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  • Presidio, Texas  December 9, 2009: Hector Raul Acosta Flores,  Mexican Consulate in Presidio, TX, speaks of his opposition to the ATEP program where Mexican nationals are bussed to the remote west Texas desert by the U.S. Border Patrol for removal back to Mexico. <br />
 © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0385360.jpg
  • Austin, TX March 30, 2006: High school students of Mexican descent rally at the Texas Capitol to protest possible changes in U.S. immigration laws that would make it more difficult to stay in the United States. The debate has prompted large rallies nationwide by Mexican aliens. ©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0194811_AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX  December 12, 2006: Colorful matachines (dancers) and Cristo Rey Catholic Church members parade through downtown Austin in honor of the Virgen de Guadalupe, an ancient Mexican traditional celebration honoring peasant Juan Diego's vision of the Virgin Mary in 1531. The holiday is celebrated with an all-night vigil December 12 in Catholic parishes.   ©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0220211.jpg
  • Austin, TX  December 12, 2006: Colorful matachines (dancers) and Cristo Rey Catholic Church members parade through downtown Austin in honor of the Virgen de Guadalupe, an ancient Mexican traditional celebration honoring peasant Juan Diego's vision of the Virgin Mary in 1531. The holiday is celebrated with an all-night vigil December 12 in Catholic parishes.     ©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0220210.jpg
  • Austin, TX  December 12, 2006: Colorful matachines (dancers) and Cristo Rey Catholic Church members parade through downtown Austin in honor of the Virgen de Guadalupe, an ancient Mexican traditional celebration honoring peasant Juan Diego's vision of the Virgin Mary in 1531. The holiday is celebrated with an all-night vigil December 12 in Catholic parishes.          ©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0220212.jpg
  • Austin, TX  December 12, 2006: Colorful matachines (dancers) and Cristo Rey Catholic Church members parade through downtown Austin in honor of the Virgen de Guadalupe, an ancient Mexican traditional celebration honoring peasant Juan Diego's vision of the Virgin Mary in 1531. The holiday is celebrated with an all-night vigil December 12 in Catholic parishes.   ©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0220215.jpg
  • Austin, TX March 30, 2006: High school students of Mexican descent rally at the Texas Capitol to protest possible changes in U.S. immigration laws that would make it more difficult to stay in the United States. The debate has prompted large rallies nationwide by Mexican aliens. ©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0194811_AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX March 30, 2006: High school students of Mexican descent rally at the Texas Capitol to protest possible changes in U.S. immigration laws that would make it more difficult to stay in the United States. The debate has prompted large rallies nationwide by Mexican aliens. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0194811x.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurrican Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base.  <br />
©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0182101_AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX  December 12, 2006: Colorful matachines (dancers) and Cristo Rey Catholic Church members parade through downtown Austin in honor of the Virgen de Guadalupe, an ancient Mexican traditional celebration honoring peasant Juan Diego's vision of the Virgin Mary in 1531. The holiday is celebrated with an all-night vigil December 12 in Catholic parishes.          ©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0220214.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurrican Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base.  <br />
©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0182101x.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurrican Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base.  <br />
©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0182103_AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX  December 12, 2006: Colorful matachines (dancers) and Cristo Rey Catholic Church members parade through downtown Austin in honor of the Virgen de Guadalupe, an ancient Mexican traditional celebration honoring peasant Juan Diego's vision of the Virgin Mary in 1531. The holiday is celebrated with an all-night vigil December 12 in Catholic parishes.          ©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0220213.jpg
  • Austin, TX  December 12, 2006: Colorful matachines (dancers) and Cristo Rey Catholic Church members parade through downtown Austin in honor of the Virgen de Guadalupe, an ancient Mexican traditional celebration honoring peasant Juan Diego's vision of the Virgin Mary in 1531. The holiday is celebrated with an all-night vigil December 12 in Catholic parishes.          ©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0220209.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurrican Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base.  <br />
©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0182103x.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas  1993: Dies y Seis Septiembre Mexican Independence Day celebration with a young girl in San Antonio.  ©Bob Daemmrich
    Daemmrich-419.JPG
  • September 15th, 2013 Austin, Texas: Mariachi band, Mexican folk dancers mark Mexican Independence Day at the Texas Capitol  mkc / Daemmrich Photos
    _EDAE0467370.jpg
  • September 15th, 2013 Austin, Texas: Mariachi band, Mexican folk dancers mark Mexican Independence Day at the Texas Capitol.  mkc / Daemmrich Photos
