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  1. Katherine D. Ortega

    Katherine D. Ortega

    American politician

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  1. Katherine Dávalos Ortega (born July 16, 1934) is a former politician who was the 38th Treasurer of the United States. She served from September 26, 1983 to July 1, 1989 under Presidents Ronald Reagan and then George H. W. Bush. Ortega also has the distinction of being the first female bank president in the state of California.

    • Lloyd Derrickson
  2. Hispanic American government official Katherine Ortega (born 1934) faced much job discrimination before she co–founded her own business. It began a journey that led to the U.S. treasurer's position under President Ronald Reagan. Ortega also delivered the keynote address at the 1984 Republican National Convention in Dallas.

  3. Katherine Dávalos Ortega (born July 16, 1934) is a former politician who was the 38th Treasurer of the United States. She served from September 26, 1983 to July 1, 1989 under Presidents Ronald Reagan and then George H. W. Bush. Ortega also has the distinction of being the first female bank president in the state of California.

  4. After her retirement from the Treasury in 1989, Ortega has gone on to become a top consultant in the world of banking and has also served on the board of directors for numerous corporations. Katherine Davalos Ortega was born on July 16, 1934, in Tularosa, New Mexico, the daughter of Donaciano Ortega and Catarina Davalos Ortega.

  5. Katherine D. Ortega- 2002 Horatio Alger Award Recipient. Katherine Ortega, the youngest of nine children, was born in 1934 in Tularosa, New Mexico. Her father once worked as a blacksmith, repairing farm equipment and tools for local farmers. Later, he opened a small restaurant in Tularosa.

  6. Sep 13, 1983 · Katherine Davalos Ortega was born in Tularosa, N.M., on July 16, 1934, and graduated from high school in Alamagordo and, in 1957, from Eastern New Mexico University with a bachelor's degree...

  7. Katherine Davalos Ortega was born on July 16, 1934, in Tularosa, New Mexico, the daughter of Donaciano Ortega and Catarina Davalos Ortega. The town of Tularosa was small—populated by no more then three thousand people—but it was a tight knit community that remembered heavily its Mexican and Spanish roots.

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