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The Alpine Avalanche is a weekly newspaper based in Alpine, Texas, United States, and covering Brewster County. It has local news stories and advertisements, and it has almost no coverage of news outside of the area. In 1982, its circulation was 4,850, with vendor/counter/dealer sales being 2,196. [3]
In 1955, she started to write a column called "Ranch News", for the Alpine Avalanche. [9] [10] She co-wrote a book, How Come It's Called That: Place Names in the Big Bend Country (1962, with Virginia Madison). [11] She became a justice of the peace in Brewster County in 1964. [12] In 1991, she published a memoir, I'll Gather My Geese. [10]
Alpine Avalanche: Alpine: 1891 Thursday 2,047 Alvin Sun: Alvin: Hartman Newspapers, L.P. 1892 Sunday 280 Amarillo Globe-News: Amarillo: Gannett: 1926 Daily (ex Sat) 4,935 The Progress: Anahuac: Granite Media Partners 1901 Wednesday 467 Andrews County News: Andrews: Scott Wood and Scott Wesner 1934 Sunday / Thursday 884 Western Observer: Anson ...
Austria is in danger of becoming largely "ice free" within 45 years, the country's Alpine Club warned last year, reporting that in 2023 two glaciers shrank by more than 100 meters. Melting ...
Franco Colapinto has joined Formula 1 team Alpine as a reserve driver for this year after racing for Williams in 2024. The 21-year-old Argentinian signed a multi-year deal with Alpine, which ...
Alpine (/ ˈ æ l p aɪ n / AL-pyne) is a city in and the county seat of Brewster County, Texas, United States. [5] The population was 6,035 at the 2020 census. [6] The town has an elevation of 4,462 feet (1,360 m), and the surrounding mountain peaks are over 1 mile (1.6 km) above sea level.
The "Alternatives to Detention" program is tracking more than 25,000 migrants using ankle and wrist-worn monitors, which costs taxpayers an average of nearly $80,000 each day, according to ICE data.
She is the daughter of Jean Epperson Glasscock and James Glasscock, who owned and operated the Alpine Avalanche from 1954 to 1974. Glasscock is a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin, and completed her M.A. in creative writing at New York University. She worked in New York City publishing before returning to Austin, Texas, in the 1990s.