HomeMy WebLinkAboutLatinos and Latinas and ...
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I u.s. LATINOS AND LATINAS
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i CHANGES SEEN, CHANGES WROUGHT CONFERENCE
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FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, MAY 26 & 27, 2000 UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN ALUMNI CENTER
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A message from the Conference Co-Chairs
Dear Conference Attendees,
The fact that we are here to mark the contributions and lives of U.s. Latinos and Latinas of the WWII
generation is a testament to the impact this group of men and women have had. It may be rightfully ,
assumed that everyone present shares an understanding that these men and women indeed have seen
great changes in their lives and that they have, in turn, wrought great changes,
This conference brings together two essential parts of an equation: scholars with a serious interest in this
generation of men and women, and the men and women themselves from whom we will hear in the next
two days,
For many professors here, this research has very -profound and personal importance: many of us are the
daughters and sons of this generation. We grew up hearing the stories of what life was like before the
War, during the War and after. It was only after we had picked up pieces from various sources that we
could finally grasp the significance of what these men and women had accomplished, as individuals, like
our parents, and collectively, as founders and workers of organizations that have forged great reforms for
U.S. Latinos and Latinas. One goal of this conference is to consolidate writings from some of the best
scholars of U.S, Latino studies in order to provide a greater context for what exactly happened to that
generation,
We are also extremely fortunate to have with us some of the best examples of V.S, Latino and Latina civil
rights activists. And we also welcome informal presentations from people who want to tell the story of
their loved ones, or their own story.
A conference like this requires a great deal of coordination. We must give our deepest appreciation to
those who have been working to ensure that the many preparations are considered. A great thanks, first,
to the A.H, Bela Foundation, which provided the initial grant last spring that gave us the green light for
this event. Thank you, too, to the U.T, Department of Journalism, and especially to Department
Chairman Steve Reese for providing us office space and the accompanying support. The College of
Communication has also provided financial and emotional support for our conference, Th,e faculty and
staff of the Center for Mexican American Studies also proVided organizational energies, Lastly, AT&T
\Vireless Communications provided us with cellular phones to keep us connected as \\le made our prepa-
rations in the past two weeks,
A small group of administrative staff people have been crucial to coordinating plans: special thanks to
Rhonda Wl1i.gham, senior administrative associate, Oeota Gambino, administrative associate, of the
Department of Journalism, Anne Reed, senior administrative associate, College of Communication Dean's
Office; and Jordana Barton, program coordinator for the Center for Mexican American Studies,
Three UT professors have been especially helpfuL Ricardo Ainslie (Educational Psychology) Lisa Montoya,,~'
(Government) and Neil Foley (History) served as the other three-fifths of the planning committee th.;~
reviewed abstracts and selected presenters for this conference. , ::'..
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And finally, to Denise Rocha, our conference coordinator, for keeping it together with style anli('O~,-
humor. Thank you all. '
Now, let's have a wonderful conference,
Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez and David Montejano
Conference Co-Chairs
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ALUMNI CENTER FLOORPLAN
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Dining
Room
West Terrace
Main Lounge
East Terrace
Entry
Locations of Events
. Rotunda -- Various displays containing memorabilia from World War II. A key display by Dani.el Casti.Uo.
. Connally Banquet Hall -- General Assembly, The Narrative sessions, and Lunch with Roundtable discus-
sions wi.U be held in the Banquet Hall.
. Nowotny & Schmidt Rooms -- The different panel sessions will run in their respective rooms, please check
the conference schedule for the times and locations,
. Oneal Room - Media Room -- This room will house a computer and scanner, We will scan any photos
that you would like to i.nclude in the U. S, Latino and Latina World War II Oral History Project, You wi.U
receive your photo back, along with an additional 5X7 photo, compliments of the U.s, Latino and Latina
World War II Conference.
. The University of Texas Qub -- Located on the east side of the Uni.versi.ty of Texas Stadi.um, The
Reception wi.U be held here, For your conveni.ence, after the last panel session, there will be shuttles provided
for your transportation.
@ All Rights Reserved
The U.S. Latino and Latina WWII Oral History Project
Department of Journalism
University of Texas at Austin
Mail Code A1000
Austin. Texas 78712
email: latinoarchives@WWW.utexas.edu
phone: (512) 471-1924
For more information, visit our Website:
http://www. utexas .edu I projects II atinoarch ives
The photographs that appear in this conference program are from a variety of sources. Most are of the men and women we've interviewed in and around
Austin, San Antonio and Los Angeles. But other photographs have been emailed to us, and others that were mailed to us. Some of are of people who
might be interviewed at some point, others are of people who have long since passed way. These are photographs that you won't find in too many books
_ they have been tucked into photograph albums, picture frames, sometimes in shoe boxes. Our deepest appreciation to the many men and women who
have shared these photographs with us. They are a stunning reminder of the important stories that must be preserved.
