fbpx
Wikipedia

Ruben Salazar

Ruben Salazar (March 3, 1928 – August 29, 1970)[1] was a civil rights activist and a reporter for the Los Angeles Times, the first Mexican-American journalist from mainstream media to cover the Chicano community.[2]

Ruben Salazar
Salazar in 1970
BornMarch 3, 1928
DiedAugust 29, 1970(1970-08-29) (aged 42)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Occupation(s)Journalist and civil rights activist
Years active1956–1970

Salazar was killed during the National Chicano Moratorium March against the Vietnam War on August 29, 1970, in East Los Angeles, California. During the march, Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputy Thomas Wilson struck and immediately killed Salazar with a tear-gas projectile. No criminal charge was filed, but Salazar's family reached an out-of-court financial settlement with the county.[2]

Early life Edit

Born in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, March 3rd 1928, Salazar was brought to the United States with his family in 1929. Salazar began his U.S. naturalization process on October 15, 1947, when he submitted his application for a certificate of arrival and preliminary form for a declaration of intention of citizenship.

Career Edit

 
Salazar interviewing civilians in Vietnam, 1965.

After high school, he served in the U.S. Army for two years. Salazar attended Texas Western College, graduating in 1954 with a degree in journalism. He obtained a job as an investigative journalist at the now-defunct El Paso Herald-Post; at one point he posed as a vagrant to get arrested while he investigated the poor treatment of prisoners in the El Paso jail. After his tenure at the Herald-Post, Salazar worked at several California newspapers, including the Santa Rosa Press Democrat.[2][3]

Salazar was a news reporter and columnist for the Los Angeles Times from 1959 to 1970.[4] During his career, Salazar became one of the most prominent figures within the Chicano movement. He was a foreign correspondent in his early years at the Times, covering the 1965 United States occupation of the Dominican Republic, the Vietnam War, and the Tlatelolco massacre (the latter while serving as the Times' bureau chief in Mexico City).

When Salazar returned to the US in 1968, he focused on the Mexican-American community and the Chicano movement, writing about East Los Angeles, an area largely ignored by the media except for coverage of crimes. He became the first Chicano journalist to cover the ethnic group while working in a large general circulation publication. Many of his pieces were critical of the Los Angeles government's treatment of Chicanos, particularly after he came into conflict with police during the East L.A. walkouts.[2] While reporting for the Times, Salazar forged relationships with members of the Chicano movement, including draft protester Rosalio Muñoz.[5]

In January 1970, Salazar left the Times to become news director for the Spanish language television station KMEX in Los Angeles. At KMEX, he investigated allegations of police officers' planting evidence to implicate Chicanos and the July 1970 police shooting of two unarmed Mexican nationals. According to Salazar, he was visited by undercover LAPD detectives who warned him that his investigations were "dangerous in the minds of barrio people."[2]

During Salazar's time as the news director for KMEX, which is a Spanish-language station since 1962, he became more outspoken on Chicano issues and gave priority to cases that were important to the Chicano Movement. This included the killing of the Sánchez cousins by police which brought forth a community-wide protest as well as covering the Chicano Moratorium which ultimately led to his death.[5]

Support for Chicano movement Edit

 
Salazar in Mexico City, 1966.

Salazar's strong support for the Chicano movement as a Mexican-American distinguished him early on from other journalists in mainstream media. With a strong disparity of racial minorities in news organizations nationwide, Salazar felt it was his personal and professional responsibility to give necessary attention to the actions led by his fellow Chicanos in East Los Angeles. In February 1970, just six months prior to his death, Salazar made his support for the Chicano movement particularly clear when he authored an article in the Los Angeles Times, titled, "Who Is A Chicano? And What Is It the Chicanos Want?" In this piece, Salazar not only describes the evolving identity of Chicanos and the historic importance of the movement, but he details his frustration with the lack of Mexican-American representation among the elected representatives in the Los Angeles city council. Salazar writes, "Mexican-Americans, though large in numbers, are so politically impotent that in Los Angeles, where the country's largest single concentration of Spanish-speaking live, they have no one of their own on the City Council. This in a city politically sophisticated enough to have three Negro council-men."[6]

