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Selected article titles: KOLD-TV to Present Rebuttal; Proposed Nat Dem Platform; Gay Pride Week Update; Gay Pride Week Kicks Off With TKO Art Show; Casa Choir Creates Commotion in Tucson.
Selected article titles: Tucson "Gay Pride" Committee to Meet; MCC/Phoenix Rallies Against Washington for Jesus; Perspective: Developing a Gay Identity; Gays and Friends Help Send Five Delegates to Phoenix Democratic Convention; CCR Legislative Report.
Selected article titles: Tucson Lesbian Theater Performs in May; Gay Theater Auditions in Phoenix; Tucson Gay Pride Committee Formed; Perspective: Developing a Gay Identity; Phoenix Fairy Tales.
Black and white stereograph card of a man sitting on an outcropping and overlooking the canyon. Circa 1879.
Evaluates the conservation significance of county-owned properties in Avra Valley, specifically with regard to Priority Vulnerable Species and the Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan.
This contains two reports. The first is by authors from Statistical Research, Inc. that provides background information on the definition and application of the traditional cultural places designation under the National Historic Preservation Act. The second report is from the National Forest Service and expands on the first with examples of how traditional cultural places can be considered as part of land management planning.
This report describes the different, and sometimes conflicting, conceptions of land use that have been held by residents of southern Arizona during the past 500 years. Briefly outlining major events in the Native American, Hispanic, and Anglo experience, the report provides a chronology of events.
This report provides an introduction to a method used by anthropologist and archaeologists called the "cultural landscape approach." It reviews the cultural landscapes of the historic and prehistoric periods of southern Arizona and explains the theory of this approach.
The depiction of a historical-period property on an early map, whether a house, a ranch, a mining prospect, or an irrigation canal, is often the earliest (and sometimes the only) evidence that cultural features once existed in a particular place. Statistical Research used early maps as a regional preservation-planning tool by systematically examining a group of early maps of the county for depictions of cultural features. The typology will be used to plot the sites, distinguished by type, on a single map (or possibly on a series of maps) to be digitized by Pima County and incorporated into its GIS database.