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Second Life data offers window into how trends spread

by the University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Michigan.— Do friends wear the same style of shoe or see the same movies because they have similar tastes, which is why they became friends in the first place? Or once a friendship is established, do individuals influence each other to adopt like behaviors?

Social scientists don’t know for sure. They’re still trying to understand the role social influence plays in the spreading of trends because the real world doesn’t keep track of how people acquire new items or preferences.

But the virtual world Second Life does. Researchers from the University of Michigan have taken advantage of this unique information to study how “gestures” make their way through this online community. Gestures are code snippets Second Life avatars must acquire in order to make motions such as dancing, waving or chanting.

Roughly half of the gestures the researchers studied made their way through the virtual world friend by friend.

“We could have found that most everyone goes to the store to buy gestures, but it turns out about 50 percent of gesture transfers are between people who have declared themselves friends. The social networks played a major role in the distribution of these assets,” said Lada Adamic, an assistant professor in the School of Information and the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.

Adamic is an author of a paper on the research that graduate student Eytan Bakshy will present on July 7 at the Association for Computer Machinery’s Conference on Electronic Conference in Stanford, Calif. Bakshy is a doctoral student in the School of Information.

“There’s been a high correspondence between the real world and virtual worlds,” Adamic said. “We’re not saying this is exactly how people share in the real world, but we believe it does have some relevance.”

This study is one of the first to model social influence in a virtual world because of the rarity of having access to information about how information, assets or ideas propagate. In Second Life, the previous owner of a gesture is listed.

The researchers also found that the gestures that spread from friend to friend were not distributed as broadly as ones that were distributed outside of the social network, such as those acquired in stores or as give-aways.

And they discovered that the early adopters of gestures who are among the first 5-10 percent to acquire new assets are not the same as the influencers, who tend to distribute them most broadly. This aligns with what social scientists have found.

“In our study, we sought to develop a more rigorous understanding of social processes

that underlies many cultural and economic phenomena,” Bakshy said. “While some of our findings may seem quite intuitive, what I find most exciting is that we were actually able to test some rather controversial and competing hypotheses about the role of social networks in influence.”

The researchers examined 130 days worth of gesture transfers in late 2008 and early 2009. They looked at 100,229 users and ­106,499 gestures. They obtained the data from Linden Lab, the maker of Second Life. Personally-identifying information had been removed.

The paper is called, “Social Influence and the Diffusion of User-Created Content.” The research is funded by the National Science Foundation. Physics graduate student Brian Karrer is also a co-author.

Honduran waits uncertainty the return of Zelaya after the coup d’ stat

by Marvin Ramírez

Horacio Dominguez, of Honduras, protests the destitution of the honduran president.: (photo by by Marvin Ramírez)Horacio Domin­guez, of Honduras, protests the destitution of the honduran president. (photo by by Marvin Ramírez)

Protests around the U.S.A. have been held to denounce and reject the coup d’état in the Republic of Honduras that ousted down President Manuel Zelaya, whose mandate was elected by popular vote.

In San Francisco, several dozens people marched on the sidewalk of the building where the Consulate of Honduras is­ located on June 29, rejecting the new “government of facto ” instituted by the military after the removal of Zelaya, whose term in office ends in six months.

“The military coup that removed from power the elected president of Honduras, provoked unanimous repudiation on a global scale. But the response of some countries has been more reluctant than that of others and the ambivalence of Washington has begun to arouse suspicion about what really the American government is trying to accomplish in this situation,” wrote Mark Weisbrot for The Guardian Unlimited.

According to his comment, the first declarations from the White House in response to the coup d’ etat were weak and evasive.

In them the coup was not denounced, but rather it was calling to “all the political and social actors in Honduras to respect1the democratic norms, the Constitutional state and the principles of the Democratic Inter-American Letter.”

The neighbor governments of Guatemala, Nicaragua and El Salvador did the first warnings by announcing a suspension of commerce for 48 hours.

Meanwhile, the armed forces were still occupying the main arteries of the country, taking control of the press, paralyzing the country, while the Organization of American States was considering the expulsion of Honduras from this organization.

At this very moment, rifles M-16 paid with American dollars, and with labels “ Made in the USA,” point at thousands peaceful, wrote Weisbrot.

