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Kyle Barnett, the new publisher, reported in an online "Dear Subscriber" letter two days after the purchase that the Mount Vernon News would immediately transition from its six-day-a-week publication schedule (no Sunday edition) to a two-day-a-week schedule (Wednesday and Saturday). The letter informed readers that "We promise to deliver more ...
The newspaper was formed in 1926 from the merger of two competing newspapers: The Knoxville News and The Knoxville Sentinel.John Trevis Hearn began publishing The Sentinel in December 1886, while The News was started in 1921 by Robert P. Scripps and Roy W. Howard.
New York City: Q3087697: Friedrich Braun: 1941-07-18 2025-02-02 Brazilian basketball player (1941–2025) basketball player: Brazil: Rio de Janeiro: Rio Claro: Q3169695: Jean-Pierre Razat: 1940-10-15 2025-02-02 French rugby union player rugby union player: France: Fumel: Q336891: Abílio Rodas de Sousa Ribas: 1931-01-02 2025-02-02 Portuguese ...
Sometimes the prewritten obituary's subject outlives its author. One example is The New York Times' obituary of Taylor, written by the newspaper's theater critic Mel Gussow, who died in 2005. [7] The 2023 obituary of Henry Kissinger featured reporting by Michael T. Kaufman, who died almost 14 years earlier in 2010. [8]
Thomas Wallace Knox was born in Pembroke, New Hampshire, in 1835, [3] where he attended local schools. He became a teacher, moving west into New York State and founding an academy in Kingston. [1] In 1860, at the age of 25, Knox headed west to take part in the gold rush in Colorado. He soon started working for the Denver Daily News.
He was born on December 24, 1928, in Buffalo, New York. He was the second son of Seymour H. Knox II and Helen Northrup. [1] His elder brother, and only sibling, was Seymour H. Knox III. Knox attended the Aiken Preparatory School in Aiken, South Carolina, and St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire. He was a 1950 graduate of Yale University ...
The owners of WNOX also had other, much bigger plans for their new facility on Whittle Springs Road. In 1955, Scripps-Howard Broadcasting was one of the applicants for the Channel 10 television frequency, awarded to Knoxville after the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) reorganized its U.S. TV table of channel allocations in 1952.
Seymour Horace Knox I (April 11, 1861 – May 17, 1915), was a businessman from Buffalo, New York, who made his fortune in five-and-dime stores. [2] He merged his more than 100 stores with those of his first cousins, Frank Winfield Woolworth and Charles Sumner Woolworth, to form the F. W. Woolworth Company. [3]