...El Llamador El Programa de la Semana Santa de Sevilla 2O13 Redacción: Francisco José López de Paz, José Manuel de la Linde, Antonio Cattoni y Carolina García Jiménez. Pintura de portada: Miguel Ángel González Romero. (www.miguelangelgonzalezromero.com) (www.menartis.com) Diseño, maquetación y fotografías: Félix Antonio Martín Mendilívar. Impresión: Egondi, Artes Gráficas. Depósito Legal: SE 511-1991. Viernes de Dolores Parroquia de Claret La Misión 450 nazarenos (aprox.) 1.000 hermanos 1 paso Bonilla Cornejo talló al Cristo de la Misión en 1988 y todo el misterio del Encuentro en la Calle de la Amargura en el que aparece la Virgen del Amparo. Capataces: Antonio Santiago y auxiliares. 48 costaleros. Música: Cigarreras. Primera túnica bordada en el taller de Ana Bonilla para el Señor. Se cumplen 25 años de la bendición y primera salida del Cristo. Parroquia de San Isidro Labrador Pino Montano 550 nazarenos (aprox.) 1.300 hermanos 2 pasos Fernando Castejón talló la imagen de Jesús de Nazaret en 1994 y lo remodeló en 2002. La Virgen del Amor es obra del mismo imaginero. Capataces: Jorge Hernández y J. Manuel Osuna (misterio), M. Ángel y Fco. Javier Páez (palio). 48 y 36 costaleros. Música: Encarnación de San Benito y Cruz Roja. Incorpora al misterio la imagen de un sayón de Fernando Castejón. Nuevas potencias para el Señor. Parroquia de San Juan de la Cruz Padre Pío Palmete 200 nazarenos (aprox.) 520 hermanos 2 pasos El Nazareno de la...
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...Review Sheet for Final Exam in GM 4640 – RBE: Latin America Format for the Final Exam: The format will be a two-hour in-class exam. You will have an essay (60% of the exam score – worth 60 points) that will be identical to the midterm. It will be closed-note, closed book exercise during the two-hour exam. You will also have 20 multiple choice questions (40% of the exam score – worth 2 points each, for a total of 40 points). As with the midterm, the essay will provide a hypothetical scenario of a company that is considering making an investment in a Latin American country. (You will not know the industry of this hypothetical company until the exam.) You will be asked to assess any TWO of the countries that we have covered since the midterm: Mexico, Costa Rica, Chile, Peru, Venezuela, and/or Colombia. The format will be identical to what you saw in the midterm, as follows: a) provide an assessment of prospects for the continuation and sustainability of market-oriented economic reforms in [ANY TWO COUNTRIES OF THE LIST COVERED SINCE THE MIDTERM]. (NOTE: In your answer, you should use the Packenham Model as a framework for your analysis. Don't just summarize Packenham, however; USE the model to assess prospects for specific current and future market-oriented economic reforms in both countries. Also, make reference to lectures/other readings, where relevant.) [MAKE SURE TO DISCUSS BOTH COUNTRIES FULLY.] AND b) discuss any other factors that might...
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...Running head: PERU AND CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT Peru and Capital Development Abstract During the 2006 election of Alan Garcia Perez, promised to improve the social condition and commanded a balance of the economic spending with an increase of social spending. With a macroeconomic performance that had increased the GDP growth and help to lower the poverty levels. Even though the economic crisis produced a strain on the financial burden of Peru at the time, the prices have begun to drop and Peruvians are proactively recovering their loses. The land is still being dominated by the elites and the higher class of mezitos. These governed entities remain in control of the structures and industries within the country. Peru and Capital Development In 1996, Republic of Peru was the world largest coca leaf producer, however as time has generated a smaller dip in the economic system, Peru is now the world’s second largest producer of coca leaf. While, Peru lags far behind Columbia; cultivation of coca in Peru declined to 36,000 hectares in 2007. With an estimated yearly rate of growth of 9.8% (U.S. Department of State), Peru continues to struggles to keep up through economic hardship and the rift of the trade. Republic of Peru is plagued with environmental issues concerning the deforestation due impart to illegal logging, overgrazing of the slopes of the costa and sierra leading to soil erosion, desertification, air pollution, water pollution. Most of the problems are due to the natural...
