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Family, friends may impact breast cancer surgery decision, study finds

by the University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Michigan.— About three-quarters of women newly diagnosed with breast cancer have a friend or family member with them at their first visit with a surgeon. And that person plays a significant role in the patient’s decision of what type of surgery to have, according to a new study from the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center.

The study looked at the factors affecting a woman’s choice between a mastectomy to remove the entire breast or breast-conserving surgery, which involves removing only the tumor and is followed by radiation treatments. It found that when the patient, rather than the doctor, drives the surgery decision, she is more likely to choose a mastectomy. This proved to be the case among all racial and ethnic groups studied.

The paper appears in the next issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

Further, the study found that women who had a friend or family member accompany them to the surgical consultation were more likely to receive a mastectomy, compared to women who attended the appointment alone. Latinas who speak little English were most influenced by family in their decision-making: 75 percent, compared to 34 percent of white women.

“Family and friends have a potentially important role in treatment discussions. More than 70 percent of women brought someone with them to the appointment, providing a chance for surgeons to convey information to both the patient and her support person. Clearly, others help with and contribute to decision making, and may do so differently for different racial or ethnic groups,” says lead study author Sarah Hawley, Ph.D., M.P.H., research associate professor of internal Storymedicine at the U-M Medical School.

The researchers also found that factors such as concern about cancer recurrence, body image and the effects of radiation impacted a woman’s surgery decision. Women who said that concerns about recurrence or radiation were very important in their surgical treatment decision-making were more likely to choose mastectomy, while women very concerned about body image were more likely to have breast conserving surgery.

“We want to ensure a woman’s decision is high quality, which means it’s based on accurate knowledge about treatment risks and benefits and is consistent with the underlying values of the patient,” Hawley says.

The researchers plan to develop a decision tool to help women and their families understand the surgical decision, and future studies will look at the issues important to patients and their spouses around decision making.

Methodology: The researchers analyzed survey responses from 1,651 women ­diagnosed with early stage breast cancer in the Detroit and Los Angeles metropolitan

areas. Patients were selected from each city’s Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results database, which collects information about cancer incidence, treatment and mortality.

Patients were asked about their surgical treatment decision, including how involved they were in the decision making, whether a family member or friend accompanied them to the appointment and their attitudes toward surgery. Higher numbers of African Americans and Latinas were included.

Breast cancer statistics: 194,280 Americans will be diagnosed with breast cancer this year and 40,610 will die from the disease, according to the American Cancer Society.

March against the designer of torture legal tactics

by the El Reportero’s staff

Protesters fake war prisoners being tortured in Iraq during a protest in UC campus.: (phot courtesy of  WORLD CAN’T WAIT)Protesters fake war prisoners being tortured in Iraq during a protest in UC campus.: (phot courtesy of WORLD CAN’T WAIT)

For the time being there will not be peace for John Yoo, as long as activists from World Can’t Wait, continue haunting the torture professor.

According to members for World Can’t Wait, they will not rest until Yoo is kicked out of his law-teaching job at UC Berkeley, a non-deserving position, for master minding the design of torturing tactics against Iraqi prisoners. They want the professor ­disbarred and prosecuted for war crimes as “the architect of the Bus-Cheney torture state.”

And to make sure that the debate over the recently released CIA Inspector General’s report from Dick Cheney and the halls of Congress to the radio talk shows, doesn’t die, The group, which has been protesting for several months, staged another protest on Sept. 3 to challenge UC’s employment of John Yoo, a former Bush administration lawyer.

According to Frances Tobin, who wrote Torture Memo’s John Yoo Welcomed Back to Berkeley by Protesters, in the online publication Politics Daily, the controversial memos he composed – the more infamous of which dealt with the curtailing of Geneva Conventions as applied to suspected Al-Qaida and Taliban leaders, narrowing the definition of torture, and justifi cations for warrantless wiretapping – were written during the time he served as a deputy assistant attorney general in the Office of Legal Counsel at the U.S. Department of Justice, where, according to his university profi le, “he worked on issues involving foreign affairs, national security and the separation of powers.”

In August on the first day of classes at UC Berkeley Law, a press conference and protest drew over 60 people to the steps of Boalt Hall, where Yoo currently teaches Civil Procedures.

