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Majority of Californians now support marihuana legalization

Compiled by the El Reportero’s staff

SAN FRANCISCO – According to the office Assembly ­member Tom Ammiano, fof or the fi rst time ever in a statewide Field Poll, a majority of state voters – 56 percent – expressed support for legalizing and taxing marijuana in a poll released last week.

Earlier this year, Ammiano (D-San Francisco) announced the introduction of groundbreaking legislation that would tax and regulate marijuana in a manner similar to alcohol.

The Marijuana Control, Regulation, and Education act (AB 390) would create a regulatory structure similar to that used for beer, wine and liquor, permitting taxed sales to adults while barring sales to or possession by those under 21.

“With the state in the midst of an historic economic crisis, the move towards regulating and taxing marijuana is simply common sense. This legislation would generate up to $1.3 billion in much needed revenue for the state, restrict access to only those over 21, end the environmental damage to our public lands from illicit crops, and improve public safety by redirecting law enforcement efforts to more serious crimes”, said Ammiano. “California has the opportunity to be the first state in the nation to enact a smart, responsible public policy for the control and regulation of marijuana.”

Mothers urge Mayor not to make devastating cuts to domestic violence programs

San Francisco – Days before Mother’s Day and a few weeks before the Mayor will release his budget, a consortium of domestic violence advocates and mothers they serve held a press conference to urge the Mayor NOT to make devastating cuts to the City’s programs serving victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking, and sex trafficking, said a Mujeres Unidas’ statement.

Amidst a $450 million deficit, the Mayor issued budget instructions for all departments to provide his offi ce a budget that includes up to 25 percent of possible cuts. Following the Mayor’s instructions, the Department of Status of Women (DSOW) which administers 100 percent of the City’s Violence Against Women (VAW) grants, have submitted a budget that could cut up to 32 percent of cuts to the community based agencies providing services to the most vulnerable women and children in our communities.

Programs such as the Asian Women’s Shelter, SF Women Against Rape, Community United Against Violence are under severe threat.

Currently, our crisis lines receive 25,000 calls and shelters are at capacity. Free legal services are provided to over 1000 victims of DV, sexual assault, and stalking every year.

State Attorney files criminal charges against six for fraud on Medicare and Medi-Cal

LOS ANGELES – Continuing his fight to combat Medicare and Medi-Cal fraud, Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. last night fi led criminal charges against six individuals who paid healthy seniors to be admitted to a hospice for the terminally ill and then billed state and federal health care programs for “phantom procedures” never performed, said a statement from the State Attorney’s Office.

The six defendants – including a mother and her two children – were physicians and staff at “We Care” hospice in Sherman Oaks. One defendant was arrested today. Another four will surrender to authorities later this month. One remains at large.

Brown’s Office and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services launched a joint investigation in 2008 after an audit found that a suspiciously large number of patients admitted to We Care were in good health and the mortality rate was low for a hospice.

Dondequiera que ocurra, la tortura es un asunto moral

by Diana Washington Valdez

El gobierno de los Estados Unidos ha llegado a una importante coyuntura sobre el tema de la tortura. Bajo su nuevo presidente, Barack Obama, el país debe decidir y declararse en cuanto si es justificable bajo cualquier circunstancia el uso de la tortura para extraer información de personas sospechosas bajo custodia oficial.

Los agentes del orden normales no están autorizados a torturar a sospechosos durante interrogaciones. Una persona normal quien torture a otro ser humano está sujeta a enjuiciamiento por infringir las leyes contra el asalto y los daños personales.

Es hecho documentado que los agentes del orden mexicanos aplicaron tortura durante varias de las investigaciones de las personas sospechadas de asesinar a mujeres en Juárez y Chihuahua.

Una de las víctimas de estas prácticas fue Cynthia Kiecker, ciudadana de los EE.UU. quien, con su esposo, Ulises Perzábal, fue acusada de matar a una joven en Chihuahua. Los metieron presos y los torturaron hasta que confesaron falsamente haber cometido un delito. Dieciocho meses más tarde, tras intervención de activistas y autoridades estadounidenses, los exoneraron y salieron libres en el 2004.

