A service of Arizona State Library, Archives and Public Records, a division of the Secretary of State. Arizona Memory Project

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Display: 20

    • Faces of Post 41: The 1950s

    • Faces of Post 41: The 1950s

    • Latino Perspectives Magazine

    • Arizona -- Latino -- Veterans

    • An account of the Arizona Latino contribution to the Korean War, and the growing influence of American Legion Post 41 in its fight against segregation in Schools of Arizona.
    • Thunderbird Magazine, Volume 48, Number 1 1993

    • Thunderbird Magazine, Volume 48, Number 1 1993

    • Thunderbird School of Global Management; Thunderbird, the Garvin School of International Management; Thunderbird, the American Graduate School of International Management; American Graduate School of International Management; Thunderbird Graduate...

    • Thunderbird alumni magazine; Thunderbird annual report.

    • The Thunderbird alumni magazine collection contains archival issues of the school’s main publication aimed at informing and connecting the Thunderbird community, especially alumni. Feature articles, profiles, interviews, news, events and alumni...
    • Arizona Highways.  January, 1990

    • Arizona Highways. January, 1990

    • Arizona Highways Commission

    • Arizona; Arizona Highways Magazine; Arizona Department of Transportation

    • CONTENTS

      The Challenge of Golf 4

      El Coronel: Jose Francisco Chaves by Susan Hazen-Hammond 14

      Barranca del Cobre: Mexico's Grand Canyon by Alan Weisman 24

      Flagstaff is Going to the Dogs by Dan Dagget 36
      ...
    • Ana Frohmiller 1891-1971

    • Ana Frohmiller 1891-1971

    • Arizona Quilter's Guild

    • Arizona Women's Hall of Fame

    • Ana Frohmiller held public office in Arizona from 1922 until 1950, when she was the first woman in Arizona to be nominated for governor. As a politician, she was known for her honest expenditures and her ability to say “no” to other...
    • The Fly-by: a quarterly newsletter of the southwest region

    • The Fly-by: a quarterly newsletter of the southwest region

    • United States. Civil Air Patrol. Southwest Region.

    • Air defenses--Periodicals; Civil defenses--Periodicals

    • This title contains one or more publications. Col. ill. The quarterly newsletter features news and photos from the Arizona Wing as well as the other squadrons of the region.
    • The Department of Justice's Operation Fast and Furious: fueling cartel violence

    • The Department of Justice's Operation Fast and Furious: fueling cartel violence

    • United States. Congress. House. Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.

    • Illegal arms transfers--Mexico; Organized crime--Mexico

    • 60 pages (PDF version). Col. ill. Map. Includes references. "Prepared for Rep. Darrell E. Issa, Chairman, United States House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Government Reform & Senator Charles E. Grassley, Ranking Member, United...
    • "The Traveler"  Glendale Community College Literary Magazine, 2005

    • "The Traveler" Glendale Community College Literary Magazine, 2005
    •  

    • Glendale Community College (Maricopa County, Ariz.); College students' writings, American--Arizona--Glendale--Periodicals; Creative writing (Higher education)--Periodicals; Short stories, American--Periodicals; American poetry--20th...

    • The Traveler, 2005. Literary Editor: Alexandra Monares; Literary Advisor: Casey Furlong. Literary Faculty Judges: Carmela Arnoldt, Renee Barstack; Larry Bohlender; Jeanette Chaplin; Marla DeSoto; Claire Englehart; Patrick Haas,Jr.; David...
    • 1845 - 1849 President James Polk and First Lady Sarah Childress Polk

    • 1845 - 1849 President James Polk and First Lady Sarah Childress Polk

    • Mohave Museum of History and Arts

    • Polk, James, 1795-1849; Polk, Sarah, 1803-1891; Arizona -- History -- Chronology

    • Mohave Museum Presidential portrait exhibit guide book page Eleven with images and biographies of the President of the United States and the First Lady. A time-line of Arizona and Mohave County historical events is included to provide a...
    • Steel Suspension Bridge

    • Steel Suspension Bridge

    • Forrest, Earle R. (Earle Robert), 1883-1969

    • Suspension bridges.

    • [Forrest:] This steel suspension bridge across the gorge of the Little Colorado near the old Tanner Ford is at the present trading post known as Cameron, named for Ralph Cameron, a prominent AZ politician in territorial days. This bridge was built...
    • The Golden West: Essays

    • The Golden West: Essays

    • Tucson Public Library (Pima County Public Library) and Arizona Historical Society

    • West (U.S.) – In literature; American Literature – West (U.S.); West (U.S.) – Literary Collections; West (U.S.) Description and travel; Phoenix (Ariz.) – Description and travel

    • A booklet containing two scholarly essays, “The Golden West,” by Paul A. Carter and “Men of Vision: Phoenix” by G. Wesley Johnson, which examines the effects of the industrialization of the Southwest. New technology (in the form of...
    • Graciela Gil Olivarez: Government Official, Attorney, Activist

    • Graciela Gil Olivarez: Government Official, Attorney, Activist

    • Raul H. Castro Institute and Latino Perspectives Magazine

    • Latina; Copper miners--Arizona--Social conditions--20th century; Copper miners; Copper miners--Labor unions--Arizona; Copper miners, Mexican American; Bilingualism; Disc jockeys; Disc jockeys--Arizona--Phoenix; Disc jockeys--Biography;

    • Graciela Gil Olivarez grew up in a segregated mining town in Barcelona, Arizona and would rise to become Phoenix's first female disc jockey. Her capacity in radio gave her an opportunity to speak on behalf of destitute Mexican American families,...
    • Mary Rose Wilcox

    • Mary Rose Wilcox

    • Raul H. Castro Institute and Latino Perspectives Magazine

    • Maricopa County (Ariz.)--History; Maricopa County (Ariz.)--History--Miscellanea; first Mexican American woman elected to Phoenix City Council and first Mexican American woman elected to Maricopa County Board of Supervisors

    • Born in Superior Arizona in 1949, Mary Rose Wilcox left eh copper mining town to purse a degree in social work from Arizona State University. “I cam down to the Valley and it was cultre shock,” she said. “There were only three Hispanics in...

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