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May 14, 2008

A Peruvian specialty gets pride of place - MACHU PICCHU CHARCOAL CHICKEN & GRILL in Boston

Filed under [ Food ] [ Massachusetts ] [ Boston ]

“The magic number at Machu Picchu Charcoal Chicken & Grill is 24. That’s how many hours their rotisserie chicken soaks in a secret brew before it’s slid onto a spit and roasted over hot coals to a succulent, smoky-to-the-bone perfection.

Twenty-four is also about the number of seconds that it takes to walk to Rosy and Hugo Cerna’s other restaurant, also dubbed Machu Picchu. Why open a second Peruvian restaurant a tamale’s throw from the first?

“Because we really wanted to serve pollos a la brasa,” says Rosy Cerna about their charcoal chicken. “It’s a national dish in Peru, but you never serve it at a restaurant where you have all the other Peruvian dishes like we have at Machu Picchu. Pollos a la brasa has to have a restaurant of its own.”*

25 Union Square, Somerville. 617-623-7972.
Hours Mon-Thu, 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m.; Fri-Sat, 11:30 a.m.-11 p.m.; Sun, 11 a.m.-10 p.m.

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Longtime community leader Orlando Isaza, of Northampton, was one of three named yesterday to a new governor’s board focused on youth. - Massachusetts

Filed under [ Community ] [ Education ] [ People ] [ Politics ] [ Massachusetts ]

“Called the Board of Early Education and Care, the 13-member group will be charged with the coordination and consolidation of a range of education and human services focused on youth.

Isaza, who is in the process of moving to Holyoke, is the senior program officer and manager for grant-making initiatives at the Community Foundation of Western Massachusetts in Springfield, and is the second Western Massachusetts resident named to the board.”*

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May 12, 2008

Red Sox Report to Broadcast on Telemundo New England as Reporte De Los Red Sox

Filed under [ Media ] [ Press Releases ] [ Sports ] [ Massachusetts ] [ Boston ]

“The Boston Red Sox and Telemundo New England announced today that the Red Sox Report, the Emmy nominated television show, will now be seen in close to 270,000 Hispanic television homes on Telemundo New England as Reporte de los Red Sox. Reporte de los Red Sox will be broadcast to all four of Telemundo’s New England broadcast markets and will reach approximately 1 million Hispanic viewers as estimated by Nielsen Universe.

Red Sox Report, which currently airs on the New England Sports Network (NESN) on Sunday nights, will be re-edited in Spanish by Telemundo New England who will add a Spanish speaking on-air and voiceover presence. Reporte de los Red Sox will also feature special segments aimed towards Hispanic viewers and is slated to air weekly on Wednesday evenings at 6:00 p.m. starting May 7, 2008.

“This is a tremendous opportunity to provide our weekly television programming for the first time to the vibrant Hispanic community in New England,” said Chuck Steedman, Vice President/Fenway Enterprises and Broadcast Services for the Boston Red Sox. “This venture gives us a consistent opportunity to interact with our Hispanic fans and provide them an opportunity to look behind-the-scenes on a weekly basis.”

Telemundo is the nation’s second largest Spanish language TV network. Telemundo New England services the Boston (WNEU), Providence (WRIW), Hartford (WRDM) and Springfield (WDMR) markets with a mixture of network and local news and community affairs programming. “We are delighted to bring the Red Sox Report to our audience and advertisers for the first time in Spanish here in New England. We look forward to a long term partnership with the Boston Red Sox,” commented Michael Gillespie, Senior Vice President of Telemundo New England, ZGS Communications.

Red Sox Report is produced by Red Sox Productions, the club’s internal television and video production department. The show goes behind the scenes with Boston’s historic baseball team to tell all the stories from the field, the ballpark and the community, throughout New England and across Red Sox Nation. It originally debuted on Boston’s WSBK-TV in April, 2004; and also aired over the air in Providence, RI and Portland, ME. The show transitioned to NESN in April, 2006, and has aired year-round since. It has been nominated for seven Boston/New England Emmy Awards since 2005.

