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May 21- 27, 2009
Francisco Aruca joins Edmundo Garcia on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 5 p.m. on 1210 AM radio PDF Print E-mail
                                                                                               Read Spanish Version

Starting Monday, February 2, Radio Progreso’s Francisco Aruca joins radio host Edmundo Garcia every Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. (in Spanish only) on Miami’s 1210 AM radio. Garcia, an award winning TV and radio personality, currently hosts a popular evening talk show (La Noche Se Mueve, or in English, The Night Moves) that because of the move to the late afternoon will now become “La Tarde Se Mueve” (or The Afternoon Moves). Garcia’s program can be heard daily Monday through Friday starting Monday on 1210 AM radio.

Aruca will join Garcia the three days of the week offering political insight and commentary as he has done since the early 1990s in Miami. Progreso Semanal (our Spanish version of Progreso Weekly) will host Garcia’s program on our website while also archiving “La Tarde Se Mueve” programs for two weeks on Semanal’s site.

 
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President Obama, his latent example and inspiration for Cuba

By Rolando H. Castañeda y Lorenzo Cañizares

One hundred days into his administration, President Barack H. Obama shows the world a series of examples and challenges that are also particularly applicable to Cuba. He proposes to confront -- simultaneously and with determination -- several fundamental problems that affect U.S. society, and he wishes to establish good relations and détente with the rest of the world, especially with his closest neighbors.

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Mario Benedetti is dead

By Virtin

On Sunday, death came to our dear poet, writer and comrade Mario Benedetti in Uruguay, his native country.

He taught us that our dead ask us to sing. 

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An example they’d like to impose on Cuba

By Germán Piniella             

An article signed by Rolando H. Castañeda and Lorenzo Cañizares, published in this issue of  Progreso Weekly (see “President Obama, His Latent Example and Inspiration for Cuba”) seems to pose an alternate position in regards to the relations of the island’s émigré.

VarelaIt is convenient to remember similar perspectives in another moment in Cuban history. Halfway through the 19th century, when the country’s national conscience began to emerge, a roadway for the independence struggle was paved in the thoughts of the educator Felix Varela and the incendiary lyrics of Jose Maria Heredia. There were sectors of the bourgeoisie who feared that the “black danger” of the Haitian revolution would overpower Cuba, or that the “Jacobin” chaos would take the country towards the path of ruin. For these and other reasons two solutions arose: the autonomy linked to Spain and annexation to the United States.

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Cuba and Obama's contradictions

By Salim Lamrani

On April 13, 2009, on the eve of the Fifth Summit of the Americas in Trinidad & Tobago, Barack Obama alleviated the economic sanctions against Cuba by lifting the restrictions that affected Cubans living in the United States. Now, they can travel to their land of birth whenever they wish (an activity previously limited to a 14-day stay every three years) and send unlimited remittances to their relatives (previously limited to US$100 per month.)

The summit -- in which Havana did not participate because it was expelled from the Organization of American States in 1962 -- was dominated by the topic of Cuba. In her inaugural speech, Clic Argentine President Cristina Kirchner exhorted Washington to eliminate the state of siege it has imposed on the people of Cuba since August 1960. The other 32 Latin American and Caribbean leaders also called on the White House to end an anachronistic and cruel situation that affects all sectors of the population.

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Win one for the Gipper

By Bill Press

It's been 81 years since legendary coach Knute Rockne urged his players to "win one for the Gipper." But no Notre Dame football team ever faced a tougher challenge than President Obama does.

Since he was invited by university president Father John Jenkins to give this year's commencement address, Obama has faced a growing wave of protest. Judging from the howls of some critics, you'd think the devil himself was presiding over this year's graduation.

Notre Dame is one of our great universities...

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Doing what you want

I’ve experienced my own surge in creativity… While it would be nice to still be getting paid for my work, the need to be more resourceful is having a beneficial effect on the arts community around me. … Nobody wants me to do anything, so I’m just doing what I want.”

-- Liz Fallon, a visual artist from Maine, tells a NY Times reporter the bad economy has helped to spark her creativity.

Twittering our lives away

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