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The Curry Coastal Pilot is a weekly newspaper published in Brookings, Oregon, United States, since 1946. [1] It is published on Fridays by Country Media, Inc. and has a circulation of 5,223. [ 1 ] [ 2 ]
The Columbia County Chronicle & Chief; Columbia County Spotlight; Columbia Gorge News; Corvallis Gazette-Times; Cottage Grove Sentinel; The Chronicle (Creswell, Oregon) Curry Coastal Pilot; Curry County Reporter
Lincoln City News Guard: Lincoln City: 1937 2024 Merged with Newport News-Times: Newport News-Times: Newport: 1882 2024 Merged with Lincoln City News Guard: Mail Tribune: Medford: April 2, 1907 January 13, 2023 McMinnville Reporter: McMinnville: 1870 [6] Metropolis Herald: Portland: circa 1855 [6] Mid-county Memo: Portland: May 1985 January ...
Newspapers owned by Country Media, Inc. State Service Area Newspaper Oregon: Coos Bay: The World: Oregon Tillamook: Tillamook Headlight-Herald: Oregon St. Helens: The Columbia County Chronicle & Chief: Oregon Brookings: Curry Coastal Pilot: California: Crescent City: Del Norte Triplicate: Oregon Newport: Lincoln County Leader: Oregon Manzanita ...
A fault off the Pacific coast could devastate Washington, Oregon and Northern California with a major earthquake and tsunami. Researchers mapped it comprehensively for the first time.
It covers communities throughout the Columbia River Gorge, including those in Wasco County, Oregon and Klickitat County, Washington. It was formed in April 2020 by the merger of The Dalles Chronicle, Hood River News and White Salmon Enterprise after Eagle Newspapers sold them to Chelsea Marr. The paper has a circulation around 7,000 and ...
Though the pilot’s identity is not listed in the data associated with the flight, the plane’s tail number (N59906) shows that it was a Piper Navajo twin-piston (PA31) that is registered to ...
The newspaper was founded in 1914 by E. M. Bogardus [2] as the Gold Beach Reporter. [3] The Gold Beach paper was sold in 1917 to A. E. Guyton and John A. Juza, [4] with Juza assuming complete ownership in 1922 and W. E. Hassler becoming editor. [5] [6] The paper's name was changed around 1926 to the Curry County Reporter. [7]