“General Romeo Vásquez and other military leaders, received training in counter-insurgency in the Institute for the Security and Hemispherical Cooperation previously known as the School of the Americas, which is responsible for the training of many who perpetrated atrocities in the Americas.”

Zelaya was removed from his house at gunpoint by soldiers and fl own to exile on June 25, after trying to lead a referendum that would permit reelection. At present a president only can be elected for a period of four years.

With the coup d’état, it has been unveiled the pretention that Latin America has stopped being a semicolony of the Yankee imperialism and that a series of diplomatic instances, like ­the Summit of Rio – the Unasur or even the ALBA -, has emancipated it from the tutelage of the fi nancial international capital, commented, Jorge Altamira, of the Working Press.

At press time of this edition, it was expected that President Zelaya would return to Honduras accompanied by several Latin-American presidents to reinstate himself in power, despite of threats from the military that he would be arrested and prosecuted.

 

Honduras coup turns violent, sanctions imposed

by the El Reportero’s news services

Manuel ZelayaManuel Zelaya

At press time of this edition, thousands of Hondurans were in the streets protesting the coup d’etat in their country. They have been met with tear gas, anti-riot rubber bullets, tanks firing water mixed with chemicals, and clubs.

Police had moved in to break down barricades and soldiers used violence to push back protesters at the presidential residence, leaving an unknown number wounded.

“If the coup leaders were desperate when they decided to forcibly depose the elected president, they are even more desperate now,” said a Americas Program, release.

“Stripped of its pretense of legality by universal repudiation and faced with a popular uprising, the coup has turned to more violent means.”

An isolated President Manuel Zelaya left the presidential palace on June 26, having suggested that the country’s “oligarchy”, with the support of Congress and the Supreme Court, had attempted a technical coup d’etat against him.

Honduran Foreign Minister Patricia Rodas called on the people to take to the streets to resist the coup perpetrated early Sunday against President Manuel Zelaya.

Also, the Attorney General, Luis Alberto Rubí affi rmed that the ex president Manuel Zelaya will be arrested at his arrival in Honduras”immediately” after being charged with varios crimes committed against the State.

Meanwhile, the World Bank and Interamerican Development Bank announced on Tuesday the freezing temporarily of their operations in Honduras.

Sharp fall in Colombian coca cultivation is less impressive than it seems

Coca cultivation fell sharply in Colombia in 2008, while increasing in Peru and Bolivia. That was the headline-grabbing conclusion of the annual report released by the United Nations Offi ce on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) this week, heralded by some as a vindication of the USsponsored counter-narcotics and counter-insurgency initiative Plan Colombia.

production was the lowest inAttention to the detail of the report shows, however, that coca cultivation in Colombia merely returned to a steady average maintained between 2003 and 2006 after an anomalous spike in 2007, although the UNODC report argues that potential cocaine a decade.

Convulsion in the Amazon shakes Peru’s García

Peru’s police force suffered the greatest number of casualties ever in one single day in early June. This did not come about as a result of an engagement with Sendero Luminoso guerrillas but rather in a violent clash with indigenous protesters in the northern department of Amazonas.

The government initially blamed indigenous groups for the scale of the violence but later conceded that the protests were a direct result of its failure to consult them about its plans to open up the area to private investment. President Alan García’s indecisive and inconsistent response to the violence has exposed his government as weak, and left his much-touted development strategy in tatters.

Canada’s leaders to skip out on developing nations’ summit

UNITED NATIONS — Canada is among Western countries whose leaders have spurned invitations to attend a United Nations “summit” opening Wednesday on how the world body can help solve the global fi nancial crisis.

UN General Assembly president Miguel d’Escoto Brockmann, a former Nicaraguan revolutionary, had asked all 192 member states to attend at the “highest level.”

But many developed countries fear the three-day gathering will descend into a raucous denunciation of the capitalist system, western diplomats say.

Radical members of the anachronistically named Group of 77 developing ­countries, which has more than 130 members, have largely developed the agenda.

What’s more, some of the world’s harshest critics of capitalism are among the 14 heads of state and government who are turning up. Among them are presidents Hugo Chavez of Venezuela, Evo Morales of Bolivia and Rafael Correa of Ecuador.