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FOYER - Registration - 8:00 - 9:00 am
BANQUET HALL - Opening Session - 9:00 - 9:30 am
Welcome - UT Vice Provost and Law Professor, Gerald Torres
Remarks - Conference Co-Chairs, Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez &
David Montejano
SCHMIDT - PanellA 9:30 - 11 :00 am - Latinos in the Military -
Moderator: Rodolfo Rosales - University of Texas - San Antonio
Ernesto Martinez: Texas Chicano World War II Hero, Activist and Premier Artist
-George Vargas, Austin, Texas
The Five Sanchez Brothers: A Generation Remembered - Rita B. Sanchez,
San Diego Mesa College
l..Papi que hiciste durante la guerra? - Rafael Chabnin, Whittier College,
California
Hispanic-American Aviation Heroes during World War II - Bruce Ashcroft,
Austin, Texas
NOWOTNY - Panel1B - 9:30 - 11:00 am - Latino Education and
World War II - Moderator: Alba Ortiz, University of Texas at Austin
Leadership in Transition: The Study of Mexican-American Education at the
University of Texas, 1940-1945 - Matthew D, Davis, University of Texas at
Austin
Lost Momentum: World War II and the Education of Hispanos in New Mexico
- Lynne M. Getz, Appalachian State University, North Carolina
On the Westside: A Portrait of Lanier High School during World War II -
Julio Noboa, University of Texas at Austin
Changes on the Home Front: Mendez vs. Westminster - Mary S. Black,
University of Texas at Austin
BANQUET HALL - Narrative Sessions - 11:00 - 12:00 pm - Informal
presentations. Rico Ainslie, moderator.
Lunch with Roundtable Discussions "Latinas and WWII" - 12:00 -
1:45 pm Moderator: America Rodriguez
Participants: Mary Murillo, Elisa Rodriguez and Marta Cotera
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"'t SCHMIDT - Panel 2A - 2:00 - 3:30 pm - Working on the Home Front
I - Moderator: Steve Trejo, University of Texas at Austin
. World War II Braceros: Precursors of Managed Transnational Labor Circuits -
Erasmo Gamboa, University of Washington
The U.S. Railroad Industry during World War II: Implications for Future Labor
Strategies - Barbara Driscoll, Universidcid Autonoma de Mexico
The Limits to Mexican Mobility in the High- Wage Firms of Texas -
Emilio Zamora, University of Houston
The Mexican American Dream In World War II: A View from the Midwest-
Dionicio Valdes, University of Minnesota
NOWOlNY - Panel 2B - 2:00 - 3:30 pm - Puerto Ricans and World
War II - Moderator: Federico Subervi Velez, UT Austin
El Comienzo de la Segunda Guerra Mundial Atraves del Almirante William
Leahy - Jorge Rodriguez Beruff, Universidad de Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras Campus
The Testimonies of World War II Puerto Ricans Veterans in Three Times: Before,
During and After World War II - Carlos Hernandez, Universidad de Puerto
Rico, Rio Piedras Campus
Rompiendo el Silencio: Las Voces de la Guerra en Puerto Rico - Josefa Santiago,
Universidad de Puerto Rico, Bayamon Campus
BANQUET HALL - Panel 3A - 3:45 - 5:15 pm - On the Home Front -
Moderator: Felipe Gonzales
Ethnic Mexicans and the Zoot Suit Summer of 1943: The Material Hybridity of
Youth Culture on the Home Front - Luis Alvarez, University of Texas at Austin
What a Difference a War Makes! - Maria Eva Flores, CDP, Our Lady of the
Lake University, San Antonio, Texas
The Beating of Pvt. Benigno Aguirre in San Angelo in 1945: An Uncle's Story
about Race Relations - David Montejano, University of Texas at Austin
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World War II's Veteran's Entitlement Act: Its Impact on a Valley Neighborhood -
Rolando Hinojosa-Smith, University of Texas at Austin
NOWOlNY - Panel 3B - 3:45 - 5:15 pm - U.S. Latino and Latina
World War II Oral History Project Inteviewer Training Session-
Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez, University of Texas at Austin
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FOYER - Registration - 8:00 - 9:00 am
BANQUET HALL - Remarks - 8:45 - Conference Staff
BANQUET HALL - Panel4A - 9:00 - 10:30 am - Working on the
Home Front II - Moderator: Rosa Salazar Rosales - Labor organizer and
Community Activist - San Antonio
Rosita the Riveter: Welding Cultural Tradition with Wartime Industry -
Naomi Qui.'fionez, California State University
Mexican American Women War Workers: A Prelude to La Chicana -
Richard Griswold del Castillo, San Diego State University
Looking Back: Looking Forward: The World War II Bracero Program and its
Mythical End - Luis F. B. Plascencia, University of Texas at Austin
SCHMIDT - Panel 4B - 9:00 - 10:30 am - Political Power -
Moderator: Raul Madrid, University of Texas at Austin
The Formation of Political Organizations in Post-World War II San Aiitonio and
their Legacy - Rudy Rosales, University of Texas at San Antonio
Mexican American Political Participation in the Post World War II Era -
Lisa J. Montoya, University of Texas at Austin
From Veterans' Rights to Civil Rights: Mexican-American GI forum in the
Post- War Years - Neil Foley, University of Texas at Austin
ONEAL - Panel 4C - 9:00 - 10:30 am - Documentary Representations -
Moderator: America Rodriguez, University of Texas at Austin
The Men of Company E and Guy Gabaldon, American Hero - Alfredo Lugo,
Whittier, California
Hector Galan, documentarian, Austin, Texas.
