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El Heraldo (English: The Herald) is a regional newspaper based in the city of Barranquilla, Colombia, founded in 1933 by Juan Fernández Ortega, Luis Eduardo Manotas Llinás, and Alberto Pumarejo Vengoechea. [1]
El Heraldo de México is a Mexican national daily newspaper published in Mexico City. Initially founded in 1965, after a 14-year absence of the name, the newspaper was relaunched on May 2, 2017. Initially founded in 1965, after a 14-year absence of the name, the newspaper was relaunched on May 2, 2017.
El Heraldo: San Luis Potosí [1] El Heraldo de Chihuahua [1] Daily Chihuahua, Chihuahua [6] 1927 El Heraldo de México: Mexico City [1] El Heraldo de Saltillo [19] Saltillo, Coahuila El Heraldo de Tabasco [8] Tabasco: El Heraldo de Toluca [1] Toluca, Mexico Imagen: Zacatecas [6] El Imparcial [1] Oaxaca [6] El Imparcial (Hermosillo) Hermosillo ...
El Heraldo ("The Herald") may refer to any of the following Spanish-language newspapers: El Heraldo; El Heraldo de Cuba; El Heraldo (Tegucigalpa) El Heraldo de Madrid, Spanish daily newspaper published 1890–1939; El Heraldo de México; Heraldo Filipino, student newspaper of De La Salle University-Dasmariñas in the Philippines. Heraldo de Aragón
El Nuevo Herald is a newspaper published daily in Spanish in Southeast Florida, United States. Its headquarters is in Doral . [ 3 ] El Nuevo Herald' s sister paper is the Miami Herald , also produced by the McClatchy Company.
XHFAMX-TDT, known as Heraldo Televisión, is a television station in Mexico City broadcasting on virtual channel 8. XHFAMX is owned by Heraldo Media Group, the company that operates the newspaper El Heraldo de México and the Heraldo Radio network.
This is a list of newspapers in Ecuador.. Ambato. El Heraldo; Babahoyo. Clarín; Bahía de Caráquez. El Globo; Cuenca. El Mercurio; La Tarde; El Tiempo; Galápagos Islands. El Colono; Guayaquil ...
' The Press ') is a Honduran newspaper founded on 26 October 1964, by Organización Publicitaria, S.A., whose publications also include El Heraldo and Diario Deportivo Diez. In 2008, La Prensa reported its audited circulation as 61,000 units. [1] It has full color and tabloid-sized pages.