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El Tiempo (English: "Time" or "The Times") is a nationally distributed broadsheet daily newspaper in Colombia launched on January 30, 1911. As of 2019 [update] , El Tiempo had the highest circulation in Colombia with an average daily weekday of 1,137,483 readers, rising to 1,921,571 readers for the Sunday edition.
Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. ... El Tiempo is a newspaper published in Cuenca, Ecuador. It has been published since April 12, 1955. [1]
Tiempo was first published on 17 May 1982. [1] [2] Its founder was Antonio Asensio Pizarro, [1] who also established Grupo Zeta in 1976. [3]Julián Lago was the founding editor-in-chief of the magazine which had its headquarters in Madrid. [2]
It was relaunched as a daily, under the new name El Tiempo, following the restoration of democracy after the 1958 Venezuelan coup d'état. [2] Under the management of Jesús Márquez (1978–1985) the newspaper increased its circulation from 6300 to 35,000, and its size from 16 pages to 40. [2]
El Tiempo had previous published the Honduras Top 50 music chart in the country. Chart rankings were based on radio play and surveyed through radio stations in San Pedro Sula, Tegucigalpa, La Ceiba, Puerto Cortés, Choluteca and Roatán. [4]
Sign from former headquarters of the El Día newspaper, while on Calle Salud, Ponce (1945–1970), now on display at Museo de la Historia de Ponce El Nuevo Día was founded in 1909 in the city of Ponce as "El Diario de Puerto Rico," [a] later changing its name to "El Día" in 1911, a name it kept for nearly seven decades.
El Tiempo Latino is a Spanish-language free-circulation weekly newspaper published in Washington, D.C. The paper was founded in 1991 and acquired by The Washington Post Company in 2004. After Nash Holdings, the Jeff Bezos -controlled company, acquired the Post in 2013, el Tiempo Latino was sold to Javier Marin, a Venezuelan-American businessman ...
The newspaper was edited by Tomás Murillo Iglesias (1923–1927), Antonio Reyes Huertas (1927–1937) and Rafael Bittini y López de Guijarro (1937–1939). [7] [7] During most of the Francoist dictatorship it was edited by Dionisio Acedo (1939–1972). [8] It was purchased by the Grupo Zeta in 1988, [9] and it was renamed as El Periódico ...