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  1. #1
    Senior Member swatchick's Avatar
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    First New Year Babies

    In both Miami Dade and Broward County both first New Year babies were Hispanic. The one in Dade County the parents were originally from Venezula and came from Peru. In Broward County there was nothing said about the parents background.
    I wonder how many anchor babies were the First New Year baby.
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  2. #2
    Senior Member crazybird's Avatar
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    More than what any of us want to know.
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  3. #3
    Senior Member BorderFox's Avatar
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    That would be an interesting thing to find out. I for one would like to know.
    Deportacion? Si Se Puede!

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    Senior Member redbadger's Avatar
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    I'm sure if you call the White House they can tell you.... as I am sure the families were sent Welcome Wagon gifts...and new bady gifts..along with future funds for College...free health care...stocks and bonds
    Never look at another flag. Remember, that behind Government, there is your country, and that you belong to her as you do belong to your own mother. Stand by her as you would stand by your own mother

  5. #5

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    I don't want to know---it ranks right up there with injuries related to fireworks, and DWI arrests. Another result of stupidity disguised as newsworthy events!
    Title 8,U.S.C.§1324 prohibits alien smuggling,conspiracy,aiding and
    abetting!

  6. #6
    Senior Member Skip's Avatar
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    Area's first baby born at Rancho Springs Medical Center

    By: BRIAN ECKHOUSE - Staff Writer
    NORTH COUNTY TIMES
    JANUARY 2, 2006



    MURRIETA -- The seconds were ticking down until midnight, but the Sanchez family of Murrieta were not at a party celebrating the coming New Year, nor were they watching the ball drop on TV.

    Maite Sanchez, 37, was having contractions. So the family began preparing to go to Rancho Springs Medical Center in Murrieta.

    At 3:14 a.m. Monday morning, Maite delivered her and Tomas Sanchez's second child -- and the first baby born in 2007 in Southwest County.


    Tomas Sanchez wasn't surprised that his first son, Maximilian, was born on Jan. 1. That was Maite's due date.

    "They just were anticipating coming here, going through the birth, so there were no parties," said Lupe Padilla, who translated for Maite. Tomas Sanchez, who moved to Southern California in the mid-1970s from Acapulco, Mexico, speaks some English. His wife, however, moved here in 2001, and speaks no English.

    That they were the parents of the first baby born in Southwest County didn't impress Maite. She had other emotions.

    "I'm tried, but more happy," she said of her son's birth.

    Her husband, though, was pleased.

    "I wanted the baby to born on Jan. 1," Tomas Sanchez said. "It's a special day of the year."

    For being the parents of the first baby born in Southwest County, the Sanchezes were given $500 worth of supplies and gift certificates to local eateries by Southwest Healthcare System, which operates Rancho Springs and Inland Valley medical centers, said system spokeswoman Teresa Fleege. Supplies included a car seat, diapers, wipes and a shirt with the name "Prince" sprawled across it.

    Eight hours after giving birth, Maite Sanchez was standing next to her husband, as their four-year-old daughter, Camila, intensely watched her new brother sleep, his mouth slightly open. The infant wore a white cap and slept under a white blanket of the same comfy fabric.

    Tomas Sanchez occasionally peeked at his son, smiling each time. At age 53, he waited a long time to be the father of a son.

    "When (Maite) was pregnant with Camila, we had the name, Maximilian, ready just in case it was a boy," he said.

    Maximilian also is the name of Tomas Sanchez's father. Maite and Tomas Sanchez plan to call the 6-pound, 12-ounce baby "Max" for short. He has no middle name.

    "Maximilian is enough," said Tomas Sanchez, smirking.

    The birth of Max means that Rancho Springs, not cousin Inland Valley, gets to claim the honor of delivering the region's first baby.

    Each year, Rancho Springs and Inland Valley engage in a mini-rivalry: Which of the two Southwest Healthcare Systems hospitals will deliver the first baby?