En realidad, esta semana, el Tribunal Inter-Americano de Derechos Civiles ha programado una audiencia para tratar tres de los asesinatos de mujeres sin resolver en Chihuahua. Los tres casos tienen que hacer con víctimas del 2001 quienes vivían en Ciudad Juárez, en Chihuahua y quienes fueron secuestradas y luego brutalmente asesinadas. Las autoridades mexicanas habían presentado a sospechosos quienes alegaron que se les torturó para que confesaran su participación en los asesinatos de Ivette González Banda, Berenice Ramos y Esmeralda Herrera Monreal. Uno de los sospechosos murió estando encarcelado.

El tribunal internacional, que forma parte de la Organización de Estados Americanos, tiene sede en Costa Rica.

La sesión extraordinaria para el caso se programa para los días 28 y 29 de abril, en Santiago de Chile. Los Estados Unidos es miembro de la OEA, organización que existe para promover la justicia en las Américas. El “caso del campo de algodón” de Juárez es el primer caso de violencia por género, y sólo el tercer caso contra el gobierno mexicano que se presenta ante el tribunal.

Algunos de los activistas que buscan justicia para las mujeres asesinadas han criticado a las autoridades de EE.UU. por haber hecho caso omiso de los asesinatos y las desapariciones de niñas y mujeres jóvenes en México.

Tal vez Estados Unidos lo consideró inaceptable políticamente desanimar a otros países de torturar a personas bajo la custodia de la policía mientras que la Casa Blanca justificaba la práctica contra personas sospechadas de terrorismo bajo la custodia de los Estados Unidos. Cada año el Departamento de Estado de los Estados Unidos publica un informe sobre las condiciones de los derechos humanos en otros países del mundo. En algunos de estos informes, el gobierno estadounidense ha condenado la tortura y las ejecuciones extrajudiciales que realizan fuerzas de seguridad en otros países.

­El asunto de tortura que enfrenta Obama podrá descarrilar a los Estados Unidos de su papel histórico de defensor de los derechos humanos. Nuestra gran nación no ha de apagar su linterna por razones de conveniencia.

A un nivel fundamental, la decisión de torturar o no implica una decisión moral; es un asunto del bien o del mal, un asunto que no se puede negociar para que sea algo menos.

El argumentar que el uso de la técnica del ahogamiento y otras contra los seres humanos no constituye la tortura es unirse al grupo que minimiza los asesinatos de mujeres provenientes de familias pobres en México y en otros países y al grupo de los que niegan que ocurriera el holocausto nazi. Hispanic Link.

(Diana Washington Valdez es periodista con base en El Paso, Texas, y autora de The Killing Fields: Harvest of Women/Cosecha de mujeres: Safari en los desiertos de México. Su siguiente libro, a publicarse este año, se titula, Mexican Roulette: Last Cartel Standing. Comuníquese con ella a: dwvaldez@gmail.com). © 2009

Hugo Chávez’s peace offering

by José de la Isla

HOUSTON, Texas — I met Fanny Riva Palacio, an editor with Mexico City’s El Heraldo at the time (now she’s a university professor), during that country’s 1994 presidential election. We were paired to interview María Elena Cruz Varela, a writer who had just been released from prison in Cuba. One day she was isolated from the world; the next, literally, she was observing a democratic election.

Varela told us about how she was tortured and “not here” with us. At first, her words seemed like a poet’s hyperbole.

“What do you mean you are not here?”

“My heart is in Cuba,” she told me. “I died in Havana.”

At that instant I experienced the thin membrane separating my reality and another’s.

Fanny and I recalled that interview each time we met on my trips to Mexico City in the years that followed. She seemed amused I was trying to get a handle on the Latin American experience. There was a kind of reality at her finger tips that I lacked the capacity to understand, she claimed. I was screwed on too tight to see from the other angle.

She recommended a book I should read.

On April 17, at the start of the Summit of the Americas in Trinidad and Tobago, while heads of government chatted waiting to be announced before entering the Great Hall, President Obama saw Hugo Chávez across the room.

He went over and said, “Cómo estás.”

They smiled, Chávez replied something. They shook hands and Obama went back to his position in line.

