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Daily Commercial Bulletin and Missouri Literary Register (1836–1838) [8]; Daily Commercial Bulletin (1838–1841) [9]; Die Gasconade Zeitung (1873-187?) [10]; Evening and Morning Star
The Current's former office, in a house at 7940 Natural Bridge Rd., was damaged by an arsonist in 1997.; The Current broke a national story in September 1999 when it reported that the president of the Student Government Association was a convicted felon who had pleaded guilty to two felonies, stealing a credit device and fraudulent use of a credit device, shortly after he won the spring election.
Current View is an unincorporated community in Clay County, Arkansas and Ripley County, Missouri, United States. [1] The community straddles the Missouri–Arkansas border on the northeast bank of the Current River. Arkansas Highway 211 connects to the south and Missouri Route E is to the north.
It includes both current and historical newspapers. The first known African American newspaper in Missouri was the Welcome Friend of St. Louis , which was in circulation by 1870. [ 1 ] Yet the first surviving issue of any such newspaper dates from 20 years later in 1890, when the sole surviving issue of The American Negro of Springfield was ...
The St. Louis American, local African-American news, weekly [7] St. Louis Business Journal, business news, weekly [8] The Riverfront Times, progressive alternative weekly [9] St. Louis Jewish Light, Jewish religious news, weekly [10] St. Louis Reporter, Christian religious news, owned by the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod, monthly [11]
According to a news release from PortKC, the project in 2023 entered a three phase 10-year deal worth $800 million to transform around 10.7 acres into, “a mixed-use, high-density, walkable ...
The Daily Tribune was founded on September 12, 1901, by former University of Missouri at Columbia student Charles Monro Strong with assistance from Barratt O'Hara as the first daily newspaper in Columbia, Missouri. Its offices were on the third floor of the Stone Building at 15 South Ninth Street. [4]
The newspaper was an important voice in keeping Missouri in the Union; was praised by President Abraham Lincoln (who read the paper before his presidency) as being worth 10 regiments of troops; may have brought about Andrew Johnson becoming Lincoln's vice-president (and thus, ultimately, president); was widely read throughout the Midwest and the Western frontier (Texas papers tried to keep it ...