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(MOAPA, Nev.- Southwest mops up after heavy rains force rescues_0)
(The Morning Call newspaper history)
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MOAPA, Nev. The Southwest was mopping up Tuesday after pouring rains and flash flooding washed out part of a major rail line between Las Vegas and Salt Lake City; swelled a river so high that a Utah national park downstream was briefly shuttered; and closed a 50-mile stretch of heavily traveled Interstate 15 when soggy pavement crumbled.The cleanup began after seasonal monsoon moisture combined with the remnants of Tropical Storm Norbert to dump heavy rain throughout the Southwest and set a single-day rainfall record in Phoenix.The sun was out Tuesday in the small, southern Nevada town of Moapa In Nevada, where officials had feared that rushing water would overwhelm the banks of the swollen Muddy and Virgin rivers."We saw it right at the cusp and it didn't go over," said Erin Neff, spokeswoman for the Clark County Regional Flood Control District. "It's a near-miss."At least 30 homes in nearby Overton were flooded, and <a href=http://www.museosangennaro.com/Public/anel.php> Christian Louboutin  Shoes Sale</a>  Clark County firefighters counted 18 rescues in the area, many involving submerged cars."I've been in this area since 1978. We've never had water like that before," said David Muns, a resident of Moapa, where more than four inches of rain fell in two hours.Transportation officials said a stretch of I-15 near Moapa could be closed for three to four days while they repair pavement that crumbled into slabs over muddy red dirt. One shattered section stretched for half a mile.Traffic was diverted along detours that added time and miles for the 20,000 vehicles a day that travel the highway connecting Las Vegas and Salt Lake City.Truck driver Randy Garca of Calhan, <a href=http://www.alportico.net/gosoc.php> true religion outlet</a>  Colorado, said he hit a standstill Monday afternoon and didn't get rolling again until the next morning."We were hungry so we set up a barbecue," he said by phone from Cedar City, Utah.Union Pacific Railroad service was suspended while crews repaired track near Moapa that was undermined and washed out by flash flooding. Officials hoped to have the track bed and rails repaired by Wednesday for freight service to resume on the busy Las Vegas-to-Salt Lake City main line.In southern Utah, rangers at Zion National Park turned away visitors for several hours Tuesday when heavy rain and a surging river made park routes impassable. Mud, debris and a boulder blocked Route 9, the road through the main canyon.Wet weather also took its toll on neighboring states.Freeways in Phoenix became small lakes on Monday and rescuers scrambled to get drivers out of inundated cars after more than 3 inches of rain fell."We've never seen this," Mesa, Arizona, resident Greg Montierth said. "Arizona deals with sand and cactus and heat. We're not set up for it so I can understand why everybody's scrambling at the last minute."Cars also were stranded near Palm Springs and in the Coachella Valley in Southern California.On an I-15 overpass in the Moapa area, police officer Shanan Kelly said he and several construction workers helped rescue a woman who was swept into rushing water from the top of her minivan."It was very heroic and <a href=http://capstone.edu.sg/clreplicashoes.php>Christian Louboutin Shoes Sale</a>  awesome," Kelly said.Forty-two people were evacuated from a middle school and high school in Moapa and spent Monday night in a building at Clark County fairgrounds. Churches provided blankets, and a store and restaurant donated food before police escorted the people over the damaged I-15, according to Clark County spokeswoman Stacey Welling.About 190 people were evacuated from the Moapa Band of Paiutes reservation after tribal officials warned that waters were close to breaching a Muddy River dam. Officials were assessing damage to properties with leaky roofs and wet floors where water breached flood control channels."We had rivers running through people's yards. But as far as property damage to homes themselves, I think we fared pretty well," said Sherryl Patterson, administrator at the tribal office.National Weather Service meteorologist Charlotte Dewey warned that any additional precipitation in the Southwest could quickly cause new flooding because the ground is saturated.
