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El Caribe is a Spanish-language daily [1] newspaper published in Santo Domingo. [2] It was founded on April 14, 1948 by Stanley Ralph Ross . [ 3 ] [ 4 ] El Caribe covers domestic, national, and international news, and comprises opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews.
Hoy describes that Listín Diario had run evenly, and sometimes ahead, with the challenges of the times. The thrust of digital media is an unavoidable challenge for print journals, and has not wavered before this reality, which assumes permanent innovations, good information and reading material, and through timely research on the topics more ...
Diario Libre is a free daily Spanish-language Dominican newspaper, founded on May 10, 2001. It is owned by the Dominican business Grupo Diario Libre, and it is part of the Latin American Newspaper Association.
In September 2013, a news investigation led by Piera revealed that the Papal Nuncio of Santo Domingo, Józef WesoĊowski, whom Pope Francis had dismissed, was not removed from office due to a dispute he held for three years with Puerto Rican Cardinal Roberto González Nieves, as stated in the Italian and Dominican press and as insinuated by the archbishop of Santo Domingo Cardinal Nicolás de ...
El Nacional is a Dominican newspaper founded in 1966 by Dr. Rafael Molina Morillo, who was president/owner of Ahora! Publications. [ 2 ] The online version of the newspaper was founded on July 17, 1997.
Hoy's Chicago and Los Angeles publications were not affected by the transaction. [1] The New York Hoy was later merged into El Diario La Prensa. In 2018, Patrick Soon-Shiong purchased Hoy titles in Los Angeles and San Diego, as part of his purchase of the assets related to the Los Angeles Times and San Diego Union-Tribune. A year later, both ...
Merengue became popular in the United States, mostly on the East Coast, during the 1980s and 90s, [96] when many Dominican artists, among them Victor Roque y La Gran Manzana, Henry Hierro, Zacarias Ferraira, Aventura, Milly, and Jocelyn Y Los Vecinos, residing in the U.S. (particularly New York City) started performing in the Latin club scene ...
All adult citizens of the Dominican Republic were required to be members of the party. They needed to carry "[the] three strikes" (Spanish: "los tres golpes"): Personal identity card; Compulsory military service card; Dominican Party membership card, popularly known as "La Palmita" The party had no real ideology other than support for Trujillo.