Undocumented lose an ally in their cause to obtain a driver’s license

by Adolfo Flores

California State Senator Gil Cedillo, who fought a long losing battle with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to permit undocumented immigrants the right to apply for driver’s licenses, has lost his bid to replace Hilda Solís in the 32nd U.S. Congressional District.

As Solís moved on to serve in President Obama’s Cabinet as Secretary of Labor, Cedillo was eliminated in the district’s Democratic primary of a May 19 special election by State Board of Equalization vicepresident Judy Chu.

The former Mayor of Monterey Park, who is Chinese-American, gained 15,338 votes, Cedillo 11,244, and another Latino candidate, Emanuel Pleitez 6,509. Nearly half of the registered voters in the heavily Democratic district are Latino and 13 percent Asian. Only 6 percent of its registered voters cast ballots.

Bolstered by support from Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, Chu picked up a third of the Hispanic vote.

Leland Saito, associate professor at the University of Southern California who has written extensively about Chinese-American and Latino relations, explained Villaraigosa’s failure to back a Latino political colleague, pointing out that if Villaraigosa runs for governor next year, he already has the Latino vote locked up. “Villaraigosa is eyeing the Asian community for fundraising as opposed to the vote,” he said.

He added, “When Latinos voted for Judy Chu, they were aware that the two groups share interest in many of the same issues.

They have some parallel life experiences when dealing with discrimination in housing, education and employment.”

Both communities stress the need for multilingual and diverse curricula in public schools, Saito said. In the 1950s both battled restrictive housing covenants in Monterey Park and neighboring Montebello.

Chu is expected to face only light opposition from Republican and Libertarian foes in the July 14 runoff. In the primary, precincts heavily populated by Hispanics voted by clear margins for Cedillo, who has a record of aggressive Latino advocacy.

He helped guide California’s DREAM Act, which would have made thousands of undocumented Hispanic and other immigrant students eligible for in-state tuition and allowed them access to certain financial aid programs. It passed the Democratic-controlled state legislature but was vetoed by Schwarzenegger, who is term-limited from running again.

The federal DREAM Act was reintroduced in both houses of Congress in March. It may be merged into a comprehensive immigration bill if and when that legislation is introduced again.

Summing up Cedillo’s campaign for Congress, Latino Caucus spokesperson Xochitl Arellano in Sacramento stated, “We achieved more than people thought we would. He’s absolutely back 100% as Senator at the state capitol giving a voice to those who don’t have one.”

Undocumented Decline

The number of immigrants caught entering or within the United States without documents, 724,840, has dropped for a third consecutive year. In 2007, there were 876,803 apprehensions; in 2006, 1,089,096.

The figure for 2008 was the lowest since 1973. ­Homeland Securirty reported 97% of the cases were on the Southwest border, with 91 percent involving Mexicans. The Pew Hispanic Center said jobs are the main reason Mexicans emigrate. Now, said spokesperson Jeff Passel, “There aren’t any.” Hispanic Link.

Boxing

June 25th (Thursday), 2009 At The Schuetzen Park, North Bergen,NJ

  • ­Mike Arnaoutis (21-3-2) vs. TBA.
  • Bobby Rooney (9-2-1) vs. TBA.
  • Danny McDermott (8-1-1) vs. TBA.
  • Jason Escalera (5-0) vs. TBA.

June 26th (Friday), 2009 At Estadio Luna Park, Buenos Aires, Argentina

  • Omar Narvaez (29-0-2) vs. Omar Soto (17-4-1) (The Ring Magazine #5 Flyweight vs. Unranked) (WBO Flyweight belt).

At Salon Marbet, Nezahualcoyotl, Mexico

  • (Telemundo) Jesus Jimenez (25-5) vs. Santiago Acosta (16-2-2).

At TBA, Tucson, AZ

  • (ESPN2) Deontay Wilder (4-0) vs. TBA.

At Casino Rama, Rama, Canada

  • Steve Molitor (28-1) vs. Heriberto Ruiz (41-7-2)

At Hermann Neuberger Halle, Völklingen,

  • (The Ring Magazine #6 Jr. Featherweight vs. Unranked) Greg Kielsa (9-0) vs. TBA.

Nicaragua and its churches – exposing their architectural history

by the El Reportero’s staff

Pachamam, a film about the Quecha people in Peru.Pachamam, a film about the Quecha people in Peru.

