Oswaldo Castro

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Oswaldo Castro
Born (1902-07-29)July 29, 1902

Chone, Ecuador
Died June 26, 1992(1992-06-26) (aged 89)

Bethesda, Maryland, USA
Resting place Portoviejo, Ecuador
Pen name Oscar Waldoosty
Occupation poet, journalist, statistician, translator, novelist
Language Spanish, English, Italian
Nationality Ecuadorian

Oswaldo José de los Ángeles Castro Intriago (29 Julaị 1902 - 26 June 1992) bụ onye nta akụkọ Ecuadorian, onye nkuzi, onye na-ede uri, onye ọnụ ọgụgụ, onye ntụgharị / onye nyocha na onye edemede. O nyere aka n'ịmalite akwụkwọ akụkọ mbụ nke Chone, omenala El Iris kwa izu; n'ịhazi ọnụ ọgụgụ mbụ nke obodo Quito, Ecuador dị ka onyeisi oche nke ọrụ aka ya; nakwa n'ịkwalite Òtù Na-ahụ Maka Nri na Ọrụ Ugbo nke Mba Ndị Dị n'Otu dị ka onye na-ahụ maka njikọ ya maka Southern Latin America. Mgbe ọ nọ na ezumike nka na Madrid, Spain, o bipụtara La Mula Ciega (1970), [1] akwụkwọ akụkọ na-adịghị mma gbasara ụmụaka abụọ na-eto eto na mmalite 1900 na Chone, Bahía de Caráquez, Quito, Guayaquil na Galápagos dị ka azụ azụ. .

Castro bụụrụ nwa-nwoke nke Carlos María Castro Araus (1873–1945) si Portoviejo, Ecuador; na Olimpia Edeltrudis Intriago Minaya (1881–1963) sitere na Riochico, Ecuador. Nne na nna ya abụọ nwụrụ na Bahìa de Caráquez, Ecuador. A mụrụ ya na Chone, Manabí, Ecuador na July 29, 1902

Castro's interest in journalism would surface again in Portoviejo when, in 1934, he joined the editorial board of the nascent Diario Manabita, today known as El Diario.[1] Macario Gutiérrez Solórzano wrote, "He was always restless, impulsive, exuberant, and even anarchic." His journalistic output would continue with articles such as La Mística de Pasternak, written for the newspaper's twentieth anniversary edition. He also wrote articles under the anagrammed pseudonym Oscar Waldoosty for Guayaquil's El Universo newspaper.

A surge of statistical activity arose in Washington, DC beginning in mid-1946, peaking in 1947, and rippling beyond; and Castro was in the thick of it. The meetings, roundtables, and conferences that convened began dealing with the confluence of statistical methods, not only as applied to population and housing, but now also to incorporate the production of food and other land resources in order to reap the most from the forthcoming 1950 Census of the Americas. All this in view of rebuilding and ameliorating the sorry state of post-war economies. The idea was to put into practice Nobel Peace Prize recipient (and first Director General of FAO), John Boyd Orr's vision for alleviating world hunger through cooperation and harmony rather than dominance and conflict.[2] Slowly but steadily, massive postwar geopolitical plates were moving. On March 15, 1946 Castro was conferred the Degree of Master of Science from the University of Michigan School of Public Health[non-primary source needed] and quickly left for Washington, D. C. to continue his work with his sponsoring agency, the United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Census. They sent him south, to North Carolina. "This will introduce Mr. Oswaldo Castro... to observe some of the pre-test in Wilmington, including the training of the enumerators and editing the schedules, in the local office," stated his perfunctory letter of introduction. Wilmington, North Carolina was a "test-tube" city, the first city in the United States where a comprehensive interim census was made, and Castro was its official foreign observer. Then back to Washington to await and study the Wilmington census results. Mid September, Halbert L. Dunn, Chief of the National Office of Vital Statistics, sent him back to the south, this time to observe the registration and tabulation of census data in Jackson, Mississippi, where he remained for over a month. In late October 1946 Castro was among the international demographers from fifteen countries in New York City invited by the Population Association of America. He attended the Association's meeting on October 25 and 26, 1946. On October 29 and 30, he participated in the "Post-war Problems of Migration" roundtable at the annual conference of the Milbank Memorial Fund. Back again in Washington, he attended a conference on census procedures given by the Bureau of Census, Department of Commerce on November 1, and on November 2 a roundtable on world population and nutrition given by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. He filled the double role of delegate representing Ecuador as Director of Statistics and Census, and trainee of the United States Department of Commerce, Census Bureau.[3] Perhaps it was here that the crucial link between his knowledge of statistics and of agricultural needs through his banking experience back home solidified. The standards for population statistics were being developed "under the auspices of the Inter-American Statistical Institute; those for agriculture under the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)." The doors of FAO began to open and soon he would be tapped to be their Liaison Officer for the southern part of Latin America, a post he would easily fill thanks to his communication and integrating skills. It was precisely these skills that enabled him to put to use the census practices he had observed in North Carolina and Mississippi and to bring together census experts he had met up north to work closely with their Ecuadorian counterparts. Hence, the road to the first census of Ecuador's capital, Quito, became quite smooth.

  1. El Diario Ecuador. www.eldiario.ec. Retrieved on Jan 8, 2021.
  2. The Nobel Peace Prize 1949. NobelPrize.org. Retrieved on Jan 8, 2021.
  3. " (1947) The Record. Division of Cultural Cooperation, Department of State. Retrieved on 2021-01-09. , Castro is seated third from right between Germano Jardim (Brazil) and J. C. Capt (USA). The same picture also appears in the International Statistical Institute web site but Adrian Fisher (USA) seated first on right is cut off. "Noteworthy moments in our history"