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Small molecules mimic natural natural regulators

by the Universidad de Míchigan

ANN ARBOR, Michigan.— In the quest for new approaches to treating and preventing disease, one appealing route involves turning genes on or off at will, directly intervening in ailments such as cancer and diabetes, which result when genes fail to turn on and off as they should.

Scientists at the University of Michigan and the University of California at Berkeley have taken a step forward on that route by developing small molecules that mimic the behavior and function of a much larger and more complicated natural regulator of gene expression.

The research, by associate professor of chemistry Anna Mapp and coworkers, is described in the [DATE] issue of the journal ACS Chemical Biology.

Molecules that can prompt genes to be active are called transcriptional activators because they influence transcription—the first step in the process through which instructions coded in genes are used to produce proteins. Transcriptional activators occur naturally in cells, but Mapp and other researchers have been working to develop artificial transcription factors (ATFs)—non-natural molecules programmed to perform the same function as their natural counterparts.

These molecules can help scientists probe the transcription process and perhaps eventually be used to correct diseases that result from errors in gene regulation.

In previous work, Mapp and coworkers showed that an ATF they developed was able to turn on genes in living cells, but they weren’t sure it was using the same mechanism that natural activators use. Both natural transcriptional activators

and their artificial through which instructions coded in genes are used to produce proteins. Transcriptional activators occur naturally in cells, but Mapp and other researchers have been working to develop artificial transcription factors (ATFs)—non-natural molecules programmed to perform the same function as their natural counterparts.

These molecules can help scientists probe the transcription process and perhaps eventually be used to correct diseases that result from errors in gene regulation.

In previous work, Mapp and coworkers showed that an ATF they developed was able to turn on genes in living cells, but they weren’t sure it was using the same mechanism that natural activators use. Both natural transcriptional activators

and their artificial latinacounterparts typically have two essential parts: a DNA-binding domain that homes in on the specific gene to be regulated, and an activation domain that attaches itself to the cell’s machinery through a key protein-to-protein interaction

and spurs the gene into action. The researchers wanted to know whether their ATFs attached to the same sites in the transcriptional machinery that natural activators did.

In the current work, the team showed that their ATFs bind to a protein called CBP, which interacts with many natural activators, and that the specific site where their ATFs bind is the same site utilized by the natural activators, even though the natural activators are much larger and more complex.

Then the researchers altered their ATFs in various ways and looked to see how those changes affected both binding and ability to function as transcriptional activators. Any change that prevented an ATF from binding to CBP also prevented it from doing its job. This suggests that, for ATFs as for natural activators, interaction with CBP is key to transcriptional activity.

“Taken together, the evidence suggests that the small molecules we have developed mimic both the function and the mechanism of their natural counterparts,” said Mapp, who has a joint appointment in the College of Pharmacy’s Department of Medicinal Chemistry. Next the researchers want to understand in more detail exactly how the small molecules bind to that site. “Then we’ll use that information

to design better molecules.”

In addition to Mapp, the study’s authors are former graduate students Sara Buhrlage, Brian Brennan, ­Aaron Minter and Chinmay Majmudar, graduate student Caleb Bates, postdoctoral fellow Steven Rowe, associate professor of chemistry and biophysics Hashim AlHashimi, and David Wemmer of the University of California, Berkeley.

Funding was provided by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, Novartis, the U-M Chemistry Biology Interface Training Program, Wyeth and the U-M Pharmaceutical Sciences Training Program.

Community honors Marlon Mayorga

by Marvin Ramírez

Organizan colecta de fondos para ayudar a la viuda y a su hija de 3 años: Marlon Mayorga poses with his dog, which accompanied him until his dead.Organizan colecta de fondos para ayudar a la viuda y a su hija de 3 años: Marlon Mayorga poses with his dog, which accompanied him until his dead.

Approximately 200 people gathered at a fundra­iser with music and food, to celebrate the life of someone in the community who lost his life to what he helped prevent: street violence in our cities.

Marlon Mayorga, 41, was shot half-a-block from his home, at about 10:30 p.m. in the 3200 block of Champion Street behind St. Jarlath Church. He had been ­walking his husky-German shepherd mix, something he was known to do nightly, police said. Oakland police hadn’t established a motive for the killing but had not ruled out robbery. No arrests have been made.

