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Latinas Are Economic Engine of Arizona

Latinos represent more than 30 percent of Arizona’s population and bring more than $31 billion to the state’s economy, according to a recent study by Arizona’s Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, reports Maritza Lizeth Félix for Prensa Hispana. The report, “Datos: Focus on Arizona’s Hispanic Market 2010,” finds that Latina women have become an economic engine in the state. The study does not include the economic impact of undocumented immigrants.

In Numbers
$31.3 billion – the buying power of Latinos in Arizona
$47.9 billion – the amount Latinos are expected to spend in 2013
$951 billion – Latino buying power in the U.S., not including Puerto Ricans, whose buying power is estimated at $50 billion
63% of Arizona’s Latino population lives in Maricopa County
42% of the residents of Phoenix are Latino
1 in 4 children born in the U.S. in 2008 was of Hispanic descent READ MORE

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Latino business leaders recognizes a New York congressman for his work in breaking down trade barriers between the United States and Latin American countries at a dinner featuring embassy representatives from 13 countries.

Washington, D.C. - infoZine - Scripps Howard Foundation Wire - Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., received an award from Hispanic entrepreneurs for supporting laws dealing with trade agreements with Latin American countries and drug policies affecting the region.

The Greater Washington Hispanic Chamber of Commerce hosted a dinner Friday to honor Engel's work as chairman of the House Foreign Affairs' subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere. Diplomatic delegations from 13 countries, mostly from Latin America, attended the dinner held at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center.

"We are giving this award for first time to honor people who help Latinos' businesses to grow, and we chose Congressman Engel for his work in facilitating trade between Latin American countries and United Sates," Angela Franco, president of GWHCC, said.

Engel's initiatives have been aimed at promoting trade preferences with some Andean countries, allocating funds for Haiti's reconstruction and convening an independent commission to evaluate U.S. programs and policies to reduce the drug supply and demand in the Western Hemisphere. READ MORE

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Hispanics are Twitter Crazed

Minority internet users are more than twice as likely to use Twitter as are white internet users.


Eight percent of the American adults who use the internet are Twitter users. It is an online activity that is particularly popular with young adults, minorities, and those who live in cities.

This is the first-ever survey reading from the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project that exclusively examines Twitter users. In previous surveys, the Pew Internet Project had asked internet users whether they "used Twitter or another service to share updates about yourself or to see updates about others?"


Here is a little background on our reasoning for focusing just on Twitter in this more recent survey. The message service Twitter launched on July 15, 2006 now claims tens of millions of users worldwide. It is one of the most popular online activities among tech enthusiasts and has become a widely used tool among analysts to study the conversations and interests of users, buzz about news, products or services, and announcements by commercial, non-profit, and government organizations. For instance, it is an important component of the analytical work by our colleagues at the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism in its New Media Index, which assesses the most prominent topics discussed in social media every week.


Since August 2008, the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project has been asking a question in occasional national telephone surveys about services like Twitter. In the 10-year lifespan of the Pew Internet Project, we have not usually asked about single, company-specific online applications or activities because our mission
is to look generally at online activities, rather than at specific brands. For instance, when we looked at teens and gaming, we focused on genres of computer and online games, rather than usage of particular games. READ MORE

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Texas Makes Telenovelas

Oh the Drama of it all. During the middle of the night a startled couple awakes to a phone call, the mother answers and it’s from the local hospital informing her that her son, Alberto, has been involved in a horrible accident. She breathes heavily, asks a furry of questions, her husband and her dash to the hospital (cue dramatic music). Husband goes into an angry monologue, family is reunited, and son is ok.

Sound like a telenovela? That’s because it is. The Texas Department of Transportation launched a series of mini telenovelas this month in an effort to educate the Hispanic Community about the consequences of drinking and driving.

The three telenovelas follow the members of a Hispanic family as they experience drinking and driving situations and they aired as thirty second and two minute spots on Univision, Estrella, and Telefutura during the evening news for two weeks in late November.

One of the telenovelas involves the aforementioned parents rushing to the hospital where their son, Alberto, is in bandages from a drunk driving accident. His parents think it was someone elses fault but to their dismay—(Dramatic Pause)—Alberto was the one drinking and driving.

