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The Bidayuh of Bukar had a unique tradition of hanging the bodies of the dead on trees and leaving them to rot away. The skeletons are left on trees as a reminder of the dead. The tradition is rarely practiced nowadays. [5] The Bidayuh or Klemantan celebrate Gawai Padi (Paddy Festival) [9] or Gawai Adat Naik Dingo (Paddy Storing Festival). [10]
Daily News was founded by Saeng Hetrakul [] when he purchased the defunct Krung Thep Daily Mail [] newspaper (Thai edition of the Bangkok Daily Mail) which has ceased publication in 1932 and relaunched it as Daily Mail Monday (Thai: เดลิเมล์วันจันทร์) it was first published weekly and then as a daily.
The Washington Daily News was owned by the E. W. Scripps Company and published by the Washington Daily News Publishing Company. [2] The newspaper was born on November 8, 1921, and competed with four established local daily newspapers, the Washington Post, the Washington Times (not to be confused with the current Washington Times), the Washington Herald, and the Washington Star (The Evening Star).
[15] Hill Rag: 1976 Monthly print, online daily; Capital Community News Capitol Hill OCLC 39308468, LCCN sn98062538 [16] [11] [6] The InTowner: 1968 Dupont Circle, Logan Circle and Adams Morgan: OCLC 13435461, LCCN sn86001289 [11] [6] [13] MidcityDC: Daily online, Monthly in print, Capital Community News Mid-City [17] The Southwester: 1968
On June 16, 2010, the Futrell family announced the sale of the Washington Daily News to Washington Newsmedia LLC, a new company affiliated Boone Newspapers, Inc. of Tuscaloosa, Alabama. [6] Boone Newspapers also owns the Tryon Daily Bulletin , The Stanley News and Press , the Salisbury Post , The Coastland Times , The Roanoke-Chowan News-Herald ...
The corporate ancestors of Knight Ridder were Knight Newspapers, Inc. and Ridder Publications, Inc. The first company was founded by John S. Knight upon inheriting control of the Akron Beacon Journal from his father, Charles Landon Knight, in 1933; the second company was founded by Herman Ridder when he acquired the New Yorker Staats-Zeitung, a German language newspaper, in 1892.
Content is shared across titles within the Washington Post Company. [1] The daily Washington Times and the free weekly Washington City Paper also have readership in the District. On February 1, 2005, the free daily tabloid Washington Examiner debuted, having been formed from a chain of suburban newspapers known as the Journal Newspapers.
Sing Sian Yer Pao Daily News (Thai: ซิงเสียนเยอะเป้า) formerly Sing Sian Yer Pao [nb 1] is a Thai newspaper that is published in Chinese language. During its peak Sing Sian Yer Pao sold 600,000 copies a day and was known as the "Chinese Thairath".