Marco Literario Dariano’s Todos por Nicaragua invites you to a book presentation of Nicaragua and its churches, authored by Luis Humberto Flores. It will present poetry declamation and folkloric dance from Nicaragua. The event will be held on June 27, 2009, from 2 to 5 p.m., at the San Francisco Public Library Main, at the Koret Auditorium, 30 Grove Street, San Francisco, California. No cover charge. FREE!

­The movie the media does not want you to see

“We the People are taking the media back.”

Broadcast Blues blows the whistle on today’s media madness, from the rise of Rush Limbaugh to the court ruling that news does not have to be true. This documentary is everything TV and Radio owners do not want you to know, so Common Cause and the Media Alliance are making sure you get a chance to see it, and find out what you can do about it.

Public Interest Pictures’ Broadcast Blues features Danny Glover, Naomi Judd, Phil Donahue, Helen Thomas, Amy Goodman and many others. But it’s stories of real people who have been damaged and even killed by reckless broadcasters that steal the show. Directed by Emmy winner Sue Wilson.

This special screening of Broadcast Blues will be held 4 PM Sunday, June 28, at San Francisco’s Victoria Theater, 2961 16th Street, at the 16th St BART station. Tickets are $12 at the box office, or $10 in advance at www.commoncause.org/broadcastblues.

Pachamama, a film about the Quecha people in Bolivia

On Bolivia’s inland salt sea (the Salar de Uyuni), 13-year-old Kunturi and 1his family cut bricks of salt by hand, which they use to barter for goods. The Quecha people have lived and worked close to the land for centuries (the term Pachamama means Mother Earth).

It’s not an easy life, but still rich with friends and family. When Kunturi’s grandmother falls ill, his father decides to take his son on the almost four-month journey along the salt trail (the Ruta de la Sal).

Their first stop is the Potosi mine to find a friend’s long-absent father. As tragedy and joy commingle, Kunturi is forced to confront the complexities of adult life, including death, suffering and, most sweetly and powerfully of all, first love.

Their first stop is the Potosi mine to find a friend’s long-absent father. As tragedy and joy commingle, Kunturi is forced to confront the complexities of adult life, including death, suffering and, most sweetly and powerfully of all, first.­

The Tiburon Film Society will present this film at the Bay Model located at 2100 Bridgeway in Sausalito on Tuesday, July 7, 2009 @ 6 PM. For info call (415) 332.3871.

Tito Puente and Celia Cruz are part of a new season of Voces

by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

La reina Celaz Cruz (izquierda/left) y/and Tito Puente derecha/right)La reina Celaz Cruz (izquierda/left) y/and Tito Puente derecha/right)

SERIES RETURNS: Documentary films about salsa legends Tito Puente and Celia Cruz are part of a new season of Voces set to air this fall on PBS.

The limited weekly series, presented by Latino Public Broadcasting and distributed by American Public Television, is set to coincide with Hispanic Heritage Month.

Voces is made up of independently produced films described by PBS as “celebrating the rich diversity of Latino life.” Actor Edward James Olmos, who presents each film, adds that, “above ail, they are American stories.”

He points out that Voces “is the only series devoted to bringing these terrific films to a national audience.”

The Celia Cruz documentary, titled Celia the Queen, is “a loving look at the amazing life and legacy of a woman whose voice symbolized the soul of a nation and captured the hearts of fans worldwide,” according to the release. It is from filmmaker Joe Cardona and scheduled to air Sept. 1 at 10:00 p.m.

Tito Puente: The King of Latin Music, by George Rivera, is scheduled for Oct. 4. It tells the life of the infl uential bandleader, percussionist and composer through archival footage and interviews and excerpts from one of his last concerts.

Other subjects included in the documentary are a Puerto Rican educator and organizer in Antonia Pantoya: jPresente! By Lillian Jimenez (Sept. 6); the controversial guest worker program of the 1940s and 50s in Bracero Stories by Patrick Mullins (Sept. 13) and a Queens, New York soccer league made up by middle-aged Central American immigrants in The Go/den Age by Phil Tuckett (Sept. 20). Dates and air times may vary market to market. Full list of fi lms and information at www.voces.tv.

CHARITABLE: Three of Latin America’s most popular performers will come together next week to launch a new antipoverty campaign by the Inter-American Development Bank.

