Indiana University Latino Cultural Center records, 1968-2003, bulk 1980-1995
A Guide to the Records at the Indiana University Archives
Electronic finding aid encoded by Amanda Harlan
Summary Information
Repository
Indiana University Archives
1320 East Tenth Street
Herman B Wells Library E460
Bloomington, IN 47405-7000
Phone: 812-855-1127
Email: archives@indiana.edu
http://www.libraries.iub.edu/archives
Creator
Indiana University, Bloomington.
Latino Cultural Center.
TitleIndiana University Latino
Cultural Center records, 1968-2003, bulk 1980-1995
Collection No.
C245
Extent
3 cubic feet
Language
Materials are in English.
Abstract
The Latino Cultural Center was
established at Indiana University in 1973. It is more affectionately known as La
Casa. Its purpose was, and continues to be, to achieve through educational and
social programs, a greater historical, political and cultural awareness regarding
latina/os. The collection consists primarily of records created by the Latino
Cultural Center while under the direction of the Office of Latino Affairs including
correspondence, publications, programs, budget information, annual reports, and
subject files.
Access Restrictions
Advance notice is required for access.
Administrative History
In 1971 the Indiana Daily Student published a call for assistance in forming an
office that would address the needs of a growing Latino student body. In 1973, after
two years of development, the Indiana University administration appointed Horatio
Lewis to fill the dual role of assistant dean in the University Division and
director of the newly created Office of Latino Affairs (OLA).
Lewis quickly established himself as a resource for Latino students. Students
frequently gathered in the Office of Latino Affairs to socialize with one another,
as well as to seek advocacy. It soon became clear to Lewis that the Latino students
needed a cultural center of their own, in addition to the newly founded advocacy
office.
In November of 1973, Lewis helped to establish the Latino Cultural Center,
affectionately know as La Casa, in a house at 410 South Park Street. Three years
later, in 1976, La Casa relocated to a larger and more conveniently situated house
at 715 East 7th Street, across from the Student Union building.
Education graduate student, Jorge Wehby, was hired as the first director of La Casa.
His primary goal was to create a place for new Latino students to congregate in a
comfortable and supportive environment. The Office of Latino Affairs hoped this
would help Latino students adjust to life at Indiana University, giving them a sense
of community that would keep them enrolled in the University and reduce attrition
rates. Though La Casa was originally intended primarily for new students making the
transition to college life, it soon became a touchstone for the entire Latino
community at Indiana University.
By 1977, La Casa had settled into its new location, and Latino students felt it was
time to take another step to develop a thriving Latino community at Indiana
University. Alianza Latina del Medioeste de America (ALMA), the leading Latino
student organization on campus at the time, began lobbying the administration to
hire a Latino recruiter and establish a full-time Latino deanship.
ALMA sought a college recruiter who would speak Spanish fluently, understand the
unique cultural concerns of Latino families, and make prospective Latino students
and their families feel welcomed by Indiana University. As a result of their
efforts, Guadalupe Solis was hired for the 1979-1980 school year as the first Latino
recruiter at Indiana University.
ALMA’s efforts, as supported by La Casa and the Office of Latino Affairs, also
yielded a new full-time deanship for the Office of Latino Affairs, filled by Dr.
Hector-Neri Casteñeda, on 15 August 1978. As part of Dr. Casteñeda duties he oversaw
the Office of Latino Affairs and the Latino Cultural Center. During his tenure as
dean, Dr. Casteñeda supported the expansion and improvement of La Casa as executed
by Georgia Burgueño, a graduate student who was the La Casa counselor at the
time.
In the 1980-1981 academic year, Dr. Casteñeda approved the funding for a major
improvement project designed by Burgueño. She renovated La Casa to create a new
lounge, T.V. room, library, and tutoring center on the premises. She was also
instrumental in expanding the programming at La Casa. During the early 1980’s
Burgueño established many new counseling and support programs, including a very
popular Single Parents Support Group in 1983. This group was formed to address the
needs of older, non-traditional Latino students who felt especially out of place at
Indiana University as both parents and minorities.
