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In 2011, Patch acquired hyperlocal news aggregator Outside.in from investors including Union Square Ventures and others, integrating the technology into the Patch platform. [15] In 2013, Patch was spun out of AOL as a joint venture with Hale Global. [16] In January 2014, the new owners announced layoffs of 400 journalists and other employees. [17]
In the 1960s, the Opie family combined The Staunton News-Leader with The Evening Leader, and Staunton was left with only one daily newspaper, The Daily News Leader. "Daily" was dropped from the name in 2002. The Opies sold the paper in 1979 to Multimedia Inc., which was purchased by Gannett Co. in 1995. The newspaper launched its online edition ...
The News Reporter won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 1953, shared with the Tabor City Tribune, for reporting of Ku Klux Klan activities in Columbus County, NC. [1] [2] [3] The News Reporter had been owned by the Thompson/High family since 1938. [4] Les High and Stuart High Rogers sold the paper in 2021 to Justin Smith, the paper's ...
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1964: Norman C. Miller, The Wall Street Journal, "for his comprehensive account of a multi-million dollar vegetable oil swindle in New Jersey."; 1965: Melvin H. Ruder, Hungry Horse News, a weekly in Columbia Falls, Montana, "for his daring and resourceful coverage of a disastrous flood that threatened his community, an individual effort in the finest tradition of spot news reporting."
There were approximately 105 newspapers in North Dakota in 2020 according to the Library of Congress. The oldest newspaper still in print under the same name is the Hillsboro Banner , which dates from 1879.
The Evening Tribune is an American daily newspaper published weekday mornings and on Sundays (as The Spectator) in Hornell, New York.. In addition to the city of Hornell, the Tribune and Spectator circulate in several villages and towns of eastern Allegany County and western Steuben County, including Alfred, Almond, Andover, Angelica, Arkport, Canaseraga and Canisteo.
The newspaper was known for many years as the Worth-Palos Reporter, the name signifying the two townships the newspaper serves (and still referred to as such by many older readers, despite not carrying that name since the mid-1980s). The paper eventually added Alsip, Crestwood and Bridgeview to its coverage area.