Oct 2012 Lavozmaster 3
Oct 2012 Lavozmaster 3
La Voz Latina
The University of Marylands Leading Source of Latino News
Latino Heritage Month articles inside | pg. 4
LGBT community
collaborates with Md.
dreamers
By Jessica Evans
Casa de Maryland joined forces
with Equality Maryland, a LGBT civil
rights advocacy group, to form the campaign Familia es Familia Maryland, or
Family is Family Maryland, in an effort
to educate the community about the Maryland Dream Act and same-sex marriage
rights before the presidential election on
Nov. 6.
We want to show the community
that we are together and that is why we
started Familia es Familia, said communication specialist at Casa De Maryland
Susana Flores.
The campaign is trying to educate
and bring awareness on these issues by going to Hispanic media outlets and having
people share their stories. We have videos
of different families showing their support, said Flores.
CASA, CONTINUES ON PAGE 2
Karen Contreras and Jasmin Herrera, members of the LHM planning committee, pose at the LSU Welcome Back Barbeque.
A new pre-college track partnership was established between the University of Maryland and Northwestern High
School on Thursday Sept. 12 to help restructure the effectiveness of older college
programs embraced by the high school.
The local high school is located less
than a mile away from campus, and already carries over 20 University of Maryland based outreach programs that help
students articulate the potential needed in
order to strive for an academic future.
There is a long history of university programs being involved at NHS,
said Shane Bryan, the AmeriCorps VISTA
Community Partner Liaison. The inquiry
of new programs was becoming burdensome to the high school. There has been
little assessment of the impact these
programs are having on the overall NHS
community.
noticias
High school seniors in
Prince Georges County
Public Schools can now
take SAT for free | Pg. 2
latinidad
Meet the newest Latina
sorority:
deportes
World Cup 2014:
entretenimiento
Salsa & Bachata:
noticias
New Prince Georges County Public Schools initiative waives SAT fee
For the first time, on Oct. 17, seniors
in Prince Georges County Public Schools
(PGCPS) will be able to take the SATthe
nations most widely used college admission
testfor free.
The goal of the county-funded initiative,
referred to as the SAT School Day, is to ensure
that every child has the opportunity to take the
test, according to Interim Superintendent of
Schools Dr. Alvin Crawley.
Leslie Sepuka of College Boards
Washington office reported that in the Prince
Georges County school district, 5,192 seniors
who graduated in 2012 took the SAT at some
point in their high school career.
But officials want to see that number
increase.
Providing the essential pre-college exam
to students not only free of charge, but also during a regular school day, in familiar surroundings and with familiar faces allows PGCPS
to remove any barriers that may deter student
participation, Crawley said.
Cost, according to Bowie High School
senior Awung Fontem, seems to deter some
students from taking the test.
According to College Board, there is a
direct correlation between family income and
SAT scoresthe higher the income, the higher
the score. Maryland students in households with
incomes greater than $200,000 score an average
of 156 points higher than those in households
with incomes less than $20,000.
But the SAT itself is not the only cost
involved in the pursuit of higher education. One
college application can come with up to a $90
TOTAL: $254.40
CASA continued
The LGBT Equity Center on campus
has also taken strides to promote intersection of
both issues.
Were trying to make people understand that there is an intersection between the
two, they are LGBTs and also dreamers, said
Pamela Hernandez, the special projects office
assistant of the LGBT Equity Center. They
face an internal conflict.
The campaign comes at a critical time
Maryland voters will have the option to vote
for the Maryland Dream Act, Question 4, and
same-sex marriage, Question 6 on the presidential election ballot.
According to the Maryland State Board
of Elections website, the Maryland Dream Act
would grant undocumented immigrants who
attended a high school in Maryland in-state college tuition for any community college.
After students have completed two years
of community college, they can then attend one
of the states public universities.
In regards to Question 6, the Maryland
State Board of Elections website stated that
latinidad
3
NWS continued
The Leadership Community Service Learning unit within Adele H. Stamp Student Union
hopes to decrease the high schools drop out
rates and increase college preparedness through
in-class and extended learning partnerships.
