Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Canal 4 (Canal Cuatro), previously known as Monte Carlo Televisión, is a television station located in Montevideo, Uruguay. Owned by Grupo Monte Carlo, it is the second oldest television channel in the country, beginning its broadcasts on April 23, 1961.
Canal 4 Télé Eclair; Canal 5 Télémax; Canal 6 Radio Tele 6 Univers – Les Cayes, Sud ; Canal 8 TNH (Télévision Nationale d'Haiti) Canal 11 Canal 11; Canal 13 Télé Timoun/ Canal 16 Télé Shalom; Canal 18 Radio Télé Ginen; Canal 20 Tele Podium; Canal 22 Tele Caraïbes; Canal 24 Tele Lumiere; Canal 28 Kanal Kreyol; Canal 30 Tele ...
Televisora Nacional red canal 5: Televisora Nacional red canal 5 - ValeTV (1998) ValeTV Televisa canal 4 (1° Junio 1953 - 1960) Venevisión Canal 4 (27 Febrero 1961) Venevisión: Venevisión: Venevisión: Venevisión Canal 4 - Venevisión Continental (28 Agosto 2000) Radio Caracas Televisión Canal 2, 7 y 10 (15 Noviembre 1953) RCTV: RCTV: RCTV
"United States TV Stations: Puerto Rico", Yearbook of Radio and Television, New York: Radio Television Daily, 1964, OCLC 7469377 – via Internet Archive; Pedro Miranda Corrada (1974). "La cable television en Puerto Rico". Revista Jurídica de la Universidad de Puerto Rico (in Spanish) (42).
Television in Venezuela began in 1952, when the president Marcos Pérez Jiménez launched the state channel Televisora Nacional, making Venezuela the ninth country in the world to have a public television network. By 1963, a quarter of Venezuelan households had television; a figure rising to 45% by 1969 and 85% by 1982. [1]
From a page move: This is a redirect from a page that has been moved (renamed).This page was kept as a redirect to avoid breaking links, both internal and external, that may have been made to the old page name.
Donald Trump has threatened to retake the Panama Canal in a lengthy post on Truth Social. The president-elect accused Panama of charging American vessels unreasonable fees to use the waterway.
Canal 4 (Nueva Imagen, S.A.) is a state-run nationwide terrestrial television channel in Nicaragua owned by Informativos de Televisión y Radio S.A. (Intrasa), a company owned by two sons of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, Carlos Enrique "Tino" Ortega and his brother Daniel Edmundo. [2]