User:Rockero/To do/to do

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Bacs à sable[edit]

Chicano, Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, San Joaquín del Río de Chama, Tierra Amarilla, Cantinflas rewrite, Rockero, ., Timeline of Guadalupan events, Chicano literature, Chicano art, Chicano Park Murals Table, Chicano theatre, Bert Corona, Casa de la Raza, Template:Infobox dance genre, Art in Ecuador

Mexican American/Chicano topics[edit]

My list has been moved to Wikipedia:WikiProject Mexican-Americans/Todo

Mexican topics[edit]

Danza[edit]

Ballet Folklórico Mexicano/Mexican folkdancing/Folk dance of Mexico/Ballet folklorico/Baile folklórico/Baile folklorico/Folklórico/Folklorico-(three choices: either everything goes into this article, I expand Culture of Mexico to include the dances, or every state/region in Mexico should have a section dealing with traditional folk dances. Any suggestions?), Conchero/Concheros/Conchero movement, La Danza del Venado (take the "Deer dance" redirect off the System of a Down Album and make it into a disambiguation page), Cecilio Luna, Zandunga, Expand: Los Matachines or La Matachina, Amalia Hernandez, Danza de los Viejitos, Danza de los Voladores/Flying Dance,

Virgen de Guadalupe-related[edit]

Jerónimo de Mendieta, Luis Becerra Tanco, Marcos Cipac de Aquino/Indio Marcos/Marcos Cipac (painter), Alonso de Montúfar, College of Santa Cruz Tlatelolco/College of Santa Cruz/Colegio de Santa Cruz/Colegio de Santa Cruz Tlatelolco, Francisco de Florencia, Xavier Escalada, Our Lady of Los Remedios/Virgin of Los Remedios, Carlos María de Bustamante, Chimalpahin/Chimalpahín, Teponazcuicatl, Expand: Antonio Valeriano, Horacio Carochi, Codex Escalada/Escalada Codex, Stafford Poole,

Music[edit]

Batiz/Javier Bátiz (rocker), Los Dug Dugs, XEP, Armando Nava, Victimas del Doctor Cerebro/Víctimas del Doctor Cerebro/Víctimas del Doctor Cerebro/Víctimas del Dr. Cerebro, Enrique Guzmán/Enrique Guzman/Enrique Guzmán y Los Teen Tops/Enrique Guzman y Los Teen Tops/Los Teen Tops/Teen Tops, Viva Malpache, Chencha Berrinches, Los Olvidados, Tucanes de Tijuana/Los Tucanes de Tijuana, Expand: Trío los Panchos, Alejandro Lora, Rockdrigo (rockero who died in the 1985 Mexico City earthquake), Javier Solís, Pedro Vargas, Tijuana No!

Art, religion, and history[edit]

