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Mexico’s march gets world’s attention

por José de la Isla

Hispanic Link News Service

MEXICO D.F.–“That’s the march where they want Calderón to withdraw the army from the war on the narcos,” my friend said over the phone. “They want the government to withdraw. It’s for abdication and against Felipe Calderón,” he said, referring to the Mexican president. His comment suggested U.S. news audiences are getting another kind of scramble with their morning breakfast.

In actuality, 29 Mexican cities and 17 countries around the world supported the march. U.S. actor Edward James was photographed with Javier Sicilia, its leader, at the head of the 60-mile march, when it departed Cuernavaca for Mexico City. Sicilia’s son is one of 35,000 casualties of the “war” over the past four years, The civic movement has attracted church leaders, artists, business and social elites, the Alta burguesia, the glitterati and some party leaders. Even Subcomandante Marcos, who led an indigenous uprising two decades ago, headed a support march in Chiapas state. Mexico has perhaps not witnessed public pressure like this since the silent march of 1927, which opposed President Elias Calles after the execution of a priest, Miguel Pro. That led Mexico to the abolition of capital punishment.

Members of the writers group Colectivo Entrópico suggested the best place to see how many groups and average citizens participated was to stand in front of the Palace of Fine Arts. The colectivo is a gathering of creative writers, editors, illustrators and web techies who meet often for conversation, word riffs, good humored jokes, gossip and information about who’s giving a book reading where.

On the way to the Metro subway station following the session, I asked Luis Alonso Gómez, a freelance copy editor, what he thought the march would accomplish. For the next hour, like someone accustomed to correcting style, he meticulously explained how two  previous marches, led byvictim’s family members, had shaped public thinking, that an emerging national civic union was changing the country with people power. In the past, two families have led similar marches. One even brought the wrongdoers in and oversaw passage of a new law protecting threatened and extorted families. A prominent businessman chastised the president and his cabinet to do their job protecting the public or resign.

In Cuernavaca after three alleged drug gang members kidnapped and murdered Javier Sicilia’s son and six other young men last month outside a club, the poet and journalist used his renown, not without criticism, to plead for a non-military approach to fight the crime spree. Luis Alonso explained that the government’s problem is having used the military. The government has whacked a beehive, making the killer bees more dangerous.

The news magazine Siempre! has reported that a United Nations working group on disappearances and forced detention concluded that the military is not trained to investigate or even to interact with civilians concerning the 3,000 kidnapping cases for which organized crime and drug cartels are presumed responsible. With the military involved, government measures come at a tremendous cost of human rights.

The underlying complaint is that when the military was unleashed, elected and appointed officials became increasingly unresponsive to the public. Instead, they became further beholden to political patrons and party interests, focused on future elections — and not public problem-solving. State and local police forces and judiciaries especially are held in contempt for their inept roles in following professional procedure and dispensing justice. Wholesale corruption has compromised public confidence.

Hence the theme: ­”peace and justice” — public peace through competent law enforcement. This may well be the greatest challenge yet to corrupt public-policy practices that created the beehive in the fi rst place, says Luis Alonso. He ought to know. He is an editor, one called a corrector, who can change a whole storyline with the turn of a phrase, a new understanding.

(José de la Isla, a nationally syndicated columnist for Hispanic Link and Scripps Howard news services, has been recognized for two consecutive years for his commentaries by New America Media. His forthcoming book is “Our Man on the Ground.” Previous books include “DAY NIGHT LIFE DEATH HOPE” (2009) and “The Rise of Hispanic Political Power” (2003).

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The Comcast-NBCU-Telemundo deal – is it for real?

by Joseph Torres

Hispanic Link News Service

It is hard to imagine NBC would ever broadcast just half an hour of local news daily on its networkowned stations in cities such cities as New York and Chicago. That would simply be unacceptable.

But that’s exactly what NBC has done with the Telemundo stations it owns in our nation’s largest Latino markets, located in our nation’s largest cities, according to a study released this week by Free Press.

