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From 2002 to 2008, The Sun was a printed daily newspaper distributed in New York City. [3] [4] It debuted on April 16, 2002, claiming descent from, and adopting the name, motto, and masthead of, the earlier New York paper The Sun (1833–1950). [5] It became the first general-interest broadsheet newspaper to be started in New York City in ...
The " Great Moon Hoax ", also known as the " Great Moon Hoax of 1835 " was a series of six articles published in The Sun (a New York newspaper), beginning on August 25, 1835, about the supposed discovery of life and civilization on the Moon. The discoveries were falsely attributed to Sir John Herschel and his fictitious companion Andrew Grant.
The New York Times, the Daily News, and the New York Post were the subject of a strike in 1978, [47] allowing emerging newspapers to leverage halted coverage. [48] The Times deliberately avoided coverage of the AIDS epidemic, running its first front-page article in May 1983.
The Chief (public service weekly) City & State (public service bi-weekly) Columbia Daily Spectator (weekly) Crain's New York Business (weekly) Der Blatt (Yiddish-language weekly) Der Yid (Yiddish-language weekly) Duo Wei Times (Chinese-language) El Diario La Prensa (Spanish-language daily) Empire State News (daily)
The Sun was a New York newspaper published from 1833 until 1950. It was considered a serious paper, [2] like the city's two more successful broadsheets, The New York Times and the New York Herald Tribune. The Sun was the first successful penny daily newspaper in the United States, and was for a time, the most successful newspaper in America. [3 ...
John Swinton (1829–1901) John Swinton (1829–1901) was a Scottish-American journalist, newspaper publisher, and orator.Although he arguably gained his greatest influence as the chief editorial writer of The New York Times during the decade of the 1860s, Swinton is best remembered as the namesake of John Swinton's Paper, one of the most prominent American labor newspapers of the 1880s.
The company was founded by Henry Jarvis Raymond and George Jones in New York City. The first edition of the newspaper The New York Times, published on September 18, 1851, stated: "We publish today the first issue of the New-York Daily Times, and we intend to issue it every morning (Sundays excepted) for an indefinite number of years to come."
The New York Times' former opinion section editor James Bennet, in light of the paper's Tom Cotton controversy, also disagreed, arguing that by catering to a partisan readership and an influx of new journalists focusing on digital content the New York Times under A.G. Sulzberger had taken on an "illiberal bias".