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The front page of Manila Bulletin, when it was still known as Bulletin Today, on the day after Benigno Aquino Jr.'s assassination Former logo used from 1991 to 2019. Manila Bulletin was founded on February 2, 1900 by Carlson Taylor as a shipping journal. In 1957, the newspaper was acquired by Swiss expatriate Hans Menzi.
Manila Bulletin [1] English [2] Daily broadsheet [3] National [2] Manila Standard: English: Daily broadsheet: National The Manila Times [1] English: Daily broadsheet: National The Market Monitor: English: Business weekly: National Philippine Daily Inquirer [4] [1] English [2] Daily broadsheet [3] National [2] The Philippine Star [1] English [2 ...
The first issue of The Manila Times on October 11, 1898, had a sheet of two leaves, or four pages, measuring about 12 by 8 inches, each page divided into two columns. The first page was taken up by announcements and advertisements. Page 2 was the editorial page. It contained the editorials and the more important news of the day.
This is a list of newspapers published in Metro Manila. Metro Manila has four major English-language daily papers: the Manila Bulletin, The Manila Times, the Philippine Daily Inquirer, and The Philippine Star. [1] [2]
The Manila Shimbun (まにら新聞), officially called The Daily Manila Shimbun (日刊まにら新聞, Nikkan Manira Shinbun), is a daily newspaper in the Philippines written in the Japanese language. Established in May 1992 as a broadsheet, it is Southeast Asia's first modern-day daily Japanese-language newspaper. [1]
Money: Stock market today: Meta Platforms rallies as most of Wall Street ticks higher; Tech: Meta agrees to pay $25 million to settle lawsuit from Trump after Jan. 6 suspension; Science: NASA's 2 stuck astronauts take their first spacewalk together; Health: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. makes his final plea before senators as a key vote hangs in the ...
The logo used from 2005 to 2015 as Manila Standard Today. The Manila Standard was founded on February 11, 1987. [1] The offices were then located at the bustling Ayala Avenue in the Makati CBD. [2] In 1989, the group of Andres Soriano III bought out the Elizalde group and renamed the company Kagitingan Publications and relocated the offices in ...
Inquirer's longest-serving and first woman editor-in-chief, the late Letty Jimenez-Magsanoc, [6] was appointed on June 14, 1991. She was a former columnist and editor of the Panorama Sunday magazine of Bulletin Today (now Manila Bulletin) who was sacked for writing articles poking fun at Marcos.