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ContributorsMather, Stephen T. (Author)
Created1923-08-11
Description

Letter from the Director of the National Park Service, Stephen T. Mather, to Jesse L. Boyce informing him that immediate action is being taken to remove the TNT from the Grand Canyon.

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ContributorsMather, Stephen T. (Author)
Created1926-04-01
Description

Letter from Stephen Mather to Carl T. Hayden regarding automobile regulations within Grand Canyon National Park.

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ContributorsMather, Stephen T. (Author)
Created1926-03-08
Description

Letter from Stephen T. Mather to Carl T. Hayden advocating for a reduction in automobile fees for the South Rim entrance.

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ContributorsMather, Stephen T. (Author)
Created1925-05-20
Description

Letter from Stephen T. Mather to Carl T. Hayden regarding a negative newspaper article about the National Park Service and Stephen Mather.

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ContributorsMather, Stephen T. (Author)
Created1924-04-21
Description

Letter from Stephen T. Mather to Carl T. Hayden thanking Hayden for his advice about visiting Arizona.

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ContributorsHayden, Carl T. (Author) / Mather, Stephen T. (Contributor)
Created1923-09-28
Description

Letter from Carl Hayden to Stephen Mather regarding the sale of Bass properties.

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ContributorsHayden, Carl T. (Author) / Mather, Stephen T. (Contributor)
Created1924-07-09
Description

Letter from Carl Hayden to Stephen Mather requesting that congress pay W. W. Bass the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars for his properties.

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ContributorsMather, Stephen T. (Author)
Created1924-11-28
Description

Letter from Stephen Mather, National Park Service to Carl Hayden on payment to W. W. Bass.

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ContributorsMather, Stephen T. (Author)
Created1926-01-20
Description

Letter from Stephen Mather to Carl Hayden regarding the sale of Bass properties to the Santa Fe Railroad Company.

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Created2005-12
Description

Many Arizona street-level police officers and sheriff’s deputies report that they are skeptical of the ability of Arizona’s “pro-arrest” policy to reduce domestic violence, frustrated by a perceived lack of follow-up from prosecutors, and often at odds with victims whose predicaments they may not fully understand.

Domestic violence is a major

Many Arizona street-level police officers and sheriff’s deputies report that they are skeptical of the ability of Arizona’s “pro-arrest” policy to reduce domestic violence, frustrated by a perceived lack of follow-up from prosecutors, and often at odds with victims whose predicaments they may not fully understand.

Domestic violence is a major social problem throughout Arizona, and a major daily challenge for law enforcement officers. Every day in Arizona, domestic violence injures victims, damages property, destroys families, breeds further crime and anti-social behavior, and perpetuates itself in younger generations. Like most states, Arizona has "criminalized" domestic violence (DV) by adopting laws and policies that bolster law enforcement officers’ arrest powers and require them to arrest suspects under certain circumstances.