    _EDAE0467368.jpg
  • September 15th, 2013 Austin, Texas: Mariachi band, Mexican folk dancers mark Mexican Independence Day at the Texas Capitol  mkc / Daemmrich Photos
    _EDAE0467367.jpg
  • Low water levels caused by a continued drought expose brush and trees on the United States side of Falcon Lake on the Texas-Mexico border south of San Antonio. A haven for bass fishermen, Falcon Lake has seen a rise in confrontations between alleged Mexican drug cartel operatives and fishermen since the killing of a U.S. citizen on the Mexican side in 2010. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0424088.jpg
  • Low water levels caused by a continued drought expose rocks and brush on the United States side of Falcon Lake on the Texas-Mexico border south of San Antonio. A haven for bass fishermen, Falcon Lake has seen a rise in confrontations between alleged Mexican drug cartel operatives and fishermen since the killing of a U.S. citizen on the Mexican side in 2010.  ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0424086.jpg
  • Low water levels caused by a continued drought expose rocks and brush on the United States side of Falcon Lake on the Texas-Mexico border south of San Antonio. A haven for bass fishermen, Falcon Lake has seen a rise in confrontations between alleged Mexican drug cartel operatives and fishermen since the killing of a U.S. citizen on the Mexican side in 2010.  ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0424084.jpg
  • Low water levels caused by a continued drought expose rocks and brush on the United States side of Falcon Lake on the Texas-Mexico border south of San Antonio. A haven for bass fishermen, Falcon Lake has seen a rise in confrontations between alleged Mexican drug cartel operatives and fishermen since the killing of a U.S. citizen on the Mexican side in 2010. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0424085.jpg
  • A United State Border Patrol boat idles through Big Tiger cove on Falcon Lake on the U.S. side of the border between Texas and Mexico south of San Antonio. A haven for bass fishermen, Falcon Lake has seen a rise in confrontations between alleged Mexican drug cartel operatives and fishermen since the killing of a U.S. citizen on the Mexican side in 2010.  ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0424082.jpg
  • A United State Border Patrol boat idles through Big Tiger cove on Falcon Lake on the U.S. side of the border between Texas and Mexico south of San Antonio. A haven for bass fishermen, Falcon Lake has seen a rise in confrontations between alleged Mexican drug cartel operatives and fishermen since the killing of a U.S. citizen on the Mexican side in 2010. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0424083.jpg
  • A U.S. fisherman casts around Tiger Island on the U.S. side in Falcon Lake on the Texas-Mexico border south of San Antonio. A haven for bass fishermen, Falcon Lake has seen a rise in confrontations between alleged Mexican drug cartel operatives and fishermen since the killing of a U.S. citizen on the Mexican side in 2010.  ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0424080.jpg
  • A Mexican Marine military helicopter patrols the Rio Grande River as it flies past a large Mexican flag at the U.S. border with Brownsville, Texas on Friday afternoon following reports of multiple shootouts in Matamoros between drug cartels and government security forces.  More than two dozen were reporter killed in the incidents.  September 2010. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0416992.jpg
  • A Mexican Marine military helicopter patrols the Rio Grande River as it flies past a large Mexican flag at the U.S. border with Brownsville, Texas on Friday afternoon following reports of multiple shootouts in Matamoros between drug cartels and government security forces.  More than two dozen were reporter killed in the incidents.  September 2010. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0416990.jpg
  • A Mexican Marine military helicopter patrols the Rio Grande River as it flies past a large Mexican flag at the U.S. border with Brownsville, Texas on Friday afternoon following reports of multiple shootouts in Matamoros between drug cartels and government security forces.  More than two dozen were reporter killed in the incidents.  September 2010. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0416987.jpg
  • Ojinaga, Mexico December 9, 2009:  Mayor Cesar Carrasco of  Chihuahua,  Mexico expresses is displeasure with the U.S. Border Patrol program that sends Mexican nationals caught in the United States back through his border city.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0385368.jpg
  • Ojinaga, Mexico December 9, 2009:  Mexican nationals who were caught in the United States after illegally entering the country arrive at the immigration checkpoint directly across the Rio Grande River from Presidio, TX where they will travel by bus back to their homes in Mexico.  The U.S. Border Patrol is shipping hundreds of illegal aliens to the remote west Texas desert for repatriation.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0385366.jpg
  • Ojinaga, Mexico December 9, 2009:  Mexican nationals who were caught in the United States after illegally entering the country arrive at the immigration checkpoint directly across the Rio Grande River from Presidio, TX where they will travel by bus back to their homes in Mexico.  The U.S. Border Patrol is shipping hundreds of illegal aliens to the remote west Texas desert for repatriation.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0385365.jpg
