Chiapas Hoy en Gente Bonita

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espectáculos cultura sociales Nubia Díaz Álvarez y Jorge Pinto Marin C M Y K

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Chiapas Hoy en Gente Bonita

Transcript of Chiapas Hoy en Gente Bonita

espectáculosculturasociales

Nubia Díaz Álvarez y Jorge Pinto Marin

C M Y K

30 Juéves15deEnerodel2009Chiapas Hoy

B- Day Victoria

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Joel De la cruz/Chiapas HoyEl pasado fin de semana, nuestra compañera y amiga Victo-

ria Penagos, compartió con sus amigos más cercanos, un mo-mento de mucha alegría y digno de festejar, su cumpleaños. La cita fue en su residencia particular de la colonia Los Laureles de la ciudad. Ahí sus invitados le cantaron las mañanitas, le de-searon lo mejor entre risas y abrazos. El pastel no podía faltar, así como la buena música, fue así entonces, como la fiesta se prolongó hasta altas horas de la madrugada. Muchas felicida-des Vitoria Penagos.

Entre risas y abrazos todos gozaron

Le cantaron las mañanitas Los amigos estuvieron presentes

Victoria se sintió muy felizMuchas Felicidades

David Pinto, Victoria y Gonzalo sedivirtieron mucho

Una noche muy divertida

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Victoria Penagos/Chiapas HoyBueno, con este título seguramente no queda muy claro de

que va esto, pero seguro que estás de acuerdo conmigo en lo bonito que es compartir, es algo que de pequeñitos nos en-señan que es mucho mejor que ser egoísta y querer las cosas sólo para uno mismo. Y esa idea la hemos llevado al mundo interconectado de hoy en día donde un ordenador no tiene sentido por si solo, si no tienes acceso al mundo exterior o a recursos compartidos con los demás, de que sirve. Pues de eso va todo esto, de como compartir teniendo en cuenta que todos somos diferentes pero no por ello deben tener unos preferencia sobre los otros.

Andrea y Paloma Mayor

Tere Bermudez y Jessica Esquinca

Judith Bellemare, Citlalli villareal, SebastenChartrand,Viviane Llagace, Thierry Lebois y Renee-pier Bouchard

Carolina Bermúdez

Elena Ruiz con sus amigas

Compartir

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Llucia M. Penagos,Luz Carreiro,Fer Neuimaer,Mandy Hernandez y Alejandre Hurtado

Mario Urbina,su mami Judith y Jazmin Urbina

Miguel Lopez Reyes y cecilis esponda

Jose Luis Coutiño y una amiga

Jose Luis Coutiño y una amiga

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Joel De la cruz/Chiapas HoyFrente al altar, se dieron el sí, tomados de la mano,

unidos por los lazos del amor, Nubia Díaz Álvarez y Jor-ge Pinto Marin, en días pasados sellaron su amor con el sacramento del matrimonio, la feliz pareja, lució muy ele-gante, se les notó muy contentos y muy enamorados por este enlace marital. Que sean muy felices.

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El amormaterializado

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10Karla y Ricardo Álvarez

Laura De La Cruz y Adolfo Hernández

Rodrigo Román

Los felices novios Nubia y Jorge

Héctor Eduardo y Sofía con sus papás Nubia Álvarez y Alejandro Gamboa

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Laura Leticia Román y Jesús Humberto Gómez

Ana Beatriz, Norma, Ana Medina, Beatriz Rojas con la madre de la novia

Juan José Román y Pati Flores de Román

Con María Leticia Bermúdez y Rogerio Román

Roger, Jorge Alejandro, Miguel, Juan y Rodrigo

Miguel Gaxiola y Kena Villalobos

Silver Díaz padre de la novia

Dolores Marín Viuda de Pinto con los novios

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INTERESTING PEOPLE

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NEW THINGS

Victoria Penagos/Chiapas HoyOn this occasion for you, dear

readers bring the former president George Bush and his gavinete. This is goodb-

ye.Farewell to All That: An Oral His-

tory of the Bush White House The threat of 9/11 ignored. The

threat of Iraq hyped and manipula-ted. Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib. Hurricane Katrina. The shredding of civil liberties. The rise of Iran. Glo-bal warming. Economic disaster. How did one two-term presidency go so wrong? A sweeping draft of history—distilled from scores of in-terviews—offers fresh insight into the roles of George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, and other key players.

January 20, 2001 After a dispu-ted election and bitter recount battle in Florida whose outcome is effectively decided by the Supreme Court, George W. Bush is sworn in as the 43rd president of the United States. In foreign affairs he promi-

ses an approach that will depart from the perceived adventurism of his predecessor, Bill Clinton, in pla-

ces such as Kosovo and Soma-lia. (“I think the United States must be humble,” Bush said in a debate with his opponent, Al Gore.) In domestic affairs Bush pledges to cut taxes and improve education. He promises to govern as a “compassionate conserva-tive” and to be “a uniter, not a divider.” He comes into office with a $237 bi-llion budget surplus.

On the day of the inau-guration the White House chief of staff, Andrew Card, declares a mora-torium on the Clinton administration’s last-minute regulations on the environment, food

safety, and health. This action is followed in the coming months by disengagement from the International Criminal Court and other international efforts. No-netheless, the early presumption is that the administration’s affairs are in steady hands, though some dis-quieting signs are noted.

In the Oval Office on January 20 the first President Bush and the new President Bush greet each other with the words “Mr. Presi-dent.”

Dan Bartlett, White House com-munications director and later counselor to the president: It was a bitterly cold day. They got back to the residence from the inaugura-tion. The president was going over to have his first moment in the Oval Office as president of the United States. And he called for his father because he wanted his father to be

there when it happened. If I recall correctly, George H. W. Bush was soaking in the tub trying to warm up, because it had been so cold on the viewing stand.

