Tuesday, June 30, 2009

NEW OFFICERS for 2009-2010 School Year

Congratulations to new officers for the 2009 - 2010 school year! They are Carolina Mendoza (President), Natalia Sanchez (Vice President), Cynthia Hernandez (Treasurer) and Pricsyla Riquelme (Secretary).

Speaking on behalf of the board and myself, we are all here to help you make this the best year yet of Amigas Latinas for College.


Virginia Baxt, Executive Director and Founder
Amigas Latinas for College, Inc.
a 501 (c) (3) non-profit organization

Thursday, June 25, 2009

ALC Grads June 2009 Get-To-Gather


Amigas Latinas for College college students got together for an informal get-to-gather at the home of executive director and founder, Virginia Baxt, on Tuesday evening, June 23, 2009. Fun was had by all, as the pictures will show.


Campus Tour of Rice University

A campus tour of Rice University is scheduled for Wednesday, July 8 from 1:30 - 2:30 p.m. Please RSVP to Adriana Sanchez by June 30 so that she may have a count of how many will attend. If we do not have enough people who RSVP, we will have to cancel the tour.

To RSVP or for more information, contact Adriana at asanchez@amigaslatinas4college.org

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

College tour of St. Thomas University

A campus tour of St. Thomas University is scheduled for July 14 from 10:00 a.m. to noon. Please RSVP to Adriana Sanchez by July 10 so that she may have a count of how many will attend. If we do not have enough people who RSVP, we will have to cancel the tour.

To RSVP or for more information, contact Adriana at asanchez@amigaslatinas4college.org

Stay Cool at MFAH!

Come volunteer at the Museum of Fine Arts. It’s a Summertime Beach Party at the next Target Free First Sunday, July 5th. The MFAH needs volunteers, so if you want to be part of the fun, sign up ASAP.

Target Free First Sundays take place in the Audrey Jones Beck and Caroline Wiess Law buildings from 1:00 - 5:00 p.m. Volunteer shifts are from 12:30-3:00 p.m. and 2:30-5:00 p.m. You can sign up for one or both.

Young adults 13-17 are encouraged to volunteer (children's activities only).

Volunteers can help in one of two areas:

1. Children's activities: direct interaction with children and craft projects or
2. Directional assistance: volunteers are stationed at the museum entrances to welcome visitors.

If you would like to volunteer, please call 713-639-7507 or e-mail lgilmour@mfah.org with your name, desired time, and preferred assignment* (children's activities or directional assistance).

*While every effort will be made to accommodate volunteer assignment preferences, we may need to reassign volunteers to the areas of greatest need at the time of check-in. We appreciate your flexibility.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Garage Sale a Success!

Thank you to our ALC members, directors and friends for making the fundraiser/garage sale a huge success. Special thanks to Adriana Sanchez and Paula Alam and their families and staff for their hard work and to Polly for providing us with a terrific location for the event. Even though the weather was hot and muggy, many volunteers showed up to help. Thank you as well to everyone who donated items to sell and food and drinks for the volunteers.

Here are some pictures from the event.




Thursday, June 11, 2009

Univision Radio interview for 'Awakening the Dreamer'

Univision Radio is airing Amigas Latinas for College "Awakening the Dreamer" symposium information this Sunday, June 14, 2009 on radio station 106.5 FM from 6 to 6:30 AM. Radio Host Renzo Heredia interviewed Amigas Latinas for College parent, Cleusa Cevallos, for information about the symposium and Amigas Latinas for College since daughter Priscila Cevallos, co-facilitator of the June 20th symposium, could not attend to do the interview.

For more information on what this initiative is about check their website, http://awakeningthedreamer.org/, and attend the 9:00 - 1:00 PM symposium at the HEB Bunkerhill Community Room, 9710 Katy Freeway, June 20, 2009. We hope to see you there.


Cleusa Cevallos, Adriana Sanchez and Adriana's son, Nicholas

Cleusa and Adriana

Cleusa

Cleusa and Renzo Heredia

Renzo Heredia

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Please volunteer to help at the ALC Garage Sale

We need your help at the upcoming ALC Garage Sale on June 13, 2009, at the Amegy Bank parking lot, 5301 Bissonnett in Bellaire.

Please sign up for one or more shifts to work the day of sale. Shifts are as follows:

6am -9am Set-up
9am - 11am Assist with garage sale
11am-1pm Assist with garage sale
1pm -2pm Closing of garage sale

We'll have refreshments available for everyone. Also, we are still accepting donations of items for the sale.

Please support Amigas Latinas by helping us raise money! For more information or to donate items, please contact Adriana Sanchez at asanchez71@att.net or at 281-777-3534.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

ALC Hilda Bautista speaks to immigrant students at Lee College



May 28, 2009

My name is Hilda Bautista I have just completed my third year and am about to enter my fourth and final year at the University of Texas at Austin. I am majoring in Human Biology with a minor in Social aspects of Health and Disease and will be applying to medical school upon graduation next spring.

I am going to share with you a little bit of my background and why I am here tonight. I come from a large family, five children and two parents make seven and am the oldest of my siblings with a ten year difference between my youngest brother and myself.

I was born in Mexico and I have been living here in the United States for a little over 18 years, so the United States is truly the only country I have ever known. I grew up in West Houston, jumping around from one apartment complex to another, but luckily remained in the same schools growing up and teachers always gave my parents good remarks about how I was doing in school. Doing well in classes really prompted my goals to do well in school and I aspired to be a doctor. Yet, no one ever really told me how that dream could be accomplished. How would I go from being the “little Rocio” as my family would call me, and become the respected doctor I aspired to be?