Mr. Mayorga, a community activist who dedicated his life to caring for individuals and families struggling with substance abuse and survivors of domestic and street violence, was born in Nicaragua in 1968.

He and his family had to leave the country as a devastating civil war engulfed it, and settled in Daly City in the 1980’s. After getting involved in drug use, he successfully overcame the addiction and enrolled at college, earning a Bachelor’s degree and a Masters in Social Work from California State University at San Francisco.

Mr. Mayorga worked in the mental health field for several years and spent the last six months of his life working for the University of California of San Francisco’s Trauma Unit as a Social Worker. He also worked as a manager at Walden House, a well-known substance-abuse treatment center and taught salsa dancing.

“He was here last weekend, said, Oscar Orellana, owner of Club Roccapulco, who offered his club for the fundraiser held on June 7, and which was organized by the San Francisco Bay Area Latino Men’s Circulo, attracting many of his friends and colleagues in the social work community.

Musicians of high caliber performed at the event for free, which included John Santos, Orlando Torriente, Jesus Díaz, Anthony Blea, John Calloway, Camillo Landau, Javier Navarette, Julio Bravo, and others.

Police and Crime Stoppers of Oakland are offering as much as $10,000 in reward money for information leading to the arrest of suspects. Anyone with information may call police at 510-238-3821 or Crime Stoppers at 510-777-8572 or 510-777-3211.

­Mr. Mayorga is survived by his wife and daughter, his father, mother, sisters and brothers who live in the Bay Area and in Miami.

Any one who wish to help his family can send a check in care of the Marlon Mayorga Memorial Fund, Acct #5559675342, Wells Fargo Bank, 151 40th Street, Oakland, California 94611-5236. All funds collected will be for his wife and 3-year-old daughter.

Balance provides key to success for El Salvador’s new president

­by the El Reportero’s news services

Mauricio FumesMauricio Fumes

Mauricio Funes was inaugurated as president on June 1, completing the first transfer of a right-wing to a left-wing government in El Salvador’s history.

Funes’ inaugural speech, like his cabinet appointments, was a skilful political balancing act. On the one hand, he played to the orthodox wing of the Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional (FMLN) by savaging the political legacy of the outgoing Alianza Republicana Nacionalista (Arena), and announcing his decision to re-establish diplomatic ties with Cuba.

On the other hand, he was careful to dispel concerns at home and abroad that he would move El Salvador into Venezuela’s orbit.

Nicaragua a winner of UN-backed grants for conserving crops

Nicaraguan farmers preserving ancient varieties of potatoes, and Kenyan women revitalizing differing types of millet are among projects in 11 developing countries to win supporting grants for their work, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) announced today.

A total of more than $500,000 will go to farming projects in Egypt, Kenya, Costa Rica, India, Peru, Senegal, Uruguay, Nicaragua, Cuba, Tanzania and Morocco, according to a news release issued by the agency.

The winners were announced today in Tunis at a meeting of the governing body of the International Treaty for Plant Genetic Resources in Food and Agriculture.

Other winners include on-farm protection of citrus diversity in Egypt, conservation of native potato varieties in Peru, the preservation of mountain varieties of maize and beans in Cuba, and a study of the adaptability of potatoes in Costa Rica to climate change.

Cuba ‘declares victory’ over OAS

Fidel Castro said on Wednesday that the OAS was complicit in ‘crimes’ against Cuba.

Cuba has declared a “major victory” following the decision by the Organization of American States (OAS) to allow it to rejoin the organization, reports have said.

The group voted in favor of Cuba rejoining the organization, 47 years after it was expelled.

But on Thursday, Ricardo Alarcon, the president of Cuba’s national assembly, was quoted by AFP as saying that the OAS vote was “a great victory for Latin America and the Caribbean and also for the Cuban people.”

However, the Caribbean nation said it would not rejoin the group, which it sees as dominated by US interests.

“[The move “does not alter what Cuba thought yesterday, the day before yesterday and today,” Alarcon said as quoted by AFP.

Neither Raul Castro, president of Cuba, or his brother, former president Fidel Castro, have commented publicly on the OAS move so far.

Uribe tight-lipped as Colombia edges towards re-election

Colombia’s senate has fi nally approved the referendum that would allow for the re-election of President Alvaro Uribe for an unprecedented third term in May 2010. Uribe maintains he is still undecided on the matter.