BANQUET HALL - Narrative Sessions - 10:45 - 11 :45 am - Informal
presentations bV public. Moderator: Rico Ainslie
Lunch with Roundtable Discussions - 12:00 - 1:30 pm
Moderator: Maria Martin, Latino USA
Participants: Ed Idar, Virgilio Roel, Albert Armendariz, Sr.
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BANQUET HALL - Pane15A - 1:45 - 3:15 pm - Representations -
Moderator: America Rodriguez, University of Texas at Austin
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Soldado Razo: Race, Ideology and Power in Mexican - American World War II
Literature and Film - B.V. Olguin, University of Texas at San Antonio
Saving Private ("ChemitaJJ) Rodriguez - Jose E. Limon, University of Texas at Austin
WayneJs World: Latinos and Latinas in the DukeJs Post War Imaginary -
Richard Flores, University of Texas at Austin
Framing a Postwar Chicano Social Criticism: Ernesto Galarza's Pueblo Libre-
Manuel Luis Martinez, Indiana University
SffiMIDT - Panel 5B - 1:45 - 3:15 pm - Research and Teaching
Strategies - Moderator: Emilio Zamora, University of Houston
Pathfinders on World War II: Guides to Preparing Undergraduates to Conduct Oral
History Interviews of u.s. Latinos and Latinas and World War II -
Loriene Roy, University of Texas at Austin
U.S. Latino & Latina and World War II Oral History Project -
Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez, University of Texas at Austin
Latinos Lead the Way: An Educational Web Site for Teaching History -
Capt. Fernando Hernandez, California State University
U.S, Latino & Latina and World War II Archive - Margo Gutierrez, University of
Texas at Austin
Wrap-up - 3:30 pm - Go to The University of Texas Club for Wrap-up
Partial List of Presenters for Narrative Sessions (Friday & Saturday)
History of Eladio Martinez - Henry Martinez
Japanese Speaking Latinos: Uncovering the Role of Latinos as World War II
Translators - Laura C. Oliveira
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What World War II was like in MercedesJ Texas: A Local and Rural Perspective
through the Lived Experienced of a Mexican American Woman - Aurora E. Orozco
Homero C. Molina of the 2nd Infantry Division in the Normandy Invasion -
Fred Silva, San Antonio, Texas
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81 RAPHIE
Rico Ainslie
Luis Alvarez
Albert Armendariz
Bruce A. Ashcroft
Jorge Rodriguez
Beruff
Dan Castillo
Rico Ainslie
The University of Texas at Austin
Ricardo Ainslie earned his BA from U, C. Berkeley, and his Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of Michigan. He
is presently a professor in the Department of Educational Psychology and an affiliate faculty at the Center for Mexican
American Studies at the University of Texas, Prof, Ainslie is author of numerous articles on psychoanalysis, the psy-
chology of culture, and immigration. He is author of three books, including No Danan' In Anson: An American Story
of Race and Social Change.
Luis Alvarez
The University of Texas at Austin
Luis Alvarez is a Ph.D. candidate in the department of history at UT and is currently writing his dissertation, The
Power of the Zoot: Youth Culture, Resistance and Community in the U.s" 1938-1945. His research interests include
borderlands and diaspora history, Chicana/o and African history, oral history, popular culture, transnationalism and
cultural theory.
Albert Armendariz
El Paso, Texas
Albert Armendariz received his Juris Doctorate from the University of Southern California School of Law in 1950,
He served as US Immigration Judge, Department of Justice from 1979 to 1985 and also served as Justice, Eighth
Court of Appeals, State of Texas in 1986. He is a founding member of Mexican American Legal Defense and
Educational Fund, the El Paso Mexican-American Bar Association. He served as National President of League of
United Latin American Citizens in 1953, United States Army 1941-1945 and Legend of Texas 1999. He is cur-
rently in private practice,
Bruce A. Ashcroft
U.S, Air Force Air Education and Training Command
Bruce Ashcroft is an Air Force historian working in the Air Education and Training Command History Office at
Randolph Air Force Base, Texas. He joined the Air Force History Program in September 1987 after serving on active
duty with the Navy for nine years. Bruce obtained an M,A. in history at New Mexico State University; Texas Western
Press published his thesis, The Territorial Historv of Socorro. New Mexico, in 1988. Bruce is currently working on
his Ph.D. in American Studies at Ur.
