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The St. Catharines Standard was started in 1891, and purchased by W. B. Burgoyne for $1 in 1892. The Standard, located in St. Catharines, Ontario, is the largest daily newspaper in Niagara. It has published continuously since 1891. Its focus is local news, and it includes national and international news, sports, entertainment and lifestyle ...
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The Standard (Philippines), or The Manila Standard, a daily newspaper in the Philippines; The Port Melbourne Standard, earlier The Standard (Port Melbourne), a defunct Australian weekly; The San Francisco Standard, online news site; St. Catharines Standard has a masthead name of The Standard, a daily newspaper published in St. Catharines ...
CKTB (610 kHz) is a commercial radio station in St. Catharines, Ontario.It is owned by Golden Horseshoe Broadcasting and airs a news-talk radio format.Its studios are on Yates Street in downtown St. Catharines, in the former mansion of William Hamilton Merritt, the main promoter of the first Welland Canal.
The Daily News Brands division primarily comprises the Toronto Star and its associated properties, including Torstar Syndication Services. The division also owns The Hamilton Spectator, the Waterloo Region Record, the St. Catharines Standard, the Niagara Falls Review, the Welland Tribune, and the Peterborough Examiner.
At the time of his retirement in 1991, the St. Catharines Standard sports department unveiled the Jack Gatecliff Award which is presented to the area person judged to have demonstrated an especially high level of dedication to sports. [6] He was awarded the Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award by the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1995. [12]
1988 National Newspaper Award for Sports Writing, St. Catharines Standard, for a feature story on Hap Emms and his family. [12] 1990 Western Ontario Newspaper Award for News Feature, St. Catharines Standard, for an article on the stress suffered by police who investigate their colleagues. [13]
In 2024, a totem pole in a St. Catharines park was restored and relocated inside the Canada Games Park as it was the only local building with a high enough ceiling for it. The total cost of the project was $188,875.