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  • Barnsdall and the town's school district recover from the EF-4 tornado that tore through the area Monday night, officials fire the director of Tulsa County's Family Center for Juvenile Justice, the Oklahoma City Thunder prepare for the second game of the NBA Western Conference Semifinals, and city council updates Tulsa's code to address people who block pedestrian traffic.
  • The oldest living survivor of the Tulsa Race Massacre, Viola Fletcher, turns 110-years-old today. The University of Tulsa is enjoying a Mayfest with clear weather and a wealth of art and music. A new study has found that medical school graduates were less likely to apply for residency positions in states with abortion bans and restrictions, like Oklahoma. The Oklahoma City Thunder suffered their first loss of the NBA Playoffs last night.
  • Tulsa officials are opposing USPS mail processing to OKC, a Creek County police sergeant resigns after controversy, Tulsa Public Schools teachers are preparing their students for state testing and Oklahoma's Department of Veteran's Affairs is going through another leadership shakeup.
  • Tulsa city council officially opposes a proposed USPS center move, "The Outsiders" musical makes its Broadway debut, Attorney General Gentner Drummond sues over energy supplies and student loans, and a Bixby bank teller will receive damages for a 2022 robbery.
  • A state legislative leader is confident a budget stalemate will see a breakthrough, Oklahoma is advancing a new law to criminalize undocumented immigrants and a Tulsa city councilor wants a trail to be rehabilitated.
  • On Tax Day, OPMX's Robby Korth surveys how Oklahoma's tax burden stacks up against that of other cities. The Oklahoma Legislature's incoming house speaker aims to bring stability to the role, and his colleagues plan to bring forward legislation that would prosecute undocumented immigrants. The Oklahoma City Thunder earn the number one seed in the Western Conference.
  • Oklahoma prepares to execute its first death row prisoner of 2024. A United States senator joins the fight to keep Tulsa's USPS center fully operational. Authorities search for a teenager last seen in Tulsa on Sunday. A Tulsa Public Schools board member discusses his re-election. State lawmakers consider removing absenteeism as a factor on school district report cards.
  • Three Tulsa men bike to all of Oklahoma's Black towns, the State Legislature considers an immigration bill that could set a template for states that don't touch the United States border, a nonprofit gives pets to struggling people, and members of the Apollo 13 team visit Tulsa.
  • The Tulsa County Election Board ruled a county commissioner candidate can, in fact, run for office after his two primary challengers argued he's legally barred. The Tulsa Public Schools’ Board of Education has officially seated its two new members. A Tulsa nonprofit that helps patients with pet care is seeing increased demand.
  • A "cybersecurity event" is impacting services at Ascension Saint John hospital, Switchyard Festival returns to Tulsa, tribal leaders ask Gov. Kevin Stitt to not drop second language requirements in Oklahoma schools, and a judge blocks a ban on the state doing business with "woke" banks.
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