Aguas Blancas massacre, Aguas Blancas, Guerrero, Leopoldo Méndez/Leopoldo Mendez (a contemporary of Posada and the founder of the Taller de Gráfica Popular/Taller Gráfica Popular in 1937), Santo Niño de Atocha/Holy Child of Atocha (Spanish icon, but much revered in Mexico and the Southwest US), Genaro Vásquez/Genaro V. Vásquez (guerrilla leader), Toribio de Benavente/Motolinia/Toribio de Motolinia (early Franciscan missionary), Rubén Jaramillo/Ruben Jaramillo (revolutionary/human rights advocate), Pedro Jaramillo/Don Pedro Jaramillo (folk healer), Nino Fidencio/Niño Fidencio (another folk healer), Remojadas/Remojadas culture (Ancient civilization), Teatro los Mascarones/ Mascarones/Los Mascarones de Cuernavaca, Manuel Manilla (a predecessor of José Guadalupe Posada), Luis Manuel Rojas (Mexican Revolutionary), Our Lady of Talpa/Virgin of Talpa, Our Lady of San Juan de los Lagos/Virgin of San Juan de Los Lagos, Antonio Vanegas Arroyo (a contemporary of Posada), Mariana Yampolsky (artist), Casta painting (Image:Mulatto.jpg is one), Agustin V. Casasola/Agustin Casasola/Agustín Casasola/Agustín V. Casasola (I can't believe there's no article on him yet!), Ojo de Dios (folk talisman), Cathedral of Guadalajara, Tehuana, Punto Crítico/Punto Critico (leftist journal), Lourdes Grobet (photographer), Jesús García/Jesus Garcia (the "hero of Nacozari"), Halcones (an elite military squadron who were responsible for many of the deaths during the 1986 Tlatelolco massacre - currently linking to the wrong one), Daniel Molina (poet and writer) Isidoro Ocampo (graphic artist), Don Diego Quijada, La Onda/La Onda Chicana (countercultural movement), Manuel Gamio, Joaquín Alencaster, (Mexican governor of New Mexico), Juan Francisco Treviño (a Spanish one), Chupamirto and his creator José Muñoz Reyes/Jose Munoz Reyes, Art of Mexico/Mexican art, Mexican muralism/Mexican mural movement/Murals of Mexico/Muralism in Mexico/Los Tres Grandes, Carlos Mérida, Patricia Bustamante Cox, Diego de Vargas Zapata/Diego de Vargas/Diego de Vargas Zapata y Lujan Ponce de León (1643 – 1704 free image), Centla, Archbishop of Mexico/Bishop of Mexico, sarape/serape/zarape/zerape, Yaqui War/Guerra Yaqui, Grupo Beta/Grupos Beta, Guillermo Guzmán Orozco/Guillermo Guzman Orozco, Albur/Albures, Pablo O'Higgins, Cosijoeza (Zapotec king), Scammon's Lagoon/Ojo de Liebre, Ateneo de la juventud/Ateneo de la Juventud/Atheneum of Youth/Athenaeum of Youth, Antonio Caso, Ollin/Ollin symbol/Olin symbol, Felipe de Jesús/Felipe de Jesus, Franciscan martyred in Nagasaki, Hospital del Amor de Dios/Hospital Amor de Dios/Colegio San Marcos/Colegio de San Marcos/San Marcos College, Morral/Moral (bag), Guarache/Guaraches/Huarache/Huaraches, Tetabiate, Enrique Parra, Tomochic massacre (1892), German immigration to Mexico, América Tropical/America Tropical (Siqueiros mural at la Placita Olvera), Benito Juárez Brigade (fought in the Spanish Civil War), Pedro Castillo/Pedro Castillo Aragón/Pedro Castillo Aragon (political prisoner), Philip Stein/Estaño/Estano (assistant to Siqueiros), Joaquín Amaro/Joaquin Amaro, Angel of Goliad, Los de Abajo/The Underdogs, Benito Juárez Brigade (Mexican brigade that fought on the Republican side of the Spanish Civil War), Dr. Wolfgang Ebell (German spy during WWII), Los Castores/Castores (disaster relief group), La Parota dam/La Parota Dam/Dique la Parota, Baltasar de Echave, Pasquín/Pasquin/Pasquines, Chucho Roto/Chucho el Roto, El gesticulador (1938 play censored by the Mexican government), Theater in Mexico/Mexican theater/Theatre in Mexico, Juan Cordero, Expand: Soldadera/La Adelita, Francisco Toledo, Cananea, Sonora, Agustín Lara (composer), Salvador Novo, Graciela Iturbide, Albino Perez, Antonio de Otermín

Cine[edit]

Juan Orol (actor), Miguel Zacarías, David Silva (actor), Fernando Soto "Mantequilla" (actor), Emilia Guiú (actress), Juan Camané (sp.? "Me llamo Juan, masco chicle fumo puro..."), Alejandro Galindo, Jesús Martínez "Palillo", Guz Águila (pen name of prolific screenwriter Antonio Guzmán Aguilera), Duende Filme (pen name of a Ángel Alcántara Pastor, a film critic for El Universal, highly critical of Cantinflas), Roberto Soto "Panzon", Miguel Contreras Torres, William O. Jenkins, Alejandro Galindo. Expand: Roberto Gavaldón, Lola Beltrán, Silvia Derbéz, Golden Age of Mexican cinema,

Nicaraguan topics[edit]

Andrés Castro/Andres Castro, Pancasán/Pancasan, Benjamín Zeledón, 1972 Managua earthquake, Güegüence/El güegüence/Bailete del güegüence, Nicaraguan Spanish, Josefa T. de Aguerri/Josefa Toledo de Aguerri, Germán Pomares Ordoñez/Germán Pomares, Antonio de Valdivieso, Expand: Carlos Mejía Godoy (trovador de la Revolución Sandinista), Nicaraguan Chontal

