Villager (Saint Paul, Minnesota)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Villager_(Saint_Paul,_Minnesota) an entity of type: Thing

The Villager, formerly the Highland Villager, is a Saint Paul, Minnesota newspaper. It was founded by Barry Prichard and Arnold Hed in 1953 as the Highland Villager, after Saint Paul's Highland Park neighborhood, and is the oldest community newspaper in the Twin Cities. It was the first paper to be distributed in both of the Twin Cities; Minneapolis and Saint Paul. In 2007 it absorbed a sister paper, Avenues (which had been called Grand Gazette till 2003). rdf:langString
rdf:langString Villager (Saint Paul, Minnesota)
rdf:langString Villager
rdf:langString Villager
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rdf:langString John Rauch
xsd:integer 60000
xsd:integer 1953
xsd:integer 7757
rdf:langString St. Paul, MN 55116
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Villager Communications Inc.
rdf:langString Michael Mischke
rdf:langString Twice monthly newspaper
xsd:string 44.939959 -93.167011
rdf:langString The Villager, formerly the Highland Villager, is a Saint Paul, Minnesota newspaper. It was founded by Barry Prichard and Arnold Hed in 1953 as the Highland Villager, after Saint Paul's Highland Park neighborhood, and is the oldest community newspaper in the Twin Cities. It was the first paper to be distributed in both of the Twin Cities; Minneapolis and Saint Paul. In 2007 it absorbed a sister paper, Avenues (which had been called Grand Gazette till 2003). As of 2021, the Villager circulates in the Saint Paul neighborhoods of Highland Park, Macalester-Groveland, Merriam Park, Snelling-Hamline, Lexington-Hamline, Summit-University, Summit Hill, West 7th/Fort Road, and Downtown; the Minneapolis neighborhoods of Hiawatha and Minnehaha; and suburban Mendota, Mendota Heights, and Lilydale. The newspaper is published twice a month on Tuesday evenings. The Villager reports a readership of 90,000. In addition to paid subscribers, they distribute free doorstep delivery to 60,000 homes, apartments, and businesses. An additional 10,000 copies are distributed free of charge at local newsstands. The newspaper used to be unavailable online but now the website features digital copies of current editions as well as an archive which subscribers may peruse.
rdf:langString Free neighborhood delivery, paid subscriptions available
rdf:langString United States
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xsd:nonNegativeInteger 60000
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