A senior administration official described the session that followed in the hall as “lively.” Chávez is believed to have been warned by his colleagues to tone down the anti-U.S. outbursts he is known for.

In the warming of personal relations, Obama and Chávez were photographed shaking hands a second time and Chávez presented Obama with a copy of Eduardo Galeano’s book, The Open Veins of Latin America.

This is the same book Fanny had recommended to me a dozen years ago. It is still the best journalistic and literary work of its kind. The book is different from terse histories that lack an ability to transcend the thin membrane between one reality and another.

We tend to take it as severe criticism or disguised antipathy or an ideological split when Latin Americans claim we lack insight into their experience. Yet, their populist criticisms are often meant as expressions of a deep hurt and disappointment from a friend who longs to be understood on his terms.

In the forward of the edition I read, Isabel Allende, the best-selling writer, says she discovered the book in Chile “when I was young and still believed that the world could be shaped according to our best intentions and hopes.” She imagined from the book “America was a woman and she was telling in my ear her secrets, the acts of love and violations that had created her.”

­She called Galeano “one of the most interesting authors to ever come out of Latin America.” When she went into exile after the military coup, she took some clothes, family pictures, a bag of dirt from her garden, a volume of Pablo Neruda poems and her copy of Open Veins.

The 1971 book is an economic criticism, ethnography, history, ecology, journalism and a minor literary masterpiece.

It was a good peace offering by Hugo Chávez, but one easily misunderstood because far too many in the United States still don’t realize truth can come with several versions; others should be entitled to their own reality.

[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

Swine flu: an epidemic or a terrorism of State?

by Marvin Ramírez

It’s really depressing to see how manipulative can mainstream media be, as they become shamelessly the mouthpiece of the government propaganda that creates panic among the population.

Mexican President Felipe Calderón just did that. On April 30, he sent a message to the nation voicing a state of panic, that the nation had been hit by a swine flu, which was a “new and incurable” virus that had already caused several dead.

“Don’t leave the house, don’t go to school, the movies, nightclubs, etc.”, he said, and as an email received at our newsroom recently, they never said: “Don’t be afraid.” The truth is, they wanted to create panic.

According to the email, which derives from what is called the Shock Doctrine, the gripping story of how America’s “free market” policies that have come to dominate the world- through the exploitation of disaster-shocked people and countries,

The article’s author details that the virus is the same one that appeared some years ago, and was known as the “Asian Flu,” and which was simply a curtain of smoke to conceal the serious economic situation that was lived in Asia in those times.

And the article proceeds saying that the situation is the same in Mexico.

The same Thursday the Mexican Senate was approving the bill to legalize drugs, which will allow people to carry small doses of marihuana, cocaine, opium and other drugs.

There were no news of this significant legislation approval, which would be put into effect by the Camera of Representatives on April 28.

The writer emphasizes that although it looks as very innocent, other laws were also approved that Thursday, April 23, and it is called the Federal Police Law, with which this police force is provided with the following powers: The use of police plainclothes agents in the cases in which some investigation deserves it. (Hurra! Secret police), armed civilians’, more thefts and unpunished kidnappings).

The intervention of telephone calls. (Farewell privacy)

The federal police now will be able to intervene and even to retain e-mails if the situation needs it.

Will be granted the power to request private companies for personal information of their clients to help in their investigation.

The corporation will conduct spying duties, identification, monitoring and trailing in the Public Network of Internet on web sites, with the intention of preventing criminal conducts.

(Or rather to prevent coups d’état, marches, civil movements, etc. let’s not forget that the centenary of the this Revolution is around the corner).

This note is available here http://sdpnoticias.com/sdp/contenido/2009/04/23/382531.

On the other hand, on April 18, the International Monetary Fund approved a credit for $47,000 million dollars that the government of Mexico requested to confront the crisis, if $47,000 millions, or U$47,000,000,000 or 658,000,000,000 Mexican pesos, in a period of one year, this means that if there was a foreign debt, now it is and in big, but as always the ones who pay are the people, but returning to the topic, the newscasters only gave the news, it did not speak about the risks that comes with a loan of such magnitude neither how it affects the population.