Reporte de los Red Sox will be available throughout New England via cable on the following Telemundo New England channels:

In the Boston market (WNEU): Charter Communications – Channel 99; Comcast – Channel 10, 14, 17, 19, 53,95 and 96; Metrocast Cablevision – Channel 19; RCN – Channel 16; TDS Cable – Channel 22; and Time Warner – Channel 15

In the Hartford market (WRDM): Comcast – Channel 13, 16, 17, 18, 19 and 20

In the Providence market (WRIW): Cox Cable – Channel 54; Starlight Communications – Channel 4

In the Springfield market (WDMR): Comcast – Channel 11, 18; Charter Communications – Channel 96

Telemundo New England is owned by ZGS Communications, a Hispanic-owned broadcasting company headquartered in Arlington, Virginia that owns and operates the largest group of Telemundo affiliate television stations. WNEU Boston, WRIW Providence, WRDM Hartford and WDMR Springfield are proud of their commitment to service, local programming, community outreach, and the celebration of Hispanic culture and heritage. Telemundo, a U.S. Spanish-language television network, is the essential entertainment, news, and sports source for Hispanics. Broadcasting unique national and local programming for the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. population, Telemundo reaches 93% of U.S. Hispanic households in 142 markets.

Editor’s Note: A title graphic of Reporte de los Red Sox and a segment of the show is available for download on ftp://public-affairs.redsox.com. Username: publicaffairs Password: redsox2008″*

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May 8, 2008

Highly acclaimed journalist Ray Suarez to address UMass Dartmouth undergraduates

Filed under [ Media ] [ People ] [ Press Releases ] [ Higher Education ] [ Massachusetts ]

“Ray Suarez, the senior correspondent for The NewsHour, who has spent more than a quarter century in journalism covering local, national, and international stories, will address UMass Dartmouth’s 2008 undergraduate commencement exercises.

Due to the rapid enrollment growth of the campus undergraduate and graduate students will be receiving their degrees at different ceremonies for the first time. Approximately 350 graduate students will receive their degrees on Saturday, May 24 and 1,200 undergraduates will receive degrees on Sunday, May 25.

During the undergraduate ceremony in the Vietnam Veterans Peace Memorial Amphitheater honorary degrees will be awarded to:

* New Bedford native and Qualcomm founder Irwin Jacobs and wife Joan Jacobs, who have been generous supporters of college scholarships for New Bedford students and supporters of numerous other educational and arts-related causes.

* Southcoast Hospitals Group CEO Ronald Goodspeed, who recently co-authored What If…? A Survival Guide for Physicians, a book intended to help medical students, residents and physicians successfully handle situations traditionally not covered by medical education and training.

* Retired UMass Dartmouth Dean of Students Donald Howard who spent more than 40 years at the university and was instrumental in building student government and leadership structures, student publications, the student judiciary system, student-run activity fee disbursement systems, the theater company, and the lecture series.

The graduate student ceremony will be built around three speakers: an innovator external to the campus, a graduate alumnus/a innovator, and a graduate student.

The address by the external innovator will be delivered by Dr.Onesky Aupont, a faculty member at the University of Massachusetts Medical School who is a key leader of the Massachusetts arm of the National Children’s Study, the largest study to be conducted in the United States to assess the effects of environmental and genetic factors on child and human health.

Also speaking at the graduate commencement will be Yong Zhang, chief operating officer of Salary.com, a Massachusetts-based company that provides companies with the tools to “manage and inspire their most important asset - their people.” Mr. Zhang received graduate degrees in engineering and physics from UMass Dartmouth.

Speaking from a graduate student perspective will be Master of Fine Arts candidate Jennifer Ling Datchuk.

“Commencement 2008 at UMass Dartmouth is going to feature a diverse array of people who have had, and continue to have, an enormous impact on the lives of others,” Chancellor Jean F. MacCormack said. “This will be a celebration of the power of education and innovation to strengthen our Commonwealth, nation, and world; and a challenge to the Class of 2008 to set a new and even higher standard of global engagement.”

More on Ray Suarez

Mr. Suarez, also known for his work as host of NPR’s Talk of the Nation, wrote the book The Old Neighborhood: What We Lost in the Great Suburban Migration ( Free Press ), and has contributed to several others, including Brooklyn ( Workman, 2001 ), Saving America’s Treasures ( National Geographic, 2000 ), Las Christmas ( Knopf, 1998 ), and About Men ( Poseidon, 1986 ). His latest work is The Holy Vote: The Politics of Faith in America, an examination of the tightening relationship between religion and politics. His essays and criticism have been published in The News York Times, The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune, The Baltimore Sun, among other publications.

