<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><!-- generator="wordpress/2.1.3" -->
<rss version="2.0" 
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/">
<channel>
	<title>Comments on: Daily Edition: San José, Costa Rica, May 12, 2006

DYNAMIC Dancing: These traditional Bolivian folk-dancers, Grupo Centro Cultural Boliviano, are among international groups scheduled to perform at this year&#8217;s Fourth International Folkloric Show to be held Saturday and Sunday at the Melico Salazar theater in San José. The event, which seeks to preserve traditional art and dance from around the world, will also include the groups Huntulha, from Honduras, and Soundstage Cloggers, from the United States.
Photo courtesy of Grupo Tiquicia.


Get The Tico Times Daily News Updates automatically every morning (Monday-Friday) in your e-mail.
Just give us your e-mail address below.

To unsubscribe or to change your email address, please email subscriptions@ticotimes.net
Thank you.

 

Contest Winner Invents Magnets
To Keep Sharks Out of Fishing Nets
The solution to preventing thousands of sharks per year from getting snared on fishermen&#8217;s hooks and dying could be magnets.
(Click for more)

Costa Ricans Arrested In U.S., Italy
Authorities in the U.S. state of New Jersey arrested José William Quintero, a Costa Rican accused of aggravated sexual abuse, according to a statement released by International Police (INTERPOL) yesterday.
(Click for more)

Manuel Antonio Hotels
Study Water-Saving Measures
Representatives of hotels in the Central Pacific beach towns of Manuel Antonio and Quepos recently met to discuss water conservation techniques for the area, which continually faces water shortages, at a conference organized by the Central American Biomass Users Network (BUN-CA), according to a statement from the organization.
(Click for more)

UNA Graduates 200-Plus Students
From Country&#8217;s Poorest Areas
Of the approximately 1,400 students who will graduate from Universidad Nacional (UNA), in Heredia, north of San José, this month, 242 are from two of the poorest regions in the country, according to a statement from the university: the indigenous reserves of Chorotega, in the northwestern Guanacaste province and Brunca, in southern Costa Rica.
(Click for more)

 



May 12

 

Today

Presentation of Rutherford County´s Cripple Creek Cloggers of Murfreesboro
U.S. folkloric group, 7 p.m., Community Hall in Filadelfia; 7 p.m., Paso Tempisque community hall, Saturday, 7 p.m. Info: 669-0659.

Youth Film Festival
Today and Saturday, films shown at 4 p.m., 7 p.m., Teatro de la Danza, National Cultural Center (CENAC), San José. Roundtable discussion, 4 p.m., Spanish Cultural Center; awards ceremony, 8 p.m., El Observatorio, Barrio La California, San José. Info: 832-8839.

First National Day Against Cancer
Health Fair, today and tomorrow, 8 a.m.-4 p.m., Plaza de la Cultura, San José. Teleconference on the Psychological and Economic Impact of Cancer, 9 a.m.-11 a.m.; workshop for health-care professionals, 8-4 p.m. Info: 253-0886.

 

Saturday

Dance Therapy Workshop
9 a.m.-4 p.m., Kapoli, Escazú, west of San José. Info: 383-6784.

Afro-Caribbean Culture Celebration
Featuring concert by Manuel Monestel, art and traditional food from Limón province, 4-7 p.m., MADCafé, National Cultural Center (CENAC), San José.

Cantoamérica
Caribbean music, 10 p.m., Jazz Café, San Pedro, east of San José.

Concert by the Urdes/Morgenstein Project
7 p.m., National Auditorium, Children&#8217;s Museum. Tickets at www.mundoticket.com

 

Sunday

Fun Walks in Escazú
Pico Blanco. Info: 228-0183.

María Pretiz in Concert
Playing trova, 10 p.m., Jazz Café, east of San José.

 

Edited By Amanda Roberson
Tico Times Staff
aroberson@ticotimes.net

 

Return To Top Of Page

Click here to subscribe


Contest Winner Invents Magnets
To Keep Sharks Out of Fishing Nets

By Amanda Roberson
Tico Times Staff
aroberson@ticotimes.net

The solution to preventing thousands of sharks per year from getting snared on fishermen&#8217;s hooks and dying could be magnets.

Michael Herrmann, a research associate at the U.S. organization Shark Defense, won the International Smart Gear Competition, a contest sponsored by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) that invites people from around the world to design fishing gear to reduce the problem of “bycatch,” or fish and mammals accidentally getting caught by fishermen, according to a statement from WWF Costa Rica.

