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In 2014, Boone Newspapers bought several newspapers from Evening Post Industries. [7] Boone, who died of cancer in 1983, won a Pulitzer Prize in 1956 for an anti-segregation editorial in the Tuscaloosa News, where he was the longtime editor and publisher, about the admission of the first Black student to the University of Alabama. [8]
The Tuscaloosa News is a daily newspaper serving Tuscaloosa, Alabama, United States, and the surrounding area in west central Alabama. It is owned by Gannett. Tuscaloosa News headquarters seen from the Riverwalk. In 2012, Halifax Media Group acquired the Tuscaloosa News. Prior to that, the paper's owner was The New York Times Company. [2]
(Includes information about weekly rural newspapers in Alabama) Rhoda Coleman Ellison. History and Bibliography of Alabama Newspapers in the Nineteenth Century. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1954. James Boylan (1963). "Birmingham: newspapers in a crisis". Columbia Journalism Review. 2. Daniel Savage Gray (1975).
Several disturbing videos emerged on social media over the weekend showing police violently arresting University of Alabama students at an off-campus apartment in Tuscaloosa. In one four-minute ...
The Selma Times-Journal is a five-day-a-week newspaper located in Selma, Alabama. It publishes every day of the week except Sunday and Monday. The Saturday paper is called the "Weekend Edition." It is owned by Tuscaloosa, Alabama-based Boone Newspapers Inc.
The Andalusia Star-News was formed in 1948 out of the merger of the Andalusia Star and the Covington News, both of Andalusia, Alabama. [1] It has a circulation of 3,372 and is owned by Boone Newspapers, Inc. [2] In 1972, it was sold to Tuscaloosa Newspapers by Ed Dannelly and Byron Vickery, who had operated it since 1948. [3]
With Alabama high school football starting this week, it is time to vote for The Tuscaloosa News' 2023 fan's choice preseason player of the year. The ballot includes the names of 41 players from ...
Alabama's first state organization of African American newspapers was the Alabama Colored Press Association, which was founded by the editors of nine papers in 1887. [2] However, the association ceased to function after two years, due to many of its key members having been driven out of the state by racist violence. [ 2 ]