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La Crónica de Hoy [1] Mexico City 1996 Cuarto Poder: Chiapas [6] Cuestion [1] Mexico City El Debate: Culiacán, [6] Sinaloa El Dia [1] Mexico City Diario de Acayucan [9] Acayucan, Veracruz Diario Amanecer: 1980s [10] El Diario [1] Daily Juarez, Chihuahua [6] El Diario de Coahuila [8] Saltillo, Coahuila Diario de Colima [11] Daily Colima City ...
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La Perla del Sur: Puerto Rico Ponce: 1982 La Perla del Sur, Inc.; Omar Alfonso, editor. [14] Primera Hora: Puerto Rico Guaynabo 1997 El Sol de Puerto Rico: Puerto Rico Ponce 2012 [15] Periodico El Sol de Puerto Rico [16] Voces del Sur: Puerto Rico Ponce 2010 Nexo Comunicaciones Inc. [17] El Vocero: Puerto Rico San Juan 1974
Organización Editorial Mexicana, also known as OEM, is the largest Mexican print media company and the largest newspaper company in Latin America.The company owns a large newswire service, it includes 70 Mexican daily newspapers, 24 radio stations and 44 websites.
Grupo Reforma was created by Alejandro Junco de la Vega and Rodolfo Junco Jr. from the merger of two companies, Editora el Sol S.A. and Ediciones del Norte S.A. The newsgroup was started with the founding of El Sol in April 1922, followed by El Norte in 1938, Monterrey's Metro in 1988, Reforma in 1993, Palabra and Mexico City's Metro in 1997 ...
El Sol de Mexico, a Mexican newspaper owned by Organización Editorial Mexicana; El Sol, a Peruvian newspaper; see Isabel Sabogal; El Sol, a defunct Spanish newspaper; El Sol de Maturín, a Venezuelan newspaper; El Sol, an American newspaper; El Sol de Salinas, an American weekly newspaper
Reforma was launched in Mexico City in November 1993 by Alejandro Junco de la Vega as an offshoot of his successful Monterrey paper, El Norte. Soon after the paper's launch, he brought Reforma and El Norte together with his other newspapers--El Sol and Metro—to unite them under a single publishing company, which he named Grupo Reforma. [3]
La Prensa is a Mexican newspaper, owned by Organizacion Editorial Mexicana, established in 1928. The newspaper had a circulation of 244,299, [1] the highest circulation of any newspaper in Mexico, as of 2013. Their sister newspaper, ESTO once had the highest circulation of any Mexican newspaper with 400,000 copies.