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Unregulated nanoparticles from diesel engines inhibit lungs

by the University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Mich.- Diesel engines emit countless carbon nanoparticles into the air, slipping through government regulation and vehicle fi lters. A new University of Michigan simulation shows that these nanoparticles can get trapped in the lungs and inhibit the function work of a fluid that facilitates breathing.

Lung surfactant is a naturally occurring fluid containing liquid made of proteins and lipids molecules. Itthat reduces surface tension in the lungs, prevents them from collapsing and helps transport foreign particles that will ultimately o fluids to be expelled from the lungs.in a sneeze. Inhaled cCarbon nanoparticles, however, appear to behave differently than most foreign particles. didn’t make it to the fluid in the U-M simulations. Computer simulations indicted that they would notn’t be expelled from the lungs, but would Instead, they becoame trapped in the surfactant, after becoming entangled with when fatty lipid molecules that wrapped their tails around the nanoparticles and into their central cavities.

“The presence of the nanoparticle can hinder the function of lung surfactant by affecting the interaction between the lipids and the peptides,” said Angela Violi, assistant professor in the College of Engineering.

Violi will present her findings during her invited talk at the American Chemical Society meeting on Aug. 20. A peptide is a piece of a protein.

This is the first time researchers have demonstrated how these nanoparticles can get caught in the lungs and affect the behavior of surfactant. Other studies have shown that buildup of nanoparticles in the lungs can lead to inflammation, blood clotting and changes in breathing and heart rates.

“There is mounting evidence that very small particles have a larger negative impact on health than larger particles,” Violi said. “Nanoparticles emitted by diesel engines and other combustion sources are a health concern because of both their size and the carcinogens with which they are associated. This problem is exacerbated by the fact that there is currently no effective regulatory control of these nanoparticles.”

Current U.S. and European diesel emissions regulations address particle sizes of . They apply to particles 2.5 microns or larger. (A micron is one-thousandth of a millimeter.) That’s still up to three orders of magnitude larger than these nanoparticles Dr. Violi studies. Carbon nanoparticles make up only 0.1 to 1.5 percent of the total mass of particles diesel engines emitspew, but when you look at the number of particles, the nanos compose between 35 percent and 97 percent of the emissions, depending on the traffic.

“With filters in cars, you can stop the soot, but you can’t stop these carbon nanoparticle cores, which are the most dangerous to humans,” Violi said. “Humans can stop larger soot particles in the nose or the throat.”

The computer model Violi created to run this simulation can also predict how various combustible materials will burn, what nanoparticles will be created, how those particles will be shaped and how they could affect the lungs. This tool could be useful in predicting ­figuring out biofuels emissions, Violi says.

“It could help us reach the goal of engineering biofuel molecules to reduce emissions,” Violi said. It’s conceivable that engineers could genetically modify a plants to produce cleaner burning fuelsburn cleaner, she said. Violi will also discuss these applications in her American Chemical Society talk.

Violi is an assistant professor in the departments of Mechanical Engineering, Chemical Engineering and Biomedical Engineering.

The presentation is called “Lipid membrane uptake of carbonaceous nanoparticles from combustion sources.” It is at 1:30 p.m. on August 20, 2008 at the American Chemical Society fall meeting in Philadelphia. A related paper on this research titled “Molecular Dynamics Simulation Study of a Pulmonary Surfactant Film Interacting with a Carbonaceous Nanoparticle” will be published in the Oct. 15 issue of Biophysical Journal.

The molcajete police are closing in on my kitchen

by Elisa Martínez

Where will all the molcajetes go?

The tomato recently received a clean bill of health from the Food and Drug Administration. The hot peppers were not so lucky. Jalapeños and serranos are still considered potential killers. Also suspect are cilantro and aguacates. So far, garlic and onions have been absolved.

As if all of this wasn’t enough, the molcajete — mortar and pestle — has now made the “Beware of Potential Killers” list. In the state of California it is now a crime to serve food in a stone molcajete in any public eatery. Only those made of plastic will be permitted. Will the plastic molcajetes be made in China? That might also pose a threat. Seems that those alien objects and ingredients that carry passports are the cause of salmonella in the American diet, and the government, always there to safeguard us, has come to the rescue.

I just published an article about my “Aztec blender,” as the molcajete is affectionately known in my casa. What to do? My recipe is obsolete. The ingredients are banned and the molcajete, which has been used in Mexico for some 6000 years without any problems, is not allowed either.