At that press conference, prominent lawyers and psychologists representing four generations of alumni of UC and its law schools denounced the presence of John Yoo on the UC faculty, announced World Can’t Wait.

Four protesters were arrested; including Stephanie Tang, a leader of World Can’t Wait. All were cited for two charges of trespassing and disturbing the peace, banned from the UC Berkeley Campus for seven days, and released.

In her article, Tobin cites the following responses to an email campaign launched against Yoo by American Freedom Campaign.

In response to the demands for Yoo’s firing — and some also think he should be disbarred — Edley released a statement in April of 2008. Edley cited Yoo’s First Amendment and due process protections, saying further, “My sense is that the vast majority of legal academics with a view of the matter disagree with substantial portions of Professor Yoo’s analyses, including a great many of his colleagues at Berkeley.

If, however, this strong consensus were enough to fi re or sanction someone, then academic freedom would be meaningless.”

According to a 2008 Inside Higher Ed article dealing with this topic, some within the academic legal realm supported Yoo even though they didn’t agree with his politics or positions. Brian Leiter, a professor of law and philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin, called the emails by American Freedom Campaign a “disgraceful attack on the academy,” claiming that “tenure, and academic freedom, would mean nothing if every professor with views deemed morally reprehensible or every professor who produced a shoddy piece of work — while inside or outside the academy — could be fired.”

In his 2008 statement, Dean Edley noted, “We press our students to grapple with these matters, and in the legal literature Professor Yoo and his critics do battl­e. One can oppose and even condemn an idea, but I do not believe that in a university we can fearfully refuse to look at it. That would not be the best way to educate, nor a promising way to seek deeper understanding in a world of continual, strange revolutions.” Edley suggested that the controversy could be a proverbial “teachable moment,” though it seems that then, as today, no consensus has emerged as to whether Boalt Hall has accurately assessed such a decision and its reverberating effect. (Politics Daily’s Frances Tobin and press announcements contributed to this article.

 

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Honduras, military escalation test, Chávez

by the El Reportero’s news services

Hugo ChávezHugo Chávez

Caracas, Aug 30 (Prensa Latina) The coup in Honduras was a test for a military escalation, which is continuously increased and boosted, with the new US military bases in Colombia, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez warned on Sunday.

Chavez expressed concern about the situation, which could start to cool off internationally and the pressure on the putschists could ease up, and he called on the international community to continue doing their best so that the Honduran people can retake their democratic path.

In his Sunday column, entitled “Chavez’ Lines”, he insisted that the coup was staged in open complicity with the US military base in Palmerola, where the plane that took President Manuel Zelaya away from Honduras landed.

“These have been two months of lessons: first, the openly interventionist power of important US sectors that are striving to change the people’s fate and secondly, the powerlessness of international bodies to enforce their own decisions,” said Chavez.

According to him, it is a terrible sign to the rest of the continent, “which may start to see that dishonor and injustice have become its daily bread.”

He said that to speak about an imminent threat to the entire region, mainly to neighbors in Colombia, is no overstatement. “We all risk a military intervention if we do not dance to the tune of the empire.”

Columbia squares up for Unasur showdown

The presidents from the Union of South American Nations (Unasur) held an extraordinary, and brief, summit in Bariloche, Argentina on Aug. 28, to discuss the proposed U.S.-Colombia deal allowing the U.S. enhanced access to military bases in Colombia.

The summit, which opens at 10 a.m. and ends with an offi cial photo and lunch at 13.30, will be a major test of Brazil’s dip  lomatic clout and regional authority.

Despite Brazil’s steady efforts to engineer an agreement, the summit looks on course for at least a row, if not failure. What Brazil wants is for the newly created Unasur, or its defense council (composed of the region’s defense ministers), to vet, or monitor, all foreign military alliances entered into by Unasur members.

250 Mexicans killed trying to emigrate to U.S.A.

At least 250 Mexicans have died while trying to cross the border with the United States in the first seven months of 2009, according to Foreign Department figures revealed on Sunday.

Most deaths have taken place in Arizona, with dehydration as the main cause in people from 18 to 45 years of age.

A slight downward trend in the number of deaths has been experienced since 2005 in the mentioned area, where 443 cases were reported that year and 344 were registered in 2008, the Foreign Department ­said.

