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Daily Word in Spanish, La Palabra Diaria, was first published in March 1955. [7] Daily Word in Large Type was introduced in 1978. Among Daily Word' s former editors are Colleen Zuck [ 8 ] [ 9 ] and Martha Smock.
"José Pedro Díaz: la literatura mar adentro", in Historia de la literatura uruguaya contemporánea, Vol. 1: La narrativa del medio siglo. Ediciones de la Banda Oriental, Montevideo: 1997. "Las ideas estéticas del comisario Medina", Río de la Plata Nº 25 dedicated to Juan Carlos Onetti, CELCIRP, Paris, 2003. "El recordado caso de la ...
Réunion (/ r iː ˈ juː n j ə n /; French: [la ʁe.ynjɔ̃] ⓘ; Reunionese Creole: La Rényon; known as Île Bourbon before 1848) is an island in the Indian Ocean that is an overseas department and region of France.
Juan Gelman (3 May 1930 – 14 January 2014) was an Argentine poet.He published more than twenty books of poetry between 1956 and his death in early 2014. He was a naturalized citizen of Mexico, [1] where he arrived as a political exile of the Process, the military junta that ruled Argentina from 1976 to 1983.
La Palabra (Spanish for The Word) may refer to: La Palabra (musician), Cuban bandleader, singer-songwriter, pianist, record producer, and arranger "La Palabra", an episode on The West Wing; La Palabra 1490, former radio station in Austin, Texas, now KJFK; palabra, an online magazine published by the National Association of Hispanic Journalists
Similarly, the church publication Palabra Nueva was founded in April 1992 and currently has a monthly circulation of 12,000 copies, ...
Liza Minnelli has been married and divorced four times, but her first union left her "truly devastated." The entertainer, who famously starred as Sally Bowles in the film version of "Cabaret," is ...
Félix Rubén García Sarmiento (18 January 1867 – 6 February 1916), known as Rubén Darío (US: / d ɑː ˈ r iː oʊ / dah-REE-oh, [1] [2] Spanish: [ruˈβen daˈɾi.o]), was a Nicaraguan poet who initiated the Spanish-language literary movement known as modernismo (modernism) that flourished at the end of the 19th century.