South Dakota History
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Wealth comes lined with rage and melancholy in a new Apple TV+ series about a hedge-fund hotshot who loses his job and begins to steal from his suburban friends.
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With tariffs on cars, materials and parts threatening to send auto prices up, some shoppers are racing to lock in vehicles at pre-tariff prices. Others plan to drive their current rides into the ground.
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After announcing social security recipients would be required to appear in-person at office locations, the Trump administration is now backtracking.
More Arts & Life stories
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Almost 75% of the South Dakota Humanities Council's budget comes from federal grants. The Department of Government Efficiency has cut off that funding stream.
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Black Hills residents can vote online by May 31 for the Thriving Communities Initiative, a $100,000 grantmaking effort that asks them to choose an issue in the community that needs support.
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A bill to establish funding for private school and homeschool students died in committee. We hear from both sides of the school choice issue as proponents and opponents consider the next moves.
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We take the hour to share a January panel discussion in Sioux Falls. City, county and state leaders join together to unpack the challenges of assisting people experiencing housing instability.
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First, the painter behind "Dazzling Dakota: The Artwork of Mecca Rutherford." Then, the editors of "Creature Needs: Writers Respond to the Science of Animal Conservation."
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The TikTok saga continues. A South Dakota Congressman, a cybersecurity leader and a legal expert dive into the fate and future of the popular social media app.
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On Monday, Larry Rhoden was sworn in as the state's 34th governor. Our Dakota Political Junkies explore how his leadership may be different.
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Actor C. Thomas Howell will headline a special screening at Northern State University.
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The former surgeon general proposed adding a cancer warning to alcoholic beverages. What does that mean for heavy, moderate and even light drinkers?
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There's a new research program for undergraduate students. It studies all facets of the illicit economy from fake IDs to poaching fossils to printing money.
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Three reporters share the stories they're working and take us into their journalistic process. Plus, the South Dakota Symphony Orchestra performs this weekend.