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When eating and dieting, follow your gut

by the University of Michigan

A girl rides her pure breed hourse during the 'hipicas' celebrations in Managua, Nicaragua, from the 1 to the 10th of August.: (photo by Marvin J. Ramirez)A girl rides her pure breed hourse during the ‘hipicas’ celebrations in Managua, Nicaragua, from the 1 to the 10th of August.  (photo by Marvin J. Ramirez)

­ANN ARBOR, Mich.— Eating a small lunch doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll be so hungry for dinner that you’ll eat more than usual, a new study suggests.

Exercising after a small meal can reduce the sensation of hunger and potentially help lose weight, according to Katarina Borer, professor in the University of Michigan School of Kinesiology and principal investigator on the study.

When the meal was small, people felt hungrier than when the meal was larger. But for the next meal, hunger ratings were equally high, the study showed.

Exercising makes you less hungry, but does not make you hungrier or eat more at the next meal.

“The stomach or gut knows when we are full, and that has to do with volume and energy contained in food,” she said. “Our body tracks the amount of food that goes into our mouth and the stomach. Our stomach is the smart guy who knows what’s going on and tells our brain.”

Borer withheld calories through diet, and also had people burn calories through exercise. The study showed that caloric deficit in the form of small meals causes hunger but the reverse is true when we expend calories through exercise after a large meal. But when she replaced those calories and nutrients intravenously, people still did not feel full after either a small meal or exercise, which suggests again that the volume of food actually passing through the mouth and gut triggers hunger or fullness.

Borer’s findings disclaim the widely held position that the hormone leptin acts as a satiety signal in controlling appetites, and that the hormone ghrelin signals hunger, Borer says.

Current thinking is that hormones and other sensors in the body somehow track our energy/caloric deficit or excess, and then ghrelin signals our bodies that we need to eat during an energy deficit and leptin directs that we should stop in response to caloric fill. Hormones leptin and ghrelin did track energy availability (defi cit due to small meals and exercise and excess due to large meals and intravenous nutrients), but did not affect appetite, she said.

Borer’s fi ndings certainly do not give license to eat a small volume of calorierich food like a pizza while dieting, she stressed. You’d feel hungry sooner than after consuming large volumes of healthy low-energy foods.

The added benefi t of low energy but nutrient-rich food is a possible weight loss and general good health, she says. Lots of vegetables and lean meat are wiser choices than pizza, she says, though equal volumes of both make us feel full.

“You need to satisfy.”­

 

­

Fidel Castro turns 83

by the El Reportero’s news services

Fidel CastroFidel Castro

The 83rd birthday anniversary of the leader of the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro, was marked with the opening of a photo exhibit at the Hotel Nacional in Havana.

The inauguration of the exhibition, made up of 83 photos showing different moments in the life of the revolutionary leader, was attended by the president of the Cuban National Assembly (Parliament), Ricardo Alarcon, who said that “we should congratulate each other for the exceptional fact that the Cuban people have someone who symbolizes their best features,” Escambray reports.

Fidel Castro appears healthy in two new pictures taken less than two weeks ago by a group of US clerics belonging to the Pastors for Peace group and posted on their website.

Wearing a white track suit, dark t-shirt and a blue cap, Castro seems to have gained weight since previous pictures, AFP reports.

The revolutionary leader has been out of public view for three years after stepping down for health reasons and handing power to younger brother Raul Castro.

However it is believed that the former president is still consulted on major decisions but his role in day-to-day government of the island is unclear, FOXNews reports.

El Salvador boosts agriculture

San Salvador, Aug 13 (Prensa Latina) The Salvadorian government started a program on Thursday to revitalize the former strength of agriculture, increase production and legalize land possession.

“We want to turn the countryside into the driving force of the country’s ­productive development,” President Mauricio Funes said in the ceremony to launch the plan, and recalled that the sector had been forgotten for years.

