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Mexico City Diario de Acayucan [9] Acayucan, Veracruz Diario Amanecer: 1980s [10] El Diario [1] Daily Juarez, Chihuahua [6] El Diario de Coahuila [8] Saltillo, Coahuila Diario de Colima [11] Daily Colima City, Colima [6] El Diario de Guadalajara [1] Daily Jalisco Diario de México [1] Daily El Diario de Monterrey [1] Daily Monterrey, Nuevo ...
Noticias Guatemala [4] Diario de Centro América, the nation's newspaper of public record [5] La Hora [6] El Metropolitano, based in Mixco; published twice each month [7] Nuestro Diario, the most widely circulated newspaper in Central America [8] El Periódico [9] Publinews, the first free daily in Guatemala [10]
Grupo Reforma was the first newsgroup in Mexico to separate its commercial division from its journalism division. This allows for a greater independence, and helps journalists resist the temptation of writing articles favorable to sponsors. When it was founded on November 20, the newspaper pressured unionized newsstands to sell the paper that day.
One year later, it was purchased by the owners of Prensa Libre, Guatemala's best-selling newspaper. [1] In 2001, the Periódico offices were attacked by a group of fifty protesters after reporting on alleged corruption in the staff of Communications Minister Luis Rabbé. The crowd attempted to force the building's doors and set it on fire, and ...
(Publicly accessible digital library of "historic Mexican and Mexican American publications published in Tucson, El Paso, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Sonora, Mexico from the mid-1800s to the 1970s")
Nuestro Diario is the most circulated newspaper in Guatemala [1] and one of the most circulated in Latin America. Its daily edition runs between 270,000 and 300,000 units per day. Its daily edition runs between 270,000 and 300,000 units per day.
It has 276,700 readers in Mexico City. [1] The paper shares content with other papers in its parent newsgroup Grupo Reforma . Reforma is named after the Mexico City avenue of the same name, Paseo de la Reforma , which is in turn named after " La Reforma ", a series of liberal reforms undertaken by the country in the mid-19th century.
Along with Mexico City's The News, Unomásuno offered some of the most in-depth coverage of Mexico's environmental problems throughout the mid-1980s. [21] It also tended to give more exposure to the views and statements of leaders from the now-extinct Mexican Workers' Party (PMT), the Unified Socialist Party of Mexico (PSUM), and their fusion ...