And according to the article, the last reason to have created such a psychosis for a curable illness is this: President Obama did a visit to Mexico on April 16, what did they speak about?

­Some say that about national security, but the truth is that Obama was coming to clinch a deal (The North command) with which it accepts that American military men enter Mexico and little by little take possession of the territory, of the petroleum wells and the oil reserves at see.

The article continues stating that this well could have been the causer of some marches, closings of highways, civil mobilizations, and even raisings in arms on the part of the drug traffickers, but everything was appeased by the curiously opportune Influenza, so opportune that government offices (the syndicates) did not work; people were not going out to the streets and logically will not comment on anything. The only thing that they could do was to remain in house without another option than to turn the TV on and every 15 minutes to see some commercial to prepare for the influenza, and every 2 or 3 hours see some newscaster speaking all the time about the same.

Now then, is it an Epidemic or a terrorism of State?

The following video link tells more or less what it is through what we are living in these moments:

Alternative therapies can be safe, effective for children

by the University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Today, more children than ever are being treated with complementary and alternative therapies. Recent studies indicate that about 30 percent of healthy children and up to 50 percent of children with chronic disease are using some kind of alternative therapy.

“There is a huge place for complementary and alternative medicine in pediatrics,” says Dolores Mendelow, M.D., clinical assistant professor of pediatrics and communicable diseases at the University of Michigan Medical School.

Complementary and alternative therapies are becoming a more prevalent treatment for children. If individuals follow the directions of their physicians, these treatments are a safe and effective way to get and stay healthy, Mendelow says.

While certain types of complementary and alternative therapies are safe for children, there are many therapies that could potentially be dangerous. Mendelow notes that parents should always consult their children’s pediatrician before beginning any new treatment.

Alternative therapies can be successful against many illnesses – including the common cold or skin rashes – when over-the-counter medications do not have immediate success. For instance, honey can be used for coughs related to the common cold – just not for children less than one year of age.

“In terms of complementary medicine, we’re using acupuncture, dietary supplementation and herbal or botanical therapies,” Mendelow says.

Some types of therapies that may be beneficial for children: Yoga. Experts suggest that pediatric patients participate in yoga as a form of therapy. Yoga, when combined with medicines prescribed by a physician, can be used to help asthmatic patients learn to practice and use deep breathing and remain calm when faced with shortness of breath. Yoga also helps reduce stress in teens and adolescents.

Tai chi. Research shows teenagers encounter a lot of stress, which puts them at risk for depression. Mind and body therapies, such as tai chi, help reduce the risk of depression and anxiety. Tai chi and yoga help to decrease blood pressure and sympathetic activity in children. This allows for a sense of relaxation and calmness Probiotics. These live bacteria, similar to those found in the human stomach, can be found in dietary supplements or in food, such as yogurt. Used to treat antibiotic associated diarrhea, controlled studies have shown probiotics are safe for children.

Using probiotics can reduce diarrhea by one to two days, allowing children to go back to school or day care sooner.

Probiotics are not recommended for children on any immunosuppressive drugs or those who are immuno compromised. Always consult a doctor first.

While there is strong evidence that these complementary and alternative therapies are safe for children, Mendelow advises parents that other complementary and alternative medicines can have serious consequences for children and adolescents.

Some types of therapies that may be harmful to children include: Ma Haung. Ma Haung, a popular Chinese medicine used to control asthma, is an ephedra compound, a stimulant often used to boost athletic performance. Using this type of boosting agent in a child can lead to heart palpitations and other cardiac-related events, all extremely dangerous for a child.

Creatine. Creatine is another supplement that should not be used in a child’s diet.

“Creatine is used for a lot of body building and we know that it can have adverse side effects for kidneys,” says Mendelow.

Other supplements. Children that are on anticoagulants should avoid certain complementary and alternative therapies, including ginkgo biloba or high-dose fish oil.

­Anti-coagulants increase the bleeding time as do these two supplements, so that children are more prone to bleeding. Before taking any supplement, always check with your physician if you’re on other prescription medication to make sure it’s safe.

Chiropractics. Mendelow advises against high-speed spinal manipulation. “The children’s spines are probably not fully developed until they’re about 18 to 20 years old and you can actually do more harm than good,” Mendelow says.