By vitue of the new policy, the authorities will speed up handing over title deeds of lands to farmers, until reaching 3,000 in the first 100 days of the new government.

The Executive has granted 934 title deeds since it assumed power on June 1, to families that had been for over 20 years awaiting legalization. Simultaneously to that measure, production of essential grains will be increased, by means of handing over fertilizers and packages of improved corn, bean, rice and sorghum seeds.

This measure will benefit 600,000 farmers and will allow increasing national production in 10 percent in the 2009-2010 period.

Graduation initiative proposal seen as boon for Hispanics

by Arlinda Arriaga

Community colleges, the fastest growing segment of U.S. higher education institutions, may see a boost in Hispanic enrollment as early as this fall because of President Obama’s American Graduation Initiative plan.

The Administration’s 512 billion proposal calls for funding spread over 10 years. It was announced July 14 during the president’s visit to Macomb Community College in Warren, Mich.

There are 1,177 community colleges in the United States. Their total enrollment is 6.7 million, or 46% of all college students, with non-whites entering at increasingly higher rates, according to the American Association of Community Colleges.

As of spring 2009, more than half of all African-American and two-thirds of Latino undergraduates attend these institutions. Of the Latinos, 39% are the first in their families to go to college.

The figure for Asian Americans is 45%; for Native Americans 52%.

At present, whites comprise 63% of community college enrollment, Hispanics 169%, blacks 13%, Asians 7% and Native Americans 1%.

The AACC also estimates that because of the economic downturn, enrollment nationally increased by about 10% in 2009 over 2008.

Of the Obama plan, $9 billion would go toward challenge grants to motivate colleges to be innovative in recruitment and address dropout rates, and $500 million for online education, with the remaining $2.5 billion serving as seed money to generate an additional $10 billion in renovation and construction on community colleges.

Some of the funds could be available by the 2010 budget year that begins Oct. 1, according to the White House.

Dr. Cecilia Cervantes, president of the National Community College Hispanic Council, an AACC affiliate, focuses on preparation and support of Hispanic leaders in education. She told Weekly Report she hopes this funding brings more Hispanic staff, faculty and administrators onto campuses.

“We’ve been trying for many years to open the door wide enough for students to come in. These funds will help our efforts to create that much needed opportunity for students,” Cervantes, who heads Hennepin Technical College in Hennepin, Minnesota, told Weekly Report. For more on the American Graduation Initiative Plan visit www.whitehouse.gov/blog/Investing-in-Education-The-American-Graduation-Initiative/.

In other news, Red Card is offering a new deal for immigration. To “bring order to U.S. borders” by separating citizenship and workers, the Red Card Solution was presented to several congressional staff members this summer at the Library of Congress by Helen Krieble, president of the Vernon K. Krieble Foundation.

Krieble explained that the “solution” is not immigration reformation, but a step toward it. The presentation included an advance screening of a mint-documentary explaining how the process would work.

The documentary described how undocumented agricultural workers often come to the United States to work for a season and then “because they’re afraid to go home, they stay through the off season and become permanent illegal residents.”

Behind the solution is the Krieble Plan, which she deemed “a reform plan that wins elections and is good for America.” The plan outlines how immigrants can receive and use their red cards.

After undergoing thorough background checks, applicants would be allowed to secure jobs in the United States Then they would be issued a “smart card” containing all of their personal information. The card could be swiped like a credit card to allow them to cross the U.S. border legally.

Their jobs would be ­seasonal. The smart card would allow them access to the United States for the amount of time contracted for the seasonal labor. They would be given the same health care and workman’s compensation as other U.S. workers.

“The Krieble Plan will help secure the border by providing an easy method that allows legal workers to go through a background check and enter the country legally,” Krieble emphasized, stressing how the workers would not be eligible U.S. citizenship.

Employers would be required to pay them at least the minimum wage, just as they do for other workers.

When asked how the job offers would be posted for immigrants to fi nd, Krieble said they would be computer-based, with hard copies of job postings available.