Jorge Rodriguez Beruff
University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras campus
Jorge Rodriguez Beruff is a Professor in the Social Sciences Department at the University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras
Campus, He received his BA from the University of Puerto Rico and his Ph.D. from the University of York. He has
published and edited various books including Politica mUitar v dominacion. Puerto Rico en el Contexto
Latinoamericano (1988) and Los Militares v el Poder: Un Ensavo sobre la Doctrina Militar en el Peru (1948-1968)
(1983)s.
Mary S. Black
The University of Texas at Austin
Mary S. Black is Assistant Professor, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, UI. She teaches Social Foundations
of Education as well as preparing future Social Studies teachers for secondary schools, Her research interests are in
Mexican American education, social studies, and archeology education for social studies classrooms. She previously
taught in public schools in San Antonio and obtained her doctorate from Harvard University.
Capt. Daniel Castillo
U.S, Army Special Forces, Retired
Capt, Daniel Castillo is the founder of the EI Castillo Militaria Museum. He received his BS from Angelo State
University. Capt. Castillo served as an Army officer in the 7th Special Forces Group Airborne, Chemical Corp" 49th
Armor Division. His research interests include 19th and 20th century military history. Currently, he travels to
schools to promote patriotism, to encourage the study of military history, staying in school and being drug-free,
Rafael Chabnin
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Marta Cotera
Richard Flores
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Neil Foley
Hector Galan
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Rafael Chabnin
Whittier College
Rafael Chabnin is a Professor in the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures at Whittier College. He
received his Ph.D. from the University of California, His research interests include Chicano/Latino studies and inter-
relations between science and literature, Chabnin has won various awards including grants and fellowships from the
National Endowment for Humanities. The World of Dr. Francisco Hernandez will be published in the fall of 2000 to
which he is a principal contributor.
Marta Cotera
Mara Cotera is a professor of History at Austin Community College and staff archivist at the University of Texas at
Austin. She is involved in historical presen'ation work. She has authored important works on Mexican American his-
tory, such as The Chicana Feminst and Diosa v Hembra' Mexican American Women's History. Martha received her
BA degree in Literature and History from the University of Texas at EI Paso, and a Masters Degree in Education from
Antioch Graduate School, Antioch University. She has received over 100 awards and recognitions for her advocacy
work on behalf of families.
Matthew D. Davis
University of Texas at Austin
Matthew D. Davis will receive his Ph.D. in May 2000, from UT-Austin in interdisciplinary studies. For his disser-
tation, he prepared a biography of Herschel T. Manuel who pioneered the study of Mexican American education in
Texas and the Southwest. His research interests include Latina! 0 educational history, curriculum policy and history,
and educational biography.
Barbara Driscoll
Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico
Barbara Driscoll received her .M.A and Ph.D, in history from the University of Notre Dame, She is a tenured researcher
in the United States Studies Department at the Centro de Investigaciones sobre America del Norte at the Universidad
Nacional Autonoma de Mexico in Mexico City. She has published Besides The Tracks North: The Railroad Bracero
Proaram of World War II (1999), Her latest book is Los proceses electorales en America del Norte en mil novecien-
t05 noventa y cuatro.
Maria Eva Flores, CDP
Our Lady of the Lake University in San Antonio
Maria Eva Flores was born in Fort Stockton, Texas, She attended the public schools in that small, remote communi-
ty, A member of the Congregation of Divine Providence, she taught high school English and Speech and Drama in
Texas and Louisiana. She has also done community pastoral work in San Antonio, Currently, she serves as the
University Archivist and Special Collections Librarian at Our Lady of the Lake University in San Antonio, Texas, and
is completing a dissertation, The Good Life, the Hard Way: The Mexican American Community of Fort Stockton,
Texas, 1930-1945
Richard Flores
University of Texas at Austin
Richard Flores is Associate Professor of Anthropology and Mexican American Studies at UT-Austin and works in the
areas of critical theory, performance studies, folklore, and historical-symbolic analysis. He is the author of ~
Pastores: History and Performance in the Mexican Shevherd's Plav of South Texas (Smithsonian Institution Press,
1995), editor of Adina De Zavala's. Historv and Legends of the Alamo (Arte Publico Press, 1996), and has published
in American Ethnologist, Cultural Anthropology.
Neil Foley
University of Texas at Austin
Neil Foley is an Associate Professor of History and American Studies at UT-Austin, He received his MA and Ph.D.
from University of Michigan, an .M.A from Georgetown, and his BA from the University of Virginia. His book, lli
White Scourae' Mexicans. Blacks. and Poor Whites in Texas Cotton Culture (1997), won the Frederick Jackson Turner
Award and the Pacific Coast Branch Award. He is the editor of Reflexiones: New Directions in Mexican American
~ (lJf Press, 1998),
Hector Galan
Galan Productions
Hector Galan has been involved in television for over 20 years. He Started out as a camera operator in his hometown
of San Angelo, Texas, he has since been involved in every aspect of television production, now contributing programs
to national nehvorks. He is a 1977 graduate of Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas. He premiered his latest work,
The forgotten Americans, an hour-long documentary special funded by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation last March at
the Smithsonian Institution.
