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DETROIT Gratis! www .la pr ensa toledo .com www.la .lapr prensa ensatoledo toledo.com CLEVELAND LORAIN Ohio & Michigan's Oldest & Largest Latino Weekly Check out our Classifieds! Checa los Anuncios Clasificados! June/junio 15 2005 Spanglish Weekly/Semanal 20 P ginas Vol. 37 No. 14 Mor e La Pr ensa photos a t www .la pr ensa toledo .com More Prensa at www.la .lapr prensa ensatoledo toledo.com F tbol p. 8 DENTRO : DENTRO: Minorities favor ethnic media...............................2 Toledo OH 43606 3011 Council St. Habla Por Equipo de Restaurante Nuevo Y Usado For All Your Restaurant Equipment Needs Habla a Amador Reyna Jr. 419-242-7377 x103 800.828.8564 x103 www.BASequipment.com Castro loses mayoral race in San Antonio.....3 FLOC's Letter to the Editor..............................4 Nikki Rios and Roxy Hern ndez (above) enjoy the entertainment of Oro Solido (below) at LatinoFest V in downtown Toledo. Oro Solido is from New York. Carla's Krazy Korner...........................6 Horoscope.....................7 Alex Romero of BG named to Task Force..7 Deportes.....................8-9 Liga Las Americas....8 Events....................12-13 Obituaries...................12 Cleveland's HBA celebrates......................14 Classifieds.............16-19 Taquer a El Nacimiento Mexican Restaurant W e l c o m e ! Hours: Mon-Thur: 9AM-12AM Fri & Sat: 9AM-3AM Sun: 9AM-12AM Carry-Out Phone: 313.554.1790 7400 W. Vernor Hwy. Detroit MI 48209 Breves: Muere soldado de EEUU por heridas en Irak BAGDAD (AP): Un soldado norteamericano falleci a consecuencia de lesiones recibidas en el norte de Bagdad dijo el ej rcito el viernes al especificar que las mismas no fueron causadas en combate. Se investigan las causas de la muerte del soldado de la Fuerza Especial Libertad fallecido el jueves cerca de Tuz Jormato 210 kil metros al norte de Bagdad. Su identidad ser mantenida en (Continua en la p. 3) Jugos/Tepache Tacos Aguas Mojarra Frita Tortas Tostadas Caldos Mariscos Carne a la Parrilla Burritos Pollo Dorado Licuados Quesadillas Pozole Carne de Puerco en salsa verde Breakfast Super Burro I-75 Springwells Livernois Bienvenidos a fiesta el 27 de junio! www.taqueriaelnacimiento.com W. Vernor EDDIE GONZALEZ THE EVENT CENTER Sabado 18 de Junio 2005 PUERTAS HABREN 7:00 PM BAILE DESDE 9 HASTA LAS 2 AM PRECIO ESPECIAL PARA DAMAS $15 DE 7PM A 9:00PM PARA MAS INF LLAME A (419) 837-6492 OR (419) 836-8772 T&S PROMOTIONS PRESENTA: DESDE LA CAPITAL DE LA MUSICA TEJANA SAN ANTONIO TEXAS LatinoFest V was a tremendous success last weekend in downtown Toledo--see page 15. More photos at www.laprensatoledo.com. Ademas Groupo Electricidad de Pontiac MI 23 North Summit Street Downtown Toledo Latino Scholarship Day WITH THE TOLEDO MUD HENS July 17 2005 2:00 PM $10 $10 Mariachi at 12:45PM TICKETS ON SALE! Call: (419) 870-6565 or 893-6227 x 7160 419-382-1115 Tinta con sabor Proudly Serving Our Readers since 1989 La Prensa Radio! Escuche WCWA 1230AM cada domingo 8:00 PM HD Charlys Family Restaurant 3312 Glendale Ave. Toledo Restaurant Try our Mexican Breakfast! El P atio Patio 440.277.0232 2933 Grove Avenue Lorain Ohio 44055 Gratis! www .la pr ensa toledo .com www.la .lapr prensa ensatoledo toledo.com Mexican Restaurant & Cantina Host: Mickey Cash Open for breakfast: 6:00 AM Serving Lunch/Dinner until 11:00 PM Special Lorain and Cleveland Edition Tinta con sabor Proudly Serving Our Readers since 1989 Check out our Classifieds! Checa los Anuncios Clasificados! June 15 2005 Spanglish Weekly/Semanal 20 P ginas Vol. 37 No. 14 Ohio & Michigan's Oldest & Largest Latino Weekly DENTRO : DENTRO: Minorities favor ethnic media...............................2 FLOC's Letter to the Editor..............................4 Carla's Krazy Korner...........................6 Horoscope.....................7 Deportes.....................8-9 Liga Las Americas....8 Events....................12-13 Obituaries...................12 Cleveland's HBA celebrates......................14 Classifieds.............16-19 Breves: Muere soldado de EEUU por heridas en Irak BAGDAD (AP): Un soldado norteamericano falleci a consecuencia de lesiones recibidas en el norte de Bagdad dijo el ej rcito el viernes al especificar que las mismas no fueron causadas en combate. Se investigan las causas de la muerte del soldado de la Fuerza Especial Libertad fallecido el jueves cerca de Tuz Jormato 210 kil metros al norte de Bagdad. Su identidad ser mantenida en (Continua en la p. 3) Explosion Latina based in Cincinnati entertains in Northern Ohio--See page 15 Escuche La Onda Cultural Latina Radio 89.1FM