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The Imperial Valley Press (originally known as the Imperial Press ) is a daily newspaper printed outside of the Imperial Valley, California . It was owned by Schurz Communications of South Bend, Indiana from 1965 to 2015. It is owned by Imperial Valley Media; shareholders include Rhode Island Suburban Newspapers .

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17-438: IVP may stand for: Imperial Valley Press , an American newspaper Institutional Venture Partners , a venture capital and growth equity firm Insight Venture Partners , a venture capital firm focusing on technology and Internet-related businesses International Viewpoint , the monthly magazine of the reunified Fourth International International Visitor Program (now called

34-518: The Gannett newspaper chain, and the expanded network of newspapers adopted the Gannett name. In March 2019 Schurz Communications bought the city-owned local broadband company Burlington Telecom of Burlington, Vermont for a total of $ 30.8 million. Rushmore Media Company, Inc. was a small radio broadcasting subsidiary, which owned and operated four radio stations and one television station in

51-521: The International Visitor Leadership Program ), a professional exchange program funded by the U.S. Department of State Initial value problem is an ordinary differential equation together with a specified value, called the initial condition Intravenous pyelogram , a radiological procedure used to visualize abnormalities of the urinary system, including the kidneys, ureters, and bladder Inter-Varsity Press ,

68-539: The Imperial Valley and the Mexicali, Baja California area, as well as San Diego County and portions of southwestern Arizona. The newspaper focuses on local news, sports and opinion pieces. The Imperial Press debuted on April 20, 1901, under editor and manager Henry C. Reed. Appearing each Saturday, it served the recently founded community of Imperial, California, then part of San Diego County. The addition of

85-748: The Midwest with its network of seven data centers and full suite of hybrid cloud services. In December of that year, Online Tech acquired the assets and products of IT provider Neverfail. The acquisition includes Neverfail’s five cloud nodes and assets in North America, Europe and Asia-Pacific. In January 2019, Schurz sold its publishing division and all its newspapers to GateHouse Media for $ 30 million. This included 20 regional papers and several special publications in Indiana , Maryland , Michigan , Pennsylvania and South Dakota. GateHouse later bought

102-612: The TV/broadcast division were split into separate entities. Schurz Communications announced on September 14, 2015 that it would exit broadcasting and sell its television and radio stations, including the Rushmore Media Company stations, to Gray Television for $ 442.5 million. Gray subsequently announced on October 1 that it would sell the KOTA-TV license to Legacy Broadcasting for $ 1, a deal that also includes

119-661: The company sold the Imperial Valley Press newspaper based in El Centro, California . In September 2016, The American News and Farm Forum, owned by Schurz, acquired The Public Opinion newspaper in Watertown, South Dakota from United Communications . In February 2018, the company acquired the Ann Arbor, Michigan -based Online Tech . The compliant hybrid cloud provider serves nearly 500 clients across

136-468: The helm. Though returning to its original title, the Imperial Press, on March 28, 1903, the focus on water remained. While noting the availability of water in the Imperial Valley, Howe worried that the water rights for “most of the country rests on a basis of speculation as to what the national government will do in the coming years.” In March 1906, the paper moved to nearby El Centro where, under

153-629: The leadership of editor and publisher Felix G. Havens, it expanded both its potential readership and its title, becoming the Imperial Valley Press and the Imperial Press on March 3, 1906. Though no longer claiming the value of water within its masthead, the paper continued to argue for water rights, “advocating prompt and decisive action to give the Reclamation Service the power to control the entire water sheds of

170-947: The license for satellite station KHSD-TV and the station's subchannel affiliations with MeTV and This TV ; a month later, on November 2, Gray announced that HomeSlice Media Group would acquire the Rushmore Media Company radio stations for $ 2.2 million, reuniting them with KBHB and KKLS , which Schurz had sold to HomeSlice in 2014 as part of its acquisition of KOTA-TV. Following the completion of these sales, Gray will retain KOTA-TV's ABC affiliation and transfer it to its existing television station in Rapid City, KEVN-TV ; it will also retain KOTA-TV satellite stations KDUH-TV and KSGW-TV and convert them to satellites of KNOP-TV in North Platte, Nebraska and KCWY-DT in Casper, Wyoming (both NBC affiliates), respectively. In March 2015,

187-533: The paper announced it would transition to mail delivery effective Oct. 3. As a result, the weekend edition will be delivered on Saturdays instead of Sundays. The Imperial Valley Press publishes Adelante Valle a Spanish-language weekly. Schurz Communications Schurz Communications, Inc. is an American broadband media group and cloud services provider based in South Bend, Indiana . It previously owned newspapers and television stations. The company

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204-685: The publishing wing of the United Kingdom-based Universities and Colleges Christian Fellowship InterVarsity Press (founded 1947), the publishing wing of the United States-based InterVarsity Christian Fellowship Intraventricular pressure, the pressure within the ventricles of the heart during different phases of diastole and systole Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with

221-501: The rivers of the arid land states.” Of particular concern were private interests controlling access to the Colorado River. The importance of such issues to local politics increased with the founding of Imperial County on August 7, 1907. The paper, its title now shortened to the Imperial Valley Press , strayed from its normal weekly publishing schedule to put out a number of “Extra” editions in late July 1907. These extras addressed

238-554: The tagline, “Water is king—here is its Kingdom,” to the masthead in June signified an ongoing concern of both the paper and its readership: the availability of water within agricultural areas of southeast California. Within its first year, the Imperial Press merged with a Los Angeles monthly publication called the Imperial Farmer to become the Imperial Press and Farmer on November 2, 1901, with new editor and manager Edgar F. Howe at

255-518: The title IVP . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=IVP&oldid=1137778662 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Imperial Valley Press The Imperial Valley Press features local news from all communities of

272-450: The upcoming elections that would establish the county seat along with the potential candidates to fill the new offices. Following the excitement surrounding the establishment of Imperial County, the Imperial Valley Press returned to its Saturday publishing date until September 30, 1911, when the paper officially became a daily. In March 2015, Schurz Communications sold the newspaper to Imperial Valley News Media Inc. On Sept. 13, 2023,

289-470: Was founded in 1872 by Alfred B. Miller and Elmer Crockett with the creation of the South Bend Tribune . Over the years, the company grew through the acquisition of other newspapers, media outlets, radio and television stations, digital companies, broadband operations and cloud services provider. The expanding company was renamed Schurz Communications Inc. in 1976, when the newspapers division and

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