His government, however, has been tirelessly propelling the referendum forward since October 2008. Meanwhile, Uribe’s reticence is putting presidential hopefuls from his ruling coalition in a diffi cult position: the defense minister, Juan Manuel Santos, has resigned from his post in order to run for the presidency – but only if Uribe decides to stand aside.

­Ecuador’s Correa makes cabinet moves

On 4 June President Rafael Correa announced three cabinet appointments. All three ministers are women and loyalists. As Correa’s Movimiento País (MP) will not have a majority in congress, these appointments, coupled with some radical statements about the role of banks in the economy, indicate that Correa’s new administration will attempt major economic changes.

Alberto González – gone not forgotten by authorities in Spain

by Jose de la Isla

NEWS ANALYSESHOUSTON, Texas — On May 20, Ari Shapiro of National Public Radio disclosed that back in 2002, an interrogator had received authorization from higher-ups to torture Abu Zubaydah. This was before the U.S. Justice Department had issued the memorandum by John Yoo on “harsh” interrogations.

The techniques applied on Zubaydah, who was picked up on March 28, 2002, were authorized each day. In the first two months psychologist James Mitchell, a CIA contractor, sat at a computer and cabled the CIA counterterrorism center for permission to use enhanced techniques.

Ali Soufan, a former FBI interrogator who was present, testified this month how Mitchell kept requesting “authorization” to apply increasingly harsher methods.

Since the first legal guidance from the Justice Department was not issued until AU9. 1, who was at the other end of the phone authorizing the permission?

The CIA acknowledged, yes, Mitchell did request permission but the agency would not describe what the legal guidance was. The CIA acknowledged, yes, Mitchell did request permission but the agency would not describe what the legal guidance was.

A source in a position to know disclosed to Shapiro on condition of anonymity that the CIA forwarded the request to the White House, where legal counsel Alberto Gonzales signed off on the technique.

Bradford Barenson, a former White House legal counsel staff member, told Shapiro “ordinarily the White House counsel’s office Is not in the business of providing advice to anyone outside the White House itself.”

Barenson was part of the legal staff with the ideological bent fostered by the Federalist Society that populated the Bush White House.

Gonzales’ relationship with the president was very close, very confidential” to the point they were on the telephone in a back-and forth, “informal guidance” that made clear that what the president wanted was being carried out “without having to tee up formal decisions.” He said this about the office culture to Bill Minutaglio for a biography of Gonzáles, The President’s Counselor, published in 2006.

Right before 9/11, the priorities were to make many judicial appointments (consistent with the Federalist Society outlook) and strengthen presidential prerogatives.

On Sept. 14, 2001, a joint congressional resolution gave Bush authorization to respond to the 9/11 attack with military might. Minutaglio wrote that it gave “Bush the muscle to fight the war by any means necessary,” embarking Gonzáles and other counsels “on a clandestine and controversial path.”

In-house, Gonzales argued to prosecute and extract “all conceivable information” from or about suspected terrorists. It meant gathering “every shred of evidence possible,” and to test the previous boundaries.

The Sept. 14 resolution allowed Bush “to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons” involved in 9/11.

The “necessary and appropriate force” notion has been behind the wiretapping and torture controversies. When the Bush Administration was given latitude, situations turned into excesses of some U.S. laws and international treaties.

Each new clue, like Shapiro’s about what went on, further justifies the need for a national commission to provide full disclosure.

There is of course intense public interest to get a straight forward understanding about what took place.

Eventually, clarity and simplicity has to emerge from the labyrinthine details, ­many of which are still cloaked in secrecy, to find out why that particular policy course was chosen. Otherwise the same mistakes will be repeated.

But so far full disclosure and Understanding have taken a back seat to the inevitable embarrassments, and even liabilities, when some people went too far.

On March 17 in a meeting at the U.S. Embassy in Madrid, Spanish prosecutor Javier Zaragoza told officials he would suspend his ongoing investigation of former U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzáles and five associates about their role in the torture of six Spanish citizens held at Guantánamo if the United States would undertake its own investigation into the matter, law professor and writer Scott Horton blogged in The Daily Beast.

The other five are former assistant AG (now federal judge) Jay Bybee, former deputy AG John Yoo, former Defense Department general counsel William J. Haynes I I, former VP Cheney’s chief of staff David Addington and former Undersecretary of Defense Douglas J. Feith.

