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User:Oughtta Be Otters/sandbox

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Claudia: Sandra Rowe

I love writing about people with minoritized identities.

WikiScholars Social Movements[edit]

Thinking about censorship and criminalization of online educational resources.

Special project[edit]

User:Thanoscar21/CVUA/Oughtta Be Otters

Counter-vandalism Unit Academy


User:Oughtta Be Otters/sandbox/sources for graphic design

User:Oughtta Be Otters/sandbox/database censorship

Indigenous People's Day Writing[edit]

Corrina Gould

Linda Yamane

Work to be done[edit]

Keep an eye on Janice Pettyjohn -- lots of press at her hiring by Howard football, but not sure quite sustainable yet.

Amira Virgil

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/dec/27/young-sudanese-archaeologists-dig-up-history-as-west-knows-best-era-ends

Maria Aparecida Vulcano brazillian entomologist

Aïda Espinola brazillian chemist

"Antoinette Seymour" OR "Juliet Storr " chess

Pushpa Khare astrophysicist: https://www.ias.ac.in/public/Resources/Initiatives/Women_in_Science/Contributors/pushpakhare.pdf

Sulabha Pathak immunologist: https://www.ias.ac.in/public/Resources/Initiatives/Women_in_Science/Contributors/sulabhapathak.pdf

Nadage Dorée Jewish feminist novelist and playwright who wrote about persecution of the Jews and tended to cause a lot of trouble

https://issuu.com/rjkennedy/docs/reduced_usbe_beya_vol42no1_text_fin -- lots of female engineers in here


Khadijeh Moghaddam



User:Oughtta Be Otters/sandbox/gwenwong


Serena Sumanop (Serena Sumanop is the executive director of The Voice, Inc. In Papua New Guinea. She runs a partnership program with universities including the University of Papua New Guinea. The Voice focuses on empowering young people to give back to their communities. They work with 200 youth, helping them understand their own legal rights and work on leadership development with the partnering universities.) https://www.ywcampls.org/all-our-voices-blog/20-asian-american-and-pacific-islander-women-to-know/

Pioneers in marine biology

https://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/news/feb21/historical-trail-blazers.html


ReShonda Young

Nujoud Merancy Rosemary Hakim

May Assaff Emily Hajar


Loretta Staples (Rick recommended): https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/18/style/loretta-staples-ui-design.html Thinking about what people I want to look at and possibly write about here, Scholars of Interest.

Important: CG asked me to take a look at African-American neighborhood and see about content and tone.

Black American Inventors

Now: User:Oughtta Be Otters/sandbox/westbank

Now: User:Oughtta Be Otters/sandbox/Derek_Liecty

User:Oughtta Be Otters/sandbox/sob sisters

Working on now: User:Oughtta Be Otters/sandbox/whitecoats.

Goal for next:Eunice_W._Johnson

Goal: People from: https://blackquotidian.supdigital.org/bq/introduction


Designers:

Samuel Joyner (cartoonist)

CHARLES DAWSON (1889 – 1981) (Cartoonist/graphic designer)

Morris "Dino" Robinson


Goal: Emma Wolf (https://www.jweekly.com/2021/02/28/early-s-f-author-emma-wolf-mother-of-american-jewish-fiction-gets-a-new-reprint-120-years-later/)

Goal: Kathy Thomas-Keprta (astrobologist??) User:Oughtta Be Otters/sandbox/kathy thomas-keprta

Goal: Derick Lisecty

Goal: Rick Griffith

Goal: National Association of Hispanic Publications (seriously mentioned on like a dozen other pages, though)

Goal to expand: Yirlania Arroyo

Goal to expand: Lorin Sklamberg

Also, add citations to: Elsie Ferguson, John H Johnson, and Maurine Dallas Watkins

https://www.ias.ac.in/Initiatives/Women_in_Science/The_Women_Scientists_of_India


"Costanoan." UXL Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes, edited by Laurie J. Edwards, 3rd ed., vol. 4: California, Plateau, UXL, 2012, pp. 1403-1418. Gale In Context: High School, link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX4019400101/GPS?u=palo88030&sid=bookmark-GPS&xid=36805e31. Accessed 11 Oct. 2021.

