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November has been declared as “Native American Heritage Month” in the City of Seminole.
Read moreSeminole Care and Rehabilitation Center on Tuesday honored its residents who are veterans of the United States Armed Forces. Pictured l-r are Larry Lewis, Robert Griffith, David Howell, Richard Craig, Jimmy Hedrick and Eddie Coker. Pictured behind the group is facility administrator Scott King.
Read moreBlayne P. Norman will serve a three-year term on the Oklahoma Bar Association’s Board of Governors starting January 2026. He will be part of the OBA’s 17-member Board of Governors, which meets monthly and governs the association.
Read moreAs families make plans to gather for festive meals and gift exchanges, city waste crews are preparing for their busiest time of the year. Between wrapping paper, food scraps and packaging and shipping materials, household waste can increase dramatically during the holiday season.
Read moreSean Kouplen, chairman and CEO of Regent Bank, Oklahoma’s past secretary of Commerce and Workforce Development, best-selling author and active small business investor, will deliver the Minter Lecture at 10 a.m., November 14, in the Tulsa Royalties Auditorium of the Bailey Business Center on the Oklahoma Baptist University campus.
Read moreDear Dave, My girlfriend and I have been dating seriously for a little over a year. We’re both 28, and I know I love her, but there’s something that worries me. She’s very smart, but at the same time, she’s not very responsible with money. I know that no one is perfect, but sometimes she’ll get behind on her bills in order to do things like buy clothes or go to concerts. How should I approach talking to her and explaining my concern about this? I’d like to ask her to marry me sometime next year.
Read moreThe county involved in a small-town Kansas newspaper raid in 2023 will pay a cumulative $3 million to three journalists and a city councilor.
Read moreGolfers here are on the brink of launching a massive fund drive to raise $98,000 to match federal funds for expansion of the city’s Municipal Goll Course to 18 holes. The Seminole Golf Foundation, an organization formed as the vehicle for the fund raising effort, has been assured by the Internal Revenue Service that contributions to the fund will be tax deductible, a spokesman said today, and the only hitch remaining is establishment of a procedure for returning funds to donors in the event the $98,000 goal is not reached.
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