Burgueño worked at La Casa to establish a Counseling and Academic Advising Program
from 1980 until 1986, when she became the Coordinator for Latino Services for the
Office of Latino Affairs. She continued to play an integral role at La Casa,
counseling and advising many students and student organizations. She was an advisor
for Latinos Unidos at Indiana University (LUIU), she helped students bring a chapter
of the Latino fraternity Sigma Lambda Beta to campus, and in 1991 she helped a group
of Latina students to create the alpha chapter of the sorority Gamma Phi Omega. In
addition to advising student groups at La Casa and beyond, Burgueño also served on
the Racial Incidents Team. In this capacity, she was instrumental in mediating a
1993 conflict between senators of the Indiana University Student Association and
LUIU president Gabino Zapata, in which the senators made racial slurs against Zapata
and his organization during a budget meeting. Burgueño worked as the Coordinator of
Latino Services for the Office of Latino Affairs until 1999 when it was incorporated
into an Office of Multicultural Affairs. She then became the Latino Advocate to
represent the needs of the Latino community within this larger organization, serving
in this capacity until leaving the University in 2003.
Although the consolidation of minority affairs offices did not occur until 1999,
efforts to bring these offices together began in 1980, the same year that Burgueño
arrived at Indiana University. In 1980, the new vice president of Afro-American
Affairs, Herman Hudson, recommended consolidation of the Afro-American, Latino, and
Women’s Affairs Offices into a single organization – The Office of Afro-American and
Minority Affairs. This proposal left the Latino community feeling marginalized,
especially after they had put a great deal of effort into strengthening and
developing the Office of Latino Affairs and the Latino Cultural Center, as well as
securing a Latino dean and minority college recruiter specializing in the needs of
Latino students. Other minority students, including representatives of the Black
Student Union, opposed the notion of consolidation because the proposal did not
address the needs of individual minority groups as the previous offices had.
Latino Students at Indiana University worked out of La Casa with other student groups
to form Students United Against Consolidation (SUAC) and lobbied vehemently against
the proposal. They wrote letters to the administration and the Indiana Daily
Student, as well as circulating petitions among students and parents. Their efforts
were successful. In January of 1981 the consolidation proposal was retracted; yet
the concept remained open for discussion. On 1 January 1999 the Office of Latino
Affairs was eventually incorporated into a larger Office of Multicultural
Affairs.
For the time being, the Office of Latino Affairs was preserved and La Casa continued
to operate in direct cooperation with the staff of the OLA, which was in a period of
internal flux at this time. In 1981, Dean Hector-Neri Castañeda received an
unfavorable administrative review and many complaints from students for failing to
be a strong advocate for the Latino community. One student, Fernando Chacón – who
was studying law at the time and is now a practicing attorney – led a boycott
against the Office of Latino Affairs as managed by Dean Castañeda. Chacón commented
that the Dean “did not respond to any of the students’ messages and pleas to improve
services for Latinos.” (Office of Latino Affairs, January 1973-June 1999. p. 22)
Castañeda took a leave of absence after receiving the negative review and later
resigned from his position. Alberto Torchinsky, professor of mathematics, stepped in
as acting dean and was later hired for the permanent position. Torchinsky was well
liked by students, staff and the administration and he remained in the Deanship
until the Office of Latino Affairs was closed in 1999. Students felt that Torchinsky
was more in touch with their needs. He also conducted the Office of Latino Affairs
openly, with the hope that the entire Latino community would have a voice in its
governance.
Under Torchinsky’s leadership, La Casa was expanded into an umbrella organization for
a growing number of Latino student groups. La Casa provided faculty advisors, a
meeting place, funding, and full use of the office equipment for clerical activities
such as typing meeting minutes and newsletters or copying event flyers.
Throughout this period, La Casa continued to grow and expand its programming and
outreach to Latino students, as well as planning cultural events for the Indiana
University community at large. Together with the Office of Latino Affairs, La Casa
brought many notable speakers and performers to campus, including Tito Puente in
1984, Henry Cisneros in 1986, Nobel Peace Prize winner Dr. Oscar Arias Sánchez in
1990, and César Chavez in 1993.
Through campus-wide events such as National Hispanic Heritage Month, La Casa and the
Latino student community were gaining visibility and acceptance at Indiana
University; yet, there were also growing concerns over racial incidents and tension
at this time. At a student senate meeting in 1993, the President of Latinos Unidos
set forth a resolution to secure funding for a parents weekend banquet. He was met
with racial slurs that spawned a major conflict in the senate and throughout the
campus. During this period, La Casa was instrumental in serving as a meeting place
for Latino students to discuss their reactions to the event and formulate a unified
response.
