The Hispanic Population in the United States, Volume 14, Issue 2U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census |
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Results 1-5 of 59
Page 11
... areas . Between March 1982 and March 1985 , Hispanics made gains in educational attainment and employment . Specifically , some evidence exists that the proportion of Hispanics completing 4 years of high school or more was higher in ...
... areas . Between March 1982 and March 1985 , Hispanics made gains in educational attainment and employment . Specifically , some evidence exists that the proportion of Hispanics completing 4 years of high school or more was higher in ...
Page 61
... areas selected for the new sampling frame , about 80 percent , were also included in the 1970 - based design ... area , had separated from their spouse because of marital discord , or had a different place of residence for any other ...
... areas selected for the new sampling frame , about 80 percent , were also included in the 1970 - based design ... area , had separated from their spouse because of marital discord , or had a different place of residence for any other ...
Page 67
... areas Housing units eligible ' Interviewed Not interviewed 2 629/729 629 57,000 58,000 2,500 2,500 1985 1982-84 ' Numbers do not include approximately 2,500 supplemental His- panic households . 2The CPS was redesigned following the 1980 ...
... areas Housing units eligible ' Interviewed Not interviewed 2 629/729 629 57,000 58,000 2,500 2,500 1985 1982-84 ' Numbers do not include approximately 2,500 supplemental His- panic households . 2The CPS was redesigned following the 1980 ...
Page 70
... areas or for the difference between separate and uncorrelated characteristics in the same area . If , how- ever , there is a high positive ( negative ) correlation between the two characteristics , the formula will overestimate ...
... areas or for the difference between separate and uncorrelated characteristics in the same area . If , how- ever , there is a high positive ( negative ) correlation between the two characteristics , the formula will overestimate ...
Page 21
... areas Central cities . Outside central cities Nonmetropolitan areas . 7,152 53.9 36.3 119,419 67.5 48.6 4,190 53.6 36.2 45,792 68.2 49.9 2,962 54.3 36.6 73,627 67.1 47.8 719 54.8 37.0 38,149 70.3 50.0 EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT Elementary ...
... areas Central cities . Outside central cities Nonmetropolitan areas . 7,152 53.9 36.3 119,419 67.5 48.6 4,190 53.6 36.2 45,792 68.2 49.9 2,962 54.3 36.6 73,627 67.1 47.8 719 54.8 37.0 38,149 70.3 50.0 EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT Elementary ...
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Common terms and phrases
18 years old Census Central and South CENTRAL OR SOUTH civilian labor force confidence interval CPS estimates Current Population Reports Current Population Survey DOLLARS educational attainment error Estimate error Estimate error Estimate Estimate One standard family household Female householder flashcard formula Hispanic and non-Hispanic Hispanic families Hispanic households Hispanic origin Hispanic persons Hispanic population Hispanic subgroups Hispanic women housing unit independent estimates interview living Managerial and professional March MARITAL STATUS married couple Mean number meaning of symbols median age MEXICAN ORIGIN money income non-Hispanic families number of persons Numbers in thousands Pareto interpolation Percent in civilian percent of Hispanic percent of non-Hispanic Percent unemployed PERSON FAMILIES Persons of Hispanic population controls poverty level poverty thresholds Puerto Rican origin reference person Series P-20 Service occupations SPANISH standard error standard Estimate error Table B-5 Total and non-Hispanic TOTAL PERSONS TOTAL WITH INCOME Type of Origin unrelated individuals unrelated subfamily