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A reconstruction of Radio Venceremos, at the Museo de la Palabra y la Imagen, San Salvador. Radio Venceremos (Spanish; in English, "'We Shall Overcome' Radio") was an 'underground' radio network of the anti-government Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN) during the Salvadoran Civil War.
Category: Radio in El Salvador. ... Club de Radio Aficionados de El Salvador; R. Radio Venceremos This page was last edited on 27 April 2020, at 03:09 (UTC). ...
The Club de Radio Aficionados de El Salvador (CRAS) (n English, El Salvador Amateur Radio Club) is a national non-profit organization for amateur radio enthusiasts in El Salvador. Key membership benefits of the CRAS include a QSL bureau for those amateur radio operators in regular communications with other amateur radio operators in foreign ...
Among her signed literary editions are a critical edition of Benito Pérez Galdós' "Trafalgar" (2001), and "Antología poética de Rosalía de Castro" (2004), the first bilingual anthology of Rosalía de Castro published. Her first published work was the collection of poems La niña en rebajas (2001). [8] She lives in the city of Madrid.
Today, Radio Rebelde has forty-four transmitters on the FM dial covering 98 percent of the island of Cuba, plus a short-wave signal on the 60-meter band at 5.025 MHz, (5025 kHz) and several AM transmitters on various frequencies, most commonly 530, 540, 550, 560, 600, 610, 620, 670, 710, 770, 1180, and 1620 kHz, and on FM 96.7 MHz in Havana.
Mercedes Durán Flores (August 9, 1933 – July 7, 1999), better known by the pseudonym Mercedes Durand, [1] was a Salvadoran poet and journalist. She was a member of the Committed Generation , a literary generation established in El Salvador in the 1950s, as well as the related Grupo Octubre.
San Miguel de Mercedes is a municipality in the Chalatenango department of El Salvador This El Salvador location article is a stub . You can help Wikipedia by expanding it .
Kabayan is a commentary program where de Castro tackles the latest issues. Among the notable features of the program was its signature closing song, What a Wonderful World by Louis Armstrong and Kenny G. The ending song was temporarily shelved in January 2019 and replaced by random old songs chosen by de Castro.