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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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Managing Editor - Jeffry Mullins.
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News, sports, life, opinion and more.
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For more than 125 years, pages of The News Tribune have been turned with understanding, laughter, tears, and awe. Every day, through each of its generations, The News Tribune has installed a strong sense of community - prompting citizens to act, businesses to flourish, and people to improve their daily lives. Today this vital source of news and technology is also reaching its audience through new channels and ever-advancing technology.
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News, sports, weather, traffic, business, entertainment and more.
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Local newspaper for Bridgeton, Millville, Vineland, & more
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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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News, Health & Fitness, Politics & Government, Sports, Money, Real Estate, Small Business, Entertainment and more.
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Beacon Hill is a 19th-century downtown Boston residential neighborhood situated directly north of the Boston Common and the Boston Public Garden. Most people think of city living as anonymous and isolating. But this cozy enclave, filled with nearly 10,000 people, is more like a village than an anonymous city. It has a rich community life, with neighbors knowing neighbors and everyone meeting on the Hill's commercial streets and at its myriad activities.
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A non-profit (501(C)3), non-partisan organization founded in 1976 and made up of volunteer board members from the community who are responsible for putting out a monthly newspaper which covers news and issues that concern the seven neighborhoods which together make up the Camden 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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News, Sports, Entertainment, Jobs, Cars, Homes and more.
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News, Weather, Sports, Entertainment, Travel, Interact, Jobs and more.
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News, sports, classifieds and more.
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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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Entertainment, sports, business, community and more.
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News, sports, entertainment, business and more.
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Atlanta News, Sports, Atlanta Weather, Business News 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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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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Autos, sports, entertainment, lifestyle and more.
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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, Sports, Entertainment, Classified, Jobs, Cars, Homes and more.
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Sports, business, entertainment and more.
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Bulletin Board, Jobs, Movies, Obituaries, Special Editions, Books, Sports and more.
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News, opinons, sports, classifieds and more.
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News, Crime & courts, Government, Health, Bizarre, Sports, Business, Jobs, Autos and more.
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News, Police, Sports, Classifieds, Community, Local Jobs and more.
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The first issue of the Tulsa Daily World appeared on the afternoon of Sept. 14, 1905. The banner across the top of the front page declared: “Tulsa, Chosen Home of Prosperity and Opportunity, is a Busy City in a Busy Universe.” The paper cost 5 cents per copy.
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