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Staten Island Advance covers news of local and community interest, including Staten Island politics. Staten Island Advance is the namesake and nominal flagship publication of Advance Publications . As of April 25, 2007, the newspaper's weekday circulation was down 3.9% from 2006, to 59,461, and its Sunday circulation dropped 4.6% from 2006, to ...
Padnani wrote for metropolitan newspapers like Newsday, The Star-Ledger and The Staten Island Advance before moving to The New York Times in 2011. [4] [5] She became digital editor of obituaries at The New York Times in 2017. [1] As the Obituaries editor of the Times, she researches, assigns and edits obituaries to in-house writers. [citation ...
Jane C. Purcell Coffee (1944–2022) was an American mathematician, one of the first women to earn a doctorate in mathematics at the University of Pennsylvania, and the founder of the Teacher Education Honors Academy at the College of Staten Island. [1]
Discover the latest breaking news in the U.S. and around the world — politics, weather, entertainment, lifestyle, finance, sports and much more.
Samuel Irving "S.I." Newhouse Jr. (November 8, 1927 – October 1, 2017) was an American heir to a substantial magazine and media business. Together with his brother Donald, he owned Advance Publications, founded by their late father in 1922, whose properties include Condé Nast (publisher of such magazines as Vogue, Vanity Fair, and The New Yorker), dozens of newspapers across the United ...
A Staten Island man left comatose after taking a punch to the head has died from injuries suffered in the confrontation last month, police said Friday. Victim Dale Cappelli, 57, was near his home ...
Staten Island Advance (daily) Street News (every six weeks) Super Express USA (daily) The Tablet (weekly) The Tribeca Trib (monthly) Urdu Times (weekly) The Villager (weekly) The Wall Street Journal (daily) Washington Square News (daily) The Wave of Long Island (weekly) The Westsider (weekly) WestView News; World Journal (Chinese-language daily)
A “devastated” family whose father and daughter were left seriously injured by a hit-and-run driver on Staten Island is planning to sue the city for $101 million, The Post has learned.