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s biggest readership, in 1926. He and his wife, Alicia
Elizondo Lozano, operated both papers, the one in San Antonio, the other in Los Angeles. After his death from
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Interview of Monica Lozano by
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border. He was a famous journalist of northern Mexico, but he joined the exodus into the
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running after his death, until she sold it in 1959. They had two children:
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Latinas in the United States: a historical encyclopedia, Volume 1,
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125:(born 1927) and Maria Alicia Lozano (born 1923), who moved to
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He was married to Alicia
Elizondo de Lozano, who kept
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47:bookstore and worked on two
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97:Ignacio E. Lozano Jr.
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70:was not the first
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133:References
102:La Opinión
89:La Prensa'
87:, home of
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205:LA Weekly
119:La Prensa
107:La Prensa
68:La Prensa
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184:Archived
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93:cancer
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58:as a
29:Texas
230:ISBN
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