Mr. Suarez shared in NPR’s 1993-94 and 1994-95 duPont-Columbia Silver Baton Awards for on-site coverage of the first all-race elections in South Africa and the first 100 days of the 104th Congress, respectively. He has been honored with the 1996 Ruben Salazar Award from the National Council of La Raza, Current History Magazine’s 1995 Global Awareness Award, and a Chicago Emmy Award.

A life member of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, Mr. Suarez was a founding member of the Chicago Association of Hispanic Journalists. A native of Brooklyn, New York, he lives in Washington, DC with his wife and three children.

Mr. Suarez holds a B.A. in African History from New York University and an M.A. in the Social Sciences from the University of Chicago.
Contact Info:
Email: kbeals@umassd.edu Kathy Beals, UMass Dartmouth Office of Public Affairs”*

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April 25, 2008

‘Presencia Latina’ Looks to Leave Mark - Harvard

Filed under [ Art y Culture ] [ Higher Education ] [ Massachusetts ]

“Presencia Latina, Harvard’s Latino cultural show, is intended not only as a showcase for Latino and Latin-American creativity but also as a means of strengthening the entire community within Harvard. The show, which will take place tomorrow, features both traditional and modern acts presented by the winners of the show’s Latino/a of the Year awards: hip-hop artist Daddy Yankee and “America’s Next Top Model” winner Jaslene Gonzalez.

The board members of Presencia Latina have been auditioning students, organizing celebrity guest appearances, and promoting the cultural show since late February. They hope that this show will open the Harvard community’s eyes to Latino culture on campus and in the greater Boston area. “*

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April 21, 2008

A Latino Professor at Harvard Law? ¡Si Se Puede!

Filed under [ Tomás' Picks ] [ Higher Education ] [ Commentary ] [ Massachusetts ]
“The chant of change is all around us. For years, Latino (as used here, meaning men and women with ancestry from Spanish-speaking countries and residing permanently in the United States) students and alumni have lobbied for a Latino professor at Harvard Law School. They have longed for a professor who self-identifies as Latino, has first-hand knowledge of Latino life in the United States, and who openly supports the struggle for equality of the Latino community in this country. There are persons from all over the world who would self-identify or be identified by others with the ethnic Latino description.

But being Latino in the United States takes on a different meaning. It is about culture, ethnicity, life experiences, national origin, and self-identification. There is also the visual identification made by others based on the stereotypical “brown” Latino. The reality is that the “Latino label” in the United States includes persons of all races and many mixtures thereof. “*

*From: http://media.www.hlrecord.org
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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April 16, 2008

LISTA National and Massachusetts Latino Chamber of Commerce Partner to bridge the Digital Divide

Filed under [ Business ] [ Press Releases ] [ Blogante Business ] [ Massachusetts ]
“ LISTA Joins The MASSACHUSETTS Latino Chamber of Commerce to hold its 3rd annual “Business Seminar for Youth”.

Springflield, Massachusetts April 14, 2008— The MA Latino Chamber of Commerce will hold its 3rd annual “Business Seminar for Youth.” During the April school vacation April 21th-25rd from 9:00AM to 2:30 PM.
The youth will learn the basic skills of business, banking, ecommerce and technology, web, ecommerce and making good leadership decisions as final project each student by the end of the seminar will complete an ecommerce web business and business plan.

The Massachusetts Latino Chamber of Commerce has partnered with Latino in Information Sciences and Technology Association (LISTA ) www.a-lista.org  a national nonprofit and Jose Marquez, National President/CEO in order to bridge the digital divide.  ”We are very excited to announce this new partnership and the launch of the New Tech Center of Excellence to be built in conjunction with the Mass Latino Chamber of Commerce. Bringing LISTA’s tech literacy programs to Massachusetts is the greatest gift to the future of the children of Massachusetts and I want to thank their visionary president Carlos Gonzalez, for spearheading this movement” said Mr. Marquez.

