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Montreal Gazette
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The Montreal Gazette is the only English-language metropolitan daily newspaper left in the province of Quebec, Canada. It is one of the oldest newspapers in North America, founded in 1778 as a French-language journal. It became bilingual shortly after, and changed to an English-language paper in 1822. It's daily circulation today is about 142,000 in Canada's second largest city where there are about 419,000 Anglophones in a metropolitan population of about 3.5 million
Montreal Gazette’s Roberto Rocha writes about the effervescent Montreal Web ecosystem today and the Praized team is featured. Excerpts: But now Montreal is witnessing an Internet renaissance. New Web companies are sprouting up and venture-capital firms and “angel” investors who fund early-stage ideas are starting to pay attention, sowing the seeds of a new economic sector in the city.
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The Montreal Gazette featured a photo of the Shine models from the Montreal LG Shine launch at Birks in the centre of the business section. The article goes on to discuss the exclusive unveil of the new LG Shine Gold and its aesthetic features.
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The Montreal Gazette seems to have departed from Canwest's principled policy regarding appropriating the "terror" word by editing out the emotive word from Canwest copy. See HonestReporting Canada's latest communique by clicking below.
For two days last week, many reporters at The Gazette in Montreal removed their names from the articles they wrote. It was a protest against the decision by Southam News to force all of its 12** major metropolitan newspapers to run "national editorials" written at the Winnipeg corporate headquarters of parent company CanWest Global Communications Corp. The first was published last week. Another is to run Thursday (Dec. 13).
The Montreal Gazette – February 26, 2003 – Robin Poole, scientific director of the Canadian Arthritis Network, has developed a simple blood test that measures chemical "biomarkers" of arthritis. The test detects the presence of the enzyme that destroys the lining between bones, and will make it easier and faster for doctors to predict whether a patient is likely to develop the disease and to assess its progress.
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