Due to his support of the Chicano movement, Salazar became an FBI target and was the subject of an FBI internal file. He was noted as being cooperative during his interactions with the FBI during the investigation of Stokely Carmichael, but he had drawn the FBI's attention during the Korean War when he began corresponding with a white female pacifist regarding the loss of his application for US citizenship by the army. During his Carmichael interview, he is noted as saying that he could not be a witness to the speech that FBI was referencing as he was not present to which he was then asked to obtain a video of the speech to present to the FBI. While Salazar accepted, he did so under the notion that he would publicize the fact that the FBI was looking for the tape.[7] As they feared the civil unrest this could cause if publicized, the FBI rescinded their request. Due to the fact that the FBI and the LAPD correlated civil unrest with communism, and Salazar reported at many events where civil unrest occurred, he was viewed in his files as a communist. LAPD also held files on Salazar specifically due to an article that Salazar wrote about the Chief of Police, Chief Davis, wherein he reported the fact that Davis referred to Mexican "tyranny and dictatorship".[7] While local and national law enforcement were displeased with Salazar's reporting, he continued to write articles advocating the rights of the Chicano community.[7]

Death Edit

 
The Silver Dollar Bar, where Salazar was killed, in 1970.
 
Mourners pay respects to Salazar, 1970.

On August 29, 1970, he was covering the National Chicano Moratorium March, organized to protest the Vietnam War, in which some believed that a disproportionate number of Latinos served and were killed. The march ended with a rally that was broken up by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department using tear gas. Panic and rioting ensued.[8] A coroner's inquest ruled the shooting of the tear gas projectile to be "death at the hands of another," but Tom Wilson, the sheriff's deputy who fired the shot that killed Salazar, was never prosecuted. At the time, many believed the homicide was a premeditated assassination of a prominent, vocal member of the Los Angeles Chicano community.

The riot started when the owners of the Green Mill liquor store, located around the corner from the Silver Dollar Bar on Whittier Boulevard, called in a complaint about people stealing from them. Deputies responded and a fight broke out. Later on that day, cadets from the nearby Sheriff's Academy were bussed to the area and marched into the park. A fight ensued, with the untrained cadets being beaten up. This led to more rioting. The Green Mill liquor store is still located at the same place on Whittier Boulevard. The owners later denied contacting the Sheriff's Department.

Salazar was resting in the Silver Dollar Bar after the protest became violent. According to a witness, "Ruben Salazar had just sat down to sip a quiet beer at the bar, away from the madness in the street," when a deputy fired a tear gas projectile through a curtain hanging at the entrance of the bar, hitting Salazar in the head and killing him instantly. Deputy Wilson fired a 10-inch wall-piercing type of tear gas round from a tear gas gun of the type intended for barricade situations, rather than rolling in a tear gas canister, which produces a much larger cloud of gas and is generally used to disperse crowds.

The story of Salazar's killing was the subject of "Strange Rumblings in Aztlan," a 1971 article by gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson for Rolling Stone magazine.[9] On February 22, 2011, the Office of Independent Review released a report of its examination of the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department records on the death of Salazar. After reviewing thousands of documents, the civilian watchdog agency concluded there is no evidence that sheriff's deputies intentionally targeted Salazar or had him under surveillance.[10]

Deputy Wilson, after being identified as responsible for Salazar's death, stated that "he did not know, and under the circumstances was not concerned about, what kind of tear gas projectile he fired".[11] Salazar's death captured the attention of many activists within the Chicano movement as his death occurred at the hands of those whom the movement felt was a large cause of the marginalizing of Chicano communities. During meetings with the district attorney in regard to the incident that led to Salazar's death, many Chicanos attended to voice their support as well as show a united force against police brutality.[5] After several days of testimony, a coroner's jury returned with a split verdict, and no charges were filed by the District Attorney. Nevertheless, three years after Salazar's death, Los Angeles County reached a settlement of $700,000 with Salazar's family as a result of the sheriff's department not using "proper and lawful guidelines for the use of deadly force" during the march.[12][13] At the time, this was the highest settlement recorded in Los Angeles county history.[citation needed]

He was survived by his wife, Sally (née Robare), and their daughters, Lisa Salazar Johnson and Stephanie Salazar Cook, and son, John Salazar.[citation needed]

