Mexican American journalist to be honored with U.S. postage stamp

Salazar stamp
Ruben Salazar, a Times reporter and columnist and general manager of KMEX-TV
at the time of his death in 1970, is one of five American journalists being honored with postage stamps.
(United States Postal Service)


By Louis Sahagun, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
April 22, 2008
The U.S. Postal Service will issue a stamp today honoring Los Angeles newsman Ruben Salazar, who, through his reporting and opinion columns during the 1960s, became a provocative voice for a Mexican American community searching for its political and social identity.

Among the first Mexican American reporters to work at a mainstream newspaper, Salazar was killed Aug. 29, 1970, struck in the head by a high-velocity tear gas projectile fired by a sheriff's deputy during an anti-Vietnam War demonstration in East Los Angeles. He was 42.

A Times columnist and general manager of KMEX-TV at the time of his death, Salazar quickly became a cultural icon. Awards are granted in his memory, and roads, schools and parks have been named after him. His likeness appears on posters, murals and lithographs, including one by the famous Mexican painter David Alfaro Siqueiros. Folk songs were written about him.

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