Surely there must be millions of mocajetes in Texas and California alone. What will become of them? Will there be that industrious person who finds a use for the outcasts? They can be used to hold candy or paper flowers. They could become powerful weapons. Will there be a huge molcajete garage sale?

Homeland Security might decommission them and crush them to build more walls to protect us from those “other” Mexican aliens. Actually, crushing them might prove dangerous.

It seems they contain lead as well. If this lead were to seep into the dirt and pose a threat for centuries to come.

They could be donated to public schools to be displayed as artifacts so tomorrow’s children might know what they looked like. And what about us who refuse to relinquish them?. Good thing we don’t yet have a home police system. So far they’re safe in our kitchens. Mine crouches next to my powerful, healthful 20th century blenders.

The grocery stores in El Paso and Juárez still have mountains of chile, tomato and cilantro, and people are filling their little plastic bags to take home. We cannot eat without this good stuff.

Two Sundays ago I had a cookout for the family. Big family that we are, I had 30 people in my backyard eating steak, frijolitos and salsa made in my molcajete. No one died.

All we need is to use good sense and clean these containers made of good rock well. Another recommendation might be fewer anti-bacterial soaps and solutions. We have completely done away with our immune systems. Living on the border makes for healthy stomachs. We are exposed to a myriad of germs and bacteria, and with time we have built a good resistance. In this age we live in fear of everything and anything. I still cringe when I see fresh green bunches of spinach at the grocery store, but I buy anyway and enjoy them with pinto beans and onion.

Eventually time will clear the names of all these good fruits and vegetables and the FDA will find more foods to warn us about. Tomorrow I’m making tacos for lunch. Can’t have tacos without salsa. I have all the ingredients ready. Among them are jalapeños, tomatoes, aguacates and cilantro. It’s going to be a good lunch. Tomorrow my molcajete and I will be very busy.

(Elisa Martínez, a retired speech therapist, is a contributing columnist with Hispanic Link News Service. E-mail her at emar37@flash.net). ©2008

Justice cattle call in Iowa

by José de la Isla

HOUSTON – On the same day The New York Times broke the story about the cushy relationship on between prosecutors and judges in Iowa, a Law & Order TV rerun was playing on the TNT cable channel with a similar plot.

In the half-hour TV drama, Sam Waterston playing executive DA Jack McCoy lays out the case against a defendant with a long drunk-driving history after killing three people with an automobile. The legal question was how guilty was he — capital murder (meaning life) or first degree manslaughter (five to 15)? It all boiled down to how the evidence was gathered, whether some witness tampering took place. Did McCoy violate legal ethics, and did a politically ambitious judge try to tip the balance of justice?

Meanwhile in real life, Times reporter Julia Preston revealed on Aug. 9 how criminal defense lawyers were stunned in May when nearly 300 undocumented immigrants were convicted on criminal charges and promptly sentenced to prison in just four days after a raid at the Agriprocessors meatpacking plant in Postville, Iowa.

It turns out that in the months before the raid a 117-page blueprint was prepared showing step-by-step how the hearings would be conducted.

The American Civil Liberties Union has posted the document online which prosecutors say was non-binding but instead was prepared to assist defense lawyers with a sudden crush of defendants. Most of the immigrants — mainly from Guatemala — pleaded guilty. They come from a place where the presumption in court is guilty, and they were unlikely to understand the jurisprudence paradigm shift in courts here without sufficient consultation and explanation from counsel.

They were promptly arrested, arraigned, and sentencing to five months in prison in a makeshift courtroom at the National Cattle Congress fairgrounds in Waterloo, Iowa.

Some Iowa lawyers had no complaint. However, others said the blueprint script suggests the court had endorsed the prosecutors’ drive to obtain guilty pleas before the hearings began. Not only did the scripts included a model guilty plea the prosecutors planned to offer but also statements which were to be made by the judges when they accepted the pleas and handed down sentences. It all sounded like made-for-TV justice — but without cameras.

The American Immigration Lawyers Association protested that workers were denied meetings with lawyers and their immigration law claims were put aside in favor of the unusual plea agreements. Criminal defense lawyers warned of due process violations.