While the recipe for good old fashioned telenovelas can draw some laughs, their influence and popularity amongst the Latino community is no joke and neither is the disturbing trend between latinos and Drunk Driving. READ MORE

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El amor apasionado alivia el dolor


Los investigadores de la Universidad de Stanford, California, descubrieron en escáneres cerebrales que muchas de las áreas del cerebro normalmente involucradas con la respuesta al dolor también se activan con los pensamientos amorosos.“Cuando la gente está en esa fase apasionada y hasta obsesiva del enamoramiento, ocurren alteraciones en su estado de ánimo que tienen un impacto en sus experiencias de dolor”, afirma el doctor Sean Mackey, quien dirigió el estudio publicado en la revista de la Biblioteca Pública de Ciencia, PLoS ONE. "Ahora estamos comenzado a entender algunos de estos sistemas de recompensa del cerebro y la forma como influyen en el dolor”.

Estos son sistemas profundos cerebrales que involucran a la dopamina, uno de los principales neurotransmisores que influ-yen en el estado de ánimo, la recompensa y la motivación, explica el científico.Fase de pasiónLos expertos analizaron a 15 estudiantes que se encontraban en la primera fase de un romance, la “etapa de más pasión”. En el análisis se les provocó una dosis leve de dolor mientras se observaba si se distraían al mirar fotos de su pareja amada. Durante el experimento los científicos utilizaron imágenes de resonancia magnética
funcional (fMRI) para medir la actividad en tiempo real de diferentes partes de su cerebro. Resultó que las mismas áreas del cerebro que se activan con el amor intenso son las mismas áreas que los medicamentos utilizan para reducir el dolor.Más amor menos dolorLos científicos descubrieron que al mirar la imagen de su persona amada, los estudiantes tenían una percepción mucho más reducida del dolor que cuando miraban la imagen del conocido atractivo. READ MORE
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Already the largest minority group in the United States, Latinos will be an even bigger presence in the years to come, according to demographic studies. Clara Rodriguez, Ph.D., professor of sociology in Fordham College at Lincoln Center, is making sure their stories are told.

Through 10 books, dozens of papers and consulting projects with Dora the Explorer and Sesame Street, Rodriguez
has developed a deep knowledge about a group that now accounts for 15 percent of the population.

Her analyses of United States census data have resulted in papers such as “Contestations Over Classifications: Latinos, the Census and Race in the United States” (Journal de la Société des Américanistes, 2009) and “Implications and Impact of Race on the Health of Latinos,” a chapter in Health Issues in Latino Males: A Social and Structural Approach (Rutgers University Press, 2010).

As part of her study of census data, Rodriguez cast a critical eye on racial classifications in the decennial censuses. Examining how respondents who identified themselves as Hispanic or Latino reported their race, she found that 40 percent chose “some other race,” and many of them wrote in what is known as a Latino identifier, such as Dominican, Panamanian or Chicano. READ MORE
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Hispanic Businesses See 60% Growth in Iowa

Census data has found 60% growth in Hispanic-owned businesses in Iowa before the recession, the
19th-fastest growth rate in the nation. The data show the Hispanic business growth rate outpaced the 10% growth seen for all Iowa businesses between 2002 and 2007.

Statewide, Hispanic-owned businesses make up less than 1% of the state's total businesses. Data show that ten other states have fewer Hispanic-owned businesses than Iowa. Hispanics are about 4.5% of the state's population, growing nearly 63% from 2000 to 2009 to about 134,000. The newspaper reports receipts from Hispanic businesses increased 59% from 2002 to 2007, totaling $457 million in 2007. READ MORE
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Why 'Ugly Betty' Was a Really Big Deal


The remarkable "Ugly Betty" ended its five-season, primetime run last Thursday night, and the TV landscape's a lot flatter for the loss. Say what you will about the ABC dramedy's quality over the past couple seasons.

The show featured a cast of brown-skinned characters that were unprecedented in primetime television. The series featured smart and strong Latinas, a powerful Black woman and even an undocumented father from Mexico. Not to mention the show's humanistic handling of its gay and transgender characters. Just one of these characters would
radicalize most primetime TV shows. In the end, though, critics say the multiple storylines these characters spawned did the show in, by stealing Betty's spotlight. During its first three seasons, "Ugly Betty" aired on Thursday nights, where it was mostly successful.

However, when viewership dropped ABC shuffled the show around and lost even more viewers. On Jan. 27, 2010, ABC announced it was canceling the series.That's a shame, and here are five reasons why—along with a compilation of scenes that make the point better than I can. READ FULL STORY
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Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said Monday that he wanted his department to help cut dropout rates and boost college enrollment for Hispanic Americans.The push for scholastic equality comes as President Barack Obama tries to improve the nation's educational system so that by 2020 the U.S. leads the world with its percentage of college graduates, as Duncan reiterated at a gathering of Hispanic college administrators.

The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that a quarter of the country's children younger than 5 are Hispanic, making Obama's goal almost impossible without their participation.Hispanic undergraduates face numerous problems, however. They're more likely to be financially disadvantaged, they have less access to school information and they often come from families that got along without college, said attendees at this week's Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities conference.

