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  1. Brownsville Station fue una banda de Rock, Blues y Hard rock, formada en Míchigan a principios de la década de los '70. Gozó de gran popularidad durante dicha década, dado que tuvo un rol significativo en la constitución del movimiento roquero que vivió Detroit durante en esos años, caracterizado por un Rock & Roll duro y pesado, con ...

  2. Brownsville, Florida. /  25.82139°N 80.24028°W  / 25.82139; -80.24028. Brownsville (also known as Brown Sub [5]) is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) that is part of the Miami metropolitan area of South Florida. As of the 2020 US census, the population was 16,583, [2] up from 15,313 in 2010.

  3. 2023 Brownsville crash. / 25.9235; -97.4319. On May 7, 2023, a Range Rover sport utility vehicle rammed into 18 people in Brownsville, Texas, United States. Eight people were killed, and ten were injured. [1] Officials say it is unclear whether the crash was intentional.

  4. Brownsville, Vermont. Location in Windsor County and the state of Vermont. /  43.46861°N 72.47083°W  / 43.46861; -72.47083. Brownsville is an unincorporated community in West Windsor, Vermont, United States. Located on Vermont Route 44, the village houses a number of administrative offices for the town of West Windsor .

  5. La Zona Metropolitana de Matamoros@–Brownsville está conectada por cinco puentes internacionales (4 vehiculares y 1 ferroviario). 5 Además, esta área conurbada trasnacional tiene una población de 1,136,995, haciéndolo la 4.ª área metropolitana más grande en la frontera México-EE. UU. 6 7 . El Zona Metropolitana de Matamoros ...

  6. Brownsville, British Columbia. Coordinates: 49°12′20″N 122°53′00″W. Brownsville was a former community in what is now the City of Surrey, British Columbia, Canada. Also known as South Westminster, it was located where the city ran a small ferry across the Fraser River, today approximately where the east footing of the Skytrain bridge ...

  7. Brownsville Station is an American rock band from Michigan popular in the 1970s. Original members included Cub Koda (guitarist/vocalist), Mike Lutz (guitarist/vocalist), T.J. Cronley (), and Tony Driggins (bassist/vocals). Later members included Henry "H-Bomb" Weck and Bruce Nazarian (guitarist/vocalist).They are primarily remembered for the top-10 hit single "Smokin' in the Boys Room" (1973).