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Hollinger International (later the Sun-Times Media Group) took over the production on February 2, 1998. The Post-Tribune consolidated its printing with that of the Sun-Times in 2007, at which time it closed its printing plant on Broadway in Gary, ending more than 50 years of press runs there. It had moved its main editorial offices from Gary to ...
The Times of Northwest Indiana – Munster; The Courier-Times – New Castle; Farmer's Exchange – New Paris; Newburgh Chandler Register – Newburgh; Noblesville Daily Times – Noblesville; Sagamore News Media – Noblesville; Plain Dealer & Sun – North Vernon; Paoli News-Republican – Paoli; Indiana Plain Dealer – Peru; The Flyer Group ...
In particular, this list considers a newspaper to be a weekly newspaper if the newspaper is published once, twice, or thrice a week. A weekly newspaper is usually a smaller publication than a larger, daily newspaper (such as one that covers a metropolitan area). Unlike these metropolitan newspapers, a weekly newspaper will cover a smaller area ...
The newspaper delivers community news to Beech Grove, Greenwood, Southport, and Center Grove, and Franklin, Perry, and White River townships. Published every Thursday, 17,500 copies are delivered to the greater south side of Indianapolis and its suburbs either to newsstands or through home delivery.
Wheeler is an unincorporated census-designated place (CDP) in northern Union Township, Porter County, in the U.S. state of Indiana. It lies along State Road 130, northwest of the city of Valparaiso. [4] Although Wheeler is unincorporated, it had a post office, with the ZIP code of 46393. [5] The population of Wheeler was 443 at the 2010 census. [6]
In 1933, the name was changed to The Hammond Times, and it became an afternoon paper serving Hammond, Whiting, and East Chicago. In May 1962, the McHie family sold the publication to Robert S. Howard of Howard Publications. [2] The paper expanded to all of northwest Indiana in 1967 and dropped Hammond from its masthead to become simply The Times.
The Vidette Times is a local newspaper in Porter County, Indiana. [1] It began in 1842 as an occasional, the Republican. In 1866 it came under new ownership as The Porter County Vidette. In 1871, a rival, The Valparaiso Democratic Messenger emerged. In the 1920s, The Vidette and The Messenger merged to form The Vidette-Messenger.
The newspaper dates back to the founding of the Indiana Herald in 1848. It was renamed to Huntington Herald in 1887, and in 1930 it merged with Huntington Press and became the Huntington Herald-Press. In the early 1960s, Eugene C. Pulliam, owner of Central Newspapers, Inc., sold the paper to his son-in-law James C. Quayle.