Duncan's strategy for addressing those problems relies on revamping financial aid and high school curricula, along with a touch of social engineering."The absolute challenge we have is one of low expectations," Duncan said.
"We have more resources than the department has ever had. We're going to try to put our money where our mouth is."Duncan's office has more dollars and more influence than any other education chief's has in U.S. history.

However, the question remains how to translate that muscle into prescriptions for the nation's educational bills.Hispanics have started to close the gap in freshman-year college enrollment, but they've stalled in graduation rates, according to a study released last month by the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative policy organization in Washington.

On average, 51 percent of Latino undergraduates earn degrees in six years or fewer, compared with 59 percent of non-Hispanic white students, the study found. To change that, the Education Department and its state counterparts need to link funds for institutions that serve Hispanics to graduation totals rather than to enrollment numbers, said Andrew P. Kelly, a co-author of the report. READ FULL STORY
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Dem Rep Gutierrez: Latinos might stay home


As we saw during the final stages of the health-care debate, Illinois Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D) isn't shy about taking his complaints public (he said he was going to vote against the health bill before eventually voting for it).

And now he's taking aim at President Obama's immigration policies, suggesting that Latino voters might not participate in the upcoming midterm elections -- if the administration and Democratic congressional leaders don't move forward on a comprehensive immigration bill.

In a press conference today blasting a new anti-immigration law in Arizona, Gutierrez said, "It seems to me that
is an option for people to stay home [in November]. The choices have always been framed the following way -- the Republicans are so mean-spirited and so anti-immigrant that they simply push immigrants and Latinos into the waiting arms of Democrats." "There is a third option for those voters," he added.

"They don't necessarily have to fill the ranks of the Democratic Party. They can simply stay home, and that to me is an option that is there. It is not an option that I have called for. But let me be clear: It's not an option I have ruled out... Will I rule it out in the future? Absolutely not!"


Later, when speaking Spanish to Spanish-language reporters, Gutierrez was even harsher toward the Obama
administration. "Where is the Justice Department? Here is an injustice against the basic rights. Where is the administration of Barack Obama and his Justice department?" READ FULL STORY
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Obama falters on immigration reform promises


Advocates for illegal immigrants fear the White House is doing the bare minimum to appease Latino voters before midterm elections as it focuses on other issues.

A White House commitment to overhaul the nation's immigration system this year is collapsing, with the Obama administration undecided about the best way to proceed on an issue the president had identified as a top priority.Immigration advocates who meet regularly with White House officials said the Obama administration had been considering several approaches, including convening a summit meeting devoted to the issue and putting forward its own bill.

Those who attended a session Friday with administration officials said they came away with no indication the White House had settled on a course of action.President Obama "made some commitments that he's supposed to be delivering on," said Angela Kelley, vice president for immigration policy at the Center for American Progress, a think tank with close ties to the Obama White House. "And that was over a month ago.

So everybody can look at the calendar and make a pretty educated guess about how many days we have to get immigration done."Immigration advocates fear the White House is doing the bare minimum needed to appease Latino voters before the midterm elections in November, while concentrating its efforts on issues it considers more urgent.The White House said Tuesday that it still wanted to pass a bill this year and was trying to round up cosponsors. Flying home from a trip to Los Angeles, Obama telephoned Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) from Air Force One and asked him to consider supporting an immigration bill, according to a Brown aide. But the conversation wasn't fruitful.

