Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Milwaukee Journal began as The Daily Journal in 1882. Edna Ferber, later a famed writer and Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist, was a Milwaukee Journal reporter for nearly four years, from approximately 1903 to 1907. The Journal followed the Sentinel into broadcasting. The Journal purchased radio station WKAF in 1927, changing its call letters ...
Journal Media Group (formerly Journal Communications) was a Milwaukee, Wisconsin-based newspaper publishing company. The company's roots were first established in 1882 as the owner of its namesake, the Milwaukee Journal, and expanded into broadcasting with the establishment of WTMJ radio and WTMJ-TV, and the acquisition of other television and radio stations.
The following people have all worked for or been otherwise closely associated with the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Pages in category " Milwaukee Journal Sentinel people" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total.
The Green Sheet was a four-page section of the Milwaukee Journal printed on green paper. It was published from the 1910s to 1994, containing comics, the crossword puzzle and other games, celebrity news, local human-interest stories, and bits of ephemera.
Stuart Carlson (September 1955 – June 10, 2022) [1] was an American editorial cartoonist who worked for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. His cartoons usually followed the moderate editorial stance of that paper.
Raquel Rutledge is an Pulitzer Prize-winning American investigative reporter working at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.Her investigations have uncovered government benefits fraud, [1] public health, [2] workplace safety issues, [3] tax oversight failures, [4] malfeasance in undercover federal law enforcement stings, [5] life-threatening dangers of alcohol poisoning at resorts in Mexico, [6 ...
This page was last edited on 13 December 2004, at 13:58 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply.
Ione Marie Quinby Griggs (1891-1991) was a crime journalist for the Chicago Evening Post and subsequently wrote an iconic advice column for the Milwaukee Journal Green Sheet for over fifty years. [1] [2] Born in Kansas to William Paine Quinby and Laura E Quinby (née Peck), [3] [4] Griggs and her family moved frequently during her childhood.