She also responded that they would fi nd out about work opportunities through word of mouth, just as they do today.

The cards, like green cards, would need to be renewed as they expire in order for immigrants to remain in this country.

The Red Card Solution is being presented to Congress as a way to help combat our current immigration crisis by “welcoming workers securely and legally,” Krieble said.

Boxing

July 31st (Friday), 2009 At The Pechange Casino, Temecula, CA

(Showtime) Marvin Quintero (16-1) vs. TBA.

(Showtime) Chris Avalos (10-0) vs. TBA

In Johannesburg, South Africa

Mzonke Fana (28-4) vs. Jasper Seroka (18-1) (The Ring Magazine #3 Jr. Lightweight vs. Unranked).

At The Cronulla Sutherland Leagues Club, Cronulla, Australia

  • Shannon McMahon (16-3-1) vs. Ryan Waters (15-2-1).

August 1st (Saturday), 2009 At Korakuen Hall, Tokyo, Japan

  • Ryuji Migaki (13-1) vs. Akihiro Kondo (11-1).

August 2nd (Sunday), 2009 At IMP Hall, Osaka, Japan

  • Tetsuya Suzuki (22-7) vs. Pilseung Oh (7-5).

August 10th (Monday), 2009 At Korakuen Hall, Tokyo, Japan

  • ­Yosukezan Onodera (18-1-1) vs. Yuji Wauke (12-2).

Teen performances and exhibition

by the El Reportero’s staff

S.F. Hospital General y el Centro de Trauma del nuevo edificio de atención hospitalaria.S.F. General Hospital and Trauma Center’s new inpatient care building.

We invite you to attend this one-night free event along Mission Street Commercial Corridor. District 11 artists will be participating to support local businesses.

It features the works of Nancy Hom, Jesse Aguirre & Matt Christenson, including members from Out of Site Youth Arts Center, Youth Speaks, City Arts and Tech High School, and the Mission YMCA Teen Top Chef Program. There will also be children’s activities with Tree Frog Treks, and One-Night-Mural Project by by Andrea Hassiba.

The event is organized by the office of District 11 Supervisor John Avalos, in conjunction with Intersection for the Arts, Out of Site Youth Arts Center, Mamá Art Cafe, The Geneva Car Barn and Power House, and local community members. For more Info: (415) 554-6976.

At on Friday July 31, 6-8 p.m., at Mamá Art Café at 4754 Mission Street, San Francisco.

Film series presents the Bay Area debut of 16 Cuban works

A selection of 16 films of the new Cuban cinema will be shown for the first time in the Bay Area. The selection includes shorts, animation, documentaries and features by Cuba’s new generation of filmmakers.

As part of the Instituto Cubano de Arte e Industria Cinematográfico, ICAIC’s annual New Filmmakers Showcase 2001-2008 the films were selected by the ICAIC especially for La Peña Cultural Center. In Spanish with English subtitles.

The first of a series of films at La Peña Cultural Center, wil take place on Wednesday, August 12, 2009 3105 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley. For more info call at 510-849-2568.

Town Hall meeting at San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center Learn more about our health care services plans for the new hospital. Ask questions, meet neighbors, light refreshments.

On Thursday Aug 6, 6:30 – 8pm, at Carr Auditorium (on the SFGH campus, at the corner of 22nd Street and San Bruno), San Francisco, For more information on the SFGH rebuild project, visit www.sfdph.org/dph/rebuildSFGH/ or call 415-206-3170. Information message line: 206-5784 or email: ­sfghrebuild@sfdph.org.

Three worlds exhibition – Arias, Fuentes, Banjo

This exhibition celebrates artists from three very different worlds and ties their work together through a series of events.

Art Hazelwood is paying tribute to African American artist Casper Banjo who was widely known in the Bay Area before he was tragically shot by Oakland Police last year.

Rene Yanez has put together the work of Luis Arias Vera and Juan Fuentes.

