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  • A spokesman for Ukraine's air force said the balloons had plain metal triangles suspended with string below them, saying that was enough to appear like an incoming missile or drone on radars.
  • The New Hampshire resort town was the first place in the nation to vote in the 2024 primaries. The voters were outnumbered more than 10-to-1 by reporters from every corner of the globe.
  • Rogers County recovers from a tornado that hit Saturday night, Tulsa's new police chief is named, three missionaries for an Oklahoma-based organization are killed in Haiti, Oral Roberts University is back in the hunt for the NCAA baseball championship, and a costume designer in Killers Of The Flower Moon sues Apple Studios.
  • Nearly two dozen detained youth sue employees at the Tulsa County Family Center for Juvenile Justice, state lawmakers move to curb Ryan Walters' public relations spending, drones come to Osage County, and Native Americans recognize 100 years of voting rights.
  • The state releases Nex Benedict's full autopsy report, concerns over Tulsa's USPS center moving reach city hall, a bill that would allow people to be charged with battery against an unborn child moves through the State Legislature, and a BMX exhibit is coming to Tulsa's science museum.
  • One of Tulsa's most prolific mayors dies, city councilors put council raises before voters, opponents to a state minimum wage increase ask the Oklahoma Supreme Court to consider their position, and a judge has strong words for state officials calling for more time between death row executions.
  • Broken Arrow State Sen. Nathan Dahm's filibustering at the legislative deadline is called "terroristic," a Muskogee production plant blindsides its workers, and a state bill similar to one a Tulsa mayoral candidate tried to pass to bar public assistance from undocumented immigrants makes its way through the legislature.
  • An astronaut from Oklahoma dies, an Owasso police officer is on administrative leave after allegedly killing a dog, Route 66 commissioners look at lighting Tulsa's stretch of the Mother Road, and bills to cut taxes and increase math requirements for high schoolers make their way through the State Legislature.
  • State officials give travel advice for viewing the solar eclipse in southeast Oklahoma, Tulsa County District 2 draws a close race, the Tulsa Public Schools Board of Education considers moving a special education program, and a bill in the State Legislature would require background checks and a fee to collect petition signatures.
  • Southeast Oklahoma is in the path of totality for the solar eclipse, third graders in Tulsa observe near-totality, an Oklahoma senator works to move more dollars to Tulsa following the city's tech hub designation, and the number of homicides in state prisons is more than double what local district attorneys have been saying.
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