Through our combined efforts, LISTA Ma. Tech Council and our initiatives we will work towards closing the Technology and financial literacy gap between Hispanic and non-Hispanic youth in Massachusetts.” said Carlos Gonzalez, President. Business owners will participate as speakers and role models during the week seminar and give back to the community by giving their most important asset… their knowledge.

The program will also feature “America Works” a Junior Achievement curriculum which highlights inventions past and presents. This is the third time we partner with Jennifer Connolly, Director of Junior Achievement.

According to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. among the nation’s Hispanics, now the largest U.S. minority, almost half-nearly 20 million people haven’t opened a basic bank account. President Bush introduced an initiative to promote financial literacy among Latinos. The MA Latino Chamber offers workshops on financial literacy for children and adults.

“It is crucial we invest in our future, offering financial literacy programs to the Latino community particularly our children will have a longstanding positive outcome for all of us. As an emerging community, if we do not prepare our children to understand economics then we will perpetuate the economic disparity that exists in our community today. Junior Achievement has the mission and the tools for us to use to help our children become educated consumers and to take a lead in the economic revitalization of Springfield and Massachusetts. .” Carlos Gonzalez, President.

“The Latino community continues to grow in Massachusetts and the rest of the country, Yes, we are making great strides, although it is slow in both financial and technology, we have come a long way, but we have a long way to go. We must do everything in our power to level the playing field for our next generation,” said Jose Marquez .

About Latino in Information Sciences and Technology Association (LISTA)

LISTA ( www.a-lista.org) promotes the utilization of the technology sectors for the empowerment of the Latino community. We are an organization that is committed to bringing various elements of Technology under one central hub to facilitate our partners, members and the community with the leverage and education they need to succeed in a highly advanced technologically driven society. LISTA Mission is to educate, motivate and encourage the use of technology in the Latino community and empowering them to bridge the digital divide.

Carlos Gonzalez
President
MA Latino Chamber of Commerce
1655 Main Street
Springfield, MA 01103

(413) 746 1989
www.masslatinochamber.com

Jose A. Marquez
President and CEO

Latinos in Information Sciences and Technology Association
Office: 347. 632.4542
info@a-lista.org
www.a-lista.org

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April 15, 2008

Did You Know? The Colorado Civil Rights Division says Boulder County is the second-hardest place in the country for Hispanics to get a fair home loan. - Cambridge, Mass. was #1

Filed under [ Did You Know? ] [ Real Estate ] [ Your Money ] [ Blogante Business ] [ Colorado ] [ Massachusetts ]

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From: http://cbs4denver.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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April 14, 2008

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Celebrates ‘Spanish Spring’ with El Greco to Velazquez: Art During the Reign of Philip III and Antonio Lopez Garcia

Filed under [ Art y Culture ] [ Hispanic News ] [ Press Releases ] [ Massachusetts ] [ Boston ]
“The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), celebrates the richness of Spain’s magnificent artistry with El Greco to Velazquez: Art during the Reign of Philip III, highlighting works by the great Spanish masters; and Antonio Lopez Garcia, a retrospective of this contemporary realist. The exhibitions were opened on Saturday by Her Royal Highness Dona Cristina de Borbon, Infanta of Spain, and His Excellency Don Inaki Urdangarin, Duke of Palma. Also in attendance were United States Senator Edward Kennedy, His Excellency, D. Carlos Westendorp y Cabeza, Ambassador of Spain to the United States, and Antonio Lopez Garcia. El Greco to Velazquez is on view April 20 through July 27 and Antonio Lopez Garcia from April 13 through July 27.

El Greco to Velazquez features 60 paintings and sculptures, including 11 works by El Greco and seven by Velazquez. The late works of El Greco and the early works of Velazquez are considered within the context of the court of Philip III, a vibrant artistic period of 23 years (1598-1621). Key masterpieces from international museums, including the Prado, are included in the exhibition. An audio guide is available in both English and Spanish.

Organized by the MFA and the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University in Durham, NC, the exhibition is sponsored by Bank of America. Additional support is provided by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and Humanities, the National Endowment for the Humanities, The Homeland Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and WCVB-TV 5. El Greco to Velazquez is presented with the collaboration of the State Corporation for

Spanish Cultural Action Abroad (SEACEX), supported by the Spanish Ministry for Foreign Affairs and Cooperation, and the Ministry of Culture. Generous support for the catalogue was provided by Scott and Isabelle Black and SEACEX.

