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Nebraska Advertiser – Brownville (1856–1899) [15] The Nebraska Advertiser – Nemaha City (1899–1908) Nebraska Palladium – Bellevue (1854–1855) [16] Nebraska State Journal – Lincoln (1867–1951) The New Era – Omaha (1921–1926) The Norfolk Weekly News-Journal – Norfolk (1900–1912) [17] The Norfolk weekly news – Norfolk ...
Roger Lee Welsch (November 6, 1936 – September 30, 2022) was an American news reporter who was a senior correspondent on the CBS News Sunday Morning program, and was featured in a segment called "Postcards from Nebraska."
The Web site hosts obituaries and memorials for more than 70 percent of all U.S. deaths. [4] Legacy.com hosts obituaries for more than three-quarters of the 100 largest newspapers in the U.S., by circulation. [5] The site attracts more than 30 million unique visitors per month and is among the top 40 trafficked websites in the world. [4]
Upon moving to Lincoln, Nebraska, she was appointed to the Lincoln/Lancaster County Planning Commission and helped develop its 2040 Comprehensive Plan. She was elected to the Lincoln City Council as a city-wide representative in May 2013 and was, at the time, its only female member. She won reelection in 2017.
The Lincoln Journal Star is an American daily newspaper that serves Lincoln, Nebraska, the state capital and home of the University of Nebraska. It is the most widely read newspaper in Lincoln and has the second-largest circulation in Nebraska (after the Omaha World-Herald). The paper also operates a commercial printing unit.
At that time the University of Nebraska–Lincoln had multiple student publications; one of these, The Nebraskan, also known as The Rag after its editor, was founded in 1892 by Frank T. Riley. For seven years UNL would have two weekly newspapers until The Daily Nebraskan was organized on January 13, 1901 as a consolidation of The Hesperian and ...
associate professor (University of Nebraska–Lincoln, 1970–2013) Thomas Nelson Winter (born in 1944) was an American associate professor of Greek [ 1 ] in Classics and Religious Studies at University of Nebraska at Lincoln [ 2 ] and former president of the Unitarian Church of Lincoln.
Kruger was born in Lincoln, Nebraska, on June 26, 1914, as the eldest of Vernon and Luella Dierks Andrews's four daughters. Her cousin, Carl Rohman, acclaimed supporter of the Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, remembers her being a very confident young woman. [2] Prior to the Depression, she was exposed to a high level of living.