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OCTOBER 9, 2020 – OCTOBER 16, 2020
Read moreWhen I was a young teenager living in Holdenville, OK I would visit and hang out in Sims Grocery Store. Here Charlie Sims and his wife would sell groceries on the credit, buy furs, and buy pecans. In the large storage area in the back of the store I would sit on the one hundred pound sacks of pecans and listen to the old men and Native American Indians tell stories of the past. These were stories about the depression days, the dust bowl, WWI and my favorite stories were about bank robbers and of course I took it all in like a sponge.
Read moreIn 1939 my best friend Lewis Blackwell, who was fourteen at the time, had the good fortune to land a steady Saturday job with our local general store. Although there may have been dozens of similar jobs for boys in small towns throughout Southeastern Oklahoma back then, it’s doubtful that even one could be found nowadays.
Read moreI Didn’t Vote for Trump in 2016, But I’d Craw Over Broken Glass to Vote for Him Now
Read moreTHE CALVIN HIGH SCHOOL ACADEMIC TEAM competed in the OSSAA District Seeding Tournament Monday Oct. 12th at Moss High School. They came away with the top seed and will compete at the Regional level in November. (L to R) Nariah Bump, RJ Craven, Champ Florie, Race Tyler, Jonas Winningham, Raney Clay. (not pictured: Brayden Ingle)
Read moreA leader in the Oklahoma City, state, and national Civil Rights movement, James Edward Stewart worked very closely with Roscoe Dunjee, editor and publisher of the Black Dispatch, a weekly Oklahoma City newspaper. The son of Zena Thomas Stewart and Mary Magdeline Fegalee Stewart, James Edward was born on September 6, 1912, in Plano, Texas. He had one half-brother, Alfred, and two half-sisters, Ella, and Johnnie. The family moved to Oklahoma in 1916. Stewart’s father died in 1920, leaving James to assist in supporting the family. Stewart attended Orchard Park Elementary School and later Douglass High School. There he and noted author Ralph Ellison both played in the band and became close friends.
Read moreRobert Benchley once remarked, “Drawing on my fine command of language, I said nothing.”
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