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In 1912, the name was changed to the Racine Journal News. The newspaper's former radio station, WRJN , was founded in December 1926. Starbuck died in 1929, his son, Frank R. Starbuck, became publisher, and in 1932 the paper merged with the Racine Times-Call , the other local daily, to become the Journal Times .
The Akron Press joined in 1925 with Akron Times to be The Akron Times-Press.; The Barberton Herald (1923-2022) [2]; Celina Democrat (1895–1921) [3]; The Cedarville Herald (from July 1890 to December 1954) [4]
As of the census [6] of 2010, there were 675 people, 288 households, and 191 families living in the village. The population density was 1,534.1 inhabitants per square mile (592.3/km 2).
Guide to Ohio Newspapers, 1793-1973 : Union Bibliography of Ohio Newspapers Available in Ohio Libraries. Ohio Historical Society. Jeffres, Leo W. (1982). "Grassroots Journalism in the City: Cleveland's Neighborhood Newspapers" (PDF) Penn, Irvine Garland (1891). The Afro-American Press and Its Editors. Willey & Company.
A group campaigning for Kamala Harris served union workers in Wisconsin an “insulting” lunch — possibly put together by “prison labor” — as it made a pitch for the vice president last ...
WRJN's studios and transmitter tower are on Victory Avenue at 17th Street in Racine. [2] WRJN is a Class C station powered at 1,000 watts, using a non-directional antenna. Programming is also heard on two FM translators: W260CV at 99.9 MHz in Racine and W251BU at 98.1 MHz in Kenosha.
Marius Robinson (1806–1878) was an American minister, abolitionist, and newspaper editor [1] of the antislavery newspaper The Philanthropist and The Anti-Slavery Bugle.He helped establish a school for African Americans in Cincinnati, Ohio while attending Lane Seminary.
The first such newspaper in Wisconsin is generally considered the Wisconsin Afro-American, which George A. Brown (son of Bishop John Mifflin Brown) and Thomas H. Jones launched in 1892. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The status of the Wisconsin Afro-American as a genuine African American newspaper has been disputed, however. [ 4 ]