Hispanic entrepreneurs and Business Leaders. It just wrapped up in manhattan. Here to let us know what they learned, jerry arzu and danielle beyer, Business Leaders and members of the new america alliance, the organizing force behind the event. Congratulations, because this was the 15th year. Am i do i have it right . Thats correct. Way to go. So, youve been doing it a while. The whole purpose, the mission of this summit, is what . To bring together corporate interests, public interests, public Pension Funds, investors. With the hopes that . That we will be able to get emerging Latino Businesses funded. Mmhmm. That investors will have an opportunity to get access to those to those assets. So, danielle, are these businesses from just new york state or just wall street or throughout. The country . Theyre throughout the country throughout the country, managed by latinos. Mmhmm. Another big part of the summit is highlighting the triumphs of latino Business Leaders. Okay. Successful weve be
Hudson Reporter
SCOREBOARD
Remembering the sports people we lost in 2020; Taglieri, Stephans, Lewis among those who left a mark
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In the pandemic-ravaged year of 2020, when COVID-19 grabbed the headlines, there were some beloved people in the local sports world who we lost and will never be forgotten.
In August, it felt like time stood still when word that
Lou Taglieri had passed away suddenly at the age of 59. Taglieri was as much Hoboken as Frank Sinatra, as beloved as fresh bread and fresh mozzarella.
It was such a tragic loss that even legendary Super Bowl Most Valuable Player
Eli Manning of the Giants expressed his sadness when Taglieri, the former Hoboken head football coach, passed on. Taglieri had secured JFK Stadium for Manning, then a Hoboken resident, for use for Manning and his teammates during a work stoppage in 2011.