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Channel to show why Latino youth should be proud

by Tracie Morales

An scene of thet film 28 weeks afterAn scene of thet film 28 weeks after

EXCLUSIVE: Spanish director Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, one of many talented Latinos gaining acclaim in Hollywood for creating evocative and visual films, talks to Weekly Report about his latest project, 28 Weeks later opening May 11. The follow-Up film to the enormously successful 28 Days Later marks Fresnadillo’s first project produced In English.

The story begins six months after a deadly epidemic that turned humans into states of murderous rage sweeps through Great Britain, leaving only a few survivors. Among them is a family trying to pick up the pieces. Despite claims of eradication by the United States, the virus returns, threatening any chance of survival.

“I wanted to tell a realistic and apocalyptic tale that the viewer could identify with,” Fresnadillo said. “The film questions whether it is possible to reconstruct a normal life after the world has been destroyed.”

Juan Carlos FresnadilloJuan Carlos Fresnadillo

He emphasized that his Latin heritage religion, guilt, strong family ties influenced elements in the fi lm.

“Those Latino concepts resonate with the public not just nationally, but internationally,” he said.

The Academy Awardnominated fi lmmaker makes his debut with his fi rst English fi lm after directing critically acclaimed works in Spanish such as Psicotaxi, Intacto, Esposados.

“You have to share lan- guages,” he said. “I have no problem with making fi lms in English, but I would like to return to making fi lms in my native tongue.”

George LópezGeorge López

HASTA LUEGO:

The ABC season finale of George López ends on a high note with a guest appearance by Stand and Deliver star Edward James Olmos on May 8.

STAY TUNED:

The music channel MTVTr3s is celebrating the many reasons Latino youth are proud of their culture in mini-documentaries airing throughout May. The “Tu Pride” campaign will show Latinos from large cities and small towns honoring their heritage in unique ways. The mini-docs range from 30-60 seconds, with accompanying music from emerr4inq Latino artists.

Hispanic Link.

Governor Schwarzenegger announces new appointments

by Elisabeth Pinio

Arnold SchwarzeneggerArnold Schwarzenegger

Governor Schwarzenegger has announced newly appointed offi cials for the state of California. State Board of Barbering Cosmetology: Socorro Farias, of Folsom, Calif. She is a jewelry consultant for Cookie Lee Jewelry, and a Spanish medical interpreter for the University of California, Davis Medical Center.

Fraud Assessment Commission: Lilia Garcia, of East Los Angeles. Garcia is the executive director of Maintenance Corporation Trust Fund, a regulator of the janitorial industry.

The Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board: Jose Moreno, of Fremont, Calif. He has been a labor rights advocate for several years.

City shut down Woodfi n, workers fired up

More than 300 people gathered in Emeryville, Calif. to protest the fi rings of twelve immigrant workers by Woodfin Suites Hotel. The intersection in front of the hotel was blocked for hours as boycotters demanded the Emeryville City Council to revoke Woodfi n’s operating permit until the workers’ jobs were restored and compensation was provided.

The hotel quoted Social Security discrepancies as the reason for the workers’ dismissals. The workers stated that Woodfi n hadn’t voiced concern over their immigration status until they started asserting their rights under Measure C. Supporters threatened to continue the protests, increasing the frequency from two times per week to fi ve, until the workers’ demands are met.

What’s in a name?

Fiona MaFiona Ma

The Name Equality Act of 2007 will allow soon- to-be married spouses and
domestic partners to change their surnames, regardless of gender, upon marriage or domestic partnership registration. AB 102, authored by Assemblywoman Fiona Ma (D-San Francisco), will also require California Department of Motor Vehicles to issue a new driver’s license or identifi cation card with the preferred name when presented with a marriage license or certifi cate of domestic partnership.

This act is currently recognized in six states.

Mayor announces HIV Planning Council appointments

San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom has announced appointments and reappointments to the San Francisco HIV Planning Council, which include Alfredo Cordova, Jose Luis Villarce, and Cruz Olgin.