Lorain Escuche La Onda Cultural Latina Radio 89.1FM Lorain P gina 2 La Prensa By JEREMIAH MARQUEZ Associated Press Writer LOS ANGELES (AP): Nearly half the country's Latinos and other minorities prefer ethnic newspapers television and radio to mainstream media according to a poll released June 7. Outlets from Korean-language dailies to Spanishbroadcasting powerhouse Univision Communications Inc. attract 45 percent of adults in the largest minority groups several times a week over their mainstream counterparts a poll commissioned by the nonprofit New California Media shows. Overall ethnic media reach approximately 80 percent of the groups studied-- about 51 million people. "This is something that is growing like a giant hidden in plain sight " said Sandy Close executive director for NCM a nationwide association of more than 700 ethnic media groups. Many turn to foreign language newspapers and broadcasts because English isn't their native tongue. Additionally minority media often do a better job covering news from the homeland and other issues the community cares about. "We have a multicultural society with multimedia choices so people pay attention to media that pay attention to them. That's the bottom line " said Felix Guti rrez professor of journalism at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Southern California. Anabel Delgado 29 a Mexican immigrant who responded to the poll watches up to two hours a day of Latino soap operas or telenovelas and music videos on Spanish language stations. 20s when many people have children. A far greater percentage of whites than Latinos are 65 or older the opposite is true of those under 18. Immigration has become a volatile issue in Congress and border states as well as in Georgia and other places where there has been a surge in new arrivals. Critics say lax enforcement of immigration laws has allowed millions of people to enter the U.S. illegally take jobs from legal residents and drain social services. The facts do not bear this out. Immigrants by and large take jobs not wanted by the population at large and they contribute heavily to Social Security and taxes. The Latino growth rate for the 12 months starting July 2003 was 3.6 percent compared with the overall population growth of 1 percent. The growth rate was 3.4 percent for Asians 1.7 percent for Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders 1.3 percent for blacks 1 percent for American Indians and Alaska Natives and 0.8 percent for whites. That meant that at the beginning of July last year the population was an estimated 294 million with the following racial and ethnic breakdown: 240 million whites 39.2 million blacks 14 million Asians 4.4 million Indians and Native Alaskans and 980 000 Native Hawaiians and other islanders. The numbers for all races and ethnic groups do not add up to the total because 4.4 million people listed themselves as having more than one race. The Census Bureau counts "Hispanic" or "Latino" as an ethnicity rather than a race so Latinos can be of any race. The population of non-Latino whites indicating no other race increased just 0.3 percent in the past year to 197.8 million. The size of the Latino population and to a lesser extent the Asian population rose in nearly every state over the 1990s. Also the Census Bureau projected last year that whites and minority groups overall would be roughly equal in size by 2050. "Sometimes this is portrayed as a problem for the United States--that the ethnic composition of the country is changing and that new people are coming to take jobs " said Goodman dean of American University's School of International Service. "My view is just the opposite: increased fertility of young people makes the (social) structure one that is more sustaining of economic production and enables older people to be in a culture where their retirements can be financed." On the Net: Census Bureau: www.census.gov/ popest. Rico de La Prensa contributed to this report. June/junio 15 2005 Latino population fastest growing now one-seventh of total By PAULINE JELINEK Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP): One of every seven people in the United States is Latino a record number that probably will keep rising because of immigration and a birth rate outstripping nonLatino blacks and whites. The country's largest minority group accounted for one-half of the overall population growth of 2.9 million between July 2003 and July 2004 according to a Census Bureau report being released Thursday. The agency estimated there are 41.3 million Latinos in the United States. The bureau does not ask people about their legal status that number is intended to include both legal and other residents. The population growth for Asians ran a close second. Increases in both groups are due largely to immigration but also higher birth rates said Lewis W. Goodman an American University expert on U.S.