Juan Luis Guerra, ­Juanes and Ricky Martin will launch the campaign at the IADB’s Washington base on June 24. With the Yo amo America slogan, the campaign will urge strategic changes in early childhood education and access to financial services for the poor.

Latin American music stars are increasingly participating in charitable activities. Puerto Rican singer Ricky Martin, an advocate for children’s rights, recently announced the creation of a $1.5 million educational center in the impoverished municipality of Loiza. Hispanic Link.

CaPERS money fuels Ellis Act evictions in East Palo Alto

compiled by the El Reportero’s staff

After gobbling up half the rental housing stock of East Palo Alto and aggressively raising rents, Page Mill Properties has invoked the controversial Ellis Act to evict tenants in the small city of East Palo Alto, according to news release. Page Mill has targeted buildings with outspoken local activists, prompting accusations that the evictions are retaliatory.

Those familiar with the Ellis Act were not surprised to see it used in this way. “This is how the Ellis Act is used — it’s a horrible law that needs to be repealed,” said Ted Gullicksen, director of the San Francisco Tenants Union. Originally justified as a way for small landlords to get out of the rental business, the Ellis Act has become a favorite tool of real estate speculators to turn a quick profi t by buying rent controlled housing, evicting all tenants and reselling the units.

Page Mill’s activities in East Palo Alto received signifi cant fi nancing, to the tune of $100 million, from CalPERS, California’s public employee pension fund. Tenant and labor advocates have criticized CalPERS’ involvement, noting that the pension fund’s members are effectively funding a scheme to displace CalPERS’ members from their affordable homes. SEIU Local 521 passed a resolution condemning.

Enríquez Ominami seeks to break Chile’s political duopoly

Marco Enríquez-Ominami offi cially left Chile’s Partido Socialista (PS) on 12 June, his 36th birthday, in order to launch his candidacy as an independent in December’s presidential elections.

In the space of just a few months Enríquez-Ominami has evolved from being just another dissident sniping at the presidential candidate for the ruling Concertación, Eduardo Frei, to posing a genuine threat to Chile’s establishment, forcing fi rst Frei and now the candidate for the right-of-centre Coalición por el Cambio, Sebastián Piñera, on to the back foot.

Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa will likely keep from nationalizing oil and mining industries even as he promises to get tough on investors and his leftist allies in the Andes step up takeovers.

Correa believes nationalizations are ineffi cient for a government struggling to run its own companies, like state oil firm Petroecuador, aides and analysts say. Paying for takeovers would also be difficult as the global crisis trims the OPEC member’s oil revenues.

Nationalizations were never part of Correa’s government plan when he was first elected in 2006, backed by a broad leftist alliance that ranged from old-school communists to well-off businessmen.

Correa’s “21st century socialism” aims to bolster state control and squeeze more benefit from companies extracting natural resources that are already owned by the state under the constitution, officials say.

Caribbean Festival in Santiago Cuba

The Cuban eastern city of Santiago de Cuba is ready to receive one of the most popular cultural events in the region, the Caribbean Festival, dedicated this time to a Central American country: Honduras.

Orlando Verges, director of the Caribbean House, which convokes the event, said it will take place withrepresentations of different ­countries.

He recalled that during the visit of Honduran President Manuel Zelaya, Cuban Culture Minister Abel Prieto proposed dedicating a festival to Honduras, and the Caribbean House took on the project.

President Zelaya announced his presence, leading a large delegation representing the multicultural universe of Honduras and the Garifuna culture.

Verges said the 29th Caribbean festival will be held July 3-9 with delegations from 18 countries, 120 local artist units and 46 from abroad.

Activities will include literary presentations, music, dancing, religious ceremonies, exchanges with groups, fairs, feasts and conferences.

(The Guardian.uk and Latin Briefs, and Prensa Latina contributed to this report).

Mr. Silvio Noe Silva passes away

Slivio Noe SilvaSlivio Noe Silva

Respected and beloved ­Mr. Silvio Noe Silva, delivered his soul to the creator last May 12. He was 83 years of age.

Born in the city of Chichigalpa, Nicaragua on Sept. 7, 1926, Mr. Silva saw the birth of the dictatorship of Gral. Anastacio Somoza García.

