is quickly drawn between truth and lies, fantasy and fact, and reality and fiction. As the professor with secrets of his own, former Radio Dos morning disc jockey “Dr. Ron” Boston is beginning to savor his role. “I play a pretentious college professor – I wonder if I was typecast?” Boston jokes. “Actually, this is a challenging role for me. In real life, my character and I probably wouldn’t get along well.” Ah, the things we do for love. Writer and director David King holds an honors BFA in performance from Montreal’s Concordia University, where he co-founded the bilingual, project-based company OUT Productions in 1997. Recent credits include “The Graduate” (assistant to Miles Potter, Grand Theatre, London, Ontario), “Story of My Life” (assistant to Michael Bush, Canadian Stage Co., Toronto), “Hysteria,” “Crave,” “Pterodactyls” and “Jocasta” (University of Alberta, Edmonton), and “Regeneration” (Theatre Network, Edmonton). More Info “Strawberries in January” is set to run Feb. 23 through March 11 at the Blanche Brown Theatre in Bello Horizonte de Escazú. For tickets, information or directions to the theater, call 355-1623 or visit www.littletheatregroup.org. This St. Valentine’s Day, Play and Win! Come up to the 17th floor of the Aurola Holiday Inn Hotel and experience the height of fun! A romantic great view of the city center Special Raffles Electronic Roulette Tournaments every Saturday with CASH PRIZES Free Parking Casino Aurola 287 8288 Open 2 p.m. to 4 a.m. Phone. 233-9490 TUTE OT: P K C JA NS O I L L MI OF NES O L O C THE TICO TIMES Caribbean Telecom Giant Wants in on Tico Market Museums, beaches, coffee plantations and volcanoes are among attractions a group of seven representatives from the German government’s Tourism Commission visited during a whirlwind tour of Costa Rica this week. The delegation was invited here by Legislative Assembly president Francisco Antonio Pacheco and Tourism Minister Carlos Benavides in order for the two countries to share information about their tourism industries and “further extend the ties of friendship.” The tour included a meeting Monday with Foreign Minister Bruno Stagno, Pacheco and representatives from the Costa Rican Tourism Institute (ICT) and Science and Technology Ministry (MICIT). Wednesday, they met with President Oscar Arias, and yesterday with Benavides and William Rodríguez, vice-president of the National Chamber of Tourism (CANATUR), completing a tour of the country’s most important officials and destinations. According to a statement from Casa Presidencial, the tour was a resounding success, ending with a commitment from the delegation to seek an increase in the number of flights arriving in Costa Rica from Germany. Annette Frasse of the delegation affirmed there are now only two flights per week from Germany – even during their bitter cold winter months – a number she feels is far too low to really encourage tourism. “About 40,000 Germans visit Costa Rica annually on vacation, but the potential is there for many more, if better opportunities existed,” she said. –Tico Times The head of the Caribbean telecom giant Digicel told the daily La República it is interested in entering the Costa Rican telecom market if the market is opened to private competition. The company, which operates in 22 countries, has lately set its sights on Central America, where it has entered the Salvadoran and Guatemalan markets, and put its foot in the door in Panama and Nicaragua. The company is the fastestgrowing mobile telecom operator in the Caribbean, already claiming 62% of that market after just six years. It has invested some $1.5 billion in that region, and employs more than 3,000 workers, according to Digicel’s Web site. The Spanish company Telefónica and the Mexican giant Telmex, owned by magnate Carlos Slim (the richest man in Latin America and third richest in the world, according to Forbes), have already registered their brands with Costa Rica’s National Registry in anticipation of a possible market opening (TT, Feb. 3, 2006) Under the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA), Costa Rica is required to open its state-run telecom monopoly to private competition. Digicel group is based in Bermuda but Irish magnate Denis O’Brien, one of the richest men in Ireland, is the company’s majority shareholder. In September 2006, O’Brien took up an address in Malta, a Mediterranean island that charges no tax on assets or income brought into the jurisdiction. The Irish Times reported that O’Brien made the move as Digicel planned to float his company on the New York Stock Exchange. –Blake Schmidt February 9, 2007 | BUSINESS & REAL ESTATE | 13 NEW GLOBAL FINANCIAL COMPANY Requires 10 motivated and energetic telephone sales people with well spoken native English for immediate employment in our Costa Rican division. BIG EARNING POTENTIAL We offer a base salary, above-average commissions and excellent bonuses. Only top closers and want-to-be top closers need apply. 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The minister called CAFTA a “more solid” agreement. Indigenous Appeal A group of about 40 indigenous Costa Ricans this week demanded that the nation’s 24 indigenous territories be included in the CAFTA debate. “I feel abused. Stop mistreating indigenous people. Stop robbing them,” said Timoteo Jackson, leader of a group of organic banana producers in the southern Caribbean zone of Bribrí, at a press conference at the Legislative Assembly Tuesday. Jackson and others, who traveled from the far southeast corner of Costa Rica to appear at the assembly, asked why the indigenous communities of Costa Rica haven’t been consulted in what they say is a mandatory consultation under Costa Rican law. Benjamín Mayorga, of the Friends of Talamanca Association, said CAFTA could threaten the nation’s food security and small farmers, many whom are indigenous; could threaten access to medicine for indigenous communities; and could mean national resources that these communities use such as water, forest and minerals could fall into hands of multinational companies who will be given more incentives to exploit those resources under the agreement. The consultation tours are required for legislation that would affect indigenous communities. Though there are differences of opinion in the assembly about whether Gilberto Jérez, a Guanacaste native who founded and owns the electricity business Monting, declared his conflict. “Because of the activities of my business, there could be a conflict of interest in my participation in the commission,” he said in a Jan. 25 letter announcing his departure from the commission. Libertarian Movement party leader Evita Arguedas is a partner in the telecom law consulting group Comunica M y T, and her husband is a company chairman. She didn’t step down from the commission, however, drawing fire from opponents. “There is a clear conflict between her duty as a representative and her particular interest,” PAC legislator Alberto Salom said in a statement. Arguedas told the daily La Nación there is no conflict and that she wants to contribute her experience in telecom to the debate. Salom is trying to “shut her up,” the pro-CAFTA legislator alleged. She also pointed to the fact that PAC legislator Leda Zamora is an ICE official and is on the special commission dedicated to modernizing that agency. “I don’t see it as a conflict of interest … I haven’t benefited from anything up to now,” Zamora, an ICE administrator of 14 years, told The Tico Times. She is currently on leave without pay. Zamora said she plans to vote on the telecom and ICE reforms. Costa Rican corruption law calls for one to eight years of prison for public officials who vote favorably on legislation that benefits them personally. Mónica Quesada | Tico Times the consultation law should apply to CAFTA (TT, Sept. 1, 2006), the assembly’s technical services department recommended the consultation tour in June of last year. “We want you to take into account what we’ve brought to light,” Mayorga said before requesting that the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court (Sala IV) side with indigenous communities. Broad Front legislator José Merino said there are more than enough votes in the anti-CAFTA bloc to request the Sala IV review the constitutionality of not conducting nationwide indigenous consultation for CAFTA. Assembly president Francisco Pacheco then briefly shook hands with Jackson, saying “I’m happy to see indigenous com- munities express themselves.” He made it clear that he is in favor of the trade pact, however. He promised to review the group’s documented anti-CAFTA positions before he scurried off to the assembly. “We’re in session and I have to do my job,” he said. Clash over Telecom Interests Though two legislators named on the special commission to discuss reforms to the telecom sector and the state-run Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) have possible conflicts of interests, only one has stepped down from the commission. 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Beautifully landscaped, all underground utilities, garage, workshop, office & much more. 33% below appraisal. $589,500 cash. 8039 8088 CALL OWNER ★ (506) 266-0000 – February 9, 2007 | BUSINESS & REAL ESTATE | 15 16 | OPINION | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 Editorial Drowning in Waste – Same Old Story ith steaming stacks of refuse on street corners around the country A special trash commission is looking into the municipal waste problem. and overflowing landfills leaking nasty chemical soup into under- A special inter-institutional team has begun looking into the chemical waste ground aquifers, it is safe to say Costa Rica has a problem with its and safety issue. waste. But we’ve heard this before. With each administration come new plans, You could even call it a state of emergency. But wait, someone already did, commissions and task forces to come up with new Band-Aid solutions. more than 20 years ago: the Costa Rican government. It’s time to try something new. The government needs to unite these Two decades have come and gone, and the situation has gotten only worse. motley efforts and raise the profile of the trash problem once and for all by The waste problem isn’t limited to garbage produced by households and putting one person, with one team, in charge. In a government that left to rot on their doorstep because the funds both a Planning Ministry and an Intermunicipalities don’t send trucks to pick it up; Institutional Coordination Minister, there is or the garbage tossed out car windows, littered obviously space for a high-level team to tackalong hiking trails, dumped over hillsides or le a problem of this magnitude, ending Two decades have come and gone, thrown into lakes, rivers and oceans. Costa decades of having the responsibility scattered and the situation has gotten only worse. Rica must take a hard look at how it is dealing throughout the middle reaches of the Health with its industrial, chemical, medical and other and Environment ministries and the counhazardous waste. try’s 81 underfunded municipalities. The government has always left the disposWe’re not advocating a new Trash al of chemical and industrial waste up to the companies that produce it – Ministry, and the red tape and bureaucracy it would likely generate. which makes sense. You make it, you deal with it. These companies, though, Still, a high-level task force dedicated to the problem could work with can’t just be taken at their word that they are disposing of their hazardous municipalities, employ specialists to examine public and private waste-manwaste in a proper way. Unfortunately, this is exactly what Costa Rica’s lax agement proposals, especially for chemical and medical waste, find funds to monitoring of the industry has meant. attack the problem and watch for and investigate corruption. Then there’s medical waste, which, save some very few exceptions, gets disThis dedicated team could also spearhead nationwide efforts to educate posed of along with the regular trash. Just ask the buzos who make their liv- and inspire inhabitants to reduce, reuse and recycle their waste. In the recipe ing picking through landfills how often they come across syringes and bags of to improve Costa Rica’s waste problem, a vigilant and concerned populace who-knows-what marked with hospital logos. must complement government efforts. W Letters Founded in 1956 by Elisabeth Dyer Publisher 1972-1996 Richard Dyer 1981 1985 1990 1995 1998 IAPA - Pedro G. Beltrán Award for distinguished service to the community Special Citation Maria Moors Cabot Awards National Conservation Prize IAPA Grand Prize for Press Freedom Salvation Army Others Award National Tourism Chamber Media Award In memoriam - Linda Frazier (1945-1984) Vol. LI N.1907 Publisher Dery Dyer Editor Auriana Koutnik General Manager Abby Daniell Weekend