Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
At 11:35AM, a white mob of 700 people gathered around the Sikeston City Hall. The mob overpowered the police force, grabbed the unconscious Wright from the female holding cell in the Sikeston City Hall and dragged Wright behind a stolen maroon Ford sedan for several blocks. [14] White onlookers celebrated the procession. [15]
The cafe was started in Sikeston in 1942 by Earl Lambert, assisted by his wife Agnes, his brother Robert, and Robert's wife Ruby. In 1976 Earl's son Norman "'Ole Norm" Lambert, a former football coach at Sikeston High School, took over management. It was Norman who started the tradition of throwing rolls to customers.
Sikeston is located at the intersection of I-55 and I-57, making it the only city in Missouri other than Kansas City, St. Louis, and Miner to be located on at least two interstate highways. Other Sikeston highways include U.S. Route 60, U.S. Route 61, U.S. Route 62, and Route 114. Sikeston's location at the intersection of U.S. Routes 60, 61 ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us. Sign in. Mail. ... MO man set for trial in Jan. 6 case had ties to KC-area Proud Boys, court filing shows ... of Sikeston, who ...
KRHW broadcasts on FM translator K255AW at 98.9 MHz to help make up for the shortfall in the station's nighttime signal to the east and west of the main AM station's transmitter site which includes Sikeston, and many surrounding rural portions of Scott and New Madrid counties, as well as Stoddard County to the west, Mississippi County to the east, and even far southwestern portions of Cape ...
Scott County comprises the Sikeston, MO Micropolitan Statistical Area, which is also included in the Cape Girardeau-Sikeston, MO-IL Combined Statistical Area. The county is home to Scott County Central High School, which has won 18 state championships in boys basketball—the most of any high school in the state.
With his difficult past now behind him, the country star gets candid about his unlikely road to stardom
KSIM went on the air in 1948 and was owned by the Sikeston Community Broadcasting Company. It broadcast with 250 watts until beginning broadcast at 1,000 watts during the day in 1962. KSIM was able to get on the air because of KFVS—the future KZIM—moving to 960 kHz. Prime Time Broadcasting Corporation bought KSIM in 1977.