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Candidates File for State, County Offices
ONLY C'SC Connors State College Library RT 1 BOX 10DO Rt. 1, Box 1000 WARNER .::,K. 74469 Warner, OK 7 4469-9700 PAID BULK RATE ,PERMIT #17 WARNER, OK 4 25 Forwarding & Address Correction Requested 7469 ¢ • tve Serving Keefeton • Gore • Porum • Warner • Webbers Falls Vol. XII - Issue No. 39 Call (918) 463-2386 or Fax (918) 773-8745 Wednesday, July 15, 1998 Candidates file for state, county offices Candidates from across the United States Representative State Auditor and Inspector Insurance Commissioner John David Luton Muskogee County Treasurer statefiled either with the StateElec District 2 Democrat Democrat State Representative Democrat tion Board in Olclahoma City (for Democrat Clifton H. Scott Carroll Fisher District 12 Dorothy W. Lawson state offices) or withthe Muskogee Kent Pharaoh Republican John P. Speannan Democrat Lillian Jayne County Election Board (for county Isabel K. Baker Allen M. Hart Barry Hale Jerry W. Hefner Muskogee County Assessor offices) Monday, Tuesday and Bryan J. Bigby Attorney General Republican Republican Democrat Wednesday, July 6-8, 1998. Candi James R. Wilson Democrat DonStrong David Lancaster TerryFoutch dateshaduntil5pm.,July 10.1998 to Republican W.A. Drew Edmondson Bill Maguire District 13 Muskogee County Commissioner withdraw. Tom A. Coburn State Treasurer John P. Crawford Democrat District 1 Those filing are listed below, Independent Democrat Corporation Commissioner Bill Settle Democrat according to h>w their name will be AlbertJones RobertA. Bulkin Democrat District 14 Hairl Adney listed on the official ballot. Those Governor Superintendent or CharleyLong Democrat Vernon Buck Toruc candidateslisted by themselveshave Democrat Public Education Re»ublican Barbara Staggs Cliff Walker drew no oppos.tionand won the seat. -
Results Are for Rogers County. Some Numbers May Be Pre-Provisional and May Be Off by a Few Votes, but Do Not Affect the Overall Results in Any Significant Way
Note: All results are for Rogers County. Some numbers may be pre-provisional and may be off by a few votes, but do not affect the overall results in any significant way. Source: Rogers County Election Board Archive 2010 Election Cycle Voter Turnout for Democratic Primary Election – July 27, 2010 5,990 Voted/21,913 Registered = 27.34% Oklahoma Gubernatorial Democratic Primary Results – July 27, 2010 Jari Askins Drew Edmondson 2,798 3,129 Oklahoma Superintendent of Public Instruction Democratic Primary Results – July 27, 2010 Susan Paddack Jerry Combrink 4,357 1,267 U.S. Senate Class 3 Seat Democratic Primary Results – July 27, 2010 Jim Rogers Mark Myles 3,949 1,521 U.S. House of Representative District 2 Democratic Primary Results – July 27, 2010 Jim Wilson Dan Boren 1,224 3,723 District Attorney, District 12 Democratic Primary – July 27, 2010 Janice Steidley Patrick Abitbol 3,774 2,078 Rogers County Assessor Democratic Primary Results – July 27, 2010 Chris Whipkey Brian Wilson 1,458 4,145 Rogers County Commissioner District 3 Democratic Primary Results – July 27, 2010 Joe Frank Clark Scott Gouard Leon Hershberger 370 873 828 Voter Turnout for Republican Primary Election – July 27, 2010 7,228 Voted/23,407 Registered = 30.88% Oklahoma Gubernatorial Republican Primary Results – July 27, 2010 Randy Brogdon Robert L. Jackson Mary Fallin Robert Hubbard 4,249 127 2,597 186 Oklahoma Lieutenant Gubernatorial Republican Primary Results – July 27, 2010 Bernie Adler John A. Wright Todd Lamb Paul F. Nosak Bill Crozier 373 1,176 3,986 823 361 Oklahoma State Auditor and Inspector Republican Primary Results – July 27, 2010 Gary Jones David Hanigar 4,323 1,983 Oklahoma Attorney General Republican Primary Results – July 27, 2010 Ryan Leonard Scott Pruitt 2,387 4,477 Oklahoma State Treasurer Republican Primary Results – July 27, 2010 Ken Miller Owen Laughlin 4,078 2,519 Oklahoma Superintendent of Public Instruction Republican Primary Results – July 27, 2010 Janet Barresi Brian S. -
Pappas BLOWOUT 93 Rachel Maddow. 2019. Blowout: Corrupted
