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"Nicaragua: News". USA: University of Texas at Austin. "Nicaragua". Provisional Census of Current Latin American Newspaper Holdings in UK Libraries. UK: Advisory Council on Latin American and Iberian Information Resources. 14 April 2011.
La Estrella Norte: Puerto Rico Mayagüez: 1983 La Estrella Oeste: Puerto Rico Mayagüez 1983 El Laurel Sureño [a] Puerto Rico Ponce 2010 [10] El Laurel Sureño, Inc. Es Noticia [11] Puerto Rico Ponce: 2015 SCC Comunicaciones LLC; [12] Biweekly [11] El Nuevo Día: Puerto Rico Guaynabo: 1909 La Opinión del Sur: Puerto Rico Ponce 2001 Periódico ...
In 1980, the owner of La Prensa fired the editor Xavier Chamorro Cardenal. Eighty percent of the paper's employees left with Chamorro Cardenal due to La Prensa 's increasingly anti-Sandinista line and founded El Nuevo Diario. [1]: 126 From 2010 to 2019, El Nuevo Diario was one of the two major newspapers in Nicaragua (the other one being La ...
At age 16, Cárdenas began writing about baseball for La Prensa and La Estrella de Nicaragua, Nicaraguan newspapers. [2] [3] He also called games on Radio Mundial.[2]In 1958, the Los Angeles Dodgers hired Cárdenas to announce their games on the radio in Spanish, making him the first Spanish-language baseball announcer in Major League Baseball. [2]
In latest purge, Nicaragua outlaws 1,500 civil society groups. August 19, 2024 at 11:34 AM (Reuters) -Nicaragua's government outlawed 1,500 non-governmental organizations on Monday, in its latest ...
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.
When Laura Pantoja immigrated to Santa Ana from Mexico City in the early 1990s, she could choose from about a dozen local newspapers in her native language. Column: The death of California's ...
La Prensa was founded by Pedro Belli, Gavry Rivas and Enrique Belli on March 2, 1926. In 1930, Pedro Joaquín Chamorro Zelaya became editor-in-chief, and in 1932 he bought the paper with the intention of promoting the principles of the Conservative Party of Nicaragua, as well as publicising historical studies of Nicaragua. [1]