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LINEA ABIERTA | THIS WEEK | PREVIOUS PROGRAMS

Linea Abierta Programs for May 2002

Wednesday, May 1st

PROGRAM # 3378 - 12:00 NOON PDT
PACO HUERTA: MEXICO'S JOURNALISM AWARD. Talk show host Paco Huerta, veteran advocate of civic journalism and host of Linea Abierta's weekly Mexico Edition, won Mexico's National Journalism Award for Lifetime Achievement. This is a conversation with Paco on the award, free speech and political change in Mexico.

INTERNATIONAL LABOR DAY. Janitors in Los Angeles demonstrate opposing a recent Supreme Court decision barring undocumented workers from some worker benefits and urging for a legalization program.

Guests: Kamilo Rivera Lizama and Maricela Salinas, Justice for Janitors, Los Angeles, www.justiceforjanitors.org

PROGRAM # 3379 - 13:00 PDT
THE REPUBLIC OF EAST L.A. The award-winning author of Always Running offers a collection of short stories about life in East Los Angeles. The book entitled The Republic of East L.A. gives voice to a neighborhood brimming with hope but marked by stereotypes of gang violence and poverty. Author Luis J. Rodriguez shares insights.

Thursday, May 2nd

PROGRAM # 3380 - 12:00 NOON PDT
MEXICO EDITION. Francisco “Paco” Huerta, a veteran radio journalist and civic journalism foremost advocate, is the program host. He offers a weekly, tape-delayed edition of the series “Voz Pública,” a call-in program airing from Mexico City.

HOST: Francisco Huerta, www.vozpublica.com

PROGRAM # 3381 - 13:00 PDT
PUERTO RICO EDITION. WRTU, Radio Universidad de Puerto Rico brings interviews and commentary on news developments in the Caribbean basin.

HOST: Wanda Colon-Cortez.

Friday, May 3rd

PROGRAM # 3382 - 12:00 PDT
FRONTERIZAS. A novel set in the Texas/México border featuring six women who explore the history of their families and communities. This is a conversation with the author of Fronterizas, Roberta Fernández, an acclaimed Texan writer and professor.

Guest: Roberta Fernandez, Professor, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, robertaf@arches.uga.edu

PROGRAM # 3383 - 13:00 PDT
IMMIGRATION EDITION. Attorney Carlos Spector Calderón, in El Paso, TX, provides news and commentary on major developments on U.S. immigration law. Listeners are encouraged to call in with personal concerns on immigration and citizenship issues. Spector comments on a Justice Department decision to extend temporary stay for Hondurans and Nicaraguans and a bill in the Senate to restore food stamps for legal immigrants.

Monday, May 6th *** CINCO DE MAYO HOLIDAY ***

PROGRAM # 3384 - 12:00 PDT
HEALTH EDITION – HEPATITIS A. Latino children in California are nearly six times more likely to contract hepatitis A than Anglo kids, according to a study. Dr. David Hayes-Bautista, author of the study and director of the UCLA Center for the Study of Latino Health and Culture, comments on this infection of the liver. Dr. Elmer Huerta, a regular commentator, also gives advise on measures to keep children safe from the viral infection.

PROGRAM # 3385 - 13:00 PDT
“YO FUI BRACERO”. “I Was a Farm Hand” is the title of a new CD release that sings the blues of guest workers contracted under the Bracero programs of the 1940-60s. The album also includes corridos about current efforts to find justice for those contracted Braceros who are still owed their due paycheck. This is a Cinco de Mayo holiday edition.

Guests: Rosa Martha Zárate, singer and composer, San Bernardino, CA; Francisco Herrera, singer, composer and producer, San Francisco, CA.

Tuesday, May 7th

PROGRAM # 3386 - 12:00 PDT
LINEA DEL PAISANO - TOLL FEE HIGHWAYS. This weekly program provides a forum for live listener questions and comments to a roundtable of high officials in Mexico’s presidential cabinet. This groundbreaking radio service offers Mexican callers unprecedented access to the Mexican presidency. Dr. Juan Hernandez, head of the Presidential Office for Mexicans Abroad answers questions from previous programs. Also, Jose San Martin Romero and Dr. Claude Cortez, representatives from the Ministry of Communications and Transportation talk about toll fees in Mexico’s highways.

