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Rivertown Newspaper Group Standard-Press: St. Croix Falls: Tom Miller St. Francis Reminder-Enterprise: St. Francis: Gannett Sauk Prairie Eagle: Sauk City: Capital Newspapers/Lee Enterprises [4] Sauk Prairie Star: Sauk City News Publishing Co. Seymour Times-Press: Seymour: Gannett Shawano Leader: Shawano: Capital Newspapers/Lee Enterprises [4 ...
Palmyra: 2-story commercial building built in the late 1840s, with cobblestone front, limestone quoins, and fieldstone sides. Originally housed a store, then Oliver Dow's Palmyra Enterprise for many years. [32] [33] 14: Enoch J. Fargo House: Enoch J. Fargo House: July 8, 1982 : 406 Mulberry St.
The Palmyra-Eagle Area School District is a school district in the U.S. state of Wisconsin that serves Jefferson, Walworth, and Waukesha counties. The district serves students from the villages of Palmyra and Eagle and the towns of Palmyra , Eagle , La Grange , and Sullivan .
Palmyra is a village in Jefferson County, Wisconsin, United States, along the Scuppernong River. It was named after the desert oasis city of Palmyra , Syria , due to its dry, sandy soil. [ 6 ] The population was 1,719 at the 2020 census.
The mayor of Madison, Wisconsin, got angry with reporters at a news conference Tuesday after facing questions about the deadly school shooting that rocked her city just over 24 hours earlier.
Community Newspapers Inc. (CNI) is a subsidiary of Gannett. Based in New Berlin, Wisconsin , it publishes eight weekly newspapers in the Milwaukee metropolitan area. CNI has about 110 full-time employees and about 30 part-time employees.
FILE - Hinds County Chancery Judge Crystal Wise Martin listens to lawyer Rob McDuff, an attorney for Parents For Public Schools, during a hearing in Jackson, Miss., Aug. 23, 2022.
It changed its name in 1852 to the Wisconsin Daily Journal in 1852 and to its current name in 1860. In 1919, the newspaper was sold to Lee Newspaper Syndicate (now Lee Enterprises) by publisher Richard Lloyd Jones. [2] The Capital Times was founded in 1917 by the former managing editor of the Wisconsin State Journal, William T. Evjue