A year earlier, in 1992, Lillian Casillas assumed responsibility for overseeing La
Casa as the Program Assistant to the Office of Latino Affairs, while a graduate
student at Indiana University. Prior to Casillas’ tenure the position had a high
turnover rate, and La Casa found itself with a new leader every 1-2 years. Casillas,
however, held the position from 1992-1998 and returned to La Casa in 2000 to accept
the newly created position of director.
Under the direction of Casillas, La Casa continued to flourish. In 1995, La Casa
sponsored MEZCLA, the first Latino team to compete in the Little 500 bicycle race.
In 1997, La Casa was instrumental in bringing another Latina sorority, Sigma Lambda
Gamma, to Indiana University. Additionally, another first for Latino students was
organized by Casillas and La Casa in 1998, when a team of Latino students
participated in the I.U. Sing.
As La Casa’s presence grew on campus, the general student body became more aware of
diversity issues. Throughout 1997 and 1998, 32 student organizations had come
together to advocate that Indiana University officially recognize Martin Luther King
Jr. Day, create a Latino Studies department, and address many other diversity
issues. Yet at the same time a climate of racial tension was also burgeoning on
campus. One high profile case of such tension occurred in 1997, when nine pledges of
the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity were arrested for racial harassment during a scavenger
hunt that required them to take a photo of “any funny looking Mexican”. The
aftermath of this and other events furthered conflict among students.
Growing concern led Kenneth R.R. Gros-Louis, Chancellor of Indiana University,
Bloomington, to reevaluate minority advocacy programs in March of 1998. He consulted
Dr. Charlie Nelms, Chancellor of the University of Michigan-Flint and a multi-racial
team of educators and administrators. Together, they studied and evaluated the
climate at Indiana University and formulated the 20/20 Plan to address minority and
diversity concerns.
The plan was released on 1 October 1998 and it called for the strengthening of
minority advocacy through the consolidation of individual advocacy offices into a
unified Office of Multicultural Affairs. Chancellor Gros-Louis commented that “a
series of stand-alone advocacy deanships cannot by themselves dramatically improve
the campus climate, or increase the numbers or improve graduation rates from
under-represented students.” (Faculty Council Speech, 6 October 1998)
There was some student opposition to the plan, and the Latino community in particular
lobbied for better representation in the new office. This led to the hiring of
former OLA Coordinator for Latino Services, Georgia Burguéno, as Latino Advocate in
the new Office of Multicultural Affairs, which opened 1 January 1999. La Casa, which
was previously managed by the Office of Latino Affairs and received funding out of
the OLA budget, became an independent organization under the umbrella of the Office
of Multi-Cultural Affairs.
This led to the replacement of the graduate student ‘Program Assistant’ position with
the permanent staff position of director, which was filled by Casillas two years
after she graduated and left the previous Program Assistant position. Though it was
feared that consolidation would marginalize services for Latino students, Casillas
commented that “under OMA [Office of Mulitcultural Affairs], La Casa has its own
budget, larger staff and has better connections to other minority related services.”
(personal communication, 14 June 2004) Presently, La Casa remains an active campus
organization.
Arrangement
Records organized into four series: Events; Latino community organizations;
Publications; and Subject files.
Scope and Content Note
This collection contains materials relating to and collected by the Latino Cultural
Center (La Casa) while under the direction of the Office of Latino Affairs. The
Office of Latino Affairs (OLA) was established in 1973 and the director of OLA
created the Latino Cultural Center as program of the OLA in November of 1973. La
Casa continued to operate as a sub-section of the Office of Latino Affairs through
1998. During this period, La Casa was managed by a graduate student ‘Program
Assistant’, who reported to the Dean overseeing the Office of Latino Affairs.
