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Los Angeles Blade; Los Angeles Express (newspaper) Los Angeles Free Press; Los Angeles Herald; Los Angeles Reader; Los Angeles Staff; Los Angeles Standard Newspaper; Los Angeles Times suburban sections; Los Angeles Tribune (1886–1890) Los Angeles Tribune (1911–1918) Los Angeles Tribune (1941–1960) Los Angeles Vanguard; Los Angeles View
A fanfare trumpet, also called a herald trumpet, is a brass instrument similar to but longer than a regular trumpet (tubing is the same length as a regular Bb trumpet but not wrapped), capable of playing specially composed fanfares. Its extra length can also accommodate a small ceremonial banner that can be mounted on it.
Established in 1873, the Los Angeles Herald or the Evening Herald represented the largely Democratic views of the city and focused primarily on issues local to Los Angeles and Southern California. The Los Angeles Daily Herald was first published on October 2, 1873, by Charles A. Storke. It was the first newspaper in Southern California to use ...
Originally named the San Gabriel Valley News Group (SGVN), the organization was formed as an umbrella name for MediaNews Group–operated newspapers in the Los Angeles area. SGVN began when MediaNews Group purchased the Pasadena Star-News, San Gabriel Valley Tribune, and Whittier Daily News from Thomson Corporation in 1996. Thomson had already ...
The merged The Van Nuys News (in big letters) and The Van Nuys Call (in small letters) (January 22, 1915). The Los Angeles Daily News is the second-largest-circulating paid daily newspaper of Los Angeles, California, after the unrelated Los Angeles Times, and the flagship newspaper of the Southern California News Group, a branch of Colorado-based Digital First Media.
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The Los Angeles Express was a newspaper published in Los Angeles in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Founded in 1871, the newspaper was acquired by William Randolph Hearst in 1931. [ 1 ] It merged with the Los Angeles Herald and became an evening newspaper known as the Los Angeles Herald-Express .
In the 96th Olympiad (396 BC), beside the athletic and artistic competitions, [1] the Herald and Trumpet contest was added, which was already a formal element of the Olympic ritual performed by the kerykes (heralds) and salpinktai (trumpeters).