Sunday, April 24, 2022

The April War, also known as the Dominican Civil War, the Revolution of ’65, or the April Revolution, was a popular revolution that took place in Santo Domingo 57 years ago, on April 24, 1965.

By: Professor Henry Grullon 
  
La Guerra de Abril, también conocida como Guerra Civil Dominicana, Revolución del 65 o Revolución de Abril, fue una revolución popular que tuvo lugar en Santo Domingo hace 57 años, el 24 de abril de 1965. 

April War: Why did it arise and who participated in this revolt?


The April War, also known as the Dominican Civil War, the Revolution of ’65, or the April Revolution, was a popular revolution that took place in Santo Domingo 57 years ago, on April 24, 1965.


According to an article on the Autonomous University of Santo Domingo (UASD) website, young men and women, civilians and soldiers who were seeking freedom and democracy came together for this struggle.

In this case, to overthrow the government of the triumvirate headed by Donald Reid Cabral and fight against the second North American occupation that took place between 1965 and 1966.


The protesters of the April War wanted Juan Bosch to return to power in conjunction with the 1963 constitution.


Los manifestantes de la Guerra de Abril querían que Juan Bosch volviera al poder junto con la constitución de 1963.


His government was considered legitimate and constitutional during the seven months he was in charge in 1963 before the coup.


Sunday, April 17, 2022

The Supreme Court this month will hear its last oral arguments

 

The Supreme Court this month will hear its last oral arguments in a term that has been overshadowed by disputes over abortion and the Second Amendment and the confirmation of the nation’s first Black female justice.





Three cases to watch as Supreme Court readies for final oral arguments of term | The Hill


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As the country awaits decisions in those potentially landmark cases.


(3) three cases stand out as highlights among the remaining disputes to be argued before the justices. 

  • They involve a Trump-era immigration policy, 
  • a dispute over a high school football coach’s religious practice on school grounds.
  • Miranda warning that suspects are given by law enforcement. 

It’s the last set of arguments that will include Justice Stephen Breyer, who will retire this summer. He will be replaced by the newly confirmed Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson.


  • Trump-era ‘remain in Mexico’ policy. One of the most high-profile fights on the court’s docket is a dispute over the Biden administration’s effort to end a controversial Trump-era immigration measure that requires asylum-seekers at the southern border to stay in Mexico while their applications are processed.

Arguments will center on whether the Biden administration must continue the policy despite the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) conclusion that the measure is not in the United States’ national interest.


Former President Trump’s “remain in Mexico” policy, implemented in 2019, blocked migrants at the Mexican border from entering the U.S. to apply for asylum, leaving tens of thousands of people awaiting their fates in Mexico and subjecting them to potential persecution and abuse.

  • More than 60,000 asylum-seekers were returned to Mexico under the policy, formally called the Migrant Protection Protocols, a departure from a previous practice of allowing those fleeing violence to cross the border and apply for asylum within the U.S.

The Biden administration’s two efforts to rescind the program were blocked after a lawsuit by the attorneys general of Texas and Missouri. Lower courts found the legal basis for ending the policy lacking, prompting the administration’s appeal to the Supreme Court.

“DHS has thus been forced to reinstate and continue implementing indefinitely a controversial policy that the Secretary has twice determined is not in the interests of the United States,” the administration told the justices in court papers.

The court will hear arguments in the case in the second week of the two-week period during which it is hearing new arguments.


  • Miranda rights

The justices this week will hear a procedural dispute that stems from a police officer’s failure to issue a Miranda warning in a case with potentially weighty criminal justice implications.

The case arose after Terence Tekoh, a Los Angeles hospital worker, was accused of sexually assaulting a patient. In the course of investigating, Los Angeles County Deputy Sheriff Carlos Vega brought Tekoh to a private room to talk but did not advise Tekoh of his Miranda rights, which include a notice of the right against self-incrimination while in police custody.