At least 500,000 Mexicans try to cross the border every year and die where the US authorities are building the long “wall of shame,” Many of them die in the desert or are killed by the organized crime, according to experts.

Fidel Castro looking good at 83

Fidel Castro just celebrated his 83rd birthday, as Hugo Chavez made a surprise visit for the occasion of Fidel’s birthday. No major events were held in Cuba to commemorate Fidel Castro’s birthday but he published a column in Granma about the global economic crisis that is hitting the country, vowing to “carry on.” Western corporate media strangely decided to announce a picture of a “healthy looking” Fidel Castro during his recent meeting with the President of Ecuador, Rafael Correa Delgado.

At that visit, an extensive dialogue took place on economic matters, education and health. The two presidents also discussed international affairs, spoke of cultural and historical topics and the continued close friendship between both countries.

As flu season nears, H1N1 pandemic spreads

by Erick Galindo

While the United States prepares for theworst, Latin America is mired in “swine flu” cases, with Costa Rica’s Nobel Prize-winning President Oscar Arias as one of its more notable new victims.

The deaths of 1,274 persons in the Americas have been attributed to the H1N1 pandemic as of Aug. 7, according to the Pan American Health Organization.

In Argentina, fatalities have more than doubled to 337 in the last month, reported the country’s health ministry, further damaging that country’s faltering economy with its impact on tourism. Deputy health minister, Máximo Diosque stated he expects to confirm another 400 deaths. Argentina has a total of 5,710 confirmed cases.

If the projection is correct, the Argentine death toll will surpass the U.S. total of 335 as the world’s highest. Other hemisphere counts include Mexico at 146, Chile at 96 and Brazil at 92.

The Americas account for 87 percent of H1N1- related deaths and 60 percent (102,905) of all confirmed cases. Twenty of the 35 countries that report to the PAHO have confirmed cases.

Health ministries including the PAHO and World Health Organization, are warning that children and pregnant women are the most susceptible.

Mexico, where the first outbreak occurred, reported no new deaths but a sharp increase in new cases. As Canada, Mexico and the United States prepare for flu season, there has been a shift in the policy of closing schools, churches and other areas of large public occupancy.

The WHO is combating news that the anticipated vaccine may be dangerous because of the rapid approval being sought.

“The public needs to be reassured that regulatory procedures in place for the licensing of pandemic vaccines, including procedures for expediting regulatory approval, are rigorous and do not compromise safety or quality controls,” WHO said.

Education and vaccine development are being stressed as fall school openings coincide with flu season. President Obama and his top advisers spent part of last week discussing the matter.

“We have been monitoring what’s been happening in the Southern Hemisphere and, although it has not received as much publicity as it did in the spring, the possibility of a very severe flu that kills a lot of people or makes a lot of people sick still exists,” the president said. TV programs such as Sesame Street — Plaza Sésamo in Latin America — are being used to educate children with the basic health tips.

In this country, there is a special focus on Hispanics. The Latino community and others that tend to be lower income and don’t have health insurance are much more vulnerable, President Obama noted on release of the White House’s comprehensive website www.flu.gov. “We want to make sure that information is getting out as systematically as possible over the next several weeks.”

Latino, Black Unemployment Rates Remain Highest

The overall monthly unemployment rate dropped in July for the first time in more than a year, prompting a glimmer of optimism for recession’s end. It dipped from 9.5 percent in June to 9.4 percent in July.

The rates for blacks, at 14.5 percent, and Hispanics at 12.3 percent, showed little change and continue well above the national rate. Payroll job losses were reduced by 247,000 following a 443,000 loss in June, according to the Department of Labor’s monthly report.

­Secretary Hilda Solís stressed that the unexpected reduction was insufficient, and more needs to be done to help the workforce.

Another economic stimulus package is not in the offing, she reported to Weekly Report and other media by teleconference.

President Obama has repeatedly preached public patience when pressed as to whether another influx of money is needed.

While the job-loss slowdown is a welcome sign, Solís stated, she would not be satisfied until there was “robust” growth.

Obama has often said that job growth is one of the last things likely to happen in the nation’s economic recovery. But the positive news did prompt the president to state that “the worse may be behind us.”