On 1 January 1999 the OLA was closed and all minority advocacy offices on campus were
consolidated into the Office of Multicultural Affairs. The deanship that oversaw the
Office of Latino Affairs was dissolved and OLA’s permanent staff position of
‘Coordinator for Latino Services’, was transformed into the Latino Advocate position
at the Office of Multicultural Affairs. The Coordinator for Latino Services had
previously been the responsible for overseeing the student position of ‘Program
Assistant’ at La Casa; but the new OMA position of Latino Advocate did not include
these responsibilities. Instead, in 2000, the OMA created a permanent staff position
for the director of La Casa, which was filled by Lillian Casillas, a former graduate
student and Program Assistant to La Casa. La Casa is now under the umbrella of the
OMA, but functions much more independently than when it was a part of the Office of
Latino Affairs.
This collection includes records collected by staff and students at La Casa, while
the center was still under the direction of the Office of Latino Affairs. It was
transferred to the Indiana University Archives by Lillian Casillas along with her
director’s files and the files of the Gamma Phi Omega Latina sorority. Gamma Phi
Omega was founded at Indiana University, Bloomington in 1991 and it was advised by
Georgia Burgueno, the Coordinator for Latino Services, through La Casa. The Gamma
Phi Omega records have been separated into their own collection, C253. Subsequent
records transferred from La Casa after it became an independent organization under
the umbrella of the Office of Multicultural Affairs will be placed in a La Casa
Director’s files collection.
The collection is organized into four series: Events, Latino community organizations,
Publications, and Subject files. The Events series is further broken into three
subseries of Banquets and receptions, General, and Speakers. Each series and
subseries is in alphabetical order. Within each series or subseries, the folders are
arranged alphabetically and the materials in each folder are in chronological
order.
Events – Banquets and receptions, 1978-1999, is the first subseries of Events. The
bulk of this subseries pertains to the Latino Students Recognition Banquet, which
was held annually to give scholarships and awards to outstanding members of the
Indiana University Latino community. This series contains programs, correspondence,
and other records relating to the awards banquets held between 1978 and 1999. The
series also features records for many student and faculty receptions held by the
Office of Latino Affairs in the 1990’s, as well as two receptions held in
conjunction with the Office of Afro-American Affairs.
Events – General, 1968-1998, contains a wide variety of events supported by the
Latino Cultural Center and the Office of Latino Affairs. They range from social and
cultural events to leadership workshops and academic events. A large portion of this
subseries deals with National Hispanic Heritage Month (Sept. 15 – Oct. 15)
programming between the years of 1984 to 2002. The Latino Leadership Workshop,
1982-1985, and other leadership retreats and workshops also comprise a significant
potion of this subseries.
Events – Speakers, 1984-1997, contains files on individual guest speakers who came to
IU and individuals whom the Latino Cultural Center and the Office of Latino Affairs
were trying to bring to campus. Of special note are speakers César Chavez and Henry
Cisneros who are known internationally for their activism for the Latino
community.
Latino community organizations features files on numerous Latino organizations
operating under the umbrella of the Latino Cultural Center (La Casa). Latinos Unidos
of Indiana University, also known as LUIU, was the largest of these organizations
and represented Latino interests in the Indiana University student government. Also
of note are MEZCLA, the first Latino team to participate in the Little 500 bicycle
race, and a file on the first Latino team to enter the IU Sing contest. This series
includes the records of many student organizations such as the Latino Law Students
Association, and many cultural organizations such as the Latino Dance Group.
The Publications series consists of many newsletters published by the Office of
Latino Affairs, Latino Cultural Center (La Casa), Latino students, and other Latino
organizations. The largest group of files in this series pertains to Hello! Office
of Latino Affairs or HOLA, a publication of the Office of Latino Affairs that
featured not only news and announcements pertaining to the Indiana University
community, but also in-depth articles on broader Latino issues around the country
and the world. In addition to publications targeted towards the students and faculty
of Indiana University, there are also two publications in this series targeted
towards the parents of Latino college students. For many Latino families, these
students were the first to go to college and these newsletters helped to connect
parents to their children’s experiences with higher education.
The Subject files are the final series and are comprised of files dealing with many
different issues relating to the Latino Cultural Center (La Casa) and the Latino
community in Bloomington, Indiana. It covers basic administrative issues such as
building and computer maintenance, budgets and annual reports, and procedural files
on Indiana University’s policies on emergency planning, disciplinary action, and
dealing with sexual assault or harassment. This series also contains files on
specific proposals and issues such as the development of a Latino Studies Department
at Indiana University and repeated proposals to consolidate the Office of Latino
Affairs and other offices into a larger minority advocacy office. Of particular
interest is a folder on the 1993 report to the Racial Incidents Team of Indiana
University. This report was filed by the President of Latinos Unidos (LUIU) after he
and his organization were ridiculed and confronted with numerous racial slurs at a
senate meeting of the Indiana University Student Association. This folder contains a
great deal of correspondence between the President of LUIU, the President of the
Student Association, and many members of the community, as well as documentation on
the steps taken to resolve the incident.
