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The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette is the newspaper of record in the U.S. state of Arkansas, [2] printed in Little Rock with a northwest edition published in Lowell.It is distributed for sale in all 75 of Arkansas' counties.
On Jan. 5, 2015, Northwest Arkansas Newspapers consolidated their four daily newspapers -- The Northwest Arkansas Times (ISSN 1066-3355), Benton County Record, Springdale Morning News, and Rogers Morning News—with the Northwest Arkansas edition of the Democrat-Gazette, creating the Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, with the former separate ...
Arkansas County Gazette: DeWitt: 1884 1886 [6] Arkansas Democrat: DeWitt 1879 1882 [7] Arkansas Farmer: Little Rock 1844 1845 [5] Arkansas Forum: Siloam Springs 1921 c. 1921 [8] Arkansas Gazette: Arkansas Post, Little Rock 1819 [9] 1991 [10] Arkansas Herald: Siloam Springs 1882 1889 [11] Arkansas Intelligencer: Van Buren 1842 1845 [12] Arkansas ...
He promised that if they keep paying their current rate of $36 a month for subscription to the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette newspaper, even though it will no longer be printed daily or delivered to ...
Ainsley Platt/Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/AP The suspect accused of killing four people and injuring nine others during a shooting at an Arkansas grocery store has been charged with additional ...
The company publishes 10 daily newspapers serving three states, as well as eight English-language nondaily newspapers and two Spanish-language publications. They include the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, the Texarkana Gazette, and the Chattanooga Times Free Press.
Someone called the Lonoke County Sheriff's Office around 1:12 Tuesday morning about a missing juvenile, the sheriff’s office said in a news release on Facebook. The girl is 14 years old and the ...
The two papers merged into the joint Arkansas Democrat-Gazette in October 1991. [3] Hussman was opposed to newspapers providing free content online, writing in a 2007 Wall Street Journal op-ed column that newspapers should stop providing such free content, calling the posting of so much of the newspaper product a "self-inflicted wound."