Zaragoza got no answer. NOW, Spanish prosecutors are expected to announce soon they are pressing forward with their investigation. Hispanic Link.

Boxing

Saturday, June 6 — at Hamilton, New Zealand

  • David Tua vs. Shane Cameron.

Saturday, June 13 — at New York, NY

  • IBF/WBO welterweight title: Miguel Cotto vs. Joshua Clottey.

Saturday, June 20 — at Gelsenkirchen, Germany (HBO)

  • IBF/WBO heavyweight title: Wladimir Klitschko vs. David Haye.

Saturday, June 27 — at TBA, England

  • WBA light welterweight title: Andriy Kotelnik vs. Amir Khan.

Saturday, June 27 — at Los Angeles, CA (HBO)

  • ­WBA featherweight title: Chris John vs. Rocky Juarez.

Saturday, June 27 — at Atlantic City, NJ (HBO)

  • WBC/WBO middleweight title: Kelly Pavlik vs. Sergio Mora.
  • WBO bantamweight title: Fernando Montiel vs. Eric Morel.

The color of funny: a multi-culty comedy show

by the El Reportero’s staff

Rita Moreno, baila en medio de una escena de la famosa película West Story.: Ella será la anfitriona de gala especial del 31er Festival de Baile Étnico de San Francisco el sábado 13 de junio, a las 6 p.m. Para más info lee el calendario de El Reporero.Rita Moreno, dances in the middle during an scene at the famous film West Story. She will be the special gala host at the 31st Annual San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival on Saturday, June 13 at 6 p.m. Read the El Reportero’s calendar.

This great comedy features Latina, African American, Muslim/Iranian, Indian, Jewish/Vietnamese, and Jewish comedians ranging in age from 19 to 50s.

Featuring with other comedians is Mimi González (Latino Laugh Festival, former SF comic).

Mimi González, formerly a San Francisco-based comedian, returns to the Bay Area for the first time in 10 years. Her TV appearances include: The Today Show, Mo Gaffney’s Women Aloud, Ellen, Que Loco, Funny is Funny, and Latino Laugh Festival. She has performed for the troops in Iraq, Afghanistan, Bosnia, Kosovo, Korea, Japan, and Guam. You can find Mimi on the road, working on her walnut farm in Michigan or through the wonders of time consumption called the internet at www.MimiGonzalez.com.

Wednesday, May 27 @ Victoria Theatre, 2961 16th St @ Capp, San Francisco. On Saturday, May 30 @ Julia Morgan Center for the Arts, 2640 College Ave @ Derby, Berkeley. Brown Paper Tickets: www.brownpapertickets.com – 800-838-3006. Info: www.koshercomedy.com.

Feminist theory series

Radical Women kicks off a four-session educational on differing approaches to women’s liberation with a discussion of liberal/reformist feminism and radical feminism which holds that men are the enemy.

Thursday, May 28 at 7:00 p.m. Full course homemade buffet with vegetarian option for $7.50 donation served at 6:15 p.m. New Valencia Hall, 625 Larkin Street, Suite 202, San Francisco. For childcare call three days in advance, 415-864-1278 or email baradicalwomen@earthlink.net; www.RadicalWomen.org.

Award-winning poet, author and literacy advocate

Pat MoraPat Mora

Pat Mora to speak Poet, author and literacy advocate Pat Mora, who is the founder of Día: El día de los niños/El día de los libros, a nationwide celebration of children and books, will be featured at San Francisco Public Library’s 13th Annual Effie Lee Morris lecture on June 2.

Mora, the author of more than 25 books of poetry, fiction and nonfiction for children, teens and adults, embraces her Mexican-American heritage in her work; her poetic vision explores our borders both literally and figuratively. She writes about the myriad treasures of her cross-cultural background in poetry, essays and richly diverse children’s literature. Her work speaks to and about children – especially the bilingual, bicultural child – while addressing the dearth of multicultural books published today.

At the 13th annual Effie Lee Morris Lecture at 6 p.m. on June 2 in the Koret ­Auditorium at the Main Library, 100 Larkin St., Lower Level. A book signing will precede the lecture at 5 p.m.