    Rancho Springs won by a wide margin Monday. The first baby at Inland Valley Medical Center in Wildomar didn't arrive until shortly before 11 a.m., Fleege said.

    Representatives of Inland Valley called Fleege to notify her of that birth, and asked if they had won.

    "I said, 'Not even close,'" Fleege said, laughing.

    Last year, however, Inland Valley delivered the first baby, Fleege said. In 2005, Rancho Springs bested Inland Valley by about 9 hours. But the real competition that year was in Rancho Springs itself: Two mothers were in labor there at the same time. Their babies were born within one minute of each other.

    2007's New Years Day could be the last time that Rancho Springs and Inland Valley battle for bragging rights.

    Rancho Springs is being expanded to accommodate all obstetrics for Southwest Healthcare System, Fleege said. The new obstetrics department is to have 17 labor and delivery rooms, a well-baby nursery and a newborn intensive care unit.

    The new building is expected to open in December or next January, Fleege said.

    -- Contact staff writer Brian Eckhouse at (951) 676-4315, Ext. 2626, or beckhouse@californian.com.

    Comments On This Story

    Note: Comments reflect the views of readers and not necessarily those of the North County Times or its staff.

    Angelrica
    wrote on January 01, 2007 11:28 PM:"Happy birthday Baby Max, Congrats to the proud parents and sister. May God Bless you all and Happy New Year."

    Roberto wrote on January 02, 2007 10:45 AM:"Wheres all the phobies?"

    cb wrote on January 02, 2007 10:54 AM:"Roberto, the phobies are punching the wall as a way to relief some anger in order to be able to type some hateful comments. LOL"

    Skip wrote on January 02, 2007 11:11 AM:"We are still here, but NCT won't post our comments."

    http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2007/01 ... 1_1_07.txt

  7. #7
    Senior Member Skip's Avatar
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    "They just were anticipating coming here, going through the birth, so there were no parties," said Lupe Padilla, who translated for Maite. Tomas Sanchez, who moved to Southern California in the mid-1970s from Acapulco, Mexico, speaks some English. His wife, however, moved here in 2001, and speaks no English.

    Comments On This Story


    Skip wrote on January 02, 2007 11:11 AM:"We are still here, but NCT won't post our comments."

    Cal wrote on January 02, 2007 11:50 AM:"What's a phobies?"

    Roberto wrote on January 02, 2007 12:03 PM:"Don't feel bad Skippy, We to are being spanked for being bad. FYI: Phobie = short for xenophobe"

    Skip wrote on January 02, 2007 12:40 PM:"Well at least you are all thinking exactly what we are thinking, even though the NCT will not post it. You are for giving away our country, and we are against it. It is that simple, even if the Liberal media will not print the truths for fear of offending somebody, or that they may be unpleasant."

    Syl wrote on January 02, 2007 12:45 PM:"There is no doubt that the people in the story are legal residents of the United States. Not even the NCT would feature a feel good story about Illegal Aliens like this? Would they? I just want to know how someone can live in the United States for 30 years or even 5 years and not know how to speak English? That sounds pretty divisive to me."

    http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2007/01 ... 1_1_07.txt

  8. #8
    Senior Member AmericanElizabeth's Avatar
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    The Oregonian never tells in their stories the legal stats on these people. Considering they live in Hillsboro, which some people lovingly refer to "Hillsburrito", I might guess the baby was an anchor baby.

    Baby came early, but right on time to be area's first in 2007
    Milestone - Anthony Israel Tavara is born 28 minutes after midnight at Tuality Community Hospital
    Tuesday, January 02, 2007
    MICHELLE COLE
    The Oregonian
    HILLSBORO -- The new year didn't start exactly as planned for the first baby born in 2007 in the Portland area.

    Anthony Israel Tavara wasn't due to arrive until Jan. 2, and his mother had a habit of delivering her babies late.

    But when Maria Tavara, 32, started feeling pains shortly after 8 p.m. on New Year's Eve, she figured she and her husband better go to Hillsboro's Tuality Community Hospital even if it might be a false alarm.

