Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Daily Times was a Nigerian newspaper with headquarters in Lagos. At its peak, in the 1970s, it was one of the most successful locally-owned businesses in Africa. [1] The paper went into decline after it was purchased by the government in 1975. What was left was sold to a private investor in 2004.
It became a daily newspaper in 1953 after merging with the Glasgow Evening Journal. [2] In 1957, the name was changed to the Glasgow Daily Times . CNHI closed the newspaper as a result of lost revenue due to the COVID-19 pandemic , one of many CNHI properties which were closed, merged with sister papers, or reduced in publication frequency.
Pages in category "Daily newspapers published in Nigeria" The following 35 pages are in this category, out of 35 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Some other areas of the Glasgow micropolitan area, including parts of Barren and Metcalfe Counties, plus Cumberland County, are served by Mediacom. Currently, no over-the-air broadcast television stations have any physical presence in Glasgow. However, ABC affiliate WBKO once operated a news bureau during the 1980s and early 1990s.
Ernest Sissei Ikoli (1893–1960) was a Nigerian politician, nationalist and pioneering journalist. He was the first editor of the Daily Times , the president of the Nigerian Youth Movement , and in 1942, represented Lagos in the Legislative Council.
Glasgow Daily Times three days a week (previously six) of Glasgow, Kentucky, closed on June 9, 2020; Grayson Journal Enquirer weekly of Grayson, Kentucky, closed and merged with The Daily Independent in May 2020; Greenup County News-Times weekly of Greenup, Kentucky, closed and merged with The Daily Independent in May 2020
Meta Platforms said on Wednesday it had removed about 63,000 accounts in Nigeria that attempted to engage in financial sexual extortion scams mostly aimed at adult men in the United States.
By 1943, a strategy to increase revenues led to the introduction of classified ads mostly covering one page. It wasn't until the establishment of two politically inspired newspapers, the West African Pilot in 1937 and the Nigerian Tribune in 1949, did newspapers began to devote more space to personality profiles.