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Aug. 31—Well-wishers numbering more than 100 showed up at the Clarkston High School Auditorium on Wednesday night to see two Lewiston-Clarkston Valley journalists in a fundraiser that was billed ...
KLEW-TV (channel 3) is a television station licensed to Lewiston, Idaho, United States, affiliated with CBS. The station serves the Lewis–Clark Valley and Palouse regions of north-central Idaho and southeastern Washington , as well as Wallowa County, Oregon .
CBS on 8.2, The CW on 8.3, KIFI Local News 8 NOW on 8.4, Telemundo on 8.5 Pocatello: 10 17 KISU-TV: PBS: satellite of KAID ch. 4 Boise. Idaho PTV Plus on 10.2, Create/Learn on 10.3, World on 10.4, PBS Kids on 10.5 15 15 KPIF: Grit
KIMA operates two semi-satellites–KEPR-TV (channel 19) in Pasco (serving the Tri-Cities) and KLEW-TV (channel 3) in Lewiston, Idaho. They simulcast all network and syndicated programming as provided through KIMA, but air separate commercial inserts, legal identifications and early evening newscasts, and have their own websites.
KBOI recently added a midday newscast that airs at 11 a.m. KBOI 2 News, First at 4:00 is the market's first-ever newscast at 4 p.m. On weeknights, KBOI airs the CBS Evening News live at 5 p.m. and there is a 30-minute local newscast at 5:30 p.m. In 2023, KBOI-TV took over presentation for the newscasts of Sinclair-owned KLEW-TV in Lewiston.
The Lewiston Morning Tribune is an independently owned newspaper in the northwestern United States, located in Lewiston, Idaho. [6] Founded in 1892, it serves eight counties in north-central Idaho and south eastern Washington , the southern portion of the Inland Empire . [ 7 ]
Oct. 11—Lewiston's fire chief has selected his 50th birthday as his final day in his present job. Travis Myklebust will retire as Lewiston's fire chief May 31, 2023, a job he has held 8 1/2 ...
This is a list of online newspaper archives and some magazines and journals, including both free and pay wall blocked digital archives. Most are scanned from microfilm into pdf, gif or similar graphic formats and many of the graphic archives have been indexed into searchable text databases utilizing optical character recognition (OCR) technology.