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Chamberlain University, the nation’s largest School of Nursing and part of Adtalem Global Education Inc. (NYSE: ATGE), and SSM Health, a leading Catholic health system, announced Friday the launch of the Aspiring Nurse Program—a largescale partnership designed to fund nursing education, enhance clinical readiness, and create a pathway to employment across SSM Health’s care sites in Missouri, Oklahoma, Illinois and Wisconsin.
Read moreThe U.S. Department of Education has awarded Seminole State College two federal TRIO Student Support Services (SSS) grants. The first is a traditional SSS grant totaling $1,532,570, and the second is a STEM SSS grant totaling $1,361,820. Both grants are for a five-year period and are designed to improve college retention and graduation rates among low-income, first-generation students and students with disabilities.
Read moreEight of the 28 seats on the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma General Council are up for grabs in an election Saturday. The other 20 seats have either already been decided by default or will be filled by appointment because fewer than two candidates filed to represent a band.
Read moreThe Muscogee Nation commemorated the fifth anniversary of the landmark McGirt v. Oklahoma decision Tuesday with a Sovereignty Day celebration at the College of the Muscogee Nation’s STEM Building Lecture Hall.
Read moreIn May 2025, twelve East Central University students, led by Dr. Mara Sukholutskaya, traveled to the national capitol – Washington, D.C.
Read moreAs Oklahomans embrace the summer season, the Oklahoma State Treasurer’s Office is encouraging residents to take a moment to check for unclaimed property, financial assets that may have been forgotten, misplaced or simply overlooked.
Read more“See that you excel in this act of grace also.” - 2 Corinthians 8:7 As economies go, there are good times and lean times. We in Oklahoma can testify to that. In Jerusalem c AD 55, it was no different. Only in biblical times, they didn’t refer to lean times as a “recession” or a “downturn.” They called it a “famine.” That meant there wasn’t enough food to eat and people starved. Help from the government was rare. There were no food pantries (like the one we host at the church of Christ at Little on the 4th Tuesday and Thursday).
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