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The Echo, formerly known as the Evening Echo, [3] is an Irish morning newspaper based in Cork. It is distributed throughout the province of Munster, although it is primarily read in its base city of Cork. The newspaper was founded as a broadsheet in 1892, [2] and has been published in tabloid format since 1991.
The Echo, formerly the Evening Echo, founded in 1892 in Cork, Ireland; The Echo, formerly the Tallaght Echo based in Dublin, Ireland; The Echo, a London newspaper published 1868–1905; The Echo, an evening newspaper which serves South Essex; L'Echo, a French-language financial newspaper published in Belgium; L'Écho de Paris, a daily newspaper ...
The Douglas Post – weekly magazine for Douglas, Cork [18] The Echo (owned by The Irish Times) The Mallow Star (owned by VSO Publications [19]) Midleton News [20] – A4 size fortnightly newspaper for Midleton County Cork, sister publication of Youghal News, originally free, now retails for one euro
Published as The Cork Examiner from 1841 until 1996, the newspaper was renamed The Examiner in 1996. Since 2000 it has been published as The Irish Examiner, to appeal to a wider national readership. [10] The newspaper, along with 'sister paper' the Evening Echo, [11] was part of the Thomas Crosbie Holdings group.
Reach plc publishes many newspapers, magazines and news websites. This list of Reach plc titles is a non-exhaustive list of these. Before 2018, Reach plc was known as Trinity Mirror plc. [ 1 ]
Through its partnership with the Evening Echo, [16] an award-winning regional newspaper in Cork, [17] Feis Maitiú Corcaigh has garnered a media profile that few other festivals in the Federation enjoy. The newspaper carries daily reports from the festival, and prints an annual supplement containing photographs from throughout the event.
Salman Rushdie was so stunned when a masked man started to stab him on a stage in western New York that the author didn’t even try to fight back, a prosecutor said Monday during opening ...
He also worked for a number of now-defunct British Sunday papers, including the Sunday Graphic, Empire News, Reynolds’ News, and Sunday Dispatch. In the early 1970s he moved to the Sunday Mirror as Irish sports editor, while remaining based in Dublin, and wrote a regular column for the Cork Evening Echo.