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MILWAUKEE 鈥?When Alberto Maldonado was a student at UW-Milwaukee, h
stanley cup e relied on the Roberto Hernandez Center to help him navigate college classes and life. I am personally a product of the center. I walked into the center in 1990 as an immigrant, as an English language learner, and you know, folks walked me through. And we see that story repeats itself i
stanley cup spain n so many other ways, said Maldonado, who is now the director of the center.When planning for the center s 50th anniversary a few years ago, the idea of a podcast exploring its history came up. In October of this year, that podcast launched as a collaboration between UWM archives and the Roberto Hernandez Center. It s called the HOLA Archives Podcast Project. We want folks to be educated on how one act of advocacy has helped pave the way for so many and has transformed a community, Maldonado said of the mission behind the podcast. The first two episodes, now online, tell the story of the inception of the Sp
stanley cup anish Speaking Institute on campus, which would eventually become the Roberto Hernandez Center. It started when students marched to and occupied the chancellor s office in 1970 demanding more resources for Latino students. At the time, there were just 12 Latino students on campus. Today, Maldonado said there are 2,600.On Wednesday, Maldonado and his partner producing the podcast, Ann Hanlon, interviewed Fela Salinas. Salinas, while not a student at the time, was part of the protest in 1970. Her full interview will be avai Bjqp Accidental Thanksgiving text friends will celebrate for 8th year
Two decades after the 9/11 attacks shook America to its core by crashing two planes into the World Trade Center, some of the men and women who wer
stanley vattenflaska e first to respond to the tragedy in lower Manhattan are recalling their harrowing experiences as this somber anniversary approaches.James Hill, Gerry Giunta and Michael Gomes are members of the Massachusetts Task Force 1. The agency has responded to countless natural disasters since it was first founded in the early 1990s. But September 11, 2001, was the teams first time dealing with a terrorist attack.James Hill still remembers pulling into New York City a few hours after the World Trade Center towers had collapsed. We turned the corner and there was an airplane jet engine laying on the sidewalk, Hill recalled.For Gerry Giunta, it was the color from the buildings ash and debris that still sits in the back of his mind some 20 years later. Everything was monochromatic grey and as we got further it was like snow, he said.These three men were among the first to arrive in New York City, mere hours after the country was shaken to its core. But as they barreled toward New York City in old military vehicles, with no FM radios or cell phones, no one had any idea what to expect. It was really strange. Everything was grey. There was no color to anything; there was dust covering everything. You just had to take a deep swallow knowing what youre going into
stanley termosar and what
stanley cup youre faced with, Gerry Giunta added.For eight days, with no sleep, the task