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Gentleman from Costa Rica passes away

by the El Reportero’s staff

José Eduardo Arias Rodríguez: [10/30/1924 a 07/23/2008]José Eduardo Arias Rodríguez [10/30/1924 a 07/23/2008]

José Eduardo Arias Rodríguez of the city of San Jose, Costa Rica, died on July 23 in his hometown. He was 83 years old.

Mr. Arias Rodríguez, who used to be a member of the Costa Rican Institute of Electricity for a period of 20 years, loved to play the guitar. He liked delighting his friends and relatives with romantic songs and amusing himself arranging electrical gadgetry, playing checker, and enjoying soccer matches of his team Herediano.

Widow of Margarita, to whom he dedicated his life and from whom he received full happiness, was a man of very few words but they said a lot.

“Although he was a man of few words, he shared his knowledge with his children and grandchildren,” said his granddaughter Marcela Arias, a resident of Hayward, Calif.

His children survive, Ann, Edwin, Héctor (in Spain), Miguel (in the USA), Macho, William and Oscar, in addition to 17 grandsons.

The personnel of El Reportero sends its most sincere condolence to the mourning family, but especially to his granddaughter Marcela, collaborator of this newspaper.

Toasting the End of Capitalism art show opens in Oakland

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor, to be released in theaters nationwide on August 1st.The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor, to be released in theaters nationwide on August 1st.

NoneSuch Space presents the photography and vivid Giclee prints of hand cut collages by Bay Area artist, Maria Gilardin. Her work ranges from spoofs on automobile culture, to corporate takeover of farms and dreams of escaping techno-economic absurdity. “It takes me a long time to find just the right pieces for each image. None of the elements are altered or scaled via Photoshop. Each of these ‘quotes’ from pop culture, in their new context, may inspire a smile or a recognition that so much of what we take for granted is not as it seems.

The show runs July 23rd – August 23rd. Gallery hours are Wed-Sat 1 – 6pm & by appointment. First Friday & Artist Reception: August 1st, 6 – 10pm. At the NoneSuch Space, 2865 Broadway at 29th Street, 2nd fl ., Oakland . For more information contact Ann Skinner-Jones, 650-224-3108, annskinnerjones@yahoo.com.

Cuban Dinner and Performance by The Troublemakers Union band

The Cuban Revolution started with the attack on the Moncada barracks on 4July 26, 1953. The revolution was eventually victorious over the U.S.-backed Batista dictatorship. Join us for a celebration of the Cuban Revolution and an evening in solidarity with the Cuban Five—five men unjustly imprisoned in U.S. jails for fighting terrorism.

The proceeds from this benefit will go toward the HUGE billboard for the Cuban Five to be displayed at Mission and 10th Streets in San Francisco for the month of September, the 10th year of their unjust imprisonment.

Carmen MilagrosCarmen Milagros

The benefit will feature a special performance by “The Troublemakers Union Band,” an update on the Cuban Five’s freedom struggle, a delicious Cuban dinner, and door prizes. The event will be Friday, July 25 from 6 to 9 pm at the Centro Del Pueblo, 474 Valencia St. (between 16th and 17th). $10–$20 sliding scale (no one turned away for lack of funds) For information contact the National Committee to Free the Cuban Five, info@freethefive.org, 415-821-6545.

San Francisco’s Voices of Latin Rock at Stern Grove

Born in the Mission District, Latin Rock was a defining sound of the late 1960s and early 1970s when bands like Santana, Malo, Sapo, Abel and the Prophets, and Azteca melded the rhythms of Latin music with funk, soul, and rock. Local favorite Samba Da will lead the afternoon with a high-powered concoction of Brazilian beats, samba, funk, reggae, and hip-hop. On Sunday, July 27 at 2:00 p.m. Stern Grove is located in the park at 19th Avenue and Sloat Boulevard, San Francisco. For more information go to www.sterngrove.org.