Erasmo Gamboa
Lynne Marie Getz
Ricardo Griswold
del Castillo
Margo Gutierrez
Fernando
Hernandez
Rolando
Hinojosa-Smith
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Erasmo Gamboa
University of Washington
Erasmo Gamboa is an Associate Professor of History in the American Ethnic Studies Department at the University of
Washington. His publications include, Mexican Labor During World War IT: Braceros in the Pacific Northwest. 1942-
liMl, Nosotros. The Hisoanic People of Oregon' Essays and Recollections, and numerous journal articles. His publi-
cation of Voces Hispanas' Excernts from the Idaho Hispanic Oral History Proiect won the 1992 American Library
Association's Award for Best Local History.
Lynne Marte Getz
Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina
Lynne Marie Getz is Associate Professor of History at Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina. Her
book, Schools of Their Own- The Education of Hispanos in New Mexico. 1850-1940, was published by the University
of New Mexico Press in 1997, She is a native of southern Colorado and received her Ph.D. in History from the
University of Washington.
Felipe Gonzales
University of New Mexico
Felipe Gonzales is Associate Professor of Sociology and Director of the Southwest Hispanic Research Institute at the
University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. He received his Ph.D. at the University of California Berkeley. His book,
Forced Sacrifice as Ethnic Protest. The Hisoano Cause in New Mexico and the Racial Attitude Confrontation of 1933
(Peter Lang), is due to come out this fall.
Ricardo Griswold del Castillo
San Diego State University
Ricardo Griswold del Castillo, Professor of Chicana and Chicano Studies at SDSU and Chair of the department. He
has published a number of books including The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo: A I eaaCY of Conflict (Norman,
Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press, 1990), Cesar Chavez' A Triumoh of Spirit (with Richard Garcia) (University
of Oklahoma Press, 1995), and North to Aztlan' Mexican Americans in United States History (with Arnoldo De
Leon), Twayne Publishers, 1996. He is cunently Chair of the Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies
Department at San Diego State University, California,
Margo Gutierrez
University of Texas at Austin
Margo Gutienez is Mexican American & Latino Studies Librarian/Bibliographer at the Nettie Lee Benson Latin
American Collection at UT. A native of Tucson, Arizona, she received her B.A. and M.L.S. from the University of
Arizona, and an M.A. in Latin American Studies from UT.
Carlos Hernandez
University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras campus
Carlos 1. Hernandez is a Ph,D. candidate at the University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras Campus. He received his B.A.
from the University of Puerto Rico and his M.A. from the Center of Advanced Studies of Puerto Rico and the
Caribbean. His research interests include the United States Air Force during WWII and presenting the humane side
of veterans and their experiences.
Fernando Hernandez
California State University
Capt. Fernando Hernandez, Ph.D is the Chair of the Division of Educational Foundations and Interdivisional Studies
in the Charter School of Education at California State University. He also holds an appointment as Professor of
Education. His research interests include in the areas of increasing educational achievement among inner city youth
and the use of technology and computers in education. He is also active in the U,S. Naval Reserve, where he holds
the rank of Captain.
Rolando Hinojosa-Smith
The University of Texas at Austin
Rolando Hinojosa-Smith is the Ellen Clayton Garwood Professor in Creative Writing in the English Department. A
native of Mercedes, Texas, he earned his B.A. from UT and his Ph, D, from the University of Illinois at Urbana. Aside
from short stories and essays, his main work, The Klait City Death Trio Series, consists of 13 novels. His latest novel,
Ask a Policeman, appeared in 1998.
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Ed Idar
Jose E. Limon
Raul Madrid
,\laria Martin
Manuel
Luis Martinez
David Montejano
Lisa J. Montoya
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Ed Idar
San Antonio, Texas
Ed !dar, Jr. is a native of Lardeo, Texas and has a B.J. Degrees and a law degree from UT-Austin. He was active in
the American G.!. Forum Veterans Organization from 1949 to 1966. During WWII, he served as a civilian in
Warrington, England and in the U.S. Army in India and China. He has also served as the head of the San Antonio
Office of J'vlALDEF and as an assistant Attorney General.
Jose E, Limon
University of Texas at Austin
Jose E. Limon is Professor of English, Mexican-American Studies, and Anthropology at the University of Texas at
Austin, He specializes in inter-American cultural studies, Mexican-Americans, and Texas. He is the author of
Dancing with the Devil' Society and Cultural Poetics in Mexican-American South Texas (1994) and most recently,
American Encounters: Greater Mexico. the United States and the Erotics of Culture (1998). Texas Monthly named
him one of its 20 "most impressive, intriguing and influential Texas" for 1999.
