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"I'm getting all this experience about the system, so they will benefit," he says. But as an undocumented immigrant, Coronel can't get federal aid or loans, and he'll have trouble finding a good job after school without proper work papers. "I worry all the time about what will happen when I get out of college," he says. "Every single day." The poll finds that many Hispanics are engaged in a cultural balancing act, eager to fit in while also striving to preserve their ethnic identities. Foreign-born Hispanics are more likely to think it's important to change and blend into society than are U.S.-born Hispanics. Segura said that may be a matter of necessity: Immigrants, especially those who can't speak English, are "more likely to pay a price" if they can't move freely through society. Those who are born here, on the other hand, tend to place more importance on maintaining their distinct cultures. "It is like I have a foot in both worlds," says Sindy Avila, 21, an undocumented immigrant brought here by her parents as a 1-year-old. "I make my identity as I go," says Avila, a student at Portland State University. The poll makes clear the political pressures that Hispanics are feeling as the public debates Arizona's tough new immigration law and questions are raised about the guarantee of citizenship given to babies who are born in the United States to illegal immigrants. Before the Arizona law passed on April 23, 40 percent of poll respondents in whose households English is the dominant language thought it was important for Hispanics to blend into society. After the law passed, that rose to 55 percent. The AP-Univision poll was conducted from March 11 to June 3 by the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago, using a sample of Hispanic households provided by Nielsen. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. Stanford University's participation was made possible by a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. ___ Online: AP-Univision poll: http://surveys.ap.org/
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