Línea Abierta; 20Th Anniversary Commemoration

- Transcript
long-term This is the last, Comensuantre publicana o cen'tai cuatro. Comensuantre publicana, comensuantre publicana o cen'tai cuatro. Comensuantre publicana, comensuantre publicana. Today we have a platform that the American people will love. The economic growth is the best way to achieve economic security for families and the traditional values give us a secure base upon which to build a future.
It's like a very good population if California or other other individuals are the most presenters of COVID or climate flow in the world, Florida probablyakes year-to-month This nomination is not only about Jerry Ferrar, it's about all of us who are considered
minorities, women, Hispanics, blacks, Asian-Pacific, Americans, you go down the line, every one of us who have felt disenfranchised for the process. The As part of the body and the
became the son of Robert York and the Clio de This will last about a whole lot of time to do it.
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much larger Lost flagos or limcicos, the Mexico. Make it for. Make it for. Make it for. Just hold it. So that's right, in 50 years, and then we'll have a special bye-bye conference. So that's all of our great event.
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around in a couple weeks and then starting For the end, my poetry and probably So they have to do everything. They have to, first of all, more than just for the time and the still seeing pinches of everything is between the male and the from here. No, I was looking. They might want to No wonder about today's
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The problems, the hopes, and the answers for immigrant children in our public schools. It's a theme for our program today, the third in a series of programs on how public schools can best respond to the challenges presented by immigrant children in our public schools. I'm your host, Richard Gonzalez. This program is produced by Ravi W. Lingwe, the studios of WGBH FM in Boston, with funds from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the Ford Foundation. Before we begin our discussion, we'll hear this report from Kathy Macanally. 14 years ago, Tui Wu and her family found a new home.
They were refugees from Vietnam, and their ticket out of an Indochinese camp was the sponsorship of a Lutheran church congregation in Duluth, Minnesota. Cultural shock was immediate. It was difficult, I think, especially in Duluth, where it was predominantly Caucasian at that time, and so it was difficult going to a school not really seeing anyone who looks like you. I think that was hard. Everyone in my class was white, and basically had light colored hair. It was intimidating. As her school is only non-English speaking students. They are very proud of her family. as in all the at the request of several members of the California delegation, including Congressman
Levine, Congressman Torrey's, and Congressman Bates. There have been and continued to be reports of violence along the U.S.-Mexican border in which there is no clear consensus as to how to resolve it. Some suggest that the U.S. border patrol have brutally treated illegal aliens seeking to enter the United States while others suggest that many of these cases stem from attacks by border bandits who prey on poor Mexicans seeking to find a better way of life in the United States. Still, some argue that with the drug seizures on the rise in the area, the border patrol is overburdened and understaffed. These officers are threatened by drug smugglers and other criminal elements and are operating under very dangerous conditions. It is clear that something is wrong on our borders and that cooperation between U.S. and Mexican authorities in addressing this matter is not what it should be.
The border patrol has a responsibility to protect our borders and to ensure that the laws are enforced. They are also responsible to ensure that illegal aliens are treated in a humanitarian manner and when abuses occur, formal investigations are conducted and disciplinary actions taken. Our witnesses today will offer different perspectives as to what they see as the problems along our border and will hopefully make constructive recommendations as to how border disputes can be handled with a minimum of violence. This subcommittee does not fund the border patrol or set immigration policy, but it does have oversight with respect to allegations of human rights abuses from a foreign policy standpoint. And it is in this context that this hearing is being held. Would any members on the committee have any comments that they would like to make Congressman
Levine, the gentleman from California? Mr. Chairman, thank you very much. I would like to begin by expressing my gratitude to you for convening this important hearing today. It is a hearing that a number of us have been interested in for some time and without your leadership and help it could not be occurring and we appreciate it. I would also like to commend my friends and my colleagues, Esteban Torres, who has joined our committee today along with us on the panel and Jim Bates from San Diego, it was through the initiation of both Mr. Torres and Mr. Bates that I became much more familiar with the concerns that have been expressed about this extremely important issue and I believe that people who live throughout California and particularly people who have been focused upon border related issues, both Mr. Torres and Mr. Bates, a debt of thanks for their leadership
and for their involvement in a number of issues relating to U.S.-Mexico relations, relations along the border and in particular the issue that we address today. Mr. Chairman, problems of border violence can no longer be ignored. It is my hope that this hearing will shed some much needed light on this subject and that it may point the way towards solutions to the vexing and deeply disturbing problems presented. The allegations of border violence are serious, encompassing almost every conceivable type of abuse. Reports tell the story of a virtually hidden war being waged on the California border with accounts of brutality and even murder of innocent men, women and most tragically young children. We must take action now to prevent such egregious violations from occurring in the future.
