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The Valley Press was founded by A.J. Hicks on Saturday, April 3, 1915, as the Palmdale Post. At the time, the Valley was home to about 3,500 people. Over the decades of the 20th century, the newspaper changed hands, and there were a few name changes as well. On May 4, 1950, the paper became known as the South Antelope Valley Press. [3]
It is owned by Imperial Valley Media; shareholders include Rhode Island Suburban Newspapers. [1] The Imperial Valley Press features local news from all communities of the Imperial Valley and the Mexicali, Baja California area, as well as San Diego County and portions of southwestern Arizona. The newspaper focuses on local news, sports and ...
The Daily News – Antelope Valley was an edition of the Los Angeles Daily News, with offices in Palmdale, California, United States. At one time the publication was the area's second largest circulating daily newspaper. It was owned by the Los Angeles Newspaper Group, whose flagship publication is the Los Angeles Daily News.
USL Antelope Valley will play its home games at Lancaster Municipal Stadium, a 5,300-seat baseball park Smelzer and the city of Lancaster are spending $11 million to renovate for soccer.
Gardena Valley News: Gardena: 10,000 Weekly Salinas Valley Tribune: Gonzales: New SV Media Inc. 850 Weekly Glendale News-Press: Glendale: Outlook Newspapers Group: 5,795 (2020) [3] Weekly Gustine Press-Standard: Gustine 209 Multimedia Weekly Half Moon Bay Review: Half Moon Bay: Coastside News Group 3,000 Weekly Selma Enterprise: Hanford: Lee ...
KTPI (1340 AM, "News Talk 1340 KTPI") is a commercial radio station that is licensed to Mojave, California, United States and serves the Antelope Valley area. The station is owned by RZ Radio LLC [3] and airs a news/talk format. KTPI is the radio home of the Lancaster JetHawks, a Minor League Baseball team in the California League.
Palmdale was first inhabited by various tribal pre-Americans. [10] Populated by different groups for an estimated 11,000 years, the Antelope Valley was a trade route for nomadic pre-Americans traveling from what is now Arizona and New Mexico to California's coast. [11]
Kay Ryan (born September 21, 1945) [1] is an American poet and educator. She has published seven volumes of poetry and an anthology of selected and new poems. From 2008 to 2010 she was the sixteenth United States Poet Laureate. [2]