Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Instituto Mexicano de la Televisión (Mexican Television Institute), known commercially as Imevisión after 1985, was a state broadcaster and federal government agency of Mexico. At its height, Imevisión programmed two national networks and additional local stations in Mexico City , Chihuahua , Ciudad Juárez , Guadalajara , Mexicali ...
XHIJ-TDT (channel 44) is a Spanish-language independent station in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico, serving the Juárez–El Paso–Las Cruces metropolitan area. Owned by Grupo Intermedia and known on air as Canal 44, the station has had a variety of affiliations since signing on the air in 1980 and also produces programs such as local news.
Juárez Hoy is a daily newspaper in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico. Owned by Televisión de la Frontera in conjunction with Publicaciones Graficas Rafime, the newspaper began publication in 2008. See also
XHJCI-TDT (physical channel 30, virtual channel 8) is a television station in Ciudad Juárez, owned by Televisa. It carries all of Televisa's local programming for Ciudad Juárez and is branded as tucanal (Your Channel).
Instituto Tecnológico de Chetumal (ITCH), Chetumal, Quintana Roo [3] Instituto Tecnológico de Chihuahua [4] Instituto Tecnológico de Chihuahua II [5] Instituto Tecnológico de Ciudad Juárez, Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua; Instituto Tecnológico de Ciudad Madero (ITCM), Ciudad Madero, Tamaulipas [6] Instituto Tecnológico de Culiacán, Culiacán ...
When XHJUB signed on it was made into Televisa's local independent station for the Ciudad Juárez market. XEPM-TV became a relayer of the Canal de las Estrellas network, and channel 56 picked up its local newscasts and programming, competing against Televisa-affiliated independent XEJ-TV and rival then-Telemundo outlet XHIJ-TV .
The National Technological Institute of Mexico (in Spanish: Tecnológico Nacional de México, TNM) is a Mexican public university system created on 23 July 2014 by presidential decree. [2]
Taft and Díaz, historic first presidential summit, Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, 1909. In 1909, Díaz and William Howard Taft planned a summit in Ciudad Juárez and El Paso, a historic first meeting between a Mexican and a U.S. president, and also the first time a U.S. president would cross the border into Mexico. [13]