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Edição digital.
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Irish news is the meat and potatoes of IrishCentral.com. News from Ireland and from all the homes of the global Irish in the United States and around the Irish world.
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Judiciário, Política, Cotidiano, Economia, Cinemas, Esportes, Agronegócios, Meio Ambiente e muito mais.
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Notícias, Mundo, Economia, Brasil, Política, Interior, Cotidiano, Tecnologia,
Veículos e muito mais.
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Covering Delaware's Cape Region - Inland Bays, Atlantic Ocean, Rehoboth Beach, Lewes, Milton, Dewey Beach, USA.
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Sun News has 11 weekly newspapers serving 47 Greater Cleveland area communities in Cuyahoga, Lorain, Medina, and Geauga counties. You can read the latest news, sports, entertainment, and classifieds from your community.
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Educação, esportes, economia, turismo e muito mais.
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Ciência e Tecnologia, Economia, Educação, Empregos, Especiais, Esporte,
Galeria de fotos, Gerais, Imóveis e mais.
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Política, Cidades, Economia, Brasil, Mundo, Esportes e muito mais.
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Política, Dia-a-dia, Economia, Brasil, Mundo, Show e Esportes.
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São Luís, Maranhão, Brasil, Política, Economia, Esporte, Mundo, Entretenimento, Multimídia e muito mais.
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Economia, polícia, política, especiais, bizarro e muito mais.
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Culinária, Cultura, Editorial, Educação, Esportes, Geral, Obras, Policial, Política, Ponto de vista, Região, Saúde e mais.
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O jornal das boas notícias.
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"Jornal Povo do Rio sempre melhorando para prestar melhor serviço, qualidade e competência."
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Fundado em 8 de maio 1878, O Fluminense é, aos 132 anos, o segundo periódico mais antigo em circulação do Estado do Rio, mantendo-se entre as raras publicações da América Latina a serem veiculadas em três diferentes séculos.
Em mais de 37 mil edições, O Fluminense mantém a postura que o fez crescer: defesa da integridade, da soberania e das aspirações populares. Assim, O Fluminense é um dos jornais mais importantes do cenário político nacional. As páginas de O Fluminense revelaram alguns dos mais talentosos nomes da nossa literatura, como Euclides da Cunha, Oliveira Vianna, Olavo Bilac, Rubem Braga e Irineu Marinho. Em 1954, O Fluminense passou a ser administrado pelo advogado, político e jornalista Alberto Torres. Quarenta e quatro anos mais tarde, O Fluminense foi transformado em um moderno veículo de comunicação. Alberto Torres promoveu o reaparelhamento das oficinas, a construção da atual sede e a expansão da empresa. Atualmente, o Grupo Fluminense de Comunicação é administrado por Nina Rita Torres e Alexandre Torres, filha e neto de Alberto Torres. |
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Revista especializada em artes marciais, com editoriais e fotos abordando a performance de lutadores brasileiros nos principais circuito nacionais e internacionais de MMA, Luta Livre e Jiu-Jitsu.
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The New York Observer is a weekly newspaper first published in New York City on September 22, 1987, by Arthur L. Carter, a very successful former investment banker with publishing interests. The Observer focuses on the city's culture, real estate, the media, politics and the entertainment and publishing industries.
The New York Observer asserts to advertisers that it delivers Manhattan’s most affluent, educated and influential consumers, with the average net worth of its readership exceeding $1.7 million and 96% of readers being college graduates. It has a paid circulation of 51,000. The Observer operates several blogs: The Politicker, the Daily Transom, the Media Mob, and the Real Estate. Source |
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TechNews is written, managed, and edited by the students of the Illinois Institute of Technology. The material in TechNews does not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Illinois Institute of Technology or the Editors, Staff, or Advisory Board of TechNews. There is no censorship of TechNews by the faculty or staff of the Illinois Institute of Technology. TechNews seeks to bring together the various segments of the IIT community and strives through balance and content to achieve a position of respect and excellence. TechNews strives for professionalism with due respect to the intellectual values of the university and its community.
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The Onion is an American "fake news" organization. It features satirical articles reporting on international, national, and local news as well as an entertainment newspaper and website known as The A.V. Club. It claims a national print circulation of 690,000 and says 61 percent of its web site readers are between 18 and 44 years old.
The Onion's articles comment on current events, both real and imagined. It parodies traditional newspaper features, such as editorials, man-on-the-street interviews, and stock quotes, as well as traditional newspaper layout and AP-style editorial voice. Much of its humor depends on presenting everyday events as newsworthy items, and by playing on commonly used phrases, as in the headline "Drugs Win Drug War." A second part of the newspaper is a non-satirical entertainment section called The A.V. Club that features interviews and reviews of various newly-released media, and other weekly features. The print edition also contains restaurant reviews and previews of upcoming live entertainment specific to cities where a print edition is published. The online incarnation of The A.V. Club has its own domain, includes its own regular features (including the syndicated weekly sex advice column Savage Love), A.V. Club blogs and reader forums, and presents itself as a separate entity from The Onion itself. Source |
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The State Press has consistently been rated among the best college newspapers in the country. In 2004, 2005 and 2006, the Columbia Scholastic Press Association named The State Press a Gold Crown and Silver Crown winner, respectively — the highest awards given to college newspapers. The State Press also was honored in 2005 with the Payne Award for Ethics in Journalism, a prestigious national award given to one college paper each year for its commitment to ethics. Student journalists working for The State Press consistently place in the prestigious Hearst awards for college journalism students and sweep the Society of Professional Journalism regional awards.
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News, sports, life, opinion 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 roots of the Idaho Press-Tribune go back to December 1883 in Caldwell - with the first paper coming off the press just months after Caldwell was established as a city. Nampa city was established in 1885.
The newspapers and their competitors underwent several name changes in both towns. Ownership changed often, too.
The early versions of the papers were often informational instruments for political parties and movements. And for you trivia buffs, Idaho Gov. Frank Steunenberg, who was murdered at his home, was one of the first editors and publishers of the Caldwell Tribune. |
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"The Conservative Voice of Today's University Campus"
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A $10 Investment 95 years ago turned the Amsterdam News into one of New York's largest and most influential Black-owned and operated business institutions.
On December 4, 1909, the late James H. Anderson put out the first issue of the Amsterdam News. He had $10 in his pocket, six sheets of paper, a lead pencil and a dressmaker's table. The newspaper was one of only 50 Black papers in the United States at that time, and it was sold for 2 cents a copy from Anderson's home at 132 W. 65th St., in the San Juan Hill section of Manhattan. With the spread of Blacks to Harlem and the growing success of the paper, Anderson moved the Amsterdam News uptown to 17 W. 135th St. in 1910. In 1916, it moved to 2293 Seventh Ave., and in 1938, it moved again, to 2271 Seventh Ave. In the early 1940s, the paper relocated to its present address at 2340 Eighth Ave. |