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The Reveille, formerly the Daily Reveille, has been the student newspaper at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana since 1887. It prints twice a week on Mondays and Thursdays during the fall and spring semesters, and once a week on Monday in the summer. It publishes online content daily at LSUReveille.com.
Another newspaper, the Louisiana Capitolian, was established in 1868 and soon merged with the then-named Weekly Advocate. By 1889 the paper was being published daily. In 1904, a new owner, William Hamilton, renamed it The Baton Rouge Times and later The State-Times, a paper with emphasis on local news. [2]
Louisiana State Newspapers: The Advocate: Baton Rouge: 1908 [2] Georges Media Group Plaquemines Gazette: Belle Chasse: The Bernice Banner News: Bernice: Jessie Kelley Boyett The Daily News: Bogalusa: Boone Newspapers: Bossier Press-Tribune: Bossier City: Specht Newspapers The Inquisitor: Bossier City: 1997 [2] Settle Talk LLC The Bunkie Record ...
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It also sold the Mississippi Network and the associated college-sports contracts. The company name was returned to Louisiana Network Inc. In April 2010, Jim Engster, a long-time Baton Rouge journalist and radio talk-show host, bought a controlling interest in the network after getting final approval from the Federal Communications Commission ...
The Louisiana historian Sue Eakin was formerly a Times-Picayune columnist. [55] Bill Minor headed the paper's news bureau in Jackson, Mississippi from 1946 until it closed in 1976. [56] A weekly political column is penned by Robert "Bob" Mann, a Democrat who holds the Douglas Manship Chair of Journalism at Louisiana State University in Baton ...
The New Orleans sports world spoke out and paid tribute on social media on Wednesday after a deadly terrorist attack rocked the city early on New Year’s Day.
LSU's men's and women's sports teams are called the Fighting Tigers, Tigers or Lady Tigers.. During its first three sports seasons, LSU played without a nickname. [2] For the inaugural LSU–Tulane football game in 1893, the New Orleans newspapers referred to the LSU football team as the Baton Rouge "boys", but that was not an official nickname. [2]