Word: hispanicism
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At the Harvard Management Company, the head of the household walked out last year for a new life at a start-up hedge fund. A wealthy and well dressed outsider took his place. One might say that life among the University’s endowment managers has come to resemble...
Consider the case of Beltway—the white neighborhood that has a growing Hispanic population. For anyone with a moderate understanding of the geography of Chicago, my lifelong home, it’s not hard to figure out Beltway’s true identity. There are only two neighborhoods...
White, non-Hispanic students, who comprised two-thirds of the bachelor’s degree recipients, had lower rates of unemployment than other groups. But in spite of higher rates of unemployment than white, non-Hispanic students, Asian-American students had higher salaries by 19 percent.
51% Growth in college and grad-school enrollment among minorities in the U.S. from 1993 to 2003--the most recent year for which data are available--due largely to the Hispanic population boom
In 2004, the U.S. Census Bureau reported that people of Hispanic origin represented 8.2 percent of all U.S. citizens but only 6 percent of actual voters. Voter turnout was 47.2 percent among registered Hispanic voters, lower than every demographic except for Asians.