Back then I didn’t have a clue. In middle school all of my friend’s parents had gone to college or had some type of formal education. Their parents were professionals, they went to schools like UT and Texas A&M, and were engineers, business. . I didn’t even know what “UT” was. So I knew that I somehow had to get to college if I ever wanted to achieve my dreams. But I had no real guide as to how to do it or what that meant to “go to college.” How would I apply? Who pays for college or is it free? And I that time I was too young to know which where the questions to ask. . . .

. . . So in some ways I have beat the odds. I stayed on track throughout high school knowing that their would be a light at the end of the tunnel, a light held by my mentors and teachers, and graduation, a sort of liberation into the real world, or the real world of college in my case.
It is important to know that from my high school, not many students attend a four-year college. Surely, a handful more go to community college but still transfer to a bigger university to pursue their professional goals. but there are many more that go into the minimum-wage work force, which we know today, is unstable and insecure and at best pays to make ends meet. A handful of my friends settled down and started families, even. And that is a great responsibility that I personally could not handle, not yet. They have made decisions that have changed their whole lives. But so have I.

After sending out applications to 10 Colleges and Universities, I got waitlisted in a handful and rejected from a couple, and accepted at the state universities. My final decision of which to attend was a financial one, . . . I had visited the campus and saw the diversity among the students, a diversity that I was excited about. My parent’s were on board with my decision. If they had any hesitation about me attending UT, it was under my radar. Once I got settled in Austin at the University, I was excited to be out of Houston , ready to explore the city and take advantage of it as a student. I was eager to study hard to get good grades, which I needed not only to maintain my scholarships but also to be a competitive applicant when Medical Schools applications came around. Now a little bit about College life.

College life is tempting. I am not going to lie to you there are many invitations to socialize in college. There’s independence that I didn’t have back at home on top of the many new friends and the city itself, full of night life, was overwhelming and if I would let it, a huge wave that would suffocate me in all of its glory. There are those who sink, the ones who unfortunately flunk out the first semester, and those that ride the wave safely to shore, the students who succeed academically and are safe for one more semester, or until the next wave comes in. There were many nights when my friends were going to watch a movie, hang out, go to a party, but I knew that I couldn’t, that I had to buckle down and finish my homework or study for an exam. I had my priorities and keeping a focus throughout the semester allowed me to not be on the line when finals came around at the end of the semester. Fighting temptations that can consume your nights and your wallets (let’s face it, going out can add up), but having friends that would study into the night always made it easier to fight desire to go out. However, once I had a routine down, I knew when I could make time to study and time to play.

College is challenging. The professors introduce the material in class a lot of times talking about theories and other things that can be way over the student’s head and then You are responsible to figure out the problems. Once in a while you are lucky enough to get a professor that not only gives you examples in class and makes the material tangible and enjoyable. I have had classes, that no matter how hard I tried, the material was just too challenging. But there are always resources. There Tutoring centers and the professors are almost always willing to help you during their office hours. . . .

. . . I know that I have one more year to go, and have to yet start my career, but know that I am here representing only a sample of the many career opportunities that are available in college. There are anthropologist, geologists, engineers, accountant, historians, writers, poets, mathematicians, just to name a few. But the thread that holds us together is higher education. Higher education is the only passport we need to navigate the intellectual world. We are young and full of potential and the world needs us to give back with our ideas, our experience, and our skills. It is up to us, up to you, to make a difference and that begins with you and your education.
It is always important to remind yourself the purpose of doing what you are doing. My parents came to America hoping for a better future for their children and I am going to school because I have younger brothers that need a role model in school. But in the bigger scheme of things, I am doing it because there is a community out there that needs us to go into professions where we understand their problems and background. And demonstrate “que si se puede.”

Awakening the Dreamer Symposium June 20th - Update 1


Connect with people who care about sustainability, spirituality and social justice, the biggest challenges and opportunities of our time.

Our mission is bringing forth an environmentally sustainable, spiritually fulfilling and socially just human presence on Planet Earth. Source: Awakening the Dreamer website

RSVP to Adriana Sanchez
281-777-3534

Monday, June 1, 2009

Opportunities for Community Service

Here are some wonderful community service opportunities for ALC members. Please consider offering your time and energy to these great causes.




June 20, Saturday 9:AM – noon
House of Amos – Community Center and Food Pantry
8030 Boone Road (@ Bissonnet) Houston, Texas 77072
Volunteers needed to assist in boxing food, vegetables for distribution to seniors and needy families in low income community. Volunteers should wear cool, casual clothes with ALC t-shirt, comfortable shoes, be prepared to work outdoors.

June 23, Tuesday 11:AM – 1:PM
Bayland Community Center - Patriotic Luncheon
5 – 6 volunteers needed to serve catered luncheon to 250 seniors. Volunteers will meet at Amegy Bank, 5301 Bissonnet, then drive to Bayland Center. Will receive Amegy Bank T-shirt and free BBQ luncheon. Dress casual/ jeans with Amegy t-shirt.

July 18, Saturday 9:AM – noon
House of Amos – Community Center and Food Pantry
8030 Boone Road (@Bissonnet) Houston Texas 77072
Volunteers needed to assist in boxing food, vegetables for distribution to seniors and needy families in low income community. Volunteers should wear cool, casual clothes with ALC t-shirt, comfortable shoes, be prepared to work outdoors.

Ripley House Summer Mixer

The Ripley House Campus of Neighborhood Centers, Inc. invites ALC members to its Summer Mixer to meet its staff and learn more about the organization, its programs and upcoming special events.


Friday, June 26, 2009
7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Plaza Amistad, 4410 Navigation
Houston, Texas 77011

Business casual attire. Refreshments will be served.
Please RSVP by June 10 to ytrevino@neighborhood-centers.org