Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Red UNO de Bolivia (literally "Network One", commonly referred to as Red UNO and occasionally also called simply UNO, UNO being the initials of Unión Nacional de Organizaciones Televisivas, [1] "National Union of Television Organizations") is a national Bolivian television network owned by conservative [2] businessman Ivo Kuljis, [3] a businessman of Croatian origin, [4] who also owns other ...
Puerto La Cruz is the terminus of the 145 km (90 mi) Carapito-Puerto la Cruz oil pipeline, the 155 km (96 mi) San Joaquin-Puerto la Cruz oil pipeline and the 184 km (114 mi) Anaco-Puerto la Cruz gas pipeline. [1] The city is the gateway to a large national park. The beaches of Mochima National Park surround the city. Places such as Isla de ...
Myriam Montemayor Cruz (born February 8, 1981), [1] better known mononymously as Myriam, is a Mexican recording artist known for winning the first season of Mexican talent show La Academia. Biography [ edit ]
José Luis Cruz Cruz was born on September 3, 1959. He is the oldest son of Luis Benjamín Cruz Hernández and Aurea Cruz Betancourt. His grandfather, Luis Cruz Hernández, was mayor of Trujillo Alto from 1941 to 1945. Cruz received his high school diploma from Colegio Santa Cruz in Trujillo Alto.
The punto is a musical genre typical of eastern Venezuela. It is also called punto y llanto, punto cruzado, punto fuerte and punto mamp ...
Veracruz was named after the city of Veracruz (From Latin Vera Crux, "True Cross"), which was originally called the Villa Rica de la Vera Cruz. The suffix is in honor of Ignacio de la Llave y Segura Zevallos (1818–1863), who was the governor of Veracruz from 1861 to 1862.
Santa Cruz (Spanish pronunciation: [ˌsanta ˈkɾus]) is the largest of the nine constituent departments of Bolivia, occupying about one-third (33.74%) of the country's territory. With an area of 370,621 km 2 (143,098 sq mi), it is slightly smaller than Japan or the US state of Montana .
The Cruz de Mañozca (Mañozca Cross), [2] otherwise known as the Cruz de Tepeapulco (Tepeapulco Cross), [3] is a 16th century atrial stone cross placed in the courtyard of the Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral, in the historic center of Mexico City, in the Cuauhtémoc Borough.