Forty new entrepreneur women graduate with pride from ALAS

­by Marvi­n Ramírez

Entrepreneurial hope for women: Approximately 40 graduates from ALAS program hold their diploma of fulfillment as entrepreneurs. (by Marvin Ramírez)Entrepreneurial hope for women: Approximately 40 graduates from ALAS program hold their diploma of fulfillment as entrepreneurs. (by Marvin Ramírez)

The current economic cr­isis affecting the U.S. and the rest of the world was not an impediment for approximately 40 Bay Area women from building hope for themselves by creating the business of their dream. They all graduated on May 4 amid a grand fiesta at the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts. Some had their own exhibition booth on display for business.

Armed with a business card, a business plan, and the energy and skills they learned, they were ready to conquest the world of commerce.

It took them months to achieve their effort. From setting up a restaurant to many other type of business plans, the women worked hard and with dedication, determined not to let their family daily obligations to interfere in their goal.

Every year, the nonprofit organization, ALAS or Women’s Initiative graduates dozens of new students, and helps build the entrepreneurial capacity of women to overcome economic and social barriers and achieve selfsufficiency.

Thais Rezende, executive director of ALAS, North Bay Region.: (photo by Marvin Ramírez)Thais Rezende, executive director of ALAS, North Bay Region.: (photo by Marvin Ramírez)

Through out the years, the Mission Districtbased organization has help hundreds of women create jobs for themselves, access the mainstream economy, and increase their economic selfsufficiency when they are given business planning and financing support, according to their program description.

Adelaida M. Chumpitaz, of Isis Personal Concierge, proudly displays the services she provides.Adelaida M. Chumpitaz, of Isis Personal Concierge, proudly displays the services she provides.

Many of them never had the opportunity to attend school or improve their working skills over their lifetime, either because they were busy raising a 1family or simply because they were unaware of their potentials and did not know from where to start.

However, as many women lose their life partners or the breadmaker in the home, they find themselves unable to survive on their own, or because of lack of work skills find it hard to find jobs.

But ALAS (Alternativas para Latinas en Autosuficiencia) program, which boasts culturally competent services and extensive networks that propel Latina entrepreneurs into business success, has become the perfect solution for these women.

The program targets lowincome women of traditionally underserved groups including minorities, immigrants, and welfare recipients. Over half of the Women’s Initiative community participates in our classes offered in Spanish through ALAS.

Correa seals re-election under new Constitution

­by the El Reportero’s news service

Rafael CorreaRafael Correa

President Rafael Correa recorded a comfortable win in Ecuador’s presidential elections on April 26. No candidate had won in the first round since the return to democracy in 1979. While he won a firm endorsement, however, the victory was not as crushing as opinion polls had indicated. His main rival, Lucio Gutiérrez, performed twice as well as expected.

Traditional parties, dubbed the “partidocracy” by Correa, also staged a comeback in the congressional elections, although the painstakingly slow count makes it difficult to divine whether he will fall short of a majority in the 124-seat congress. This is very important because while the elections were not fought on economic issues, the post-electoral debate will be.

Panama opposition leads elections

Extra-offi cial information suggests Monday the triumph of Ricardo Martinelli, of the opposition Alliance for Change party, in the Panamanian presidential elections, with 60.3 percent of votes and 91.3 percent of ballots counted. Figures from the Electoral Court show early Monday that after evaluating 89.4 percent of polling stations, the businessperson had 873,244 votes in his favor.

Following Martinelli is Balbina Herrera, of the Democratic Revolutionary Movement, with 37.3 percent (540,543 votes), and Guillermo Endara, of the Homeland Moral Vanguard party with 34,231 votes.

The information also stated that of the number of votes reported, 1.13 percent were blank and 1.84 null.

Martinelli’s victory will be decided once the National Vote Counting Boards evaluate the country’s 39 electoral constituencies, which could happen Wednesday, May 6.

Venezuela’s Chávez courts Iran as US shows concern

CARACAS, Venezuela — President Hugo Chávez met with a delegation from Iran last week to prepare for an upcoming visit from President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad — an alliance that has provoked concern in Washington.

