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Daily Sun News
The ''Sunnyside Sun'' is a daily newspaper published in Sunnyside, Washington, five days a week and has a circulation of 3,745. The paper covers community events, sports and local news. The ''Sun'' is the newspaper of record for Sunnyside. History The ''Sunnyside Sun'' was founded in 1901 by William Hitchcock, a member of a group of Dunkards who were migrating from South Dakota South Dakota (; Sioux: , ) is a U.S. state in the North Central region of the United States. It is also part of the Great Plains. South Dakota is named after the Lakota and Dakota Sioux Native American tribes, who comprise a large porti ... in search of a site for a Christian Cooperative Colony. They purchased the townsite in 1900 and soon founded the ''Sun'', along with various other institutions. It was a weekly paper. That same year, it was identified as one of four Washington papers that refused to publish advertisements for saloons. In 1914, Yancey Freeman of the ''Sun'' was elected vice ...
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Sunnyside, Washington
Sunnyside is a city in Yakima County, Washington, United States. The population was 16,375 at the 2020 census. History Up through the early portion of the 19th century, the portion of the Yakima Valley where Sunnyside is now located was inhabited by the "Taptat-ħlama" (or ″People at the rapids"). These people hunted and fished along Yakima River from the mouth of Satus Creek (contained in present-day Satus immediately southwest of Sunnyside) to present Kiona, with a key fishery at near present-day Prosser. Several tribes in the region were relocated onto the Yakama Indian Reservation following the 1855 signing of a treaty with the federal government. However, the Yakima War lingered until 1858, with Chief Kamiakin fighting on until the Battle of Four Lakes in 1858. The modern settlement of Sunnyside was founded by Walter Granger in 1893. The name was coined by a merchant named W. H. Cline. Granger was involved in the financing and construction of the Sunnyside Canal which ...
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Richland Advocate
Richland may refer to: Places in the United States (by state) *Richland, California *Richland, Georgia *Richland County, Illinois * Richland, Rush County, Indiana * Richland, Iowa *Richland, Michigan *Richland, Mississippi (other) *Richland, Missouri *Richland County, Montana * Richland, Nebraska *Richland, New Jersey *Richland, New York *Richland County, North Dakota *Richland County, Ohio *Richland, Oregon *Richland, Pennsylvania *Richland County, South Carolina *Richland, South Dakota *Richland, Tennessee *Richland, Texas *Richland, Washington *Richland, Richland County, Wisconsin *Richland, Rusk County, Wisconsin *Richland County, Wisconsin *Richland Creek (other) *Richland Township (other) Education in the United States *Richland Community College, Decatur, Illinois *Richland College, Dallas, Texas, a community college *Richland High School (other) *Richland School District (other) Places on the United States National Register of Hi ...
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Newspapers Published In Washington (state)
A newspaper is a periodical publication containing written information about current events and is often typed in black ink with a white or gray background. Newspapers can cover a wide variety of fields such as politics, business, sports and art, and often include materials such as opinion columns, weather forecasts, reviews of local services, obituaries, birth notices, crosswords, editorial cartoons, comic strips, and advice columns. Most newspapers are businesses, and they pay their expenses with a mixture of subscription revenue, newsstand sales, and advertising revenue. The journalism organizations that publish newspapers are themselves often metonymically called newspapers. Newspapers have traditionally been published in print (usually on cheap, low-grade paper called newsprint). However, today most newspapers are also published on websites as online newspapers, and some have even abandoned their print versions entirely. Newspapers developed in the 17th century, as ...
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Eagle Newspapers (Oregon)
Eagle Newspapers is an American newspaper publisher serving the states of Oregon, Washington and Idaho. History The origins of the company date back to 1933 when Elmo Smith and his wife, Dorothy, borrowed $25 to establish a mimeographed weekly newspaper in Ontario, Oregon. In 1948, Smith sold the paper and used the proceeds to purchase the Blue Mountain Eagle in John Day, Oregon. That same year Smith and his friend, Bill Robinson, purchased The Madras Pioneer and the family business was incorporated. In 1961, the company purchased the Hood River News. The company changed its name to Eagle Newspapers, Inc. in 1979. In 2013, Eagle Newspapers sold six Oregon newspapers in Central Oregon and the Willamette Valley to the Pamplin Media Group. In 2020, the company sold the Polk County Itemizer-Observer to SJ Olson Publishing, Inc. That same year, the company ceased publication of Hood River News, '' The Dalles Chronicle'' and the ''White Salmon Enterprise'' on March 31. The ...
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4-H Club
4-H is a U.S.-based network of youth organizations whose mission is "engaging youth to reach their fullest potential while advancing the field of youth development". Its name is a reference to the occurrence of the initial letter H four times in the organization's original motto "head, heart, hands, and health", which was later incorporated into the fuller pledge officially adopted in 1927. In the United States, the organization is administered by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). 4-H Canada is an independent non-profit organization overseeing the operation of branches throughout Canada. There are 4-H organizations in over 50 countries; the organization and administration varies from country to country. The goal of 4-H is to develop citizenship, leadership, responsibility and life skills of youth through experiential learning programs and a positive youth development approach. Though typically thought of as an a ...