Legacy and honors Edit

 
A plaque honoring Salazar was mounted in the Globe lobby of the former Los Angeles Times building in downtown Los Angeles.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "NNDB". NNDB.com. Retrieved 2010-04-01.
  2. ^ a b c d e Juan Gonzalez (August 31, 2010). "Slain Latino Journalist Rubén Salazar, Killed 40 Years Ago in Police Attack". DemocracyNow.org. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  3. ^ Gustavo Reveles Acosta (August 29, 2010). "Ruben Salazar killing left impact on Hispanics, journalism". El Paso Times. Archived from the original on January 10, 2013. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  4. ^ Pilar Marrero, "Homenaje al periodista angelino Rubén Salazar," La Opinión Newspaper, 22 April 2008.
  5. ^ a b c García, M. T. (2015). The Chicano generation: Testimonios of the movement. University of California Press
  6. ^ "Who Is A Chicano? And What Is It The Chicanos Want?". Los Angeles Times. February 6, 1970. p. B7.
  7. ^ a b c Vigil, E. B. (1999). The crusade for justice: Chicano militancy and the government's war on dissent. The University of Wisconsin Press
  8. ^ Chavez, Ernesto (2002). Mi Raza Primero! (My People First!): Nationalism, Identity, and Insurgency in the Chicano Movement in Los Angeles, 1966-1978. University of California Press. p. 70.
  9. ^ Perry, Paul (2004). Fear and Loathing: The Strange and Terrible Saga of Hunter S. Thompson. Thunder's Mouth Press. pp. 153–54. ISBN 1-56025-605-2.
  10. ^ Robert J. Lopez (February 19, 2011). "No evidence Ruben Salazar was targeted in killing, report says". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-02-20.
  11. ^ Dave Smith and Paul Houston, "Deputy Says He Did Not Know Kind of Missile," Los Angeles Times, October 6, 1970.
  12. ^ Lopez, Robert J. (November 18, 1999). "FBI Files Shed Little Light on Ruben Salazar's Death". Los Angeles Times.
  13. ^ AELE Law Enforcement Legal Liability Reporter. Law Enforcement Legal Defense Center, Americans for Effective Law Enforcement. 1973. p. 22.
  14. ^ "Three Times Reporters Win Awards". Los Angeles Times. June 25, 1965. p. A8.
  15. ^ "Times Assigns Second Reporter to Vietnam". Los Angeles Times. August 8, 1965. p. A1.
  16. ^ Notable Latino Americans: a biographical dictionary by Matt S. Meier, Conchita Franco Serri, Richard A. Garcia. Greenwood Press, 1997 ISBN 0-313-29105-5
  17. ^ Laura Pulido; Laura Barraclough; Wendy Cheng (2012). A People's Guide to Los Angeles. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 4. ISBN 9780520270817.
  18. ^ Oscar Acosta (1989). The Revolt of the Cockroach People. Vintage Books. ISBN 9780679722120.
  19. ^ "Ruben Salazar, 1928 - 1970". University Library. 2017-09-22. Retrieved 2020-06-03.
  20. ^ "Death of Rubén Salazar | Smithsonian American Art Museum". americanart.si.edu. Retrieved 2020-06-03.
  21. ^ Radio station KPCC
  22. ^ "Portrait renews legacy at Salazar Hall" (PDF). California State University, Los Angeles. Fall 2006. Retrieved September 1, 2020.
  23. ^ Sheryl Kornman (September 28, 2007). "UA educator succeeds in getting stamp for Hispanic journalist". Tucson Citizen. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  24. ^ Documentary on Life, Not Death, of Ruben Salazar ABC News, 2014-04-29.
  25. ^ Ruben Salazar: Man in the Middle PBS, 2014-04-29.