The LCSL will strengthen its programs
academic efficacy with outreach programs,
like Upward Bound and College and Career
Pathways. These non-profit organizations will
assist low-income, first generation students, and
provide high school students with academic
counseling.
Pre-college programs, like College and
Career Pathways, provides the school with the
resources that students need in order to choose
The winning ALPFA team at a KPMG Case Sudy competition in Las Vegas.
Only two years old, the Association of
Latino Professionals in Finance and Accounting (ALPFA) a national business professional
development organization, has helped students
become successful professionals in their career
fields, and last summer, the ALPFA-UMD team
placed second in a National KPMG Case Study
Competition.
Five members were selected from the
ALPFA-UMD chapter to go to Las Vegas and
compete in the National KPMG Case Study
Competition where over 28 different schools
across the U.S. and Puerto Rico competed and
presented on an accounting subject assigned to
them.
Participating in the KPMG Case Study
Competition was a great experience! said Gerson Elias, president of ALPFA-UMD. Thanks
to ALPFA, I was able to secure an internship
with KPMG this past summer and I just recently committed to a full time job with them right
after I graduate this fall, said Elias.
The ALPFA-UMD team analyzed Exxon
Mobils corporate governance and significant
accounting policies relating to post-retirement
benefits. The team is eligible to return and go
straight into finals at next summers competition, which will be held in Washington D.C.
courtesy of ALPFA
The ALPFA-UMD chapter was founded
by economics major, Peter Canales, and accounting and information systems double
major, Ivana Mejias. With the help of Pamela
Hernandez, former coordinator for Latina/o
Student Involvement at the office of Multicultural Involvement and Community Advocacy
(MICA), along with the help and support of
student organizations such as La Unidad Latina,
Lambda Upsilon Lambda Fraternity, Inc., the
Latino Student Union (LSU) and the Coalition
of Latino Student Organizations (CLSO), the
ALPFA-UMD chapter was established in fall
2010.
Their goal was to establish an organization on campus for Latinos and other minorities that would provide the skills and resources
needed to succeed as a professional. ALPFA
also connects students to internships and jobs at
major competitive accounting firms such as Deloitte, PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), KPMG,
and Ernst and Young.
Being a minority student is hard
enough, trying to make it in the business world
is even harder, so I wanted to make it easier for
them, said co-founder Peter Canales.
We are such a small percentage on
campus and an even smaller percentage in the
business school. ALPFA is like a family - we
ALPFA, CONTINUES ON PAGE 7
Entertainment and culture united the
president of the Gamma Phi Sigma Hermanos
Pachamama (mother earth in Quechua, the naUniversity of Maryland community as the anUnidos Fraternity, Inc., presenting Judy Martive language of Potosi, Bolivia).
nual Latino Heritage Month Festival, organized tinez, coordinator for the office of Multicultural
Freshman Xandria Baleno followed
by the Coalition of Latino Student OrganizaInvolvement & Community Advocacy, with the up afterwards with a rendition of a Christian
tions (CLSO), kicked off the month of festiviRaza Award for her work with uniting many
Aguilera song accompanied with her guitar
ties of Hispanic Heritage.
students in the Hispanic population at the unithat brought a soulful mood. Abisola Kusimo, a
With a crowd of
mechanical Engineerover 100 people in attening major from New
dance in the Nyumburu
Jersey, rounded out the
Ampitheater, the night was
student performers by
filled with music, dances,
motivating the audiand games that showcased
ence with her spoken
many customs of different
word poetry.
Hispanic countries. Ac
In between
cording to CLSO President
performances, comedic
Jasmin Herrera, the event
relief and laughs were
took over three months of
added to the show via
planning in order to make
most of the UMD
it a success.
Hispanic fraternities
Once school
and sororities with
ended last [spring] semesinteractive games with
ter, we were here at least
the audience. Some of
once a week, organizing
the competitions
the event, stated Herrera.
included Latino karaWe wanted to make this
oke from the Chi
show a great showcase for
Upsilon Sigma Nathe community on campus
tional Latin Sorority,
The Fraternidad Cultural Pachamama, a Bolivian dance troupe, was one of many performances at the LHM kickoff.