Pappas 93 BLOWOUT Rachel Maddow. 2019. %ORZRXW &RUUXSWHG 'HPRFUDF\ 5RJXH State Russia, and the Richest, Most Destructive Industry on Earth. Crown. 406 pages. Modern society runs on oil. Today’s drillers produce over 90 million barrels of oil worldwide every single day. Oil has become an imperative and with that imperative the people who provide that oil demand payment and control. The tradeoff is logical. However, what happens when the balance is out of whack? According to Maddow, “The oil and gas industry--left to its own devices--will mindlessly follow its own nature. It will make tons of money. It will corrode and corrupt and sabotage democratic governance. It will screw up and-in the end-fatally injure the whole freaking planet. And yes, it will also provide oil and gas along the way!” (p. 365). In reviewing the cover of Rachel Maddow’s new book Blowout, one would not assume that the State of Oklahoma is the subject of nearly half of the book. However, she compares it to petrostates such as Equatorial Guinea. The State of Oklahoma government is no match for Harold Hamm and big oil. News watchers will be familiar with the events that Maddow recounts but the way she strings them all together tells a story that doesn’t quite get told in Oklahoma media. Earthquake swarms started in Oklahoma in 2010 but it wasn’t until WKDWWKH2NODKRPD&RUSRUDWLRQ&RPPLVVLRQ¿QDOO\EHJDQWR restrain the actions of the oil and gas producers and their injection wells. It took longer than necessary to pinpoint the cause of the earthquakes because oil and gas producers resisted data collection. -
OSU-Tulsa Library Michael Wallis Papers the Real Wild West Writings
OSU-Tulsa Library Michael Wallis papers The Real Wild West Rev. July 2013 Writings 1:1 Typed draft book proposals, overviews and chapter summaries, prologue, introduction, chronologies, all in several versions. Letter from Wallis to Robert Weil (St. Martin’s Press) in reference to Wallis’s reasons for writing the book. 24 Feb 1990. 1:2 Version 1A: “The Making of the West: From Sagebrush to Silverscreen.” 19p. 1:3 Version 1B, 28p. 1:4 Version 1C, 75p. 1:5 Version 2A, 37p. 1:6 Version 2B, 56p. 1:7 Version 2C, marked as final draft, circa 12 Dec 1990. 56p. 1:8 Version 3A: “The Making of the West: From Sagebrush to Silverscreen. The Story of the Miller Brothers’ 101 Ranch Empire…” 55p. 1:9 Version 3B, 46p. 1:10 Version 4: “The Read Wild West. Saturday’s Heroes: From Sagebrush to Silverscreen.” 37p. 1:11 Version 5: “The Real Wild West: The Story of the 101 Ranch.” 8p. 1:12 Version 6A: “The Real Wild West: The Story of the Miller Brothers and the 101 Ranch.” 25p. 1:13 Version 6B, 4p. 1:14 Version 6C, 26p. 1:15 Typed draft list of sidebars and songs, 2p. Another list of proposed titles of sidebars and songs, 6p. 1:16 Introduction, a different version from the one used in Version 1 draft of text, 5p. 1:17 Version 1: “The Hundred and 101. The True Story of the Men and Women Who Created ‘The Real Wild West.’” Early typed draft text with handwritten revisions and notations. Includes title page, Dedication, Epigraph, with text and accompanying portraits and references. -
Congressional Record—Senate S5228
S5228 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — SENATE July 31, 2019 Oklahoma City area and all around You can’t go through Oklahoma Mr. HAWLEY. Mr. President, I op- Tulsa, to spend as much time as I can without stopping at Cattlemen’s pose the confirmation of U.S. District with as many different people as I can Steakhouse and enjoying a great steak Court nominee Karin Immergut. She to find out what is going on in Okla- or without driving out west to see the went through the committee confirma- homa. I get this one precious month a Stafford Air & Space Museum. People tion process in 2018, before I joined the year to make sure I have focus time in who travel to Washington, DC, go to Senate Judiciary Committee, and sub- the State to see as many people as I the Air and Space Museum, and I will sequently, she was part of a package of can. often smile at them and say: Do not judges who were renominated and I got to thinking about this and the miss the Air & Space Museum that is voted out earlier this year. I later privilege that I have really had in in Weatherford, OK, because the Staf- learned that the nominee had issued a being able to travel around my State ford Air & Space Museum has a re- questionable abortion opinion and is and see so many people and so many markable collection from a fantastic pro-choice. places, to get on Route 66, travel the Oklahoma astronaut. f State from east to west, and see ex- The Great Salt Plains in Jet and the EXECUTIVE CALENDAR actly what is going on. -