NOTABLE PEOPLE Oiyugma was an Ohlone chief who led the resistance against the establishment of Mission San Jose in the late 1700s. He threatened to kill Spanish soldiers and any Native peoples who tried to help them build the mission.

Other notable Ohlone include Mutsun Ohlone Ann Marie Sayers, Rumsen Ohlone Linda Yamane, and Alex Ramirez, who are currently active in the movement to revive tribal traditions and bring them to the attention of a wider audience.

New Entries[edit]

Herschelle Sullivan Challenor

Corina Gould

Ione Quinby Griggs

Westpac Outstanding Women Award

Cybele Druma

Sarah Haoda Todd

Margaret Aka

Samantha Andreas

Rona Nadile

Kafi D. Blumenfield

Marie Price

Kennda Lynch

Yuriko Kimura

Angela Jackson (basketball)

Substantial edits[edit]

COVID-19 in CA Timeline

User:Oughtta Be Otters/sandbox/Toni Stone

Lenore Keeshig-Tobias

Phill Uipi

Xiaolan Bao

Madeline Stanton ‎(de-orphaned)

Toni Stone

Added baseball section to Romare Bearden

Patricia Roberts Harris

Y&G Wishlist[edit]

Emily - Mexican/Mexican-American medical personnel[edit]

(https://www.google.com/search?q=site%3Apinterest.com+%22Felicitas+Provencio%22+%22Julia+Morris%22&oq=site%3Apinterest.com+%22Felicitas+Provencio%22+%22Julia+Morris%22&aqs=chrome..69i57j69i58.11976j0j4&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8)


https://www.nps.gov/articles/latinothemescience.htm

midwife Felicitas Provencio

https://www.hispanicoutlook.com/articles/latinas-medicine-needed-sought-welcome-b-cheryl-ri

Dr. Elena Ríos is president and CEO of the National Hispanic Medical Association

Dr. Katherine Flores, director of the Latino Center for Medical Education and Research at the University of California-San Francisco

Famous hispanic female doctors[edit]

  • Dr. Katherine Flores was born into a family of migrant farmworkers in Fresno, California. (sandbox page here: User:Oughtta Be Otters/sandbox/KatherineAFlores)
  • Dr. Catalina Esperanza Garcia, a Dallas-area anesthesiologist, was one of the first Hispanic women to graduate from the University of Texas-Southwestern Medical School. Garcia attended the school at a time of racial strife: the 1960s.
  • Annette Perez-Delboy is director of Labor & Delivery and Maternal-Fetal Medicine Operations for the Columbia University Medical Center in New York City.

First hispanic doctor[edit]

  • Dr. Antonia Novello. Dr. Antonia Novello was the first woman and the first Hispanic to become Surgeon General of the United States.

https://www.latinoleadersmagazine.com/mayjune-2017/2017/12/28/top-latino-physicians

Hoy Health

Dr. Catalina Esperanza Garcia. (draft)

Catalina Esperanza Garcia, a Dallas-area anesthesiologist, was one of the first Hispanic women to graduate from the University of Texas-Southwestern Medical School. Garcia attended the school at a time of racial strife: the 1960s.

“So many times I’d run into people who had misconceptions of Latinos,” Garcia said. “I realized what they had been telling me – that I was different. I wasn’t different; they just hadn’t met enough of us. I felt I was carrying a burden in a way.” Garcia was the only woman of four in her class to successfully complete medical school. Garcia is a founding member of the philanthropic Dallas Women’s Foundation. She teaches English to immigrant women. She is the 2013 recipient of the Dallas-Fort Worth Hispanic 100 Latina Living Legend Award. In 2016, she received a Distinguished Alumni and Gold Nugget Award from the University of Texas at El Paso.