When NBC bought Telemundo in 2002, it pledged to the Federal Communications Commission that it would increase investment in the network’s news operations at Telemundoowned stations. Instead, over the past decade it has gutted the Spanish-language network’s news operations, creating a huge disparity in how it respects its Spanish-language viewers. Free Press’s report reviewed the amount of news that aired on NBC – and Telemundo – owned-andoperated stations during the first quarter of this year. It found that NBC’s English- language stations aired an average four hours and 42 minutes of local news per day compared to just 48 minutes on Telemundo stations owned by NBC.

NBC’s local stations devoted about 20 percent of their weekly time to local programming; the average Telemundo station aired less than 3 percent.

In New York and Chicago, NBC stations aired more than five hours of local news. That contrasts to slightly more than half an hour for Telemundo. In Los Angeles, the NBC station aired four hours, Telemundo, less than an hour. In Denver and Boston, Telemundo stations offered none. The Free Press report serves as a reminder about the dangers of media consolidation. Companies seeking to merge always tout the societal benefi t of an informed community.

In 2002, NBC promised that the Telemundo network would receive the resources needed to compete locally as well as nationally with Univisión. Latino groups such as the National Council of La Raza and the League of United Latin American Citizens were skeptical. They opposed the merger. Their fears were validated in 2006 when NBC eliminated the local Telemundo newscasts in several cities in such large Latino markets as Dallas, Houston, San Jose, Denver,  Phoenix and San Antonio.

The National Association of Hispanic Journalists called the cuts a “disservice to the Spanish-speaking community” that “undermine the principals of the First Amendment and the ability of local stations to “act as a watchdog for local government.”

Telemundo audiences are suffering from NBC’s past broken promises. Will history repeat itself now that the Comcast conglomerate acquired NBCU and Telemundo in January? Or will Comcast use its vast resources to re-invest in Telemundo’s local news operations?

“Considering Comcast’s enormous resources, there is no reason why it couldn’t broaden local news coverage for all Telemundo stations,” says former NAHJ president Verónica Villafañe. “Now more than ever, the need is evident.”

Unlike in 2002, the national Latino civil rights groups endorsed the Comcast-NBCU deal. They signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Comcast that, while unenforceable, calls for increasing the participation of Latinos throughout the company’s corporate governance, programming, workforce, procurement and community investment efforts. It creates a Latino advisory committee that will meet for the fi rst time this month. However, Comcast’spromises regarding Telemundo’s

news operations are marginal, at best. It now agrees to increase local news by 1,000 hours for the 10 stations that are NBCowned, but made that same pledge for only six of the 15 Telemundo-owned stations, a pledge that was added only after groups such as Free Press and NAHJ criticized the cable giant for treating Spanish-language stations like country cousins.

It promises “not to cut” local news for the remaining Telemundo stations – in effect, to continue doing nothing for local communities that aren’t being ­served. This is a far cry from Latino groups’ demands of NBC a decade ago. The fi rst order of business for the Latino advisory committee created by Comcast should be to call for local news parity for Telemundo with other NBC stations. It’s simply unacceptable for the committee to allow this offensive double standard to continue. (Based in Washington, D.C., Torres is the senior advisor for the media reform group Free Press. Prior to joining Free Press, Torres served as deputy director of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists and editor of Hispanic Link

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What is HAARP? Part 4

­by Marvin Ramíre­z­

­­Marvin  J. Ramírez­Ma­rv­in­ R­­­­a­­m­­­­í­r­­­ez­­­­­
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FROM THE EDITOR: Given the latest tsunamis, earthquakes and hurricanes that have stricken several nations in the world, leaving many deaths and destruction, there are beliefs – based on scientific analysis -that those events might have been man-made. El Reportero found the following article, which due to its length it will be published in six parts. The is the forth part. In order to better read and follow up the complete story, we suggest you read part one, two and three in older editions in our website. You may access older editions at: https://elreporterosf.com/editions/?q=epublish/1.