Editor Meg Yamamoto Online Editor Amanda Roberson Staff & Contributors Ann Antkiw, Leland Baxter-Neal, Ed Bernhardt, Paul Brohaugh, Mary Chalker (Exploring Costa Rica Guide), Sonia Cordero (Calendar), María Gabriela Díaz, Arcadio Esquivel, Kate Galante, David Garrett, Ellen Zoe Golden, Sophia Kelley, Susan Hall Liang, Gaby Kyriss, Shawn Larkin, Vicky Longland, Dorothy MacKinnon, Ana Luisa Monge, Jack O’Brien, Tyler Pearce, Tim Rogers (The Nica Times), Jerry Ruhlow, Blake Schmidt, David Sherwood, Katherine Stanley, Mitzi Stark, Jeffrey Van Fleet Photography Mónica Quesada, Chelcey Adami Advertising Ivonne Morúa (Manager), Rod Hughes, Jeannette Campos, Marta Gamboa, Silvia Hernández, Mary Rohaman, Ricardo Rojas, Mauricio Vanegas, Cindy Vargas Circulation Diego Herrera (Manager), Gerardo Arias (Reaching Out), Alonso Bustos, Cesar García, Andrey León, Clara León, Lincon Pastenes Finance Olman Chacón, Ana Arguedas, Rigoberto León Production Mayra Sojo (Manager), Roy Arguedas, Verny Quesada Customer Service Ana Lucía Espinoza, Annette Benavides, Bernardino Madrigal, Flory Poveda, Luis Morales Systems Edwin Cárdenas The Tico Times (USPS 002-579) is published every Friday for $61 per year by The Tico Times S.A., Avenida 8, Calle 15, Apartado 4632-1000, San José, Costa Rica. Periodicals postage paid at St. Louis Offset, 1212 Dielman Industrial Court, St. Louis, MO 63132. Postmaster – Send address changes to: The Tico Times-SJO 717, P.O. Box 025331, Miami FL 33102-5331. Copyright Convention: unauthorized reproduction in whole or in part is strictly prohibited. Herbal Supplements May Be Regulated Under CAFTA Dear Tico Times: Several months ago I wrote of my experiment to reduce my cholesterol numbers by using a Chinese medicinal herb, red yeast rice extract (Monascus purpureus), instead of the prescribed Crestor. At that time I reported on how one trial had produced a drop of 104 (total) and 94 (LDL) points. (TT, Oct. 13, 2006). Being of an open-minded but skeptical nature I thought that this, while very promising, was not conclusive: so I followed on with a second trial. After not taking the herb for a further three months, I had a lipid profile test done Nov. 13 which showed that my total had increased by 71 points and my LDL by 67 points. OK then, so this is the state of my cholesterol without any interference – not good! So, back on the red yeast rice extract for another couple of months and then another test Jan. 15. This time my total was down by 81 points to 197 and my LDL was down 74 points to 132 – I should also add that my triglycerides were also down 58 points to 103 and my HDL was up 4.5 points to 44.5. ‘Nuff said. Even if these numbers aren’t as good as what Crestor could do (and I’ll never know that), they are good enough for me. For those who’d like to check my research, they can see what the Mayo Clinic says about red yeast rice extract and what www.worstpills.org has to say about Crestor. A couple of years ago, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) attempted to have the product Cholestin, which contains red rice yeast extract, declared an unapproved drug and removed from the market. Their reasoning? That it too closely resembles the pharmaceutical drug Lovastatin. Send your Letters by e-mail (letters@ticotimes.net), regular mail or fax (see Page 2). Please don’t forget to sign your name and include your return address and phone number. Thank you. You see, the drug companies have the patents on all statin drugs – even the naturally occurring ones! Fortunately, the Cholestin manufacturer appealed and the FDA lost. Even so, my (and your) freedom of choice in this matter apparently is going to be taken out of our hands by “big pharma.” In a two-pronged attack to annihilate the competition, they are the force behind the international Codex Alimentarius, and they are buying up all the formulae for producing generic versions of pharmaceutical drugs. This latter issue is currently before the U.S. Congress. The most important item I have seen on this topic in many years is to be found at this Web site: www.herballure.com/Special/ WeBecomeSilent. It is a 29-minute video narrated by Judy Dench about the well-advanced plot by “big pharma” to eradicate our free choice to buy herbs, vitamins and minerals. In the guise of protecting us against ourselves (nitwits that we are) the Codex Alimentarius is preparing to declare the competition illegal. Lest readers think that Codex, a United Nations program created to develop international food standards, will not affect them, please note that the Adverse Event Reporting (S. 3546) was passed Dec. 17, 2006, and will categorize dietary supplements as drugs. In addition, Costa Rica has a representative and a committee on Codex overseen by the Ministry of Economy, Industry and Commerce. The Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA), as is well known, can overrule national laws (in this case, to enforce the Codex regulations), and will tremendously affect the ability of Costa Rica’s Social Security System (Caja) to provide medications at a price within its budget. Please, please, watch this video! Steve Friedman Rio Oro de Santa Ana Petty Crime Rising along With Poverty, Homelessness Dear Tico Times: While I agree with Michael Cook that tourists usually contribute to their crime problems (TT, Jan. 19), that doesn’t mean that petty crime has not become a serious problem. I have been visiting Costa Rica since 1972. That has included at least one trip (sometimes two) a year since 1993. In 2006, I made three trips to Pacific beaches to do some surfing. (I haven’t visited Guanacaste since 1989, though, because the development there depresses me.) The one significant crime problem I’ve experienced was definitely a result of foolishness. A couple years ago I let a friend talk me into accompanying him to Costa Rica to visit a family in Turrialba that was going to host his daughter as an exchange student. When we arrived there I noticed a pay phone near a bakery and found a parking spot a little way down the street. As I walked back to the pay phone to call for directions I asked my friend to watch the car. I then went to the phone and called the family. When I arrived back at the car, my friend informed me that some guy opened the car door, but he didn’t think he took anything. Apparently my friend had gotten out of the car and was standing on the sidewalk during this incident. I was shocked by this. I thought it was obvious that when watching the car you would prevent strangers from entering or at least sound the alarm if any attempted to do so. Naturally the thief did take some things. Despite my experiences, I definitely feel less safe in Costa Rica than I did back in the 70s, because of the obvious increase in poverty and homelessness. Some may blame drugs. I think substance abuse is a symptom THE TICO TIMES of poverty and hopelessness. No doubt it contributes to the continuation of those when it is handled as a criminal rather than a public health issue. These issues are certainly not unique to Costa Rica. Just visit any city in the United States to see similar problems. On the other hand, if you visit Amsterdam, you will see plenty of drug use but you do not see obvious signs of poverty (at least not in the touristy central district). The Dutch provide plenty of police patrols in that district too. Consequently I have felt secure during my visits there. Ken Hayes Austin, Texas, USA Work Study Camps Can End Poverty Dear Tico Times: Costa Rica will not solve poverty by following the old bureaucratic ways. First of all, unless we significantly reduce the number of children born to unwed mothers in poverty – and unless the government stops rewarding such mothers for having six or more children by giving them free houses and allowances – the vicious cycle of poverty can never be broken. The mindset of those in poverty – and those in anti-poverty programs – seems to be that the worse their plight, the more government services they should receive. Costa Rica is facing a time bomb from the number of school dropouts, a prelude to more poverty. With no education and no beginner’s job opportunities, a young man has few choices – that is, if he wants to eat. He can not join the army to learn a skill. He might be fortunate to find temporary employment in farming or construction, or as a vendor of fruit at intersections. Or he can become a beggar, a thief, a kidnapperextortionist or a drug dealer. Or, he might forget his misery by becoming a drug addict with an expensive habit and probably kill himself from an overdose and some innocents who get in his way. Social programs can give limited support but lack the means to supply the discipline, knowledge and self-esteem lacking among the poor. Victims must learn to help themselves. How? Most countries provide an opportunity for those trying to escape poverty and willing to accept discipline by joining the military. OK, we do not want that here. During the Great Depression in the United States the federal government conscripted the unemployed into the Civilian Conservation Corps and Works Projects Administration camps where they were housed, fed, clothed and given medical attention. They worked on conservation, infrastructure and public works projects. In the process, many learned discipline, self esteem, social interaction, team work, and respect for authority – some even learned a trade that they pursued all through life with dignity. We can certainly use that kind of work in Costa Rica. Putting young people who should be in school to work on constructive projects will get them off the streets and teach them how to survive by doing an honest day’s work while they learn a trade. Such a program will not be costly. To the contrary, the country will save in many ways. The specifics of a program “a lo Tico” can be worked out. If all abandoned youngsters over 10 or 12 who are not in school are sent to camps to work and study, many will find a way to stay in school. Those in camps will learn much more than those in public schools where they are exposed to overworked and indifferent teachers and where they lack parental support and suitable places to study. In camps, supervised study with tutoring can provide effective total immersion learning. If the development of this program is left to cooperation between the Ministry of Public Education (MEP), the National Training Institute (INA) and the Public – February 9, 2007 | OPINION | 17 ARCADIO Security Ministry, nothing will happen. It will be talked to death. That is why there should be a Youth Ministry reporting directly to the President. Otherwise, more public funds will be wasted and no meaningful decrease in poverty will occur. Henry Markant San Antonio de Belén Editor’s note: Thanks for sharing your ideas. Costa Rica does have a Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sports, but it focuses mainly on culture and sports events. The Child Welfare Office (PANI) deals with youth issues, but does not have ministry ranking. Also, the country’s laws prohibit work by those under age 15. Plans to Improve San José Should Include Cleaner Air Dear Tico Times: I first went to Costa Rica in 1984. Between then and 1991 I went each summer to study Spanish and do research. I love Costa Rica and would like to go back but I have been hesitant to return. The reason is because of how much the air pollution increased in San José during those years. Since then, so far as I can tell from reading developments in The Tico Times, the pollution has only gotten worse. I hope those working to revitalize San José (TT, Jan. 19) are including improved air quality in their plans. I would love to visit a San José with cleaner air once again. GET ACTION What’s the Best Way to Send Items to Costa Rica? I would like to get information about sending items such as clothing, etc. to Costa Rica from California, hopefully the best, least expensive way. Gretel Gonzales Whittier, California, USA All packages sent here must include a list of items and their value. In addition, all goods brought into Costa Rica are subject to import taxes and Customs handling charges, which can make shipping to Costa Rica somewhat complicated. However, every person in Costa Rica (whether tourist, citizen or foreign resident) is entitled to a tax-free shipment of up to $500 (including shipping, insurance and handling fees) every six months. When sending items from the United States to Costa Rica, it should be noted that some things, such as fertilizers, food and medicine, are among a list of restricted items. The above items, for example, must be approved by Costa Rica’s Public Health Ministry (www.ministerio desalud.go.cr, 223-0333) before they will be allowed to enter the country. Some shipping companies will obtain the permits for you. K. Ann Stebbins Richmond, Kentucky, USA For a more detailed list of shipping requirements for Costa