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Semana ' s foreign periodicals include SoHo Ecuador, which began publication in 2002; SoHo Costa Rica, which was started in 2006; and Fucsia Ecuador, which has been published since 2004. The website Semana.com offers all the contents of the magazine Semana and also provides exclusive coverage of political and social developments. It is the ...
Magazines in Spain are varied and numerous, [1] but they have small circulation. [2] In terms of frequency, the Spanish magazines are mostly weekly and monthly. [3] Although there are news magazines and political magazines in the country, they mostly focus on entertainment, social events, sports, and television.
Colección El Papagayo. Madrid: Temas de Hoy. ISBN 978-84-7880-441-2. OCLC 34576565. Samper Pizano, Daniel (1995). Aspectos sicológicos del calzoncillo : y otros artículos de humor [Psychological Aspects of Underwear: And Other Humoristic Articles]. Bogotá: El Ancora. ISBN 978-958-36-0021-0. OCLC 34782004.
In 1964 he obtained a degree in Journalism from the Official School of Madrid. He also studied law. He worked for the Hispania Press agency, El Alcázar and magazine Semana. Since 1967 he worked as an editor and director in different periodicals including El diario montañés, Arriba, [1] Revista de Geografía Universal and Free Lance'e ...
Arriba (Spanish for "up") was a Spanish daily newspaper published in Madrid between 1935 and 1979. It was the official organ of the Falange , and also of the regime during the Franco rule in the country.
Perfil de la semana; Pobre diablo; Por tierra, mar y aire ¡Que usted lo pase bien! ¿Quién es quién? Reportaje de toros; Reina por un día; Revista para la mujer ; Ronda de España ; Rumbo a lo desconocido; Rueda de prensa; Sábado 64 ; Sala de concierto; Seis mujeres en la vida de un hombre; Solo una mujer; Sonría, por favor ; Teatro de ...
Tragic Week (in Catalan la Setmana Tràgica, in Spanish la Semana Trágica) (25 July – 2 August 1909) was a series of violent confrontations between the Spanish army and anarchists, freemasons, socialists and republicans of Barcelona and other cities in Catalonia, Spain, during the last week of July 1909.
Aitana Sánchez-Gijón was born in Rome on 5 November 1968, [1] to a Spanish father Ángel Sánchez-Gijón Martínez [], a history lecturer exiled from Francoism, and an Italian mother, Fiorella de Angelis, a lecturer. [2]