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Cesar Lancis was a Cuban politican who served as mayor of Pinar del Rio in the early 20th century.
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Joel Lamere received his Master of Architecture degree from the Harvard Graduate School of Design. Before joining UM’s School of Achitecture, he was Assistant Professor of Architectural Design and Homer A. Burnell Chair at MIT. Lamere’s research addresses the future of building practice through innovation in emerging means and methods. As computational design processes evolve, and digital fabrication techniques become more commonplace, our built environment promises to transform radically. Lamere explores this changing landscape through Future Objects at the School of Architecture, a laboratory dedicated to experimentation and innovation in the field of construction technology.
In addition, Lamere is investigating the design of coastal structures - a key ingredient in the struggle to overcome the effects of global climate change. The topic has an ugly history, rife with faulty solutions that reflect the incredible complexity of the problem: the vast number of variables and systemic interactions that occur along a coastline. With this complexity in mind, Lamere joined an interdisciplinary faculty team to address the question from a range of perspectives simultaneously. This team, part of the University of Miami Laboratory for Integrative Knowledge (U-LINK), is working to design the next generation of coastal structures in a way that protects communities from rising seas and the other effects of climate change without negatively affecting coastal ecosystems and the vitality of nearby communities.
- Person
- Person
- 1941-
Zilia Luisa Lage is a fiction writer, publisher, and translator. She was born on February 1, 1941 in Havana, Cuba to Luis B. Lage, a bill collector, and Z. Isabel Bello, a typist. As an adolescent, Lage lived in New York from 1951 to 1957. She worked as an export documentation clerk for Pittsburgh Plate Glass International in Havana from 1959 to1960 and graduated as a commercial accountant from the Escuela Professional de Comercio in Havana in 1961.That same year, she left Cuba for the U.S.
From 1962-1967, Lage worked as the agency secretary for Occidental Life Insurance Company in Miami, Florida. From 1972-1976, she worked as the secretary to vice president and branch manager of the Chicago Title Insurance Company. She then worked as a corporation banking assistant for Southeast Bank (National Association) in Miami Springs, Florida from 1978-1990. In 1989, she earned her Associate of Arts in Business Administration from Miami-Dade Community College
Since writing and translate starting in 1991, Lage has written a number of self-published books including: Genealogía - Laje (Guarina Publishing, 2006), 100 Recetas de cocina tradicionales (Guarina Publishing, 2004), Divagaciones (Guarina Publishing, 2003), Love Letters in the Sand (Guarina Publishing, 2002), Cartas Son Cartas (Guarina Publishing, 2001), The Sugar Cane Curtain (Guarina Publishing, 2000) which won numerous awards, and La cortina de bagazo (Guarina Publishing, 1995). Lage won First Prize of the Octavio Paz International Biography Contest of the "Atenea" Miami Cultural Club, in November 2005 for her biography of Antonio Maceo and she won the Writers' Journal 3rd prize for photography in November 2002.
In an interview, Zilia L. Laje said: "My primary motivation for writing is a pressing need to tell the story I have inside. Betty Smith, Kathleen Winsor, Herman Wouk, Rona Jaffe, and James Joyce have influenced my work. My writing process is to write a short draft with the plot and key dialogue, then research the background extensively and take hundreds of notes, which I incorporate, and finally rewrite the whole story. My writing is inspired by the trauma of migration and an ache that our way of life is disappearing. I want to leave a testimony of our customs. I enjoy using a lot of hidden symbolism that I'm sure goes undetected by the general reader."
Lage is the founder of the Cuban Writers in Miami, a group which gathers at the annual Miami book fair to exhibit their works. She has been an exhibitor at the Miami International Book Fair since 1995. She is also a member of the Poets, Playwrights, Editors, Essayists and Novelists Association, the Center of Writers in Exile, and a correspondent for the Women's National Book Association. She is a member of the Cuban Genealogical Society, the Alliance Française de Miami, Círculo de Cultura Panamericano, and Miami-Dade Community College Alumni Association.
Labrador Ruiz, Enrique, 1902-1991
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Enrique Labrador Ruiz, Cuban journalist, novelist, essayist, short story writer, and poet, was born in Sagua la Grande, Cuba, on May 11, 1902. He was a member of the Academia Cubana de la Lengua and also of the Academia Norteamericana de la Lengua Española. Labrador Ruiz was a well-learned and traveled man who created his own style of writing novels, which he called gaseiforme. In 1933, he published his first novel in this style, El laberinto de sí mismo, which forms a trilogy with Cresival(1936) and Anteo (Novela gaseiforme) (1940). With his collection of short stories, El gallo en el espejo(1953), he established his cuentería cubiche style.
In 1976, Labrador Ruiz and his wife María (Cheché) were exiled from Cuba. After residing in Spain and Venezuela, they moved to and maintained their permanent residence in Miami, Florida. During his years of exile, Labrador Ruiz wrote for many literary journals and newspapers, including Réplica(Miami), El Diario de Caracas, and Linden Lane Magazine.
Enrique Labrador Ruiz received numerous awards and honors for his works of literature. In Cuba, Conejito Ulánwon the Hernández Catá Prize in 1946, and in 1950 his novel Sangre hambrientawon the Premio Nacional de Literatura. Some of his most important works are: El gallo en el espejo(1953), El pan de los muertos(1958), and his final work, Cartas a la carte (1991).
Enrique Labrador Ruiz died in Miami on November 10, 1991.
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Raymond Labonte was an US Army Officer that was stationed in Cuba at the San Antonio de los Baños US Army Air Base during the 1940s. Passionate about land and sky photography, he captured scenes of Havana and its surroundings as well as daily life in the US Army Base.