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El Día: decano de la prensa de Puerto Rico [276] [477] Ponce [478] 1911 (May 2) [479] [467] 1970 [480] Archivo Histórico Municipal de Ponce (entire printed collection) [481] This paper was the successor of El Diario de Puerto Rico (1909–1911); Eugenio Astol, director; Guillermo Vivas Valdivieso become its director in 1928. [482]
Reaching more than 200,000 people with its regionalized distribution, Primerahora.com is also the second most visited local news website in Puerto Rico. [ 1 ] Primera Hora also fleshed out questions raised by Puerto Rican politicians in 2002, [ 2 ] by publishing research findings and even conducting its own research during a national ...
La Estrella was distributed door to door across the 36 towns of the western and northern regions of Puerto Rico. The newspaper was founded in 1983, and was intended to cover news and features from Puerto Rico’s western towns. Later in the 1980s, La Estrella Norte was founded to cover news and features about Puerto Rico’s northern towns.
Belem Clark de Lara; Elisa Speckman Guerra, eds. (2005). La república de las letras: Publicaciones periódicas y otros impresos (in Spanish). Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. ISBN 978-970-32-1087-9. Celia del Palacio Montiel (2006). "La prensa como objeto de estudio. Panorama actual de las formas de hacer historia de la prensa en ...
Gerson Borrero is an American journalist, radio host, and TV political commentator. Among other posts, he has been editor-at-large of City & State NY [1] and editor-in-chief of El Diario/La Prensa, the largest Spanish-language newspaper in New York City.
San Juan: Editorial Universidad de Puerto Rico. ISBN 9780847716265. (Covers 1930s-1980s) Historia de la radio en Puerto Rico; La Radioafición en Puerto Rico; La radio y sus oyentes durante el huracán María: un reexamen de la relación medio-audiencia en situaciones de desastres; WAPA Radio "abrazó" a Puerto Rico en el peor momento de María
The newspaper was created in 1963 through the merger of El Diario de Nueva York (established 1947) and La Prensa (established as a weekly in 1913 by Rafael Viera and converted into a daily in 1918 when acquired by José Camprubí) when both were purchased by O. Roy Chalk. [4]
Carlos D. Ramirez (August 19, 1946 – July 11, 1999) was an American publisher who purchased El Diario La Prensa — the oldest Spanish-language newspaper in the United States — from the Gannett Company in 1989, and succeeded in turning around the paper's longstanding decline in readership and returned it to profitability.