Alfredo Lugo
Whittier, California
Alfredo Lugo is a writer/producer/director and has twenty-five years experience in television. He has produced sev-
eral documentaries including "The Men of Company E" and "Guy Gabaldon, American Hero." He has won the
Golden Mike Award, the Capra Award and has shared in two Emmy awards, as well as receiving awards from LULAC
and the American G.!. Forum, Articles that he has written have appeared in The Arizona Record and Karter
Magazine,
Raul Madrid
University of Texas at Austin
Raul Madrid is an Assistant Professor in the Dept, of Government at lIT, where he spedalizes in Latin American pol-
itics. He received his Ph.D, from Stanford University in 1999. He has served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Costa Rica
and a foreign affairs analyst at a research institute in Washington DC where he authored, Overexposed: U S Banks
Confront the Third World Debt Crisis (Westview 1992) and co-authored US Arms EXDorts (Ballinger 1988),
Maria Martin
Latino USA, Austin
Maria Martin is executive producer of Latino USA. She has more than 20 years experience working in Latino public
broadcasting. She has also worked for National Public Radio (NPR) in a variety of positions, Martin's first job in
radio was as news and public affairs director for KBBF, a bilingual radio station in Santa Rosa, California. She start-
ed as a volunteer reporter and co-producer of Somas Chicanas, which addressed the needs and concerns of Hispanic
women. Martin has her Master's degree from Ohio State University.
Manuel Luis Martinez
Indiana University in Bloomington
Manuel Luis Martinez is an assistant professor of 20th century American literature, American studies,
Chicano/Latino studies, and creative writing at Indiana University, His first novel, Crossing, (1998) has been nom-
inated for a Pushcart Prize, the Premia Aztlan Fiction Award, and selected as one of the 10 outstanding books by a
writer of color by PEN American Center, NY, Another book, Countering the Counterculture: Rereading American
Dissent From Tack Kerouac to Tomas Rivera, is in press (Verso).
David Montejano
University of Texas at Austin
David Montejano is Director, Center for Mexican American Studies, and an Associate Professor of History &
Sociology. His B.A. is from m', his M.A. and Ph.D. in Sodology are from Yale University. He specializes in compar-
ative and historical sociology, political sociology, and race and ethnic relations. He is the author of Anglos and
Mexicans in the Making of Texas. 1836-1986 (UT Press, 1987) and the editor of Chicano Politics and Sodety in the
Late Twentieth Centurv (m" Press, 1999),
Lisa J. Montoya
The University of Texas at Austin
Lisa J. Montoya is an assistant professor in the Department of Government at UT. She received a Ph.D. from
Washington University in St. Louis in 1995. She received a grant from the Inter-university Program for Latino
Research and the Social Science Research Council to study Latino gender differences in political attitudes and partic-
ipation. Her research interests include the representation of radical and ethnic interests in Congress and Latino elec-
toral potential in state and national elections
Mary,Murillo
Julio Noboa
B. V. Olguin
Alba Ortiz
Luis F.B. Plascencia
Naomi Quinonez
Maggie
Rivas-Rodriguez
Denise Rocha
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Mary Murillo
Austin, Texas
Mary Murillo grew up in Austin. She received her GED when she was over 50 years old, in part because of the urg-
ing of community activists who, after WWIl, worked to organize the Austin Latino community, Her father and othe
relatives were active in the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) and other groups that promoted greater
involvement for Latinos. Her story appears in Narratives, Vol. 1, No, 1.
Julio Noboa
University of Northern Iowa
Julio Noboa is an instructor at the University of Northern Iowa and Clinical Supervisor for student teachers in San
Antonio public schools. He is also a doctoral student in curriculum studies at the University of Texas in Austin. He
writes a biweekly column for the San Antonio Express-News, and a monthly column for La Estrella of Fort Worth,
Nobaa, a Chicago native, obtained a B.s. in Anthropology from the University of Illinois and a M.A. in Education
from Northwestern University,
B. V. Olguin
University of Texas at San Antonio
B. V. Olguin is an Assistant Professor in the Division of English, Classics, Philosophy and Communication at UT-San
Antonio. He teaches in U.s. Latino, American and Latin American Literature and Popular Culture and has published
in all these fields. His first book, I a Pinta: Historv Culture and Ideology in O1icana and O1icano Convict Discourses,
is forthcoming in 2001 from UT Press.
Alba Ortiz
The University of Texas at Austin
Alba Ortiz is a Professor and Associate Dean of Special Education. She received her B.s, from, South""est Texas State,
in San Marcos. Her masters and Ph.D, in education are from UT-Austin. Her. research interests include developing
models for effective schools and instructional delivery systems for minority students and Appropriate and
Inappropriate Referral Systems for Exceptional Limited English Proficient Students, Proceedings of the Second
National Research Symposium on Limited English Proficient Students' Issues. (Department of Education, Office of
Bilingual Education and Minority Languages Affairs, 1992).
Luis F.B. Plascencia
The University of Texas at Austin
Luis F.B. Plascencia, Associate Director of the Texas Office of the Tomas Rivera Policy Institute and Project Coordinator
for the Public Policy Clinic (Government Department at UT). His primary research interests are immigrant and immi-
gration policy, citizenship, agricultural labor and Mexico-U,S, relations. In addition to directing several qualitative
and quantitative research projects, he has been a lecturer at UT-Austin, UT-San Antonio, Northeastern Illinois
University (Chicago), and Elmhurst College (Chicago).
