Den (ДеньUkrainian: The Day) is a Kiev-based, centrist daily boardsheet newspaper. Founded in 1996, the paper has a circulation of about 60,000. It is linked to former defense minister Yevhen Marchuk—his wife, Larysa Ivshyna is the paper's editor. It supports Leonid Kuchma, NATO, and ties with the West, while remaining critical of the opposition. Ukrainian is an East Slavic language, one of three members of this language group, the other two being Russian and Belarusian. ... Kiev (Київ, Kyiv, in Ukrainian; Киев, Kiev, in Russian) is the capital and largest city of Ukraine, located in the north central part of the country on the Dnieper river. ... In politics, centrism usually refers to the political ideal of promoting moderate policies which land in the middle ground between different political extremes. ... 1996 is a leap year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar, and was designated the International Year for the Eradication of Poverty. ... Leonid Kuchma Leonid Danylovych Kuchma (Леонід Кучма) (born August 9, 1938) was the second President of Ukraine from July 19, 1994 to January 23, 2005. ... For the National Association of Theatre Owners, please see National Association of Theatre Owners. ... West is most commonly a noun, adjective, or adverb indicating direction or geography. ...
In the USA, a den can also be a family room or a room devoted to a parent's hobbies.
In British children's street culture, a den is concealed place, unknown to adults, where children can congregate together.
Such dens often occur naturally (e.g.: in thickets of bushes or in an abandoned structure); but are then added to with branches, sheeting and improvised seating.
Advertising revenue had never amounted to more than 10 percent of their budgets, and consequently newspapers and magazines that had just broken loose of the state and party monopoly now were obliged to beg for subsidies from the state, which meant turning to former party bureaucrats.
Newspapers for homosexuals, such as Tema, or fascist publications, such as the previously mentioned Russkoe voskresenie, or Pul's Tushina (Tushin's Pulse), are sold everywhere in Moscow, even though individual issues may be banned by the authorities.
The newspaperDen' was given space for its editorial offices at a military base and was being subsidized by army extremists, thus avoiding any effective public control.