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Hoy's Chicago and Los Angeles publications were not affected by the transaction. [1] The New York Hoy was later merged into El Diario La Prensa. In 2018, Patrick Soon-Shiong purchased Hoy titles in Los Angeles and San Diego, as part of his purchase of the assets related to the Los Angeles Times and San Diego Union-Tribune. A year later, both ...
El Caribe (Santo Domingo) Diario Libre (Santo Domingo) – free newspaper; Dominican Today; Listín Diario (Santo Domingo) – oldest newspaper in the Dominican Republic; El Nacional (Santo Domingo) – afternoon newspaper
Hoy describes that Listín Diario had run evenly, and sometimes ahead, with the challenges of the times. The thrust of digital media is an unavoidable challenge for print journals, and has not wavered before this reality, which assumes permanent innovations, good information and reading material, and through timely research on the topics more ...
Diario Libre is a free daily Spanish-language Dominican newspaper, founded on May 10, 2001. It is owned by the Dominican business Grupo Diario Libre, and it is part of the Latin American Newspaper Association.
The Pueblo de los Ángeles was the second pueblo (town) created during the Spanish colonization of California (the first was San Jose, in 1777). El Pueblo de la Reina de los Ángeles —'The Town of the Queen of Angels' [2] was founded twelve years after the first presidio and mission, the Presidio of San Diego and Mission San Diego de Alcalá ...
Rafael Leónidas Trujillo Molina (/ t r uː ˈ h iː j oʊ / troo-HEE-yoh; Spanish: [rafaˈel leˈoniðas tɾuˈxiʝo moˈlina]; 24 October 1891 – 30 May 1961), nicknamed El Jefe (Spanish: [el ˈxefe]; meaning the boss), was a Dominican military officer and dictator who ruled the Dominican Republic from August 1930 until his assassination in May 1961. [2]
El Caribe is a Spanish-language daily [1] newspaper published in Santo Domingo. [2] It was founded on April 14, 1948 by Stanley Ralph Ross . [ 3 ] [ 4 ] El Caribe covers domestic, national, and international news, and comprises opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews.
The section Cartas a la Dirección is not the first time Granma has included letters from readers in the newspaper, but most of these sections were more focused on a certain topic, such as economic statistics or transportation and infrastructure. [6] An exception was A vuelta de correo, which began in 1975 and continued until 1984.