Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Zomi Town, Tulsa is an ethnic enclave in Tulsa, Oklahoma, inhabited by approximately 7,000 to 9,000 [1] immigrants from the Zomi ethnic group, who originally hail from the mountainous regions of northwestern Myanmar. The community consists of individuals who sought refuge in the United States to escape religious and political persecution in ...
CityPlex Towers, originally known as City of Faith Medical and Research in Tulsa, Oklahoma. There are three triangular towers with over 2,200,000 square feet (200,000 m 2) of office space. The tallest is the 60-story CityPlex Tower which at 648 feet (198 m) is the third tallest building in Oklahoma (after Devon Tower and BOK Tower).
1989 - Tulsa became the Design Center for the Hazardous, Toxic, and Radiological Waste program for the entire five state Southwestern Division. [5] 1995 - Tulsa District, working under the Federal Emergency Management Agency, responds to the bombing attack on the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. The Corps primary role was public works ...
3. The shelter will operate until at least the spring. The Stark Community Foundation has donated $30,000 and Sisters of Charity has contributed $5,000 to operate the temporary shelter through the ...
The program began in 2020 and has resulted in more than $68,000 in municipal fines suspended for 20 clients. Community Court sets some of OKC's homeless, after hitting 'rock bottom,' on a new path ...
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Attorneys for the last two remaining survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre asked the Oklahoma Supreme Court on Tuesday to reconsider the case they dismissed last month ...
The City of Tulsa submitted an application to the U.S. Department of the Interior for the Greenwood Historic District on September 29, 2011. On August 8, 2012, the Coordinator of the National Register Program wrote the Tulsa Preservation Commission that the proposed District would be renamed as the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921. [58]
Emergency Infant Services was founded on January 1, 1977, by Linda Watts in the balcony of the Second Presbyterian Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Noticing how unexpected circumstances made it temporarily impossible for families to make ends meet, she decided it was time to lend a helping hand.