Vera, born in Peru, and now living in Berkeley has strong ties in Spain where he has been commissioned to create a significant public art sculpture.

Juan Fuentes has been a part of the Chicano poster movement since the early 1970s.

He has created screenprint posters for countless community groups and political causes.

Opening reception Friday, August, 14th, 7-10pm $5. At the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts, at 2868 Mission Street, San Francisco.

Singer Marc Anthony will be minority owner of Dolphins NFL

­by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

Marc Anthony y Jennifer LópezMarc Anthony y Jennifer López

Singer Marc Anthony revealed in New York bis affiliation with the Miami Dolphins NFL team. He may become a minority owner, as musical colleagues Emilio and Gloria Estefan did recently. Marc Anthony is expected to perform during halftime of the Oct. 12 Dolphins game to be broadcast on ESPN’s Monday Night Football.

As he retakes his musical career following a five-year stint as Panama’s Minister of Tourism, singer-songwriter Rubén Blades says he has not given up on his political aspirations.

Blades told a Panamanian TV station last week he is willing to run again for president, but only if the country’s constitution is altered to allow a president to serve more than one five-year term. He ran for Panama’s highest office in 1994 but gained only 1 7 percent of the vote. In 1999 he backed winning candidate Martin Torîjos and took a five year hiatus from recording and performing to serve in the Tourism office, a post that ended on June 30.

Although Blades performed in a European tour intended to promote tourism to Panama, his official return to performing is expected to be the Todos vuelve tour with his old band Seis del Solar, set to launch Aug. 21 and 22 in Puerto Rico. While Blades has indicated there are 17 cities in the American continent confirmed for the tour, the only other date on sale is Nov. 21 in Miami (details at www.rubenblades.com).

The performer celebrated his 61st birthday on June 16 and marked the occasion by visiting his archive collection at Harvard University, where he obtained his law degree in 1965. Since June 30 he has joined his wife, jazz singer Luba Mason, on her Krazy Love tour and the visit to the campus coincided with her date in Boston that evening.B lades has not been completely absent from the entertainment world. Earlier this year he recorded a rap chorus for the single La Perla, by the Puerto Rican urban duo Calle 13.

He also acted in the film Spoken Word, expected to be released in 2010.

Oakland Mayor Dellums receives environmental award

by the El Reportero’s staff

Environment California awarded Mayor Ron Dellums and the City of Oakland with a “2009 Solar Champion” award for having one of the highest rankings for solar roofs and solar power installed in the state.

According to Environment California, Oakland has more than 642 solar roofs and 7,007 kilowatts installed (or solar capacity).

“This award is a significant acknowledgement of the diligence and commitment Oakland has towards the goal of sustainability and energy effi ciency,” said Mayor Dellums. “I commend the effort and results of the various businesses, residents, and city staff which have taken the lead to ensure that Oakland remains a statewide leader in this critical area.”

Oakland’s award comes after the release of Environment California Research & Policy Center’s latest report, California’s Solar Cities: Leading the Way to a Clean Energy Future, which analyzes the amount of solar power installed in California on a city by city basis.

Environment California will present the award in front of the Port of Oakland’s 756kW ground-mounted solar power system. The photovoltaic system, which delivers approximately 1 million kilowatt hours of clean, renewable energy annually was deployed under a solar energy supply agreement with SunEdison, North America’s largest solar energy services provider.

Report shows $47 million subsidy could improve quality of life, create good job in Emeryville

As the City Council considers spending millions of public dollars on the second phase of a large-scale retail project, the Coalition for a Better Bay Street will unveil a new report chronicling resident priorities for development and offering solutions to help achieve greater transparency and sustainability.

Bringing Main Street back to Bay Street: Win-Win Solutions to Create Good Jobs and Livable Communities in Emeryville outlines ways that the City of Emeryville, the developer, Madison Marquette, and the community together can achieve a more inclusive project. These solutions include closing the legal loop hole that allows service workers to be paid poverty-level wages, creating more familysized affordable housing, and exploring fi nancial contributions by the developer and resource sharing by the City and school district to improve school facilities.