External links Edit

ruben, salazar, march, 1928, august, 1970, civil, rights, activist, reporter, angeles, times, first, mexican, american, journalist, from, mainstream, media, cover, chicano, community, salazar, 1970bornmarch, 1928ciudad, juárez, mexicodiedaugust, 1970, 1970, ag. Ruben Salazar March 3 1928 August 29 1970 1 was a civil rights activist and a reporter for the Los Angeles Times the first Mexican American journalist from mainstream media to cover the Chicano community 2 Ruben SalazarSalazar in 1970BornMarch 3 1928Ciudad Juarez MexicoDiedAugust 29 1970 1970 08 29 aged 42 Los Angeles California U S Occupation s Journalist and civil rights activistYears active1956 1970Salazar was killed during the National Chicano Moratorium March against the Vietnam War on August 29 1970 in East Los Angeles California During the march Los Angeles County Sheriff s deputy Thomas Wilson struck and immediately killed Salazar with a tear gas projectile No criminal charge was filed but Salazar s family reached an out of court financial settlement with the county 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Support for Chicano movement 3 Death 4 Legacy and honors 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly life EditBorn in Ciudad Juarez Mexico March 3rd 1928 Salazar was brought to the United States with his family in 1929 Salazar began his U S naturalization process on October 15 1947 when he submitted his application for a certificate of arrival and preliminary form for a declaration of intention of citizenship Career Edit Salazar interviewing civilians in Vietnam 1965 After high school he served in the U S Army for two years Salazar attended Texas Western College graduating in 1954 with a degree in journalism He obtained a job as an investigative journalist at the now defunct El Paso Herald Post at one point he posed as a vagrant to get arrested while he investigated the poor treatment of prisoners in the El Paso jail After his tenure at the Herald Post Salazar worked at several California newspapers including the Santa Rosa Press Democrat 2 3 Salazar was a news reporter and columnist for the Los Angeles Times from 1959 to 1970 4 During his career Salazar became one of the most prominent figures within the Chicano movement He was a foreign correspondent in his early years at the Times covering the 1965 United States occupation of the Dominican Republic the Vietnam War and the Tlatelolco massacre the latter while serving as the Times bureau chief in Mexico City When Salazar returned to the US in 1968 he focused on the Mexican American community and the Chicano movement writing about East Los Angeles an area largely ignored by the media except for coverage of crimes He became the first Chicano journalist to cover the ethnic group while working in a large general circulation publication Many of his pieces were critical of the Los Angeles government s treatment of Chicanos particularly after he came into conflict with police during the East L A walkouts 2 While reporting for the Times Salazar forged relationships with members of the Chicano movement including draft protester Rosalio Munoz 5 In January 1970 Salazar left the Times to become news director for the Spanish language television station KMEX in Los Angeles At KMEX he investigated allegations of police officers planting evidence to implicate Chicanos and the July 1970 police shooting of two unarmed Mexican nationals According to Salazar he was visited by undercover LAPD detectives who warned him that his investigations were dangerous in the minds of barrio people 2 During Salazar s time as the news director for KMEX which is a Spanish language station since 1962 he became more outspoken on Chicano issues and gave priority to cases that were important to the Chicano Movement This included the killing of the Sanchez cousins by police which brought forth a community wide protest as well as covering the Chicano Moratorium which ultimately led to his death 5 Support for Chicano movement Edit Salazar in Mexico City 1966 Salazar s strong support for the Chicano movement as a Mexican American distinguished him early on from other journalists in mainstream media With a strong disparity of racial minorities in news organizations nationwide Salazar felt it was his personal and professional responsibility to give necessary attention to the actions led by his fellow Chicanos in East Los Angeles In February 1970 just six months prior to his death Salazar made his support for the Chicano movement particularly clear when he authored an article in the Los Angeles Times titled Who Is A Chicano And What Is It the Chicanos Want In this piece Salazar not only describes the evolving identity of Chicanos and the historic importance of the movement but he details his frustration with the lack of Mexican American representation among the elected representatives in the Los Angeles city council Salazar writes Mexican Americans though large in numbers are so politically impotent that in Los Angeles where the country s largest single concentration of Spanish speaking live they have no one of their own on the City Council This in a city politically sophisticated enough to have three Negro council men 6 Due to his support of the Chicano movement Salazar became an FBI target and was the subject of an FBI internal file