6:55 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Entertainment|World · Comments Off
24 Nov 2005
I thought this piece of news was a bit weird, I guess because I’ve never seen the Nobel Prize concert and I don’t associate the prize itself with Hollywood celebrities:
Mexican film star Salma Hayek will host this year’s Nobel Peace Prize concert in Oslo next month.
“She is truly enthusiastic about this assignment. I have the impression that Salma is part of Hollywood’s intellectual elite, who feel that leading the Nobel concert is a great honor,” concert producer Odd Arvid Strømstad told newspaper VG.
The concert will be held in Oslo on Sunday, Dec. 11 and will feature artists such as Westlife, Damien Rice, Duran Duran, and the Sugababes.
Oprah Winfrey, Anthony Hopkins and Meryl Streep are among the celebrities who have hosted the concert in previous years.
It’s no weirder than Oprah hosting or Duran Duran performing. Good for Salma.
Via / Afterposten
4:09 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Bilingualism|California|Justice · Comments Off
24 Nov 2005
A landmark ruling has come down in a Southern California case challenging the state’s “English only” instruction rule for ballots, in which voters say they were misled by signature gatherers and were unable to know that because they didn’t speak English. A win for voter’s rights advocates:
The trustee, Nativio V. Lopez, had come under fire for seeking exemptions to the state’s English-only instruction requirements and was partly blamed for the district’s lack of new school construction. He was recalled by 71 percent of voters.
The decision Wednesday by the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals could be used to force election officials throughout the state to require multiple-language petitions for ballot issues, voting-rights advocates said.
It means “non-English-speaking voters have the opportunity to participate in the entire electoral process, from beginning – which often means deciding whether to sign a petition – to end, in the voting booth,” said former Mexican-American Legal Defense and Educational Fund attorney Thomas Saenz, who represented the plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the Orange County Registrar of Voters.
Via / San Jose Mercury News
4:04 pm By Maegan La Mala · Activism|Immigration · Comments Off
24 Nov 2005
The Border Film Project is very interesting project that hopes to raise awareness about the issues related to the border through images.
The purpose of the project is to capture the perspective of both immigrants coming to the United States and minuteman at the border attempting to stop them. Both groups are given disposable cameras to take pictures of their journey or their experience and they are asked to send them back to the Border Film Project.
Both sets of photographers have the power to show everyday Americans what they otherwise cannot see, providing a more personal look into a rich and complicated issue.
The project is run by Boston College grads Brett Huneycutt and Victoria Criado, and University of Arizona grad Rudy Adler.
At the conclusion of the project the various images will be shown in galleries in Mexico and the United States.
Via / Border Film Project

After a pesticide cloud drifted over the town of Earlimart in 1999, sickening 250 people, the state fined Wilbur-Ellis, the company found liable in the case, $150,000, but since then, hundreds of people have been poisoned by pesticide drifts in Kern County. The incidents often occur in the same towns and involve the same companies.
In the Central Valley you see the pesticides being sprayed everywhere, whether it’s by tractor or through the air with a crop duster. On many occasions I will be driving through back roads lined with orange groves and suddenly the car windshield will get sprayed with moisture. You then realize that you have just driven through a pesticide cloud or at least the residue of a recent spraying.
10:04 am By Maegan La Mala · New York City|Politics|radio · Comments Off
24 Nov 2005
While some Latino families will be eating pavo (or pernil) giving thanks in the tradition of a story passed on about Native Americans sharing with the pilgrims, others may be out serving those less fortunate. For many Latinos whose roots lie in Indigenous cultures across the Americas today is no party. It is a day or mourning and remembrance of colonization and genocide. Regardless of your position on this so called holiday, even if you’re just enjoying having the day off work and school, it never hurts to have a little background information.
From 10 am to 6 pm EST, WBAI Radio in NYC (99.5 fm or on the web at WBAI.org) will be telling the true story of Thanksgiving and how the Pilgrims, the Puritans, and the influences of Christianity created the American view of this day.
Have a safe and thoughtful day.
Via / WBAI.org
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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