    At 12:28 a.m. New Year's Day, Tavara gave birth to a boy with lots of dark hair. He weighed in at 6 pounds, 10 ounces and measured nearly 18 inches long. He beat the second baby born in the Portland area by 13 minutes.

    His father, Everardo Tavara, 35, chose the baby's name -- Anthony, he said, because it would be easy for everyone to pronounce. He took the middle name, Israel, from the Bible.

    Everardo works at a Weyerhaeuser plant; Maria assembles electronic circuit boards for Tektronix. The couple fell in love while they were teenagers and have three older children: Adrian, 16; Victoria, 11; and Andrea, 6.

    The parents noticed that their newborn was quieter than the others on arrival.

    "He wasn't crying that much," his mother said. "And he didn't ask for food."

    Nurses noticed that, too. By daybreak Monday, baby Anthony was diagnosed with a platelet problem and transferred to the Providence St. Vincent Medical Center in Portland.

    Soon after 1 p.m., Maria Tavara left the hospital. She and her husband were proud and excited but also concerned for their baby.

    They had two girls at home eager to play with their new brother. The big brother was waiting, too. The Tavaras stopped to pick up the siblings before heading to St. Vincent.

    New Year's Day turned out to be busy for the hospital's neonatal intensive care unit. Six babies were admitted by late afternoon with at least two more expected, said Renee King, a hospital spokeswoman.

    Baby Anthony was sleeping in a glassed-enclosed isolation room when Maria and Everardo Tavara arrived.

    His cheeks were rosy. His condition: stable. If he continues on this path, his parents were told, he could go home in a couple of days.

    With Everardo standing by, nurses wrapped Anthony in a soft blanket and lifted him onto his mother's lap.

    Maria cradled "her little one" and stroked his chin. And Anthony yawned.

    Michelle Cole: 503-294-5143; michellecole@news.oregonian.com



    ©2007 The Oregonian
    "In the beginning of a change, the Patriot is a scarce man, Brave, Hated, and Scorned. When his cause succeeds however,the timid join him, For then it costs nothing to be a Patriot." Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  9. #9
    Senior Member Skip's Avatar
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    NCT thought about this post and then deleted it!
    :P


    Syl wrote on January 02, 2007 12:45 PM:"There is no doubt that the people in the story are legal residents of the United States. Not even the NCT would feature a feel good story about Illegal Aliens like this? Would they? I just want to know how someone can live in the United States for 30 years or even 5 years and not know how to speak English? That sounds pretty divisive to me."


    http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2007/01 ... ogcomments

  10. #10
    Senior Member fedupinwaukegan's Avatar
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    Lake County's 1st baby of 2007

    (http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/news ... S1.article)

    January 2, 2007

    By JUDY MASTERSON Staff Writer

    The first baby born in Lake County in 2007 was a 6-pound, 13-ounce boy who arrived at 3:28 a.m. Monday at Condell Medical Center in Libertyville.

    Luis Angel Mandeola, who was 19-inches long, is the first son for parents Areli Torrecilla and Luis Mandeola of Waukegan.

    Torrecilla, who spoke through a translator, said she had a smooth delivery despite the fact that her son arrived one-and-a-half months early. Little Luis is doing fine, she said.

    The couple, immigrants from Mexico who live in the Washington Park neighborhood, also has a 1-year-old daughter, Evelin.


    What does Torrecilla wish for her new child?

    "I'd like him to grow up to be a doctor," she said.

    Area hospitals, including Condell, celebrate the first baby of the new year by bestowing a large gift basket on the new parents.

    Other new-year arrivals included a boy born at 6:03 a.m. at Vista East Medical Center in Waukegan and an arrival at 4:45 a.m. at Lake Forest Hospital.

    A Lake Forest couple, Melanie and Sean Walsh, welcomed a 9.1-pound baby boy at 10 seconds after midnight at Evanston Hospital.
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