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Luis Javier Alegre Salazar (4 February 1964 – 5 November 2022) was a Mexican businessman and politician. He served in the Chamber of Deputies from 2018 to 2021 as a member of Morena and representing the state of Quintana Roo. He also worked in the family radio business, which included XHNUC-FM "Radio Turquesa" and other stations.
This work was on the point of being published when the Jesuits were expelled from the Spanish dominions, on July 25, 1767. When he left New Spain, the manuscript and his sources remained behind. Alegre died of apoplexy near Bologna, Italy, in 1788. Some of his works remained unpublished at his death.
Francisco Avitia Tapia (13 May 1915 – 29 June 1995), commonly known as "El Charro Avitia", was a Mexican singer, primarily of ranchera and corrido genres. [1] His best known songs include "Maquina 501," "Caballo alazán lucero," and "El Muchacho Alegre".
A California couple visiting family in Mexico was shot and killed in the state of Michoacán on Wednesday, according to officials. Named only as Rafael C., 53, and María Gloria A., 50, the pair ...
Ignacio de la Torre was born on June 25, 1866, in a house in the Historic center of Mexico City.He was the youngest of 7 children of the sugar businessman from El Puerto de Santa María, Spain, Isidoro Fernando José Máximo de la Torre Carsí (1818–1881), founder of the company Jecker-Torre, responsible for issuing the bonds which would result in the French intervention in Mexico; and his ...
Abelardo Díaz Alfaro (July 24, 1916 – July 22, 1999) was an author from Puerto Rico who achieved great fame throughout Latin America during the 1940s. His book Campo Alegre is a text that has been studied at schools in Austria, Australia, Canada, England, New Zealand as well as all over the Americas.
CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (Reuters) -Three suspects were arrested on Monday in the death of a Mexican migration agent who was found earlier in the day with no signs of life, state security and ...
The account itself, Life in Mexico, consists of 54 letters Fanny Calderón wrote during her sojourn in Mexico from October 1839 to February 1842. [2] In terms of content, Calderón’s book includes her personal experiences of Mexico from the standpoint of an aristocratic lady, the wife of a Spanish diplomat, a position that allowed her unique immersion into Mexican culture. [1]