If the immigrants tried to defend themselves, they were threatened with a minimum of two years in prison. With their hands and feet shackled, the defendants were filed into the makeshift courtrooms in groups of ten, where one by one, through a translator, they plead guilty to having taken jobs using fraudulent Social Security cards or immigration documents. They were then moved into another courtroom for sentencing.

Bush appointee Linda R. Reade, chief judge of Iowa´s Northern District, oversaw the hearings, for which she had begun preparations in December. It´s unknown if or how much she might have contributed to the blueprint. However, Judge Reade should have known better, as she taught trial techniques at Drake University Law School in Iowa and at Emory Law School in Georgia in the 1990s.

Rockne Cole, a defense lawyer who refused to represent any of the arrested immigrants and “walked out in disgust,” requested a congressional subcommittee to look into the raid and its legal proceedings, claiming the hearings were organized to produce guilty pleas in favor of the prosecution Cole told the NYT that he was most astonished that Chief Judge Reade apparently had already ratified the deals before a lawyer even talked to his or her client.

In the TV case, McCoy lets the defendant plead to the lesser charge in order to keep the judge from getting his way and corrupting the process and introducing bias. The congressional committee should see this episode to understand that what was really on trial was the possible corruption of our jurisprudence by a judge.

[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 him at ­joseisla3@yahoo.com]. ©2008

Bush is lying, there is enough oil and gas in Alaska, we don’t need to drill offshore

by Marvin J. Ramirez

Marvin J. RamirezMarvin J. Ramirez

The selling of the United States to the international bankers and oil consortiums continue going uncovered by the majestic media, while the sleeping beauty (the North American public) rest in front of their TV tubes watching their favorite flick, buy their latest ¡iPods, and continue driving and buying gas-burning cars.

The high emotions provoked by the latest skyrocketing gas prices that have alerted the people about something wrong happening to our country, have been atoned by the softly coming down of gas price by a few cents.

The célèbre politician, and de facto spokesperson of the oil industry George W. Bush, is again trying to act as a redeemer to our disgrace, by pleading to the Congress to let the oil moguls to start drilling for oil in our Pacific Coast offshore.

“Congress Should ‘schedule a vote on offshore oil exploration as soon as possible’ and “not insert any legislative poison pills,” was the message Bush sent in a capitalized headliner on Tuesday to the national media.

““There’s not a single answer to our energy problems.

But a part of solving the dilemma that our consumers are facing, that the hardworking Americans face, and that is high price of gasoline, we need to get after exploration here in America. And we can do it in a way that protects the environment. So when Congress comes back, they need to act. And they don’t need to gimmick up the legislation; they need to allow there to be an up or down vote, and let the members express the will of their constituents.”

At first value, the President’s words sound very altruistic, sincere, and full of true facts. Any innocent (sleeping) North American will believe their Commander In-Chief when the obedient and biased media repeat it through out the week in their networks.

However, what W. Bush is not saying, the media won’t highlight it, won’t pursue it, as they pursue The Minute Men’s anti-immigrants activities. With another capitalized headliner, writer Marie Gunther contradicts most of what is saying.

“Huge Alaska Oil Reserves Go Unused, after 30 years, an insider fi nally acknowledges the United States has all the oil and gas it needs.”

The United States has more oil reserves than Saudi Arabia but this happy though shocking information has been covered up for years.

The wells have been drilled; it’s merely a matter of turning on the faucets to supply America’s needs for 200 years.

A 30-year veteran oil executive with leukemia who has decided to speak out has confirmed these astounding revelations.

In 1980, Lindsey Williams wrote a book, The Energy Non-Crisis, based upon his eyewitness accounts during the construction of the Trans-Alaska pipeline. As a chaplain assigned to executive status and the advisory board of Atlantic Richfi eld & Co. (ARCO), he was privy to detailed information.

“All of our energy problems could have been solved in the 70s with the huge discovery of oil under Gull Island, Prudhoe Bay, Alaska,” Williams said.

“There is more pure grade oil there than in all of Saudi Arabia. Gull Island contains as much oil and natural gas as Americans could use in 200 years.” Oddly though, immediately after this massive discovery, the federal government ordered the rigs to be capped and oil production shut down.

Developing Alaskan oil would make the United States completely independent of oil imports, Williams said in his book, Gunther says in her article.

“Why is the government covering up such good news?” continues the article.

And adds: “Why does it want to be dependent on imported oil? Do international fi nanciers who are heavily invested in the oil industry want to keep the supply limited and prices up?

