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The St. Cloud Rox also had a booth set up. Wallner went to Forest Lake Area High School and he remembered traveling to Joe Faber Field and Waite Park to play local Legion and youth teams growing up.
The last remaining news reporter at the paper resigned in January 2023 to join St. Cloud Live, a new, free online publication produced by The Forum Communications Company, headquartered in Fargo North Dakota, 155 miles northwest of St. Cloud by Interstate 94. (A sports reporter was hired later in 2023 as the Times' next sole news staffer.)
KPXM-TV (channel 41) is a television station licensed to St. Cloud, Minnesota, United States, broadcasting the Ion Television network to the Minneapolis–Saint Paul area. The station is owned and operated by the Ion Media subsidiary of the E. W. Scripps Company, and maintains a sales office on 176th Street NW near Big Lake; its transmitter is located in Nowthen, Minnesota.
St. Cloud: 17 17 KMWE-LD: Silent Minneapolis: 19 19 KKTW-LD Heartland: Retro Television Network on 19.2, Rev'n on 19.3, The Action Channel on 19.4, The Family Channel on 19.5 St. Cloud: 20 20 K20KW-D: Silent Minneapolis: 21 21 WUMN-LD: Univision: 25 25 KJNK-LD: Telemundo: SBN on 25.2, Cozi on 25.3, American Crimes on 25.4, Infomercials on 25.5 ...
Brian Mozey is the high school sports reporter for the St. Cloud Times. Reach him at 320-255-8772 or bmozey@stcloudtimes.com. Follow him on Twitter @BrianMozey . Support local journalism.
Pro-Family News: Family values: Minneapolis Hennepin Monthly 12,000 [33] Senior Perspective: Seniors Glenwood Pope Monthly (27th) 60,000 [33] St. Cloud Visitor: Catholics: St. Cloud Stearns 45,500 [33] St. Paul Legal Ledger: Public policy: St. Paul Ramsey Weekly (Mon., Thurs.) 750 [33] Zerkalo – Minnesota News: Russian Americans: Twin Cities ...
the Saint Cloud Area Roller Dolls, a flat-track roller derby league founded in 2011. [63] the Saint Cloud River Runners club, who put on the Lake Wobegon Trail Marathon, an annual event in central Minnesota. The race is used as a Boston-qualifying event for runners who want a straight, quiet, scenic, mostly flat route in the early spring.
The station was first licensed in 1938 as KFAM on 1420 kHz. The call letters recalled an earlier St. Cloud station, WFAM, owned by the Times Publishing Company and the St. Cloud Daily Times, which had been first licensed in June 1922 [2] and deleted in the summer of 1928. [3]