My site’s general topic will be “Entertainment”
it will feature celebrities and other important
characters from Dominican Republic.

I chose this topic because I think it is very
interesting and it is a way to follow up with what
is new in the dominican republic entertainment
setting.

It will address music, film, and television.

The audience will be made up of anyone interested
in the dances and music of the Dominican Republic.

At the time there isnt an existing site and I have not see
any other like it.

ImageDominican wins US horse race
In what has been described as a long-shot winner, 23-year old Dominican jockey Joel Rosario made off with the trophy in the US$2 million Breeders’ Cup Sprint, held at the Santa Anita race track in Arcadia, California last Saturday. He thus positions Dominicans as world-class athletes in another sport – along with successes in baseball, basketball, volleyball, and several other sports. He won in a four-horse photo finish, riding Dancing in Silks. The normal eye showed a tie between Crown of Thorns (14-1) and Dancing in Silks (25-1).
Joel Rosario is a native of Pimentel in Duarte province (San Francisco de Macoris). He had a successful career at Santo Domingo’s V Centenario Race Track, where he won 1,170 races and had four championship titles before moving to the US. Last December, he was in Puerto Rico where he won the Caribbean Classic riding Sicotico. This was the first time a Dominican jockey has ever won a big name race. He is now among the top 5 money producers for horse owners, with more than US$10 million.

This wave without a doubt is the biggest wave I have ever seen.

Yuniol2 is a Dominican Movie that shows some of the reality                                                                                                                    that goes on outside the AI’s  in the poor neighborhoods of the                                                                                                           Dominican Republic.

A 35-mile rift in the desert of Ethiopia will likely become a new ocean eventually, researchers now confirm.

The crack, 20 feet wide in spots, opened in 2005 and some geologists believed then that it would spawn a new ocean. But that view was controversial, and the rift had not been well studied.

A new study involving an international team of scientists and reported in the journal Geophysical Research Letters finds the processes creating the rift are nearly identical to what goes on at the bottom of oceans, further indication a sea is in the region’s future.

The same rift activity is slowly parting the Red Sea, too.

Using newly gathered seismic data from 2005, researchers reconstructed the event to show the rift tore open along its entire 35-mile length in just days. Dabbahu, a volcano at the northern end of the rift, erupted first, then magma pushed up through the middle of the rift area and began “unzipping” the rift in both directions, the researchers explained in a statement today.

“We know that seafloor ridges are created by a similar intrusion of magma into a rift, but we never knew that a huge length of the ridge could break open at once like this,” said Cindy Ebinger, professor of earth and environmental sciences at the University of Rochester and co-author of the study.

The result shows that highly active volcanic boundaries along the edges of tectonic ocean plates may suddenly break apart in large sections, instead of in bits, as the leading theory held. And such sudden large-scale events on land pose a much more serious hazard to populations living near the rift than would several smaller events, Ebinger said.

“The whole point of this study is to learn whether what is happening in Ethiopia is like what is happening at the bottom of the ocean where it’s almost impossible for us to go,” says Ebinger. “We knew that if we could establish that, then Ethiopia would essentially be a unique and superb ocean-ridge laboratory for us. Because of the unprecedented cross-border collaboration behind this research, we now know that the answer is yes, it is analogous.”

The African and Arabian plates meet in the remote Afar desert of Northern Ethiopia and have been spreading apart in a rifting process – at a speed of less than 1 inch per year – for the past 30 million years. This rifting formed the 186-mile Afar depression and the Red Sea. The thinking is that the Red Sea will eventually pour into the new sea in a million years or so. The new ocean would connect to the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, an arm of the Arabian Sea between Yemen on the Arabian Peninsula and Somalia in eastern Africa.

Atalay Ayele, professor at the Addis Ababa University in Ethiopia, led the investigation, gathering seismic data with help from neighboring Eritrea and Ghebrebrhan Ogubazghi, professor at the Eritrea Institute of Technology, and from Yemen with the help of Jamal Sholan of the National Yemen Seismological Observatory Center.

Early life
Gonzalez was born in New York City of Dominican (Dominican Republic)
and Puerto Rican descent. His parents met in New York City where they
married. They settled down in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn where
they raised Rick.[1] There, he attended elementary and junior high school.
Ever since he was a young child, Rick would put on improvised “shows” for
his family and participate in all of his school’s plays. His teachers were
instrumental in convincing Rick to apply and try out for the High School of
the Performing Arts, on which Fame was based, in Manhattan. He did as
suggested and was accepted. In 1997, he graduated and began to pursue a
career in acting.[2]

[edit] Career
Gonzalez started his acting career in New York where he landed a small role in
the made for television movie Thicker Than Blood (1998) as Sanchez. In 1999,
he made his feature movie debut as Ricky in the movie Mambo Cafe, which was
released in the year 2000. He followed that by participating in the film Prince of
Central Park (2000) before heading for Los Angeles, California.[2]

In Hollywood, he landed a small part as a gangbanger in the 2001 film Crocodile
Dundee in Los Angeles. He followed that with the roles of Rudy Bonilla in The Rookie,
starring Dennis Quaid and as the sex-crazed Primo in the 2003 movie Biker Boyz. In
2005, he played the role of Timo Cruz in the movie Coach Carter. Gonzalez also
appeared in Twista’s video “Hope”, which is the lead single off the Coach Carter
movie soundtrack. He played the male lead in Mashonda’s “Back of Tha Club” video;
and has also starred in the video to the Obie Trice song “Snitch”, where he plays a
member of a group who successfully pull off a bank robbery, and then snitches on
them. Gonzalez was also in Red Cafe’s video for “All Night Long” which was also in
the Coach Carter movie soundtrack.

