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The paper was founded as the weekly The Breeze in 1894 by local political activist S. D. Barkley and first served the local Redondo Beach community. Coverage eventually spread to other coastal cities, and by 1922, it had become a daily publication.
Garage sale in northern California Diverse items bought at a moving sale held in Boise, Idaho. A garage sale (also known as a yard sale, tag sale, moving sale and by many other names [1]) is an informal event for the sale of used goods by private individuals, in which sellers are not required to obtain business licenses or collect sales tax (though, in some jurisdictions, a permit may be ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Daily_Breeze_(Torrance)&oldid=305010474"This page was last edited on 30 July 2009, at 04:09
It borders the city of Torrance to its north, the Pacific Ocean is on the west and south, and the Port of Los Angeles is to the east. As of the 2010 census, the population of the Palos Verdes Peninsula is 65,008.
Some of the eliminated positions were picked up by the Torrance Daily Breeze, another Los Angeles Newspaper Group paper. [ 9 ] The paper's longtime home, the Press-Telegram building at 6th Street and Pine Avenue, was sold in late 2006 to real estate developers intending to convert the property into condominiums.
In addition to the Los Angeles Times, the South Bay cities are served by daily papers, the Daily Breeze, the weeklies The Beach Reporter, The Easy Reader and South Bay Community News, a bi-monthly real estate magazine, South Bay DIGS and lifestyle publication 'Southbay Magazine'.
The Los Angeles City School District removed all of the furniture from the Torrance elementary and middle schools; Sam Gnerre of The Daily Breeze wrote that "LAUSD was not pleased with the outcome of the election." [8] In 1948 Torrance's high schools and elementary schools unified into one district. [9]
The paper town of Walteria in 1888. The area that came to be known as Walteria was once part of Rancho Palos Verdes.According to Historic Spots in California, a location just southeast of Walteria was likely the location of the José Dolores Sepúlveda Adobe, built in approximately 1818: "The exact site is unknown, but the general area is indicated by old pepper trees at the mouth of the ...