Latino artists in San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival

SAN FRANCISCO– From the temples of India to the village squares of Mexico, the 31st Annual San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival is your first class ticket to an unforgettable journey around the world.

San Francisco¹s Palace of Fine Arts comes to vivid life in a swirl of sublime gesture, exuberant energy, and soul-stirring rhythms as 37 companies representing dance traditions from more than 20 cultures including Mexican, Peruvian, Cuban and Spanish and featuring more than 500 of Northern California¹s most acclaimed dancers and musicians take to the stage.

At the Palace of Fine Arts, 3301 Lyon St., San Francisco, California [94123]. Saturdays at 2 & 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. on June 6 & 7; 13 & 14; 20 & 21; 27 & 28, 2009 with a special Gala hosted by the legendary Rita Moreno on Saturday, June 13 at 6 p.m. Call (415) 567-6642.

Discounted family matinees are available every Saturday at 2 p.m. Tickets to the San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival are $22 – $44. Tickets are available by calling City Box Office at (415) 392-4400; online at www.cityboxoffice.com <http://www.cityboxoffice.com> or www.tickets.com http://www.tickets.com.

Mexican tenor cancels all 2009 performances due to vocal cord illness

­by Antonio Mejías Rentas

Rolando VillazónRolando Villazón

SIDELINED BY SURGERY: Mexican tenor Rolando Villazón, a rising international opera star at age 37, has cancelled all performances for the rest of 2009 to have a cyst removed from a vocal cord. His management says he will return to performing in 2010.

Opera companies around the world have scrambled to find replacements for his multiple engagements this year. Ramón Vargas, another popular Mexican tenor, will fill in for Villazón in a production of Werther at the Vienna Opera House the end of May. Los Angeles Opera has replaced him with Italian  tenor Giuseppe Filianoti in L’Elisir d’Amore, next season’s opening production in September.

“I am a close personal friend of Rolando, who is one of the great tenors of our day,” said Los Angeles Opera director Plácido Domingo.

“My deepest wish is for him to have a quick and complete recovery.”

Beginning in March, Villazón cancelled all performances in a production of L’Elisir at New York’s Metropolitan Opera, complaining of laryngitis. The imminent surgery is a new blow for Villazón, who retired for several months in 2007 to deal with vocal problems.

Villazón became an international star soon after winning several awards at the1999 Operalia, a singing contest sponsored by Spanish tenor Plácido Domingo, who has become his mentor.

Buoyed by critical acclaim, he began performing in opera houses around the world, wowing audiences with a brilliant voice and dramatic intensity. Some called him the next Plácido Domingo.

When Villazón’s voice began to fail in 2007, doctors recommended rest. The Mexico City-born tenor took six months, claiming he had attempted to take on too much. He returned in 2008 and recorded a collection of Handel Arias, warmly received by critics in March.

ON SALE: Self-portraits of artist couples are the lead attractions at the spring Latin American art auctions in New York this month.

A rare self-portrait by Diego Rivera, painted in the United States at the height of his popularity, highlights Christie’s May 28-29 sale.

The 1941 painting was commissioned by New ­York collector Sigmund Firestone, who befriended Rivera and his sometime wife Frida Kahlo, who is also portrayed in the piece.

The painting is being sold with 14 letters exchanged between Firestone, Rivera and Kahlo, also a painter, and may fetch between $1.2 and $1.8 million.

Sotheby’s May 27-28 sale offers a large canvas by English artist Leonora Carrington, who settled in Mexico. She is one of the few living members of the surrealist group founded in Paris at the beginning of the 20th century. Her self-portrait, titled Chiki, is dedicated to her husband, Hungarian photographer Chiki Weisz, also seen in the painting. The 1944 painting is expected to sell in the range of $1.2-$1.8 million. Hispanic Link.

Governor calls for the elimination of critical programs for legal immigrants

Compiled by the El Reportero’s staff

The Governor’s May Revision of the state budget, released Thursday May 14th, targets a range of important health and human service programs for low-income Californians in an effort to close a $15-$21 billion budget defi cit in the 2009-2010 budget year. Among these p­roposed cuts, the Governor targets key programs for immigrant communities.