— In addition to the NEPA process described above, the Air Force and Navy would comply with all applicable state and federal regulations for construction and operation of the HAARP facility. Additional Information An updated version of this fact sheet will be issued as often as program changes warrant to keep interested parties apprised of significant developments in regard to HAARP. Any individual seeking additionalinformation about HAARP,or wishing to provide commentsregarding HAARP, can contact any one of the individuals listed below.

  • Mr. John Heckscher

    Pl/gpia

    Phillips Laboratory

    29 Randolph Road Hanscom AFB, MA 01731-3010

  • Mr. Ralph Scott

    3rd Wing Public Affairs Division

    Elmendorf AFB, AK 99506

  • Mr. Guy McConnell

    Alaska District Corps of Engineers,

    Planning Npaen-pl-er Anchorage, Alaska 99506-0898

I s H a a r p A S t a rwa r s W e a p o n ?

Defending against enemy missile attacks and other imagined threats has generated futuristic and science fiction sounding proposals better known as Starwars. Concepts and ideas circulated wildly throughout government, military and civilian circles. As the former Soviet Union broke up, the

backing for U.S. Starwars efforts evaporated and the spending on such projects was dropped. But not soon enough. Many experimental starwars research projects are still funded and being pursued by the military. HAARP (High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program), being constructed for the Air Force and Navy by an ARCO subsidiary, is such a project.

Touted as scientifi c research, HAARP is a thinly disguised project to “perturb” the ionosphere with extremely powerful beams of energy to see what military uses it can serve. According to the HAARP RFP, these energy beams will be used to “control ionospheric processes in such a way as to greatly enhance the performance of C3 systems (or, to deny accessibility to an adversary).” That sounds like a weapon to this writer. Other such projects go by the code names BIME, RED AIR, CRRES, E X C E D E , C H A R G E IV, WISP, ACTIVE, HIPAS, RADC, AIM, etc.

Nuclear bombs exploded in high altitude tests in the late fi fties and early sixties by both the U.S.S.R. and the U.S. caused weather and jet stream changes that lasted almost 20 years. Do the HAARP heaters offer the same potential as they “perturb” the ionosphere? The ionosphere is home to many benefi cial natural phenomena among them fi ltering the sun’s harmful rays and refl ecting radio waves used for communications.

Although not totally understood, the ionosphere also directly effects the weather systems and the jet streams. HAARP, “the most powerful facility (of its kind) in the world” is currently under construction near Gakona, Alaska. Other smaller ionospheric heaters of this type are already in operation in Norway, Ukraine, Russia, Tadzhikistan, Puerto Rico and Fairbanks (yes, right here in Alaska). Could tests and experiments with these ionospheric heaters already be changing global weather systems? Could they be a contributing cause for the floods in the U.S.? Could this be the kind of secret weapon that Zhirinovsky speaks of? Can these heaters change the earth’s magnetic fi elds as well and cause equal reactions half-way around the globe? Will we need to protect ourselves from the sun’s rays due to new holes in the ionosphere? What will happen to the individuals living near HAARP when it operates, will they be exposed to unnecessary risk of electromagnetic radiation?

Some of the specific language in the HAARP documents is quoted below:

“The HAARP is to ultimately have a HF {High Frequency} heater with an ERP {Effective Radiated Power} well above 1 gigawatt {1,000,000,000 watts} (on the order of 95-100 dBW); in short, the most ­powerful faci!ity in the world for conducting ionospheric modification research.”

“The Soviets, operating at higher powers than the West, now have claimed signifi cant stimulated ionization by electron-impact ionization. The claim is that HF energy, via wave-particle interaction, accelerates ionospheric electrons to energies well in excess of 20 electron volts (eV) so that they will ionize neutral atmospheric particles with which they collide. Given that the Soviet HF facilities are several times more powerful than the Western facilities at comparable midlatitudes, and given that the latter appear to be on a threshold of a new “waveparticle” regime of phenomena, it is believed that the Soviets have crossed that threshold and are exploring a regime of phenomena still unavailable for study or application in the West.”

“A key goal of the program {HAARP} is the identification and investigation of those ionospheric processes and phenomena that can be exploited for DoD purposes, such as outlined below. IT WILL CONTINUE ON THE NEXT EDITION.

