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The Rapid City Journal began on January 5, 1878, as the Black Hills Journal. Publisher Joseph P. Gossage produced the first edition of the Black Hills Journal, which was four pages and had 250 subscribers. Printed in a log cabin on Rapid Street, the first newspaper was laboriously cranked out on a Washington hand printing press.
Potter County News - Gettysburg; Prairie Pioneer - Pollock; Rapid City Journal - Rapid City; Redfield Press - Redfield; Sioux Valley News - Canton; Sisseton Courier - Sisseton; Sota Iya Ye Yapi - Wilmot; South Dakota Messenger - Pierre (1912-1914, defunct) Southern Union County Leader-Courier - Elk Point; Timber Lake Topic - Timber Lake; Todd ...
Forum Communications Company is an American multimedia and technology company headquartered in Fargo, North Dakota.With multiple online and print news brands throughout Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin, Forum Communications offers local news in a variety of digital and broadcast mediums in addition to various niche media brands covering specialty interests.
KNBN launched without a local news presence. In December 1996, it began producing news cut-ins during Today. [6] A full news service debuted September 22, 1997, as NewsCenter1, airing at 6 and 10 p.m. nightly; the early evening time slot contrasted with KOTA and KEVN, who presented their main news at 5:30. [7]
From 1910 to 1922, a city commission government was used. Later that year, the system of government was changed to council–manager. Rapid City returned to a mayor–council government in 1957. [4] The Rapid City Council chose to extend the mayoral term to four years in 2015, and the change took effect in 2019. [5]
NASA's Cassini spacecraft, which explored Saturn and its icy moons, including the majestic Titan, ended its mission with a death plunge into the giant ringed planet in 2017. Cassini's radar ...
KCLO-TV's digital configuration has The CW Plus on channel 15.2, Ion Television on 15.3 and Ion Mystery on 15.4. By 2019, "The Black Hills' CW" had been airing in 720p HD over-the-air, per additional distribution of digital bandwidth into channel 15.2 and further compression of the remaining three subchannels of KCLO-TV. [20]
He grew up in Rapid City, South Dakota, where he did editorial cartoons for Central High School's school newspaper. [1] He attended The Art Institute of Colorado, then took jobs at KOTA-TV, the Rapid City Journal, and the Argus Leader. He completed an art degree at the Institute of American Indian Arts once his children matured.