CODEPINK to hold weekly peace vigil outside of torture memo author John Yoo’s Berkeley home

A coalition of torture accountability, civil liberties, human rights, and anti-war groups will hold a weekly peace vigil outside of John Yoo’s Berkeley home with on-going activities including speakers and a Dick Cheney slogan contest. The contest takes place Sunday July 26th at 4pm. The UC Berkeley Professor and 3Linguist George Lack­ off has been asked to judge the Dick Cheney slogan contest; selected entries include: Chain Cheney, Prosecute Cheney for Treason and more!

The vigil will be held every Sunday from 4 p.m.-6 p.m. at the home of John Yoo, 1241 Grizzly Peak Blvd , Berkeley , California.

Protesters will use a masked John Yoo impersonator dressed in jailhouse jumpsuit.

Internet as journalism medium attracts Hispanic youth

by Julio Urdaneta

Slowly but decisively, the Internet is becoming the new medium for Hispanic news ventures around the country. Several publications have ceased producing hard-copy editions altogether, placing their content on the Web or distributing through electronic formats.

Television and radio stations not only offer their fare on the web, but also construct programs exclusively for those media.

“More and more people are taking advantage of what the internet presents, and that includes Latino voices,” independent journalist Tracy Barnett, former editor of University of Missouri’s bilingual newspaper Adelante! says.

Advertising money is starting flow onto the Internet as Latinos become more technology savvy. Dollars spent on Hispanic Web sites are growing quickly. In 2007, ad spending for Hispanic-oriented Web sites increased 36 percent, from $132 million to $178 million, over the previous year, according to data compiled by the University of Northern Texas.

In 2006, the Internet represented 3.5 percent of the Hispanic media advertising pie. In 2007 the portion grew to 5 percent.

But some fear that as Hispanics grow more accustomed to using new technologies, formats and social networks such as blogs, Twitter, Facebook and MySpace to access information and entertainment, the Hispanic print media might have their days numbered if they don’t move quickly to adapt.

Veteran binational (Mexico-U.S.) newsman José Luis Benevides, who launched the Spanish language journalism program at the University of California-Northridge half a dozen years ago, says he’s learning new skills himself as he helps shape curricula to prepare students for tomorrow’s journalistic playing fields.

“We need to teach the students the value of our profession. That core value is not going to change,” he insists. “What is changing is the way we deliver information.

Students are required to learn how to deliver in different platforms.”

Adolfo Flores is one of those Northridge students. He’s a member of a new generation of Hispanic journalists. He’s learning internet-based skills in video and audio reporting and creating blogs. “Convergence is capital,” he says. “No one is thinking about diversity in the newsroom as they were before. Now they’re worried about newspapers shutting down.”

Alejandro Cortez, a reporter for Qué Pasa Media, a news company that embraces print, radio and the 2Internet in Raleigh, N.C., emphasizes, “Hispanic journalists must adjust to the new media. That’s where the future of journalism lays.”

Current Spanish-language heavyweights are entering the competition, investing resources to remain relevant in this Internet era. That includes making content available in English as well.

“The incursion into the Internet of major newspapers like La Opinión in Los Angeles and conglomerates like Univisión and Telemundo will increase, and surely they would try some sort of bilingual strategy,” veteran Mexican journalist Antonio Ruíz-Camacho, currently a Knight fellow at Stanford University, expects.

As the industry changes, Latino journalism — its veteran practitioners, its teachers and its new brigade of reporters — must make major adjustments to be marketable.

Benevides sees finding a balance between technological skills and thorough journalism reporting as the new paradigm schools face: “Students are required to learn more and more platforms, but what we’re concerned about is that these platforms give them less time to provide information to the public. We want to teach those skills that will allow students to go and research a particular story and then provide that information on various platforms.”

He adds, “What we are seeing is pretty hard to teach to students because we have this traditional area. They assume they will work in one particular medium and now these media are converging. Students must be very flexible.”

