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La Voz de Houston : ウィキペディア英語版 | La Voz de Houston
right ''La Voz de Houston'' (Spanish: "The Voice of Houston") is a Spanish-language weekly newspaper distributed by the ''Houston Chronicle'', and a subsidiary of the ''Houston Chronicle''.〔"(La Voz de Houston )." ''Businessweek''. Retrieved on January 8, 2012.〕 The newspaper's offices are located in the ''Houston Chronicle'''s newspaper production plant at the 610 Loop and U.S. Route 59 (Southwest Freeway).〔Moreno, Jenalia. "(Chronicle buys La Voz Spanish newspaper )." ''Houston Chronicle''. Friday December 3, 2004. Retrieved on January 8, 2012.〕 This plant is the former ''Houston Post'' headquarters.〔"(HOUSTON POST PUBLISHES LAST EDITION; HEARST ACQUIRES OPERATING ASSETS )." Hearst Corporation. April 18, 1995. Retrieved on May 28, 2010.〕 Before the ''Chronicle'' acquisition, the paper was published by the La Voz Publishing Corp., headquartered in Houston.〔"(About Us )." ''La Voz de Houston''. February 6, 2002. Retrieved on January 8, 2012. "6101 S.W. Freeway, Suite 127 Houston, Texas 77057"〕 ==History== Armando and Olga Ordóñez, refugees from Cuba, established ''La Voz de Houston'' in 1979. The couple used a small house as the newspaper's offices. Armando and Olga wrote articles and operated the paper, while their children, Carlos and Laura, helped produce ''La Voz''. Armando Ordóñez died in 1984, so Olga Ordóñez became the sole owner of the paper. Under her leadership ''La Voz de Houston'' gained a circulation of 100,000. 35,000 of the circulation consisted of copies that were distributed on Wednesdays to subscribers of the ''Houston Chronicle''. Before the acquisition by the ''Houston Chronicle'', ''La Voz de Houston'' had 14 employees.〔 For a 13 year period before the 2004 acquisition, ''La Voz'' and the ''Houston Chronicle'' were in a partnership. The ''Chronicle'' distributed and printed ''La Voz'' and the ''Chronicle'' sold advertisements and shared some stories.〔 On Thursday December 2, 2004 the ''Houston Chronicle'' purchased ''La Voz''. Ordóñez remained as the publisher of ''La Voz''. As an employee of the ''Houston Chronicle'' she began reporting to Jack Sweeney, the publisher of the ''Houston Chronicle''. The 14 employees of ''La Voz de Houston'' became ''Houston Chronicle'' employees. The offices of ''La Voz de Houston'' moved to their current location.〔 With the sale, ''La Voz'' began to receive advertising sales and editorial support from the ''Chronicle''.〔
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「La Voz de Houston」の詳細全文を読む
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