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The Tampa Bay Times, called the St. Petersburg Times until 2011, is an American newspaper published in St. Petersburg, Florida, United States.It is published by the Times Publishing Company, which is owned by The Poynter Institute for Media Studies, a nonprofit journalism school directly adjacent to the University of South Florida St. Petersburg campus.
Birmingham: . The Ball of Roses [1]; Mobile. The Camellia Ball, [2] held the Wednesday before Thanksgiving. A souvenir recording released by Verve Records in the summer of 1959 featuring longtime San Francisco bandleader Ernie Heckscher playing for The Cotillion at The Fairmont.
The two companies reached an agreement in 2006, by which the Media General keep its exclusive right to use of Tampa Times for another five years; the window expired in 2011, and on January 1, 2012, the St. Petersburg Times was renamed the Tampa Bay Times. [5] In 2016, the Tampa Bay Times bought the Tampa Tribune, effectively consolidating the ...
Breaking, popularly called “breakdancing,” doesn’t require much—just some thumping beats and space to slide, collapse, jump and spin. That’s probably what turned the dance form, which ...
A construction crane toppled into an office housing the news outlet, the Tampa Bay Times, leaving a massive hole in the side of the building during violent winds from Hurricane Milton.
The Tampa riots began after a 19-year-old black man named Martin Chambers, who was one of three people suspected of robbing a camera supply warehouse on 421 East Ellasme Street, was fatally shot by a white officer of the Tampa Police Department, Patrolman James Calvert. The riots began on the night of June 11 and ended on June 15, in the ...
The Tampa Times or Tampa Daily Times, a daily newspaper published in Tampa, Florida, from 1893 to 1982 The Tampa Bay Times , a newspaper published in St. Petersburg, Florida, since 1884 Topics referred to by the same term
Breaking's community is divided over its elevation to the Olympic stage: "The Olympics has changed the way some people are dancing," U.S. B-girl Sunny Choi said.