The proposal seeks to eliminate the Cash Assistance Program for Immigrants (CAPI), the California Food Assistance Program (CFAP), Medi-Cal for lawful residents who have been in the country for fewer than five years, and placing harsh time limits on benefi ts for children with immigrant parents in the CalWORKS program. Established in 1998 under the Republican Administration of Governor Pete Wilson, CAPI provides cash assistance to lawful immigrant seniors and persons with disabilities who were rendered ineligible for federal Supplemental Security Income (SSI). CAPI provides basic assistance to this population, who rely on the grant to pay for housing, food, medicine, and other necessities. CAPI serves approximately 12,000 lawfully residing immigrant families in California who would lose this support under the Governor’s plan.

  • CAPI helps prevent immigrant seniors and persons with disabilities from facing homelessness and despair, serving as a lifeline for this vulnerable population. Severing that lifeline will only create more costs and problems for the state and local com- munities, as immigrants are pushed into homelessness and other unacceptable conditions.
  • Elimination of the California Food Assistance Program (CFAP). CFAP provides nutrition assistance to low-income immigrant adults who have resided lawfully in the U.S. for less than 5 years.
  • Elimination of full Medi-Cal for many lawful immigrants: The proposal targets low-income immigrants who have had legal permanent status for fewer than fi ve years. These immigrants are low-income working parents, seniors and persons with disabilities. Most are lawful permanent residents (green card holders), and have worked and paid taxes in the U.S.
  • (Other programs that will be affected as well, were included in this article due to lack of space).

Anti war group to hold protest against U.C. Berkeley faculty

The organization WORLD CAN’T WAIT will hold a large anti-torture protest demonstration to the 2009 graduation ceremonies at UC’s Berkeley Law (Boalt Hall), denouncing the continuing presence of former Bush administration lawyer John Yoo on UC’s tenured faculty, the organization announced.

Joined by protesters from other organizations and the UC community, World Can’t Wait calls for John Yoo to be prosecuted for torture, a war crime and a crime against humanity.

One year after a similar large protest at Boalt’s 2008 graduation, World Can’t Wait organizers say they will call for John Yoo’s prosecution, disbarment, and his firing from the university for his role in crafting torture memos for the Bush administration.

Travel warning for Novel H1N1 Flu to Mexico removed CDC’s Travel Health Warning recommending against non-essential travel to Mexico, in effect since April 27, 2009, has now been downgraded to a Travel Health Precaution for Mexico.

Mexican government grants 75 scholarships to Latino students at CCSF

The Mexican government gave 75 scholarships under joint program with the Istituto de los Mexicanos en el Exterior and the University of California, at Berkeley for San Francisco City College Latino students.

The Mexican Consul General in San Francisco delivered the scholarships during a special ceremony, and are aimed to contribute to programs that help better the live of Mexicans abroad, said a consular statement.

Hispanic youth – a weet target for U.S. marketers

by José de la Isla

HOUSTON, Texas – Bears evidently get tooth decay from eating honey. Humans also get cavities from eating too much sugar. Bears and humans are the only ones in the animal kingdom with this similarity.

The comparison comes to mind after the Center for Science in the Public Interest urged the Senate Finance Committee on May13 to adopt a tax on non-diet soda drinks. The group also included alcoholic beverages as a source for funding expanded healthcare coverage.

Former president Bill Clinton, a champion of controlling childhood obesity, was quick to respond. “I think the better thing to do is to give incentives right across the board for prevention and wellness,” he told ABC News two days later. Clinton’s Alliance for a Healthier Generation has worked with beverage makers to reduce the caloric content of drinks sold in school vending machines.

Dr. Michael Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, calls soft drinks major contributors to obesity in recent decades. In turn, obesity is a major cause of diabetes, hypertension, strokes, heart attacks and cancer. That is the underlying rationale for asking Congress to impose a new excise tax on non-diet soft drinks, both carbonated and non-carbonated.

The science is on the side of the tax.

On the day prior to the testimony unnamed Senate aides told the Wall Street Journal that key lawmakers were weighing the idea behind closed doors. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated such a tax could yield as much as $24 billion in the next four years to help pay for broad, expanded health insurance.

It’s not hard to anticipate that the beverage industry and groups that ritually demonize the word “tax” will oppose the idea. Yet, it seems, on the face of it, feelings run disproportionately high over simple products like flavored water. How can something that tastes so good be so bad?

