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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.
The newspapers include: Daily Breeze – Torrance and the South Bay (acquired from the San Diego–based Copley Press in 2007); Inland Valley Daily Bulletin – Pomona Valley and Ontario; originally were two separate papers: the Pomona Progress-Bulletin and the Ontario Daily Report (merged in April 1990) (acquired in 1999 from Donrey).
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
Built in Torrance, California, the initial property was repurposed from a private Storm family tract, used to store recreational vehicles, into a driving range. The site expanded around the driving range, which operated until 2007, adding two miniature golf courses, an arcade , a batting cage , and an indoor restaurant.
Samantha Gordon, the deals editor for Consumer Reports, finds the best monthly sales. With temperatures warming up, she says now is the time to look for landscaping markdowns.
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'.
Torrance has a moderate year-round climate with average rainfall of 12 inches (300 mm) per year. [8] Torrance was incorporated in 1921, and at the 2020 census had a population of 147,067 residents. [6] Torrance has a beachfront and has 30 parks located around the city. [8] It is also the birthplace of the American Youth Soccer Organization (AYSO).
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.