Antonio Lopez Garcia showcases 55 paintings, drawings, and sculpture highlighting the artist’s career from 1955 to the present. A special feature is the debut of Day and Night, monumental sculptures of baby heads flanking the Museum’s front entrance. The exhibition is sponsored by United Technologies Corporation.

For more information, or for the MFA Press Room, visit http://www.mfa.org. “*

*From: http://www.hispanicprwire.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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April 8, 2008

Commission hears testimony on US immigration raids - Massachusetts

Filed under [ Hispanic News ] [ Immigration ] [ Massachusetts ]
“Immigrants and their advocates testified before a union-led commission at the State House yesterday that federal agents violated illegal immigrants’ constitutional rights and treated them inhumanely during recent raids, prompting swift denials from the federal government.
more stories like this

The commission held its second national meeting in Boston to hear testimony about the fallout from raids in New England, from little-noticed house raids in Springfield to a massive crackdown just over a year ago at a New Bedford leather goods factory that drew national attention for separating children from their parents.”*

*From: http://www.boston.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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Teenage Birth Rates in Massachusetts Highest Among Hispanics; Legislation Needed To Address the Issue, Experts Say

Filed under [ Health ] [ Hispanic News ] [ Latinas ] [ Eye Openers ] [ Massachusetts ]
“Births to Hispanic teenagers living in the western part of Massachusetts — a state with one of the lowest teen pregnancy rates in the nation — are more prevalent than teen births among other groups and the rate is growing, a health expert said at a conference on Monday, the Springfield Republican reports.

According to Patricia Quinn, executive director of the Massachusetts Alliance on Teen Pregnancy, who spoke at an event sponsored by the Youth Empowerment Adolescent Health Network, 65% of teenage births in Springfield, Mass., were to Hispanics in 2006, up from 48% a decade earlier. Sarah Perez-McAdoo, co-founder of the network and an obstetrician-gynecologist at Baystate Medical Center, said the Hispanic teenage pregnancy rate in Massachusetts is six times higher than that of non-Hispanics. “*

*From: http://www.kaisernetwork.org
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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March 28, 2008

Isabel Melendez won’t run for mayor - Lawrence, Massachusetts

Filed under [ Hispanic News ] [ Latinas ] [ People ] [ Politics ] [ Massachusetts ]
“Isabel Melendez, the community activist who came close to becoming the state’s first elected Latino mayor when she ran for the Lawrence post in 2001, has announced she won’t seek the job next year.
more stories like this

Instead, she said she is throwing her support behind former city councilor Israel Reyes, who recently announced his intention to run for the office.

Melendez’s announcement ends speculation that the 70-year-old would make a second run for the city’s top municipal spot when Mayor Michael J. Sullivan leaves office because of term limits. For months now, Spanish-language radio stations and local newspapers have mentioned Melendez as a possible candidate.”*

*From: http://www.boston.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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March 24, 2008

Producer of bittersweet, funny ‘Maldeamores’ will speak at Latino Film Festival

Filed under [ Entertainment ] [ Hispanic News ] [ Massachusetts ]
“For a film that often takes an ironic and melancholic look at love, the new Puerto Rican movie “Maldeamores” (“Love Sickness”) is surrounded by a lot of actual nice, heartwarming, feel-good kind of love.

The co-directors, Carlos Ruiz Ruiz and Mariem Perez Riera, are married. The producer, Luillo Ruiz, is Carlos Ruiz Ruiz’s brother. Meanwhile, the film’s executive production coordinator, Belly Torres, is Luillo Ruiz’s “life partner,” Ruiz said.

The love of filmmaking may have something to do with it. “*

*From: http://www.telegram.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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March 20, 2008

Did You Know? The total number of Latino students statewide is 128,993 and over the last five years Latino student enrollments jumped by 22.7 percent in Massachusetts

Filed under [ Did You Know? ] [ Education ] [ Hispanic News ] [ Youth ] [ Massachusetts ]

So did you know this? If you didn’t, perhaps you could send it to someone you know to help spread the knowledge and please tell them about HispanicTips.