The problem of bycatch has pushed some shark species to the brink of extinction, with some populations down by 90%.

Recognizing that sharks can detect magnetic fields, Herrmann discovered that placing strong magnets just above fishermen&#8217;s hooks on long lines can repel certain species.

As the winner of the contest, Herrmann was awarded $25,000 to put the idea into practice, said WWW spokeswoman Cinthya Flores.

“He&#8217;s already proved that the magnets work, and now he can make them available for other people to use,” Flores said.

Asian Pacific waters have the highest incidence of bycatch, which affects seabirds, mammals, sea turtles, tuna, sharks and other fish, Flores said, while in Latin America, it occurs the most in Ecuador, Colombia, Panama, Costa Rica and Mexico.

In this year&#8217;s Smart Gear Competition, WWF received more than 80 entries from 26 countries around the world. The entries were judged by an international panel composed of gear technologists, fishery experts, representatives from the seafood industry, fishermen, scientists, researchers and conservationists.

Through the Smart Gear Competition, WWF seeks to find, reward and promote inexpensive tools for fishermen to reduce the problem of bycatch, the statement said.

Return To Top Of Page

Click here to subscribe
 


Costa Ricans Arrested In U.S., Italy

Authorities in the U.S. state of New Jersey arrested José William Quintero, a Costa Rican accused of aggravated sexual abuse, according to a statement released by International Police (INTERPOL) yesterday.

A Costa Rican judge in Pérez Zeledón, in the Southern Zone, issued an international order to arrest Quintero in August 2002. Quintero, who worked as a teacher in Pérez Zeledón in 1992, was allegedly caught by a fellow teacher sexually abusing three eight-year-old girls; he awaits trial in Costa Rica.

International police in San José issued a red alert, extending the search for Quintero to the 184 member countries of its Criminal Police Organization (OIPC-INTERPOL), the statement said.

At the beginning of April, police received information that Quintero might be living in New York. He was later discovered in the neighboring state of New Jersey, where he was arrested by authorities.

Police determined that Quintero was residing in the United States illegally, and he faces deportation to Costa Rica, the statement said.

On Wednesday, international police also located Costa Rican Mario Antonio Niel, who escaped from prison here in 1989 while serving a 16-year sentence. Niel was discovered and arrested in Fogia, Italy.

Niel, who was convicted of aggravated robbery and abduction on March 3, 1985, was deported to Costa Rica, where he must complete his prison sentence and faces new charges for evading it, the statement said.

Return To Top Of Page

Click here to subscribe


Manuel Antonio Hotels
Study Water-Saving Measures

Representatives of hotels in the Central Pacific beach towns of Manuel Antonio and Quepos recently met to discuss water conservation techniques for the area, which continually faces water shortages, at a conference organized by the Central American Biomass Users Network (BUN-CA), according to a statement from the organization.

An increase in tourists to the area during the dry season resulted in periods with no water available, said BUN-CA consultant Agustín Rodríguez.

“This lack of water affects the development of the hotels&#8217; normal activities, and, on many occasions, hotels have had to contract trucks to bring in water from other areas,” Rodríguez said.

Twenty representatives from the area attended the workshop, entitled “Good and Efficient Practices in the Use of Water Resources” and learned conservation strategies such as using low-consumption toilets and showers. Treating and recycling pool water rather than draining it was another suggestion made.

Data obtained at the seminar indicates that some hotels pay more than $2,000 per month for water, another reason to make conservation efforts, Rodríguez said.

The seminar was part of BUN-CA&#8217;s Energy Efficiency in the Tourism Sector Program. Hotels that participate in the program qualify for a Certificate of Sustainable Tourism from the Costa Rican Tourism Institute (ICT), the statement said. 

-Tico Times

Return To Top Of Page

Click here to subscribe


UNA Graduates 200-Plus Students</title>
	<link>http://american-european.net/blogs/costa-rica-news/2006/05/12/daily-edition-san-jose-costa-rica-may-12-2006dynamic-dancing-these-traditional-bolivian-folk-dancers-grupo-centro-cultural-boliviano-are-among-international-groups-scheduled-to-perform-at-this-years-f/</link>
	<description>Costa Rica news, information, plus real estate &#038; investment advice</description>
	<pubDate>Sat, 30 Aug 2008 03:39:44 +0000</pubDate>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=2.1.3</generator>

</channel>
</rss>
