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Nov. 9 marks 84 years since Kristallnacht, the infamous wave of antisemitic pogroms organized by the Nazi regime that served as a prelude to the Holocaust. At the time, it was among the biggest news stories in the American media.
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Relying less on ads and subscriptions and more on memberships and tiered benefits may allow rural weeklies to keep reporting local news.
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A Cole County Prosecutor says the state law was "so vague that it basically describes someone using a computer to look up someone’s information."
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Lee Enterprises, which owns the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and nearly two dozen other Midwest newspapers, last week rebuffed a $141 million bid from Alden Global Capital, which has a reputation for saddling newspapers with debt and aggressively cutting costs.
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Known for extreme cost-cutting measures, the New York City investment firm moves to acquire Lee Enterprises.
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Lee Enterprises' board of directors rejected a buyout offer from Alden Global Capital, a hedge fund known for downsizing the newspapers it owns.
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Lee executives said the hedge fund, known for gutting the newspapers it acquires, did not follow the rules in trying to nominate three people to the the publisher's board.
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Brock Wilbur is one of five investors taking over the alternative magazine. It's the third ownership change in 10 years for the publication.
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New York-based Alden Global Capital is offering to buy Lee Enterprises, which owns the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the Omaha World-Herald, the Sioux City Journal and other newspapers around the Midwest.