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From: http://www.wickedlocal.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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UMass study: Latino students improve on MCAS; dropout, absence rates high

Filed under [ Education ] [ Hispanic News ] [ Higher Education ] [ Research ] [ Massachusetts ]
“Latino students in Massachusetts are showing some improvement in MCAS achievement and a decline in MCAS failure rates, according to a study released on Wednesday that also underscored high dropout and absence rates.

Amid continuing concern over achievement gaps, the “moderate” gains are positive developments, said Miren Uriarte, an associate professor and sociologist at the University of Massachusetts Mauricio Gaston Institute. Uriarte, in a statement, called the results “still very depressed when compared to other groups.”"*

*From: http://www.wickedlocal.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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March 18, 2008

Did You Know? More than a third of Boston’s 56,000 students are Latino; more than 40 percent of them are learning English as a second language. And since the state eliminated bilingual education in 2002, these students have fallen further behind.

Filed under [ Did You Know? ] [ Education ] [ Hispanic News ] [ Massachusetts ] [ Boston ]

So did you know this? If you didn’t, perhaps you could send it to someone you know to help spread the knowledge and please tell them about HispanicTips.

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From: http://www.boston.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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Bilingual teachers wanted - Boston schools recruiting in Puerto Rico

Filed under [ Education ] [ Hispanic News ] [ Top Stories ] [ Massachusetts ] [ Boston ] [ Puerto Rico ]
“As a balmy breeze fanned the palm fronds dotting the college campus, the man in the seersucker suit and leather flip flops pointed to a sheet filled with numbers and launched into his pitch for Boston public schools.”Starting salary for you would be right here, at $44,000,” recruiter Alvin Cooper told a 22-year-old aspiring elementary school teacher.

She blinked, then smiled. The figure was more than double what she would make here in Puerto Rico.”*

*From: http://www.boston.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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March 17, 2008

Revolution get nod for SuperLiga

Filed under [ Hispanic News ] [ Sports ] [ Massachusetts ] [ Boston ]
“The SuperLiga proceeded successfully without the Revolution last year. Teams were chosen for geographic and promotional reasons, the promoters vindicated by large crowds, receptive television audiences, and some dramatic outcomes.

But the credibility of the SuperLiga, a joint venture between Major League Soccer and the Federacion Mexicana de Futbol, required that the best teams in North America be involved.”*

*From: http://www.boston.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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March 11, 2008

Super Mario Barros - This teacher has a radio show, a newspaper column, and a satirical take on social issues - Boston

Filed under [ Education ] [ Hispanic News ] [ People ] [ Eye Openers ] [ Massachusetts ] [ Boston ]
“Inside room 336 at Somerville High, freshmen know him as Mr. Barros, the colorful and animated teacher who talks passionately about immigration, workplace reform, and US history.
more stories like this

Outside school, Mario Barros is known as a satirical newspaper columnist and the sharp-tongued voice behind “Lenguaviva” (”Living Language”), a radio show on WUNR-AM (1600) where Barros shares his social commentary on just about anything, from New England’s harsh winters to fuel alternatives to Angelina Jolie’s collection of tattoos.

“What is going to happen to her when she is 87 years old? All those tattoos will be in different places from where they started,” he jokes.”*

*From: http://www.boston.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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March 6, 2008

A year after raid, immigration cases drag on for many - New Bedford, Massachusetts

Filed under [ Community ] [ Hispanic News ] [ Immigration ] [ Top Stories ] [ Massachusetts ]
“Exactly one year after federal agents burst into a New Bedford factory and arrested 361 immigrant workers, about half of those arrested are still here, an outcome that is raising concerns on both sides of the heated immigration divide.

The raid whiplashed the city, drew criticism from state and federal authorities, and captured national attention for separating some parents from their children. Now, the plodding aftermath is prompting new questions about the effectiveness of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s raid.

