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Arizona Weekly Citizen – Tucson 1880s – 1890s [33] See also: Arizona Citizen, Tucson Citizen, Arizona Daily Citizen. Arizona Weekly Enterprise – Florence 1880s – 1890s [34] Arizona Weekly Journal-Miner – Prescott [35] See also: Arizona Miner, Arizona Weekly Miner. Arizona Weekly Miner – Prescott [36] See also: Arizona Miner, Arizona ...
The precursor to the Arizona Daily Star was The Bulletin, the first daily newspaper published in Tucson. It was started March 1, 1877 by L.C. Hughes and Charles Tully, later publishers of The Star. The Bulletin was succeeded by The Arizona Tri-Weekly Star, under the same ownership March 29, 1877.
Merl Harry Reagle (January 5, 1950 – August 22, 2015) was an American crossword constructor. [2] [3] For 30 years, he constructed a puzzle every Sunday for the San Francisco Chronicle (originally the San Francisco Examiner), which he syndicated to more than 50 Sunday newspapers, [4] including the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Seattle Times, The Plain ...
Trump returned to Arizona, and in 1965 became the founding president of Scottsdale's chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution. [32] [e] He also served on the vestry at the Episcopal church Saint Barnabas on the Desert. He worked for a while in Ogden, Utah, where he died at the age of 54 due to heart complications. [3] He was buried in ...
In a March 1882 interview with the Arizona Daily Star, Virgil Earp told the reporter "Before Stilwell died he confessed that he killed Morg and gave the names of those who were implicated with him. When my brothers were leaving Arizona they got dispatches from Tucson saying that Stilwell and a party of friends were watching all the railroad ...
Elza Temary was born Elza Klecker in Timișoara, Austria-Hungary. [2]After her active film career centered in Berlin, Germany which seems to have ended abruptly as Hitler took power, Elza married wildlife photographer / socialite Philip Chancellor and moved to Montecito, California, next to Santa Barbara.
According to an editorial in the Arizona Daily Star on October 13, 2009, the Department of Administration in Arizona stated that "about 800 state employees are affected and that the cost to insure domestic partners is about $3 million of the $625 million the state spends on benefits". [107]
In 2013, The Arizona Republic dropped from the sixteenth largest daily newspaper in the United States to the twenty-first largest, by circulation. [5] In 2020 it had a circulation of about 116,000 for its daily edition, and 337,000 for its Sunday edition.