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The Crouse brothers and McClelland bitterly feuded for years until merging their papers together in 1968 to form The Sentinel-Mist Chronicle. [21] In 1985, the paper was sold to Earl Parsons. [22] By then the paper's name was The Chronicle and Sentinel-Mist, finally becoming The Chronicle in 2009.
Parkland News - Farmington; Pike County News - Bowling Green; Phelps County Focus-Rolla; Rich Hill Mining Review - Rich Hill; Riverfront Times - St. Louis; Sedalia Democrat - Sedalia; South County Times - Crestwood, Sunset Hills, Affton, Sappington Concord Village, and Fenton [3] Southeast Missourian - Cape Girardeau; Springfield News-Leader ...
Lake Sun Leader [97] of Camdenton, Missouri. Lake Area News Focus, weekly, of Osage Beach, Missouri; WestSide Star, weekly, of Laurie, Missouri; The Rolla Daily News [98] of Rolla, Missouri. St. James Leader-Journal, weekly, of St. James, Missouri; Four State Area (Joplin area) The Carthage Press [99] of Carthage, Missouri; The Morning Sun [100 ...
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It’s been one year since three of Willis’ friends, Clayton McGeeney, David Harrington and Ricky Johnson, were found dead outside Willis’ rental home two days after the group gathered in ...
The Current's former office, in a house at 7940 Natural Bridge Rd., was damaged by an arsonist in 1997.; The Current broke a national story in September 1999 when it reported that the president of the Student Government Association was a convicted felon who had pleaded guilty to two felonies, stealing a credit device and fraudulent use of a credit device, shortly after he won the spring election.
In 1967, Gary W. Rust purchased the Weekly Bulletin, a weekly newspaper in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. Previously he worked at his familiy's furniture store. [1] He then purchased the Dexter Statesman in 1982, [2] Southeast Missourian from Thomson Newspapers in 1986, [3] the Daily Dunklin Democrat of Kennett in 1989 [4] and Daily American Republic of Poplar Bluff in 1990.
It includes both current and historical newspapers. The first known African American newspaper in Missouri was the Welcome Friend of St. Louis, which was in circulation by 1870. [1] Yet the first surviving issue of any such newspaper dates from 20 years later in 1890, when the sole surviving issue of The American Negro of Springfield was ...