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The first issue was titled the Chapel Hill Sun and was sold for $0.25 each. [3] The title was later changed to The Sun. Readership was about 1000 for roughly the first decade [2] and has now increased to more than 70,000. [1] Safransky describes the magazine as one "that honors the mystery at the heart of existence."
This is a list of online newspaper archives and some magazines and journals, including both free and pay wall blocked digital archives. Most are scanned from microfilm into pdf , gif or similar graphic formats and many of the graphic archives have been indexed into searchable text databases utilizing optical character recognition (OCR) technology.
The following list of Canadian magazines is sorted by their circulation totals, as of the first half of 2012, according to data from the Alliance for Audited Media (then the Audit Bureau of Circulations): [26]
The tabloid Sun was first published on 17 November 1969, with a front page headlined "HORSE DOPE SENSATION", an ephemeral "exclusive". [29] An editorial on page 2 announced: "Today's Sun is a new newspaper. It has a new shape, new writers, new ideas. But it inherits all that is best from the great traditions of its predecessors. The Sun cares ...
In February 2018 The Sun's 40-year dominance at the top of the circulation charts was eclipsed by the free Metro newspaper for the first time. [8] In May 2020 the Audit Bureau of Circulations , which records and audits sales, stated that monthly publication of circulation figures would no longer be automatic, as publishers were concerned that ...
British Society of Magazine Editors; List of 18th-century British periodicals; List of 19th-century British periodicals; List of early-20th-century British children's magazines and annuals; List of magazines published in Scotland; List of newspapers in the United Kingdom
Scandal sheets were the precursors to tabloid journalism. Around 1770, scandal sheets appeared in London, and in the United States as early as the 1840s. [4] Reverend Henry Bate Dudley was the editor of one of the earliest scandal sheets, The Morning Post, which specialized in printing malicious society gossip, selling positive mentions in its pages, and collecting suppression fees to keep ...
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 ...