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         Latin Americans Notable People:     more detail

41. SCSU: Learning Resources - Spanish-Speaking People Resources
199192 Who's Who Among Hispanic americans,1991-92 Ref E 184 .S75 N68 1993 NotableHispanic American Spanish, latin American, and Hispanic American writers are
http://lrs.stcloudstate.edu/guides/web/hispbibl.html
LRS Guide to Research on
Spanish Speaking Peoples of the Americas

    Considerable controversy surrounds the use of the term Hispanic to designate a racial or ethnic group. The U.S. Census and other government agencies mistakenly use the term as an umbrella for many diverse groups representing 21 potential nationalities and a variety of national, ethnic, and racial backgrounds. This guide attempts to be inclusive of all peoples who as a result of Spain's colonial heritage today use Spanish as a primary means of communication. Common names for these diverse peoples include Latino/Latina, Chicano/Chicana, Mexican-American, Cubano/Cubana, Puertoriqueno/Puertoriquena. Use these and similar terms of national origin when searching the PALS online catalog and periodical indexes. People whose national origin links them to Mexico, Cuba, and Puerto Rico represent approximately 80 percent of the total Latino population in the United States.
Select type of information needed for this topic. PALS Strategies Reference Sources Periodical Indexes Internet Sites ... CD-ROMs PALS Online Catalog Search Strategies
    Common names for the diverse Spanish-speaking peoples of the Americas include Hispanic, Latino/Latina, Chicano/Chicana, Mexican-American, Cubano/Cubana, Puertoriqueno/Puertoriquena. Use these and similar terms of national origin when searching the PALS online catalog. Many Spanish-speaking people have compound surnames, e.g., Garcia Marquez (Gabriel Garcia Marquez).

42. Latin America: Introduction
S.Meier, M., Serri, CF, Garcia, RA (1997). notable latino americans A bibliographicaldictionary. latin American Immigration to the United States.
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~gstudies/latin/curriculum/intro.htm
Introduction
Immigration from Latin America and Caribbean
Today, Latin Americans are the largest immigrant group in the United States. During the 1980s eight million immigrants came from Latin America, nearly equal to the total figure of European immigrants who came to the U.S. during the first decade of the 20th century. ( ) According to the U.S. Census Bureau, there are an estimated 31 million Latinos in the United States, comprising about 11.2 percent of the total population. Immigration from Latin America has become the most significant immigration spread during the second half of the twentieth century with immigrants coming from all over the continent: "Of the top ten "sender" countries in the last decade, four are Latin American and Caribbean: Mexico, the Dominican Republic, Cuba and Jamaica; in the next ten are Haiti, El Salvador, Colombia and Peru". ( The goal of this website is to provide information about Latin American and Caribbean immigration to teachers and students in the U.S. studying the different immigrant groups. Further it would help them understand better the causes of Mexican immigration which is the largest immigrant group to the U.S. Three major sources document the demographic trends of immigrants to the United States:
  • the Annual Statistical Yearbook of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) the Annual Statistical Abstract of the United States

43. Biographies
latin americans, Hispanics, latinos A collection of web sites The Faces of ScienceAfrican americans in the African Queens; Biographies of notable Women in
http://www.sldirectory.com/studf/bio.html

Resources for Students Menu
Biographies African Americans Arab Americans ... Cool Sites Site Guide Quick Search Searching the Internet Resources for Teachers The Reading Room ... Back to Library Homepage
Resources for Students
Biographies
African-Americans

44. Argentina Leads Latin American Dislike Of USA
latin americans present a very mixed picture. These positive assessments are notablegiven the large percentage of people in Mexico and the two Central
http://www.onlinejournal.com/Foreign_Press/Etchaleco121202/etchaleco121202.html