-Latin American relations. "If we didn't have those elements we would be moving into a situation like Japan and Europe ... where the populations are graying in a way that is very alarming and endangering their productivity and endangering even their social security systems " he said. Most immigrants to the U.S. tend to arrive in their Poll: U.S. minorities favor ethnic media She favors the news shows in particular because they focus on topics affecting Latinos like immigration. "The Spanish news seems to let Latinos know more about what interests us things English channels don't talk much about " said Delgado a customer service representative who lives in El Monte east of Los Angeles. The survey found that more than half of all Latino adults preferred ethnic media. About 60 percent of blacks and Arab Americans and a fourth of Asian Americans and Native Americans opted for such outlets. Guti rrez said the poll was further evidence that the news media are fracturing into segments a trend fueled in part by advertisers looking to tailor their messages to individual consumers. Some companies see minorities--many of whom are immigrants whose tastes and buying habits are still being shaped--as an untapped market. Advertising and marketing in mainstream media about $140 billion a year is growing about 3 percent annually according to NCM estimates. For Latino outlets ad spending is about $3 billion and increasing at 15 percent. The poll was conducted through telephone interviews with 1 895 black Latino Asian American Arab American and Native American adults across the country from April to May. It has a margin of error between 3.5 and 10 percentage points depending on the sample. Surveys were conducted in Arabic Cantonese English Hindi Japanese Korean Mandarin Spanish Tagalog and Vietnamese. Poll co-sponsors included the Center for American Progress and the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights Education Fund. Editor's Note: Check out New California Media at: http://www.ncmonline.com with features such as: Dirty Little Secret: Undocumented Workers Are Saving Social Security--such workers pay taxes and Social Security but can't collect. U.S. population by race and ethnicity (AP) The U.S. population in millions by race and ethnicity in July 2004 and July 2000 and the percentage change according to the U.S. Census Bureau. The total for race groups surpasses the U.S. total because individuals can report belonging to more than one race. The American Indian category includes Alaska natives the native Hawaiian category includes other Pacific Islanders. People of Hispanic ethnicity can be of any race. Race Ethnicity July 2004 July 2000 Change White 239.9 232.0 3.4 Black 39.2 37.2 5.4 Asian 14.0 12.1 15.7 American Indian 4.4 4.2 4.7 Native Hawaiian 1.0 0.9 11.1 Non-Hispanic or Latino 252.3 246.5 2.4 Hispanic or Latino 41.3 35.6 16.0 Total Population 293.7 282.2 4.1 La Prensa Newspaper Staff Culturas Publications Inc. Rebecca McQueen Editorial: Pepe Caudillo Ricardo Urrutia Carla Soto Monica Morales Teodosio Feliciano Fletcher Word Wendy Cuellar Elisea Alvarado O'Donnell Art/Graphics/Web: Jennifer Retholtz Advertising: Karla Porter 419-340-8998 Holly Gonz les/Carla Soto Rico Distribution: Wally Rodela/Rick Keel Publisher Chief Financial Officer North Carolina Correspondent Michigan Correspondent Entertainment Editor UT Correspondent Reportero/Translations Staff Writer Staff Writer Staff Writer Graphics Manager & Webmaster Regional Sales Executive Account Executives Cacographer Layout & Sales Distribution Q Q Motors Transmissions Q Alternators Q Starters Open 7 Days PART S PARTS GAL ORE GALORE SELF SER VICE SERVICE Used Auto & Truck Parts Radiators Batteries Q Tires Q Glass Q Q Best Prices OVER 2000 VEHICLES at 11360 EAST 8 MILE Culturas Publications Inc. d.b.a. La Prensa Newspaper Headquarters: 616 Adams Street Toledo Ohio 43604 Tierra phone 419.870.6565 Fax: Use E-mail below. DEADLINE: MONDAY AT 11:00AM SALES: 419.870.6565 E-mail: laprensa1@yahoo.com web site: www.laprensatoledo.com Limit: One free copy per reader. Additional copies are $1.00 each. Hardcopy subscriptions $100 per year. Emailed link to pdf is gratis. Member of Newsfinder an affiliate with AP. by Culturas Publications Inc. 1989-2005 PHONE 313-245-2944 Roberta M. Rosa - Reportera Teodosio