Naomi Quinonez
California State University Fullerton
Naomi Quinonez is currently an Assistant Professor at California State University Fullerton where she teaches course
in the Chicana/Chicano Studies Department. Quinonez received her Ph.D in History with an American Studies spe-
cialization from Claremont Graduate University in Pomona, California. Quinonez is also an award winning poet who
has written two books of poetry, and is anthologized in many books and journals,
Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez
University of Texas at Austin
Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez, an assistant professor, has taught journalism at UT since graduating from the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill as a Freedom Forum Fellow in 1998. She has she worked as a journalist for major news
media outlets including UPI, WFM-TV in Dallas, the Boston Globe and the Dallas Morning News. Her master's was
from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and her bachelor's in journalism was from UT-Austin,
She researches Latinos and the news media.
Denise Rocha
University of Texas at Austin
Denise Rocha, a native of Refugio, Texas, is the U.s. Latino and Latina World War II Conference Coordinator, She
received her B.A. in History with a minor in Hispanic Relations from St, Edward's University in Austin, Her research
has included the history of World War II, the culture and politics of Latin America, Spain and Russia,
America Rodriguez
Virgilio Roet
Rosa Salazar
Rosales
Rodolfo Rosales
Rita Sanchez
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Josefina Santiago
Carab(tUo
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America Rodriguez
University of Texas at Austin
America Rodriguez, formerly a Los Angeles-based correspondent for National Public Radio (NPR), is associate pro-
fessor in the Departments of RTF and Journalism Departments at UT, She is the author of "Making Latino News:
Race, Oass Language," (Sage, 1999). Her Ph.D, is in Communication from the University of California at San Diego.
Her B,A. is in English and Spanish Literature from Swarthmore College. Her research interests include the history
and political economy of US immigrant media,
Elisa Rodriguez
Elisa Rodriguez worked for 34 years for the federal government as a stenographer and an administrative secretary, as
well as serving as an interpreter and, later, as the Spanish speaking program coordinator for the Economic
Opportunity Office at Bergstrom Air Force Base. She worked in Waco and Austin for the Army Air Corps, the
Veterans Administration and the Air Force, A native of Waco, Texas, Mrs. Rodriguez graduated from Waco High
School in 1941. Mrs. Rodriguez retired in 1977.
Virgilio G. Roel
Austin, Texas
Virgilio G, Roel received his BA from UT-Austin and his law degree from Georgetown Law School. He served in the
Army and received the European EAME Campaign Medal with two bronze stars, He was appointed to various posi-
tions including the High Court of American Samoa and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
He was also was involved in helping to organize the Hispanic Bar Association.
Rosa Salazar Rosales
Rosa Salazar Rosales is the Executive Director of the National Association for Public Employees, located in San
Antonio, Texas. Ms, Rosales, a native of San Antonio, received her B,A, from the University of'Michigan at Ann
Arbor. As an active member of LULAC for the past twenty years, she has served as district director and is a past State
Director of Texas LULAC. She is known for her public advocacy on behalf of disenfranchised communities in the area
of labor, education, health, and housing.
Rodolfo Rosales
University of Texas at San Antonio
Rodolfo Rosales is an Assistant Professor at UI'-San Antonio. He received his Ph.D, from the University of Michigan.
Dr. Rosales is the author of The Illusion of Inclusion (1999), which focuses on the emergence of middle class Hispanic
politics in San Antonio in the last half of the 20th century. His teaching and research interests are Chicano politics,
urban politics, modern and contemporary political philosophy, and public policy.
Loriene Roy
University of Texas at Austin
Loriene Roy is a Professor in the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at UT-Austin, She received a
Ph,D, from the University of Illinois, She co-edited Librarv and Information Studies Education in the United States
(1998), Her research involves creating a National Virtual Museum of the American Indian, a reading program for
American Indian children; conducting a study of Spectrum Initiative scholars for the American Library Association;
and co-developing an agent for book recommending.
Rita Sanchez
San Diego Mesa College
Rita Sanchez received her Master's Degree in English from Stanford University in 1974. At Stanford, she was a Ford
Foundation Fellow and a Stanford Chicano FeUow. She edited and published two student journals. She taught for
ten years, from 1974-1984, in the Chicano Studies Department at San Diego State University. She is currently Chair
of the Chicano Studies Department at San Diego Mesa College, She developed the first courses on Chicanas. Today
she promotes the study and research of family history.
Josefina Santiago Caraballo
University of Puerto Rico, Bayamon campus
Josefina Santiago Caraballo teaches humanitions, Puerto Rican history and U.S. history. She is completing her dis-
sertation, "War, Reform and Colonialism: the Militarization of Puerto Rico." The dissertaion looks at the reltaion
looks at the relation between the militarization and socio-economic reforms as a result of World War II. Her work has
been published in books, academic journals and newspapers, mostly related to her dissertaion,
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Federico Subervi
Gerald Torres
George Vargas
Emilio Zamora
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Federico Subervi
University of Texas at Austin
Federico Subervi has been a professor at the Department of Radio-TV- Film, University of Texas-Austin since 1989.