Carmen Milagro Band at the San Mateo County Fair

Come out and say hello to THE CARMEN MILAGRO BAND on 8/10/08 12 -1:30 pm show at the Brews and Blues Stage at the San Mateo County Fair. For a preview, take a listen to guest radio host Liliana Aranda of Starstruck Management who has pledged to play some original Carmen Milagro songs (maybe Bailando Haci es la Vida, Kisses and Caresses or Living Legend) on 680/1050 AM KNBR during her 3-hour appearance on the air with Fitz & Brooks on Friday, July 25th! Or just listen online at www.KNBR.com. More information at www.milagromusic.com.

­

Rufino Tamayo’s painting breaks record

­por Antonio Mejías-Rentas

TrovadorTrovador

RECORD BREAKER: A rare work by Mexican master Rufino Tamayo that was at the center of a recant legal battle has sold at auction for the highest amount ever paid for a Latin American painting. Trovador sold for $7 2 million this month at New York’s Christie’s auction house. The 1945 painting of a musician with his guitar was sold by Virginia’s Randolph College at more than double the expected price. Thepainting had been donated to the school.

Last November opponents got an injunction to block the sale, but dropped the case to focus on a court challenge to the former women’s school’s 2006 decision to go coed.

The iconic, colorful canvas, not seen at auction for 40 years, went to an anonymous buyer.

The previous highest price for a Tamayo was 52.59 million. The previous record for a Latin American painting belonged to Frida Kahlo’s Raíces, which sold in 2006 for $5.6 million.

Several records for Latin American art were broken at two major New York auction houses, including a second Tamayo, Comedor de sandías, sold at Sotheby’s for $3.6 million.

Both Christie’s and Sotheby’s reported their highest-ever totals for one-evening sales of Latin American art, signaling a healthy, growing market in the category.

Christie’s reported two-day take of $33.9 million also included works by Alfredo Ramos Martinez ($2.2 million) and Claudio Bravo ($1 3 million) among its top-ten sellers. Across town, Sotheby’s one-night sale of $21 million included a record for a work by Joaquin Torres-Garcia, which sold for 51.7 million.

JULIETA JUNE: Audiences got a first peek at one of the year’s most anticipated recordings last week as MTV Tr3s continued an extensive marketing campaign for one of its most popular artists.

The bilingual, youth-oriented network premiered the Julieta Venegas MTV Unplugged special June 5. Recorded earlier this year in Mexico City, it featured a guest performance by Gustavo Santaolalla and new, acoustic takes on the Tijuana~born singer songwriter’s best known songs.

As part of an ongoing on-air campaign, MTV Tr3s will tape an appearance by Julieta Venegas on its signature Mi TRL show on June 17, the day the Julieta Venegas MTV Unplugged CD and DVD go on sale. The taping at MTV’s Times Square studio will be projected outside on a 44-foot high screen and air on the channel on June 19.

A series of Julieta Venegas vignettes have been airing on the channel since mid-May and additional related material can be seen on the website unplugged.mtv3s.com. Hispanic Link.

Dept. of Elections certifi es Save teh JROTC Initiative for the Nov. ballot

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

After determining a raw count of 13,503 petitions, the Department of Education certifi ed that the Save JROTC effort has collected enough signatures to qualify for the November Ballot. The Junior Reserve Offi cers’ Training Corps program is a 90-year old program that has served an average of over 1,600 high school students annually. The school board voted in 2006 to ax the program on the grounds that it is operated by the U.S. military, which bars gays and lesbians, and that the board has no say over who is hired as an instructor. The board then voted to let the program continue through spring 2009. Last month, however, it said it would no longer grant physical-education credit for the program, a move that will make it impossible for most students to fi t JROTC into their schedules next school year.

Supervisor race for Districts 9 and 11 Heats Up

San Francisco Supervisor races have kicked into high gear, with local analysts calling districts 9 and 11 the most interesting contests, including multiple progressive candidates. In District 9, Police Commisioner David Campos, School Board member Mark Sánchez, long-time Dolores Huerta’s allied Eva Royale, and Mission Anti-Displacement activist Eric Quezada, are squaring off to replace Tom Ammiano. In District 11, Community College Board member Julio Ramos, Supervisor Daly aide and longtime labor activist John Avalos, and Cecilia Chung, a Milk Club activist and head of the Transgender Law Center, are competing to replace Gerardo Sandoval.