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Indexing Terms
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The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in
IUCAT, the IU Libraries'
online catalog. Materials about related topics, persons or places can be found by
searching the catalog using these terms.
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Names
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Indiana
University. Latino Cultural Center --History --Sources.
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Indiana
University. Latino Cultural Center --Records and
correspondence.
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Indiana
University. Latino Cultural Center --Archives.
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Indiana
University, Bloomington. Latino Cultural Center --History
--Sources.
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Indiana
University, Bloomington. Latino Cultural Center --Records and
correspondence.
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Indiana
University, Bloomington. Latino Cultural Center
--Archives.
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Indiana
University. Office of Latino Affairs --History --Sources.
-
Indiana
University, Bloomington. Office of Latino Affairs --History
--Sources.
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Indiana
University, Bloomington --Students --Services for.
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Indiana University. Latino
Cultural Center.
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Indiana University. Office
of Latino Affairs.
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Indiana University,
Bloomington. Office of Latino Affairs.
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Indiana University,
Bloomington. Office of Multicultural Affairs.
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Chavez,
Cesar, 1927-
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Cisneros,
Henry.
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Separated Material
The records of Gamma Phi Omega sorority (Collection C253), confidential student
information, photographs, current director’s subject files, and duplicate materials
have been removed from the collection.
Related Material
See also the Indiana University Archives Collection C253, the Gamma Phi Omega
Sorority records.
Administrative Information
Acquisition Information
Accessions 2003/081 and 7071.
Usage RestrictionsCopyrights for records originating with Indiana University administrative units, departments, and other offices are held by
the Trustees of Indiana University. For more information, please contact the Indiana University Archives staff.
The Indiana University Archives respects the intellectual property rights of others and does not claim any copyrights for
non-university records, materials in the public domain, or materials for which we do not hold a Deed of Gift. Responsibility
for the determination of the copyright status of these materials rests with those persons wishing to reuse the materials.
Researchers are responsible for securing permission from copyright owners and any other rights holders for any reuse of these
materials that extends beyond fair use or other statutory limitations.
Digital reproductions of archival materials from the Indiana University Archives are made available for noncommercial educational
and research purposes only. If you are the copyright holder for any of the digitized materials and have questions about its
inclusion on our site, please contact the Indiana University Archivist.
Preferred Citation
[Item], Indiana University Latino Cultural Center records, Collection C245, Indiana University Archives, Bloomington.
Provenance
Transfer; Latino Cultural Center; 2003; Accession 2003/081.
Processing InformationProcessed by Kate Ball.
Completed in 2004.