Jose Vasquez
and make the Hispanic
Inc., a clothes changpopulation more known.
versity with activities across campus.
ing competition with the Lambda
While the festival was filled with music,
Local Hispanic band Inseparable played Theta Alpha Latin Sorority, Inc., and a Bachata
dances, and entertainment from different counCumbia, an originally Colombian genre of
dance competition from the Lambda Theta Phi
tries from all over Central and South America,
music that has grown popularity in Mexico and Fraternity, Inc.
the show carried a theme of unity and voice that parts of Central America, which brought many
My favorite part was the bachata conwas presented through every performance and
audience members to the central stage to dance test, stated freshman Laura Romero. I really
announcement. Almost every speaker spoke of
to the music.
enjoyed the festival.
the importance to stay united and to speak their
Afterwards, more local and student
La Unidad Latina, Lambda Upsilon
voice, as the U.S. presidential and local elecperformers made their way up the stage and
Lambda Fraternity, Inc. joined together with
tions draw closer. CLSO representatives went
wowed the audience with their displays of talLambda Upsilon Lambda Fraternity to end the
around registering people to vote during the
ent. First, Joy Maldonado, a local high school
show with a Hispanic spelling bee where the
festivities.
student, performed a mix of modern dance and
consequences for getting the word wrong would
This year, our theme for Latino Herihip-hop fusion. Continuing with the dancing
result into a whipped cream pie to the face of a
tage Month is: One Nation: Life, Liberty, and
theme, a Brazilian and Latino movement group group member, uniting the audience to particiJustice for all or Una Nacion: Vida, Libertad
demonstrated and taught Capoeira, a Brazilian
pate in Hispanic culture.
y Justicia para Todos. Christian Del Cid, the
martial art that combines dance with music.
The festival was great, junior Ren
Master of Ceremonies said. We all have a
Lastly, a Bolivian dance troupe, called The
Diaz said. I got to see and meet other great Lavoice and should use it during elections in tryFraternidad Cultural Pachamama, used their
tinos on campus. It was great to see the Latino
ing to make a positive change.
Bolivian culture and tradition to demonstrate
unity on campus.
The event began with Chris Martinez,
the dance of the Tinkus or encounter for the
LHM Trajectory continued
The refrain life, liberty,
and justice for all has been wellknown for years, and on Sept. 17,
faculty and student alumni of the
University of Maryland united
to provide meaning to this years
theme for Latino Heritage Month
(LHM).
The LHM 2012 Opening
Ceremony welcomed Dr. Mark
Brimhall-Vargas, associate director of the Office of Diversity
Education and Compliance, as the
master of ceremonies. He began
the ceremony with his interpretation of the month, paying close
attention to the details on many of
the posters and t-shirts promoting
LHM on campus.
I noticed several items
about the use of language. Its
not Hispanic Heritage Month
anymore, he said, [the posters]
use L-A-T-I-N-@ symbol for
Latina/o.
Despite the interesting
word choice, the question of the
night centered on what life, liberty
and justice meant to la comunidad
Latina.
New faculty member Dr.
Michelle Espino, assistant professor of the Department of Counseling, Higher Education and Special
Education, touched on her views
of life in which our present situation deny so many of our people
the opportunities to good education, to equal opportunity, [and] to
quality of life simply because they
do not have the right documentation to claim their fundamental
human rights.
Recognized as one of the
most important Latina people on
campus, Dr. Ana Patricia Rodriguez, associate professor of the
Department of Spanish and Portuguese and U.S. Latina/o Studies, gave what she considered a
distinction between liberty and
freedom.
I came to this term in a
very conflictive matter, said Rodriguez. [Liberty] means a term
of displacement, a term of conflict, a term of war, but it also is a
term of great promise for a lot of
people who struggle with libertad
[and] freedom is a term that is
very hard to qualify for.
