Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Reforma is a Mexican newspaper based in Mexico City. It has 276,700 readers in Mexico City. [1] The paper shares content with other papers in its parent newsgroup ...
The newsgroup was started with the founding of El Sol in April 1922, followed by El Norte in 1938, Monterrey's Metro in 1988, Reforma in 1993, Palabra and Mexico City's Metro in 1997, Mural in 1998, Saltillo's Metro in 2004 and Guadalajara's Metro in 2005. Reforma was an offshoot of El Norte, the noted Monterrey-based daily. Grupo Reforma was ...
Diario de Acayucan [9] Acayucan, Veracruz Diario Amanecer: 1980s [10] El Diario [1] Daily Juarez, Chihuahua [6] El Diario de Coahuila [8] Saltillo, Coahuila Diario de Colima [11] Daily Colima City, Colima [6] El Diario de Guadalajara [1] Daily Jalisco Diario de México [1] Daily El Diario de Monterrey [1] Daily Monterrey, Nuevo León El Diario ...
Reforma, a daily published in Mexico City; Grupo Reforma, parent company of the newspaper; Agencia Reforma, news wire agency of the same group; REFORMA, the U.S. National Association to Promote Library and Information Services to Latinos and the Spanish-speaking; Reforma, a rock band from Chicago that broke up in 2004.
Periodico El Sol de Puerto Rico [16] Voces del Sur: Puerto Rico Ponce 2010 Nexo Comunicaciones Inc. [17] El Vocero: Puerto Rico San Juan 1974 Defunct. United States
Grupo Reforma is 85 years old. It began with the founding of the newspaper El Sol in April 1922, followed by El Norte in 1938, the newspaper Metro in Monterrey in 1988 (and renovated in 1993). Four years later, in 1997, the newspaper Palabra was born in Saltillo, and the Metro in Mexico City. Mural, in Guadalajara, was founded a year later.
Five years later, it is sold to Healy; who acquires the newspaper, modernizing its structure and replacing the legend of "Diario Grafico de la Mañana" with "Diario Independiente de Sonora".Because it was not registered as a new newspaper, to date, El Imparcial is the oldest and most established newspaper in the State of Sonora.
Mexico is one of the most dangerous countries in the world for journalists and among the ones with the highest levels of unsolved crimes against the press. [1] Though the exact figures of those killed are often conflicting, [2] [3] press freedom organizations around the world agree through general consensus that Mexico is among the most dangerous countries on the planet to exercise journalism ...