How one student is welcoming the challenge

by Adolfo Flores

When I enrolled in college to study journalism, I didn’t expect to be producing podcasts, soundslides and videos. But now, entering my final year at Cali­fornia State University at Northridge, I do it regularly — and I like the challenge and excitement it adds to my education.

As a student reporter, I get to tell stories using various formats — and two languages. Hispanic media will always be here as long as they embrace multimedia.

Last semester we posted stories, videos and sound slides while constructed and maintained a blog, too.

My school has given us the opportunity to try new things. At first, it was very experimental. At times we were learning along with our professors, which in a way made it better.

My initial projects weren’t that great, but they were a start. That’s how I’ve been preparing, just by practicing. I just went out and did it.

Now my school is offering a new media course, and its publications encourage and actually require multimedia.

A lot of us students feel right at home with media convergence. We grew up playing with our parents’ video cameras and surfing on Internet.

Carrying around an audio recorder, still camera and video camera, as opposed to just a pen and notepad, might seem tedious, but the opportunities new media provide give our stories more meaning. They can have more impact.

These are skills that are going to be required of us, that are going to make us more marketable, so it’s in our best interest to embrace them. But at the same time, it’s still important to understand the fundamentals and ethics of journalism, because they still apply.

(Julio Urdaneta is a reporter/editor with Hispanic Link News Service in Washington, D.C. Adolfo Flores completed a “Washington experience” semester with the news service in 2007 as its first Sebastiana Mendoza Memorial Fellow. Email either care of julio@hispaniclink.org.) ©2009

Race and point of view

by José de la Isla

I was one of the students hearing Professor Homer G. Barnett’s lectures on the history of anthropology at the University of Oregon the year before he retired. That was more than three decades ago.

Barnett was among reasons I was in graduate school at Oregon in the first place. He is largely responsible for how we think about “innovation” today. He tied it in with ideas about “culture change” and wrote a book using those words in the title. Also, he had been on the committee that had given me a very handsome scholarship. I had to pay my respects to this scholarly icon and take in his parting wisdom.

“There is no such thing as race,”I remember Prof. Barnett saying.

In those activist times, I could understand “equality” and “justice” as public values. But he was showing that science came into it through various researchers who had developed classification systems about genetic variation. They showed that people, like plants, can be of mixed and many characteristics.

All that was understandable.

But the lesson went further.

The one that stumped me was that some people could not see race at all. It wasn’t there. Well, that just seemed impossible. Of course you can see who is in front of you.

I was unconvinced, even if a study in Brazil suggested that people there could not see skin color and purported some white people were called black and some blacks white.

I was walking toward the university’s Knight Library when the realization struck me like a thunderbolt.

I was about 10 years old, in Miss Bowman’s room at De Zavala elementary school.

My classmate, Louis Sánchez, was black in that predominantly Mexican American school in segregated Texas. How could that be? More to the point, why — knowing for more than a decade — had I not realized it before now? For me, that was the empirical truth behind what Prof. Barnett was saying.

It is clear that we are literally conditioned to perceive one way or to not perceive another. For instance, remember the scene in the 2004 movie “What in the Bleep Do We Know!” showing how the native people had trouble perceiving the arrival of the first Europeans to the New World because they had no context for understanding invisible creatures who came in houses from the ocean?

The first native chronicles talked about half-man of no color and half-horse. It is proof that prior knowledge, belief, fear or goodwill shape what we perceive and how we see it. Anthropologists are among those, distinct from others who study policy and politics with a keen insight into how humans put together ideas about the world in whichwe live.

For that reason I was thrilled that the American Anthropological Association had mounted the exhibit “Race: Are We So Different?” at the Science Museum of Minnesota in St. Paul. The cutting edge concept that questions the very concept of race that Barnett was talking about is now key, central, and mainstream. There is no such thing as race nor “racial” ­differences.

