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Displaying results 13911 - 13920 of 14045

Vassili Sulich clowning around, image 001: photographic print

Date

1950 (year approximate) to 1969 (year approximate)

Archival Collection

Description

Vassili Sulich. (c. 1950s-60s)

Image

Vassili Sulich clowning around, image 002: photographic print

Date

1950 (year approximate) to 1969 (year approximate)

Archival Collection

Description

Vassili Sulich clowning . (c. 1950s-60s)

Image

Photograph of Anna Fayle, early 1900s

Date

1900 to 1925

Archival Collection

Description

Anna Fayle

Image

Photograph of Madge Henderson, early 1900s

Date

1900 to 1925

Archival Collection

Description

Madge Henderson, daughter of Lubin and Annie Henderson.

Image

Photograph of Jean Fayle, circa 1948

Date

1947 to 1949

Archival Collection

Description

Jean Fayle, age 40 in the photograph.

Image

Meeting minutes for Consolidated Student Senate, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, December 08, 1981

Date

1981-12-08

Description

Includes meeting agenda and minutes along with additional information about the Housing Resolution and proposed schedule of events. CSUN Session 12 Meeting Minutes and Agendas.

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Interview with Robert W. Taft, August 5, 2004

Date

2004-08-05

Description

Narrator affiliation: Asst. Manager, Plans, Engineering and Budgets, Dept. of Energy

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National Organization for Women artwork and ephemera, 1970s

Date

1970 to 1979

Archival Collection

Description

Zine, artwork, and magazine for the National Organization for Women (NOW).

Text

Transcript of interview with Thomas Rodriguez by Maribel Estrada Calderón, September 10, 2018

Date

2018-09-10

Description

Known for “raising hell and making a difference” in the Las Vegas Valley, Thomas Rodriguez has dedicated more than four decades of his life to the political, educational, and social advancement of the Latinx community. Tom was born in 1940 to Jennie Gomez and Joseph Rodriguez in a Topeka, Kansas neighborhood its residents called The Bottoms. Mexicans, Mexican Americans, American Indians, African Americans, among other peoples lived in this diverse and beloved community. In 1956, the Urban Renewal Program, a program funded by the Federal Government that sought to raze neighborhoods the city considered to be “slums,” forced The Bottoms’ residents to abandon their homes. Rodriguez recalled the effects that this event had on his family and on his educational career. Despite his family’s relocation, he graduated from a high school located in a nearby neighborhood in 1958. Years later, the activism and ideology of the Chicano Movement of the 1960s taught Rodriguez that to overcome the injus

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