“Will the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, chaired by Sen. Frank Murkowski (R-Alaska), investigate what could be a criminal cover-up?

Will the appropriate House committees inquire? Or the Justice Department? Since the cover-up has extended through four presidential administrations, only public outrage can force action.”

I can assume that the mass media is as an accomplice in this cover-up as is everyone in our government, especially elected public offi cials who, fallen in love with power, have sold their soul to the devil, and hence betrayed We the people.

(Lindsey Williams’s book, The Energy Non Crisis, for $7 plus S&H by calling toll free 1-800-321-2900.)

Concern builds as Latinos now comprise 22% of AIDS diagnoses

by Nicole Joy

Border governors sign green agreement with Schwarzenegger: From left to right: The Mexican governors of Coahuila Humberto Moreira Valdés, of Chihuahua José Reyes Baeza Terrazas, of Sonora Eduardo Bours Castelo, of Tamaulipas Eugenio Hernández Flores, and of (U.S.) California Arnold Schwarzenegger signing aBorder governors sign green agreement with Schwarzenegger From left to right: The Mexican governors of Coahuila Humberto Moreira Valdés, of Chihuahua José Reyes Baeza Terrazas, of Sonora Eduardo Bours Castelo, of Tamaulipas Eugenio Hernández Flores, and of (U.S.) California Arnold Schwarzenegger signing a document to fight climate change and increase green investment through public private partnerships at XXVII Border Governors Conference. (photo by Duncan Mcintosh)

Coinciding with updated data revealing that Hispanics comprise 22 percent of new HIVAIDS diagnoses in the United States, major global and national sessions are addressing the statistics with new concern.

The figures, released by the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control, fed discussions this month at the International AIDS Conference in Mexico City, which drew 22,000 participants.

Multiple organizations representing U.S. Hispanics joined in presentations on issues impacting the community as they strategized on how to fight AIDS effectively across all borders.

A major U.S. conference on AIDS will follow Sept. 18-21 in Miami Beach, hosted by the National Minority AIDS Council.

The Mexico City sessions, which concluded Aug. 8, ranged from satellite meetings and special youth programs to visual arts exhibitions. A series of presentations covered social and economic factors prevalent in the Latino community.

Dennis deLeón, head of the New York-based Latino Commission on AIDS, related to Weekly Report the many challenges facing those working to confront the AIDS epidemic.

“We hope to share what is happening in other countries through more press coverage—and to see how those countries are coping with care needs,” he said.

DeLeón singled out stigma as a main challenge the Latino population faces. “This stigmatizing process can cut persons with AIDS off from their families’” he said.

“It causes sexually active Hispanics not to get tested for HIV or to delay taking medications until they are presented with an AIDS diagnosis.”

A 24-minute video presentation produced by the Bay Area National Latino AIDS Awareness Day(BANLMD), “A Todos Nos Afecta’” encouraged discussions about HIV/AIDS related stigma and risk behaviors.

It featured interviews with infected individuals in conjunction with telenovela-style dramatizations about Latino immigrant populations in California.

In addition’ the National Latino AIDS Committee of Northern Virginia displayed an exhibit titled “Portraits of Latinos fi ghting against AIDS in the Washington’ D.C. metropolitan area.”

In other health related news:

As Hispanics grow older, Alzheimer’s poses ­bigger threat to community

by Virginia Torres

Hispanics with mild to moderate Alzbeimer’s disease experienced major progress in cognition after 12 weeks of treatment with Aricept (donepezil HCI tablets), according to a study released July 30 at the 2008 Alzheimer’s Association International Conference.

Approximately 200,000 Hispanics living in the United States today have AD, and by the year 2050 an estimated 1.3 million will have the disease, announced the National Institute on Aging.

Óscar López, professor of neurology at the University of Pittsburgh, is one of the lead investigators in the study, which involved 106 Hispanic men and women at least 50 years old. L6pez has conducted several studies in the clinical diagnosis of AD and vascular dementia.

“This news should serve as a call to action for Hispanic families to watch for early signs of AD among their loved ones and speak with a doctor as soon as possible if symptoms are suspected,” he said.

The research indicates that symptoms of AD in Hispanics show seven years before non-Hispanics, and approximately 40 percent of the cases are undiagnosed and untreated. It adds that: Latinos usually wait three years after having the fi rst symptoms to see a doctor due to language and cultural barriers.

