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Jul. 5—Rio Arriba County activist and organizer Antonio "Ike" DeVargas, whose lifelong penchant for prodding public officials and challenging the local power structure gained both scrutiny and ...
Valentin de Vargas (born Albert Charles Schubert; April 27, 1935 – June 10, 2013) was an American actor known for appearing in films in the 1950s and 1960s. Two of his prominent roles were as a gangster threatening Janet Leigh in Orson Welles ' Touch of Evil (1958) and playing Luis Francisco Garcia Lopez in Hatari!
Funeral of Giuseppe Verdi: January 30, 1901 Italy: Milan: 10,000 (private ceremony) [10] February 27, 1901: 300,000 (State funeral) [10] Funeral of Sholem Aleichem: May 13, 1916 United States: New York City: at least 250,000 [11] Funerals of Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht: June 13, 1919 Weimar Republic: Berlin: 200,000 [12] Funeral of ...
Mary Belle de Vargas lived with her parents all her life. [10] She died in 1946 at the age of 44, in Natchitoches. [11] Her admirer and correspondent Gualterio Quinonas published a biography, The Armless Marvel, Mary Belle (1949). [12] In 2005, there were plans for an exhibition of surviving paintings and drawing by de Vargas, in Natchitoches. [9]
Dec. 21—A special prosecutor has dismissed perjury charges against Rio Arriba County Commissioner Alex Naranjo and former County Manager Tomas Campos in a case involving the North Central Solid ...
American teenage phenomenon Ilia Malinin won his first ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final on Saturday, after he had made even more figure skating history on Thursday.
De Vargas is a surname of Spanish origin. Notable people with the surname include: Andrés de Vargas (1613–1647), Spanish painter; Diego de Vargas (1643–1704), Spanish colonial governor; Francisco de Vargas (born 1970), Paraguayan lawyer and politician; Francisco de Vargas y Mejía (1500–1566), Spanish diplomat and writer
A statue of Diego de Vargas made by Donna Quasthoff was installed in 2007 at the west end of Santa Fe, New Mexico's Cathedral Park, in the United States. The statue was removed in June 2020 for conservation concerns, and is now on display at the New Mexico History Museum .