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El Vocero de Puerto Rico is a Puerto Rican free newspaper that is published in San Juan. Published since 1974, El Vocero was at first the third of the four largest Puerto Rico newspapers, trailing El Mundo and El Nuevo Día and leading El Reportero and The San Juan Star in sales. With the temporary demise in the late 1980s of El Mundo, El ...
El Nuevo Día (English: The New Day) is the newspaper with the largest circulation in Puerto Rico. It is considered mainstream and the territory's newspaper of record. [5] It was founded in 1909 in Ponce, Puerto Rico, and today it is a subsidiary of GFR Media. Its headquarters are in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico. [6]
News Media in Puerto Rico can be dated back to the invasion of the Spaniards and the introduction of a Spanish led government. Captain General, Toribio Montes established a printing press at the Spanish government's headquarters and began publishing "La Gaceta del Gobierno de Puerto Rico.
El Vocero. Categories: Newspapers published in Puerto Rico. Spanish-language newspapers published in insular areas of the United States.
"Mas de cuatroceintos periodicos en espanol se han editado en los Estados Unidos" [More than 400 newspapers in Spanish have been published in the United States], La Prensa (in Spanish), San Antonio, Texas, February 13, 1938 (List of titles)
He wrote columns for such newspapers as El Nuevo Dia (The New Day), El Vocero (The Spokesperson) and The San Juan Star. In 2006, he returned to Puerto Rico's most respected news radio station, WKAQ, as an on-air political commentator.
Claridad. Claridad ("Clarity") is a Spanish-language weekly newspaper based in San Juan, Puerto Rico. It was founded in June 1959. The paper served as the official publication of the Puerto Rican independence movement and later the Puerto Rican Socialist Party (PSP). The paper has been praised for its strong political and investigative reporting.
El Imparcial, founded in 1918, was "an anti- Popular, pro-Independence tabloid " [5] in Puerto Rico. It circulated daily, except Sundays. [6] Its full name was El Imparcial: El diario ilustrado de Puerto Rico. [7]