Feliciano - Reportero & Fot grafo OPENING SPRING 2005 Culturas Publications Inc. d.b.a. La Prensa Newspaper 205 West 20th Street Suite M-265 Lorain OH 44052 laprensa1@yahoo.com www.laprensatoledo.com La Prensa Lorain & Cleveland Staff La Prensa's Detroit Office 4454 W. Vernor Hwy. Detroit MI 48209 Sales Representatives: Carla Soto & Rico 313.729.4435 We accept: Discover Visa & MC VENTAS: Rub n Torres Lorain & Cleveland Field Representative 440.320.8221 Teodosio Feliciano Cleveland Field Representative 216.252-7773 ext. 2 June/junio 15 2005 La Prensa Complaints continue in affirmative action petition campaigns LANSING MI (AP) June 9: The group behind an antiaffirmative action ballot proposal said Thursday it is filing a campaign finance complaint against one of its political opponents. The Michigan Civil Rights Initiative complaint says the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action Integration & Immigrant Rights and Fight for Equality by Any Means Necessary (BAMN) intentionally underreported its campaign contributions. That allowed BAMN to avoid a trigger that would require it to open up its donor and expenditure records according to the complaint which MCRI spokesman Chetly Zarko said he faxed to the Michigan Secretary of State's office Thursday afternoon. The filing turns the tables on BAMN which earlier filed a complaint against the civil rights initiative. The Secretary of Page 3 Hardberger defeats Castro in San Antonio mayoral race The Hardberger-Castro 26 percent in the initial round By T.A. BADGER Associated Press Writer (AP): Retired state judge Phil Hardberger pulled out two close elections in a month and now he's the mayor-elect of San Antonio. Hardberger 70 rallied from a double-digit deficit in the May 7 general election to defeat youthful Latino city councilman Julian Castro in the June 7th mayoral runoff in San Antonio--the U.S.'s eighth-largest city. Hardberger received 66 830 votes or 51.5 percent in the two-man runoff while Castro finished with 63 001 votes or 48.5 percent. Hardberger will succeed Ed Garza who was blocked by term limits from running for a third two-year term at the helm of this South Texas city of nearly 1.2 million of whom about 59 percent are Latino. "Leadership is here " Hardberger proclaimed in his brief late-night victory speech. All of us together we will make a great great San Antonio.'' faceoff degenerated into nasty name-calling down the stretch as it became clear that the race was going to be very close. "I've had a lot of battles in my life and I've been fortunate to win most of them but this was one tough scrap " said Hardberger who had to win a close fight to even reach the runoff. "I'm glad it's over." Castro 30 got 42 percent of the mayoral votes during May's general election and it appeared he was on track to become the second Latino in a matter of weeks to be elected mayor of a major U.S. city. Antonio Villaraigosa won in Los Angeles last month. Afterward he hinted that while he tasted defeat for the first time in this election his political career is far from over. "This just wasn't our time " he said in his concession speech "but it will be one day." Hardberger who got 30 percent of the May 7 vote made up ground on Castro quickly by getting the endorsement of ex-councilman Carroll Schubert who had finished at of voting. Hardberger received about 58 percent in last week's early voting period but that advantage steadily dwindled as ballots cast on election day were counted. Castro got as close as about 1 800 votes late in the counting before a late burst of support came in from the districts where Schubert had run strong. Typically runoffs in San Antonio attract fewer voters than the preceding general election but in this case more than 15 000 additional ballots were cast in the runoff. Rhetoric and TV ads from both camps got feisty in the final weeks as the race tightened. But after the election was decided Castro urged his backers to rally around the incoming mayor. "I think both candidates did a great job in this campaign talking about San Antonio's future " Castro said. "And tonight we need to stand united behind Judge Hardberger." Breves: (Continuaci n de p.1) secreto en tanto se informa a sus familiares sobre su deceso. Otros cinco soldados resultaron heridos el jueves cuando un autom vil bomba conducido por un militante suicida atac su convoy entre Beiyi y Tikrit 130 kil metros al norte de Bagdad dijo el ej rcito. Cuatro de los soldados fueron evacuados a una instalaci n militar y uno de ellos regres al servicio activo. Ninguno de ellos presentaba lesiones que pusieran en peligro