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ContributorsHunting, Dan (Contributor) / Gilmore, Taylor (Contributor) / Rex, Tom (Contributor) / Morrison Institute of Public Policy (Contributor) / L. William Seidman Research Institute (Contributor) / Center for Competitiveness and Prosperity Research (Contributor)
Created2019-05-01
Description

Mexico is Arizona’s No. 1 trading partner with over $15 billion in trade annually. The bulk of Arizona’s international commerce is with Sonora, the immediate neighbor to the south, but there are other potential economic opportunities worth exploring across Mexico. Here the focus is on Guanajuato, one of Mexico’s most

Mexico is Arizona’s No. 1 trading partner with over $15 billion in trade annually. The bulk of Arizona’s international commerce is with Sonora, the immediate neighbor to the south, but there are other potential economic opportunities worth exploring across Mexico. Here the focus is on Guanajuato, one of Mexico’s most economically advanced states with robust international trading ties. Watts College of Public Service and Community Solutions and Morrison Institute for Public Policy at Arizona State University researched the potential for enhanced economic ties between Arizona and Guanajuato, a state and capital city by the same name located in Central Mexico, 227 miles northwest of Mexico City and about 1,100 miles southeast of Phoenix. Watts College and Morrison Institute partnered with the L. William Seidman Research Institute at ASU’s W.P. Carey School of Business to produce a detailed economic profile of Guanajuato in order to guide ongoing and future exploration of expanded trade with Arizona.

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ContributorsHayden, Carl T. (Author)
Created1917-06-08
Description

Letter from Carl Hayden to H. F. Robinson with attached notes from W. W. Bass and C. H. Gensler. Hayden solitices advice concerning the Havasupai Tribe needs for grazing and access to natural resources.

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ContributorsHayden, Carl T. (Author)
Created1917-03-07
Description

Letter from Carl Hayden to L. S. Williams informing the Saginaw and Manistee Lumber Company that a bill extending the timber cutting rights in the Canyon did not pass in Congress.

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ContributorsHayden, Carl T. (Author)
Created1917-02-24
Description

Letter from Carl Hayden to Harold Greene regarding the progress of the national park bill.

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ContributorsHayden, Carl T. (Author)
Created1917-03-09
Description

Letter from Carl Hayden to Bernie Zachau regarding the national park bill with an enclosed copy of the National Park Service Act.

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ContributorsHayden, Carl T. (Author)
Created1917-02-26
Description

Letter from Carl Hayden to Joseph J. Cotter regarding suggestions on the proposed national park bill.

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ContributorsHayden, Carl T. (Author)
Created1918-04-19
Description

Letter from Carl Hayden to George W. P. Hunt outlining the proposed national park boundaries and the cost of a township if the state of Arizona decided to acquire one on the rim of the Grand Canyon.

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ContributorsHayden, Carl T. (Author)
Created1918-04-26
Description

Letter from Carl Hayden to L. B. Williams concerning the proposed township in the Grand Canyon.

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ContributorsHayden, Carl T. (Author) / Smith, George Otih (Author)
Created1918-04-25
Description

Letter from Carl Hayden to George Otis Smith asking his advice regarding the mining of asbestos deposits in the Grand Canyon.

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ContributorsHayden, Carl T. (Author)
Created1918-07-19
Description

Letter from Carl T. Hayden to C. H. Gensler, Havasupai Indian Reservation, regarding Hualapai and Cataract Canyons geography.