Water Supply Reliability Bill praised by Mayor’s Office

Mayor Gavin Newsom praised SBXX 1, the Water Supply Reliability appropriations bill announced today by California State Senate President pro Tem Don Perata and Assembly Speaker Karen Bass, citing its prudent and timely investments to address water challenges throughout California, all with existing bond dollars. More than 70 percent of San Francisco’s 900 miles of sewers are more than 70 years old, and many are at risk for failure and badly in need of replacement.

San Francisco has requested Proposition 1E funds to design and construct projects that will reduce flooding, improve stormwater collection and treatment and reduce untreated discharges into San Francisco Bay or the Pacific Ocean.

Supervisors to vote on $273 million worth of city power plants

The San Francisco Board of Supervisors debated last week whether to build $273 million worth of new fossil fuel-burning power plants in and around the Southeast communities of Bayview-Hunters Point and Potrero. It was once thought that building the new power plants was required as the only means of shutting the aging Mirant Potrero Power Plant. However, a coalition of residents, activists, and Supervisors Ross Mirkarimi, Michela Alioto Pier, Chris Daly, and Tom Ammiano issued a call that culminated in last month’s announcement by Mayor Gavin Newsom that he had secured a commitment from state regulators to shut 94 percent of the Potrero Plant in 2010, without the new power plants.

The Board must now choose a preference between retrofitting the remaining Potrero units, estimated to be shut down within 3 to 5 years, or building the new power plants, which will run from 18 to 30 years depending on their hours of operation.

The myth of unrealized potential

by José de la Isla

HOUSTON – A recent news report referred to Latinos as having an “unrealized potential” as a decisive force in the November elections. Hispanics, the item said, may be poised to make a difference this year.

On the face of it, this is conventional truth. Perhaps a Latino precedent will be set. But that line of thinking is an urban legend. Truth is the “potential” has already been unleashed.

This needs mentioning because another writer from that same news source said earlier that a cooling off was taking place.

So what gives? In June the theme was Latinos were being ignored.

Then came July. The Triple Crown of Latino conventions — the National Association of Latino Elected & Appointed Officials, the League of United Latin American Citizens and the National Council of La Raza — coincided that month. The three organizations form the largest national advocacy bloc on behalf of Latinos.

Each was visited by Barack Obama and John McCain. Latinos couldn’t get more attention.

The conventions and the media that covered them all talked up the “issues.” But the hidden subtext was about how partisan relations could either be solidified or formed. New elements grow out of ever-expanding Latino networks. This year it’s homeowners. Last year it was business owners.

Of course, the touchstone issues were familiar to Latinos: education, immigration, language learning, health and income security. They are decades old. The staging this summer was more about the candidates coming to spread the message as if it were news.

Here is what’s wrong with the theory of “unrealized potential.” This play is now in its 48th season. Its purpose is to make the contenders the focus, the heroes. It is about “discovering” the issue as a way of discovering the people connected to the issue.

It is not really about the potential, but about continuity. The potential has already been realized as a decisive force.

Think, for instance, about how John Kennedy was elected president in 1960. He had chosen Lyndon Johnson of Texas as his running mate. The election came down to the results from Illinois and Texas. Illinois delivered. Hispanic South Texas delivered, too. This inaugurated a new political era.

Something like that happened again in 1976 when Latinos carried Florida, a southern state, for Jimmy Carter. Florida Latinos had voted Republican in the two previous presidential elections. Without the Florida win and ten other Electoral College votes, Carter would not have become president.

Need we even get into the 2000 George W. Bush “win” in Florida? Some of the election night confusion occurred because exit polls failed to account for the changes in the state’s Hispanic voting pattern. The Latino population, other than Cuban, was partly responsible for a change in pattern, creating the teeter-totter. Outdated voter profi les led pollsters to miscalculate. The outcome was called too soon, causing tremendous election night confusion. Only 500 votes made the difference in that state, and the Latino voting pattern had changed.

That was a decisive shift in the outcome, wouldn’t you say?

The theory of the Latino voting potential — redux — is an urban legend worthy of another big one — that Christopher Columbus discovered America. It’s as if the continent was lost until Columbus arrived, and then it could begin.