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Once ‘sin papeles’ Latino rings Pulitzer bell for Los Angeles Times

­by Kristian Hernández

Former undocumented journalist Rubén Vives covers a news event.Former undocumented journalist Rubén Vives covers a news event.

L O S A N G E L E S — He is a testament to the undocumented immigrant student’s hopes and dreams of reaching the summit to change the world. Rubén Vives, a 32-yearold Los Angeles Times reporter, was awarded the Gold Medal for Public Service, the most prestigious of the Pulitzer Prizes, on April 18, for his work with colleague Jeff Gotlieb exposing corruption in the city of Bell, Calif. Their investigative work led to the indictment of eight city officials on corruption charges.

In a column for Orange Coast Magazine, Shawn Hubler writes about her relationship to Vives and his mother, who once worked as a nanny for Hubler. “Her son was a 17-year-old high school student then. Quiet. Polite. Smart, too — college-smart, we’d tell the nanny, who’d just smile. Proud, we thought.”

At that young age, Vives faced deportation because of his illegal immigration status. He was brought to California from Guatemala by his mother at age six. Hubler, a former Times employee, helped him gain legal permission to remain in the United States. Enrolling in California State University-Fullerton, Vives began working at the Times as a copy messenger and later in a clerical job. Three years ago, he was given a shot at the Homicide Report, one of the most exhaustive jobs at the Times, according to coworker James Rainey. Rainey adds in an article for the Times that this is where Vives, among so much death, was “born” as a reporter.

Last July Vives and Gotlieb, 57, teamed to cover Bell, a 90 percent – Latino town of 37,000 residents. When they asked to interview non-Hispanic city administrator Robert Rizzo, they were denied a meeting.

The pair pushed on and uncovered that Rizzo was the highest-paid city administrator in the nation. His salary was $787,637, they found. Unbeknownst to the taxpaying public, other Bell officials were also being overgenerously compensated.

Police Chief Randy Adams received a $457,000 annual salary to run a department employing 33 officers and 46 civilian personnel. A few miles away, Los Angeles police chief Charlie Beck was paid nearly $100,000 less directing a department of 12,899 civilian personnel and 9,959 ­officers. Rizzo’s assistant, Angela Spaccia, was paid $376,288, almost equal to President Barrack Obama’s annual wage of $400,000.

Other Times’ journalists who contributed to the story’s research and development included Robert López, Paloma Esquivel, Héctor Becerra and with editing aid, former Hispanic Link reporter Efraín Hernández. The exposé resulted in eight arrests, including Rizzo and Mayor Oscar Hernández. It also resulted in passage of a bill by the California legislature requiring cities to post their officials’ salaries online.

 

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Melatonin effectively controls weight gain, obesity and associated heart desease

by John Phillip

Melatonin is a powerful natural hormone that is well known for its association with circadian rhythms that promote a healthful sleep cycle. Researchers from the University of Granada reporting in the Journal of Pineal Research have found that melatonin helps to control unnatural weight gain without reducing the intake of food. The hormone was shown to improve blood lipid profiles, to lower triglycerides and oxidized LDL cholesterol and to boost health-promoting HDL cholesterol. Found naturally in certain fruits and vegetables, small quantities are shown to provide a powerful array of health benefits and to promote deep sleep that is so critical to systemic repair functions throughout the body.

Melatonin is a natural hormone normally secreted by the pineal gland at night time to encourage sleep. Circulating levels trail off during the early morning hours to help us awaken. The importance of 7 to 9 hours of restful sleep is paramount to cellular repair and maintenance functions that promote vibrant health. New research demonstrates that melatonin exerts control over metabolic functions that determine fat accumulation, obesity and lipids and helps prevent cardiovascular disease. Researchers broke test subjects into three groups where one cohort was supplemented with melatonin.