March 6, 2001 Secretary of Sta-te Colin Powell tells reporters that the United States intends to “en-gage with North Korea to pick up where President Clinton and his ad-ministration left off.” The next day, Powell is forced by the administra-tion to backpedal. Other early ad-ministration actions—abrogation of the Anti-Ballistic-Missile Treaty, abandonment of the Kyoto Proto-col on climate change—signal that America’s way of doing business has changed. In time, Defense Se-cretary Rumsfeld will characterize traditional U.S. allies as “old Euro-pe.”

May 16, 2001 A task force assem-bled and led by Vice President Dick Cheney unveils a blueprint for the administration’s energy program. The report, “National Energy Poli-cy,” which had been in the works since shortly after the inaugura-tion, calls for increased drilling for oil and more nuclear power. The energy task force becomes an im-mediate focus of controversy—and lawsuits—because its records and the list of advisers, mainly re-presentatives of the oil and gas in-dustries, are never divulged by the White House. The administration’s environmental policy is heavily po-liticized from the outset.

June 12, 2008 The Supreme Court in Boumediene v. Bush strikes down a provision in the Military Commis-sions Act, ruling that the denial of the right to petition for habeas cor-pus is unconstitutional.

July 9, 2008 The annual summit of the G-8 nations, held in Japan,

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concludes with a tepid pledge to cut greenhouse gases by 50 per-cent by the year 2050. It is the last G-8 summit that Bush attends. He bids farewell to the other heads of state with the words “Good-bye from the world’s greatest pollu-ter.”

July 30, 2008 As the subprime-mortgage crisis continues to ripple through the economy, Bush signs emergency legislation to rescue the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. A Wall Street bailout will follow in October. The budget deficit for the year is expected to exceed $1 trillion.

August 8, 2008 Russia invades the Republic of Georgia. Bush says in a Rose Garden appearance that the United States “stands with” Georgia. Bush makes his com-ments during a brief stop in Was-hington between a trip to Beijing for the Olympics and a vacation at his ranch in Crawford. Since taking office Bush has spent more than 450 days at the Crawford ranch and more than 450 days at Camp David. During the last six months of his presidency, Bush is largely absent from public view, even as the eco-nomic crisis continues to build.

September 1, 2008 Republicans meet in St. Paul to nominate John McCain as their presidential candi-date; with an approval rating in the polls hovering below 30 percent, Bush becomes the first sitting president since Lyndon Johnson not to appear at his own party’s nominating convention. (He had been scheduled to attend, but his appearance was canceled when a hurricane once again threatened the Gulf Coast.) The president tra-vels to Gettysburg for a tour of the battlefield, accompanied by his wife, Laura, and a number of former aides—Alberto Gonzales, Karl Rove, Karen Hughes, and Ha-rriet Miers. Among the guides are Gabor Boritt, a Lincoln scholar, and

his son Jake Boritt, a filmmaker.August 8, 2008 Russia

invades the Republic of Geor-gia. Bush says in a Rose Garden appearance that the United States “stands with” Georgia. Bush makes his comments during a brief stop in Washington between a trip to Bei-jing for the Olympics and a vaca-tion at his ranch in Crawford. Since taking office Bush has spent more than 450 days at the Crawford ranch and more than 450 days at Camp David. During the last six months of his presidency, Bush is largely absent from public view, even as the economic crisis conti-nues to build.

September 1, 2008 Republicans meet in St. Paul to nominate John McCain as their presidential candi-date; with an approval rating in the polls hovering below 30 percent, Bush becomes the first sitting president since Lyndon Johnson not to appear at his own party’s nominating convention. (He had been scheduled to attend, but his appearance was canceled when a hurricane once again threatened the Gulf Coast.) The president tra-vels to Gettysburg for a tour of the battlefield, accompanied by his wife, Laura, and a number of former aides—Alberto Gonzales,

Karl Rove, Karen Hughes, and Ha-rriet Miers. Among the guides are

Gabor Boritt, a Lincoln scholar, and his son Jake Boritt, a filmmaker.

November 4, 2008 Barack Oba-ma is elected president in an elec-toral-college landslide. The Repu-blicans lose at least seven seats in the Senate and a score in the House, dashing Karl Rove’s hopes of a permanent Republican ma-jority. As the administration pre-pares to leave office, it promulga-tes a raft of “midnight” orders to weaken environmental, health-ca-re, and product-safety regulations. The unemployment rate is nearly 7 percent and rising. Income in-equality is at the highest level since the 1920s. As of a week before the election, the stock market had lost a third of its value over a period of six months.

Matthew Dowd, Bush’s pollster and chief strategist for the 2004 presidential campaign: You know, the headline in his presidency will be MISSED OPPORTUNITY. That is the headline, ultimately. It’s MIS-SED OPPORTUNITY, MISSED OP-PORTUNITY.

Chiapas Hoy

Mel Gibson financió viviendas en Veracruz y Chiapas

Agencias. El actor y productor Mel Gibson donó US$1 millón a la gente que perdió sus viviendas en Veracruz y el vecino estado de Chiapas durante la tormenta tropical Stan.El resto del costo de la construcción de 109 viviendas en el poblado veracruzano de San Andrés Tuxtla fue financiado por una ONG local. Gibson se comprometió con la ayuda mientras filmaba Apocalypto, en el Estado de Veracruz.Stan golpeó Centroamérica y el sur de México en octubre del 2005, dañando 40 mil viviendas en México y matando a 71 personas en Chiapas

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