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Diario De Sesiones
DIARIO DE SESIONES PROCEDIMIENTOS Y DEBATES DE LA ESTADO LIBRE ASOCIADO DE PUERTO RICO ASAMBLEA LEGISLATIVA Vol. XXXIII SAN JUAN, P.R.-Miércoles, 18 de abril de 1979 Núm. 47 SENADO A la una y quince minutos de la tarde de sonar por algún tIempo para ver, entre otras Servicios; para autorizar al Secretario de hoy, miércoles, 18 de abril de 1979 (DIA cosas, que los señores de la Prensa nos querían Hacienda a hacer anticipos a dicho CIENTO UNO DE SESION), el Senado hacer una serie de preguntas y nos retuvieron Departamento y disponer sobre el reanuda sus trabajos bajo la Presidencia del en la antesala del hemiciclo para hacernos reembolso de los mismos; y para señor Miguel A. Miranda, designado al efecto una serie de preguntas relativas a esas vistas. autorizar el pareo de los fondos que se por el Presidente, señor Ferré. y por el otro lado, pues, estábamos esperando asignan." para que llegaran los demás compañeros, si es ASISTENCIA que podian terminar sus labores en la La Comisión de Juventud y Deportes, Comisión. En vista de que está reunida la proponiendo al Senado que se apruebe, con Señora: Comisión de Nombramientos, señor enmiendas,el Benitez Presidente. y exigiendo el Reglamento Señores: del Senado de Puerto Rico, que ninguna P.deIS.818 Calero Juarbe Comisión puede estar reunida mientras el Campos Ayala Senado está constituido para deliberar en su "Para prohibir a toda persona natural o juri Cancel Rios Sesión Ordinaria o Extraordinaria, dica y a todo comerciante, la utilización Deynes Soto formulamos la moción de que se permita a.1a de los distintivos de los Octavos Juegos Señora: Comisión de Nombramientos y a sus Panamericanos a celebrarse próxima• Fernández integrantes continuar con sus vistas públicas, mente en Puerto Rico y del Comité Señores: mientras nosotros despachamos el trabajo Organizador de los Juegos Panamerica Ferré rutinario del Senado. -
Beyond the Critique of Rights: the Puerto Rico Legal Project and Civil Rights Litigation in America’S Colony Abstract
VALERIA M. PELET DEL TORO Beyond the Critique of Rights: The Puerto Rico Legal Project and Civil Rights Litigation in America’s Colony abstract. Long skeptical of the ability of rights to advance oppressed groups’ political goals, Critical Legal Studies (CLS) scholars might consider a U.S. territory like Puerto Rico and ask, “What good are rights when you live in a colony?” In this Note, I will argue that CLS’s critique of rights, though compelling in the abstract, falters in the political and historical context of Puerto Rico. Although it may appear that rights have failed Puerto Ricans, rights talk has historically provided a framework for effective organizing and community action. Building on the work of Critical Race Theory and LatCrit scholars, this Note counters the CLS intuition that rights talk lacks value by focusing on the origins and development of the Puerto Rico Legal Project, an un- derstudied but critical force for community development and legal advocacy on the island that was founded in response to severe political repression during the late 1970s and early 1980s. This Note draws on original interviews with Puerto Rican and U.S. lawyers and community activists to reveal fissures in the critique of rights and to propose certain revisions to the theory. By concentrating on the entitlements that rights are thought to provide, CLS’s critique of rights ignores the power of rights discourse to organize marginalized communities. The critique of rights also overlooks the value of the collective efforts that go into articulating a particular community’s aspirations through rights talk, efforts which can be empowering andhelp spur further political action. -
LANGUAGE and IDENTITY in the CERRO MARAVILLA HEARINGS by Germán Negrón Rivera