They found that the melatonin supplemented group experienced a significant reduction in body weight with no difference in calories consumed as compared with the non-supplemented subjects. Additionally, they determined that melatonin helped to lower systolic blood pressure and provided a significant improvement in dyslipidemia and hypertriglyceridemia. Improvements in blood lipid ratios and in lowering of circulating triglycerides are critical to reducing the overall risk of heart disease.

­Melatonin is naturally found in some fruits and vegetables including mustard, Goji berries, almonds, sunflower seeds, cardamom, fennel, coriander and cherries. The researchers publishing the result of this study believe this is the first proof that melatonin can act as a critical hormonal agent in the fi ght against cardiovascular disease and lipid dysfunction. They did note that the protective effect of melatonin was more pronounced in younger subjects in this study prompting dietary intervention or supplementation at an earlier age to yield maximum health benefits.

The study authors concluded “administration of melatonin and intake of food containing melatonin might be a useful tool to fi ght obesity and the risks associated to it.” In addition to natural food sources, many health-minded individuals will want to supplement with 1 to 3 mg of melatonin each night, taken 30 minutes before retiring, to promote sound sleep, avoid unnecessary weight gain and ward off the damaging effects of oxidized blood fats that promote heart disease.

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Peña Nieto starts to set the tone

­by the El Reportero’s news services

Enrique Peña NietoEnrique Peña Nieto

Enrique Peña Nieto, the current governor of the Estado de México and the opinion poll frontrunner for the 2012 presidential elections, is starting to set the political tone. Some commentators allude to his growing influence by calling him the 501st (and most powerful) member of the 500-seat congress, because he has indicated that he does not want congress to consider the current government’s stalled political reforms in a special session. Congress, which is dominated by Peña Nieto’s Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI), has taken the hint. If there is no special session nothing will be changed in time for next year’s elections.

How U.S. policy will change after Valenzuela

On May 5 Arturo Valenzuela, the U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs, let it be known that he was resigning. Valenzuela is returning to academia: he had left Georgetown University on a two-year leave of absence in 2009. His period as the US’s chief policy maker towards Latin America has seen a major change in the ­relationship, as President Barack Obama had promised.

The U.S. now has professional diplomats heading its missions across the region and reacts much more calmly to provocative behavior by taunting presidents such as Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua and Hugo Chávez in Venezuela. The traditional US policy of treating Latin America as its “backyard” has ended. This change has an economic price, as the region’s relationship with China has blossomed. Strategically, however, the region has preferred to integrate rather than to ally itself with rivals to the U.S.

Chávez welds moderate foreign policy to domestic agenda

Venezuela’s President Hugo Chávez is gearing up for his re-election bid next year with a concerted effort to court the middle class. Chávez never really steps out of campaign mode but his adoption of a more moderate foreign policy, in conjunction with domestic economic policy changes, suggests he feels the need to reach beyond his core support base among the poor to the middle class. This comes as his most likely rival in December 2012, Henrique Capriles Radonski, just 38 and the politician with the greatest chance of defeating Chávez according to recent polls, announced his intention to compete in the opposition party primaries on Feb. 12 next year.

‘ Pacific Alliance’ and ‘OAS without US’ come onstage

The last week of April witnessed the emergence of two regional organizations in Latin America: the Alianza del Pacífico (AP; Pacific Alliance), formed by four countries committed to free trade and enterprise, and the Comunidad de Estados Latinoamericanos y Caribeños (Celac; Community of Latin American and Caribbean States), which includes all countries in the hemisphere save the US and Canada. Presidents Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia and Hugo Chávez of Venezuela have fi gured prominently among those promoting these developments: the former in his bid to pull Colombia out of its long period of isolation, the latter seeking to prevent further deterioration of his country’s regional infl uence.

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Control freak society: Goverment to monitor school lunches with cameras

by Steve Watson, Paul Joseph Watson & Alex Jones

Infowars

Several schools in San Antonio are being provided with government grants to install surveillance equipment in cafeterias as part of a government funded project to monitor every morsel of food that the children eat.

