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The North Weld Herald — Eaton; Northglenn/Thornton Sentinel — Thornton (weekly) Ouray County Plaindealer — Ouray (weekly) Our Community News - El Paso County (monthly) Out Front Colorado — Denver (bi-weekly) The Pagosa Springs Sun — Pagosa Springs; Parker Chronicle — Parker (weekly) The Pikes Peak Courier — Teller County
The modern Herald traces its roots to both papers but the current Herald nameplate cites 1881 as the paper's founding year. The paper was combined in 1952 after Arthur and Morley Cowles Ballantine purchased the Herald-Democrat and the News. In 1960, the name was changed to The Durango Herald. [1]
Lake Nighthorse is a reservoir created by the 270 feet (82 m) high Ridges Basin Dam [1] southwest of Durango in La Plata County Colorado. As part of the Animas-La Plata Water Project , Lake Nighthorse provides water storage for tribal and water right claim-holders along the Animas River .
The Durango Herald is the city's primary newspaper that is published daily. [1] The Durango Telegraph , a weekly alternative newspaper , is also published in the city. [ 2 ] DGO Magazine, a free alt-weekly also known as "freekly," is published at Durango as well.
Durango is served by U.S. Highway 160 (the Old Spanish Trail), running east–west, and U.S. Highway 550, running north–south. Part of U.S. 550 offers high-speed access (primarily a 4-lane, divided highway) to Albuquerque, New Mexico. North of Durango, 550 is nicknamed the Million Dollar Highway, and is part of the scenic San Juan Skyway.
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The more extreme corridor of wind gusts transitioned into a broader swath of 60–70 mph (97–113 km/h) winds as the storm moved across northern Illinois and northwestern Indiana between 2–5 p.m. Despite the weakening of straight-line winds, the atmospheric environment became more conducive for tornadogenesis during this time.
Elizabeth Morley Cowles was born on May 21, 1925, in Des Moines, Iowa, the eldest of four children of John Cowles Sr. and his wife Elizabeth (née Bates). [1] [2] Her grandfather, Gardner Cowles Sr., had bought The Des Moines Register in 1903; her father became vice president, general manager and associate publisher of the Des Moines morning and evening newspapers in the 1920s. [2]
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