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・ Aiken Colored Cemetery
・ Aiken County
・ Aiken County, South Carolina
・ Aiken Drum
・ Aiken Glacier
・ Aiken High School
・ Aiken High School (Aiken, South Carolina)
・ Aiken High School (Cincinnati, Ohio)
・ Aiken House
・ Aiken House (Rensselaer, New York)
・ Aiken Mile Track
・ Aiken Municipal Airport
・ Aiken Polo Club
・ Aiken Promotions
・ Aiken Regional Medical Center
Aiken Standard
・ Aiken State Park
・ Aiken Taylor Award for Modern American Poetry
・ Aiken Technical College
・ Aiken Tennis Club
・ Aiken Thoroughbred Racing Hall of Fame and Museum
・ Aiken Training Track
・ Aiken tube
・ Aiken Winter Colony
・ Aiken Winter Colony Historic District I
・ Aiken Winter Colony Historic District II
・ Aiken Winter Colony Historic District III
・ Aiken's Tavern Historic District
・ Aiken's Wash
・ Aiken, Floyd County, Texas


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Aiken Standard : ウィキペディア英語版
Aiken Standard
Aiken Standard is a daily newspaper published from Aiken, South Carolina, USA. It was established in 1867. It was called the ''Aiken Press''.
The newspaper passed through the hands of several owners during the 1800s. One of the paper’s most prominent early owners was James F. Byrnes. Byrnes, who was a congressman, U.S. senator, South Carolina governor, U.S. Secretary of State, Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court and “Assistant” to the President of the United States.
Under Byrnes and his partner, Alva Lorenz, the ''Journal and Review'' developed into Aiken's main newspaper. Byrnes and Lorenz operated the ''Journal and Review'' until 1912, when Lorenz bought out Byrnes' interest in the newspaper.
In 1953, Lorenz sold the newspaper to Benjamin Josey King and his wife, Annie Howell King. The Kings already owned a weekly newspaper called the ''Aiken Standard''. The Kings merged the two papers to create the ''Aiken Standard and Review''. The ''Aiken Standard and Review'' operated in a small building on Richland Avenue, using Linotype machines and hot lead production methods that had been common in newspaper plants for many decades.
The Evening Post Publishing Company of Charleston purchased the newspaper in 1968. Construction of a modern, newspaper publishing plant, which featured a new offset press, was begun at once, and was completed, equipped and occupied within a year. The newspaper closed out the old operation with its issue of Friday, September 26, 1969, and published its first issue from the new plant on September 29, 1969. By this time, the newspaper’s name had been shortened, and it became the ''Aiken Standard'' of today.
Samuel A. Cothran was the modern ''Aiken Standard's'' first Publisher and Editor. Under the leadership of Mr. Cothran, in 1985 a new, faster and larger press was installed, and almost simultaneously a Sunday morning edition was introduced. He remained Publisher and Editor until his retirement in 1989.
In April 1989, Scott B. Hunter became the new Publisher of the ''Aiken Standard''. On August 19, 1989, the first Saturday morning edition was produced.
The Evening Post Industries owns the ''Aiken Standard'', the ''Post and Courier'' in Charleston, and other daily and non-daily newspapers and television stations throughout the country.
In December 2013, Ellen C. Priest became President and Publisher of the "Aiken Standard," replacing Scott Hunter who retired that month.
==External links==

* (Official website )

http://www.aikenstandard.com/about

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Aiken Standard」の詳細全文を読む



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