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The Morning Call is part of Tribune Publishing, with sister newspapers the , , , , , , , , and .The company s publishing history goes back to 1883 when The Critic, an&nbsp;Allentown&nbsp;newspaper, was founded. The editor, owner and chief reporter of the Critic was Samuel S. Woolever.In what would become a family dynasty that would oversee the company for four decades, in 1894&nbsp;Muhlenberg College&nbsp;senior David A. Miller went to work for the Critic as its sole reporter. Its owners were Charles Weiser, editor, and Kirt W. DeBelle, business manager.A reader contest was involved in the naming of the newspaper when, in late 1894, the company said that a school boy or girl in Lehigh County would receive $5 in gold if he or she could guess the publication's new name. The identity of the lucky winner is <a href=http://www.avanttravel.com/page.php?sale=Tory-Burch-Tampa>Tory Burch Tampa</a>  lost to history, but on Jan. 1, 1895, Allentown City Treasurer A.L. Reichenbach, who had supervised the contest, read out the new name: The Morning Call. That same year, David A. Miller and his brother Samuel Miller were able to purchase their first shares of The Morning Call. It was the start of a series of stock buyouts that would leave the newspaper entirely in the hands of the Miller brothers by 1904. In that nine-year period, the Miller brothers worked to gather subscribers. In one case, David A. Miller even attended a corn husking party and had every family there signed up by the time he left. By 1920,&nbsp;World War I&nbsp;and the work of the Millers had raised circulation to 20,000. A series of newspaper mergers that year, funded by Gen.&nbsp;Harry Clay Trexler, led to the Millers' sale of The Morning Call to the Trexler interests. <a href=http://www.avanttravel.com/page.php?sale=Michael-Kors-Silver-Oversized-Runway-Watch>Michael Kors Sale</a>  It was only after Trexler's death in 1933, and at the urging of David A. Miller's sons, Donald P. and Samuel W., that David A. Miller returned to the newspaper in 1934. In 1935 The Morning Call acquired the sole remaining Allentown newspaper, The Chronicle and News, and renamed it the Evening Chronicle. In 1938 the Sunday Call-Chronicle was first published. In 1951, David A. Miller assumed the official title of president of the Call-Chronicle newspapers. He would keep that post until his death in 1958 at the age of 88. That September his sons, Donald and Samuel, were named publishers. After Samuel's death in 1967, Donald P. Miller continued to run the newspaper. He did so with his son, Edward D. Miller, until the late 1970s when Edward became executive editor and publisher. The Evening Chronicle went to press for the last time in 1980. In 1981 Edward D. Miller left the newspaper, and Donald P. Miller returned as chairman. The publisher and chief executive officer was Bernard C. Stinner. They retained control of the newspaper until 1984, when it was sold to The Times Mirror Company, joining the&nbsp;Los Angeles Times, Newsday, The Baltimore Sun, the Hartford Courant and Southern&nbsp;Connecticut&nbsp;Newspapers Inc., publishers of the&nbsp;Stamford Advocate and&nbsp;Greenwich&nbsp;Times. Gary K. Shorts was publisher and chief executive officer from 1987 until succeeded by Guy Gilmore in 2000. Susan Hunt was named publisher in June 2001. In September 1996, The Morning Call launched its website.In 2000, Times Mirror was acquired by the Tribune Company, merging 11 newspapers, 22 television stations, four radio stations, a cable TV company, and Tribune Interactive.In February 2006, Timothy R. Kennedy was named publisher.In 2010, , the publisher and CEO of The Baltimore Sun Media Group, also became The Morning Call s publisher and CEO.The Morning Call s editor and vice president is  and the vice president of advertising is .In August 2014, The Morning Call became part of  as Tribune Co. created a separate company for its publishing businesses.&nbsp;The Morning Call is dedicated to providing the most comprehensive and essential news coverage in the Lehigh Valley. It is highly committed to watchdog journalism and has been a five-time recipient since 2002 of the G. <a href=http://www.radiorcs.com/page.php?sale=Kate-Spade-Coats>Kate Spade Coats</a>  Richard Dew Award for Journalistic Service in Pennsylvania,&nbsp; the Pennsylvania News Media Association s highest journalistic award, which recognizes outstanding contributions to community or state. Several of the works prompted statewide reforms. Copyright 2014,
Associated Press writers Paul Davenport and Alina Hartounian in Phoenix, and Michelle Price in Salt Lake City contributed to this report. Rindels reported from Las Vegas.