Ecuadorian topics[edit]

Nicolás Kingman, Morocho, Capilla del Hombre, Faustino Rayo, Peguche, John Maldonado, Frank Vargas/Frank Vargas Pazzos, Imbacucha/Lake Imbacucha/Lake San Pablo/San Pablo Lake, Imbaburi, Quimbolito, Rumicucho, Santa Mariana de Jesús, Bernardo de Legarda, Mamá Negra/Mama Negra, Caranqui, Gospel Missionary Union, Chonta/Chonta palm ((Guilielma utilis): distinguish from Juania), Sigsig, Sasquisili/Sasquisilí, Ediciones Abya-Yala, Art in Ecuador, Rumicucho, Mindo, Auqui Tituaña, Faustino Rayo, clean-up/expand: Gabriel García Moreno, Huayna Capac, Conibos

Latin America, Caribbean, Africa, and Asia[edit]

Orlando Julius Ekemode/OJ Ekemode/O.J. Ekemode/O. J. Ekemode, Margareth Menezes, Fujioka Sayo, Tanya Stephens, Andrés Zepeda (Guatemalan journalist), Francisco Aguabella, Pedro Terán/Pedro Teran, Carlos Hermosilla Alvarez-South American (Chilean) graphic artist, Everton Blender, Tumba Francesa (Cuban music/dance), Otto René Castillo/Otto Rene Castillo (Guatemalan poet), Laws of the Indies/Law of the Indies, Eduardo Muñoz Bachs/Eduardo Munoz Bachs (Cuban graphic designer), Antonio Fernández Reboiro/Antonio Fernandez Reboiro, Governors of Cuba/Governor of Cuba/Spanish governors of Cuba/List of Spanish governors of Cuba, Latin ska, Juan Gerardi Conedera (assassinated Guatemalan bishop), Julian of Erculum, Camilo Zapata, Cantautor, María Teresa Tula/Maria Teresa Tula/Laura Pinto (Salvadoran human rights activist), Miguel Mármol/Miguel Marmol, José Dionisio Suárez Esquivel/José Dionisio Suárez/Jose Dionisio Suarez, Virgilio Paz Romano, Armando Pérez-Roura, Vladimiro Roca, Grupo de Apoyo Mutuo, Pedro Font, Expand: Armando Peraza (drummer), North American Congress on Latin America, Malalai Joya

Indians[edit]

Deganawida Quetzalcoatl University/Daganawida Quetzalcoatl University, Kenneth Loudhawk, Russel Redner, Trail of Broken Treaties, The Longest Walk/Longest Walk, Desert Culture, Great Pueblo Period, Wanrow Defense, Norma Jean Croy, Skolaskin/Kolaskin (–seems like quite an interesting character), Chief Moses, Morongo Indian Reservation/Morongo Band of Mission Indians, Friends of the Indian (early pro-Indian lobbying group), Indian agent, Tlahuica (culture centered around Cuernavaca), Mad Bear/Mad Bear Anderson, Juan José/Juan Jose/Juan Jose Compas (Apache chief whose 1836 murder marked the beginning of enmity between Apaches and Mexicans), Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, Anchois/Anchois Indians/Anchois people, Indigenous people of Central America/Indians of Central America/Central American Indians, Lempira Eroe, Hank Adams, Antonio Garra, Expand: Big Mountain, Arizona (site of land struggles), Serrano Indians, Tataviam,

Ideally, every group of Native Americans should have three articles: A cultural/ethnic group article for the tribe, a geographic article for the reservation, and a linguistic article for their language. And then the links need to be fixed. All three articles will not always be necessary, especially in the cases of extinct tribes, dead languages, and tribes without reservations.