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by D-Scholarship@Pitt WHAT DID THEY SAY IN THE HALL OF THE DEAD? LANGUAGE AND IDENTITY IN THE CERRO MARAVILLA HEARINGS by Germán Negrón Rivera B.A. University of Puerto Rico, 1988 M.A. University of Puerto Rico, 1997 Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of Arts and Sciences in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Pittsburgh 2010 ii UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES This dissertation was presented by Germán Negrón Rivera It was defended on April 16, 2010 and approved by Susan Berk-Seligson, Associate Professor, Spanish and Portuguese Department, Vanderbilt University Juan Duchesne Winter, Professor, Department of Hispanic Languages and Literatures Barbara Johnstone, Professor, English Department, Carnegie Mellon University Dissertation Advisor: Scott Kiesling, Associate Professor, Department of Linguistics ii Copyright © by Germán Negrón Rivera 2010 iii WHAT DID THEY SAY IN THE HALL OF THE DEAD? LANGUAGE AND IDENTITY IN THE CERRO MARAVILLA HEARINGS Germán Negrón Rivera, Ph.D. University of Pittsburgh, 2010 Identity has become a major interest for researchers in the areas of linguistic anthropology and sociolinguistics. Recent understandings of identity emphasize its malleability and fluidity. This conceptualization of identities as malleable comes from the realization that speakers relate strategically to propositions and their interlocutors in order to achieve their communicative goals. This study is an exploration of the (co-)construction of identities in an institutional context, specifically in the Cerro Maravilla hearings. I examine the interactions between the Senate‘s main investigator, Héctor Rivera Cruz, and five witnesses in order to explore how identities were created and how speakers managed the interactions. -
Copyright by Samuel Ellis Ginsburg 2018
Copyright by Samuel Ellis Ginsburg 2018 The Dissertation Committee for Samuel Ellis Ginsburg Certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: The Cyborg Caribbean: Bodies, Technology, and the Struggle for (Post)Humanity in 21st-Century Cuban, Dominican, and Puerto Rican Science Fiction Committee: Jossianna Arroyo- Martínez, Co-Supervisor César Salgado, Co-Supervisor Luís Cárcamo Huechante John Morán González The Cyborg Caribbean: Bodies, Technology and the Struggle for (Post)Humanity in 21st-Century Cuban, Dominican, and Puerto Rican Science Fiction By Samuel Ellis Ginsburg Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Texas at Austin May 2018 Acknowledgements I would first like to acknowledge my dissertation committee for their support of this project: Co-Supervisors Jossianna Arroyo-Martínez and César Salgado, and committee members Luís Cárcamo Huechante and John Morán Gonazález. Each one has helped shape my academic and personal trajectory. Thank you for not kicking me out of your offices when I proposed this project. So many of my colleagues have provided me with scholarly and emotional support throughout this process: María Cristina Monsalve, Melissa González Contreras, Ginette Eldridge, James Staig, Valeria Rey de Castro, José Ignacio Carvajal, Sam Cannon, Ruth Rubio, Ana Cecilia Calle, Ana Almar, Stephanie Malak, and Min Suk Kim. I’d also like to thank Laura Rodríguez for making everything possible. My family has been incredibly supportive and have believed in me at every step along the way. Thank you, Mom, Dad, and Ruthie. -
Senado De Puerto Rico Diario De Sesiones Procedimientos Y Debates De La Decimocuarta Asamblea Legislativa Primera Sesion Ordinaria Año 2001 Vol
SENADO DE PUERTO RICO DIARIO DE SESIONES PROCEDIMIENTOS Y DEBATES DE LA DECIMOCUARTA ASAMBLEA LEGISLATIVA PRIMERA SESION ORDINARIA AÑO 2001 VOL. LII San Juan, Puerto Rico Miércoles, 13 de junio de 2001 Núm. 51 A la una y diez minutos de la tarde (1:10 p.m.) de este día, miércoles, 13 de junio de 2001, el Senado reanuda sus trabajos bajo la Presidencia del señor Antonio J. Fas Alzamora. ASISTENCIA Senadores: Luz Z. Arce Ferrer, Eudaldo Báez Galib, Norma Burgos Andújar, Juan A. Cancel Alegría, José Luis Dalmau Santiago, Velda González de Modestti, Sixto Hernández Serrano, Rafael Luis Irizarry Cruz, Pablo Lafontaine Rodríguez, Kenneth McClintock Hernández, Yasmín Mejías Lugo, José A. Ortiz-Daliot, Margarita Ostolaza Bey, Migdalia Padilla Alvelo, Orlando Parga Figueroa, Sergio Peña Clos, Roberto L. Prats Palerm, Miriam J. Ramírez, Bruno A. Ramos Olivera, Jorge Alberto Ramos Vélez, Maribel Rodríguez Hernández, Angel M. Rodríguez Ortiz, Rafael Rodríguez Vargas, Cirilo Tirado Rivera, Roberto Vigoreaux Lorenzana y Antonio J. Fas Alzamora, Presidente. SR. PRESIDENTE: Se reanuda la sesión. INVOCACION La señora Luz Z. Arce Ferrer, procede con la Invocación. SRA. ARCE FERRER: Invocamos la presencia de Dios. Amantísimo Padre Celestial, te damos gracias, Señor, por permitir un día más en nuestras vidas. Te damos gracias, Señor, por la oportunidad de servirle a nuestro pueblo. Te pedimos, Señor, por la familia puertorriqueña. Te pedimos, Señor, por la familia del niño encontrado muerto en Culebra. Sé Tú, Señor, en todo momento con ellos. Dale la serenidad y dale la paz que tanto clama y espera nuestro pueblo. Te pedimos, Señor, que seas Tú quien hoy dirijas nuevamente estos trabajos. -
