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The Chronicle-Tribune was created in 1968 when The Marion Chronicle (established in 1865 as an evening newspaper) was combined with The Marion Leader-Tribune (established in 1912 as a morning newspaper); the papers had published a combined Sunday edition under the Chronicle-Tribune name. It was published as an all-day newspaper with morning and ...
Calaveras Chronicle (Mokelumne Hill, 1851–1868) Calexico Chronicle (Calexico, 1904–1998) California Aggie (Davis, 1915–2014) California Crusader News (Los Angeles, 2010) California Farmer and Journal of Useful Sciences (San Francisco, 1855–1880) California Star (San Francisco, 1847–1848) California Star & Californian (San Francisco, 1848)
Local news, since 1891 Cedar Street: Pacific Grove 20,000 Weekly The Palisadian-Post: Pacific Palisades Alan Smolinisky: Weekly Pacifica Tribune: Pacifica: Coastside News Group Weekly Paso Robles Press: Paso Robles News Media Corporation: Weekly Placerville Mountain Democrat: Placerville McNaughton Newspapers Weekly Mid Valley Times: Reedley
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The lawsuit filed this week by the Marion County Record against Marion city and county officials has been expected since the day the local police and sheriff staged an illegal and ill-advised raid ...
In 2007, Paxton Media Group purchased three Indiana newspapers: the Marion Chronicle-Tribune (in July) from the Gannett Foundation; [6] the Huntington Herald-Press (in May) from the Quayle family; [7] and the La Porte Herald-Argus from Small Newspaper Group (in September). [8] In June 2015, Paxton purchased the Mayfield Messenger in Kentucky. [9]
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Robert Lynch was born in San Francisco in 1920 and had served in the U.S. Navy during World War II. He built the newspaper to 65 employees and expanded the circulation from 2000 to 12,000. He served as president of both the California Newspaper Publishers Association and the California Press Association, and died in 2003. [5]