This week in Canadian media history: Montreal Herald stops publication after 146 years
Herald was founded by William Gray and made its first appearance on Oct. 19, 1811.
Herald was founded by William Gray and made its first appearance on Oct. 19, 1811.
Canadian major news outlets devoted significant space to the latest confirmed U.S. case of Ebola on Wednesday.
ISIS held its place in Canadian headlines but shared the spotlight with a recent report on the Catholic Church.
With the latest case of Ebola confirmed in the U.S., Canadian media looked inward to see if our health-care system is ready to handle the disease.
Canadians caught in a Nepalese avalanche led the headlines of many major news outlets Friday.
“Montreal Letter” was one of the first columns written by a female writer in Canada
International headlines focused on continued Ebola coverage for some Canadian outlets, while others looked to the Catholic Church’s new text on homosexuals and family life.
The world takes a look on how to keep Ebola at bay, while Oscar Pistorius is sentenced to five years behind bars.
The Gazette is the second Postmedia newspaper to implement the company’s bold, four-platform strategy with unique content for print, online, tablet and smartphone readers.
The five-year sentence of Oscar Pistorius led the world section of many Canadian news outlets Wednesday.