Each member of the HIV Planning Council has a background in public advocacy with a dedication to the homeless and Latino communities, promoting HIV awareness and prevention, and compassion and support to those living with HIV and AIDS.

College of Alameda offers Ancestral DNA Testing Workshop

College of Alameda is offering a genealogy workshop for those interested in exploring their ancestry. Taught by the college’s anthropology instructor, Dr. Nathan Strong, the six-hour class will include DNA collection of each student and a thorough description of DNA testing to trace biogeographic origins. Results of the DNA collection will be analyzed and discussed.

The two-part workshop will take place May 19 and June 9, from noon to 3 p.m. Cost of the workshop is $125. Interested participants can call (510) 748-2395 to register.

Latina honor student fi rst in family to attend college

Laura Maldonado, student ambassador of College of Alameda and vice president of the student honor society, has been accepted to the California Maritime Academy as a Global Studies and Maritime Affairs major.

Maldonado immigrated to California from Mexico City with her mother at the age of 15. Fluent in English, she plans to study languages at Maritime University in addition to her other coursework. Her goal is to be fl uent in fi ve languages. She is the fi rst member of her family to attend college.

My conversation with 8-year-old international pawn

­by Esther J. Cepeda

As Mother’s Day approached, I sat with eight-year-old Saúl in the courtyard of St. Adalberto United Methodist Church in Chicago, where he lives with his mother, Elvira Arellano, who has avoided the reach of U.S. immigration officials for nine months now.

Away from a small group of other parishioners who were also enjoying a barbecue lunch, we engaged in some serious conversation.

Saúl is a U.S. citizen by virtue of being born here. His mother isn’t. She arrived in the United States from Maravatio, a small town in the central Mexico state of Michoacán, without papers 10 years ago. On Aug. 15, 2006, she defied a federal order to report to the Chicago office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement for deportation proceedings. She had been swept up in a raid at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport, where she had worked for a year as a cleaning lady at O’Hare International Airport.

Last fall, long separated from Saúl’s father, Elvira took the boy, then 7, and sought sanctuary in their church on the city’s near west side. Her hope was that ICE agents would not raid the church, and time would bring an avenue for her to stay in the United States legally with her son. ICE agents have stayed away, in part perhaps because of the Arellanos’ celebrity status in the community.

During the May Day immigration march, pro-immigrant organizers took Saúl to Chicago’s Grant Park to address a crowd of thousands. Always thin and shy, he has grown, by his mother’s measure, five inches since August. But around adults his speech remains guarded.

I have spoken with mother and son on several occasions while reporting on their status. I have a son Saúl’s age, which I hoped would guide me in moving our conversation.

Framing his predicament carefully, Saúl told me he was content living in the church but felt confronted daily by his mom’s lack of freedom. “She can’t take me to the store and can’t take me to school. It makes me feel a little bad. My friends — they have their moms and their dads,” he said. “It’s different for them.”

He described how he and his mother used to go to the park and run around together. Now they settle for watching movies on TV in the room they share in the sanctuary church.

On special occasions Elvira does her best to bring the party to Saúl. “For my birthday we invited all my friends over. We played and ate,” he said. “We had pizza, hot dogs, nachos and apple juice.”

The boy is growing up much faster than he wants. He has traveled across the country accompanied by advocates for his mother’s cause, speaking to countless radio, television and newspaper reporters about her situation, using the spotlight to plead for a compassionate law that would let families threatened with separation stay together in the United States.

He has appeared on talk shows, gone to Washington, D.C., multiple times to meet politicians, and even traveled to Mexico City, his first trip across the border, to ask that nation’s legislators to lobby the United States government on his mother’s behalf. They quickly obliged.

