Happy birthday Guadalajara!
Plenty of love will be spread around for Guadalajara when the city celebrates the 481st anniversary of its founding on Tuesday, February 14.
The Guadalajara Reporter
Guadalajara's Largest English Newspaper
Plenty of love will be spread around for Guadalajara when the city celebrates the 481st anniversary of its founding on Tuesday, February 14.
After three years of negotiations with Beijing City University (BCU), the University of Guadalajara (UdeG) has announced the opening of the Confucius Institute, to be housed in the Proulex language center, located on Calle Tomás V. Gomez 125, in Colonia Arcos Vallarta.
The city’s gay community has presented Guadalajara city hall with an official petition to change the name of the Parque de la Revolución (at Juarez and Federalismo) to the Plazoleta de la Diversidad (Diversity Plaza).
A Jesuit priest was detained for 40 minutes by National Guard police after being mistaken for an Uber driver at the Guadalajara International Airport, Mural newspaper and other sources have reported.
The Jalisco Philharmonic Orchestra (OFJ) will see four guest conductors take the baton during an eight-program 2023 winter season, which kicks off with concerts at Guadalajara’s Teatro Degollado on Thursday, February 9 and Sunday, February 12.
State legislators from the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) are proposing a bill that would see property tax discounts and other benefits given to citizens who separate their garbage.
The state-funded Jalisco Philharmonic Orchestra (OFJ) will start the new year by showcasing one of Jalisco’s finest musical talents, 20-year-old pianist Daniela Liebman, who stepped into the limelight more than a decade ago as an thrilling child prodigy.
GDLuz, the annual sound and light spectacle held in downtown Guadalajara, will run for an additional two days this month, from Tuesday, February 14 to Sunday, February 19.
An alliance between a non-governmental organization dedicated to promoting a tobacco-free environment and the federal government’s health regulator may go some way to ensuring at least partial enforcement of the strict anti-smoking laws recently approved at the federal level in Mexico.