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This is a list of newspapers in the Dominican Republic. 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
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. [6] Its first editor was Aníbal de Castro from 2001 to 2004, and its editor since 2004 has been Adriano Miguel Tejada. It has a ...
This is a list of online newspaper archives and some magazines and journals, including both free and pay wall blocked digital archives. Most are scanned from microfilm into pdf, gif or similar graphic formats and many of the graphic archives have been indexed into searchable text databases utilizing optical character recognition (OCR) technology.
The family tapped Rafael Herrera Cabral, then editor of El Caribe, another leading daily newspaper at the time, as the editor of Listín Diario. Herrera served from 1963 until his death in 1994, and is considered one of the most important editorialists of the Dominican Republic. Listín Diario´s current editor-in-chief is Miguel Franjul.
La Nación (transl. "The Nation") is an Argentine daily newspaper. As the country's leading conservative newspaper, [7] La Nación ' s main competitor is the more liberal Clarín. It is regarded as a newspaper of record for Argentina. [8] Its motto is: "La Nación will be a tribune of doctrine."
El Diario Nueva York is the largest [2] and the oldest Spanish-language daily newspaper in the United States. Published by ImpreMedia , the paper covers local, national and international news with an emphasis on Latin America , as well as human-interest stories, politics, business and technology, health, entertainment, and sports.
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In the period of 1995–1996 Diário de Notícias had a circulation of 63,000 copies slightly down on its 1880s circulation and below its peak as a propaganda newspaper for the Estado Novo in the 1930s (circulation of 120,000 in mainland Portugal and an additional 70,000 in its colonies), making it the seventh best-selling newspaper and third best selling daily newspaper in the country. [14]