Instead, how we think about something shapes our reality of it.

It is surprising, but this is the first time an exhibition has been mounted in the United States to address race from the biological, cultural, and historical points of view. The timelines, dating from the 1600s to the present, include how recent race-based notions have crept into our consciousness, when some of them did not exist before, as with immigrants (see www.understandingrace.org/home.html).

If there is a great national purpose served by this important project, it is encapsulated in a quote from author James Baldwin, who said, “Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced.”

The exhibit will be on national tour through 2014. Like Professor. Barnett’s lectures, it will instruct us on how to innovate new thinking.

[José de la Isla’s latest book, Day Night Life Death Hope, is distributed by The Ford Foundation. He writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service and is author of The Rise of Hispanic Political Power (2003). E-mail him at joseisla3@yahoo.com] ©2009

Fifth part of The Lost 13th Amendment

by Marvin Ramírez

Marvin  J. RamírezMarvin J. Ram­írez­

This is the fifth part of the article: The lost 13th Amendment to the Constitution.

Last week we ran the f­orth part of this multi-part article, in hope that it will provide our readers with information that has been kept a secret by the controllers of our country – the bankers and their private army of lawyers.

What follows is an article reprinted from the “AntiShyster,” in “The Correspondent” of Condon, Montana. We suggest that in order to have a complete picture of the content of the article, one must read the previous parts of this series.

PROS AND CONS

Of course, there are two sides to this issue. David Dodge, the principal researcher, argues that this 13th Amendment was ratified in 1819 and then was subverted from the Constitution near the end of the Civil War. U.S. Senator George Mitchell of Maine, and Mr. Dane Hartgrove (Acting Assistant Chief, Civil Reference Branch of the National Archives) have argued that the Amendment was never properly ratified and only published in error.

There is some agreement.

Both sides agree the Amendment required the support of at least thirteen States to be ratified. Both sides agree that between 1810 and 1812, twelve States voted to support ratification.

The pivotal issue is whether Virginia ratified or rejected the proposed Amendment.

Dodge contends that Virginia voted to support the Amendment in 1819, and so the Amendment was truly ratified and should still be a part of our Constitution. Senator Mitchell and Mr. Hartgrove disagree, arguing that Virginia did not ratify.

Unfortunately, several decades of Virginia’s Legislative Journals were misplaced or destroyed (possibly during the Civil War; possibly during the 1930’s). Consequently, neither side has found absolute proof that the Virginia legislature voted for (or against) ratification, A series of letters exchanged in 1991 between David Dodge, Senator Mitchell, and Mr. Hartgrove illuminate the various points of disagreement. After Dodge’s initial report of a “missing” Amendment in the 1825 Maine Civil Code, Senator Mitchell explained that this edition was a one-time publishing error: “The Maine Legislature mistakenly printed the proposed Amendment in the Maine Constitution as having been adopted. As you know, this was a mistake, as it was not ratified.”

Further, “All editions of the Maine Constitution printed after 1820 [sie] exclude the proposed Amendment; only the originals contain this error.”

Dodge dug deeper and found other editions (there are 30, to date) of State and Territorial Civil Codes that contained the missing Amendment, and thereby demonstrated that the Maine publication was not a “one-time” publishing error.

YES, VIRGINIA, THERE IS A RATIFICATION

After examining Dodge’s evidence of multiple publication of the “missing” Amendment, Senator Mitchell and Mr. Hartgrove conceded that the Amendment had been published by several States and was ratified by twelve of the seventeen States in the Union in 1810. However, because the Constitution requires that a three-quarters vote of the States to ratify an Amendment, Mitchell and Hartgrove insisted that the 13th Amendment was published in error because it was passed by only twelve, not thirteen States.

Dodge investigated which seventeen States were in the Union at the time the Amendment was proposed, which States had ratified, which States had rejected the Amendment, and determined that the issue hung on whether one last State (Virginia) had or had not, voted to ratify.

