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Since 1999 - Offices in Little Havana, Florida, USA The newspaper of the Cuban American community in the United Sates and Puerto Rico.
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Three years after Brigham Young led Mormon pioneers to the Salt Lake Valley in 1847, the first issue of the Deseret News was pulled off a small hand-cranked press. This eight-page newspaper was the first published in what was then called the territory of Deseret.
Although the state of Utah has long-since replaced the old territory, the Deseret News retained its original name. In 2003 the paper switched to morning delivery and today the Deseret News is published daily as Utah's oldest — but most modern — newspaper. Over the years, the Deseret News has earned hundreds of awards for writing, reporting, design and community service, including the Pulitzer Prize. |
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Santee Cooper started work in September to install underground utilities along a section of Myrtle Avenue south of the South Causeway. It will serve 47 homes and is funded by the property owners and the town.
If a similar project begins north of the South Causeway, the utility will require an additional supply line along the North Causeway. |
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The Queens Tribune is a free weekly newspaper founded as the monthly Flushing Tribune in February 1970 by Gary Ackerman. It is based in Fresh Meadows. The Tribune is a member of the New York Press Association.
Every month, the newspaper issues a special edition that focuses on a given topic. Recurring examples include the Best of Queens, Arts & Culture, Blue Book, Gay Pride, and Community Characters editions. Source |
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A weekly newspaper serving Cape May, West Cape May, Cape May Point and
Lower Township, New Jersey.
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The paper of record for the Temple University community since it first printed as Temple University Weekly on Sept. 19, 1921. The award-winning student publication, editorially independent of Temple, now publishes every Tuesday. The Temple News distributes 8,000 printed copies, free of charge, to the university’s five primary locations in the Delaware Valley, including Main Campus, Center City, Health Sciences, Ambler, and the Tyler School of Art.
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The Forward is a Jewish-American weekly newspaper published in New York City.
As of 2008, the Forward is published as a weekly news magazine in separate Yiddish and English editions. Each is effectively an independent publication with its own contents. Jane Eisner became Editor in June, 2008.[1] The Editorial Director is J.J. Goldberg, who has served in that role since 2000. The paper maintains a left of center editorial stance. Source |
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Editorial, Classifieds, Obituaries, Sports and more.
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Started in 1970 as a strident little weekly that editorialized on all its pages. It was purchased by Dick Morgan, Max Swearingen and Pat O'Connell in 1970. In its early years it was printed in a building one former editor described as a "cubicle" in Old Town Kenai next door to one of that area's bars.
The paper continued to grow, eventually moving to its present location on Trading Bay Drive and converting in 1978 from a weekly to a Monday through Friday publication. A major change ocurred in 1990 when the paper was sold to Georgia-based newspaper chain, Morris Communications. In the years since then the paper has changed from tabloid format to broad sheet and in 1997 started publishing a Sunday edition. The Clarion started producing its web site edition in April 2000. |
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News, Views, Blogs, Calendar, Film, Music, Culture, Classifieds, Personals and more.
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The Flint Journal has had only three publishers in 125 years. . No, they didn’t average more than 41 years apiece in the job; the job didn’t exist until 1978, more than a century after the newspaper was founded.
So who ran the operation before 1978? It was a team effort: an editor on the news content side and a manager on the business and financial side. In the early years, the manager was most likely also the owner. |
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The first issue of the San Diego Reader came out on October 4, 1972. The 12-page black-and-white tabloid was laid out on the dining room table of a 1-bedroom apartment on Mission Boulevard in Mission Beach, and 20,000 copies were printed at Western Offset on State and Market streets.
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News, opinion, sports, business, entertainment and more.
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The Daily Telegram is Lenawee County's only daily newspaper. Based in the county seat of Adrian, Michigan, we cover the communities of Adrian, Tecumseh, Blissfield, Clinton, Addison, Deerfield, Hudson, Morenci, Onsted, Brooklyn and all points in between.
