Ruben Salazar AKA Rubén Salazar Born: 3-Mar-1928 Birthplace: Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico Died: 29-Aug-1970 Location of death: Los Angeles, CA Cause of death: Cerebral Hemorrhage Remains: Buried, Pacific View Memorial Park, Corona del Mar, CA
Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: Hispanic Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Journalist, Activist Nationality: United States Executive summary: L.A. Times reporter killed on the job Military service: US Army Ruben Salazar was a correspondent in Vietnam, later bureau chief in Mexico City, and finally a columnist for the Los Angeles Times and news director for KMEX-TV. His most memorable writing covered the protests of the late '60s, and he was perhaps the most prominent Hispanic reporter writing in English at the time of his death -- he was hit in the head by a police tear gas canister while covering the first Chicano-sponsored antiwar protest in Los Angeles. The coroner concluded that his death was a homicide, but the policeman who fired the canister was never prosecuted. As a result, Salazar has been seen as a martyr by Chicano activists, and his name was central to a generation of wacko conspiracy theorists. He is the namesake of Salazar Park, on Whittier Boulevard a few miles east of Downtown Los Angeles. Father: Salvador Salazar Mother: Luz Salazar Wife: Sally Salazar
High School: El Paso High School, El Paso, TX University: BA Journalism, Texas Western College (1954)
The Los Angeles Times 1959-70 Naturalized US Citizen Mexican Ancestry
Author of books:
Border Correspondent (1995, posthumous)
Appears on postage stamps:
USA, Scott #4251 (41¢, depicting Salazar, issued 22-Apr-2007)
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