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The Shelton Clipper – Shelton - Gibbon - Wood River - Cairo, Nebraska; Sidney Sun-Telegraph – Sidney; Dakota County Star – South Sioux City; Polk County News – Stromsburg; Superior Express – Superior; Clay County News – Sutton; Syracuse Journal-Democrat – Syracuse; Tecumseh Chieftain – Tecumseh; Hitchcock County News – Trenton ...
In addition, News Media Corporation publishes the Business Farmer, a weekly agribusiness paper. [ 2 ] The Scottsbluff Republican was a major newspaper published in Scottsbluff from 1900–1964.
KNEP (channel 4) is a television station in Sidney, Nebraska, United States, serving the Nebraska Panhandle as an affiliate of NBC. It is owned by Marquee Broadcasting alongside Cheyenne, Wyoming–licensed dual CBS/CW+ affiliate KGWN-TV (channel 5). KNEP's studios are located on 1st Avenue in Scottsbluff, and its transmitter is located in ...
In Broken Bow, for instance, subscribers to the Custer County Chief were paying 87 cents a week for local news. Finneman said that in North Dakota, her home state, the cost of one weekly paper had ...
Sidney is located along Lodgepole Creek, which is along present-day Interstate 80. The city is presently located at the junction of U.S. Route 385 with I-80, and its location approximately halfway between Cheyenne, Wyoming , and North Platte, Nebraska , has encouraged the growth of the city as a major transportation service area on the Interstate.
The Democrat was purchased in 1876 by General James Oliver Amos, and became the first newspaper published by Amos Publishing. The Amos family began the Daily News in 1891 and published both papers until June 28, 1940, when the Democrat folded. The family sold its interest in the Sidney Daily News in 1999. [3]
Administrators at a Nebraska school shuttered the school’s award-winning student newspaper just days after its last edition that included articles and editorials on LGBTQ issues, leading press ...
The Gering Courier was a weekly newspaper serving the Gering, Nebraska community from 1887 to 2024. It was printed in Gering's sister city of Scottsbluff. [2] The Courier shared resources with two other nearby newspapers, the Star-Herald and the Hemingford Ledger, both also owned by Lee Enterprises.