Brown told Obama that he would review any legislation that comes up, but that he believes "that the immediate
focus should be on fixing the economy and creating jobs," the senator's aide said.For immigration to pass in the narrow window left before campaign season fully kicks in, Obama needs to step up his involvement, members of Congress and immigration advocates said."The critical ingredient for whether we get immigration reform done this
year will be whether the president has the courage to step forward and lead," said Deepak Bhargava, executive director of the Center for Community Change, an advocacy group for low-income people and minority groups. "That is the indispensible ingredient". READ FULL STORY
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A new study of state flagship universities says that while the University of Texas has increased minority and low-income student enrollment, it still has a long way to go to reflect the state's changing demographics. The study by The Education Trust, a nonprofit group based in Washington, D.C., examined the most prestigious public universities because those schools are often the wealthiest, have higher research contributions and train future state leaders. "Enrollments at flagship state universities are looking less and less like the populations they serve," said the group's spokeswoman, Stephanie Germeraad. The study measured success in enrolling minorities by looking at the makeup of Texas high school graduates in 2007 and comparing it with UT's enrollment that year. It found the school doesn't reflect the makeup but is making progress. It also found continuing gaps in six-year graduation rates between white and minority students at UT. "They fall about in the middle on our various equity measures," said Jennifer Engle, one of the report's authors. "They do fit at the top in progress." About 51 percent of the state's high school graduates were Hispanic or black in 2008, compared with just 24 percent of undergraduate UT students that year. According to UT, between 2003 and 2008 the number of undergraduate Hispanic students enrolled rose from 5,478 to 6,980. Black students enrolled went from 1,395 to 1,810. White students by far make up the largest group. But the number of whites dropped during the same years, from 23,131 to 20,478. The Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board has placed a priority on increasing minority enrollment and tracks its progress with an annual "Closing the Gaps" report. The state has missed its goals of increasing Hispanic enrollment, however. Hispanics are almost the majority of Texas public school students. READ FULL STORY
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Conducted by the Pew Research Center between the end of October and the end of November a poll covering several different aspects of race and race relations has shown that while the majority of African-Americans believe that more still needs to be done to address racial discrimination in the U.S., 81 percent to be precise, increasing numbers are optimistic about the future, 53 percent believing the future will be better for them, 44 percent having felt that way in 2007. Furthermore 39 percent say that they are personally better off than they were five years ago, contrasting with 20 percent who stated in 2007 that they were better off than they were five years earlier. However, as the poll released on Tuesday confirmed, there is an air of pessimism within the Hispanic community, with 50 percent of Hispanic respondents saying they get along "very" or "pretty" well with whites and African Americans, compared to over 70 percent of whites and African Americans indicating that they get along "very" or "pretty" well with Hispanics. When it came to which racial groups were discriminated against "a lot", to quote the Associated Press, among the 2,884 adults who took part in the poll, 23 percent said Hispanics faced "a lot" of discrimination and 18 percent said the same of African-Americans. For whites the figure was 10 percent and for Asian-Americans eight percent. Recent attacks on Hispanics are being attributed to anti-immigrant sentiment, with Carmen Febo-San Miguel, executive director of a Hispanic cultural center in Philadelphia saying that she believes racism in the U.S. is "pretty entrenched". Whether driven by greater expectation of fair treatment it is unclear but 31 percent more Hispanics born in the U.S. than those born outside the U.S. speak of "a lot" or "some" discrimination against their community. The sight of Barack Obama in the White House is said to be driving much of the optimism felt by African-Americans. READ FULL STORY
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MIT must do a better job recruiting and retaining black and Hispanic faculty, who have a significantly more difficult time getting promoted than white and Asian colleagues, according to a frank internal study released today by the university. In some departments, such as chemistry, mathematics, and nuclear science and engineering, no minorities have been hired in the last two decades, according to the report, which was more than two years in the making. MIT's first comprehensive study of faculty racial diversity and the experiences of underrepresented minority professors highlights a national problem across academia: the need to improve the pipeline of black and Hispanic scholars. Blacks and Hispanics make up only 6 percent of MIT faculty, an increase of 4.5 percent since 2000 but far below the university's goal of achieving parity with the nation, where underrepresented minorities make up 30 percent of the population. The report indicates that in addition to focusing on recruitment and retention of these minority professors, the university needs to provide increased mentoring and expanding professional opportunities to make the climate at MIT more welcoming to underrepresented groups. READ FULL STORY
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UNITED STATES HISPANIC CHAMBER OF COMMERCE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Detroit-area high school junior and seniors will hone their entrepreneurship skills and learn to turn hobbies into profitable ventures at the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (USCHCC) Foundation Regional BizFest competition. The Detroit BizFest is part of a series of entrepreneurial training camps in partnership with Ford Motor Company Fund and Community Services, the philanthropic arm of Ford Motor Company. “Education is a top priority for Ford Motor Company Fund, and we are proud to continue our partnership with the USHCC Foundation on its innovative BizFest program that paves the way for future entrepreneurs and business owners,” said Jim Vella, president, Ford Motor Company Fund and Community Services. Thirty students from Detroit-area high schools have been selected to participate in this intensive four-day workshop, taking place November 18-21st at the Michigan Technical Education Center (M-TEC) in Dearborn, Michigan. Participants will learn how to launch their own business, establish entrepreneurial and leadership goals, create a business plan, identify investment opportunities and other skills needed to become effective business leaders. “BizFest gives aspiring young entrepreneurs practical, hands-on training on owning a business, marketing and networking. Through BizFest we hope to inspire the entrepreneurs of tomorrow” said Javier Palomarez, President and CEO of the USHCC Foundation. “We value our partnership with Ford Motor Company Fund and Community Services, which allows us to offer Hispanic youth in Detroit this unique experience. This also provides an opportunity for us to collaborate with the Michigan Hispanic Chamber of Commerce which has long-supported our program.” At the closing of the event, the top students will present business plans to local business leaders to compete for different awards, including scholarships and prizes as well as long-term business support. The winner of the Detroit regional BizFest will have the opportunity to participate in the National “BizFest” Competition at the USCHCC 31st Annual National Convention & Business Expo in Dallas, Texas, in September 2010. The Detroit BizFest is one of several regional BizFests held throughout the country. BizFest is the USHCC Foundation’s signature youth initiative. The BizFest training in Detroit will be conducted by Peter Hornberger, a Blended Learning and Consulting Specialists; Lenin Agudo of the Latino Business Resource Center; and Dama Gonzalez of Bilingual Executive Strategic Training (BEST). Carlos Ojeda, Jr., a motivational speaker and educator, will also participate in the program. About the USHCC Foundation: The USHCC Foundation is committed to the advancement of the Hispanic community’s economic development and entrepreneurship skills through the empowerment of Hispanic-owned businesses, growth of the Hispanic chamber of commerce network and promotion of life-long learning experiences for Hispanic youth and entrepreneurs. The Foundation’s broad-based approach is coupled with proactive strategy, which is reflected in the diverse number of USHCC Foundation-driven programs created to reach constituencies of all age groups and needs. For more information on the USHCC Foundation please visit www.ushccfoundation.org. About Ford Motor Company Fund and Community Services: Ford Motor Company Fund and Community Services is a community relations and philanthropic non-profit funded by Ford Motor Company. Celebrating its 60th anniversary in 2009, Ford Fund supports initiatives and institutions that foster and promote innovation in education, greater automotive safety and American heritage and diversity. National programs include Ford Partnership for Advanced Studies (Ford PAS), which provides 21st century skills-based curriculum to more than 40,000 high school students; and Ford Driving Skills for Life, which has taught safe driving skills to more than 337,000 young drivers. In addition, the Ford Volunteer Corps, established in 2005, enlists the help of thousands of Ford employees and retirees who volunteer their time to continue Ford's legacy of community service worldwide. For more information about programs made possible by Ford Motor Company Fund and Community Services, please visit www.community.ford.com, www.volunteer.ford.com or www.abrighterfuture.ford.com. CONTACT: DeVere Kutscher (202) 715-0497 dkutscher@ushcc.com
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Mt. Hood Community College’s decision to place Al Sigala, longtime spokesman, on paid leave and eliminate his position has drawn fire from college supporters. Members of the Hispanic Metropolitan Chamber, which represents hundreds of Latino businesses, professionals and others, were set to meet the college’s new president, John J. “Ski” Sygielski, on Wednesday, Oct. 1, to discuss their concerns. Sigala is of Mexican descent and supporters say he has been instrumental in increasing the college’s Latino enrollment. Sigala says Latino enrollment increased from 6 percent when he arrived more than 11 years ago, to 12 percent today. READ FULL STORY
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Hispanics hit hard by subprimes

