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The Mercury News headquarters in downtown San Jose. The Mercury News is the largest tenant in the Towers @ 2nd high-rise office complex in downtown San Jose. [64] Business functions occupy the seventh floor of 4 North Second Street, while news staff and executives occupy the eighth floor, for a total of 33,186 square feet (3,083.1 m 2). [4]
The East Bay Times is a daily broadsheet newspaper based in Walnut Creek, California, United States, owned by the Bay Area News Group (BANG), a subsidiary of Media News Group, that serves Contra Costa and Alameda counties, in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area.
The Contra Costa Times, San Ramon Valley Times, East County Times, Tri-Valley Herald and San Joaquin Herald were scheduled to become the new The Times. [9] The San Mateo Times was scheduled to publish its last issue on November 1, 2011. As of November 2, 2011, subscribers were to get localized versions of the San Jose Mercury News. [7]
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Turn a vacation response on or off. 1. Click on the Settings icon | select More settings. 2. Click Vacation response. 3. Toggle on or off Enable vacation response. 4. Select the dates you want it active. 5. Enter your response message. 6. Click Save. Turn on another response for specific domains. 1. Toggle on or off Add another response. 2.
Mercury News found that of the 13 “essential housing” projects in Northern California, half charged rents higher than the local market, and that the projects have created $25 million in up ...
In 2006, Knight Ridder was purchased by McClatchy Co., [10] which immediately sold SVCN and the San Jose Mercury News to MediaNews Group. [11] MediaNews Group is now known as Digital First Media. Silicon Valley Community Newspapers and the Sunnyvale Sun are published as part of the San Jose Mercury News. [1]
Alianza Metropolitan was founded in 1986 by George Villalobos. [4] [1]In 1996, San Jose Mercury News, owned by media conglomerate Knight Ridder, established Nuevo Mundo and its Spanish-language weekly subsidiary to compete directly with the three local Hispanic-owned papers: La Ofreta, El Observador, and Alianza. [5]