One click can help a community come together in a time when the facts aren't always clear, writes the Tulsa World executive editor.
Since 2012, Red Dirt Relief Fund has provided a million dollars in aid for Oklahoma music professionals. Let's put a face with the dollar figure. Ryan McCall shared his RDRF story.
"I've tried not to yell as much as Perry White in my tenure as editor, but the push to get the real story is not fiction," writes the Tulsa World executive editor.
Bixby's Kate Creekmore: “Great venue. Great experience. Who wouldn’t want to provide that for their athletes?”
McCartney will perform Wednesday, Oct. 22 at BOK Center. Tickets go on sale 10 a.m. Friday, July 18 at bokcenter.com.
Business Viewpoint columns appear on the Sunday Business cover and allow locals to share their opinion on something in the business world they believe needs to be said.
What if when a story link is posted on Facebook, no one is allowed to comment on Facebook until they click the link and actually read the story?
Oklahoma Watch is a nonprofit, tax-exempt, 501(c)(3) corporation that produces in-depth journalism that covers public-policy issues facing the state.
Castiglione is the longest-tenured AD in major college sports. He is entering his 28th season at OU — a span that has seen 26 national titles and 117 league titles.
The people at the controls have decided that links to a story from a news organization should be downgraded in your feeds, writes the Tulsa World executive editor.
Anderson Public School, a dependent district on Sand Springs' north side, has a two-part, $2.6 million bond package before voters on Tuesday. #oklaed
While the company that took over the six restaurants in April 2023 has paid the state almost $580,000, it is in arears on at least another $255,000, documents show.
CareerTech is reshuffling the distribution of its state appropriation to bolster districts with growing enrollments and limited local funding.
"We would actually go with something much more conservative than what's on the table that doesn't affect so many poor Oklahomans trying to make it in this world," writes the Tulsa World Editorial Board.
The Bill of Rights protects our right to speak up and criticize the government directly when we think it is violating the law, and it likewise protects our ability to advocate for change, writes the co-president of the Freedom From Religion Foundation.
We have a country short on civility, lacking in trust and, more troubling, seemingly unappreciative of our shared humanity. We need to find common ground, writes Hannibal B. Johnson.
Support policies that protect health. Educate your families. Participate in local health events. Be the advocate someone else might need, writes the executive director of the Tulsa Health Department.
Find a list of the bills that focus on Oklahoma's Promise, dyslexia help, CareerTech assistance, DEI spending, district accreditation and other topics of interest for #oklaed.
The Owasso Library is overdue for renovation and major expansion. It was built in 1989, when the city's population was about 11,000. Today, the population is about 39,000, says columnist Ginnie Graham.
Journalism is a team sport, and when you produce about 100,000 words a week, everyone works to make sure everything is right, writes the Tulsa World executive editor.
Chester Gould has some history with the Tulsa World, according our reporter Randy Krehbiel’s great 2007 book, "Tulsa’s Daily World: The Story of a Newspaper and its Town."
We are working on refreshing and reformatting the greatest hits from the Throwback Tulsa series, which told our city's history from the Tulsa World Archive.
Perhaps sooner rather than later, Thunder owners will sell, but OKC has positioned itself well to retain the franchise, writes Sports Columnist Berry Tramel.