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New York Daily News (200,000 daily; 260,000 Sunday) ... Staten Island Advance (daily) Street News (every six weeks) Super Express USA (daily) The Tablet (weekly)
Newhouse News Service, bearing the name of Advance Publications founder Samuel Irving Newhouse Sr., was founded in 1961 and closed in late 2008, as a cost-cutting measure due to the 2007–2008 financial crisis; based in Washington, D.C., its staff served as a national news bureau to all publications in the Advance portfolio [14]
Staten Island Advance covers news of local and community interest, including Staten Island politics. Staten Island Advance is the namesake and nominal flagship publication of Advance Publications . As of April 25, 2007, the newspaper's weekday circulation was down 3.9% from 2006, to 59,461, and its Sunday circulation dropped 4.6% from 2006, to ...
The company is named after the Staten Island Advance, the first newspaper owned by the Newhouse family, in which Sam Newhouse bought a controlling interest in 1922. [3]On August 25, 2018, Advance/Newhouse ("A/N") notified Charter Communications that it intended to establish a credit facility collateralized by a portion of Advance/Newhouse Common Units in Charter Communications Holdings, LLC. [4]
Weiss, Harry B. A Graphic Summary of the Growth of Newspapers in New York and Other States, 1704–1810. New York: New York Public Library, 1948; Brigham, Clarence S. "Bibliography of American Newspapers, 1690–1820 Part VII: New York (A–L)." Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 27(1): 177–274. 1917
In February of the following year Hoffman launched a Sunday edition, the Long Island Sunday Press. Later in 1932 the Ridders sold their controlling interest in the Press to Samuel I. Newhouse, [7] who also owned the Staten Island Advance. In June 1938, Newhouse acquired the Press ' main competitor, the Long Island Daily-Star Journal.
In February 2004, Elauwit sold the Register to Staten Island Media Group, LLC, run by Daniel Duman's York Street Partners, in 2004. The paper ceased publication in December 2005. [1] At least partial collections of the paper are available in the New York Public Library Main Branch and the New York State Library in Albany.
The Post-Standard building in downtown Syracuse. The Post-Standard is a newspaper serving the greater Syracuse, New York, metro area.Published by Advance Publications, it and sister website Syracuse.com are among the consumer brands of Advance Media New York, alongside NYUp.com and The Good Life: Central New York magazine.