Browse Items (2465 total)

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Biggs family photograph taken in Nogales, Arizona, circa 1943. Individuals include, left to right: George W. Biggs, a Tuskegee airman; John Biggs, a young man; and Levi Biggs, Sr., a buffalo soldier.

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Biggs family photograph taken in Nogales, Arizona. On the left is Levi Biggs, Jr., an airman. His mother, Dolores R. Riggs is in the center. On the left is George W. Biggs, navigator. The photograph was taken to commemorate homecoming.

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Billboard signage, congressional campaign, 1961.

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Senators Hollings, Walter Mondale, Edward Kennedy, John Glenn, Gary Hart, and Governor Ruben Askew (standing second from left), birthday roast for Mo Udall, Washington, D.C., 1983

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Udall at an underground Bisbee Mine tour. 1976.

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Bloom is comprised of 12 photographic images of flowers by Rosira Correia Sasser and their botanical descriptions. Each is Van Dyke printed from an enlarged negative on Arches 300 cotton rag paper. The blooming case was constructed by the artist and…

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Flyer by Tree Haus Creative for the exhibition Blooming Feels Weird by artist, Souther Recio. Part of the Rio Grande Ceramic Residency.

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Digital illustration for Blue Lives Don't Exist article.

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Book cover for "Too Funny To Be President" by Morris K. Udall (New York: Henry Holt, 1987), featuring photograph of a laughing Morris K. Udall in front of the U.S. Capitol.

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Booklet commemorating the USS Arizona crossing the Equator in 1936. This event, called a "line crossing" was cause for a wild a colorful ritual where those who had never made the crossing were given an initiation ceremony. This nautical themed…

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Rows of plants, with Landrum Cemetery in background off U.S. Highway 281.

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A web archive of project website for Border Crossings Project, which aims to preserve the memory the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic on border towns through the testimonies of women whose work and lives depend on crossing the US-Mexico border.

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A border fence approaches an arroyo at the San Pedro River. Trees line the other side of the arroyo.

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View of the border fence and Monument No. 121, near the port-of-entry at the twin towns of Nogales, Sonora and Arizona. Mexico is on the left.

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View of the border fence near Monument 108, looking west. Vegetation lines both sides on the fence, and on the left, trees are visible.

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[Note: Revised for appropriate name of the Tohono O’odham Nation]: The border line divides the Baboquivari Mountains and cuts through the Tohono O’odham Nation. Many washes and arroyos, such as the Gu Oidak, San Simon, and Altar, intersect the…

Border Futures_CreativeBrief_FINAL.pdf
Final report created by the Center for Cultural Power for the Ford Foundation funded project, Reclaiming the Border Narrative

Profile of Alisha Vasquez, an educator and community activist that self-identifies as a crip Chicana mama. Recorded in English. Includes American Sign Language interpretation and open captions.

Profile of Amalia Mondragón, an artist and musician that self-identifies as a Trans-Fronterizx with Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Recorded in English. Includes American Sign Language interpretation and open captions.

Profile of Daniel Martínez , an educator and mentor that self-identifies as a Chicano man and blind individual. Recorded in English. Includes American Sign Language interpretation and open captions.
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