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El Imparcial de Texas [20] Texas: San Antonio: 1908 1924 El Libre Pensador [20] Texas: Brownsville: 1890 ? ENGL Trans::The Free Thinker Mensajero [22] Arizona: Phoenix: El Mensajero Semanal de Nueva York: New York: New York: 1828 [2] El Mercurio de Nueva York: New York: New York: 1828 [8] Mexico: Illinois: Chicago: 1922 [32] El Misisipi ...
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; El Diario de Juárez
Juarez: The Laboratory of Our Future, 1998, Aperture Press (with Charles Bowden) Morir Despacio: Una Mirada al Interior de las Maquiladoras en la Frontera E.U./México , 2000 No One is Illegal: Fighting Violence and State Repression on the U.S.-Mexico Border , 2006, Haymarket Books (with Justin Akers Chacon and Mike Davis)
Sandra Rodríguez Nieto is a Mexican journalist who for many years was an investigative reporter for El Diario de Juárez.She has aggressively covered the narcotics-connected violence in Ciudad Juárez, which is located across the border from El Paso, Texas, and which is one of the most violent cities in the world.
El Diario de El Paso, Texas, United States; El Diario La Prensa, New York City, United States; El Diario, Uruguay; El Diario de Caracas, Venezuela; Other uses.
Alejandro was an orphan. He was baptized Armando Martínez. [4] He spent a portion of his childhood in orphanages in the United States. During the 1970s, he was adopted by Guillermo Máynez, a Chihuahua business entrepreneur and owner of approximately 20 bars and nightclubs in Juárez, and his family, who gave him his surname and changed his name to Alejandro.
The El Diario de El Paso is the primary Spanish-language newspaper for the U.S. city of El Paso, Texas.The paper was founded on May 16, 2005, by El Diario de Juárez.It originally started out as a Mexican newspaper circulated throughout Ciudad Juárez under the name Diario de Juárez.
Luis Carlos Santiago Orozco was the second El Diario journalist to be murdered in two years, following the death of José Armando Rodríguez Carreón, 40, who was shot dead on 13 November 2008. Reporters Without Borders notes that 68 media workers have been killed since 2008 in Mexico and 11 declared missing since 2003. As of 2010, the worst of ...