Miscellaneous[edit]

Susan B. Jordan, Charles Garry, Horse theft, Sonali Kolhatkar, Music Farmers, Quentin R. Hand/Quentin Hand (Bay Area poet), Jerome R. Waldie, Virgin of Atocha, Isla Vista riots, Dessie Woods, Asian American Theater Company, Nellie Wong, Adobe de Palomares, Graber Olive House, Gary Ovitt, John Armstrong (nurseryman), Hobie Alter, James Neill Northe, Lindo Ivan Storti (Baseball player, died and was buried in Ontario), Ontario Museum of History and Art, Louis Santeiro (Cuban-American writer), Andy Ramirez and Friends of the Border Patrol, Jack Nichols (early gay rights pioneer-currently linking to the wrong one), Barbara Coe, California Coalition for Immigration Reform, Charles White (painter)[1], Harold C. Wilson (PA death row inmate exonerated after 16 years), Blessed Joannes Menesius da Silva/Joannes Menesius da Silva/Blessed Amadeus of Portugal/Amadeus of Portugal (visionary who proclaimed that Mary would be physically present in images of herself--figures into the Guadalupe story), Merle Woo, Bernadette Corporation (mysterious underground multimedia postmodernist art collective, the Santa Fe Ring, William Anderson Pile/William A. Pile/William Pile, Ira M. Bond and all the others responsible for dispossessing land grant heirs of their lands, Emory Douglas (Oakland artist and former Minister of Culture of the Black Panther Party), Michio Ito (choreographer), Flying Samaritans, Florence Rey (French anarchist), Miguel de Molina (Spanish folkdancer), Stella Mayhew (vaudeville performer), France V. Scholes/France Scholes, Sainete (Spanish comedy of manners), Economic justice, Sulieman El-Hadi, Medusa/Medusa, Renán Almendáriz Coello/Renan Almendariz Coello/El Cucuy/Cucuy/El Cucuy de la Mañana/El Cucuy de la Manana, Operation Gandhi, Art and Architecture Thesauraus/Getty Thesaurus of Art and Architecture Mariposa Battalion/Mariposa Brigade, Rose Will Monroe/Rosie Monroe (the real Rosie the Riveter), Autochthony, Robert Lyn Nelson, Voices in the Wilderness, Rip Cronk, Sister Mary Corita Kent/Sister Mary Corita Kent, Equal representation, Economic hitman, Listener-sponsored radio, Firestone Walker Brewing Company, Theological Studies (journal), Institute for Democracy, Education, and Access, Glasgow Print Studio, Ethnic history, Museum of Latin American Art/MoLAA/MOLA/MOLAA, Mural Conservancy of Los Angeles/Los Angeles Mural Conservancy (lamurals.org), Everyman I (anti-nuclear ship), Los Mocosos/Mocosos, Hertzberg Circus Museum, Witte Museum, Circular migration, Pura Belpré, Murals of Los Angeles, House of Ruth, Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic/Recording for the Blind/RfB, California Peace Action/Peace Action West, Jack Tenney/Jack B. Tenney, Valerie Hobbs, Flores Forbes, Deficit model, Pueblo Levee Mural/Pueblo Levee Mural Project, Pueblo Levee Project (the largest outdoor mural in the world), Immaculate Heart College (some info), Campbell v. Clinton, Virtual exhibit/Virtual exhibition, California Language Teachers Association/CLTA, Gevirtz Graduate School of Education/GGSE, Barbara MacArthur, Princess Erika/Princesse Erika/Erika Dobong'na, Flying A Studios/Flying-A Studio (Santa Barbara-based film production company?), La Cigale, Pit Baccardi, Marie-Simon-Pierre, Asian American literature/Asian-American literature, Louis-Pierre Dillais (French terrorist), Delilah Beasley/Delilah L. Beasley, Jenny Vincent, Manly Hall/Manly P. Hall, Californians for Population Stabilization, Stanley Levinson (speechwriter and advisor to Dr. King) secular priest, Marie Blondeau, Activist media/Activist press Loreta Janeta Velazquez/Loreta Janeta Velázquez/Loreta Velazquez/Harry T. Buford/Harry Buford, Claremont Colleges Digital Library, Sand Walking Company, Expand: Poor People's March, Robert K.G. Temple, Holy House of Loreto, Thomas Benton Catron, Kent Twitchell, University Hills (one of my old neighborhoods),

Articles needing attention[edit]

Alianza Federal de Mercedes, Brown Berets, Caló (Chicano), Chicano, Chicano Moratorium, Chicano rap, Culture of Mexico, Dolores Huerta, History of Mexican-Americans, Lowrider, Mexican American, Zoot Suit Riots

Fix up, disambiguate, split, and categorize[edit]

Figure out what's going on with Mexican American Political Association.