Series:
Events, 1968-1999
Subseries:
Banquets and receptions, 1978-1999
Box 1
Latino Graduate Student Reception, 1995
Latino Students Recognition Banquet,
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
Office of Latino Affairs and Office of Afro-American Affairs
Fall Reception,
1994
1995
Office of Latino Affairs Fall Reception,
1994
1995
1996
Reception for Latino Faculty and Staff,
1993
Receptions, miscellaneous, 1996-1998
Subseries:
General, 1968-1998
Box 1
Black and Brown Get Down, 1995
Dia de la Raza,
1981
1982
1983
Fiesta Indianapolis,
1982
1983
1984
1985
Groups 30th year reunion, 1998
Latino Leadership Workshop I,1982-1983,
undated
Latino Leadership Workshop II,1983-1984,
undated
Latino Leadership Workshop III,1985,
undated
Latino Student Leadership Retreat,1991-1992,
undated
Latino Student Forum, 1994
Little 500, 1995-1996
National Hispanic Heritage Month,
1984
1985
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
Proclamations, 1968-1996
Office of Latino Affairs Racism Workshop, 1989
Pan/Amigos Retreat, 1987
Series:
Events, 1968-1999
Subseries:
Speakers, 1984-1997
Box 2
Agosin, Marjorie, 1993
Alvarad, Elvia, 1993
Alvarado, Linda, 1993
Cuellar, Dr. José “Loco,” 1997
Chavez, César, 1987-1994,
undated
Cisneros, Henry, 1984-1986,
undated
Colon, Emilio, 1992
Crawford, James, 1993
Cuarón, Dr. Alicia V., 1989,
undated
Gonzales, Roberta, 1990
Gonzalez, Rey, 1988
Gutierrez, Sidney M., 1988
Hernandez, Antonia, 1994
Luna, William, undated
Munoz, Carlos Jr., 1997
Negrete, Jesus,1992-1993,
undated
Ochoa, Ellen, 1990
Quintano, Alicia, 1992-1993
Rios-Weible, Marisella, 1991
Rodriguez, Luis, 1992-1997
Santiago, Esmeralda, undated
Santos, Miriam, 1992-1993
Villasenor, Victor, 1992,
undated
Series:
Latino community organizations, 1979-2003
Box 2
Alianza Latina del Medioeste de America (ALMA), 1973-1979,
undated
Gamma Phi Omega, 1992-2003,
undated
Hombre Latino, undated
IDIOMA, 1998-2000,
undated
Indiana University Latino Alumni Association, undated
IU Sing, 1997-1998
Latino Dance Group, 1997-1998,
undated
Latino Enhancement Committee, 1995-2001,
undated
Latino Graduate Student Association, 1998-2002,
undated
Latino Law Students Association, 1977-2003,
undated
Latinos Unidos,
1980-1984
1984-1989
1990-1992
1995-2003
Constitution, 1980-1998
Mezcla, 1994-2001,
undated
Omega Delta Phi, 1995
Puerto Rican Student Association, 1979-1995,
undated
Series:
Publications, 1974-1997
Box 2
Hispanics and Other Minorities, 1984
HOLA (Hello! Office of Latino Affairs,)
Correspondence, 1982-1985
Issues,
1981-1982
1982-1983
1983-1984
1984-1985
1985-1986
1986-1987
Drafts of unpublished articles, undated
Box 3
La Casa News, 1991-1995
La Voz, 1986-1988
LATCA (Latino Affairs/La Casa Newsletter,) 1974-1977
OLA (Office of Latino Affairs) Newsletter,
Correspondence, 1980-1981,
undated
Issues, 1977-1982
Parent Connection, 1997
Parents Only, 1980-1991
Series:
Subject files, 1973-2001
Box 3
Advisory Board Proposal, undated
Affirmative Action Report, 1984-1985
Annotated Bibliographies on Latino Subjects, 1989-1994
Annual Reports, 1983-1985
Art Print of Indiana University Campus,
undated
Biographies of Latino Faculty, 1995-1997,
undated
Budget and Program Planning, 1989-1990
Building Maintenance of La Casa, 1974-2001,
undated
Columbia House CD Club Musica Latina, 1996-1998
Computer Literacy Project, 1985-1986,
undated
Computer Maintenance, 1993-1997,
undated
Comunidad Latina Survey, 1973
Dean Michael Gordon Review Committee, 1986
Disciplinary Procedures, undated
Emergency Action Plan, undated
Enrollment Highlights, 1996
GROUPS Report, undated
Hispanic Summer Enrichment proposal, 1986
Indiana Census Information, 1990-1992
Indiana Hispanic Network, 1983-1992,
undated
La Casa Questionnaire, undated
La Casa Renovation Project, 1995-1997
Latino authors, undated
Latino Living Learning Center proposal, 1992-1996
Latino Research and Development Project, undated
Minority Services, undated
Nonprofit Corporations, 1998,
undated
Office of Latino Affairs History, 1981,
undated
Parking, 1994-2000
Proposal for the Reorganization of Minority Service Programs,
1990-1991
Prospective Faculty, 1997-1998
Racial Incident Report, 1993
Receipts and Warranties, 1985-1997,
undated
SABER Program, 1981,
undated
Sexual Assault Policy Information, 1995,
undated
Sociology 335, Race and Ethnic Relations, 1998
Student Ethics Research, 1998,
undated
Students United Against Consolidations (SUAC), 1987-1991
Television Programs with Latino Themes, 1986-1988
World AIDS Day, 1991