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The Black Chronicle is an African-American weekly newspaper in the state of Oklahoma. [2] Founded in April 1979 and based in Oklahoma City's Eastside, it is owned by Perry Publishing and Broadcasting and caters to Oklahoma City's black community. [3] Today, the Black Chronicle has the largest paid circulation among Oklahoma's weekly newspapers.
Buffalo Criterion is a historic African-American newspaper published in Buffalo, New York from 1925 until 1973 and from 1978 until the present. [1] Frank E. Merriweather and his wife Camilla Merriweather were its founders and he was its publisher. [2] It is still published by the Merriweather family and is the oldest African-American newspaper ...
Port Arthur Daily News/News-Chronicle social news and 1914 war references index (1915–1942) Port Arthur News-Chronicle social news index (1943–1951, 1952–1961) Thunder Bay Chronicle Journal obituary index (1972–1989, 1988–1997, 1998–2013) Thunder Bay Chronicle Journal social news index (2000–2009, 2010–2014)
This is a list of African American newspapers that have been published in the state of New York. It includes both current and historical newspapers. New York was the birthplace of the African American press, with the publication of Freedom's Journal in 1827, and has remained a vibrant center of publishing ever since.
Country. United States. State (s) New York, Georgia. Date apprehended. January 1981. Joseph Gerard Christopher (July 26, 1955 – March 1, 1993) was an American serial killer who gained infamy for a series of murders in the early 1980s. He is believed to have killed at least twelve African American men and boys and wounded numerous others.
Donald Herbert joined the Buffalo Fire Department in 1986. [3] On the morning of December 29, 1995 the roof of a building in which he was fighting a fire collapsed, pinning him down and starving his brain of oxygen for over six minutes. [4] He was rescued from the collapsed structure, but had a cardiac arrest and was taken to a hospital where ...
Occupation. Sports executive, athlete. Northrup Rand Knox (December 24, 1928 – July 23, 1998), was a banker, sportsman, and community leader from Buffalo, New York, who, along with his brother Seymour, brought the National Hockey League to Buffalo as founders of the Buffalo Sabres. Knox was the third generation of the Knox family to serve as ...
He earned an M.A. from Columbia University in 1960 and a Ph.D from the University of Michigan in 1967. [2] He was a full-time professor at the University at Buffalo 's English department for 40 years, from 1967 to 2007, then an adjunct professor there until 2010. [3] Wolf continues to teach a course on travel writing as a part of University at ...