A decade-old pandemic that began in Mexico – did we learn from it?
It has been said that people have a very short memory for weather—hurricanes, blizzards and the like.
The Guadalajara Reporter
Guadalajara's Largest English Newspaper
It has been said that people have a very short memory for weather—hurricanes, blizzards and the like.
From a spacious office in the Department of Parks and Gardens, overlooking a small garden behind the city zoo, the Beekeeper Supervisory Unit responds to several calls each day about wild beehives in and around Guadalajara.
During her career in public health, Dr. Cornelia (Connie) Davis tramped the byways of India and Africa for the likes of the World Health Organization and US-AID, sometimes blazing trails in leadership both for women and people of color.
On Wednesday, April 22 (EDT) Democrats Abroad Caucuses will stream on Zoom and Facebook Live a 16-hour program to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Earth Day.
Along restaurant-laden streets in one of Guadalajara’s noted culinary districts, where many eateries are shuttered these days due to government “stay at home” directives, traffic is of course sparser than usual.
At first we were told categorically that only people with coroanvirus symptoms, or those caring for the sick, need wear masks during the current pandemic.
In mid-January, when Mercedes Bern-Klug, a professor of social work at the University of Iowa, began teaching master’s students at the University of Guadalajara, she thought she had arrived in paradise, she said.