It was the other way around. Columbus didn’t know where he was. He thought he had reached an island next to Japan.

Discovery, like potential, is one of those ideas that go down as easy as orange juice. The yarn is soft-sell in the morning and still works at night.

The real facts are not as easy to explain, but they are accurate. Maybe we can get it right this year.

[José de la Isla writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service. He is author of The Rise of Hispanic Political Power (Archer Books). Email: joseisla3@yahoo.com]. ©2008

We are losing the little money we make through inflation

by Marvin J. Ramirez

Marvin J. RamirezMarvin J. Ramirez

When we hear in the news, ‘the feds hit them,’ it usually means that the IRS, the FBI or any other federal agency cracked down on tax evaders or drug dealers.

But have you ever heard that the feds raid private people for using gold as their medium for bartering? It doesn’t sound right in a supposedly free society.

I sometime barter advertising space in the paper for services with merchants. And I would never imagine that the fed would come down on me and confiscate my newspaper for giving an ad space for a dinner for two to a restaurant owner.

A company that makes and distributes Liberty Dollar coins in various denominations late last year announced it was shutting down – for now – after a raid by FBI and U.S. Secret Service agents in which documents, records, coins and gold and silver were confiscated, reported WorldnetDaily.

According to the article, company information says Von NotHaus developed the Liberty Dollar in 1998 as an “inflation-proof” alternative currency to Federal Reserve Notes. The U.S. government, however, historically has taken a dim view of anything monetary that could be perceived as substituting for Federal Reserve Notes.

The Federal Reserve Notes – the green money we now use as currency – does not hold its value. For example, you worked all last year day and night, seven days a week, because you wanted to buy a brand new car for $20,000. You made the money and now you put it in the bank for two years. You might get 5 percent interest for having your money in the bank for one year. But what you’re not told is that the same car you wanted to by in two years, you won’t be able to purchase it with the same $20,000 you saved. And is not the car that went up in price, but rather your money that lost its value. When you are ready to buy the car, you will probably need $25,000 dollars to take it home.

You can buy one gallon of milk for $4.00 today, but you will need $4.50 or $5.00 to buy the same gallon of milk next year. I know, nobody teaches you in college that the money you are working so hard for today is not real money. All this time we have believed that we are making money. But we are not.

If we were paid in gold certificates or in goldbacked dollars, like it used to be 85 years ago, when there was no such thing as national debt, or debt mortgage, credit cards, etc., every penny you made would be your personal wealth, in gold value. And you could inherit to your children. Today, you can’t leave much if you bequeath Federal Reserve Notes to your kids.

The value shrinks year after year, until there is almost nothing left for them.

And the most amazing fact is that most us believe that the Federal Reserve is part of the federal governmental, but is not. It is instead “a cabal of private and international banks that does not answer to the United States government… For those who have made a serious inquiry, the Federal Reserve is shadowed in deceptive origins and fraudulent policies,” according to the WorldDaily.com.

Notice that no presidential candidates ever mention this subject, with the exception of Senator Ron Paul.

Gold standard is the way to go when saving our money. But in the absence of dollar gold, we can buy gold coins as a savings, if we want to keep our hard ­earned money intact. Otherwise, we make the money for others to steal it from us through their private, invented, inflationary money: Federal Reserve Notes.

New City budget adopted despite labor opposition

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

El abogado defensor Ricardo López, el Supervisor de SF y candidato a juez Gerardo Sandoval, una joven activista no identificada: y Salomón Rizzo, protestan el presupuesto del Alcalde. (photo by Marvin J. Ramirez)Deputy public defender Ricardo López, Supervisor and candidate for judge Gerardo Sandoval, an unidentified woman activist, and Salomon Rizzo, protest the Mayor’s budget. (photo by Marvin J. Ramirez)

Amidst strong protest from the city’s largest labor union, San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors approved a $6.4 million budget for the coming year by a 10 – 1 vote. The Service Employees International Union (SEIU), concerned about layoffs and service cuts, voiced their opposition outside the meeting at City Hall. The budget is the largest ever for the city, and managed to avoid laying off over 1000 workers by slashing funds for a variety of city services.

