Word: prensa
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Others are also conceptualizing. O. Roy Chalk, publisher of the city's Spanish language El Diario-La Prensa, has met with officials of seven newspaper unions in the hope of putting out a standard-size afternoon daily patterned after the Chicago Tribune. Chalk "did not make specific proposals," said a man who is something of a connoisseur of specific proposals, Bert Powers, president of the New York Typographical Union...
...gave the Soviet ambassador "friendly warning" that it would no longer provide a forum for Communist propaganda. The Algiers correspondent for France's Communist daily L'Humanite, which bitterly denounced the coup, was booted out of the country for "exaggerated" reporting. Police also closed the office of Prensa Latina, Cuba's news and propaganda agency. When Fidel Castro castigated "military despotism and counterrevolution" in Algeria, a Cuban embassy official was called in for a sharp dressing down. Just how, Foreign Minister Abdelaziz Bouteflika inquired acidly, did Castro take power...
President Johnson was almost as enthusiastic, and forthwith sent his "warmest good wishes" to the new President, Paschoal Ranieri Mazzilli. In Peru, Lima's La Prensa called the revolution a "healthy action"; in Argentina, former President Pedro Aramburu said that "democracy has won out." But despite all the enthusiasm, getting rid of Goulart was only a first and far-from-conclusive step. He had mismanaged Brazil so badly that his downfall became inevitable, but the fruits of that mismanagement remain for his successors to cope with...
...clamored for action against the I.P.C. contract as a living insult to their national dignity. In last June's national elections every major-and minor-party denounced the oil company. The army had already called the agreement "injurious to national sovereignty." Major newspapers were against I.P.C.-even La Prensa, Lima's prestigious daily owned by former Premier Pedro Beltrán, who is probably the best friend U.S. businessmen ever had in Peru. The end of I.P.C.'s privileged position, said La Prensa, was "an aspiration of all Peruvians...
...Fidel Castro may be getting the best of the bargain. Incoming wire service copy makes a useful window to the West. There are A. P. tickers in the Foreign Relations Ministry, the Union of Young Communists, the United Party of the Socialist Revolution and in many other government offices. Prensa Latina, the Castroite wire service that peddles propaganda free to any taker, might go out of business without its A.P. wires; much of what comes in is trimmed to Castro's line and sent right out again...