The Technological Embodiment of Colonialism in Puerto Rico
Anthurium: A Caribbean Studies Journal Volume 12 | Issue 2 Article 6 December 2015 The echnologT ical Embodiment of Colonialism in Puerto Rico Manuel G. Aviles-Santiago Arizona State University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/anthurium Recommended Citation Aviles-Santiago, Manuel G. (2015) "The eT chnological Embodiment of Colonialism in Puerto Rico," Anthurium: A Caribbean Studies Journal: Vol. 12 : Iss. 2 , Article 6. Available at: http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/anthurium/vol12/iss2/6 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarly Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Anthurium: A Caribbean Studies Journal by an authorized editor of Scholarly Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Aviles-Santiago: The Technological Embodiment of Colonialism in Puerto Rico Although the literature on colonial countries has long emphasized under- development as an effect of the ways in which the colonizing powers assert their monopolistic access to cutting-edge technology at the expense of the colonized (delayed technology transfer, for instance, or unilateral decision making on the part of the colonial government concerning implementation), this literature has not examined the connection between technology and colonialism in Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico provides a unique example of a colony under a supposedly pre- modern regime (Spain), as well as a hyper-modern and post-industrial one (the United States). Not that the technological space has been totally neglected in literature. There are, for instance, a few studies concerning particular technologies, including that of birth control, with a particular emphasis on sterilization, used during the 1920s-30s and that of media, in particular the advent of radio, film, and print media in the late 1940s.1 There is, however, no general historical account of the introduction, presence, and development of technology on the island. -
Evaluation of Landslide Hazards Resulting from the 5-8 October 1985, Storm in Puerto Rico
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOLOGICAL SURVEY EVALUATION OF LANDSLIDE HAZARDS RESULTING FROM THE 5-8 OCTOBER 1985, STORM IN PUERTO RICO by Randal1 W. Jibson U.S. Geological Survey Reston, Virginia 22092 U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 86-26 A report submitted to the Federal Emergency Management Agency in fulfillment of a mission assignment to evaluate landslide hazards related to disaster FEMA-746-DR-PR This report is preliminary and has not been edited or reviewed for conformity with editorial standards and nomenclature of the U.S. Geological Survey PREFACE This document was assembled for the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) as part of the USGS mission assignment to provide "a summary report on the reconnaissance landslide studies and emergency response * * * within 60 days of the October 10 declaration" of FEMA- 746-DR-PR. Included are a collection of oral and written communications previously transmitted to FEMA officials in Puerto Rico concerning various emergency reconnaissance operations conducted between 18 October and 14 November 1985. Supporting documents relating to the USGS role in the disaster response operations are included as appendices. The report has been edited for continuity and is organized so as to present (1) an overview of the 5-8 October 1985, storm and its effects; (2) an evaluation of the landslide hazards resulting from the storm; and (3) short- and long-term recommendations for mitigation of landslide hazards. CONTENTS Page Preface ____________________________________ i i Introduction -
Toward People's War for Independence and Socialism in Puerto Rico: ,N Defense of Armed Struggle