Rica, you might check with a shipping company representative, the U.S. Postal Service or Costa Rica’s Customs Administration (www.hacienda. go.cr, click on Dirección General de Aduanas, 233, 6797, 440-0275). Roberto Carvajal, a representative of courier company Aerocasillas, told The Tico Times that to import used clothing into Costa Rica, the clothing must be fumigated in the United States and a certificate of the fumigation must be included in the package. The package will be inspected by Customs here and possibly re-fumigated if agents decide to do so, he explained. (Clothing brought in luggage on commercial flights, however, does not face any of these requirements.) The Tico Times asked around with several shipping companies to compare the cost of sending a package weighing 25 pounds and measuring 40 inches long by 20 inches wide by 10 inches tall. Shipping this hypothetical package from the United States to Costa Rica with the U.S. Postal Service, for example, runs from $55 (Economy Parcel Post, 4-6 weeks) to $507 (Global Express Guaranteed NonDocument Service, 1-3 days). For more information, see the U.S. Postal Service’s Web site, www.usps.com. To ship it with FedEx (www.fedex. com), the least expensive option available is $395. Aerocasillas (208-4848, www.aeropost. com) is one of several shipping companies that bring items to Costa Rica from its mail center in Miami, Florida (so the package would have to be sent there first). Carvajal quoted $104 for the 25-pound package. Jet Box (281-3208, www.jetbox.com), which also ships packages from Miami, has two types of shipping contracts: one where you pay a monthly fee (minimum of $15) for discounted shipping, or where you pay per shipment. To send without the monthly contract, the price would be $129, and with the monthly payments, it would be $103. Aeromarine (442-7200, www.aeroma rine.net) quoted the cheapest price, with a special rate of $32.32, plus taxes. According to spokesman Marlin Brenes, if the package doesn’t qualify for the tax exoneration, clothing is taxed at 30% of its value – declared by the sender before shipping and included with the list of items. As a service to Tico Times readers, “Get Action” will answer questions, solve problems, bridge language gaps and just generally help wherever it can. Please send your queries to “Get Action” at The Tico Times by mail, fax or e-mail. We can’t promise miracles, but we’ll do the best we can. Lousy Service, Food at Restaurant Near Poás Dear Tico Times: This letter is meant to be helpful for anyone who travels on the camino to Poás Volcano. A restaurant to avoid, unless you like waiting an hour plus to receive inedible food at more than double the cost, is Casa Bavaria, just north of Carrizal de Alajuela. This large, beautiful facility has lousy service, inedible food and is overpriced. If this letter prevents one person from making the mistake I made when I went there with my family, it will have been worth writing. Bill Comer San Isidro de Heredia Editor’s note: The Tico Times contacted Casa Bavaria owner Barbara Schwagereit, who said she doesn’t recall anyone making such complaints at the restaurant. She said Casa Bavaria serves more than 30,000 guests annually and to her knowledge, no one has ever complained of food being inedible. As far as wait times, she said the restaurant strives to ensure hors d’oeuvres are served in 20 minutes maximum and entrees in 30 minutes max. She added that if complaints are made in the restaurant, she and the rest of the staff try to resolve them immediately. 18 | CLASSIFIEDS | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 CENTRAL AMERICAÕS LEADING ENGLISH-LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER CLASSIFIEDS Buying and selling is easy and effective with a classified ad in The Tico Times. Fax it (country code 506) 233-6378, by mail to The Tico Times, Apdo. 4632-1000, San José, Costa Rica (U.S. residents send orders to SJO 717, P.O. Box 025331, Miami, FL 33102-5331) or by phone to (country code 506) 258-1558. Visit us online www.ticotimes.net and fill out the classified order form or send an e-mail to classified@ticotimes.net. Rates for the print-edition classifieds are as follows: Minimum 3 lines, Minimum 2 weeks. US $2.63 per line including letters, punctuation and spaces. For symbols (star, arrow, check mark) or graphics, contact the Classified Department. For yellow shading add an additional 40% charge. Finally, add 13% advertising tax to the total of the ad. 100 ANIMALS 101 Animals AHPPA’s animal shelter has love on 4 legs waiting for you. For any donation they can be yours adult/puppy, cat/kittens. If you already have your pet, than help us with our sterilization programs, send your donation to AHPPA, Apartado 73-3000 Heredia, Costa Rica or deposit in Banco Nacional de C.R. acc. AHPPA, No. 040431-9. Tel. 267-7158, San Rafael de Heredia. You can help us save lives! www. animalsheltercostarica.com MASTIFF ENG. pups & adults. Burmese, Bengal cats, Andalusian/ Peruvian Paso Horses 416-3333 DOGGI DIVINO Grooming Salon has the FURMINATOR to deshed your dog! Call 289-2162 WOOF! Nato sez: adopt an orphan dog or cat Sundays in la Sabana Parque info. 267-6011 spayed/neutered & dewormed & vaccinated & loved Amigos de los Animales Asís a “no kill” Costa Rica pubic benefit animal charity donations save lives! Sun Sat TV HD Satellite TV Costa Rica/Panama Major US Channels 120 + CBS, ABC, NBC, FOX Signal Provided by our Superior laser built 2.4 m Dish Reiny 506-249-0506 Cathy 506-282-9097 cathy@sunsattv.com “We service what we sell’’ www.sunsattv.com LABRADOR, female, yellow, 2 yrs old, w/pedigree, spayed, neutered & dewormed. 845-6704. MALE, mix, short hair. 2yr neutered, vacc., dewormed. 225-3379/ 253-1529. MIX male puppy 2mo. Black & white. Neutered, vacc. & deworm. 361-2488. NEED HOME Mutt, female dog, 1 yr spayed/dewormed. 294-3734 / 292-5754. POODLE female, 1.5 yr. Very sweet. Spayed, vacc. & dewormed. 225-3379. TOGETHER We can save animal lives 102 Free ADOPTION, Eng. Mastiff female, 4 yrs, for housepet, need to spayed, fenced yard. 416-3333. BEAUTIFUL kitty, white, 5mo, spayed, free for loving home. 817-3118. DOBERMAN, male, black, 2 yrs. Need a good home. Tel: 359-9040. FREE CLASSIFIEDS FOUND a wallet? Need a home for your kittens? Lost & Found items and giveaways can be advertised FREE in Tico Times Classifieds. Just call us with your message be-fore Tuesday noon. Another community service from THE TICO TIMES ANPA asks for help: Each ¢5,000 you donate will spay/neuter and deworm a stray dog/cat, companion animal from a poor family. 233-0779 gvico@adoptame.org or deposit your donation #904095700 Banco de San José. Please give us the chance to work for the welfare of animals. 103 For Sale AMERICAN Pitbulls, champion bloodline, 2 males, intelligent. 9mo. All shots. $150ea. Good home w/yard. No dogs similar in CR. MonFri 290-1481. HORSES 1/2 Spanish, 1/2 Arabians for work, pleasure & riding, and Trail riding. (506) 234-1253/361-6666. Fax: 224-6962. lauracollado@racsa.co.cr For a few $ more, you can reach thousands of internet readers GOLDEN Retriver puppies 6 wks. Pedigree, spayed & dewormed. $300/ $250. 2410574/ 385-8804/ 888-9411/ 379-0609. RHODESIAN RIDGEBACK & Basenji puppies, champion. Parents ped/shot. 355-5160 eves. www.zulucariari.com 200 EMPLOYMENT 201 Jobs Offered $1,000 Sign-on Bonus for experienced phone closers. Perfect English required. Only the best need apply. Call 296-8306 ADMIN ASST. to provide full admin support for the Costa Rican subsidiary of a US software solutions co. Exc. English skills required, Span. is a+ Min of 2 yrs Excel, Word & outlook in a similar environment. Send resume to: jobs@ searchtechnologies.com ART DIRECTOR. CR’s most prestigious tourism may seek graphic designer. In designing, photoshop, Ilustrator, bilingual a must. CV to: srevistas@yahoo.com BETTOR WAY- Are you a sportsbook owner having problems with cash flow? Do you want to merge with a bigger entity with comprehensive payment solutions? Join our team and let us put you in the big league. Email in confidence bettorway@yahoo.com ANTED: W TOP GUN ASSISTANT SALES MANAGER To break the team sales production records at our luxury travel agency. Requirements: • Some formal business education. • Previous experience in management. • Prior work in tourism sector. • Goal oriented and self motivated. • Excellent organization skills. • Leadership & motivational skills. We offer: • High energy, fun work environment. • Opportunities to earn great pay. • Incentives, bonuses and benefits. • Travel perks to top hotels in Costa Rica. Visit: www.vacationscostarica.com For more info: E-mail: carolinaumana@ goduesouth.com Send resume and cover letter to apply 10 year old US company. Opening office in Costa Rica. 8 positions available. Earn $100,000$200,000 plus USD per year $5000.00 bonus. Perfect English only!!! Only the best need to apply e-mail your contact info to transcontinental holdings@gmail. com BILINGUAL hotel manager, experience & reference. Livein. Tel. 446-5785 cafetal@cafetal.com BILINGUAL Tour guide needed for jet ski tours in Quepos. Call, fax a resume to: 777-1706 BILINGUALS needed, full/ part time availability. Immediate Openings. Tel. 357-2153 BILLS PILLING up? Get out from under quickly. We need your skills in telemarketing. Great work environment. Competitive pay. Flexible schedule. 335-2390 BIODIESEL, I’ve a working factory in Nicaragua will duplicate in C.R greater than 100% return on investment per year. cookjack3@yahoo.com CERTIFIED Native English speaking Teachers needed. (506) 232-9710 jobs@idiomacostarica.com AMERICAN SCHOOL 100 Animals 200 Employment 201 Jobs Offered 202 Jobs Wanted 300 Health Services 400 Investments 401 Business For Sale 402 Financing 403 Miscellaneous 404 Business Opport. 405 Business Services 600 Lost and Found 700 Miscellaneous 701 Collectors 702 Furniture/Housewares 703 Miscellaneous 704 Memberships 800 Music 801 Music 900 Personal 901 Men Seeking Women 902 Women Seeking Men 903 Personal 1000 Real Estate For Rent 1001 Apartments 1002 Comm. Property 1003 Condominiums 1004 Exchange 1005 Houses 1006 Rooms 1007 Timeshares 1100 Real Estate For Sale 1101 Apartments 1102 Beach Property 1103 Comm. Property 1104 Condominiums 1105 Exchange 1106 Farms 1107 Houses 1108 Lots-Property 1109 Timeshare 1110 Rent For Sale 1111 Quintas 1200 Services 1201 Accounting 1202 Autos-Mechanic 1203 Construction 1204 Computers 1205 Languages 1206 Miscellaneous 1207 Public Notice 1208 Religious 1209 Repair 1210 Storage 1211 Legal Services 1212 Telecommunications 1300 Tourism 1301 Accommodations 1302 Airfare 1303 Camping 1304 Cruises 1305 Fishing 1306 Guides 1307 Tourism Info 1308 Tours 1400 Transportation 1401 Airplane 1402 Boats 1500 Vehicles 1501 Autos 1502 4x4’s 1503 Miscellaneous 1504 Motorcycles 1505 Rentals 1600 Wanted 1601 Wanted 1602 Help Wanted PROFESSIONAL TELEMARKETING EXPERIENCE We accept VISA, MASTERCARD and AMEX or make checks payable to The Tico Times. Payment must be made in U.S. dollars. Do not send cash. in Rohrmoser is looking to hire an elementary teacher with experience and proper English for elementary grades. For more info. please call Chana at 290-4347 or fax 296-1225 e-mail chana@ice.co.cr CHEF WANTED for established beach lodge. Peninsula de Osa, Matapalo. encantalavida.com 376-3209. NEW GLOBAL FINANCIAL C O M PA N Y CONTROLLER: Are you a CPA from the U.S. accustomed to GAAP principles and prepared to live the good life in Costa Rica? Excellent opportunity for Controller to work in major gaming company. Beautiful work environment, attractive remuneration package for right candidate. Send resume in confidence to bettorway@yahoo.com or call Art in Costa Rica during the day at + (506) 379-6862 Requires 10 motivated and energetic telesales people with well spoken native English for immediate employment in our Costa Rican division. ESCAZU steal 3 bdr, 3.5 baths, 2906 sqft exquisite views, nice area. Priced to sell $214,000. Call 267-6360 or 816-9898 SALES PROS WANTED! BIG EARNING POTENTIAL We offer a base salary, above average commissions and excellent bonuses. Only Top Closers and want-to-be Top Closers need Apply. The best will be trained for available positions. Contact: Mr. Silvers at 362-5300 CR’s top online travel agency seeks energetic, hard-working individuals who know and love Costa Rica to design and sell custom, luxury vacation packages. Sales experience required. We offer great commissions, incentives and chances to earn free stays at the top hotels in Costa Rica and Panama. You will be selling a fun product that makes people HAPPY! Send resumes with cover letter to: carolinaumana@ goduesouth.com Visit us @ www.vacations costarica.com ESL-certified native English speaking teachers w/2 yrs. experience preferred. Classes start ASAP! Whittemore de Costa Rica, S.A. 296-1248. Even on weekends inglescostarica@yahoo.com ESTABLISHED Tamarindo Real Estate agency seeks bilingual experienced sales agent & administrator. eddie@hiddencoastrealty. com EXPERIENCED freelance graphic artist position for t-shirt co. Located in Los Angeles, CA. Candidate works from Costa Rica producing art concepts from our direction. Candidate must work in Adobe Ilustrator. Please respond to matt@mergeleft.com JET SKY mechanic needed for pt/ft. serv. in Jaco Beach. 