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The Dupont Valley Times was a freely circulated, monthly newspaper which is direct mailed to zip codes 46818, 46825, 46845 in Fort Wayne, 45748 in Huntertown and 46765 in Leo-Cedarville with a circulation of over 19,000 addresses. It contained editorial content pertaining to Northwest Fort Wayne and Allen County.
Most weekly newspapers follow a similar format as daily newspapers (i.e., news, sports, family news, obituaries). However, the primary focus is on news from the publication's coverage area. The publication date of weekly newspapers varies, but usually they come out in the middle of the week (e.g., Wednesday or Thursday).
The News-Sentinel traces its origins to 1833, when The Sentinel was established as a weekly paper. The Sentinel was owned for a year and half in 1878-79 by Fort Wayne native William Rockhill Nelson who went on to found and make his fortune with The Kansas City Star.
WFWA (channel 39) is a PBS member television station in Fort Wayne, Indiana, United States.Owned by Fort Wayne Public Television, Inc., the station maintains studios at the Dr. Rudy and Rhonda Kachmann Teleplex on the campus of Purdue University Fort Wayne, and its transmitter is located at its former studio facility on Butler Road in Fort Wayne.
Four Republican candidates have filed for two Wayne County commissioner seats, which are four-year terms. Matt Martin, Kyle E. Shanklin and Steven Wolfe are vying for one seat, while David E ...
Franklin Electric was founded in 1944 in Bluffton, Indiana, USA [3] by E.J. (Ed) Schaefer and T.W. (Wayne) Kehoe. They named the company Franklin Electric in honor of Benjamin Franklin, [4] whom they considered the country's first electrical engineer. The company's first product was a backpack generator to power the radio equipment paratroopers ...
The FBI provided an update Tuesday on the New Year's Day attack in New Orleans, revealing new information about the attacker's online search history as well as releasing a photo showing him ...
WGL was first licensed, with the sequentially issued call letters WHBJ, to the Lauer Auto Company at 2109 South Calhoun Street on March 3, 1925. [4] It was Fort Wayne's third broadcasting station, preceded by the United Radio Corporation's WFAS in 1922, [5] and the Strand Theater's WDBV in 1924, [6] although both of these stations had left the airwaves by the time WHBJ debuted.