sus vidas. Hasta el viernes unos 1684 soldados norteamericanos han muerto desde el inicio de la guerra en Irak en marzo del 2003 de acuerdo con estimaciones de Associated Press. Volc n mexicano nuevamente hace erupci n MEXICO (AP): El Volc n de Colima en el occidente de M xico hizo nuevamente erupci n luego de un fuerte rugido la noche del jueves mandando una columna de humo que se alz a los cielos pero no con la fuerza suficiente para llegar a comunidades cercanas. La explosi n en el cr ter del tambi n llamado "Volc n de Fuego" de 3.802 metros de alto ocurri poco despu s de las 22.00 y tuvo aproximadamente la mitad de la potencia de las ocurridas en d as recientes de acuerdo con un comunicado emitido por una estaci n de vigilancia. En la frontera entre los estados de Colima y Jalisco el volc n ha tenido seis espectaculares erupciones en las ltimas tres semanas la m s potente la noche del lunes cuando lanz lava a cinco kil metros de altura y ba la cercana ciudad de Colima con cenizas. Los expertos se alan que los patrones de viento en el rea podr an llevar cenizas a zonas pobladas. La erupci n del lunes fue considerada por las autoridades como la m s potente en dos d cadas. El Volc n de Colima cuya primera erupci n registrada data del siglo XVI es considerado uno de los m s activos del pa s. En 1913 una explosi n provoc un cr ter de 500 metros y cubri de ceniza a Guadalajara capital de Jalisco y localizada a unos 120 kil metros del volc n. State this week dismissed the BAMN complaint which accused the initiative of money laundering and other campaign finance violations. The anti-affirmative action group is asking that BAMN and its lawyers be penalized for filing a frivolous complaint. The new complaint also accuses BAMN of its own campaign violations. "They filed a complaint against us and that prompted us to look at their campaign finance reports " Zarko said. Zarko's letter to state elections officials said his organization regretted "the significant waste of public resources BAMN's frivo- lous and politically motivated complaint has generated." A message seeking comment was left with BAMN Thursday afternoon. The proposed ballot initiative would stop public agencies and universities from granting preferential treatment based on race color ethnicity national origin or sex. It targets the November 2006 ballot. On the Net: The Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action Integration & Immigrant Rights and Fight for Equality by Any Means Necessary (BAMN): www.bamn.com Michigan Civil Rights Initiative: www.michigancivilrights.org AURORA ACADEMY K-Grade 8 Certified Teachers All Day Everyday Kindergarten Tuition Free Title 1 Program Special Education Program Individualized Instruction--Hands on Learning Breakfast & Lunch Program Received 2 Commendations from the Ohio State Board of Education for Academic Progress Accepting Registrations NOW! Call 419-693-6841 for information. Established in 1998 541 Utah St. Toledo Ohio 43605 Spider man lo v es these w e bs : www .la pr ensa toledo .com www .v ocesla tinas and www .g r upo vidane ws .com lov we bs: www.la ensatoledo toledo.com www.v .vocesla oceslatinas tinas www.g upovidane vidanews ws.com P gina 4 La Prensa FLOC is alleged to have charged union dues in M xico in order to protect workers from Mexican businesses that "want to enslave workers and pay miserable wages" In reality the flyer that Mr. Greene and FLOC distributed offered and continues to offer FLOC's telephone numbers in Monterrey and the support of our casa de hospedaje to FLOC's members who have to wait to get their visas processed by the U.S. Consulate before they go on to work in North Carolina. This complaint consists of patently fraudulent charges that appear designed to intimidate and question the legitimacy of FLOC's activities in M xico on behalf of the Mexican workers who are employed in North Carolina by the NCGA pursuant to the CBA contract that FLOC negotiated with the NCGA. FLOC has absolutely no interest in organizing any union for any employee of a business located in M xico. The sole purpose of the FLOC office Monterrey is to assist educate and inform Mexican H2A workers employed by the NCGA with respect to their rights under the CBA. Those rights include hiring in M xico without discrimination and according to the seniority system specified in FLOC's CBA with the NCGA. On September 16 2004 FLOC won a groundbreaking agreement with NCGA that granted these and other protections to the more than 7500 temporary guest workers that labor in the fields of North Carolina with the NCGA. The present charges against