Dr. Annette Perez-Delboy

Annette Perez-Delboy is director of Labor & Delivery and Maternal-Fetal Medicine Operations for the Columbia University Medical Center in New York City. She has expertise in amniocentesis, chorionic villus sampling, fetal reduction and fetal blood transfusions and has done research on preterm deliveries, recurrent pregnancy loss, cervical insufficiencies and cervical cerclages. Perez-Delboy is one of the few physicians who performs cerclages with the daVinci robot-assisted surgical system. Perez-Delboy is a member of the Fellow American College of Ob/Gyn (FACOG), the American College of Physician Executives (ACPE), the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine (AIUM), the Society of Maternal-Fetal Medicine (SMFM), the New York Obstetric Society (NYOBS), and the Association of Maternal Fetal Medicine Management (AMFMM).


https://www.univision.com/univision-news/health/these-23-hispanics-are-an-example-in-the-us-health-services

  • Aimee Pinales-Rodriguez, registered and certified nurse who works in the operating room at Houston Methodist Hospital in Texas

For the last eight years, Pinales-Rodriguez has worked as a sort of patient advocate, assessing whether patients are ready for surgery and acting as their eyes, ears, and voice while under anesthesia. Her parents were born in Mexico, but moved to the U.S. more than 30 years ago. “I am truly proud of being Hispanic, of being part of a culture that is so rich and colorful and focuses on family, unity, rich food, and above all, integrity," she said. "As a young child, I watched my father work from sunrise to sunset to provide for our family of six. All these values, relayed to me as a child, gave me strength and determination to be the first in my family to graduate from college and have the successful nursing career I have today.” She wants to instill the same values in her 5-year-old daughter, she added.


https://www.aamc.org/news-insights/celebrating-10-hispanic-pioneers-medicine

Celebrating 10 Hispanic pioneers in medicine

Stacy Weiner, Senior Staff Writer

September 17, 2020

https://www.umhs-sk.org/blog/hispanic-heritage-month-latino-doctors-scientists-educators

Random[edit]

http://bamanet.net/actualite/independant/ordres-nationaux-du-mali-qui-comment-pourquoi.html For the National Order of Mali, the first promoted to the title of Knight was Bakara Diallo, Director of the Cabinet of the President of the Republic at the time, the first male Officer was El Hadji Dossolo Traoré, the first male Commander Sory Coulibaly, Minister Delegate to the CMLN (1971) the first man Grand Officer El Hadji Dossolo Traoré (again him!) The first woman Knight, Madame Rossi Odette Ouattara, the first woman Officer, Madame Diallo Pauline, Midwife at the Ministry of Health (1972 ) the first female Commander, Madame Inna Sissoko, Secretary of State for Social Affairs (1971) the first female Grand Officer, Madame Inna Sissoko, Former Minister (2003) the first female Grand Cross, Her Princely Highness Monique Sihanouk (1973).

Regarding the Order of Agricultural Merit, the first male Knight was Amadou Niang, breeder in Kayes, the first female Knight, Madame Mamou Doucouré, farmer in Kiban (Banamba) the first male Officer, Nader Tedros, in Tamani (Ségou) the first Woman Officer, Madame Touré Kadja Traoré, market gardener in the District of Bamako and the first Commander's medal was awarded to the village tone of Kiyo, Cercle de Tominian (Ségou).

For the Order of Merit of Health, the first male Knight is Doctor Mamadou Dembélé who will later become the first Prime Minister in the history of Mali, the first female Knight was Madame Mabintou Diawara, SG of CADP VI Bamako.

Regarding Military Distinctions, the Cross of Military Valor was awarded for the first time to Staff Sergeant Abdoulaye Touré of the Army, the Medal of Military Merit to Ousseynou Traoré of the Army, the Medal of Rescue to Sergeant Laya Ouologuem of the Air Force.

Finally, the Medal for the Wounded was awarded for the very first time to Staff Sergeant of Peace, Soumaïla Kouyaté of the Police.