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El Dia [1] 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 ...
World's "first" aerial reconnaissance flown via airplane (El Paso-Ciudad Juarez), for Mexican government. [7] 1912 - Mexico North Western Railway (Ciudad Juárez and Chihuahua) in operation. [8] 1913 - Battle of Ciudad Juárez (1913). 1919 - Battle of Ciudad Juárez (1919). 1922 - Teatro-Cine Alcazar (theatre) opens. [9] 1930 - Quevedo crime ...
El Diario de Juárez, [79] is the founder of El Diario de El Paso. El Norte was a fifth, but it ceased operations on April 2, 2017, following the murder of journalist Miroslava Breach, [80] the paper explained, the recent killings of several Mexican journalists made the job too dangerous. [81]
The digital signal was activated on June 1, 2012. [4] It remained after Juárez's digital transition took place on July 14, 2015, at which time analog channel 5 left the air. In March 2018, in order to facilitate the repacking of TV services out of the 600 MHz band (channels 38–51), XEJ was assigned channel 35 for continued digital operations.
The El Diario de El Paso is the primary Spanish-language newspaper for the U.S. city of El Paso, Texas.The paper was founded on May 16, 2005, by El Diario de Juárez.It originally started out as a Mexican newspaper circulated throughout Ciudad Juárez under the name Diario de Juárez.
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; El Diario de Juárez
XHJUB-TDT began broadcasting in digital on October 12, 2012, two years after receiving initial approval. The digital signal remained after Juárez converted to digital on July 14, 2015. In 2016, as part of Mexico's standardization of virtual channels, XHJUB transferred its PSIP virtual channel from 56 to 5 (the assigned channel for Canal 5).
In February 2020, XEWG added to its Bengala Regional Mexican format—the last Grupo Siete station using the name—by airing daytime Catholic religious programming branded as Radio Guadalupana, produced by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ciudad Juárez, from 6 a.m. to 3 p.m. on weekdays and to 1:30 p.m. on weekends. This was later dropped as the ...