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Chemicals in common consumer products may play a role in pre-term births

by the University of Michigan

ANN ARBOR, Michigan.— A new study of expectant mothers suggests that a group of common environmental contaminants called phthalates, which are present in many industrial and consumer products including everyday personal care items, may contribute to the country’s alarming rise in premature births.

Researchers at the University of Michigan School of Public Health found that women who deliver prematurely have, on average, up to three times the phthalate level in their urine compared to women who carry to term.

Professors John Meeker, Rita Loch-Caruso and Howard Hu of the SPH Department of Environmental Health Sciences and collaborators from the National Institute of Public Health in Mexico and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention analyzed data from a larger study directed by Hu, which follows a cohort of Mexican women recruited during pre-natal visits at one of four clinics of the Mexican Institute of Social Security in Mexico City.

Meeker and colleagues looked at data from 60 women: 30 who carried to term and 30 who delivered prematurely (defined as less than 37 weeks gestation).

They analyzed urine samples collected during the third trimester and compared them to the control group who carried to term. They found significantly higher phthalate metabolite levels in the women who delivered prematurely.

Premature birth is a significant risk factor for many health problems in childhood that can persist into adulthood, Meeker says. In the United States, premature births have increased by more than 30 percent since 1981 and by 18 percent since 1990. In 2004, premature births acmúsicacounted for 12.8 percent of live births nationwide.

Premature births, he says, account for one-third of infant deaths in the United States, making it the leading cause of neonatal mortality. Being born too early can also lead to chronic health problems such as blindness, deafness, cerebral palsy, low IQ and more.

Phthalates are commonly used compounds in plastics, personal care products, home furnishings (vinyl flooring, carpeting, paints, etc.) and many other consumer and industrial products. The toxicity varies by specific phthalates or their breakdown products, but past studies show that several phthalates cause reproductive and developmental toxicity in animals.

A couple of human studies have reported associations between phthalates and gestational age, but this is the first known study to look at the relationship between phthalates and premature births, Meeker says.

“We looked at these commonly used compounds found in consumer products based on the growing amount of animal toxicity data and since national human data show that a large proportion of the population are unknowingly exposed,” Meeker said.

“One of the problems for consumers is that you don’t know exactly which products contain phthalates because the products do not have to be labeled accordingly.”

Meeker says the U-M study is a stepping stone to larger and more detailed studies examining the role of phthalates and premature births. The researchers hope to examine a larger population of pregnant women to corroborate these initial study findings, and conduct experimental lab studies to further explore the biological mechanisms of how phthalates work in the body.

The study, “Urinary Phthalate Metabolites in Relation to Preterm Birth in Mexico City,” is available online at: http://www.ehponline.org/docs/2009/0800522/abstract.html. It will appear in a later printed issue of Environmental Health Perspectives.

Task force froms to ‘rescue’ New Mexico’s Latino dropouts

by José Armas

situaLa Policía de S.F. estacionó por dos días (martes calles Misión con 24, y el jueves en calles Misión y 16) el sofisticado comando móvil todo el día.: Al ir la imprenta, El Reportero no pudo averiguar exactamente que buscaba este tipo de camión de vigilancia en un barrio como la Misión, además de buscar a pequeños vende-narcóticos callejeros y borrachitos. (photo by Marvin J. Ramirez)The S.F.P.D. parked for two days (Tuesday at Mission and 24th) and Thursday at Mission and 16th) their sophisticated mobile command for a whole day. At press time, El Reportero, could not find out exactly what was this type of surveillance truck doing in the Mission, besides looking for small-time drug pushers and winos. (photo by Marvin J. Ramirez)

ALBUQUERQUE — New Mexico is the only Hispanic-majority state in the nation. Latinos make up nearly 57 percent of its students while whites make up 29 percent.

The state’s public schools are failing to educate more than half of those Latino children. Put another way, Latino dropouts number almost exactly the same as all white students in the state.

To confront this looming education tsunami threatening New Mexico’s social and economic future, a number of concerned leaders have formed “The Latino/Hispano Education Improvement Task Force.”

They cite that Latinos make up nearly 70 percent of all of the state’s elementary schools students, foreshadowing the state’s continuing population shift.