  • Ojinaga, Mexico December 9, 2009:  Mexican nationals who were caught in the United States after illegally entering the country arrive at the immigration checkpoint directly across the Rio Grande River from Presidio, TX where they will travel by bus back to their homes in Mexico.  The U.S. Border Patrol is shipping hundreds of illegal aliens to the remote west Texas desert for repatriation.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0385364.jpg
  • Ojinaga, Mexico December 9, 2009:  Mexican nationals who were caught in the United States after illegally entering the country arrive at the immigration checkpoint directly across the Rio Grande River from Presidio, TX where they will travel by bus back to their homes in Mexico.  The U.S. Border Patrol is shipping hundreds of illegal aliens to the remote west Texas desert for repatriation.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0385362.jpg
  • San Miguel de Allende, Mexico: Woman preparing posole, a traditional Mexican dish. MR ©Bob Daemmrich / The Image Works
    CDMM4473000.jpg
  • Austin, Texas November 2, 2008: Author Stephanis Elizondo Griest, reads from her latest memoir, "Mexican Enough, My Life Between the Borderlines" at the Texas Book Festival.  ©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0296806_AL.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurrican Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base.  <br />
©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0182104.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: Hurricane Katrina evacuee center at KellyUSA, a former Air Force base in south San Antonio.  Mexican soldiers prepare meals for evacuees. <br />
©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0182106.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurrican Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base.  <br />
©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0182102.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico:  Car radios being manufactured at Delphi Delco Electronics de Mexico, a maquiladora plant across the U.S. border that makes parts for General Motors cars. Delphi has about 11,000 Mexican workers in seven factories near Matamoros.  This is a small 'shift meeting' to discuss the day's production. April 2006  ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194122.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico, April, 2006:  Mexican facotry of U.S-based Starkey makeer of hearing aids. ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194100.jpg
  • Austin, TX  December 12, 2006: Colorful matachines (dancers) and Cristo Rey Catholic Church members parade through downtown Austin in honor of the Virgen de Guadalupe, an ancient Mexican traditional celebration honoring peasant Juan Diego's vision of the Virgin Mary in 1531. The holiday is celebrated with an all-night vigil December 12 in Catholic parishes.          ©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0220216.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico:  Car radios being manufactured at Delphi Delco Electronics de Mexico, a maquiladora plant across the U.S. border that makes parts for General Motors cars. Delphi has about 11,000 Mexican workers in seven factories near Matamoros.  This is a small 'shift meeting' to discuss the day's production. April 2006  ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194122.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico, April, 2006:  Mexican facotry of U.S-based Starkey makeer of hearing aids. ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194100.jpg
  • San Miguel de Allende, Mexico: Mexican female artist paints on canvas on her rooftop in San Miguel de Allende. MR<br />
©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0198784.jpg
  • Texas Governor Ann Richards with Mexican President Carlos Salinas de Gortari, 1993. <br />
©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0198843.jpg
  • Austin, Texas November 2, 2008: Author Stephanis Elizondo Griest, reads from her latest memoir, "Mexican Enough, My Life Between the Borderlines" at the Texas Book Festival.  ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0296806x.jpg
  • A concrete post marks the Rio Grande river channel and the international border between Mexico on the left and the United States on the right at Falcon Lake, Texas south of San Antonio. A haven for bass fishermen, Falcon Lake has seen a rise in confrontations between alleged Mexican drug cartel operatives and fishermen since the killing of a U.S. citizen on the Mexican side in 2010.   ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0424087.jpg
  • A U.S. fisherman casts around Tiger Island on the U.S. side in Falcon Lake on the Texas-Mexico border south of San Antonio. A haven for bass fishermen, Falcon Lake has seen a rise in confrontations between alleged Mexican drug cartel operatives and fishermen since the killing of a U.S. citizen on the Mexican side in 2010. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0424081.jpg
  • A Mexican Marine military helicopter patrols the Rio Grande River as it flies past a large Mexican flag at the U.S. border with Brownsville, Texas on Friday afternoon following reports of multiple shootouts in Matamoros between drug cartels and government security forces.  More than two dozen were reporter killed in the incidents.  September 2010. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0416991.jpg
  • A Mexican Marine military helicopter patrols the Rio Grande River as it flies past a large Mexican flag at the U.S. border with Brownsville, Texas on Friday afternoon following reports of multiple shootouts in Matamoros between drug cartels and government security forces.  More than two dozen were reporter killed in the incidents.  September 2010. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0416986.jpg
  • Ojinaga, Mexico December 9, 2009:  Mayor Cesar Carrasco of  Chihuahua,  Mexico expresses is displeasure with the U.S. Border Patrol program that sends Mexican nationals caught in the United States back through his border city.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0385367.jpg