He also taught at UC-Santa Barbara. Subervi earned his Ph,D at the School of Journalism and Mass Communication
at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, His M.A. in Communication and B.A. in Social Science, both with honors,
are from the University of Puerto Rico, his native country. His specialty, areas are Communication and ethnic-minor-
ity groups, especially Latinos/Hispanics.
Gerald Torres
University of Texas at Austin
Gerald Torres is Vice-Provost and H.O, Head Centennial Professor in Real Property Law. He received his A,8, in 1974
from Stanford University; his J.D. 1977 from Yale and his LL.M. 1980, University of Michigan (Ann Arbor), His
research areas are Critical Race Theory and agricultural and environmental law. He has served as Deputy Attorney
General for Environmental and Natural Resources in the Department of Justice in Washington, DC, and as Counsel
to Attorney General Janet Reno.
Steve Trejo
The University of Texas at Austin
Steve Trejo is an economist who recently moved to UT from the University of California at Santa Barbara. He received
his Ph.D, from the University of Chicago, and his research focuses on public policy issues involving labor markets. In
recent work, he has investigated the economic experiences of immigrant and minority workers and the impact of over-
time pay regulation.
Dionicto Valdes
The University Of Minnesota
Dionicio Valdes is Professor of Chicano Studies at the University Of Minnesota. He received his Ph. D. in Latin
American history at the University of Michigan, He is the author of Al Norte' Agricultural Workers in the Great lakes
Region. 1917-1970 (UT Press, 1991), and Barrios Nortenos: St Paul and Midwestern Mexican Communities in the
Twentieth Century (UT Press, 2000). He is also co-editor, with Refugio Rochin, of Voices of a New Chicana/o Historv
(Michigan State University Press, 2000).
George Vargas
Austin, Texas
George Vargas, Ph.D. (the University of Michigan) is published art historian, art/ed administrator, art consultant,
grantwriter, museum educator/curator, and visual artist, who also has an expertise in public art. His most recent
book is on contemporary Mexican American art and will be published by UT Press. He is also the founder of Latin-
Artes, a new art consultancy company organized to present, promote, and preserve Latino American arts and culture.
Emilio Zamora
University of Houston
Emilio Zamora is an Associate Professor in the Department of History at the University of Houston. He obtained his
BA and MA degrees at Texas 1\&1 University at Kingsville and his Ph,D. degree from UT-Austin. His research inter-
ests include Mexican American history and the history of Mexican workers in Texas between 1890 and 1945, His
recent book-length study, The World of the Mexican Worker in Texas (1993), was awarded The T.R. Fehrenbach Book
Award and The H.L. Mitchell Award.
The U.S. Latinos & Latinas WWII Oral History Project
... Preserving the Legacy
This conference ties in to the U.S. Latinos & Latinas WWII Oral History Project, which is doc-
umenting the stories and accomplishments of that generation. The core of the Project is an
archive of videotaped interviews to be housed at the Center for American History and the Nettie
Lee Benson Latin American Collection, both here at the lIT campus.
There are several other components and lots of ways to help. Please see our contact information
on page 1 of this program. Any and all help is welcome!
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Weare proud to be associated with the U.S. Latinos & 1.,atinas and WWII
Conference and with the larger effort, the U.S. Latinos & Latinas WWII Oral
History Project. As journalists, we believe tha! the story of our country must include
the stories of all of our people. We applaud the good efforts of conference partici-
pants and especially the leadership of Prof. Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez. We look for-
ward to continuing work in this important area.
--Stephen D. Reese, Chairman, Department of Journalism.
The Center for Mexican American Studies (CMAS) is proud to be a sponsor of
this event honoring the experience of U.S. Latinos and Latinas during World
War II. Too often the contributions and sacrifices of the Latino community in the
service of this country have been overlooked. This conference represents an initial
step in the long-overdue effort to correct this oversight. In that context, this confer-
ence marks an important and much-needed beginning.
-- David Montejano, Director Center for Mexican American Studies
The College of Communication at the University of Texas at Austin is honored to
be a part of the u.s. Latinos & Latinas and WWII Conference. We wish to
thank the excellent scholars from throughout the country who are here to share their
very important work in the area of U.S, Hispanics. Let's hope this is the beginning
of future work and conversations in this area. The College is pleased to cosponsor this
event and we wish to congratulate Professor Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez for her very
hard work..,have a great conference.
-- Dean Ellen Wartella
The U,S. Latino and Latina World War II Conference would like to thank our
volunteers for all of their hard work. vVtthout their help, the U. S. Latino and
Latina World War II Conference could not be possible.
and the
A. H. Belo Corporation Foundation
proudly support the
u.s. Latinos and Latinas & World War II:
Changes Seen, Changes Wrought
Conference
University of Texas at Austin
May 2000