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Peninsula Daily News – Port Angeles; Seattle Daily Journal of Commerce – Seattle; The Seattle Times – Seattle; Spokesman-Review – Spokane; The News Tribune – Tacoma; The Columbian – Vancouver; Walla Walla Union-Bulletin – Walla Walla; The Wenatchee World – Wenatchee; Yakima Herald-Republic – Yakima
It is now part of The Seattle Times Company, which purchased the paper in 1991. [4] The newspaper was printed in Yakima until 2021, when The Seattle Times Company announced it would sell the Herald-Republic ' s headquarters and printing plant. The newspaper will instead be printed in Walla Walla by the Walla Walla Union-Bulletin. [5]
Elsewhere in Washington, the company owns the Yakima Herald-Republic and Walla Walla Union-Bulletin. [6] Maine-native schoolteacher and attorney Alden J. Blethen bought the Seattle Press-Times in 1896, renaming it the Seattle Daily Times and doubling its circulation to 7,000 six months later. When he died in 1915, the Times' circulation was ...
To understand just how big of a star he was in the Tri-Cities, you have to remember the times in the early 1970s. Computers weren’t available to most kids. No cell phones.
A man accused of killing three people early Tuesday in a “random” shooting at a convenience store in Yakima, Washington, is on the lam, police said. Suspect found dead after 'random' shooting ...
Google Maps estimates that the trek from Yakima to the Tacoma zoo is around 2 hours and 40 minutes. Wildlife authorities captured a young kinkajou at a Yakima rest stop on Sunday, June 23, 2024.
The Sunnyside Sun absorbed the weekly Sunnyside Times in 1962. The paper was acquired by the Oregon-based Eagle Newspapers in 1984. [5] Eagle bought the competing Daily News as well, and merged the two in 1986 to form the Daily Sun News. [13] [14] [15] After the paper's sale to Andy McNab in 2018, the name was changed back to Sunnyside Sun. [16]
The Yakima Herald-Republic is the primary daily newspaper in the area. According to Arbitron, the Yakima metropolitan area is the 197th largest radio market in the US, serving 196,500 people. [45] Yakima is part of the U.S.'s 114th largest television viewing market, which includes viewers in Pasco, Richland and Kennewick. [46]