Last September, Donna Maldonado-Schullo reported in Al Día of Philadelphia on a Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) report that one soda a day can add up to 15 pounds of weight gain in a year. Of the foods we commonly consume, soda is responsible for the largest percentage of calories. Sodas contain large amounts of high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) used as a sweetener, increasing the risk of obesity and diabetes.

Children are particularly vulnerable because HFCS has high levels of reactive compounds that cause tissue damage, which in turn can lead to diabetes.

Soft drinks with HFCS have high levels of reactive carbonyls, a compound associated with “unbound” fructose and glucose molecules believed to damage tissue. In contrast, common table sugar is “bound” and chemically “stable.”

That is not to say that sugar consumption is particularly benign, either. A hundred years ago, the average person consumed roughly five pounds a year. About 20 years ago, consumption rose to 20 pounds. Now it’s 135 pounds.

Literally, innutritious eating and drinking has become a health concern. High sugar content in diets leads to metabolic syndrome —the co-incidence of high blood pressure, obesity and diabetes.

­According to the National Institutes of Heath, 65 percent of diabetics will die of heart attacks or stroke. They report 10.4 percent of Hispanics have already been diagnosed with diabetes.

Alarmingly, for those 50 or older the rate reaches 25 to 30 percent.

Meanwhile, as U.S. population percentages continue to decline among all children, evidence suggests that producers like Cadbury Schweppes look for market growth by expanding and intensifying marketing efforts directed toward Hispanic youth.

This “low hanging fruit,” as one trade journal referred to the Hispanic market, at least called them something nutritious. They could have called them big sweet-tooth bears. Hispanic Link.

[José de la Isla’s latest book, Day Night Life Death Hope, is distributed by The Ford Foundation. He writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service and is author of The Rise of Hispanic Political Power (2003). E-mail him at joseisla3@yahoo.com). © 2009

Former Castro prisoners scold Congressional Black Caucus

­by Julio Urdaneta

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Miami-based Cuban pro-democracy activist Bertha Antúnez visited Capitol Hill this month to deliver a critical letter to members of the Congressional Black Caucus — and drew an unexpected response.

The letter, from former Castro political prisoners José Luis García Pérez and Iris Pérez Aguilera, who still reside in Cuba, reprimanded caucus members for their refusal to contact island dissidents while meeting with President Raúl Castro and his brother Fidel on their recent trip to Cuba.

“When we recall the fight and integrity of Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks, without whom you would still be giving up your seat on the bus and would not have the right to vote, we ask ourselves if the legacy of those who conquered the space of opportunity that you enjoy today, has been reserved only for political speeches and has ceased to be a commitment of your generation to justice and truth,” the letter, addressed to Reps. Barbara Lee and Laura Richardson, both of California, and Bobby Rush of Illinois, stated.

Antúnez told Hispanic Link News Service that she didn’t have access to the congressmen and received no promises from their staff members with whom she spoke. “My achievement was that I was able to speak on behalf of those Cubans who felt let down,” she said.

By coincidence, Antúnez visit coincided with the May 6 introduction of a House bill sponsored by Rush that would lift the embargo against Cuba. The United States-Cuba Trade Normalization Act of 2009 would eliminate current restrictions on trade, remittances and banking with Cuba, remove the country from the terrorist supporter list and authorize the President to negotiate and settle all property claims of U.S. nationals against the government of the island. The bill has 47 cosponsors, none of whom are members of the Hispanic Caucus.

The letter by the former prisoners stated further: “It is undignified to use prerogatives that for us are inaccessible, such as to traveling to and from one’s homeland, having an opinion without fear of persecution, or associating with others who share similar interests, and then to ignore the victims of oppression in Cuba.”

Rush, chairman of the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade and Consumer Protection, said in a statement, “My view is similar to that of our President as I firmly believe that American democracy and free enterprise, coupled with the strong bonds of family that currently unite our two nations, will allow us to help create a vibrant economy for all of the people of Cuba.

“In addition, removing Cuba from the so-called terrorist watch list will enable U.S. and international relief organizations to provide significant financial resources that will help those who have or are continuing to suffer under the vestiges of a failed communist regime.” Hispanic Link.

(Julio Urdaneta is a reporter with Hispanic Link News Service in Washington, D.C. Email: julio@hispaniclink.org. Full text of the prisoners’ letter can be found at ­www.capitolhillcubans.com). ©2009