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The Clearfield Progress is a daily newspaper serving Clearfield in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. [1] It was founded in 1913 as successor to the Clearfield Herald. [2] It has a circulation of about 12,000 and is published six days a week. [1]
Daily Star-Progress [24] Dinuba Sentinel; Evening Outlook (Santa Monica) Fortuna Advance (Fortuna) (existed in 1905) Fullerton News-Tribune [25] The Golden Era (San Francisco) Hispano América (San Francisco, Spanish, 1917-1934) [26] Hokubei Mainichi Newspaper (San Francisco, Japanese) Hollywood Citizen (1931–1970) [27] Hollywood Star
Clearfield is a borough and the county seat [3] of Clearfield County, Pennsylvania, United States. As of the 2020 census the population was 5,962 people, [ 4 ] making it the second most populous community in Clearfield County, behind DuBois .
WCCS was the brainchild of founders Mark Harley and Ray Goss, both of whom had served as general managers at radio stations in the area that were owned by Progressive Publishing, which also published the Clearfield Progress newspaper. Goss left WDAD and WQMU in 1981 after being general manager for 15 years.
The Veterans of Foreign Wars post in Mahaffey and an Army Reserve Center in Clearfield, Pennsylvania, are also named in his honor. On February 26, 2008, the Army opened a new 26,000-square-foot (2,400 m 2 ) vehicle maintenance facility named after Brown in Camp Carroll, South Korea .
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The United States Office of Management and Budget [17] has designated Clearfield County as the DuBois, PA Micropolitan Statistical Area (μSA). As of the 2010 census [ 18 ] the micropolitan area ranked sixth most populous in the State of Pennsylvania and the 65th most populous in the United States, with a population of 81,642.
His New York Times obituary says Rossiter served as a lieutenant in an artillery unit in World War I. [1] He was among the founders of the Roger Israel Post 11 of the American Legion and actively promoted the cause of veterans.