At the conclusion of their meeting, Tekoh had produced a written confession. The party’s claims about what transpired in their meeting are at stark odds, with Tekoh claiming Vega coerced him into confessing by threatening to deport Tekoh and his family to their native Cameroon. Vega, by contrast, depicted Tekoh as contrite and remorseful and having confessed voluntarily.


  • Prayer in school athletics

A third upcoming case pits a high school football coach against school administrators who reprimanded the coach over his practice of holding a brief prayer on the field’s 50-yard line following games.

A devout Christian, coach Joseph Kennedy’s custom of kneeling on field and conducting prayer while surrounded by many of his players drew reproach from officials at his Seattle-area public school. Administrators told Kennedy his conduct violated a school policy that prohibited staff from encouraging students to engage in prayer or other devotional activity.

Amid widespread publicity, Kennedy sued the school district, alleging that his First Amendment speech and religious rights were violated. A federal district court in Washington ruled against him, reasoning that Kennedy’s conduct was not constitutionally protected because it was done in his capacity as a public employee.


Kennedy appealed, but a unanimous three-judge panel of the San Francisco-based federal appeals court last year affirmed the lower court’s decision. The panel concluded that Bremerton School District (BSD) would have violated the Constitution’s prohibition on government endorsement of religion “by allowing Kennedy to pray at the conclusion of football games, in the center of the field, with students who felt pressured to join him.”


“Kennedy’s attempts to draw nationwide attention to his challenge to BSD compels the conclusion that he was not engaging in private prayer, but was instead engaging in public speech of an overtly religious nature while performing his job duties,” the appeals court wrote.

The Supreme Court will hear arguments in Kennedy’s appeal on April 25.

Tuesday, April 12, 2022

ESL ADVANCED LEVEL III VIRTUAL CLASS - PROFESSOR HENRY GRULLON







ESL ADVANCED LEVEL III / Oral communication class TEX BOOK



ESL LEVEL 3 ADVANCED LEVEL/
                  ORAL COMMUNICATION 
                   FIRST DAY MAY 24,2022



VIDEO DE CLASE EN PRESENCIA: 


https://youtu.be/xpxVRMsxbkg


VIDEO PROMO - MAY, 2022 (SPRING)

LINK/ ENLACE TO REGISTER FOR LEVEL 3 ESL / ORAL COMMUNICATION

(VIRTUAL CLASS) 

4/25/22-CANCELLED) 

I WILL INFORM EVERYONE ON THE NEW DATES. 

I WILL TRY TO SCHEDULE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE 

(PROFESSOR GRULLON 




https://www.campusce.net/bronx/cart/index.aspx



………..

ABIERTO A ESTUDIANTES DE REPÚBLICA DOMINICANA PARA ATENDER TODOS LOS NIVELES DE INGLÉS COMO SEGUNDO IDIOMA vía - virtual.


"It's not the police who need to be retrained, it's the public. We have grown into a mouthy, mobile phone wielding, vulgar, uncivil society with no personal responsibility and the attitude of 'it's the other person's fault, you owe me'. A society where children grow up with no boundaries or knowledge or concern for civil society and personal responsibility.

When an officer says "Put your hands up," then put your hands up! Don't reach for something in your pocket, your lap, your seat. There's plenty of reason for a police officer to feel threatened, there have been multiple assaults and ambushes on police officers lately. Comply with requests from the officer, have your day in court. Don't mouth off, or fight, or refuse to comply... that escalates the situation.

Police officers are our sons and daughters, fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters. They're black, white, brown, all colors, all ethnicities, all faiths, male and female, they are us. They see the worst side of humanity... the raped children, the bloody mangled bodies of traffic victims, the bruised and battered victims of domestic violence, homicide victims, body parts... day after day.

They work holidays while we have festive meals with our families. They miss school events with their kids, birthdays, anniversaries, all those special occasions that we take for granted. They work in all types of weather, under dangerous conditions, for relatively low pay.

