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WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on Friday to hear a bid led by two Catholic dioceses to establish in Oklahoma the nation's first taxpayer-funded religious charter school in a ...
Ryan Walters, Oklahoma’s right-wing state school superintendent, set off a firestorm when he said he planned to spend $6 million to buy Bibles for every classroom in Oklahoma. But then the bid ...
CORRECTION (Jan. 22, 2024, 3:18 p.m. ET): A previous version of this article misstated when an Oklahoma appeals court upheld Glossip’s death sentence. It was last year, not earlier this year. It ...
QuiBids.com is an American online retailer headquartered in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States. It is a retail website that operates as a bidding fee auction, also known as a penny auction. The company has been sued under allegations that it is a form of illegal gambling and that its advertising is misleading. It advertises the price ...
John Toole "J. T." Griffin – the owner and president of the Griffin Grocery Company, a Muskogee-based wholesaler and manufacturer of condiments and baking products that he inherited from his father, John Taylor Griffin, after the elder company co-founder died in 1944 – entered the communications industry in October 1938, when he purchased local radio station KOMA (1520 AM, now KOKC) from ...
McCurtain County is one of Oklahoma's most racially diverse counties, but remains highly economically and racially segregated. [3] On March 6, the McCurtain Gazette-News brought suit against the McCurtain County Board of County Commissioners, the county Sheriff's Office, Sheriff Kevin Clardy, and county investigator Alicia Manning in federal ...
In 2022, Oklahoma received the funding after complying with the rule, but after the Supreme Court's 2022 ruling that overturned abortion rights landmark Roe v. Wade, the state changed course.
Lloyd E. Rader Sr. (1906–1986) was an Oklahoma state government official. [1] [2] He was appointed director of the Oklahoma Department of Public Welfare (later called the Department of Human Services) in 1951, and ran it until he was forced to resign in 1982, following news media investigations, including ABC's News 20/20's "Throwaway Kids," and reports by Gannett News Service, into the ...