Department of Consumer Credit State of Oklahoma
Department of Consumer Credit State of Oklahoma Helping protect Oklahoma Consumers through the regulation of consumer credit sales and consumer loans. 2015 Annual Report Scott Lesher Mary Fallin Administrator Governor Ruben Tornini Todd Lamb Deputy Administrator Lt. Governor STATE OF OKLAHOMA DEPARTMENT OF CONSUMER CREDIT November 18, 2015 The Honorable Mary Fallin Governor, State of Oklahoma 2300 N. Lincoln Blvd., Room 212 Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105 The Honorable Brian Bingman President Pro Tempore Oklahoma State Senate 2300 N. Lincoln Blvd., Room 422 Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105 The Honorable Jeffrey Hickman Speaker of the Oklahoma House of Representatives 2300 N. Lincoln Blvd., Room 401 Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105 Dear Governor Fallin, President Pro Tempore Bingman, and Speaker Hickman: On behalf of the Oklahoma Commission on Consumer Credit and the staff, we are pleased to submit the 2015 Annual Report for the Oklahoma Department of Consumer Credit and the Oklahoma Commission on Consumer Credit. This report contains information regarding the activities of the Department, the Commission, and the industries regulated by the Department. The Department of Consumer Credit annually licenses or registers over 10,000 credit-related organizations including supervised lenders, mortgage brokers/loan originators, mortgage lenders, deferred deposit lenders, credit service organizations, consumer litigation funders, pawn brokers, rent-to-own dealers, health spas, precious metal dealers, acceptance companies and businesses that finance goods -
April 2018.Pub
Florida Prehistorical Museum, Inc. dba/ Florida Fossil Hunters Volume 28, Number 4 April 2018 From the desk of the President..... Greetings, Everyone. UPCOMING MEETINGS Hope you get out for Earth Day - there are plenty of celebrations. Salvatore at the Orlando Science Center Sansone will be out at Lake Lotus representing FL Fossil Hunters & the Central FL Rock, Gem & Mineral Club on Sunday, Apr. 24th. He could sure Saturday, April 21st use some volunteers. If you would like to help, email him at ssfossilhunters FFH Meeting @aol.com. Saturday, May 19th The Peace River low - dirty, but low - and lots of fossil hunters are taking FFH Meeting 3pm advantage of the lull in rain. You should, too. Contact Steve Sharpe at 352- 552-2296 to join him on one of his many trips. Speaking of the Peace River, "Dino-Dan" or Chris DeLorey as some may know him, rewarded volunteers at More events listed on back page the Brevard Zoo with a trip to the Peace to hunt fossils. Steve & Michael For more info... Sharpe and Bonnie & me helped out with a walk-in hunt at Wauchula. About www.floridafossilhunters.com 30 or more first-timers went shark tooth crazy. A little sun and less wind would have been nice but there were no complaints... everyone had a blast experiencing the thrill of fossil hunting. The Yankeetown trip got delayed since it was supposed to be the same day, Fragments ............................... 2 so I'm thinking about going in May (the 12?), weather permitting. It may have Kids’ Fossil Blast ..................... 2 been a good thing it got cancelled on the 31st. -
District Numbers Appears After the City