Billed as part of an effort to reduce obesity and improve eating habits, small cameras are programmed to take snapshots of lunch trays before and after each student eats. Each child is uniquely identifiable via a barcode attached to the tray. The amount of calories and nutrients that each child has consumed is then calculated via a database containing 7,500 different varieties of food.

The entire project is being funded by a U.S. Department of Agriculture grant to the tune of $2 million. “We’re trying to be as passive as possible. The kids know they’re being monitored,” Dr. Roger Echon told the Associated Press. Echon, who works  for the San Antonio-based Social & Health Research Center, is building the food-recognition program.

The aim of the study, according to the researchers is ” to study what foods children are likely to choose and how much they’re eating”, in addition to influencing parents to alter their child’s eating habits at home. The principal of the five schools involved, described by researchers as “poor minority campuses”, told the AP that 90% of parents agreed to allow their children to be monitored, adding that he believes those who have resisted do not understand the project.

“Nothing in the program says they can’t have something,” principal Mark Davis said. “It just says we’re tracking what it is.” This is yet another example of the shocking acceleration of the nanny state.

Is it really necessary to barcode kids like rats in a lab and database everything they eat in order to promote healthy eating? Why not just serve healthy food free from additives and preservatives? Oh right I forgot, that is not a part of the vision for the perfect control freak society.

Where does this end? Will parents receive letters from the government informing them that little Jimmy is not eating his greens? Will the government move to ration your child’s calorie intake? Will the government issue fi nes to parents whose children’s eating habits do not match up to a predetermined definition of a “balanced diet”?

Just last month it emerged that schools in Chicago have banned parents from giving their children packed lunches, forcing kids to eat in the cafeteria in order to “protect students from the potential for unhealthy homemade lunches”. f course, should kids be allowed to eat their own lunches the government would not be able to effectively monitor them.

The precedent was set long ago to demonize any parents who try to keep the government out of their children’s lives. Parents who attempt to take their kids out of the predatory public school system by home schooling are even being spied on by authorities. A Mississippi state judge recently ordered that state officials gather the names of every single child being home schooled in the state in order that they be kept on a watch list.

Mayor Bloomberg is forcing food manufacturers in New York to reduce the amount of salt content in food under the National Salt Reduction Initiative, while at the same time spending $25 million on a program to fluoridate the water supply with a toxic waste, sodium fluoride, that contributes to lowering IQ and has been linked to cancers as well as disorders affecting teeth, bones, the brain and the thyroid gland. Food additives like aspartame and MSG, which are a far deadlier health threat

than salt, are not being targeted ­by the government. Indeed, New York is the model for the rest of the country. The Department of Health has slapped strict regulations on anything deemed “risky recreational activities” conducted by programs or organizations.

Wiffl e ball, dodge ball, kick ball, freeze tag, red rover, frisbee tossing and tug of war have all been placed under the new rules. If an organization offers two or more recreational activities, with just one being on the “risky” list, it is deemed to be a summer camp and comes under state regulation which entails fees and the necessity to provide medical staff. “Classics like Capture the Flag, Steal the Bacon and Red Rover are also deemed dangerous in new state regulations for day camps,” reports the New York Daily News. This is all part of the process of the state replacing the parents as guardians of the children and it is designed to ensure that kids become nothing more than drug-addled, dependent slobs with no energy and no life experience, perfectly molding them to grow up as obedient, video- game playing, Clockwork Orange-style droogs.

Monitoring of school children extends beyond the cafeteria and gym class, however, as evidenced last year in a shocking case in Philadelphia, where a school district issued laptop computers to 1,800 students across two high schools and then used concealed cameras within the machines to spy on students and their parents without their knowledge or consent.

In today’s big brother control freak society this is the norm. In the UK, the state has gone one further by pumping $700 million into a program to install surveillance cameras inside the private homes of citizens to ensure that children go to bed on time, attend school and eat proper meal.