TOWARD PEOPLE'S WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE AND SOCIALISM IN PUERTO RICO: ,N DEFENSE OF ARMED STRUGGLE Documents and Communiques from the Revolutionary Public Independence Movement and the Armed Clandestine Movement str«tegle Coim«««i tf ucte«r bomb <l TOWARD PEOPLE'S WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE AND SOCIALISM IN PUERTO RICO: IN DEFENSE OF ARMED STRUGGLE Air bast »nA military camp 6n\ei3»c^ Documents and Communiques from the Revolutionary Public Independence Movement and the Armed Clandestine Movement < This book is dedicated to all Puerto Rican prisoners of war, because it is they who are the revolutionary inspiration for us all. Lolita Lebron Rafael Cancel Miranda Irvin Flores Oscar Collazo Pablo Marcano Nydia Esther Cuevas and William Guillermo Morales This book is produced and distributed in solidarity with the struggle of the Puerto Rican nation for Independence and Socialism; under the leadership and with the guidance of the Movimiento de Liberation National; by the following organizations: Committee in Solidarity with Puerto Rican Independence May 19th Communist Organization Midwest Action League October 30th Organization Prairie Fire Organiz ing Committee Sojourner Truth Organization These groups form an interim committe building a national, revolutionary anti- imperialist organization in solidarity with the Puerto Rican Independence Movement. January 1979 — Don Pedro Albizu Campos, President, Nationalist Party of Puerto Rico, from 1930 until his death in 1965. — Don Juan Antonio Corretjer, Secretary-General, La Liga Socialista PuertorriqueTIa (LSP). CONTENTS Maps Preface PART ONE 1. FROM BETANCES TO LENIN Don Juan Corretjer Secretary-General, La Liga Socialista Puertorriquena 12 2. THE SPIRIT OF LARES Don Juan Antonio Corretjer Secretary-General, La Liga Socialista Puertorriquena 14 Independence is not made with applause. -
The Attitudes of Puerto Ricans Toward the Participation of Women in the Labor Force of the Island
University of Massachusetts Amherst ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Doctoral Dissertations 1896 - February 2014 1-1-1994 The attitudes of Puerto Ricans toward the participation of women in the labor force of the island. Ana R. Rivera Rivera University of Massachusetts Amherst Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations_1 Recommended Citation Rivera, Ana R. Rivera, "The attitudes of Puerto Ricans toward the participation of women in the labor force of the island." (1994). Doctoral Dissertations 1896 - February 2014. 5151. https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations_1/5151 This Open Access Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. It has been accepted for inclusion in Doctoral Dissertations 1896 - February 2014 by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE ATTITUDES OF PUERTO RICANS TOWARD THE PARTICIPATION OF WOMEN IN THE LABOR FORCE OF THE ISLAND A Dissertation Presented by ANA R. RIVERA RIVERA t Submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Massachusetts Amherst in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF EDUCATION May 1994 School of Education © Copyright by Ana R. Rivera Rivera All Rights Reserved THE ATTITUDES OF PUERTO RICANS TOWARD THE PARTICIPATION OF WOMEN IN THE LABOR FORCE OF THE ISLAND A Dissertation Presented by ANA R. RIVERA RIVERA Approved as to style and content by: Gloria de Guevara, Chair Luis Furates, Member Tancispe-Cevallos, Member . Jackson, Dean 1 of Education DEDICATION A mi madre, quien con sus sabios consejos, guio mis primeros pasos en la vida. -
The Floods of May 17-18, 1985 and October 6-7, 1985 in Puerto Rico
THE FLOODS OF MAY 17-18, 1985 AND OCTOBER 6-7, 1985 IN PUERTO RICO By Ferdinand Quinones and Karl G. Johnson U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OPEN-FILE REPORT 87-123 Prepared in cooperation with the PUERTO RICO DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES, PUERTO RICO ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY BOARD, AND PUERTO RICO HIGHWAY AUTHORITY San Juan, Puerto Rico 1987 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR DONALD PAUL HODEL, Secretary U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Dallas L. Peck, Director For additional Information Copies of this report can be write to: purchased from: Chief, Caribbean District, WRD U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Geological Survey Books and Open-File Reports GPO Box 4424 Federal Center, Bldg. 41 San Juan, Puerto Rico OO936 Box 25425 Denver, Colorado 8O225 Ill CONTENTS PAGE Abstract..................................................... 