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Nashville Medical News: Nashville: Weekly or bi-weekly Nashville Pride: Nashville: Weekly or bi-weekly Nashville Scene: Nashville: Weekly or bi-weekly Nashville Times and True Union: Nashville: 1862 [11] Daily Newport Plain Talk: Newport: Weekly or bi-weekly Adams Publishing Group [9] Oak Ridger, The: Oak Ridge: Daily: GateHouse Media [1] Out ...
On July 31, 2009, WTVF began simulcasting on its digital subchannels the over-the-air relaunch of "NewsChannel 5+" (originally a cable-only channel) on 5.2 and the addition of classic movie network, This TV on 5.3. On September 7, 2012, WTVF relocated its main digital signal to UHF channel 25 and shut down its UHF fill-in translator on channel 50.
Chris Clark (real name Chris Botsaris; born December 9, 1938 [1]) is the former lead news anchor at WTVF in Nashville, Tennessee. Clark's tenure at WTVF began in 1966 (then known as WLAC-TV), and lasted until his retirement on May 23, 2007. His 41 years at WTVF makes him one of the longest-tenured anchors in American television history.
Executives at a newspaper in Nashville, Tennessee, apologized Sunday for publishing what a top editor called a "horrific" full-page advertisement that said "Islam" was going to detonate a nuclear ...
Formed by the merger of the Nashville Globe and Nashville Independent. [84] Nashville: The Nashville Globe: 1906 [86] 1930s [86] Weekly [86] LCCN 2014218453, sn86064259; OCLC 13744970, 881287661; ISSN 2373-4892, 2373-4906; Free online archive; Merged with the Nashville Independent to form the Nashville Globe and Independent. [86] Nashville: The ...
This is a list of newspapers in Sudan. It comprises both daily newspapers as well as general news magazines, published both by Sudanese journalists working in Sudan and abroad, in print and/or online version. [1]
UNICEF said on Friday that 700,000 children in Sudan were likely to suffer from the worst form of malnutrition this year, with tens of thousands who could die. A 10-month war in Sudan between its ...
The official Sudan News Agency (Suna) was established in 1971 [10] and continues to distribute information in Arabic, English, and French. [11] Before the 1989 coup, Sudan had a lively press. There were 22 daily papers, 19 in Arabic and three in English, published in Khartoum. In total, Sudan had 55 daily or weekly newspapers and magazines.