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...In history, people often look over Latin America and their fight for independence is often forgotten. One instance of a disremembered independence is the Dominican Republic’s underground revolution against dictatorship under Trujillo. In the Time of the Butterflies, Julia Alvarez retells the story of the Mirabal sisters and their sacrifice for change. The four Mirabal sisters (Patria, Dede, Minerva, and Maria Teresa) work as a unit along with others to raise awareness against oppression. Although Dede is the only one to survive, the sisters are well known in Latin America for their efforts. In Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s speech, “The Solitude of Latin America,” his statement rings true when he explains that “In spite of [a history of violence],...
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...Peru: are we entering in a new crisis? by Marco Morante Monday September 23rd, 2013 Last month newspapers’ headlines were talking about a statement made by Ollanta Humala to the media: “The crisis has arrived, but we have a solid economy”; indeed there is a global crisis going on and indeed the Peruvian economy growth’s expectation is not the very same as in just a few months ago; but, is Peru about to enter in another crisis as the ones suffered in past years? Disregarding the several replies, opinions and views of the message that our president really intended to give, let us remember Peru’s past crisis and understand the economic frame in which these crisis developed. A little bit of Peruvian’s Recent Crisis History1 In the early 80’s, during Fernando Belaúnde’s government, “El Niño” phenomenon affected severely the northern coast of Peru, impacting mainly in the agricultural sector (consumption), the public and private investment suffered an important contraction, also the external demand was affected due to the crisis generated by the adjustments of the debt in México (having a deep effect in all economies in Latin America). In year 1983, the metal prices fall meant for Peru difficulties for the payment of the external debt and a high increase in inflation, reaching a concerning 163% inflation for the last year of the “Sol” (1985). Also, in this year the economy suffered a contraction in the GdP growth: a decrease of 9.3%, the largest one until that moment in the...
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...Dead Poets Society Dear dad I am writing to you because I would like to tell you about my situation right now. I don't feel that there is a reason to live anymore. I can’t live any longer. It may well be that you are my father but for that reason you should not decide everything for me. I am old enough to take care of my own life. As you know, is I soon an adult, and I can take my own decisions and I will be able to take the consequences of my own choices. It’s nice that you want help and advise me in which way I should go. You should know that I really value that, but most of all, I need to take care of my own life, and then go after my dreams. You should support me. As you know have I always wanted to be an actor. It is really difficult to follow my dreams. When you keep holding me back. This is my dream, and I don´t care If you agree or not. It was your choice to bring me at this school; instead of I could go for my dreams. But now you may take the risk for your choice, and this will be my death. When I am dead I would be sitting up in the sky at the most beautiful star, where i will be looking at you and the boarding school with all the good boys and specially Todd Anderson. I have thought about it in long time, now I stand here with a gun in my hand. And these are the last words for you. I really love you, but not the way to be my father. By the way, you must give Todd Anderson my compliments and say what happen for me and say that I love him and...
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...Maria Alejandrina Cervantes—Commentary—Chronicle of a Death Foretold “I dreamed that a woman was coming into the room with a little girl in her arms, and that the child was chewing without stopping to take a breath, and that half-chewed kernels of corn were falling into the woman’s brassiere. The woman said to me: ‘She crunches like a nutty nuthatch, kind of sloppy, kind of slurpy.’ Suddenly I felt the anxious fingers that were undoing the buttons of my shirt, and I caught the dangerous smell of the beast of love lying on my back, and I felt myself sinking into the delights of quicksand of her tenderness.” (89-90). Maria Alejandrina Cervantes, the voluptuous, tasteful, tender prostitute in Chronicle of a Death Foretold has more significance than meets the eye. Firstly, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, the author of the book, uses magic realism in context with the character of Maria Alejandrina Cervantes in order to convey the notion of irony. After all, Marquez does indeed eulogistically portray whores as members of the upper classes. Throughout the book, there is a cynical tone and deathly images that lead to accentuate the negative effect of Santiago Nasar’s death on the society. Noting Santiago Nasar’s impact on the town, the book may be considered a symbol of the end of the world. This quote (referring to “I dreamed…out of my life.” [Marquez, 89-90]) amalgamates the motifs of dreams and magic realism regarding Maria Alejandrina Cervantes through the use of literacy devices to...