This program can also be heard online on www.mexicoenlinea.gob.mx

PROGRAM # 3387 - 13:00 PDT
FRONTERA LIBRE EDITION – ANCIENT FOOTPRINTS. Radio Bilingüe in the U.S. and Radiarte, Sistema Jalisciense de Radio y Televisión in Guadalajara, México, join broadcasts to interconnect live U.S. audiences with listeners in Mexico’s emigres home states. This week’s edition features a conversation with historian Alfredo Figueroa, a Colorado River native, on his book “Ancient Footprints of the Colorado River.” In his study, Figueroa finds traces of Aztlan, the homeland of the ancient Nahua/Mexica peoples, in the mountains and mesas around the Colorado River Basin.

Wednesday, May 8th

PROGRAM # 3388 - 12:00 NOON PDT
BROWN TIDE RISING. Scholar Otto Santa Ana says that metaphors used by print media during the 90s portrayed immigrants as invaders, outsiders, burdens, diseases or animals and immigration as dangerous waters. In his book “Brown Tide Rising,” Santa Ana says that this discourse fuels negative public perceptions against Latinos and erodes the rights of the community. This program also discusses the effects of the cartoon Speedy Gonzalez, "the fastest mouse in all Mejico", on Latino children.

Guests: Professor Otto Santa Ana, founder and professor of the Cesar Chavez Center, Chicana/o Studies Department, University of California, Los Angeles; Virginia Cueto, associate editor, Hispanic Online, Miami.

PROGRAM # 3389 - 13:00 PDT
HEALTH LITERACY. Patients who can’t read prescriptions, medicine labels and diagnostic information may be putting their health at risk. Many may use health services only during emergencies. What happens when patients can’t follow medical directions properly? What’s being done to develop the literacy skills of health consumers? How to present health information in plain language, simple instructions and easy-to-understand ways? This program is in conjunction with KQED, San Francisco public radio's Health Dialogues series.

Guests: Agustin Maravilla, Office of the Patient Advocate, Sacramento, CA; Alvaro Morales, Community health coordinator, Health Access, San Francisco.

Thursday, May 9th

PROGRAM # 3390 - 12:00 NOON PDT
MEXICO EDITION. Francisco “Paco” Huerta, a veteran radio journalist and civic journalism foremost advocate, is the program host. He offers a weekly, tape-delayed edition of the series “Voz Pública,” a call-in program airing from Mexico City.

HOST: Francisco Huerta, www.vozpublica.com

PROGRAM # 3391 - 13:00 PDT
PUERTO RICO EDITION. WRTU, Radio Universidad de Puerto Rico brings interviews and commentary on news developments in the Caribbean basin.

HOST: Wanda Colon-Cortez.

Friday, May 10th

PROGRAM # 3392 - 12:00 PDT
IMMIGRATION EDITION. Attorney Carlos Spector Calderón, in El Paso, TX, provides news and commentary on major developments on U.S. immigration law. Listeners are encouraged to call in with personal concerns on immigration and citizenship issues. Items analyzed included a new effort to extend Section 245i, the reduction of time allowed for tourists to visit the U.S., and statements by President Fox calling migration the lithmus test for the U.S.

PROGRAM # 3393 - 13:00 PDT
MOTHER’S DAY: BREAST CANCER SCREENING. On Mother’s Day, community health centers and disease scientists reach out to Latino women over 40 to encourage early breast and cervical cancer screening to help save lives. Who is at highest risk? Where can low-income women find cancer screening services and medical treatment?

Guest: Rita Carreón, Manager, Latina Breast and Cervical Cancer Initiative, National Association of Community Health Centers, http://www.nachc.com

ALSO, TEACHING MOTHERS. A community education program teaches at-risk Latino immigrant mothers to create toys to teach their infant children basic skills. Mothers learn that play can be a powerful tool to celebrate and uplift their children while also building their own self esteem.

Guest: Maria Elena Villegas, participant mother, AVANCE Program, Dallas, TX, www.avance-dallas.org

Monday, May 13th

PROGRAM # 3394 - 12:00 PDT
HEALTH EDITION – CHILDREN WITH ASTHMA. A multi-million dollar initiative in California seeks to bring together government agencies and non-governmental organizations to reduce asthma-triggering factors in homes, child care centers, schools, community parks and areas where children live, play and learn.