45. New & Notable
series is named in honor of two latin americans whose lives Nuestra América in latino(a)and latin American Studies Send news for New notable to Emily Weir
http://www.mtholyoke.edu/offices/comm/csj/980508/notable.html
Alternative mediation Stephen Jones, professor of Russian and Eurasian studies, has just returned from a four-day conference in Switzerland devoted to discussing possible alternatives to traditional conflict resolution in five areas of current United Nations concern: East Timor, Kosovo, Burundi, Sudan, and Georgia. Funded by UNITAR (United Nations Institute for Teaching and Research) and the Swiss government, the conference brought together twenty-five or so academics and senior UN and diplomatic personnel, as well as a number of ex-ambassadors who had served as special envoys in various mediation attempts by the UN. According to Jones, an authority on Georgia and other former Soviet republics, "It was an extremely fruitful seminar where we got down to nitty-gritty issues of how enemies could be brought to the table and how we could entice them to stay there." Staff Council election results That's the spirit Susan Higinbotham Holcombe '62 received the second annual Mary Lyon Spirit Award from the Mount Holyoke Club of Boston. The honor was established to honor Boston-area women who exhibit qualities that Lyon believed to be important: leadership, a pioneering spirit, and the belief in advancement through education. Holcombe is the director of Global Programs for Oxfam America in Boston, and has contributed significantly to issues of poverty alleviation, health care, rural development, nutrition, and reproductive health of women in Asia and Africa. She is also the author of the 1995 book

46. Biographical Resources
notable americans What They Did, from 1620 to the Present RAGH 99-1610 Brief entrieson notable British figures sources for Portugal, Spain, and latin America
http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/grd/resguides/biography/geographical.html
@import "/research/styles/sophisto.css";
Contents
Introduction to the Collections Using the Library's Catalogs Indexes and Guides to Biographical Sources Geographic Biographical Sources ... Return to Research Guides
Geographic Biographical Sources
Biographical Resources
Many of the resources available for biographers are arranged by geographical location. These resources can help the researcher find more specific information on individuals not included in the general indexes. International American French German ... Other Areas International Biographical Sources Current Current Biography Yearbook (New York: H. W. Wilson, 1940- ) *R-AA 98-1105 . This annual is a valuable source for biographical data on contemporary people from all professions (including literary, sports, and political figures). The essay-length entries (which include brief bibliographies) provide not only data about a person's life and career but also his or her physical characteristics (such as height, color of eyes, etc.) and a photograph. A cumulated index exists for the years 1940 through 1995; the 2000 edition indexes the years 1991 through 2000. International Who's Who (London: Europa, 1935- )

47. CLP In Latin America
this way, I think this finding is notable. students about their attitudes towardpeople with Communication They found that latin americans were more likely
http://web.nmsu.edu/~lleeper/pages/CLPLtnAm/
CLP in LATIN AMERICA
A Web page by Patrick Walden
What is Latin America
Latin America represents many different nationalities as well as racial backgrounds. Latin America is made up of Indigenous, Spanish (Caucasian), Black, as well as other ethnicities. Each country has its own beliefs and history. For this reason, all generalizations made about Latin Americans should be taken with this in mind. Did you know that the president of Peru is of Japanese descent? The countries of Latin America are mostly rural, low socio-economic areas. This has certain implications for treatment which will be discussed later. This is what Latin America looks like topographically:
CLP in Latin America
Since Latin America is a mostly underdeveloped area, there is little opportunity for intervention of CLP for the masses. There are, however, efforts by organizations in the United States to intervene in Latin America as well as other underdeveloped areas. One organization specifically is Austin Smiles. Austin Smiles is a group of US health care workers helping people in El Salvador. Three times a year, children with defects who are found by El Salvadorian soldiers are transported to a military hospital, where the visiting team of US doctors, nurses, and anesthesiologists have set up shop to volunteer their talents. Hundreds of other children with defects are brought by their parents or relatives, who usually catch wind of the doctors' arrival through radio, television, and newspaper reports. A spokesperson for Austin Smiles said about 60% of the plastic surgeons in the Central Texas area volunteer with the group. Many of the volunteers, such as nurses, are bilingual, since few of the doctors speak fluent Spanish.

