Top Headlines
More than 40 Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples (MMIP) activists gathered outside the Oklahoma state capitol on Sunday to walk in honor of their loved ones.
Top Stories From NPR
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- Transgender bathroom bills are back, gaining traction after past boycotts
- FAA is investigating Boeing for apparent missed inspections on 787 Dreamliner
- Here are the winners of the 2024 Pulitzer Prizes
Get up-to-date on the latest from the state capitol, as lawmakers work their way through thousands of bills concerning taxes, school funding, reproductive care and more.
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Latest News
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Enter for a chance to win tickets to see Hayes Carll at Tower Theatre in Oklahoma City on Thursday, June 6, 2024.
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Local headlines for Monday, May 6, 2024
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Someone vandalized the Million Dollar Elm, a symbolic tree located on the Osage Nation campus. The act left many in the community asking, 'why?'
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As a little Chickasaw-Choctaw girl living in Stigler, Oklahoma, Norma Howard and her seven siblings grew up on the same plot of land her grandmother had received after being forced to walk 500 miles from Mississippi to Oklahoma.
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KOSU's Oklahoma Music Minute features musicians and bands from across the state. Here's this week's featured artists.
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Leaders of the Chickasaw, Cherokee, Choctaw, Muscogee and Seminole nations are urging the FCC to establish a new event code to help locate missing and endangered adults — a crucial tool for tribal nations impacted by the MMIP crisis.
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As people pick up the devastating damage from recent tornadoes, Oklahoma State University Extension Service experts are urging rural residents to keep an eye on their livestock and water.
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Oklahoma hadn’t updated its regulations for swimming pools since Gerald Ford was president. Now, Gov. Kevin Stitt has signed a bill to bring Oklahoma’s pools into the 21st century.
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Local headlines for Friday, May 3, 2024
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Our panel discusses the governor signing a controversial Texas-style illegal immigration bill and more trouble for Tourism Director Shelley Zumwalt.
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Legislative leaders and Gov. Kevin Stitt’s office are expected to sit down Monday in what could be a historic public meeting on budget negotiations.
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Gov. Kevin Stitt signed into law Monday a bill that would lock Oklahoma to permanent Daylight Saving Time (DST), but only if the federal government allows it.
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