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magazine was subsequently edited in Miami, Florida, San Juan, Puerto Rico, and
Caracas, Venezuela. On August 12, 1969, weeks after his publication went bankrupt and he was heavily indebted to loan sharks and had cashed large checks without funds, the inveterate bachelor committed suicide, at age 61, in the Caracas apartment that he shared with his sister Rosa Margarita Quevedo. He shot himself in the right temple with a .38-caliber revolver. Next to his body was found a letter to "the competent authorities and to public opinion" saying that "absolutely no one should be blamed for his death." He "begged forgiveness from anyone he may have offended in any way." Another letter was addressed to his sister, who heard the gunshot in his bedroom while she was in the kitchen.
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Quevedo sought political asylum in the
Venezuelan embassy in Havana in the summer of 1960 and arrived in Miami on September 7, 1960. The following month he published Bohemia Libre with $ 40,000 monthly from the U.S. State Department until after the failed Bay of Pigs invasion in April 1961. The
137:, a distinction for which he was jailed several times in the early 1930s. The young Quevedo also became a vocal critic of the myriad dictatorships that gripped Latin America in the 1930s and 1940s. By the 1950s, Quevedo and
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led the mainstream Cuban press in denouncing the dictatorship of
Fulgencio Batista and supported the insurrection and revolution against Batista's regime. On July 26, 1958 the magazine published the
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to his son, Quevedo de la Lastra (then only eighteen years old), on
January 1, 1927. Almost immediately, the young Quevedo became one of the principle voices of opposition to the dictatorship of
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Magazine invented the 20,000 figure that is commonly cited for the number of deaths under
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In May 1908, Quevedo's father, Miguel Ángel
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https://web.archive.org/web/20081010165028/http://www.babalublog.com/archives/001452.html
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published in Miami an apocryphal suicide letter from
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http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/cuba/Quevedo-9-7-1960.jpg
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Magazine, the most popular news-weekly of its day in
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98:Miguel Ángel Quevedo y de la Lastra
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277:Suicides by firearm in Venezuela
267:Maria Moors Cabot Prize winners
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252:20th-century journalists
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183:Miami "admitted" Image
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158:Bohemia
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131:Bohemia
117:Bohemia
102:Bohemia
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