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The Golden Who's Who of the Lebanese Emigrants in the World
Gold Archive

Most immigrants in this book have achieved and earned the honor of being listed in their corresponding cities.

This golden page is dedicated to those Lebanese emigrants who have superior achievement in their newly found countries, and truly earned a distinct appreciations.

Obviously, we can never know all these distinguished achievers, but we invite our dear readers to forward to Raymond Maurice K. H. Dib the names, and biographies of those we missed, and we shall add them to this page of honor.


Highly Distinguished Lebanese Emigrants

A| B| C| D| E| F| G| H| I| J| K| L| M| N| O| P| Q| R| S| T| U| V| W| X| Y| Z

Shaheen, Jeanne   Governor of the State of New Hampshire, USA

    Jeanne Shaheen was born January 28, 1947, in St. Charles, Missouri. She earned her bachelor's degree from Shippensburg University in Pennsylvania in 1969 and her master's degree from the University of Mississippi in 1973. She lives in Madbury, NH with her husband, Bill, and has three daughters: Stefany, Stacey, and Molly.

    Before serving in public office, she managed several statewide campaigns, taught in public schools, and was a small business owner and manager. In 1996, she became the first woman Governor of New Hampshire.




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Shalala, Donna E.   United States secretary of health and human services

    Born in Cleveland, Ohio, and educated at Western College. After graduating in 1962, Donna Shalala served two years in the Peace Corps in Iran, then returned to the United States to attend Syracuse University. After graduating from Syracuse in 1970, she taught political science at Bernard Baruch College in New York City, then taught politics and education at Columbia Teacher's College. In 1975 Shalala became director and treasurer of the Municipal Assistance Corporation, which helped reverse New York City's financial collapse. In 1977 she became assistant secretary for policy research and development at the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) in Washington, D.C. At HUD she promoted women's issues, working toward the creation of battered women's shelters, mortgage credits for women, and anti-discrimination measures.

    Shalala served as president of Hunter College in New York City from 1980 until 1988. In 1988, when she was named chancellor of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, she became the first woman to head a Big Ten school. Shalala also chaired the Children's Defense Fund, and in 1993 she was selected by President Bill Clinton (1993- ) to be secretary of health and human services. A dynamic leader, she outlined five major policy initiatives for her first year: revision of health-care financing, expansion of the Head Start program for preschool children, universal childhood immunizations, expansion of AIDS research, and welfare reform.

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Slim, Carlos   Chairman of Telefonos de Mexico, and other Enterprises

BY DANIEL DOMBEY

In 1996 Carlos Slim, 57, prepared to survive the onslaught of foreign telecommunications competition in Mexico. This year many of those invaders, especially from the U.S., may learn whether they can survive Carlos Slim.

The biggest shareholder as well as chairman of Telefonos de Mexico (Telmex), Mexico's no-longer-monopoly telephone company, Slim is planning to challenge American giants like AT&T and MCI on their home turf in 1997. The stakes: a bigger share in the $2.5 billion U.S.-Mexico long-distance market. "Our focus is toward Hispanic users in the U.S.," he says. The notion of taking on mammoth American firms is in keeping with the ambitions of multibillionaire Slim, widely assumed to be Mexico's richest man. His Grupo Carso holding company was already worth $1.2 billion in sales in 1990 when, along with Southwestern Bell and France Telecom, he bought 20% of stodgy, state-owned Telmex for $1.8 billion.

Telmex is now a $17 billion enterprise, and Slim is looking further afield in more ways than one. His main strategic objective is to diversify the company away from ordinary telephone services and into data transmission, videoconferencing and the Internet. "Long-distance communications are old news," he told TIME.

Slim's expansiveness inspires cynicism in his many Mexican critics. His Telmex purchase was condemned by many nationalists as evidence of his cronyism with then President Carlos Salinas de Gortari; one political party filed suit against Slim, saying he paid an artificially low price for his share, a charge he firmly denies.

The son of Lebanese emigrants, Slim first built a stake as a stockbroker in the 1960s before moving into insurance. His big opportunity came during Mexico's economic collapse of the early 1980s, when he snapped up cigarette manufacturer Cigatam, as well as Sanborns, the cafe and convenience-store chain, and Frisco, a mining company. Through Grupo Carso, Slim now controls 30 companies worth more than $7.2 billion. Critics aside, he is considered to be a passionate Mexican nationalist--and a fierce competitor. Yanquis, take note.

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Sununu, John E.   United States Congressman

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Tanous, Peter J.   President, Lynx Investment Advisory, Inc.

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Thomas, Danny   American Entertainer

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Thomas, Helen   UPI White House News Bureau Chief






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Copyright © 1998 . Raymond Maurice K. H. Dib - New York. No reproduction is allowed without the expressed approval of the producer.

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