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Two Aberdeen men died in a single-car accident at around 1:20 a.m. Saturday at 129 Street and 393 Avenue, eight miles northeast of Aberdeen, according to the South Dakota Highway Patrol.
Aberdeen American News - Aberdeen, Daily [1] Alcester Union & Hudsonite - Alcester/Hudson, Weekly [1] Argus Leader - Sioux Falls, Daily [1] Arlington Sun - Arlington, South Dakota [2] Bennett County Booster II - Martin; Beresford Republic - Beresford; Bison Courier - Bison; Black Hills Pioneer - Spearfish; Brandon Valley Challenger - Brandon ...
The Aberdeen American News was founded as a weekly in 1885 by C.W. Starling and Paul Ware. Soon after, the Ordway Tribune, which had a power press, was moved to Aberdeen and combined with the News to produce a daily. In 1920, a competitor, the Aberdeen American, bought the News, and both were later purchased by the Aberdeen Journal. The Ridder ...
Walter Dale "Walt" Miller (October 5, 1925 – September 28, 2015) was an American politician and member of the Republican Party.He served as the 29th governor of South Dakota from 1993 to 1995, having assumed the office upon the death of George S. Mickelson.
The Aberdeen Saturday Pioneer was a weekly newspaper edited and published by L. Frank Baum between 1890 and 1891. [1] The first issue of the weekly appeared on January 25, 1890, and the paper was based in Aberdeen, South Dakota. [1] [2] Baum bought a local paper, The Dakota Pioneer, from John H. Drake and renamed it as The Aberdeen Saturday ...
KKAA-AM shifted to a news/talk format and KSDN-AM shifted to a full-time sports talk station with a majority of its programing based out of KFAN-AM Minneapolis, MN "The Fan". [8] Late 2004, Aberdeen Radio Ranch’s Rob & Todd Ingstad of Valley City, ND signed an agreement to acquire five Clear Channel-Aberdeen, SD stations: KKAA-AM, KSDN-AM/FM ...
The Sioux City Journal was founded as a weekly newspaper on August 20, 1864 by Samuel Tait Davis (1828–1900) and others who wanted a strong local voice for the Union Party and the re-election of Abraham Lincoln. Serving as the first editor, Davis continued until after the election, ensuring a pro-Lincoln perspective.
The Huron Plainsman started as the Daily Huronite on January 3, 1886. It ran with four to six pages per edition. Being locally owned for almost 100 years, the owners sold the paper to Freedom Newspapers in 1980, which ran it for the next ten years, when they sold to the Omaha World-Herald in 1990.