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Carnaval San Francisco 2011 is the event of the year

Carnaval SF 2011 Monarchs King Jason Ogao, Queen Eyla Moor: (PHOTO COURTESY BY MAX KOO AND DAVE GOLDEN)Carnaval SF 2011 Monarchs King Jason Ogao, Queen Eyla Moor: (PHOTO COURTESY BY MAX KOO AND DAVE GOLDEN)

­2011 Grand Parade features Grand Marshals Danny Glover and Dr. Ana Maria Polo, Giants’ Mascot Lou Seal and the 2010 World Series Championship Trophy

San Francisco Cultural Arts Traditions (SFCAT) proudly presents California’s largest annual multi-cultural celebrations, San Francisco Carnaval 2011, taking place Memorial Day weekend in San Francisco. San Francisco Carnaval, themed “Live Your Fantasy,” will be held Saturday May 28 and Sunday May 29 in San Francisco’s Mission District.

Acting as this year’s Grand Marshals of the San Francisco Carnaval Grand Parade is famed actor, film director and political activist Danny Glover and Dr. Ana Maria Polo, author and star of the popular television program, “Caso Cerrado.” The 2011 Grand Parade will feature a very special appearance of the San Francisco Giants’ 2010 World Series trophy accompanied by the Giants’ mascot Lou Seal.

San Francisco Carnaval

Grand Parade is a unique, must see multi-cultural event that celebrates the traditions of many countries and cultures around the world. The floats are spectacular, the music is uplifting and the costumes are lavish. Beautifully designed floats depict rich multi-cultural themes, and feature musicians, dancers and other performers that excite and entertain the crowds.

As one of the Bay Area’s most spectacular traditions, the free, family-friendly San Francisco Carnaval showcases the very best of Latin American, the Caribbean and around the world cultures and traditions with a diverse array of food, music, dance and artistry.

Parade Highlights

Along with Danny Glover, Giants’ mascot Lou Seal and the 2010 World Series trophy, this year’s King and Queen of San Francisco Carnaval 2011 King Jay Paul and Queen Eyla will also be at the helm of the Carnaval Grand Parade. With it’s rich multicultural themes, spectacular costumes, music and dancing, the San Francisco Carnaval Grand Parade takes place on Sunday, May 29 beginning at 9:30 a.m. at the corner of 24th and Bryant streets where it will proceed west to Mission Street. From there, the parade heads north on Mission down to 17th Street, where it will turn east and flow into the festival area. The Best Seats in the House: San Francisco Carnaval Grand Parade Grandstand seating is now available for $30, and is the best way to view the parade. Visit SFCarnaval.com to purchase your tickets now.

Festival Highlights

On Saturday and Sunday, May 28 and 29, the San Francisco Carnaval Festival will offer food, music, dance, art, crafts and other fun activities and events on several stages for the entire family to enjoy. Spanning seven blocks, the San Francisco Carnaval Festival will take place on Harrison Street between 16th and 23rd streets (10 a.m.-6 p.m.). This year’s festival highlights include three stages of continuous thrilling live music from around the globe, salsa dance classes and competitions, children’s activities and much more.

At the Havana Village Dance Pavilion festivalgoers may take salsa dance classes, watch salsa demonstrations or even sign up for a sizzling salsa dance competition. The Havana Village will also be a nice place to relax during the Festival with seating, tables with umbrellas and a high-end food court.

Children and their families will have lots to explore at “Niñolandia,” a special area of the festival that offers children’s activities. ­“Niñolandia” will include fun children’s activities like inflatable bounce houses, face painting, a kid’s music camp and more! Additionally, Xfi nity’s La Academia will feature a funfilled sports center where children and adults can test their skills in soccer, football and even video games. Please check www.sfcarnaval.com for updates on the festival and music line-up.

 

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Unprecedented number of Latinos cast during 2011 pilot season

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ABC & FOX lideran con nueve latinos cada uno

­por Latin Heat

Nueva estrella de Los Ángeles de Charlie Ramón Rodríguez.New star of Charlie’s Angels.

Last year the National Hispanic Media Coalition’s annual “Network Report Cards” resulted in failing grades for three out of the four top English-language prime time networks. Only CBS received high marks for the hiring of Latinos. If this years pilot season is any indication, the networks seem to be working towards a better grade year. An unprecedented number of Latinos have been cast as leads this season — 29 at last count, with a few more roles yet to be cast.