Among the other movies in which Gonzalez has participated in are the 2003
comedy Old School (alongside Luke Wilson, Vince Vaughn and Will Ferrell) as
“Spanish”, Laurel Canyon (2003) as Wyett, Subway Cafe (2004) as Vincent Young,
War of the Worlds (2005) as Vincent, Roll Bounce (2005) as Naps, Pulse (2006) as
Stone, First Snow (2006) as Andy Lopez,[3] and Illegal Tender (2007) as Wilson
DeLeon Jr.[3]

His TV guest appearances have been in Law & Order: Special Victims
Unit (2000), Touched by an Angel (2001) as Ramone, ER (2001) as Jorge Escalona,
Buffy the Vampire Slayer (2002) as Tomas, The Shield (2002) and CSI: Miami (2006).
Most recently, he co-starred in the CW television series Reaper as Ben Gonzalez.
Gonzalez had a blog about the 2008 MLB Post Season and was nicknamed the
“October Gonzo”.[4]

  • America

    Columbus Day: A Working Holiday?

  • by Vera H-C Chan



    Oct 9, 2009

    115 Votes

    Fire up the barbecue. Get the mall-walking shoes on. About 517 years
    have passed since Christopher Columbus stumbled onto North America,
    and it’s time to remember that with a three-day weekend.

    Well, for some of us. While national government offices can be depended
    upon to celebrate a federal holiday, Columbus Day isn’t a day off for all
    Americans. Some schools will stay open, and local bureaucrats will still
    shuffle paperwork…but the department store sales soldier on.

    How a Holiday Is Made

    Looking back, the formal recognition of Columbus Day is relatively recent.
    New York City threw the first recorded Columbus party in 1792, but it took
    New Yorkers 74 years for another big celebration. Then, Colorado scooted
    in to become the first state to have a Columbus Day (1905). President
    Franklin D. Roosevelt decided the Depression could use a new holiday, and
    made Oct. 12 a federal one in 1937. Under President Richard M. Nixon,
    Columbus Day got moved to the second Monday in October.

    Columbus Controversy

    According to the Wall Street Journal, 22 states don’t observe the holiday.
    Why the disparity? Well, among other reasons, a strong contingent feels
    that the Genoese navigator’s sailing the ocean blue in 1492 introduced a
    dark period of colonization. Protesters and academics have argued for
    years that the existing American population, plus earlier evidence of
    Viking houseguests, make the notion of “discovery” misleading.

    These impassioned arguments around Columbus go back decades
    before any holiday: Efforts to make the Italian navigator a candidate for
    sainthood inspired a tart New York Times editorial that said Columbus
    got his “fleets at public expense, on the condition that he remove himself
    and his tediousness as far as possible toward the unknown west.”

    Floating Holiday

    Some states have long just “observed” the holiday, but leave local
    government offices open. Others use the date to revere the native
    population who existed long before the Nina, the Pinta, and the
    Santa Maria sailed in. According to a Wikipedia round-up, South
    Dakota declares October 12 as Indigenous People’s Day. Hawaii
    celebrates the more general Discoverers’ Day, which actually refers
    to the Aloha State’s Polynesian founders (although the bureaucrats
    firmly emphasize “this day is not and shall not be construed to be
    a state holiday”).

    Tennessee, though, wins for creative calendaring: The Wall Street
    Journal points out that the state bumped Columbus Day to after
    Thanksgiving to create a four-day weekend. Indeed, the explorer’s day
    leads in “holiday swapping”—work on that October date, get another
    day off later in the holiday season.

    A Teachable Era

    In a way, not having a day off encourages more attention and open
    discussion around the man, which academics encourage. Searches
    on Yahoo! for “christopher columbus,” “pictures of christopher columbus,”
    “christopher columbus biography,” and “christopher columbus ships” are
    all up—as are queries for the usual conquistadors like Amerigo Vespucci,
    Vasco de Gama, Ferdinand Magellan, Francisco Pizarro, and Marco Polo.

    They’re not all from schoolkids either (though they do make up more than
    third of “columbus” searches). Incidentally, of all regions checking out
    “christopher columbus” online, the one fittingly leading the nation’s lookups:
    Columbia, South Carolina. The state capitol may have his namesake, but it’ll
    be working that day