In an effort to address a deficit of approximately $338 million, the budget makes significant cuts to city programs, hiking fees for many existing services and creating new ones for recreation programs, ambulance services, and health inspections. Unlike the federal budget, the city’s budget must be balanced by law.

“We put together a budget that reflects the collective compassion that is San Francisco,” Supervisor Jake McGoldrick, chair of the board’s Budget and Finance Committee, said at Tuesday’s meeting. “None of us got everything, a lot of us got something,”

Despite the cuts, some officials are already estimating that next year’s budget will be another $250 million short, a figure which could rise higher if state or federal lawmakers take more dollars away from San Francisco than city leaders are estimating. In November, city voters will decide several measures that also will impact the number.

Supervisors rejected Mayor Newsom’s plan to hire private security guards instead of city-employed ones at San Francisco General and Laguna Honda hospitals, perhaps because of the pressure by labor unions. To make up for the $5 million Newsom ‘s security guard plan would have saved, the is likely to eliminate funding for other programs rather than dip into the pool of money reserved for emergencies.

“The money is there to fund these services,” opined Ed Kinchley, a board member of the SEIU Local 1021 that represents about 12,000 workers. “But the Mayor and the Budget Committee prefer to spend it on another 55 six-fi gure salaried executives instead.”

Approximately 140 full time positions were eliminated, but many of them were vacant. Only about 30 people would actually lose their jobs, according to the city’s human resources department.

Robert Haaland, the political coordinator for SEIU 1021, told the San Francisco Chonicle he thinks there will be a signifi cant number of employees retiring this year and that layoffs will be unnecessary.

The biggest budget beneficiary, the Department of Public Health, is to get more than $1.5 billion. Almost $2.4 billion goes toward public works, transportation and commerce service departments, including the Municipal Transportation Agency, San Francisco International Airport and the Public Utilities Commission. Public safety services such as police, fire and courts will get more than $1 billion.

Supervisor Chris Daly was the dissenting voice in last week’s vote, which will go back to the Board for another fi nal approval in the coming week. Daly criticized the process in general, saying that the mayor’s office is at odds with the board regarding many of the budget policies.

Support for the SF Clean Energy Act

photo by Marvin J. Ramirezphoto by Marvin J. Ramirez

Environmantal and social justice organization members show their support for the San Francisco Clean Energy Act, a measure that will be at the November 2008 ballot.

The Act, they claim, will enable San Francisco to take community control of its energy future and adopt clean electricity mandates for the City of 51 percent by 2017, 75 percent by 2030 and 100 percent by 2040.

­The march took place at City Hall of San Francisco.

Chávez in Russia for multipolarity

by the El Reportero’s news services

Hugo ChávézHugo Chávéz

Moscow, Jul 22 – Upon his arrival in Russia Tuesday, Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez called for a multipolar world order, where countries have full rights to freedom.

Chávez told Prensa Latina being free is a hard task, but “it is our choice, an international order based on polycentrism, as Russian President Dmitri Medvedev says.”

The president recalled Simón Bolivar as saying nearly 200 years ago that only a balanced universe will allow for peace and respect for the peoples” independence.

“That is the way we are paving,” he added.

Referring to the importance of his sixth visit to Moscow since 2001, the Venezuelan leader highlighted it is the first since Medvedev was elected chief of State.

“We are going to get to know each other better,” he said.

That is one of the prospects of this new trip to the Russian Federation, Chávez remarked, and noted he is also looking forward to the meeting with now Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

The president sustained they support ever increasing strategic alliance in fields such as energy, due to the current world crisis, and added that agreements in oil, gas, petrochemistry, science, and technology will be signed.

Dmitri MedvedevDmitri Medvedev

Mexican Senate ends oil debate

Mexico, Jul 22 – The inter-party difference over the future of the Mexican oil is the most evident re3sult of senatorial debates that conclude Tuesday in this country, after having focused political attention since May.

Despite the series of conferences presented in 20 forums to bury the hatchet, polarization continues among those who in the Legislature follow the Executive’s energy reform and those who reject it as privatization.

For Alejandro Frank Hoeflich, director of the Nuclear Sciences Institute at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, exchanges in the Senate flagged due to the timid hierarchy of criteria from the scientific community.

