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Oklahoma Today's base circulation is 38,000 and is the state's third-largest paid circulation publication, coming behind only The Oklahoman and Tulsa World. It is the only statewide magazine and it is the only magazine with a paid circulation. Oklahoma Today subscribers live in all 77 counties of the state, other state's and many other ...
Harris served eight years in the Senate, first winning in 1964 to fill a vacancy, and made unsuccessful bid for the presidency in 1976. It fell to Harris, as chairman of the Democratic National Committee in 1969 and 1970, to help heal the party’s wounds from the tumultuous national convention in 1968 when protesters and police clashed in Chicago.
Dewey F. Bartlett, Sr. (1919–1979), Oklahoma governor and U.S. senator; Dan Boren (born 1973), represents Oklahoma's 2nd Congressional district in the U.S. House; David Boren (born 1941), former governor of Oklahoma, U.S. senator and University of Oklahoma president; Donna Campbell (born 1954), physician and member of the Texas Senate; reared ...
Harris was born on November 13, 1930, in Cotton County, Oklahoma, near Walters, Oklahoma, the son of Eunice Alene (Pearson) and Fred Byron Harris, a sharecropper. [1] His parents disagreed on whether his middle name should be "Ray" or "Roy", and his handwritten birth certificate was ambiguous, allowing Harris to choose; he eventually used his mother's preferred name, Roy.
Fred Harris, a former U.S. senator from Oklahoma, presidential hopeful and populist who championed Democratic Party reforms in the turbulent 1960s, died Saturday. He was 94.
Russell M. Perry, former Oklahoma Secretary of Commerce; John Threadgill (1847–1915), Oklahoma legislator and Texas politician [74] Elizabeth Warren, U.S. Senator and 2020 Presidential candidate; J.C. Watts, University of Oklahoma football player and former Congressman; Mac Q. Williamson, former Attorney General of Oklahoma
Nov. 29—A woman was arrested for homicide on Tuesday in Wilson County. Lindsay Harris, 39, was charged with one count of first-degree murder and was taken into custody for the death of her husband.
Harris served eight years in the Senate, first winning in 1964 to fill a vacancy, and made unsuccessful bid for the presidency in 1976. It fell to Harris, as chairman of the Democratic National Committee in 1969 and 1970, to help heal the party’s wounds from the tumultuous national convention in 1968 when protesters and police clashed in Chicago.