The fastest-growing segment of U.S. home buyers is also among those facing the greatest risk of foreclosure, two top federal housing officials told a group of Hispanic real-estate professionals meeting in Phoenix this week. Poor guidance and cultural biases have forced too many Hispanics into predatory loans, they said, and in some cases their Hispanic real-estate agents helped put them there. READ FULL STORY
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Former Mexican President Vicente Fox expressed hope Tuesday that a new U.S. administration will find a mutually beneficial solution to immigration and restore America's standing in the world. Fox said the United States and the Bush administration have been too focused since 9/11 on related issues to be the example that other democracies expected from previous administrations. "We missed that great leadership in this nation. We need it back," Fox said. Fox did not disclose his preference between presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain, offering his choice of "Palin and Hillary" instead. READ FULL STORY
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American Latinos increasingly pessimistic

America's largest minority is a paradox. Latinos have a reputation for being fatalistic. Yet many, especially immigrants, also share an entrepreneurial belief that people chart their own destinies. The result is 46 million Americans -- 15 percent of the U.S. population -- who vacillate between pessimism and optimism. At the moment, pessimism has the upper hand. According to a new survey from the Pew Hispanic Center, Latinos in the United States are increasingly gloomy about their own situation, the economy and their prospects for future success. That is true of many Americans. However, it's precisely because Latinos -- as with other groups with a strong immigrant tradition -- are known for being optimistic and overcoming obstacles that a surge of pessimism should be taken seriously. Imagine what other groups typically less optimistic are going through. READ FULL ARTICLE
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