He called it a positive sign that the stimulus was working, “While we’ve rescued our economy from catastrophe, we’ve also begun to build a new foundation for growth.” Hispanic Link.

Boxing

August 29th (Saturday), 2009 At The Cultural Center, Miyoshi, Japan

  • ­Hidenobu Honda (30-6) vs. Daigo Nakahiro(20-2).

October 3rd (Saturday), 2009 At The Pavilion, Hamilton, New Zealand

  • David Tua (49-3-1) vs. Shane Cameron (23-1).

At The Stadthalle, Vienna, Austria

  • Vilmos Balog (24-0) vs. TBA.

October 11th (Sunday), 2009 At Korakuen Hall, Tokyo, Japan

  • Kyohei Tamakoshi (23-5-6) vs. TBA.
  • Suguru Takizawa (18-1) vs. TBA.
  • Yoshihiro Kamegai (11-0) vs. Daiki Koide (13-1-2).

Photo exhibition – people of the harvest

by the El Reportero staff

People of the Harvest is part of a larger project, Living Under the Trees, that documents the lives of communities of indigenous Mexican farm workers in California, through documentary photographs.

The photographs in People of the Harvest were taken in 2009.

It’s no accident the state of Oaxaca is one of the main starting points for the current stream of Mexican migrants coming to the United States. Extreme poverty encompasses 75 percent of its 3.4 million residents.

The communities documented in this show are locacted in Arvin, Taft, Oxnard and Santa Paula, Santa Maria, Fresno, Greenfield, Watsonville and Marysville. They include Mixtecos, Triquis, Zapotecos, Chatinos and Purepechas. At the Asian Resource Gallery 310 Eighth Street at Harrison Oakland Chinatown, August through September 2009, Monday – Friday, 9 a.m. – 6 p.m. Reception Thursday, Aug. 27, 6 p.m.

Fundraiser for the Mission Cultural Center’s Youth Theater Program

It’s a family entertainment day, which will serve a good cause for our young people in our community.

Amoung the artists in attendance will be, El Mariachi “Nueva Generación” and theater performance by Hector Zavala & the MCCLA performance troupe.

On Sunday, Aug. 30, from 2 to 4 p.m. At 3239 22nd St @ Bartlett St, San Francisco.

Also at the MCCLA, Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2009, 6 – 10 p.m. at the new “Baobob Village” in San Francisco’s Mission District. Fundraiser for the Youth Program with live salsa. Music provided by youth salsa bands “Los Chiles Verdes” and “Futuro Picante” as well as Bay Area favorites, “Los Compas”. For more info please call (415) 821-1155.

Suggested Donation $20.00 (No one turned away for lack for funds). Nonstop and diverse music highlights Organic Planet Festival The Grammy-winning Del McCoury Band, hailed as the best bluegrass band on the face of the Earth, will fittingly headline the Organic Planet Festival’s day of nonstop and spectacular music on the Eureka waterfront.

Sharing the billing on the festival’s diverse musical lineup will be international reggae star Tanya Stephens, Humboldt’s own poet-songstress Lila Nelson, Oakland’s multicultural Latin fusion band LoCura and award-winning songwriter for kids, Peter Alsop.

The activities go nonstop from 10:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m., and tickets are just $12 in advance or $15 at the gate, and on the festival website through InTicketing.

For more information, please visit www.organicplanetfestival.org or call CATs at 707-445-5100.

­Juan R. Fuentes linocut (relief printmaking) workshop

Come and try your hand at carving your own design on a piece of linoleum and then pull a print by hand or on a small press. Materials will be provided and Juan has invited other relief printmakers to come and share the experience.

If you are not familiar with the process, here is your chance to learn and participate! Saturday, September 5, 3-5 p.m. Free. At the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts.

Also, check out 3 Worlds Myth, Bricks, Prints by Arias, Fuentes, and Banjo Aug. 14 – Sept. 19, 2009, at MCCLA Galleries, 2868 Mission Street, San Francisco.

Juanes’s Cuba concert to promote peace becomes a controversy

­by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

JuanesJuanes

CUBA CONTROVERSY – An announced peace concert by Juanes in Havana has sparked debate in his Miami home base, in spite of what appears to be a new openness for cultural exchange between U.S. and Cuban artists.