Because of this situation, task force members say they’re convinced that the Latino education crisis will grow unless there is intervention to “forge bold and provocative redirection.”

The issue surfaced when the South West Organizing Project (SWOP) pointed out that the recent state legislative session included a bill to create an independent police department within the Albuquerque public school system.

SWOP organizer Emma Sandoval reacted immediately. “We don’t need a police department to be taking money away from educating our kids.’’

With mobilization and organizing by community leaders, the bill was killed in both houses.

Too often the nation’s failure to educate Hispan­ic students is blamed on poverty and their limited English skills. However, Laredo’ Texas—at one time billed as the “Poorest City in the Nation”—has one school district with 96.4 percent Latino enrollment, 71 percent are poor and 48 percent have limited English skills. Yet 87.7 percent of Latinos there receive a high school diploma in four years. In Albuquerque public schools, comprising the largest district in the state, only 37 percent of Latinos graduated in four years.

The Task Force has forged partnerships with statewide grassroots groups, unions, legislators, unions and administrators to sign on to their mission. Recently the group approached Gov.

Bill Richardson asking for endorsement of six initiatives that included declaring a state of crisis, making changes in the Department of Education and funding this community-based task force to train parents and educators throughout the state to redirect schools priorities.

The governor approved all six initiatives, promising stimulus monies to fund the project. Richardson also pledged to make education reform his priority for the remaining 17 months of his tenure as governor.

But, given that New Mexico has risen only from 50th to 48th position among U.S. states in its dropouts rate, there’s still a long ways to go. Task Force member Adrian Pedroza says he hopes that before Richardson’s eight-year term ends, change might finally get started. Hispanic Link.

 

Nicaragua’s Sandinista dissidents turn against ‘despot’ Ortega

by the El Reportero’s news services

Daniel OrtegaDaniel Ortega

Nicaragua celebrated on Monday, July 20, 2009, the 30t Anniversary of the Sandinista Revolution.

But for Dora Maria Téllez, her achievements as a Sandinista guerrilla commander 30 years ago earned her a place in the pantheon of Nicaragua’s revolutionary heroes.

But while thousands will flood the streets of Managua tomorrow to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Sandinista victory over the ­dictator Anastasio Somoza, Dora Maria Téllez will stay away.

Ms Téllez is one of a growing number of Sandinistas who have broken with the government of Daniel Ortega as, they say, he completes his transformation from revolutionary to “caudillo” — one of the Latin American despots he once so despised.

“We are nearing a dictatorship,” Ms Téllez told The Times. “He is concentrating power, buying officials, eliminating institutions, creating the conditions to advance his own authoritarian project.All that he needs now is to remain in power,” she said in a reference to Mr Ortega’s plans for constitutional reform allowing him to stand for re-election when his term expires.

“He needs only parliamentary approval to do so,” she noted, adding: “He doesn’t have the votes yet, but he is close. And he will buy the ones he needs.”

(Reported Hannah Strange in Managua in Managua).

Honduras talks break up without deal

On July 19 the mediation talks between the de facto and elected governments of Honduras broke up without an agreement.

The sticking point was the de facto government’s refusal to countenance the return of President Manuel Zelaya as president, even as a president shorn of a lot of his powers and under international supervision.

This hard line looks like a mistake because it enabled the elected president Manuel Zelaya, who has previously fl oundered in the PR battle, to claim that his opponents were “arrogant” and “intransigent”.

Honduras’ de facto leader came under increased pressure on Monday July 20 to hand power back to the ousted president with Europe halting economic aid and top Latin American officials warning of bloodshed if he does not back down.

Efforts to broker an end to the power struggle in Honduras following a June 28 military coup collapsed on Sunday after interim leader Roberto Micheletti rejected a proposal to reinstate overthrown President Manuel Zelaya.

Costa Rican President Oscar Arias, the frustrated peacemaker in the talks, asked both sides to give him until Wednesday to broker a solution to the crisis. But Micheletti, who was appointed by Honduras’ Congress after the coup, appeared unwilling to compromise despite being shunned by foreign governments.

Now come the regional implications of the Honduras coup.

