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This is a list of online newspaper archives and some magazines and journals, including both free and pay wall blocked digital archives. Most are scanned from microfilm into pdf, gif or similar graphic formats and many of the graphic archives have been indexed into searchable text databases utilizing optical character recognition (OCR) technology.
Los Angeles Times Magazine was started in 1985. [4] [5] As with West, the magazine was a weekly supplemental to the Sunday edition of the Los Angeles Times newspaper. In 2006, the Los Angeles Times announced it was resurrecting West magazine, edited by Rick Wartzman, with writer Amy Tan as the literary editor. West replaced the Los Angeles ...
The Epoch Times - Washington DC; The paper, while also offering paid subscriptions, continued to offer papers free at boxes around the city, until August 15, 2019. Illinois [ edit ]
This week, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, in the footsteps of San Francisco and San Diego,voted unanimously to give the Sheriff's Department a Dec. 1 deadline to make phone calls ...
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.
The Los Angeles City Attorney's Office filed a lawsuit this week against Blueground, a short-term rental company that advertises properties. LA lawmakers threaten landlords with fines as high as ...
National Library of Israel newspaper collection (in Arabic, English and Hebrew) Newspaper SG - Singaporean newspapers dating back to 1827 Papers Past – digitization project of the National Library of New Zealand; over 6 million New Zealand newspaper pages, 270 thousand pages of magazine and journal content, as well as certain letters, diaries ...
A free weekly tabloid print edition of Metromix Los Angeles followed in February 2008; the publication was the newspaper's first stand-alone print weekly. [76] In 2009, the Times shut down Metromix and replaced it with Brand X, a blog site and free weekly tabloid targeting young, social networking readers. [77]