Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
La Prensa was founded on February 13, 1913, in San Antonio as a weekly newspaper by Ignacio Eugenio Lozano, Sr. (1886–1953), a prominent exile of Mexico, native of Nuevo Leon, and supporter of Porfirio Diaz leading up to, and throughout the Mexican Revolution. [5] Nine days later, Mexico's President Francisco I. Madero was assassinated.
La Prensa Texas is an American bilingual semi-weekly newspaper based in San Antonio, Texas.Florentino "Tino" J. Durán (1934–2017) [1] and his wife of sixty-nine years (since 1954), Amelia ("Mellie") Durán (née Jimenez; born 1936), founded it in 1989 and are the publishers under the auspices of Duran Duran Industries, Inc., a Texas corporation formed March 17, 1989.
La Prensa de Colorado: Colorado: Denver: 2010 La Prensa de Minnesota: Minnesota Minneapolis El Puente Indiana [9] Goshen Que Pasa: North Carolina Charlotte 2002 La Raza: Illinois Chicago 1970 www.laraza.com: Rumbo: Massachusetts Lawrence 1996 Rumbo: Texas San Antonio, Houston, Austin, McAllen 2004 (no longer in print) El Sentinel: Florida Orlando
La Prensa (California), founded 1999, serving Riverside and San Bernardino counties, owned by Southern California News Group; La Prensa , a Central Florida publication owned by ImpreMedia; La Prensa, a newspaper of Detroit, Michigan; La Prensa (San Antonio), a former newspaper in Texas
San Antonio Express-News; San Antonio Business Journal; Buena Suerte; El Mundo; Hart Beat; La Prensa de San Antonio; Northeast Herald; Rumbo; San Diego, California.
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 México" (PDF). Comunicación y Sociedad (in Spanish) (5 ...
In light of Pope Francis’ latest diagnosis, Dr. Leana Wen explains why older adults are especially at risk for serious disease due to respiratory infections.
Ignacio Eugenio Lozano Sr. (1886-September 21, 1953) [1] was born in Marín, Nuevo León on Mexico-Texas border. He was a famous journalist of northern Mexico, but he joined the exodus into the United States during the Mexican Revolution., [1] [2] He moved to San Antonio and established a Spanish language bookstore and worked on two Spanish language periodicals.