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Arizona Copper Camp – Ray in the 1910s and 1920s [19] Arizona Daily Citizen – Tucson 1880s – 1900s [20] See also: Arizona Citizen, Tucson Citizen, Arizona Weekly Citizen. The Arizona Daily Orb – Bisbee 1890s – 1900s [21] The Arizona Gleam – Phoenix in the 1920s and 1930s [22] The Arizona Journal; The Arizona Kicker – Tombstone [23]
Magazine, East Valley Tribune, Gilbert Sun News, Lovin' Life After 50, Nearby News, North Valley Magazine, SanTan Sun News, Scottsdale Airpark News, West Valley View, Scottsdale Airpark News, The Glendale Star and Peoria Times. TMG also owns and operates AZ Integrated Media, a media distribution and custom publishing company, and runs the ...
The town's first newspaper, The Peoria Enterprise, was printed weekly from November 14, 1917, to April 1921. Peoria's first library was held at the women's club in 1920 until it moved to the old Peoria City Hall in 1975 (where the Peoria Center for the Performing Arts was constructed and currently sits). The library eventually moved to the ...
Dan Fogelberg's "Same Old Lang Syne" was released as a single in late 1980. Based on a 1975 visit to his native Peoria, the autobiographical ballad recounts a serendipitous Christmas Eve encounter ...
Gadua Cherokee News (United Keetowah Band of Cherokee Indians) [5] Gallup Sun, news coverage of Navajo Nation, Pueblo, and Apache tribes; Gam-yu, Hualapai Tribe of Arizona, [5] Peach Springs, AZ; Gila River Indian News, Gila River Indian Community, Sacaton, AZ [31] Gyah’-Wish Atak-Ia - The Turtle Speaks (Wyandotte Nation) [32]
The new reporters will start June 1. Greg Burton, the executive editor of The Republic, said, "Adding more coverage in rural Arizona will allow us to tell more of the stories of our state and ...
Ferrari 360 Modena bearing a plate from the Cherokee Nation. Several Native American tribes within the United States register motor vehicles and issue license plates to those vehicles.
In December 1999, The Tribune was renamed the East Valley Tribune and, in August 2000, Thomson Newspapers sold its Arizona newspaper holdings to Freedom Communications, Inc. of Irvine, California On October 6, 2008, publisher Julie Moreno announced that, as of 2009, the newspaper would cease publishing in Scottsdale and Tempe.