48. Latin American Culture
R 920 Mei The Biographical Dictionary of Hispanic americans. R 920 Nob notable HispanicAmerican Women R 973.0468 His Encyclopedia of latin American History and
http://www.wshs.fcps.k12.va.us/library/pf/LatAmCult.htm

49. 1310
1930's only about 50,000 people a year become influential minorities, most notablein California Asians and latin americans, predominantly Mexicans, account for
http://www.geo.utep.edu/pub/nick_miller/1310/LECTURE_8.html
LECTURE 8 MIGRATION TO THE UNITED STATES
The world's third most populous country is inhabited overwhelmingly by descendants of immigrants. About 65 million people have migrated to the US since 1820, including 20 million immigrants who are alive right now. The US had two main eras in immigration. European Immigration c. 1850-early 20th century. 90% of immigrants were from Europe. Also Africans. from Latin America, Asia c. 1970 to today. 75% from Latin America and Asia EUROPEAN MIGRATION/AND AFRICANS
In the 500 years since Columbus, 60 million Europeans have migrated, 36 million came to the US Among European Countries Germany 7.1 million (1/4 of Americans are of German extraction)

50. City Of Chicago - Office Of The Mayor - News - Notable Speeches
and each new group – whether from Europe, latin America or But MexicanAmericansare the first group that has come Free trade doesn't hurt working people.
http://www.ci.chi.il.us/Mayor/2001Speeches/news_speeches_usmexchamberofcommerce.
Key Speeches By Mayor
Richard M. Daley United States-Mexico Chamber of Commerce
Monday, July 16, 2001
Acknowledgments:
Carlos Genardini, President, Motorola Latin America
Governor George Ryan
James Goodwin, Chairman and CEO, United Airlines
Douglas Doetsch (DOCHE), President, United States-Mexico Chamber of Commerce On behalf of all the people of the City of Chicago – and especially our 530,000 Mexican-American residents – I'm pleased to welcome President Vicente Fox and Mrs. Fox to our city. Chicago is proud to have the second largest Mexican-American community in the United States, a community that has grown ten-fold since 1950, and by 50 percent during the last decade. As you saw yesterday, Mexican-Americans have brought energy, vitality and excitement to our city, especially to neighborhoods such as Pilsen, Little Village and Back of the Yards. They also have brought strong family values, a work ethic and a deep commitment to education. The Mexican-American community in Chicago stands four-square behind our efforts to make our public school system the best in the nation. Chicago was built by immigrants, and each new group – whether from Europe, Latin America or Asia – has made its distinctive contribution to the economic, social and cultural life of our city.

51. Brandeis Libraries: Finding Biographical Information
Spain, latin America and latin americans in the US life stories of important peoplefrom Powhatan notable Asian americans Organized alphabetically with signed
http://library.brandeis.edu/resources/resguides/special/biog/biogminor.html
Electronic Resources Library Home Resources Subjects Services ... Brandeis Home
Finding Biographical Information
Introduction First Stop for Biography General Indexes Other Biographical Indexes ... Professional Biographies - Minorities and Women - Writers Autobiographies Web Sources Minorities And Women These sources list persons in a particular minority group in the United States or Canada, or sources devoted to information about women. American National Biography
You can easily access this from campus by going to the Library's database page and clicking on the title or by typing in the website address:
http://www.anb.org/articles/index.html
You can get complete information in print by going to the Biography Reference Stacks to use the 24-volume set. This resource includes nearly 17,500 biographies of men and women whose lives have shaped the American nation, with essays, bibliographies, illustrations and web links; subjects must have died prior to 1996.
Main Biography Reference CT213 .A68 1999 Biographical Dictionary of Women More than 3,000 brief entries, each beginning with a one line summary description. "Extensive coverage of leading figures in the women's rights movement." Weighted to 19th and 20th century western women.