  • Ojinaga, Mexico December 9, 2009:  Mexican nationals who were caught in the United States after illegally entering the country arrive at the immigration checkpoint directly across the Rio Grande River from Presidio, TX where they will travel by bus back to their homes in Mexico.  The U.S. Border Patrol is shipping hundreds of illegal aliens to the remote west Texas desert for repatriation.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0385363.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurrican Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base.  <br />
©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0182099.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurrican Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base.  <br />
©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0182098.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurrican Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base.  <br />
©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0182100.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services. ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194094_AL.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services. ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194091_AL.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services. ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194090_AL.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services.<br />
<br />
<br />
©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194096_AL.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services. ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194094_AL.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services. ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194090_AL.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services.  Cyoptics controller Mariguel Cuellar (standing) meets with her staff to go over budget numbers during the workday.  ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0194092x.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0194095x.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurricane Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base. <br />
©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0182462x.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurricane Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base. <br />
©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0182462_AL.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services.<br />
<br />
<br />
©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194096_AL.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services.  Cyoptics controller Mariguel Cuellar (standing) meets with her staff to go over budget numbers during the workday.  ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194092_AL.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services. ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194095_AL.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services.  Cyoptics controller Mariguel Cuellar (standing) meets with her staff to go over budget numbers during the workday.  ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194092_AL.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services. ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194095_AL.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services. ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0194091_AL.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services.<br />
<br />
<br />
©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0194096x.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0194094x.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0194091x.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0194090x.jpg
  • Texas-Mexico Border at Rio Grande River - A Mexican fisherman throws his net toward the U.S. side of the Rio Grande River at Boca Chica beach where the river separating Mexico from Texas dumps into the Gulf of Mexico.  The U.S. border is unsecured in this area with only occasional patrols by U.S. Border Patrol.   September 23, 2014 © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0492800.jpg
  • Young elementary school age Hispanic girl's perform Mexican folkloric dance wearing dresses traditional from the state of Veracruz during outdoor event in Austin, Texas  August 27 , 2011  ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0429684.jpg
  • Young elementary school age Hispanic girl's perform Mexican folkloric dance wearing dresses traditional from the state of Veracruz during outdoor event in Austin, Texas  August 27 , 2011  ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0429681.jpg
  • A macabre dressed woman waits at the annual Kyle, TX "Day of the Dead" or Dia de Los Muertos celebration just south of Austin.  Day of the Dead is a Mexican national holiday celebrated throughout Mexico and focuses on gatherings of family and friends to pray for a remember departed loved ones.  Gatherings often take place in cemeteries where food is served and graves cleaned and decorated.  2011 © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0423805.jpg
  • Texas schoolchildren wait before performing at the annual Kyle, TX "Day of the Dead" or Dia de Los Muertos celebration just south of Austin.  Day of the Dead is a Mexican national holiday celebrated throughout Mexico and focuses on gatherings of family and friends to pray for a remember departed loved ones.  Gatherings often take place in cemeteries where food is served and graves cleaned and decorated.  2011 © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0423801.jpg
