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The News-Dispatch of Michigan City was established in 1938 through the merger of the Michigan City News and the Michigan City Evening Dispatch. [1] [2]In September 2007, Small Newspaper Group sold the La Porte Herald-Argus to Paxton Media Group.
La Porte (from French 'the door') is a city in LaPorte County, Indiana, United States, of which it is the county seat. [4] Its population was estimated to be 21,341 in 2022. [ 5 ] It is one of the two principal cities of the Michigan City -La Porte, Indiana metropolitan statistical area , which is included in the Chicago– Naperville ...
In 2007, Paxton Media Group purchased three Indiana newspapers: the Marion Chronicle-Tribune (in July) from the Gannett Foundation; [6] the Huntington Herald-Press (in May) from the Quayle family; [7] and the La Porte Herald-Argus from Small Newspaper Group (in September). [8] In June 2015, Paxton purchased the Mayfield Messenger in Kentucky. [9]
Indiana football coach Curt Cignetti: "I want the chip on their shoulder to keep growing, is what I want." Indiana is the first team in the FBS that is bowl eligible.
The Herald – Jasper / Dubois County; Evening News and Tribune – Jeffersonville; The News Sun – Kendallville; Kokomo Tribune – Kokomo; Herald-Argus – La Porte; Journal & Courier – Lafayette; The Daily Sun – Lebanon; Lebanon Reporter – Lebanon; Greene County Daily World – Linton; Pharos-Tribune – Logansport; Madison Courier ...
Ullman served in World War II and the U.S. Navy for two and a half years, and also served as an Air Force civilian employee on Guam.. Ullman became a newspaperman soon after. He served as police reporter on the La Porte, Indiana Herald-Argus, was editor of the Skokie, IL News and served as head of the United Press Bureau's Chicago des
The daily newspaper in La Porte (The Herald-Argus) recently made the decision to uniformly spell the name of the city as 'La Porte' with a space. Spelling it as 'LaPorte' leads to much confusion and a natural progression to 'Laporte' which is universally agreed as not an acceptable way to spell the name.
Linedecker's first job was as a reporter for the LaPorte Herald-Argus in La Porte, Indiana. [2] He later worked for many years as an editor at the National Examiner. [3] He worked for a series of newspapers, including the Terre Haute Tribune, The Times in Hammond, the Fort Wayne News-Sentinel, the Times-Union in Rochester, N.Y., and The Philadelphia Inquirer.