The almost slow-motion coup that led to the elected Zelaya, leaving his palace for the airport and exile in his pyjamas and at gunpoint was condemned by every government

in the region and every multilateral organization that mattered. But, as this is written,

almost three weeks later, Zelaya looks as far from being restored as he was when he was ousted.

However, papers around Latin America have reported that Zelaya has started to organize an insurrection, which according to the Honduran Constitution, said the ousted president, the people has the right to lift up in arms against the illegitimate government.

The European Commission tightened the screws on Micheletti on Monday by suspending all budgetary 5support payments to his government.

It had earmarked 65.5 million euros ($92.73 million) in payments in the 2007-10 period.

As the interim government digs in its heels, more diplomatic and economic sanctions are expected in coming days. Latin American leaders fear violence in the impoverished Central American country unless Micheletti steps aside.

­García battens down the hatches in cabinet reshuffle

Peru’s President Alan García has entrusted the formation of a new cabinet to Javier Velásquez Quesquén, the head of congress and a stalwart member of the ruling Partido Aprista Peruano (PAP), after Yehude Simon presented his irrevocable resignation. Velásquez Quesquén duly appointed seven new ministers while holding on to nine members of Simon’s cabinet. His appointment was roundly condemned by the opposition, trade unions and indigenous groups for failing to address the causes of the regional social protests which brought down Simon. (Latin News and World News contribute to the report.)

­

Bombshell: Orders revoked for soldier challenging the President

Major victory for Army warrior questioning Obama’s birthplacenúmero

by Chelsea Schilling © 2009 WorldNetDaily

A U.S. Army Reserve major from Florida scheduled to report for deployment to Afghanistan within days has had his military orders revoked after he argued that he should not be required to serve under a president who has not proven his legitimacy for office.

His attorney, Orly Taitz, confirmed to WND the military has rescinded his impending deployment orders.

“We won! We won before we even arrived,” she said with excitement. “It means that the military has nothing to show for Obama. It means that the military has directly responded by saying Obama is illegitimate – and they cannot fight it. Therefore, they are revoking the order!”

She continued, “They just said, ‘Order revoked.’ No explanation. No reasons – just revoked.”

A hearing on the questions raised by Maj. Stefan Frederick Cook, an engineer who told WND he wants to serve his country in Afghanistan, was scheduled for July 16 at 9:30 a.m.

Join the petition campaign to make President Obama reveal his long-form, hospital-generated birth certificate!

“As an officer in the armed forces of the United States, it is [my] duty to gain clarification on any order we may believe illegal. With that said, if President Obama is found not to be a ‘natural-born citizen,’ he is not eligible to be commander-in-chief,” he told WND only hours after the case was filed.

”[Then] any order coming out of the presidency or his chain of command is illegal. Should I deploy, I would essentially be following an illegal [order]. If I happened to be captured by the enemy in a foreign land, I would not be privy to the Geneva Convention protections,” he said.

The order for the hearing in the federal court for the Middle District of Georgia from U.S. District Judge Clay D. Land said the hearing on the request for a temporary restraining order would be held Thursday.

Want to turn up the pressure to learn the facts? Get your signs and postcards asking for the president’s birth certificate documentation here.

Cook said without a legitimate president as commander-in-chief, members of the U.S. military in overseas actions could be determined to be “war criminals and subject to prosecution.”

He said the vast array of information about Obama that is not available to the public confirms to him that “something is amiss.”

“That and the fact the individual who is occupying the White House has not been entirely truthful with anybody,” he said. “Every time anyone has made an inquiry, it has been either cast aside, it has been maligned, it has been laughed at or just dismissed summarily without further investigation.

“You know what. It would be so simple to solve. Just produce the long-form  document, certificate of live birth,” he said.

He said he was scheduled to report for duty tomorrow, on July 15, to deploy to Afghanistan as part of President Obama’s plan to increase pressure of insurgent forces there.

He told WND he would be prepared for a backlash against him as a military officer, since members of the military swear to uphold and follow their orders. However, he noted that following an illegal order would be just as bad as failing to follow a legal order.

Named as defendants in the case are Col. Wanda Good, Col. Thomas Macdonald, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and Obama, described as “de facto president of the United States.

