Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Weatherford Daily News is a five-day daily newspaper published in Weatherford, Oklahoma. [1] The newspaper is owned by Phillip and Jeanne Ann Reid, who also own the Vinita Daily Journal, the Perry Daily Journal, the Nowata Star, the OKC Tribune the Afton/Fairland American and the GrandLaker .
Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History & Culture. Oklahoma Historical Society and Oklahoma State University Library Electronic Publishing Center. "News: Newspapers: Regional: United States: Oklahoma". DMOZ. AOL. (Directory ceased in 2017) "US Newspaper Directory: Oklahoma". Chronicling America. Washington DC: Library of Congress. "Oklahoma Newspapers".
whs.wpsok.org: Weatherford High School,sometimes abbreviated as WHS, is a high school in Weatherford, Oklahoma, United States. Notable alumni
Custer County is a county located in the U.S. state of Oklahoma. As of the 2020 census, the population was 28,513. [1] Its county seat is Arapaho. [2] The county was named in honor of General George Armstrong Custer. Custer County comprises the Weatherford, Oklahoma, Micropolitan Statistical Area.
Dead Women Crossing, also known as Dead Woman's Crossing, [1] is an unincorporated community on Deer Creek northeast of Weatherford [2] in Custer County, Oklahoma, United States, at an elevation of 1,509 feet (460 m). [3] [4] [5] The community takes its name from the unsolved murder of a local woman.
Get the Weatherford, OK local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
In the spring of 1909, two young men came to Durant to enter the newspaper business: R. F. (Bob) Story of Mineral Wells, Texas, and Walter Archibald, of Marietta, Oklahoma. The following year they purchased the Durant Daily News and changed the name to the Durant Daily Democrat. The first issue under the new - and present - name was dated June ...
Barry began his career in radio during his sophomore year attending Norman High School in 1973. His television career began in Oklahoma City in September 1980 as sports director for independent station KAUT-TV (channel 43; which became co-owned with KFOR-TV in 2006), when that station signed on with a daytime-only all-news format that lasted until the following year. [3]