He relishes the things his mother does for him, like his special meals during her 25-day hunger strike which ended May 1. “She fixes good soup — with vegetables and meat and small pieces of corn on the cob so they fit in the bowl.” He fantasizes about walking out of the church with his mom to get pizza at his favorite Chuck E. Cheese.

He describes their daily routines, hanging out and doing homework at the table where Elvira works on the computer. They watch TV together, play with his action figures, and practice vocabulary for his weekly spelling test.

For Mother’s Day, he explains, “We made cards at school. They have different hearts on them and I wrote something on it but I can’t remember what.”

How else might he show his love for her?

“I think she likes flowers.”

Then one more wish tumbled off the child’s tongue. “I want President Bush to end the deportations so my mom and other families can stay here in the United States.”

(Esther J. Cepeda of Chicago is a contributing columnist with Hispanic Link News Service. She may be reached at chihuahua33@hotmail.com). © 2007

‘The war continues

by Jorge Mariscal

PBS and Ken Burns still don’t get it.

After months of negotiations with Latino advocacy groups, academics, veterans and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, the powers that be at PBS and their house director Ken Burns fail to understand the real issues at stake in Burns’ exclusion of the Latino experience in his World War II documentary “The War.”

In an article published May 5 in The New York Times, Burns continued to make self-aggrandizing and ignorant statements.

According to the Times, Burns called his 14-hour series, scheduled to be shown during Hispanic Heritage Month in September, “a sort of epic poem and not a textbook.”

He must be kidding. Several weeks ago, Mr. Burns compared his film to the U.S. Constitution. Now he says it’s sort of an epic poem.

artist’s personal vision. The singer of the Iliad or the Poem of the Cid was simplyIf he knew anything about epic poems, he would know that they were composed with the goal of representing an entire community’s historical experience. They had nothing to do with an individual a vehicle for a shared collective experience.

Clearly, Burns is not interested in any of these things. He has his individual “vision” which cannot be tampered with. He is a self-righteous romantic who has no business and not enough knowledge to chronicle an event as momentous as World War II.

No one in the group that raised questions about the film asked Burns to turn it into “a textbook.” Let him be as lyrical and non-narrative as he wishes. No one wants to deprive him of his artistic freedom. But he has no right to invent a history of the war that excludes a community that paid a very high price for its participation.

The Times article stated: “Mr. Burns, who was not at the meeting (between PBS executives and Hispanic leaders), said he found it painful that the controversy was erupting over a film in which he explores an episode of American history that brought citizens together.”

Burns is pained by the controversy. Then why doesn’t he stop his pain by doing the right thing? Is his “vision” more important than an inclusive account of the war? It was his flawed “vision” and sloppy research (not those who raised legitimate questions) that created divisions.

While it is certainly true that World War II brought the U.S. people together, Burns needs to go back to school to learn about events like the Zoot Suit Riots and the Felix Longoria case. World War II was not as utopian for some communities as Burns thinks it was. He didn’t do his homework.

Burns should either fire his researchers or fire himself. As long as PBS continues to take money from the public treasury, it should fire all of them.

Can we Latinos look forward to some future Ken Burns excluding us from the history of the U.S. war in Iraq?

Finally, the Times reported: “Mr. Burns said there was no chance that the film would be re-edited. It would be destructive, like trying to graft an arm onto your child,” he said. “It would destroy the film.”

Give me a break. Any decent writer or filmmaker not blinded by ego knows that any text or film thought to be finished can be reopened and revised without the slightest negative impact on overall tone and structure. It might actually get better.

To think otherwise displays either a total lack of creative imagination or a stubborn refusal to listen to other voices or both.

A film is not a child. And if it were, no one is asking Burns to attach a third arm.

Simply put, Latinos are asking Burns to reshape the entire artifact into a harmonious object that reflects every community that lived the experience of the war against fascism.

One of the cities featured in the current film is Sacramento, California. Competent historians could quickly provide Burns with stories of Latino veterans from that city that might be seamlessly woven into his film.