52. AIDS - A Prescription Long Overdue
Activists defending the rights of people who are HIVpositive recognise that notableprogress has been made Many HIV-positive latin americans are from poor
http://www.ipsnews.net/aids/page_2.shtml
Produced by IPS with support from PAHO and UNAIDS
Home
Men Make a Difference A Prescription Long Overdue An AIDS Vaccine - When? "I Have AIDS - and I am Happy" The Economic Impacts of HIV/AIDS In the Hands of Men ... Link Yourself to Life with the 'Red Ribbon' Project
AIDS Treatment in Latin America
A Prescription Long Overdue The number of Latin Americans with HIV/AIDS who receive medical attention through state programmes and who have access to adequate treatment is growing, but many are still out of the loop. What must be done to remedy the situation? By Diego Cevallos*
MEXICO CITY - Hugo Estrada, 43, has been HIV-positive for the last five years and says he is content with his life. He has studied at the graduate level, he has access to antiretroviral medications, timely medical treatment as well as psychological support. Furthermore, he receives a disability pension and he has strong family support. Estrada's case might be considered normal in an industrialised country, but in Latin America, where there are 1.4 million people with HIV/AIDS - 130,000 who became infected this year - he is the exception.

53. Biographical Resources / UTSA Library Pathfinders
search for biographies on fascinating people by name many short biographies of notableMexican figures of numerous contemporary and historical latin americans.
http://www.lib.utsa.edu/Instruction/biography.html

54. Comparative American Studies
most people, and 'americans' are that country's people. Baldwin, as well as Latinamericans like Jorge produced brilliant work equally notable, however, have
http://www.warwick.ac.uk/undergrad/cas

55. We Cannot Seek Achievement For Ourselves And Forget About
Modern latinAmerican Fiction Writers, Second Series, vol. that provide biographicalinformation on notable Hispanics of Chicanos and Native americans in Science
http://www.grapids.lib.mi.us/coll/highlights/pathhispanic.html
We cannot seek achievement for ourselves 
   and forget about progress and prosperity for our
   community...Our ambitions must be broad 
   enough to include the aspirations and needs of
   others, for their sakes and for our own.                         Cesar Chavez
Biographical Resources on Hispanic-Americans
National Hispanic Heritage Month is celebrated from September 15 through October 15.  The following resources provide biographical information on people of Hispanic heritage. This list begins with Reference materials, which must be used in the Library only, and is followed by Circulating resources, which are available for check-out. (The word Hispanic is used in here to include persons who trace their origins to Spanish-speaking countries.) 
Print Reference Resources: General Resources Latino Encyclopedia.  (Marshall Cavendish, 1996). 
R 973.0468 L349   6 vols. Kanellos, Nicolas, ed. Hispanic-American Almanac: A Reference Work on Hispanics in the United States.   (Gale Research, 1997). 
R 973.0468 H625a

56. Partners
27 years versus 35 for nonHispanics or latin americans. It is this strong tie tolatin America, which There were other states with notable latino populations
http://www.elclick.com/Partners/partners.html
ElClick.com Click below on a Latino community near your home! Arizona
California

Colorado

Florida
...
Washington

Latino Communities around the
Globe Central America
South America

Caribbean

Mexico
Awards earned by El Click .com ElClick.com
is currently seeking the following types of partnerships 1) E-Commerce 2) Distribution 3) Content providers 4) Media 5) Advertising 6) Search Engines Why partner with the El Click.com Community We are an English and Spanish language website that provides Hispanics/Latino s and Latin Americans an online community and portal. Our focus is on the US Hispanics and Latin Americans with the goal of becoming the leading online community targeting these groups. Why do we target the US Hispanic and Latin American market? The four principal reasons why this market presents a compelling opportunity for our business and our Partners are: 1) The rapid growth and young age that characterize the US Hispanic and Latin American populations. The Hispanic population is growing five times faster than the general population and will result in Hispanics becoming the largest minority group in the US by 2005. In addition, both populations are defined by their relative youth – average age is 27 years versus 35 for non-Hispanics or Latin Americans. 2) These populations also have a larger household size – 3.5 persons per household versus 2.5 for others.