Guest: Angela Coron, deputy director, Department of Health and Human Services, State of California, Los Angeles.

DIABETES. A survivor of diabetes tells his story and shares advice on how to control blood sugar levels through proper diet, exercise and medication. Following those steps, patients can prevent major complications such as amputations, kidney disorders and blindness.

Guest: Jesús Cruz, Public Participation Specialist, California Environmental Protection Agency, Berkeley, CA.

PROGRAM # 3395 - 13:00 PDT
RACIAL PRIVACY INITIATIVE. Kevin Nguyen, executive director of American Civil Rights Coalition, the organization sponsoring an initiative in California to limit public agencies from collecting racial data, explains details of the Racial Privacy Initiative. If it qualifies, the initiative may appear on the ballot next November.

FARM ARBITRATION. Veteran farm labor leader Dolores Huerta calls on California Gov. Gray Davis to support a measure allowing the state's farm labor relations board to force farmers into binding arbitration on contract talks between the labor union and growers.

HOME REFINANCING. Mortgage interest rates are again at their lowest levels in decades. A mortgage broker discusses options for refinancing home loans and predatory lending practices.

Guest: Rosa María Rosales, Senior Loan Officer, Wausau Mortgage, Fresno, CA.

Tuesday, May 14th

PROGRAM # 3396 - 12:00 PDT
LINEA DEL PAISANO. This weekly program provides a forum for live listener questions and comments to a roundtable of high officials in Mexico’s presidential cabinet. This groundbreaking radio service offers Mexican callers unprecedented access to the Mexican presidency. Dr. Juan Hernandez, head of the Presidential Office for Mexicans Abroad discusses current issues. Percy Pitzer, Warden of California City's Correctional Center talks about his correctional model, to provide inmates with schooling and job skills and prevent recidivism. Also, Andres Figueroa Cobian, director of Telecom, Mexico's state telegraph service, announces "Giro Paisano", a new money remittance service for clients in the U.S.

This program can also be heard online on www.mexicoenlinea.gob.mx

PROGRAM # 3397 - 13:00 PDT
FRONTERA LIBRE EDITION – CLERGY SEX ABUSE. Radio Bilingüe in the U.S. and Radiarte, Sistema Jalisciense de Radio y Televisión in Guadalajara, México, join broadcasts to interconnect live U.S. audiences with listeners in Mexico’s emigres home states. This week, officials of the Catholic Church and social organizations discuss the ongoing sex abuse scandal. As sexual abuse claims increase dramatically, a Northern California Catholic Dioceses take strong measures to probe the claims and prevent further abuse.

Guests: Hector Medina, director, Ministerio Hispano de la Diocesis de Oakland, CA; Rev. Antonio Gutierrez, spokesperson, Guadalajara Catholic Archdiocese.

Wednesday, May 15th

PROGRAM # 3398 - 12:00 NOON PDT
WAR ON TERRORISM. On the Day of Conscientious Objectors, Mexican scholar Monica Gonzalez joins this edition to discuss the outcome of the war in Afghanistan and U.S. plans to attack Iraq and to change defense policy to use atomic weapons.

Guest: Dr. Mónica González, professor of international relations, Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey, Mexico City; researcher on conflict resolution, Conflict Management Group, Harvard University.

ALSO,

DOLORES HUERTA. This is a conversation with Dolores Huerta, co-founder of the United Farm Workers of America and a prominent human rights activist. She shares her views on the impact of the war on terrorism on the domestic budget, immigration reform and other issues.

PROGRAM # 3399 - 13:00 PDT
BUDGET DEBATE. Congressman Ciro Rodríguez, Democrat-Texas, vice-chair of the U.S. Congressional Hispanic Caucus, and Rudy Fernandez, director of Grassroots Development for the Republican National Committee discuss issues such as a bill to lift food stamp restrictions for legal immigrants, plans to cut back federal scholarship funds, and efforts by the political parties to win the Latino swing vote. Also, Congressman Xavier Becerra (D-LA) reports on a stalemate in a House Committee over amendments to a proposed welfare law reform.

Thursday, May 16th

PROGRAM # 3400 - 12:00 NOON PDT
MEXICO EDITION. Francisco “Paco” Huerta, a veteran radio journalist and civic journalism foremost advocate, is the program host. He offers a weekly, tape-delayed edition of the series “Voz Pública,” a call-in program airing from Mexico City.

