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The Frederick News-Post : ウィキペディア英語版
Frederick News-Post

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''The Frederick News-Post'' is the local newspaper of Frederick County, Maryland. Ever since a massive televised, radio, print and sign media campaign〔(Frederick News Post Commercial – YouTube )〕 began referring to it as The FNP, others have begun to do so as well. In addition to discussing local news, the newspaper addresses international, national, and regional news. The paper publishes seven days a week and had weekday paid circulation of 33,082 and Sunday paid circulation of 34,602 in 2011.〔(AAM: Total Circ for Newspapers )〕
==History==
On October 15, 1883, a Frederick printing company first published ''The News'', an evening newspaper that would eventually become ''The Frederick News-Post''. William T. Delaplaine, grandfather of the current president of Great Southern, began his business career in Frederick in 1880 when he opened a small printing shop. He expanded the operation by establishing the first daily newspaper in Frederick, ''The News'', in October 1883. The business was incorporated in June 1888.
A competing daily newspaper, ''The Frederick Post'', began publication in December 1910, and several years later was purchased by Great Southern, which remained a family-owned business. Surviving members of the third generation of the founder are Mr. Delaplaine and Mrs. Frances A. Randall, and fourth-generation members are involved in the businesses.
In 1916, through a business deal, ''The News'' acquired rival paper ''The Frederick Post'', publishing ''The News'' in the evenings and ''The Frederick Post'' in the morning.
In 2002, the two papers were merged to create a single morning edition known as ''The Frederick News-Post''. The Sunday edition created in October of that year created a true daily paper published 365 days a year.
The paper has been controlled by the same family since it was founded.
In 2004, publisher George E. Randall died. He was a fourth-generation descendant of the founder. His brother, Myron Randall, Junior was named president and publisher. William B. Randall, Myron Randall's son and a fifth-generation family member, joined the company.〔(The Frederick News-Post : Customer Service )〕
In April 2008, ''The News-Post'' moved into a new building, with a new high-speed, six-tower TKS press capable of printing 70,000 copies an hour.〔(I don't work here – The Frederick News-Post : Archive )〕〔(Up and running – The Frederick News-Post : Archive )〕
In early November 2008, Randall Family LLC, publisher of ''The Frederick News-Post'', laid off 17 employees, four from the newsroom. The total layoffs represented about 7% of the company's workforce, and were the result of a dramatic drop in advertising revenue over the preceding two years. It was the first time in company history that layoffs had been issued.〔(The News-Post lays off 16 employees – The Frederick News-Post : Archive )〕
In 2009, ''The Frederick News-Post'' suspended its Monday edition, making the paper available six days a week.〔(Military Intelligence Army to assess soldiers' mental health – The Frederick News-Post : Archive )〕 Employees were forced to take five-day furloughs, and the company reduced its pension benefits to employees.
In 2011, ''The News-Post'' named Geordie Wilson as publisher. Wilson previously had served as publisher of the ''Concord Monitor'' of Concord, New Hampshire, and as publisher of the ''Monadnock Ledger'' (now the ''Monadnock Ledger-Transcript'') of Peterborough, New Hampshire. Myron Randall remained president of Randall Family LLC.〔(News-Post names a new publisher – The Frederick News-Post : Archive )〕
In 2012, ''The News-Post'' resumed Monday publication, citing subscriber demand. The revived Monday edition had a tabloid format, as opposed to the larger broadsheet format used by the paper the rest of the week, and it had a business and sports focus.〔(News-Post to bring back Monday paper – The Frederick News-Post : Archive )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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