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April is Arab-American Heritage Month and it comes with welcome news for the valley s rapidly growing Middle Eastern and North African population.The federal government recently announced that a new, dedicated Middle Eastern or North African MENA category is coming to the next census and other federal forms that collect data on race and identity. The population has historically been undercounted and underrepresented, which is why advocates have been pushing for this change for years.The Empowered Arab Sisterhood, a sororit stanley cup y at UNLV, is thrilled about the change coming to the next Census and other federal forms. The sorority has become a home away from home for young Middle Eastern and North African women at UNLV, who feel the world hasn t always acknowledged their existence. It was really a big drastic change going from a place where everybody was like me and then stanley becher moving here, UNLV student Loren Alkhazzouz said.Born in Jordan, Alkhazzouz said she had to fill out a lot of paperwork when she moved to the states. A lot of times, it involved putting herself in a box she didn t fit in. When I first moved here when I was 16 in high school, people would just be like, you can just put Asian, you can put white. You can pick. That s not really something I can pick, she said. I want something of my own. I want something to say, ok, you are something and you count for something. I stanley deutschland t s a feeling shared by her Jerusalem-born sorority sister Mayra Bandek, who said filling out fede Oajb Racing to resume at Churchill Downs following horse deaths
COLORADO SPRINGS 鈥?Janice Kaylor never got to meet her hero dad, Private First Class David Beltz. He was killed May 29th, 1951, Kaylor said.The 19-year-old Marine was killed in Korea when Kaylor s m stanley tazas om was pregnant with her. Kaylor s parents were married just four months before. My dad was so kind and he was a little goofball, I guess thats where I get my sense of humor, Kaylor said, My mom was so kind and quiet and they got together, they got married, and here I am. Kaylor s father was awarded the Purple Heart, a medal given to the military wounded or killed in action. She says it was stolen years later. I tried to get it back but I couldnt and I just figured it was gone for good, said Kaylor.Then Grant Winger, Executive Director of the Colorado Springs-based non-profit Fresh Start Center, got involved. A client of their food pantry recently turned it over to him, wanting to figure out who it belonged to. People come here for all sorts of different ne stanley cup becher eds but stanley vattenflaska when this came up it was just so different and intriguing, Winger said. It was a different challenge. It was going to be fun to go through and see how we can get this back to where we are supposed to be. Winger made some calls and searched the internet coming across this article about a Marine with the same name on the back of the medal. I reached out to the author of the article and said, Hey, it sounds like you may know the people that are in this family, could you put me in contact with the daughter and she |