Oklahoma Museums Members of the Oklahoma Museums Association appear in bold; those accredited by the American Alliance of Museums are designated by an asterisk. District numbers appears after the city. Bartlesville Area History Museum Bartlesville 1 Bartlesville Community Center Bartlesville 1 Delaware Tribe Historic Preservation Office Bartlesville 1 Frank Phillips Home Bartlesville 1 La Quinta Mansion Bartlesville 1 Phillips Petroleum Company Museum Bartlesville 1 Price Tower Arts Center Bartlesville 1 Bixby Historical Society Bixby 1 http://www.bixbyhistoricalsociety.com Military History Center Broken Arrow 1 Safari's Sanctuary Broken Arrow 1 The Museum Broken Arrow Broken Arrow 1 https://www.brokenarrowmuseum.org/ Catoosa Historical Society & Museum Catoosa 1 D.W. Correll Museum Catoosa 1 https://cityofcatoosa.org/163/DW-Correll-Museum National BMX Hall of Fame Chandler 1 Collinsville Depot Museum Collinsville 1 Mission Bell Museum Coweta 1 Prairie Song Pioneer Village Dewey 1 Tom Mix Museum Dewey 1 Washington County Historical Society and Dewey Hotel Museum Dewey 1 Dr. B.W. McLean Historical Home Jenks 1 Oklahoma Aquarium Jenks 1 Owasso Historical Museum Owasso 1 Sand Springs Cultural & Historical Museum Sand Springs 1 Talala Historical Society Talala 1 108 Contemporary Tulsa 1 American Song Archives Tulsa 1 https://www.bobdylancenter.com/ Arts & Humanities Council of Tulsa - Hardesty Arts Center Tulsa 1 Discovery Lab* Tulsa 1 http://discoverylab.org/ Elsing Museum Tulsa 1 Gilcrease Museum* Tulsa 1 http://www.gilcrease.org Greenwood Cultural Center & Mabel B. Little Heritage House Tulsa 1 http://www.greenwoodculturalcenter.com/ Oklahoma Museums Association Updated 9/2/2021 Page 1 of 17 405.424.7757 www.okmuseums.or g Oklahoma Museums Members of the Oklahoma Museums Association appear in bold; those accredited by the American Alliance of Museums are designated by an asterisk. -
RV Sites in the United States Location Map 110-Mile Park Map 35 Mile
RV sites in the United States This GPS POI file is available here: https://poidirectory.com/poifiles/united_states/accommodation/RV_MH-US.html Location Map 110-Mile Park Map 35 Mile Camp Map 370 Lakeside Park Map 5 Star RV Map 566 Piney Creek Horse Camp Map 7 Oaks RV Park Map 8th and Bridge RV Map A AAA RV Map A and A Mesa Verde RV Map A H Hogue Map A H Stephens Historic Park Map A J Jolly County Park Map A Mountain Top RV Map A-Bar-A RV/CG Map A. W. Jack Morgan County Par Map A.W. Marion State Park Map Abbeville RV Park Map Abbott Map Abbott Creek (Abbott Butte) Map Abilene State Park Map Abita Springs RV Resort (Oce Map Abram Rutt City Park Map Acadia National Parks Map Acadiana Park Map Ace RV Park Map Ackerman Map Ackley Creek Co Park Map Ackley Lake State Park Map Acorn East Map Acorn Valley Map Acorn West Map Ada Lake Map Adam County Fairgrounds Map Adams City CG Map Adams County Regional Park Map Adams Fork Map Page 1 Location Map Adams Grove Map Adelaide Map Adirondack Gateway Campgroun Map Admiralty RV and Resort Map Adolph Thomae Jr. County Par Map Adrian City CG Map Aerie Crag Map Aeroplane Mesa Map Afton Canyon Map Afton Landing Map Agate Beach Map Agnew Meadows Map Agricenter RV Park Map Agua Caliente County Park Map Agua Piedra Map Aguirre Spring Map Ahart Map Ahtanum State Forest Map Aiken State Park Map Aikens Creek West Map Ainsworth State Park Map Airplane Flat Map Airport Flat Map Airport Lake Park Map Airport Park Map Aitkin Co Campground Map Ajax Country Livin' I-49 RV Map Ajo Arena Map Ajo Community Golf Course Map -
Camping Guide
GOING THE OKLAHOMA TODAY CAMPING BY SUSAN AND BILL DRAGOO E OF SOCIETY tent or under the stars is little about giant cottonwoods as they followed Anywhere in Oklahoma, outdoor primitive camping is permitted virtually are slaves, comfort and much about the temporary the bison; when cowboys slept by adventure is close at hand. Travelers are anywhere in the 350,000 acres of Okla- not so much liberation from what Washington Ir- campfires as they drove their herds unlikely to get bored with the same old homa’s portion of the Ouachita National to others as to ving called “our superfluities”—be they to market. landscape because of the state’s un- Forest alone. Beyond that, many local ourselves; our good wi-fi or the convenience of a ther- So it makes sense that Oklahoma of- usual natural diversity. Oklahoma has governments and private businesses offer superfluities are the chains that bind mostat—perhaps so we can ultimately fers a rich outdoor experience. This land, mountains, lakes, prairies, forests, rivers, camping and recreation opportunities. us, impeding every movement of our appreciate them all the more. which Irving described as containing and swamps in eleven ecoregions, and What better way to appreciate