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International Trucks. Motorbooks International. ISBN 0-76030069-0. Davies, Peter J. (2000). The World Encyclopedia of Trucks. Lorenz Books. ISBN 0-7548-0518-2. Foster, Patrick (2015). International Harvester Trucks, The Complete History. Motorbooks. ISBN 978-0-7603-4860-4. "A History of International Trucks". IHC-McCormack Collection.
The line hauls ethanol, dried distillers grains (DDG), corn oil, [3] plastic pellets, cement, sand, gravel, and Sioux Quartzite, which is mined from two large quarries in Dell Rapids. [ 4 ] The D&I has a trackage rights agreement with BNSF that allows it to travel on three BNSF subdivisions to deliver and sell products, as they must use BNSF ...
At Cornhusker Highway, US-6 turns east with a short urban connection to I-180 on the west along Cornhusker. US-6 then follows Cornhusker Highway, which is a divided highway, northeast out of the city. At the eastern end of Cornhusker Highway (near Waverly), US-6 meets I-80. [1] [2]
The King Air 200 was one of the oldest of its model still in operation in the United States and was facing mechanical issues. Besides its use for executive transport, the planes are also used for poisoner transport, law enforcement, disaster response, honor guard use for funerals, and by the Cabinet for Economic Development.
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US 275 and N-91 separate from US 77 just south of Winslow, Nebraska and US 77 continues north as a two-lane highway until it meets U.S. Route 75 at Winnebago. The two highways run together to the junction of I-129 and US 20 at Dakota City , where US 75 breaks off and US 77 continues northward as a divided highway through South Sioux City before ...
The Argus Leader compiled food trucks based in Sioux Falls or nearby that are operating this summer. Your 2022 guide to Sioux Falls food trucks operating this summer Skip to main content
This is for players of the Sioux City Cornhuskers minor league baseball team, who played in the Western League in 1894 and again in 1900, when they became the Major League Chicago White Sox. Also a separate team of the same name that played in the Iowa–South Dakota League in 1902.