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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.
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 ...
Organización Editorial Mexicana was founded by Jose Garcia Valseca The daily circulation of the print edition of La Prensa, one of OEM's newspapers, is more than 450,000 readers. It is considered the most widely read newspaper in Mexico City.
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]
Anarchist newspaper. La Raza Latina [38] New York: New York: El Regidor [20] Texas: San Antonio: 1888 1916 ENGL Trans: The Regent La Revista [39] Florida: Tampa: Revista Agricola [22] Illinois: Chicago: La Revista Católica [20] New Mexico: Las Vegas: 1875 1962 Sancho Panza [32] Wisconsin: Milwaukee: 1930s La Semana: Florida: Orlando: 1981 [40 ...
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]
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
The News (Mexico City) Novedades de México; O. La Orquesta; P. La Prensa (Mexico City) R. Reforma (newspaper) T. Two Republics; U. El Universal (Mexico City) Unomásuno