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  • All fields: racism
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Display: 20

    • Cecilia D. Esquer

    • Cecilia D. Esquer

    • Raul H. Castro Institute and Latino Perspectives Magazine

    • Pima County (Ariz.)--History; Pima County (Ariz.)--History--Miscellanea; Tucson, Arizona—History; Legislators Mine Clifton-Morenci Heritage

    • With a passion for civic activism rooted in their Clifton-Morenci mining heritage, the women of the Cajero families have made public service an array of life. Carmen Cajero brought compassion, insight, stamina, and a tremendous work ethic to her...
    • Plácida Elvira García Smith

    • Plácida Elvira García Smith

    • Raul H. Castro Institute and Latino Perspectives Magazine

    • Theodore Roosevelt Dam (Ariz.); Salt River Project; Americanization; San Luis (Yuma County, Ariz.); University of Utah; University of California at Berkeley; League of United Latin American Citizens; United Service Organizations (U.S.);

    • Plácida Elvira García Smith’s place in Phoenix history is during post-World War I at Friendly House, established in 1920. Disturbed by the poverty and racism she witnessed within the Mexican and Mexican-American community in south Phoenix,...
    • Faces of Post 41: The 1940s

    • Faces of Post 41: The 1940s

    • Latino Perspectives Magazine

    • Arizona -- Latino -- Veterans

    • Latinos contribute to World War II, from Luzon and Corregidor to Normandy and Germany.
    • June 5

    • June 5

    • Unknown

    • Ku Klux Klan (1915- ). Yuma County Chapter; Racism--Arizona

    • On this date in 1921, the Ku Klux Klan burned a fiery cross at Telegraph Pass near Yuma. The Yuma Klan was established in 1921; they held their meetings at Somerton, Arizona, about ten miles southwest of Yuma. The membership was about 50 men; most...
    • Oral History with Gertrude Lopez, April 9, 2011

    • Oral History with Gertrude Lopez, April 9, 2011

    • Lopez, Gertrude
    •  

    • Gertrude "Gertie" Lopez is Tohono O'odham. She was born in 1959 on the Pima Reservation in Sacaton, Arizona and grew up on the Tohono O'odham Reservation. Ms. Lopez talks about her family and life on the reservation, including music, food,...
    • Black Mesa Project: final environmental impact statement

    • Black Mesa Project: final environmental impact statement

    • United States. Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement.

    • Coal mines and mining--Environmental aspects--Arizona--Black Mesa (Navajo County and Apache County); Strip mining--Environmental aspects--Arizona--Black Mesa (Navajo County and Apache County)

    • This title contains one or more volumes. Report number: DOI FES 08-49. OSM-EIS-33. Prepared by the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement ; in cooperation with the U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Indian Affairs. ...
    • Down Mexico Way: Essays

    • Down Mexico Way: Essays

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

    • Mexico – In literature; American Literature – West (U.S.); Mexico – Description and Travel; West (U.S.) – Literary Collections;

    • A booklet containing two scholarly essays, “The Mexican in Popular Literature 1875-1925" by Juan R. Garcia and “American Writers in Mexico 1875-1925,” by Cecil Robinson, which examine the changing American attitudes and perceptions of...
    • Barbara Rodríguez Mundell

    • Barbara Rodríguez Mundell

    • Raul H. Castro Institute and Latino Perspectives Magazine

    • Maricopa County (Ariz.); Maricopa County (Ariz). Superior Court; Judges; Arizona State University; Arizona State University. College of Law; Arizona State University. College of Law--Alumni and alumnae--Periodicals; Arizona. Industrial Commission;

    • Barbara Rodríguez Mundell is the first female and the first Hispanic presiding judge of the Maricopa County Superior Court. She oversees the work of approximately 95 judges, 58 commissioners, more than 4,000 staff members, 25 justice courts, and...
    • Video: Plácida Elvira García Smith

    • Video: Plácida Elvira García Smith

    • Raul H. Castro Institute and Latino Perspectives Magazine

    • Theodore Roosevelt Dam (Ariz.); Salt River Project; Americanization; San Luis (Yuma County, Ariz.); University of Utah; University of California at Berkeley; League of United Latin American Citizens; United Service Organizations (U.S.);

    • Vignette of the life of Plácida Elvira García Smith, whose place in Phoenix history lies during post-World War I at Friendly House, established in 1920. Disturbed by the poverty and racism she witnessed within the Mexican and Mexican-American...
    • Faces of Post 41: The 1960s

    • Faces of Post 41: The 1960s

    • Latino Perspectives Magazine

    • Arizona -- Latino -- Veterans

    • As the Civil Rights Movement gains momentum, so does the Vietnam war. Veterans relate their brave and heartbreaking experiences in battle, while Post 41 members gain influence in local politics and activism.

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