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The Buchtelite (student newspaper at the University of Akron) - Akron; The Suburbanite - Akron; Mr. Thrifty Shoppers - Alliance; The Athens News - Athens; The Post (student newspaper at Ohio University) - Athens; Cleveland Jewish News - Beachwood; News on the Green - Brookfield; Harrison News-Herald - Cadiz; The Journal and The Noble County ...
Cleveland Community News / The Greater Cleveland Community News: 1968 [21] Weekly [21] Official site; Cleveland: The Cleveland Gazette: 1883 [22] 1945 [22] Weekly [22] LCCN sn83035388; OCLC 9754948, 9754970, 9754999; Founded by Harry Clay Smith. [12] Became the longest-publishing African American weekly in the country. [23] Cleveland: The ...
The News-Herald began as the Willoughby Independent on April 18, 1879, was renamed Willoughby Republican in 1920, and became the Lake County News-Herald in 1935. Its offices moved from downtown Willoughby to 38879 Mentor Avenue (U.S. Route 20) in 1950, then to its current location, 7085 Mentor Avenue, adjacent to Mentor, after 1973. [2]
This is a list of African American newspapers and media outlets, which is sortable by publication name, city, state, founding date, and extant vs. defunct status.For more detail on a given newspaper, see the linked entries below.
The major daily newspaper in Columbus is The Columbus Dispatch; its erstwhile main competitor, The Columbus Citizen-Journal, ceased publication on December 31, 1985. There are also neighborhood/suburb specific papers, such as the Dispatch Printing Company's ThisWeek Community News , which serves 23 suburbs and Columbus, the Columbus Messenger ...
Columbus Alive (also presented as ALIVE), was a free online news site serving Columbus, Ohio.The site focused on local music, art, dining, film and culture.Formerly distributed in print form each week on Thursdays, the final print version of the alternative-weekly newspaper was published on July 3, 2019. [1]
Alcona County Herald: On March 10, 1910, the newspaper changed its name to the Alcona County Herald, with Rola E. Prescott as the publisher. Interestingly, it was the only country weekly in the United States to have its own cartoonist, providing readers with lively cartoons on county subjects in every issue.
The hometown newspaper of Washington Court House is the Record Herald. The Record Herald was formed from the merger of two dailies – The Record-Republican and the Washington C.H. Herald – in 1937. [24] The latter paper's publishing history dates back to 1858 when it began as a weekly. [25]