Adriana Rosas, UMD
alumna and sister of Lambda
Theta Alpha Latin Sorority, Inc.,
spoke about the findings of her
senior thesis paper, which focused
on investigating the history of
Latinos at the University of Maryland.
According to Rosas, although Panamanian student Cadet
A. Cook was the first Latino to
attend the University in 1871, it
wasnt until the late 1980s that the
Latino population began to have
a more visible presence on the
university.
However, since the 1990s,
the Latino population at the
university has remained at less
than 10 percent of the student
body though the universitys total
undergraduate enrollment rate has
been anywhere from 20,000 to
26,000 undergraduate students.
The Latino population
has not really risen for quite sometime. The low attendance rates I
believe are something that with us
being here since 1871, or having
a presence here, that should be
more, said Rosas.
For the past twenty years,
the Latino population has remained in the 1000 range. In the
1990s, the Latino population was
1,655 students and in the fall of
2011, the Latino population was
1,963 students.
The Opening Ceremony,
organized by the Multicultural
Involvement & Community Advocacy Office (MICA), the Coalition of Latino Student Organizations (CLSO), and the Office of
Multi-Ethnic Student Education
(OMSE), successfully joined the
UMD community together to reflect on the idea of living in one
nation.
Towards the end of the ceremony, Dr. William John Hanna,
professor in the department of Urban Studies, reflected on his own
meaning of the refrain justice for
all, but also on how he believes
that we dont have equality in the
United States.
If this were true, then in
the words of Espino, Mi gente
we got work to do, so lets do it.
Do you define yourself by your name?
Your age? Race? Ethnicity, religion, gender,
hometown, family, friends likes or dislikes?
With countless components that can be
used to define us as human beings and as individuals, the concept of identity is a universal
struggle.
But this game of tug of war between
oneself and ones identity can be even stronger
for Black LatinosBlack Americans of Hispanic descent.
People who identify themselves as
being Afro-Latinos face the challenge of not
fitting the stereotype of the Latino everyone
thinks about when they hear the word, Douglas Jimenez, president of the University of
Marylands Lambda Theta Phi Latin Fraternity
said. A lot of people dont even know that
Afro-Latinidad exists.
But that is precisely why individuals and
groups are trying to initiate discussion through
what is referred to as the Black Latino/-a Movement.
And the University of Maryland is completely on board.
On Sept. 18, Lambda Theta Phi Latin
Fraternity, Inc., and the Caribbean Student As-
deportes
Mexican boxer Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. tests positive for marijuana
Chavez may face a year long suspension
By Ivette Lucero Lopez
Not only did Mexican boxer Julio Cesar
Chavez Jr. lose his WBO middleweight championship fight in Las Vegas against Sergio Martinez on Sept. 15, but it appears he will also be
losing money and his boxing license after the
Nevada State Athletic Commission notified the
boxer and his boxing promoting company, Top
Rank, that he tested positive for marijuana.
According to Dan Rafael, ESPN boxing analyst, this is not the first time Chavez has
tested positive in a drug test, which could make
his punishment more severe than his first time
offense in 2009.
During that last failed test, Chavez tested positive for furosemide, a diuretic drug that
is commonly used to cut weight or to prevent
detection of a banned substance or illegal drug.
Chavezs actions also got him three years probation as a result of driving under the influence
and without a valid license earlier this year in
California. He was also fined 10 percent of his
earnings for that fight along with seven months
suspension
With this latest charge, the son of
the famed retired Mexican boxer Julio Cesar
Chavez faces a chance of being suspended for
a year because of his past behavior and a bigger fee for his actions, as this is his second drug
testing offense in Las Vegas, which can be a
lead role in determining punishment.
According to HBO Series 24/7, a reality
show that follows the training of the boxers before their fight, Chavezs attitude resembled that
of a rebellious teenager, as though he knew he
was going to win. Chavez was late to training
appointments and at one point during taping,
didnt even show up.