506-643-1576. (C.R) 973-465-5227 (USA) NEED women for tour guides. Excellent pay, travel, paid vacations. American comp. Some Eng helpful. E-mail: paradisefantasytourscr@yahoo. com. Leave Pnone number for interviews. Feb 11-21 SALES REPS. needed, good English a must. Fresh leads good base + comm. salesforcecr@gmail.com SE NECESITAN mujeres para guia turista, excelente salario, viaje, vacaciones pagadas. Comp. Americana. Ingles preferible. E-mail: paradisefantasytours@yahoo. com. Envie su numero para entrevista. Feb 11-21 SMALL 14 room hotel in Quepos seeks qualified candidate. Exc. opportunity, salary plus commission. crtrav@racsa.co.cr VOLUNTEER Coordinator work in Global Vision International’s new Costa Rica office helping to coordinate volunteers for our projects world wide. Requires good comm. & administration skills. Experience in volunteering or Travel helpful. E-mail: andy@gvi.co.uk with resume and cover letter. NATIVE SPEAKING ENGLISH TEACHERS O NLY San José and surrounding area. • • • • Top Pay – Dollarized Part/Full schedules Training + Perks Free Spanish Classes • Teacher Support • Voted best place to teach Call: 234-1001 www. ingles-empresarial. com WANTED Northamerican teacher to work fridays & Sat. in Guanacaste 686-8200 301-8251 202 Jobs Wanted 55 YR OLD Canadian now living in Costa Rica looking for an interesting construction project. I have 30+ yrs. experience as a Carpenter, Superintendent, General Manager and owner of construction companies. I have worked on residential, commercial & industrial projects in Canada and Russia. I speak and understand a little Spanish and am studying to improve this. If interested contact me at daveamckenna@hotmail.com or phone (506) 294-0259 CERTIFIED Nurse offering her service, experience in critical care. Tel. 297-6037 HELICOPTER Pilot 4000+ hrs in CR. FAA+CR lic. gowest8488@yahoo.com MERCEDES 4X4 w/ Eng. speaking driver available to take you anywhere in C.R. Fully lic. armed driver available upon request. 878-0202. crvips@gmail.com 300 HEALTH SERVICES 301 Health Services A PHYSICAL THERAPIST, Home service. Profes. services in neuromuscular & bone rehabilitation. Therapeutic massages. J. Huete 296-0552 Need some cash? Sell it fast; with the TT Classifieds THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 | CLASSIFIEDS | 19 Tel. 372-1962 ACUPUNTURE Auriculotherapy No needles. Immediate results for stress, anxiety, depression, all pain, injury, migraine. 17 yrs. US Lic. Escazu 352-0661 Cal-Lic’d Psychotherapy Individual Couple Family 35 yrs Exp. Flexible Fees. 281-0421 Ext 107 aft 11am DR. SHAHIN RAVERY Chiropractor, full spine, knees, shoulder & ankle, adjustment & rehabilitation. Tel 222-3152, 376-3779 HAIR PIECES REPAIRS, tapes, maintenance, natural or synthetic hair. Call Maria 256-4347 MASSAGE Therapist. Hotel & house calls. Non-sexual. Elizabeth 290-2063, 383-1033 NUTRITIONAL Spa in Escazu wellness eval, fruit smoothie more... 341-5619. SALA VILMA, Therapeutic Massage, Non sexual. C 30-32, Ave 6. 221-6192 SECRET GARDEN Massage Certified Therapeutic Masseuse. Bello Horizonte de Escazu. Call for appointment 228-1049 Dr-Dish Satellite TV or Internet Opening Soon Cariari, Belen between AM/PM and Drugstore 837-3474 www.perfectodish.com CARIARI MEDICAL CENTER DREAM opportunity in Manuel Antonio, Bar/Rest. on the Beach, 100m from the entrance to National Park. 777-2382. Michael. mike.kats@gmail.com PROSPEROUS tourist product distribution company for sale. 818-2876 400 INVESTMENTS 401 Business For Sale THE LAST opportunity leaving the country for sale Salon-Spa, exc. location in San Jose. Good price. 348-6524, 870-6643. BAR, Grill & Disco. 2,707 M2. Liquor & other licenses, fully equip., etc. Belen-Santa Ana area. $700K OBO. Ph. 228-0672, 351-3250, 3817513 402 Financing BAR/RESTAURANT Heredia, fully equipped, secure parking, International liquor license, telephone, great location. $28K. 2442545 BAR/RESTAURANT Inn for sale in Quepos Center, turnkey business. 864-8927 DIVORCE FORCES SALE. ATV Tour Business for sale. Turn Key Cash Cow Adrenaline Tours a discount tour center specializing in their ATV tour Business can easily generate 10-15K per month. Office is located on the 1st corner in Quepos with great signage there and around town. There are seven ATV’s all Registered (top condition) 2004-2005. Live-in Mechanic available with rancho restaurant for clients. Priced to sell at $39,900. Dave at 310-0158 LOOKING for mortgage? money over properties 392-9315 or crinvestments@racsa.co.cr MAIL BOXES ETC. #1 Postal Franchise, seeking New Franchisee for area of Liberia. Also available for sale-MBE store located in Pavas, San Jose. contact: Christopher Thompson. crthompson@cwpanama.net www.mbe.com REAL ESTATE financing purchase, pre-development, const. $50,000 to $10 million. Fast funding CRI managment. 365-1758 crimgt@gmail.com 403 Miscellaneous CR small investor seeks couple as active partner to start new tourism project. harbrace.magj@gmail.com Your best shot is with an ad in the TT Classifieds 404 Business Opportunity BEACHFRONT-Hotel 9bdrs. 5km west of Samara, Playa Buena Vista. 824-2822. BUILDER seeking investment partner for const. projects. 813-0942/269-8842 GAMING CO is converting to mobile and Internet entertainment. New sites, the first of their kind are finished and ready for marketing. Partner needed. TunesNetworks.com Ph. 282-4142 ext.106 JACO BEACH Dicoteca/ Rest/bar on sale by owner. Located at Main Strip, all furn & equipment incl. Ready for new managment. USA 973-465-5227. LIQUOR Licenses for Buy, Sale and Rent. 226-5889 www.patentesdelicores.com VENTURE CAPITAL needed for CR dating/sailing adventures. $25K. Tel. 305-9651. costaricagringotours@ hotmail.com WELLNESS Franchise for the New Millenium, Huge opp. across CR, Latin Am & US. Call Randy 341-5619 in CR, www.nutritionclubs.net 405 Business Services FINACIAL Advisors. Invest your money in mortgages & other options. 392-9315 crinvestments@racsa.co.cr 701 Collectors Antiques ANTIQUE & antique reproduction furn. from India. Clothes, bedspreads, tapestries etc. Deliver through out country. Call Chris: 291-1652/867-4549 702 Furniture Housewares OVERSEA moving, must sell everything. Furn. new Honda moto scooter, new elect. house hold appliances, all together: $4,500. Separate: Negotiable. 288-2696. 348-4332 703 Miscellaneous GARAGE sale. Queen beds, bicycles, office desks. 826-3778. REFRI 18 cu/ft. U$ 570, LCD 32 high def U$1,230, TV 20’ $140, TV 29 flat tube $300 Washer $360, Stove (smoothtop) $570. All new in box with warranty. Cel 361-0408 / 228-6889 SOLAR POWER security lighting, remote solar wireless cameras, dock & landscape lighting, solar water *RENEWABLE ENERGY* Wind generators, microhydro, batteries, charge controllers, inverters, 12 & 24 VDC lighting and appliances, LED Lights and all other necessary supplies. Located in Florida. Contact for more info. (Office) 321-783-0726. (fax) 321-783-0749 or www.nrgmanager.com GOODLIGHT BOOKS More than mysteries. Best selection of non-fiction, cookbooks, children’s, etc. A clean, orderly, well-lit-place for books. Open 7 days a week. 10 mins. from SJO Airport in Alajuela Centro. 100 N. & 300 W. of La Agonia Church. Tel. 430-4083 850 NICARAGUA 851 Nicaragua 44 YEAR male. 1.85cm tall goodlooking from US seeks atractive female from 24-36 for friendship & relationship Some English and US visa is a +. I’ll be soon visiting Send e-mail w/photo to: goodgemin@gmail.com 900 PERSONAL 901 Men Seeking Women 40 YEAR OLD Male from California visits C.R often, seeks Tica 23-35 for friendship, romance and long term relationship a little Eng. helpful send photo to blueeyes709@yahoo.com or write letter to Robert Richardson PO BOX 443 fawnskin CA 92333 44 YEAR male. 1.85cm tall goodlooking from US seeks attractive female from 24-36 for friendship & relationship Some English and US visa is a +. I’ll be soon visiting Send e-mail w/photo to: goodgemin@gmail.com AMERICANO pensionado 56 años, viviendo ahora en CR, en Pozos de Santa Ana; busca señorita, delgada para salir, cenar y viajar. Si tiene niños esta bien, debe hablar algo de inglés. Envie nota con foto Apdo 128-6155 Forum, Costa Rica o al correo elect: Golfergardner@yahoo.com ATTRACTIVE Amer/Italian, descent, looking for cute, petite, honest, lady. Marriage minded. Some Eng Send Photo to: garychr@excite.com I’ll be in C.R in March. ITALIAN Man 44 affectionate, charming, athletic, educated looking for woman 35-55 serioos relation. 863-0119 francoit42@yahoo.com USA CITIZEN, young, handsome man & financially secure seeks attractive Costa Rican lady, no kids, age 23 to 32 for serious relationship. Letter & photo to: doctor.nice@yahoo.com 902 Women Seeking Men 1 ON 1 MEET quality CR women. Since 1992 oldest & most successful service. Ed: 506-391-1617 LFL92@hotmail.com A Foreign Affair Come join us and meet beautiful & sincere women Feb 2nd & 3rd socials. Tour Feb 1st to 7th. Peresonal introductions. Free catalog & video costa-rica-women.com Call: 256-2715 CR / 602-553-8178 USA costa-rica-women.com CUPIDO HUNDREDS of Colombian women, who would like to meet you, www.colombiacupido.com I’M THE PERFECT girl for you. Call me for serious relationship. Tel. 871-9928 SEEKING man 50/70 very good manners f/ serious relationship. 350-4747. SINGLE GIRL looking for a perfect guy for serious relationship. Tel. 871-9928 YOUNG LADY seeks a good professional gentleman, single, Catholic, between 30-38 yrs. Must speak Spanish. Good manners. Send recent photo. goodgirlcr32@yahoo.com 903 Personal ASSISTANCE w/ anything. Apartments, transportation, translations, even finding a nice girlfriend, photos avail. Call Britney 506-362-4501 personalassistance1@yahoo. com ATTRACTIVE Tica Billing. selfemployed is looking for friendship w/cultured North american gentleman. 45-60 gardinarosa@hotmail.com COMPLETE HAIRCARE Expert Massage. Across US Embassy. 291-3126 EUROPEAN-American lady, retired multilingual, former Peace Corps Volunteer in CR now living on the Nicoyan Peninsula wishes contact w/educated wordly gentleman 60+ who shares passion for local culture, flora and fauna, the sea. utitaincr@hotmail.com or Apto. 152- 5200. Nicoya, Guanacaste. HAIR CUT, home service, and exchange Spanish to English. Karen 223-8748 TAKING care of elderly person by hour also offer B&B service. Tel. 223-8748 1000 REAL ESTATE FOR RENT 1001 Apartments APARTAMENTOS FERSO: Furn. apartments downtown from $10. St. 2, Ave. 6-8. 398-1264, 221-7404, 221-4167 BEACHFRONT. 5km W. of Samara. Magical location. From $200 on. 824-2822 BELEN LOS Arcos, furn, 4 bdrm, 2.5 bath, cable, ph, 24 hr. security, wk, mo, yearly. Tel. 375-0518 BO DENT 8 commercial or doctor’s offices. $1600 mo. Tel. 460-7682, 283-1183 Bo. LUJAN, near San Jose ctr. Studio, full furn & amenities, parking not include but available. ADSL, $600+deposit. 372-5844. CARIARI on Golf course, 1 bdr and 2 bdr furnished, maid service. 239-1003 CIUDAD COLON Furnished studio apts. Utilities incl. 249-4736, 896-5510 www.costaricanapts.com NEW A PA RTMENTS FOR RENT, SECURE HEREDIA week or month, 12 bdr. Internet, cable, tel, fully furn, hot water, gar. avail. 263-5298, 386-1994 NEIGHBORHOOD 8 blocks from downtown, fully equipped apts. & kitchen, 1 or 2 bedrms, cable TV, phone, ADSL internet, from US$150 to $1,250. Ph (506) 372-4157 osfa_88@yahoo.fr ESCAZU Country Club, deluxe 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, spacious liv-din, maid’s serv, 2 car gar, splendid panor. view. $2100mo. Furn /unfurn. 487-8098/378-8377 ESCAZU fully furn, 3 bdr, 2 bath, gar, $600. 232-9585 ESCAZU Great condo, furnished, big yard. Tel: 832-5068 / 290-0236. ESCAZU RED HOT apt. 2 bdrm, tower furnished, pool, view, Tel. 885-3287 ESCAZU, 1bdr. parking under roof, w/ or w/o furn. sec.. $450. 506-289-5482. www.balconesdeescazu.com LUXURY APARTMENTS FROM $250 WK, $650 MONTH. One bedroom. Completely & attractively furnished with full kitchen, microwave, cable TV, Tel, Internet access, 24-hr. security. GUEST WELCOME CENTRALLY LOCATED COMPLETELY PRIVATE www.hotels.co.cr/scotland.html Tel.(506) 223-0033, 223-0833 scotlandaptos@racsa.co.cr APARTMENTS SCOTLAND Ave 1 & Calle 27 Behind Cine Magaly 100 mts. east B. Escalante ESCAZU, Split-level Penthouse, 2 bdr, 2 bath, balcony, sun room, spectacular panoramic views of entire San Jose Valley. Professionally decorated. Ph, cable TV, Internet. All amenities, total furnished, secure, quiet, gated. $995. Also large 1 bdr $650. 