Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The name Oneida Daily Dispatch now refers to the three-times-per-week print edition; the newspaper is produced Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Sundays. [4] The paper shares material with sister publications The Record, in Troy, The Saratogian and The Daily Freeman in Kingston, as well as other upstate New York newspapers. [8] [9] [10] [11]
The Observer-Dispatch (The O-D) is a newspaper serving the Utica-Rome metropolitan area in Central New York, circulating in Oneida County, Herkimer County, and parts of Madison County. Based in Utica, New York , the publication is owned by Gannett .
This is a list of newspapers published by Digital First Media, the successor to 21st Century Media.. The company owns daily and weekly newspapers, and other print media properties and newspaper-affiliated local Websites in the U.S. states of Connecticut, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey, organized in six geographic "clusters": [1]
AOL latest headlines, entertainment, sports, articles for business, health and world news.
Pierrepont "P. B." Noyes was born in the Oneida Community (1848–1880), a group of religious perfectionists who lived communally in New York State. The Community was led by Noyes' father, John Humphrey Noyes. In the early years of the Community, members practiced birth control in order to keep the birthrate low.
Robert F. Julian is a former New York judge, former sports executive and lawyer.. Julian served as the Majority Leader of the Oneida County Board of Legislators from 1978 to 2000, the President of the New York-Penn Baseball League from 1992 to 2000, and as a New York Supreme Court judge from 2001 to 2008,
The station signed on September 26, 1956 [3] as WONG, owned by John J. Geiger; [4] it was transferred by 1959 to Madison County Broadcasting Corporation, [5] which changed the call letters to WMCR [6] on April 26, 1961 [7] The station was sold to Chenor Communications in 1965, [8] and to Warren Broadcasting Company in 1969.
Rufus Pasquale "Rufie" Elefante (April 11, 1903 – November 15, 1994) was an American political boss from Utica, New York. [1] Originally a Republican, who worked as a trucker, Elefante rose to power during the late 1920s.