While his opponent Martinez was shown
constantly training day and night for the fight,
Chavez lacked duty to train hard and motivate
himself to the fullest based on his actions.
Even with the inclusion of having
prestigious boxing trainer Freddy Roach, whose
history of trainees consist of Oscar de La Hoya,
Manny Paquiao and Amir Khan, did not seem
to have given an impact on Chavez as the
negative behavior continued. The frustration
Roach showed as the lack of effort coming from
Chavez worried him that if he did not prepare
for the fight, Chavez was bound to lose.
This has led some fans to agree with
Chavezs trainer and believe that Chavezs use
Central America teams fight for final World Cup qualifier spots
By Jos Umaa
Five Central American national teams
looked to garner favorable results on their last
two games in group play in order to advance to
the next stage of qualifiers in the CONCACAF/
North American region for the FIFA World Cup
in Brazil 2014.
El Salvador, Guatemala, Costa Rica,
Panama and Honduras are four out of the remaining eight teams that may still qualify for
the hexagonal round of qualifiers that start next
year, as only the top two teams from each of the
three groups will continue forward. The next
round of matches will be played on October
12th and 16th.
In Group A, three out of the four teams
can still qualify as the United States, Guatemala
and Jamaica are tied with the same number of
points and results. Guatemala, currently in second place due to a goal differential tie-breaker
with the United States, must win their home
match against Jamaica in order to take command of one of the two top spots in the group.
According to Grant Wahl, senior soccer writer
for Sports Illustrated, Guatemala hopes to win
AFRO-LATINO continued
movement is to educate people and to normalize that term African diaspora.
Agramonte voiced being proud of
people embracing the same kind of living the
movement by doing things like leaving their
hair natural and challenging their families perception of their own identity.
I love the way [the movement] is
entretenimiento
Third annual salsa competition brings dancers of all skill levels together
By Melanie Balakit
Dancers of all different
skill levels competed in a salsa and
bachata competition co-sponsored
by Gamma Phi Sigma Hermanos
Unidos Fraternity, Inc. and the
University of Maryland Latin Dance
Company, on Fri., Sept. 21 to benefit
the American Cancer Society.
Salsa and bachata are two
partner dances that are extremely
popular in Latin America, as well
as in the Latino community in the
United States. Salsa has origins in
Cuba, while bachata originates from
the Dominican Republic. This is the
first time the competition has included bachata since its conception
in 2008.
The third annual competition
featured two different competitions
for salsa and bachata. The first was
a couples competition, where contestants formally chose their partner, and were judged by a panel of
judges. The second was a Jack and
Jill competition, where contestants
met their partner on the open floor
and were judged by the audience.
Prior to the competition, a
free salsa class was provided by
Latin Dance Vibe, LLC, an instructional dance company based in the
DC metro area.
The competition also featured
a dance performance by Dynamix
Dance team, a D.C. metro-based
group.
Weve been together for a
year and a half, said Nebyat Yonas,
referring to Jhef Felix, her partner in
the salsa couples competition.
Allan Gonzalez
But this is our first time
in an actual competition, she
said. I learned salsa by just going
out, she said. Its a lot of fun.
Elyse Weitzman, a student
from the University of Pittsburgh
and a competitor in the salsa
couples competition began dancing salsa almost a year and a half
ago.
I took an introduction to
salsa class last summer and have
been dancing ever since, said
Weitzman. Now I dance it on a
weekly basis. I have a passion for
it.
I actually just passed
CUS continued
ALPFA continued
support each other and collectively work towards achieving our professional and personal
goals, said Avilene Rubio-Palencia, an accounting and information systems double major
and current secretary.
The ALPFA-UMD chapter also strives
to reach out and recruit many other students
of all ethnicities and a wide range of majors.
Were aiming to reach out to students outside
of business too, everyone can benefit from
networking, no matter what major because we
are all professionals, said co-founder Ivana
Mejias.
The students in ALPFA-UMD will be
the best of the best, said Canales.
Jose Vasquez
Allan Gonzalez
Jose Vasquez
Jose Vasquez