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<p>Una nueva película de gran presupuesto sobre la vida y el legado de César E. Chávez tratará de cerrar la brecha entre jóvenes latinos urbanos y el movimiento de los derechos de los trabajadores agrícolas actualmente.</p>
<p>Cesar Chavez: An American Hero, una película dirigida por el actor mexicano Diego Luna, se estrena el viernes 28 de marzo a través del país, y la United Farm Worker Foundation está organizando un evento de alfombra roja y un panel de discusión esa misma noche en San Diego.</p>
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<strong>Frontera NorteSur</strong></p>
<p>As dusk stirs, Acapulco’s Zocalo, or town square, becomes a cacophony of sounds. On a given day, visitors might hear a woman street musician playing a violin, the municipal orchestra soothing a mainly older audience, a poet reading revolutionary verse, or a clown tickling the old funny bones.</p>
In the wake of President Barack Obama’s declaration of the challenge of helping young men of color succeed as a “moral issue for the country,” Cuyamaca College recently held a workshop led by two San Diego State University professors highlighting the issue’s relevance to community colleges.
Frank Harris III and J. Luke Wood are faculty members in SDSU’s College of Education, co-directing the Minority Male Community College Collaborative, a program affiliated with SDSU’s doctoral program in Community College Leadership.
You may have heard about the magnitude 4.4 earthquake centered in the Los Angeles Basin that struck early in the morning this week. Seismologists are saying it is the most significant shake in Southern California since 2008 when Chino Hills got a 5.5 jolt. Maybe it got you thinking about what you would do if it – or a much larger quake – had been centered in San Diego County?