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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 16 January 2025. Scheduled publication of information about current events A girl reading a 21 July 1969 copy of The Washington Post reporting on the Apollo 11 Moon landing Journalism News Writing style (Five Ws) Ethics and standards (code of ethics) Culture Objectivity News values Attribution Defamation ...
Portrait of founder Louis N. Hammerling, ca.1912. The American Association of Foreign Language Newspapers was founded by Louis Nicholas Hammerling in 1908. [1] It served as an intermediary between "respectable national advertisers", and the foreign-language newspapers that profited from publishing advertisements. [2]
Yiddish-language newspapers published in the United States (1 C, 4 P) Pages in category "Non-English-language newspapers published in the United States" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
The laws stated that newspapers must translate all printed material concerning the war. The German papers nearly all folded in World War I, and after 1950 the other ethnic groups had largely dropped foreign language papers. [94] This drop of foreign-press publications during World War I was not only felt by German-Americans.
List of newspapers serving cities over 100,000 in the United States; Foreign language. List of French-language newspapers published in the United States; List of German-language newspapers published in the United States; List of Spanish-language newspapers published in the United States; Specialty. List of African-American newspapers in the ...
The history of American journalism began in 1690, when Benjamin Harris published the first edition of "Public Occurrences, Both Foreign and Domestic" in Boston. Harris had strong trans-Atlantic connections and intended to publish a regular weekly newspaper along the lines of those in London, but he did not get prior approval and his paper was suppressed after a single edition. [1]
An international Arabic-language edition called Al Ahram al Duwali has been published daily in London since 1984. It is printed in both London and Paris and is distributed throughout Europe, USA, Canada and Egypt. Two foreign-language weekly versions are also produced: the English Al-Ahram Weekly (founded in 1991) and the French Al-Ahram Hebdo.
Le Figaro (French: [lə fiɡaʁo] ⓘ) is a French daily morning newspaper founded in 1826. It was named after Figaro, a character in a play by polymath Beaumarchais (1732–1799); one of his lines became the paper's motto: "Without the freedom to criticise, there is no flattering praise".