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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
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.
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).
Canal 28 provides the feed to XHMTCH-TDT through its for-profit arm, Unidad Corporativa de Televisión, S.A. de C.V. Multimedios Televisión bid for and won a television station in Ciudad Juárez as part of the IFT's IFT-6 television station auction in 2017. This station, XHMTCH-TDT RF 28 (virtual channel 6), came on the air in October 2018.
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).
XEP-AM is a talk radio station in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico. Broadcasting on 1300 AM , XEP is known as Radio Mexicana Nuestras Noticias and is owned by Grupo Radiorama . History
Puerto de Anapra, (or Colonia Puerto De Anapra or simply Anapra) is a colonia in the city of Ciudad Juárez in the Mexican state of Chihuahua. Anapra is west of the Rio Grande, on the border of the U.S. state of New Mexico. It is one of the poorest communities within the city. [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]