Venezuela’s ambassador to Iran, David Velásquez, said following the meeting ­that Ahmadinejad’s visit will deepen ties between the countries and “allow us to move ahead in the transfer of technology and industry,” according to Venezuela’s state-run Bolivarian News Agency.

Latin America’s leftist leaders have in recent years strengthened relations with countries including China and Iran — inroads that U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Friday termed “quite disturbing.”

“They are building very strong economic and political connections with a lot of these leaders. I don’t think that’s in our interest,” Clinton said.

She said President Barack Obama’s administration aims to improve deteriorating relations with Latin American nations including Bolivia, Nicaragua and Venezuela to counter the growing infl uence of China, Iran and Russia in the region.

U.S. immigrants, Mexico blamed for swine flu

by Veronica Macías

U.S. health and civil rights experts have been quick to counter allegations by antiimmigration zealots that undocumented Mexican immigrants are spreading swine flu throughout this country.

At Weekly Report’s press time, the 226 U.S. cases reported in 30 states ranging from New York to California, did not include a single one attributed to an undocumented immigrant.

While anti-immigrant voices have seized the chance to scapegoat Mexican migrants for the potential swine flu pandemic, it’s a move that has come as no surprise to Hispanic leaders here.

“Conservative media is distorting the reality of the situation. They are always looking for someone to blame,” National Hispanic Health Alliance president Dr. Jane Delgado told Weekly Report “They are doing a disservice to their listeners and to the world by not presenting accurate information.”

Despite confirmations from U.S. authorities that the confirmed swine flu cases here have been nearly exclusively from residents who recently traveled to Mexico, right-wing pundits including Glen Beck, Lou Dobbs and Michael Savage are continue to politicize the issue to advance their ongoing nativist stances.

“Make no mistake about it, illegal aliens are carriers of the new strain of human/swine/avian flu from Mexico,” said Savage Nation radio host Michael Savage.

Referring to the outbreak at St. Francis Preparatory School in Queens, New York, National Hispanic Medical Association president Dr. Elena Rios censured the critics, “They should pay attention to the facts. These were American citizens who had money to go travel to Cancun for spring break. “

The virus is identified as the H1N1(swine flu) by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Virginia Gov. Timothy Kaine confirmed that its two reported cases were of residents who separately came down with the disease following trips to Mexico.

In Maryland, a U.S. Energy Department security official contracted AH1N1 when traveling to Mexico with Secretary Steven Chu last month. He infected his family when he returned.

The World Health Organization, the U. N.’s health authority, believes the virus first manifested in Mexico City, where a stronger strain killed an estimated 146 people.

Within a few days the virus spread to 13 countries.

The first swine flu-related death was of a 23-month-old Mexican boy whose family traveled from Mexico City to visit Houston.

The Libertarian Party and Americans for Legal Immigration PAC (ALIPAC) have been among groups responded to the growing number of U.S. cases by demanding much more vigilant border enforcement.

ALI PAC president William Gheen emphasized to Weekly Report, “We are calling for all non-essential traffic and illegal immigration to stop.”

Blaming the Congress for not moving more decisively and allowing commerce “to take precedence over public health,” he urged that thousands of U.S. National Guard troops be brought in to, in effect, close off the border.

Since news of a likely pandemic broke April 23, Mexico’s huge tourism industry has collapsed. Voice of America reported it has plummeted by 77°/0.

A five-day shutdown of Mexico City businesses ordered by President Felipe Calderon effective May 1 was said to be costing the city $57 million a day.

The WHO made no recommendation on imposing global travel restrictions since the virus has already spread and it would be “highly disruptive” to the world economy.

On its web­site, the CDC suggest that U.S. travelers avoid all nonessential travel to Mexico.

While some media pundits called the virus the “fajita flu,” other well known faces like MSNBC host Keith Olbermann called the comments ignorant and racist.

Boston radio talk host Jay Severin was taken off the air for characterizing Mexican immigrants as “criminaliens.”

Health officials say 35,000 U.S.residents die every year of the seasonal flu and an increase from the swine flu is inevitable. Hispanic Link.

