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The ''Beaverton Valley Times'', also known as the ''Valley Times'', is a weekly newspaper covering the city of Beaverton, Oregon, United States, and adjacent unincorporated areas. Owned since 2000 by the Pamplin Media Group, the paper was established in 1921.〔(Beaverton Valley Times. ) Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association. Retrieved on November 25, 2014.〕 Currently based in neighboring Portland, the ''Valley Times'' is printed each Thursday and in 2014 had a paid circulation of 3,353.〔 ==History== What is today the ''Beaverton Valley Times'' was established in 1951 as ''The Valley News'',〔"First Local Paper Started in 1891" (March 21, 1968). ''The Valley Times'' (Beaverton), p. 10.〕 with the consolidation of four local newspapers, the ''Aloha News'', ''Beaverton Enterprise'', ''Multnomah Press'', and ''Tigard Sentinel''. However, the paper's owners have long used 1921 as the date of foundation, based on that being the year in which the owner of the four papers, H. H. Jeffries, acquired the ''Multnomah Press''.〔 Jeffries launched the ''Sentinel'' in 1924 and the ''Aloha News'' and ''Beaverton Enterprise'' in 1927. He later sold the group of four papers to Stan Netherton. Meanwhile, another newspaper being published separately in the area was the ''Beaverton Review'', which was launched in 1922, but ceased publication in 1941.〔 The four jointly owned newspapers were consolidated into a single paper, ''The Valley News'', after Netherton sold them to Ivan Smith and H.D. and Dan Powell, in early 1951. Not long afterward, in late 1951, the ''Valley News'' was sold to Hugh McGilvra and Elbert Hawkins, with George Hoyt joining them later as co-owner. In 1951, the paper had fewer than 2,000 paid subscribers and averaged 12–16 pages per issue.〔 On September 6, 1962, ''The Valley News'' was renamed ''The Valley Times'' (OCLC number 30759134). By that time, the ''Tigard Times'', which had begun publication in February 1957 (as a weekly, subscription paper), and the ''Washington County News-Times'' of Forest Grove were affiliated or jointly owned, and the renaming of the ''Valley News'' as the ''Times'' was intended to publicize that relationship.〔 The publishing company's name at that time was Valley Publishing, Inc. Circulation surpassed 10,000 in 1967.〔 Publisher Hugh Edward McGilvra sold the newspaper in 1981 to the owners of Eugene’s ''Register-Guard''. In January 1989, "Beaverton" was added to the paper's name, making it ''The Beaverton Valley Times''. In 1989, the paper's circulation was in excess of 8,000. The paper won a first-place prize for its size category in 1992 for general excellence from the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association. In 1996, along with five other area newspapers, the ''Valley Times'' was sold to Steve and Randalyn Clark. In 1997, the paper took first place in its division at the annual Better Newspaper Contest of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association.〔1997 Better Newspaper Contest Awards. ''Editor & Publisher'', September 6, 1997.〕 In July 2000, the ''Valley Times'' was honored by the same organization for excellence. Community Newspapers Inc. sold the newspaper along with several others in the Portland metropolitan area to Pamplin Media Group in August 2000. By 2003, the paper began printing announcements for same-sex couples' commitment ceremonies.〔NGLTF Praises Oregonian for Printing Commitment-Ceremony Announcements; 47 Newspapers Currently Print Announcements. ''U.S. Newswire'', October 29, 2002.〕 In 2005, it was the largest weekly newspaper in Oregon.〔(Beaverton Valley Times. ) Echo Media. Retrieved on July 17, 2008.〕 ''The Oregonian'' announced plans to launch a competing paper, the ''Beaverton Leader'', in March 2013. As of 2014, the paper's publisher is Christine Moore and its editor Christina Lent.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Beaverton Valley Times」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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