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Oregon City Enterprise: Oregon City: October 1866 1875 [6] Oregon City Free Press: Oregon City: March 1948 October 1948 [6] Oregon Farmer: Portland: August 1858 February 1863 [6] Oregon Herald: Portland: March 1866 1871 [6] Oregon Intelligencer: Jacksonville: November 1862 1864 [6] The Oregon Journal: Portland: 1902 1982 Oregon News Budget ...
This is a list of online newspaper archives and some magazines and journals, including both free and pay wall blocked digital archives. Most are scanned from microfilm into pdf, gif or similar graphic formats and many of the graphic archives have been indexed into searchable text databases utilizing optical character recognition (OCR) technology.
Chico News & Review, Chico; Desert Star Weekly, Palm Springs; East Bay Express, Oakland; Easy Reader, Hermosa Beach; Good Times, Santa Cruz; LA Weekly, Los Angeles; Metro Silicon Valley, San Jose; Monterey County Weekly, Seaside; New Times (weekly), San Luis Obispo, owned by the New Times Media Group; North Bay Bohemian, Sonoma, Marin, and Napa ...
An Oregon man is accused of murdering his girlfriend, whose July 2024 death was initially ruled a suicide. On Tuesday, Jan.15, police in Sweet Home arrested Jerod L. Norman, 40, of Sweet Home, and ...
The Oregon Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional in 1981 and Oregon voters reinstated it in 1984, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. A list of inmates with death sentences ...
The Northwest Territorial Imperative was the motivation for Randy Weaver and his family to move to Idaho in the early 1980s; they were later involved in the Ruby Ridge incident. [3] David Lane, proponent of the Fourteen Words, endorsed a form of the Northwest Territorial Imperative advocating domestic terrorism to achieve one in the Mountain ...
Willamette Week was founded in 1974 by Ronald A. Buel, [3] who served as its first publisher. [4] It was later owned by the Eugene Register-Guard, which sold it in the fall of 1983 to Richard H. Meeker and Mark Zusman, [5] who took the positions of publisher and editor, respectively.
A SF Weekly newspaper box on Sansome Street in San Francisco. Alternative papers have usually operated under a different business model than daily papers. [1] Most alternative papers, such as The Stranger, the Houston Press, SF Weekly, the Village Voice, the New York Press, the Metro Times, the LA Weekly, the Boise Weekly and the Long Island Press, have been free, earning revenue through the ...