HOST: Francisco Huerta, www.vozpublica.com

PROGRAM # 3401 - 13:00 PDT
PUERTO RICO EDITION. WRTU, Radio Universidad de Puerto Rico brings interviews and commentary on news developments in the Caribbean basin.

HOST: Wanda Colon-Cortez.

Friday, May 17th

PROGRAM # 3402 - 12:00 PDT
WELFARE REFORM: 40-HOUR WORKWEEK. The House passed a reform plan to require welfare recipients to work 40 hours a week. Republican congresswoman Ileana Ross-Lehtinen greets the Bush administration initiative. Congressman Xavier Becerra (D-LA) objects to the lack of funds for ESL programs, child care services and benefits for legal immigrants.

ALSO, SANCTIONS ON CUBA. Following on former President Jimmy Carter's steps, forty members of Congress call to change U.S. policies towards Cuba, lifting travel and trade restrictions and increasing security cooperation. Congressmembers Ileana Ross-Lehtinen (R-Miami) and Hilda Solis (D-LA) debate the issue.

PROGRAM # 3403 - 13:00 PDT
IMMIGRATION EDITION. Attorney Carlos Spector Calderón, in El Paso, TX, provides news and commentary on major developments on U.S. immigration law. Listeners are encouraged to call in with personal concerns on immigration and citizenship issues. Spector comments on a new campaign launched by unions and activists to legalize immigrants. He also comments on the extension of old border visas under the recently approved Border Security Act.

Monday, May 20th

PROGRAM # 3404 - 12:00 PDT
HEALTH EDITION – CANCER NEWS. The American Society of Clinical Oncology is holding its annual meeting in Orlando, FL. Experts from around the world gather to discuss the latest developments in cancer screening, diagnosis and treatment. Dr. Elmer Huerta, a regular commentator and recognized cancer expert, broadcasts live from the site of the conference.

Guests: Dr. Fernando Cabanillas, director, Nuevo Centro de Cancer "Auxilio Mutuo", San Juan, PR; Dr. Luis Baez, Nuevo Centro de Cancer Auxilio Mutuo, San Juan, PR; Dr. Waldir Pereyra, child cancer expert, Brazil.

PROGRAM # 3405 - 13:00 PDT
UNDOCUMENTED WORKERS RIGHTS IN CALIFORNIA. The government of California issued a statement saying that the state’s labor laws do protect undocumented workers. The clarification was in reaction to a Supreme Court decision ruling that an undocumented worker who was fired in a union organizing drive is not entitled to back pay for wages lost after his unlawful discharge.

Guests: Edna García Early, attorney Los Angeles Labor Commissioner; Santiago Ventura, California Rural Legal Assistance, Fresno, CA.

ALSO, UNLAWFUL ARREST. A federal judge found the city of Modesto, CA, violated the U.S. Constitution and California law when police officers detained the family of an 11-year-old boy who was shot and killed during a SWAT team raid.

Guests: Arturo González, Morrison and Foerster LLP, San Francisco, attorney for the Sepulveda family.

Tuesday, May 21st

PROGRAM # 3406 - 12:00 PDT
LINEA DEL PAISANO. This weekly program provides a forum for live listener questions and comments to a roundtable of high officials in Mexico’s presidential cabinet. This groundbreaking radio service offers Mexican callers unprecedented access to the Mexican presidency. Dr. Juan Hernandez, head of the Presidential Office for Mexicans Abroad discusses current issues.

ALSO, Sen. Ricardo Alanis Posadas (PAN-Guanajuato) reported on discussions about immigration reform and the U.S. farm bill at the recent US/Mexico Interparlamentary Meeting in Guanajuato. Irma Villalobos, mayor of Agua Prieta, Son, talks about a new shelter for migrant women built with local and federal funds.

This program can also be heard online on www.mexicoenlinea.gob.mx

PROGRAM # 3407 - 13:00 PDT
FRONTERA LIBRE EDITION – U.S. FARM BILL. Radio Bilingüe in the U.S. and Radiarte, Sistema Jalisciense de Radio y Televisión in Guadalajara, México, join broadcasts to interconnect live U.S. audiences with listeners in Mexico’s émigrés home states. This week, Mexican farmers discuss a newly approved bill that expands subsidies for U.S. grain and cotton farmers. Mexican farmers fear widespread bankruptcy, unable to compete with the subsidized prices of U.S. grain exports.