After several years of searching the Virginia State Archives, Dodge made a crucial discovery: In spring of 1991, he found a misplaced copy of the 1819 Virginia Civil Code which included the “missing” 13th Amendment. Dodge notes that, curiously: “There is no public record that shows this Code [the 1819 Virginia Civil Code] exists. It is not cataloged as a holding of the Library of Congress nor is it in the National Union Catalog. Neither the State Law Library nor the law school in Portland were able to find any trace that this book exists in any of their computer programs.” 1/*

Dodge sent photo-copies of the 1819 Virginia Civil Code to Senator Mitchell and Mr. Hartgrove, and explained that: “Under legislative construction, it is considered prima facia evidence that what is published as the official Acts of the legislature are the official Acts.”

By publishing the Amendment as ratified in an official publication, Virginia demonstrated:

1. that they knew that they were the last State whose vote was necessary to ratify the 13th Amendment;

2. that they had voted to ratify the Amendment; and;

3. that they were publishing the Amendment in a special edition of their Civil Code as an official notice to the world that the Amendment had indeed been ratified.

Dodge concluded: “Unless there is competing evidence to the contrary, it must be held that the Constitution of the United States was officially amended to exclude from its body of citizens any who accepted or claimed a title of nobility or accepted any special favors. Foremost in this category of ex-citizens are bankers and lawyers.”

RATIONALES

Undeterred, Senator Mitchell wrote that: “Article XIII did not receive the three-fourths vote required from the States within the time limit to be ratified.”

(Although his language is imprecise, Senator Mitchell seems to concede that although the Amendment had failed to satisfy the “time limit,” the required three-quarters of the States did vote to ratify. It should be noted that there was no time limit given to ratify this (1810) Amendment as published in II Stat 613).

Dodge replies: “Contrary to your assertion … there was no time limit for Amendment ratification in 1811. Any time limit is now established by Congress in the Resolves for proposed Amendments.”

In fact, ratification time limits didn’t start until 1917, when Section 3 of the Eighteenth Amendment stated that: “This Article shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified … within seven years from the date of submission, to the States by Congress.”

A similar time limit is now included on other proposed Amendments, but there was no specified time limit when the 13th Amendment was proposed in 1810 or ratified in 1819.

Senator Mitchell remained determined to find some rationale, somewhere, that would defeat Dodge’s persistence. Although Senator Mitchell implicitly conceded that his “published by error” and “time limit” arguments were invalid, he continued to grope for reasons to dispute ratification: “… regardless of whether the State of Virginia did ratify the proposed Thirteenth Amendment, on March 12, 1819, this approval would not have been sufficient to amend the Constitution. In 1819, there were twenty-one States in the United States and any amendment would have required approval of sixteen States to amend the Constitution. According to your own research, Virginia would have only been the thirteenth State to approve the proposed amendment.”

Dodge replies:

“Article V [amendment procedures] of the Constitution is silent on the question of whether or not the framers meant three-fourths of the States at the time the proposed amendment is submitted to the States for ratification, or three-fourths of the States that exist at some future point in time. Since only the existing States were involved in the debate and vote of Congress on the Resolve proposing an Amendment, it is reasonable that ratification be limited to those States that took an active part in the Amendment process.”

Dodge demonstrated this rationale by pointing out that: ­“President Monroe had his Secretary of State, [ask the] governors of Virginia, South Carolina, and Connecticut, in January, 1818, as to the status of the Amendment in their respective States. The four new States (Louisiana, Indiana, Mississippi, and Illinois) that were added to the Union between 1810 and 1818 were not even considered.”

[It should be noted that pursuant to a Resolution of the House of Congress, James Monroe made inquiries of ratification of the 13th Amendment by South Carolina and Virginia on February 4, 1818 (CIS U.S. Serial Set Index – Misc. 446 (15-1) ASP038)]

– With this last fifth article on the Lost Thirteen Amendment of the Constitution, we end this series. We hope we all have learned something about the hidden history of the United States.