They have extensive training, but they are human. When there are numerous attacks on them, they become hyper vigilant for a reason, they have become targets. When a police officer encounters any person... any person, whether at a traffic stop, a street confrontation, an arrest, whatever... that situation has the potential to become life threatening. You, Mr & Mrs/Miss Civilian, also have the responsibility of keeping the situation from getting out of control.

Many law enforcement officers are Veterans. They've been in service to this nation most of their lives, whether on the battlefield or protecting us here at home. They are the only thing that stands between us and anarchy in the streets.

If you want to protect your child, teach them respect."

~ Sheriff David Clarke




Renowned Professor Henry Grullon of ESL ( English As a Second Language) for the Workforce / Continuing Education - BRONX COMMUNITY COLLEGE. 

A Dominican American ( Dominican parents and born, raised, educated in the United Stated). 


El renombrado profesor Henry Grullon de ESL (inglés como segundo idioma) para la fuerza laboral/educación continua - BRONX COMMUNITY COLLEGE. Un dominicano estadounidense (padres dominicanos y nacido, criado y educado en los Estados Unidos).




https://listinusa.net/2022/04/12/profesor-del-bronx-community-college-ofrece-clases-de-ingles-virtual/


https://youtu.be/xpxVRMsxbkg


EL BRONX.- Un profesor  de inglés del Bronx Community College, nacido aquí en New York y de padres dominicanos, anunció un programa de clases  virtual del idioma de Estados Unidos dedicado a personas latinas radicadas aquí y fuera del país.

https://henrygsenior.wixsite.com/mysite/main-page-intro


https://youtu.be/HW55e-erU-I


Bronx Community College 

Universidad Bronx Community College

Workforce department 

Continuing Eduction Department 

Departamento de Educación Continua

ESL ( English as a Second Language)

Ingles como segundo lenguaje

Profesor Henry Grullon 🇺🇸🇩🇴

(347)485-8914

(914) 803-3135 

Email: Professorhenry466@gmail.com


TWITTER: @henrygrullon4



PROMO VIDEO:


https://youtu.be/xpxVRMsxbkg



https://youtu.be/k4pMQJvZdok


https://www.bcc.cuny.edu/continuing-education/course-catalog/


English As A Second Language (ESL) Courses


YOUTUBE PROMO VIDEO

https://youtu.be/xpxVRMsxbkg

Henry Grullón Pérez  dijo que los futuros estudiantes ya sean de República Dominicana u otros países pueden matricularse de forma virtual hasta tanto las clases se puedan impartir de manera presencial

WHAT'S UP SCAN - CÁMARA DE TELÉFONO CELULAR DE PUNTO

 Agregó que esa misma modalidad se aplica a los estudiantes residentes en esta ciudad de Nueva York y áreas vecinas hasta que pase la Pandemia y se pueda ofrecer docencia de forma personal.

WHAT’S UP SCAN - POINT CELL PHONE CAMARA

El profesor de inglés avanzado -como segundo idioma-  y de comunicación oral, del Bronx Community College, en el condado del mismo; informó que el curso de 100 horas que durará  dos meses y medio tiene un costo de 150.00 dólares.

Actualmente el profesor Grullón Pérez imparte clases de inglés como segundo idioma a personas de varias nacionalidades, de Lunes a Jueves, en horarios de 6:00 de la tarde a 9:00 de la noche.

 La próxima inscripción para  las clases serán el  Lunes 25 de Abril del año en curso.  Y para registro  e información adicional, favor comunicarse con el profesor Henry al teléfono 1-914- 803-3135 o escribir al correo electrónico professorhenry466@gmail.com

También se pueden comunicar al departamento de fuerza de trabajo y desarrollo económico del Bronx Community College a la siguiente dirección: 2155 University Ave, Bronx, N.Y. 10468 o al teléfono 718-289-5100.

Por Erasmo Chalas Tejeda


https://www.elsiembrahielo.com/2022/04/profesor-del-bronx-community-college.html