But unfortunately, PBS and Ken Burns still don’t get it. Or they simply don’t care.

(Jorge Mariscal, a veteran of the U.S. war in Vietnam, is a professor of history and literature at the University of California, San Diego. Contact him at gmariscal@ucsd.edu). © 2007

The city should promote ownership vs tenentship

­by marvin J Ramirez

From The Editor Marvin J. RamirezFrom The Editor Marvin J. Ramirez

The housing market has taught us all a lesson. It happened about 12 years ago, and it happened again. As most of us have witnessed, the opportunity of becoming rich overnight selling real estate seems to have been vanishing again.

Those who saw their income skyrocketing are seeing now the loss, little by little those gains they achieves, slowly starting to disappear.

Meanwhile, millions of people who don’t own a home, might never have a chance to achieve that dream, as San Francisco’s small supply of vacant land, continues ending in the hands of speculators to build luxurious condos that most can’t afford.

The City, in the other hand, is helping a lot by demanding a small portion of new condo constructions, to be allocated for low-income residents.

But the shortage of housing is sending other away. Armies of families are leaving San Francisco, so losing the City its precious diversity.

“As we praise San Francisco for its diversity, we fail to address the reality that developers are stripping this diversity from our city. As we see families flee our city in record numbers, the concern that affordable housing is the leading cause of family flight in San Francisco is no longer a question,” said a youth commission’s statement.

By the same token, the City, instead of selling these new apartment to its low-income tenants, continue renting them, so perpetuating these people as renters forever.

It would be like a miracle or a voice fallen from heaven if we heard any member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors to advocate or propose this idea of selling, not renting the newly built condos to those low-income families, as their only alternative to securing permanent, inexpensive housing.

Let’s not forget that the externalities associated with homeownership are many, and very positive.

The results of studies suggest that some of the effects of homeownership bring residential stability within the communities. And, as much as homeownership increases residential stability, it appears to be correlated with higher school attainment, and creates self-steam.

The Board of Supervisors and the Mayor of San Francisco should become champions to starting this endeavor of empowering the people by changing the course by providing ownership instead of rental units to the people they want to help. Instead of them paying the rent, they could be paying their mortgage.

Bernal Heights community continues campaigning for their preschool

by Juliana Birnbaum Fox

Kinder garden still in the air: Mauricio Vela (right) shows Alejandra Lara, mother of a kinder garden student, the plan for the new kinder garden plan, while architect Armando Vázquez observes. ( PHOTO BY MARVIN J. RAMIREZ )Kinder garden still in the air Mauricio Vela (right) shows Alejandra Lara, mother of a kinder garden student, the plan for the new kinder garden plan, while architect Armando Vázquez observes. ( PHOTO BY MARVIN J. RAMIREZ )

Parents, community leaders, and local residents gathered on May 4 to celebrate their victories and to continue their three-year effort to stop the planned eviction of the Bernal Heights State Preschool.

The school, located in the ground floor of the Bernal Heights Branch Library, offers free care for low-income families.It was to be moved permanently to Paul Revere Elementary in June 2006 due to seismic retrofitting of the library building. Members of the Save Bernal Preschool—Stop the Eviction campaign want the preschool to stay in the library after the retrofit, citing the benefits of a central location with easy access for local families and proximity to the library’s books and computers.

Bernal Heights Preschool has been located in the branch library for 26 years, and is currently made up of 80 percent of Latino families. The San Francisco Library Commission initially decided, without community input, that it would not be included in the new library’s design. Local organizing efforts have forced the library to reconsider its decision and to put forth other options.

Mauricio Vela (at front in black), with Kinder Garden students,: teachers and parents af ter a class graduation Bernal Preschool.Mauricio Vela (at front in black), with Kinder Garden students, teachers and parents af ter a class graduation Bernal Preschool.

While the Bernal Heights and Mission neighborhoods have a larger proportion of children under 5 years old than other parts of the city do, the number of preschool openings is smaller.

