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The San Diego Reader is an alternative press newspaper in San Diego County, California. Published weekly since October 1972, the Reader is distributed free on Wednesday and Thursday via street boxes and cooperating retail outlets.
Shepherd, in fact, was a "sounding board" for a 1971 Farber essay on director Raoul Walsh ("He Used to Be a Big Shot"), [2] found in Farber's book (originally published in Artforum magazine). At the San Diego Reader , Shepherd awarded a "priority" to movies from one to five stars, with "antipathies" receiving a black spot.
San Diego Reader, San Diego; San Francisco Bay Guardian, ... Toledo Free Press, Toledo, Oklahoma. Oklahoma Gazette, Oklahoma City metropolitan area, Oregon
The Organ, San Francisco, 1970–1971; Peninsula Observer, Palo Alto; The San Diego Door, San Diego, 1966–1970 (formerly Good Morning, Teaspoon) San Diego Free Press, San Diego 1968–1970 (changed name to San Diego Street Journal) San Francisco Express Times, San Francisco, 1968–1969 (changed name to Good Times)
Laughing Elephant Gifts, located in Seattle, Washington, specializes in unique gifts using vintage images from the Laughing Elephant and Green Tiger Press archives. [ 5 ] [ 8 ] Laughing Elephant Books, run by Benjamin Darling in San Diego, California, focuses on publishing children’s and gift books featuring vintage illustrations and designs ...
Subsequently, the print edition of the newspaper was folded into the U-T and called U-T North County Times, which is an edition of U-T San Diego and combines North County-specific content with features and columns from the U-T. [11] The North County Times headquarters in Escondido were sold to the Classical Academy charter school. [12] [13]
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The San Diego Public Library was established on May 19, 1882, by an elected board of library trustees, one of whom was civic leader and philanthropist George Marston.The first location was rented space in the Commercial Bank building at Fifth and G streets, and the new library opened its doors to the public for the first time on July 15, 1882.