ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — It was Dolores Huerta who coined the slogan "Si, se puede" in 1972 when bringing together farmworkers in Arizona to fight a law that prohibited boycotts and strikes.
United Farm Workers leader Dolores Huerta, center, leads a rally Nov. 19, 1988, along with Howard Wallace, president of the San Francisco chapter of the UFW, left, and Maria Elena Chavez, 16, the daughter of Cesar Chavez, right, in San Francisco's Mission District.Â
United Farm Workers co-founder Dolores Huerta looks at a mural of the late Cesar Chavez during a Sept. 4, 2008, dedication of the Cesar Chavez Monument on the San Jose State University campus in San Jose, Calif.
United Farm Workers Vice President Dolores Huerta speaks during an interview Oct. 1, 1969, at her apartment in the Mission District of San Francisco.Â
President Barack Obama awards American labor leader and civil rights activist Dolores Huerta the Presidential Medal of Freedom during a May 29, 2012, ceremony at the White House in Washington.Â
United Farm Workers leader Dolores Huerta, center, leads a rally Nov. 19, 1988, along with Howard Wallace, president of the San Francisco chapter of the UFW, left, and Maria Elena Chavez, 16, the daughter of Cesar Chavez, right, in San Francisco's Mission District.Â
United Farm Workers co-founder Dolores Huerta looks at a mural of the late Cesar Chavez during a Sept. 4, 2008, dedication of the Cesar Chavez Monument on the San Jose State University campus in San Jose, Calif.
United Farm Workers Vice President Dolores Huerta speaks during an interview Oct. 1, 1969, at her apartment in the Mission District of San Francisco.Â
President Barack Obama awards American labor leader and civil rights activist Dolores Huerta the Presidential Medal of Freedom during a May 29, 2012, ceremony at the White House in Washington.Â