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The Navhind Times is an English language newspaper in Goa. [2] Founded in 1963 and based in Panaji, the capital of Goa, [3] it is the largest selling newspaper, amongst the three locally published English newspapers in the state. The other two being O Heraldo (The Herald) and Gomantak Times successively. [4] [5]
Goa Today is a monthly magazine published from Panjim , the state-capital of Goa, India, since 1966, [1] [2] featuring news, literature and local issues. [3] Goa Today is considered the "grand-daddy" of all monthly magazines in Goa. [4] It was founded by Francisco Damasceno do Rosario Dantas and former joint-editor of Navhind Times, Lambert ...
English-language newspapers in Goa comprise: O Heraldo (The Herald), Goa's oldest newspaper, formerly a Portuguese language daily owned by the family of Raul Fernandes (Herald Publications Pvt Ltd), a local printing enterprise that grew out of a stationery shop; The Navhind Times, published by the former mining house of the Dempos since 1963 ...
India has the second-largest newspaper market in the world, with daily newspapers reporting a combined circulation of over 240 million copies as of 2018. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] There are publications produced in each of the 22 scheduled languages of India and in many of the other languages spoken throughout the country .
The Times of India has recently started publication from Goa itself, serving the local population news directly from the state capital. Among the list of officially accredited newspapers are O Heraldo , The Navhind Times and The Gomantak Times in English; Bhaangar Bhuin in Konkani (Devanagari script); and Tarun Bharat , Gomantak , Navprabha ...
On 24 April 2015, the Dalgado Konknni Akademi (DKA) marked Konkani Cinema Day by launching a new edition of their in-house magazine.The magazine, curated and edited by Vincy Quadros, the secretary of DKA, and a team of editors including Esteves, Menino Almeida, and Walter Menezes, was unveiled by Francis D'Souza, the then-Deputy Chief Minister of Goa.
Mascarenhas also contributed to India's freedom movement. [5] He authored the Goan Tribune, which was dedicated to the cause of Goa's liberation. [6] While at the Goan Tribune, he wrote numerous articles against the Portuguese colonial regime in Goa and caught the attention of both Indian leaders as well as the Portuguese regime.
Lambert Mascarenhas, author of the novel Sorrowing Lies My Land (1955); editor of the Goan Tribune; founder editor of Goa Today, former editor of The Navhind Times; won the State Cultural award. [5] Leopoldo da Gama, Goan journalist and founder of the weekly Portuguese newspaper "A Convicção". [5]