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Philadelphia Bulletin ceases publication

The Bulletin, a Philadelphia daily newspaper that developed a loyal following as a strident conservative voice in the region, folded yesterday, employees confirmed.

The Bulletin, a Philadelphia daily newspaper that developed a loyal following as a strident conservative voice in the region, folded yesterday, employees confirmed.

Around 4:15 p.m., about 25 employees were called together at the newspaper's office at 1500 Walnut St. They were told by publisher Thomas G. Rice that the paper could no longer afford to operate, employees said. Yesterday's issue was the last.

In an e-mail last night, Rice said he did not want to comment.

Meredith Cunningham, 24, who laid out sports pages, said the staff had not been paid on time for several months. Employees were not paid last week, Cunningham said.

Jenny DeHuff, 27, the city reporter, said she was stunned but not surprised by the announcement. She said she was working on a story at home when she received a text message from a colleague saying, essentially: You heard? We're done.

Rice started the paper in 2004 after paying for the right to use the Bulletin name from the family that published the original Evening Bulletin, which shut down in 1982 after decades as the dominant newspaper in the city.

The new Bulletin featured the original's famous slogan, "In Philadelphia Nearly Everybody Reads the Bulletin."

It also used the Latin phrase "Res Ipsa Loquitur," which means, "The thing speaks for itself."

The newspaper had mainly straightforward coverage of some local issues, but was heavily dominated by wire stories that could be viewed as critical of liberals. Its commentary pages included syndicated columns by Chuck Norris, Oliver North, and Patrick J. Buchanan.

The newspaper was noticeably lacking in advertisements. "How do you run a newspaper without any ads?" Cunningham asked.

Brian P. Tierney, publisher of The Inquirer, said he was not aware of any confirmed circulation figures for the Bulletin, though its loyalists claimed 100,000 readers.

Tierney, who was upset by the Bulletin's coverage of the bankruptcy of Philadelphia Newspapers L.L.C., which owns The Inquirer, said nonetheless that he was "always sorry to see somebody go through the problems that they were going through and see the publication cease."

DeHuff, though stunned by her sudden unemployment, said she was appreciative of the opportunity she had as a young journalist at the Bulletin.

"Tom Rice gave me my first job in journalism in Philadelphia - an amazing opportunity that allowed me to work with the mayor and be constantly in and out of City Hall," she said. "I'm very lucky."