Juanes confirmed this month that the second Paz sin fronteras concert, intended to promote worldwide peace, will take place in the Cuban capital Sept. 20. It follows last year’s successful concert on the Colombian-Venezuelan border that included performances by top Latin American and Spanish artists, including Carlos Vives, Juan Luis Guerra and Miguel Bosé.

The announced concert at Havana’s Plaza de la Revolución will reportedly include performances by several artists from the U.S. and those artists include two other prominent Miami- based singers: Enrique Iglesias and Luis Fonsi.

Some sectors of Miami’s Cuban exile community have severely criticized Juanes’ announcement, forcing the Colombian singer songwriter to put out a statement calling the concert an “apolitical event.’’ Juanes has also reacted in a series of messages he posted on the Twitter social network.

The second Paz sin fronteras concert appears to have the tacit approval of the Obama administration, which has allowed an increased amount of cultural exchange between the U.S. and Cuba. Before visiting Cuba last month to work out some of the concert’s logistics, Juanes paid a visit to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Washington.

Miami’s El Nuevo Herald quoted an unnamed State Department source as saying the U.S. gave Juanes its blessing. “We’re not officially sponsoring the concert, but the State Department favors these kind of cultural interchanges because they increase the understanding among nations,” the source told the newspaper. El Nuevo Herald has published several opinion pieces decrying the Cuban concert.

RECOGNITION FOR LATI NO PROGRAMS: PBS’Latino programs has received nominations for 2009 News and Documentary Emmy Awards as well as Imagen Award nominations for Best Documentary/Television and Best Children’s Programming.

The 30th annual News and Documentary Emmy Awards recognize outstanding achievement in broadcast journalism during the 2008 calendar year. The Imagen awards were established in 1985 from a suggestion by veteran TV producer Norman Lear to encourage and recognize positive portrayals of Latinos in the media.

The PBS Emmy nominees include the Kieran Fitzgerald-directed P.O.V. documentaries “The Ballad of Esequiel Hernández,” and “The Judge and the General,” co-produced and directed by Elizabeth Farnsworth and Patricio Lanfranco.

Another Emmy nomination was for the Independent Lens fi lm “Hard Road Home” directed by Mackey Alston.

The three Imagen nominations included P.O.V. “The Last Conquistador,”directed by John J. Valadez, Latinos’08, from filmmaker Philip Rodriguez as well as American Experience “A Class Apart” by Carlos Sandoval and Peter Miller.

­The Emmy awards will be presented Sept. 21 at Frederick P. Rose Hall, Home of Jazz at Lincoln Center, located in the Time Warner Center in New York City. The Imagen awards will be presented at a black-tie dinner gala Aug. 21, at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills.

TAKEOVERAT BORDER MEDIA: Lending institutions Goldman Sachs, Vestar Capital Partners and D.B. Zwirn are set to take over Border Media, according to the trade publication Inside Radio.

MOST INFLUENTIAL: ImpreMedia won the 2008 Cambio 16 award for being ~the best and most influential Hispanic media company in the U.S.”

The award was presented to impreMedia chairman and CEO John Paton, July 14 in New York by Manuel Domínguez Moreno, the director and editor-in-chief of Grupo EIG, which also publishes the Spanish newsweekly Cambio 16. Hispanic Link.

Pelosi held in ‘detention’ by constituents

by the El Reportero’s staff

Until Nancy Pelosi meets with some ‘different’ constituents, those who are against her support to war, she won’t have peace at her home, sometimes.

Last Saturday, members of the antiwar organization, CodePINK, activists gathered outside Pelosi’s residence to continue to bring grievances to her regarding war funding.

According to a announcement, peace activists have been asking Congresswoman Pelosi to meet with them to discuss their grievances regarding continued war funding for years.

During the August recess, congressional reps. meet with their constituents across the nation to hear their grievances. Locally, Congresspersons Stark, Spiers, Miller and others are holding town hall meetings. Speaker Pelosi has not held a public forum, or town hall meeting for over 4 years.

Bernal Library mural to be painted out

Library Commission voted to Paintout two of three sides of the Bernal Library mural. Citing the restoration of original architectural design, costs, condition of mural, mural representation the commission voted 6 – 1.

According to Mauricio Vela, a community activist, “this is just another slap in the face to the Bernal Latino community as well as other truly progressive members of the community.