He was noted as being cooperative during his interactions with the FBI during the investigation of Stokely Carmichael but he had drawn the FBI s attention during the Korean War when he began corresponding with a white female pacifist regarding the loss of his application for US citizenship by the army During his Carmichael interview he is noted as saying that he could not be a witness to the speech that FBI was referencing as he was not present to which he was then asked to obtain a video of the speech to present to the FBI While Salazar accepted he did so under the notion that he would publicize the fact that the FBI was looking for the tape 7 As they feared the civil unrest this could cause if publicized the FBI rescinded their request Due to the fact that the FBI and the LAPD correlated civil unrest with communism and Salazar reported at many events where civil unrest occurred he was viewed in his files as a communist LAPD also held files on Salazar specifically due to an article that Salazar wrote about the Chief of Police Chief Davis wherein he reported the fact that Davis referred to Mexican tyranny and dictatorship 7 While local and national law enforcement were displeased with Salazar s reporting he continued to write articles advocating the rights of the Chicano community 7 Death Edit The Silver Dollar Bar where Salazar was killed in 1970 Mourners pay respects to Salazar 1970 On August 29 1970 he was covering the National Chicano Moratorium March organized to protest the Vietnam War in which some believed that a disproportionate number of Latinos served and were killed The march ended with a rally that was broken up by the Los Angeles County Sheriff s Department using tear gas Panic and rioting ensued 8 A coroner s inquest ruled the shooting of the tear gas projectile to be death at the hands of another but Tom Wilson the sheriff s deputy who fired the shot that killed Salazar was never prosecuted At the time many believed the homicide was a premeditated assassination of a prominent vocal member of the Los Angeles Chicano community The riot started when the owners of the Green Mill liquor store located around the corner from the Silver Dollar Bar on Whittier Boulevard called in a complaint about people stealing from them Deputies responded and a fight broke out Later on that day cadets from the nearby Sheriff s Academy were bussed to the area and marched into the park A fight ensued with the untrained cadets being beaten up This led to more rioting The Green Mill liquor store is still located at the same place on Whittier Boulevard The owners later denied contacting the Sheriff s Department Salazar was resting in the Silver Dollar Bar after the protest became violent According to a witness Ruben Salazar had just sat down to sip a quiet beer at the bar away from the madness in the street when a deputy fired a tear gas projectile through a curtain hanging at the entrance of the bar hitting Salazar in the head and killing him instantly Deputy Wilson fired a 10 inch wall piercing type of tear gas round from a tear gas gun of the type intended for barricade situations rather than rolling in a tear gas canister which produces a much larger cloud of gas and is generally used to disperse crowds The story of Salazar s killing was the subject of Strange Rumblings in Aztlan a 1971 article by gonzo journalist Hunter S Thompson for Rolling Stone magazine 9 On February 22 2011 the Office of Independent Review released a report of its examination of the Los Angeles Sheriff s Department records on the death of Salazar After reviewing thousands of documents the civilian watchdog agency concluded there is no evidence that sheriff s deputies intentionally targeted Salazar or had him under surveillance 10 Deputy Wilson after being identified as responsible for Salazar s death stated that he did not know and under the circumstances was not concerned about what kind of tear gas projectile he fired 11 Salazar s death captured the attention of many activists within the Chicano movement as his death occurred at the hands of those whom the movement felt was a large cause of the marginalizing of Chicano communities During meetings with the district attorney in regard to the incident that led to Salazar s death many Chicanos attended to voice their support as well as show a united force against police brutality 5 After several days of testimony a coroner s jury returned with a split verdict and no charges were filed by the District Attorney Nevertheless three years after Salazar s death Los Angeles County reached a settlement of 700 000 with Salazar s family as a result of the sheriff s department not using proper and lawful guidelines for the use of deadly force during the march 12 13 At the time this was the highest settlement recorded in Los Angeles county history citation needed He was survived by his wife Sally nee Robare and their daughters Lisa Salazar Johnson and Stephanie Salazar Cook and son John Salazar citation needed Legacy and honors Edit A plaque honoring Salazar was mounted in the Globe lobby of the former Los Angeles Times building in downtown Los Angeles Salazar was a two time winner of the Greater Los Angeles Press Club Award and in 1965 was presented with an award from the Equal Opportunity Foundation 14 15 In 1971 Salazar was posthumously awarded