Currently, one out of three children is denied access to preschool because of the shortage of facilities.

“We refuse to be pushed out of our home for 30 years after we put in the sweat equity to keep the library open, renovate the play structure, gymnasium, and the Neighborhood Center, and revitalized Cortland Avenue,” said Gladys Soto, preschool committee co-chair, St. Mary’s Park resident, and mother of a 21-month old.

“We wanted to create a safety net for our children, youth, and seniors most at risk. We successfully did that and now we’re being asked to leave,” Soto said.

San Francisco Supervisors Tom Ammiano, Chris Daly, and California Assemblyman Mark Leno have come out publicly in support of the preschool.

Gladys Soto and daughter GiovannaGladys Soto and daughter Giovanna

On April 24, the Board of Supervisors introduced a children and youth budget supplement which included Ammiano’s request of $1.6 million for the predevelopment and construction of a new Bernal preschool.

Experts are being assembled for a feasibility study, which will begin later this month, regarding construction on a playground site adjacent to the Bernal Library. To provide space for the preschool while library construction is taking place, a temporary site is being prepared at Paul Revere elementary school for a two year relocation period.

If the results of the study are positive and fundraising successful, plan approval, permitting and construction of the new preschool would take place between January 2007 and December 2008. Once the Bernal Preschool moves into the new site, Mission Neighborhood Centers has offered to continue operating the Paul Revere site, creating 50 slots of childcare in addition to the 50 slots the Bernal Preschool would provide. This would increase the total Bernal community childcare center slots to 100 from the 25 currently provided at the library.

“The fight to stop the eviction of the preschool is alive and well. We haven’t let the city dampen our spirits. They actually have strengthened our resolve to return to our home of 26 years,” said Bill Sorro, a grandfather, long term Bernal resident and Preschool campaign co-chair.

Mexican cartels seize control of inmigrant routes

by the El Reportero news services

Alfonzo PeñaAlfonzo Peña

SASABE, MEXICO – Mexican drug lords are taking over the business of smuggling migrants into the United States, using them as human decoys to divert authorities from billions of dollars in cocaine shipments across the same border.

U.S. and Mexican law-enforcement officials said that drug traffickers, in response to a U.S. border crackdown, have seized control of the routes they once shared with human smugglers and are transforming themselves into more diversified crime syndicates.

The drug gangs get protection money from the migrants and then use them to clear the trail for the flow of drugs.

Undocumented aliens are used “to maneuver where they want us or don’t want us to be,’’ said Alonzo Peña, chief of investigations for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Arizona.

Gustavo Soto, a spokesman for the U.S. Border Patrol in Tucson, Ariz., said smugglers are carrying drugs along paths once used primarily by migrants. New fences and National Guard troops have helped seal the usual drug routes, and vehicle barriers are forcing traffickers to send more drugs north on the backs of cartel foot soldiers, he said, reported World News.

International Court opens hearing in case Nicaragua Colombia

The International Court of Justice (CIJ) will open the public hearings in the dispute on marine delimitation that faces Nicaragua and Colombia next June 4. These trataraán concerning the jurisdiction of the court in the case, it indicated a bulletin of the judicial organism in a bulletin this week.

These are preliminary hearings and will deal only on the topic if the Court is competent to hear it, which Colombia has put in doubt. It will not talk about the substance of the question that both countries face.

Nicaragua denounced Colombia before the ICJ for “legal topics relating to the marine and territorial delimitation” between the two countries in their opposite west of their Caribbean sea. The denunciation was done on Dec. 6, 2001.

In dispute are the sovereignty that Nicaragua claims on the islands Providence, San Andrés and Saint Catalina, as well as on the keys Roncador, Mountain, Serranilla and Quitasueño.