289-4579. ESCAZU. condos, apts, homes furn./unfurn. no fee 220-0361/825-2604 ESCAZU. Furn. apart, monthly, weekly from $155. Tel. 289-7655 GUANACASTE New 2 bdr, a/c Brasilito/ Flamingo. wkly or mo. Villa Ferlito with new large pool. 386-7922 HEREDIA newly remodeled apart, 2 bdrm, 2 full bath. $250. 865-3993, 294-3012 ★★★ APARTMENTS SUDAMER Downtown completely furnished apartments, safe, secure, telephone, cable TV, Wi-Fi Internet. Calle 7, Ave. 14 Weekly from $160 Monthly from $480 to $650 Phone: 221-0247 381-3183 Fax: 222-2195 carlosedmena@ yahoo.com HOTEL-STUDIO apts Escazu $10-$20-$30/night. $200/300/ 400mo. h/w, cable. 289-7486, 307-0164 LLORENTE RES. rent apart only 3 km from San Jose center. 1,2,&3 bdr, 24 hrs sec, pool, gym, ranch for parties. Furn or Unfurn. From $500 to $700. Inf: 235-0471 / 384-7493 LOURDES M. de Oca, fully furn, nice, good area, safe, $500 mo. 224-7334 MORAVIA, priv, secure, gardens, fully furn. $400, $350, cableTV, 349-1615 BIRDS! TREES! An oasis of green in Sabanilla, only 10 min. from UCR. Completely furnished one-bedroom apartments in an enclosed, safe compound. Direct phone, laundry, parking, gardens. Excellent bus service. Cable TV available. US owned & operated. $325/$425/$450/mo. 273-3173 273-3837 381-8971 PALACIO Condo. San Jose New & luxurious. 2 bdr, 2 bath, fully furn, beautiful, full ultra electronics incl, reserve parking, rancho & pool. www.totalcostarica.net or rickraid2005@yahoo.com or in CR (506) 389-3945/ 866-1088/ 290-5264. USA (407) 804-0644 PASEO COLON studio, semi-furn, indep., garden, only person with passport. $200. 222-3024/817-9371 ROHMOSER. 2bdr. elegant. furn. tel, cable, garage, sec. 487-8098 / 378-8377 ROHRMOSER 2 bdr, 1 bath, 24-hr sec, parking, stainless applia, washer/ dryer. No pets. Tel: 886-8867 $500/mo + dep. ROHRMOSER modern, 160 M2, 1 floor, 2 bdr+, 2 bath, view, light, secure, $695. 231-2261, 843-9094 ROHRMOSER, furn 1bdr apt. secure, h/w, ph, cable, $400- $450/mo. 296-7396 ROHRMOSER. $550, $650$700. 237-4051, 271-3941, 394-1768, 238-2044. SAN PEDRO Area. 2 bdr, 1 bath, furnished, tel. gar. .$425. 391-5428/ 283-0158 SAN PEDRO near Mas X Menos, new, furn, 1 bdr, tel. washer, cable, Internet. $300, $350. Ph: 228-2049 SAN PEDRO, country furnished 2 bdr, elect. gate. $250/mo. Tel. 224-0985 SAN PEDRO, UCR/malls, 1bdr, quiet, furn, Internet, $375 302-1499 www.villalakshmi.com SANTA ANA, furn apart 1 bdr, ecological area, special for retirees. $300. 203-3814 ESCAZU APARTHOTEL CASA REFLEJOS Completely furnished 1, 2 & 3 bedroom apts Gym, Sauna & Jacuzzi Heated pool BBQ Area Fast Internet Tropical gardens Great city view Close proximity to all shopping & services Ph. 288-3630 ext. 400 Cel. 388-2873 www.casareflejoscr.com SANTA ANA, Parque Montaña del Sol. Furnished, unfurnished, 24 hr. security, total privacy, telephone, cable, Internet, washer/dryer. All included. $975/mo. Cel. 827-6787, tel. 282-9489 SANTA BARBARA 1/2 bdr apts. phone, furn. cbl. ready to move in, $300 mo dep. 813-0942/269-8842 STA ANA, Urb. Rio Oro, 2 bdr, furn, pool, 2 pers. German owner. 282-4126. TEXAS BBQ, Baby back ribs, BBQ chicken, Much more? BBQ sauce in spicy or regular. Take out or we deliver. Try it once and taste the difference. Dinners or Parties. Questions: Call Jim 355-5243 YOSES Apts fully furn near Mall, Internet, from $600. San Pedro main road fm $350. 381-1336, 827-5451 1002 Commercial Property Bo. DENT, S.J. for Call Center 11 comp.net, AC, security 24/7, $1,500/m. 833-4920. gmtours@racsa.co.cr 1003 Condominiums BELEN new lux. condo, central air, 3bdr. 3bath. walk-in closet, maid’s room, patio, 2 car gar. pool & clubhouse, 24hr sec. great location near Intel & Global Park. $1500. 516-768-1755 or 506-380-6445 ESCAZU Bello Horizonte, excl., 2 story, 3 bdr, 3 bth, furn, finest decorations, 24hr. sec. tel, $950 mo. 381-1336, 827-5451 ESCAZU condos, homes, apts furn/unfn, views, pools, sec, all prices. 288-1326. ESCAZU rent or sale furn/ unfurn, view, garden. 376-4740, 289-3303. ESCAZU, Furn, Tennis court, pool, beautiful, 24 hrs sec. Tel: 885-3287 ESCAZU, Guachipelin furn. apt. 3bdr. 2.5bath, fully equipped, safe. Near Forum & Santa Ana. $560 wk. $1300 mo. 382-2109 ESCAZU, Jaboncillo. Townhouse, 24 hrs sec. Semi-furn. $1,000. 228-3310. 20 | CLASSIFIEDS | THE TICO TIMES HEREDIA, San Francisco close to Hipermas 190m2 lot, 175m2 const, 2bdr. TV. study, terrace, $690. 380-4326. JACO Condos 1 & 2 bdr town house. Furn, behind Beatle Bar, a/c, hot showers, pool, 24 hr sec, 1 block to beach. (506) 643-2098 or 342-0153 SFO. HEREDIA. 2bdr. 2.5bath. TV. room, brand new. $600. sec. & maint. included. 837-3778. STA. ANA Brand new lux. furn. view, 2 bath. 2bdr. 24 hrs. sec. must see!!! $1,300. 866-6969/203-4759 1005 Houses 4 BDRM, 2 baths house, 3.5 kms from Puriscal. Beautiful grounds, privacy, views, house is bright & attractive. $425 rent, $135K sale.Ph. US 518-686-3209 or gileadsmom@yahoo.com ALAJUELA, Sabanilla. By the Poas Volcano. 2 bdr, 2 bath, garage, front & back patios. Fully furn. 875-2144, 812-5242 (English) 433-8120, 842-1451 (Spanish) Look at: http:// casasabanilla.atspace.com ALAJUELA- furn 1bdr cottages, 487-7566. villaritacountrycottages.com ALAJUELA/La Garita. 2bdr. 2.5bath. front & back patios hot wtr. phone, cbl. & Internet lines. Secure & private. English: 487-5934. Spanish: 433-6641. $300 AMERICAN house 3/2/2, furn., cable, tel,, h/w, near universities & malls in Heredia, $500mo & short terms. Call Carlos 237-3154 or 954-452-3369 or caramba@ufl.edu APTS/CONDOS & homes very nice, for rent or sale in exclusive neighborhoods such as Rohrmoser, Escazu, Cariari. Bob 236-1028, 390-2988 ARENA de Grecia, quinta 4,969 m2, furnished house 260 m2, panoramic view. $600 negotiable. 378-5772, 440-3002 Eng, 380-4538, Spanish. ATENAS large 1 bdr on 9 acres, view, tel, gated, furn, Direct TV $285mo. 4466584 BEAUTIFUL 2 BED, 2 BATH T ownhouse on corner lot in gated community. Lots of light. Small courtyard garden with fountain. 100 M2. Washer and Dryer. Phone, Good storage space. Residencial Privacia, Lagunilla de Heredia (Between Cariari Mall and Jardines del Recuerdo). $550 month. Yearly lease. Available Feb. 1. Call Jim at 365-3908 – February 9, 2007 Mountain Top Vacation MansionHotel-Resort LA GARITA 2 bdr, furn, pool, 24-hr sec, 1-yr lease, $650 mo. 487-8282, 487-8098 Daily Room/Suite rates $195-$395 PLAYA HERMOSA (Jaco). 1 bdrm, w/loft, bath, full furn, h/w, 24-hr security. $110,000. 373-1437 (near San José) www.costaricadream properties.com Costa Rica (506) 868-5772 United States (561) 386-5153 PLAYA HERMOSA, *Precious beach front 2 bdrm, bath, fully equip. kit, living with TV, Internet & cable. *Cabina, fully equip., 2 bdr, kitchen. 643-5016 ATENAS, Rio Grande. 2 bdr, 2 baths, fully furn, balcony, exc. view, tel, DirectTV, very quiet & secure, 2 car gar, 150 M2 house, 700 M2 lot. 45 min. from beach, $400. Tel. 813-0915, 259-2008 BEACHFRONT single cabin Montezuma area. lrodriguezcr23@hotmail.com CARIBBEAN $600 march only beautifully furn. American style home near Black Beach. 3 double bdrs. 1.5 bath. large dining room, living room, mod. fully equipped kitchen, h/w screens, ceiling fans, short walk to Puerto Viejo near busline, also small new 2 bdr. unfurn. house. $300mo ESCAZU Condo walking distance to shopping, view, 3 bdrm. Tel. 885-3287 ESCAZU downtown, 2 floors, 3bdr. gar. w/elect. door. equipped kitchen, 2.5 bath. water heater, $500 mo plus deposit. 345-6304 ESCAZU fully furn, 3bdr townhouse, 2 bath, garden, sec. complex, adults only, no pets, phone, cable. $1,300 mo. 228-0915 ESCAZU spacious 4 bdr, terrace, 4 car garage, $1600. Call 228-9131 ESCAZU, 1 storey, 4bdr. 4.5bath. office, garden, BBQ $2,500 also for all at $28k 829-9812 ESCAZU, view, 3bdr. 2 living, office, garden, alarm. $1,500 mo. 506-289-5482. www.balconesdeescazu.com FREE HOUSE-room in return for morning help in B&B/fruit farm, commission poss. Dog friendly. 2683084 bebbiecr@racsa.co.cr GREAT accommodations close to beautiful Conchal beach. Tel. 367-0855. GRECIA PROPERTIES. Web site www.greciarealestate.com 356-1616 Spanish 834-2118 GUACHIPELIN Escazu, 250 M2, only 7 houses in condo, 24 hr sec, 2 park areas, 4 bdr, 4 bath, walk-in closet, TV rm, patio, maid’s rm, attic, 2 warehouses, lux. finishings, nice view & quiet. $1150. Tel. 827-2808 GUANACASTE, near Coco Beach, 5 acres, compound, 3 houses, pool, $8500, see pictures. Tel. 383-3233, USA 949-584-9680 www.haciendasardinal.com HEREDIA San Rafael, big, furn. house, green areas, very sec. domestic service, Internet & cbl. TV $1,350 814-6220/267-6991 PLAZA DEL Sol. 400M2. const. 5 bdr, 4.5 bath, secure. $1,100. 383-0872/ 381-1336. RENT HOUSES- from $1300 usd, 2/3 rooms and bath, all serv. incl.: water, elect, pool, cable, maint., 24 hr. security. Piedades 203-4780, 847-0316 http://lindavista.altervista.org ROHMOSER 3bdr/ 2bath den, all furn. $137,000. OBO 220-0361/825-2604 SABANA, 3 bdrm, furnished, great view, $1300. Call 228-9131. SANTA ANA townhouses with community pool, 2/3 bdr, furnished, $1500. Tel. 588-1717 SANTA ANA beautiful sublet 18 Feb-30 June. $750. 282-6959, 393-0995 SANTA ANA upscale prop, gated comm, private pool & area, sunset views, kitchen appliances included, 3 bdr, 3 bath, maid’s quarter. $3500mo. 588-1717 SANTA Barbara Three 2 story houses on large lots in an enclosed, guarded dvlpmnt. 3 or 4 bdr, 2.5 bths, 2 car gar, balconies, cable, tel, full kitchen & laundry. $800 269-5180 or 357-4647 STA. BARBARA, Heredia. Coffee plantation. New, 3 bdr, 2 bath, h/w, fully furn, living/ dining, office. Spectacular 360 views. Safe, maid, tel/ ADSL Internet. All appliances. $800 269-9225 rosamond@racsa.co.cr TAMARINDO, 10Km East from beach, 2bdr, furn, a/c, h/w, fruit trees monkeys. $250/wk. 301-3867. UNREAL opportunity in Escazu 1 mo. 3 mo. 6 mo Lease available. 4bdr. 4bath. Beuatifully furn. 2 car gar. 24hr sec. Eng. 361-2135 Span: 857-0310. $3,100 WANTED FURN. house near Grecia/Atenas, on or near bus, must have outbuilding for woodworking shop about 400 sqft. in CR now. rick2859@yahoo.com WOMAN to share house. San Antonio de Coronado. Quiet, safe, gardens. Ana Zamora. 294-5907/350-0215 1006 Rooms HEREDIA, lovely balcony, views on charming B&B. 10 min. to Hdia, quiet person $200 mo, bus nearby our rustic 3-bdr house. $300 mo. Tel. 268-3084 Your ad will be seen ‘round the world! 1100 REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 1101 Apartments BRAND NEW Townhome apts. for sale, rent or rent w/option to buy: seller will finance w/30% down, beautiful 3/2 1/2 near all embassies, indoor country club and 5min. from S.J Int Airport! Sale: $175k. Rent: $1250 per month 786-506-6706 (Barby) 011-506-258-1462(Nano) 1102 Beach Property BAHIA DE LAS Piratas, Punta Playa Vistas, luxury development, panoramic ocean views, upscale amenities, excellent infrastructure and roads. Developer presale pricing. Lots from $159,000, furnished condos from $259,000. Duplex ocean view villas from $439,000. Call 653-1241 www. desmondcoastalproperties. com BEACH area lots and house Playa Grande and Surfside. 235-3479 www.junglejimscr.com BEACHFRONT. 635ft. 4.6ac save now before concession is issued. 18993m2 at $20 m2. crgringo41@yahoo.com BEACHFRONT 9 ac. private House+Large Bodega, all services. $430,000. 288-2500 jim@crre.com www.ycrre.com BEACH AREA CONDOS GREAT BUYS! • Magnificent Ocean View Only 10% down! • Quiet undeveloped rural area • Incredible view of Papagayo Bay • 100 M2, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths • 100 m from beach • $130,000 preconstruction • Beautiful Coco Beach • Short walk to Coco Beach • 1 bedroom, 1 bath, 60 M2 • New development in Coco • Gated community • Includes all appliances • $99,750 preconstruction • Owner must sell Great Condo Only 10% down! • Close to Ocotal Beach • 2 bedrooms,2 baths, 80 M2 • Asking $75,000 • Near restaurants and shopping. • Cozy Studio in Ocotal • $37,100 – owner must sell • Walk to Ocotal Beach! • 30 M2 completed condo • Swimming pool, beautiful landscape. Call now! 670-1401 CR Properties Realty, Coco DEVELOPMENT PARCELS 25, 18 & 36 hecs. Ocean views Internal roads, legal water & electricity. $5.75 to $7.25/sqm. 10 minutes to Tamarindo www.tamarindovistas.com or office 653-1102 BEACHFRONT property in Samara. Spectacular beachfront property in Samara titled to 50 meters one of the highest profit potential development properties in Costa Rica. Approx 40 acre already approved for development of 300 units has its own water system ready to supply all units. Comes with an additional 23 acre oceanview property complete with water system. Also has 5000 M2, concession lot that is incl. Price $9,000,000. Century 21 Best Value Realty Samara. 8506) 656-0049 BEAUTIFUL new 4,000 sqft mansion overlooking Samara Beach. 5,000 M2 ocean view lot in a secure gated community. 