Voters are being pulled hard from both directions in South Texas (2/25/2008)

The number of people speaking Spanish at home in the U.S. has increased from 30.5 million in 2004 to 34.0 million in 2006 (11/29/2007)

Guadalupe Perez Gonzales filed suit in a Waco district court Wednesday against Joe Rodriguez and the chamber (11/29/2007)

Latino community leaders see this as the time to act if they want to head off gangs becoming so organized they actually claim specific Salem neighborhoods (11/28/2007)

The Patriots drew a 7.5 rating among Hispanic viewers, surpassing ABC's "Dancing with the Stars" (11/28/2007)

In recent weeks the worry about illegal immigration has slightly edged out terrorism for fourth place (11/28/2007)

There are 11,621 firefighters in NYC, but just 666 of them are Hispanic, 337 are black and 75 Asian-American (11/28/2007)

While the immigration debate in Congress ended months ago, the immigrant jokes haven't (11/28/2007)

Nearly 9 percent of Hispanic high school students dropped out of high school in the 2005-06 school year (11/27/2007)

Venezuela seems likely to start an extraordinary experiment in centralized, oil-fueled socialism (11/17/2007)

Marilyn Martinez dies at 52 (11/13/2007)

Three guns linked to Pancho Villa were auctioned for nearly $29,000 (11/12/2007)

Juan Luis Guerra was the big winner at the eighth annual Latin Grammy Awards (11/09/2007)

Last year, blacks were 2.3 times more likely, and Hispanics twice as likely, to get high-cost loans as whites (11/04/2007)

"The Democrats clearly do not want to antagonize Hispanic voters" (11/01/2007)

Maybe Mr. Gold was working the wrong market (10/30/2007)

Democratic strategists know that the Latino vote is their future (10/29/2007)


The B & H photo and electronics equipment store has agreed to pay $4.3 million to settle a discrimination case (10/17/2007)

"For blacks, especially, it mimics the 50s-style suburban movement, most pronounced for married couples with children, owners and the upwardly mobile" (10/17/2007)

Disparities in Mortgages by Race (10/15/2007)

"Mr. McPherson knows what he likes and he works extremely hard to make ABC's shows better" (10/07/2007)


We would like to find fugitive aliens at 100 percent of the locations we go to, but it's not an exact science (9/21/2007)

"The Republican candidates need to understand that they are doing a great disservice to our country" (9/10/2007)

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Nearly 9 percent of Hispanic high school students dropped out of high school in the 2005-06 school year
 
 
November 27, 2007
 
Hispanic youths in North Carolina, struggling to find acceptance in U.S. culture, are increasingly turning to gangs and other self-destructive behavior, according to studies and those who follow the trends.

Nearly 9 percent of Hispanic high school students dropped out of high school in the 2005-06 school year - a rate higher than any other group in the state and double the rate of white students, according to state figures. More than half of Hispanic girls in North Carolina are expected to be pregnant before their 20th birthdays, according to the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy.

And the problems are getting worse, according to a national survey by New York University professor Marcelo Suarez-Orozco, which found that immigrant teens were doing worse in school five years after the study began.

Meanwhile, more than 40 percent of Hispanic immigrant teenagers in North Carolina say they have faced ethnic discrimination, often from their classmates, according to a study of 300 people conducted by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's School of Social Work.

That study found a population with emotional scars, uneducated parents and the pervasive feeling that they are not accepted by Americans.

Juana Martinez, 17, a senior at Wake Forest-Rolesville High School, said she saw that discrimination at a recent meeting of Latinos Constructing a Better Future, where she serves as president. She recalled that several boys talks about taunts from their classmates.

"They said that some people have told them, 'Hey, go back to Mexico,' " Martinez said. "And some of them aren't even from Mexico. They were born here."

Martinez said many of her Hispanic classmates are heading to trouble, with girls getting pregnant, boys wearing gang colors and others dropping out.

Mike Figueras, who runs a gang prevention program for the Hispanic advocacy group El Pueblo, said children whose needs aren't met at home or at school are prime candidates for joining gangs because they seek a feeling of belonging.

"It's so important to the kids that they're willing to do anything," he said. "We're looking at 11-year-olds joining gangs."

Hispanic gangs are the fastest growing segment of the underground culture in North Carolina, according to a 2005 study that found that Hispanic accounted for a quarter of the state's nearly 400 gangs.

William Lassiter, manager of the state's Center for the Prevention of School Violence, said some Hispanic students are four or five years behind and illiterate in their native language. Their parents are often disconnected and swamped with work, according to observers.

And if the students join gangs, Lassiter said, educators often write them off.

"The big misconception is that these kids are not savable, that once they're in, they're in for life," he said. "That's just not true. We need to ask ourselves: How do we serve these kids better?"