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...LONDON – Thirty years ago, the Cold War was at its height and the United Kingdom had just clawed its way out of recession. Perhaps those factors explain why, this week in 1982, when 119 government delegations chose to sign the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), the UK was not among them. According to Donald Rumsfeld, Britain’s then-prime minister, Margaret Thatcher, declared UNCLOS to be “nothing less than the international nationalization of roughly two-thirds of the Earth’s surface.” Fifteen years later, when the UK finally acceded to UNCLOS under a Labour government, the convention was applying, for the first time in history, an internationally agreed legal framework to the majority of coastal waters around the world. Countries’ rights to fish, minerals, and other resources were enshrined in law, with recourse to international adjudication should disputes arise. The right of free passage on the high seas was assured. Britain and other countries must now learn from, rather than repeat, the Thatcher government’s mistake. A new debate is emerging about how we govern and exercise stewardship over the high seas – the 45% of the Earth’s surface that lies beyond national jurisdictions. We know that a resource crunch of unprecedented scale is coming. Non-oil commodity prices have risen precipitously in the last decade. The high seas can provide food, minerals, and novel resources for technology and medicine. But the weaknesses of the current governance...
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...I shall start this essay with a confession: when it comes to rock music, I am the perfect layperson. For me, the name “Grateful Dead” didn’t ring a bell: I guess that I would have pictured them as scary dudes playing black metal, and definitely not as a band of light-hearted stoned hippies. For a layman, there are many reasons to find the Dead deceitful. First of all, which genre could I associate them with? After listening to a couple of song in class, I looked for their most popular songs on deezer: “Truckin’” recalled country music, while “Dark Star” ’s guitar sound was dirty, raw and enigmatic. This was to be added to “Franklin’s Tower” ‘s form of joyful and childish simplicity. So there I was, trying to label a music that seemed so diverse, looking for a form of logic amongst all these influences. This is probably when I began thinking that maybe my approach was a bit absurd: why was I putting so much effort into reducing the Dead’s sound to one unambiguous genre, into finding an illusory unity? Perhaps I needed to reassure myself, but it lead me nowhere, even when I listened to the whole Europe 72 album. After more than an hour of listening to the Dead, I had entirely forgotten about my essay and I realized that maybe I had been looking in the wrong direction. For me, the Dead’s music was all about energy and the transmission of these positive vibes to the listener. But it wasn’t the kind of existential shout some artists need to express: here, everything seemed...
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...Super PACs is good for the citizens because it allows people to be in control of their representatives of whom they are discontent with. It is irrational that people need to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to defeat house members that were previously selected in a relatively fair manner.Since a super PAC collects and spends unlimited amounts of money, which may be worse for the government. With so much money, it is hard to trust that the government’s motives are as pure as they claim to be. A group of individuals could pool their money in the form of unlimited contributions into a PAC, so long as it remained independent from political parties or candidates, which prevents corruption of the government. Since it is possible for anyone to make a donation of any amount of money, it may be possible for companies or other people to take advantage of this. In 1999 in Peru, Alberto Fujimori’s campaign needed money, so Fujimori bribed his chief advisor, Vladmir Montesinos in exchange for being promoted to head of the Supreme Council of Military Justice.There is not much difference in this bribing and donating large sums of money to super PACs except for the fact that the super PACs are legal, and the other is not.Nobody gives money away and expects nothing in return. There are people who complain that super PACs spend "secret" money. This is just not true because by law, super PACs are required to disclose their donors.There is no possible way for money to go through without...
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...their highlight shows. What is always thrown up on the screen is a list of stats or a highlight of the night. Sometimes they even do show a highlight of a taunt that some would find entertaining, but it just displays the lack of discipline in today’s sports. All these highlights do is give light to the athlete’s that are camera hungry and those are the taunters. I find that athletes in today’s sports really like to taunt and disgrace. Taunting is when one disgraces others in a mocking or insulting manner. Taunting is really disrespectful to both the sport of which they are playing and other team. A great example of a disrespectful player is Terrell Owens. Until he had reached Dallas, he would disrespect his former quarterbacks, Jeff Garcia and Donovan McNabb. As a player, on the field, Terrell Owens is disrespectful, too. His taunts are rude and disrespectful, because they are so belligerent and excessive. Also, In this past season he had grabbed a fan’s box of popcorn and thrown it into his face. Terrell Owens doesn’t appear to be any kind of role model at all....