According to Vela, fi rst the Library Preschool, serving primarily Latino families, got evicted, then the gym got closed which serves primarily African American children & teen. And now, he ads, the mural, which Arch Williams and Carlos Alcalá put up with our community youth 30 years ago.

“We are not asking to put up a new mural, just restore what was granted to us in 1980,” said Vela in a written statement. “This would never happen to the GLTB community only to the Latino and/or African American community because we’re seen as poor and unorganized.

Native, conservation groups oppose state department dirty pipeline permit

Aug 20, Washington, DC- An international coalition of environmental and Native American groups strongly opposed Thursday’s U.S. State Department decision to issue a permit for a pipeline to carry the dirtiest oil on earth from Canada to the U.S. and vowed to challenge it in court, according to a statement from Green Media.

“The State Department has rubber-stamped a project that will mean more air, water and global warming pollution, particularly in the communities near refineries that will process this dirty oil,” said Earthjustice attorney Sarah Burt.

“The project’s environmental review fails to show how construction of the Alberta Clipper is in the national interest. We will go to court to make sure that all the impacts of this pipeline are considered.”

The international coalition of groups has pointed out that this decision contradicts President Obama’s promise to cut global warming pollution and 3America’s addiction to oil while investing in a clean energy future.

­The State Department’s decision would allow construction of Enbridge Energy’s Alberta Clipper pipeline across northern Minnesota to Superior, Wis. and the Southern Lights pipeline to carry hazardous liquids back to Canada.

Beyond the white picket fence

By Janet Murguía

A home with a white picket fence has always been a manifestation of the American Dream. But for many families, today’s economy has kept this dream from coming true.

While the recession has left many without the option to buy a home, predatory lending and risky mortgages are the culprits separating millions of hard-working families from the picture-perfect house with the white picket fence — the biggest investment most of us make.

This is not the story, however, for Adelaida and Wilfredo González. In the midst of a foreclosure crisis that is predicted to claim nearly two million homes this year, the Philadelphia couple defied the odds with the help of Nancy Rodríguez, a housing counselor at Asociación de Puertorriqueños en Marcha (APM), a Latino nonprofit organization that provides health, educational, and homeownership services to Philadelphia’s Latino community.

The González family was repeatedly told they did not qualify for a standard mortgage and homeownership was not for them, but when the couple turned to APM, they were carefully matched to an affordable home loan under Nancy’s guidance.

In this age of cruel predatory lending that sets up so many families to fail, especially Hispanic families, who suffer nearly twice as many foreclosures as whites, housing counseling provides the critical guidance that brings hopeful families within a fair shot at obtaining homeownership.

Having the keys to a home opens the door to the financial mainstream, affording many families with the opportunity to send their children to college or the ability to sustain a financial emergency. For most families, homeownership goes beyond the white picket fence.

The National Council of La Raza), the largest national Latino civil rights and advocacy organization in the United States, is helping 2launch the Fair Mortgage Collaborative.

The FMC is a nonprofit organization whose members include certified lending organizations, brokers, and housing counselors who provide families with honest and fair mortgages and guidance. FMC certification guarantees that families will not be subject to the unscrupulous practices that have victimized too many people.

NCLR believes that promoting homeownership through housing counseling is the perfect antidote to the housing crisis and this nation’s worst recession since the Great Depression. In an effort to ensure that our families get a chance to achieve the dream of homeownership, NCLR, as a member of the Alliance for Stabilizing our Communities, closed out National Homeownership Month with a Home Rescue Fair in Los Angeles. Housing counselors, attorneys, and mortgage servicers were on hand to provide free on-site counseling services to families struggling to pay their mortgages.

The Los Angeles fair was part of 34 Home Rescue Fairs being presented in collaboration with the National Coalition for Asian Pacific American Community Development and the National Urban League with the support of Bank of America. Taking place in communities facing high foreclosure rates, they served more than 11,000 households.

One-on-one counselingis one of the most effective tools for building financial knowledge and sustainable wealth in our communities. In conjunction with reforms in the mortgage market, distributing vital information and making financial and housing counseling available to communities of color are important steps in addressing wealth disparities, finally making the dream of homeownership a true possibility for all families.