3 bdrm, 3.5 bath. 24 ft. high living room with 24ft. high monitor. All laminated mature teak beams wtih 1” t&g teack ceilings. Jacuzzi, granite counters, custom cabinets, hand made teak doors and windows. Canadian builder. Finished, furnished, landscaped, pool and garage. If you buying in Costa Rica you need to see this home. $850,000. Contact 232-1657, 381-4896 mgsenter2002@yahoo.com samarabeach@gmail.com FREE OCEANview lot. Lend me $750K for one year and immediately. I will give you a spectacular 5,011 M2, ocean view, lot worth $400K overlooking Samara Beach for interest. Will secure the loan with another $2,000,000 in lots. All lots are ready to build with clear title, power, water, access, and all INVU, Setena, and Municipal stamps. Lots are in a securegated community. Contact 232-1657, 381-4896. samarabeach@gmail.com mgsenter2002@yahoo.com GUANACASTE, near Coco Beach, 5 acres, compound, 3 houses, pool, $950K, see pictures. Tel. 383-3233, USA 949-584-9680 www.haciendasardinal.com JUNQUILLAL 4 acres $63 m2. 833-3297, beachfront alephcv@yahoo.com NEG LOOKING Guanacaste lots from 25 to 30 has. Beach front, directly with owner. Tel. 203-5237 hectorr929@hotmail.com MANUEL ANTONIO 2 homes for sale. New ocean view, 4 bdr, 4 bath, 4200 sqft. $699K and a jungle home. 8 bed/5 bath, 3 kitchens, 8000 sqft. $479K. 303-668-8685 MATAPALO (Aguirre) 1832 M2, beach lot for sale. 787-5207. christianser@hotmail.com Car broke down? Lose that frown; find help in the TT Classifieds NEED TO borrow $750K for one year. Will give you a spectacular 5,011 M2, ocean view lot worth $400K overlooking Samara Beach for Interest. Will secure the loan with another $2,000,000 in lots. All lots are ready to build with clear title, power, water, access, and all INVU, Setena and Municipal stamps. Lots are in a secure gated community. Contact 232-1657. 381-4896 samarabeach@gmail.com mgsenter2002@yahoo.com NOSARA *Beachside lots from $75K *”Casa Bella Nuevo” $489K, *”Vista Paraiso”-125 acres $4,400,000 - Awesome ocean and jungle views Nosara is Pura Vida! *Casa Paul $449,000 beach side homes. *Lunquillal- “Casa Wilkie” on the Beach. $650,000 Beach lots/ homes/ large fincas in Nosara, Tambor and Golfito. View properties at www.mikepuhek.com Contact Mike at sixpuheks@yahoo.com or (USA) 805-473-2777, 805-459-1627 BEACHFRONT PROPERTY With over 1000 feet of beachfront by 1000 feet back. A real find, 37 acres next to Jaco right on Playa Hermosa, in front of the Almendro Tree Great Value at just $250/M2. We are interested in Brokers with U.S. connections to large developers. Call us now at 891-1287 or 892-7000 costaricahermosa.com NOSARA Playa Pelada, house, ov. 3bdr. 3bath. pool 2000m2 lot. $380k gnosara@web.de 827-4119 OPPORTUNITY, 1 hect. Jaco Guacalillo, in front of the beach, trade. $190,000 812-6140 PLAYA HERMOSA beach front, equipped, cabinas w/ restaurant. Tel. 643-7022 PLAYA SAMARA, 12 room hotel with bar, restaurant + pool. Only $595,000. 835-3174 rexraycrprop@yahoo.com SAN JUANILLO! Beautiful ocean view lots & dvlpmnt properties, 15 min. from shopping, serv & Nosara airport. Elect, wtr & private reserve. Forever unobstructed Sunset views. Gated nature comm, direct from owner. Visit: www. ecolandia.com/sale/ index.html Tel: Mr. Brenes 812-7416 or 382-8280 TAMBOR-10.760 sqft. Titled, beachfront $250,000 Tambor-2/3 ac. 2 homes, only $85,000. 288-2500 jim@ycrre.com www.ycrre.com 1103 Commercial Property FOR INVESTORS. Buy opportunity for sale, 7 commercial locales, in San Jose Center. All are rented. Excellent income. Tel. 231-1896, 232-7650 SANTA ANA. Multiple offices new commercial ctr nicest in all Costa Rica. $225,000. Tel: 203-5606 OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS! Coco Beach’s First Mall C hoose a prime location in Coco Beach’s first major shopping mall. Located in the heart of the business district, just blocks from the beach. Mall will feature a major hotel, double screen movie theater, major restaurant, luxury casino, and health club. Ample parking. Perfect for luxury and boutique jewelry stores, high quality artisans, apparel stores, professional offices and services. High quality retail spaces available from 48 to 77 sq. meters on three levels for lease or purchase. Prime spots still available. Pre-construction prices. Groundbreaking in early 2007. For more information: 670-1401 CHOICE LAND next to SARDINAL RIVER T his exceptional land is a single lot divided equally into farm and wooded portions 14,000 sq. meters or 3.5 acres. Water and electricity. Located next to Sardinal River. Includes a stand of exceptional 100-year-old hardwood trees. Cultivated portion ready for farming horses, or homesite. Only minutes from Coco Beach, but tucked away in a serene countryside setting. $125,000 Call 670-1401 OCEANVIEW LOT ceanview lots are in great demand and command top prices. Why? Because they are in limited supply. Here’s a chance to buy an exceptional ocean view lot at a low price for your luxury home. Located in the exclusive community of Ocotal Beach, near several luxury resorts and luxury view homes. About one acre with a grand view of Ocotal Bay and the Pacific Ocean. Only $360,000 Call 670-1401 O CR Properties Realty, Coco 670-1401 US Canada 301-760-7189 www.crpropertiesrealty.com 1104 Condominiums CARIARI Country Club new townhouses, $150,000. Full Financing. 387-6685 DESAMPARADOS new, 2 floor, 3 bdr, 2.5 bath, gar. Quiet, safe neighborhood. High quality const. $52,000. Leila Retana 896-7912 toscana_30@hotmail.com ESCAZU condo 236 M2 condo, nice patio, 3 bdr, 2.5 bath & large living area. Gated complex of 16 units w/pool & 24-hr sec. $220,000. Contact 302-6099 adrianzum@aol.com ESCAZU condo, 132 M2, 3 bdr, 2.5 bath. Spacious living area. Gated and 24 hr. sec. 2 car garage. $150,000. Tel. 892-1089. cynalp@hotmail.com ESCAZU condos, homes, security, views, pools, all prices. 288-1326. ESCAZU new condo unmatched luxury by owner. If you are looking for the ultimate in comfort, view and amenities. 834-8247. HEREDIA, Santo Domingo, 2 ample bdr, 2.5 baths. 1 gar. a/c. security. $75K 895-0101/ 843-7103. jbrenes@propertiescr.net HERRADURA/Jaco, 5 min. from Los Sueños, 2 bdr, fur. cbl. TV, A/C, pool. $89,000. 506-637-8994. Also, pre-const. Herradura 2 & 3 bdr. 2.5 bath. pool & more, starting at: 198,000. Call:506-637-8994. PENTHOUSE Barrio Amon, San Jose, elegantly furnished, great view, 24-hr security, air cond. $350,000 Tel. 392-6746 or 829-3198 Financing Available TRY www.costaricatropical paradiseproperties.com for service, integrity & reliability 1106 Farms 2.5 ACRES HECTARES prime commercial property near Tamarindo. 200m paved road frontage. This property is well suited for comm. retail or mixed use. Owner can build to suit or assist with the development & const. process. Recent appraisal available. For additional info. contact Freddy Esquivel in C.R at: 447-4162/820-3501. For info in U.S. call Dennis Merrit at 407-948-4190 or visit www.cadg.cc NOSARA-Playa Guiones. 1.8 hec. (4+acre) lot very close to beach in the heart of the development, waterview. $2.5 million. Call (506) 682-0012 or 954-467-1739 REST/PATIO Bar. 100m to beach Hotels+high rises on gold coast. Remodeled $44k Turnkey. 916-974-8555. specralte@aol.com SAN JOSE, ideal for offices, or home. $45.000 Tel: 268-3942/386-6745 Nicoya Peninsula, water, pwr avail. $12,900. 870-4290 2900 AC near Flamingo w/540 ac of mature teak, great views, at low price: $34 m2. Info: 288-2500 www.ycrre.com EMERALD Forest Properties is now taking listings in Atenas, Grecia & La Garita. If you wish to sell your property QUICK! give us a call at: 267-6360/816-9898 Integrity & experience you can count on! ESPARZA, Baron. Beautiful recreational 13 acres, all serv, fruit trees, mountain, river. Only 15 min. from Caldera. $125,000. (506) 817-7474 Fax 445-7334. jose@pacificteak.com FARM w/ Tilapia project, ranch and pool. Cell: 829-7506, 394-6292 FARMS, Homes, condominiums, business opportunities, undeveloped land in the mountain & at the beach. All sizes & prices. See: www.angiesanchezhomes.com or call 843-7053 CR THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 | CLASSIFIEDS | 21 GOLFITO 136 hect. North of Airport, La Finca La Gamba. Call Troy 872-2622 GUANACASTE/ $40usxm2 5000m2, 5min. from Tamarindo, wtr. and elect. 835-1625 JACO, Playa Hermosa. 800 Ha. Ocean view, all services, water falls, easy access. US$5.5millions 385-3164 Spanish. LA GRANJA. 4bdr. 3.5bath lg. living room w/cathedral ceilings, office, gar, alarm. $150,000. $800 288-3878/ 373-4971. laruth@racsa.co.cr OUTSTANDING sea and mountain views plus 10 acres of land for gardening or horses. This farm is located on a quiet road. Road in Panica 10 min to Tambor. $295,000. 1 hect. (2.4 acres) located in Panica. $85,000. 867-8978 ginowatt@hotmail.com SAN JUANILLO Development Opportunity. sold by owner, 92, 46, 23 hectares. 180-degree views of coastline and rolling hills of the jungle. 10 minutes from beaches of San Juanillo and Ostional. The San Juanillo River snakes through the land with water running all year round. Including three springs. Two water tanks of 70,000 litres., two wells, internal roads, electricity mains. Perfect topography and space to build a landing strip or golf course.... More than 15,000 fruit and hardwood trees. T (506) 339-2042/ 458-5154 breathing@ ranganaoliveira .com 1107 Houses $90,000, 2 bdr. 2.5 bath new house, concrete & steel const, gated comm., pool, financing available. 506-788-1150/ 870-4998. A PIECE of paradise a new 1900sqft, 3bdr. 2bath, pool rancho, fully furn. on 1.5 ac. $299,000 for more info call Dave: 867-9426 email: dmain62@yahoo.com APTS/CONDOS & homes very nice, for rent or sale in exclusive neighborhoods such as Rohrmoser, Escazu, Cariari. Bob 236-1028, 390-2988 Thecostarica realty.com Rentals & Sales 228-6863 ARE YOU looking for a property in Escazu? We have everything. 289-5059 www.realtyincostarica.com Atenas Realty www.atenasrealty.com ATENAS, Properties in the best climate. 506-446-6619 www.atenas.co.cr BRAND NEW in exclusive Santa Ana comm. 3230 sqtf. pool, tennis, views. $350K 288-2500 www.ycrre.com BEAUTIFUL new 3bdr. 3.5 bath fully furn condominium located on the 5th floor of La Alhambra in Escazu for $275,000. 290-8830. Rosa BIG OCEAN view from the mtns. 16 miles west of Puriscal. 2.5 acres. 2/1 totally remodeled with new tile, carpet, bath and porch. Beautiful wood throughout. $142,000. http://www.ben. floridakeysweb .com 011-506-416-3023 benstbirdcr@yahoo.com BRANDNEW unique American Victorian/Country style house w/ oldfashioned interior, 3 bdr. 3.5 bath. 2 car gar. marble bath. big deck, Rancho, dream of a kitchen, 60% furn. (European import), diesel generator, great view. Even the 06 Kia Spotage Diesel auto is incl. $680.000. 444-6075/876-0631 BUILDER-We do Home Repair. Work residency & references New const. or remodeling we do. Buying a home here, let me inspect it before you buy, nobody likes surprises. If some things aren’t right, just call me for some free advice. Ethics you deserve & honesty you expect. Looking after owner is what we do. Jim 355-5243| CAHUITA 1.200m2, house 250m2, with 5 cabin, 2 apartm. $250K. 361-7883. CARIARI Charming, 1 level, 4 bdrm, 2.5 bath, maid’s room w/bath & wheelchair accessible. $250,000. Full Financing. 387-6685 ATENAS Picaflora Bali Estates Beauty By Nature/ Elegance By Design www.costa-ricareal-estate.org Cel. 832-3231 ESTERILLOS Oeste, new & very elegant 3800 sqft home w/partial ocean view in gated comm. within 2-3 minutes of great surfing beach. $395,000. Contact Jim 778-7140 or 301-7366 jimbaldwin1137@yahoo.com GRECIA PROPERTIES. Web site www.greciarealestate.com 356-1616 Spanish 834-2118 GRECIA, a brand new UNIQUE in American style built country house on 3400mts. land. This house will be sold completely furn. w/imported European furn. lots of precious antiques, a computer and even a 06’ KIA Sportage Auto. All facilities like highspeed Internet, tel & satelite TV. This chance will only come once in your life. This is really a suitcase deal. Email: pezidon@amnet.co.cr CARIARI, area 804M2 land 300M2. const. 4 bdr, 3.5 bath 2 car gar, $298K. Tel: 822-6383. GUANACASTE, beatiful, w/ or w/o furn. 200m2 const. & 1400m2 lot, 15 min. from Liberia. 506-234-1762. www.actionrealtycr.com COCO BEACH Gte. 400 mts from beach. Lot 1,750 M2 house 220 M2. 3 bdr, 2 baths, 670-3818. 290, 8212072. Moving sale HEREDIA, Belen. New, 2 story, 3 bdr, 2.5 bath, 2 car gar, 170M2, furn or unfurn, tel, jacuzzi. US$1million. Tel: 374-7823. CONFUSED about real estate? www.costaricatropical paradiseproperties.com HEREDIA, close to Barva, in residential, 234m2 lot & 200m2 const. 506-234-1762 www.actionrealty.com EMERALD Forest Properties is now taking listings in Atenas, Grecia & La Garita. If you wish to sell your property QUICK! give us a call at: 267-6360/816-9898 Integrity & experience you can count on! ESCAZU PARADISE SECLUDED 1 story, garden 4bdr. 4.5bath. guest cottage, what a dream hideout+++so much to see $450 Neg. 228-9197/334-5156 ESCAZU gated community, 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, maid’s quarters, 350 M2 const. Priced $239,000. 296-3709 ESCAZU great 5 bdr. 5 baths. big garden, 4 parking. 