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CEC packs the fairgrounds

Electric cooperative’s 87th annual meeting brings in more than 600

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‘Logical Next Step’: Speaker McCarthy announces Biden impeachment inquiry

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy authorized the House of Representatives to move forward on an impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden based on what Republicans have characterized as “Biden family influence-peddling.”

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Children targeted by Marxists

Children targeted by Marxists

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EFFORT TO IMPROVE TULSA SCHOOLS DRAWS THREATS FROM OFFICIALS

In recent weeks, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Ryan Walters has criticized the extremely poor outcomes produced by Tulsa schools and indicated the district could have its state accreditation lowered or even face a state takeover.

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Really good bad ideas

I was talking with my buddy Ralph who lives in “America’s Outback” and he was complaining because he could not participate in the trend towards “agri-tourism” because his starve-out ranch is right in the middle of Nevada’s big nowhere.

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September is Suicide Prevention and Recovery Month

We are asking every one of you to join me in honoring the lives lost to suicide and supporting Oklahomans struggling with substance use disorders during National Suicide Prevention and Recovery Month this September.

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Residents request busing for eastside Hennessey students to resume

Hennessey Middle School Principal Ricardo Tarango (far right) translates from Spanish to English for Raquel Medrano. She wants the school board to offer bus transportation to students who live on East 7th Street at South Cimarron Street. “A few years ago we had it,” said Medrano, “then it was taken away.” Medrano (fourth person left of the principal) represented other parents and students in that area. She said a bus route there would allow 15 students to ride. “Everyone (parents) works,” she said and asked the board to reconsider adding transportation this year. Medrano was listed on the agenda to address the board about the transportation issue at the start of the Monday, Sept. 11, meeting. After she spoke, President Luke Lough thanked her and other parents and children for coming, He said the board couldn’t take action on her request that night because it wasn’t on the agenda for action. When asked about the issue after the meeting, Superintendent Jason Sternberger said it’s a state law: “Schools are only required to provide transportation for students who live 1.5 miles, or more, from school. We do provide transportation for some students who live under the 1.5 miles and those would be the students who live on the west side of Highway 81 (Main Street) so they do not have to cross four lanes of traffic.” [KT&FP Staff Photo by Barb Walter]

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