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The system covers 4.8 miles (7.7 km) [50] [51] (round trip) in two loops from Downtown El Paso to University of Texas at El Paso. The system was constructed under the authority of the Camino Real Regional Mobility Authority , but when the major construction was completed, around spring 2018, it was transferred to Sun Metro , for operation and ...
The 1917 Bath Riots occurred in January 1917 at the Santa Fe Street Bridge between El Paso, Texas, United States, and Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico.The riots are known to have been started by Carmelita Torres [1] and lasted from January 28 to January 30 and were sparked by new immigration policies at the El Paso–Juárez Immigration and Naturalization Service office, requiring Mexicans ...
We had no idea when we started the project earlier this year that 2023 would close out as the deadliest year ever for migrants along the 268 miles of international border in the Border Patrol's El ...
Juárez has four local newspapers: El Diario, El Mexicano, El PM and Hoy. El Diario de Juárez , [ 79 ] is the founder of El Diario de El Paso . El Norte was a fifth, but it ceased operations on April 2, 2017, following the murder of journalist Miroslava Breach , [ 80 ] the paper explained, the recent killings of several Mexican journalists ...
ABOUT THE SERIES. The El Paso Times embarked on this series in March 2023 after a deadly detention center fire in Juárez, Mexico, killed 40 migrants from half a dozen countries.
Longtime El Paso newsman Mark Ross has announced he is retiring from Channel 7-KVIA and has three final newscasts left. He has been in the El Paso radio and television news business for 45 years.
Carmelita Torres was a "red-haired Mexican woman" known for starting the 1917 Bath riots on the Mexico–United States border between Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, and El Paso, Texas. [1] At the time of the riots, she was 17 years old and working as a maid in the United States. [2] [3] [4]
Map of the Chamizal settlement of 1963. The Chamizal dispute was an international land and boundary conflict over contested land (estimates range from 600 to 1,600 acres [240–650 ha; 2.4–6.5 km 2]) along the Mexico–United States border between El Paso, Texas, and Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua. [1]