Mr. Greene appear to suggest that there are powerful interests in M xico who are completely hostile to FLOC's and Mr. Greene's work to ensure that the nondiscrimination and seniority hiring rights of the CBA are enforced. Unfortunately it appears that this is hostility to FLOC's vigorous enforcement of the CBA rights of H2A Mexican workers against discrimination and for seniority hiring is likely to result in more attacks against FLOC and FLOC staff members like Mr. Greene for the work that they do in M xico. Without that work the rights of H2A Mexican employees of the NCGA to non-discrimination and seniority hiring in North Carolina under the CBA that those H2A Mexican workers have with the NCGA would quickly disappear. FLOC had hoped that the complaint against Mr. Greene by the Instituto would be terminated without any further processing. However at the present time Mr. Greene has been notified that there will be a 15 day investigation into the validity of these charges. To date he has not been provided with the original or a copy of the 30-page written statement of the charges against him or any other written document that purports to identify the witnesses or evidence against him with respect to the "trafficking" and other charges against him. This fundamental failure cannot be under-emphasized as the charges against Mr. Greene could be converted into a penal case. In order to prevent Mr. Greene's physical detention FLOC has been forced to both retain the services of a Mexican attorney and to pay an "amparo" (the quasiequivalent of a bond under June/junio 15 2005 Letter to the Editor from Baldemar Vel squez president of FLOC: Powerful interests in M xico have instigated the filing of a complaint in the Instituto Nacional de Migraci n against Brendan Greene Organizer for the Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC/AFLCIO) for "human trafficking" and "participating in political activities." This complaint is a thinly veiled attempt to stop the groundbreaking work FLOC is doing in M xico as part of its efforts to enforce the rights that Mexican migrant workers have obtained through FLOC's collective bargaining agreement (CBA) with a large North Carolina agricultural employer association the North Carolina Grower's Association Inc. (NCGA) that obtains its workers exclusively with the assistance of Mexican recruiters. The complaint alleges that Brendan Greene asked 3 individuals to pay him in order for Mr. Greene to process their work visas when those three came into FLOC's Monterrey office looking for employment. The complaint also included a forged FLOC pamphlet that Mr. Greene allegedly distributed in which U.S. law) of several thousand dollars. This is the first labor agreement to gain representation for temporary guest workers in the history of both the United States and M xico and we must make sure that it survives to serve as an example for both Mexican workers in the United States and H2A employers other than the NCGA both inside and outside of North Carolina of how a guest worker program should be and can be run with labor protections and voz y voto para los trabajadores! Without the active work of FLOC employees like Brendan and the courage of H2A workers in M xico who continue to protest against the violation in M xico of their rights against discrimination and seniority hiring under the CBA this effort will not succeed. We are asking that you to contribute to those efforts by: 1. Contributing whatever funds you can to F.L.R.P./M xico Defense Fund to pay for legal expenses necessary to defend Mr. Greene and other FLOC staff or members like him. Please send any funds to: Farm Labor Research Project Inc. 1221 Broadway Toledo Ohio 43609 (A taxdeductible 501 (c)(3) charity). 2. Authorizing the listing of your name or your organization's name to a petition to the Instituto to terminate the deportation proceedings against Brendan Greene. Please direct your authorizing e-mail or correspondence to: Jerry Ceille at jceille@floc.com or FLOC 1221 Broadway Toledo Ohio 43509. 3. Indicating whether you have any interest in being a member in the National FLOC/M xico Legal Defense Committee to develop activities or other actions in support of FLOC Mr. Greene and FLOC staff or members like Mr. Greene. Please direct your e-mail or correspondence expressing any such interest to Baldemar Vel squez at: FLOC 1221 Broadway Toledo Ohio 43609 or bvelasq@floc.com. www.laprensatoledo.com current events photographs links weather classifieds copies of La Prensa can be found at www.laprensatoledo.com
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