Newspaper

A newspaper was a printed publication that contained news articles written by reporters.

A newspaper published issues regularly, most often daily or weekly. Pages were folded together, rather than stapled, did not have a cover, and were larger than a book or magazine.

In the 22nd century, newspapers could be output from a personal printer. 

Newspaper media survived into the 24th century. Reporter Edmund Atkinson worked for The Times for at least 30 years. .

Also in the 24th century, Starfleet Academy published a newspaper. 

History
In the 1930s of a timeline he altered when time traveling through the Guardian of Forever and saving the life of Edith Keeler, the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701)'s Doctor Leonard McCoy awaited the arrival of James T. Kirk and Spock. When they didn't come, he followed her advice and placed classified ads in several New York City newspapers, including the The New York Times, The World, and The Star Dispatch, in hopes that his messages would guide his friends in the 23rd century. After five months, he expanded his ad placements into newspapers throughout the state of New York, then to other American daily papers, and then to international cities. He also visited the New York Public Library and scoured papers published in Baltimore, Boston, San Francisco, Washington, D.C., Great Britain, France, Ireland, Argentina, Switzerland and Italy. On one day, he searched the classified sections of The Philadelphia Enquirer, The Times-Picayune, The New York Times, and Italy's Corriere della Sera for reply messages. After receiving no response after two years, he gave up and moved out of the 21st Street Mission in New York City. 

Also in March 1930, Spock reviewed editions of various newspapers through his tricorder to locate a divergence in the flow of time. It displayed conflicting accounts on the life of Edith Keeler. A February 23, 1936 edition of one paper displayed the headline "FDR Confers With Slum Angel 'Angel'." Yet in another paper he read about her dying in an automobile accident. 

In 1986, San Francisco area newspapers covered the release of humpback whales George and Gracie. A more sensational publication featured the story "Aliens Land in Golden Gate Park", containing interviews with a garbageman, joggers, and someone who had spotted a helicopter lowering a glass panel into nothingness. On page three, that edition reported the growth of a new kidney by a woman at Mercy Hospital. A follow-up story was headlined "Military Coverup, Alien Spacecraft Sighted In Alaskan Waters. Fisherman Almost Captured." (SS TOS (Whales Weep Not))

In 2052, the San Diego Chronicle extensively covered Earth's first beaming of a chimpanzee,. 

Henry Archer kept copies of old newspapers. In 2123, Jonathan Archer recalled having seen an image of Dr. Lily Sloane in one of them. (SS ENT (A Girl for Every Star))

In 2266, Space News reported on the first press conference given by revived 20th century celebrity Alfred Bleikoff at the Taj Mahal. 

In 2268, during a mission to Melkot, a landing party from the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) saw the October 26, 1881 edition of the Tombstone Epitaph. 

Detective Dixon Hill read newspapers, or at least Jean-Luc Picard thought he did. (SS TNG (The Monkey Puzzle Box))

In 2370, during his last year at Starfleet Academy, Harry Kim wrote an article for the Academy's newspaper. 

In 2371, Montgomery Scott was featured during a live broadcast of  when an emergency occurred during a training mission. (SS TOS (Terra Tonight))


 * Star Trek authors Michelle A. Bottrall, Kevin Dilmore, Robert T. Jeschonek, Kevin Lauderdale, Andy Mangels, J.R. Rasmussen, and Brian Seidman have written newspaper articles, having worked either as a reporter, editor and/or freelance writer.


 * Editor Paula M. Block's first exposure to Star Trek fandom came from seeing an ad in her university's school newspaper. (Biography, Strange New Worlds I)


 * Twenty Star Trek stories set in the 2270s were published in daily newspapers in the US Comic Strips series from 1979-1983.

Newspapers

 * Albany Times-Union (1857-, New York)
 * Amsterdam News (1909-, New York)
 * Atlanta Constitution (1886- Atlanta)
 * Corriere della Sera/The Evening Courier (1876-, Italy)
 * New York Age (1887-1960, New York)
 * The New York Times (1851-, New York City)
 * The Philadelphia Enquirer (1829-, Philadelphia)
 * San Diego Chronicle (21st century, San Diego)
 * San Francisco Chronicle (1965-, San Francisco)
 * Space News (23rd century, Earth)
 * The Star Dispatch (20th century, New York City)
 * The Times-Picayune (1837-, New Orleans, Louisiana)
 * Tombstone Epitaph (Late 19th century, Tombstone, Arizona)
 * USA Today (1982-, United States of America)
 * Village Voice (1955-2018, New York City)
 * The World (1860-1931, New York City)

Appearances

 * SS ENT (A Girl for Every Star)
 * SS TOS (Terra Tonight)
 * SS TNG (The Monkey Puzzle Box)
 * SS TOS (Whales Weep Not)
 * SS ENT (A Girl for Every Star)
 * SS TOS (Terra Tonight)
 * SS TNG (The Monkey Puzzle Box)
 * SS TOS (Whales Weep Not)
 * SS TNG (The Monkey Puzzle Box)
 * SS TOS (Whales Weep Not)