Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Manhattan Mercury is the local newspaper for Manhattan, Kansas. The Mercury is a daily newspaper published in the afternoon five days a week, and in the morning on Sunday. No Saturday edition is issued. The newspaper is physically printed on the Mercury's own in-house presses. The newspaper also maintains an online presence.
Manhattan had a number of newspapers in its early years. Following is a timeline of 19th-century papers in the town: Kansas Express (1859–1926) – first newspaper in Manhattan, consolidated into The Manhattan Mercury. name changed to Independent in 1863, Standard in 1868, and Nationalist in 1870. Kansas Radical (1866–1868) – second ...
He was 79. He died of natural causes Monday night at his home in Manhattan in northeastern Kansas, his son, Ned, who followed his father as publisher of The Manhattan Mercury, told the newspaper ...
The Manhattan Mercury is the city's main newspaper, published six days a week. [70] Other newspapers published in the city include: the alternative weekly The Hype Weekly which focuses on events, arts, and culture in the area; the weekly Manhattan Free Press ; the agriculture-oriented Grass & Grain ; and the K-State university newspaper, the ...
Daily newspapers. This is a list of daily newspapers currently published in Kansas. For weekly newspapers, see List of newspapers in Kansas. The Abilene Reflector-Chronicle – Abilene. Atchison Daily Globe – Atchison. Augusta Daily Gazette – Augusta. The Chanute Tribune – Chanute. Clay Center Dispatch – Clay Center. Columbus News ...
The legend of Johnny Kaw was created in 1955 by George Filinger, a professor of horticulture at Kansas State University, to celebrate the centennial of Manhattan, Kansas. The stories were initially printed in the city newspaper, The Manhattan Mercury , during the centennial and later collected into a self-published book by Filinger, who created ...
In 1937, he retired and the newspaper was sold to the Seaton family. [6] Fay Seaton had owned and published the Manhattan, Kansas Mercury since 1915; [7] later, he had acquired the Manhattan Chronicle. [8] In 1937, he and his sons Fred and Richard bought the Tribune, and Fred was dispatched to Hastings to operate the newspaper. [9]
Clevedon Mercury, a free weekly newspaper. Leicester Mercury, a regional newspaper. London Mercury, a list of periodicals published in London. Matlock Mercury. Reading Mercury, a defunct newspaper which was published in Berkshire, England. Stamford Mercury, a weekly paid-for newspaper, the oldest continuous newspaper title in England.