Advocates for immigrants say the raid on the Michael Bianco factory devastated a community, with little to show for it. Those who favor restrictions on immigration say the system should work faster to expel illegal immigrants from the country.”*

*From: http://www.boston.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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March 5, 2008

Vanessa Calderon-Rosado fixes the disconnect - Boston

Filed under [ Community ] [ Hispanic News ] [ Latinas ] [ People ] [ Massachusetts ] [ Boston ]
“Vanessa Calderon-Rosado has been fixing a disconnect throughout her career, from her start in Puerto Rico to her role today as chief executive officer of Inquilinos Boricuas en Accion, or Puerto Rican Tenants in Action, in Boston.

For the past five years, Calderon-Rosado has been heading IBA’s 40-year effort to provide housing as well as programs that advance, educate and enrich the lives of its low-income, all-ages, primarily Latino service population.”*

*From: http://www.bostonherald.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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February 25, 2008

Housing crisis hits immigrants in Massachusetts

Filed under [ Hispanic News ] [ Tomás' Picks ] [ Real Estate ] [ Blogante Business ] [ Massachusetts ]
“When Ramon Gallo bought a $300,000 home in Westborough in late 2006, he thought he had achieved his dream. Sixteen months later, Gallo, who signed for an adjustable-rate mortgage, has fallen behind on his payments and fears he may soon live a foreclosure nightmare.

Gallo, 38, who came from Mexico five years ago, is part of a wave of immigrant homeowners who have been hit hard by the national foreclosure epidemic. Reports say new immigrants, along with minorities and low-income Americans, were the targets of sub-prime loans, which played a key role in the foreclosure epidemic.

Many immigrants bought homes during the boom market five years ago, taking advantage of adjustable-rate mortgages, which made it easy at first glance to buy properties.”*

*From: http://www.dailynewstribune.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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February 21, 2008

For tots, Spanish as a second language - In ‘a smaller world,’ parents want their children to be bilingual - Massachusetts

Filed under [ Education ] [ Hispanic News ] [ Tomás' Picks ] [ Youth ] [ Language Issues ] [ Massachusetts ]
“On the second Saturday of each month, the town’s library offers youngsters a chance to escape the familiar geography of their suburban neighborhoods and discover the lively harbors and old markets of cities half a world away. The landscape changes each month, but the journey is always narrated in Spanish.

It might seem an odd choice for Arlington - where only 1.6 percent of the town’s 40,000-plus population speak Spanish at home and only 4 percent of schoolchildren are Hispanic - but at a time when municipal budget cuts have decimated similar programs in more diverse cities such as Lowell and Lawrence, the Spanish story hour at the Robbins Library is enjoying great success.

“Given that the world has become smaller, knowing a second or even third language is important,” said Adam Harder, whose 4-year-old daughter, Keira, each month excitedly counts down the days to Spanish story time.”*

*From: http://www.boston.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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February 20, 2008

A chef says olé to foods of Chiapas - Boston

Filed under [ Food ] [ Hispanic News ] [ Massachusetts ] [ Boston ]
“Erwin Ramos is smitten by the foods of Chiapas, the southernmost region of Mexico, which he visited last year as part of a group hosted by Chicago restaurateur, TV personality, and cookbook author Rick Bayless.

Ever since, Ramos, chef of Olé Mexican restaurant, has been serving what he learned. “To understand a recipe, I need to know where it came from,” says Ramos, whose explorations in Chiapas encouraged him to learn more. Soon he’ll be heading to Guadalajara and later in the spring to San Miguel de Allende with a group led by Diana Kennedy, another Mexican cookbook author. “I am not Mexican, so I must keep educating myself,” says Ramos, who was born in the Philippines.”*

*From: http://www.boston.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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February 18, 2008

Did You Know? In Springfield, 65 percent of teen births in 2005 were to Hispanics, while Holyoke saw a greater number - 85 percent. Even more discouraging than the increase in teen pregnancies, however, is the sense that little can be done to change what some say is a “cultural” phenomenon among Hispanics. - Massachusetts

Filed under [ Did You Know? ] [ Health ] [ Hispanic News ] [ Latinas ] [ Massachusetts ]

So did you know this? If you didn’t, perhaps you could send it to someone you know to help spread the knowledge and please tell them about HispanicTips.

View more “Did You Know?” facts in our “Did You Know?” section

From: http://www.masslive.com
Traducido: usando Google o Altavista/Babel Fish

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