It stills remains to be seen how many of these pilots will actually get picked up, but the number of Latinos roles cast may be an indication the networks are finally beginning to realize the importance of including Latinos on primetime, if not for a better “diversity grade”, maybe because the 2010 census numbers don’t lie.

Good christian bitches

This hour-long drama stars Marisol Nichols and Leslie Bibb moving into the city of Dallas for a new life but it might not be as new as they think. It may not sound like your average show but it will sure be relatable.

The river

Paulina Gaitán, Eloise Mumford, and Joe Anderson star in this drama about the Amazon. A famed adventurer/TV personality goes missing and the search begins. From writer-director Oren Peli, Paranormal Activity, the characters are set to encounter abnormal adventures.

Damage control

The life and work of a crisis management consultant, played by Kerry Washington, and her staff will shed some drama onto an ABC slot next season. Guillermo Díaz is set to be part of the cast, which is passed on Judy Smith, former White House press aide.

Charlie’s Angels

Another drama to look forward to will be a remake of the original Charlie’s Angels, based on the classic show of three female detectives in Miami. Ramón Rodríguez will play Bosley along with the Angels played by Annie Ilonzeh, Minka Kelly, and Rachael Taylor. Drew Barrymore is among the producers of this modern version.

Partners

Expect to sit down for this crime drama about two female police detectives, secretly sisters, who will always stay loyal to each other. ­Nester Serrano, Francis Fisher, and Scottie Thompson are set to star in this show.

Grace

Get ready for this musical drama based on a famous choreographer’s dysfunctional professional dance family. The dancing show will star Anabelle Acosta, Eric Roberts, Chantz Simpson, Debbie Allen, and Will Kemp.

Lost and found

You wont stop laughing at this comedy about an 18- year-old showing up into the life of a narcissistic New York City bartender and a party girl. The young man shows up on the doorstep of the woman who gave him up for adoption. Starring Diana María Riva, Gary Clayton, and Josh Casaubo, the comedy promises to be unlike any other.

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Funding to organic farmers natiowide

­by Annalis Flores

The USDA and NRCS are proud to assist organic farmers, ranchers, and producers with $50 million in funding for Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) Organic Initiative.

The EQIP Organic Initiative strives to transition farmers and ranchers to organic. This year the funding has doubled and organic farmers nationwide should apply.

Limited-resource and socially-disadvantaged farmers and ranchers can qualify up to 90 percent for the beginning and be assisted with “transitioning agricultural land and production to organic certification.” The last day to turn in the application will be May 20.

New bill for anti-corruption

California Sate Assembly approved AB 46, “which establishes a process whereby any city with fewer than 150 residents is disincorporated.”

Led by a strong bipartisan vote, the legislation was introduced by Assembly Speaker John A Perez. Perez is a democrat from Los Angeles who wants to stop corruption occurring in such cities as Vernon.

As Perez stated, “When a city’s population becomes so small the burden of monitoring government activities falls on the few, and no real protections or accountability exist.”

Perez continued, “AB 46 not only remedies corruption among the ruling clique in Vernon, it prevents similar fiefdoms from occurring in other extremely small cities as well.” Many southern California cities and businesses support the anticorruption bill, which will hopefully only help the state.

Lawyer’s license revoked due to violation

Attorney Michael T. Pines’ license was revoked Thursday by the State Bar of California after advising homeowners to retake their foreclosed homes.

Pines is defiant of big banks and investment groups, which he claims are putting homeowners on the street and lawyers who defend them are only benefiting themselves.

State Bar Court Judge Richard Honn decided to revoke Pines license on a temporary measure until a hearing on disciplinary charges. The April 12th bar court hearing accused Pines of violating ethical standards and laws. For now Pines is considered “a substantial threat of harm to the public.”

Former homeowners did not have the right to enter the premises legally, according to Deputy Trial Counsel Brooke Schafer. The only way to stop Pines from his rash decisions was to revoke his license.

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