Guests: Maestro Santiago Sanchez Preciado, Centro Universitario de Ciencias Biologicas y Agropecuarias, Zapopan, Jal; Ing. Rene Lopez Ruelas, President, Union Estatal de Productores de Maiz, Guadalajara, Jal.

Wednesday, May 22nd

PROGRAM # 3408 - 12:00 NOON PDT
CADETES DE LINARES. A conversation with Lupe Tijerina, cofounder of the popular group Los Cadetes de Linares. Born in Linares, Nuevo León, the group is a legend in Mexican norteño traditional music. They created popular songs like “Los Dos Amigos”, “Dos Coronas a Mi Madre” and “El Palomito”.

PROGRAM # 3409 - 13:00 PDT
DRIVER’S LICENSES. In the name of national security, many states have recently passed and others are considering laws that restrict immigrants from getting driver’s licenses and other official identification documents. The National Coluncil of La Raza, a prominent civil rights organization, released an issue brief arguing that the nation’s national security will not be ensured with those restrictions. This is a conversation on the report. This program also discusses a lawsuit urging a state court to declare law an initiative to extend driver's license rights to would-be legal residents.

Guests: Attorney Maria Blanco, National Senior Counsel, MALDEF, Oakland, CA; Michele Waslin, Senior Immigration Policy Analyst, National Council of La Raza, Washington, DC.

Thursday, May 23rd

PROGRAM # 3410 - 12:00 NOON PDT
MEXICO EDITION. Francisco “Paco” Huerta, a veteran radio journalist and civic journalism foremost advocate, is the program host. He offers a weekly, tape-delayed edition of the series “Voz Pública,” a call-in program airing from Mexico City.

HOST: Francisco Huerta, www.vozpublica.com

PROGRAM # 3411 - 13:00 PDT
PUERTO RICO EDITION. WRTU, Radio Universidad de Puerto Rico brings interviews and commentary on news developments in the Caribbean basin.

HOST: Wanda Colon-Cortez.

Friday, May 24th

PROGRAM # 3412 - 12:00 PDT
IMMIGRATION EDITION. Attorney Carlos Spector Calderón, in El Paso, TX, provides news and commentary on major developments on U.S. immigration law. Listeners are encouraged to call in with personal concerns on immigration and citizenship issues. News included for commentary: U.S. and Mexico plan to build towers to help migrants crossing border, immigrant groups remember dead migrants in Tijuana, and Latino legislators ask Bush to keep local police out of immigration law enforcement.

PROGRAM # 3413 - 13:00 PDT
COMPUTER LESSONS FOR PARENTS. In an effort to bridge the digital divide, a community-oriented computer lab in Watsonville, CA, teaches computer literacy to parents of Latino children.

Guests: Katie Hinnenkamp, coordinator, Rural Technology and Information Project, Latino Issues Forum, San Francisco; Maria Elena Contreras and Maria Guadalupe Ochoa, Project's graduates, Watsonville, CA.

Monday, May 27th

PROGRAM # 3414 - 12:00 PDT
HEALTH EDITION – WWII VETERANS. This holiday edition, features interviews with veterans of World War II. Virgilio Roel, a retired civil rights attorney in Austin, talks about how the war experience helped him and an entire generation to bring about an era that he describes as the Golden Age for Mexican American civil rights. Enriqueta Rivas found new abilities and self-confidence after working as a mechanic, repairing military airplanes. Santos Sandoval, a decorated sergeant, still fights the nightmarish traumas of the worst battles in the Pacific front.

PROGRAM # 3415 - 13:00 PDT
RUBEN OLIVARES. This is a pre-taped conversation with three-time world boxing champion Rubén “El Púas” Olivares. Sport observers place Olivares among the top fifty greatest all-time fighters.

