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On September 12, 1928 the Anaconda Standard merged with Butte Miner to form The Montana Standard. [3] At the time it was owned by the Anaconda Company. [4] In 1959, It was sold to Lee Enterprises. [4] In 1971, under the leadership of Betty Danfield, the paper's women's section won the Penney-Missouri Award for General Excellence. [5]
Lee announced a Montana State News Bureau near the end of 2020 that serves the Gazette and its sister papers. [2] In 2013, circulation of the print edition was around 39,405 copies, and that number increased to more than 44,000 on Sundays. [3] The Gazette website, billingsgazette.com, receives over 10 million page views per month. [4]
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David Thomas Dawson (October 20, 1957 – August 11, 2006) [1] was an American convicted murderer who was executed at Montana State Prison in Deer Lodge, Montana. Dawson was executed for the April 1986 murders of the Rodstein family in Billings, Montana. He remains the most recent person executed in Montana. [2]
John D. Ryan was named ninth in a listing of the 100 most important people in Montana of the 20th century. [7] He was inducted posthumously into the National Mining Hall of Fame at Leadville, Colorado in 2005. Carrie Johnson, a historian, wrote a story about Ryan's rise to power which was published in Montana – The Magazine of Western History ...
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Michael Joseph Mansfield (March 16, 1903 – October 5, 2001) was an American Democratic Party politician and diplomat who represented Montana in the United States House of Representatives from 1943 to 1953 and United States Senate from 1953 to 1977.
David Gail Meirhofer (June 8, 1949 – September 29, 1974) was an American serial killer who confessed to four murders in rural Montana between 1967 and 1974 — three of them children. [1] Meirhofer killed himself shortly after confessing, and was never tried in court.
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