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...Abstract Throughout all of history people have been using and experimenting with drugs especially artists and musicians. Numerious musician have reluctantly admitted to or actually proclaimed their use of drugs. The general conscious of these “artists” is that their drug use has unlocked a higher level of creativity. As trendsetters and role models this use of drugs was emulated by audiences across the United States and Great Britain. To such a point as references to mind altering drugs were appearing in Beats poems and essays and even protest songs of the middle 1950s. As music progressed through the year’s drug use (by artists and fans) and references became more mainstream. This paper will look at two specific band, The Beatles and the Grateful Dead. Rock and Roll on Drugs Drug use and music have been intertwined for many years. This use whether illegal or legal has had both positive and negative impacts on the artists and their success. While the creative juices may be flowing while under the influence of drugs the final outcome (maybe years down the road) almost always ends on a negative note. Even dating back to 1830 when Hector Berlioz wrote his most famous work “Symphonie Fantastique” he detailed the effects of an opium induced dream, specifically in the fourth movement. In an interview on June 16, 1967, Paul McCartney was asked if he ever took drugs, he said “After I took it (LSD), it opened my eyes. We only use one-tenth of our brain. Just think what we could accomplish...
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...Gabriel Garcia Marquez can be seen as one of the 20th century’s greatest storytellers exploring the notions of machismo and honour within a Latin-American context in Chronicle of a Death Foretold published in 1981. Chronicle of a Death Foretold follows the series of events up to and after the death of Santiago Nasar and explores the town peoples’ culpability several decades on. Through the chronicle of events Marquez explores the Latin American cultural paradigm coupled with the naivety of Santiago Nasar as a foreigner in the paradigm and how it ultimately leads to his death. By developing the notion of the ignorant foreigner, Marquez is able to recreate and explore the brutal honour code of the Hispanic paradigm. The characterisation of Nasar...
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...Marianne Angeli Diaz Professor Jan Lombardi English 221 21 May 2015 The Storyteller Who Started a Movement As I sat through another session in class, I did not think I would become so immersed about the wonders of magical realism. But as the Magical Realism group presented the historical significance of this movement, I found myself nodding at everything they said. I was intrigued by the ways this movement influenced Latin America, portraying enchanting events in realistic tones. As they moved on further about the people who started it all, the person that grabbed my attention became the key of discovering stories that truly captured magical experiences in the real world: Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Throughout his life, not only did Marquez brought Latin America stories that incorporated magic to real life, but he was also the one who started the most recognized movement in Europe: the power and influence of magical realism. Being from Latin America himself, Marquez was inspired by the place where he was born and the avid experiences he remembered with his maternal grandparents in Aracataca, Colombia. His grandmother, Tranquilina Iguaran Cortes, was the one who “gave Marquez a deep reservoir of folkloric knowledge about omens, premonitions, dead ancestors, and ghosts” (EGS). Since people pay closer attention to stories that paint pictures in their mind, we can say these tactics work well in literature, where describing the events illustrate a better portrait rather than just...
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... A. El título es literal ya que en la casa es donde se da la mayor parte de la obra. Que sea la casa de Bernarda Alba, nos indica de quien es la casa y quien tiene todo el control en la obra. (Bernarda) II. Autor A. Datos biográficos 1. Nació en 1898 en España 2. Estudió filosofía y letras y se licenció en derecho 3. Muere fusilado en Granada en 1936 por sus ideales liberales 4. Destacó en poesía y teatro 5. Obras teatrales: a. Yerma (1934) b. La casa de Bernarda Alba (1936) B. Relación del texto con el autor 1. Según el prólogo la obra se basa en una historia real, García Lorca vivía frente a la viuda Frasquita Alba y sus 4 hijas. 2. Le cambió el nombre a la viuda para complacer a su madre pero el apellido sonaba “tan bien” que no lo pudo cambiar, añadió 1 hija y Pepe de la Romilla se llamó Pepe el Romano. 3. García Lorca en una anotación indica que la obra es un documental fotográfico. El autor partía de algo real y lo transformaba en materia artística. III. Marco histórico/ Literario de la obra A. El sistema político de la Restauración se mantiene vigente a comienzos del siglo XX con el reinado de Alfonso XIII. La neutralidad durante la Primera Guerra Mundial permite cierto desarrollo económico hacia la industrialización. De manera progresiva se producen cambios en la sociedad española: crecimiento urbano, consolidación de la burguesía, aparición del movimiento obrero que reivindica mejoras sociales y económicas...
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