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Phoenix New Times is a free digital and print media company based in Phoenix, Arizona. Phoenix New Times publishes daily online coverage of local news, restaurants, music, arts, cannabis, as well as longform narrative journalism. A weekly print issue circulates every Thursday.
Arizona State Miner – Randsburg, California and Wickenburg 1890s – 1920s [29] Arizona Sun – Phoenix 1940s – 1960s [30] The Arizona Times – Tucson in the 1920s and 1930s [31] Arizona Tribune – Phoenix 1950s – 1970s [32] Arizona Weekly Citizen – Tucson 1880s – 1890s [33] See also: Arizona Citizen, Tucson Citizen, Arizona Daily ...
Village Voice Media or VVM is a newspaper company. It began in 1970 as a weekly alternative newspaper in Phoenix, Arizona.The company, founded by Michael Lacey (editor) and Jim Larkin (publisher), was then known as New Times Inc. (NTI) and the publication was named New Times.
Michael G. Lacey (born July 30, 1948) is an Arizona-based journalist, editor, publisher and First Amendment advocate. He is the founder and former executive editor of the Phoenix New Times, which he and his business partner, publisher Jim Larkin, expanded into a nationwide chain of 17 alternative weeklies, known as Village Voice Media (VVM).
Arizona News Service, which publishes the Arizona Capitol Times, was founded by Ned Creighton in 1906 before Arizona became a state.The operation was run and expanded by his son Robert until 1970, when Robert's son, also Ned, assumed control of the business.
AOL latest headlines, news articles on business, entertainment, health and world events.
Similarly, in 1993, the head of the Arizona Department of Public Safety, Col. Ralph Milstead, a friend of Ortega's from their days as patrol cops, told Phoenix New Times that Ortega had convinced Milstead to investigate PNT executive editor Mike Lacey in the 1980s for alleged cocaine smuggling, though there was no probable cause to do so.
In 1972, she moved to Arizona and started to work as a journalist. [2] In 2012, she worked on the television program profiling historic Arizona characters Outrageous Arizona along with Marshall Trimble. [3] Bommersbach worked for Phoenix New Times and the Arizona Republic. [4] Bommersbach died July 17, 2024, at the age of 78. [5] [6]