Alberto Montoya, academic of the Ibero-American University, questioned the limited treatment of the issue of national security in the parliament agenda.

The government’s initiative aims to subordinate the Mexican energy policy to the interests of global companies and the needs of US crude oil, stated Montoya.

Legislators are expected to define in coming days the dates for the decision process and voting on reform of the state oil company PEMEX presented by the Executive.

Bolivia, US in tense talks

La Paz, Jul 22 – Talks between Bolivia and the United States restart Tuesday in this capital amid tension from the former’s accusations on plotting and interference in the country’s internal affairs.

According to diplomatic sources, the northern nation’s Assistant Secretary of State for Latin America Thomas Shannon will arrive today.

Foreign Minister David Choquehuanca stated that the visitor could be welcomed at the Presidential Palace by the Head of State Evo Morales.

The meeting will take place after the Aymara statesman accused Washington and the US Agency for International Development (USAID) of plotting against this country, and in a moment of tension between both nations.

Last month coca workers from Chapare, Cochabamba, expelled representatives of USAID on charges of subversion.

Morales and other Executive members have repeatedly denounced the destabilizing campaign developed by that entity on several fronts.

(Prensa Latina contributed to this report.)

Obama, envisions immigration reform before his first term ends

by Alex Meneses Miyashita

Antonio VillaraigozaAntonio Villaraigoza

Addressing hundreds of Hispanic activists July 8 during the 79th annual convention of the League multipolarityof United Latin American Citizens in Washington, D. C., Democratic presidential candidate Barack Okama promised to push to ensure that comprehensive immigration reform passes before the end of his first term as president.

He criticized presumptive Republican opponent John McCain once again for “abandoning” a comprehensive immigration bill that McCain had cosponsored with Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.) two years ago.

Speaking in San Diego July 14 at the National Council of La Raza conference, McCain responded to Obama’s suggestive comments that “he turned his back on comprehensive reform out of political necessity.”

McCain recalled aiding Kennedy and also trying to get the bill passed.

“My campaign was written off as a lost cause. I did so, not just because I believed it was the right thing to do for Hispanic Americans. It was the right thing to do for all Americans,” McCain said.

At the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials conference in the capital a week earlier, both candidates said that if elected they would make immigration reform a priority in their first 100 days in office. At NALEO, neither had specifically stated a time frame to pass a bill.

This was the second of three appearances by the two major presidential candidates before national Hispanic organizations this summer. Both candidates spoke this week at the NCLR conference, where Obama continued to emphasize that immigration reform will be a top priority in his first year in office.

Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who traveled to Washington, D.C to promote the Democratic candidate, pointed out that having the contenders speak before NALEO, LULAC and NCLR shows “that the Hispanic vote is key.’’

Unlike the Q&A format used at NALEO, the candidates limited their remarks to prepared speeches when addressing LULAC.

Members of the audience punctuated Obama’s presentation with loud cheers, bringing their voices in unison on occasion with chants of “¡SI se puede!”

McCain, who spoke four hours before Obama, was received with applause and some cheers.

Obama said the nation needs a president who “won’t walk away from comprehensive immigration reform when it becomes politically unpopular.”

He added it is time to bring the 12 million undocumented immigrants out of the shadows and put them on a path to citizenship after they pay a fine and go to the back of the naturalization wait line.

McCain stated it is necessary to show to the U.S. public that “we can secure the borders first.”

Then, he added, there are “economic and humanitarian responsibilities as well.”

Republicans claimed Obama has yet to show any leadership on the issue of comprehensive reform the way McCain has.

­Eric Rojo, national president of the Hispanic War Veterans of America, said McCain is the better choice for Hispanics because the GOP candidate knows the community well and shares its values.

Villaraigosa, who supported Hillary Clinton in the primary season but is now rallying Latino support for Obama, said McCain’s policies areas full of “division and distraction” as those of the Bush administration. He added that if McCain is elected it will lead to “four more years of economic stagnation.”

Obama wrapped up his speech calling for support from Hispanics, adding, “Now is the time to vote.”

A Gallup Poll in June showed him leading McCain among Hispanic registered voters, 59 percent-29 percent. Hispanic Link.