1 Introduction................................................. 1 The floods of May 17-18, 1985................................ 3 Rainfall................................................ 3 Flooding and damages.................................... 3 Peak discharges......................................... 4 The floods of October 6-7, 1985.............................. 10 Rainfall................................................ 10 Flooding and damages.................................... 10 Peak discharges......................................... 14 Landslides.............................................. 14 Comparison of the 1985 floods with historical floods......... 14 Summary...................................................... 19 References cited............................................ -
CLLI(TM) Codes
Bellcore Practice BR 795-152-100 Issue 2, March 1999 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ CLLI™ CODES - U. S. OUTLYING AND PACIFIC OCEAN TERRITORIES POSTAL CLLI CODE PLACE-SITE-DESCR ADDRESS CODE OTC AM AMERICAN SAMOA PGPG AM PAGO PAGO ZA PAGO PAGO 2A OFC AMERICAN SAMOA ATX 01T PAGO PAGO #1 SWITCHER TERM-AM ATX A00 PAGO PAGO CX-ZA1VB,01T&F01-AM ATX F01 PAGO PAGO FACILITY TERM-AM ATX TFUN AM TAFUNA AA AMERICAN SAMOA AMERICAN SAMOA TELCOM 96799 NNTM CM1 NORTEL WIRELESS MSC NNTM ES TAFUNA-ES AMERICAN SAMOA ATX W01 TAFUNA EARTH STATION - (POR) ATX TUTL AM TUTUILA XA PAGATOGO C.O. 14 17'02"SOUTH 170 41'12"WEST 00000 GTEX D50 INC MODULE GTEX DS1 DMS 100 BU GTEX FM MICRONESIA, FEDERATED STATES OF PHNP FM POHNPEI AA BLDG PO BOX 1210 KOLONIA 00000 ATX F01 DSX FACILITY TERM FOR ILD TELECOMMUNICATIONS ATX ZA POHNPEI BLDG POHNAPEI FSM - MICRONESIA 00000 ATX 01T FACILITY ATX TKIS FM TRUK ISLANDS ZA TRUK ISLANDS BLDG TRUK ISLAND FEDERATED STATES OF 00000 ATX MICRONESIA 01T FACILITY ATX GU GUAM AGAN GU AGANA 01 BUILDING LOT 1 BLOCK 1 MARTYR STREET 96910 GTA DS1 BUILDING GTA AA AGANA EARTH STATION ANDERSON AIR FORCE BASE 96910 ATX W01 AGANA EARTH ST.PRIVATE LINE COMM.SATELLITE ATX AB AGANA BLDG 115 MARINE DR HALODA BLDG - WAR IN THE 96921 ATX PACIF N01 NODAL SERVICE ATX AC AGANA, GUAM BUILDING 424 O'BRIEN DR, AGANA, GUAM 96910 96910 ATX A01 ADMINISTRATIVE ATX AD BLDG 137 MURRAY BLVD 96910 EDS NAA PBX EDS AE AGANA BLDG 8182 RT 10 MANGILAO BLDG 96910 ATX N01 NODAL SERVICE ATX AF AGANA BUILDING 238 ARCHBISHOP FLORES ST 96910 ATX N01 NODAL SERVICE ATX SO HAWAIIAN TEL SALES OFFICE 390 W. -
Surface-Water, Water-Quality, and Ground-Water Assessment of the Municipio of Ponce, Puerto Rico, 2002-2004
U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey PREPARED IIN COOPERATIION WIITH THE MUNIICIIPIIO AUTÓNOMO DE PONCE,, PUERTO RIICO,, OFFIICE OF THE MAYOR SSuurrffaaccee--WWaatteerr,, WWaatteerr--QQuuaalliittyy,, aanndd GGrroouunndd--WWaatteerr AAsssseessssmmeenntt ooff tthhee MMuunniicciippiioo ooff PPoonnccee,, PPuueerrttoo RRiiccoo,, 22000022--22000044 Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5243 Cover photograph View towards the southeast of Lago Cerrillos from Highway 505. Highway 139 is in the foreground. Highway 52 is in distance to the right. Removal of earth material for a housing development is occurring near the Río Inabón to the left hand side of the photograph. Photograph taken by Jesús Rodríguez-Martínez on November 27, 2001. Surface-Water, Water-Quality, and Ground-Water Assessment of the Municipio of Ponce, Puerto Rico, 2002-2004 By Jesús Rodríguez-Martínez, Luis Santiago-Rivera, José M. Rodríguez, and Fernando Gómez-Gómez Chapter A Surface-Water Resources Assessment of the Municipio of Ponce, Puerto Rico, 2002-2004 By Luis Santiago-Rivera and Fernando Gómez-Gómez Chapter B Sanitary Quality of Surface Water During Base-Flow Conditions in the Municipio of Ponce, Puerto Rico, 2002 By José M. Rodríguez and Fernando Gómez-Gómez Chapter C Hydrogeologic Terranes and Ground-Water Resources in the Municipio of Ponce, Puerto Rico, 2002-2004 By Jesús Rodríguez-Martínez and Fernando Gómez-Gómez Prepared in cooperation with the MUNICIPIO AUTÓNOMO DE PONCE, PUERTO RICO OFFICE OF THE MAYOR Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5243 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Department of the Interior Gale A. Norton, Secretary U.S. Geological Survey P. Patrick Leahy, Acting Director U.S.