Boxing

Saturday, May 2 — at Las Vegas, NV (HBO-PPV)

  • Manny Pacquiao vs. Ricky Hatton.
  • WBO featherweight title: Steven Luevano vs. Bernabe Concepcion.

Saturday, May 9 — at Las Vegas, NV (HBO)

  • IBF light heavyweight title: Chad Dawson vs. Antonio Tarver

Saturday, June 6 — at Auckland, New Zealand

  • Shane Cameron vs. David Tua

Saturday, June 13 — at New York, NY

  • WBO welterweight title: Miguel Cotto vs. TBA.

Saturday, June 20 — at London, United Kingdom

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

Come listen to rumba developed in Cuba

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

Café Rumba. Community participatory event.

The Afro-Cuban folkloric drums, dances, and songs of rumba. Rumba is the word used for a group of related, community-oriented, musical and dance styles in Cuba. Rumba developed in rural Cuba, with strong influences from African drumming and Spanish poetry and singing. 3:30-6 p.m. La Peña Cultural Center, 3105 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley. 510-849-2568. fena@lapena.org.

“What’s Your Excuse?” S.F. Public Library offers amnesty period for overdue materials

San Francisco Public Library is encouraging patrons to return their overdue books and other library materials and restore their borrowing privileges without penalty or fine during an amnesty period in May. Overdue materials can be returned to any branch or the Main Library during the amnesty period. Patrons are encouraged to share their cleverest excuses about why their materials are overdue at sfpl.org/fineamnesty and the best excuses will be highlighted on the Web site. For more information on the library overdue materials amnesty from May 3 – 16, please call (415) 557-4277.

Discover the Rumba with John Santos at the Museum of the African Diaspora

La Rumba No Es Como Ayer (The Rumba is not Like Yesterday) is a seven part lecture series taught by four-time Grammy nominee John Santos that delves into the evolution, anatomy, and relevance of the Cuban rumba, one of the most important and influential musical/dance genres in the history of the Americas. The rumba is an indispensable expression of Afro-Latin culture, from the seductive, satirical choreography of the Yambú and the Columbia to its influence on modern jazz and beyond.

The series will be held on Tuesdays, May 5 through June 16, from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Museum of the African Diaspora at 685 Mission St, San Francisco. Sign up for the entire series, or on a class-by-class basis. For tickets please visit sfjazz.org or call the SFJAZZ box office at (415) 788-7353.

Unity Council offers free bilingual budgeting and financial education workshops

The Unity Council announces their workshop series on Financial Fitness, Homebuyers Education, and Foreclosure Prevention. In this current economic downturn of massive layoffs, the mortgage pandemic, investment losses, and record high unemployment benefit rolls, the Unity Council offers services to assist families in maintaining their credit and saving their homes.

Classes include: Homebuyers Education on Saturdays, 9 – 5 p.m. (Spanish – May 2, English – March 21, April 18, May 16); Financial Fitness, a 5 week series on Tuesdays, 6 – 8:30 p.m. (Spanish – April 21, 28); Foreclosure Prevention: Wednesdays, 6 – 9 p.m. (English & Spanish: April 15, May 6, 13, 20). At 3301 East 12th Street, Suite 201, Oakland, CA 94601. A limited number of the classes will be held at the Fairfi eld Community Center in Fairfi eld, California. Pre-registration is required.

For information contact Sandra Velazquez, program assistant, svelazquez@unitycouncil.org at The Unity Council, (510) 535-6943.

State terrorism in Argentina: a survivor’s eyewitness account

Over 1,500 people were murdered, kidnapped and disappeared in Argentina be­tween 1973 and 1976 for their political beliefs and activism. After 30 years, some of those responsible are finally being brought to trial. One of the key witnesses in this court case, and a survivor of three assassination attempts, is Carlos Petroni, well known in the Bay Area as the former editor of Frontlines newspaper, a popular left progressive paper in the 90s.

He is making a presentation about the case including photographs, evidence and a shocking account of the crimes committed by the death squads known as the Triple A (Argentinean Anticommunist Alliance). On Friday, May 8th, a 6 p.m., at 522 Valencia Street in San Francisco. For further information, contact or interviews: (415) 867-5174.