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Times Mirror Square includes: The Los Angeles Times Building (or "Kaufmann Building") [2] at the southwest corner of First and Spring Streets, opened in 1935. [3] It was built as the headquarters of the Los Angeles Times and was designed in Art Deco style by Gordon B. Kaufmann. [4] [5] The building won a gold medal at the 1937 Paris Exposition. [6]
In 1926, Reilly proposed the idea of installing a news ticker bulletin on the Times Tower to the owner of the New York Times Adolph Ochs and deputy Arthur Hays Sulzberger. They all signed a contract July 26, 1928. [2] It took 8 weeks to install the display with work being done 24 hours a day in order to meet the contracted deadline.
Los Angeles Times building (1887–1910), located on the northwest corner of 1st and Broadway; this is the building that was destroyed in the Los Angeles Times bombing of 1910, killing 21 people [1] Los Angeles Times building (1912–1934), new construction on the same site as previous, [1] rebuilt as a four-story building with "castle-like ...
Nearby, a veteran Times Square New Year’s Eve reveler — decked out in a 2025 foam top hat, 2025 glasses and colorful boas — shrugged off the stormy weather. “[My] eighth year in a row ...
Times Mirror owned the Sporting News from 1977 [1] until 2000, when it was sold to Paul Allen's Vulcan Inc. In 1987, Times Mirror acquired Field & Stream, Yachting, Home Mechanix, and Skiing. [1] In 1983, Times Mirror owned not only the Los Angeles Times but also Newsday, [6] The Denver Post, The Dallas Times Herald, and the Hartford Courant. [3]
The Times’ comics and puzzles pages run Monday through Friday in the Calendar section, Saturday in the California section, and Sunday in the Sunday Comics section.
Oct. 5—Family recipes that have stood the test of time is how La Posta de Mesilla has achieved 85 years of operation. In 1939, Katy Griggs opened the little chile joint and named it La Posta.
The Ponet Square Hotel and Apartments fire was a 1970 multiple-fatality building fire in Los Angeles, California, United States. The fire broke out before dawn on Sunday, September 13, 1970, and swept through the four-story, 86-unit building, which had been constructed around 1910. [1] The cause of the fire was arson. [2]