According to the court filing, Cook affirmed when he joined the military, he took the following oath: “I, Stefan Frederick Cook, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; and that I will obey the orders of the president of the United States and the orders of the officers appointed over me, according to the regulations and the Uniform Code of Military Justice. So help me God.”

According to the claim, “Plaintiff submits that it is implicit though not expressly stated that an officer is and should be subject to court-martial, 1because he will be derelict

in the performance of his duties, if he does not inquire as to the lawfulness, ­the legality, the legitimacy of the orders which he has received, whether those orders are specific or general.“

The military courts offer no option for raising the question, so he turned to civilian courts to consider “a question of paramount constitutional and legal importance: the validity of the chain of command under a president whose election, eligibility, and constitutional status appear open to serious question.”

“Barack Hussein Obama, in order to prove his constitutional eligibility to serve as president, basically needs only produce a single unique historical document for the Plaintiff’s inspection and authentication: namely, the ‘long-form’ birth certificate which will confirm whether Barack Hussein Obama was in fact born to parents who were both citizens of the United States in Honolulu, Hawaii, in or about 1961,” explains the complaint.

Taitz said she will attend the hearing to amend the temporary restraining order to an injunction because more members of the military have joined the cause.

“We are going to be asking for release of Obama’s records because now this completely undermines the military.

It revoked this order, but it can come up with another order tomorrow.

It can come up with orders for other people,” she said. “Am I going to be flying around the country 1,000 times and paying the fees every time they issue an order?”

Taitz said the issue “must be resolved immediately,” and she will continue working to ensure Obama proves he is eligible for office.

“We’re going to be asking the judge to issue an order for Obama to provide his vital records to show he is legitimately president,” she said.

“We’re going to say, we have orders every day, and we’ll have revocations every day.

This issue has to be decided.”

She said there cannot be any harm to the president if he is legitimately holding office.

“If he is legitimate, then his vital records will prove it,” Taitz said. “If he is illegitimate,

then he should not have been there in the first place.”

Asked what this decision means for every other serviceman who objects to deployment under a president who has not proven he is eligible for office, Taitz responded: “Now, we can have each and every member of the military – each and every enlistee and officer – file something similar saying ‘I will not take orders until Obama is legitimately vetted.’”

Multiple questions have been raised about what that would mean to the 2008 election, to the orders and laws Obama has signed and other issues, including whether he then is a valid commander-in-chief of the military.

The question over Obama’s eligibility now also is being raised on billboards nationwide.

Boxing

July 9th (Thursday), 2009 At Korakuen Hall, Tokyo, Japan

Yasutaka Kuroki (20-3-1) vs. Toshimasa Ouchi (10-4-1).

Takejiro Kato (22-9-1) vs. Yo Inoue (14-1).

July 10th (Friday), 2009 At TBA, USA

(ESPN2) Matt Godfrey (18-1) vs. Arron Williams (19-1-21).

(ESPN2) Shaun George (18-2-2) vs. Chris Henry (23-2).

At The Reno Events Center, Reno, NV

Jesse Brinkley (33-5) vs. Mike Paschall (19-1-1).

Bayan Jargal (12-0-1) vs. TBA.

In Istanbul, Turkey

Selcuk Aydin (18-0) vs. Jackson Bonsu (30-2).

­In Auch, France

Doudou Ngumbu (18-0) vs. Charles Chisamba (7-5-1).

July 11th (Saturday), 2009 At The Bank Atlantic Center, Sunrise, FL

(Showtime) Joseph Agbeko (26-1) vs. Vic Darchinyan (32-1-1) (The Ring Magazine #5 Bantamweight vs. #1 Jr. Bantamweight).

(IBF Bantamweight belt) (Showtime) Antonio DeMarco (20-1-1) vs. Anges Adjaho (25-1).

Steve Cunningham (21-2) vs. Wayne Braithwaite (23-3) (The Ring Magazine #1 Cruiserweight vs. Unranked).

Cuban legend in the Rock

by the The Reporterós staff

Bobi CéspedesBobi Céspedes

Bobi Céspedes it returns to La Peña with a selection of songs of its most recent recording CD Patakin. With danzones, rumbas, boleros and sons, the night will be an encounter with the African-Cuban folkloric music, to listen and dance to.

