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  2. Messenger-Inquirer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Messenger-Inquirer

    Owensboro, Kentucky 42301. United States. Circulation. 15,087 Monday-Saturday. 20,383 Sunday. Website. messenger-inquirer .com. The Messenger-Inquirer is a local newspaper in Owensboro, Kentucky. The Messenger-Inquirer serves 15,087 daily and 20,383 Sunday readers in five counties in western Kentucky.

  3. Lawrence W. Hager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_W._Hager

    He served as director of the Southern Newspapers Association (1947–1950), Owensboro Publishing Company, and the Kentucky Broadcasting Company, president, owner, and operator of WOMI radio station, president of the Kentucky Press Association, and owner of the Messenger-Inquirer. Hager died in 1982.

  4. Owensboro, Kentucky - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Owensboro,_Kentucky

    The daily newspaper is the Messenger-Inquirer, owned by Paxton Media Group of Paducah, Kentucky. The Owensboro Times is a local online news site. Radio. Radio stations include WBIO, WXCM, WLME, WOMI, WVJS and WBKR broadcasting from Owensboro. One, WSTO-FM, is actually licensed to Owensboro, although its studios are now located in Evansville

  5. Paxton Media Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paxton_Media_Group

    The Messenger - Madisonville, Kentucky; Mayfield Messenger - Mayfield, Kentucky; Messenger-Inquirer - Owensboro, Kentucky; The Paducah Sun - Paducah, Kentucky; Daily Star - Hammond, Louisiana; The Herald-Palladium - St. Joseph, Michigan; Daily Corinthian - Corinth, Mississippi; The Courier-Tribune - Asheboro, North Carolina; Times-News ...

  6. The Messenger (website) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Messenger_(website)

    The Messenger. (website) The Messenger was an American news website founded by Jimmy Finkelstein, the former owner of Washington, D.C.-based news organization The Hill. The publication launched on May 15, 2023, and hired many journalists and editors from several other established news organizations.

  7. William Gant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gant

    Gant was a lifelong member of Owensboro's First Church of Christ Disciples of Christ Church, where The Messenger-Inquirer reported he had "held every major office", including elder. [3] He married Mary Ellen Price, and the couple had two sons – Stuart Price Gant and Walter Gant. [3] [5] Walter was killed in an automobile accident in June 1988.

  8. Gavin Wimsatt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gavin_Wimsatt

    That year, he helped them have a record of 12–2 before losing in the state playoff semifinals to Frederick Douglass, earning second-team all-area honors from the Messenger-Inquirer while totaling 2,792 passing yards and 31 passing touchdowns, along with 564 yards and 12 scores rushing.

  9. Wendell Ford - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wendell_Ford

    On July 19, 2014, the Messenger-Inquirer reported that Ford had been diagnosed with lung cancer. Ford died from lung cancer at his home on January 22, 2015, at age 90. He was buried at Rosehill Elmwood Cemetery. See also. Conservative Democrat; References

  10. Nancy (comic strip) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_(comic_strip)

    Nancy became the focus of the daily strip, which was renamed for her in 1938 after Lawrence W. Hager, the editor of the Owensboro, Kentucky Inquirer-Messenger (now the Messenger-Inquirer), lobbied for the change; Sluggo Smith, Nancy's friend from the "wrong side of the tracks" had been introduced earlier that year, and the strip's popularity rose.

  11. Henderson Gleaner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henderson_Gleaner

    Belo had purchased The Messenger-Inquirer in nearby Owensboro a year earlier. Belo subsequently decided that the two Kentucky newspapers were not core to their business of operating newspapers and television stations in larger high-growth markets, particularly in the Southwest and Pacific Northwest.