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Word: chicanas (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Chicans, professionals, mothers, all without stripping ourselves," Dr. Alicia V. Cuaron, co-chair of the National League of United Latin American Citizens and the first Chicana woman sponsored to speak at Radcliffe said last night at Agassiz House...

Author: By Susan L. Donner, | Title: Groups Sponsor Chicana Speaker; First At Radcliffe | 2/13/1981 | See Source »

...Chicana women workers at the Farah pants factory in Texas won a two-year strike in 1974, to get recognition of the right to organize. While the women strikers had aid from support committees and a national boycott, it was again the tenacity and determination of these women workers which made victory possible...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Women Hold Up Half the Sky | 3/11/1977 | See Source »

...most polarized delegation was the 280-member California contingent, bitterly split between Carter and Brown. Jessica Govea, 29, a Chicana union organizer from Bakersfield, was gung-ho for Jerry Brown largely because he had pushed through the nation's first collective bargaining law covering farm workers. She perceives Carter as too sympathetic to Big Agribusiness, but, if he makes a "gesture" toward the United Farm Workers, would work for him against Reagan and probably against Ford...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: The Dlehards Dissolve | 7/26/1976 | See Source »

...token woman is a black Chicana fluent in Chinese who has borne 1.2 babies (not on the premises, no childcare provided) owns a PhD, will teach freshmen English for a decade and bleach your laundry with tears, silent as a china egg. Your department orders her from a taxidermist's catalog and she comes luxuriously stuffed with goosedown able to double as sleeping or punching bag. --From The Token Woman, by Marge Piercy

Author: By Anemona Hartocollis, | Title: Notes for Wayward Women | 5/20/1976 | See Source »

...September 1971, I watched a documentary, "Salt of the Earth," about a successful mine workers strike in New Mexico led by the miner's Chicana wives. Being Chicano myself and knowing the film is banned in my home state, New Mexico, I was profoundly affected. The impact of observing those women overcome their exploitative circumstances was enhanced by meeting, that same night, a woman possessing the same strengths and experiences of poor Chicanas in the Southwest. The only difference was that she was Puerto Rican and from New York City...

Author: By Jo ANA Sanchez, | Title: Belen Zayas: Honors With Honor | 6/13/1974 | See Source »

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