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In 1912, the name was changed to the Racine Journal News. The newspaper's former radio station, WRJN , was founded in December 1926. Starbuck died in 1929, his son, Frank R. Starbuck, became publisher, and in 1932 the paper merged with the Racine Times-Call , the other local daily, to become the Journal Times .
Multiple people were shot during a funeral at a cemetery in Racine, Wis., on Thursday, police said. According to mourners, two people were shot and wounded, local NBC affiliate WTMJ reported. No ...
Sherry James accuses the Racine County Sheriff's Department, Sheriff Schmaling, other officers and a jail nurse of causing her son's death.
WRJN (1400 AM) is a full service oldies radio station in Racine, Wisconsin, serving Racine and Kenosha Counties. The station is owned by Civic Media, Inc., along with sister station WAUK in Milwaukee. WRJN features live sports including Green Bay Packers football, Milwaukee Brewers baseball and University of Wisconsin Badgers games.
List of African American newspapers in Wisconsin; Ashland Daily Press; B. Beloit Daily News; Berlin Journal; ... Racine Journal Times; The Reporter (Fond du Lac ...
Wisconsin State Journal: Madison Capital Newspapers/Lee Enterprises [4] Manitowoc Herald Times Reporter: Manitowoc: Gannett Marinette-Menominee Eagle Herald: Marinette: Adams Publishing Group [3] Markesan Regional Reporter: Markesan: The Berlin Journal Company, Inc. Hub City Times: Marshfield: Multi Media Channels, LLC Marshfield News-Herald ...
Racine is served by the daily newspaper The Journal Times, [83] which is the namesake (but not current owner) of radio station WRJN (1400), and is owned by Lee Enterprises. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel formerly published a Racine-specific page on Thursdays and a Racine County section on Sundays, but dropped them in 2007.
By 1947, the figure topped 18,000. Today's Kenosha News circulation averages around 22,000 copies. [citation needed] The early Evening News was a simple six-column, four-page broadsheet, printed on a cylinder press and folded by hand. Its first subscriber, reportedly, was Johnson A. Jackson, secretary-treasurer of a local factory that ...