UNT Libraries Special Collections - 13 Matching Results

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[Carlos Garcia de Alba and the Pope]
Carlos Garcia de Alba stands in front of a photograph of himself shaking hands with Pope John Paul II. Garcia de Alba is the Consul General of Mexico in Dallas, Texas.
[Domingo Garcia speaking in front of audience]
Domingo Garcia is a practicing attorney in Dallas, Texas. Garcia served as Mayor Pro Tem of Dallas, as a Dallas City Council member, and as a Texas legislator. He is the current General Counsel for the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), a Latino civil rights organization.
[Domingo Garcia speaking into microphone]
Domingo Garcia is a practicing attorney in Dallas, Texas. Garcia served as Mayor Pro Tem of Dallas, as a Dallas City Council member, and as a Texas legislator. He is the current General Counsel for the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), a Latino civil rights organization.
[Domingo Garcia speaking into microphone with arm raised]
Domingo Garcia is a practicing attorney in Dallas, Texas. Garcia served as Mayor Pro Tem of Dallas, as a Dallas City Council member, and as a Texas legislator. He is the current General Counsel for the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), a Latino civil rights organization.
[Domingo Garcia with hand on head]
Domingo Garcia is a practicing attorney in Dallas, Texas. Garcia served as Mayor Pro Tem of Dallas, as a Dallas City Council member, and as a Texas legislator. He is the current General Counsel for the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), a Latino civil rights organization.
[Hurricane Katrina refugees]
Photograph of Cynthia Canepa and Luis Alberto Ponce; both were displaced by hurricane Katrina.
[Parents with children study forms]
Parents and their children study forms while participating in a distance learning program. Colegio de Bachilleres, located int he Mexican state of Michoacan, runs a distance learning program which helps immigrants in the United States earn bachelors degrees.
Plan a distancia ofrece oportunidad para culminar preparatoria
This article describes how distance education allows some Mexican immigrants to earn a bachelors degree from the Colegio de Bachilleres in the Mexcian state of Michoacan. Both the original Spanish article and the English translation are included.
[Students participate in a distance learning class]
Students in Dallas, Texas prepare to participate in a distance learning program run by Colegio de Bachilleres, located in the Mexican state of Michoacan. The students take courses that are recognized by all Mexican institutions of higher learning.
[Students read handouts on distance learning]
Dallas students work toward their bachelors degrees through a distance education program run by Colegio de Bachilleres. The courses are recognized by all Mexican institutions.
[Students take online courses to earn a bachelors degree]
Mexican immigrants in Dallas, Texas use the Colegio De Bachilleres distance learning program to earn their bachelors degree.
[Woman and Man study material on a computer screen]
A woman and a man study material on a computer as part of their distance learning program. The Colegio de Bacheilleres, located in the Mexican state of Michoacan, offers a distance learning program to Mexican immigrants in the United States. Students are able to earn bachelors degrees by participating in this program.
[Woman and young man with skyscrapers in background]
After a few months in Dallas, Cynthia Canepa and Luis Alberto Ponce have decided to return to Biloxi, the place they left six months ago due to the ravages caused by Hurricane Katrina.
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