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Unusual among daily newspapers when The Washington Times was founded, the newspaper published full color front pages in all its sections and color elements throughout. It also used ink that it advertised as being less likely to come off on the reader's hands than the type used by The Washington Post . [ 12 ]
Washington Times-Herald (1939–1954) [36] United States Daily (1926–1933) United States Telegraph (1827–1937) Washington Times (1894–1939) Washington Times-Herald (1939–1954) Waterline (published for the Naval District of Washington by the Washington Post Company) Young D.C., monthly tabloid by and about teenagers in Washington, D.C ...
In 1917, Hearst acquired the old Washington Times.It had been established in 1894 and owned successively by Congressman Charles G. Conn (1844–1931) of Elkhart, Indiana, publisher Stilson Hutchins (1838–1912, previous founder/owner of The Washington Post, 1877–1889), and most recently Frank A. Munsey (1854–1925), a financier, banker and magazine publisher known as the "Dealer in Dailies ...
In 1954, the Times-Herald was purchased by Phillip L. Graham, owner of The Washington Post. For a time, the combined paper was officially known as The Washington Post and Times-Herald. The Times-Herald portion of the nameplate became less and less prominent on a second line in ensuing years, however, and was dropped entirely in 1973.
Although the newspaper's motto is "Serving Washington and surrounding communities since 1867", the paper's history goes back to the Washington Democrat weekly, founded 1863. The Democrat changed its name to Daily Times in 1955; on June 1, 1964, it merged with the Washington Herald (not related to the Washington D.C. newspaper The Washington ...
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This week's print edition was set to publish on Wednesday and was slated to be a 16-page preview dedicated to football season at UNC's flagship campus. The newsroom of The Daily Tar Heel on Aug ...
News World Communications' best-known newspaper was The Washington Times, which the company owned from the paper's founding in 1982 until 2010, when Sun Myung Moon and a group of former Times editors purchased it from News World Communications under the company News World Media Development, which now also owns The World and I. [5]