832-5068/290-0236 ESCAZU new 4 bdr. 3 bath. great view. $269,000 furnished 289-4758. ESCAZU Penthouse fab. view, deluxe finishes, pool, sec. 832-5068, 290-0236 HIGUITO SAN Mateo, Alajuela, 1,925 m2 lot, 4 bdr, 2 bath, jac, fruit trees. English 222-4448 Victor Mata from 10 am to 4 pm HILLS of Coronado. small, quality, gated development, your choice, new homes or lots. 393-2567. CA (250)715-6115 LA FORTUNA -fabulous volcano view. Tico-style house, 3 bdrs, 1 bath. 560m2 property, bordered by protected land on two sides, fruit trees, birds private, quite, private, rural, 3 miles from La Fortuna center $58,000. John 365-9568. luzdecielo@aol.com LIBERIA, Gte. 250m2 lot & 180m2 const. 15 min from airp. 506-234-1762. www.actionrealty.com LLANO GRANDE, Cartago, brand new 290M2 const, amazing view. 3530 M2 land $250K. Accept property near beach as part of payment. 353-8870 9-3 pm ESCAZU Super Contempo house, 5 bdr, views, pool. Guest house, play room, hot tub, view. 885-3287 ESCAZU- opportunity, 3 bdrm, ample gardens & social areas, 2 car gar. 380-5724, 228-4519 822-5976, 340-0384 TicoRealty .com SANTA ANA house, new gated community, 3 bdrm, 670 M2 land, 320 M2 const. $320K negotiable. Tel. 823-1136 VIEW PHOTO TOURS OF 690 PROPERTIES FOR SALE OR RENT www.ticorealty.com 588-1717, 290-7667 SANTA ANA Puerta Hierro 5bdr. 4.5 bath. 3229.2sqft $355,000. 871-7373 MANUEL Antonio/ Quepos area 8 miles from the Manuel Antonio beach. New, all Teak wood home with 3 bdr, 2 bath, a/c, 2 car gar, completely furnished. $255K For more information go to www.sellingincostarica.com Tel: (506)779-1703. SANTA ANA, Piedades 275 m2 3 bdr. 3.5 bath, large covered patio, garden, gourmet kitchen, dining room w/ 2 car garage on 460m2 lot in guarded/gated comm, 5 min. from Forum Pre-construction priced at $260,000, house finished in May. 394-4742 MORAVIA, residential area, 2 story, 300m const. & 220m2 lot. 506-234-1762 SANTA ANA, Villa Real, great view, 3bdr. 2.5bath. office, garden $550k. It won’t last for rent. $3,000 392-5661 NARANJO, dist. Franquil, 2story, renovated, 3bdr. 2bath. gar. elect door, garden, furn. kitchen. terrace roof , near school, market, bustop. $87k or $92k door closed furn. fax: (506) 450-3894 or e-mail: casayancynoel@hotmail.com NEW NATURE Reserve Home in sec. planned community in SantaAna, 3bdr. 2bath. 300m2. $325k Call: 289-8638 OPPORTUNITY 4 apt. & 2 houses in Quepos Naranjito $190,000. 812-6140 PARAISO, Cartago. 7 bdrms, 5 baths, ample livings, terrace, nice view to Central Valley and Cachi lake, 13720 M2, beautiful green areas, many fruit trees, tilapia ponds, party ranch, warehouse, guard house. Own weel, electric pomps. Ideal for clinic, university, hotel, behind of Costa Rica University house. Facilities. (506) 551-1342, fax: (506) 551-2076 ojaca@yahoo.com PEREZ Zeledon, Beatiful 3 bdr, 2 bath, 1 car gar. garden $125,000. 770-9109. PUNTA LEONA house $340,000. Escazu rent $1300 or sale $135,000. Tel. 829-3771, 228-1942 SAN ANTONIO Escazu, 1300 M2 land, 200 M2 const, great views, 4 bdrm, 3 bath, $290K. 823-1136 SAN JOSE, near seminario Mayor, Paso Ancho. All services. Corner house. 2 car gar. 3bdr. exc. sec. Furn. $70,000 Unfurn $67,500. 861-8276 SAN RAMON, Alajuela. 1500m2, fenced w/2 houses fruit trees, green areas. 899-3167/878-8557 440-7179 SAN VITO Coto Brus, 6 ha, 4000 ft elev. House, bodega, corral, all utilities, on paved road. 3 km town, hospital, airstrip. $114,000. yamalbosque@yahoo.com SANTA ANA gated comm. security system, fenced, min. from US ambassador’s residence. Natural setting, extended views, creek rancho, 1400m land, 500m house, 3bdr. 4 bath. maid’s qtrs, laundry, office with separate entrance & ball deck, rancho, well designed for easy living & entertaining $275,000. 244-0316 844-6154 SANTA ANA-Gated with garden on both sides, 2bdr. office, 2bath, 1 level, 190m2. $149,000. 382-7399 SANTA ANA/ residential resort community. Secure/ gated, 2 pools, waterfalls, High speed Internet, extensive gardens, cable, satellite TV, phone. For Lease: New, 2 bdr, 2 bath, $1600 & studio $700, fully furnished to executive standards. For sale: 2 bdr, 2.5 bath, 2 flr, 158 M2, $270K. 2 bdr, 2 bath, 1 fl, 120 M2 $190K, fully furnished. 305-3965, www.residenciaslosjardines. com TAMARINDO Area. 2000sq ft. home nicely furn. on 1.25 ac lot. 3bdr. 2.5bath. full kitchen, large pool in Landsc. garden. 357-5534 No agents please. TAMBOR Ocean view home $150,000 finish it yourself and save a bundle. arroyohiltonhead@aim.com or 843-290-5272 VISIT www.costaricatropical paradiseproperties.com for all your real estate needs. 1108 Lots/Property 2.5 ACRES, in the hills of Playa Hermosa, views from Jaco to Esterillos, 90% buildable, perfect for condos or multy homes, power 6 water. $9 sqft. 831-1621 ARENAL-Turtle Cove Lake Club, lakefront gated community: Marina, restaurant, spa, boat storage. Financing available. Broker commissions, Owner/ developer. US (404) 543-8640, CR (506) 353-0716 turtlecovelakeclub.com BEACHFRONT lot 500mt. great view of mountains, corporation & consseson ready to build between Quepos & Jaco, water pw, phone avail. No rd. in front of property. Direct beach acess. $200,000. Call U.S 802-257-0861. Evenings or stpeicr@earthlink.net BEAUTIFUL 1,500M2 lot 5Km up the hill between Playa Bejuco & Bandera. Nice tranquil area. $45,000 / 349-8001. BUENA VISTA village road to San Ramon-Alajuela. Farm with tremendous views, overlooking Gulf & Nicoya Peninsula, incl. Cerro Berlin & Puntarenas. 1.5 ha, (3.71 acres), Good access & all services. $95,000 German owner. 447-8269, 445-9530 REAL ESTATE Country Views Lovely 4 acre home site in a small, peaceful & picturesque village near Puriscal; just 1 hr. to San Jose; mature trees; creek; birds; great VIEWS; privacy; utilities; nice climate; home package available. $75,000. Nature & Views Secluded 4-acre parcel; eco-compound behind La Paz Waterfall Gardens; great VIEWS; lush rain forest: pristine river; plenty of birds & wildlife; privacy & peace; all utilities; 1 hr to San José; home package available. $85,000. Rain Forest Heaven 100 acres of lush rain forest; behind La Paz Waterfall Gardens, next to Poas Volcano Park; pristine river, waterfalls, superior wildlife; VIEWS; good road & utilities; ideal for Nature Retreat. 1 hr. to San José. $279,000 Ranch with Views Gorgeous 35 acre ranch in a picturesque village of Puriscal; nice rolling hills with large terraces; good VIEWS; excellent climate; good soil; forest; wildlife; paved road; all utilities; cozy owner's house; 1 hr to San José. $375,000. Mansion with Views Exclusive Mediterranean style 10,000sqft home; in Escazú gated hilltop; 3+ acres of tropical gardens; breathtaking VIEWS; covered terrace for 100+ people; Helipad; 15 min. to San José. Privacy & Security, $1,600,000. Info on these & others 288-1414 822-1414 info@primecostarica.com BY OWNER Spectacular 100 ft waterfall ($229,000) Falling into a large natural pool on 8.75 acres of private primary Jungle Land with a tremendous variety of rare tropical trees full of whitefaced and congo monkeys, toucans and other exotic birds and animals. Includes caretakers couple and house on main road w/ electricity, phone, public water, 5 min. to Libano. Tel: Danny (954) 868-1264 FL, USA. beachst@aol.com CHARMING Country home priced to sell near Venecia in Marcella. A bargain $85,000. feslick@gmail.com www.feslick.com/coxhome/ htm CUIDAD Colon. Large 7536 m2 lot, in a gated community, has incredible views and sunsets. Existing 100 m2 small house and permits to build new const. Priced for quick sale $340,000 302-6099 adrianzum@aol.com ESCAZU, 13 hectares overlooking the valley. This is a must-see property. $27 sqmt. 296-2300 856-4569. eco-pages-costarica.com \ESCAZU, 624 M2. great views, exc. loc. finan. avail. $105K. OBO. 380-4447. PIEDADES Santa Ana, 3 hectares, nice views, $14 per M2. Tel. 823-1136 GARITA de Alajuela. Residencial el Bosque. 914.72m2, $100m2. (506)301-5979. Carlos. PRIVATE PARADISE: estate property located Dominical/ Platinillo very easy access to property & beach. A maintainable 3 ac/12,110 M2, lovely trees/plantings, perfect elevation for temp./ breeze, no fog, gorgeous ocean sunsets & valley views. Public H2O, elect. just 12m away. $185K. US 610-473-8860. Details: tianastyles@yahoo.com GRECIA PROPERTIES. Web site www.greciarealestate.com 356-1616 Spanish 834-2118 GUANACASTE, Playa Garza ocean view, close to beach. 62 Ha., $15M2. carlos_devandas@hotmail. com HEREDIA beaut. 5645 M2. flat, own well, walls, all serv, 20 min. from S.J. $30M2. Facilities. 359-5262 lucrezamora@yahoo.com HEREDIA San Isidro, ready to build, exc. views, waterfall, elect. gate. All utilities, including Internet, cable, concrete driveway. 14,000M2, $100,000. 268-3672, 268-8050 HEREDIA, Concepcion, San Rafael lot 7000m2, private, 15 minutes from San Jose, elect/water/ telephone, security. $29M2. 878-5875 mwcranford@hotmail.com HOJANCHA, Guanacaste, 10 hect. planted TECA, 4 years plantation. $200.000 Tel: 386-2413 LA PALMA de Coronado, 142,181 M2, 1600 mts altitude, 150 M2 const, 18 Km from San Jose, springwater, 4.5 hect of mountain, all services. $7 M2. 529-0067, 868-9082 PROPERTY for sale 5033 M2 with gorgeous ocean views North to Papagayo, south to Potrero Bay (site of Flamingo Marina), Flamingo and to Conchal Bay. Level building site with water and electric. CR corporation included. Bella Vista #9 in area of exclusive homes. $298,000. Tel. 653-8953, or cell 301-4984 PUNTA ISLITA, Corozalito 95 acres, w/ magnificent ocean views $4.8 million. Tel: 880-9238. sunnyneil@hotmail.com PUNTARENAS, Parrita. 5000m2 lot, Bejuco Beach property 300mts away from beach, $325k. 349-5618 USA: 702-610-7381 blackmont@gmail.com PUNTARENAS, San Miguel Barranca. 8ha. and 10ha, $10 M2, Golfo de Nicoya view. Sea breeze, exc. for tourist development or Villas. Accept offers. 392-6613/225-8386 SAN ANTONIO Escazu, 4300 M2, perfect for condos or houses, good road, great view. $65M2. Tel. 823-1136 LIMON Only for Conservationists. 8 acres of mountain. $1,000 each acre Titled. 30 min. to Caribbean Beach. 347-3634, 710-1823 SAN ANTONIO Escazu, 1 hectare, views, good access, $40 M2.Tel. 823-1136 LIMON reforested parcel, 11,000 M2, $6000. Tel. 365-4052, 342-6108 SAN RAMON $11M2, ocean/mountain view. 5,300m2. Utilities. 249-0046 MANUEL Antonio, secluded 1200 M2 part. Ocean view w/rainforest. Tel. 882-7717, 787-8378 SANTA ANA few minutes from Forum 1836,51 M2, flat. Telfax 506-228-7673 mariepelza@hotmail.com 1109 Timeshares OCEAN VIEW 10 Acres $189,000 Near Tamarindo one hour from Liberia Airport, gently slopes towards ocean, topographer says can get 12 lots 90% with view, quiet pretty area. Subdivision included. Pics at marrbucks. com Don’t miss this opportunity to triple your money! Adjacent acreage also available and seller says all cash offers considered. 506-397-7548 CR, 800-931-6329 from US PANAMA Real Estate. Large lots for investment or development. Beach, ocean & mountain view. 507-265-REAL. panamarealestatepros.com PEREZ ZELEDON, 73hect. road to Interamerican Hghy. All services. 506-234-1762. www.actionrealtycr.com PIEDADES CONDOVAC, Holy wk, $1,000. Share $11,000. Tel: 225-5020/ 387-1002. CONDOVAC. Full equipp. cabin, 6 persons, children free. $800. 16-23 Feb. And for sale Timeshare $10,000. Emily. 370-2735/ 225-0072. THE BCHCLUB, St. Aug. Fl. 1 bdr $1000. rrtowles@yahoo.com. 1110 Rent or Sale SAN ANTONIO, Escazu. Rent $1,200. Sale $380,000 or Trade. 4 bdr. 3 bath, 2 story, 3 car gar, amenities. Tel: 307-5680/ 372-8925. SANTA ANA APARTMENTS For rent/sale 2, 3 bdr Furn or unfurn, pool, gym 24 hr. sec, wireless Internet cable, 3 min to Forum, 15 min to Intl. Aiport, Call (506) 282-1010. 1111 Quintas SPECTACULAR views of the Central Valley, fruit trees, coffee. Perfect for large estate lots or condo development. $439,000. 835-3174 rexraycrprop@yahoo.com 15 MIN. from Alajuela, 4bdr. 2bath. fruit trees, in front of main road. 1km north from Casa Bavaria. $125,000. OBO. 483-1832 1200 SERVICES 1203 Construction 3 PASLODE Neumatic Nail Guns (New). 7 boxes Nails inox & regular. Price $3,000 OBO. Tel: 215-3814 A1 MASTER builder, electric, plumbing, cement- block stucco , Am. owned. 2897486 /3070164 PURCHASING A NEW HOME? Protect your investment with a professional, affordable home inspection by U.S. Co Contact Costa Rica Insp. Service. At (506) 524-2155 (330) 3131219 or email: to paula.moncayo@starktruss. com 1204 Computers AAA COMPUTER All Work Guaranteed or your Money Back! Mike 302-5558 ONSITE Computer Service / Repair. Happy Gringo Computer for all your hardware/software needs. Kevin Huey. 879-1188 YOUR WEBSITE for $149 Incl. 5 pages (index, 3 links + contact form), domain name & hosting for 1yr. 3594488/ 225-0539. (6:00-10:00pm) zayra@ticotrax.com 1205 Languages LEARN SPANISH in Escazu. Tel: 384-2465, 289-4396, www.ilerispanishschool.com 1211 Legal Services ASSET PROTECTION & Corporate Structures. Residency specialists, background investigations, Real Estate & accounts call: 834-4196 GRUPO COSTA Ipanema Residency Specialist. 