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Samakalika Malayalam Vaarika: Weekly Print The New Indian Express: Risala Weekly: Weekly Print Islamic Publishing Bureau Sunni Students Federation: Ezhuthu Chinthikkunna Hrudayangalkku: Monthly Print Loyola Research Institute of Peace and International Relations Vachakam : Weekly Print & Online Vachakam News Ltd.
Rajyasamacharam was the first newspaper in Malayalam. This was started by Hermann Gundert under the Christian missionaries of Basel Mission in June 1847 from Illikkunnu in Thalassery. Pashchimodayam was the second newspaper in Malayalam. It started in October 1847 from Thalassery.
The Utkala Deepika was the first Odia printed newspaper. [1] The weekly paper was started on 4 August 1866 () by Gourishankar Ray and Babu Bichitrananda Das. Therefore, 4 August is celebrated as Odia Journalism Day. [2] This weekly was instrumental in campaigning of bringing all Odia speaking tracts under a single province in India to develop ...
It is the first newspaper in India using free software. [1] Originally started in 1947 as a weekly magazine from Quilon to propagate the news and views of the party, on 16 November 1953 it was converted as a daily newspaper. The first editor was N. Gopinathan Nair (alias Velya Gopi) and the first manager R. Gopinathan Nair (alias Kochu Gopi).
Circulation figures try to estimate the number of copies sold, while readership figures are usually higher as they tend to estimate the number of people who actually read the newspaper. Typically, readership tends to be 2.5 times circulation, though this may be higher or lower depending on individual cases.
Sakala is an Indian newspaper of Odia language which is published daily from Bhubaneswar, Odisha. It is one of the fastest growing Odia newspapers in Odisha. It is published from the capital city of Bhubaneswar, as well as from Cuttack, Berhampur, Rourkela, Sambalpur, Balasore, Jajpur, Jeypore, and Angul. The first edition of this newspaper was ...
Gourishankar Ray, better known as Karmaveer Gourishankar, [1] a prominent figure amongst the makers of Modern Orissa (Odisha) as well as the savior of Odia (Oriya) language and literature, [2] who led the Save Oriya Movement during the late nineteenth century working relentlessly for the protection and preservation of the Odia language.
The Prameya (ପ୍ରମେୟ), a newspaper published in the Odia language, is the third-most read newspaper in Odia (after Sambad and Samaja). [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In 2015, it launched its own TV channel, Prameya News7 , available through satellite television.