Thousands of bills were filed this legislative session and hundreds were signed into law by Gov. Kevin Stitt.
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The announcement of the death of the Super Bowl champion, Hall of Famer and 11-time Pro Bowl player triggered emotional reactions from Allen's former teammates.
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The once small newspaper was founded by Chinese dissidents. It became prominent in right-wing media in recent years but is now facing accusations that a top officer laundered at least $67 million.
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The ruling against the Fearless Fund is another victory for conservative groups waging legal battles against corporate diversity programs,
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The Post's new CEO has ousted Executive Editor Sally Buzbee, replacing her with a former colleague of his at The Wall Street Journal. Post journalists worry about the choice, and the paper's future.
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The 2024 Oklahoma legislative session is over, concluding one day ahead of the legally-mandated deadline.
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Oklahoma City on Friday released the annual 2024 Point In Time Count, a survey that documents the number of people experiencing homelessness on a particular night in January.
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The trial, which opened Monday in federal court in Delaware, is the first of two cases brought by Justice Department special counsel David Weiss against the president’s son.
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When Father James Martin's dad was dying, a nun named Sister Janice Farnham went out of her way to visit him.
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If you dread getting on a scale to calculate your body mass index, there’s a good reason to ignore the measure. Body composition tests are an increasingly popular way to gauge health. Here’s why they're better than BMI.
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Scientists have long studied how near-infrared light bounces off forests and grasslands, as a proxy for plant health. Now, an artist is using the same trick to turn the Joshua tree into an instrument.
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As much as we would all love to ignore COVID, a new set of variants that scientists call “FLiRT” is here to remind us that the virus is still with us.
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Georgia hasn’t expanded Medicaid. Some people suffer more than others because of that coverage gap.
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Meza Malonga, a restaurant in Rwanda's capital Kigali, serves innovative Afro-fusion cuisine. Chef Dieuveil Malonga opened it in 2020, after years of working in high-end European restaurants.
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The symbol, traditionally used by seafarers as a distress call, has been wielded as a bipartisan protest. But its most visible recent uses have taken a hard right political shift.