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Good Times was founded in 1975 by Jay Shore, who remained its owner/operator and editor for 13 years. Shore established Good Times amidst a proliferation in the 1970s of short-lived free counterculture newspapers in Santa Cruz County that included The Free Spaghetti Dinner, Sundaz!, Santa Cruz Times, People’s Press and the Santa Cruz Independent.
Santa Cruz Weekly was a free-circulation weekly newspaper published in Santa Cruz, California.It began publishing under its current name on May 6, 2009; publication ceased when operations were merged with the competing Good Times weekly on April 2, 2014, with the merged company continuing as Good Times.
Metro Santa Cruz, a free-circulation weekly newspaper published in Santa Cruz, California, was published from 1994 to 2009 It was renamed the Santa Cruz Weekly on May 6, 2009 and continued for five years, under its new name, to cover news, arts and entertainment in Santa Cruz County, a coastal area that includes Capitola, Aptos, Boulder Creek, Scotts Valley and Watsonville.
Summer is ending, but sales are still going strong with up to 85% off jewelry, vacuums, laptops and appliances. Shop the best deals during Walmart's weekly sale: Save on Ninja, Bissell, HP and ...
In 1988, Los Altos Town Crier, along with four other Santa Clara County weekly newspapers a part of the Donnelly Newspaper joined three weekly newspapers owned by the Times Tribune. [ 7 ] In 1993, it was reported by the Santa Cruz Sentinel that the Town Crier for years has carried accounts of a local resident's fight with the city and neighbors ...
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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 ...
The Mercury merged with the Times Publishing Company, which was owned by Charles M. Shortridge, in 1884. [27] [28] [29] The Daily Morning Times and Daily Mercury briefly became the Times-Mercury, while the Weekly Times and Weekly Mercury briefly become the Times-Weekly Mercury. [30] In 1885, both publications adopted the San Jose Mercury name. [31]