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Word: revistas (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Pero le va mejor que eso. Saralegui, que lleg? de Cuba a los 12 a?os, ahora dirige un imperio. Como Oprah Winfrey, a quien a menudo se le compara, Saralegui, de 57 a?os, se ha convertido en una marca que incluye Cristina La Revista, la cual fund? en 1991; su show de charla que ha ganado 11 Emmys y tiene 100 millones de televidentes en el mundo; un estudio de televisi?n en Miami; Casa Cristina, una l?nea de muebles; una pr?xima l?nea de moda; y una creciente carrera art?stica que incluye una reciente presentaci?n en el show de George L?pez...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cristina Saralegui | 8/15/2005 | See Source »

...Planner) y un disco (J. Lo) en el tope de las listas de venta. Hoy en d?a posee l?neas de ropa (JLO by Jennifer L?pez y Sweetface) y fragancias (Glow, Still), lo que le report? un total de m?s de $300 millones en ganancias en el 2004. Seg?n la revista Fortune, esto la convirti? en la decimonovena persona m?s rica menor de 40 a?os...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jennifer L?pez | 8/15/2005 | See Source »

...duchesses, fulminating at Iberian decadence till hostesses swept the whole lot out at dawn. To lead Spain out of its self-centered provincialism into fruitful communication with the rest of Europe, Ortega founded the most famous Spanish newspaper (the liberal El Sol) and the most widely quoted Spanish review (Revista de Occidente) of the day. He launched political manifestoes ("Spaniards, our nation does not exist. Reconstruct it. The monarchy must be destroyed"). And all the while, in the most exquisitely modulated Castilian prose of the 20th century, he wrote about Spain, art, bullfighting, modern poetry and the timeless problems...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SPAIN: Death of a Philosopher | 10/31/1955 | See Source »

...issue this time was control of Rio's Clube Militar, an august social and fraternal organization open to all Brazilian officers. Firmly entrenched in the club, the Communists had taken over its monthly magazine, Revista do Clube Militar, published made-in-Moscow editorials blasting the Korean campaign as "Wall Street imperialism" and U.N. troops as "butchers." And even after Vargas dismissed him as Brazil's War Minister, Estillac Leal still held his job as the club's president...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BRAZIL: Victory for Democracy | 6/2/1952 | See Source »

President Eurico Caspar Dutra's regime finally squelched the Revista. But when Getulio Vargas returned to power last January, Estillac Leal became his War Minister. He permitted the Red editors to revive Revista. When criticism flared, Estillac protested that he was a busy man and took a leave from the club presidency. Army anti-Communists grew angrier. After a bitter campaign, they won a promise that a referendum vote would be held on whether the membership really supported the Revista's leftist editorial policy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BRAZIL: Communism in the Corps | 10/1/1951 | See Source »

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