In the United States, among Hispanics, Mexican Americans have the lowest rate of asthma. |
|
Some of these are in immigrant gateway states, with growing numbers of Hispanics and Asians. |
|
African Americans and Hispanics shared the belief that education would help reduce the stigma. |
|
Of the Hispanics in the district, 59 percent reported they speak only Spanish in the home. |
|
This means that projections and, therefore birth rates, are not very reliable for Hispanics. |
|
Twice as many Hispanics as European American students feel very comfortable. |
|
Hispanics dominate large portions of counties in a span of states stretching from California to Texas. |
|
It also enjoys solid support from gays and Hispanics, the nation's fastest-growing minority. |
|
Judging from the polls, they are even starting to attract upwardly mobile Hispanics who regularly attend church. |
|
They must also explain their policies to the Hispanics who are enfranchised. |
|
You should explain that to the farm owners in Alabama who cannot get their crops picked because all the Hispanics self-deported. |
|
But the issue in California, because Hispanics are so integrated and so fundamental to the society of California, indeed the entire country. |
|
For example, a significant number of young Hispanics and Asians are visiting their parents' homelands to study their parents' native languages. |
|
The racial and ethnic breakdown is seven Caucasians, four Hispanics and one Asian. |
|
And Hispanics are a little over-represented, 11 percent of the deaths versus 9 percent of the total face. |
|
While not universal, some operators are pursuing Hispanics with targeted initiatives. |
|
Hispanics descended from Europeans are no more heat-tolerant than other whites. |
|
More than two million more Hispanics live in the United States than African Americans. |
|
Yet for many African Americans and Hispanics, as well as other ethnic groups, a larger body still holds positive social value. |
|
But Hispanics continue to lag well behind the rest of the labor market in wages. |
|
|
That includes 1,550 Hispanics, American Indians and other ethnic minorities. |
|
According to these standards, Hispanics or Latinos are referred to as an ethnic group. |
|
He points to the profound cultural differences between Hispanics and Anglos. |
|
The diffusion of Hispanics outward from these core areas, in terms of total numbers, is far less rapid than recent press accounts imply. |
|
The same trend is evident among Hispanics at more selective universities, the commission said. |
|
For all anyone knows it could work equally well in Asians or Caucasians or Hispanics. |
|
Well, we're seeing how Hispanics are really integrating into American society. |
|
When I made my career choice, I knew I wanted to reach out to under-represented groups, especially Hispanics. |
|
Riley says that few of those students are Hispanics or African Americans and he wants to see the numbers doubled. |
|
And where we spent the resources and we talked to Hispanics, we picked up the Hispanic vote. |
|
While not the first time Mott's had marketed to Hispanics in Spanish-language TV and print, previous efforts proved spotty and inconsistent. |
|
While most white men backed him, majorities of women, African-Americans and Hispanics did not. |
|
That's because there just weren't that many Hispanics playing in the majors. |
|
There is some directed diffusion of Hispanics and Asians outward from these immigrant ports of entry. |
|
For the last several months, prominent Democrats have urged Hispanics to make their voices heard on Election Day. |
|
Even as Hispanics favored Democrats this week, some Republicans wooed them ardently and made surprising inroads. |
|
Yet the brutish rhetoric inevitably coming from GOP opponents will only alienate Hispanics even more than they already are. |
|
But in California Hispanics comprise 23 percent of the electorate versus just over 12 percent nationally. |
|
But fluency and being able to talk to Hispanics are two entirely different matters. |
|
Other Hispanics complain about a lack of good Latino comedies in English. |
|
|
Family intactness was a significant factor only for whites and Hispanics. |
|
Although Salvadoreans are the fourth largest group of Hispanics in the United States, little data exist on their sociodemographic profile, health beliefs and behaviors. |
|
It is common to see white Americans and Hispanics picking their fruits, vegetables and milk at Indian grocery stores and yes, the occasional packet of samosas and spices too. |
|
That accumulation of identities is already a sine qua non when speaking of Hispanics, like Zimmerman. |
|
He was actually soft as mush, straining to mollify Hispanics without roiling his own nativist base. |
|
If Hispanics challenge such a response, their Euro-American co-religionists often perceive them as being unappreciative of the welcome offered them. |
|
I wouldn't have expected as many Hispanics or Hmong or Somalians. |
|
He strides both the Harlem and Brooklyn black power bases and is the single most popular politician among both blacks and Hispanics in the streets. |
|
Commentators gabbed endlessly about the number of women, blacks, Hispanics, and other minorities in attendance, and the cameras never stopped looking for an illustrative face. |
|
Several obstacles put African-Americans, Hispanics and Native Americans at a disadvantage in the CPA profession. |
|
There's little doubt that the North American Free Trade Agreement will be a boon to Mexico, but are Hispanics buying it? |
|
Texas has a large percentage of Hispanics descended from Basques who participated in the conquest of New Spain. |
|
The falloff in enrollment is leading schools to retool or broaden such departments to include Hispanics of all nationalities. |
|
Most Hispanics in the Americas have mixed European and Indigenous ancestry. |
|
The parish also draws a few Tejanos, meaning Hispanics who have lived in Texas for generations, in some cases since the Spanish colonial era. |
|
Moreover, while the author did interview both sexes, nearly all races, and Hispanics, many of the interviewees did not embody the typical temp. |
|
Formerly British Honduras, Belize has a diverse population of 250,000 Afro-Caribbeans, Hispanics, Creoles, mestizos, Mayans and others. |
|
By taking account of ethnic attrition, the assimilation rate of Hispanics in the United States improves significantly. |
|
More recent immigration in the late 20th century and early 21st century has fueled new communities of Hispanics and Asians. |
|
Hispanics are most concentrated in the neighborhoods of Elmwood, the West End, and Upper and Lower South Providence. |
|
|
He focuses on the dual dynamics of the Americanization of Hispanics and the Hispanicization of the Americans. |
|
An ever-increasing number of Hispanics, particularly Mexicans, are immigrating to the United States. |
|
Hispanic Unity's mission is to empower Hispanics and other members of the community to become self-sufficient, civically engaged, and lead productive lives. |
|
African and European Americans, however, continue to wield a stronger political influence because of the lower rates of citizenship and voting among Asians and Hispanics. |
|
Folk remedies for upset stomach, including azarcon and greta among Hispanics, ba-baw-san among Chinese or ghasard among Indians, may contain large amounts of lead. |
|
You don't see all the Armenians in one corner, all the Asians in one corner, all the Hispanics in one corner,'' said Arax Gevorgyan, who is a sophomore. |
|
Having a lower income and the presence of more food deserts have additively been linked to obesity, a factor that would also be relevant to Hispanics. |
|
Among those who self-identified themselves as Native American, 80 percent of them had white ancestors, along with 20 percent for blacks, Hispanics, and Asians. |
|
To illustrate the importance of a high ppv, suppose many Hispanics misreport themselves as non-Hispanic whites, but the ppv for Hispanics remains high. |
|