AD is increasing among Latinos because of the growing elderly population, genetics and higher rates in diabetes and hypertension, the study concludes. Hispanic Link.­

Lugo takes office in Paraguay, expectations are inmensesouthern

by the El Reportero’s news services

The expectations surrounding Lugo’s new leftwing government are immense: he is the first president in 61 years not to come from the rightwing Partido Colorado (ANR).

However, the difficulties facing Lugo are equally sizeable. The new president has had to cobble together a congressional alliance comprising former opponents, including a faction of the ANR loyal to his widely reviled predecessor, Nicanor Duarte.

The key to Lugo’s presidency will be whether his legislative supporters back the radical proposals Lugo has promised to reduce poverty and to end corruption.

Morales wins recall vote in Bolivia, but deadlock continues with prefects

Hopes that the 10 August recall vote would bring an end to the political crisis afflicting Bolivia soon evaporated after both President Evo Morales and his key opponents were overwhelmingly ratified in power according to pre liminary results.

Nevertheless, with more than two thirds of the vote, two key opponents ejected and an increase in support in eight of the country’s nine regions, Morales undoubtedly emerges the stronger and in a prime position to begin the inevitable negotiation process.

ALBA nations expand cooperation

MANAGUA, Aug 11- Venezuelan ambassador to Managua Sergio Rodriguez told Prensa Latina the construction of an oil refi nery in Nicaragua is on schedule.

According to the diplomat, a wide cooperation program is being developed within the framework of Petrocaribe. The refi nery project is on schedule, Rodriguez stated.

As part of the ALBA (Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas) cooperation program, the fi rst shipment of Nicaraguan heifers was sent to Venezuela. Another shipment is due within the next few day.

Nicaragua is also selling beef to Venezuela’s local state markets known as Mercal. Milk and chicken will soon add to Nicaragua’s exports, he said.

Some 1,600 patients have flown to Venezuela to undergo eye surgery and there are many other health and cooperation projects being developed.

Rodriguez said rightwing mass media is objecting the ALBA integration process in an attempt to discredit it. Most of such media is acting as a lackey of the US Empire, he stated.

Lula & Chávez lead new spike of top-level regional alliance building

In one of the busiest months ever for Latin American presidential diplomacy, Brazil’s Lula da Silva has managed to persuade Colombia’s Álvaro Uribe to join the proposed South American defence council, while Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez was able to boast of having attracted two new recruits to his camp: Costa Rica into Petrocaribe, Honduras (possibly) into Alba.

At the same time, Uribe and Chávez have again buried the hatchet, and Lula and Chávez took the opportunity to act jointly in shoring up Bolivia’s Evo Morales in the face of his serious domestic challenges.

New call to review NAFTA in Mexico

MEXICO, Aug 10- Mexican farmer organizations reiterated today their call to review the agricultural chapter of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), considered harmful to food sovereignty.

The National Union of Regional Autonomous Farmer Organizations insisted in renegotiating NAFTA in order to protect Mexican agriculture and re-orientate priorities to domestic production instead of imports.

According to the rural movement, products like corn, sugar, beans, wheat, rice, sorghum, coffee, eggs, milk, beef, poultry and fi sh should be declared strategic to national diet and thus, protected.

The previous week, the Confederación Nacional Campesina of Mexico favored a deep change and review of policies applied in the agricultural sector, above all due to the effects of links with the United States.

Cruz López, leader of that group, denounced that transnational companies are to blame for rules benefi ting US farmers and harmful to Mexican producers. U.S. company Farm Hill, exemplified the guild leader, has hit hardest Mexican farmers, who receive salaries that barely allow them to survive in a situation marked by an unprecedented increase in prices of the family basket. (Latin News and Prensa Latina contributed to this report.)

Hispanic elderly need and deserve Social Security protection

by Janet Murguia

Hilaria Vallejo was shocked to learn that after 35 years of picking tomatoes in farms across the southern United States, she was not eligible to receive Social Security benefits. Born in southern Texas, the 77-yearold was unaware that her employers did not report her wages or withhold Social Security taxes. “At the time, we were just happy to be getting paid, but we didn’t know what they were doing,” she said. “They took advantage of us.”

With an amputated leg—the result of a cancerous tumor and an aging body—Hilaria cannot work to sustain herself. Denied the Social Security benefits she should have earned, she depends on the help she receives from her five children to pay her bills and buy groceries. “I’m an American citizen,” she said. “I worked many years in this country’s fields.”