8750447/costaazul@ice.co.cr PERMANENT Residency/ pensionado/ rentista, renewals. Highly referred. Flora 253-1686 VILLALOBOS Investors Call (506) 296-1936 1300 TOURISM 1301 Accommodations BIBI’S B and B: New home, quiet, fabulous garden with jacuzzi, cable TV, Internet, SKYPE, kitchen, laundry, near San Jose, $45dbl, $37sngl, wkly, mnth rates. (506) 244-7324 jptwomey@foxinternet.com HOTEL MANGO Suites in Escazu. Beautiful, spacious suites, cable TV, maid serv., jacuzzi, fireplace, pool table, spectacular view, only 2 min from Multiplaza. Massage & facials available. Rooms start at $39/day. Contact: 228-8162 / 360-1000. PELICAN Beachfront Hotel, midway Jaco/Quepos/ Manuel Antonio. (506) 778-8105 www.pelicanhotelcr.com PUERTO COYOTE elegant mainhouse, big pool, charming guest house, fantastic ocean view. 17.500 m2. www.geocities.com/ prospero_pacific_paradise SPANISH COURSE, 5hrs/ wk $60/mo. Registration fee $20, start day: Feb 26th. San Jose, Tel: 258-0491/ 258-8609, or e-mail: info@newlearningcr.com SAN JUANILLO, Gte. El Sueño beach hotel, rest, Buddha bar music lounge! 200mts to beautiful beaches, near Nosara & Ostional turtle reserve. $40 dbl. (incl. breakfast & tax). Visit www.sanjuanillo.com Tel: 682-8074 or 812-7416 for reservations. SPANISH Save by learning more in less time! Tel. 394-6348, 288-1691 VACATION Rental, dly/wk/ mo, new 1bd (506)291-4575 bonnieperry@shaw.ca 1206 Miscellaneous BILINGUAL HOUSE Watchers. Have confidence your home is secure maintained and clean while you are absent. Professional service & staff. Tel: 282-3300 / 870-0742. WW2 BUFFS! “English Girl, German Boy” World War II from Both Sides”. Personal war experiences in England & Germany. www.mimosa.co.cr www.amazon.com Telfax 506-494-5868 1209 Repair COMPUTER troubles? Call the P.C. Guy. Your place or ours. Call Pat at 289-8638 or 384-5636 LIC. ELECTRICIAN & handyman. Paints and remodels small projects. Free estimate. English: 506874-7669 Span. 375-3104 February 9, 2007 VACATION RENTAL, Puntaleona, w/pool and a rancho, cbl. TV. 249-2017 1307 Guides ANYWHERE, in Costa Rica transportation guide and driver. 15 pass diesel van fluent eng. Call for price... 394-3934/ 588-1475. CAR DRIVER. Tour guide. 343-0148 arielarr@hotmail.com MORAL Honest, fully bilingual lady offers her services for errands, guide, companion for elderly people, etc. Fax 297-1352, tel. 381-4160 xiniaae@racsa.co.cr PANAMANIAN Male living in C.R offers his services to foreigners as tour guides & Span. teacher. Latin music dance classes incl. for ladies. Call. 349-3784 email: paengo@yahoo.com PRIVATE TOUR NEW 12-PASSENGER VAN Experienced English-speaking Guide. Anywhere, Anytime $25. Call Jim 249-2701, cell 395-2407 podiaint@racsa.co.cr 1309 Tours TRANSFERS/ 1 day tours, Real Estates Showing, 4X4 car. Tel 832-5656 lrodriguezcr23@hotmail.com HOTEL EL CAFETAL Offers weddings at our bar-rest. Rincón Llanero Max. 75 pers. St. Eulalia of Atenas 446-5785 www.cafetal.com 1400 TRANSPORTATION 1402 Boats 16’ DUROBOAT, welded alum. Cnt console w/canvas top 60 hp Tohatsu T&T $5,500/ Tel: 349-8001. 2005, 9 meter CC Boat, Twin 115 HP Johnson, 4 stroke center consol. 849-2323, 661-0220 636-8980 38’ BOAT all fiber glasses live aboard, very good cond. Tel: 637-0015 WWW.ACINAUTICO.COM Boats new - used. Boston Whaler and Costa Boat repair. Phone 438-3629 WWW.RICABOATS.COM Boats for Sale over 40 sail & powerboats, view photos of the boats online. Tel 827-2362, 654-4063 1500 VEHICLES 1501 Autos ‘96 LINCOLN Town Car. Limousine 10 pass. $21,500 OBO 855-9173 or 391-2844 2001 LUHRS 36’ convert. Cats 3216, 1350 hrs. 8kw gen. Tel: (506) 257-4242 ext. 410. (506) 272-4543 94 MAZDA Navajo SUV, auto. a/c. 2wd. full extras. $4,250. 219-0194 98’ RANGE Rover, full ext. $17k. 878-0202 or Email: 247boss@gmail.com AUDI 03 A4 all wheel dr. (Quatro) v6 3000cc, 220hp. 45km. one owner. $40k. 204-2040.gocher1@hotmail.com CHEVY BLAZER 4X4, perfect, leather, auto, only 45K miles, best looking in CR. 86 Range Rover, lifted, CD, 4X4, awesome truck. 92 Landcruiser SUV, only 42K miles, auto, 4X4, leather. Call 239-5970 we buy cars! caesarwilliam123@yahoo. com (stock changes daily call now!) HONDA Civic 95, XL, 4 drs, RTV, automatic, loaded, beautiful, red, $5,500 Tel. 260-4856, 862-5547 95 FORD Explorer, new tires 6cd player very nice great suv. Tel: 260-4578. $7,800 English only. YOUR BEST USED CAR in ehlerscars.com 384-9978 with Andy. 96’ TOYOTA 4runner, gasoline, 63k miles, garaged little use, great cond. fully loaded $9900. 385-7848 1504 Motorcycles HARLEY DAVIDSON 1951 FL 1200 cc. 1955 FL 1200 cc 1958 FLH 1200 cc. 1983 FXR 1540 cc. 221-4136/306-3225 BILL’S Rent-a-Car $20 day, $120 a week, $500 mo. $300 deposit. 362-5403 BULLET Proof Rentals. Mercedes turbo diesel $25 up. T. 822-0706/ 282-3564 1502 4X4’S 97 TOYOTA Four Runner 4 door, 4X4, automatic, full xts. Mint cond. $13,900. Tel. 244-0484 01 DODGE Ram Ex. Cab 4x4 Bcyl. Auto air PS PB 80,000. Orig. miles linex bedliner, Cargo box & + Taxes paid, tico plates. 813-0169/$25,000 Eng/Span. 99 LAND Rover Freelander Good cond, low mileage, sunroof, new tires, $11,500. 289-4579. 01 GALLAPER II, 75,000 km. 5SP Diesel, ext. clean, won’t waste your time!! $15,500- 203-2582 99’ TROOPER. Good cond all extras. $8,500 US. Tel: 654-5209 01 TOYOTA Rav4-must sell. Exc. cond. a/c. PS PB 4door, CD, new wheels, tires, battery brilliant silver. US 404-966-5863. MITSUBISHI Nativa 2003 Turbo Diesel Intercooler. 39km. exc. cond. 866-6969. RANGE ROVER 91, Retired sell, low miles, full extras, $8,000. Tel: 253-0992. 05 X-Trail 4x4 Nissan automatic, low mileage 4dr. multilock looks great. $23,900 By owner. Call Robert: 369-7797 TOYOTA, 4 RUNNER 95, V6, full extras, Leather, new tires, 4” Lift kit for extreme conditions. Price $14,000. OBO Tel: 215-3814. RIDE THE best Kawasaki KLR Crossing & Enduro bike 650cc. Perfect cond, alarm system, aluminum carriers, Corbin seats, windshield. Book value $6,000 inmediate sale $4,500. Low miles, very dependable. Randall (506) 842-0181. 1505 Rentals *CARS $125-$195 a week Call Andy 282-7013 CAR 5sp. and automatic $125 to $175 week. ALSO 15 pass. Van $250 a week. 228-5827, 825-2694 crjimmy@hotmail.com EXPEDITION Get the best quality 4X4 cars for rent with full extras, free mileage mileage. (506) 379-7000 4x4 TROOPER for Rent, all with a/c & exc cond. Luis / Tony 832-5656 ReadyRentacars@gmail.com RENT A CAR 4X4, new models, from $30/day. Special p/week. 811-9620 AUTOS, 4X4, vans, trucks, special raise. Daily, wkly. mo. Free mileage. Insurance incl. 506-443-3333. 380-3432. www.crtopicalrenta car.com SMART CAR RENTAL 4x4 quality cars with all inclusive rates. Special weekly & monthly discounts. 506-834-8686. or emeono@gmail.com 4X4 CAR RENTAL has quality autos with air, CD players, starting at $35 per day, including full coverage insur. & unlimited mileage. 358-7676 www.4x4rentacar.com TUCAN RENT A CAR Trooper, Mitsubishi Montero, low rate, rental Insurance, low deposit. tucanrentacar.com 441-0859/441-7744/ 840-8501 1600 WANTED 1601 Wanted WANTED: YOUR COMMENTS www.VoiceExpatCR.org SPEAK UP- BE HEARD! Need a car? Don’t look far; find it in the TT Classifieds 1980 TOYOTA FJ-40 Landcruiser Jeep, great paint, 6 disc. CD, air cond, power steering, rack, grill guard. $13,500. 244-0484 2 TOYOTA. Landcruiser (toyotona) 1998. 4 dr, auto, full, V8 gas. 2002 TDiesel auto. Exc. condition. Tel: 384-1211. Last Chance! 2000 CHEVY S-10, pick up, 4 door, 4X4, turbo diesel, full xts, great cond, $15,900. Tel. 244-0484 Today is the last day to reserve your advertising space in the 28-page full-color special Real Estate and Construction Supplement to be published on February 23. Don’t miss the best time of year to reach potential buyers coming to Costa Rica for some sun and fun! 2000 TOYOTA diesel, HiLux, 4X4, pick-up, X-cab, full xts, impeccable, low miles. $21,900. 244-0484 2000 TOYOTA Tacoma X-cab SR5, 4X4, pick-up, automatic, full xts, like new. $19,900. Tel. 244-0484 LAST R.E. 2007 GUANACASTE, near Coco Beach, 5 acres, compound, 3 houses, pool, $950K, see pictures. Tel. CR 383-3233, USA 949-584-9680 www.haciendasardinal.com – 2002 BMX X5, turbo diesel, 4 doors, 4X4, automatic! $39,900 Warranty. Tel. 244-0484 2002 FORD Ranger Pickup, 4 door, 4X4, turbo diesel, full xts, real nice. $22,900. Tel. 244-0484 You’ll be glad you did. Two great guides published by The Tico Times, Central America’s Leading English-Language Newspaper mplete The most costa o C guide to Rica. y the Compiled b d writers an hers of photograp es. The Tico Tim22 Features 1 photos and 30 more than maps. up-to-date lor 432 full-co pages 3.95. for just $1 2003 TURBO diesel Toyota, 4-Runner, 4X4, seats 7, full xts, low miles. $28,500. Tel. 244-0484 2006 MAHINDRA Bolero. Only 7,000 km Emer. Green reloc. perf. cond. Manual turbo diesel, full effiec. Dual cab w/bed. Perfect for C.R. terrain. Contact. Kim (540)463-4652 US l kcoslett@hughes.net 91 MONTERO 4X4, auto loaded, new tires, CD, 4 door, alarm, CR tags, AC, well maint. $4800. Stumblejourney@yahoo.com 91 TOYOTA LandCruiser turbo 4x4, full factory options, clean inside & out, plus CD stereo: custu, steel bumpers, extra large roof rack with ladder, snorkel duel batteries removable carrier for large ice chest; heat reflectives tint tow htches front & rear 26mpg 670-1538/371-1632. Contact your TT Ad Rep today at 258-1558 or by e-mail at display@ticotimes.net to reserve your space. Exploring Costa Rica 2007 & the Restaurant Guide to Costa Rica TRAVEL PUBLISHERS PERIODICO 07 22 | CLASSIFIEDS | THE TICO TIMES To purchase either of these guides: Phone Orders: 011 506 258 1558 Available on www.amazon.com, www.bn.com and www.ticotimes.net first Costa Rica’s staurant re ly n o d n a gual guide. Bilinnd a h is n (Spa ide English) gu Eliot written by , the Greenspan e author of thGuide to Frommer’s Includes Costa Rica. 450 more than restaurants ps from and 15 ma around the country. A t to any complemenosta Rica Guide to C .95. for just $9 THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007 | CROSSWORD & WEATHER REPORT | 23 CROSSWORD #384 ACROSS 1 Swagger 6 Blemish 10 “A Farewell to __” 14 “Missing You” singer John 15 Cowardly Lion actor 16 Betty of cartoons 17 Relevant, to lawyers 18 Gun shop purchase 19 Avis precursor 20 Ring holder 22 Marred 24 Watch word 26 Small pool 27 Provide 30 Surrounded by 32 Filled pastry 33 Poetic Pound 35 Basket for jai alai 39 __ Lingus 40 Adore 42 Sounds of surprise 43 Japanese noodle dish 45 It’s in vein 46 Cape of Good Hope explorer 47 Shade of purple 49 “God Bless America” songwriter 51 Claim 54 Irish county 56 Embargo 58 Latin rhythm instruments 62 Polly, to Tom 63 Cleansing agent 65 Espouse 66 Faction 67 Billy or Nanny 68 Succinct 69 Top 70 Endorse 71 Out of line 40 English architect Jones 41 Striped quadruped 44 Voted in 46 Wood nymphs 48 “What are we waiting for?” 50 Correction section 51 Discountenance 52 Danny DeVito’s “Taxi” role 53 “Wonder Woman” star Carter 55 Unoccupied 57 Captured 59 Bottle stopper 60 Church recess 61 Fret 64 Highly rated –Michael Curl DOWN 1 Med lab specimen 2 Go in up to the ankles 3 Affectation 4 Westerner’s hat 5 Sewing machine attachment 6 Draw a __ 7 Hit 8 Some resistance 9 Too much, musically 10 Shorten 11 Author Dahl 12 Type of mushroom SOLUTION 13 Gardener’s implement 21 Helped 23 Measure of prevention 25 Gunwale attachment 27 Way, way off 28 Tiny bloodsucker 29 Raise crops 31 Female servant 34 “Germinal” author 36 Growing medium 37 Bangkok resident 38 Org. #383 Subscription Order Inside Costa Rica Six months US$25 One year US$48* (payable in colones at current exchange rate) (Home delivery in the San Jose metropolitan area or by mail to the provinces) Outside Costa Rica (U.S. Only) Trial subscription - Six months US$34 One year US$65* Canada and Western Hemisphere Trial subscription - Six months US$50 One year US$96* Elsewhere Europe and Middle East US$96 per year* Africa and Asia Pacific US$139 per year* PDF Online Edition One month US$8 Six months US$33 Three months US$21 One Year US$48* Daily News Electronic Edition One month US$5 Six months US$30 Three months US$15 One Year US$60 This subscription is New Renewal (check one) Name Address City Country Tel.: E-mail: State ZIP/Postal Code Fax: Credit Card Payment Card Holder Name AMEX - DISCOVER - MC - VISA U.S. Residents send mail to: The Tico Times SJO 717 Exp. Date Credit Card Number My check for, is enclosed. (Canadian subscribers: please send only checks on U.S. banks) *Includes a free copy of The Tico Times annual Guide to Costa Rica. (Please allow two weeks for delivery) Apdo. 4632-1000 | San José, Costa Rica Tel.: (506) 258-1558 | Fax. (506) 233-6378 Signature: This is a gift. Please include gift card to read: P.O. Box 025331 Miami, Fl. 33102-5331 E-mail: subscriptions@ticotimes.net 24 | NEWS | THE TICO TIMES – February 9, 2007