Nicaragua lays claim to the San Andrés and Providencia islands, and ­Roncador, Quitasueños and Cerrana keys, which it lost to Colombia, Nicaragua says, in a 1928 treaty it was forced to sign because it was occupied by the US Marines at the time.

Also, Nicaragua asks that the ICJ determine the continental platform and the economic exclusive zone in the Caribbean that corresponds to each of the countries. In its denunciation, Nicaragua argued that “it reserves itself the right to request compensations for elements of unjust enrichment “, on the part of Colombia, derivative of the possession of this country of these islands and keys.

FBI joins others to assess LAPD brutality charges

by Alex Meneses Miyashita

LAPD Chief William BrattonLAPD Chief William Bratton

The FBI announced May 3 that it will open a civil rights investigation into the use of force by Los Angeles police officers against civilians during a May 1 immigration rally that gathered some 25,000 demonstrators.

The Los Angeles Police Department is also investigating the case. Police chief William Bratton said May 3 it would conduct a “comprehensive” investigation “to determine if that use of force was an appropriate response to the level of threat, disturbance and danger the officers were encountering.”

Police fired some 250 rubber bullets and used batons and physical force against the participants as they dispersed the crowd during the rally at the city’s Mac Arthur Park.

Shortening a trade mission to El Salvador, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said he was “deeply troubled” by the police action.

This was the only violent incident reported among the dozens of pro-immigrant marches which took place nationwide that day and drew thousands of demonstrators.

According to reports, conflict erupted around 6:00 p.m. when police officers tried to disperse demonstrators who were step ping into the street from the sidewalk, and responded with force when a small group of people threw bottles and rocks at them. Bratton said the agitators may have numbered between 50 and 100, adding they “were not a part of the larger group of thousands of peaceful demonstrators.”

Ten civilians were injured, including seven journalists (see Media Report). Seven police officers suffered minor injuries.

Dozens of Latino and immigrant advocates denounced the actions of the police.

The National Immigrant Solidarity Network stated the department “lacked recognition of the consequences of its actions. The LAPD failed to act professionally and demonstrate restraint when it used excess force against a peaceful rally of families which included mothers, babies end young children.”

A broad grassroots coalition of California Immigrant advocacy groups, under the name “Unión Del Barrio” and the “Frente Contra las Redadas” (Front Against the Raids), termed the actions “racist police brutality.”

Congressional Hispanic Caucus chair Joe Baca (D-Calif.), responded, “Incidents like this one perpetuate fear within the Hispanic community. The First Amendment of the Constitution provides… the right to demonstrate peacefully on behalf of a cause, as participants in the rally did.”

Bratton shared “the understandable concern and frustration of all of you that once again the Department, its members and the community ere involved in such e troubling event.” He promised “an aggressive review.”

Bernal Preschool unveils study on Preschool/Learning Center

­by Mauricio Vela

Bernal Preschool Parents & Supporters Celebrate Cinco de Mayo by releasing seven month feasibility study for New Bernal Preschool/Learning Center.

Over the past eight months, with the financial support provided Supervisor Ammiano’s office, the Bernal Preschool committee with participation and support of parents, community members, childcare experts, elected and appointed officials has examined three options to ensure that Bernal Preschool remains in our Community Hub.

The Bernal Preschool Committee has been fighting for the past 2 1⁄2 years to remain in the Community Hub that has been their home for almost 30 years. Due to the renovation of the library, the library and its supporters have taken this opportunity to evict the Preschool. Preschool parents, with support from Parent Voices, and community supporters have refused to accept the permanent displacement to Paul Revere elementary. Gladys Soto states” We refuse to be pushed out of our home for thirty years after we put in the sweat equity to keep the library open, renovate the playstructure, gymnasium, and Neighborhood Center, and revitalized Cortland Ave. We wanted to create a safety net for our children, youth, and seniors most at risk. We successfully did that and now we’re being asked to leave.”