Tuesday, May 28th

PROGRAM # 3416 - 12:00 PDT
LINEA DEL PAISANO – CROSS-BORDER HEALTH CARE. This weekly program provides a forum for live listener questions and comments to a roundtable of high officials in Mexico’s presidential cabinet. This groundbreaking radio service offers Mexican callers unprecedented access to the Mexican presidency. Dr. Juan Hernandez, head of the Presidential Office for Mexicans Abroad discusses current issues. This week, Dr. Adriana Arjona talks about the ESL program "Sepa Ingles", an effort by the Secretaria de Educacion Publica and Instituto Latino Americano de Comunicacion Educativa to teach English in Mexico and also for Mexican communities living abroad. Also, Dr. Juan Hernandez addresses the issue of school dropouts in Mexican American communities, after a Latino Commencement Celebration speech at CSU Fresno.

This program can also be heard online on www.mexicoenlinea.gob.mx

PROGRAM # 3417 - 13:00 PDT
EDICION FRONTERA LIBRE - VOLCAN COLIMA. Radio Bilingüe in the U.S. and Radiarte, Sistema Jalisciense de Radio y Televisión in Guadalajara, México, join broadcasts to interconnect live U.S. audiences with listeners in Mexico’s émigrés home states. Dr. Juan Jose Ramirez, director of the Observatorio Vulcanologico de la Universidad de Colima, and Dr. Miguel Leal, a vulcanologist, discuss the current activity of the Colima volcano and measures to protect neighboring towns.

Wednesday, May 29th

PROGRAM # 3418 - 12:00 NOON PDT
JESÚS ALEMAÑY. A conversation with Cuban trumpet player Jesus Alemany, director of Cuban band Cubanismo! Living now in London, Jesus and his band have become ambassadors to the traditional Son Cubano, the rhythm made popular by the Cuban bands of the 1950s. This interview was provided by Radio Nederland.

ALSO, RECONCILIATION IN CHILE. This is an interview with Dr. Elizabeth Valdez, a social psychologist who especializes on human rights. She discusses the challenges ahead for Chileans, in their quest for reconcilliation.

PROGRAM # 3419 - 13:00 PDT
CUTBACKS IN CALIFORNIA. Grassroots groups in California are heading to Sacramento to oppose drastic cutbacks to the arts and health care budgets. Gov. Gray Davis announced the cuts recently to balance a major budget deficit. State legislators are being invited to discuss the issue.

Guests: Sarah Mercer, Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund, Sacramento, CA; Russell Lopez, spokesperson, Gov. Gray Davis, Sacramento; Vickie Verti, Fellow for Economic Justice, Consumers Union, San Francisco, CA; Maria Acosta, Latino Arts Network, San Francisco, CA.

Thursday, May 30th

PROGRAM # 3420 - 12:00 NOON PDT
MEXICO EDITION. Francisco “Paco” Huerta, a veteran radio journalist and civic journalism foremost advocate, is the program host. He offers a weekly, tape-delayed edition of the series “Voz Pública,” a call-in program airing from Mexico City.

HOST: Francisco Huerta, www.vozpublica.com

PROGRAM # 3421 - 13:00 PDT
PUERTO RICO EDITION. WRTU, Radio Universidad de Puerto Rico brings interviews and commentary on news developments in the Caribbean basin.

HOST: Wanda Colon-Cortez.

Friday, May 31st

PROGRAM # 3422 - 12:00 PDT
TOP ENGINEERS. This program features conversations with Latinas who have excelled in the science and engineering career field. Sylvia Rojas, a dyslexic single mother from El Paso, returned to college and finished with the top honor a B.A. in Industrial Engineering in three years. Magaly Spector, from New Jersey, is one of the highest ranking female Latina scientists in the U.S. She came to the U.S. from Cuba, struggling to learn English and eventually earned two advanced degrees and won this year's Professional Achievement Award from the Hispanic Engineer National Achievement Awards Conference. This program is part of a series sponsored by the Engineering Information Foundation.

Guests: Sylvia Rojas Pearson, factory planner, Motorola, Austin, TX; Magaly Spector, Ph.D., technical manager, OADM Group Lucent Technologies, Holdel, NJ.

PROGRAM # 3423 - 13:00 PDT
IMMIGRATION EDITION. Attorney Carlos Spector Calderón, in El Paso, TX, provides news and commentary on major developments on U.S. immigration law. Listeners are encouraged to call in with personal concerns on immigration and citizenship issues. Spector talked about the new restrictions banning foreign students from part-time schooling in the U.S., a measure impacting Mexican and Canadian border residents. He also provided advice on the extension of the filing period for thos applying under Late Amnesty cases.

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