Having joined the National Guard of Nicaragua at a very early age as a typist, since he did not have the majority of age needed to be a service man, he was assigned to serving personally to Gral. Somoza.

“He used to narrate with so much pride this experience … I bristled when I heard him tell the story with so much emotion,” said baseball talent contractor Evelio Evaristo Gómez.

“He used to tell the story that being so young, he served the coffee to the general … and he said it with so much pride.”

In reunions with relatives and friends, he use to tell about how Somoza chose him to be the bodyguard of his children.

He told that Somoza, when he saw him seeing him very often, Somoza asked him why was he looking at him so much, and he responded because he knew he had a lot of money.

Somoza asked him how did he know that, and he responded that it was what the people were saying.

Then on the following day, Somoza sent for him and gave him a ward’s name, and that he wanted him to serve as the bodyguard for his children.

He also marched and sang in the Army’s Band during his free time.

He is survived by his wife of 55 years, Mrs. Pastora López, and his children Carlos, Silvio, Sandra, Carolina and Silvio, and 10 grandchildren.

A border garden makes sense

by Leonel Castillo Hispanic Link News Service

About ten years ago I began thinking about how to respond to those who believe a border fence, to protect the United States from Mexicans coming to work and live here, is a shield. Instead, the idea of a border garden to bind our neighboring countries together in important new ways took root.

At first I thought only about the southern border,­ separating Mexico and the U. S. But soon I was thinking about the northern frontier with Canada.

In the southern borderland, a fragrant blooming area, with exotic and useful vegetation, windmills, solar panels, and hydra-turbines for sparkling water is not only possible but the right thing to do. Rivers could irrigate and provide water-driven energy and solar-generated power could also transform how we think about the land and how we use it.

Since the idea first occurred to me, great advancements have been made in solar-panel technology, major improvements in wind energy, and in biofuels from plants. So now the idea of creating a blossoming border-garden is no longer far-fetched the way it might have seemed ten years ago.

In fact, a creative use of non-edible plants, used as fuel, could help us emulate the work being done in other countries. Brazil’s use of sugar cane as a fuel source, for instance, is well-known, but what about the development of jatropha, known in the tropical and subtropical climates of India, Africa and elsewhere, which has tremendous potential as a future biodiesel fuel source.

Imagine the Southern border as a great wind-farm and solar-panel region. Oilman T. Boone Pickens has been making some noise with his idea for huge wind-farming in Texas. I would simply urge Pickens to move his planning to the Rio Grande border and also test it in North Dakota, Wyoming and Montana. And why not a solar-panel industry alongside the Pickens windmills?

The border region would have gardens with healthy plants like aloe vera and cactus, which have been used for decades as a poor man’s cure for diabetes.

The idea is to mix the new energy from the border gardens into a national electric power grid. The extra energy would not be wasted but would be rewound into a national or North American electricity grid.

The northern border with Canada, with its seasonally cold climate, invites creative and unusual opportunities for water-driven power sources. Its links to the Great Lakes could be a great help in producing inexpensive energy and providing new jobs for both the United States and Canada.

At first I thought of using the Alaskan glaciers as a water source, applying the oil pipelines to transport water toward parts of the continental United States, rather than oil. But now I have learned that the same pipelines could be used to move water from the Great Lakes at a lesser cost.

Depending on global climate changes and political realities, the first-order priority would be to move Lake Superior water and later hooking into transmitting Alaskan water.

Thinking these ideas out about land, people, resources and new approaches on how to rethink North America’s potential to create new ecological solutions to national problems causes me to reconsider the notion of “border,” and even erasing, certainly blurring, some aspects of it altogether by substituting some new arrangement.

It’s high time to think imaginatively about ourselves as North Americans and how we can form better national, state and regional relations through resources we can all share.

There is the other power to consider. Just as the sun and wind don’t observe political borders, there’s no reason to think reciprocity better, like sharing one area’s waters to the benefit of those who have a scarcity of it. Unless we imagine it, little will happen. A little imagination can spark a lot of energy. Hispanic Link.

(Leonel Castillo served as U.S. Commissioner on Immigration during the Jimmy Carter administration. Now retired and living in Houston, he is credited with bringing about significant reforms in the Border Patrol. Email him at Charlie@hispaniclink.org).