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William Denison Lyman
William Denison Lyman (born December 1, 1852, died June 21, 1920) was an author, professor, and historian. Biography Lyman studied at Tualatin Academy and Pacific University, graduating from the Pacific scientific course in 1873. He received a degree from Williams College in 1877. After an attempt at farming and teaching at the University of New Mexico at Santa Fe, Lyman taught history and served as department head at Whitman College from 1888 until his death in 1920. Just before his death he became Professor Emeritus at the college. In 1890 and 1891 he went to Spokane to try to bootstap a new college. Lyman contributed published papers to the American Antiquarian Society. Lyman published several books, notably about the history of Walla Walla, Washington and the significance of The Columbia River. Lyman climbed and documented many peaks in the Pacific Northwest. Legacy Lyman House at Whitman College is named in his honor, as are the Lyman Glaciers on Lyman Glacier (Mount Adam ...
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Congressional Record
The ''Congressional Record'' is the official record of the proceedings and debates of the United States Congress, published by the United States Government Publishing Office and issued when Congress is in session. The Congressional Record Index is updated daily online and published monthly. At the end of a session of Congress, the daily editions are compiled in bound volumes constituting the permanent editionChapter 9 of Title 44 of the United States Codeauthorizes publication of the ''Congressional Record''. The ''Congressional Record'' consists of four sections: the House section, the Senate section, the Extensions of Remarks, and, since the 1940s, the Daily Digest. At the back of each daily issue is the Daily Digest, which summarizes the day's floor and committee activities and serves as a table of contents for each issue. The House and Senate sections contain proceedings for the separate chambers of Congress. A section of the ''Congressional Record'' titled ''Extensions of ...
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Prosser Record-Bulletin
Prosser may refer to: __NOTOC__ Places ;United States * Prosser, California, a former settlement * Prosser Creek, California * Prosser, Nebraska, a village * Prosser, Washington, a city ;Australia * Electoral division of Prosser, Tasmania * Prosser Bay, Tasmania * Prosser River, Tasmania High schools * Prosser Career Academy, a vocational high school in Chicago, Illinois * Charles Allen Prosser School of Technology, a vocational high school in New Albany, Indiana * Prosser High School, Prosser, Washington People * Prosser (surname), a surname and a list of people so named * Prosser Gifford (1929–2020), American historian, author and academic administrator Fictional characters * Brian Prosser, a supporting character in the BBC TV series ''Hinterland'' * Maxwell Prosser, the main character of the indie video game ''Ironclad Tactics'' * Oofy Prosser, a recurring character in P. G. Wodehouse stories * Sydney Prosser, in the 2013 film ''American Hustle'', played by Amy Adams Other ...
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Zillah Mirror
Zillah may refer to: __NOTOC__ Geography *Zillah (country subdivision), a country subdivision in Bangladesh, India and Pakistan *Zillah, Washington, United States, a city People * Zillah Smith Gill (1859–1937), New Zealand local politician and community leader *Cecilia "Zillah" Andrén, winner of ''Talang 2007'', a Sweden TV talent show - see Zillah & Totte *Zillah Minx, a member of Rubella Ballet, a gothic anarcho-punk band Fictional characters *Zillah, a vampire from '' Lost Souls'', by Poppy Z Brite *Zillah, the wife of Abel in ''Cain'', by Lord Byron *Zillah, from Flora Thompson's ''Lark Rise to Candleford'' *Zillah, from ''Wuthering Heights'', a novel by Emily Brontë *Zillah, a Native American princess who was thought to be capable of witchcraft and sentenced to die in ''A Swiftly Tilting Planet'', the fourth book of the ''Space-Time'' books. Her descendant, who was named after her and her grandmother, is now known as Mrs. O'Keeffe, the hard-hearted and unloving mother of C ...
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Schwarzenau Brethren
The Schwarzenau Brethren, the German Baptist Brethren, Dunkers, Dunkards, Tunkers, or sometimes simply called the German Baptists, are an Anabaptist group that dissented from Roman Catholic, Lutheran and Reformed European state churches during the 17th and 18th centuries. German Baptist Brethren emerged in some German-speaking states in western and southwestern parts of the Holy Roman Empire as a result of the Radical Pietist revival movement of the late 17th and early 18th centuries. Hopeful of the imminent return of Christ and desiring to follow Jesus in their daily life, the founding Brethren abandoned State churches and officially formed a new church in 1708. They thereby attempted to translate the New Testament idea of brotherly love into concrete congregational ordinances for all the members. The Brethren rejected some Radical Pietists’ focus on emotionalism and direct revelation, and emphasized early ("Apostolic" or "primitive") New Testament Christianity as the binding ...
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Kennewick Courier-Reporter
Kennewick () is a city in Benton County in the U.S. state of Washington. It is located along the southwest bank of the Columbia River, just southeast of the confluence of the Columbia and Yakima rivers and across from the confluence of the Columbia and Snake rivers. It is the most populous of the three cities collectively referred to as the Tri-Cities (the others being Pasco and Richland). The population was 83,921 at the 2020 census. The discovery of Kennewick Man along the banks of the Columbia River provides evidence of Native Americans' settlement of the area for at least 9,000 years. American settlers began moving into the region in the late 19th century as transportation infrastructure was built to connect Kennewick to other settlements along the Columbia River. The construction of the Hanford Site at Richland accelerated the city's growth in the 1940s as workers from around the country came to participate in the Manhattan Project. While Hanford and Pacific Northwes ...
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