Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Daily Progress has been published daily, since September 14, 1892. The paper was founded by James Hubert Lindsay and his brother Frank Lindsay. [3] The Progress was initially published six days a week; the first Sunday edition was printed in September 1968. Lindsay's family owned the paper for 78 years.
Kelly was an intern at the Daily Press in Newport News, Virginia. He joined The Daily Progress in Charlottesville in 2013 as a photojournalist. He left the newspaper after nearly four years, citing low pay, long hours, bad schedules and constant stress. He now works as a Digital and Social Media Coordinator at Ardent Craft Ales.
Arlington Daily [24] Arlington: 1939 1951 Broadside: Fairfax: 1963 2013 Former student newspaper of George Mason University: succeeded by Fourth Estate: Caroline Progress [25] Bowling Green: 1919 2018 Charlottesville-Albemarle Tribune [26] Charlottesville 1954 1992 Weekly, Published by Randolph L. White. African-American interest publication.
Charlottesville has a main daily newspaper, The Daily Progress. Weekly publications include C-Ville Weekly, which also publishes quarterly, bi-annual, and yearly glossies such as Abode (home, garden, architecture), Knife & Fork (food, drink, restaurants), Unbound, (outdoor sports and recreation, environmental issues), Best of C-VILLE (readers ...
The Charlottesville car attack was a white supremacist terrorist attack [ 12 ] perpetrated on August 12, 2017, when James Alex Fields Jr. deliberately drove his car into a crowd of people peacefully protesting the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, killing one person and injuring 35. [ 4 ][ 13 ] Fields, 20, had previously ...
Ken Boyd (politician) Kenneth C. Boyd is a member of the Albemarle County, Virginia Board of Supervisors. He ran unsuccessfully for the Republican Party nomination in Virginia's fifth congressional district to challenge incumbent Congressman Tom Perriello in the 2010 congressional elections.
At the time, WHSV-TV was owned by Worrell Newspapers along with the Charlottesville Daily Progress. On April 9, 2004, W64AO moved to UHF channel 16, changed call letters to WVAW-LP, upgraded power, and separated from WHSV-TV. WVAW-LP was the market's third local station after WVIR-TV (channel 29) and WCAV.
"After time of turmoil, WTJU reprograms, increases fundraising" 2012 article in The Daily Progress "WTJU keeps it eclectic" 2013 article in The Daily Progress "Charlottesville Radio Station Celebrates a Century of Jazz" 2017 article in U.S. News & World Report "Radio Station Visit #129 – WTJU at University of Virginia" 2017 article in Radio ...