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Guadalupe Quezada, of Mesa, Arizona, was sentenced Dec. 19 to 11 years and three months in federal prison on one count of conspiracy to bring an alien to the United States resulting in death, U.S ...
José Francisco Morazán Quesada was born on October 3, 1792, in Tegucigalpa (then in the Captaincy General of Guatemala, now the capital of Honduras) during the waning years of Spanish colonial rule to Eusebio Morazán Alemán and Guadalupe Quesada Borjas, both members of an upper-class Creole family dedicated to trade and agriculture.
José del Pilar Quezada Valdés (1900–1985), Bishop of Acapulco (Jalisco, Mexico) Virginia Padilla Jiménez (1901–1986), Founder of the Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Sorrows, Reparatrices of Her Sorrows (Jalisco – Mexico City, Mexico) (non-cause)
Guadalupe Borja Osorno (April 4, 1915 – July 19, 1974) was First Lady of Mexico from 1964 to 1970. She was the wife of Mexican president Gustavo Díaz Ordaz. [1]
When officers found Quezada on Friday at around 8:05 a.m. they tried to conduct a traffic stop in the area of McKinley Street and Griffin Way in Corona, but he refused to pull over.
Reenactment of a Viking landing in L'Anse aux Meadows. Pre-Columbian transoceanic contact theories are speculative theories which propose that visits to the Americas, interactions with the Indigenous peoples of the Americas, or both, were made by people from elsewhere prior to Christopher Columbus's first voyage to the Caribbean in 1492. [1]
B. Maipina de la Barra, ; Olga Boetther; Silvia Boza; C. Dámasa Cabezón (aka Dámasa Cabezón Martínez, Dámasa Cabezón de Córdoba) (1792–1867), educator; Ana Maria Cumsille, winemaker
Rank Heat Name Nationality Time Notes 1: 1: Darian Forbes Turks and Caicos Islands 21.05: Q: 2: 1: Derrick Atkins Bahamas 21.16: Q: 3: 1: Michael Herrera Cuba 21.21: Q: 4: 4: Jared Connaughton Canada 21.22