District 24 lawmakers have mixed reactions to Education Savings Account recommendation in proposed FY2026 state budgetRounds Urges Ag Secretary to Avoid Reopening U.S.-Mexico Cattle Trade Due to Detected DiseaseFarm-to-School Program Applications Now OpenSDSU Extension 2025 Crop Hour webinar series starts in January2023 Irrigation and Water Management data now availableNearly half of US teens are online 'constantly,' Pew report findsRefunds on the way for Fortnite gamers charged for unwanted itemsStanley County High School students participate in State Oral Interp FestivalThe 125th playing of the Army vs. Navy game takes place todayDRG Saturday Sports Broadcast ScheduleSully Buttes edges out North Central in a tight finishGovs girls fall to Raiders in first game of the seasonGovs impress in season opening winFollow along with all SD high school basketball scores from around the statePro Football Hall of Famer and former Viking Randy Moss reveals cancer diagnosis, 6-hour surgeryCourt ruling says genetically engineered crops must have oversightFinal 2023-24 sunflower export figures releasedThune vows to speed up pace of bills going through the SenateIn a first, Arizona Attorney General Sues a Farm Over Water UseNCBA unimpressed with 2025 dietary guidelines report
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In this image provided by the U.S. Air Force, Airman 1st Class Jonathan Marrs, 21, left, and Senior Airman Jacob Deas, 23, right, work to dislodge the 110-ton cement and steel blast door covering the top of the Bravo-9 nuclear missile silo at Malmstrom Air Force Base, Mont., Aug. 24, 2023. When the first 225-pound aluminum tow, or "mule" could not pull the door open, Marrs dragged down a second tow to give them more power. (John Turner/U.S. Air Force via AP)

Inside the delicate art of maintaining America’s aging nuclear weapons

By Jody Heemstra Sep 25, 2023 | 7:18 AM
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