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Bastrop Daily Enterprise: Bastrop: 1904 2019 [6] Baton-Rouge Gazette: 1819 1856 [7] Baton Rouge State-Times: 1904 1991 [8] Bogalusa Enterprise: 1914 1918 [9] Daily States [4] New Orleans 1880 Became New Orleans States-Item in 1960 [2] Gazette and Sentinel: Plaquemine: 1858 1864 [10] Houma Courier: 1878 1939 [11] The Independent: Lafayette: 2003 ...
Baton Rouge: The Observer: 1899 [26] 1900 [26] Weekly [26] LCCN 2014254009, sn83016560; OCLC 851187461, 9907976; Baton Rouge: Baton Rouge Post: 1937 [27]? [27] Weekly [27] LCCN sn88064129; OCLC 17499960; Baton Rouge: Baton Rouge Post: 1983 [29] 2007 [28] Irregular [29] or weekly [28] LCCN sn88064185; OCLC 17554084; Not to be confused with ...
In January 1995, it became Baton Rouge's first UPN affiliate; it also carried programming from the All News Channel overnight in the early-to-mid 1990s. While affiliated with UPN, KBTR continued to use W39AT and K65EF as translators, while K07UJ and K13VE were used as translators for Jenkins's other station in Baton Rouge: WTNC, which was a ...
WBXH was the third and final station in Baton Rouge to be affiliated with the network, as UPN was originally programmed on WBTR from 1995 to 1999 and then on KZUP from 1999 to 2003. It showcased itself as "UPN the Block" and used a duo known as "Rider and the Fish" to promote programming and various locales around Baton Rouge. [ 2 ]
WBRZ was the second station in the Baton Rouge area and the fourth in Louisiana to broadcast their newscasts in high definition. On November 17, 2014, WBRZ introduced their new state-of-the-art upgrades set on their 5 p.m. newscasts, while maintaining the news theme "Extreme" by Stephen Arnold Music, which the station has used from 2007 HD ...
The child in Baton Rouge, La., was found alive in a field after an hours-long search by local officials and first responders. Abandoned 8-month-old found alive in Louisiana field: 'The baby was tough'
By 1889 the paper was being published daily. In 1904, a new owner, William Hamilton, renamed it The Baton Rouge Times and later The State-Times, a paper with emphasis on local news. [2] In 1909, The State-Times was acquired by Capital City Press, a company newly founded by Charles P. Manship Sr. and James Edmonds. Manship purchased his partner ...
I picked Baton Rouge over New York or L.A. after earning an MIT engineering degree—and am loving its genuine sense of community David Hou Updated August 22, 2024 at 12:36 PM