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  2. Pat Campbell (broadcaster) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_Campbell_(broadcaster)

    Patrick J. Campbell (March 17, 1960 – October 20, 2021) was an American talk radio host in the Tulsa, Oklahoma, area on station KFAQ (1170 AM). He was the host of The Pat Campbell Show, which aired weekdays from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m., central standard time.

  3. William P. Steven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_P._Steven

    After moving to Tulsa, Steven met Esther Lucile ("Lucy") Shoemaker, daughter of John David Shoemaker and Rachel Elizabeth Hix. Both parents had moved to Tulsa from Marshall, Illinois, where Lucy was born in 1910. Bill and Lucy married in Tulsa on July 7, 1934. They had three daughters and one son. Lucy died on March 15, 1999, in Sarasota, Florida.

  4. Jim Giles (meteorologist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Giles_(meteorologist)

    Jim Giles (1939–December 20, 2006) was a longtime television meteorologist with CBS affiliate KOTV, Channel 6 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. A "longtime fixture" on Oklahoma television, after his death the Tulsa World described him as "perhaps the best-known weatherman in this area". [1]

  5. Roger Wheeler (businessman) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_Wheeler_(businessman)

    Roger Milton Wheeler Sr. (February 27, 1926 – May 27, 1981) was an American businessman from Tulsa, Oklahoma, the former chairman of Telex Corporation, and former owner of World Jai Alai. He was murdered by members of organized crime who discovered that Wheeler had uncovered their embezzlement scheme at World Jai Alai.

  6. Remains exhumed from a Tulsa cemetery as the search for 1921 ...

    www.aol.com/news/remains-exhumed-tulsa-cemetery...

    The latest search began Sept. 5 and is the third such excavation in the search for remains of the estimated 75 to 300 Black people killed during the 1921 massacre at the hands of a white mob that ...

  7. Viola Fletcher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viola_Fletcher

    Her family, including four of her siblings, was living in Greenwood, a wealthy Black neighborhood of Tulsa known as the Black Wall Street, at the time of the massacre. [1] [5] [6] Fletcher was seven years old at the time. [1] She was in bed asleep on May 31, 1921, when the massacre began; her mother woke the family and they fled.

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