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Minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Regents of New Mexico State University, November 20, 2000
- The Board of Regents is the governing board for New Mexico State University, the state’s land-grant institution
- New Mexico State University Board of Regents Minutes, 1890-Present
- Author: Urban, Joanne
Minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Regents of New Mexico State University, December 16, 2000
- The Board of Regents is the governing board for New Mexico State University, the state’s land-grant institution
- New Mexico State University Board of Regents Minutes, 1890-Present
- Author: Urban, Joanne
Minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Regents of New Mexico State University, September 7, 2001
- The Board of Regents is the governing board for New Mexico State University, the state’s land-grant institution
- New Mexico State University Board of Regents Minutes, 1890-Present
- Author: Urban, Joanne
Minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Regents of New Mexico State University, March 10, 2003
- The Board of Regents is the governing board for New Mexico State University, the state’s land-grant institution
- New Mexico State University Board of Regents Minutes, 1890-Present
Minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Regents, New Mexico State University, January 31, 2005
- The Board of Regents is the governing board for New Mexico State University, the state’s land-grant institution
- New Mexico State University Board of Regents Minutes, 1890-Present
- Author: Saenz-Lobato, Socorro
Amador Family Correspondence, 1856-1949
- The Amador family correspondence is made up of approximately 16,000 pages of letters, mostly in Spanish, from a Mexican-American family of prominence in the border region of southern New Mexico and northern Chihuahua, Mexico during the 19th and early 20th centuries. The letters illuminate the struggles and triumphs of a Mexican family as they negotiate transborder life on the U.S.-Mexico boundary following the Mexican-American War (1846-1848). Like many Mexicans who accepted American citizenship when the land where they lived passed from Mexico to the United States as a result of the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, the Amadors were challenged to find a way to retain important aspects of their cultural heritage and identity while simultaneously adapting to a new social, political, and economic system. During their rise to prominence in Las Cruces, New Mexico, the family members kept up a prodigious correspondence with family, friends, business associates, clergy, and educators, among others, on both sides of the border. The bulk of the correspondence circulated between the border communities of Las Cruces, El Paso, and Ciudad Juarez, the three cities where the Amadors lived and spent most of their time. Some family members, at times, also lived in and corresponded from the cities of Chihuahua and Albuquerque. With funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the NMSU Library digitized the correspondence in its entirety in order to increase access to this valuable resource. The project was completed in July 2025.
Swastika, Volume 2, 1908
- New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts yearbook for 1908
- New Mexico State University Yearbooks, 1907-1992
- Author: Dunlap, Alice, Mitchell, S. R., Edwards, Margaret, Dessauer, Philip
Swastika, Volume 4, 1910
- New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts yearbook for 1910
- New Mexico State University Yearbooks, 1907-1992
Swastika, Volume 17, 1923
- New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts yearbook for 1923
- New Mexico State University Yearbooks, 1907-1992
Swastika, Volume 19, 1925
- New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts yearbook for 1925
- New Mexico State University Yearbooks, 1907-1992