(Janet Murguía, president & CEO of the National Council of La Raza, the nation’s largest Hispanic advocacy and civil rights organization, writes a monthly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service. Reach her at ­opi@nclr.org ) © 2009

The way we wore

by José Antonio Burciaga

Today’s popular “rumpled look” — or even wash and wear clothes — didn’t exist in the late ’40s, so mom would iron the shirts and pants. Some she would starch. Creases on our trousers, which we call tramados or tramos, were highly praised. We paraded about with our hands in our pockets, refusing to sit down lest our knees kill the crease. In school, we had to sit; we did so carefully, stretching our legs to conserve it.

Among Pachucos — Chicano zoot suiters — creases were even more demanded by peers. Their rigid standing pose not only carried a message of proud defiance; it also conserved the crease line. Many young men never sat down; they would lean back and rock back and forth to ease their tired feet and spine.

Pachucos’ clothes were sacred uniforms. Physical confrontations were minimal to avoid messing up their hair, the crease lines and the shoe-shines. There was nothing like a mark on black shoes to ruin someone’s evening, and mussing any clothing items could be reason enough for a fight. “You stepped on my shoes, ese!”

With this country’s involvement in a chain of wars since the ’40s, the military has had a profound effect on the styles and psyche of many young Latinos who also must fight for survival in their neighborhood battlefields.

Back when the military service was “come join us to get drafted” Chicanos had an easy time keeping their military creases. After World War II, many Chicanos who grew up in the service came home with nothing to wear but their khaki pants, white T-shirts and highly polished black shoes. It became a uniform in south El Paso and many towns around the Southwest.

The military neatness was preserved with the hair grown longer, combed back and set with a petroleum-based jelly that smelled of perfume and came in a tin with a picture of a colorful parrot. “La Parrot” was regulation hair dressing for young “Pachukes.”

My brother and I used a Mexican liquid-oil brilliantine that was called — and smelled of — roses. A family friend who sold beauty salon products gave us a gallon of it. Though I used it sparingly, Efraín would drench his head to the point that it sometimes ran down his face and neck.

All our friends used something similar. These were the years when the rest of the country used Wildroot Cream Oil and Vitalis. A head of oily hair pressed against a school blackboard left a row of sweet, oily smudges.

At the other extreme of the ody, shoes were just as important.

According to the style, we called them either tablitas (little wooden slabs), chalupas (Mexican canoes) or calcos, an ancient Spanish- German word for shoes. Metal taps were in – again, some pachucos went all the way with horseshoe taps on the heels and a small one on the tip of each shoe. They were deadly in fights but also dangerous to walk on. Taps made us macho but they also scarred the floors.

Not all Pachucos wore taps. Some preferred the safety, silence and surprise element of tapless shoes. Black ones were favored, along with white socks and, khaki pants. The most popular belts were either gold or silver in color, a quarter of an inch thin. The thinner the belt, the more in you were.

Then there were the shirts, called lisas (plain and unadorned). The best were silk, but more than likely they were loose, thin cotton in light, solid colors. Blue was popular Lisas were the most important piece of dress. They stood out. The best were not from Taiwan, but from California.

It was normal to check out a guy’s shirt, feel the material and recognize the California quality. This lost its meaning when checking a shirt led reaching into the guy’s shirt pocket to steal a smoke.

Not too many kids bought cigarettes. More than likely, it was “Pas alas tres”. (give me three puffs). These code words carried much authority. The three puffs were always granted.

Smoking was cool and elegant. Cigarettes were frajos (not in the dictionary) and matches were metchas or chicanoization of matches or trolas (not in the dictionary). The most popular frajos were filterless Pall Malls.

The other adornment was a gold religious medal, usually given by the one’s own jefita (mother). We weren’t Pachucos, but we approximated that look to some degree, the way we wore our garras (rags).

It was our armor, how we dress for our rite of passage into manhood in a society that has become more accepting of the doctrine that “might makes right”. Those days of youthful bravado seem a long time distant, but really, they were just a few wars ago.

In 1991, the year of the Gulf, neither the styles nor the psyche of our barrio warriors have changed very much.

­(This “Cultural Classic” by the late author/muralist José Antonio Burciaga was written for Hispanic Link News Service in 1991.) ©2009