57. An Intelligence Perspective On Latin America's Renewal
The most notable exception is Peru and Ecuador, which Seventyfive percent of alllatin americans live in cities Janeiro, and Buenos Aires¾are in latin America
http://www.cia.gov/cia/public_affairs/speeches/archives/1996/ddi_speech_102696.h
Home Notices Privacy Security ... Search
An Intelligence Perspective on Latin America's Renewal
An Address by DDI John Gannon
Before the Central Intelligence Retirees Association
Clearwater Beach, Florida
26 October 1996
Good evening. I am delighted to be with you tonight. I confess that I leap at any chance to get outside the beltway, and Clearwater is as good a field trip as a government worker can hope to get. But I also must tell you that I take special pleasure in meeting with Agency retirees¾this is my fourth such encounter in the past year. Your generation of intelligence officers achieved more in the defense of freedom than any of your forebears anywhere in the world at any time in history. Rubbing shoulders with you is, to say the least, energizing for those of us trying to carry on the traditions of a demanding but unheralded profession that you made honorable and indispensable to the preservation of our great democracy. And, let's face it, you retirees always manage to recover that sense of humor and perspective that you lost in your last couple of assignments at Headquarters. I assure you that you throw much better parties than the crowd you left behind in Langley. And, as always when I mix it up with Agency veterans, I will go home encouraged by how deeply you all still care about CIA¾its challenging future as well as its heroic past.

58. Earth's Population Shrunk To 100 People
Earth's population shrunk to 100 people. 60 Asians. 13 Africans 12Europeans 9 latin americans. 5 North americans. 1 Oceanian Source
http://www.public.iastate.edu/~murlin/Lect3.htm
Earth's population shrunk to 100 people 60 Asians 13 Africans
12 Europeans
9 Latin Americans 5 North Americans 1 Oceanian
Source: UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division, " World Population Prospects: The 2000 Revision ." 50 females, 50 male Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census International Data Base, Table 094 : Midyear Population by Age and Sex 2001. 80 non-whites, 20 whites Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census International Data Base, Table 001 : Total Midyear Population 2001, assuming the populations of South America, Asia, and Africa are "non-white" and those of North America, Europe, and Oceania are "white." 20 people would earn 89% of world's wealth Source: The International Herald Tribune, February 5, 1999, cited in the World Income Inequality table 25 would live in substandard housing Source: Habitat for Humanity International, " Why Habitat is Needed ." 17 would be unable to read Source: UNICEF, " The State of the World's Children 1999 ." 13 would suffer from malnutrition Source: UN Food and Agriculture Organization report, cited at

59. Latin America Resource Review -- Brazil: "Without Fear Of Being Happy" Spring 19
paradise were affirmed by notable black observers was eventually rejected as Africanamericans began to of the relationship between latin americans and African
http://www.americas.org/News/Latin_American_Resource_Review/LARR0301.HTM
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  • 60. Latin America: Empowering Civil Society
    This year, more than 50,000 people are converging on also among the Forum’s notableguests, as The latin americans addressing these issues include Uruguayan
    http://www.twnside.org.sg/title/pa1.htm
    BACK TO MAIN ONLINE BOOKSTORE HOW TO ORDER Latin America: Empowering civil society Porto Alegre, Brazil, 31 Jan 2002 (IPS/Gustavo Gonzalez) - Grassroots activists and members of civil society must be empowered to assert their economic, social and cultural rights in the context of a globalized world, say many of the Latin American organisations participating in the second World Social Forum in this southern Brazilian city through 5 February. Latin America, and particularly host-country Brazil, is playing a leading role in this second annual gathering of independent and non-governmental entities, an event born in January 2001 as a counterweight to the World Economic Forum, a yearly meeting in which the world’s most powerful politicians and business executives set the world economic agenda. At the first World Social Forum, 18,000 people from 117 countries participated, including delegates from non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and participants in the Youth Camp and the Indigenous Nations Camp. This year, more than 50,000 people are converging on Porto Alegre, convened under the motto, “another world is possible.”

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