Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
South Dakota Magazine is a bi-monthly magazine publication that explores the culture, events, history, characters, landscape and communities of South Dakota. Bernie Hunhoff founded the magazine in 1985 after several years in the newspaper business,. [1] His daughter, Katie Hunhoff, is now the editor and publisher.
South Dakota Magazine; South Dakota Review; V. Vermillion Literary Project Magazine This page was last edited on 2 June 2020, at 06:18 (UTC). Text ...
Past associate editors include Eileen Sullivan and Theo Bohn. The magazine has its headquarters in Vermillion. [1] SDR publishes poetry, fiction, interview, and literary non-fiction by both emerging and established writers of considerable skill.
From the publisher of South Dakota Magazine, with many photographs. Miller, John E. (2014). "South Dakota at 125: Interpreting the Past, Assessing the Present, and Imagining the Future". The Great War and the Northern Plains. Schell, Herbert S. (2004). History of South Dakota. Pierre, SD: South Dakota State Historical Society Press.
This is a list of newspapers in South Dakota. Current news publications. Aberdeen American News - Aberdeen, Daily [1]
For example, the Nebraska edition also included stations in Sioux City, Iowa and Sioux Falls, South Dakota. During the period that TV Guide published local program listings from 1953 to 2005, the magazine did not print regional editions for the U.S. territories, although Puerto Rico has a similar magazine called Teve Guía.
Bernie P. Hunhoff [1] (born September 5, 1951 in South Dakota) is an American politician and a former Democratic member of the South Dakota Senate representing District 18 from 1993 to 1999 and 2015 to 2017. Hunhoff was also a member of the South Dakota House of Representatives for District 18 from 2009 to 2015.
With statehood South Dakota was now in a position to make decisions on the major issues it confronted: prohibition, women's suffrage, the location of the state capital, the opening of the Sioux lands for settlement, and the cyclical issues of drought (severe in 1889) and low wheat prices (1893–1896). [60]