As the economy heads toward recession, Hilaria’s financial stability is at even greater risk. Most elderly Americans and people with disabilities can find at least some relief in Social Security, the federal insurance program to which workers contribute through mandatory payroll taxes and from which they or their family members collect benefits in the event of retirement, disability or death. During times of economic hardship, Social Security benefits become critical to meeting immediate needs.

Unfortunetely, Hilaria’s situation is a reality for many members of our most vulnerable communities, people who face economic insecurity because they lack this social insurance. Almost 30 percent of Latinos age 65 or older do not receive Social Security benefits, compared to only 10 percent of the general population of this age, and more than half of elderly Latinos rely on Social Security for 90 percent of their income. Without Social Security, nearly two-thirds of Latinos over the age of 65 would live in poverty.

Low-wage employment, lack of wage reporting, and errors in employment classification are among the factors that contribute to the gap in Social Security coverage. Workers earning minimum to low wages are less likely to be covered, putting them at risk of bearing a heavy financial burden after retirement or following a debilitating medical emergency. In addition, employers like Hilaria’s, who withhold Social Security taxes or fail to report wages, rob workers of these crucial benefits. Many employers also misclassify workers as independent contractors who need to file their own.. Unaware that the Social Security tax is not automatically withheld from their wages, these employees unknowingly forfeit their benefits.

August marks the 73rd anniversary of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s signing of the Social Security Act into law Many Latino workers have not benefited, despite the contributions that they have made to the U.S. economy before and after the bill became law. This disparity in coverage affects our nation’s economy as a whole.

As the Baby Boomers retire, the number of working age adults who contribute to Social Security significantly decreases. As a younger population and an important growing part of the workforce, Latinos will play a large role in paying for the retirement of the Baby Boomers.

Undocumented immigrants, often targeted in the media as “freeloaders,” also significantly contribute to Social Security. The Social Security Administration Chief Actuary estimates that 75°/0 of undocumented workers, most of whom will never see any Social Security benefits, pay Social Security taxes.

They will contribute as much as $7 billion annually to the Social Security trust fund.

In an effort to inform the discussion on these disparities, the National Council of La Raza (NCLR)—the largest national Hispanic civil rights and advocacy organization in the United States—has published Domestic Workers Working Hard to Sustain American Families, Compromising Their Social Security and The Social Security Program and Reform. A Latino Perspective. Both are available at www.ncir.org­.

Conducting important research and releasing publications such as these is just the first step in addressing the critical needs of the older members of our community.

They, like all workers, have made invaluable contributions to our country. It is our obligation to ensure that their basic needs are met.

(Janet Murguía is president of the National Council of La Raza.)

Preparing the 2008 Latino Film Festival

The personnel of the San Francisco International Latino Film Festival threw the house by the window July 21 during the kickoff of the organizing campaign of this great annual event, with a delicious dinner gathering at the fabulous Destino Restaurant. The festival will take place from November 7 – 23. Stay tuned.

Those people who desire more information or would like to be associated to the Latin Film Society, should send us an mail in the festival’s website: www.latinofilmfestival.org.

Sitting, from L-R: Adrián Carrasco, Ninfa Dawson, Sylvia Perel, June Chatterjee. Behind: Virginia Chavez, Vanessa Topper, Charlotte von Hemert and Damian; René and Carlos Cota Estevez; farther behind: John Petrovsky, Luis Calero and Fracois.

Cheech and Chong in tour together after 25-year feud

por Antonio Mejías-Rentas

Cheech and ChngCheech and Chng

REUNITED: One of the most popular comedy teams of the 1970s and 80s will tour this fall, putting an end to a sometimes bitter 25-year feud.

Richard “Cheech” Marín and Tommy Chong will hit 22 U.S. cities starting Sept. 12 in Philadelphia and ending in Denver on Dec. 20. Presented by concert powerhouse Live Nation, Cheech & Chong: Light Up America will hit prime venues in major markets, including Los Angeles, Miami and Washington, D.C.

Marin, 62, and Chong, 70, announced the tour at Los Angeles’ Troubadour’s nightclub where they honed their marijuana-inspired comedy act in the 70s and developed their “stoner” characters. Cheech & Chong won a 1973 comedy Grammy for Los cochinos and their first movie – the 1978 hit Up in Smoke, made $100 million. The pair last performed live in 1981 but continued recording and making films through 1985. In spite of their acrimonious and well publicized split, the two have been cordiaUn public 4and have hinted at a reunion tour in the last few years.