Bobi she is a recognized singer of folkloric Cuban music. Percussionist, dancer, and teacher, Bobi is a priestess of the spiritual tradition yoruba-lucumi of its people. For more than 30 years Bobi has occupied an important place in the conservation and education of the African-Cuban culture.

Bobi sings in three languages: English, Spanish and lucumi, the mother tongue of progeny yorubas of Western Africa in Cuba. Also it makes the percussion instruments such as the chekere, which is made of dry pumpkins and tell stories on the orishas – deities in the pantheon yoruba. For more information visit: http://www.bobicespedes.com/.

Saturday, July 18, at 8 p.m. $18 advance. $20 at the door. Centro Cultural La Peña, 3105 Shattuck Ave. en Berkeley. 510-849-2568 http://www.lapena.org/event/1144.

Museum of Women presents Dolores Huerta with María Echaveste

The International Museum of Women is hosting their latest Extraordinary Voices, Extraordinary Change Speaker Series Event at the Omni San Francisco Hotel. This event features speaker Dolores Huerta in conversation with Maria Echaveste.

Dolores Huerta, co-founder of United Farm Workers with César Chávez and founder of the Dolores Huerta Foundation, is one of the country’s most influential Latinas and is an outspoken advocate for workers’ rights. Huerta was named one of Ms. Magazine’s three most important women of 1997 and Ladies Home Journal’s 100 most important women of the 20th Century.

Dolores Huerta will appear in conversation with Berkeley School of Law Lecturer and Senior Fellow Maria Echaveste. Echaveste, who served as Senior Advisor and Deputy Chief of Staff to Bill Clinton, is one of the highest-ranking Latinas to have served in a presidential administration. On July 22,2009, 6 p.m. – 7:30pm. For more information, please call 415-543-4669.

Dancing with disabilities

In honor of Disability Pride Month, DisabledCommunity.Org is co-sponsoring a dance with other disability and aging focused organizations. This pride dance is open to people with and without disabilities and is planned as a social action to increase self love and social movement and to decrease alienation and isolation within our community.

AXIS Dance Company will kick off the dance from 5:30 to 6:30 teaching dance participants new ways of thinking about movement.

From 6:30 on everyone can dance to the musical mixings of Leroy Franklin Moore Jr. of Krip Hop Na1tion who will be mixing a group of diverse dance music, including music created by artists with disabilities. On Saturday, July 25 from 5-9 p.m. at the UU Center at 1187 Franklin Street, San Francisco. Tickets $5-25 based on ability to pay. To volunteer or co-sponsor the dance and raffle contact Lori Guidos at ­admin@disabledcommunity.org or leave a message at 415-508-6130.

For Richer or poorer: Surviving and thriving in the Great Recession Since the seriousness of the worldwide economic crisis became obvious last summer, people have been searching for answers. What happened? How did we get here? What can we do to fix things? Why didn’t we prevent this? How do we cope with newfound stress? And, perhaps most important, what will our economy and world look like after the recovery?

The Commonwealth Club will attempt to provide some answers to the myriad of economic questions in a series of talks with experts.

At The Club offices located at 595 Market Street, 2nd Floor in San Francisco. Free for member, with prices varying for non-members. For more info please call 415-597-6712.

Eight Latino films to be screen in eight cities

by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

Eduardo José Cabra Martínez (right) and René Pérez Joglar in a scene of the film, Sin Mapa.Eduardo José Cabra Martínez (right) and René Pérez Joglar in a scene of the film, Sin Mapa.

ROTATING SHOWCASE: Eight Latino-themed films will be screened in the same number of U.S. cities before being released on DVD this fall as part of a deal between Maya Entertainment and Blockbuster.

The Maya Indie Film Series launches July 17 with a one-week run at Los Angeles’ Nuart Theatre. Titles included in the series, some of which will have their national ­premieres in Los Angeles, are The Line, Vicious Circle, Bajo la sal, Sultanes del sur, Once Upon a ­Time in Rio, Crónicas Chilangas, Bad Guys and Mancora.

After the Los Angeles run, the series moves to NewYork’s Clearview Chelsea Cinemas (July 27): Chicago’s Century Centre Cinema, Washington’s E Street Cinema and Miami’s Cinebistro (Aug. 7); San Francisco’s Luumiere Theater (Aug. 14); San Diego’s Hillcrest Theater end Dallas, The Magnolla (Sept. 4).

