Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Manchester Evening News (MEN) is a regional daily newspaper covering Greater Manchester in North West England, founded in 1868.It is published Monday–Saturday; a Sunday edition, the MEN on Sunday, was launched in February 2019. [3]
Manchester Evening Chronicle; Manchester Evening News; Manchester Examiner; Manchester Gazette; Manchester Mercury; Manchester Metro News; Manchester Observer; Manchester Times; The Mancunion; The Mill (newspaper) Mule (newspaper)
Chris Boardman, the Greater Manchester Cycling and Walking Commissioner published documents in 2017 setting out plans. [3] The project would include 121 kilometres (75 mi) of segregated cycling lanes, brand new electric buses, around 2,900 kilometres (1,800 mi) of new dedicated walking and cycling routes, 2,400 new road crossings and a new cycle hire scheme throughout the region.
From 2004 until July 2009, the station's flagship programme was the 5pm weeknight edition of Channel M News (produced in conjunction with the Manchester Evening News), which later expanded to include breakfast, [6] lunchtime [7] and late evening bulletins as well as a weekly review programme and occasional live specials.
Another publisher is The Manchester Gazette, an online news organisation covering the City and 10 Boroughs of Greater Manchester. A new addition is Business Manchester, a good news business only website, catering for the Greater Manchester business community, which has caught the attention of circa 20,000 business readers in the region.
The sale eroded the connection between The Guardian and Manchester as the sale of the Manchester Evening News was included in the package. [9] The division's local television station for Greater Manchester, Channel M, and two newspapers in Woking were not included in the sale.
The Manchester Theatre Awards were established in 2011 to replace the Manchester Evening News Theatre Awards.The MEN awards, created in 1981 by Alan Hulme, the paper's theatre critic, had long been recognised as the most important theatrical prize-giving outside London and were an important part of the Greater Manchester theatrical calendar.
Amongst the local political parties, the leader of the Liberal Democrat group on Manchester City Council publicly declared his support for the proposals, [43] whilst the Manchester Evening News reported that many Labour politicians were "quietly opposed to change". [43]