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Daily Times West Virginian: Fairmont: Daily CNHI [4] Major newspaper Tyler Star News: Sistersville: Nondaily Ogden Newspapers Inc. [26] Wayne County News: Wayne: Daily Weirton Daily Times: Weirton: Daily Ogden Newspapers Inc. [26] Welch News: Welch: Nondaily West Virginia Daily News: Lewisburg: Daily Weston Democrat: Weston: 1868 Weekly NCWV ...
The company was founded by H.C. Ogden in 1890, and is currently run by the family of his grandson, G. Ogden Nutting. Current CEO Robert Nutting, son of G. Ogden Nutting, is the fourth generation of the Ogden-Nutting family to run the company, and is also principal owner of the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Weirton (/ ˈ w ɪər t ən / WEER-tən) is a city in Hancock and Brooke counties in the U.S. state of West Virginia.Located along the Ohio River in the state's Northern Panhandle, the city's population was 19,163 as of the 2020 census, making it the seventh most populous city in the state.
Blatnik worked as a reporter for the Weirton Daily Times, The Wheeling Intelligencer, and as an editor for the Dominion Post. Blatnik served in the West Virginia House of Delegates from 1977 to 1978 and again from 1980 to 1986. She then served in the West Virginia Senate from 1989 to 1996 as a Democrat.
The paper was founded in 1879 by former Pittsburgh Gazette city editor William McCord as a weekly paper called The Saturday Review, launching on October 29 of that year.In 1885, the paper increased its publication to a daily basis, a frequency the paper maintains to the present.
The Daily Times may refer to the following newspapers: The Daily Times, newspaper published in Malawi; The Daily Times (Salisbury, Maryland), newspaper ...
Name Term Reference Thomas E. Millsop: 1947–1955 Samuel Kusic: 1955–1959 David T. Frew: 1959–1963 Frank A. Rybka: 1963–1971 Mike A. Andochick Jr.
Steubenville is a principal city of the Weirton–Steubenville metropolitan area and is part of the larger Pittsburgh–New Castle–Weirton combined statistical area. [28] From 1980 to 2000, census figures show that the Weirton–Steubenville metro population decreased faster than that of any other urban area in the United States. [29]