  • Children hold a "catrina" doll-like figure while performing at the annual Kyle, TX "Day of the Dead" or Dia de Los Muertos celebration just south of Austin.  Day of the Dead is a Mexican national holiday celebrated throughout Mexico and focuses on gatherings of family and friends to pray for a remember departed loved ones.  Gatherings often take place in cemeteries where food is served and graves cleaned and decorated.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0423798.jpg
  • Laredo , Texas - December 16, 2010  ,Downtown scene - City on the on the Texas / Mexican border  © Bob / Daemmerich
    EDAE0387956.jpg
  • Presidio, Texas  December 9, 2009:  Mexican nationals caught bu the U.S. Border Patrol in Arizona are sent across the remote international bridge between Presidio, TX and Ojinaga, Chihuahua, Mexico as part of the ATEP program that attempts to break the cycle of illegal aliens returning back to the United States.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0385372.jpg
  • Presidio, Texas  December 9, 2009:  Mexican nationals caught bu the U.S. Border Patrol in Arizona are sent across the remote international bridge between Presidio, TX and Ojinaga, Chihuahua, Mexico as part of the ATEP program that attempts to break the cycle of illegal aliens returning back to the United States.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0385369.jpg
  • Presidio, Texas  December 9, 2009:  Mexican nationals caught bu the U.S. Border Patrol in Arizona are sent across the remote international bridge between Presidio, TX and Ojinaga, Chihuahua, Mexico as part of the ATEP program that attempts to break the cycle of illegal aliens returning back to the United States.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0385358.jpg
  • Matamoros, Mexico: Car radios being manufactured at Delphi Delco Electronics de Mexico, a maquiladora plant across the U.S. border that makes parts for General Motors cars. Delphi has about 11,000 Mexican workers in seven factories near Matamoros. April 2006 ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0194145.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurricane Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base. <br />
©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0182457.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurricane Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base.<br />
©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0182456.jpg
  • San Antonio, Texas September 9, 2005: A convoy of the Mexican Army bivouacs at KellyUSA, in south San Antonio to prepare meals for the thousands of Hurricane Katrina evacuees housed at the former U.S. Air Force base. <br />
©Bob Daemmrich/
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  • Matamoros, Mexico: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, Texas.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services.  April 2006 ©Bob Daemmrich /
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  • Matamoros, Mexico  April, 2006: Mexican workers at CyOptics, a high-tech manufacturing facility just across the U.S. border from Brownsville, TX.  CyOptics, a U.S-owned company , designs, develops and markets a range of optical chips and components for integration into access, metro and long haul communications systems. The company also provides contract design, fabrication and packaging services.<br />
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©Bob Daemmrich /
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  • Hispanic and Anglo celebration participants line up for authentic Mexican food at Cinco de Mayo celebration in Austin, Texas.<br />
©Bob Daemmrich
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  • San Miguel de Allende, Mexico 1996: newlywed Mexican couple both (26) years old in city park at San Miguel, Mexico. Model Release ET-0039  © Bob Daemmrich Photogrpahy
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  • Texas-Mexico Border at Rio Grande River - A Mexican fisherman approaches the U.S. side of the Rio Grande River at Boca Chica beach where the river separating Mexico from Texas dumps into the Gulf of Mexico.  The U.S. border is unsecured in this area with only occasional patrols by U.S. Border Patrol.   September 23, 2014 © Bob Daemmrich
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  • Texas-Mexico Border at Rio Grande River - A Mexican fisherman approaches the U.S. side of the Rio Grande River at Boca Chica beach where the river separating Mexico from Texas dumps into the Gulf of Mexico.  The U.S. border is unsecured in this area with only occasional patrols by U.S. Border Patrol.   September 23, 2014 © Bob Daemmrich
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  • Young man wears traditional Mexican Mariachi clothing during a parade in Austin, Texas  March 2012. ©Marjorie Kamys Cotera / Daemmrich Photos
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  • Visitors view the newly unveiled Tejano Monument on Texas Capitol grounds. The Granite and bronze monument by Laredo artist Armando Hinojosa weighs 250 tons and is a tribune to Texas early Spanish and Mexican explorers and settlers   March 2012. ©Marjorie Kamys Cotera / Daemmrich Photos
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  • Newly unveiled Tejano Monument on Texas Capitol grounds. The Granite and bronze monument by Laredo artist Armando Hinojosa weighs 250 tons and is a tribune to Texas early Spanish and Mexican explorers and settlers <br />
  March 2012. ©Marjorie Kamys Cotera / Daemmrich Photos
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  • Young elementary school age Hispanic girl's perform Mexican folkloric dance wearing dresses traditional from the state of Veracruz during outdoor event in Austin, Texas  August 27 , 2011  ©Bob Daemmrich
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