The newspaper dates back to Dec. 3, 1892, when M.W. Redfield and Elmer E. Putnam published the first issue of the Adrian Daily Telegram. The editors pledged that although "foreign matters will be laid before the people each evening," they would make sure that "particular attention will be given to events of a local nature." That emphasis continues to this day. |
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"nola.com is pleased to announce a brand new look and design for our home page. We've been listening to your feedback for some time now and have created a new home page that is designed to make it easier for you to discover all the great content our Web site offers, and continue to easily find the content you've come to depend on from NOLA.com."
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"We publish every weekday except five holidays: New Year’s Day, Memorial Day, the Fourth of July, the Friday after Thanksgiving and Christmas Day"
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News, Police, Sports, Classifieds, Community, Local Jobs and more.
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News, Sports, Entertainment, Classified, Jobs, Cars, Homes and more.
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Entertainment, sports, business, community and more.
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The Emery County Progress began publishing in 1900 in Castle Dale, the county seat. In 1957 it merged with the Green River Leader to become the Emery County Progress-Leader. In 1977 the name was changed back to the Emery County Progress. Today, the Emery County Progress is a weekly newspaper, published every Tuesday.
Located in Castle Dale, Utah, the Emery County Progress serves the entire Emery County area. The Sun Advocate, the Emery County Progress's sister paper, serves neighboring Carbon County residents. |
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The Las Vegas Review-Journal is Nevada's largest newspaper.
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What began as a two-page church bulletin by co-founders George P. Stewart and Will Porter, The Indianapolis Recorder now hails as one of the top African-American publications in the nation.
In 1897, the co-founders of the newspaper decided to expand their already successful newssheet into a weekly newspaper. The earliest existing issues of the Recorder date to 1899 — the year Porter sold his share of the newspaper to Stewart.
Realizing the importance of local news, Stewart captured that market, outdistancing his local competitors, the publishers of the Freeman and the Colored World. With its emphasis on local news, the Recorder set itself apart from other Black newspapers. It had an immediate and an enduring impact on the Indianapolis community. |
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For nearly three quarters of a century, the Zion-Benton News has reported the hometown news for Beach Park, Winthrop Harbor, Zion, Ill. and surrounding areas.
The Bargaineer, a companion paper to the Zion-Benton News, provides 36,000 readers in Beach Park, Gurnee, Wadsworth, Waukegan, Winthrop Harbor, and Zion, Ill. with many local deals and a smattering of general interest news. This free community paper is delivered door-to-door each Tuesday. |
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The Courier-Journal has been part of the fabric of Louisville life since 1868. Every day, nearly half a million adults throughout Kentucky and Southern Indiana read The Courier-Journal, and more than 617,000 read the Sunday Courier-Journal. Since 1987, The Courier-Journal has been part of Gannett Co., Inc., a Fortune 500 company that publishes 103 daily newspapers worldwide, including USA Today.
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"It is all about you". News, Business, Science, Health, Entertainment, Sports, Blogs and more.
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With circulation of about 16,500 daily and 18,500 Sunday, the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle is Wyoming's second-largest daily newspaper and its largest locally owned newspaper.
Headquartered in Cheyenne, our paper is distributed throughout southeast Wyoming, and into western Nebraska, with the majority of our circulation within Laramie County. |
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The Sioux Falls Argus and Sioux Falls Leader were born in the boom days of the 1880s, when Sioux Falls was young and saloons outnumbered churches 32 to 14, and the city's 20 gambling establishments served 10,000 citizens.
These were the years when a newspaper was a civic booster, and had no trouble labeling those who disagreed kickers and croakers.
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Atlanta News, Sports, Atlanta Weather, Business News and more.
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"Located in some of the best communities in the country. In Cedar Rapids and Iowa City both, our schools are fabulous, our cultural and recreational offerings endless. We have plenty of housing, with character and comfortable price tags. We don’t have clogged freeways. We do have farmer’s markets, festivals, the freshest air, sun, snow and tons of sweet corn."
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