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The Little Saigon News; 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 ...
Los Angeles Illustrated Daily News; Los Angeles Examiner (1903–1962) [11] Los Angeles Herald-Examiner (1962–1989) [12] Los Angeles Herald Express (1931–1962) [13] Los Angeles Mirror; Los Angeles Record [14] Los Angeles Saturday Night (1920–1934, illustrated weekly by Samuel Travers Clover) Los Angeles Star / La Estrella de Los Ángeles ...
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.
Newspapers once printed or published in the U.S. state of California which have ceased publication. Subcategories This category has only the following subcategory.
Los Angeles Times (2 C, 23 P) Pages in category "Daily newspapers published in Greater Los Angeles" The following 37 pages are in this category, out of 37 total.
Allan James Clayton MBE (born 1981) is a British tenor. [ 1 ] Clayton studied at the King's School, Worcester as a chorister at Worcester Cathedral , [ 1 ] at St John's College, Cambridge as a choral scholar, and at the Royal Academy of Music in London. [ 2 ]
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 .
Los Angeles Record exposés of the 1920s, like this one on the Julian Pete scandal, were often marked with a ink splot labeled "The Truth!". E. E. McDowell, called Mac, was the editorial cartoonist from 1903 to ~1934 [11]