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Revision as of 19:03, 1 October 2014

The Morning Call is part of Tribune Publishing, with sister newspapers the , , , , , , , , and .The company s publishing history goes back to 1883 when The Critic, an Allentown newspaper, was founded. The editor, owner and chief reporter of the Critic was Samuel S. Woolever.In what would become a family dynasty that would oversee the company for four decades, in 1894 Muhlenberg College senior David A. Miller went to work for the Critic as its sole reporter. Its owners were Charles Weiser, editor, and Kirt W. DeBelle, business manager.A reader contest was involved in the naming of the newspaper when, in late 1894, the company said that a school boy or girl in Lehigh County would receive $5 in gold if he or she could guess the publication's new name. The identity of the lucky winner is <a href=http://www.avanttravel.com/page.php?sale=Tory-Burch-Tampa>Tory Burch Tampa</a> lost to history, but on Jan. 1, 1895, Allentown City Treasurer A.L. Reichenbach, who had supervised the contest, read out the new name: The Morning Call. That same year, David A. Miller and his brother Samuel Miller were able to purchase their first shares of The Morning Call. It was the start of a series of stock buyouts that would leave the newspaper entirely in the hands of the Miller brothers by 1904. In that nine-year period, the Miller brothers worked to gather subscribers. In one case, David A. Miller even attended a corn husking party and had every family there signed up by the time he left. By 1920, World War I and the work of the Millers had raised circulation to 20,000. A series of newspaper mergers that year, funded by Gen. Harry Clay Trexler, led to the Millers' sale of The Morning Call to the Trexler interests. <a href=http://www.avanttravel.com/page.php?sale=Michael-Kors-Silver-Oversized-Runway-Watch>Michael Kors Sale</a> It was only after Trexler's death in 1933, and at the urging of David A. Miller's sons, Donald P. and Samuel W., that David A. Miller returned to the newspaper in 1934. In 1935 The Morning Call acquired the sole remaining Allentown newspaper, The Chronicle and News, and renamed it the Evening Chronicle. In 1938 the Sunday Call-Chronicle was first published. In 1951, David A. Miller assumed the official title of president of the Call-Chronicle newspapers. He would keep that post until his death in 1958 at the age of 88. That September his sons, Donald and Samuel, were named publishers. After Samuel's death in 1967, Donald P. Miller continued to run the newspaper. He did so with his son, Edward D. Miller, until the late 1970s when Edward became executive editor and publisher. The Evening Chronicle went to press for the last time in 1980. In 1981 Edward D. Miller left the newspaper, and Donald P. Miller returned as chairman. The publisher and chief executive officer was Bernard C. Stinner. They retained control of the newspaper until 1984, when it was sold to The Times Mirror Company, joining the Los Angeles Times, Newsday, The Baltimore Sun, the Hartford Courant and Southern Connecticut Newspapers Inc., publishers of the Stamford Advocate and Greenwich Times. Gary K. Shorts was publisher and chief executive officer from 1987 until succeeded by Guy Gilmore in 2000. Susan Hunt was named publisher in June 2001. In September 1996, The Morning Call launched its website.In 2000, Times Mirror was acquired by the Tribune Company, merging 11 newspapers, 22 television stations, four radio stations, a cable TV company, and Tribune Interactive.In February 2006, Timothy R. Kennedy was named publisher.In 2010, , the publisher and CEO of The Baltimore Sun Media Group, also became The Morning Call s publisher and CEO.The Morning Call s editor and vice president is and the vice president of advertising is .In August 2014, The Morning Call became part of as Tribune Co. created a separate company for its publishing businesses. The Morning Call is dedicated to providing the most comprehensive and essential news coverage in the Lehigh Valley. It is highly committed to watchdog journalism and has been a five-time recipient since 2002 of the G. <a href=http://www.radiorcs.com/page.php?sale=Kate-Spade-Coats>Kate Spade Coats</a> Richard Dew Award for Journalistic Service in Pennsylvania,  the Pennsylvania News Media Association s highest journalistic award, which recognizes outstanding contributions to community or state. Several of the works prompted statewide reforms. Copyright 2014,

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