a special Robert F Kennedy Journalism Award 16 After the controversy related to his death had subsided Laguna Park site of the 1970 rally and subsequent police action was renamed Salazar Park in his honor 17 Salazar is depicted under the name Roland Zanzibar in Oscar Zeta Acosta s 1973 novel The Revolt of the Cockroach People 18 In 1979 Sonoma State University re named its library in honor of Salazar Subsequently in 2002 the library moved into a new building and the former library building was renamed Salazar Hall 19 In 1996 the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington D C acquired the painting Death of Ruben Salazar a 1986 oil on canvas by artist Frank Romero 20 His death was commemorated in a corrido by Lalo Guerrero titled El 29 de Agosto 21 A classroom building at California State University Los Angeles Cal State LA was named for him in 1976 On October 12 2006 Salazar Hall was rededicated with the unveiling of his portrait by John Martin 22 On October 5 2007 the United States Postal Service announced that it would honor five journalists of the 20th century with first class rate postage stamps to be issued on Tuesday April 22 2008 Martha Gellhorn John Hersey George Polk Ruben Salazar and Eric Sevareid 23 A documentary about Salazar by Phillip Rodriguez titled Ruben Salazar Man in the Middle was broadcast on PBS television on April 29 2014 24 25 See also Edit Los Angeles portal Latino and Hispanic American portalHistory of the Mexican Americans in Los Angeles List of journalists killed in the United StatesReferences Edit NNDB NNDB com Retrieved 2010 04 01 a b c d e Juan Gonzalez August 31 2010 Slain Latino Journalist Ruben Salazar Killed 40 Years Ago in Police Attack DemocracyNow org Retrieved September 3 2010 Gustavo Reveles Acosta August 29 2010 Ruben Salazar killing left impact on Hispanics journalism El Paso Times Archived from the original on January 10 2013 Retrieved September 3 2010 Pilar Marrero Homenaje al periodista angelino Ruben Salazar La Opinion Newspaper 22 April 2008 a b c Garcia M T 2015 The Chicano generation Testimonios of the movement University of California Press Who Is A Chicano And What Is It The Chicanos Want Los Angeles Times February 6 1970 p B7 a b c Vigil E B 1999 The crusade for justice Chicano militancy and the government s war on dissent The University of Wisconsin Press Chavez Ernesto 2002 Mi Raza Primero My People First Nationalism Identity and Insurgency in the Chicano Movement in Los Angeles 1966 1978 University of California Press p 70 Perry Paul 2004 Fear and Loathing The Strange and Terrible Saga of Hunter S Thompson Thunder s Mouth Press pp 153 54 ISBN 1 56025 605 2 Robert J Lopez February 19 2011 No evidence Ruben Salazar was targeted in killing report says Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2011 02 20 Dave Smith and Paul Houston Deputy Says He Did Not Know Kind of Missile Los Angeles Times October 6 1970 Lopez Robert J November 18 1999 FBI Files Shed Little Light on Ruben Salazar s Death Los Angeles Times AELE Law Enforcement Legal Liability Reporter Law Enforcement Legal Defense Center Americans for Effective Law Enforcement 1973 p 22 Three Times Reporters Win Awards Los Angeles Times June 25 1965 p A8 Times Assigns Second Reporter to Vietnam Los Angeles Times August 8 1965 p A1 Notable Latino Americans a biographical dictionary by Matt S Meier Conchita Franco Serri Richard A Garcia Greenwood Press 1997 ISBN 0 313 29105 5 Laura Pulido Laura Barraclough Wendy Cheng 2012 A People s Guide to Los Angeles Berkeley University of California Press p 4 ISBN 9780520270817 Oscar Acosta 1989 The Revolt of the Cockroach People Vintage Books ISBN 9780679722120 Ruben Salazar 1928 1970 University Library 2017 09 22 Retrieved 2020 06 03 Death of Ruben Salazar Smithsonian American Art Museum americanart si edu Retrieved 2020 06 03 Radio station KPCC Portrait renews legacy at Salazar Hall PDF California State University Los Angeles Fall 2006 Retrieved September 1 2020 Sheryl Kornman September 28 2007 UA educator succeeds in getting stamp for Hispanic journalist Tucson Citizen Retrieved September 3 2010 Documentary on Life Not Death of Ruben Salazar ABC News 2014 04 29 Ruben Salazar Man in the Middle PBS 2014 04 29 External links EditMario T Garcia ed Ruben Salazar Border Correspondent Selected Writings 1955 1970 University of California Press 1995 Stamp of Salazar issued by the USPS Salazar Remembered as Champion of Chicano Rights video report by Democracy Now Ruben Salazar Collection Archived 2015 09 10 at the Wayback Machine at Sonoma State University Library Ruben Salazar Man in the Middle documentary film Los Angeles Times articles by Salazar Image of painting Death of Ruben Salazar at Smithsonian American Art Museum Portrait of Ruben Salazar East Los Angeles California 1970 Los Angeles Times Photographic Archive Collection 1429 UCLA Library Special Collections Charles E Young Research Library University of California Los Angeles Image of Ruben Salazar interviewing civilians in Vietnam 1965 Los Angeles Times Photographic Archive Collection 1429 UCLA Library Special Collections Charles E Young Research Library University of California Los Angeles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ruben Salazar amp oldid 1162486520, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.