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Paperboy license for boys under age 14 in 1970 when girls were not allowed to deliver newspapers in New York State A paperboy for the Toronto Star in Whitby, Ontario, Canada, 1940. The paperboy occupies a prominent place in the popular memory of many countries, including the United Kingdom, United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland ...
Newspaper Prov. City/region Owner [1] Circulation (weekly total, 2013) [2] Frequency Language Notes National Post: Nat'l National Postmedia: 982,555 Tue–Sat
The Varsity, The Newspaper, The Medium , The Underground , The Mike (St. Michael's College), The Salterrae (Trinity College), The Gargoyle (University College), The Strand (Victoria College) University of Waterloo: Imprint, The Iron Warrior (Waterloo Engineering Society), mathNEWS (MathSoc) 1978, 1980, [1] 1973 [2] University of Western Ontario
Newspaper hawker. A newspaper hawker, newsboy or newsie is a street vendor of newspapers without a fixed newsstand. Related jobs included paperboy, delivering newspapers to subscribers, and news butcher, selling papers on trains. Adults who sold newspapers from fixed newsstands were called newsdealers, and are not covered here.
There were five important periods in the history of Canadian newspapers' responsible for the eventual development of the modern newspaper. These are the "Transplant Period" from 1750 to 1800, when printing and newspapers initially came to Canada as publications of government news and proclamations; followed by the "Partisan Period from 1800–1850," when individual printers and editors played ...
Alta, also known as Alberta Newspaper Group and Southern Alberta Newspapers, is one of two Canadian newspaper companies run and partially owned by David Radler, a former business partner of Conrad Black in Hollinger Inc. [1] Both Alta and Continental Newspapers are descendants of Horizon Operations (Canada) Ltd., a company Radler founded at the ...
This is a list of early Canadian newspapers. This includes newspapers in all the former colonies now a part of Canada, which published prior to the War of 1812 . The earliest Canadian newspaper was the Halifax Gazette which first published on 23 March 1752, [1] followed by other newspapers in what are now the Maritimes and Quebec .
The Peak is the independent student newspaper of Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. It is split into six major sections: News , Opinions , Features , Arts , Sports , and Humour .