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Nightlife was a free alternative newsweekly serving Southern Illinois.It published news and commentary, music, arts and leisure, classifieds and comics on a weekly basis, excluding spring, fall and winter breaks during which time a single issue would span multiple weeks.
East Boston Community News, 1970-1989 [18] Footnote links to Northeastern University Library's archive of all editions; The Free Press of Springfield, Springfield (became Common Sense in 1969) Mother of Voices, Amherst; Old Mole, Cambridge; Thursday, Cambridge; Worcester Phoenix; Worcester Punch, Worcester; Zig zag, Montague [19]
“It is the only country weekly in the United States having its own cartoonist and giving its readers a live cartoon on county subjects in every issue.” [246] Lincoln Herald: The newspaper began publishing on January 1, 1908, under the name Lincoln Herald. It was founded by D.C. Magahay.
South Beach clubs lit up the night in the 1990s. There seemed to be a venue on every block. Themed nights. Celebs. DJs and drinks. Dancing and more dancing.
The Southern Illinoisan is a daily newspaper and multimedia news platform based in Carbondale, Illinois, known locally as "The Southern." It is one of the major regional newspaper and media services for southern Illinois. The most recent editor of The Southern Illinoisan was 22-year-old Jackson Brandhorst, a native of Carbondale, Illinois. [2]
NewspaperArchive is a commercial online database of digitized newspapers, and claims to be the world's largest newspaper archive. [1] The site was launched in 1999 by its parent company, Heritage Microfilm, Inc. of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. It is currently overseen by Heritage Archives, Inc. [2]
Several film and TV writers say they are horrified their scripts are being used by tech companies to train AI models without writers' permission. ... a 58-year-old screenwriter in L.A., has spent ...
The Daily Egyptian, formally known as the Normal Gazette and later changed to The Egyptian in 1916, was the first newspaper at Southern Illinois University. It consisted of eight pages and was printed monthly by the Free Press Printing House of Carbondale, Illinois in 1888 to 1889. [1] The subscription cost was fifty cents per year.