Based on our findings, the committee prioritized Option “C” which is to utilized 2,700 sq. ft of land within the Bernal Playground. Should this option not be realized then the committee supports Option “A” which is to return to the Library upon completion of the renovation in 2009. The committee will continue to meet with the responsible governing bodies as well with members of the community, and other supporters to create the “political will” and financial support to make our new Preschool/Learning Center a reality.

Building the new preschool addresses the Mission/Bernal short fall of 700 childcare slots. Presently, the Bernal preschool offers 25 slots. By building the new preschool 25 additional slots will be created at the Preschool and an additional 50 will be provided at Paul Revere by the Mission Neighborhood Centers which has offered to take over the space once the Preschool returns to the Hub for an increase of 75 Bernal slots. Over the last five years Bernal Heights has lost Little People’s Workshop Coop and Alfa Day childcare center. Building the new preschool also contributes to the city wide childcare shortfall. Supervisor Ammiano, Daly, and Assemblyman Mark Leno have come out publicly in support of the new Preschool/Learning. The new Preschool/Learning Center will also allow City College to provide parenting classes for the preschool parents, nannies, and stroller moms of the community. Supervisor Ammiano added $1.6 million into the children and senior budget supplemental just introduce by Supervisor Daly on April 24th.

As part of the Preschool’s celebration of Cinco de Mayo, the preschool plans to unvail our findings to the public.

Que Viva Cinco de Mayo!!! Si Se Puede!!

Early College Commitment briefing

by Elisabeth Pinio

Mariachi familyMariachi family

The Campaign for College Opportunity announced a briefing on SB 890, Early College Commitment, to discuss the bill dedicated to providng access to college and financial aid for low-income students. Youth and their families are encouraged to start planning for college at a young age.

The event will take place at the East Bay Community Foundation in Oakland on Wednesday, May 2, from 10 a.m. to noon. RSVP to Danielle Lafayette at (510) 645-1362, or Danielle@collegecampaign.org.

Three Women and a Chateau

The Tiburon Film Society will be presenting Three Women and a Chateau at the Bay Model in Sausalito. The film depicts three women – an heiress, a countess, and a doctor – through each of their stays at chateau, spanning three generations. The drama depicts the romantic, glamorous life of each woman, sprinkled with scandal, despair and disaster.

The feature was part of the Tiburon International Film Festival in March, and will be shown Thursday, May 3, at 6 p.m. Admission is free.

Mujeres Music Festival

Mariachi Picante’s 2nd Annual Mujeres Music Festival will take place Friday, May 4 at 8:30 p.m. to celebrate latino women in music. The event will feature Nada Lewis’, Gypsy-Latin accordion harmonies, cumbia dancing by Beatriz Restrepo, and dueling guitarists Manuel Constancio and José Roberto Hernandez.

The event will be held at La Peña Cultural Center in Berkeley. Admission is $18 advance purchase, $20 at the door. For more information, call (510) 849-2568 or visit www.lapena.org.

Cinco de Mayo Festival in San Francisco

Join the fun and celebrate! Commemorating Mexico’s indepedence since 1862, Historical Mission Dolores Park is hosting a Cinco de Mayo event on May 5 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Before the festivities, a tour will take place showcasing the park’s historical features. Dancing, music, and activities for children are all part of the fun, in an alcohol-free environment. Admission is free for this event. For more information, visit www.sfcincodemayo.com.

Soccer match adds to Cinco de Mayo festivities

A Cinco de Mayo celebration at Kezar Stadium will kick it up a notch with a soccer game! The festivities will take place May 5 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and the soccer game will begin at 2 p.m., California Victory Vs. Necaxa.

Mayor Gavin Newsom and members of the Board of Supervisors will commence the event with a ribbon cutting ceremony commemorating California Victory’s first home game at Kezar.

The event features fun for the whole family. Admission is free for children under seven, $9 ages 8-18, $12 for adults. Visit www.ca.iforniavictorysoccer.com to purchase tickets, or call (415) 593-1491.

­