Maya Entertainment, a production and distribution enterprise heeded by industry veterans Moctesuma Esparza and Jeff Esparza, will release all films on DVD for Hispanic Heritage Month. The DVDs will be available at Blockbuster stores.

DOCUMENTARY DEBUTS: Following a preview screening this month in Puerto Rico, Calle 13’s fi rst fi lm Sin mapa is set for its continental premiere this month in New York and its release on DVD.

The documentary chronicles several recent trips to South America by the Puerto Rican duo formed by René Pérez (Visitante) and Eduardo Cabra (Visitante). It shows their interactions with some at the continent’s native communities, such as the Yekuana, Yanomami, Arhuacos and Wayuu, in visits to Perú, Colombia, Argentina and Venezuela.

The travels provided some of the themes for Calle 13’s latest album, Los de atrás vienen conmigo.

Sin Mapa will be available on DVD July 28. On July 29, the fi lm premieres at the New York Latino Internetional Film Festival.

Calle 13 performed July 11 in New York at the closing event of the 10th annual Latin Alternative Music Conference.

ONE LINERS: Puerto Ricans mournedtheJune30death of Paquito Cordero, a pioneering TV producer who helped launch the careers of many of the island’s entertainers.

Benicio del Toro visited ­inmates at several prisons in Puerto Rico this month, including one with a theater group that performed for the Oscar-winning actor. Mexican actress Kate del Castillo guest stars in the July 14 episode of the A&E drama The Cleaner… and a musical inspired by the songs of the original Puerto Rican boy band Menudo is set to premiere in Caracas in November with a cast yet to be chosen… Hispanic Link.

They signed to Obama’s foreclosure plan but bank won’t modify loans

compiled by the El Reportero staff

Across the country members of ACORN took on the “Home Wrecker 4” to get them to sign on to the Obama plan and begin modifying loans. As a result of the days actions, One West has agreed to sign on to the plan! Yet, many families are still not getting modifi cations, said an organization’s communiqué.

María and José Ramos Zavala have lived in their home in San Leandro for 5 years. They are victims of a predatory loan, serviced by Central Mortgage Company but owned by Downy Savings (which is now owned by U.S. Bank). While their banks are signed onto the Obama plan, after their loan payments jumped more than $1000 last September, there has been no hope for a modification.

“I called the bank before we missed our fi rst payment and asked for help,” said Ramos-Zavala, a member of ACORN and Home Defender. “They refused to help me and just asked me to show more income. If I had more income then I could make the higher payments! They would not work with me for a payment that I can afford to stay in our home.”

Since that time, José and Maria have been working with ACORN Housing for a loan modifi cation but US Bank is still refusing to modify the loan – despite having signed onto the Obama plan to modify loans. Today, their home is set to be auctioned off at public auction. Maria and Jose will be joined by other ACORN members and Home Defenders to visit our local US Bank Branch to demand action now to stop the sale, followed by attending the sale itself to prevent the home from being sold.

On July 1, Maria and José Ramos, members of ACORN and Home Defenders will get together and walk to the US Bank branch located on 20th St. beside Lake Merritt at 11: 30 a.m. Then, they will head to the Alameda County Courthouse, located at 14th St. and Fallon in Downtown Oakland where the auctions will be held on the back steps of the courthouse (on the side by the lake) (for the 12:30 sale).

Organizations ask the FCC to open a docket on hate speech in media

The National Hispanic Media Coalition (NHMC), one of the country’s foremost Latino media advocacy and civil rights organizations, announced today that thirty-three organizations have signed on to a letter urging the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to grant NHMC’s Petition for Inquiry into hate speech in media. The Petition requests that the FCC initiate an inquiry into the extent, nature and effects of hate speech, and explore ways to counteract or reduce its negative impacts.

These signatory organizations represent a variety of diverse communities and include: the Asian American Justice Center (AAJC); Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good; the de sus países miembros tiene problemas afecta al resto.

Recordó que luego de la asonada golpista, Guatemala, El Salvador y Nicaragua bloquearon por 48 horas las fronteras con Honduras y con ello el comercio con los países vecinos, algo que según estimaciones ­habría costado a toda el área unos 61 millones de dólares.

