Newspapers published in Montreal :
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24 Hours (newspaper)
24 Hours and 24 Heures (sometimes stylized as 24H) is a chain of free daily
newspapers published in Canada by Sun Media, a subsidiary of Quebecor Media.
Five different English editions are published in Toronto, Vancouver, Ottawa,
Calgary, and Edmonton, and a French edition is published in Montreal.
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Les Affaires
Les Affaires is a French language weekly business newspaper, based in Montreal,
Quebec, Canada. It is owned by Transcontinental Media.
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L’aut’journal
L’aut’journal (ISSN 0833-8965) is a French language newspaper distributed in
Quebec freely and through subscription. It was founded in 1984 by political
scientist and journalist Pierre Dubuc, and as of 2004 has a circulation of
35,000 copies.
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Il Cittadino Canadese
Il Cittadino Canadese is a newspaper based in Montreal, Quebec. Founded in 1941,
it is the oldest Italian language newspaper of Quebec and Canada.
This weekly tabloid has a circulation of 18,000. It is published in Montréal and
covers Greater Montreal.
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Das Echo
Das Echo is a monthly German language newspaper based in Montreal, Quebec,
Canada.
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Le Délit français
Le Délit français, also known as Le Délit, is an independent francophone
newspaper on the McGill University campus, in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Serving
McGill University's francophone-student minority, Le Délit is a sister
publication to the English-language The McGill Daily.
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Le Devoir
Le Devoir is a French-language newspaper published in Montreal and distributed
in Quebec and the rest of Canada. It was founded by journalist, politician, and
nationalist Henri Bourassa in 1910.
In recent times, Le Devoir has favoured sovereignty for Quebec and social
democracy. It is noted for being the only independent large-circulation
newspaper in Quebec and in Canada amongst a market dominated by the media
conglomerates of Gesca Limitée (including La Presse) and Quebecor (including Le
Journal de Montréal).
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The Gazette (Montreal)
The Gazette, often called the Montreal Gazette to avoid ambiguity, is the only
English-language daily newspaper published in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, with
three other daily English newspapers all having shut down at different times
during the second half of the 20th century.
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Hour (magazine)
Hour is an English-language urban news magazine published in Montreal, Quebec,
Canada, by Communications Voir. Its president-publisher is Pierre Paquet, the
editor-in-chief is Jamie O'Meara. It caters to Montreal's anglophone community
and is published every Thursday. The news features "expose readers to new ideas
and alternative policies". News coverage centers on film, arts, and nightlife.
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Le Journal de Montréal
Le Journal de Montréal is a daily tabloid newspaper published in Montreal,
Quebec, Canada, and is the largest-circulation French-language newspaper in
North America. Established by Pierre Péladeau in 1964, it is owned by the Sun
Media division of Quebecor Media. It is also Canada's largest tabloid newspaper.
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The Link (newspaper)
The Link is an independent student newspaper at Concordia University. It was
founded in 1980 as a merger between The Georgian, representing Sir George
Williams University, and The Loyola News, representing Loyola College, when they
merged to form Concordia University. The Link was so called because it was meant
to link both campuses.
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McGill Tribune
The McGill Tribune is a campus newspaper published by the Students' Society of
McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It has a circulation of 11,000
between McGill's downtown and Macdonald campuses. It publishes once a week on
Tuesdays, and it has News, Opinion, Features, Arts & Entertainment and Sports
sections.
Although the Tribune is published by the Students' Society of McGill University,
it retains editorial autonomy from the organization. In March 2010, following a
student referendum, the Tribune is now independent of SSMU, which will take
effect in the 2010-2011 school year.
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The McGill Daily
The McGill Daily is a campus newspaper created and run by students of McGill
University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The paper was first published in 1911.
The paper was originally published daily, but is now issued twice a week. It
began as a broadsheet that covered mainly sports and it retained the broadsheet
format for many years, but it now publishes in the tabloid format and covers a
range of topics and genres in its pages. The paper's main sections are News,
Culture, Commentary, Health & Education, Features, Compendium!, Science &
Technology, and Sports.
The paper is generally considered a farther left voice on the McGill campus,
compared to the more centrist McGill Tribune, and the other faculty-specific
papers such as the Bull & Bear and the Plumber's Faucet.[citation needed] The
Daily generally endorses left-wing student candidates, and backs grassroots
student activism and direct action. Much of its features coverage is devoted to
issues of social justice, accessibility, and inequality. However, the paper's
longstanding policy of publishing almost all letters means that dissenting
points of view and lively debate occur within the newspaper's pages.
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The Monitor (Montreal)
The Monitor (also briefly known as the West End Chronicle) is an
English-language online newspaper based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Formerly a weekly newspaper serving the West End Montreal communities of
Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, Hampstead, Côte Saint-Luc and Montreal West, it published
its final print edition on Thursday, February 5, 2009. Launched in 1926, the
paper was bought by Transcontinental in 1996. It had a circulation of 35,000.
In order to cut costs, Transcontinental had reduced staff and attempted to share
content and design with its other publications, even briefly renaming the
Monitor the West End Chronicle, after its West Island Chronicle.
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Montreal Mirror
Montreal Mirror is an English language alternative newsweekly based in Montreal,
Quebec, Canada with a circulation of 70,000, and reaches a quarter of a million
readers per week. It is published by Communications Gratte-Ciel Ltée.
First published on June 20, 1985, the publication became a weekly in September
1989. It was bought by media giant Quebecor in 1997. The Montreal Mirror is
distributed every Thursday.
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Phoenicia (weekly)
Phoenicia (Arabic: فينيسيا pronounced féneesia in Arabic) is a Montreal-based
Canadian Lebanese / pan-Arab weekly publication that started in December 2003.
It is a trilingual newspaper (in Arabic, French and English) published every
Friday morning and distributed throughout Lebanese and Arab communities in
Montreal, Laval and South Shore (Quebec), in Ottawa (Ontario) and in Halifax
(Nova Scotia). The editor in chief is Garo Salibian. The paper is also available
in .pdf form on the Phoenicia website.
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La Presse (Canadian newspaper)
La Presse, founded in 1884, is a large-circulation French-language daily
newspaper published in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is owned today by Groupe
Gesca, a subsidiary of Power Corporation of Canada.
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Les Presses Chinoises
Les Presses Chinoises (English:The Chinese Press) is a weekly Chinese newspaper
in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The other main Chinese paper in Montreal is Sept
Days.
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Sept Days
Sept Days is a weekly Chinese newspaper in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Other
Chinese newspapers in Montreal include Les Presses Chinoises and the Luby.
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The Suburban
The Suburban is the largest English-language weekly newspaper in the province of
Quebec. It is a community newspaper based in the Montreal borough of
Saint-Laurent, and serves primarily the west-end of the city and the West Island
suburbs. The newspaper's editor-in-chief is Beryl Wajsman. Its publisher is
Michael Sochaczevski. David Solomon is Sales Manager. Its business column is
written by David Lisbona.
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Voir
Voir is a chain of francophone alternative weekly newspapers in the Canadian
province of Quebec. The newspaper publishes separate editions in Montreal,
Quebec City, Saguenay, Sherbrooke, Trois-Rivières and Gatineau, all of which
publish a mix of locally-oriented and chainwide content.
Communications Voir, the papers' publisher, also publishes the anglophone
alternative weeklies Hour in Montreal and XPress in Ottawa.
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