Sunday mass not sacrosanct for crooks
You might think a Sunday mass would be the last place to encounter the criminal class.
The Guadalajara Reporter
Guadalajara's Largest English Newspaper
You might think a Sunday mass would be the last place to encounter the criminal class.
Two small trains run in opposite direction on rails laid side to side. When they cross paths, a small crowd of children cheer.
Between them, Guadalajara’s present and previous municipal administrations have delivered 3,000 laptop computers to local primary schools, with another 500 still to come.
The perennial problem of what to do with the ambulant vendors who hawk their wares on the streets, pedestrian walkways and plazas of downtown Guadalajara just got a lot more complicated.
Four people were injured in a massive blaze at a warehouse in Tonala where thieves had been storing stolen fuel last week.
Between 700 and 800 old buildings in downtown Guadalajara are at risk of collapse due to improper maintenance, Public Works Secretary Carlos Felipe Arias Garcia warned this week.
Guadalajara city officials will take advantage of a four-day trip to San Jose, California next week to promote the merits of the Ciudad Creativa Digital, the digital and telecommunications hub proposed to rescue the depressed downtown zone near the San Juan de Dios market.
Last Thursday thieves stole the cables used to illuminate Guadalajara’s iconic Minerva statue at night.
A block of public housing apartments in the working-class Miravalle neighborhood of Guadalajara has been transformed into a colorful artwork following four months of hard graft by local residents.