Cheech – whose nickname comes from the word chicharrón— said the pair’s stoner humor will surely appeal to today’s youth. “We’ve had the younger audience all along,” he said. “Every time they get to that certain age, they go through that Cheech & Chong period watching the movies, listening to the records. So, it’s almost like a rite of passage.”

Cheech and Chong continued to perform separately after the split, mostly in television series.

Marin, born to a Los Angeles Mexican-American family, is a well-known collector of Chicano art. Part of his collection is currently on view at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

Chong has long advocated the legalization of marijuana, and in 2003 was arrested and jailed for selling drug paraphernalia.

IN COMPETITION: One out of five films representing the U.S. at this year’s 85th annual Venice International Film Festival marks the directing debut of Mexican writer Guillermo Arriaga.

The Burning Plain, also written by Arriaga, was among 21 competing films announced last week. The festival takes place Aug. 27 to Sept. 8. Hispanic Link.

City releases $100k for Nicaraguan Huracane Felix victims

­by the El Reportero’s staff

Members of several groups of community organization have reasons to celebrate after the San Francisco Board of Supervisors released a $100,000 relief fund on behalf of the people of the Nicaraguan Atlantic Coast impacted by Hurricane Felix.

“First of all we want to express our gratitude to the Board of Supervisors of the City and County of San Francisco, Mayor Gavin Newsom, the Northern California Nicaraguan Hurricane Relief Coalition and Somos Costa Atlántica for all their work and support to assure that $100,000 of funding was earmarked to bring relief to communities impacted by Hurricane Felix in the North Atlantic Autonomous Region (RAAN) of Nicaragua,” said in a written statement, Ana C. Pérez, from the Central American Resources Center (CARECEN).

CARECEN, which played an administrative role of the funds, released two important projects that were selected for the funding.

Among them are, the Fundacion Alistar Anic, which was awarded $40k for material aid and $5k to administer the project. Alistar will build water holding tanks and a purifying system to serve two communities in the Waspam municipality: Krasa and Santa Rosa.

The second project is IPADE (Instituto para el Desarrollo y la Democracia), which was awarded $40,000 to purchase material aid and $5,000 to administer the project. IPADE will purchase Zinc roofi ng (metal roofi ng sheets) and will be distributing roofi ng materials in the communities of Kamala, Signi, and Signilaya.

Ralph Nader won presidential nomination on Peace and Freedom Party 2008

Saturday Peace and Freedom Party convention in Sacramento chose former 3Green Party Ralph Nader as their nominee for President for the 2008 election.

Nader garnered just over 50 percent on the first floor ballot, and his victory guarantees

his name will appear on the ballot for President in California. He was the 1996 and 2000 presidential nominee for the Greens.

He ran an independent race in 2004, as he is this year.

His running mate is Matt Gonzalez, a former Green Party president of the Board of Supervisors in San Francisco.

Cynthia McKinney, the former 12-time Democratic Party member of Congress and this year’s Green Party nominee for President, finished behind Nader.

In the Peace and Freedom Party’s presidential preference primary in California earlier this year – which was not binding – the results were Nader (41 percent), McKinney (21 percent), La Riva (20 percent) and Moore (11 percent).

Feds can seize travelers’ electronics, more

As of July 16, US federal agents have the power to seize travelers’ laptops and other electronic devices at the border and hold them for however long they want, says a Friday report. The seizures do not require a suspicion of wrongdoing, and are aimed to counter terrorism, with the new policies passed by two Department of Homeland Security agencies. The contents of the confiscated laptops and electronics can then be shared with not only other agencies, but private entities in order to decrypt the data they contain.

DHS officials maintain the new policies allow federal agents to take any hard drives, flash drives, cell phones, iPods, pagers, beepers and video or audio tapes, as well as books and any written materials from any person entering the USA, US citizens included. While the measures were being practiced before they were made public in mid-July, pressure from civil rights and business travel groups made the government admit the existence new policies.

To protect sensitive business information and privileged material, such as between lawyers and clients, the policies require agents to destroy any copies of the data they acquire once a review is complete and there is no more probable cause to leave the information on file.