the state bodies, and thwarting every impulse Oklahomans are not so far re- “great grassy plains, interspersed with all of them have public lands well-suited than to backpack the Ouachita Trail or of our souls.” moved from the days when settlers forests and groves and clumps of trees, for camping. More than two million spend the night in a Panhandle oasis near —Washington Irving, 1835 traveled across Indian Territory on and watered by the Arkansas, the Grand acres lie in state parks, wildlife manage- the state’s highest point; camp in a cave the California Road, camping every Canadian, the Red River, and their ment areas, national forest, grasslands, or on a granite slab under the stars; or see Camping is illogical. -
New Oklahoma National Register Listings
Vol. 45, No. 8 Published monthly by the Oklahoma Historical Society, serving since 1893 August 2014 New Oklahoma National Register listings The Oklahoma Historical Society, State Historic Preservation tifying features of Colonial Revival seen on the house include an Office is pleased to announce four new National Register of His- accentuated front door, symmetrical façade, and double hung toric Places listings. The National Register of Historic Places is windows. The Hamilton Cross House is the only example of the our nation’s official list of properties significant in our past. Colonial Revival style in this area of Stillwater. Breadtown, located in Adair County (address restricted), is as- The McGregor House, located in Tulsa, is significant in the sociated with the Cherokee Trail of Tears and its immediate af- area of Architecture. It is as an intact example of architect termath. The site is linked to the arrival and resettlement of the Bruce Goff’s early residential designs during his formative years Cherokees in today’s Oklahoma at the end of their Trail of Tears. in Tulsa. Designed when Goff was a teenager, the Tulsa resi- The site is associated with events that have made a significant dence reflects a synthesis of styles that Goff explored in his early contribution to the broad patterns of Oklahoma’s history as it years. The McGregor House is an excellent example of a Prairie- relates to Ethnic Heritage, specifically Native American. style home, distinguished by its tiered roof with wide box eaves, The Griffin House, at 1402 West Kansas Avenue, is located in second-floor penthouse, full-width front porch, and Prairie-style northwest Chickasha. -
Annual Report MUSEUMS for the Fiscal Year Ending June 30, 2016 a S S O C I a T I O N FY2016 Board of Directors Bill Bryans • President EDUCATE
Oklahoma Musuems Association O M A OkMuseums.org O K L A H O M A Annual Report MUSEUMS for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2016 A S S O C I A T I O N FY2016 Board of Directors Bill Bryans • President EDUCATE. INFORM. ENTERTAIN. Oklahoma State University, Stillwater We love our OMA members and friends! As you can read in this annual Jennifer Holt • Vice President report, we have so many wonderful supporters who help us succeed in our Will Rogers Memorial Museums, Claremore mission to assist Oklahoma museums with their efforts to educate, inform and Richard Ellwanger • Treasurer entertain. Below you find just a few examples of OMA partnerships at work for Seminole Nation Museum, Wewoka Oklahoma museums! Dan Provo • Secretary Oklahoma History Center, OKC FY2016 was a productive and great year serving Oklahoma’s 500+ museums Gena Timberman, Esq • Immediate Past while also helping to strengthen our own State Museum Association President profession. OMA is one of the five key partners on the Museums United Phase The Luksi Group, OKC 2 (MUP2) which is an IMLS-supported initiative in which U.S. state museum associations are working collaboratively to achieve greater organizational Stephanie Allen • District 4 Rep. success, so that we may better serve our museum constituents. Sam Noble Museum, Norman Julie Baird • At-Large Rep. Another great project which OMA has been a statewide partner with Leonardo’s Children’s Museum, Enid Oklahomans for the Arts and others is The Economic Impact of Nonprofit Ken Busby • At-Large Rep. Arts & Culture Organizations and Their Audiences in the State of Oklahoma.