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YA (1935-1996)


Founded by Editorial Catolica, SA (DTIS), the newspaper was already on newsstands on January 14, 1935 as an evening publication coming out every day, including Monday despite the Royal Order requiring that the Sunday rest most newspaper editorials. Its director was Vincent Gallo. At the outbreak of the English Civil War, the July 20, 1936 was suspended and the Communist Party of Spain used its presses to publish the newspaper Mundo Obrero.
After the Civil War, the newspaper became a morning YA. Until 1952 was directed by Juan José Pradera, who had several conflicts with the direction of the company. His replacement, Aquilino Morcillo, was 23 years in front of the newspaper. It was a fruitful stage for the first time, was introduced gravure, while it changed the format of the newspaper by a smaller, more manageable, and with color covers on Sundays and holidays, days when a charge was also introduced Sunday. In the last years of Franco's regime, the newspaper meant for its line of openness. Due to its conservative orientation, was one of the most popular and influential newspapers in Spain under Franco. Articles appeared regularly in a group of intellectuals and politicians Democrats, Tacitus belonging to the group. With Alejandro Fernandez Pombo, director from 1974 until 1980, the newspaper managed to successfully replace the old linotype. In 1975, Franco's death, became the best-selling newspaper in Madrid, with 177,000 copies daily on average.


The decline began in the 1980's, is a clear sign of the recession the frequency with which the bishops changed directors (Manuel Jiménez Quiles, José María Castillo, Luis Venancio Acute Guillermo Medina, Fernando Onega and Ramon Pi). With Jiménez Quilez that remained one year, the online newspaper took a turn right again.
In 1988, the Episcopal Conference and the head sold its flagship building in Madrid to a Basque group subsidiary Comeco (now Grupo Correo) beginning a period of decline. During this decade the newspaper format was changed again struggling to adapt to more modern designs of the era. The new owners failed in their attempt to refloat, and in July 1991 was sold to Antena 3 TV.
This TV station, then still owned by the Conde de Godo, failed in his project to create a media group and sold it in December 1992, the Mexican group by the Southern Publishing symbolic price of one peseta. However, the new owners suspended payments in July 1993. In October 1994, Miguel Angel Gnecco Chilean businessman claimed to have bought the newspaper. In December 1994, the editor of El Diario de Ávila, Aurelio Delgado, bought the paper in an agreement with representatives of Antena 3 TV, the Community of Madrid and UGT. Caja Madrid gave a loan of 600 million pesetas to the newspaper, endorsed by the Community. In September 1995, Aurelio Delgado announced a capital increase amounting to 800 million pesetas that never happened. Finally, in April 1996, the 160 daily workers demanded to Edic for unpaid wages.


In June 1996 the Justice recognized the right of staff to terminate their contracts and collect 2,000 million pesetas in compensation. The daily YA insolvent, declared the 160 workers laid off as owners of property rights in the header of YA daily press, the computer system and other goods.
On January 25, 2006, went to auction the old file photo diary NOW, which was won by 40,000 € to the Foundation San Pablo-CEU.
On July 1, 2008, reappeared in a daily Internet news DAILY under the name of YA, where one of the teachers working as CEU columnists. The director of this digital edition is Rafael Nieto, being part owner of the digital edition Juan Manuel Pozuelo. During the presentation at the Madrid Press Association, the same Rafael Nieto said: "Our editorial line is very clear: we are against all abortion, any form of euthanasia, and defend the unity of Spain, because we believe that Spain and Catholicism were born together, "adding that ending the head" is not of any party. "

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