Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Puerto Rico Ilustrado was a weekly magazine in Puerto Rico. Its first issue was published 6 March 1910 in San Juan, Puerto Rico , with Juan M. Saavedra as administrator. [ 7 ] The final issue of Puerto Rico Ilustrado as an independent publication was número 2227, published 27 December 1952.
From 1938 to 1949, he was the director of the magazine "Puerto Rico Illustrado", there he published some of his poems under the name of Raimundo Lucio. [1] Among his written works are the following: [1] "Antología de poetas jóvenes de Puerto Rico" (Anthology of young poets of Puerto Rico) (1918) "Crónicas frívolas" (Frivolous Chronics) (1938)
El Día: decano de la prensa de Puerto Rico [276] [477] Ponce [478] 1911 (May 2) [479] [467] 1970 [480] Archivo Histórico Municipal de Ponce (entire printed collection) [481] This paper was the successor of El Diario de Puerto Rico (1909–1911); Eugenio Astol, director; Guillermo Vivas Valdivieso become its director in 1928. [482]
Puerto Rico Ilustrado/El Mundo Building (Spanish: Edificio El Mundo/Puerto Rico Ilustrado) is a historic Art Deco high-rise building located in the Old San Juan historic district of the city of San Juan, Puerto Rico. The building was erected in 1923 to serve as the headquarters of the El Mundo newspaper and the Puerto Rico Ilustrado magazine. [1]
El Imparcial, founded in 1918, was "an anti-Popular, pro-Independence tabloid" [4] in Puerto Rico. It circulated daily, except Sundays. [5] Its full name was El Imparcial: El diario ilustrado de Puerto Rico. [6] El Imparcial was given new life in 1933 under the leadership of Antonio Ayuso Valdivieso. [7]
El Mundo (lit. ' The World ') is a Puerto Rican newspaper founded in 1919 [1] by Romualdo Real. [2] Its slogan was "Verdad y Justicia" (Truth and Justice). [3] In 1929, former corrector-turned-administrator Angel Ramos and journalist José Coll Vidal, bought the newspaper when Real retired.
He was the son of Eugenio María de Hostos and had several brothers and sisters: Eugenio Carlos, Luisa Amelia, Bayoán Lautaro, Filipo Luis Duarte, María Angelina [3] In 1939, he corresponded with his brother Eugenio Carlos de Hostos excitedly relaying how he hoped to have his publication, Trópico, be included in the newspaper Puerto Rico Ilustrado.
“El Derecho Divino de Los Blancos” (“The Divine Right of the Whites”), published on September 30, 1939 in Puerto Rico Ilustrado, a Puerto Rican cultural publication, offers a critical eye on racism. [9] In this article, Betances Jaeger praises the liberation work of her uncle, Ramon Emeterio Betances. [9]