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The newspaper's Sunday edition is known as the Tyler Morning Telegraph. The Tyler Courier-Times was a sister afternoon paper published until 1995. The paper uses a white letter T over a blue circle as its logo, changing from the previous stylized paperboy. The paper bills itself as "the Tyler Paper" in advertising and elsewhere, including its URL.
1926 – Tyler Junior College founded. [1] 1929 – Tyler Morning Telegraph newspaper begins publication. [14] 1930 East Texas Oil Field discovered in vicinity of Tyler; oil boom begins. [7] Liberty Theatre in business. [15] Population: 17,113. [5] 1931 – KGKB radio begins broadcasting. [16] 1933 – Texas Rose Festival begins. [1]
Tyler Morning Telegraph: Tyler: M. Roberts Media 1877 Online daily / print Wed / Fri / Sun 8,055 Uvalde Leader-News: Uvalde: Craig Garnett 1879 Sunday / Thursday 3,472 Valley Mills Progress: Valley Mills: 1989 2nd & 4th Wednesday 580 Van Alstyne Leader: Van Alstyne: CherryRoad Media: 1892 Friday 315 The Van Horn Advocate: Van Horn: 1910 ...
KETX was a television station on channel 19 at Tyler, Texas, that operated between September 1953 and October 1954.It was the first television station in East Texas [2] and the first UHF station in the entire state; however, its operation was fraught with technical and financial difficulties, and the coming of a VHF station, KLTV, was an existential threat to the smaller UHF outlet, causing ...
On November 4, 2012, days before the 2012 United States presidential election, Strickland led a public rally and prayer service in downtown Tyler asking the faithful to turn toward God before the election. In an editorial written for the Tyler Morning Telegraph, Strickland said:
KYTX (channel 19) is a television station licensed to Nacogdoches, Texas, United States, serving East Texas as an affiliate of CBS and The CW Plus.Owned by Tegna Inc., the station has studios near Loop 323 in the southeastern portion of Tyler, and its transmitter is located near State Highway 110 in rural east-central Cherokee County (northwest of Ponta).
"They got into a vehicle and left, so we ended up following that vehicle and doing a traffic stop on them," Lt. Steve Fornoff told WOWT. "We utilized our K-9 handlers.
Sarah Newcomb McClendon (July 8, 1910 – January 8, 2003) was a long-time White House reporter who covered presidential politics for a half century. McClendon founded her own freelance news service as a single mother in the post-World War II era, and became known as a model for women in the press and as a vocal advocate of various causes, particularly those of United States military veterans.