El titular costarricense también expresó su preocupación porque la comunidad financiera internacional pueda tener una visión de inestabilidad general.

From Puerto Rico: a new idea for an industry that needs one

by Edna Negrón Hispanic Link News Service

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico – Newspaper editor Rafael Matos interrupted an interview recently to take a call on a story about a possible small plane crash in a remote part of the island. After dispatching a photographer, he switched the conversation to the business of his nonprofit newspaper venture.

Working both ends of a newspaper operation these days is routine for Matos, editor of the island’s English-language Puerto Rico Daily Sun. It is an experiment in alternative newspaper ownership that many in the industry are watching.

He is one of the 85 member-owners of the nonprofit Cooperativa Prensa Unida, organized by former employees of the defunct Pulitzer Prize-winning San Juan Star, which closed last August after 49 years. Two months later, the cooperative launched the Puerto Rico Daily Sun to keep an English daily newspaper alive.

“It’s not glamorous. It’s like an old diesel engine that works,” Matos says of the cooperative. “We’re not going to be millionaires, but it’s a dependable means of getting the job done.”

If the cooperative can break even while serving a niche market for English-language readers, the paper would be a success, editors say. So far, newsstand sales and a brisk classified and legal notice business, along with some ad revenue, help the 30,000-circulation paper meet its payroll. A low-interest loan supports equipment and supplies.

The cooperative is backed by an $800 investment by each member and financial support and guidance from the island’s long-established cooperatives.

Fomento Cooperativo, a government agency which supervises all the cooperatives in Puerto Rico, conducts audits every few months.

English-language newspapers have circulated in Puerto Rico dating as far back as 1898. Currently, the island has an English business weekly and a few magazines.

Cooperatives have long provided an economic model for financing entrepreneurial ventures, including projects in agriculture, education, tourism and construction.

As the Puerto Rico Daily Sun approaches its first anniversary, editors say it still needs to grow subscriptions and attract more advertisers once claimed by the Star. An interactive Web site is in the works, but Matos says they are holding off the launch until they can build a solid subscription base.

Studies have identified a potential 400,000 English-language readers on the island, in addition to second and third generations of Puerto Rican descent residing elsewhere. About 4 million live on the island and an equal number on the U.S. mainland. These are persons who have lived or studied in Puerto Rico, tourists who travel to the island, as well as professionals such as teachers, military and business people.

Increasingly, newspapers and Web sites are exploring new business models amid a wave of layoffs that is rocking the U.S. newspaper industry. U.S. dailies lost 5,900 newsroom jobs in 2008 following a drop of 2,400 the year before, reducing employment of journalists to levels of the 1980s, according to the American Society of News Editors.

“We are at a time when breaking even may be a pretty reasonable goal for a newspaper,” says Rick Edmonds, media business analyst at the Poynter Institute ­in Florida. “For a variety of newspapers, the nonprofit structures are getting a second look.”

Nonprofit structures in general could bring other players to the table. In the case of The Daily Sun, it does sound generally that the model, culturally specific to Puerto Rico, fits the times, Edmonds says.

While the no-frills infrastructure allows journalists to pursue stories free of corporate pressures, owners must balance the routines of daily journalism with managing a business.

“Since we are owners, there are multiple responsibilities, including making a multitude of decisions,” says Matos.

The newsroom is housed in a cramped space in Rio Piedras. A skeletal staff produces six pages of local news in addition to sports, features and business sections that often rely on wire copy. They’ve learned to pool their skills to include administering a payroll, monitoring expenses and maintaining equipment.

Matos wants to evolve the print product into a publication with more local and in-depth pieces, while reserving the Web for breaking news, features and general information to lure a wider audience.

“It’s a promise of better journalism because you can tell the story the way it is and not worry about a corporate board of directors, politics or agendas,” he says of the cooperative as a model for an industry searching for new paths.

(Edna Negrón is a veteran journalist. She teaches journalism at Ramapo College of New Jersey. Email her at negrone7@gmail.com). ©2009

Race and personal perspective

por José de la Isla

HOUSTON, Texas — 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 Prof. 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