Not surprisingly Mr. Chairman, these allegations have come from a variety of different sources with different points of view and with different analyses of the problem. Although along the U.S.-Mexico border, there is a long-standing history. The U.S.-Mexico border is a problem that we have to resolve the situation. Unfortunately, it happens in our countries like the American countries. It pleases me to know that there is a disposition for dialogue.
And if we do it with in recent, with the citizen consciousness so we can resolve it. The Umanista, York and his adult. 70 years ago, today, in the nearby fields of the Central Valley, an eight-year-old farm worker was chosen by his much, much older farm workers, co-workers. The largest counties in North America still serve long New Yorkans.
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as the pluralismo, he appeared to us,
he had lost victorious in conformist conel system. Baconanist, resumselinista, a grime, the other reformists in the representation of monicid policy, rechunales, et aluchenos, rechamas, por liminerala, very sad. Decuents, and degum, feature, resientes, monolcomachosolis, et viologo del salinismo. As a city, there are some part of the whose pull cross for you to spool, the heteriosque quanen rechis, the rector decomonic, as units in turn, as unales, de la campania de salinas, from what we're gonna be, de la campania de vina, no tantan, terminos de das, you know, the vina and terminos, de hente quesadacuent, de quesan muy importante, importante de la méformas, et mechico, elos campios dantro systema, polytico, de contino arcon, conel apertura quesesta, y vanda cao, especialmente and terminos, y ase buaar que la percifacian, de la hente, en processo uno gratico. Ase bure, primero que la hentesinte, que hostin en poler para ser, lo que,
lo que hostesin a ser, conesos cesadacuesta, y que cesadacuesta, méfécadentro de obia, los votos de campesinos, either recuneness and terras. Este campania de centro y ser, de quesadacuesto un profirio monos la doe, et cetreta, de estado, de el pre, ser que hino al cuar, teras a la lien, se pre, estago vernante, en medio de y amado, se una profunda, per tu la de mocaratico, fin, al aparatica, al al aparismo, el de raso, el caro complato, teras ocido, fin al ado estarismo, que háros de cesadentro de la repulica, pidiola acesun, y amado cuariento de mocaratica del pre, el caradeniz mocar comocar comocarambien, una que túmes, firme en las nico cesadun, cesadun, el quesadun, el pessines, el verto, esti el quesadun, el pessines, el pessines, el pessines, el pessines, el pessines, Rafael de qualitative, i'mreto pessines. I just imagine when I would do that bit a little bit wide, and the pros and
differ more in the main solos, preparing to having perform and is consciousness at incredible sea Islanders and populations. In many countries, the world Annotations are one of our in the city of Mexico and in Los Angeles. In the city of Mexico, in the city of Mexico, in the city of Mexico, in the city of California. MUSIC MUSIC
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- Series
- Línea Abierta
- Episode
- 20Th Anniversary Commemoration
- Producing Organization
- Radio Bilingue
- Contributing Organization
- Radio Bilingue (Fresno, California)
- AAPB ID
- cpb-aacip-1817c046369
If you have more information about this item than what is given here, or if you have concerns about this record, we want to know! Contact us, indicating the AAPB ID (cpb-aacip-1817c046369).
- Description
- Episode Description
- Disclaimer: The following description was created before the live broadcast aired and thus may not accurately reflect the content of the actual broadcast.
- Episode Description
- Radio Bilingue's flagship station, KSJV, turns 20 years old on this day. KSJV/Radio Bilingue is Linea Abierta's founding organization. To mark the occasion, this program showcased a retrospective review of Radio Bilingue's brand of community journalism. Selected samples of documentaries, roundtables, public forums, call-ins and other works, were featured in this 2-year review. This second edition gathered voices of the period of 1984-1993, when Radio Bilingue began building a network among the newsrooms of the bilingual community radio stations in the nation and cultural stations in Mexico, to distribute a public radio service nationwide.
- Broadcast Date
- 2000-07-11
- Asset type
- Episode
- Media type
- Sound
- Credits
-
-
Producing Organization: Radio Bilingue
- AAPB Contributor Holdings
-
Radio Bilingue
Identifier: cpb-aacip-b23613fc7a1 (Filename)
Format: CD
If you have a copy of this asset and would like us to add it to our catalog, please contact us.
- Citations
- Chicago: “Línea Abierta; 20Th Anniversary Commemoration,” 2000-07-11, Radio Bilingue, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed October 4, 2025, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-1817c046369.
- MLA: “Línea Abierta; 20Th Anniversary Commemoration.” 2000-07-11. Radio Bilingue, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. October 4, 2025. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-1817c046369>.
- APA: Línea Abierta; 20Th Anniversary Commemoration. Boston, MA: Radio Bilingue, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Retrieved from http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-1817c046369