LareDOS

Last updated
LareDOS (December 1994 - September 2014)
LareDOS Logo.jpg
TypeMonthly newspaper
Format Compact
Owner(s)Maria Eugenia Guerra
FoundedDecember, 1994
Political alignmentNeutral
Headquarters Laredo, Webb County, Texas, USA
Website

LareDOS was an independent monthly newspaper published in Laredo, Texas, and distributed free of charge. The newspaper was widely praised and also criticized for its controversial stories on local politics.

LareDOS was founded by Maria Eugenia "Meg" Guerra and Richard Geissler in December 1994. The newspaper took pride that it was 100 percent owned by a Latina since Guerra bought out Geissler in 1996. [1] LareDOS also used the branding of "A Journal of the borderlands".

In April 2011, LareDOS publisher Guerra received the First Amendment Community Watchdog Award from the Society of Professional Journalists, Fort Worth Chapter for two stories concerning the state of living in the colonias near Laredo, Texas, and damage done to the National Historic Landmark, Fort Treviño in San Ygnacio, Texas, when city workers accidentally sprayed tar all over the walls of the historic building when they were paving a road.

In September 2014, owner and publisher Guerra discontinued the financially unsuccessful publication. [2]

Related Research Articles

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Los Ojuelos is a ghost town near Mirando City in the southeastern part of Webb County, Texas, United States. Before its establishment, Indians camped near the only dependable water source in the semiarid area. The local springs attracted Eugenio Gutiérrez in 1810 and attempted to settle in the area. Frequent Indian attacks forced Gutiérrez to abandon the site. in 1835, Eugenio's son returned to the site and tried to resettle the area but Indian attacks drove him back. In 1850, a company of Texas Rangers were stationed on the site to protect the trade route Laredo, Texas - Corpus Christi, Texas. In 1857, José María Guerra, grandson of Eugenio Gutiérrez and an ancestor of Laredo businessman Joe A. Guerra, built an irrigation system and a wall around Los Ojuelos to protect from Indian attacks.

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The flag of Puerto Rico represents and symbolizes Puerto Rico and its people.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ramón H. Dovalina</span>

Ramón Humberto Dovalina, is the retired fifth president of Laredo Community College, a two-year institution with the main campus on the grounds of historic Fort McIntosh on the Rio Grande in his native Laredo in Webb County in South Texas. With service from July 5, 1995, until August 31, 2007, Dovalina left the position with two years remaining in his contract. Under Dovalina, the physical appearance of the college was upgraded, the scholarship endowment fund increased from $100,000 in 1995 to more than $1 million in 2007, the institution advanced a 10-year master plan for new technology, and a $50 million South Campus was opened.

The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Laredo, Texas, USA.

References

  1. LareDOS; Who we are [ permanent dead link ]
  2. MacCormick, John. "Sharp-penned watchdog in Laredo calls it quits". San Antonio Express News. Hearst.